Summer Session Kansan 76th Year, No. 6 Lawrence, Kansas Friday, July 1, 1966 Summer closing plan succeedina By Connie Myers The extended closing hour system for upperclass women was an experiment this summer, and it has been most successful during the two weeks it has been in effect. "We have been very pleased with the way the new program has worked," stated Mrs. Frank Shavlik, assistant to the dean of women. "The girls have cooperated to make the new system a success." KU women affected by the new system seem very pleased with the extension of their freedom. "I AM VERY GLAD the ID cards finally went into effect," stated a junior resident of McCollum Hall. "People in dorms should have the same freedom as those living in apartments. I think the extended closing at KU was long overdue." A Wellington senior said, "I am 20 years old and I didn't like having a closing restriction placed on me. I think when I have almost reached voting age, I should be given the privilege of setting my own closing hours. I'm really glad There are many practical reasons for the extended closing system. A senior noted, "I live in Chicago; and sometimes when I'm coming back from breaks, my train doesn't get in till after closing. I used to have to go through all sorts of red tape just in case my train might be late. Now I can sign out, and there's no problem. I think it's great!" the new system was approved." THE NEW CLOSING system has levied more responsibility on women. "I have to use my own judgment in deciding when to come in," said a Salina junior. "I like the sense of responsibility. The new closing hours give you the freedom you simply couldn't have before." KU brings writers to meeting By Dennis Buck Writers of fiction and non-fiction have been providing information and insight to delegates this week at the 16th KU Writers' Conference. The sessions extend through today. Most women students seem to be in agreement on the program's worth. The male students have some definite opinions also. Said a Wichita senior, "I like the new closing system. It's great to be able to go to Kansas City and not have to worry about getting back on time. It's also nice to go to a party and leave when you want to and not when the clock says the dorm or house is about to lock your date out." In a welcoming speech, Dean Warren K. Agee of the School of Journalism emphasized "The Power of Words," saying that people live by, fight for and die for words. "THE MEN WHO shape our destiny, teach, inspire and lead us to deeds of immortality are those who use words with clarity, grandeur and passion," Dean Agee said, citing Socrates, Jesus, Luther, Lincoln and Churchill. Directing the annual conference and presiding at daily sessions is Miss Frances Grinstead, associate professor of journalism. The opening speaker, Mrs. Holly Wilson, discussed "The Spirit of Juvenile Writing," telling listeners that juvenile fiction is enjoying one of its best markets. "AN IDEA that writers should try juvenile fiction because it is easy or simple just does not apply." Mrs. Wilson said. "Young readers are very critical. Writers must have a good plot. They must have a theme. Characters must possess a crusading spirit, a desire to do good," she said. (Continued on page 6) Mrs. Wilson's regular occupation is teaching freshman English at Ferris State College, Big Rapids, Mich. No Kansan Tuesday The Summer Session Kansan will not be issued next Tuesday, July 5. BUT THEN THERE'S the problem of "feeling as though I have to keep my date out after closing cause I know she's signed out. It really can be awkward sometimes," remarked a Kansas City senior. In showing their appreciation for the new freedom, few upper-class women have abused the privilege. "The women seem to be using some sound judgment in setting their own closing," said a McCollum Hall counselor. The few anticipated problems in the new closing plan seems to be far outweighed by its initial success. Cathy Mize, Salina senior in charge of the summer closing program, stated, "It is very reassuring that KU women respect their new responsibility. That says something very good for us." Juniorhigh bandcamp nextinline Three hundred and fifty junior high school students representing 25 Mid-Western states will arrive Sunday for the sixth annual session of the junior high music camp. The sixth, seventh, and eighth graders will take part in band, orchestra, and chorus programs during the two-week camp. At the close of the session, the three groups will present a joint concert in the University Theatre. The free concert is scheduled for 3 p.m., Saturday, July 16th. THE TWO BANDS OF 120 pieces each, the 100 piece orchestra, and the two 165-member choruses will rehearse four hours daily under the leadership of guest conductors. The guest conductor — band: Richard Brummett, director of junior high and senior high bands, Winfield, and David Circle, band director, Shawnee Mission West High School, Shawnee Mission. Chorus: Marilyn Curt, director of choral music, Meadowbrook Junior High School, Shawnee Mission. Orchestra: Loren Crawford, director of orchestra and strings, Weber State College, Ogden, Utah. Junior high students interested in art have already enrolled in the regular six-week camp session since there is no special junior high division of the art camp. The 339 art campers, ages 13 through 19, have completed two weeks of work and many have finished projects which will be on display in Murphy Hall, beginning today. The purpose of the camp is to give students a firm basis in art, rather than to prepare works for an exhibit. Selected staff members train the young people in five different artistic areas. Combined classes meet in Swarthout Auditorium on Saturdays for a special art survey (history) class. Reds at KU? battle is on By Dan Austin Communists at KU? "Yes," says a Topeka publisher, "less than 1 per cent of the student body." "No," retorts a Lawrence liberal, "but I'll offer a $100 reward if you can find one." Interesting dialogue? In late September, 1965, Bert C. Carlyle publisher of the Topeka Pictorial-Times, told a Kansan reporter that the number of KU student Communists was less than 1 per cent. LAST TUESDAY, Laird Wilcox, editor of the Kansas Free Press, issued a public statement offering $100 to Carlyle if he could produce a "bonafide" Communist-a card-carrying party member. The Topeka publisher refused the challenge. "Laird (Wilcox) has lost financial and political support for his Free Press since I began my expose of the New Left. Now he just wants to stir up a donnybrook to gain support. I'm going to ignore this naive challenge but I will continue my exposure of Communists." Carlyle said. In his reward offer, Wilcox said that he had waited nine months for Carlyle to name those who are Communists. He also denied charges that his Free Press circulation was down. "NINE MONTHS is long enough. I don't like a man who prints such statements and then won't be specific. Apparently Carlyle either doesn't have any information to support his charges, or he won't divulge it." said Wilcox. Explaining why he wouldn't produce names of KU reds, Carlyle said that much of his information is confidential—information that only he and the FBI have knowledge of. Carlyle also said that people often misunderstand his definition of a Communist. "WHEN I USE the word 'Communist,' I'm referring to those who support the same ideology as the international Communist conspiracy. Besides, 95 per cent of the Communist Party members don't carry cards now because it's illegal," Carlyle said. Apparently the Topeka newsman still feels that there are actual Communist Party members at KU. In a Sept. 16 issue of his Pictorial-Times he maintained that KU contained "one of the most active Communist cells in the United States." Carlyle also has fingered KU student organizations such as the Students for a Democratic Society and the Student Peace Union as being "subversive Commy organizations." Wileox, disappointed with Carlyle's failure to accept his offer, said, "Since Carlyle won't bite, I'll make this offer to anybody—just produce one real Communist on this (KU) campus." WHERE DO YOU THINK YOU WILL BE FOUND? 101010101010101010101010101010101010101010101010101010101010101010101010101010101010101010101010101010101010101010101010101010101010101 THE HUNTER AND THE HUNTED . . . (Photo by Glen Phillips) This dog led the Humane Society and helpers a merry chase yesterday when an onlooker called them to pick the dog up. After a valiant flight, the Humane Society won. Page 2 No.of 1 2 3 4 5 6 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 1, 1966 Teachers as dropouts (Editor's Note: This is an editorial written by a high school teacher enrolled at KU recently in the Publication Advisers Institute sponsored by the Wall Street Journal's Newspaper Fund and the School of Journalism.) Much publicity is being given today to the problem of the student dropout, particularly the high school dropout. There is grave concern about the student dropout generally; everyone knows and talks about him. But relatively few people seem to be aware of what eventually may become an even greater threat to the nation's welfare. There is also an alarming teacher dropout, especially among beginning teachers. Between 1955 and 1965, the number of students in the United States from kindergarten through the 12th grade rose 57 per cent. According to a statement issued by the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare in April, 1966, the number of students in this age group is expected to increase 13 per cent to a total of 55 million by 1975. WITH INCREASED numbers of students, one can reasonably expect more and more dropouts. More and better teachers, rather than fewer and poorer teachers, are going to be needed. Today more than half of the beginning teachers drop out of the profession. This waste of trained talent and what lies behind it is explored in a publication on TEPS, "The Real World of the Beginning Teacher." This includes nine papers by professors of education, psychologists, a Peace Corps teacher, new teachers, veteran teachers, and the author of a best seller. The high school dropout himself usually does not fully comprehend what has happened to him, but he has a vague idea that somehow it is all the fault of the teachers or of some particular teacher. HOW CAN A TEACHER who is about to become a dropout himself cope with the task of identifying with and coming to the aid of a student in the same predicament? The situation calls for empathy that just is not there, since the teacher sees the student as at least a part of his own difficulties. The student leaves school completely frustrated, followed shortly by a disillusioned teacher. The student has a bleak prospect ahead, the teacher a devastating backward view of mis- spent effort and the necessity of making a fresh start. In both cases, society loses. Why are beginning teachers leaving the profession in such numbers? Inadequate salary is the most commonly mentioned cause, but this is doubtful, since teachers know what to expect and would not invest money and spend years preparing to teach unless they expected to work for the going wages. LACK OF HELP from supervisors and administrators, and sometimes from their colleagues, is a common cause of discouragement and eventual failure of many young teachers. Overcrowded classrooms and insufficient teaching materials make for a disappointing teaching experience. The storm of paper work is more irksome than many anticipated. Heavy extra-class activities come as a surprise to many teachers who had not known they would be selling tickets at athletic events; sponsoring clubs, yearbooks, and newspapers; directing plays; managing myriads of money-making schemes; supervising lunchrooms and policing halls. And someone has to ride the school bus with the football heroes and their wildly vocal supporting cheering section of pep club girls. TEACHER-TRAINING institutions could acquaint themselves more thoroughly with what actually goes on in primary and secondary schools and then give aspiring teachers a more realistic view of what confronts them. Theory is all right in its place, but actual knowledge of the realities is better. Everyone in a school system should recognize the fact that a beginning teacher is just that—a beginner who needs personal assistance with many problems that the experienced teacher already has encountered and learned to handle. Until teachers themselves are enabled to live reasonably happy lives and enjoy a sense of success in their work, they are hardly likely to be able to erase the dropout's conviction that he is a failure and that so is everyone else in the school. And in 55 per cent of the beginning teachers the same conviction holds true; they quit, too. LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS The student loses. The teacher loses. We all lose. Ura Plaster C-75 10.80X13.30 MONICET.CA.17 "AN' DON'T TAKE A CLASS FROM PROF SNARF "HERE HE LEPTURES SO LOUD YOU CAN HARDLY SLEEP." BOOK REVIEWS AMBASSADOR EXTRAORDINARY, by Paul Hyde Bonner (Dell, 60 cents)—Well, if the cover counted for everything, this one at least would have enough good stuff to keep you turning the pages—looking. Fortunately there is more than that. Diplomacy in the West Inoies is the theme, or is it sex? The semi-political novel is still riding high, and if you can fancy an ugly American in and out of bedrooms then you get why this one is out in inexpensive edition. 本 书 本 ASSAULT ON A QUEEN, by Jack Finney (Dell, 50 cents) — The trade stresses the "movie tie-in" for this kind of book. A fast and entertaining thriller is what it is, and you'll be seeing Frank Sinatra in it one of these days. If you remember Sinatra and the Rat Pack in the heist of Las Vegas you'll sense some of the nonsense (and fun) here — an old German U-boat and an ocean liner and deviltry afoot. *** HARTE OF THE WEST, edited by Ned E. Hoopes (Dell, 50 cents) — Seventeen stories by Bret Hartle. This chap hasn't been in paperback much, possibly because he's so blasted sentimental. But entertaining, too, and he was in the West and knew many of the types he describes. It wouldn't make sense to give you the table of contents, but let's just put it this way—Roaring Camp, Poker Flat, Tennessee's partner, Red Gulch, Laurel Run, Simpson's Bar; these are the people and places. Letters to the editor of Summer Kansan Dear Editor: For the record, I would like to make some minor corrections to the article about the Minutemen that appeared it the Kansan of June. 24. It was a good article, but I feel that some important points were omitted unintentionally. The girl mentioned in the article as a Minuteman "spy," was identified by several Minutemen and former Minutemen, and not just by Brooks alone. Her husband was also identified by more than one source and was tricked into acknowledging his own membership in the organization over the telephone in the presence of two witnesses. There is other evidence that has been presented to the Federal Grand Jury that is substantially more than hearsaay. The Grand Jury is not concerned with th membership in a political organization, but rather with violations of federal laws, in particular the Federal Firearms Act which prohibits untaxed possession of fully automatic machine guns, silencers, and sawed-off shotguns, among other things. Their denial of membership in the Minutemen was to be expected since the organization imposes severe penalties upon members who break discipline. It is significant, however, that they refuse to discuss the matter with me or to comment upon the "evidence." I must admit that I was reluctant to believe it myself at first, but the evidence is there for anyone to check into. The harassment mentioned in the article is also a matter of public record—the Lawrence police docket—and not merely a "claim" made by myself. The two men sent over to Lawrence mentioned in the article were identified as Minutemen—one is a member of the Minuteman Council and the other is a team captain—and they were only pursued after we recognized them as such. No threats were made against them and the riot gun was carried only for protection. One of the Minutemen was armed but he was not searched by police. The police could see who the "good guys" and the "bad guys" were, so to speak, and the Minutemen were asked to leave town and not bother us anymore. The detective, who is familiar with some of the harassment we have experienced, was sympathetic but did suggest that we notify the authorities next time we get forewarning that an incident like this is in the offing. It is natural to expect Robert DePugh, the Minuteman leader, to poo-poo Jerry Brooks' testimony. DePugh is even denying that Brooks was a member of the organization. the death blow to any organization. But individually, or in small autonomous groups, the Minutemen do represent a serious threat. Many members of the organization are highly unstable, some are definitely psychotic. There are a large number of Klansmen who are also Minutemen, as well as American Nazi's. Acting on tips from informers like Brooks, federal authorities are picking up Minutemen almost weekly now, the violations range from theft of government property (breaking into armories), interstate transportation of stolen property, illegal machine guns, and even threats against the President. Interestingly enough, we have uncovered no case where these violations were official Minutemen policy, but rather individual Minutemen acting alone or in small squads. As an organization, the Minutemen are a farce. The organization has begun to splinter, which is My own position is that the Minutemen should not be outlawed. Only specific violations of the law should be the concern of the government. Freedom of association and other civil liberties guarantees of the Bill of Rights must be extended across the board. This does not mean, however, that Minutemen politics should not concern other private groups, such as the organizations that they are trying to infiltrate. I hope that this letter cleared up a few points. Again, congratulations on a good article. Laird M. Wilcox To the Editor: It seems to me that Mr. John Nugent's problems as described in the article "Overdue Book" in the Summer Session Kansan of June 21, 1966, do not all stem from students' inconsiderateness. I received two overdue notices for books I had returned to the chute I have also been wondering why the employees of the Interlibrary Loan department try to discourage graduate students from ordering books, be it by general unfriendliness or be it by procedural complications. Are they simply lazy, or do they want to save Watson Library additional expenses? By the way. Interlibrary Loan is a wonderful facility for which I am grateful. next to the circulation desk in time. Each time I went to the circulation department and informed one of the girls about the error. But to no avail—for a few weeks later I received a bill of $10.00 for one of the books. Although I notified Mr. Nugent of this new error, I am now wondering whether my name is on the Business Office's list of students with unpaid fines and whether I will be made responsible for the carelessness or incompetence of some of the library staff. Summer Session Kansan For 76 Years, KU's Official Student Newspaper KANSAN TELEPHONE NUMBERS Newsroom—UN 4-3646 Business Office—UN 4-3198 The Summer Session Kanan, student newspaper at The University of Kansas is represented by National Advertising Services. 18 East 50 St., New York, NY 10017. Students are required to complete a second class passage paid at Lawrences, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays. University holidays and examination periods. Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the Summer Session Kanan are offered to all students without regard to color, creed, gender, race, ethnicity or disability. The opinions expressed in the editorial column are those of the students whose names are signed to them. Guest editorial authors are necessarily editor's. Any opinions expressed in the editorial column are especially those of The University of Kansas Administration or the State Board of Kansahs. The interior of the library building could hardly be arranged to any more disadvantage for the student. In order to get to level four e.g., one has to go down to the basement entrance, shove his briefcase or pile of books through the turnstile, go up to seven and then down to four. But that is in full accord with our nonfunctional though beautiful campus where a disgustingly overambitious police prevent you from utilizing readily available parking space. S Sunda Wilhelm H. Grothmann Page 3 Sunday concerts Friday, July 1, 1966 Summer Session Kansan Concert Choir and Chamber Choir James Ralston, Director James Ralston, Director Darrell Benne, Assistant Director Jane Fager, Accompanist Sunday, July 3, 2:15 p.m. University Theatre Concert Choir Hodie, Christus Natus est J. P. Sweetlink Ave Verum Corpus William Byrd Sixty-seventh Psalm Charles Ives Dialogue of the Shepherds French Folk Tune When Soft Winds, from Eight Fragments of Shelley The Lord Is My Shepherd (Twenty-third Psalm) ... Franz Schubert Chamber Choir Exultate Deo Alessandro Scarlatti Alla Trinita Arranged by Charles Burney A Swan Paul Hindemith Six Folk Songs Johannes Brahns Lullay My Liking Gustov Holst Our Father Alexander Gretchaninov Intermission Orchestra Gerald Carney, Director Russell Stanger, Guest Conductor Theme Song, Irish Tune from County Derry ... Percy Grainger Prelude and Fugue in D Minor ... Handel-Kindler Symphony No. 1, second movement ... Jean Sibelius Mr. Carney, conducting Symphony No. 8, in F Major, first movement ... Ludwig Von Beethoven Ballad for String Orchestra ... Henry Cowell Symphony No. 4, in G Major, first movement ... Anton Dvorak Bufoons (A Merry Overture) ... Russell Stanger Mr. Stanger, conducting Concert Band Russell L. Wiley, Director Symphonic Band Kenneth Bloomquist, Director Symphonic Band 7 p.m. University Theatre Star Spangled Banner Sea Songs, Quick March Tulsa, A Symphonic Portrait La Sorella, March R. Vaughan Williams Don Gillis Ch. Borel-Clerc Mr. Bloomquist conducting Cortege and Fanfare Rimsky-Korsakov Fourth of July Morton Gould Chorale and Alleluia Goward Hanson Stars and Stripes John Philip Sousa Mr. Stanger conducting Concert Band Theme Song, Irish Tune from County Derry ... Percy Grainger Coronation Scene from the Opera "Boris Godonow ... Entry of the Gods into Valhalla from the Opera "The Rhinegold" ... Richard Wagner American Salute, based on "When Johnny Comes Marching Home" ... Morton Gould Mr. Wiley conducting Toccata Girolamo Frescobaldi Trittico Vaclav Nehybel Ballet of Pleasure (Ballet du Plaisir) Gustave Charpentier Hut of Baba Yaga and the Great Gate of Kiev from "Pictures at an Exhibition" M. Moussorgsky Mr. Stanger conducting Mr. Stanger conducting Pole vault stars sign The leading pole vaulter from the states of Kansas and Missouri have returned signed letters of intent to enroll at KU in the fall. John Oliver from Ruskin High School (Mo.) and Alex Turner, Shawnee-Mission North are the latest signees announced by coach Bob Timmons. Oliver won the Missouri state championship and had a seasonal best of 14^2". He plans to major in either mathematics or science. Turner had the highest mark in the state of Kansas during the past season with a best of 14" - 234". Named to Iowa faculty KIEF'S RECORD & STEREO Diamond Needle Sale Reg. $9.95 - $10.95 $5.95 Miss Justine Julianna Broberg, a graduate student and assistant instructor in French at the University of Kansas 1963-65, has been appointed to the faculty of Luther College in Decorah, Ia. Permanent Discount on 8-Track Car Tapes SUA FRIDAY FLICKS SUA 'The Mouse That Roared Starring: Peter Sellers & Jean Seberg Friday, July 1 In Air Conditioned Dyche Auditorium 7:00 & 9:00 p.m. Admission 35c Fireworks show on tap July 4th The Lawrence Junior Chamber of Commerce again will sponsor a fireworks display at the KU Memorial Stadium at 8 p.m. July 4. The program this year will be more elaborate and will feature 250 aerial shells. In addition to the aerial shells, there will be numerous ground displays, one of which will star Batman. More than 20,000 people are expected to attend this year's program. The gates will open at 6:30 p.m., with a band concert given by the local music union. The winners of the Soap Box Derby and Miss Lawrence also will be presented. The Caped Crusader feature was specially made for the Jay- cees program. Three movies listed Three movies will be shown at 8 p.m. today east of Robinson Gymnasium. They are "Come to Texas." "Bay of Gold," and "Bavaria. Colorful Mosaic." In the event of rain, the showing will be in 3 Bailey. Students, Staff, Campers The University Lutheran Church Invites you to share in our Worship this summer. Bible Study & Sunday School 9:45 a.m. PATRONAL DE NUESTRA IGLESIA DE SANT JOSEPH Worship Service 11:00 a.m. You are invited to study in our quiet, air-conditioned building, 8:00 a.m. to 11:00 a.m. everyday. Rev. Norman Steffen, Pastor 15th & Iowa Page 4 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 1, 1966 KU carillon concert set by Belgian A Belgian carillonneur will present a recital at 8 p.m. today on the University Carillon. He is Piet van den Broek, director of the Royal Carillon school of "Jef DENYN" and city carillonneur of Mechelen, Belgium. Van den Broek, born in Holland in 1916, began his career early by becoming the organist of the Seminary of Hoogastraten at the age of 14. He became organist at St. Rombout's Cathedral in 1938 and in 1941, as a professor, at the Belgian College for Sacred Music he performed extensively in Belgium, Denmark, Germany and Holland. HE BEGAN his carillon studies at the Carillon School in Mechelen in 1942 and later presented recitals in Belgium, Holland, France and Denmark, where he inaugurated three new Scandinavian carillons in Copenhagen, Aarhus and Svendborg. As a carillonneur he is the recipient of many medals and prizes, among these being the "Golden Medal" of the town of Mechelen and the holder of the challenge cup of the Hilversum annual competition for three successive years. AMONG H1S compositions, "Klokkenhymne" was awarded a prize at the International Competition for carillon compositions at Mechelen in 1950. For his program he will present Prelude 6 (G Minor) for carillon by M. Van den Gheyn, Aria by J.B. Loeillet, Jesu, Joy of Man's Desiring by J.S. Bach (arranged for carillon by Fred Marriott), Baroque - Suite for carillon by R. Keldermaas, Two Old Flemish Folksongs, Caller Herrin' by Niel Gow, La Cathedrale de Malines, for carillon by Edward Nielson, Hindou Song, from "Sadko" by N. Rimski-Korsakov, Dance Exotic for carillon by himself, and Fantasia I for carillon by Staf Nees. KU a leader in teaching Kansas colleges and universities in 1965 trained new teachers at the rate of one for every 660 inhabitants—or 3,347 for the 2.2 million population in the 1960 census. Kansas State Teachers College of Emporia, with 531, was first in productivity closely followed by the KU School of Education with 517. KU led in training elementary teachers, 197 to KSTC's 187, while the latter led in secondary teachers. 344 to 320. According to "Teacher Productivity—1965," published by the American Association of Colleges of Teacher Education, other state-supported institutions produced new teachers as follows: Kansas State University, 434; Kansas State College of Pittsburg, 412; Fort Hays Kansas State College, 319; and Wichita State University, 251. Total for the state schools is 2,464, or 74 per cent of the Kansas supply. Washburn University, a municipal school with some state assistance, contributed 126 and the remainder were trained at privately-supported colleges. Faculty recital set Wednesday KU is in third position with 153 graduate degrees, conferred 25 doctorates in education. Wichita State University was fourth with 116, including one doctorate in logopedics. The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts will present a Faculty Recital at 8 p.m. Wednesday, July 6, in Swarthout Recital Hall. The first part of the program will include two selections: "II Lacerato Spirito" (Aria from "Simone Baccanegra") by Verdi, and "Vous Qui Faites L'Endormie" (Serenade from "Faust") by Gounod. They will be sung by Kenneth Smith, bass-baritone, accompanied on the piano by Ernesto Leiano. Robert Scott Ward, pianist, will follow with the performance of Chopin's "Barcarole, Opus 60." Next on the program, Howard Boyajian, violin soloist, and Paul Tardif, pianist, will perform four selections. These will be "Sicilienne" by Paradis, "Mouvement Perpetuel" by Poulenc-Heifetz, "Bean Soir" by Debussy, and "Sonatensate, Opus Posthumous" by Brahms. Finally, the University Woodwind Quintet will present the nine movements of "Regaines" by Souris and "Scherzo" by Bozza. His freedom was short JEFFERSON CITY, Mo.—(UPI) —Earl Wayne Quick wasn't quick enough. He escaped Saturday from the Renz prison farm north of here, but was captured Sunday. Police found Quick at a local cafe. He had been serving a 3-year term for burglary from Jackson County (Kansas City). Granada THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5714 Granada THEATRE...telephone VI3-5784 NOW! Matinees 2:00 Evenings 7:00 & 9:10 IT'S A PLOT! ...to make the world die laughing! THE MIRISCH CORPORATION Presents "THE JUSSIAWS ARE COMING" "THE JUSSIAWS ARE COMING" ITS A PLOT! ...to make the world die laughing! THE MIRISON CORPORATION Program Granada THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-5724 NOW! Matinees 2:00 Evenings 7:00 & 9:10 IT'S A PLOT! to make the world die laughing! THE MIRISCH CORPORATION Presents "THE HUSSIAWS ARE COMING THE HUSSIAWS ARE COMING" Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065 NOW! Matinees 2:00 Evenings 7:00 & 9:25 "NEVADA SMITH" COLOR PAINTSMITH Sunset DRIVE IN THEATRE · West on Highway 40 NOW! Show Starts At Dusk "I Saw What You Did" & "Night Walker" Sunday Only — Pre-July 4 Laugh-A-Thon 4 of Jack Lemmon's Hits THE RUSSIANS ARE COMING THE RUSSIANS ARE COMING" Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065 "NEVAOA SMITH" COLOR PANELS Sunset DRIVE IN THEATER · West on Highway 40 Rose to take leave in Peru Kenneth E. Rose, chairman of the department of metallurgy and materials engineering, will go on leave in August to assume teaching and administrative duties at the National Engineering University in Lima, Peru. During his absence Prof. Fred C. Smithmeyer will be acting chairman. The program at Lima is sponsored by the engineering division of the Mid-America State Universities Association (MASUA), of which KU is a member, by the Ford Foundation, and by the Peruvian university. The objectives of the project include development of scientific and technical investigations, co-ordination of professional studies throughout the university, and the improvement of the faculty. Rose will be chairman of a group of faculty members from the MASUA engineering section and will serve as assistant rector of the university. He will replace Dean John Lagerstrom of Iowa State University. Two graduating seniors in psychology share the Beulah Morrison scholarship award for 1966. Patricia Hackney of Route 3, Wellington, and Roger L. Mellgren, 10331 Sagamore, Leawood, each received $50. The annual award to outstanding seniors comes from an endowment in memory of Miss Morrison, for many years a professor in the department of psychology. Win Morrison award PRESSURE GETTING YOU DOWN? Then take a break and Bowl tonight at the JAY BOWL You've earned it. Jay Bowl KANSAS UNION Free Parking in "Project 800" Jay SHOPPE DOWNTOWN Jay SHOPPE DOWNTOWN Pre-Fourth SPORTSWEAR SALE! Pre-Fourth SPORTSWEAR SALE! Pre-Fourth 2 Large Groups "SURFSIDE" (Navy & Burgundy) "PRESS-FREE PLAIDS" (Aqua & Burgundy) SKIRTS - SLACKS - SHORTS - BLOUSES REDUCED - KNIT TOPS Sizes 5 to 15 40% LAWRENCE NATIONAL BANK Serving Lawrence for 101 years and KU for all of its 100 years is the Convenience Bank for the KU student - Drive-In Bank - Check-Master - Night Depository - Free Parking FULL SERVICE BANKING LNB 7th & Mass. LNB 7th & Mass. Friday, July 1, 1966 Summer Session Kansan Page 5 Concerts go inside to escape that Kansas heat The 1,188 seat University Theatre was chosen as the summer concert site primarily for the comfort of the audience, Russell Wiley, KU band director and director of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp, said. The concerts are free and will be held every Sunday until July 31. Guest conductors for the season will include Robert Holliday, music director, Hamline University, St. Paul, Minnesota, and Russell Stanger, assistant conductor, Minneapolis Symphony, July 3; Weston Noble, chairman INSIDE, THE audience is protected from the rain, wind and heat. He said he expected attendance to be somewhat less but those that come will be comfortable. The University Theatre is air-conditioned. Wiley explained that sound projection can be controlled in the theatre, whereas outdoors one is at the mercy of the weather. If the wind blows, the sound is blown with it; if the weather is hot and humid, sound penetration is difficult. of Department of music, Luther College, Decorah, Iowa, July 10. The orchestra and band con- It is not a seminar; it is a chance for youngsters to exploit their talents far beyond the opportunity offered them in high school, he explained. TWENTY-NINE YEARS AGO Russell Wiley founded the Midwestern Music and Art Camp. It began as a band camp then art was added. Today the camp offers eight divisions: music, art, journalism, ballet, speech, German language, science, and mathematics. He said it was called a "camp" because "that's what it is—summer activity for young people." Harry John Brown, conductor of the Milwaukee Symphony, July 17; Elyakum Shapira, assistant conductor, Baltimore Symphony, July 24; and Victor Allessandro, conductor of the San Antonio Symphony, and Paul Salamunovich, director of choral music, Loyola University and Mount Saint Mary's College, Los Angeles, July 31. Michener is Africa-bound Kenya. He will collect specimens for the Entomological Museum, which is one of the world's largest, and study the behavior of the primitively social bees of Africa. Kansas is losing its only member of the National Academy of Sciences, the nation's most exclusive and prestigious organization in that field—but only for 13 months. More than 15 years ago Dr. Michener began an intensive study of the Halictine or sweat bees, working first in Kansas and nearby states. This study since has taken him to Brazil on an earlier Guggenheim Fellowship, to Australia on a Fulbright Fellowship, and to Mexico, Panama, New Guinea, and the Fiji Islands. Last summer he was in England and Italy in furtherance of this research. Charles D. Michener, Watkins professor of entomology at KU, left yesterday for a year of field studies in Africa. For his leave from KU he has received a Guggenheim Fellowship and additional research support will come from the National Science Foundation. are enrolled in the first six-week session. Michener will spend most of the year in Cameroun, Nigeria, and certs are not the only means whereby talents are displayed. Those in ballet will perform on July 29 and 30 in the University Theatre at 8 p.m. Works of art will be exhibited every Sunday in the promenade of the Theatre, and students in Journalism will compile the camp yearbook, "Tempo." Three hundred and fifty junior high students are expected for the second session from July 3 to July 16. Prerequisites for admission include acceleration in the division in which they enroll and serious intent. Tuition is $360 and scholarships are available. Many of the students take private music lessons while attending camp. Senior high school students (817 girls and 570 boys) from 47 states FOR THE FOURTH Sun Glasses, Sun Tan Lotion Name Brands PRESCRIPTIONS ROUND CORNER DRUG STORE Co. 801 Mass. Phone VI 3-0200 "When Quality Service Comes First" T SANDY'S THRIFT & SWIFT DRIVE-IN LAWRENCE'S Number One Drive-In DANCE In The Hillcrest Shopping Center KIEF'S RECORD & STEREO offers the best in component sound the MASTERWORK for only $199.00 (nationally advertised at $235.00) • 30-watt—all transistor pre-amp- amp combination • New pickering V-15 magnetic cartridge • Girard changer • Pickering acoustic-suspension speakers (with electronic-crossovers) Is the sound terrible in your set? Come hear the MASTERWORK Kief's Record & Stereo Malls Shopping Center 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27. 28. 29. 30. 31. 32. 33. 34. 35. 36. 37. 38. 39. 40. 41. 42. 43. 44. 45. 46. 47. 48. 49. 50. 51. 52. 53. 54. 55. 56. 57. 58. 59. 60. 61. 62. 63. 64. 65. 66. 67. 68. 69. 70. 71. 72. 73. 74. 75. 76. 77. 78. 79. 80. 81. 82. 83. 84. 85. 86. 87. 88. 89. 90. 91. 92. 93. 94. 95. 96. 97. 98. 99. 100. Tempo YOUR STORE WITH MORE AT LOWEST POSSIBLE PRICES OPERATED BY GAMBLE-SKOGMO, INC. Come to Tempo "Where The Action Is!" Tempo Tip: See us for all your Picnic Supplies O OPEN OPEN Sat.—9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Sun.—1 p.m. to 6 p.m. Mon.—12 noon to 6 p.m. MALLS SHOPPING CENTER FREE PARKING Page 6 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 1, 1966 KU draws writers to conference (Continued from page 1) SHE FINDS STUDENTS very idealistic, that they want to do good, that they want to fight a good fight, and want to read about people who do these things. The second conference speaker, Jay Milner, Texas free-lance writer and teacher, told conference listeners Tuesday that writers do their best when they are where the action is. "The serious writer has never been able to remain comfortable for a long time. He is not afraid to recognize things. He must move on to where the action is," Milner said. LITERARY LECTURER for the writers' conference, Milner said everybody has a story to tell. The problem, he declared, is learning how to tell the story. Beginners are tempted to imitate somebody, he said. A time comes when the developing writer must want to learn disciplines, and one of the first disciplines is writing fundamentals, an area in which writers' conferences and creative writing courses are helpful, Milner declared. "ANOTHER IMPORTANT discipline the writer needs is to find himself—find his type of writing. This usually occurs when the developing writer has sold his first story," Milner said. The committed creative writer faces many problems during his developing years, the Texas writer and teacher told the conference group. THE THIRD SPEAKER Tuesday, Mrs. Helen Rowe Henze, spoke on "Poetic Structure: Old and New." Recognized widely as a poet in the United States and abroad, Mrs. Henze told the writers that we are living in the most challenging and rewarding period of human history. "I believe that poetry will come to attain a new grandeur and depth, a more sensitive insight, a clarified approach to the task of presenting life experience," she said. WHILE A POEM must first have enchantment and while the poem is always more important than the technique, Mrs. Henze said, the versifier will find it helpful to find out what the rules are before beginning to break them. "The technique should be completely mastered and then when it has become second nature, it can be forgotten," she said. "How To Get the Story Planned, and How to Get It Written," was the Wednesday afternoon subject of Herbert Breen, author and editor of best-selling fiction, including six mystery novels. BREAN TOLD the writers' conference that they should write anything—but write. A professional writer cannot afford the luxury of writing when he wants to write. Once the writer sets a goal for himself, Brea said, he should stick to it. "If the writer only works a half hour a day, he should do it continuously, six days a week. In one year this half hour daily amounts to 150,000 words or the equivalent of two novels, Brean said. ALONG WITH continuity of work, Brean told the writers it is also important that the writer use the same place for working. It enables him to come in, sit down and quickly pick up where he left off. Production steps for the writer were broken into three stages by Breen. First stage is getting and starting with an idea. Second stage is the development of this idea. Third stage is the actual writing or shaping of material into logical form. KIEF'S RECORD & STEREO Malls Shopping Center Summer Fun Sale ALL BILL COSBY L.P.'s $2.72 Diamond Needle Sale $5.95 One of the speakers scheduled for the 16th University of Kansas Writers' Conference meeting this week was forced to cancel his appearance because of an auto accident. Writer injured in accident Fred Kiewit, who was to speak Wednesday on feature writing, broke his lower jaw in two places when propelled against the dash during an emergency stop of his car in Kansas City. Kiewit, news and feature writer for the Kansas City Star, studied journalism at the University of Kansas in 1948-49. He has since worked for the Star, writing signed special articles for a number of years. Berlin airlift record BERLIN —(UPI)— The U.S. Air Force flew 2.5 million tons of supplies into Berlin in a 15-month period during the Berlin blockade by the Russians in 1948-49. terrill's LAWRENCE, KANSAS SALE Lady Manhattan Blouses Reg. $5.00 to $8.00 - - - Now $3.99 Sizes 8 thru 20 In Prints and Solid Colors Junior Junior Petite Dress SALE Reg. $11.00 --- Now $ 7.99 Reg. $13.00 - --- Now $ 9.99 Reg. $15.00 - --- Now $10.99 Reg. $18.00 - --- Now $12.99 Reg. $23.00 ---- Now $15.99 Jonathan Logan — Logan Petites — Carlettes Jo Juniors — Petites Unlimited Entire Stock Not Included terriills LAWRENCE KANSAS The GASLIGHT is open... AIR-CONDITIONED Next door to the Union Cold Refreshing BEER — Glasses-Pitchers-Cans-Bottles-Quarts Pitcher Hours-Wednesday & Friday-1:30 to 2:30 p.m. Featuring Pitchers at 65c King Size Tasty Sandwiches-French Fries SPEEDY SERVICE Beer To Go Amusement Machines "Relax in Cool Comfort' Onion Rings The Latest Records Page 7 CLASSIFIEDS Summer Session Kansan Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised to college students Kansas are offered to college students regardless of color, creed, or national origin. MISCELLANEOUS Experienced babysitting. Your home or mine. Nights and weekends. Call VI 2-3901. tf Dairyland Drive-In, 23rd & Ohio (aerospace from Rusty's IGA), Open a.m. to 11 p.m., Mon.Sat., Sun. 12-30 a.m., Service, Ice Cream & sandwiches. Western Civilization Notes. Completely revised, extremely comprehensive. Mimeographed and bound for $4.25 per copy. Call VI 2-1001 for free tt $10 reward for information leading to the recovery of a stolen world game from room 11, Bailey Hall, June 15th. Great sentimental value to owner. UN 4-3386 or VI 3-5579. No questions asked. **tf** CAMPERS-Here's the sweatshtir he been waiting for. Only $2.50 in a variety of colors. Orders will be taken in Templin or Lewis Halls on Monday and Wednesday evenings. Or come to 111 Flint Hall. tf Light hauling & moving. Call VI 3- 7094 after 5 p.m. TUTORING-G-S Senior math. major math. German, or logic. Call VI 3-7045. Michigan St. Bar-B-Q, Ribs $2.85 per slob—¥1.25 chicken I-10.1–Brixton Sand 65c. Cold Beverages. Open 11:00 a.m. to 11:00 p.m. Closed Sunday and Tuesday. Phone VI 2-9510. 515 Michigan St. tt TYPING Experienced typist with new electric office typewriter will type dissertations,isses and term papers. Fast accurate service with reasonable rates.Call Mrs.Lancaster at VI 2-1705. 8-2 Typist, experienced with term papers, these and dissertations. Will give immediate attention with electric machine with extra symbols. Mrs. Marlene Higley at 408 W. 13th. VI 3-6048. tf Experienced typist, 10 years experience in theses and term papers; utricipio typist required. All service reasonable rates. CALL Mrs. Barlow, 2407 Yale, VI-1 2648. tt Fast—Accurate—Experienced. 256 per double-spaced page. VI 2-9309. 824 Miss. St. Mrs. Craven. tf Typing Wanted, theses, essays, and themes—Fast, accurate, Reasonable Rates. Mrs. Hallenbeck. VI 3-4156. tt Gift Box Andrews Gifts VI 2-1523 Open Wednesday Evenings Malls Shopping Center Plenty of Free Parking GRANT'S Drive-In Pet Center Established - Experienced 1218 Conn. Pet Ph. VI 3-2921 Complete Center under one roof FREE PARKING FOR RENT LIVE CLOSE TO CAMPUS. Air-conditioned one and two bedroom apartments. One room furnished. Rents beginning at $85, Santee Apts. 123 Ind. VI 3-2116 Experienced typist—Will type your term papers, themes, book reports. Reasonable. Call VI 2-3901. tf TWO COMFORTABLE APARTMENTS at 927 Ohio. Move in immediately. Will also take ironing. Prompt service, neatly done, VI 2-3447. 7-8 Room and board for men: Only at the Manor Lodge can you find a quiet study environment and wonderful meals served 3 times a day, 6 days a week and wice on weekend. $98 will be issued with the college and licensed by the State Board. Call today for further information: VI 3-3408, BUT HURRY! ! 3 Rooms with Bath, Furnished Apt. 3 Complete Prtl. Single Bed, Sleeps able to 6. Utilities $75.00 for 2, or $50.00 for 1- VI 3-4347. Inquire 1005 Miss. 7-12 WANTED of Exclusive Representative Now Renting For Fall—Extra Nice Bachelor Apartments for graduates or older undergraduate men. 2 Blocks from law school. Quicken Loans paid. Parking, some air-conditioned. For appointment call VI 3-8534. tt FOR SALE For the finest in Fraternity Jewelry L. G. Balfour Co. Woman needed to supervise church nursery 8:30 to 12:30 Sundays. Experience Preferred. VI 3-7134. 7-15 German Ph.D. candidate will teach German and would like students for group or private lessons. Contact Hellerich Gt at VI 3-9890. 6-28 - Badges * 'guards Fraternity Jewelry Free Fireworks, $1.50 Free merchandise with every purchase. Benson's fireworks are located on East Side and Blue Hills Drive-In. $4.14 South of 4-H Grounds. 7-1 - Sportswear - Mugs Oil painting, silversmithing, metal enameling, gold leafing, water color, and 1932 wood materials much before the 1932 Maine, side entrance, 7-8 to 7-11 p.m. - Novelties - Favors TYPEWRITERS—most brands portables including Olympia, Royal and SCM Electric portables. Sales, service and rental. Inquire aboue on purchase a Lawrence device equipment and a Lawrence Lawrence Typewriter, 700 Mass., VI 3-3644. tt - Paddles - Trophies - Lavalliers - Rings This lovable black toy poole puppy wants you to own him. This fella is a great shot, but I'm not ready shots. (That's the worth $250.00) VI 1-2504 after 10 a.m. 7-12 Cups Awards Al Lauter 411 W. 14th VT 3-1571 Having trouble finding locations for parties? The "New" Alley Cat is now available. Large or Small. For information call VI 2-6389 evenings. tf ENTERTAINMENT Friday, July 1st: "Tape Recordings of lecture," by D. Frost; and the "Primalist" and a reading of Snyder's poetry by Dr. Edward Grier. Discussion & Coffee. 7:30 MIDWEST ARTIST'S COOP FILMS Saturday, July 2nd: "Casablanca" staring Humphrey and Ingrid Brown Bergman, 9 p.m. $10. Sunday, July 3rd: "Casablanca" 9 p.m. Gallery Art Show: Prints and drawings by Glerlich, Hedrick, Orlovsky, Siebold and Brown at the wedding of Mike Carmichael and J. Davenport. Free Gallery Hours: Sat, and Sun afternoons Advance tickets available 7-1 LOST Black Shaving Kit containing needed keys. If found, call VI 3-8787. Reward. 7-8 TUTORING Graduate student will tutor in mathematics. Group or private lessons. Call Keith Stumpf at VI 3-6606 Monday through Friday. 7-12 Downtown Health & Foreign Foods Natural Foods Better Nutrition Better Health - WATCHES - DIAMONDS - GIFTS - 9th & N.H. VI 2-2771 FRED GREEN Western Wear Brushed Denim Bonanza Shirts $8.70 Justin Boots The only store in Lawrence with complete lines in western wear. Lee Rider Jeans 914 Mass. St. 910 Mass. V1 3-0077 YES! We're open for the summer. Come down and see us at the... WAGON WHEEL Daniels Jewelry Watch Repairing at its Finest — Using the Latest Electronic and Ultrasonic Equipment • Free Estimates on Repairs • Only Genuine Material Used • Work Guaranteed — of course • Pleasing Prices The Bank of Friendly Service Invites You To Open A Checking Account Now. - Close to campus - Drive-up windows - Free parking Bank by mail Douglas County State Bank VI 3-7474 9th and Ky. Member F.D.I.C HAVING A PARTY? We are always happy to serve you with Ice cold beverages Chips, nuts, cookies Variety of grocery items Crushed ice, candy Ice cold 6 pacs all kinds OPEN TO 10 P.M.EVERY EVENING LAWRENCE ICE COMPANY 616 Vt. Ph.VI 3-0350 Southridge Plaza, Inc. Vacancies Available 235$ Ridge Court Lawrence, Kansas, 6644 MRS. RAMON H. PICKERING Manager Office VI 2-1100 Home VI 2-3755 Area Code 918 TRAVEL THIS SUMMER Arrange Your: Flight Home Vacation Reservations Trip Abroad Other Summer Reservations The Malls VI 3-1211 at: MAUPINTOUR INSTANT TALK AND BACKTALK Mercury for only 89.50 INSTANT TALK AND BACKTALK MERCURY Mercury Macum NEW! MERCURY CORDLESS, CARTRIDGE TAPE RECORDER Recording and playback are a snap with the tiny Mercury Recordomatic. Just snap-in the cartridge and go for an hour—anywhere you go. Even in your car or boat. Features solid state circuitry; capstan drive; remote start/stop; VU meter; and AC operation. Complete with omnidirectional mike; patch cord; shoulder strap; cartridge library rack; and blank cartridge. Weighs only 3 lbs., measures only $7\frac{1}{4}\times 4\frac{1}{4}\times 2\frac{1}{4}$. The handiest tape recorder for business, school or just for the fun of it. Available only at THE SOUND Hillcrest Shopping Center INC. SOUND Page 8 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 1, 1966 PATRONIZE KANSAN ADVERTISERS Derby to be held July 4 Lawrence will hold its first annual Soap Box Derby, Monday, July 4th. Since it is the first year for the derby in Lawrence, its sponsors, Winter Chevrolet and the Lawrence Journal-World, are doing everything in their power to make it a success. They made available wheel kits to boys who needed them and inspected the cars to see that the brakes, steering, etc., would function properly. THE RACE ITSELF will begin at 1:00 Monday. At this time preliminary "heats" will be run. The boys will race two at a time down Mississippi Street, starting near the Kansas Union and finishing at 9th Street. By 2:00 it is expected that the heats will be finished and the race for the championship can get underway. The champion will receive a wall plaque and $500 for his efforts. Jay Simon appointed KU sports publicist Jay Simon, sports editor of the Oklahoma City Oklahoma-Times and graduate of KU, has been named news-sports information director for KU. He succeeds Phil Dynan, who resigned effective July 31. A 1940 KU School of Journalism graduate, Simon was managing editor of the Daily Kansan in the spring of 1940 and also was sports editor. Simon's appointment becomes effective early in July, according to KU Athletic Director Wade Stinson. No salary terms were announced. DYNAN HAS BEEN THE KU publicist since January,1965,and has not announced his future plans. He has been a member of the Daily Oklahoman and Times sports department since 1948 and Smoothly smart has been sports editor of the two papers the past three years. The smoothest of leathers add their glowing touch to this fashionable moccasin with its elegant nandsewn vamp detailing. Wear it with all your loveliest casual clothes for the sporty look you love. OTHER POSITIONS Simon has held are sports editor of the Topeka State Journal, of the Coffeyville Journal and of the Boise, Idaho, Statesman. He worked for the Associated Press for a short time. 1579 oldmaine trotters Royal College Shop He has covered more NCAA basketball championship games than any other writer and for a number of years contributed the national tournament article for the NCAA Basketball Guide. VI 3-4255 837 Mass. CALL CAFE 1422 Crescent Rd. (Across From Lindley) OPEN NOW for Summer Session Hours: Monday-Friday 7 to 5 Saturday 7 to 1 Good Food — Fountain Service - AIR-CONDITIONED - Open Thursdays Till 8:30 SAMSON ENDURO STAY-PRESS NEWEST DISCOVERY IN NO-IRON FABRICS styled by Enro Here are the sportshirts that make ironing boards obsolete! The scientifically treated fabric blend . 65% Polyester and 35% fine combed cotton . . . resists wrinkles . . stays pressed permanently . . never to be touched by an iron. So completely carefree — only requires laundering and drying at "regular" settings. Features include finest tailoring with tapered body in a broad selection of patterns and colors. from $ 5^{95} 821 Mass. Ober's. VI 3-1951 Lawrence's Fashion Leader Since 1896 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 8, 1966 76th Year, No. 7 Lawrence, Kansas JANUARY 1974 MUSIC HATH CHARMS TO SOOTHE THE SAVAGE? A popular form of entertainment at McCollum this summer. Director pleased by German camp By Annie Reid To Robert Elkins, director of the German Division of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp, it is "unbelievable... that so many high school students would want to learn German in the summer." The German division, in its first year and originally planned for 30 students, has enrolled more than five times that many. "It kept growing and growing until we had 160 students and 13 teachers," Elkins said. In fact, the camp received so many applications that 200 had to be returned, and the camp had to become quite selective in accepting applicants. THE PROGRAM for the German students is intensive. Students have six hours of class each day, totaling 150 classroom hours. Someone who completes the program, Elkins said, should be able to "jump ahead one year" in his German studies. In addition to class, German movies are shown to the campers each week. The German campers have been split into four levels corresponding to second, third, fourth and fifth years of study. Most campers are at the third-year level, but there are 19 in the most advanced class, which is taught at the level of a junior-year course in college. The classes are designed to cover six areas: vocabulary and structure, grammar, reading, conversation, culture lecture, and culture discussion. ALL CLASSES are conducted completely in German. "We try to give no writing outside of class because the students will use a dictionary to do translation. We want them to think in German," Elkins said. An enthusiast for the ALM method of teaching foreign languages, he believes in the oral approach in which the student learns to comprehend and respond. The staff-members recruited from the KU faculty are: Ted Garten, Judith Edwards, Harry Parker, Harry Seelig (whose parents are native Germans), Robin Clouser, Bob Reiner, Lothar Schweder (a native German), and Robert J. Elkins. Although most of the camper's work is in "standard German," the most advanced group does reading in the "Berlin Dialect." Other staff-members are: Magda Meisels, a native German with her doctorate from the University of Vienna; Ida Wheeler, a native German who has lived and taught abroad and now teaches in Castro Valley, Calif.; David Sachen, a native German teaching French, Spanish, and German at Oak Park High School, Missouri; Siegfried Magiera, a German graduate student of law and political sciences, studying in this country for one year; and Ingo Roedig, also a native German teaching high school in the U.S. The movies seen by the Ger- (Continued on page 3) TWO NEW PROGRAMS By Bill Robinson Two new financial programs, both sponsored by the Federal government, will be available this fall to KU students of significant financial need who have demonstrated adequate scholastic ability. Student aid grows By Bill Robinson The new programs, the Educational Opportunity Grants and the College Work-Study Program, are results of recent federal legislation in education and poverty. The total amount available to KU students through the two programs depends on the resources of KU, in that all Educational Opportunity Grants allocations must be matched by a like sum from University scholarship or loan funds. THE COLLEGE WORK-Study Program, effective beginning September 1, offers part-time employment to students with exceptional financial need and the ability to maintain average grades while working. The employment available under the Program will be for on-campus work only; no off-campus employment will be included. A minimum wage of $1.00 per hour will be paid students employed under the College Work-Study Program. A student in the program may not work more than 15 hours during any week in which he attends scheduled classes, nor more than 40 hours in any other week. An additional stipulation of the program is that no jobs currently held by students not under the new Program shall be given to Program students. Participants in the Program will be employed for new jobs, and will not replace students now holding jobs with the University. IN EFFECT, THE NEW PROGRAM creates several new jobs for students in a specific category without endangering the jobs of other students not covered by the Work-Study Program. Educational Opportunity Grants will make available nearly $140,-000 to KU students, primarily new freshmen. The grants are awarded on the basis of financial need and capability of maintaining good standing at the University of Kansas. To be eligible for a grant, a student must be enrolled in at least 12 hours. Students receiving an EOG will also receive a like amount in scholarships or loans from the University. In that way, students receiving an EOG receive a total "package" from the University equal to twice the amount of the grant. The University commits the necessary funds for subsequent renewals of the "package" for a total of four years. Renewal, however, is entirely dependent on the recipient's achievement. Rusk fails to win Japanese on war TOKYO—(UPI)—Secretary of State Dean Rusk wound up a two-day conference with Japanese government ministers yesterday but failed in attempts to win endorsements for U.S. Viet Nam policy. Although the Southeast Asian conflict was a chief topic of discussion, the conference communique made no mention of the war and Japanese Foreign Minister Etsusaburu Shina told newsmen there were "differences in views" between the two countries on the American course in the war. Sources said Prime Minister Eisaku Sato would urge that the United States carefully consider whether to continue its bombing of North Viet Nam. The sources said Sato basically supports the U.S. policy in Viet Nam but believes that an escalation in bombing raids would hinder a peaceful settlement of the dispute. Carillonneur to give Belgian carillonneur Piet van den Broek will present a recital at 8 p.m. today on the University Carillon. Last Friday's Kansas erroneously reported the date of van den Brock's recital as July 1. (Photo by Glen Phillips) UP IN THE AIR! IT'S A BIRD, IT'S A PLANE, NO, IT'S FIREWORKS! Part of the entertainment given by the Lawrence Jaycees at the Fourth of July celebration. Page 2 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 8, 1966 Example by a coed Annette Buchanan is only 20, and as editor of the Daily Emerald at the University of Oregon is hardly a professional journalist yet. But already she has faced one of the toughest problems that can face a newsman. She has handled it like a professional, and the American press will be the stronger for it. Last month, in the wake of reports that the use of drugs is increasing on the American campus, Miss Buchanan interviewed five students who said they either used marijuana or approved of its use by students. The story, a good example of journalistic initiative, shook the town of Eugene, and a grand jury demanded that Miss Buchanan reveal the names of the students involved. Rightly, she refused, and has now been ordered by a circuit judge to produce the names or face a possible six months in jail and a $300 fine. IT IS A FAMILIAR and pointless argument. Since Miss Buchanan still insists she will not talk, the case will be carried to a higher court where in all probability it will be decided in her favon. Whatever the court outcome, it is the kind of case that the newsman may lose but which the courts cannot win. Indeed, society stands to win with the newsman. It is a matter not only of press freedom but of common sense. Judges, police and juries who insist that reporters owe it to society to reveal leading information miss the point; if the newsman starts revealing his sources, he will soon have none, and his service to his society will end. For the newsman is not a policeman. His duty is not to police society but to show it for what it is, so that proper agencies may police it. Press freedom exists not for the press but for society, which is informed and alerted by aggressive reporting of the news. When it can no longer protect its sources, the press will lose access to these sources, and society as well as the press will be the loser. Officials hounding Annette Buchanan, or the Los Angeles officials who tried to trap Watts rioters from their tape-recorded voices on television programs, should remember this.-Louisville (Ky.) Courier-Journal New breeze blows in Bonn By PHIL NEWSOM UPI Foreign News Analyst GPI Foreign News Analyst The new spirit sweeping Europe in search of closer relations between East and West also is evidencing itself strongly in West Germany. This is not alone in the economic field in which the West Germans long have been in the forefront. PERHAPS IT IS because the go-it-alone policies of French President Charles de Gaulle forced an examination of the whole concept of NATO. Perhaps it is because years of frustration have convinced the Germans that if there ever is to be a reunited Germany,it must come at least in part from German initiative. In any event, it it a far cry from the hard-line policies of former West German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer, for it takes the position that disagreements are negotiable and that German reunification can be accomplished only at a price. Nor does it require necessarily that reunification come first. ONE IMPORANT move came earlier this year when the Bonn government offered to sign nonaggression agreements with all of the East European Communist governments except East Germany. Bonn also proposed that observers be exchanged during NATO and Warsaw Pact maneuvers, reiterated its pledge to seek no nuclear weapons of its own, reassured Czechoslovakia that it sought no border alterations and told Poland it was willing to accept sacrifices in the disputed territories beyond the Oder-Neisse. Only four years ago, a move by the late President Kennedy to explore Soviet offers of a non-agression act brought a roar of rage from Adenauer. SINCE THEN, two other important proposals have come from a man already high in the councils of Chancellor Ludwig Erhard's government. Comparatively little known outside West Germany, he is Dr. Rainer Barzel, who currently serves in the dual role of first deputy chairman of the Christian Democratic party and Christian Democratic leader in the German Bundestag parliament. Both were designed to offer proof of West German intent to remain a peaceful member of the European family. During a visit to the United States, Barzel suggested that a united Germany could permit some Russian troops to remain on German soil. THE PROPOSAL created a sensation in West Germany and promptly was downgraded by the Erhard government as a personal opinion. Nonetheless there was speculation it was a government trial balloon. This week, in a speech before the German Foreign Policy Association, Barzel declared that French troops should remain in West Germany even after their departure from the NATO command Friday. HE DECLARED HIS confidence that France would come to West Germany's aid in a crisis and declared the country could not do without either French or American troops. LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS Barzel, 41, and 28 years Erhard's junior, could become West Germany's chancellor. His words amount to a recognition that reunification will be a slow process and will come only after Germany has proved herself. LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS C.35 J.C. CAIL DOI:10.2694/1780-7216/39791901 POKER CHIPS BONO DRUMS JAZZ RECORDS PORTABLE HI-FI CARDG, GOLF CLUBS TRANSISTOR! — SAY, ARE WE SENDIN' THIS KID TO A COLLEGE OR A COUNTRY CLUB?" Letters... Dear Sir: I do not hold a brief for Mr. Bert C. Carlyle of Topeka. In fact, I learned about his existence only when I read his name in the "Reds at KU" leader in the July 1 issue of the Summer Session Kansan. Nevertheless, I cannot but give my full assent to the wider sense in which he construes the term "communist." Mr. Laird Wilcox's narrow definition of who must be considered a "bona fide communist," i.e., a card-carrying party member, strikes me as being either incredibly naive or disingenuous. Studies in France H. A. Stammler Professor of Slavic Langs. & Lits. Ahmad Sabahi, a fourth-year student of architecture at KU, is in Europe attending this summer's session of the Fontainebleau Fine Arts and Music Schools near Paris. Sabahi was one of nine regional winners in the fourth annual Architectural Scholarship Awards Program of the Portland Cement Association. Each scholarship included transportation, tuition, board, and lodging up to $1500. 1966 JUNE JULY MEDICARE IS IN © HERBLOCK THE WASHINGTON POST BOOK REVIEWS CHILDREN AND OTHERS, by James Gould Cozzens (Crest, 75 cents)—Well, this was a Book-of-the-Month Club selection, which will endear it to some and make it, for others (Dwight Macdonald, say), beneath contempt. It's a collection, essays and short stories. The style lets in a little more light than is customary with Mr. Cozzens, and this will make the book something that, at least, can be grasped. ***** CASTLE KEEP, by William Eastlake (Crest, 75 cents)—A war novel, about an old castle in the Ardennes where a detachment of American soldiers holes out on the eve of the Battle of the Bulge. It's more endowed with humor (to put it in a literary way) than most war novels. The war novels will never run down, and this one already has been sold to Hollywood. ** ** ** $$ ***** $$ RAVENSCROFT, by Dorothy Eden (Crest, 60 cents)—Another of those Gothic thrillers, in the genre that's riding so high in 1966, especially with the young and romantic. It's a suspense tale, about a damsel in distress in 19th century England, pursued from the London slums to a great manor house. This is what used to be called "summer reading." SOUTH OF THE ANGELS, by Jessamyn West (Crest, 95 cents)—A new one by the author of "Friendly Persuasion." The setting is the shadow of the Sierra Madres, and it's about pioneering folks in southern California. But not superficial in the sense of much historical fiction. This writer knows how to get into the minds and souls of her characters. \* \* \* The Number One Best Seller, by Marvin Kitman (Dial, $3.95). Kitman might be described as a situation humorist. Instead of commenting humorously on the zany activities of others, he specializes in humorous descriptions of the zany things he has done himself. This first book (subtitled "The True Adventures of Marvin Kitman") is a compilation of material previously published in magazines. MORE THAN A THIRD of the book is devoted to Kitman's best-known exploit—his tongue-in-cheek campaign for the Republican presidential nomination in 1964 on the "Lincoln ticket." (His platform: Abolish slavery, reinforce the garrison at Fort Sumter, and bring the South back into the union.) "I wasn't surprised that General Goldwater lost in 1964." he says solemnly. "At a time in history when the voters really wanted a true reactionary, the Republican Party gave them a moderate." KITMAN ALSO describes his efforts to end one phase of segregation by persuading the League of Women Voters to accept him as a member, and his attempt to settle the Sino-Soviet conflict by inviting Nikita Khrushchev and Mao Tse-tung to a summit conference in Leonia, N.J. Summer Session Kansan For 76 Years, KU's Official Student Newspaper KANSAN TELEPHONE NUMBERS Newsroom—UN 4-3616 — Business Office—UN 4-3198 The Summer Session Kansan, student newspaper at The University of Kansas, is represented by National Advertising Services, 18 East Street, 20022 Mamaroneck, N.Y. Students are published and second year students paid at Lawrences, Kans, every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays. University holidays and examination days. Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised. The Summer Session Kansan are offered to all students without regard to color, creed or national origin. The opinions expressed in the editorial column are those of the students whose names are signed to them. Guest editorial views are not accepted editorially. Any opinions expressed in the Summer Session Kansan are not needed by those of The University of Kansas Administration or the State Board of Regents. Friday, July 8, 1966 Summer Session Kansan Page 3 --man camp every Wednesday night are commercial films supplied by Brandon Films in Chicago. They are: "Eroica," about the composer Beethoven; "Die Fliedermaus," an operetta; "Der Hauptmann von Koepenich," a comedy about an imposter; parts one and two of Thomas Mann's "Buddenbrooks"; and "Wir Wunderkinder," (We're Wonderful), a satire by the Germans on their "economic miracle" since World War II. This last movie, Mr. Elkins said, was chosen to show modern Germany and to show that the Germans can and do criticize themselves. I will do my best to make sure that you understand the importance of the book. It is a work of art, and I want you to be aware of its value. If you have any questions or concerns, please contact me directly. ART FOR ART'S SAKE A camper shows the concentration it takes to create. Director pleased. (Continued from page 1) THE GERMAN CAMPERS also see three or four educational movies each week in their culture classes. These movies are supplied by the German Consulate. Some guest lectures have been planned for the German campers. J.A.Burzle, chairman of the KU German Department, returned this week from a year in Germany and will give four or five lectures. He plays the guitar and will probably speak on German music and architecture. Donald Crosby, professor of German, will talk about German lyric poetry. No tests which "count" are given to the German campers. They are tested at the beginning and the end of the six weeks to measure their improvement. "Evaluative exercises" without "marks" are given to students in the lower levels to see if they have mastered the material well enough to go on to new lessons. Elkins said that many campers at first felt "over their heads," but that all were "trying hard ... and seem to be really catching on the way we hoped they would." The program is designed "so even the best student will find more than he can master." The German Camp at KU is the only one of its kind in this country. All other U.S. summer school programs for high school students of languages are one- or two-week or remedial camps, or involve study overseas. Elkins said it is "highly praiseworthy" for students to give up vacation time to study German. He added that most students of German want to go to Germany, not the Midwestern U.S., for their studies. ONE REASON for not insisting that German campers speak German outside of class is that Elkins believes it is important for the German campers to exchange ideas with other campers in the other divisions from all over the country. country. Elkins plans to head the German camp again next year. He will keep the camp approximately the same size it is this year—no more than 200 students. There was the problem of classroom space this year, and classes are held on all floors of Lewis Hall. Elkins said he did not know where "to get that many good teachers" for a much larger camp. ELKINS SPEAKS both German and Russian. After attending the Army Language School for Russian at Monterey, California, he spent four years in Germany with the army. There he used his Russian, and also learned German. He completed his formal study of German when he returned to the U.S. There are no plans for starting a similar camp at KU for other foreign languages. As a professor in the school of Education, Elkins is "on part-time loan to the German Department." During the school year he teaches the "methods course" for teachers of German and Russian. In this course he passes on his enthusiasm for the ALM, or audio-lingual method, of teaching languages. The German Camp was established, Elkins said, thanks to the cooperation of Russell Wiley, director of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp, and Dean Beckman of International Programs. Rice's play is next in repertory The Summer Experimental Repertory Theatre will present Elmer Rice's "The Adding Machine" at 8 p.m. July 9,22,and 27 at the University Theatre. Student admission is $1.50 or 75 cents if the summer registration certificate is presented. The plot involves five main characters: Mr. and Mrs. Zero, played by Richard Brady and Cheryl Burnet; Daisy Diana Dorthea Devore, portrayed by Janet Pugh; Mr. One, John Morgan, and Charles, Lanny Fellers. Rice described "The Adding Machine" as a "hurricane, in the form of a new play" in a letter to a friend in 1923. in "Minority Report," his autobiography. FIRST PRODUCED by the Theatre Guild in New York in 1923, and revived by off-Broadway Phoenix Theatre in 1953, the play depicts the plight of Mr. Zero—a bookkeeper. It is a comment on automation and the growing concern over the lessening of the individual. He described the play as "a compound of comedy, melodrama, fantasy, satire, and polemics," written in the form known as "expressionism." The technique was new. The director is Sally Tornhill, a graduate student from Ohio. The cast also includes Larry Soller, David Staffer, Franklin Cox, Jack Hurley, Mike Stremel, Sue Edmunds, Pat McKenna, Debi Daniels, Jeri Walker, and Bobbi Bergman. After a slow start, the play is a hit By Bruce Levitt Members of KU's Summer Repertory Theatre company presented the first of four plays in the Experimental Theatre in Murphy Hall last night—the production "Romanoff and Juliet," by Peter Ustinov. The play takes place in the "main square in the Capital City of the smallest country in Europe." Much like the Shakespearean play of a similar name, Ustinov's comedy involves the struggle of two rival families to prevent the marriage of their children. The updated twist given to the story lies in the fact that Juliet, the daughter of the American ambassador, has fallen hopefully in love with Igar, son of the Russian ambassador. THE PLOT thickens as the somewhat sentimental General of the country tires to unite the two youths. Largely responsible for the slow start was the General, portrayed by Kip Niven. Niven's performance seemed somewhat forced and methodical in the first act as opposed to the more virulent and well drawn character he displayed in Act Two. Under the direction of Larry Soller, the generally enjoyable performance was marred by a few problems involving the direction as well as the acting. The play maintained a tedious pace through most of the first act. JULIET AND IGOR, portrayed by Debbie Drum and David Straffer, also hinder the pace of the show in Act One due to poor projection and enunciation. Straffer appears hesitant to open his mouth for fear the false beard he wears might fall off. Add to these acting problems some rather clumsy staging in the embassy scenes, and one finds a first act that is not as entertaining as it could be. Acting honors for the performance have to be awarded to the supporting members of the cast. Sean Griffin as the Archbishop and John Morgan as Freddie are by far the most entertaining and consistent characterizations. BOB BETTCHER'S American ambassador is a convincing, and extremely humorous, portrayal of a Texas politician. Cheryl Burnet is equally as convincing as the Ambassador's wife Beulah. Adding life to the production is Sally Thornhill's cameo role as Death. The second act of the production is extremely well done save for a few fumbled lines; probably due to opening night jitters. The wedding celebration is by far the most amusing scene in the play and the company executes it with perfection. "Romanoff and Juliet" will play July 8, 23, and 28, alternating with the other three productions, "She Stoops to Conquer," "The Adding Machine," and "Stop the World—I Want to Get off." If "Romanoff" is an indication of things to come, all four repertory productions are bound to make an evening of entertainment well worth seeing. Warriors are in Italy ROME — (UPI) — U.S. Chief Justice Earl Warren and his wife arrived yesterday for a three-day stay in Rome and a three-week cruise off Sardinia. Royal College Shop 837 Mass VI 3-4255 Smart Smoothie! That's what you'll be in this buttery soft kidskin sport casual with the handsewn vamp detailing. A moccasin so soft, so light, Cardigan so comfortable you'll never want to take it off ... as a matter of fact you'll hardly know you have it on. Black, Brown, Light Blue, Navy, Red, Green, White AAA to B to 11 $13.00 naturally, oldmaine trotters Page 4 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 8, 1960 Western writers stressed Jay Milner, Texas writer and teacher, focused on the westward movement of writers in an after-dinner speech which highlighted four days of activities at the 16th KU Writers' Conference. Held in the Kansas Room of the Kansas Union, it was the 12th such dinner. Achievements announced during the dinner of some conferees in the last year were: "FIVE ARTISTS OF THE OLD West," a juvenile book by Mrs. Clide Hollman, Kansas City, Mo., has been added to the Kansas State Reading Circle List. A juvenile book completed by Dorothy Frances, Marshalltown, Iowa, will be published in August. "The Night the Coyotes Sang," a book by Mrs. Marie Mitchell, Kansas City, Mo., published in April, is selling well in trade and school editions. Fourth place prize in the annual Writers' Digest short-short story contest has just been announced for Eugene Bales, Route 1, Lawrence. CHAPTERS OF A PSYCHOLOGICAL mystery nearing completion were submitted for conferee criticism by Alica Winter, author of a juvenile best seller in this area. "Velvet Bubble." Milner, free-lance writer and author of two novels, predicted that "one hinterland of the United States—the Southwest—is about to show a literary renaissance which this country has not seen since the deep South was held to be a center of literature." While the Southwest is not exhibiting a new school of writing or confining itself to one form of writing or displaying a sophistication. Milner declared, it is offering a new tone in writing. "THE SOPHISTICATED writer can write good, even great books, but he will never write the great American novel. Too much sophistication causes the writer to lose that edge of what he's doing," he said. Though writing involves long periods of isolation. Milner cautioned that the "writer's isolation must be maintained as he lives among his contemporaries." Milher explained that this isolation factor has had a lot to do with the westward trend in writing. "The writer is finding that he cannot write from the heart alone and that he must go where the action is—be among the folks. "THE ACTION NOW is moving West—where folks are still so square they haven't lost hope and enthusiasm." Milner said. Following Milher's speech Thursday night, the conferees and guests were entertained at a gathering in the home of Dean and Mrs. Warren K. Agee. In conference activities Thursday, workshop panels were held in the following writing fields: non-fiction, juvenile, mysteries and magazine articles. Helen P. Hostetter, author of articles and textbooks and formerly a journalism teacher at Kansas State University, spoke Friday in the final session of the fourday conference. USING "WRITING ON HOME Problems," as her topic, Mrs. Hostetter explained some techniques of feature writing. Features have a tremendous market, she declared, adding that if they are well written and meet a need the editor will probably buy it. "Ideas for such writing are right around us." Mrs. Hostetter said, adding that material is found in small as well as large communities. Basic to effective feature writing, the speaker continued, are original reading for background, market study, planned interviewing, and specific aim at intended readers. Leaders included: Jay Miner, novelist of Ft. Worth; Holly Wilson, juvenile writer of Big Rapids, Mich.; Helen Rowe Henze, poet from Kansas City, Mo.; Herbert Breen, writer of mystery novels and editor from New York; Helen Hostetter, professor emeritus of home economics journalism at Kansas State University; and Lucille Kohler, non-fiction writer of Lawrence, Kans. ALL OF THE FICTION TECHI- niques—good dialogue, anecdotes, characterization and others—can be carried over directly into feature writing. Mrs. Hostetter told assembled writers. Sixty persons attended the four-day writers' conference, 40 of them enrolled for the entire period and coming from Missouri, Oklahoma, Kansas, Iowa, Texas and Florida. Topeka civil defense boss blasts critics on tornado LINCOLN, Neb.—(UPI)—The director of the Topeka civil defense system said here that critics of his operation during the recent devastating tornado did not state all the facts. "I don't mind investigation of the operations but I do mind castigation without investigation." Jones told the Lincoln-Lancaster County Civil Defense awards banquet here. THE TOPKEA tornado caused an estimated $100 million worth of damage, destroyed 571 homes, left over 2,000 residents homeless and killed 16 persons. Jones said. However, he added, the city's civil defense alert system averted an even greater tragedy. He said early warning sirens permitted about 70 percent of the city to brace for the tornado. "You should have 100 percent coverage but it didn't work out that way." Jones said. "IF I HAD it to live through again, I would plan to include more training in our programs. All the dollars spent on training, sirens, and other equipment paid off in human lives. "But for those who continue to criticize the civil defense set up in Topeka, I quote a national civil defense official, who, hearing of the squabble, said: 'Quit complaining and get to work. What if it had been the bomb?' " Scripps-Howard group gives KU girl award CINCINNATI—(UPD)—Trustees of the Scripps-Howard Foundation have announced a series of awards and grants to newspapers, television stations, schools of journalism, and journalism students. By Connie Myers A question of current importance: "How does summer school compare to the regular school year." The answers of 10 summer school students run the gamut. Shelley Kathleen Bray of Battlesville, Okla., a student at KU, was one of eighteen students receiving general foundation scholarship grants. David Young, Denver senior: "I like summer school better than the regular school year. There is a high percentage of serious students in the summer. They are mostly grad students and upper classmen trying desperately to graduate. That makes for a better study atmosphere, I guess. I like the co-ed dorms, too. It's nice to see girls around sometimes. I mean you get less depressed and give the books an extra effort." DARYL WILLEY, Wichita senior: "I think I like the regular school year better. There aren't enough people up here now. It makes everything seem kind of desolate. I know there's enough to occupy my time, but I just can't seem to find it." Alvin Dewey, Garden City sophomore: "I like the relaxed feeling on campus and in the classroom. The pressure isn't so great, but the incentive is still there." Summer—school year: that is the question Don Hunter, Abilene senior: "Strangely enough, I don't find summer school as easy as most people have told it it would be. Everything is so concentrated, and the relaxed atmosphere certainly isn't conducive to study. I have as many outside activities as I do during the year. Everything moves so fast. I'll be glad when fall comes." Keith Kinyon, Greensburg senior; "I like summer school, but I would rather not have all the high school kids on campus. They detract from the college atmosphere that you find during the regular school year." NANCY MANION, Salina junior: "I like summer school. I have much more time to study, and I don't believe that the courses are so hard. Classes are smaller, and I feel more obligated to attend. It's easier to know the teachers, and I think that's a real benefit." Carolyn Payne, Salina sophmore: "I'm in art. The summer art classes are much longer than during the fall. I go almost all day, everyday. But the quiet feeling during summer school is great for art. Despite the long hours, I think I like summer school better than the regular year." A. J. Duff, Ulysses junior: "Summer school is really keeping me busy. I have some things to finish from last year. Those and the Western Civ Comp. and a 40-hour-per-week job provide plenty to do. I'm waiting for the fall so I can relax. Summer school is a good thing if you can keep up with the pace." Dave Dickensheets, Wellington junior: "Summer school isn't so bad, but the outside activities seem to take up most of my time. With rush and organizing the activities for the KU-Y next year, I have few spare moments. The atmosphere is great. No one seems to rush, but mose everyone seems to be serious about what they are doing. I miss the athletic events and things like that. As for college atmosphere, you can't beat the fall." Proton 3 is in orbit MOSCOW — (UPI) — Proton 3, Russia's heaviest scientific satellite, is whirling in orbit, gathering scientific data for a new Soviet-manned space flight through deadly radiation belts around the earth. SUA FRIDAY FLICKS SUA 'On The Waterfront' Starring: Marlon Brando & Eva Marie Saint Friday, July 8 In Air Conditioned Dyche Auditorium 7:00 & 9:00 p.m. Admission 35c offers the best in component sound the KIEF'S RECORD & STEREO MASTERWORK for only $199.00 (nationally advertised at $235.00) A B - 30-watt—all transistor pre-amp combination - amp combination - New pickering V-15 magnetic cartridge - Girard changer - Pickering acoustic-suspension speakers (with electronic-crossovers) Is the sound terrible in your set? Come hear the MASTERWORK Kief's Record & Stereo Malls Shopping Center TAN 73 24.14 M. B. MURRAY MALCOLM APPLEGATE Applegate starts job in journalism Malcolm Applegate has begun his duties as administrative assistant to the dean of the School of Journalism. A native of WaKeeney, Applegate has worked in the University Relations Office and has been instructor in journalism the past year. In his new position, he will be responsible for journalism placement, organizing continuing education programs for professional journalists, publishing a journalism newsletter, and various other administrative functions. He also will teach in the school. Applegate previously worked for four years in the News and Publications Office at Fort Hays Kansas State College and prior to that on the Salina Journal. He has a bachelor's degree in journalism from KU and a master's from the University of Iowa. Furniture unit is prize winner A multi -pourpose furniture unit that converts to a chair, sofa, bench or a variety of tables, is one of six 1966 Alcoa Student Design Merit Award winners. William Henry Tucker, Jr. who graduated in industrial design in June at KU is the designer. He created the modular furniture primarily to serve as a stage rehearsal unit. It could be adapted, according to Tucker, for use on the patio, in waiting rooms or offices. Tucker's basic unit is of square aluminum tube, formed to provide an open, boxlike frame measuring 18 by 20 by 18 inches and weighing 14 pounds. Upon this frame may be attached armrests, back panels or an aluminum table top. Sunday Concerts CONCERT CHOIR AND CHAMBER CHOIR James Ralston, Director Darrell Benne, Assistant Director Jane Fager, Accompanist Weston Noble, Guest Conductor July 10, 2:15 P.M. Universi Friday, July 8. 1966 Summer Session Kansan Page 5 Sunday, July 10, 2:15 P.M. University Theatre CONCERT CHOIR Mass in G ... Franz Schubert 1. Kyrie 2. Gloria 2. Gloria As the Hart Longs ... Felix Mendelsohn Vinea Mea Electa... Francis Poulenc Lark ... Aaron Copland Mr. Ralston, conducting CHAMBER CHOIR Canticle of Praise John Ness Beck Hard by a Fountain Hubert Waelrant The Shepherd's Chorus from Amahl and the Night Visitors Mr. Noble, conducting Psalm 150 ... Lawrence Morton 12-MINUTE INTERMISSION ORCHESTRA Gerald Carney, Director Russell L. Wiley, Guest Conductor Mr. Benne, conducting Theme Song Irish Tune from County Derry ... Percy Grainger Magic Flute, Overture ... Wolfgang Mozart Waltz from Eugen Onegin ... Peter Tchakowsky Johannes Brahms Symphony No. 2 ... Johannes Brahms First movement—Allegro non troppo Overture to the Opera “Die Meistersinger” ... Richard Wagner Mr. Wiley, conducting CONCERT BAND Russell L. Wiley, Director SYMPHONIC BAND Kenneth Bloomquist, Director Weston Noble and Gerald Carney: Guest Conductors University Theatre SYMPHONIC BAND An Original Suite Gordon Jacob 1. March 2. Intermezzo 3. Finale Andante Albert Ingalls Funiculi Funicula Luigi Denza Mr. Bloomquist, conducting March from Mahler Second Symphony Gustav Mahler Symphonic Overture Carter Strategic Air Command Clifton Williams Mr. Noble, conducting INTERMISSION CONCERT BAND Theme Song Irish Tune from County Derry Percy Grainger Symphonie Fantastique Hector Berlioz Fourth movement, March to the Scaffold An Outdoor Overture Aaron Copland Fourth movement, March to the Scaffold An Outdoor Overture Aaron Copland British Eighth March ... Zo Elliott Andrea Chenier ... Giordano Civil War Fantasy ... Jerry Bilik Mr. Noble, conducting "THE PANCAKE MAN" 1528 West 23rd Breakfast Special . . . . . . . 59c KAREN NAN ANDERSON She is a champion baton twirler and an accomplished singer and actress. She hopes to join little theatre and singing groups. She also plays the flute. Miss Junior Miss will attend KU Chicken ... 99c To go or eat here SHE WAS ONE OF 12 finalists in the America's Miss Junior Miss Pageant, held in Mobile, Ala., March 26. Miss Anderson is currently attending the July 7-8 KU Preview. The Kansas Junior Miss of 1966, Karen Nan Anderson of Hays, will enter KU as a freshman next fall. One entry asked: "DO YOU know how to report a fire?" Miss Anderson, 17, has received $2,000 in scholarships from the America's Junior Miss Pageant, Inc., of Mobile, Ala., which will be used at KU. Holy Causts! TAYLOR BURTON Steaks, Chops, & Chicken Dinners from $1.35 COOKING TIME AUSTIN, Tex. — (UPI)— Batman got into the fire safety act this year in the state poster contest for school children. The first grader's poster showed Batman swooping down on flames and said; "Batman does." 7 A.M.-8 P.M. FRI. & SAT.TILL MIDNIGHT Fifty members were soon recruited, and Mrs. Jonas—who was a friend of the late James Joyce—organized the printing of leaflets announcing formation of the committee. The committee grew out of a petition presented to the embassy last November by a group of Americans protesting the escalation of the Viet Nam war. Leary, sculptor Alexander Calder and Mrs. Maria Jonas, a Kentuckian who has lived here for 40 years, decided some sort of organization should be set up. 7 A.M.- 8 P.M. — EVERY DAY 25 Varieties The committee made its first appearance when members handed out leaflets saying: "Fellow Americans—Let's stop the war in Viet Nam!" at a rally here supporting the Rev. Martin Luther King's Southern Christian Leadership Conference. War is hit by Yanks in France PARIS — (UPI)—A group of Americans in Paris has formed the first overseas chapter of the National Committee for a Sane Nuclear Policy (SANE) to crystallize opposition here to the war in Viet Nam. So tar the committee has around 50 members, according to its organizer, artist Francis Leary of New York. But he hopes for many more. NOW IT PLANS a concerted drive to recruit members from among the estimated 50,000 Americans living here. The committee is officially linked with SANE, but calls itself PACS — Paris American Committee for SANE. THE U.S. EMBASSY, which is under instructions to have nothing official to do with any protest movements organized privately among Americans here, is adopting a "hands off" policy towards the committee. "We've just scratched the surface with our activities so far." Leary told UPI. Free Parking in "Project 800" Jay SHOPPE DOWNTOWN After the 4th CLEARANCE SALE - Dresses - Slacks - Blouses 30% - Knit Tops 40% and 50% - Shorts Store Hours: 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. (Open Thursdays Till 8:30) Page 6 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 8, 1966 Loving kindness is all Harlem children want NEW YORK—(UPI) The Children's Aid Society gymnasium in West Harlem is hot and humid. A thundershower beats against the windows, trapping the children inside where they yell their way through a fast game of kickball. One side is winning—by 40 to 6. Leader of the hot scorers is a tall, gangling 20-year-old college junior who drapes his six-foot-seven frame over the apron of the small stage. A half dozen grade school boys crowd around him. One of the smallest boys suddenly throws his arms around the student's neck and asks anxiously, "We're friends, aren't we?" HARLAN LUDEWIG, of Forreston, Ill., gives him a friendly whack on the back. "Sure we are," he says. "Friends all the way." The boy grins broadly. "We took some of these kids to Central Park the other day," said Ludewig, "and they just loved to play on the grass. That's practically all they cared about — the grass." In a basement room of the Children's Aid Center, the girls are skipping through "double Dutch" jump ropes. The timing is serious, punctuated with giggles and laughter and tin whistle screams. EVERY ONCE in awhile, one of them calls over to pretty Veida McMullen: "Hey, Miss Veida --- watch this!" The 20 - year - old Miss McMullen smiles and waves. "That's fine Suzy." "All they want is some attention," the Fort Valley, Ga., coed explained. "And when you know their names it comes as a shock to them. When I leave every day, the hem of my dress is all dirty from little hands gripping it." Ludewig and Miss McMullen are Beloit College students spending a summer in what is known as a "field term" away from their Wisconsin campus. They and eight other Beloit students are working for the society in centers scattered throughout Manhattan's poverty and slum areas, where children's chances of rising above a ghetto viewpoint are slim. THEY WORK four weeks in the city and then spend six weeks at the society's summer camps in upper New York state, where their faces will be familiar to many of the children, most of whom have never been out of the city before. The field term for Beloit College's 1,200 students is an unusual approach to undergraduate study. It offers each student a chance to see how the rest of the world gets by, in activities that stretch from running an excursion boat to assisting scientists. But these 10 chose Manhattan and the 113-year-old, privately-funded society that still lives up to its founding creed—save the children. The hours are rough and the experience is sobering to these students from middle class homes. THEIR ACTIVITIES include play, supervision, teaching preschoolers and interviewing parents, and secretarial or filing chores in the medical and dental programs. The students are divided into teams of two. Ludewig and Miss McMullen work at the Frederick Douglass center in West Harlem. Karen Olsen, of Hibbbing, Minn., and Robert Lyon, of Chicago, work in Greenwich Village. Randy Buck, of Detroit, and Andrea Brewer, of Alexandria, Va., are assigned to a center near the old Hell's Kitchen district. William Webb, of Davenport, Iowa, and June Baker, of Gloversville, N.Y., work at the upper East Side center. CHARLES ELLIS, of Rockford, Ill., and Richard Casper, of Brookfield, Ill., work at the East Harlem center. They are paid $60 a week and live at the midtown Manhattan YMCA, now converted to living quarters for both sexes. One day a week they help with the pre-school "Head-start" program. The other four days chores begin at 2 p.m. and end at 10 p.m., with activities that include grade schoolers and teenagers. "I was sort of nervous riding the subways at night when we first got here," said Miss McMullen. "But now it's okay. "BECAUSE EACH day these Tour to gallery planned by SUA A guided tour to the Nelson Art Gallery, sponsored by the SUA, is scheduled for Tuesday, July 19, and is open to all summer school students enrolled at KU. Tickets may be purchased at the information desk in the Kansas Union at $1.25 a person. Anyone interested in buying tickets must do so by today. The tour includes transportation to and from Kansas City, Mo., by chartered bus and an hour tour of the gallery with the rest of the afternoon free. The bus will leave the Kansas Union at 1 p.m. and its expected return is around 5 p.m. kids come back and look for somebody that knows them... somebody to find something for them, like a ball or a jump rope. They're dying for attention." "One day I started telling a story to a little Puerto Rican girl. She seemed very shy, but sat on my lap and never took her eyes off my face. "After a few minutes her big sister came along and told me the child didn't understand English. “But she was happy, anyway. I was talking to her—just to her.” Granada THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-5783 NOW! Tonight> 7:00 - 9:00 Cont. Sat. & Sun. from 2:30 Playing Threezy Isn't Easy... But It's FUN!!! Columbia Pictures Presents JERRY LEWIS JANET LEIGH 3 ON A COUCH (A JERRY LEWIS PRODUCTION) COLUMBIACOLOR Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065 NOW! Tonight----7:00 & 9:05 Cont. Sat. & Sun. from 2:30 Air Conditioned From The Man Who Made "Charade" Gregory Peck Sophia Loren A STANLEY DONEN Production ARABESQUE TECHNICOLOR PANAVISION SUNSER DIVE IN THEATRE · West on Highway 40 ENDS TONITE! Both 1st Run!! Bridgette Bardot Roddy McDowell & Tuesday Weld "Viva Maria"-plus-"Lord Love A Duck" Starting Saturday 3 big hits-Saturday only! Souvenirs for your desk PEN STAND Ballpoint Pen Set by Sheaffer. Black base with silver trim. $2.95 --- Ceramic Ash Tray 7" square with KU Seal. 2 colors—butterscotch and white. $5.00 Also matching mug $5.00 KANSAS Cork Lighter 21/2" tall, KU Seal and gold trim. $4.10 Black Leather Lighter KU Seal and gold trim. $10.00 kansas union BOOKSTORE Friday, July 8, 1966 Summer Session Kansan Page 7 That turtle may beam Beatles Bu Vicki Asbury Bruce Curfman, undergraduate NSF research worker, has been transforming ordinary turtles into walking radio stations. Warking under the guidance of Henry S. Fitch, professor of zoology, and Hampton Shirer, professor of comparative biochemistry and physiology, Curfman is attempting to explore the relatively new field of biotelemetry also known as ecotelemetry. The central idea of the project is to plant a transmitting device on the animal that sends out signals which are picked up within a range of one-fourth mile on a master control. "EACH ANIMAL'S transmitter sends out a different wave frequency which is recorded every 15 minutes pinpointing the animal's location at the time. "So without keeping the animal under captivity, we can determine his amount of movement from place to place, the places he normally visits and, by knowing the weather conditions of his locality, we can determine the effect of the climatic conditions on his amount of activity," explained Curfman. "RUBBER CEMENT is used as the gluing agent in this case because of the turtle's aquatic environment." Curfman stated. The transformation is made by gluing a tiny oscillating current transmitter to the turtle's shell along with a long piece of wire which acts as an antenna. Other animals besides the turtle are or have been under biotelemetric observation. Two of these are the opossum and the snake. Asked about attaching the transmitter to these animals, Curfman said: "When working with opossums we attach the transmitter to a harness or collar, which is then fastened to the animal. With snakes we usually force the transmitter down their throats and then feed them a morsel of food to help keep it down. Sometimes the transmitters remain in their bodies for weeks before being ejected. News Bureau a key KU spot Tucked away in the corner of Strong basement, the KU News Bureau goes on about its daily duties of gathering news and information on the events and people of the University. Through almost half of the University's history, a news bureau of some type has been performing this function. Today's bureau boasts a larger staff and more specified responsibilities than in the past. But, with all improvements, Tom Yoe, director of the News Bureau, keeps looking toward the future. During his 20 years with the bureau, Yoe has noticed changes in the newspapers' desires and standards. He finds the newspapers more critical and aware of good news judgment. The news bureau must constantly adjust its sights toward these changes he says. Press conferences also are set up at times through the News Bureau. Although it does not try to cover every campus event, the bureau will try to help reporters "We try to clear the way for them," Yoe said. He cited the coverage of "Carry Nation," Douglas Moore's opera which premiered at KU in April. We tried to arrange things so there would be a minimum of interruption and so the writers would not fall into blind alleys," he explained. THE NEWS BUREAU'S main job is putting packages of information on the faculty, staff and students into the hands of media likely to use them. The primary recipients are the newspapers, but some work is done with radio and television stations. SOME OTHER university news bureaus put out a daily paper. But, KU's bureau does not see the need for this with a daily campus newspaper and coverage in the local daily paper. Someone from the bureau staff attends almost all University events. During the Inter-Century Seminar for example, a staff member attended each scheduled event. Those which were particularly well covered were not written up by the news bureau. In other cases, the bureau made notes on the event available to reporters. Advance texts of speeches sometimes are made available through the bureau office. "A great many of the speeches around here are too specialized," Yoe said. In such cases, the bureau covers and reports the event, because few reporters are likely to attend. LARGER KANSAS newspapers which cover the entire state receive all material produced by the bureau. Smaller papers receive the news pertaining to their community. The bureau relies on the wire services to inform the smaller papers of events of more general interest. In the early part of the century, when the University wanted something in the newspapers, it would call the department of journalism for help. W. A. Dill, former writer for the AP, came in 1920 to form the first official news bureau. "He had a yen for journalism teaching and was employed by the University as a member of the journalism faculty." Yoe said. IN ADDITION to his responsibilities as a news bureau chief, he taught a full load in the journalism school. His only help was a student who helped write sports publicity. When Deane Malott became chancellor in 1940, the first fulltime director was hired. K. W. Davidson began to form a bureau which is comparable to the bureau of today. R. Edwin Browne, now director of the University radio station, handled the job from 1945 until 1946, when Yoe became director. "At the time I arrived and for several years afterward, the News Bureau consisted of myself and one full-time office worker, plus some student help." Yoe said. AFTER WORLD WAR II sports publicity became a department of its own, under the direction of the late Don Pierce. But the News Bureau continued to handle technical jobs such as duplicating and mailing until last year. At the time, the bureau had responsibility for a number of student recruitment publications and campus guides. "A lot of things were not done very well." Yoe explained. "There are a lot more publications now than before; they are much better than they used to be." Yoe said. In those days there was no attempt at overall planning and coordination of University events as there is now, he explained. TODAY A FULL-TIME University Relations staff takes care of many of these jobs. The News Bureau is now one branch of University relations. The News Bureau seems to grow a little bit at a time. One of the first steps was the hiring of a half-time graduate assistant. During the Korean War, this was not a satisfactory arrangement. Half-time employees could only take 10 credit hours, but 12 hours were required to avoid the draft. About the time that Yoe became faculty adviser to the Jayhawker, a full-time assistant, an information writer and an office manager were hired. STAFF ORGANIZATION remains the same today. Students also are hired on a part-time basis. Some trade publications also receive News Bureau releases. "The Kansas Teacher," for example, receives all News Bureau material. The staff also prepares the weekly brochure entitled "This Week at KU" which lists all events and exhibits of the week. Although the bureau staff does not take pictures, they have the use of a photographer from the Photo Bureau, also a branch of University Relations. MANY PEOPLE call every year to get information on a wide variety of subjects. Recently a man in South America wrote for all information on the Inter-Century Seminar. Mothers often write for information for their children for social science projects and term papers. Until recently, classes of grade Salute given to Headstart WASHINGTON —(UPI)—Mrs. Lyndon B. Johnson yesterday saluted the year-old Headstart program for its success in "already producing higher IQ's and medical corrections" in thousands of impoverished pre-schoolers. Mrs. Johnson received a first year report on the program she founded from Sargent Shriver, director of the Office of Economic Opportunity which administers it. Shriver told the First Lady that last summer's six-week cultural and educational experience made participating children "better prepared with greater self-confidence and greater intellectual capacity" than other children entering kindergarten in the fall without the benefit of Headstart. "Educational news to gain space has to find a higher standard," he explained "Instead of shooting shot guns, we have to aim with rifles and improve our marksmanship." "Today great issues make more often than great names," Yoe said. "There is no question that the public enthusiasm for Headstart continues to grow," Shriver said. "We are overwhelmed by organizations and individuals wanting to know what they can do to help." You Must Try Our Delicious Food school children in Philadelphia wrote every year for pictures of the school emblem, the Jayhawk. This summer's program, which begins now, will enroll 580,000 children in 2,600 communities—an increase of 20,000 children and 100 communities over last year, The Theta For Lunch & A Chopped Sirloin For Dinner We Suggest Dance to The Segments This Weekend THE VILLAGE GREEN 23rd & Naismith VI 3-6966 KIEF'S RECORD & STEREO Malls Shopping Center BEST OF THE BEACH BOYS Here's a sensational collection of the Beach Boys' greatest hits! . . . personally selected and compiled by the Beach Boys themselves and dedicated to their fans: "Fun, Fun, Fun"; "Surfn" U.S.A."; "Surfer Girl"; "Little Honda"; "Wendy" and more! $2.86 DIAMOND NEEDLE SALE $5.95 9 Page 8 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 8.1966 UN school provides children a world view By Aline Mosby NEW YORK — (UPI)— There's a school here where the children learn that history books often represent a one-sided opinion. It's a school where pupils of all colors study together, where everyone knows the three R's in at least two languages. The United Nations school is so successful it is expanding into a new building. It was called an experiment in education when opened as a nursery school in 1947 with 20 pupils from 15 countries. Its goal was to operate on the UN principles of internationalism, meaning objectivity in the social sciences such as history, emphasis on languages and teaching children of all nations. TODAY, WITH 600 students of 69 nationalities, the 12-grade school is a hit, not only with UN families but with U.S. citizens clamoring to get their children on the waiting list. With plenty of pupils assured, $14 million has been donated by various countries and foundations to build larger, ultra-modern quarters for 1500 children on filled-in land near a pier at East 25th Street in Manhattan. In its new quarters, the UN school may well become the most sought-after private school in New York. Now fees range from $800 to $1250 per child. "This could be a preview model in international education," is the opinion of Marietta Tree, former member of the U.S. delegation to the UN, who was named to raise funds for the new school. "As time goes on, education all over the world will be more universal, and more international, when boundaries are less defined." THE GENERAL theme of the international school is that it is "an orchestration of national cultures," as Mrs. Tree described it in an interview. Children of every race, religion and ethnic group in the world study together in harmony and yet do not lose their own characteristics. "An Arab child learns a song in Japanese, a boy from Iceland does a Latin American dance," said Mrs. Tree. This international theme was most evident when I visited the school's current ramshackle quarters in an 1890 school building on Manhattan's East side. The results of the art class that decorated the corridors included every kind of world art from Chinese brush painting to reproductions of Egyptian tomb drawings to modern colleges. Another example of internationalism is an attempt at objectivity in social sciences. I stood outside a history class while a British teacher was explaining in an unbiased way about "the Austrian army advancing upon Potsdam. . ." AN ASSISTANT to the registrar, Victoria Nes, of Baltimore, daughter of a U.S. diplomat, explained that history classes use both English and American textbooks, and outside reading is required of other countries' history books. The children learn that their history books are biased, she said, and the pupils study how they are slanted. Otherwise how could you teach history to Soviet, French and German children in the same class? Mrs. Tree predicts that as the world becomes smaller, schools everywhere will concentrate more on languages, as is done at the UN school. THE MAJORITY of the children already speak English, so that is the teaching language except for the first two grades. In those classes children are taught in both English and French until the French-speakers learn English. But French also is a required subject. They also study a third language of their choice. Currently the proportion of students is almost 50-50 between UN and non-UN American students. "I've been so struck by the UN school that my own child will attend next year," Mrs. Tree said. "There's a long waiting list of American parents who want their children to have this tremendous cultural advantage." The school is "denationalized" in other ways. Its only flag is a faded UN flag hanging in the lunchroom near a map of the world with cut-out figures of children of all nations. NO NATIONAL holidays are celebrated, or the school would have to observe as many as 69. Some Americanization is noted. The luncheon menu is meat loaf, hot dogs, hamburgers, salads or Chinese food. U.S. school holidays such as Thanksgiving and George Washington's birthday are observed. A bust of Washington sits in one hall but the foreign children, to whom he means very little, occasionally decorate him with hats and signs. Another American touch was a row of brown-eyed Indian children in the library—all reading Batman comic books. However, they had their choice of a wide variety of French and U.S. magazines and books, said one teacher, a Lebanese. The UN school teachers come from many nations. But so many are British that the headmaster is touring Africa and Eastern Europe to recruit some from those areas "to give the school a better balance." THE IMPACT of the school on New York is evident even outside on the sidewalk. As I left, two elderly gentlemen stopped to stare at some Oriental students visible through a window. "Why, I went to this school 60 years ago," one senior citizen said to the other. "Now look—filled with foreigners from the UN." PRESSURE GETTING YOU DOWN? Then take a break and Bowl tonight at the JAY BOWL You've earned it. Jay Bowl KANSAS UNION ACME LAUNDRY and DRY CLEANERS gives you - 3 Convenient Locations - 10% Discount on Cash & Carry Dry Cleaning - In by 10:00 out by 4:00 service - Pick-up and Delivery - Nu-Way Dry Cleaning Process 1007 Friday, July 8, 1966 Summer Session Kansan Page 9 SOLOMON SOLOMON COMES TO KU We all remember King Solomon, don't we. Ye olde wisest man on earth seems to have taken up residence on the Hill. Another Juco star signs track letter Another junior college track star has selected KU. Coach Bob Timmons announced today that Leodies Adams of Bakersfield Junior College has inked a letter of intent to enroll at K.U. in September. Adams is a high hurdle champion and recently won the event at the West Coast Relays, Metropolitan Conference and the Mount Sac Invitational at Walnut, Calif. His best time for the highs was 14.3 and he has recorded 37.4 in the intermediate hurdles. Adams runs the hundred-yard dash in 9.7 and the 220 yard dash in 21.4. Beginning Tuesday, July 12, SUA is beginning its new "dinner- ner-with-a-prof" program open to any summer school student at KU. Adams is the third junior college track athlete to sign with the Jayhawks this month, joining Ben Olison, Bakersfield, Calif., and Steve Moon, Chanute, Kan. Eat-with-a-prof During the noon hour, students who desire may eat lunch in one of the special partitioned lunch rooms in the Kansas Union cafeteria with three campus professors. CLARK BRICKER, professor of chemistry; Clifford Ketzel, professor of political science, and Franklyn Nellick, professor of English, will be on hand to answer questions or just chat with students in an informal atmosphere. Students interested in the "dinner-with-a-prof" program may sign up at the information desk in the Kansas Union as soon as possible for either a Tuesday or a Thursday lunch hour with the profs. 3 outdoor films to be shown Three movies will be shown at 8 p.m. today east of Robinson Gymnasium. They are "Birds of the Inland Waterways," "Drum in the Graveyard," and "California World in a Week." In the event of rain, the showing will be in 3 Bailey. 440-yard expert will come to KU Coach Bob Timmons has announced that KU has signed one of the nation's top high school 440-yard dash prospects. Randy Julian from Bolsa Grande High School, Garden Grove, California, is the latest signee. Julian, 6"-1", 170, has best times of 47.4 for the 440; 20.9 in the 220 and a 9.7 in the 100-yard dash. He plans to major in physical education. Timmons said Julian was one of the "key" athletes in the Jayhawk track recruiting plans this year. Premier Ky to get luxurious plane OAKLAND, Calif. — (UPI)—A luxurious rebuilt DC6B at Oakland Airport soon will be shipped to Saigon for use as the personal transport of Premier Nguyen Cao Ky, according to an official of Air Carrier Service Corp. The plane is complete with television set, bar and stereo and has an ornate four-foot-long gold-colored key on the forward bulkhead. KIEF'S RECORD & STEREO Diamond Needle Sale Reg. $9.95 - $10.95 $5.95 Permanent Discount on 8-Track Car Tapes Nebraska, which lost a New Year's Day bowl game to Alabama after an undefeated 1965 season, has been tabbed a heavy favorite to waltz away with a fourth straight Big Eight Conference title this year. The Cornhuskers received 89 first place votes, 19 more than they gathered in last year's poll. Nebraska solid favorite No one picked Nebraska to finish lower than third. A final scoring established on a basis of eight points for a first place vote, seven points for second place, six points for (bird etc., gee NU a total of 787 points. the poll agree that the conference championship could depend primarily on the outcome of four games. The big ones include, Nebraska at Colorado, Oct. 22; Missouri at Nebraska, Oct. 29; Colorado at Missouri, Nov. 5, and Nebraska at Oklahoma, Nov. 24. "Big Red all the way" is a popular chant at the University of Nebraska. It also could be termed the consensus of a majority of 100 Midwest sports writers and broadcasters who took part in the annual Big Eight football poll conducted by Phil Dynan, who resigned recently as KU sports information director. Many of the forecasters volunteered the prediction that 1966 could be the "year of the quarterbacks" in the Big Eight. At least three All-American candidates are slated for signal calling. Nebraska has Bob Churchich, Kansas is counting on the services of Bob Skahan and Iowa State will ride with Tim Van Galder. COLORADO PICKED up a total of 631 points, but received only six first place votes. Most writers and broadcasters felt the Buffaloes will edge Missouri for second place in the final standings. The Tigers compiled a total of 605 points. Add the Oklahoma Sooners with 548 points and the Baltimore singers selected for Luci The second division finds Iowa State, Oklahoma State, Kansas and Kansas State picked to finish in that order. All of the lower four teams received last place votes but only the Stillwater Cowboys notched a championship nod. Coach Bob Devaney's Cornhuskers seem destined for national honors as well as conference awards. Nebraska, which has compiled a record of 38-6 during the past three championship years, will have 34 lettermen returning including six offensive starters and eight defensive starters. Colorado returns 31 letter winners, Missouri 18, Oklahoma 32, Iowa State 27, Oklahoma State 22, Kansas 27, and K-State 20. poll indicates an interesting battle for second place honors. MOST PEOPLE taking part in PRESCRIPTIONS ROUND CORNER DRUG STORE Co. WASHINGTON — (UPI) — A 100-voice choir from Baltimore will sing original music at the wedding of Luci Johnson and Patrick Nugent Aug. 6 in the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception. 801 mass. VI 3-0200 SUMMER SALE Women's Sportswear at the country house 839 mass. - PANT TOPS - SKIRTS - SLACKS Slack Sets - SHORTS - SWEATERS 1/3 OFF - SWIMWEAR - BLOUSES sleeveless half sleeve - SURFERS - DRESSES Values $4 to $24 SALE PRICES $2^{67} to $15 $95 Country Country House 839 Mass At the Town Shop House Page 10 --- Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 8, 1966 Colorful past in lives of 3 KU delegates (left to right) J.R. Koch, president of the San Francisco World Series and future manager of the N.Y.C. baseball team; and John L. Smith, former manager of the N.Y.C. baseball team. TEACH ORIGINAL AMERICANS—Three educators attending the KU institute for secondary teachers of the American Indian tell tall tales—all true. From left, Ed Clark, El Reno, Okla., grandson of the last Comanche chief; Richard Henson, Ethete, Wyo., rodeo champion, and Walden McFarland, Mt. Edgecumbe, Alaska, who coaches a Russian-accented Eskimo and Indian debate squad. A Purple Heart winner who is the grandson of the last Comanche chief, a rodeo champion who instructs Indian students and bucking broncoes, an Eskimo-Indian teacher who boasts a Russian-accented debate squad. "We still have to overcome the Indian's distrust of the white man." The men with these stories—Ed Clark, Richard Henson, and Walden McFarland—are attending an NDEA institute at KU on Problems in Speech Instruction for Secondary Teachers of American Indians. CLARK'S STUDENTS at the Cheyenne and Arapaho Indian School in Concho, Okla., are more interested, however, in tales of his Indian grandfather, Chief Quanah Parker, and of Clark's own military battles. Indian resourcefulness and courage saw Clark through four days and nights of creeping by Japanese lines, without food or water, in the Guadalcanal campaign. Clark took his name from his paternal grandfather, an early-day physician and one of the few white men to serve as a translator for the Indians on trips to Washington. The Smithsonian Institution houses his Comanche vocabulary collections. "Indian children today have great pride in their heritage, and they are sorry that I do not look more like an Indian," the light-skinned Clark said. HE REVENGED his unit's ambush with 13 hits on the way back to base, but wasn't interested in stopping for any scalps. For Marine service in World War II and the Korean conflict, Clark won, in addition to the Purple Heart, the Silver Star, the Navy and Marine Corps medals, the presidential unit citation with two stars, navy unit commendation, Good Conduct medal with four stars, American Defense ribbon with one star, the Asiatic Pacific ribbon with five stars, American Area campaign ribbon, World War II victory medal, Korean campaign ribbon with three stars and United Nations medals and ribbons. Also heavily decorated is Henson, marking 20 years on the rodeo circuit. He often wears a silver belt buckle designating him the 1965 All-around Champion for a four-state association "I DIDN'T BRING my 12 head of horses to Kansas, but I can't seem to stay out of the saddle," said Henson, who won the saddle mount riding competition at Sedalia. Mo., last weekend. of 30 rodeos. In 1959 he was national bareback riding champion. In addition to teaching speech, history and government, Henson coaches sports and teaches brene-busting to students in the predominantly Arapaho Indian school at Etheta, Wyo. "They may be more interested in riding, but my aim is to help them gain the speaking confidence necessary for a good job and a better life," Henson said. McFARLAND, TOO, finds the problem of native dialects or watered down English at home a challenge for his students at Mt. Edgecumbe High School in Alaska. "But my Aleut-Russian descendants did a fine job winning Most of the students turn to native fishing, hunting and language in the summer months, but readily adapt and are highly motivated during school terms, he added. students attend Haskell Institute at Lawrence, or the University of Alaska for more education. debates and English is the exclusive boarding school language there." he said. These three men and 21 other educators attending the KU institute are highly motivated to help the American Indian attain his rightful and desired place in modern America. McFarland said many of his The institute will close July 23. Freshman camp set "What is man that thou art mindful of him?" is the question asked of previewers in the Kansas Union display for KU-Y's freshman camp. The camp will be held the weekend of Oct. 8-9 at Camp Santosage, Independence, Mo. sor at Pennsylvania State University, earned B.S., M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in education from KU and taught freshman chemistry classes here. Dean Anderson had an undergraduate major in chemistry at the University of Minnesota. What is the camp? "It is not a guidance counseling session, a weekend study session, or a recreation camp; it is none of these things individually, because it is all of these together. It is a time for examination, evaluation, and fun in the university atmosphere of inquisitiveness and decision of which you are now a part." Highlights of the camp include a talk by Aldon D. Bell, assistant dean of the College of Liberal Arts, "What Does the College Expect of Me; What Would I Expect of it; of Myself," a panel discussion on the subject of "Will College Change My Attitudes or Values?" with Howard Baumgartel, professor of human relations; Clark E. Bricker, professor of chemistry; and the Rev. John R. Simmons, and planned evening entertainment. CLASSIFIEDS LOST Black Shaving Kit containing needed keys. If found, call VI 3-8787. Reward. 7-8 The new Anderson-Fisk Chemistry Test, just published by Harcourt, Brace and World of New York is the result of collaboration between Kenneth E. Anderson, dean of the School of Education and an alumnus with three degrees from KU. Professors publish chemistry exam TUTORING Franklin G. Fisk, now a profes- Graduate student will tutor in mathematics. Group or private lessons. Call Keith Stumpf at VI 3-6660 Monday through Friday. 7-12 WANTED Woman needed to supervise church nursery 8:30 to 12:30 Sundays. Experience Preferred. VI 3-7134. 7-15 MARKETING It's RED DOG INN The Mid-America's Largest Night Club EVERY FRIDAY NIGHT IS TEEN NIGHT! Everyone welcome NO AGE LIMIT and Saturday Night COLLEGE NIGHT This Weekend it's The Fabulous minimum age 18 Bud on tap "SOUL SEEKERS" Tulsa's No.1 Rock'n Roll Band Always Featuring The Best In Entertainment 642 Mass. in Lawrence, Kan. SUA OPEN HOUSE Friday, July 22, 1966 Free Bowling and Billiards From 2-6 p.m. Free Classical Films Starting at 7 p.m. in the Forum Room. Free Friday Flick "On The Waterfront" with Marlon Brando at 7 and 9 p.m. in the Union Ballroom. Summer Session Kansan Page 11 Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the Summer Session Kansas are offered to students interested in good regard to color, creed, or national origin. CLASSIFIEDS MISCELLANEOUS Dairyland Drive-In, 23rd & Ohio across from Rush's IGA). Open 11 m., Mon.Sat., Sun. 12am- p.m.-11 p.m. Service, Ice Cream & Sandwiches. Experienced babysitting. Your home many nights and weekends. Call VI 2-3901. Western Civilization Notes. Completely revised, extremely comprehensive. Mimicraphed and bound for $4.25. Call VI 2-1901 for delivery. tf $10 reward for information leading to the recovery of a stolen world globe taken from room 11. Bailey Hall, June 15th. Great sentimental value to owner. UN 4-3386 or VI 3-5579. No questions asked. tf CAMPERS—Here's the sweatsuit you've been waiting for. Only $2.50 in a variety of colors. Orders will be taken in Templin or Lewis Halls on Monday and Wednesday evenings. Or come to 111 Flint Hall. tf Michigan St. Bar-B-Q, Ribs $2.85 per shab- 1 chicken $1.10—Bristol Sand 65c. Cold Beverages. Open 11:00 a.m. to 11:00 p.m. Closed Sunday and Tuesday. Phone VI 2-9510. 515 Michigan St. tf Need any sewing or mending done? All types sewing—Repairs, alterations, and clothes made. Reasonable. VI 2- 3901. tf Thesis graphs drawn to your specifications. Reasonable. Call UN 4-3867. VI 2-6174 After 5 p.m. Robert Nelson. 7-22 Experienced typist with new electric office typewriter will type dissertations, theses and term papers. Fast and accurate service with reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Lancaster at VI 2-1705. 8-2 Typist, experienced with term papers, theses and dissertations. Will give your typing immediate attention with electric machine with extra symbols. Mrs. Marlene Higley at 408 W. 13th. VI 3-6048. tt TYPING *Tying- Thesss, term papers, disser- tation*. Rates, paper fini- ved. **VI** 2-1561. Downtown Health & Foreign Foods Natural Foods Better Nutrition Better Health 9th & N.H. VI 2-2771 Fast - Accurate - Experienced - 25+ perf Fast - Accurate - Experienced - 21-63000 - tf Miss. St, Ms. Craven tf Experienced typist, 10 years experience in theses and term papers. Electrician for accurate service. Reasonable rates. Mr Barlow, 2407 Yale, VI 2-1648. Typing Wanted, theses, essays, and books. Resumes. Rates. Mrs. Hallenbauer, VI 3-4150, Berkshire. Experienced typist—Will type your report. Reasonable. Call VI 2-9011. Expert typing. Themes. Dissertations. Critically typewritten Mrs. Mishlei V1 3-1029 FOR RENT LIVE CLOSE TO CAMPUS Air-conditioned one and two bedroom apartments in modern furnished Rents beginning at $350. Santee App., 1123 Ind. I3 - 21-616 tt TWO COMFORTABLE APARTMENTS at 927 Ohio. Move in immediately. Will also take ironing. Prompt service, neatly done. VI 2-3447. 7-8 Room and board for men: Only at the Manor Lodge can you find a quiet study environment and wonderful meals served 3 times a day, 6 days a week and twice on Sunday with the college and licensed by the State Board. Call today for further information: VI 3-3409. BUT HURRY! Now Renting for Fall-Extra Nice Bachelor Apartments for graduates or older undergraduate men. 2 Blocks from law school. Quite a nice paid. For Park, some air-conditioned. For appointment call VI 3-8534. 3 Rooms with Bath. Furnished Apt. Completely Ptl. Single Beds Avail- able. $75.00 for 1, or $200 for 1, $75.00 for 1, or $200 for 1, V I 3-4347. Inquire 1005 Miss. 7-15 FOR SALE Oil painting, silversmithing, metal enameling, gold leafing, water color, and paint materials much below 932 Maine, side entrance, till 7 p.m. 7-8 Gift Box Andrews Gifts VI 2-1523 Southridge Plaza, Inc. Open Wednesday Evenings Malls Shopping Center Plenty of Free Parking 2850 Ridge Court Lawrence, Kansas, 66044 Vacancies Available MRS. RAMON H. PICKERING Office VI 2-1160 Manager Home VI 2-3755 Go With The Winner Area Code 913 Have your sports car tuned where performance is proven with race-winning cars. TRIUMPH SALES & SERVICE We are always happy to serve you with HAVING A PARTY? 1209 E. 23rd St. VI2-2191 Ice cold beverages Chips, nuts, cookies Variety of grocery items Ice cold 6 pacs all kinds OPEN TO 10 P.M. EVERY EVENING LAWRENCE ICE COMPANY 616 Vt Ph. VI 3-0350 Crushed ice, candy Ph. VI 3-0350 616 Vt. TYPEWRITERS-most brands portables including Olympia, Royal and SCM Electric portables. Sales, service purchase office. About our customer purchase office. Office equipment and furniture. Lawrence Typewriter, 700 Mass., VI 3-3644. tt This lovable black toy puppy puppy wants you to own him. This fella is wearing a little coat and bad shots. (That’s worth $25.00.) V1 7-2504 after 10 a.m. VII 7-12 Extra clean 1949 Lineinch 4 door, low mileage, standard transmission, overdrive, radio, $100.00. See after 5: Call VI 3-1669. 7-15 1962 TRIUMPH HERALD. Low mileage, exceptionally good condition. $700.00 By Owner. Ph. VI 2-9141 or 740 Louisiana after 6:30. tt ENTERTAINMENT Having trouble finding locations for parties? The "New" Alley Cat is now available. Large or Small. For information call VI 2-6389 evenings. tf FRED GREEN Western Wear Justin Boots The only store in Lawrence with complete lines in western wear. YES! We're open for the summer. Come down and Lee Rider Jeans see us at the... Brushed Denim Bonanza Shirts $8.70 910 Mass. VI 3-0077 PATRONIZE KANSAN ADVERTI SERS WAGON WHEEL 1218 Conn. Pet Ph. VI 3-2921 1401 Ohio GRANT'S VI 3-9603 Complete Center under one roof Established - Experienced Drive-In Pet Center FREE PARKING Arrange Your: Flight Home Vacation Reservations Trip Abroad Other Summer Reservations TRAVEL THIS SUMMER of 914 Mass. 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Member F.D.I.C VI 3-7474 Welcome KU CAMPERS to SANDY'S THRIFT & SWIFT DRIVE-IN Lawrence's Fine Drive-In Page 12 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 8, 1966 Well, this is KU-seen by camper TO: Barrymore, my pet cat SUBJECT: My first impressions of the KU campus Dear Barrymore. First I would like to tell you about Potter Lake, because it has ducks which I know you would like. They are rather mangy but respond beautifully to chocolate creme cookies. They are underfed, probably because little boys are always catching fish in rather greedy proportions, and the only other thing in the lake is turtles, who are pleasant enough but rather cranky. You would like the clover and weed covered banks, but you might get stuck on the path, which is tar and gets soft when it is hot, which is often. The rest of the places are inside, but you might like them too. The KU postoffice is humorless and businesslike, and reluctant to give change. There are vending machines down there, in Strong, which sell milk. This improves the atmosphere tremendously. ANOTHER PLACE rather businesslike is the Political Science Library. The view is magnificent and not at all scary (it is on a top floor) because they don't allow you to open the windows. You can see all sorts of smokestacks, brown patches on lawns, and the shingles falling off the library roof. The Museum of Natural History you would love. One floor is dedicated entirely to birds, but they are under glass. All the exhibits are natural and historical, and you might be a little tempted to examine them a little more carefully than allowed. The Museum of Art is right across the street. It is very clean and well kept. In an antique oak bench on the first floor there is a vacuum cleaner. Downstairs there are some busts of men with broken noses, but the posts they are on would make good back-scratchers. ANOTHER RATHER high-up place is the periodical room of the library. It is sort of clinical and has a lot more magazines than they do at home, but no "Cat World." There is a bai window that is pretty. Practically all you can see out of it is trees, though. The last place I wanted to go was the "Hawk's Nest" but I couldn't because it is off limits. You wouldn't like it anyway, Barrymore: it is at times a little loud and smoky. As soon as you can visit I will take you to the lake to see the ducks, but we had better put something on your paws because so many places are too far to walk. With love, Your owner (Christine Frank) 25 learning family funds Education in Family Finance, part of a national program held this year on 17 university campuses, is teaching 25 educators at KU how to teach the financial facts of life to young people before they have to assume adult financial responsibilities. The fourth annual KU workshop, which will end July 22, is dealing with such topics as installment buying, automobile property, health and life insurance, savings and investments, social security, retirement and pension plans, estates, wills and taxes. Participants include elementary and business education teachers, principals, counselors, and a large number of home economics teachers. The workshop draws on resource personnel from KU, local and regional business institutions and governmental agencies. Director this year is I. N. Bowman, instructor in the School of Business. Draft call at 31,300 WASHINGTON — (UPI)— The Army will draft 31,300 men in September and will boost its combined calls for July and August by 6,000 men, the Defense Department has announced. Plaids oust neutrals NEW YORK — (UPI)— Make a winning fashion move into fall—with the checkerboard look. Women's clothes for the season ahead no longer are the quiet, subdued neutrals, so long a basic of their wardrobes. By Gay Pauley Instead, checks which have outgrown the size of those on the familiar checkerboard, pervade, the New York ready-to-wear collections. So do plaids and stripes. DESIGNERS LABEL this geometric swing everything from tattersall to window pane to the pattern of tile. Larry Aldrich's designer Marie McCarthy, for instance, went on a check swing that picked up the pattern of tiles. Typical was a black and white tube of a dress, in twill, with the splashy contrast looking as if it were right from the building supplies stores. THE TUBE SHAPE, a la McCarthy, has narrow, wrist-length sleeves, no collar and no defined waistline. Tubes are skinnery shapes, skimming over the body without fitting it. Pearson is in Colby COLBY — (UPI) — Sen. James Pearson, R-Kans., campaigned by car and plane in northwest Kansas yesterday. Lickety Split! BANANA SPLIT Lickety Split! BANANA SPLIT Dairy Queen with bananas, pineapple, strawberry, chocolate and marshmallow! And souvenir plastic dish. © 1956 NATIONAL DAIRY QUEEN DEVELOPMENT CO DAIRY QUEEN Pattern is every where you turn in the collections that the New York Couture Business Council, Inc. formerly the New York couture group unveiled this week during its 47th semiannual "National Press Week" for visiting reporters. 1835 Mass. St. Showings of the clothes, which already are beginning their appearance in some stores, will continue through next week, with the American designers group taking over Sunday, July 12. when the council is finished. GEOMETRIC patterns dominated the clothes show by the firm of Nat Kaplan, which frankly said it was having a highland fling. Pants suits, the "in" costume for the days ahead, came in a variety of plaids. The firm coupled red, green and yellow in wool pattern with long jackets topping bell bottom trousers. The same plaids appeared in costumes, plaid jackets worn with dresses in coordinated solid shades; in a wool plaid coat over a green jersey dress; and red and green plaid topping skirts of gray worsted. Try Dixon's "BIG D" Beefburger One-fourth pound of the finest ground beef. Deluxe, delicious, extra-big! Served with french fries, tomato, seasoned to your taste. We Have Home-Made Cheesecake! Delicious Strawberry Shortcake! DRIVE-IN RESTAURANT DIXON'S 2500 W.6th VI 3-7446 SEE EXCITING MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL K. C. A's vs New York Yankees SATURDAY, JULY 16th $3.50 INCLUDES $2.50 RESERVED SEAT & TRANSPORTATION Sign-Up And Pay at the Kansas Union Information Booth by July 12th BUS WILL LEAVE KANSAS UNION AT 11 A.M. THE 16th. Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 12, 1966 Lawrence, Kansas 76th Year, No. 8 SUNDAY JULY 20TH Photo by Glen Phillips KU'S BUDDHA ON A BIKE KU'S BUDDHA ON A BIKE Lewis Wood, Lawrence graduate student in, would you believe, philosophy, strikes a meditative pose while waiting for a friend in front of McCollum Hall. Pool to open on trial basis Henry A. Shenk, chairman of the department of physical education and recreation at KU, has announced that the swimming pool in the New Robinson Gym will open tomorrow, on a trial basis. Everyone is expected to take a soap shower before entering the pool, Prof. Shenk said. Everyone also must furnish his own suit and towel, and all women should wear swim caps. NO ONE WILL BE permitted on the pool deck unless he is in a swim suit. Also no food or drinks will be allowed on the pool deck. Prof. Shenk stated, "We are very proud of this pool and we want to keep it clean for the faculty and students of the university." Foreign center opens tomorrow The KU Orientation Center for foreign students entering American schools in the fall—the oldest such center in existence—will begin its 17th year Wednesday. About 55 students from nearly 25 nations will participate in the 8-week program which will end Sept. 6 in time for them to enroll in American colleges and universities THE U.S. STATE DEPARTMENT supports the program which orients foreign students in the English language, the American educational system, and in American civilization and culture. Prof. Shenk also emphasized the necessity that one must have a quarter to lock his locker while going out to swim. The lockers are designed to use a quarter for locking them and after they are opened again the quarter will be refunded. A person will be admitted to the pool only by a pool privilege card which may be obtained at the Robinson Gym Physical Education Office. Prof. Shenk said that the pool is mainly deep water and it is no place for anyone who can't swim. College within College to receive Carnegie aid The University will have the assistance of a 3-year grant of $288,000 from the Carnegie Corp. of New York in pioneering its "college within the College" project of 450-student living and study units within the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. The "college within the College" was one of the objectives for private support approved by the blue-ribbon Council for Progress which met on the campus in April. The $288,000 will go toward meeting the $18.6 million, three-year campaign goal the council adopted. The Program for Progress objective also calls for gifts to build classroom and office structures near the residence halls to enhance the effectiveness of the new colleges. Students enjoy co-ed dorm life By Connie Myers McCollum Hall is the result of three previous summers' experiments with co-ed living. The hall has one wing reserved for women and two for men. Men and women students use separate elevators, and the living wings are strictly segregated. However, all of the lounge area and the cafeteria are open to both men and women. "There's a tremendous difference in atmosphere," stated Bill Andrews, Brunswick, Mo., senior and McCollum counselor. "There's a much lighter feeling about the place. Everyone seems to be more settled. Co-ed living is a good thing, especially for the summer. Everyone is here for a purpose. They are mostly serious students and responsible people which makes co-ed living very practical." ROBERT PUFFER, Howard sophomore, noted, "I think that co-ed living is great simply for variety's sake. I lived in Templin with 500 guys last year, and after that you learn to appreciate seeing a girl sometimes. Girls brighten up the place immensely. They definitely make dormitory living more fun." Carolyn Power, resident director at McCollum, comments, "From a girl's point of view, the atmosphere is definitely different. I mean most of the girls make a special effort to look nice and act appropriately. This type of living has an atmosphere of a conscientious nature. People are learning to adjust themselves to living in such a situation. "IN A NON CO-ED DORM, people feel as though they are secluded. Members of the opposite sex represent the outside to them. Here everyone is included . . . there is no outside. "It's nice to see a boy in the lobby and know he's not waiting for a date or simply standing around. He has a right to be there." concluded Miss Power. "Im in favor of co-ed living too," stated Karen Kreider, Chanute senior and McCollum counselor. "Since there are less activities on campus, this type of living offers a better chance for people to get to know each other. Seems like there are always people in the lobby playing the piano and singing, playing cards, or just talking. It's a very relaxing atmosphere." THE RESIDENTS of McCollum have organized activities to widen hall friendships during the summer. There have been several all hall mixers. Last week the hall residents presented a bootenanny which will be continued this week due to the interest shown. During the second week of school, a clean-up crew was organized to help the tornado victims in Topeka. The people in McColllum like their way of living. "I wish McColllum was co-ed all year round," said Dave Young, Denver senior. "I think it's great." The first of these units, to be organized in September using available residence hall accommodations, will be called "Centennial College" in honor of the University's 100th year to be completed Sept. 12. THE STUDENT BODY for Centennial College will be picked at random from among the new freshmen living in University residence halls who will be enrolled in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences this fall; 225 men will be assigned to three floors of Ellsworth Hall and 225 women to three floors of new Oliver Hall. Office headquarters for Centennial College, which will combine representatives from the offices of the College, the dean of men, the dean of women, and the registrar, will be in Oliver Hall. "The grant from the Carnegie Corp. of New York," Dean George R. Waggoner of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, said, "has made it possible for us to consider Centennial College not just an experimental project but a pilot project in a full-scale program to obtain for freshmen and sophomores in the large public university the advantages of the small academic community and, at the same time, to preserve for the student access to the extraordinary richness of resources of the multiversity. "The COLLEGE within the College is the most exciting development for undergraduate here in recent years. If there is a danger of anonymity among students at large institutions of higher education, the kind of reorganization we begin this fall will go a long way toward eliminating it." "The problem of the large university," Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe agreed, "is not numbers but organization. In recent years the Carnegie Corp. of New York has assisted the University of Kansas in a number of its experiments aimed at providing individual opportunities of high quality in the midst of programs offered to all who can take advantage of them—the early, much-imitated honors program for freshmen and sophomores, the (Continued on page 4) (Photo by Glenn E. HOW TO WATER YOUR LAWN IN ONE EASY STEP Building and Grounds handy-dandy lawn sprinkler makes the job look easy. So big it is wheeled in on its own trailer, the rainmaker makes short work of vast expanses of lawn. Here it was watering about one-fourth of the large green in front of the Engineering Building with a single revolution. Page 2 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 12, 1966 Our campers speak their minds... A call for patriotism A way to end prejudice Liquor by the drink Arab-Jew strain bitter (Editors Note: Journalism high school summer campers spent some time (1) researching, (2) thinking and (3) writing last week. Here are some of the editorials they came up with.) On peaceful integration Integration is a word which appears almost daily in the news. One day two steps forward are taken and the next day one back occurs. Few people are really forced to think about it unless it strikes close to home. Integration has finally come to Southwest Miami High, with the phasing out of an all Negro school—George Washington Carver. It came in its own quiet way last fall when our teaching staff became integrated. There were no demonstrations, and not a word was said. For most of us the first day of school will be as it always has been. For others it will be a day of trying to be accepted and to the remaining few a time to do the accepting. It will be a time to grow. Next year when the first bell rings we no longer will be a typical southern school nor will we be a northern school. We will be the ideal American high with students working together in almost complete harmony, split only by student council ideas and the number of points that we are going to win by in the big game. A letter to the adults —Peggy Goalstone Dear Average Adult, After listening to years and years of your complaints about me, I have decided to answer you. I am not what the television commercials show. I am not a painted sweater girl" running my fingers through a boy's hair. I am not a monster who takes all of my parents' money. I do not fit into the category of a juvenile delinquent. I do not speed down highways and run over little old ladies. Neither do I break into houses at night to steal, injure or murder. I do not take joy rides in stolen automobiles. I DO NOT habitually drink alcoholic beverages or blow cigarette smoke in your face. What am I? I am a good, law-abiding young person trying to learn about life in a fast-moving world. I am a student who spends much time and money preparing myself through schooling to meet the challenges that will be thrown at me. I am the worker, the sales person in a store, the attendant at a gasoline station, the typist in an office. I am the person who will take over the reins guiding this world from you. Wish me luck. Sincerely, Average Teenager (Barbara Earnest) We, teenagers of today, are the new generation, the leaders of tomorrow. However, what will tomorrow be if our actions don't change? Take for example the demonstrators against Viet Nam. The boys are fighting to preserve our liberty; liberty the forefathers fought for many years ago. Instead of protesting against Viet Nam, we should be out carrying signs praising our boys, to let them know that we appreciate what they are doing. They are giving their lives to protect us, they aren't doing it for "kicks." As for patriotism, there isn't much left. When the flag salute is being said, or the national anthem is being sung, the atmosphere isn't what it should be. Many people are looking all around; some are even running around the place. Very few eyes are really on the flag and many of the ones that are aren't actually seeing it for what it is. The red and white stripes, 50 stars lying in the blue flag, the symbol of America, will we let it die? It will be up to every one of us to make sure the symbol of America doesn't die; but even more important, it will be up to every one of us to make sure America doesn't die. Nancy Teters Auto safety a great need Legislators have unanimously passed an auto safety bill. The new bill requires set standards for many items in or on the car, which until now have not been included in many autos. Newsroom—UN 4-3646 — Business Office—UN 4-3198 The law carries provisions for punishment of the violators. A fine of $1,000 will be levied for each single violation, with a maximum of $400,000 for any series of violations along the auto assembly line. Summer Session Kansan The legislation, passed without opposition, is a wise one and a large step in the right direction. The loss of 50,000 human lives on our nation's highways can be cut considerably by safety feature to include features which features, which until now have gone unused by many companies. For 70 Years, KU's Official Student Newspaper KANSAN TELEPHONE NUMBERS It is up to the auto manufacturer to include features which aid the well-being of his customers. Automobiles of today are reaching far ahead into the future with designs and conveniences of tomorrow. With the help of today's safety devices many more will live to enjoy them. George Wilkens Early engagements ALTAVISTA. Va. — (UPI) - More than 800,000 teen-age girls will become engaged in 1966 and the median age for engagements is under 17 years, according to a survey by The Lane Co., furniture manufacturer. "The Summer Session Kansan, student newspaper at The University of Kansas is represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St., New York, NY. 10022. Mall subscriber at Lawrence, Kan.; every Tuesday and Friday during the Summer Session except University holidays and examination periods. Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the Summer Session Kansan are offered to all students without regard to color, creed, or nat **Form 40.3** The opinions expressed in the editorial column are those of the students whose names are signed to them by the student opinion expresses in the Summer Session Kansan are not necessarily those of The University of Kansas Administration or the State Board of Regents. The burning controversy of the great northern cities remains the issue of busing small children to schools out of their neighborhoods in order to end "de facto segregation" in the schools. September promises another round in this battle. Although it is not altogether desirable to bus little children away from home,busing seems the fastest and most effective way to solve the de facto segregation problem in urban schools. DE FACTO segregation exists in the schools because two conditions act simultaneously to produce it. First of all, de facto segregation exists in housing: the different races live in separate neighborhoods and rarely mingle. Secondly, the "neighborhood school principle" is religiously applied. The result is that children grow up and go to school only with others of their own race, never coming into meaningful contact with fellow human beings who happen to be of another "color." Children are not born race-conscious. If children associate with other children of different races while all still possess a child's innocence and frankness, the youngsters will be able to accept all persons as individuals rather than as members of a certain race. If children of all races are treated as equal individuals in the school environment, the senseless prejudices of their home environments will not become rooted in their youthful minds. THE STAUNCH defenders of the neighborhood school argue that school integration must occur "naturally," that is, when housing becomes integrated and children of different races attend the same neighborhood school. But how long will it take to integrate housing? Adults, of all races, already harbor firm beliefs and prejudices about other races. They will be slow to relinquish their convictions and to live side by side with other "colors." What could be more natural than attempting to make two prejudiced adults of different races live in the same house? When the young children of different races mingle, then, and only then, will integrated housing come about freely and voluntarily in our urban centers. Then, and only then, can the ultimate goal of all integration be achieved; this ultimate goal, as we see it, is the creation of a generation—and a world—of individuals who are free from the blight of race-consciousness. HOWEVER, BEFORE busing can be a feasible policy, some definite actions must be taken. The quality of every single public school in a city must be raised so that all are of the same high quality as the city's best schools. Compensational education programs, such as New York City's project Head Start, must be undertaken to give to deprived children of all races the "readiness" for school and formal education possessed by children from middle-class homes. Annie Reid Oldest of subways WASHINGTON —(UPI)— The London Underground, completed in 1863, is the oldest of all subways. Prime Minister Gladstone and 30,000 other Londoners traveled in the gaslit railway carriages in "the historic" opening of the so-called tubes, says National Geographic. What is so terrible about liquor by the drink? This is a question facing Kansans of all walks of life today. Does the state have the right to say a man cannot order a cocktail or martini or even a glass of wine in a restaurant or bar? Let's explore this editor's side of the question. I'm quite sure that I speak for most Kansans when I say that liquor by the drink is a privilege that each man should be able to choose for himself. In our modern society it is considered in good taste to have a drink before, during or after a meal in a restaurant or other public eating establishment. Legalized "over the counter" drinks would lighten the burden placed on our already overworked law enforcement agencies whose duty it is to enforce this state's so-called "dry laws." WOULD MORE alcohol be consumed if it were served by the glass rather than by the bottle? I'm sure the quantity would stay about the same, and possibly even be lessened. If a man wants a drink, he's going to get it one way or another. Why not make it easier and cheaper by offering it for sale by the drink? The state of Kansas exceeds several states in many fields. But in the area of alcohol we tend to be a little stuffy. Think it over, Kansans. Do we want liquor by the drink, or don't we? Talk with your friends and write to your state officials. Let's see if we can't get something started. Chris Abercrombie LBJ: dream of Almighty Welfare, Medicare, foreign aid, poverty programs, government developments—What is our dear and dutiful President Johnson trying to do? It appears to this writer that our President hopes to raise his status to the Almighty himself by trying to make everyone joyously happy. Mr. Johnson is trying to spread siks and satins over our country. He seems not to realize that even silk and satin soon grows thin and eventually turns to shreds. Historians will tell us that all great nations have fallen when the rulers tried to fill their subjects' hearts with gold instead of spirit. Why even work in this country of abundance where, for some, it is far more profitable just to sit back and let Big Brother lump in welfare funds, poverty funds, medicare funds, unemployment funds, and college funds. You name it and the federal government is likely to have several funds for it. Our leaders will soon discover that the more they give to the people, the more the people will want. Does not Philanthropist Lydon realize that Americans need, they need desperately, to gain an incentive, a driving force, not an overflowing breadbasket. After all, the bread of life comes from work, not from welfare. Rome fell when its mighty emperors dished out riches to all. Will our beloved America follow this same lifeless path of self-destruction? As George Eliot said, "Not liberty, but duty, is the condition of our existence." —Bill Meredith In recent days a certain world matter has pushed itself grotesquely into newspaper, radio, and TV headlines. This matter is the shaky relationship between the Moslem nation of Saudi Arabia and the young Jewish nation of Israel. This recently was brought again to the attention of the public when Saudi Arabia's king visited New York City. He was snubbed there because of some of his anti-Jewish remarks. Forty per-cent of New York's population is Jewish, and they would not stand for it. New York's mayor Lindsay cancelled dinner engagements, tours, and meetings with the king because of these few anti-Jew remarks. THESE DEVELOPMENTS are not new developments. Saudi Arabia and Israel have been at odds with each other for a long time. There was a time when the Arabs would not allow Israel's vessels to pass through the Arab-controlled Suez Canal. The people of Israel did not like this one bit. The two nations got to arguing. One thing led to another, and finally the British government and the UN had to send in troops to the canal to douse the flames of unrest. I do not have to say that this affair put the world at a point of political unrest. First the Suez Canal, and now the snubbing of the Arab king in New York. These matters must be solved. I believe that if we solve the difficulties between Saudi Arabia and Israel, it would put the entire world at ease. If we, as a country, solve the problem, it would win both countries over to us as strong allies. Our now shaky appearance in world affairs would be "cleaned" up a little. And if for no other reason, it would relax strained relations between the different religious groups. Moslem and Jew. Martin Umholtz Why police get tough Should big-city cops "get tough"? Tough not only in instances where rioting prevails, but in order to prevent these bloody riots? Rioting in America has become a way for "the group" to let off steam, whether it concerns a major issue such as civil rights, or protesting an important decision by the police—to get tough. Brought to light in the June 27 issue of Newsweek Magazine, the situation shows that police in many parts of the country are despised simply because they wear their badge. They are hated because many people feel that police can only harm them, especially in the ghettos of Chicago, New York, and Watts. POLICE MUST get tough in the larger cities if they are to maintain general decorum in the streets. After all, isn't it the duty of the police to keep the streets safe? Even if they must resort to "get tough" policies, including dogs, clubs, and scatter-guns? True, these devices of law enforcement do injure severely, and sometimes kill, but aren't they used on those taking part in a riot, or starting one? And as a rule, police do have common sense, and only use these when necessary, so the general and law-abiding public becomes more protected. Aaron Mermelstein Tuesday, July 12. 1966 Summer Session Kansan Page 3 More opinions from our high school campers Do campers Now-a time Some errors Much ado about attire have rights? to revolt of the draft If my memory serves me right (and it seldom does) there is a section in the Bill of Rights concerning "Protection from unlawful search and seizure." Teachers have been pounding the American Constitution into our heads for 12 years or more. It would be tripe to say "practice what you preach." But it appears that in this institution of higher learning that some people have forgotten this trivial bit of information. As one faculty member put it, how many parents would have let their kids come to this camp had they known this could happen? Recently in Detroit, Mich., the City Council passed legislation prohibiting an officer of the law from stopping and searching a person unless he was under suspicion of committing a felony or other crime. Are all the residents in Templin Hall under suspicion of this sort? Were the custodians' the cleaning women's lockers checked? OF COURSE everybody obliged and kept quiet. However, many were somewhat upset. This was practically an accusation of everyone searched. They might as well have said, "We suspect every one of you." Recently, because of several reports of LOST money at Templin Hall dorms, the counselors were asked by their supervisors to check all the locked drawers in each room. It's not too comforting a feeling to know you're a suspect for anything. This is not saying that the staff is guilty of anything. But it is no more ridiculous than halfway accusing 530 boys. —Mike Walsh Sockless boy a great issue Parents are getting worried, neighbors are beginning to talk, school administrations throughout the country are clamping down. The results will be disastrous to the entire country's well being. It's bound to cause the United States to disintegrate from within. What is this horrible thing which is causing our country to fall apart? In the world we live in today, with the problems which exist in every single city, the school officials are bothering to make up rules (and enforce them) about how long a boy may wear his hair. Teenage boys want to wear shoes without socks. IN NEW YORK, teachers aren't allowed to walk through the halls alone, because students are waiting to jump them in some schools. In another school the teachers are escorted to school each morning and back home again in the evenings for the same reason. Unimportant ideas such as how much greasy kid stuff a student uses aren't even thought about. Margaret Sloss IT'S JUST THAT rules such as these, in the society we live in today, are trite. It's a waste of time to make up the rules and enforce them. With the problems which are facing not only the adults but also the teenagers of today. I don't believe that whether a boy wears socks is an issue that should be as built up as it is being now. Teenagers used to have a favorite argument—that of "the loss of freedom of the individual." But I don't think that is the point. People, listen. Revolt. Rise up. Revolt against today's young adults. The people commonly called teenagers. Tear them apart. Tomorrow they will run your world. Break every creative idea that their minds possess because they may create a world better than yours. They may attain peace. Educators, listen. Rise up Revolt. REVOLT AGAINST polka-dot shirts and individualism. Bear down on white boots and high boots. Kick pregnant girls out of high school. Discriminate against married teenagers. Lash out against draft card burners. These forms of expression are creating a world contrary to yours. Therefore, you consider them wrong so squash forms of expression. Parents, listen. Revolt. REVOLT AND HOLD on to your children's apron strings. Keep their eyes and ears closed to today's vulgar happenings. Leave them in a dream world. Watch them closely. Do not allow your children to stay out after midnight. It is demoralizing. Criticize even if you cannot understand. Your road is rapidly aging. Try to change this. Their new road may be better. They may attain magnificent goals. Teenagers, listen. Rise un. Revolt against people, educators, mothers and fathers who will not realize that their world is changing. They may not accept the fact, but you must. Your individualism helps to create tomorrow's better world. Cast aside those who cannot lend their creativity, knowledge, and energy. We may create a better world, a world of peace. Rise up Revolt. —Cindy Byram LSD-illegal or illegal? I believe LSD should be legalized. Fads come in and then leave as fast as they came, and I think that this is the case with this drug. Although this fad is very dangerous and has caused, in some cases, death, it should wear itself out. But it can't if the law prohibits it. It just provides a greater temptation for the victim to use the deadly drug if he can't get it legally. Up until a few months ago, the drug LSD was relatively unknown, but today it has become the most talked-about drug on the market. It is becoming the main controversial subject on the college campus. In California, its use has been prohibited. This is also the case in Nevada. This is wrong. At the University of California at Berkeley, LSD has become a "big deal." There are many parties where the drug is the main event of the evening. But college kids are always doing things like this, maybe not necessarily with drugs, but they're always looking for fun or a good time. In conclusion, LSD has been introduced into American society and if we can't realize the dangers it possesses, then we might as well realize that it is here to stay. Rich Howe When a young man who is a junior in college, on the dean's list and president of a company which has just begun to flourish, is pulled out of his work and sent to Viet Nam, a revision in the draft laws of this country is needed. This year many young men who are really brilliant students have been taken out of school only to peel potatoes in a swamp in Viet Nam or some other foreign port. At the same time, many even younger or older men have been overlooked while they loaf around their house without a job or even a high school education. Others have their diploma but are not attending college. ANOTHER GROUP that is prevalent in this country which the draft never reaches is the young men who, although they want to enlist, are deferred for various physical or mental reasons. Often the reason for deferment is a slight physical defect which would never hinder the person's fighting. But nevertheless, he too is kept from joining the ranks of fighting men. Many proposals have been introduced into Congress, but as yet no hope for a revision in the policies can be seen. The men in Congress do not seem to think that it is wrong to ruin one Dress in school has always been the subject of heated discussions, but this past year it has raised a storm of controversy heard all over the country. It all started in the fall when thousands of teenage boys showed up for school in shaggy hair. Principals turned the students away in droves, with orders not to reappear until shorn. When several students refused to do so and took the matter to court the press began to sit up and take notice. IN MOST SCHOOLS girls wearing "grannys" were ordered home to change and, in one case, the principal of a junior high school in California cut off the bottom of the skirts on six girls' "grannys." Other student non-conformists took to wearing boots, long dangling earrings, and other "Mod" man's education while those who do not care for one are left alone. The possibility of drafting all men at a certain age whether in school or in spite of physical defects should be considered as well as drafting only those men who are not maintaining at least a "B" average in school. But whatever revision is decided upon, if any, the worthwhileness of it can be determined only by how many students are left in college. clothing. When this situation arose many principals and schoolboards took it upon themselves to set rules for dress in their schools according to personal taste. The question arises as to the legality of such a move. If a principal or school board should happen to dislike a certain style of dress, by a simple veto they could prohibit the wearing of such a style. The style may be socially acceptable in other schools but not in "theirs." Janice Moyer JUST SUCH A CASE arose in my town recently concerning one junior high school. The principal in this school was setting rules to be enforced only in this one school. In every other school in the district, including another junior high school, there was no dress code. Upon checking with the superintendent it was found that the principal was going beyond his authority. My solution for this would be to call a meeting of all concerned so that everyone would be able to hear the other sides of the story. These people then could decide the best solution. Too often adults refuse to meet people halfway-on the grounds that they are not mature enough to act and think clearly. If only given a chance teenagers could prove that they are worthy of being treated like human beings. —Joyce Lapekas Weaver's RECORD DEPARTMENT Complete line of Transistor Radios MODEL M-2862 AM-FM $24.95 MODEL M-2864 AM-FM $39.95 MASTERWORK A Product of COLUMBIA RECORDS Sale $5.95 Diamond Needle Weavers AM 54 6 7 10 12 16 kc MASTERWORK FUNKING OFF VOLUME TONE LAW FM MF MASTERWORK MODEL M-2864 Page 4 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 12. 1966 'Adding Machine'a sound criticism By Bruce Levitt Members of the KU summer repertory company presented the opening performance of their second production, "The Adding Machine," Thursday in the Experimental Theatre. The play by Elmer Rice was first produced in 1923 as a social comment on the ill effects of automation on the society of the time. Today, the play is still a valuable criticism on the automated society in which we live, where the white collar has replaced the iron collar of the feudal serfs of medieval Europe. The plot revolves around Mr. Zero, who, after 25 years at the same job as an adder of figures, is replaced by the adding machine. Enraged at his dismissal, Mr. Zero kills The Boss. Zero is tried, convicted, sentenced, and executed by his neighbors, who serve as the jurors in his trial. THE LAST HALF of the play contains a great deal of humor as Zero travels from his grave to The Elysian Fields, and finally to a celestial office where he learns of the tragic fate of the soul and mankind. The extremely demanding role of Zero is portrayed almost flawlessly by Richard Brady. Surprising maturity throughout the production, and a natural ability for understatement in the comical exchanges in the later scenes, are Brady's biggest assets. Mr. Zero is relentlessly bothered with an overbearing wife, right up to the grave. Cheryl Burnet, as Mrs. Zero, presents an entertaining portrayal of a nagging wife as well as providing Brady with excellent motivation from which to play. JANET PUGH as Miss Devore, the girl at the next desk to whom Zero confesses love in the hereafter, adds a smooth and natural flow to the production with her characterization. John Morgan entertains the audience with his portrayal of a mother killer in the graveyard scene. The entire supporting cast enhances the production by performing various cameo roles with an air of professionalism. Under the direction of Sara Thornhill, "The Adding Machine" is a solid, well-paced production. The ensemble scenes are especially well-staged and executed. The electronic music used as background for many of the scenes creates an imaginative, and sometimes eerie, atmosphere for the production. "The Adding Machine" is the second of four productions to be presented by the summer repertory group. It will play July 22 and 25, alternating with "Romanoff and Juliet," which already has opened. Two more plays, "She Stoops to Conquer" and "Stop the World—I Want to Get Off," will open July 14 and 15. Streeter Blair work to be shown abroad Streeter Blair, Beverly Hills, Calif., painter and a 1911 KU graduate, will exhibit five of the 40 American paintings to be included in an international exhibition of primitive art Aug. 26-Oct. 2 in Bratislava, Czechoslovakia. College- (Continued from page 1) international exchanges with Costa Rica, and the Russian language study program in Finland. "Public universities must take care of swelling public need. This new grant will help the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences reorganize itself to meet the challenge of size." STUDENTS IN Centennial College will live together, take many of their classes together, and share the same advisers and administrators. College officials and faculty researchers expect students involved in the project to learn more, earn better grades, and be happier about their academic experience. PATRONIZE KANSAN ADVERTISERS E. Jackson Baur, professor of sociology, who recently completed a study of the sociological factors within a university student body which affect its educational process, points out that students in the typical classroom are "a collection of competing strangers who are incapable of collaborating with one another in a pleasurable pursuit of scholarship." With part of the Carnegie grant, Baur will be spending half time next year on a study of the impact of the Centennial College project. Other uses of the Carnegie funds will be for administration, office space and secretarial assistance, equipment, planning, and additional senior staff for teaching lower division courses. IN THE FALL of 1967 all freshmen entering the College will be placed in "colleges within the College," 450 of them entering Centennial College to join the original 450 who will be sophomores, and the remaining 1,800 or so in four newly created colleges. In 1968 all freshmen and sophomores within the College, regardless of place of residence, will be enrolled in one of the colleges-within-the-College. KIEF'S RECORD & STEREO offers the best in component sound the MASTERWORK for only $199.00 (nationally advertised at $235.00) ... - 30-watt—all transistor pre-amp amp combination - New pickering V-15 magnetic cartridge - Gird chonger - Girard changer - Girard change - Pickering acoustic-suspension speakers (with electronic-crossovers) Is the sound terribie in your set? Come hear the MASTERWORK Kief's Record & Stereo Malls Shopping Center Bring Your Laundry In By 10:00-And You Can Pick It Up At 4:00 at ACME ACME Laundry and Dry Cleaners C 10% Discount on Cash and Carry Dry Cleaning Ch bega sity " tatio thou zine prep peop weel Tuesday, July 12, 1966 Summer Session Kansan Page 5 Centennial display recalls thrill of celebration Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe began his "State of the University" message June 5 with a quotation: "not, as you may have thought, from the Alumni Magazine nor from the latest brochure prepared by our public relations people (but) from Time, the weekly news magazine." Wescoe was referring to the national impact of KU's centennial celebration in 1965-66: "We are not surprised . . . to have this effect on strangers. . . If we can but bring to this campus . . . those parochial editors of the East or those parvenu reporters from the West. We have won them for KU. THOSE WHO DID not hear his words at the dinner preceding Baccalaurate may have noticed a display of newspaper and magazine clippings at the west end of the south lounge in the Kansas Union. We must depend upon the words and impressions of those who do come, and for this 1966 has been a good year." The chancellor described its purpose in an accompanying statement: "... one way in which the University can indicate its appreciation to the publishers, editors, and reporters whose understanding of the significance of the University's centennial and the news value of higher education made the coverage possible and the University's task of meeting the challenge of the second century a little easier." Wescoe's statement adds that the display is "a way of letting the many members of the University family enjoy the experience of seeing the broad coverage received." AN ARRAY of articles featured on the colorful geometric forms revives for the observer events which received publicity from New York to Los Angeles and even in Rome. The II Messagero di Romo reviewed "Carry Nation" in its May 29 edition. Wescoe has called the opera coverage "incredible," as he has that of the Inter-Century Seminar, which took place earlier in April. Such criticism, he has said, "point to ourselves as well as others, how well we are doing with what we have, but they also call attention to our needs." James Gunn, who heads University Relations, says the clippings in the display represent "only a small part" of those on file. Publicity staffers now often refer to these files but when the new Spencer Research Library is completed, the files will be kept in its archives. "The celebration may live on for years," Wescoe predicted in his "State of the University" address. FOR WESCOF, reading these records is "exhilarating." His appreciation was shared this year by students' parents who read various national publications supplied with KU news by international wire services. In November a weekly series entitled "100 Years on Mt. Oread," covering the development of KU's traditions and physical plant, was offered to Kansas subscribers of 34 weekly and 17 daily newspapers. It will continue through next fall. Alumni read the texts of a few seminar addresses in their own publication. They were first to read an interpretation of the Centennial Medallion, two-and-one-half inch bronze copies of which are now on sale. It was designed by Prof. Elden Tefft "to emphasize the University's concern with all phases of the lives of the people of Kansas." FUTURE JAYHAWKERS will be listening to tapes of the "Carry Nation" world premiere and of the Inter-Century Seminar, reading a book containing seminar addresses and discussions, or watching motion picture films of centennial activities in color and in black-and-white. A San Francisco institution has requested tapes of the seminar for classroom use. Planning for the centennial began "years ago," said Gunn. "Td almost hesitate to say how many years." He had been working on it actively more than a year prior to the 30-day centennial period, but he said the real preparation of copy began when Stewart Newlin joined the staff last July. NEWLIN AND LANCE Gilmore, KU News Bureau employees who wrote most of the "100 Years" series, were "primarily involved in implementation of the program although a lot of other people contributed." Gunn said. Ideas came from "a lot of different sources, many out of staff discussions, and the chancellor gives us some good ideas when he has time." Gunn produced a booklet which was published by the KU Endowment Association and has been sold on campus, "What Is a University?" Chancellor Wescoe wrote a number of articles expressing his personal observations on the centennial, one of which appeared March 27 in the Kansas City Star's feature section on KU. Many individual efforts were involved in the promotion of the school, its practices, and its principles. Members of a centennial committee, representing various departments, were organized by Prof. George Anderson, the chairman, about a year before the activities began. Six months later a few student members were added to the committee. THE UNIVERSITY Daily Kansas printed a centennial issue April 12. Gunn also cited the Wichita Eagle, the Topeka Daily Capital, and the Lawrence Journal-World for a "great amount" of comparable feature articles. "We tried to send out at least one historical feature every couple of weeks," Gunn said. Much of the basic information was often provided by the University Relations staff,but reporters and photographers also visited the campus to get their own. Wescoe referred to a November "visit from a select group of educational writers representing papers and publications in all parts of the nation, and the picture they painted later for their readers glowed with appreciation for what they had seen." Granada TREATRE...Telephone VI3-5724 Last 2 Days! "3 On A Couch" Shows 7:00 & 9:00 TWO FEATURE PAGES were used by 15 to 20 Kansas daily papers in March and April. Prepared in both offset and stereotype form, one was historical and the other based on the celebration. Granada THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-5784 Last 2 Days! "3 On A Couch" Shows 7:00 & 9:00 Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1063 Shows 7:00 9:10 Ends Tonite — "ARABESQUE" NEXT! Starts Wednesday FRANK SINatra VIRNA LISI Assault ON A Queen TECHNICOLOR® A PARAMOUNT PICTUR Varsity INFINITA ... ELEPHANT V3-1054 They are one attraction of the Union display, and another is the Kansas University Centennial Issue of Kansas! a magazine published by the Kansas Department of Economic Development. It also may be seen in a display case on Jayhawk Boulevard. FRANK VIRNA Sinatra Lisi Assault on a Queen TECHNICOLOR® A PARAMOUNT PICTUF Publicity on various phases of the centennial program had to be coordinated by University Relations. Posters and tickets were designed and distributed to each of eight Kansas towns included in the Concert and Lecture Series. Sunset DRIVE IN THEATRE · West on Highway 60 Sunset DRIVE IN THEATRE West on Highway 40 Ends Tonite — 'Cheyenne Autumn' & 'Outlaws Is Coming' NEXT! Starts Wednesday "The Ghost In The Invisible Bikini" A KICK-OFF EVENT, this student tour also received "excellent" radio, television, and press German exam slated The Ph.D. reading exam in German will be given on Saturday, July 23 a.m. in room 106 of Blake Hall. Registration for the exam will end at noon Friday, July 15. coverage, said Gunn, "and reactions were very fine." Wescoe told his audience Baccalaurate eve that "already we have plans for continuing some parts of our celebration on an annual basis—our statewide Concert and Lecture Series for one." Programs for "Carry Nation" productions at KU, in Wichita, and in Kansas City were also the responsibility of Gunn's office, as were programs for the Ecumenical Institute early in May. Flyers of identical design are available to the public through University Relations. They contain comments from the press, the seminar program, an agenda for the entire celebration, and a reprint of Wescoe's "State of the University" message. SUA SUMMER COMEDY SERIES Announces a change in their schedule — July 14th "Never Give A Sucker An Even Break" W. C. Fields July 21st "Monkey Business" The Marx Bros. 11 BEFORE SAILING FORTH A SALE! Stuffs of solid worth at smallest profit! A largish selection of small things! Good garments for the well-rounded navigator of fashion! Our Annual Summer Sale Begins Thursday Morning at 9:00 GREAT BARGAINS THE Town Shop DOWNTOWN 839 Massachusetts BEFORE SAILING FORTH A SALE! ENDUE his Day [Illustration of a man in a suit holding a dog's head.] THE Town Shop BOWNTOWN 839 Massachusetts O Page 6 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 12, 1966 Public relations-valuable for everyone By Dennis Buck A new survey course in public relations, offered for the first time by the School of Journalism, has the largest summer enrollment in the school. Both journalism and non-journalism students are taking the two-hour course. During regular semesters it will be offered for three credits. TEACHING THE NEW course is James E. Dykes, professor of journalism, who explained that the subject can be of value to students in any field of study. Public relations practice has steadily expanded in recent years, Dykes declared, predicting that it would continue to grow in coming decades. Its growth, he explained, has come from a greater need and a wider recognition. "The need for public relations has increased as our society has become more complex. Business organizations have become bigger. Government agencies and labor organizations have become bigger." he said. "The student today lives in a much more complex world than that of his parents a generation ago. The jet age, with fast-hapening events, has brought an ever increasing need for a better informed country, a greater need for public relations activities." WIDER RECOGNITION of the value and benefits stemming from effective public relations has accelerated its growth, Dykes said. "Today it is employed by farm organizations, labor unions, business associations, professional groups, hospitals, fund-raising groups, public service institutions, political parties, government at all levels—all recognizing its need and its value." The Medicare program which went into operation July 1 throughout the country was cited as illustrating the application of effective public relations. FROM THE DAY it became law some months ago until it went into operation last week, government agencies supplied basic material on Medicare, how it would operate, who it would affect, when it would apply, and what it was to accomplish, he said. "Medicare is a vast undertaking, directly affecting 19 million elderly people starting July 1. It's vital to Medicare success that the public be widely informed, that the program be widely accepted," Dykes said. "The public was initially informed of Medicare when President Johnson flew to Independence, Mo., and signed the legislation into law in the presence of former President Truman. The President also presented the first two Medicare cards to Mr. and Mrs. Truman." Dykes said. Survey uses a computer The computer has revolutionized research in geology. In 1963 the Kansas Geological Survey first noted that "the computer revolution is fast sweeping through the petroleum industry." But the survey has taken a new look at this development and decided that its first assessment of the computer's value did not go far enough. The survey has just published the first of a new series of reports called "Computer Contributions" and says this of the computer trend: "Little did we realize how fast the computer revolution was sweeping! Demand for information in this new area of interest has exceeded all expectations. "In response to the international acceptance and apparent wide use of this information," writes Daniel F. Merriam, editor, "the Survey is proud to initiate a new series devoted exclusively to computer programs and examples of computer problem-solving in the earth sciences." IN THE WEEKS preceding July 1, launching date for Medicare, the public was effectively and continuously informed of Medicare through newspaper and magazine articles, through television and radio programs, through speeches and pamphlets, Dykes noted. "A Kansas City newspaper devoted an entire section of its Sunday edition three weeks ago to explaining the impending Medicare program." Dykes said. Such activities served to increase understanding and acceptance of Medicare which directly affects millions. Fears of great confusion, of a rush on hospitals July 1 did not materialize. Medicare has smoothly gone into operation—helped by some effective public relations. Dykes explained. PUBLIC RELATIONS is sometimes misunderstood, Dykes observed. It is often referred to as "publicity," which actually is only a part of, a single tool of public relations. Many of the misconceptions developed during the early days of public relations. Public relations has changed drastically since the days of a "public be damned" philosophy nearly a century ago. Today it incorporates a public-be-informed philosophy proved useful to organizations having relations with any public, Dykes explained. "Public relations got a bad name in the last half of the 19th century from fantastic claims and distorted or false information handed to the public by press agents. "THE MODERN public relations practitioner embraces a code of ethics enunciated by the Public Relations Society of America (PRSA)." Dykes said. Four essential operation steps employed in effective public relations, Dykes said, are fact-finding research, setting objectives and planning, communicating and evaluating. Communication tools used in public relations include writing news and feature releases, editing publications, placing releases with media, preparing speeches, arranging special events, improving community relations and preparing institutional advertising. SIZE OF AN organization is not a determining factor for justifying a public relations program, Dykes declared, saying that it "can be just as valuable to a small organization operating in one community as it can to a multi-billion dollar enterprise having worldwide activities." In modern organizations, the public relations department works directly with top management in determining needs, defining goals and recommending steps to carry out public relations programs, Dykes said. Couple heading for Congo A Lawrence couple has accepted teaching appointments in the American School of Leopoldville in the Congo and will depart by plane next month. Joel D. Janzen, who is completing work at KU for the master's degree in guidance and counseling, will teach mathematics and develop a guidance program. Mrs. Janzen will teach girls' physical education. The Janzens, and their two children, Julie, age 5, and Gregory, 3, will be in the Congo at least two years. The appointment to the faculty of the private school came through its principal, Orval K. Wiebe, who did graduate work in guidance at KU in 1964-65 and who was acquainted with the Janzens when they lived in Hillsboro. The American School of Leopoldville has about 350 students in the elementary and secondary grades. Approximately half the students are children of missionaries in Africa. The Janzens have lived in Lawrence the past six years. He has taught mathematics and done counseling at West Junior High. Two recitals scheduled Veda Rogers, senior, will present a vocal recital at 8 p.m. Thursday in Swarthout Hall. Ernestine Hallman will accompany her. This recital will be presented in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree Bachelor of Music in Voice. Nancy Kyle will give a recital at 8 p.m. Tuesday in Swarthout Hall. Miss Kyle (Bachelor of Music in Piano, Phillips University, Enid, Oklahoma) will present this recital in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree Master of Music in Piano. KIEF'S RECORD & STEREO The greatest value of an effective public relations program comes from a continuous program. "WAITING UNTIL emergencies arise and then employing public relations as a remedial device is not an effective employment of its techniques. A continuous PR program helps an organization reduce problems and prevent emergencies. Good public relations often can attack big problems while they are still small," Dykes said. Dykes recommends two viewpoints for appraising modern public relations. From the viewpoint of an organization, effective PR should obtain better understanding and acceptance which is essential for survival in our complex, competitive society. CLASSIFIEDS FOR SALE $5.95 A second viewpoint—that of the receiver of organization messages also should be considered, he said, because the receiver needs to understand the issues, the consequences of fast-moving events in a changing world. TYPEWRITERS—most brands portables including Olympia, Royal and SCM Electric portables, sales service, and commercial Inquiries about on-menta purchaser, Office of Lawyers and furniture. Lawrence Typewriter, 700 Mass., VI 3-3644. Diamond Needle Sale Reg. $9.95 - $10.95 Permanent Discount on 8-Track Car Tapes This lovable black toy poodle puppy wants you to own him. This fella is worth $25,00 (that's 7 shots). (That's worth $25,00) VI 2-1254 after 10 a.m. VII 7-12 1962 TRUMPH HERALD. Low mileage, exceptionally good condition. $700.00 By Owner. Ph. VI 2-9141 or 740 Louisana after 6:30. tf SHERWOOD AMPLIFIER, 20 watts, good condition, $45. VI 2-1646. 7-26 Selmer Mk VI Saxophone, perfect played $600.00 value-for $400.00 Am selling to subsidize education expenses. Call VI 2-6825. TUTORING LOST Black Shaving KIT containing needed keys. It found, call VI 3-8787. Res. 14/2015. Extra clean 1949 Lincoln 4 door, low mileage, standard transmission, overdrive, radio. $100.00. See after 5: Call VI 3-1669. 7-15 Graduate student will tutor in mathematics. Group or private lessons. Call Keith Stumpf at VI 3-6600 Monday through Friday. 7-12 WANTED Woman needed to supervise church and/or worship service. experience Preferred. VI 3-7134, 7-15 Spring and Summer Dresses Reduced 25 to 40% Entire Stock Included SALE SALE Spring and Summer Sportswear Reduced 25 to 40% Entire Stock Included terrill's LAWRENCE, KANSAS SALE Swim Suits Reduced up to 40% Entire Stock Included SALE Entire Stock of Summer Fabrics Reduced 1/3 to 1/2 July Sale of Bernat Yarns Now in Progress CLI Experience or minne VI 2-39 Accom and em Summer to all color, cr Dainylan (aeros a.m. to p.m.-11 Sandwid Western ly revis Mimeog per co delivery terri's LAWRENCE. KANSAS $10 rev to the globe Hall, J value t 5579. N CAMP you've in a va taken Monda Page 7 CLASSIFIEDS Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the Summer Session Kansas are required students to wear color to color, ered or national origin. MISCELLANEOUS Dainyland Drive-In, 23rd & Ohio (across from Rusty's IGA), Open am/am, 10 p.m., Mon/Sat, Sun, 1:30 to 11 p.m., Service, Ice Cream, sandwiches. Experienced babysitting. Your home or mine, Nights and weekends. Call VI 2-3901. tf Western Civilization Notes *Completely revised, extremely comprehensive. Mineographed and bound for $4.25. Call VI 2-1901 for delivery.* **if** $10 reward for information leading to the recovery of a stolen world globe taken from room 11, Bailey Hall, June 15th. Great sentimental value to owner. UN 4-3386 or VI 3-5579. No questions asked. tt CAMPERS—Here's the sweatshirt you've been waiting for. Only $20 taken in Templin or Lewis Halls on Monday and Wednesday evenings. Michigan St. Bar-B-Q, Ribs $2.53 per slab — hire $1.10 chicken $1.41-Bracket Sand 65e. Cold Beverages, Open 11:00 a.m. to 11:00 p.m. Closed Sunday and Tuesday. Phone VI 2-9510. 515 Michigan St. tf Need any sewing or mending done? All types sewing—Repairs, alterations, and clothes made. Reasonable. VI 2- 3901. tt Thesis graphs drawn to your specifications. Reasonable. Call UN 4-3867. VI 2-6174 After 5 p.m. Robert Nelson. 7-22 TYPING Experienced typist with new electric typewriter will type dissertations, theses and term papers. Fast and accurate service with reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Lancaster at VI 2-1705. Typist, experienced with term papers, theses and dissertations. Will give your typing immediate attention with electric machine with extra symbols. Mrs. Marlene Higley at 408 W. 13th. VI 3-6048. **tf** Typing—Theses, term papers, dissertations, Reasonable Rates, paper furnished. VI 2-1561. tf Experienced typist, 10 years experience in theses and term papers. Reasonable rates for service. Reasonable rates. CALL Mrs. Barlow, 2407 Wale, VI 1-2648. tsf Gift Box Andrews Gifts VI 2-1523 Open Wednesday Evenings Malls Shopping Center Plenty of Free Parking FRED GREEN Western Wear The only store in Lawrence with complete lines in western wear. Lee Rider Jeans Justin Boots Brushed Denim Bonanza Shirts $8.70 910 Mass. VI 3-0077 see us at the... YES! We're open for the summer. Come down and WAGON WHEEL 1401 Ohio VI 3-9603 Southridge Plaza, Inc. 2350 Ridge Court Lawrence, Kansas, 66044 Vacancies Available MRS. RAMON H. PICKERING Manager Office VI 2-1159 Home VI 2-3756 Area Code 913 HAVING A PARTY? We are always happy to serve you with OPEN TO 10 P.M. EVERY EVENING Crushed ice, candy Chips, nuts, cookies Crushed ice, canny Ice cold 6 pacs - all kinds Variety of grocery items Ice cold beverages LAWRENCE ICE COMPANY Go With The Winner Have your sports car tuned where performance is proven Fast-Accurate—Experienced 25s per Miss. St. Mrs. Craven 2-0398 $18 Miss. St. Mrs. Craven with race-winning cars. Competition Sports Cars Typing Wanted, theses, essays, and Rates. Mrs. Hallenbeck, VI 3-4156, Rates. Mrs. Hallenbeck, VI 3-4156, 616 Vt. Ph.VI 3-0350 1209 E. 23rd St. VI2-2191 Experienced typist—Will type your term papers, themes, book reports. Reasonable. Call VI 2-3901. tf TRIUMPH SALES & SERVICE Expert typing. Themes. Dissertations. The typewriter typewriter, Mischel V 1-3029 FORMER HARVARD AND UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA SECRETARY WILL TYPE REPORTS. TERM PAPERS. THESES. VI 3-7207. 8-2 FOR RENT Room and board for men: Only at the Manor Lodge can you find a quiet study environment and wonderful meals served 3 times a day, 6 days a week and 8 hours a day. We're registered with the college and licensed by the State Board. Call today for further information: VI 3-3408, BUT HURRY! Downtown Health & Foreign Foods Natural Foods Better Nutrition Better Health Tuesday, July 12. 1966 Summer Session Kansan 9th & N.H. VI 2-2771 LIVE CLOSE TO CAMPUS. Air-conditioned one and two bedroom apartments in the apartment furnished or insured. Rents begin immediately. Santes Apte. 1123, Ind. I3-2116. Complete Center 1218 Conn. Pet Ph. VI 3-2821 Established - Experienced FREE PARKING TWO COMFORTABLE APARTMENTS at 827 Ohio. Move in immediately. Will also take ironing. Prompt service, neatly done. V1 2-3447. 7-8 Complete Center under one roof Drive-In Pet Center GRANT'S Now Renting For Fall—Extra Nice Bachelor Apartments for graduates or older undergraduate men. 2 Blocks from new school building, milling finished. Pki. Park. SOME air-conditioned. For appointment call VI 3-8534. tt Arrange Your: Flight Home Vacation Reservations Trip Abroad Other Summer Reservations ENTERTAINMENT TRAVEL THIS SUMMER Having trouble finding locations for parties? The "New" Alley Cat is now available. Large or Small. For information call VI 2-6389. times 3 Rooms with Bath, Furnished Apt. 3 Preently Ptl. Single Beds Availi- mind $75.00 for 2, or $500.00 for 1— I 3-4347. Inquire 1093. Messages 7-15 of - Novelties Lavalliers Sportswear - Badges Exclusive Representative 914 Mass. St. - Badges - Novelties L. G. Balfour Co. Paddles For the finest in Cups at: MAUPINTOUR The Malls VI 3-1211 - Rings Rings Al Lauter 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 Favors Fraternity Jewelry Watch Renairing at its Finest — - Guards — WATCHES — DIAMONDS — GIFTS — - Trophies Daniels Jewelry - Free Estimates on Repairs - Only Genuine Material Used Watch Repairing at Using the Latest Electronic and Ultrasonic Equipment Software Repairs - Awards - Only Genuine Material Used * Work Guaranteed — of course - Pleasing Prices The Bank of Friendly Service Invites You To Open A Checking Account Now. - Drive-up windows - Close to campus - Free parking - Bank by mail Douglas County State Bank 9th and Ky. VI 3-7474 Member F.D.I.C SUA FRIDAY FLICKS SUA "Flower Drum Song" Starring: Nancy Kwan Friday, July 15 In Air Conditioned Dyche Auditorium 7:00 & 9:00 p.m. Admission 35c Page 8 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 12, 1965 NO REASON TO STAY IN THE HEAT come to THE HAWKLET IT'S COOL Open 6:30 a.m.-10:00 p.m. ROLLS ICE CREAM SALADS COLD DRINKS DESSERTS COFFEE HOT AND COLD SANDWICHES KANSAS UNION FOOD SERVICE Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 15.1966 76th Year, No. 9 Lawrence, Kansas The (Photo by Glen Phillips) ADMIRERS OF ART These two campers were caught by the roving photographer viewing the Art Camp display in Murphy Hall. History, English institutes convene What effect has modern imperialism had on Europe and other countries such as Latin America, China, and sub-Saharan Africa? This in the basic question being discussed in the National Defense Education Act (NDEA) Institute in History now in session at KU. THE INSTITUTE from June 13 to Aug. 5 consists of 29 world history teachers. Each participant is enrolled in the KU Graduate School as a special student and will receive eight hours credit. The course, entitled "Europe and the World in the Age of Modern Imperialism, 1763-1919," is a survey of Europe with emphasis upon the impulse toward and the meaning and implications of modern imperialism. Countries outside Europe will also be studied to see what impact imperialism had on them. * * Teachers get a taste of their own medicine when they participate in one of the many summer institutes now in session at KU. Forty junior high and high school teachers are enrolled in the National Defense Education Act (NDEA) Institute for Advance Study in English. The institute is co-sponsored by the U. S. Office of Education and KU. THE INSTITUTE, from June 10 to August 6, is dealing with composition, literature, modern grammar, linguistics, and teaching methods. The institute is taught by KU staff members and one visiting professor. Director this year is John R. Willingham, associate professor of English and director of freshman-sophomore English. ONE CAMP FINISHED Goodbye music, frizbie By Margaret Ogilvie Tonight a "Farewell Party" will mark the close of the two-week junior high music camp. When the capacity enrollment of 340 girls and boys leaves Corbin Hall tomorrow, Gary Watson, head of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp division, will have supervised what he terms a "bigger and better" session than any of the five before it. Oliver Hall ready by fall term Kansas University's new Oliver Hall is nearing completion and wil be ready for occupancy by 680 freshmen women by Sept.1, according to J. J. Wilson KU dormitory director. Workmen will move furniture into the new hall beginning Monday, and building contractors should be finished by Aug. 15. INSPECTION HAS begun of the eighth, ninth, and tenth floors. Some floor and ceiling tile, plus lighting fixtures, still must be installed before the building is finished. However, when students arrive for the fall session Sept. 12, everything should be ready except for landscaping. Oliver Hall is a 10-story structure located near 19th Street and Naismith Drive, named in honor of the Rev. R. W. Oliver, first KU chancellor. The building resembles Lewis and Templin Halls in style. ALSO LOCATED at the hall will be the offices of officials in the KU "College Within the College," new living-learning program which will begin next fall. The 10-story Naismith Hall, the first privately financed dormitory in the history of the University, also will open this fall. Two bands, two choirs, and an orchestra will present a joint concert tomorrow at 3 p.m. in the University Theatre. The junior high schoolers have been rehearsing four hours daily under the direction of Loren Crawford (orchestra), Richard Brummett (concert band), David Circle (symphonic band), and Miss Marilyn Curt (chamber and concert choirs). THE MAIN LOUNGE and the south dining room at Corbin were used for practices. Each student also has had two private lessons included in his fees. Many have had additional instruction offered by 15 teachers who used rooms on the fourth floor of North Corbin as studios. The youngsters have attended Sunday concerts presented by senior high musicians "en masse." At 2 p.m. tomorrow they will also have the opportunity to hear a repeat performance of the Advanced Student Recital given Wednesday. Campaigning for king and queen of the climactic formal tonight started Monday when candidates were elected. It has been only one aspect of the activity occupying seventh, eighth, and ninth graders. "THE BIG PASTIME," said Watson, "is frizzie." Informal games of volleyball, badminton, and croquet have kept the campers busy between rehearsals and lessons. They were offered three movies each week at Corbin, and Saturday all participated in a Moonlight Swim for which three buses were chartered to Holiday Park Swim Club. A camp meeting was held the first day of camp, July 3, and another Monday to discuss plans for next year. Party Pix to return to KU yearbook the tradition of "Party Pix" will be revived in the 1967 Jawhawker, according to Blake Biles, Hutchinson junior and editor of the yearbook. "Party Pix" were dropped in the 1966 edition of the Jayhawker because of a shortage of space created by coverage of the University's centennial. "We considered eliminating Party Pix" permanently," said Biles, "but there seems to be wide-spread student support for the section, so we are going to include them in the book." Biles plans to run "Party Pix" in two separate supplements to the four magazine issues of the 1967 Jayhawker. "The two sections will be 12 to 16 pages long. Tentatively, we are planning to distribute them with the Fall and Spring (first and third) issues of the Jayhawker," Biles said. In the past, "Party Pix" have appeared in each issue of the yearbook. "Humor sections such as the Jayhawker's 'Party Pix' are rarely found in college yearbooks." Biles stated, "because most administrators and advisors don't feel that humor is a proper function of a yearbook. However, I don't think that ignoring the non-academic side of life at KU is a good thing either. After all, the activities that begin every Friday afternoon at 4:30 are fairly important to most students and I think they should be included in the Jayhawker." Iris (Photo by Glen Phillips) THE AGONY AND THE ECSTASY Members of the junior high orchestra practice even though the temperature soars to the 100-degree mark. And, while the girl on the left shows the concentration these young musicians have for learning to play, the one on the right shows that some of them yield to demands of comfort, too. Page 2 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 15, 1966 Don't knock the kids Perhaps some of our more astute readers (those who glance at the editorial page for something besides the "little man on campus" cartoons) noticed something different about our last issue. On pages two and three of the Tuesday, July 12, Summer Session Kansan, 16 editorials, written by students of the journalism division of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp appeared. I HAVE HEARD some unfavorable comments on this practice, and I wish to make my opinions on the subject heard here and now. The hard-bitten college students with philosophical and intellectual leanings who mentioned that perhaps high school students were not really old enough or mature enough to write anything that they (my college friends) would consider worth reading, would do well to look at these pieces. It's true, the subjects included some which would not be of interest to most collegians. One editorial, on camp practices, doubtless did not have much appeal. And those students who feel themselves to be emancipated, clothing-wise, from the petty standards of most high schools, would not be concerned with the few articles on dress. BUT THERE WERE definitive articles of interest. LSD, integration, rights, auto safety, and LBJ, are all topics which should concern any average reader. And the ideas expressed on these subjects were not bad, not bad at all; in fact my hard-hearted college friend, you might do well to read some of the bright and intelligent young opinions. Maybe high school students have no right to be heard in a college newspaper, but I feel that if they have the courage to stare their frank and sometimes unpopular opinions, then they have the right to be heard. AND YOU, my old mature college friend, if you think their opinions are so foolish, why don't you write a guest editorial and give me your own ideas. But you'd better send it special delivery, or I'll never see it; I would probably be too busy talking to some of these "adolescents" and learning how they feel about things. Barbara Phillips Civil rights shifts to North (UPI)—Pressure is fast building to compel the well-heeled suburbs outside the South to share the Negro problem with the great central cities. For example: North Shore communities suburban to Chicago would be pressed to re-zone areas for subsidized, low-cost housing, and the suburban schools would be expected to absorb the children of Negro families attracted to the area by subsidized housing. WE ALTHY WESTCHESTER and Dutchess counties, which are typical of suburban wealth near New York City, would be pressed to do their bit in absorbing the impact of Negro intellectual and material poverty. Detroit's Grosse Point, and the satellite communities around Los Angeles, Washington, D.C., and elsewhere finally must endure the coming pressure, or else. Last month's conference of U.S. mayors endorsed such a program in general terms. The 1966 civil rights bill now pending in Congress was a step toward the generally indicated purpose of the federal government to press for suburban help in dealing with the problem of the northern Negro. THE 1966 BILL contained an open housing provision which would have forbidden a home owner or a dealer in homes to discriminate against a would-be Negro purchaser. Startled congressional champions of civil rights recognized a Great Society effort to outlaw outside the South the prevailing discrimination against Negroes which is not enforced by northern law, but which is based on habit and most of all is dependent on a subtle exclusion of Negroes from the good life, the good education and the good homes of suburbia. THERE IS NO ROOM in white suburbia for impoverished Negroes. They cannot afford it. Hence, a beginning might be made with subsidized low-cost housing. Suburban communities could zone against any such intrusion, and that is a fact. But the federal government could withhold all federal funds from such a suburb. Consider what may come to pass in the light of a recent statement by Dr. Tinsley L. Spraggins of the U.S. Office of Educational Opportunities. He said: "Money is power and the government intends to use this power as a lever to pressure school systems, both North and South, to eliminate the last vestiges of segregation." SCHOOL SYSTEMS in the wealthier suburbs are lily white or almost so, there being no Negroes in the neighborhoods to be integrated into such schools. The long-haul program is to change all of that by making sufficient Negro children available, pretty much regardless of how the suburban whites feel about it. They won't like it. Suburban and other outside the-South whites did not like the open housing provision in the pending civil rights bill. So they junked most of that part of the measure. They obtained a compromise on the open housing question. The compromise limited the open housing provision mainly to the sale and-or rental of large apartment and home developments. NO DANGER NOW of your suburban next-door neighbor being compelled to sell his home to some well-heeled Negro, if your neighbor sells at all. Many of the whites who opposed the original open housing provision have been providing political support for punitive civil rights legislation directed at southern states. Summer Session Kansan Outraged civil rights leaders accused the turncoat northerners of hypocrisy in refusing to accept Radio-TV classes prepare scripts Each class member wrote a script and submitted it to the class for review. Then the class voted for the best ones. The selected plays range from a take-off on Gunsmoke to a trip through a jungle. Each has several actors, a director, and an engineer. After enough rehearsal, each will be put on tape and played back for the cast. Glenn Price's camp class in radio and television has been busy for the past three weeks preparing radio scripts. For 76 Years, KU's Official Student Newspaper KANSAN TELEPHONE NUMBERS Newsroom—UN 4-3646 Business Office—UN 4-3198 The Summer Session Kansan, student newspaper at The University of Kansas, is represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St., New York, NY. Students in the summer session may take a class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan., every Tuesday and Friday during the Summer Session except University holidays and examination periods. Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the Summer Session Kansan are offered to all students without regard to color, creed, or nationality. The opinions expressed in the editorial column are those of the students whose names are signed to them. Guest editorial views are not necessarily the editor's. Any opinions expressed in the Summer Session Kansan are not free-of-charge. Of the University of Kansas Administration or the State Board of Regents. THE NEIGHBORHOOD Youth Corps, a program under the war on poverty, gives teenagers jobs—but how hard they work at these jobs and what jobs they work on is a detail that seems to point to the inefficiency and waste of this program. For instance, in Dodge City, the NYC is directed by the Monseigneur of the Catholic Church. Of the dozen or so workers belonging to the program, over eight of them work on Catholic Church grounds, Catholic High School grounds, the Catholic college grounds and other Catholic-affiliated agencies. The trio of workers sent to the public schools were taken off the more difficult and exacting labor because of the laxness and inefficiency of their work. all-out civil rights law for themselves while approving it for others. Many such northerners are indeed, cynical hypocrites. The poverty program conceived by President Lyndon B. Johnson has long been in practice and has at least reached the equivalent of puberty in its stage of growth. This, then, makes it fair play for evaluation. But it is striking that the only evaluation of this program can be in the negative sense. For instance— Blunders in poverty plan It is a known and published fact that in the military there is only one foreman-type employee to every 1,100 civilians, while in the war on poverty there is one foreman-type employee—being paid as much as $24,000 a year—to every 18 employees. The military men are dedicating their lives to the nation and are risking their lives in Viet Nam while the War on Poverty people are being paid thousands more by the same government to run this particular program. These are not the only things that I could cite as examples. State authorities have been forced to ask that thousands of Canadians and West Indians be brought into the United States to harvest the apple crop in Virginia and West Virginia. This took place while our "Job Camps" were bulging with Americans who would not pick apples. Sargeant Shriver has more than 400 staff members under him who are being paid $35 and up to $100 a day by the taxpayers to run this fisco. Surely President Johnson has made a terrible mistake if he ever planned this program to bring him the undying good will of the American people. Scott English Salvage Operation 1964 GOLD WATER REAGAN NAXH FACTIONS GOP MODERATES BOOK REVIEWS The disc jockeys each summer pull out the records that remind us, via Nat Cole and Robert Goulet, of the lazy, hazy days and the hours at the beaches and the picines and the girls in the bikinis. The book trade gives us light fiction. Saw a woman the other day reading Boswell's "Life of Johnson," and once saw a nut on a train reading "The Story of Philosophy." (World is full of people who get off the track.) Most sane folks, lolling in air-conditioned comfort, prefer summer reading. Which means that perhaps John le Carre's The Looking Glass War (Dell, 95 cents) is not the best way to start the subject. A spy story, in the mood of the author's "The Spy Who Came In from the Cold." No pussyfooting around with Pussy Galore, or getting in the shower with Sophia Loren. Le Carre's people live dark ugly lives and are quite unheroic. What has happened with this author is that he has made the spy novel a respectable genre. His books may even get on English Lit. reading lists sometime. Of a different sort is one called Torn Curtain (Dell 50 cents), by Richard Wormser. The author is one of those chaps who writes novels from screenplays. "Torn Curtain" is the new Hitchcock movie. Wild, fantastic doings—a senator's daughter, a traitor, a countess, a ballerina, secret police, a U. S. physicist—call in Paul Newman and see if Mancini can do the sound track. We take you back 30 years or more with three wonderful books in paperback, Dashiell Hammett's The Maltese Falcon, The Thin Man and The Glass Key (Dell, 50 cents each). Titles that, of course, you recognize. Memories of Humphrey Bogart turning in Mary Aster to the cops, William Powell and Myrna Loy madly drinking and solving mysteries, George Raft as front man for big crook Edward Arnold. Hamnett was great reading in the thirties, and he's still great read- ing. Tough guy stuff, sort of poor man's Ernest Hemingway. It is a pleasure to see these volumes. Some Agatha Christie, too. The Man in the Brown Suit (Dell, 50 cents). You could have read this one back in 1924, when it first appeared. A damsel in distress, a mysterious gent with a scar. So what else is there this month? Well, Edgar Pangborn a West of the Sun (Dell, 50 cents), which we suppose you'd call science fiction. The planet Lucifer. Aspace ship wandering around 11 years. Horrible people and a wild world. "The Lost World" and "The Land That Time Forgot" gave us this kind of nonsense two generations ago. Let's see—Elizabeth Seifert's Doctor Samaritan (Dell, 50 cents) soapy romance about a dedicated doctor, his career, and a beautiful girl. Who will win? Will September follow August? And C. Y. Lee's The Flower Drum Song (Dell, 60 cents). Chop Suey in Chinatown. The clash of the races (wittily and delightfully done, of course; we can't mess around with meanings). What? You hadn't heard about this story? May a hundred thousand miracles never come your way. Civil rights concern all "Civil rights? buh! What's that?" "Oh, oh yeah, civil rights, sure, they're okay." Does this reaction sound familiar? Or how about this one: "I absolutely never think or read about it. Those Niggers upset me too much." Why should this type of comment be heard around our school? There aren't any Negroes attending Moscow High, and maybe there never will be, but that doesn't mean we should act as if problems concerning race are not of vital concern to the nation right now. Someday everyone of us will in some way run into the problem of taking a definite stand one way or the other on civil rights. Yet many of us are going out of our way to remain ignorant of the issue. I don't mean to say that MSHSers should get busy demonstrating and having sit-ins, but they should not take the attitude shown by the above quote. One thing we students should do is clean up the language floating through the school halls. The kind of language meant here is the use of the word "Nigger" or terms such as "black as a Nigger" and many other unprintable epithets all of us have heard. If you don't want your skin color to become a dirty word, why use another's color for one? — Margaret Weber Page 3 TV inspires plumage of colorful clothing By Vernon Scott HOLLYWOOD — (UPI)—If the plumage of male Americans has brightened in the past year, blame color television. This is the calculated conclusion of Sy Devore, Hollywood's foremost haberdasher, who suits many a male video star in addition to providing leading men with movie wardrobes. Sy contends that the more color sets sold, the bolder men become in their wearing apparel. "STARS LIKE Dean Martin and Andy Williams and Frank Sinatra aren't afraid to wear bright colors." Devore explained. "And when American men see them on color TV they're encouraged to go out and buy some colorful clothes themselves." According to Sy, oranges, green, mustard, burgundy, bright blues and yellow are becoming increasingly popular in slacks, sweaters, sports shirts and even sports jackets. "Andy Williams has increased the sale of sweaters 100 per cent in my stores," said Sy at lunch in the Brown Derby, just across the street from his Hollywood establishment. "HE'S DONE MORE for alpaca sweaters than all the golf pros in the business. Perry Como used to wear those sweaters, too, but he was in black and white and didn't affect the viewers as dramatically as Andy does in color. "Color television has increased the demand for maroon and blue dress shoes. If a man sees Dean Martin wearing blue shoes he's going to feel better about wearing them himself." Devore's contention is based on fact. He says men around the Ping pongers' tourney bounces into new week The Templin Hall ping pong tournament is in full swing as it enters its second week. Of the 20 boys who entered the tournament last week only ten remain in the second round. The boys play at their leisure anytime during the week and report the outcome to Steve Branden, counselor, chairman of the ping-pong tournament. The final rounds will be played next week in the Templin Hall lounges. "IT'S NOT JUST New York and Southern California," Devore said. "I get letters from all parts of the country, and the big thing is color. The Madison Avenue look is on the way out. It's been limited to blacks, grays and somber blues for too many years. country write to him asking for a specific sports jacket or sweater they've seen on the back of a television celebrity. "There's a new, natural look that I think is best illustrated on television by Ben Gazarra in 'Run for Your Life.' His wardrobe is for real men, not the college boy look." Council lists camp gripes Weekly meetings of the "gripe squad," formerly known as a camp council, are being held to help the administration know what the campers don't like. Complaints on food, rules, and living conditions, brought to the representatives' attention by fellow campers are main topics of discussion. When possible, these are corrected. IN AN OVER 90 PER CENT majority vote, Russell L. Wiley, director of the camp, has decided to look into the campers taking a trip to the Starlight Theatre. At a suggestion by a representative, this week's dance will be a bootenanny. The council is made up of elected representatives from each dorm and wing and is presided over by LeRoy Esau, supervisor, Joe Wiegand, Nancy Able, and Andy Soll, counselors. WASHINGTON—(UPI) —Republicans in search of the way back to power have been urged to take a leaf from the Kennedy notebook—put the accent on youth. Youth to get big push from GOP THE REPORT, prepared by the conservative-oriented Senate Republican policy committee, was released last week. It placed heavy emphasis on the nature of the voters in the next decade. New faces and fresh programs aimed at the young people who will come to dominate the electorate in the next decade will be a key to GOP rejuvenation, according to a frank report called "Where the Votes Are." "Since party identification is at its weakest among voters in their early and middle 20's we suggest the presence of enoumous opportunity; opportunity to make these new voters Republicans; opportunity to reach these new voters in terms of their own problems, their own issues, their own needs and hopes," the report said. IT IS TO THESE young voters that Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, DN. Y., as his late brother, President John F. Kennedy, has given much of his time and attention. Summer Session Kansan The report said "the decade head offers Republicans their first opportunity in nearly 40 years to establish themselves once again as the majority party in the United States." It was 38 years ago in the 1928 GOP election victory of Herbert Hoover over Democratic presidential candidate Al Smith that the GOP began to lose control of the cities where it once held balance of power. The "Cinderella of bacteria" will be discussed and studied by Christopher P. Sword, associate professor in microbiology, when he attends the Third International Symposium on Listeriosis. Listeriosis is subject of talk by professor The symposium will be held July 13-16 at the National Institute of Public Health at Bilthoven in The Netherlands. There will be representatives from many countries including the United States, Canada, Bulgaria, Yugoslavia, Italy, Germany, Denmark, The Netherlands, Britain, Sweden and Israel. There will also be representatives of the World Health Organization and the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations. The symposium, held every five years, is to help researchers all over the world know what are the latest findings on this bacteria. THE BACTERIA. Listeriosis, got its nickname because it was one of the last bacteria to be discovered. This organism causes disease in a wide variety of domestic and wild animals (including cattle and sheep) and also causes several clinical forms of disease in humans. Among the human diseases caused are meningitis, encephalitis, and infectious mononucleosis-like disease. Abortions are sometimes caused by this bacterium. Dr. Sword will present two papers at the symposium, entitled "Biochemical Aspects of the Listeriosis," by C. P. Sword and Martin Wilder, U. S. Public Heath Service (USPHS) predoctoral fellow, from Brooklyn, New York; and "Immunoglobulin re- Moonlight swim party planned for 200 Holiday Park pool will be the scene of a swimming party Saturday for 200 Midwestern Music and Art campers. The campers will leave from Lewis Hall at 9 p.m. by buses and return from the pool at 11 p.m. The camp is paying all costs for the swim, because the pool in Robinson Gym has been closed all summer. terrill's Summer Clearance Sale Swim Suits Reduced up to 1/3 Entire Stock Included Summer Sportswear Reduced up to 40% Entire Stock Included terriis LAWRENCE, KANSAS terri LAWRENCE. soonse in Listeriosis," by A. S. Armstrong, predoctoral graduate student, USPHS trainee, from Lawrence and C. P. Sword. Dr. Sword will also take part in a panel discussion on "New Aspects in the Isolation of Listeria monocytogenes." the KIEF'S RECORD & STEREO offers the best in component sound THE PROJECT and trip are being sponsored by the U. S. Public Health Service, and a grant from the National Institute of Allergy and infectious diseases. Dr. Sword is also receiving aid from the KU Research Funds. MASTERWORK for only $199.00 (nationally advertised at $235.00) - 30-watt—all transistor pre-amplamp combination - New pickering V-15 magnetic cartridge - Girard changer - Pickering acoustic-suspension speakers (with electronic-crossovers) Two seniors receive R.C.A. scholarships Is the sound terrible in your set? Come hear the Kief's Record & Stereo Malls Shopping Center MASTERWORK Shelly B. Pearce, Jr. and John B. Stinson, Topeka seniors in pre-medicine, have been awarded the $400 R. C. A. Scholarships in Science for 1966-67 at KU. Both recipients graduated from Topeka West High School in 1963. While at KU both have held Summerfield Scholarships, have been on the honor roll and were elected to Phi Beta Kappa, national honor society in the liberal arts. Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065 TONIGHT At Lawrence Theatres Varsity THEATRE...Telephone V13-5063 NOW! Evenings 7:15-9:15 Cont. Sat.-Sun.—2:30 FRANK SINATRA LISI ASSAULT ON A QUEEN Granada THEATRE...Telephone V13-5784 NOW! Evenings 7:15-9:30 Cont. Sat.-Sun.—2:30 A Riotous Romantic Adventure! WALT DISNEY'S LT.ROBIN CRUSOE, U.S.N. DICK VAN DYKE NANCY KWAN TECHNICOLOR® WALT DISNEY'S Run, Appaloosa, RUN! TECHNICOLOR® Sunset DRIVE IN THEATRE - West on Highway 40 Ends Tonite! "Ghost In The Invisible Bikini" & "War Of The Zombies" Sat. Only! Sidney Poitier—2 Hits "The Slender Thread" & "Lilies Of The Field" TONIGHT At Lawrence Theatres Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1045 NOW! Evenings 7:15-9:15 Cont. Sat.-Sun.—2:30 FRANK SINATRA LISI -Assault ON A Queen FRANK VIRNA Sinatra Lisi Assault ON A Queen Granada THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5784 A Riotous Romantic Adventure! WALT DISNEY'S LT. ROBIN CRUSOE, U.S.N. BANNED BY DICK VAN DYKE NANCY KWAN TECHNICOLOR® And WALT DISNEY'S Run, Appaloosa, RUN!! TECHNICOLOR® © 1986 Walt Disney Productions Sunset DRIVE IN HEARTH • West on Highway 40 Page 4 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 15.1966 Sunday Concerts CONCERT CHOIR AND CHAMBER CHOIR James Ralston, Director Darrell Benne, Assistant Director Jane Fager, Accompanist Sunday, July 17, 2:15 p.m. Mass in D Minor (Nelson) Joseph Haydn (1732-1809) 1. Kyrie 5. Credo 9. Benedictus 2. Gloria 6. Et incarnatus 10. Osanna 3. Qui tollis 7. Et resurrexit 11. Agnus Dei 4. Quoniam 8. Sanctus 12. Dona nobis Mr. Ralston, conducting Members of the Orchestra: Violin *Howard Boyajian *Paul Todd Marian Scheid Nadine Tonsig Janet Crawford Cynthia Tamer Cello Don Beene Selina Davis String Bass Cecal Cole David Kay Flute Nancy Hitt Viola Mike Seyfrit Eleanor Allen Esther Shriver Oboe Earle Dumler Martin Bebb Bassoon Charles Rader Trumpet David Clark Roger Stoner Paul Gray Tympani Leonard Cuddy Organ Jane Fager Soloists: (to be selected) 12-MINUTE INTERMISSION ORCHESTRA Gerald Carney, Director Harry John Brown, Guest Conductor Theme Song Irish Tune from County Derry ... Percy Grainger Russian and Ludmilla, Overture ... Michail Glinka Symphony No. 3 (Scotch) ... Felix Mendelssohn Fourth movement, allegro vivacissimo Mr. Carney, conducting Introduction to Act III, Lohengrin Richard Wagner Variations, Chaconne, and Finale Norman Dello Joio Mr. Brown, conducting - Faculty CONCERT BAND Russell L. Wiley, Director SYMPHONIC BAND Kenneth Bloomquist, Director Harry John Brown, Guest Conductor UNIVERSITY THEATRE SYMPHONIC BAND Mr. Bloomquist, conducting SYMPHONIC BAND North Sea Overture ... Ralph Hermann El Relicario ... Jose Padilla Elsa's Procession to the Cathedral from "Lohengrin" ... Richard Wagner 7 p.m. The Sinfonians Clifton Williams Prelude and Fugue in Bb Minor J. S. Bach Knightsbridge March Eric Coates INTERMISSION CONCERT BAND Theme Song Irish Tune from County Derry ... Percy Grainger March Militaire Francaise from the Algerienne Suite ... Camille Saint-Saens Invocation of Alberich from the Opera "Rheingold" ... Richard Wagner Harkstow Grange from "Lincolnshire Posy" ... Percy Grainger Danza Finale from the Ballet Suite "Estancia" ... Alberto Ginastera Mr. Wiley, conducting La Forza del Destino ... Giuseppe Verdi Suite Francaise ... Darius Milhaud Molly on the Shore ... Percy Grainger Finale from Symphony No. 4 ... Peter Tchaikowsky Mr. Brown, conducting SUA into summer swing Jaybowl. The tournament, open to all KU students, will feature snooker, 1-14, straight rail, and three rail billiards. Those interested may sign up at the Jaybowl. The Student Union Activities' Recreation Committee, with Rich Yeager as chairman, is in full swing featuring a busy schedule of events for the rest of the summer. July 27 is the date set for a bridge tournament at the Union. THE BEST THING about "Birdie," by nature of content a blare and blast musical, was the high comic relief. The Jewish mother bit ("I'm going to stick my head in the oven and turn on the gas"), the antics of the Sweet Apple mayor's wife when she encounters Conrad Birdie, and the distraught father (Bernie West) of the recipient of Birdie's "last kiss" sent the Kansas City audience into sympathetic hysterics. A pocket billiards tournament is planned for July 20 at the PRESCRIPTIONS Hibbard, who earned the B. S. degree in business administration, completed 13 weeks of training at the University of Hawaii campus in Hilo, left last week for India. Hibbard's group of volunteers will be assigned to poultry development, gardening, and nutrition projects in the Indian states of Maharashtra, Mysore, and Orissa. By Dan Austin It was a sweltering 95 degrees and Gary Lewis and his Playbies sounded worse in person than on a recording, but the Starlight Theatre's "Bye Bye Birdie" overcame the heat and Lewis developed into a pretty good show. ROUND CORNER DRUG STORE Co. 801 mass. VI 3-0200 Graduate assigned to Peace Corps duty Peterson and Rose bore up the show with some serious acting and professional dancing. But they were just a couple of notches above Lewis as singers. PETERSON himself is plagued by a Jewish mother (Madge Cameron) and his girl friend Rose (Elaine Dunn). The highly publicized Lewis looked the part of a delinquent-turned-singer(?) but when he stopped in mid show to sing a few of his own hits ("This Diamond Ring," etc.), the part fitted him like a leather glove. The screams of the younger set in the audience were understandably disarming. "Birdie," the third production of the Starlight's summer season, satirizes the current American craze, rock 'n' roll. It is the story of teenage singer Conrad Birdie (rightly played by the real-life Gary Lewis) and his final moments in the limelight before answering a draft call. In a last-ditch attempt to profit from Birdie's fame, manager Albert Peterson (Richard Barclay) gives away Birdie's "last kiss" to a fan in Sweet Apple, Ohio. A February graduate of KU, Edward A. "Hank" Hibbard of Eureka, has been given full appointment as a Peace Corps volunteer. Okay, even with Gary Lewis as star Come to a Party ELLSWORTH A-GO-GO To honor Kansas' next U.S. Senator Ron Dressler, Chairman Ellsworth for Senate Collegiate Comm. (Pol. Ad.) Sat., July 16, 1966 108 E. 6th, Topeka, Kansas 10 a.m. till Midnight ANNUAL SUMMER SALE! P.O. BOX 4150 Twice each year we offer big reductions on our regular stock of seasonal merchandise. Stop in today and take advantage of great buys on: Suits Sport Shirts Sport Coats Swim wear Dress Slacks Jackets Dress Shirts Pajamas & Robes (no returns or exchanges, please) THE Town Shop DOWNTOWN 839 Mass. St. Downtown Friday, July 15. 1966 Summer Session Kansan Page 5 'She Stoops to Conauer' conauers on KU staae By Bruce Levitt Oliver Goldsmith's "She Stoops to Conquer" opened Wednesday night in the Experimental Theatre as the third offering of the KU Summer Repertory Group. throughout the production. The audience was highly receptive to and thoroughly entertained by The play, directed by Linda McDonald, is an 18th century comedy of manners and confusions, and is perhaps the most difficult undertaking of the company to date. The production displays an abundance of sight humor combined with a hearty bawdyness. THE PLOT revolves around Miss Hardcastle, who has to forsake her somewhat upper class The swift pace of the show falters at times since the cast is not uniformly strong in comic flair or skilled in the handling of the difficult dialogue and Restoration mannerisms. Some lines were lost due to the problem of co-ordinating a quickness of tongue with Goldsmith's tongueting speeches. the director's handling of sight humor. airs to win her lady-shy suitor. The role, although smoothly enough played by Debbie Daniels, seems to lack a pinch of sparkle. Vocal variation and more delight in her cleverness could enhance the role. members probably will become comfortable in their difficult surroundings. PERHAPS THE MOST enjoyable aspect of the production is the direction. Miss McDonald has been most inventive with her staging (especially in the tavern scene) and her stage business Larry Soller and Sue Tisdall as Mr. and Mrs. Hardcastle perform their demanding roles with the energy, and the subtlety often required for the quick-to-quarrel couple. Kip Niven captivates the audience with his spirited portrayal of the practical-joking Tony Lumpkin. Niven's performance is perhaps the best in the show as he carries his characterization up to, but not beyond, the point of pure farce. After the opening the cast THE Red Dog Inn NEW Bob Dylan LP ON COLUMBIA RECORDS 2 Record Set-Reg. $7.95 $682 It's The RED DOG INN Mid-America's Largest Night Club KIEF'S & RECORD STEREO EVERY FRIDAY NIGHT IS TEEN NIGHT Everyone Welcome NO AGE LIMIT and Saturday Night COLLEGE NIGHT -minimum age 18. Bud on tap The Attraction This Weekend Friday—ERIC CRAFT & THE SIGNETS Saturday—SIR REGGIE & THE ROGUES 642 Mass. in Lawrence, Kan. "Mitch Rider and The Detroit Wheels" will appear Mon., July 18, at the Topeka Municipal Auditorium Advance Tickets At The Red Dog and Kief's — $1.50 SUA Trip to NELSON ART GALLERY Kansas City Tues., July 19th Bus leaves at 1:00 p.m. Returns at 5:30 p.m. Sign up at the Information Desk in the Kansas Union by noon Saturday, July 16. Cost of tour and bus fare $1.25 Page 6 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 15.1966 Two students get Hansen awards Van Jansonius, Prairie View sophomore, and Roy Forssberg, Logan junior, have been reawarded Dane G. Hansen scholarships of $500 for 1966-67 at KU. The Hansen scholarships, designated for graduates of Logan High School, are based on potential, scholarship, character and leadership. The awards are provided from funds established prior to Mr. Hansen's death. PATRONIZE KANSAN ADVERTISERS Tonight's movies listed Three movies will be shown at 8 p.m. today east of Robinson Gymnasium. They are "Search for Sea Speckled," "Happy Holidays" and "Camping in the Smokies" and "Vacation Revelation." MANHATTAN - (UPI) - Salary offers to Kansas State University engineering seniors average the highest in history, Bruce Laughlin, director of business and industrial placement, reports. He said the average for 1966 engineering graduates was $666 a month, compared with $638 last year and $612 two years ago. Laughlin said electrical engineers fared best in salaries, with offers averaging $678 per month. Improved salaries also were noted in virtually all other fields. Accounting seniors received offers averaging $589 a month, compared with $524 per month last year, and business administration majors were offered $540 a month, up from $490. SUA to sponsor trip to gallery The annual summer trip to the Nelson Art Gallery in Kansas City, sponsored by Student Union Activities, is scheduled for July 19. A group of 35 people is expected to leave Lawrence by bus at 1 p.m. Tuesday. They will return at 5 p.m. The deadline for reservations is noon. July 16. The reservations, which are $1.25, are to be made at the Information Desk in the Kansas Union. Campers volunteer for visual perception tests An appeal from the KU psychology department for 100 campers' cooperation in visual perception tests was heeded at Templin. Super for sipping Dairy Queen SODAS ©1980 Dairy Queen National Development Co. Dairy Queen's delicious country-fresh flavor makes these tasty sodas a real thirst-quencher. Beat the heat with a Dairy Queen soda! Come in for a treat TODAY! Dairy Queen 1835 Mass. St. KIEF'S RECORD & STEREO Malls Shopping Center BEST OF THE BEACH BOYS Philip Here's a sensational collection of the Beach Boys' greatest hits! . . . personally selected and compiled by the Beach Boys themselves and dedicated to their fans: "Fun, Fun, Fun"; "Surfin", U.S.A."; "Surfer Girl"; "Little Honda"; "Wendy" and more! $2.86 DIAMOND NEEDLE SALE $5.95 Souvenirs in Notebooks and Stationery Stana... one blue with red UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Standard 3 ring notebooks 2 styles one blue with red trim 1.35 other rd 3 ring notebooks 2 styles with red trim 1.35- other with artificial leather in selec tion of colors. Gold trim. Uni versity seal 2.55 Stationery with variety of letterheads.1.00 a box and up— kansas union BOOKSTORE UNITED STATES UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS University of Kansas BENJAMIN UNIVERSITAT KANSAS UNIVERSITY OF Kansas C Ac and Sum to a color UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS U.S. POSTAL STATE MARKERING MILLSTONE CITY, N.Y. University of Kansas M University of Kansas PARKING UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON --- Summer Session Kansan CLASSIFIEDS Page 7 Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the Summer Session Kaisan are offered in color, creed, or national origin. FOR SALE TYPEWRITERS-most brands, portables including Olympia, Royal and SCM Electric portables. Sales, service and rental Inquiries. Office equipment and furniture. Lawrence Typewriter, 700 Mass. VI 3-3644. tf Extra clean 1949 Lincoln 4 door, low mileage, standard transmission, overdrive, radio, $100.00. See after 5. Call VI 3-1669. 7-15 Friday, July 15, 1966 1962 TRIUMPH HERALD. Low mileage, exceptionally good condition. $700.00 By Owner. VI 2-9141 or 740 Louisiana. Ph at 6:30. tf SHERWOOD AMPLIFIER. 20 wage, good condition, $45. VI 2-1646. 7-26 Selmer Mk VI Saxophone, perfed $600.00 value for $400.00. Am selling to subsidize education expenses. Call VI 2-6825. tf For Sale: One complete set of women's golf clubs. Oster hand vibrator and classical records. Call VI 3-7047. 7-15 Watted: Ride from 6340 Riley, Over- tailed, to Kau, to Kup for next 2 C- 20-5277 Woman needed to supervise church performance. VI 3-7134 7-15 perience Preferred. VI 3-7134 7-15 WANTED Dairyland Drive-In, 23rd & Ohio (across from Rusty's IGA). Open 11 a.m.-11 p.m. Mon.Sat., Sun. 1 a.m.-11 p.m. Service, Ice Cream, Sandwiches tt MISCELLANEOUS Western Civilization Notes. Completely revised, extremely comprehensive, carefully garped and bound for $4.25 per copy. Call VI 2-1901 for delivery Experienced baby-sitting. Your home morning nights and weekends Cat VI 2-3001. $10 reward for information leading to the recovery of a stolen world globe taken from room 11, Bailey Hall. June 15th. Great sentimental value to owner. UN 4-3386 or VI 3-5579. No questions asked. tf Michigan St. Bar-B-Q, Ribs $2.55 siah — 1.25" chicken 10.10—Brixton Sand 65c. Cold Beverages, Open 11:00 a.m. to 11:00 p.m. Closed Sunday and Tuesday. Phone VI 2-9510. 515 Michigan St. tt Need any sewing or mending done? All types sewing—Repairs, alterations, and clothes made. Reasonable. VI 2- 390. Thesis graphs drawn to your specifications. Reasonable. Call UN 4-3867 VI 2-6174 After 5 p.m. Robert Nelson. 7-22 TYPING Experienced typist with new electric office typewriter will type dissertations, theses and term papers. Fast and accurate service with reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Lancaster at VI 2-1705. 8-2 *Typing-Theses, term papers, diss- terviews*, *Nates, paper*s, *presentation*, *VI 2-1561*. ft Experienced typist, 10 years experience in theses and term papers. Elec- tric support. Reasonable rates. CALL Mrs. Barlow, 2407 Yale, VI 2168-ft Typing Wanted, theses, essays and articles. Mail to: Rates. Mrs. Halen堡, VI 3-4156. Experienced typist—Will type your report in the computer reports section. Reasonable. Call VI 2-3901. Downtown Health & Foreign Foods Natural Foods Better Nutrition Better Health 9th & N.H. VI 2-2771 HAVING A PARTY? We are always happy to serve you with We are always happy to serve you with Ice cold beverages Chips, nuts, cookies Variety of grocery items Crushed ice, candy Ice co. all kinds OPEN TO 10 P.M.EVERY EVENING LAWRENCE ICE COMPANY 616 Vt. Ph.VI 3-0350 Go With The Winner Have your sports car tuned where performance is proven with race-winning cars. Competition Sports Cars 1209 E. 23rd St. VI 2-2191 TRIUMPH SALES & SERVICE Vacancies Available 2350 Ridge Court Southridge Plaza, Inc. MRS. RAMON H. PICKERING Office V 2-1150 Home VI 2-3755 Area Code 915 Lawrence, Kansas, 66044 Manager YES! We're open for the summer. Come down and see us at the... WAGON WHEEL 1401 Ohio Typist, experienced with term papers, using typewriter and electronic typing, your typing immediate attention with electric machine with extra symbols. The name Higley at 408 W. 131f T. 3-60488 VI 3-9603 FORMER HARVARD AND UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA SECRETARY WILL TYPE REPORTS. TERM PAPERS. THESES. VI 3-7207. 8-2 Expert typing, Themes, Dissertations, typewriter typewriter, Mishler, V 1-3i-2024 3 Rooms with Bath, Furnished Apt. Completely Pti. Single Beds Avail- able in Bathroom; $75 for 2, or $50 for 1 V 3-4347. Inquire 105 Miss. 7-15 FOR RENT LIVE CLOSE TO CAMPUS. Air-conditioned one and two bedroom apartments in modern bldg. Furnished or unfurnished. Rents beginning at $85. Santee Apts., 1123 Ind. VI 3-2116. tt Now Renting for Fall-Extra Extra Bachelor Apartments for grown or older undergraduates. 3 Blocks. Law, court. Quiet, prt, kitchen -utilities paid. Prt Parking, some air-conditioned. For appointment call VI 3-8534. For rent. Nice air-conditioned bach- ENTERTAINMENT Room and board for men: Only at the Manor Lodge can you find a quiet study environment and wonderful meals served 3 times a day, 6 days a week and twice on Sunday with the college and licensed by the State Board Call today for further information: VI 3-3408, BUT HURRY! For Rent: Nice air-conditioned bachelor apartment, available in August. May work out part or all of rent. Very close to KU Phone VI 3-8521 Having trouble finding locations for parties? The "New" Alley Cat is now available. Large or Small. For information call V1 2-6389 evening. tf FRED GREEN Western Wear The only store in Lawrence with complete lines in western wear. - Lee Rider Jeans Justin Boots Brushed Denim Bonanza Shirts $8.70 910 Mass. VI 3-0077 TRAVEL THIS SUMMER Arrange Your: Flight Home Vacation Reservations Trip Abroad Other Summer Reservations GRANT'S Drive-In Pet Center Established — Experienced 1218 Conn. Pet Ph. VI 3-2921 Complete Center under one roof FREE PARKING Exclusive Representative The Malls VI 3-1211 of at: MAUPINTOUR L. G. Balfour Co. 914 Mass. St. For the finest in Estimates on Repairs * Only Genuine Material Used * Work Guaranteed — of course * Pleaseing Prices -WATCHES-DIAMONDS-GIFTS- - Free Estimates on Repairs. - Only Guarantee Material Used. Watch Repairing at its Finest— Daniels Jewelry Fraternity Jewelry - Novelties - Favors - Novelties Using the Latest Electronic and Ultrasonic Equipment ● Lavalliers ● Rings Paddles Quarus Favors Favors - Badges - Guards - Paddles - Trophies - Sportswear - Mugs - Cups * Awards Al Lauter 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 The Bank of Friendly Service Invites You To Open A Checking Account Now. - Close to campus - Drive-up windows - Free parking - Bank by mail Douglas County State Bank 9th and Ky. Member F.D.I.C VI 3-7474 SUA FRIDAY FLICKS SUA "Flower Drum Song" Starring: Nancy Kwan Friday, July 15 In Air Conditioned Dyche Auditorium 7:00 & 9:00 p.m. Admission 35c Page 8 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 15. 1966 Junior high concert CONCERT CHOIR AND CHAMBER CHOIR Marilyn Curt. Guest Conductor Saturday, July 16, 2 p.m. UNIVERSITY THEATRE CONCERT CHOIR Heavenly Light ... A. Kopylow I Gaze on the Garden ... Schumann-Churchill I'll Not Complain ... Schumann-Churchill Oh! Lemuel ... Foster-Wagner Sure on This Shining Night ... Samuel Barber Ev'ry Night When the Sun Goes In ... arr. Gardner Ride the Chariot ... arr. Smith CHAMBER CHOIR Miserere Mei Antonio Lotti I'd Enter Your Garden Johannes Brahms Camptown Races Foster-Shaw-Parker He's Gone Away arr. K. K. Davis Set Down Servant arr. Shaw Glory Rimsky-Korsakoff Marilyn Curt, conducting SYMPHONIC BAND David Circle. Guest Conductor Freedom Plus March ... W. Oldham & J. Hale The Earle of Oxford's March from "William Byrd Suite". Goldon Jacob Ode for Band ... Robert Washburn Dramatic Prelude ... Claude T. Smith Mr. Circle, conducting ORCHESTRA ORCHESTRA Loren Crawford, Guest Conductor Symphony No. 1 in C Major (First Movement) ... Beethoven Prelude from "Brook Green Suite" (Strings) ... Holst Excerpts from "Sound of Music" ... arr. Bennett CONCERT BAND Richard Brummett. Guest Conductor Storm King ... Walter Finlayson Toccata for Band ... Frank Erickson Allegro ... Corelli-Brummett Concord Overture ... Ralph Hermann Holiday in Naples ... Maurice Whitney Highlights from "The King and I" ... Rogers-Herfurth Mr. Brummett, conducting Peace Corps fulfills dream By Cathy Austin When Congress established the Peace Corps, there was a cry of dissent from critics throughout the nation. The question was repeatedly asked, "How can amateurs succeed where experts have failed?" Today, critics no longer are skeptical of the Peace Corps. It is a proven success. Throughout the nation both young and old wish to carry out the objectives of the Peace Corps: to promote world peace and friendship. QUALIFICATIONS for service in the Peace Corps are few. One must be a United States citizen, 18 years old, if married, have no dependents under 18.One must submit an application and take the placement test. On the college campuses enthusiasm has been so great that a Student Peace Corps Committee has been formed to promote interest and knowledge about the Peace Corps. At KU this organization plans a Peace Corps Week in which films and talks are given on the Peace Corps. Placement tests are given once a month. This test is not graded and is only an informational tool for selection. The Peace Corps files applications accordingly. Countries ask for volunteers and the Peace Corps refers to its files to select the best qualified for the position. TRAINING FOLLOWS selection, and it lasts from 8 to 12 weeks. A number of students train in the summer before their senior year. Parents' Day at KU Oct. 14-15 will offer the triple-header lure of football, comedy and carnival. Parents' Day a triple lure Football for the program for parents of new students will be the Oklahoma-Kansas game Oct. 15. The University Theatre's production of "The Rehearsal" by Jean Anouilh will supply sophisticated comedy the nights of Oct. 14-15. STUDENT UNION Activities will have its annual fall carnival the evening of Oct. 15. There will be 30 booths and skits on the theme "That was the West that was." Softball contests into third week Intramural softball competition is in its third week, with 154 students and faculty members playing on seven fast-pitch teams and ten slow-pitch teams, a record number for summer session intramurals. Following are the current standings of teams in both leagues. Fast-pitch league; Fast-pitch league: Team Won Lost % SCROCS 1 0 1.000 Faculty Fossils 1 0 1.000 Speed Rats 1 1 .500 Chinese Bandits 1 1 .500 Hybrids 1 1 .500 English 0 2 .000 Slow-pitch league. Team Won Lost % Bio Chem 3 0 1,000 Charlie Brown's All-Stars 2 0 1,000 Medical Chemists 1 0 1,000 Heroditi 2 1 .666 Chem Tech 1 1 .500 Radiation Biophysics 1 1 .500 Delta Functions 0 1 .000 Blanks 0 2 .000 KKK 0 3 .000 Camp bowling tourney continues in third week Forty-eight Midwestern Music and Art campers are in their third week of mixed bowling league competition. Twenty-one girls and 27 boys take to the lanes in the Kansas Union Fridays at 6:30 p.m. Friday Night: Dance To 'THE CHESSMEN' and Saturday Night 'THE SIGNETS' 1/4 Pound Hamburgers and Franks on 5 inch Sesame Seed Buns. 1966-67 concert slate announced by fine arts You'll enjoy the Big 12 ounce T-Bone at THE VILLAGE GREEN 23rd & Naismith VI 3-6966 the Los Angeles Philharmonic at 8:20 p.m. on Monday, May 8. The Chamber Music Series will include four performances. On Monday, Oct. 17, the Aeolian Quartet will appear at 8 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall to inaugurate the series. The concert and recital schedule for the 1966-1967 school year has been announced by Thomas Gorton, dean of the School of Fine Arts. On Oct. 26, at 8:20 p.m. the initial program in the University Concert Course, "The Royal Hunt of the Sun," will be staged in Hoch Auditorium. Following this the Moscow Chamber Orchestra will perform in the University Theatre on Nov. 18, at 8:20 p.m. Jeanne Marie Darré, French piano virtuoso, will appear Friday, Dec. 9, in the University Theatre at 8:20 p.m. Also included in the Concert Course will be Justino Diaz, leading bass with the Metropolitan Opera, appearing on the University Theatre's stage at 8:20 p.m. on March 18. Concluding the KU Concert Course will be a performance by Following that, Soni Ventorum will appear at Swarthout Recital Hall at 8 p.m. Nov. 16; the Bartok Quartet will perform at Swarthout Friday, Jan. 20, at 8 p.m., and Wiener Solisten at 8 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 28 in Swarthout. The musical comedy, "How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying," will be one of many other special events. The Homecoming production, it will be given Nov. 3, 4, 10, and 11 in the University Theatre, at 8:20 p.m. SUA Presents Adm. 35c Kansas Union Ballroom "THE HUSTLER" Wednesday, July 20 Starring: Paul Newman Record Department Weavers DOWNTOWN FEATURING Just Like Me/Steppin' Out Just Like Us! PAUL REVERE & THE RAIDERS from "Where The Action Is" CL 2451/CS 9251 Stereo CL 2451/CS 9251 Stereo The "action" is with Paul Revere and The Raiders and their sensational LP. Included are hits like "Steppin' Out," "Doggone," "I Can't Get No Satisfaction," "Action" and others. $2.69 DIAMOND NEEDLE SALE $5.95 Charge It! Summer Session Kansan 76th Year, No.10 Lawrence, Kansas Tuesday, July 19, 1966 3:51.3 MILE Ryun breaks world record By George Wilkens Jim Ryun, KU freshman, ran the mile Sunday in a record time of 3.51.3, knocking 2.3 seconds off the previous world record and returning the title to the U.S. Ryun set the all-time mark at the All American Track Meet at the University of California in Berkeley. This meet was only a ANSA JIM RYUN substitute for a planned Polish American meet which was canceled by the Poles as a protest against American policy in Viet Nam. RYUN IS THE FIRST American to hold the record since it was won by Glenn Cunningham in 1934, with a time of 4.067. Before Sunday's record-breaking meet, Michel Jazy, a Frenchman, held the honors with a 3:53.6 time. Ryun was timed at 57.7 seconds as he reached the quarter mile mark, 1.554 for the half mile, and 2.55 at the three-quarter mark. His time for 1,500 meters was only a half second over the time of Herb Elliott, an Australian, who won the 1960 Olympics championship held in Rome. Finishing second in Sunday's record-breaking meet was Cary Weisiger of San Diego with 3:58, Richard Romo came in third, followed by Pat Traynor. At the end of the first quarter Romo was ahead, with Ryun in third place. At the half-mile mark, Ryun held second place and Wade Bell of Oregon led. Ryun took the lead at the end of the third lap as a crowd of 15,000 stood and cheered. U. S. TEAM coach Stan Wright described the 19-year-old Ryun as a psychological phenomenon, and said he paced himself for the first 880 yards and then claimed the lead. Ryun, whose home is in Wichita, runs 80 miles each week for practice, and holds the American two-mile record with a time of 8:25.2. He has a half-mile time of 1:44.9, a pending world record for that distance, and won the national mile championship in June. RYUN HAD CONSIDERED calling the University of California track coach and asking that the 1,500-meter race be extended Fees to be raised (Continued on Page 3) TOPEKA —(UPI)— The Kansas Board of Regents yesterday increased fees at the state's institutions of higher learning from 20 to 141 per cent. The action followed recommendations by the Legislative Council and review of the state college and university budgets at an executive committee meeting of the regents Friday. FEES FOR RESIDENT students at KU, Kansas State University and Wichita State University were raised $20 per semester. Students will now have to pay $240 a year at the three universities. Non-resident undergraduate student fees were increased $50 per semester to $700 per year. Fees for non-resident graduate students at the three universities were increased 141 per cent from $290 a year to $700 a year. The increase was $410 a year. FEES WERE INCREASED 20 per cent at Kansas State Teachers College of Emporia, Kansas State College of Pittsburg and Fort Hays State College for resident students. Resident students now pay $150 a year. The $15 per semester increase will boost the yearly fees to $180. Non - resident undergraduate students at the three colleges will pay an additional $75 per year or $445 per year. That was increased 20 per cent. FEES FOR NON-RESIDENT graduates were increased $107.50 per semester from $230 a year to $445 per year. That increase was 93 per cent. The regents said the increase in fees would provide an estimated $3.735,000 for fiscal 1968. The fee increases are effective in the fall of 1967. Max Bickford, executive officer for the regents, said the increase brings Kansas into the area of fee schedules similar to Oklahoma, Missouri and Nebraska. HE SAID THE FEE SCHEDULE is about average in the Midwest. There are 8,242 out-of-state students attending the six state institutions of higher learning. Bickford said graduate nonresident students who are teaching or doing research at the colleges and universities would not receive an increase in fees. He said those graduate students engaged in teaching or research are charged a staff rate for fees The Board also approved a budget of $29,595,379 for KU for 1968. The 1967 figure was $26,599,-452. The requested figure represents an increase of $2,995,927 or 11.3 per cent. The KU Medical Center in Kansas City would receive $20,463,123 under the Regents request for 1968. The new state budget includes a $7^{1/2}$ per cent raise for faculty members at KU and Kansas State, and a 9 per cent faculty salary increase for Wichita, Emporia, Fort Hays State, and Pittsburg State. Coed living groups top scholarship lists The motivation of the Viet Nam troubles, better students, kinder professors — no matter what, scholarship is up at KU. The grade point average for all undergraduate students in 1965-66 is 1.49, up from 1.46 each of the previous two years, on a scale of A is 3.0, B is 2.0 and C is 1.0 NEARLY ALL CATEGORIES improved their records in 1965- 66, both in the fall and spring semesters. As usual, women did better than men. 1.64 to 1.39. The four women's scholarship halls together averaged 2.15, significantly better than all B grades for 200 women. This is believed to be the highest ever for so many students in living units. The five men's scholarship halls also bested the B-mark with 2.02. The 13 sororites averaged 1.83, up from 1.80 a year ago and 29 fraternities averaged 1.47, up .01. MEN LIVING IN RESIDENCE halls scored 1.27 the same as last year while the women living in residence halls were 1.49, a significant gain over last year's 1.40. Both freshman men and women, although they were the University's largest new student group ever, earned better grades —men, 1.16, up from 1.11; women, 1.42, up from 1.38. The big news among living groups was Phi Delta Theta's edging Beta Theta Pi for fraternity grade leadership in the spring semester, 1.84 to 1.82; Delta Tau Delta also was 1.82. However for the year Beta ThetaPi led, 1.87 to Delta Tau Delta's 1.81 Pearson scholarship hall was high for men's living groups with a 2.15 average. This was only the third time since fraternities re-opened after World War II that Beta Theta Pi was not in first place. KU honors its beloved teacher, Dr. Babcock By Margaret Ogilvie Considered THE teacher in KU's math department by those who have known her during her 42 years here, Dr. Wealthy Babcock will be "difficult to replace." University and College officials expressed the gratitude shared by generations of students, who also were her friends, in commemorating her retirement last month. "We just want you to know that you mean a great deal to each of us and to the University," began a letter she received from administrators when presented with a plaque Friday by Robert Billings, director of student financial aid. She will keep a smaller one than will hang in Billings' office, both as "tangible evidence of the University's high esteem." Billings, who said Dr. Babook had "really taken an interest and done a great deal," as "the bulwark of the undergraduate scholarship program," wanted to recognize her as a "tremendous individual . . . over and above what the University would do." He did so informally, and as a surprise, because he thought "that's the way she'd like it." DR. BABCOCK did like it; in fact, she was "amazed," and the mist in her merry eyes told what she struggled to put into words: "I've enjoyed my teaching very much. It has been the most important part of my life." Dr. Babcock did not actually begin her teaching career at KU, although the records show that she became an instructor in 1923, an assistant professor in 1926, and an associate professor in 1940, after earning three degrees here from 1919 to 1926. She began at the age of 17, teaching in Washington County at Liberty school and at Lone Mound, which she had attended earlier. For two years after graduation from Washington High School she rode horseback from her farm home to teach elementary schoolers in buildings where "you were your own janitor." Recalling dates and figures she remarked, "Dear, dear, dear, we have to do arithmetic!" and concluded that she saved $50 each month for college expenses. Dr. Babcock later earned her PhD. under Stouffer and became what department chairman Dr. G. Baley Price termed "beloved" because of her "sympathetic interest towards the students." He said she "tried very hard to give the good students an opportunity." Dr. Babcock explained that she had always planned to teach but that a calculus class under the late E. B. Stouffer, former dean of KU's graduate school, influenced her choice of math rather than history. IN APRIL of 1964, before they had to connect it with retirement and more "for her pleasure." Price said, the department "tried to do something for her" by giving its library her name. "It was," he added, "in appreciation of the staff for her contributions in building it . . . a very genuine compliment and thank you." Dr. Babcock was given this recognition at the annual departmental honors dinner, 30 years after she began supervising the library's orders and purchases. "She devoted a great deal of attention to this task," Price said, "it isn't easy." Working with student help and with no assistance from Watson Library until a few years ago, "she's really had a heavy load." Price related that during the 1930's and 40's the library lacked research journals important to the department, and Dr. Babcock restored them with funds allotted recently. "We worked very hard," she said. "IT WILL BE hard to get anybody to work with the math library with the same devotion that she has," Price said. An "indication of her devotion" is her work there now as an emergency replacement "to hold things together in good shape to pass it on to her successor." He told of her offer to come up several times each week this summer: "If you don't mind," she had said. "That's part of her life." he pointed out, "it's of importance to her." She puts it much the same way: "The library became ill . . . You get used to it after awhile. In fact, you miss it very much, you see." Dr. Babcock will be missed in the library, in the classroom, and also in the University's scholarship program. THE FIRST COMMITTEE on (Continued on Page 3) TH ALTHY ATHEI LIBR WEALTHY BABCOCK Page 2 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 19.1966 Dangerous Genie On TV and giving This summer's managing editor being a pleasant and charming young woman who doesn't keep telling her professors how stupid they are, the Summer Session Kansan's editorial page has been relatively bland. The heat has helped, and so has the laziness that all of us tend to attach to the season. Anyway, it's time for a burning issue, so the paper's summer news adviser will blast off at the movies and television. Let's start with television. That's always a good target, and in view of the fact that nothing much good has been seen on it (except for old movies) since the days of the Show of Shows and Playhouse 90, it's also a safe one. Last week I sat down with my family to watch an old (eight years old) movie called "Damn Yankees. And somebody did it. They did it. They succeeded in making the thing look as though baseball was only incidental to it. Because of the commercials, probably. We have to watch the birds fly in the window and the White Knight gallop and the smokers exhibit their black eyes and the pills dissolve in the stomachs. This is now an essential part of our culture, and why does it matter that something good is shredded so that someone may work in these insiping documents of art? "DAMN YANKEES" should have been sponsored by a Kansas City meat-packing firm. Hollywood has been good, recently, at cutting out most of the good music in its versions of Broadway plays ("Bye, Bye Birdie" and "The Unsinkable Molly Brown" come to mind at this point). But it wasn't Hollywood that cut "Heart," "Shoeless Joe from Hannibal Mo" and "The Game." Somebody either in Kansas City or on the network did that. These were the great songs sung—and danced—by the baseball players. Easily, too, the best things in the musical. How anybody could cut "You Gotta Have Heart" from "Damn Yankees" is difficult to understand. But anything can be done these days for the sponsor. After all, Channel 4 sliced into the minister's prayer at the wedding in 'The Best Years of Our Lives' (three commercials every six minutes, timed by this viewer) to show us a gal tossing her hair around and a housewife holding up daddy's clean shorts. Now for the other gripe. This one stems from "Arabesque," which wasn't much of a movie. But the gripe centers around one of the short subjects, in which Alfred Hitchcock unctuously came on and in his elephantine way announced that we were about to be submitted to the bite. The house lights were about to come on and little Boy Scouts would pass the can for money to subsidize, among other things, an antiTB vaccine. THE ADS DIDN'T say a thing about it. We knew that we'd probably start with a look at somebody's clothing after it had spent a few days at a local cleaning establishment. We knew that there might be scenes from the world premiere of a new 20th Century-Fox movie, plus the ubiquitous trailers for coming attractions. But not the drive for funds. This wasn't in the ads. We sat there and passed that tin can around as we participated in the great American custom of giving—giving whenever anybody says "give." Nothing else to complain about at the moment. We didn't go to see Gary Lewis at the Starlight; that's why this editorial's complaints can be restricted to the electronic and film end of the mass media. CMP Breslau now only a memory BY EDWARD J. SHIELDS United Press International WROCLAW, Poland—(UPI)—A city named Breslau once flourished here. Except for a few reconstructed monuments, it exists now only in the memories of middle-aged Germans long in exile. Breslau was destroyed by the Germans as much as by the Russians. Today Wroclaw is the hub of the crucial German-Polish argument over ownership of the Oder-Neisse territories. WROCLAW to Poles symbolizes their own occupation of those territories—they argue that historically it is really a regaining of their own land—and the creation of a new Poland from the horror and destruction of the Nazi occupation. The nostalgic memory of Breslau to millions of Germans stands for the territories from which they were evacuated in 1945 after the Third Reich's collapse. Breslau died in flames and shellfire 21 years ago. Its fate was sealed when Allied armies began their victorious march on Hitler's heartland from east and west, but the city's selfimmolation was the decision of the Nazi commander, Gauleiter Karl Hanke. HANKE decreed as the Red Army swept across the Polish plain in January, 1945, that Breslau would become a fortress to block its advance. About 800,000 Germans, including 300,000 refugees, were jammed into the city. Hanke ordered them all into the four below zero winter to tear down buildings and erect barricades for "Festung Breslau" (Fortress Breslau). The onrushing Polish and Russian troops ringed the city with artillery and the main attack flowed around it and on towards Leipzig. Inside the city of Hanke refused to surrender. Shells and bombs fell unceasingly, the people grew emaciated on starvation rations, water was scarce and foul. No Surrender HANKE turned his forces on the Grunwald district,razing whole blocks of homes and two churches and bulldozing a landing field for an airlift that never came. An estimated 90,000 people died in building the airstrip alone. It was used once—on May 2, when Gaulerite Hanke climbed into a small Fieseler Storch artillery spotter plane and fled. Behind him he left 400,000 dead and a city 60 percent destroyed. Whole districts were reconstructed from the shell-poked ruins. The cathedral, the town hall and market square were restored. THE SURVIVORS of Fortress Breslau joined the refugee stream moving west. Poles—many of them from the areas around Lwow which passed under Russian domination—moved in and began to create their city of Wroclaw. Modern apartments in recent Summer Session Kansan For 76 Years, KU's Official Student Newspaper KANSAN TELEPHONE NUMBERS Still Scarred But even today no Polish city shows so clearly the scars of war. years have been going up at the rate of 10,000 annually. The old canal through the city has grassy banks again, the flowers bloom in the parks and along the main streets. Of the 600,000 Germans who lived in Breslau in 1939, perhaps 500 remain, city officials say. The local branch of the Social-Cultural Association in Germans in Poland reports only 225 members. DESPITE the reconstruction of the best of the old, Wroclaw still seems a new—almost frontier—city. In all the former Oder-Neisse territories there is one German-language newspaper. The Arbeiterzeitung. It was a daily until 1557, then a bi-weekly, then a weekly. Wroclaw is inhabited by 450,000 Poles, one-half of them born there after 1945. The old opera has been rebuilt. There are half a dozen theatres, cinemas, and a zoo and a race track. THERE ARE swinging student night clubs in medieval cellars under the old town square and a busy academic life at the Wroclaw University But the impression remains of a raw, new city which has not yet found its own personality. Newsroom—UN 4-3646 ---- Business Office—UN 4-3198 The Summer Session Kansan, student newspaper at The University of Kansas, is represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St., New York, N.Y. Class postage is charged at the class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan., every Tuesday and Friday during the Summer Session except University holidays and examination periods. Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the Summer Session Kansan are offered to all students without regard to color, creed, or nationality. The opinions expressed in the editorial column are those of the students whose names are signed to them. Guest editorial views are not necessarily the editor's. Any opinions expressed in the Summer Session Kansan are not necessarily those of the University of Kansas Administration or the State Board of Regents. The Poles moved into the Oder-Neisse territories and part of East Prussia in accordance with the Potsdam agreements which placed the regions under Polish administration until the final terms of World War Two were settled by a peace treaty. THE TREATY has never been signed. The Polish people, the Church and the Government find one of their rare points of unanimity in declaring the territories now are permanently Polish. The West German Government and refuge organization say Poland's border on the Oder-Neisse cannot be recognized until a peace treaty is signed. BLACK POWER 1966 HELDOCK WILLIAMSON POST BOOK REVIEWS Monet and His World, by Raymond Cogniat (Viking Studio $6.95): A biography, discussion and analysis of the works of Claude Monet, leader of Impressionism. The book is illustrated with 138 paintings in black and white and some photographs supplied by the artist's son Michel. Monet's life embraced a period that saw the 19th century give way to the revolutionary 20th. He died in 1926 at 86, the last of the impressionists that included Toulouse-Lautree, Gauguin, Cezanne, Degas, Van Gogh and Renoir. Famous in his own lifetime after a difficult youth, he had lived through the whole period of the Impressionist movement and had seen it superseded and relegated to an honored past. Cogniat's account and interpretations of this long and notable life are readable and sympathetic. \* \* \* Toward a Psychology of Art, by Rudolf Arnheim (University of California Press $10): What is art—as expressed in painting, sculpture, music, dancing, architecture, etc.? Definitions, explanations, interpretations are as numerous and various as the artists, teachers, writers, scientists and philosophers who attempt them. Professor Arnheim's essays gathered in this book are illuminating and easily understood and should lead to clarification of the questions if not the answers. They discuss such subjects as pure form versus subject matter, beauty or ugliness? symbols without roots, the craftsman and the artist. Is Modern art necessary? etc. The Musician's World: Great Composers in Their Letters, edited by Hans Gal (Arco $12.50). A selection of letters written by the great musicians of the 16th to 20th centuries. They afford an intimate insight into the characters, attitudes, ambitions, triumphs, and failures of such as Bach, Handel, Beethoven, Wagner, Liszt, Chopin, Brahms Debussy, Schonberg, etc. Dr. Gal's running commentaries help put the letters and excerpts into proper perspective. F The author teaches at Sarah Lawrence College and the New School for Social Research. 赤 赤 赤 The following is an open letter to the University of Kansas Business Office in charge of STUDENT HOURLY FAYROLLS. The first week of the month has once again rolled around and all the full-time employees have been paid, cashed their checks, and put them to use. But the first of the month is also when students on the hourly payroll get paid too—or is it? Although this is the understanding that each student has when he is hired by the University, it seems to be becoming less and less frequently the case. Dear Editor: To whom it may concern: Letters... For once again, a student seeking his check during this, the first week of the month, will be told that they will not be available until the eleventh or later. During another recent pay-period it was the fifteenth of the month before the checks came in. "Big deal!" you say, "so a few students don't get their 'spending money' for an extra week or so. They can always call on Mom or Dad for enough to tide them over." If this is your thinking, then here is a bulletin for you: Not ALL the students on the hourly payroll use their wages for leisure spending. In fact, many of us are married and have families who have the unusual habit of liking to eat regularly, enjoying the convenience of a family car, or having a place to sleep at night. So when the time to meet these expenses comes around, are we to say to our wives and children, "I'm sorry you're hungry, but the payroll office is swamped with work and won't be able to pay us until next week or the week after," or to the leinholder, or landlord, "I'm sorry, but you'll have to wait indefinitely for your money." Perhaps you have some suggestions as to how those of us with financial obligations to meet can work out a budget on your irregular pay-periods. OR perhaps the responsible persons might exert a little more effort to see that the student hourly payrolls are met on time. Bill Grimes, Junior in Education Would you believe? Sign on the door of microbiologist's office in Snow Hall: "At 3 o'clock in the morning, who's minding the spores?" Tuesday, July 19, 1966 Summer Session Kansan Page 3 Ryun breaks record (Continued from page 1) (Continued from page 1) to the mile. However, before he did so, he saw the story coming over AP wire that it already had been extended to a mile race. Ryun called KU Coach Robert Timmons and discussed the possibility of having Sunday's race an attempt at the world record. University of California track Coach Sam Bell was contacted by Ryun and necessary arrangement were begun. Few knew of Ryun's plans to attempt to break the world record. At other times publicity before the meets had drawn extra attention and pre-meet pressures. At the Compton Relays, held in Los Angeles on June 4, Ryun was unable to hear his lap times which are so vitally important. The other runners in Sunday's meet were all volunteers to help Ryun win the race and the pace was perfect. TRYING TO LEAVE THE stadium after the race. Ryun was mobbed by spectators who flocked to the track and bubbled over with enthusiasm. He had to run barefoot for two blocks to get to the dorm. Someone had stolen his shoes. The disadvantage to being a track fan was clearly evident, as Ryun easily outran 25 eager autograph hounds. Souvenir seekers wanted to get their hands on his shirt, competitor pass, or any other token which could be tagged "Ryun's" KU track coach Robert Timmons said that when Ryun phoned him from California he was really thrilled and relieved that he had broken the record. Asked if he thought he might have done better in the competition, Ryun replied, "When you win a good race, you always feel you could have done better." Explaining that Ryun will not run another mile until next year, Timmons stated, "We're all as thrilled as we can be. It's really a great achievement on Jim's part." KU honors teacher (Continued from page 1) scholarships was formed in 1923, and divided in the late 30's into a committee on Aids and Awards and one on what became residence scholarships. Recalling her appointment as chairman of the latter, Dr. Babcock said she was teaching in 219 Strong when U.G. Mitchell stopped by on his way to the chancellor's office and hurriedly informed her. For a number of years recently, she has headed the math department's committee on scholarships, named for Mitchell, who left a fund for its establishment in 1954. Notably, she also has been corresponding secretary of Kansas Alpha chapter of Pi Mu Epsilon, on the undergraduate nominations for Phi Beta Kappa, for several years a member of Aids and Awards. Elizabeth M. Watkins, and donor scholarship committees, chairman of the committee on honor scholarships for women, and co-chairman of the general scholarships committee. There were three phases of her academic life, but there are others of her private life that those who know her well will tell you about. Price described her as "a very quiet, likeable person, and very serious" who "likes to ride her horses and likes athletics." BILLINGS SAID she and Miss Florence Black, a former KU professor whom she met in Graduate School, "probably have logged more hours in the saddle than anybody else in Lawrence." Dr. Babcock has owned saddle horses for years, but now has just one, a buckskin named "Toby." Miss Black, a native of Meade County, also has a natural interest in horses, and her palamino is called "Paso." Dr. Babcock has kept the "handsome pair" of horses on a few acres of pasture off 23rd Street, maintained despite the suburban development that is now forcing a move to a farm near Lecompton, and to a house on Engel Road. "I tried to buy the equivalent thereof in two parts," she commented, "with almost unbelievable difficulties." Electricity was inaccessible at first, but now that she has that, she lacks a door for the barn she started building this spring. The horses are in pasture there, and Dr. Babcock predicts "they will feel at home as soon as we get the corral built and have names put on the stalls for them to read." She and Miss Black will feel at home there during weekends, when they will sleep in bunks also built into the barn. BEFORE THE MOVE, the two women often rode south from the 23rd Street property through the Haskell schoolgrounds. During World War II, recalls Dr. Babcock, automobile traffic was not heavy and they rode along the roads. She also told of "inspecting" the Jacklan property where Kasold Drive has replaced Jenny Wren Road one mile west of Iowa Street. This property, of historical significance in Lawrence, was open every summer "for inspection." Another activity shared with Miss Black has been spectator sports. "During the season we enjoy whatever's going on." Dr. Babcock said, "Basketball and football are the favorites, although I love track also." She said she "cannot tell how many years" she and Miss Black have had front row seats at such events. "Before you had reserved seats," she said, "we got them by going early and sitting in them." DR. BABCOCK remembers that when she was an undergraduate at KU, physical education was required all four years, but that "lady athletics are quite different." She was a "side center" on a basketball team of six players, and Miss Black was on the women's tennis team. Dr. Babcock has done a variety of worthwhile things, is still doing many of them, and she says of her busy and productive years, "I'd like to start over again." The new University Pool will be open for recreational swimming for University students and faculty members upon presentation of the pool privilege card which can be obtained from Prof. Henry A. Shenk, chairman of physical education and recreation in room 108 in the New Robinson Gym. Pool is open Pool privilege cards are obtainable upon presentation of an ID card. 4:00-6:00 Monday through Friday 1:00-4:00 Sundav LeRoy Esau, said the pool will be open to campers from 2-4 p.m. and 6-7 p.m. Monday thru Friday. It will not be necessary for campers to obtain a swimming privilege card. Coach Richard Reamon will determine eligibility of campers. 7:00-9:00 M T Th F 1:00-6:00 Saturday Children of faculty and staff will be permitted to use the pool between 11:30 and 12:30 Monday thru Friday. Locating one of the recently formed countries on a map may be somewhat difficult. Trying to figure out the climate, soils and vegetation for the area requires Teachers obtaining insights into geography at KU even greater skill. Forty elementary and junior high school teachers are getting a general overview of geography in the NDEA Summer Institute in Geography now in session at KU. The eight-week course, ending Aug. 5, includes the study of maps, climates, cities, soils, and vegetation. FOR A COOL AFTERNOON TREAT TRY OUR ICE COLD . . . - Malts and Shakes . . . . . . 19-30¢ Vanilla, Pineapple, Chocolate, Strawberry, Cherry, and Blackberry - Floats ... 25¢ Coke, Root Beer, Pepsi, Dr. Pepper, and Sprite - Sundaes ... 30¢ Pineapple, Chocolate, Strawberry, and Cherry - Limeade and Lemonade .15-25¢ Made with Fresh Limes and Lemons - Iced Tea . . . . . . . . . . 10-20¢ Dine in Air-Conditioning DIXON'S DRIVE-IN 2500 West 6th VI 3-7446 FINAL REDUCTIONS AT The University Shop's ANNUAL SUMMER SALE These prices are rock bottom and will never be lower. Don't miss these final ridiculous reductions on quality men's clothing & sportswear—all from our regular stock. Entire Stock SUITS Now 33% OFF Reg. Now 45.00 29.95 60.00 39.95 75.00 49.95 One Large Group SPORTCOATS Now ½ Price Reg. Reg. 27.50 13.75 35.00 17.50 45.00 22.50 Permanent Press SLACKS and JEANS Entire Stock DRESS SLACKS Now 33% OFF Reg. Now 10.95 7.70 14.95 9.95 21.50 14.35 Sportshirts Bermudas Banlons (some colors) Reg. 6.00 and 7.00 ___ 4.50 Reg. 8.00 and 9.00 ___ 5.95 50c BARGAIN TABLE 20% OFF GROUP Socks Belts Jewelry $3.00 BARGAIN TABLE Sportshirts Dress Shirts Wash Slacks SWIMWEAR Entire Stock Now 25% OFF SHOES One Group 11 different styles 33% OFF SUMMER STORE HOURS Monday through Friday 9-5 - Closed Saturday the university shop 1420 Crescent Rd. On The Hill Page 4 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 19, 1966 Fine Arts schedules 2 recitals by pianists The School of Fine Arts will present two pianists, John Kozar and Paul Tardif, in piano recitals in Swarthout Recital Hall. Kozar, who will participate in the faculty recital Thursday, July 21, at 8 p.m., joined the KU faculty in 1965 and is a native of Gary, Ind. After receiving his BA and MA from Indiana University, he studied at the University of Zagreb, Yugoslavia in 1964-65. That year he concertized in Munich, Nuremberg, Belgrade, Zagreb and Verona. His teachers have been Bela Boszormeni-Nagy and Gyorgy Sebok. IN 1962 he was named winner of the Desire Defauw Young Artists competition. He will present "Passacaglia (1943)" by Piston, "Moments Musicaux, Op. 94" by Schubert, "Suite Op. 14" by Bartok, and "Sonata in C Major, Op. 1" by Brahms. Paul Tardif, a native of Buffalo, N. Y., will present his recital Thursday, July 28, at 8 p.m. Tardif received both his BA and MA from Eastman School of Music, where he was a student of Cecile Genhart and Sandor Vas. He was awarded the performers certificate from Eastman School in 1962. In 1963-64 he studied in Munich at the Hochschule fur Music. The following year he continued his study with Kurt Neumuller at the Mozartum in Salzburg, Limper plays a fast game Leroy Esau, administrative assistant to the director of Midwestern Music and Art Camp, recently observed that among 1.641 high school students enough happens in six weeks to "write a book" about. He laughingly referred to a notebook in which he records most of the incidents he handles daily. Among these was the case of a boy who was out 35 minutes after the 9:30 closing at Templin Hall. He claimed he had broken his ankle. "We could tell he was faking," Esau said. The boy's date that evening reported he had left Lewis Hall, where girl campers live, "on the run." (She was also 35 minutes late.) When the boy was threatened with X-rays at Watkins Hospital, where a doctor already had examined him and found nothing seriously wrong, he quickly offered to walk back to Watkins and return the crutches they had loaned him to assist him in limping. The next afternoon the boy was spotted by a supervisor—playing football! 2 pamphlets out on computer use Two pamphlets have been added to the Kansas Geological Survey's ever-increasing publications about the application of computers to geological research. They were written by survey staff members and KU faculty members and appeared first in a summary of reports made at Pennsylvania State University's recent annual symposium on "Computers and Operation Research in Mineral Industries." One is entitled "Generation of Orthogonal Polynomials for Trend Surfacing with a Digital Computer" and was written by O. T. Spitz, chief of the survey's operations research section. where he was awarded the highest diploma award. His study in Europe was under a Fulbright grant. TARDIF HAS participated in a number of contests, winning the first prize in the senior division of the National Piano Guild (1960) and a special prize in the Alfredo Caselle International Competition held in Naples in 1963. He has had numerous solo appearances, including an appearance with the Eastman-Rochester Philharmonic, recitals in Carnegie Recital Hall, Boston, and Ohio. He will present "French Suite No. 5 in G Major" by Bach, "Sonata in D Major Op. 10 No. 3" by Beethoven, "Three Preludes" by Debussy and "Five Etudes Op. 10" by Chopin. Both programs are open to the public. Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065 — Air-Conditioned — Ends Tonite — "Assault On A Queen" 7:15 & 9:15 NEXT! Starts Wednesday 'We should all be so crazy...) Sean Connery Joanne Woodward Jean Seberg JOHN LENNARD ROSS "A Fine Madness" Granada THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5784 Last 2 Days! "Lt. Robin Crusoe" — plus — "Run Appaloosa Run" 7-15 & 10-09 Sunset Open 6:45 — Show At Dusk Ends Tonight — Open £45 - Show At Dusk "Never Too Late" "Papa's Delicate Condition" Bridge attracts several at Hall Next—Starts Wed. 1st Run! "Bedford Incident" Six tables were set up in the main lounge of Templin Hall recently for the first "bridge party" in the history of Midwestern Music and Art Camp. Campers were invited to sign up for the event, but Watson said the procedure would be abandoned. "Whoever wants to come, comes and we'll just take it from there," he said. "Enthusiasm seemed to be fairly high," said Gary Watson, recreation director, who planned another party. For the fifth straight year KU ranks among the top six state universities in the nation for private support from the alumni, according to the Council for Financial Aid to Education. During the 1964-65 year alumni gave more than $11^{1/2}$ million to the University for scholarships, loan funds, endowed professorships, research projects, art objects, books, and buildings of a special character. KU high in private support In total gifts of all kinds, KU ranked fourteenth in the nation among state universities for the 1964-65 period, with $3,173,647 in gifts. Last April 14 the Council for Progress of the University approved a three-year capital fund drive totaling $18.6 million. Passport total up WASHINGTON — (UPI) Americans are still flocking abroad, despite campaigns such as "See the USA" and "Discover America," according to the American Automobile Association. Ober's Summer Clearance SALE A cool spring and late deliveries have caused a large carryover of hot weather apparel which is now priced to save you money just when the summer season is in full swing. SUITS 47. 50 Tropical weight suits . . . . . . . . . 39.95 59. 95 Cool & Crisp Dacron/ wool suits . . . 48.95 Some with second trousers at 5.00 89. 95 Hart Schaffner & Marx Suits . . . . 69.95 SPORT COATS 35.00 Colorful Dacron/ wool sport coats . 27.95 39.95 Lightweight Dacron/ wool blends . 32.95 65.00 Hart Schaffner & Marx blazers . . . 49.95 SPECIAL VALUES ON - Tropical Trousers - Swimwear - One Group of Sport Shirts $ _{1/2} $ Price - Boy's Bargain Table Oberis Lawrence's Fashion Leader Since 1896 821 Mass. VI 3-1951 Tuesday, July 19, 1966 Summer Session Kansan Page 5 --- Looking for a good place to eat? try THE UNION CAFETERIA Breakfast 6:30-8:30 Lunch 11:00-1:15 Dinner 5:00-6:30 KANSAS UNION FOOD SERVICE Page 6 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 19, 1966 36 in course on chemistry Thirty-six high school science teachers are now attending KU classes to learn a more modern approach to the basic fundamentals of chemistry. The Summer Institute in Chemistry for High School Teachers, sponsored and financed by the National Science Foundation, (NSF), is planned to give the participants up-to-date material to take back to their classrooms. The seven-week institute will end Aug. 5. All the teachers receive a weekly stipend and also an extra allowance for each dependent up to a maximum of four. Some of the participants are enrolled in the Graduate School and will receive six hours graduate credit upon completion of the course. Faculty receives grants in medical research Four faculty members of the KU School of Medicine have received research grants totaling $104,160 from the U.S. Public Health Service. Dr. Ernest B. Brown Jr., professor of physiology, has $36,000 for basic research in that field. Dr. Kenneth B. Goetz, instructor in physiology, has $13,320 to study right arterial pressure and heart rate. Humoral agents in cerebral activity will be studied by Dr. Edward J. Walaszek, professor of pharmacology, with a grant of $20,042. Dr. Charles E. Lewis, professor of preventive medicine and community health, has $34,798 for work on the dynamics of nursing in ambulatory patient care. Stop the By Bruce Levitt The KU Summer Repertory Theatre Company "Built a Mountain" of entertainment in the Experimental Theatre Thursday night in the opening production of its fourth show of the summer, "Stop The World-I Want To Get Off." UNDER THE DIRECTION of Sean Griffin the production is packed with life and energy. The audience is far from "lumbered" by the pace of the show and Griffin shows that he knows his "ABC's" of the theatre by the clever staging he has devised. The Leslie Bricusse-Anthony Newley musical is anything but "Mumbo Jumbo." It has something to say. The plot is a present-day Adam and Eve story set in the modern world's garden of politics, religion, industry, and international and human relations. A universal flavor is added to the script by the abundance of "Typically English," Russian, and German humor. Compliments upon compliments are due the show's two leads, Sue Tisdall and Ken Marsolais. Both actors turned in flawless performances that displayed great timing, control, and most of all, talent! The chorus and orchestra both deserve a round of applause for Kansan attends political seminar Mona Gayle Hobson, St. John, political science and social studies senior in the School of Education, is one of 34 college students participating in the 21st Washington Citizenship Seminar of the National Student Young Men's and Young Women's Christian Associations. World' is no kind of fool their more than ample contribution to the overall success of the show. THE SCORE for the musical is a "Once in a Life Time" masterpiece which won the London Critics' Prize. Both Miss Tisdall and Marsolais perform their difficult singing tasks with apparent ease, each word being clearly understood. If you, as the theatregoer "Wanna be Richly" entertained, "Stop the World" is a show you won't want to miss. Perhaps now that all four productions of the Repertory Company have opened, a summation might be appropriate. All four shows have been well produced in remarkably short time. It is impossible to compare the plays and rate them as to which is good, which better and which best, since all four offer something unique as artistic productions. If, however, you don't see all of the productions I am sure that the word of mouth compliments will have you asking yourself, "What Kind of Fool Am I?" SUA FRIDAY FLICKS SUA "MARNIE" Starring: Sean Connery and 'Tippi' Hedren Friday, July 22 In Air Conditioned Dyche Auditorium 7:00 & 9:00 p.m. Admission 35c ACOME MONTH WEEKEND FREE 1111 Mass. VI 3-5155 Starch to your liking Bring in your Sport Shirts Summer Slacks Summer Dresses Nu-Way Dry Cleaning ACME Laundry and Dry Cleaners 1 1562 7 1 1011 CLASSIFIEDS Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the Summer Session Kansan are offered to all students without regard to race. Page 7 FOR SALE TYPEWRITERS—most brands portables including Olympia, Royal and SCM Electric portables. Sales, service and rental. Inquire about our rental-purchase plan. Office equipment and mass storage. Typewriter, Twtf Mass., VI 3-3644. SHERWOOD AMPLIFIER, 20 watts good condition, $45. V1-2-1646, 7-26 For Sale: One complete set of women's golf clubs. Oster hand vibrator and classical records. Call VI 3-7047. 7-15 Extra clean 1949 Lincoln 4 door, low mileage, standard transmission, overdrive, radio, $100.00. See after 5: Call VI 3-1669. 7-15 For Sale—Kay banjo and case, in good condition $35.00 Call V1 3-822- 7-922 For Sale: 33 x8' 1952 house trailer, priced to sell. Suitable for students or lake front retreat. See at 1600 W. 4th. Lot No. 7. 7-26 Contemporary bedroom and living room suits. Good condition. Willing to bargain. Call VI 2-4361 after 1:00 p.m. g.2 MISCELLANEOUS Dairyland Drive-In, 23rd & Ohio (across from Rusty's IGA). Open 11 a.m. to 11 p.m., Mon/Sat; Sun, 12:30-5:00, Service, Ice Cream and Sandwiches. Experienced babysitting. Your home or mine. Nights and weekends. Call VI 2-3901. Need any sewing or mending done? Types used—Repairs, alterations and clothes made. Reasonable. VI 2-3901. Western Civilization Notes. Completely revised, extremely comprehensive. Mimeographed and bound for $4.25. Call VI 2-1901 for free delivery. Pure American shorthair kittens need homes. A free can of cat food with each adoption. Take one. I'm desperate. Call VI 3-8202. 7-22 Thesis graphs drawn to your specifications. Reasonable. Call UN 4-3867 VI 2-6174 After 5 p.m. Robert Nelson. 7-22 Tuesday, July 19, 1966 Summer Session Kansan WANTED Woman needed to supervise church nursery 8:30 to 12:30 Sundays. Experience Preferred. VI 3-7134. 7-15 Wanted: Ride from 6340 Riley, Over- pass, to Kan, to Kun for next 72 CO-2-5027 ENTERTAINMENT Having trouble finding locations for parties? The "New" Alley Cat is now available. Large or Small. For information call VI 2-6389 evening. tt Experienced typist with new electric typewriter will type dissertations, theses and term papers. Fast and accurate service with reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Lancaster at VI 2-1705. 8-2 TYPING Experienced typist, 10 years experience in theses and term papers. Elec. training required. Required rates. Reasonable rates. CALL Mrs. Barlow, 2407 Yale, VI 2-1648. tt Typing Wanted, theses, essays, and themes—Fast, accurate, Reasonable Rates. Mrs. Hallenbeck, VI 3-4156. T typing -Theses, term papers, dissor- tion papers. Rates, paper fur- mitted. VI 2-1561. FORMER HARVARD AND UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA SECRETARY WILL TYPE REPORTS. TERM PAPERS. THESES. VI 3-7207. 8-2 Health & Foreign Foods Natural Foods Better Nutrition Better Health Downtown 9th & N.H. VI 2-2771 Go With The Winner Have your sports car tuned where performance is proven with race-winning cars. Competition Sports Cars 1209 E. 23rd St. VI 2-2191 TRIUMPH SALES & SERVICE HAVING A PARTY? We are always happy to serve you with Ice cold beverages Chips, nuts, cookies Variety of grocery items Crushed ice, candy Ice cold 6 pacs all kinds OPEN TO 10 P.M.EVERY EVENING LAWRENCE ICE COMPANY 616 Vt. Ph.VI 3-0350 Vacancies Available Southridge Plaza, Inc. 2350 Ridge Court Lawrence, Kansas, 66044 MRS. RAMON H. PICKERING Manager Office VI 21160 Home VI 23755 Area Code 913 YES! We're open for the summer. Come down and see us at the... Typist, experienced with term papers, these topics and your typing immediate attention with electric machine with extra symbols. I havehone Higley at 408 W. 13th I 3-6048 WAGON WHEEL 1401 Ohio VI 3-9603 3 Rooms with Bath, Furnished Apt. Completely Pt. Single beds Available with room for 1, 2 or 4 beds at $750 for 2, or 4床 for 1-3 I 3-4347. Inquire 1005 Miss. 7-15 LIVE CLOSE TO CAMPUS Air-conditioned one and two bedroom apartments at $89-$169 unfurnished Rents beginning at $95. Santee Apts., 1123 Ind. V 3-2116. Expert typing. Themes. Dissertations. Book title (typewriter) writer. Mishler B. 3-1-1029 FOR RENT For Rent: Nice air-conditioned bachelor apartment, available in August. May work out part or all of rent. Very close to KU. Phone VI 3-8534. Boom and board for men: Only at the Manor Lodge can you find a quiet study environment and wonderful meals served 3 times a day, 6 days a week and twice on Saturday with the college and licensed by the State Board. Call today for further information: VI 3-3408, BUT HURRY! Now Renting For Fall-Extra Nice Bachelor Apartments for graduates or older undergraduate men 2 Blocks from law school. Quicken Loans, Hewlett-Packard, Home Parking, air conditioned. For appointment call VI 3-8534 When You're in Doubt—Try It Out, Kansan Classifieds. FRED GREEN Western Wear The only store in Lawrence with complete lines in western wear. - Lee Rider Jeans - Justin Boots - Brushed Denim Bonanza Shirts $8.70 910 Mass. VI 3-0077 TRAVEL THIS SUMMER Arrange Your: Flight Home Vacation Reservations Trip Abroad Other Summer Reservations GRANT'S Drive-In Pet Center Established — Experienced 1218 Conn. Pet Ph. VI 3-2921 Complete Center under one roof FREE PARKING 914 Mass. St. — WATCHES — DIAMONDS — GIFTS — at: MAUPINTOUR The Malls VI 3-1211 Exclusive Representative of Watch Repairing at its Finest— Watch Repairing at its Finest — Using the Latest Electronic and Ultrasonic Equipment Free Estimates on Repairs Only Genuine Material Used Work Guaranteed — of course Pleasing Prices For the finest in L. G. Balfour Co. - Sportswear Daniels Jewelry Fraternity Jewelry - Badges - Guards - Paddles - Novelties - Favors - Lavalliers * Rings - Sportswear - Mugs Burgess Curtas Nonetheless Emora ● Paddles ● Trophies 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 Trophies Awards - Cups - Awards Al Lauter The Bank of Friendly Service Invites You To Open A Checking Account Now. - Close to campus - Drive-up windows - Free parking - Bank by mail Douglas County State Bank Member F.D.I.C and Ky. VI2 Specials This Week at THE VILLAGE GREEN 23rd & Naismith VI 3-6966 Spaghetti on Tuesday Fried Chicken on Wednesday Hot Beef Sandwich on Thursday Catfish Fillet on Friday Dance to Spanky & the Emeralds Friday & Saturday Page 8 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 19, 1966 Penn State to display KU materials Because of a coincidence of centennials, Pennsylvania State University is planning a display at its library that will include photographs and information on KU and its centennial year. The tie-in is based on Gen. John Fraser, the second chancellor of KU (1867-74). Fraser came to Mount Oread from Penn State (then the Agricultural College of Pennsylvania), and this is the 100th anniversary of his becoming president of the Pennsylvania school. THE DISPLAY will include materials on KU's old Fraser Hall, built through the efforts of the fiery Civil War general and the largest educational building in the nation at the time. Fraser Hall was razed in 1965 after playing a major role in 93 of KU's 100 years. Also included in the display will be photographs, clippings, and other items on the KU campus today, and biographical material on Fraser, a doughy Scottsman who was elected state superintendent of public instruction in Kansas after his chancellorship. Fraser was a highly decorated Union officer in the Civil War before heading the Pennsylvania and Kansas schools. J-school has 15 on spring honor roll Fifteen students, including four recent graduates with distinction, are on the spring semester dean's honor roll of the School of Journalism. To qualify for the honor roll, a student's grades must rank him in the top 10 per cent of all students in the school. Included on the list released by Dean Warren K. Age is Janet Chartier Hamilton. Salina senior. Three others graduated "with distinction" were Judith K. Farell, Topeka; Karen Lambert, Dayton, Ohio, and William R. Patterson, San Jose, Calif. Others on the honor roll: Larry E. Bast, senior, Topeka; Charles M. Berg, senior, Leawood; Charles T. Curry, junior, Pratt; Judith K. Faust, junior, Memphis Tenn.; Frederick Frailey, senior, Sulphur Springs, Tex.; Cheryl G. Hentsch, junior, Lawrence. Robert Morgenthaler, junior, Prairie Village; John B. Pepper, senior, Lenexa; Lyle A. Robe Jr., senior, Arkansas City; Cindy D. Simpson, senior, Shawnee Mission, and Linda K. Sleffel, junior, Norton. German highways BONN — (UPI) — West Germany's network of four-lane Autobahns will be doubled by 1975 to 4,395 miles, says the Ministry for transportation. Busiest students at KU this month may be the 51 persons in the Management Development program for executives of Independent Telephone Co. The 50 men and one woman from 21 states, including Hawaii, have an 8 to 4 instructional day and there's homework in the evening. The School of Business is conducting for the ninth year the intensive four-week school for the United States Independent Telephone Association. It will end Aug. 5. Telephone executives in KU session Each "student" already has important administrative responsibilities in his company, which is making a significant investment so that he may broaden his horizons and sharpen his management capacities. The companies sending personnel to the KU program are investing upwards of $2,000. This would include the fee for the self-sustaining course, the individual's salary and travel expenses. Areas of instruction are functions of administration, rate regulation, and the American business climate. Administration is divided into control and finances, human relations and marketing. Frank S. Pinet of KU's School of Business is program director, assisted by Kent I. Tool. SUA Presents "THE HUSTLER" Starring: Paul Newman & Jackie Gleason Wednesday, July 20 Kansas Union Ballroom Adm. 35c LAWRENCE launderers and dry cleaners 10th and New Hampshire "Specialists In Fabric Care Phone VI 3-3711 Whether it is clothes for a summer afternoon or a summer formal, Lawrence Laundry can handle all your cleaning and laundry needs. Convenient pick-up and delivery at all living organizations. "Exclusive SANITONE Dry Cleaning" Jacket by McGregor McGREGOR® recommends our Sanitone drycleaning process The exclusive Soft-Set® fabric finish, an important feature of our Sanitone drycleaning process, prolongs the life and good looks of your garment. That's why so many leading clothing manufacturers, like McGregor, recommend our Sanitone drycleaning. Try it. You'll recommend it, too! a national service Jacket by McGregor Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 22, 1966 76th Year, No.11 Lawrence, Kansas 2018 —Photo by Glen Phillips AND THE ROAD RUNS THROUGH THE MIDDLE OF THE HOUSE?! With all the sidewalk entrances to the complex fence to keep out wandering students, trucks removing debris from the demolition of the World War II vintage annex building behind Strong Hall desperately needed an opening. They apparently found one—through the middle of old Strong Annex C. Foreign students center is on-strike or no strike Despite the airlines strike which seriously hampered travel, activities of the Orientation Center for Foreign Students are well under way. "I've been called out of bed at 3 a.m. several times as students arrived by bus and train," said J. A. Burzle, head of the German Department and of the center. "The program," Dr. Burzle said, "is designed to aid the foreign student in the transition from his homeland to the American academic system: to increase their proficiency in written and spoken English, to become familiar with the customs and culture of the United States, and to become familiar with the classroom techniques and with the educational system of American colleges and universities." HE SAID the students have a wide variety of majors ranging from law and chemistry to business and the arts including an outstanding pianist and a dancer. They come from countries all over the world-from Afghanistan and Thailand to Chile and Argentina. When they leave they will return to equally diverse colleges and universities including Columbia, Carnegie Institute, Martha Graham School of Contemporary Dance, Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy of Tufts University. All of the students will pursue advanced graduate work this fall. Most of the students understand three or four languages and are conversant in two or three languages. A few speak as many as six or eight languages. In addition to classes, this week's schedule includes a talk on American art and a trip to the Nelson Gallery in Kansas City, a visit to the Buick-Oldsmobile-Pontiac car assembly plant, and instruction in square dancing. THE WEEKEND stays with Kansas and Missouri families are an important part of the orientation program. In the past years the students have stayed with families in Independence, Abilene, Paola, Clay Center, Kansas City and other communities. Burlingame is being considered as the site for this year's stay in a smaller town. The program annually involves one weekend in Kansas City, Mo. for a taste of American big-city life, and a weekend in a smaller community. Begun in 1950 under a U.S. State Department contract that has been renewed annually, the KU Orientation Center recently launched its 17th year. ABOUT 55 STUDENTS from nearly 25 nations are participating this summer. The session will end Sept. 6 in time for the visitors to enroll in the American colleges and universities. The students annually visit the Truman Library in Independence, Mo., where former President Harry S. Truman traditionally Conference ending on family finance Twenty-one teachers and administrators from five states will end a 4-week intensive study of family finance at KU today. The educators from Kansas, Missouri, Illinois, Ohio and Alabama studied instructional problems of teaching budgeting, banking, credit, savings and investments, insurance, Social Security, home ownership, wills and estates, and taxation. meets with them. It was under Truman's administration that the program was begun. Participants also spend six hours a day in the classroom and learn something of quizzes, machine graded tests and open book examinations. Informal evenings of singing, games, parties and counseling are other facets of the orientation. New College not restrictive By Bill Robinson The newly created college-within-a-college of KU is deliberately structured so as not to exclude undergraduate professional training or endanger the existence of fraternities and sororites. Recent apprehensions that Greek houses might be slowly depopulated by the new program, until they no longer exist, have no legitimate basis, said Jerry Lewis, assistant dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. Dean Lewis said that the quasi-residential program slated to open this fall is the only segment of the program which focuses on the residence of students involved. DEAN LEWIS said that after next year, essentially stage one of a multi-staged program, there would be no emphasis given to the residence of participating students. Therefore, he added, there is no danger of depopulating Greek organizations implied in the program. The new system, designated the Centennial College, will be housed in Oliver and Ellsworth Halls next year solely for administrative purposes. Once the program is beyond the experimental stage, Dean Lewis said, students from all living districts on campus will be included in it. Regarding the possibility that professional schools would lose students through strict orientation with the College, Dean Lewis explained that only certain courses are included in the program, and that students would in no way be restricted to courses offered within- in the College. A STUDENT WISHING to take courses preparing him for professional training in journalism, pharmacy, education, or business would certainly be free to do so, said Dean Lewis. He explained that students taking pre-professional courses would be assigned to classes together whenever possible, but that no student would be denied enrollment in a class simply because no other Centennial students were enrolled in it. Dean Lewis said that he has received several letters expressing concern about the possible restrictions in the new program, but that he hoped all such apprehensions could be alleviated before the opening of Centennial College this fall. He stressed that the purpose of the new program is to offer the personal contacts of a small school while providing the numerous academic and social opportunities of a large school. Midnight is show time To meet the demand for tickets, a special performance of "Stop the World—I Want To Get Off" will be given at midnight Saturday in the Experimental Theatre. The Leslie Bricusse-Anthony Newley musical is one of four productions by the KU Summer Repertory Theatre Company. It will be staged for the last time Friday, July 29, at 8:20. TICKETS FOR Saturday's performance are 75 cents for summer school students with certificates of registration. Other tickets are $1.50. Telephone orders are taken at the box office, UN 4-3982. 24 hours a day or students may purchase tickets there until 5 p.m. today and from 10 a.m. to noon tomorrow. A limited number of standing room tickets are on sale at 7 p.m. nightly, before performances of the three other plays in the series, also at 8:20 in the Experimental Theatre. THE FOUNTAIN IS ALSO USED FOR WATER CLEARING THE AREA. IT IS A NOTABLE PLACE FOR DAYTIME ACTIVITIES, AND IT IS AVAILABLE FOR WATER BATHS. —Photo by Taylor Huebner THOSE LAZY HAZY CRAZY DAYS OF SUMMER A few campers enjoy the forbidden waters of the Chi Omega Fountain. Page 2 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 22.1966 A sophomore dissents on the Centennial College I feel sorry for the 450 freshmen who will be assigned to Centennial College in the fall. I am glad I escaped the administration's "reorganization" of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. Dean Waggoner was quoted in a Kansan article of June 12 as saying he wants to "eliminate" a "danger of anonymity" with this "most exciting development for undergraduates here in recent years." With all respect to the dean, I think he is confusing what is exciting and what is dangerous. Although I speak only as a College sophomore, I know what I'm taking about and I know I'm not alone when I say "anonymity" is not dangerous but an exciting challenge. IT'S THE CHALLENGE of depending on one's self to make one's own way from the sheltered high school to the adult world. I don't believe the institution is helping the student by paving his way for him. Who wants to be catered to like a helpless child? (by representatives of the College, the deans of men and women, and the registrar). Much of the excitement for a new student comes when he successfully gains access to persons, places, and positions. The challenge of anonymity is more specifically the challenge a boy faces in developing into a man whose name represents an individual and purposeful existence. Anonymity threatens identity but it also maintains high standards by which the person's identity is recognized. These high standards demand that one become more self-reliant, less self-satisfied, more self-confident, and less self-centered as he develops. Anonymity is what the freshman who enters KU as his first step into the adult world should expect. It is reality. It is what he should be ready to face and if he is not ready yet, he never will be. If he can't use it to his advantage, he never will have the advantage that life in a cosmopolitan atmosphere offers. MY FAVORITE WAY of describing KU is to say it's a city of young people. We are the thriving core of all there is to be interested in and to care about. There is something here for each of us to work toward, and the freedom for us to do so in any way we choose. We are rehearsing for future roles by learning who we are and who we want to be, where we stand and where we want to go, what to expect of ourselves and what will be expected of us. And now the administration says we are to use only one corner of the stage. There will be no excitement for the undergraduate who lives, attends classes, studies, and socializes with the same 450 people day after day. It is with a tragic short-sightedness that university officials think these students will "learn more, earn better grades, and be happier." How do they know? HAPPINESS, measurements of knowledge, and scholastic standing are individual matters. A very influential factor in determining them is whether or not the individual's environment is right for him and what he does to make it so. I think the administrators will be cheating Centennial College inductees by denying them choices according to their wants and needs. How can they predict that these new students will prefer to be isolated from what Dean Waggoner calls the "extraordinary richness of resources of the multiversity," or that they will benefit more in the long run from "the advantages of the small academic community" they will be given. I think students should continue to make this choice themselves when they choose to attend a university or a liberal arts college. Dean Waggoner claims both will be available here, but I don't know when or how students will actually participate in the university community when they do everything as a compact unit. I CAME FROM a high school class of 725, for the opportunity to learn from a variety of sources, in large part from contacts with many people of diverse backgrounds and outlooks. I was acquainted with most of the 400 girls in my living group, but I enjoyed the wider variety of classroom and social contacts. The constant exhilaration in making friends of strangers is important and even necessary for some people. If I had wanted primarily to become well acquainted, rather than widely acquainted, in my associations. I might have chosen one of the numerous smaller schools in the state, instead of the largest. CONTRARY to what a professor of sociology on this campus has said of the situation. I don't look upon classmates as "competing strangers" with whom I am "incapable of collaborating in a pleasurable pursuit of scholarship." Whether or not the other student and I feel that collaboration is necessary for pleasure in learning depends on us. It is up to each individual to decide how he wants to pursue knowledge. I know of Chancellor Wescoe's concern that KU not become overwhelmingly impersonal. But impersonality is a relative term—relative to each person. Regardless of whatever system the university uses to orient the student toward his education, what and how he learns depends only on him. Margaret Ogilvie Italy tells story of Duce's downfall ROME—(UPI) — twenty-three years after the downfall of Benito Mussolini, Italy, by a curious sequence of events, at last has it on paper. The Italian government only recently acquired its first complete record of the resolutions voted by the Facist Grand Council July 25, 1943, when it deposed "Il Duce," who led his country into a disastrous war on the side of Nazi Germany. The documents might never have turned up had it not been for Mussolini's sharp temper, the serious illness last year of his onetime confidential secretary, Nicole de Cesar, and the financial need of an orphanage. THE STORY was told by the magazine Epoca, which learned of it by making a substantial contribution to an orphanage run by Msgr. Cosimo Bolandi at Como in northern Italy. De Cesare was a conscientious secretary. When the Facist Grand Council cast 19 of 28 votes against Mussolini that hot July dawn 23 years ago, he carefully collected copies of Dino Grandi's ouster resolution and the resolutions of pro-war Council members Roberto Farinacci and Carlo Scorza. The resolutions, plus personal jottings of the Duce, went into Mussolini's big leather dispatch case, nicknamed the "Little Inferno." MUSSOLINI CARRIED the "Little Inferno" under his arm when, accompanied by de Cesare, he called on King Victor Emmanuel a few hours later and was arrested. As both men entered an ambulance taking them into captivity, Mussolini handed de Cesare the "Little Inferno." The secretary kept it when the Duce left the ambulance under guard at a police barracks where he was to be held. The dispatch case was deposited with de Cesare's other personal belongings when the secretary was delivered to a prison. Msgr. Bolandi was chaplain at the prison. He and de Cesare spent many hours in conversation and became friends. De Cesare and the "Little Inferno stayed in the prison until Sept. 8, 1943, when the Germans, who by that time had taken over Rome, set him free. De Cesare got back the "Little Inferno" and found the contents intact. De Cesare soon followed Mussolini to Munich. But when he finally reached the Duce and tried to return the "Little Inferno," Mussolini, apparently in bad humor, brusquely ordered him to return to Rome and "stand by for orders." A F EW DAYS later, on Sept. 12, Nazi S.S. commandees under Otto Skorzeny landed by glider at the Gran Sasso Plateau Hotel in the Appenine where Mussolini was being held, liberated him and flew him to Germany. The orders never came. Nazi armies in Italy surrendered. Mussolini was captured by Italian partisans, machinegunned to death and hung up by his heels DE CESARE retired from public life. He went towork for Msgr. Bolandi, his prison friend who after the war founded the Como orphanage. Last November de Cesare, a clerk in the orphanage administration, fell gravely ill. He sent for Msgr. Bolandi, gave him the documents of July 25, 1943, and said: in Milan to the jeers of the populace. "These papers belong to the state. I give them to you. I have always kept them because my state disappeared July 25 and nobody ever came and asked me for them to this day. If this story can help the orphanage, go ahead and tell it." Bolandi told it to Epoca and then turned over the documents to the Italian Government. Thus, 23 years after the fall of fascism, Italy finally has an official record of it. Course slated for advisers A course especially tailored for high school journalism teachers and publications advisers will be offered on Saturdays this fall by the School of Journalism. Though School Journalism and Publications has been included in the School of Journalism's curriculum for several years, this is the first time it will have been offered on Saturdays. azines. Staff organization, writing and editing, makeup, typography, advertising and illustrations are among the topics considered in the class,which carries two hours' undergraduate or graduate credit. Taught by Prof. John H. Knowles, a former high school journalism teacher and publications adviser, the class involves a study of teaching journalism in the high school and supervising yearbooks, newspapers, and mag- The class will meet each Saturday from 9:30 to 11:30 a.m. in Flint Hall, starting Sept. 17. Those who do not enroll during the regular registration period from Sept. 14-16 will enroll the morning of Sept. 17. Persons wishing to take the class who have not attended the University previously should apply for admission prior to enrollment through the Office of Admissions and Records, 120 Strong. Summer Session Kansan For 76 Years, KU's Official Student Newspaper KANSAN TELEPHONE NUMBERS Newsroom—UN 4-3646 Business Office—UN 4-3198 The Summer Session Kansan, student newspaper at The University of Kansas, is represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St., New York, N.Y. Mail resume to the University of Kansas, class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan., every Tuesday and Friday during the Summer Session except University holidays and examination periods. Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the Summer Session Kansan are offered to all students without regard to color, creed, or nationality. The opinions expressed in the editorial column are those of the students whose names are signed to them. Guest editorial views are not necessarily the editor. Any opinions expressed in the Summer Session Kansan are not necessarily those of the University of Kansas Administration or the State Board of Regents. Students show movie tastes are varied in KU survey Frances Hammer, Topeka graduate: "I would pick 'Sound of Music' because of the music in the show." Ten summer school students answered the following question: "What motion picture have you seen in the last six months that you consider the best? Why?" Joseph McKenna, Lawrence garduate: "I would say 'The Great Race' because it is funny as well as being very well done." EILL BROOKS. Liberty graduate: "I would say 'King of Kings' because it was a nice job of portraying the life of Jesus from birth through to death." MARILYN McBRIDE. Enid junior: "Ithink 'A Patch of Blue' is more realistic than others I have seen. The emotions and happenings are so realistic. It presents a social problem yet it is a sentimental movie." Norma Johnson, Marysville sophomore: "I think 'My Fair Lady' has been the only good show that has been here. I would choose it because I like the music and the costuming. The show is so relaxing." Ronald Shaffer, Lawrence graduate: "I would select 'Sound of Music' because it is a wholesome show as well as entertaining." Elizabeth McMillen, Leawood graduate: "My choice would be 'Please Don't Eat the Daisies' be cause it is a light show and very entertaining." Judy Dickey, Kansas City graduate: "I Would say 'Doctor Zivago' would be my selection because it was so well done. The actors in the movie were very convincing." Patricia Fagerquist, Lawrenet graduate; "My choice would be 'Doctor Zhivago' because of the scenery which was filmed in Spain and the excellent music. Driver course open International students at KU may take a three-week course in driver education beginning Monday. Interested students should contact Prof. Don Henry, 108 Robinson Gymnasium. Barbara Cochrane, Hoisington junior: "One of those I would pick is 'The Umbrellas of Cherbourg' because it has a new type of music. I particularly enjoyed it sung in French." The composer for 'Lawrence of Arabia' also wrote some of the music for the movie." R N BOOKS Adances show at 8 day, for insti DYNAMIC SPEED READING, by Norman C. Maberly (Signet, 60 cents); ADVENTURING WITH BOOKS, edited by Elizabeth Guilfoite (Signet, 75 cents); YOUR READING, edited by Charles B. Willard (Signet, 75 cents). Speed reading has become almost a fashionable cult, and if you want some help on it this may be the book. You're entitled, of course, to ask why one should become a speed reader. You're entitled to ask what speed reading does to the beauty of words, the sound that they make on paper, as E. B. White so well puts it. Plots can be found in the Book Review Digest. Or in "Master-plots." But if your goal is to read rapidly then look at books like this one. Some will prefer to read books with other goals in mind. Th Ano oper ries Glemy Yug the five Acture Now about the other books. They have been checked out not with junior high and elementary teachers but with children of that general age group, and the word is that "they're all right for reference but hardly a complete list" (this the opinion of a young woman who reads almost constantly and last year worked in the library of a Lawrence junior high). Teachers should be advised, for example, that the young folks enjoy (and why not?) a lot of books that will never find their way to recommended lists of the National Council of Teachers of English. Gothic thrillers like "The Uninvited." Everything Louisa May Alcott wrote. Dickens. Dickens gets short shrift in these volumes. No listing at all. Alcott is lightly represented. Mark Twain scarcely at all. Page 3 'Rehearsal to open next week Admission to preview performances of "The Rehearsal." to be shown in the University Theatre at 8 p.m. Tuesday and Wednesday, July 26 and 27, will be free for summer school students and institute participants. for en- books y to y to alish Un- May kena- vena tt it wain The public will not see Jean Anouilh's three-act play until it opens the University Theatre Series Oct. 7 and 8, 14 and 15. GEORGE PARO OF the Academy of Dramatic Arts, Zagraeb, Yugslavia, is guest director of the production. The cast includes five members of the KU Resident Acting Company, who will be featured in the fall series. They are Julia Callahan, Baldwin graduate student; Sean Griffin, South Bend. Ind., graduate student; Jo Anna Schneider, Lawrence (former Broadway actress); Dennis L. Dalen, St. Louis Park, Minn., graduate student, and Linda McDonald, Overland Park graduate student. Other members of the cast are Bob Bettcher, Wilmette, Ill., junior; Kip Niven, Prairie Village senior; Jim Woods, Topeka graduate student; Douglas Curtis, Dodge City junior, and Bob Stewart, Sharon Hill, Pa., junior. "THE REHEARSAL" is set in the mid-20th century, but its characters slip gradually into the past. The count presents a performance of Marivaux's "Double Inconstancy," casting and costuming himself, his wife, his mistress, and his wife's lover in the major roles. The costumed characters assume the cynicism of Marivaux's period as they wait for rehearsal cues. A pretty young girl, superviser of 12 little orphans, fatally lures the men. The count, recalling his lost youth, falls in love with her. The countess induces a family friend, and roue, to seduce the girl and destroy her affair with the count. But the girl arouses the roue to memories of his first and only true love. In despair, he invites a duel with the count and certain death. Baritone is given grant for study Roger M. Riley, a June graduate in music education, is among the original group to receive $1,-000 awards from the National Endowment for the Arts to further their careers. The $1,000 grants are to encourage young musicians and other artists to "go to centers of performance, to make contacts in the field, and further their careers." Riley is a bass-baritone. He has sung in several School of Fine Arts honor recitals and has been a frequent soloist with KU music organizations and a principal in operas here. His most recent role was that of the father in Douglas Moore's opera "Carry Nation," which had its world premiere here this spring. Grant will assist study by Michener The National Science Foundation has made a grant of $13,200 to KU to assist Charles D. Michener. Watkins professor of entomology, with field work in Africa on his study of Halictine bees. He is on a year's leave of absence. Michener, who is the only Kansan to hold membership in the National Academy of Sciences, also received a Guggenheim Fellowship for this study. Dr. Michener and family left last month for Cameroun. He also will do field work in Nigeria and Kenya. Sunday Concerts CONCERT CHOIR and CHAMBER CHOIR James Ralston, Director Darrrell Benne, Assistant Director Jane Fager, Accompanyist Sunday, July 24, 2:15 p.m. UNIVERSITY THEATRE Ceremony of Carols Benjamin Britten Tremony of Carols ... Benjamin Britten Mr. Ralston, conducting Combined Girls Choirs Harp: Ineta Williams Soloists: Cathy Allen, Martha Bagnall, Cindy Headrick, Helen Parker, Mary Jane Beal, Linda Hall, Cynthia Maxwell, Betty Rogers, Pam Trinkle Testament of Freedom ... Randall Thompson Mr. Benne, conducting Combined Boys Choir 12-MINUTE INTERMISSION ORCHESTRA Gerald M. Carney, Director Elyakum Shapira, Guest Conductor Theme Song Irish Tune from County Derry ... Percy Grainger Polonaise from Christmas Eve Suite ... Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov Hansel and Gretel, prelude ... Engelburt Humperdinck Mr. Carney, conducting Overture to "The School for Scandal" ... Samuel Barber Symphony No. 1, Op. 39 ... Jean Sibelius First movement, andante, allegro energico Firebird, suite ... Igor Stravinsky The Infernal Dance of King Kastchei Berceuse Final Mr. Shapira, conducting CONCERT BAND Russell L. Wiley, Director SYMPHONIC BAND Kenneth Bloomquist, Director SUNDAY EVENING, JULY 24, 1966 Elyakum Shaniya, Guest Conductor UNIVERSITY THEATRE 7 p.m. UNIVERSITY TIME Festival Clifton Williams Serenata Leroy Anderson Ceremony of Flourishes Alfred Reed First Suite in Eb for Military Band ... Gustav Holst 1. Chaconne 2. Intermezzo 3. March Friday, July 22, 1966 Summer Session Kansan Mr. Shapira, conducting INTERMISSION CONCERT BAND Theme Song Irish Tune from County Derry ... Percy Grainger Citation ... Claude Smith Oberon Overture ... Von Weber Dance of the Seven Veils from "Salome" ... Richard Strauss Mr. Wiley, conducting Celebration Overture, Op. 61 ... Paul Creston Symphony No. 2 ... Alexander Borodin First movement, allegro moderato Pines of the Appian Way from "Pines of Rome" ... Ottorino Respighi Arrg. Antonio d'Ella Mr.Shapira,conducting Ticket price increase is poll topic By John Casady "What is you reaction to the increase in price of student season football tickets to $5?" This question was posed to students on the KU campus following a decision by the athletic administration to increase the price of student football tickets to help pay for the expansion of Memorial Stadium. Paul Widick, Atchison senior, said, "Right offhand I'd say that it seems a little illogical to pay five bucks to see a football team that was only two for ten last season when you can see KU's basketball team play for free. I did buy a ticket though—not because I want to see our team, but because the games are a lot of fun even if the football isn't too good." Craig Shaw, Shawnee Mission sophomore, said, "I'm certainly not in favor of having the price of anything raised, but if the stadium expansion creates better seats for underclassmen, I suppose it's worth it." LINDA VOORHEES. Wyandotte senior, said, "Actually, it's still pretty cheap entertainment. Win or lose, football games are always a good time." Mike Borders, Prairie Village sophomore, said, "Intercollegiate sports have become big business, so naturally somebody has to pay for it. If they didn't raise the ticket prices, they would have to get the money from the University. I think it's better to have the people who go to the games support the financial end of the thing than to take it out of everyone's tuition." Blake Biles, Hutchinson junior, said, "It's a bad year to raise ticket prices since we only have four home games. I don't think the ticket sales were too good because of this." MIKE McNALLY, Bartlesville, Okla., senior, said, "I didn't mind it too much. I hope we get better seats, though." Carole Cour, El Dorado senior, said, "I imagine it was necessary. The University is growing and the price of everything is going up. Also, I think it's a good thing to have more student seats above the center of the field." LBJ is off to greet the voters WASHINGTON—(UPI)—President Johnson feels it is part of a president's job to "go out into the country to meet the people," and he is going to do just that this weekend with a campaign style swing through four states. The Chief Executive has spoken of visiting all 50 states before the November election. He told his news conference this week he would "take advantage of every opportunity to go out into the country to discuss our programs, our convictions and to tell them what we stand for, and ask for their support." FOR STARTERS, Johnson said that on Saturday he would go to Kentucky, Tennessee, Illinois and Indiana to visit a military installation, help Indiana celebrate its 150 birthday and sign a bill setting up a new national monument. the tentative schedule issued by the White House showed principal presidential stops at Indianapolis and Vineennes, Ind., and at Ft. Campbell, Ky., with an airport stopover at Lawrenceville, Ill. The schedule showed no stop in Tennessee, despite the President's statement, but Ft. Campbell is located on the Tennessee-Kentucky line. "I . . . RECOGNIZE this is an election year," Johnson said. "I will be called upon to visit various parts of the country. I expect to do so . . . I think a part of the president's job is to go out into the country to meet the people, to talk to them, and to exchange viewpoints with them." SUN GLASSES SUN TAN LOTION ROUND CORNER DRUG STORE Co. 801 mass. VI 3-0200 Language study draws 83 to KU Covering a year's material in a college course in 10 weeks is demanding, but when the subject is the Chinese or Japanese language, extra concentration is required. Eighty-three students are now enrolled in the National Defense Education Act (NDEA) Summer Language in Chinese and Japanese at the University of Kansas. The institute, the only one of its kind in the midwestern area, will end Aug. 20. The institute is in cooperation with Washington University at St. Louis, Mo., where it was held last year. There are only five other similar institutes in the United States. There are four levels of Chinese and two levels of Japanese offered during the summer session. The students are either incoming freshmen, college, or graduate students. They all receive 10 hours of credit for their summer work. Instructors for the institute are from the KU and Washington University faculties along with three teaching assistants. Director of the institute this year is Thomas R. Smith, chairman of the East Asian Area Studies. Delicious Dinners this weekend at THE VILLAGE GREEN 23rd & Naismith VI 3-6966 Saturday-Fried Chicken Dinner Sunday-Roast Beef Dinner Open at 11:00 a.m. "The livliest music in Lawrence" SPANKY & THE EMERALDS Friday and Saturday Page 4 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 22,1966 Boylan is appointed at Emporia TOPEKA — (UPI) — The Kansas Board of Regents this week named Dr. Larry Boylan acting president of Kansas State Teachers College of Emporia. Boylan, who is dean of the Graduate School of Emporia, will serve as acting president starting with the effective date of the resignation of Dr. John King. King is taking a position as president of the University of Wyoming. He has not given an effective date of his resignation as yet. THE REGENTS also approved an increase of $2 per semester for health fees at the University of Kansas. It also approved construction bids on a new residence hall for 623 students at Kansas State University. Construction bids for the residence hall totaled $1,696,783. Construction bids on a new food service center at K-State totaling $624,363 also were approved. The board authorized a notice of intent to issue bonds totaling $1.8 million at Wichita State University to construct an addition to the student activities center. THE REGENTS also approved plans and specifications for an addition to McKinley Hall at Wichita. It named two men's residence halls at Kansas State Teachers College of Emporia. The new residence halls will be named William Henry Singular for the former bursar and registrar and Victor T. Tursler, a teacher, coach and dean of men at the school. Indian teachers ending institute The NDEA Institute for Advanced Study for Secondary Teachers of Speech to American Indian Pupils will close today. An outdoor buffet at Haskell Institute, with Thomas Tommaney, Haskell superintendent as host, will be held tonight to climax the six-week conference, which has drawn 24 teachers from across the country. L. Madison Coombs, a former rector of education, Bureau of Indian Affairs, will be the banquet speaker. Coombs, a former Haskell superintendent, will discuss "Indian Education—a Joint Enterprise." Certificates of participation will be awarded to the teachers by William J. Argersinger, Jr. associate dean of faculties for research. Fraser given funds in chemical study Robin T. M. Fraser, associate professor of chemistry, has received a grant from the General Medical Sciences Council of the U. S. Public Health Service for study of electron transfer by chain of charge-transfer ligands. Fraser will have $23,882 for the current year's study of the mechanisms of inorganic reactions—$11,558 in new funds and a balance of $12,324 from last year when the project was begun. The USPHS has recommended $18,323 for the third year, 1967-68. Today's movies listed Three movies will be shown at 8 p.m. today east of the old Robinson Gymnasium. They are "Invitation to Munich," "Tennessee Holiday" and "New England Heritage Trail." In case of rain the movies will be shown in 3 Bailey. 1234567890 Anita Crawford, music and art camper, seemed unsure about one of the pictures in the rotating display in the halls of Murphy. Increase in fees fails to stir student praise By Connie Myers The way to a college student's heart is through his wallet, or so it seemed when the Board of Regents announced the fee increase recently. "What do you think of the fee increase?" is a question to which almost any answer could be expected. Janet Whitmer, sophomore, Kansas City: "If they are going to enlarge the facilities or modernize some of the buildings, I'm all for it. I think a new humanities building would be a fine thing. KU is a good school; I don't think an increase in fees is unreasonable." HARRY WILES, senior, Topeka: "Seems as though the new increase might keep out-of-staters from coming to KU. I don't think it does much for public relations. Getting kids to come here from other states is really important, and I don't think that raising fees is going to help much." Zu Zu Duhaiyu, junior, Saudi Arabia: "I think the University is getting to be more and more commercialized. It's not only the fees, there are lots of other things too. I hope the ASC will investigate this fee raise next year, and find out exactly where the money is going. If it is not being used for University improvement, I think some action should be taken." Jerry Long, first year law student, Humboldt: "I thought this was a state-supported school. They keep raising taxes and fees well, I guess that's all right if you approve of double taxation. Everywhere the student turns, he gets hit up for more money. The University seems to be exploiting every revenue potential. I wish fees were the only things that were being raised. But if the Board of Regents feels this raise is justified in the light of future expenses, I have no right to condemn it. I only hope that it will help to provide a more efficient, comfortable university." CAROLYN PAYNE, sophomore, Salina: "It seems as though with all of the people going to school here that we wouldn't need a raise in fees. But if they really have to be raised, it would be nice if the students knew where the money is going." Jane Laughlin, junior, Garden City; "It seems to be a very bad thing for out-of-state graduate students. A 141 per cent increase in fees is rather out of sight. It's too much of an increase in one jump." Barbara Gates, senior, St. Louis: "The thing is that, if the school has what you need, and the fees aren't unreasonable, especially what you want to study is only offered at other universities that are a great deal more expensive." ED BORCHARDT, graduate student, Kansas City: "I'm only going to school in the summer; I teach during the school year. All I can say is that a 141 per cent increase more than wiped out the pay raise any teacher is likely to get. I hoped to start my doctorate next year, but it doesn't seem too probable with the new fee increase. The ironic thing is that I pay state taxes in Kansas because I teach here; but since I live in Missouri, I have to pay out-of-state tuition." Don Hunter, senior, Abilene; "I'm in favor of the new increase, if it's necessary to maintain a university and faculty of the quality which KU has. We have to compete with private schools; and by keeping a top-notch staff, we'll be in a much better position for such competition. I think the tuition at KU is still probably one of the lowest in the nation anyway." Open house planned for today in Union All students are invited to attend the Kansas Union open house today. TOPEKA — (UPI) — The Kansas Board of Regents this week approved a record budget of $112 million for the state's institutions of higher learning. The budget is for fiscal 1968. Ann Elliott, chairman of the SUA entertainment committee, said there will be free bowling and billiards from 2 to 6 p.m. in the Jaybowl. In the evening there will be a special, free, classical film in the Forum Room, starring Humphrey Bogart. At 7 and 9 p.m. in the ballroom, there will be a free Friday flick entitled "Marnie." Record budget OK'd for state institutions The $13 million increase will be submitted to the budget department before final submission to the 1967 legislative session. The increases include $6 million for a 10 per cent salary increase for classified personnel; a 7.5 per cent salary increase for faculty members at the University of Kansas and Kansas State University, and a 9 per cent increase for faculty members at Wichita State University, Kansas State College of Pittsburg, Kansas State Teachers College of Emporia and Fort Hays State College. IT ALSO INCLUDED an increased enrollment and $1.7 million for new programs. The operating budget for fiscal 1967 was $99,195,809. The proposed budget will be $112,197,997, an increase of 13.1 per cent. Here is a breakdown of the individual college and university budgets including 1967 budgets, 1968 budgets,the increases and the percentage increases: UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, $26,599,452 for 1967; $29,595,379 for 1968, an increase of $2,995,927 or 11.3 per cent. UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS MEDICAL CENTER — $18,948,275 for 1967; $20,463,125 for 1968, an increase of $2,414,848 or 13.4 per cent. KANSAS STATE UNIVERSITY -$28,292,833; for fiscal 1967; $31- 186,340 for 1968, an increase of $8,293,504 or 10.2 per cent. WICHTA STATE UNIVERSITY—$7,757,030 for 1967; $9,496,-230 for 1968; an increase of $1,-739,200 or 22.4 per cent. KANSAS STATE TEACHERS COLLEGE OF EMPIORIA - $-.713,814 for 1967; $7.617,049 for 1968, an increase of $903,235 or 13.5 per cent. KANSAS STATE COLLEGE OF PITTSBURG — $6,173,016 for 1967; $7,322,843 for 1968, an increase of $1,149,827 or 18.5 per cent. FORT HAYS KANSAS STATE COLLEGE—$4,447.012 for 1967; $5,229,426 for 1968, an increase of $782,414, or 17.6 per cent. SCHOOL FOR THE DEAF= $758,354 for 1967; $830,611 for 1968, an increase of $72,257 or 9.5 per annum. SCHOOL FOR THE BLIND— $406,023 for 1967; $456,996 for 1968, an increase of $50,973 or 12.6 per cent. The KU International Club will sponsor an International Picnic at Wyandotte County Lake Saturday. Departure time will be 3 p.m. from the Union. International club plans lake picnic The program will include six special competitive performances from the Philippines, China, Japan, Arabia, Africa and Latin America. The club has been working on the program since the beginning of the summer school, and expects to have at least 300 participants, representing 85 nations. Ultimate purpose of this picnic is to provide not only recreation to the participants but also to promote friendship and understanding among students from different nations. KIEF'S RECORD & STEREO Malls Shopping Center BEST OF THE BEACH BOYS Here's a sensational collection of the Beach Boys' greatest hits! . . . personally selected and compiled by the Beach Boys themselves and dedicated to their fans: "Fun, Fun, Fun"; "Surfin' U.S.A."; "Surfer Girl"; "Little Honda"; "Wendy" and more! $2.86 DIAMOND NEEDLE SALE $5.95 BEST OF THE BEACH BOYS u s s e - e e g t Friday. July 22,1966 Summer Session Kansai Page 5 Actors tell of journey to Europe Theatre techniques and actor training programs in Kansas and eastern European countries are basically the same, according to a KU professor. KU, THE ONLY American university in this program, has sent students and a professor abroad for the past three years. In exchange, students from European countries have come to KU for a similar program. "There are no real differences in the kind of training," William Kuhlke, assistant professor of speech and drama, said, "only in the degree. Our students compare quite favorably to the Europeans on the same level of training." Kuhike and six KU students recently returned from an eight-week tour of Poland, Czechoslovakia, Yugoslavia and Rumania. They were taking part in the American Theatre Symposium sponsored by the State Department's Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs. The demonstration team visited professional theatre academies in major cities in the four countries. The students attended classes to see the kinds of training programs Europeans have and the training techniques they employ. Then the two groups of students met in formal and informal discussion groups to compare the two types of theatre. For each tour the KU demonstration team puts on a production. This year the students did "An American Medley," a musical account of the past 100 years. THE COLLECTION of songs, dances and play scenes was compiled by Kuhike and by Allen Crafton, professor emeritus. It also was presented on KU's Centennial lecture and concert course throughout Kansas last winter Each of the six Jayhawkers performed various roles in the two-act presentation. Slides projected on a screen were used for background, and a narrative written in the native language was read by a European student. "The training programs in Europe are more complete," Kuhle said, "consisting of four or five years of professional training. Our students are busy studying biology and other subjects while they get their theatre training." "ONE OF THE greatest benefits from a program such as this," Professor Kuhkke said, "was the close association with people—we learned not just from books and graphs. This program also promotes international understanding. When we couldn't find a language to talk to each other with, we used sign language." "Our physical facilities, however, are far better than those in Europe," Kuhlke said. "The scenery, lights and costumes in America are much better." The comedy scenes of the American Medley were livened up when the KU students learned key punch lines in the foreign language. The sir students were selected by tryouts and interviews last September and practiced until they left. During the spring semester they could only enroll in two theatre courses for six hours' credit because they left on tour in April. Cast members were: Paul W. Hough, Jr., junior, Topeka; Kip Niven, junior, Prairie Village; Richard Kelton, senior, Miami, Okla.; Brenda Currin, junior, Rockville, Md.; Ann Runge Glaze, graduate, Higginsville, Mo., and Mary Linda Rapelye, senior, Kansas City, Mo. DANIEL MILLER CHARMS TO SOOTHE THE SAVAGE BEAST? CHARMS TO SOOTHE THE SAVAGE BEAST? A band camper displays some originality in dress in the middle of practice Peace officers to convene on campus for training School days will begin Monday for about 175 law enforcement and correctional officers on the KU campus. Kansas Atty. Gen. Robert Londerholm will give the keynote address for the six-day 20th Annual Kansas Peace Officers Training School, offered by the Governmental Research Center and University Extension, KU, and the Kansas Peace Officers Association. The program has 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' experience or previous training. It includes forgery investigation, supervision methods, and interrogation of suspects. The Correctional Officers Seminar for prison and jail personnel will cover such subjects as transportation of prisoners, supervision problems, and managing disturbed persons. 1 team unbeaten in softball play Fast-pitch league. Team Won Lost % SCROCS 4 0 1,000 Faculty Fossils 3 1 .750 Firebirds 2 1 .666 Hybrids 2 2 .500 Speed Rats 1 3 .250 Chinese Bandits 1 3 .250 English 0 3 .000 As the intramral softball season entered its fourth week, only one team, the SCROCS in the fast-pitch league, remains undefeated. Following are the standings of teams in both leagues. Two seniors will present recitals in Swarthout hall The School of Fine Arts will present two senior music recitals in the next two weeks. Charlie Brown's All-Stars 4 1 .800 Heroditi 4 1 .800 Chem Tech 4 1 .800 Bio-Chem 4 2 .666 Radiation Biophysics 4 2 .666 Chemical Engineers 3 3 .500 Medical Chemists 2 3 .400 Delta Functions 1 3 .250 KKK 1 5 .166 Blanks 0 5 .000 Slow-pitch league: Charlie Brown's Vivian Stinkel Shilts, soprano, will present a recital Tuesday, July 26, at 8 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall. Her recital selectios will be, "Ah! Mio Cor" and "Alma Mia (Floridante)" by Handel, "Un Certo Non So Che") by Vivaldi, "Im Herbst" by Franz, "Der Schmetterling" and "Lied der Mignon Bei Dir!" by Schubert, "Air de Salome (Herodiade)" by Massenet, "Deux Melodies Hebraiques" and "Nicolette" by Ravel, "With a Water-lily" and "Song of Hope" by Grieg and "Poems by Joyce" by Moeran. Mrs. Shilts was graduated from Colorado Women's College cum laude where she was a member of Phi Theta Kappa, liberal arts honorary society. She has studied with Elsa Haury at Friends University and with Alice Moncrieff and Miriam Stewart Green at KU. Mrs. Fryman held a music scholarship for three years while at KU She was a member of the KU Symphony and the Little Symphony as well as Mu Phi Epsilon, national music women's honorary. She has studied with Raymond Stubl at the University, The second senior recital to be presented is that of Linda Judd Fryman, cellist, Wednesday, July 27 at 8 in Swarthout Recital Hall. Mrs. Fryman's program will include "Suite III" by Bach, "Fantasy Pieces, Op. 73" by Schuman and "Concerto No. 1, Op. 33 by Saint-Saens. competition, first place in the Bloch Competition, honorarium in Naftgzer Young Artists Auditions and solo appearances with the KU Symphony. Mrs. Fryman has received several awards, including first place in the St. Louis Symphony Prize Both recitals are open to the public. Bonded cashier on Templin duty A bonded cashier from the KU business office receives deposits from any campers or camp personnel at the new "bank" in Templin Hall. Table tennis date set Open 12:30 to 4:30 p.m. Monday through Friday since July 7, the service is for those with large amounts of money who want to deposit cash or checks in excess of $4. Camp students also use valuable drawers in their rooms which they lock with keys issued to them on one dollar deposits. Leroy Esau, administrative assistant to the camp director, has suggested that campers use checks sent from home regularly or checking accounts. Yet he said that the service is "as safe as any bank" and mentioned that he used it himself. The table tennis tournament sponsored by Student Union Activities, originally set for July 13, has been rescheduled for Wednesday, July 27. The tournament will begin at 7 p.m. in the ballroom parlor of the Union and will include singles and doubles for both men and women. Trophies will be presented to the winners, according to Rich Yeager, chairman of the SUA recreation committee. For Dinner Tonight Come to DIXON'S Try Our Delicious - Flavor Crisp Chicken $1.55 1/2 chicken, golden brown French fries, hot buttered bun and crisp slaw. - Shrimp Dinner $1.55 5 golden brown jumbo fantail shrimp, combination salad, French fries, buttered bun and honey. - Ham Sandwich 60c Big portion of Missouri hickory smoked ham, creamy salad dressing and lettuce leaf. - Pork Tenderloin De Luxe -------- 65c Extra large serving with lettuce, tomato, and dressing - Big "D" 79c $ \frac{1}{2} $ pound ground beefburger with lettuce, tomato and mayonnaise Drive-In Restaurant DIXON'S 2500 W. Sixth VI 3-7446 Air-Conditioned Dining Room Page 6 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 22, 1966 Students working for the University Daily Kansan know the problems of getting out a paper every day, but their work is easy compared with the problems facing students on British university papers. MORRIS SQUARE True, the British university papers come out just once a week, but this is the only factor on the credit side. On the other side there are these difficulties. There are no journalism courses in British universities. So all staff members are self-taught, from the editor down. Second, and following from the first, because there are no journalism courses this work is completely voluntary. Students have to sacrifice some of their study time and leisure hours to gather and write material. New botanical research center operating at KU British papers: no easy go By David Finch Next, there is no compulsory contribution by students to the newspaper, which is sold on a single-issue basis. So staff members really have to sell their paper when it comes out. Here again, they have to give up an hour or two between classes to stand at a vantage point and persuade other students that they really need the paper. THIRD.AND AGAIN.following from the first, advertising has to be solicited in spare time and by volunteers with no experience of advertising techniques. Another point: the university papers rarely have their own presses and so have to get the proofs published by job printers. This results in a loss of time between sending off the proofs and getting the bundles of papers returned. Material was gathered at odd intervals during the week, and on Sundays we crowded into this small room to write our stories. One girl worked on the make-up and the editor and sub-editors worked on their editorials either in the corridor or in another room they had managed to scrouenge. And their editorials were surprisingly good. They were usually on three topics—one international, one national or local, and one on university news. BEFORE COMING to KU I worked for my university paper as a general reporter and feature writer. This was the Aberdeen University paper, Gaudie. The name is a contraction of the Latin gaudeamus, from "Gaudeamus igitur," the international student song. FEW OF US COULD type, so three girls were there especially for this purpose. They took our handwritten stories and typed them up, occasionally rewriting. The atmosphere was usually hectic but high-spirited. Coffee was there for everybody, and at 10:30 p.m. someone usually took orders for fish and chips, the staple diet of Aberdeen students. Our premises were a small room rented to us at a nominal fee by the Student Representative Council, under whose jurisdiction we came. So there was no staff supervision. Wednesday, the big day—we took it in turns to stand at strategic spots and sell papers to the students. There was always difficulty in getting enough people to man the spots at all hours, but somehow the job was done. Our deadline was 1 a.m. when the last train that night left for Montrose, where our job printers had their office. We usually met this deadline without much trouble, but the main prblem was finding interesting university news. Because our paper was a weekly, we could not handle international or national news other than editorially or as features. UNIVERSITY SPORTS took from one to two pages, and senatus, or student council, decisions were always big news (as, in Britain, student government has real power). And any Parliamentary decisions concerning university education were featured in a big way. Tuesday evening, the bundles were returned and more volunteers (usually the same people as Sunday night) wrapped the papers that had to be mailed and took them to the post office. Wednesday evening, the takings were counted. By including advertising revenue, we usually managed to just about break even. We weren't a big paper, by any means, but our editorials were good, and our cartoon series, "McCool," was the finest I have seen in a college paper. More than 40 clergymen from over Kansas will spend five days next week learning more about how the American economic system operates. They are at KU this week for the Kansas Clergy Economic Education Workshop. Economy is studied by clergymen Following the keynote on "Economic Values in a Judeo-Christian Society" given by Jim Hennessey of the Clergy Economic Education Foundation, West Lafayette, Ind., the workshop will concentrate on factual economic analysis. The topics include a review of the U.S. economy, the price and market system, money and banking, the impact of increased productivity and automation on the economy, business economics, the philosophy of labor-management relations, labor's stake in the economy, international trade and world markets, agricultural economics, family finance and money management, economic problems and labor, distribution of income and emerging nations, and economic problems and the clergy. AND ALREADY material for the next edition was being gafaulted by professional standards. Speakers will be Richard L. Kohls, agricultural economist, Purdue University; Glenn Miller, economist, Federal Reserve Bank, Kansas City, Mo.; Dallas Jones, professor of industrial relations, University of Michigan; Ross Beach, president, Kansas Natural Gas, Inc., Hays; Richard L Morse, Kansas State University, and John Blake, general counsel, Boilermakers International Union, Kansas City, Kan. No doubt our writing could be faulted by professionla standards, but some of it was highly original, and all of it was enthusiastic. I may possibly go on to work for large metropolitan newspapers, but I will always remember the fun we had getting out our Gaudie. University completes new botanical center The University has completed construction and equipping of its $90,000 Botanical Research Center, and the center already has attracted private research grants totaling more than KU's investment in the facility. Emphasizing the study of Great Plains plants, the structure was financed 50-50 by KU and the National Science Foundation. Two private, three-year grants totaling more than $50,000 were made recently for research to be conducted at the center. The new building is located near the botany department's three-year-old greenhouse, laboratory and experimental plots in the growing complex of research facilities west of Highway 59 at the west edge of the campus. The concrete block facility has nearly 6,000 square feet of work space in the form of 14 research rooms located around the perimeter of a central library-museum area. THE LIBRARY-MUSEUM area houses KU'S 125,000-specimen collection of plants and fossil plants, largest in the Great Plains area. "I don't know of any other university that has a center like this," says Ronald McGregor, professor and chairman of botany. "Visitors from other schools have been coming here to look at what we're doing." The new center provides muchneeded research room for graduate students and faculty, freeing more expensive space atop Mount Oread for undergraduate classrooms. McGREGOR SAID the added research space will help attract faculty members of high calibre as well as provide a place to work for post-dectorates who want to come to KU from other universities. "The added research space also has advantages for other departments," McGregor said. "For instance, this fall, because of the facilities we have now, we are bringing in a Ph.D. from England who will teach and do research in both zoology end botany. Two other botanists are coming here under entomology grants that overlap botany." The center enables the botany department to lift past restrictions on its graduate student enrollment. McGregor said that in the past there simply has not been enough research space to accommodate all the students who wanted to do graduate study. FINAL REDUCTIONS AT The University Shop's ANNUAL SUMMER SALE These prices are rock bottom and will never be lower. Don't miss these final ridiculous reductions on quality men's clothing & sportswear—all from our regular stock. Entire Stock SUITS Now 33% OFF Reg. Now 45.00 29.95 60.00 39.95 75.00 49.95 One Large Group SPORTCOATS Now 1/2 Price Reg. Reg. 27.50 13.75 35.00 17.50 45.00 22.50 Permanent Press SLACKS and JEANS Reg. 6.00 and 7.00 ___ 4.50 Reg. 8.00 and 9.00 ___ 5.95 Sportshirts Bermudas Banlons (some colors) Entire Stock DRESS SLACKS Now 33% OFF Reg. Now 10.95 7.70 14.95 9.95 21.50 14.35 20% OFF GROUP 50c BARGAIN TABLE Socks Belts Jewelry $3.00 BARGAIN TABLE Sportshirts Dress Shirts Wash Slacks SWIMWEAR SWIMWEAR Entire Stock Now 25% OFF SHOES One Group 11 different styles 33% OFF SUMMER STORE HOURS Monday through Friday 9-5 Closed Saturday the university shop 1420 Crescent Rd. On The Hill CLASSIFIEDS Page 7 Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the Summit Kemsa and offered full student enrollment are regard to color, creed, or national origin. FOR SALE TYPEWRITERS--most brands portables including Olympia, Royal and SCM Electric portables. Sales, service and rent. Inquire about our rental-purchase office. Office equipment and lawn mowers. Lawncare equipment. 700 Mass., VI 3-3644. 700 tf SHERWOOD AMPLIFIER, 20 watts good condition, $45. VI 1-2164, 7-26 For Sale—Kay banjo and case, good condition, $33.00. Call VI 3-829 -7-26. For Sale: 33 x8' 1952 for houserailer, priced to sell Suitable for students or lake front retreat. See at 1600 W. 4th. Lot No. 7. 7-26 Contemporary bedroom and living- room furniture, bargain. Call VI 2-4311 after 1.00 p.m. For Sale: 12 watt amplifier, $15.00 FM tuner, $10.00; Clock Radio, $6.00; 32 bricks, $2.00; kitchen stool, $2.00. VI 2-3518, 1818 Missouri St. 7-22 For Sale: Irish Setter puppies; registered A.K.C.; Champion bloodline; 7 weeks old; ready to go—VI 2-3110. 7-29 MISCELLANEOUS Western Civilization Notes. Completely revised, extremely comprehensive. Mimeographed and bound for $4.25. Call VI. 3-1901 for delivery. Thesis graphs drawn to your specifi- ifications. Reasonable. Call UN 4-3867. VI 2-6174 After 5 p.m. Robert Nelson. 7-22 Gift Box Andrews Gifts VI 2-1523 Summer Session Kansan Open Wednesday Evenings Malls Shopping Center Plenty of Free Parking Pure American shorthair kittens need homes. A free can of cat food with each adoption. Take one, I'm desperate. Call VI 3-8202. 7-22 Midwest Artists Co-op presents: D W Griffith Classic "BIRTH OF NATION" July 23 & 24 at 9:00 p.m. July 24 only at 3:00 p.m. 8351; Mass. St. WANTED Wanted: Ride from 6340 Riley, Overland Park, Kan., to KU for next fall. CO 2-5027. 7-22 Wanted: Poets to read their own work at Midwest Artists Co-Op 29. Stop at the back end of the rack. Leave name, address, phone number no restrictions! $331⁺² Mass - 7-22 TYPING Expert typing, Themes, Dissertations, etc. Electric typewriter. Mrs. Mishler. VI 3-1029. tt 7-22 Typing—Theses, term papers, dissertations, Reasonable Rates, paper furnished. VI 2-1561. tt Typhist, experienced with term papers, and your typing immediate attention with electric machine with extra symbols. Typhist, Higley at 408 W. 131st. T- 3-0408 Experienced typist, 10 years experience in theses and term papers. Electrician with accurate service. Reasonable fees to test. Mr Barlow. 2407 Yale, VI 2-1648. Experienced typist with new electric office typewriter will type dissertations, theses and term papers. Fast and accurate service with reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Lancaster at VI 2-1705. 8-2 FRED GREEN Western Wear The only store in Lawrence with complete lines in western wear. - Lee Rider Jeans - Justin Boots Brushed Denim Bonanza Shirts $8.70 Have your sports car tuned where performance is proven Go With The Winner 910 Mass. VI 3-0077 with race-winning cars. Competition Sports Cars 1209 E. 23rd St. VI 2-2191 Daniels Jewelry 914 Mass. St. -WATCHES-DIAMONDS-GIFTS- Watch Repairing at its Finest — Using the Latest Electronic and Ultrasonic Equipment - Free Estimates on Repairs - Only Genuine Material Used - Work Guaranteed — of course * Pleasing Prices - Only Genuine Material Excuse - Work Guaranteed — of course - Pleasing Prices Planning A Vacation? Purchase Travelers Checks At The Bank of Friendly Service - Immediate replacement if lost - Safer than carrying cash DOUGLAS COUNTY STATE BANK - Can be cashed anywhere - Low in cost, only $1 per $100 Member F.D.I.C. 9th and Ky. V1 3-7474 Typing Wanted. theses, essays, and themes—Fast. accurate. Reasonable Rates. Mrs. Hallenbeck, VI 3-4156 FORMER HARVARD AND UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA SECRETARY WILL TYPE REPORTS. TERM PAPERS, THESES. V 3-17207. 8-2 GRANT'S Established — Experienced Drive-In Pet Center 1218 Conn. Pet Ph. VI 3-2921 Complete Center under one roof FREE PARKING Exclusive Representative of L. G. Balfour Co. For the finest in - Badges Fraternity Jewelry - Guards - Novelties - Lavalliers Favors - Sportswear Cups Paddles - Rings Sportswear Boddies - Awards - Trophies Al Lauter Al Lauter 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 Friday, July 22, 1966 LIVE CLOSE TO CAMPUS. Air-conditioned one and two bedroom apartments in modern bldg. Furnished or unfurnished. Rents beginning at $35. Santee Apts., 1123 Ind. VI 3-2116. Ft room and board for men! Only at the study environment and wonderful meals served 3 times a day, 6 days a week and twice on Sunday—all for $38 per person. College and licensed by the State Board. Call today for further information; VI 3-3408. BUT HURRY! FOR RENT For Rent: Nice air-conditioned bachelor apartment, available in August. May work out part or all of rent. Very close to KU. Phone VI 3-8534 Now Renting For Fall-Extra Nice Bachelor Apartments for graduates or older undergraduate men 2 Blocks from law school. Quite expensive, kitchen paid. Fri. Parking, so air-conditioned. For appointment call VI 3-8534. YES! We're open for the summer. Come down and see us at the... Basement Apt. for rent for 2 boys, furnished. Private entrance and private shower. Util. pd. $65.00. Call V 1-3930 after 5 p.m. 7-29 WAGON WHEEL 1401 Ohio VI 3-9603 TRAVEL THIS SUMMER Arrange Your: Flight Home Vacation Reservations Trip Abroad at: MAUPINTOUR Trip Abroad Other Summer Reservations Southridge Plaza, Inc. 2350 Ridge Court Lawrence, Kansas, 66044 Manager Vacancies Available Office VI 2-1160 MRS. RAMON H. PICKERING Home VI 2-3755 Area Code 913 HAVING A PARTY? We are always happy to serve you with Ice cold beverages The Malls VI 3-1211 Variety of grocery items Chips, nuts, cookies Crushed ice, candy Ice cold 6 pacs all kinds LAWRENCE ICE COMPANY OPEN TO 10 P.M. EVERY EVENING LAWRENCE ICE CORP. 616 Vt. Ph. VI 3-0350 FREE CLASSICAL FILMS Friday, July 22 FREE BOWLING AND BILLIARDS Starting at 7:00, Forum Room Free Friday Flick Union Ballroom SUA OPEN HOUSE 7:00 and 9:00 2-6 p.m. "MARNIE" Starring: Sean Connery TONIGHT! AT LAWRENCE THEATRES Sean Connery Joanne Woodward Jean Seberg "A Fine Madness" TECHNICOLOR" From WARNER BROS. Evenings 7:15 & 9:15 Cont. Sat. & Sun—2:30 Air-Conditioned Varsitu WELARE ... Telephone VI 3-1065 Granada THEATRE ...Telephone VI 3-5784 DON KNOTTS 'The GHOST and MR. CHICKEN' ITECHNICOLOR L Evenings 7:15 & 9:15 Cont. Sat. & Sun.-2:30 Sunset DRIVE IN THEATRE - West on Highway 40 DRIVE IN THEATRE - West on Highway 40 1st Run! "Bedford Incident" and "HELL IS FOR HEROES" Open 6:45 Show Starts At Dusk Saturday - "HARLOW with Carrol Baker - Plus - — 2 BONUS FEATURES — Page 8 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 22.1966 Writer explains civil rights bill provisions By Arnold B. Sawislak (Editor's Note—The House is heading toward floor debate on the far-reaching civil rights legislation proposed by President Johnson. It will be the most controversial measure to be considered by the election-year Congress this session. Two features of the bill involving a ban on discrimination in the housing field and ways to punish violence against Negroes and civil rights advocates would have the greatest impact—North as well as South. In this article, Arnold B. Sawislak of the UPI House staff explains what these provisions would do and what the legislative outlook is.) WASHINGTON—(UPI)—"It is the policy of the United States to prevent discrimination on account of race, color, religion or national origin in the purchase, rental, lease, financing, use and occupancy of housing throughout the nation." To some, that 34-word statement of national policy in President Johnson's civil rights bill means "fair housing." To others, it connotes "forced housing." And to everyone, it represents the most emotionally charged and politically difficult issue to face Congress this year. JOINSON'S PROPOSALS for nondiscrimination in jury selection and tougher penalties for racial violence came out of the House Judiciary Committee without major change. But the housing section emerged with some significant modifications and there is a strong chance that it will be worked over more when it gets to the House floor. There is no certainty that the House will not kill the housing section entirely. Even though the committee approved the final version by an overwhelming bipartisan margin, the administration's original plan at one point came within two votes of being dropped from the bill altogether. BOTH THE PRESIDENT'S proposal and the committee version, now supported by the administration, forbid racial, religious and ethnic discrimination in the sale, rental and financing of housing. But both coverage and enforcement were drastically altered before the committee voted out the legislation. The committee bill would require open occupancy in less housing and prohibit discrimination by fewer persons than the President's plan. At the same time, it would provide cheaper and faster legal relief for home-seekers who have been turned down because of their race, religious or ethnic background. Here is a rundown on the two basic approaches: COVERAGE — The administration bill would have covered all housing and vacant land. Property owners and their employees, real estate agents and brokers and all persons engaged in financing housing would have been covered. The committee version would exempt from regulation the sale or rental of owner-occupied single family homes and multiple dwellings with up to four apartments. Vacant land and housing operated by religious and fraternal groups for their own members also would be exempted. Persons in the real estate and financing industries would be forbidden to discriminate. Property owners would be exempt unless they participated in the sale or rental of more than two dwellings in a single year. After that, they would be considered to be in the housing business and subject to the antidiscrimination requirements. ENFORCEMENT—The administration would have authorized aggrieved persons to sue in federal or state courts for damages and injunctions to stop discrimination. If discrimination was widespread in an area, the Justice Department could sue. The committee bill would retain the court enforcement, but create a new "fair housing board" within the housing and urban development department. The special board would have power to investigate complaints of discrimination and issue cease and desist orders to violators. Even with the exemptions, the committee bill would cover a lot of housing. This would be true especially in big cities, where big apartment buildings are the rule and in burgeoning suburbs where developers build hundreds of houses at a time. BUT WITH the exemption on sales of existing single family homes and rentals of small apartment buildings, many of the dwellings that Negroes can afford could be denied to them. There is a disagreement of some significance about the scope of the exemption approved by the committee for owners who do not sell or rent their property more than twice a year. The authors of the provision say it would permit discrimination by the owner himself or by an agent instructed by the owner to restrict sale or rental of the property. They emphasize, however, that the agent may discriminate only if explicitly told to do so by the owner. The agent may not suggest or initiate such practices on his own. CIVIL RIGHTS groups disagree with this reading of the provision. They say the exemption is valid only for the owner, and cannot be transferred to his agent. Amendments from both sides designed to make clear the position of agents in such cases are sure to be offered when the bill reaches the floor. The prospects are for exemption of the agent who is expressly instructed to discriminate by the owner. There also was some initial confusion about the role of the fair housing board. The first word was that it would have only conciliation powers, but bill's language makes clear that it would have the same strong quasi-judicial enforcement powers in the housing field as the national labor relations board has in labor-management disputes. A STRONG EFFORT will be made on the house floor to eliminate the fair housing board enforcement procedure. Civil rights militants will fight for it as hard as for the housing section itself. But its removal may become the price of support demanded by wavering Republicans and Democrats. The outlook then is for a final housing section substantially weaker than proposed by the president. Seasoned legislative tacticians in the pro-civil rights ranks concede that even this will be hard to pass in a troubled Congress. They argue, however, that it is worth the effort to establish the open occupancy principle in federal law even if only a relatively few homes are made available outside the present racial ghettoes. HOWEVER, THERE is a possibility that civil rights groups might react furiously to a seriously weakened housing section. The Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) already has rejected the entire bill. Less militant groups might leave the bill in no better condition than if it were too strong for a majority of the house to swallow. The atmosphere of doubt about the fate of the housing section is similar to the situation in 1957, when Congress was considering the first civil rights bill to become law in the 20th century. No one was sure what it would take to win then. The same is true now. THE REASON for the doubt is that the housing section is the first civil rights proposal to hit the North with equal—if not stronger—impact than the South. Northern delegations that have been all but unanimous in favor of liberalized federal voting, public accommodations and fair employment proposals in the past nine years appear to be wavering on open housing. At the same time, southerners are still overwhelmingly opposed to any further legislation in the civil rights field and are eagerly looking for northern allies to fight the 1966 bill. PASSAGE OF PAST rights bills has required two elements that so far do not seem to be present for open housing. The first is strong two-party support within Congress. The majority Democrats cannot pass a civil rights bill without the backing of Republican leaders and the votes of the GOF rank and file. In the present dispute, they haven't clinched that kind of bipartisan backing yet, especially in the Senate. The second necessary ingredient is strong support from outside Congress, including the White House. President Eisenhower, Kennedy and Johnson gave top priority to the five bills that passed in 1957, 1960, 1964 and 1965. Special Souvenirs from KU Black Arm Chair with KU Seal or Jayhawk on the back—Gold trim $32.25 Bronze Centennial Medallion with official Seal of KU on reverse side. 2 and one half inches in Diameter—$5.00 Sheaffer Desk Set in Black with Silver trim 6 & one half x 8 inches—$31.00 Kansas Union Bookstore UNITED STATES OF AMERICA 10 CENTS Black Arm Chair with KU Seal or Jayhawk on the back—Gold trim $32.25 Sheaffer Desk Set in Black with Silver trim 6 & one half x 8 inches—$31.00 U Seal Gold trim [Insert an image here] 47 Summer Session Kansan 76th Year, No. 12 Lawrence, Kansas Tuesday, July 26.1966 JOHN HENRY LEE ALLEN CRAFTON SUA plans for fall By Connie Myers Student Union Activities, headed by president Dave Waxse, Oswego senior, has many new plans for the fall semester. By combining some committees and expanding others, SUA plans to offer a greater variety of new activities to better serve the ever-growing KU student population. One of the first events on the fall calendar is a campus-wide survey conducted by SUA to learn more about the student attitude toward the Kansas Union and the SUA program. It will probably be a random sample of students chosen through the mail, according to Frank Shavlik, SUA adviser. THE TRAVEL COMMITTEE, with John Green as chairman, is a new department of SUA. The fall plans include the travel board, which helps students in finding rides to different parts of the country; the charter flight, probably to Europe or the Bahama Islands; and bus trips to Kansas City for special cultural or sports events. Further possibilities for this new committee include skiing trips and bus trips to the coast. The committee will continue to maintain a file of travel books and folders, which are always available to the student. A festival of the arts is planned for a week during March. The week will feature a variety of music, drama, and other creative arts. There will be famous personalities as well as KU students participating in the festival. The week will be climaxed by a concert in Hoch. The festival is a cultural project, which SUA hopes will become a KU tradition. THE FORUM COMMITTEE, headed by John Hoppe, has expanded. Such things as current events and poetry forums will be continued. Science and career forums have been added in addition to specialized forums, which are designed to appeal to certain segments of the University community. With a new adviser, Cheryl Knapp, from Colorado University, SUA plans to begin the fall semester with a full schedule of activities. The traditions dance is the first big event, followed by the activities carnival, the SUA carnival and the homecoming dance and concert. "I'm sure next year will see an even bigger and better SUA program," stated Shavlik. "The potential that the SUA program and those working with it have is almost staggering. Every KU student comes into direct contact with SUA at one time or another during his college career. Because of this, we are trying to widen our horizons and thinking to better serve the students. "This is part of the reason for the survey we are planning for next year. We hope to meet a greater number of the students directly, more often than we do now. By understanding and responding to their wishes, we hope to make a significant contribution to their college careers. This is one of the major reasons for the many changes we are making in next year's program," stated Shavlik. Allen Crafton dies at home in Colorado By Bill Robinson Allen Crafton, professor emeritus of speech and drama at KU, died suddenly Friday near the family summer home near Glen Haven, Colo. He was 75. Prof. and Mrs. Crafton and their daughter, Mrs. Elizabeth Boyce of Overland Park, had arrived at the vacation spot Friday morning. Prof. Crafton was walking near the cottage with Mrs. Crafton when he complained of dizziness. He died within seconds. MEMORIAL SERVICES will be announced after Mrs. Crafton's return to Lawrence this wee. Cremation was to be in Colorado. In addition to his wife and daughter, Prof. Crafton is survived by two grandons, both of Overland Park. Prof. Crafton joined the KU faculty in 1923 as professor of speech and drama and chairman of the speech and drama department. He resigned as departmental chairman in 1957, but continued on the faculty until 1961. Prof. Crafton also was director of the University Theatre from 1923 until 1953. Recipient of the HOPE award in 1961, Prof. Crafton maintained his interest in KU theatre productions until his death. Prof. Crafton, working with Prof. William Kuhlike, completed "An American Medley" to correspond with the centennial celebration of the University. "An American Medley" was an excerpt description of the first 100 years of the American theatre. IN ADDITION TO "MEDLEY" Prof. Crafton authored, with Mrs. Crafton, five theatre textbooks. In 1954 he wrote a history of Lawrence. The history, "Free State Fortress," was published by the World Company and has become a collector's item. Camper royalty named Saturday Toy Caldwell and Fred Wiman were crowned camp king and queen Saturday night at Midwestern Music and Art Camp's final dance. THEY WERE ELECTED in an all-camp contest held Thursday night following three days of hard campaigning. Miss Caldwell said immediately after her crowning, "This is wonderful, I was really surprised." Miss Caldwell is a music camper from Salina, and Wiman came from Snyder, Tex., to attend the science camp this summer. Wiman added, "This is really an honor." Prof. Crafton also wrote the Medicine Lodge Peace Treaty Pageant, depicting the history of Southwestern Kansas. The pageant was presented in 1957. For Prof. Crafton, a theatrical career began before World War I. He received his B.S. degree from Knox College, where he was a member of Phi Gamma Delta, and went to Harvard in 1914 to study under George Pierce Baker, then patriarch of the theatre. Prof. Crafton received his master of arts degree from Harvard in 1914. AFTER A BRIEF TOUR of Boston vaudeville and a time in Galesburg, Ill., where he developed the first small town community theatre in America, Prof. Crafton entered the Army. In World War I, he did work in Army shows in Europe with the Army Entertainment Forces. Returning from the war, Prof. Crafton was advised by friends against returning to the theatre. He tried writing for a short time, then began his long and illustrious teaching career. His first teaching assignment was at Wabash College in 1919, with the English department. He left the English department of Carleton College in 1923 to come to KU. PROF. CRAFTON, WORKING with E. C. Buehler, professor emeritus of public speaking, and Miss Margaret Anderson, associate professor of speech, developed and adopted a program of speech training which made the speech and drama department an integral part of KU student life. At the time of his retirement in 1961, a scholarship fund was initiated in honor of Prof. Crafton. At the time the fund was announced, its formation was described by the founding group as "the one way we can perpetuate the kind of help and spirit which 'Prof' Crafton has furnished for so many years to so many of us." Grad students have fee hope Non-resident graduate students who recently have been faced with a 141 per cent increase in their KU fees may discover that the increase does not affect them. According to one recent estimate, unofficially advanced by a member of the University's financial staff, nearly 90 per cent of the non-resident graduate students will be eligible for resident or faculty rates. To avoid the $410 increase, non-resident graduate students must be: - Working as half-time faculty members - Working as half-time research assistants Recipients of government or foundation grants or loans which cover fees and tuition. It has been the policy of the University for the past several years to charge faculty rates, equal to resident rates, to half-time faculty members and research assistants. Students unsure of their status should check with their department. ALTHOUGH THE EXACT figures were not available, the Graduate School estimated that some 50 per cent of KU's graduate students are half-time faculty or staff members, or are doing half-time research. The Office of Aids and Awards estimated that nearly 1,600 graduate students are the recipients of loans or grants which cover fees and tuition. $$ * * * * * * $$ Non-resident undergraduate students are not as fortunate as their graduate counterparts. Non-resident undergraduates will be paying $700 per year beginning in the fall of 1967. Resident undergraduates will begin paying $342 in 1967. Resident graduate students also will pay more, but will pay an amount equal to that paid by resident undergraduates. The all-inclusive increases will provide an estimated $3.7 million increase in fiscal 1968. SKI With camp electioneering under full steam, the windows of Lewis and Templin blossomed with a number of signs, mostly expounding the virtues of a particular candidate (well, at least spelling out his name). But along with the political loyalty went the greater love—home. Here a devoted Minnesotan is surrounded by Skip's campaigners. (Photo by Glen Phillips) Page 2 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 26.1966 Increased Altitude, Visibility Poor Tribute to a teacher One of his students, one of the many who sat literally or figuratively at his feet through the many years at KU, should be writing this editorial about Allen Crafton. But everybody who knew Allen was his student. Teacher was what he mainly was, but in no formal, stuffy sense of the word. I knew Allen Crafton mainly by reputation up until about 1960. Then I began to become associated with him through work in the Lawrence Unitarian Fellowship. For two years I worked with him on committees, and sat in joyous sessions in his home. Once at our house he spent an evening delighting us with reading and singing of ballads. Another time he read aloud from Robert Benchley's hoked-up stories of the great operas. We, his unofficial students, sang as he played the piano, and we listened as he alone, or with his lovely wife Jessica, or with what we came to think of as the Crafton Players, presented plays—Christmas and Easter programs, "Father Malachy's Miracle," "Androcles and the Lion," "The Zoo Story." He was a funny man in the best sense of the word "funny." He knew the purpose of humor, and when he used it it was in a gentle way. He seemed to lack the capacity to hurt people. He looked at life as a humanist, and mainly he accepted people for what they are. It always seemed to me that he could cut through sham and nonsense, and he would have scoffed at pretentious words about him today. His home was full of books, for he and Mrs. Crafton read and talked and used literature as the starting point for many discussions. In recent years Allen had come to think deeply and wonder considerably about man and religion, and he could synthesize his thinking and research and pull, it together into a warm commentary that would put conventional ministers to shame. Persons who attended Lawrence art shows in recent years saw his landscapes—the mountains and deserts and those sites of historical but also emotional meaning to him. He was a fine painter, and his painting revealed his humanity as well as did his words. But mainly he was a man of the theater. University audiences saw his "American Medley" last year. He guided young actors and directors and playwrights. He was versed in the lore of the theater (maybe a bit impatient about certain trends in recent years, for his tastes were, perhaps, on the old-fashioned side). Others can testify to his greatness as a teacher of the theater and the drama. How he ever found time to do everything remains the mystery. But he was like Missouri's great journalism teacher, Frank Luther Mott, whose autobiography, called "Time Enough," said that any man could find time enough to do those things that were meaningful to him. Allen Crafton loved Kansas and the Kansas past and was not ashamed to say so. Many people in this area first came to know him through his entertaining depiction of how culture came to Kansas. Allen's physical vigor had diminished in recent years, but many of us envied that quick wit and exceptional mind functioning within a frail frame. He didn't get around too well, and had had to limit what he could try to do. But each year he and Jessica managed to get to the West, which they loved so much, to the mountains. It was in the mountains, on the first day of his 1966 vacation trip, that Allen Crafton died last Friday. The University of Kansas and the city of Lawrence have lost one of their most beloved men. But all of us are richer for having had him in front of us, teaching us, these many years. Calder M. Pickett - Calder M. Pickett Professor of Journalism Weakness in World Court The recent non-decision of the World Court has pointed out two rather major inadequacies of the United Nations and the World Court charter. The decision of the court was simply a rejection of jurisdiction; the court said it could not rule on the African situation, since legal jurisdiction actually rests with the League of Nations, defunct since 1946. WHY HAS SUCH a significant issue of international law been left in the jurisdiction of a non-existent body? Why were the necessary provisions not included in the charter of the World Court, even after the League disappeared? It would seem that the World Court has taken an easy exit from an uncomfortable situation, perhaps on a justified legal point, perhaps not. If the legal jurisdiction truly rests with the League of Nations, should not that jurisdiction be shifted to within the realm of the existing United Nations or the World Court? Another questionable point brought to the surface by the decision of the court is the manner in which the decision was reached. The president of the court, Sir Percy Spender, exercised his legal right to vote twice on the decision: he first voted with the side he felt was legally correct; he then voted again, as president of the court, to break the tie. What historical or legal support can be voiced to justify that practice? Is the World Court an arena in which may be displayed inequalities that are not allowed in even the lowest courts of many countries? THIS DECISION was the first major test of the World Court. Apparently the court has established itself as a timid and ultra-cautious body, unwilling to assume judicial precedence in international cases. The personnel of the World Court should, and certainly does, represent the finest legal ability of the major nations of the world. The legal and political bases on which the court is based apparently do not equal the excellence of its personnel. Have not the people of the world the right to expect something better from the recognized legal arbiter of international matters? Bill Robinson Watts, Hough-they seem similar By Al Kuettner CLEVELAND — (UPI) —Where was this —Watts or Hough?" Only the signs seemed to be different. Here on Hough Avenue, which took the brunt of fire bombs in a week-long outburst of racial passion last week, the signs read "Soul brother." In the littered riot-seared streets of Watts in Los Angeles last year, I saw the crude signs loomed up on store fronts: "Blood brother." They meant the same — Negro Summer Session Kansan Newsroom—UN 4-3646 --- Business Office—UN 4-3198 For 76 Years, KU's Official Student Newspaper KANSAN TELEPHONE NUMBERS The Summer Session Kansan, student newspaper at The University of Kansas, is represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St., New York, N.Y. A class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan., every Tuesday and Friday during the Summer Session except University holidays and examination periods. Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the Summer Session are offered to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin. ownership. Don't burn this one. In both cities, the appeal proved effective. Cleveland got only a taste of the devastation that scarred Watts. You wondered what hand of fate had kept it from being worse. All the elements were here. The opinions expressed in the editorial column are those of the students whose names are signed to them. Guest editorial views are not necessarily the opinion. Any opinions expressed in the Summer Session Kansan are not necessarily those of The University of Kansas Administration or the State Board of Regents. The mobs that touched off the Watts riot aimed at the business section. Some businesses were destroyed here, too, but they seemed to be second targets. The main enemy of the firebombers was a batch of old apartment buildings and other dwellings that have been abandoned and marked for eventual destruction under an urban renewal program. You see them scattered all through the Hough district, gaunt and empty, their windows smashed out by vandals. THE VIETNAM WAR HERBLOCK THE WASHINGTON POST BOOK REVIEWS By United Press International FLYING SAUCERS—SERIOUS BUSINESS by Frank Edwards (Lyle Stuart, $5.75); Edwards, a serious, painstaking newsman and radio commentator, has been studying Unidentified Flying Objects since 1849. He believes that UFOs are real, intelligently guided, scientific beyond our most advanced knowledge—and about to land on earth. Edwards makes a case that UFOs date back to earliest Biblical times—the flaming chariots and heavenly visitors of the Scriptures—and have been coming into our atmosphere with frequency increasing to an alltime high in late 1965. He suggests explanations to many mysteries: the otherwise inexplicable crash of various earthly aircraft; the "buzzing" of U. S. and Soviet satellites sent into space; strange manifestations on the moon which indicate that that orb is a UFO base and the first man to land will not be there alone; and the possibility that last fall's gigantic electrical blackout of the northeastern United States, as well as several other such blackouts, were caused directly by UFOs. Graham temporarily abandoned a promising career in surgical research at a famous medical center in Baltimore (here called "Lakewood") to enter the army, where he distinguished himself as the commander of a hospital ship. SURGEON, U.S.A., by Frank G. Slaughter (Doubleday $5.95): A novel chronicling the World War II adventures of Maj. (later Col.) Bruce Graham, a brilliant surgeon who chose to volunteer for army duty. Politics raises its ugly head from time to time. Graham takes time off from his medical duties to confound an unscrubulous congressional communist-hunter and to disrupt a conservative organization named for the first U. S. casualty of World War II. And then, of course, there are the ladies: beautiful Janet Josselyn, senator's daughter and USO star; and haunting Shane McLendon, journalism's Miss Ernie Pyle. Sisters under the skin, of course, but which twin gets the Graham? No one can touch Slaughter in making surgery come alive for the layman. The medical sequences of "Surgeon, U. S. A." are informative and absorbing enough to capture the reader who is not qualified even to administer an aspirin tablet. EXECUTIVES UNDER FIRE, by Chester Burger (Macmillan $5.95): Apparently things are tough all over, and being in the executive suite with your name on the door isn't all it's cracked up to be. That seems to be the main message conveyed in this book which consists of tape-recorded interviews with the men who make the decisions in business, the military, the university and other situations. The few women who reach executive status have special problems. It seems that in the arenas of high position, power and big pay, the competitive drives are intensified, spurred by ambition and greed, and the casualties high. Many of the woes of the people who wind the stem, are due to the fact that they are square pegs in round holes and often enough are not equal to the jobs for which they are paid so handsomely. The author of the book is a management consultant well acquainted with the types who can manage and those who can't. THE ACHIEVEMENT OF WILLIAM FAULKNER, by Michael Millgate (Random House $6): A British look at the works of William Faulkner. Now professor of English at York University, Toronto, Millgate has critically analyzed all the novels and short stories. There is an introductory chapter narrating and documenting Faulkner's literary career with emphasis on what, when and why he wrote as he did. Millgate concludes that Faulkner, if he must be related to some other literary great, must be compared to Dickens "whom Faulkner most resembles in the sheer quantity and consistent quality of his achievement, and it is alongside Dickens, the greatest of the English novelists, that Faulkner must ultimately be ranked." Against capitol fund WASHINGTON — (UPI) — A Senate subcommittee proposed yesterday that Congress cut off the cash for a controversial $34 million proposal to extend the west front of the Capitol. Page 3 Tuesday. July 26, 1966 Summer Session Kansan AURH tests hall living practicality By Margaret Ogilvie "Buildings must serve people." says Brent Porter, Bolivar, Mo., senior and head of the Association of University Residence Halls Housing Board. "But what if a building such as the residence hall does not enhance the day-to-day lives of its inhabitants and what if some needed elements are totally missing?" The board sought answers to Porter's question when they surveyed 50 per cent of all hall residents in May. Four-page questionnaires returned by one-half of those polled will be compiled to determine what changes in their environment residents would like to see made. Porter, who is president-elect of the Student American Institute of Architecture, predicts that "people will listen" when results are presented to administrators, the Union Operating Board, and the All Student Council this fall. "Housing needs will be implemented," he said. Fifteen English students of geology from the University of Leicester, England, passed through Lawrence this weekend en route for three weeks' study at the KU Geology Field Camp near Canon City, Colo. Britons head for geology camp in west Heading the British group, all of whom are paying their own way for the educational experience, is Dr. P. C. Sylvester-Bradley, who was the Rose Morgan visiting professor at KU about 10 years ago. The visit by the English students, who correspond to juniors and seniors here, was planned a year ago when Daniel F. Merriam of the State Geological Survey at KU held a Fulbright fellowship to the University of Leicester, where he collaborated with Prof. Sylvester-Bradley. IT IS HOPED that a group of KU geology students can be organized for field work in Britain next summer, Merriam said, with the exchanges continuing in alternate years. The English students will be paired with KU students already at the KU "Canon City campus." The eight-week field study is a requirement for the bachelor's degree. Merriam and Frank C. Foley, professor and director of the State Geological Survey, accompanied the British group to Colorado. Architects, AIA make awards to 3 students The American Institute of Architects and the AIA Foundation Scholarship Program have made three awards for 1966-67 to KU students. Donald Craig Morris, senior from Parkville, Mo., will hold the $400 Desco International Association scholarship and a $100 Wald Education Fund award. Roger Vonder Brueggem, senior from St. Louis, will hold the $300 Blumcraft of Pittsburgh, Pa., award. Mitchell A. Brown, Lawrence junior, will receive $750 from the Waid Education Fund. Morris has been the ranking student of his class for three years. Critical of post office FORT SCOTT —(UPI) — Rep. Robert Ellsworth, R-Kan.. yester- day called the U.S. postal service "a national scandal." Ellsworth said mail delays were the "fault of the red tape jungle that exists in the bureaucracy in Washington, D.C." Working with Porter on the project are Cindy Culbert, Larned senior; Wayne Smith, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore; Frank Uroanac, Kansas City sophomore; Diane Monroe; Jay Jackson; Don Weiner, Cincinnati, Ohio, senior; Mark Lord, Overland Park sophomore, and Janet Whalen, Wichita senior. THE BOARD WILL apply for a grant to finance improvements when the final report is made which will include similar studies of the past two years. Findings of the 1000 questionnaires will be printed next spring in a program brochure. The first two pages of the questionnaires on "the immediate hall environment" were directed to students in large halls as well as scholarship halls. The third page, concerning over-all problems of the residence hall community, emphasized the issue of extending Kansas Union services. A fourth page was attached for scholarship hall residents to determine their satisfaction with facilities. The largest tabulation problem is relating demands for improved lighting, room decor, or study space to personal data on the student queried: where he lives and has lived, his class, age, and sex, whether or not he has a car at KU, and is perhaps a hall officer, counselor or resident director. Tabulation of the questionnaires has presented a problem which the board hopes to solve with computer services or through a behavioral science grant. Information from the American Institute of Architects library, Washington, D.C., will be used. A McCOLLUM RESIDENT, Porter pointed to Daisy Hill as representative of the situation itemized by the survey. He cited the need for a "stimulating" environment such as he said is provided at Wichita State University on a comparable site with "open handball courts, sheltered patios and grassy areas, and graceful walkways over streets and through parking lots." Porter said that "while administrators tend to believe such construction is architecture," Daisy Hill's dorms are "great monolithic structures" which "overwhelm the individual who lives there." ONE PREVIOUS STUDY, "Residence Hall Design from Theory to Reality," was the discussion topic at the 1964 National Conference of University Residence Halls in Denver KU's representatives researched the topic with a survey they distributed to residents and administrators of 29 schools. "A more practical crux for student concern here at KU" he said is the fact that "some type of student center is needed . . . or a sundries store with coffeeshop and drug center incorporated in one of the dorms. "Vending machines have their place in halls, but they are not the complete solution. Laundry service in individual halls often is inefficient. Restaurants, barber and beauty shops are far away. A vital part of the living environment is missing." Subjects covered at the conference and in the survey included the functions of a residence hall, what facilities will be helpful in fulfilling the functions and how can students work to attain the desired facilities. The ballet division of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp will appear in a program in the University Theatre at 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday, July 29 and 30. Ballets set by camp this week Five ballets will be staged during each performance. The original presentations are "Sur le Bois," "Glinka Suite," "Set for Ten," and "Melange." The fifth presentation is "Sleeping Beauty Prologue." The guest artist will be Larry Long, the ballet master and choreographer of Ruth Page's International Ballet. Long will stage the second act of "Nutcracker" for the St. Louis Municipal Opera after his performances at KU. He will appear in St. Louis with his wife, ballerina Dolores Lipkins. Choreographers for the performances are Marguerite Reed, Marcia Weary, and Alexandra Zaharias. Mrs. Reed, a founder of the Tulaa Opera Ballet and co-director and co-founder of the civic ballet, Dance Showcase of Tulsa, and Miss Zaharias, president of the St. Louis Civic Ballet, are the directors of the camp's ballet division. Marcia Weary is also director of the Central Pennsylvania Ballet Guild. Gerald M. Carney, associate professor of music education at KU, will direct the camp ballet orchestra for the performances. Scenery and lighting will be done by Glenn Bickle, a KU staff member. In charge of costumes is Chez Haehl, a assistant professor of speech and drama. Latin institute will end Friday About 25 high school teachers and college students are enrolled in a five-week Latin Institute now in session at KU. The institute, ending Friday, is supported by the Joseph Fels Foundation, a group interested in classical studies. The participants are enrolled in two courses. One deals with medieval Latin and is taught by J.P. Heironomus, professor at the University of Wisconsin. The other course is new linguistics for Latin teachers. This course is taught by Gerda Seligson, professor at the University of Michigan. Ned Nabors, instructor of classics at KU, is the director of the institute. WASHINGTON —(UPI)—From 1966 through 1970, the nation's scheduled airlines are planning to buy at least 825 planes valued at $4.8 billion. Plane purchases due Thousands of American youngsters—including some of the most talented—got their first look at Kansas as participants in the Midwestern Music and Art Camp at KU. Midwestern camp continues growth Many of the out-of-staters who have flocked to the summer camp in its 29-year history returned to Mount Oread as KU students. Enrollment in the camp is setting new records every year as word - of - mouth advertising spreads in high schools and junior highs across the nation. Here are some typical comments from '66 campers: RICHARD JONES, Hamilton, Ohio—"Last year one camper came here from Hamilton, and this year there are six of us at KU. We have nothing like this in Ohio." Fred Wiman, Snyder, Tex.— "This is my second year at the camp. I heard about it through the National Science Foundation. It can't be beaten." Some 1,650 teen-agers from 45 states and Canada are attending the six-week camp this summer. It will close Sunday. Actor Clift dies at 45 in New York "I don't have a big urge to act," he once explained. "I can't play something I'm not interested in." NEW YORK —(UPI)— Montgomery Clift, an actor who preferred New York and his boat to the spotlight of Hollywood, died Saturday as quietly as he had lived. He turned down several film contracts before appearing in "The Search" in 1948, in which he portrayed a lonely GI helping a Czech boy find his mother after World War II. He was born Oct. 17, 1920 in Omaha. He first caught the public eye in the Broadway musical hit, "Jubilee." His other stage appearances included roles in "There Shall Be No Night," "The Skin of Our Teeth" and "You Touched Me." The sensitive, often moody star of stage and screen was found near death in his bed by his personal secretary. A doctor was summoned but Clift was pronounced dead upon his arrival. "THE CAMP REALLY caught fire in the summers of 1940-41," says Prof. Russell Wiley, founder and director. Other films included "Red River," "The Heiress," "A Place in the Sun," "Raintree County," "The Young Lions," "The Misfits," "Judgment at Nuremberg" and "Fred." The 45-year-old bachelor died of a heart attack at his East Side townhouse. The enterprise shut down in the war years but reopened in 1945. The camp is self-supporting and taught almost entirely by KU faculty. The divisions are art, music, ballet, journalism, speech, science and German. Initiated to provide an opportunity for advanced study by talented high school students, the camp has grown to seven divisions. In 1335, its first year, band was the only offering and the camp drew 17 students. The only similar enterprise in the nation at that time was Interlochen. Warm weather treat DAIRY QUEEN FREEZES If you're droolin' for something coolin' ... make it a refreshing Dairy Queen freeze in your favorite flavor. It's smooth, and oh so thick! Served fresh from the freezer, Dairy Queen is better tasting, better for you. Less fattening, too! Come in for a treat TODAY! Penguin What the campers get from their experiences at Mount Oread could be summed up in this comment from Mark Ankeles, 1966 camper from Peabody, Mass.: "There is a wonderful attitude here toward work. We don't need to be concerned about competition for grades because campers don't work for academic position. Instead, campers receive training and experience and learn for the joy of learning." NON-STORIFIED AND MASTURIZED DAIRY QUEEN ICE CREAM IN A TUB FOR ONE ONLY 1835 MASS. ST. Granada THEATRE ...Milestone VI 1-500 Last 2 days— "Ghost & Mr. Chicken" Matinees 2 p.m.-Evenings 7:15 & 9 Next! Starts Thursday Doris Day Rod Taylor 'Glass Bottom Boat' Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone 713-1054 Air-Conditioned Ends Tonite— "A Fine Madness" 7:15 & 9:15 Next—Starts Wednesday Varsity THEATRE ... Phone V3-1605 BEHIND THE BLINDFOLD IS THE GREATEST SECURITY TRAP EVER DEVISED! ROCK CLAUDIA HUDSON CARDINALE "BLINDFOLD" TECHNICOLOR PANAVISION Sunset DRIVE IN THEATRE · West on Nightway 60 Ends Tonite — “FIREBALL 500” and “Swinger's Paradise” Next! Starts Wednesday "SHENANDOAH" Page 2 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 26, 1966 Increased Altitude, Visibility Poor Tribute to a teacher One of his students, one of the many who sat literally or figuratively at his feet through the many years at KU, should be writing this editorial about Allen Crafton. But everybody who knew Allen was his student. Teacher was what he mainly was, but in no formal, stuffy sense of the word. I knew Allen Crafton mainly by reputation up until about 1960. Then I began to become associated with him through work in the Lawrence Unitarian Fellowship. For two years I worked with him on committees, and sat in joyous sessions in his home. Once at our house he spent an evening delighting us with reading and singing of ballads. Another time he read aloud from Robert Benchley's hoked-up stories of the great operas. We, his unofficial students, sang as he played the piano, and we listened as he alone, or with his lovely wife Jessica, or with what we came to think of as the Crafton Players, presented plays—Christmas and Easter programs, "Father Malachy's Miracle," "Androcles and the Lion," "The Zoo Story." He was a funny man in the best sense of the word "funny." He knew the purpose of humor, and when he used it it was in a gentle way. He seemed to lack the capacity to hurt people. He looked at life as a humanist, and mainly he accepted people for what they are. It always seemed to me that he could cut through sham and nonsense, and he would have scoffed at pretentious words about him today. His home was full of books, for he and Mrs. Crafton read and talked and used literature as the starting point for many discussions. In recent years Allen had come to think deeply and wonder considerably about man and religion, and he could synthesize his thinking and research and pull it together into a warm commentary that would put conventional ministers to shame. Persons who attended Lawrence art shows in recent years saw his landscapes—the mountains and deserts and those sites of historical but also emotional meaning to him. He was a fine painter, and his painting revealed his humanity as well as did his words. But mainly he was a man of the theater. University audiences saw his "American Medley" last year. He guided young actors and directors and playwrights. He was versed in the lore of the theater (maybe a bit impatient about certain trends in recent years, for his tastes were, perhaps, on the old-fashioned side). Others can testify better to his greatness as a teacher of the theater and the drama. Allen Crafton loved Kansas and the Kansas past and was not ashamed to say so. Many people in this area first came to know him through his entertaining depiction of how culture came to Kansas. How he ever found time to do everything remains the mystery. But he was like Missouri's great journalism teacher, Frank Luther Mott, whose autobiography, called "Time Enough," said that any man could find time enough to do those things that were meaningful to him. Allen's physical vigor had diminished in recent years, but many of us envied that quick wit and exceptional mind functioning within a frail frame. He didn't get around too well, and had had to limit what he could try to do. But each year he and Jessica managed to get to the West, which they loved so much, to the mountains. It was in the mountains, on the first day of his 1966 vacation trip, that Allen Crafton died last Friday. The University of Kansas and the city of Lawrence have lost one of their most beloved men. But all of us are richer for having had him in front of us, teaching us, these many years. — Calder M. Pickett Professor of Journalism The recent non-decision of the World Court has pointed out two rather major inadequacies of the United Nations and the World Court charter. Weakness in World Court The decision of the court was simply a rejection of jurisdiction: the court said it could not rule on the African situation, since legal jurisdiction actually rests with the League of Nations, defunct since 1946. It would seem that the World Court has taken an easy exit from an uncomfortable situation, perhaps on a justified legal point, perhaps not. If the legal jurisdiction truly rests with the League of Nations, should not that jurisdiction be shifted to within the realm of the existing United Nations or the World Court? WHY HAS SUCH a significant issue of international law been left in the jurisdiction of a non-existent body? Why were the necessary provisions not included in the charter of the World Court, even after the League disappeared? Another questionable point brought to the surface by the decision of the court is the manner in which the decision was reached. The president of the court, Sir Percy Spender, exercised his legal right to vote twice on the decision; he first voted with the side he felt was legally correct; he then voted again, as president of the court, to break the tie. What historical or legal support can be voiced to justify that practice? Is the World Court an arena in which may be displayed inequalities that are not allowed in even the lowest courts of many countries? THIS DECISION was the first major test of the World Court. Apparently the court has established itself as a timid and ultra-cautious body, unwilling to assume judicial precedence in international cases. The personnel of the World Court should, and certainly does, represent the finest legal ability of the major nations of the world. The legal and political bases on which the court is based apparently do not equal the excellence of its personnel. Have not the people of the world the right to expect something better from the recognized legal arbiter of international matters? Watts, Hough-they seem similar Bill Robinson By Al Kuettner CLEVELAND — (UPI)—Where was this —Watts or Hough?“ Here on Hough Avenue, which took the brunt of fire bombs in a week-long outburst of racial passion last week, the signs read "Soul brother." Only the signs seemed to be different. In the littered riot-seared streets of Watts in Los Angeles last year, I saw the crude signs loomed up on store fronts: "Blood brother." They meant the same — Negro For 76 Years, KU's Official Student Newspaper KANSAN TELEPHONE NUMBERS Summer Session Kansan Newsroom—UN 4-3646 Business Office—UN 4-3198 The Summer Session Kansan, student newspaper at The University of Kansas, is represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St., New York, N.Y. The summer session is open to all students and does not class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan.; every Tuesday and Friday from the Summer Session except University holidays and examination periods. Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the Summer Session are offered to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin. ownership. Don't burn this one. In both cities, the appeal proved effective. Cleveland got only a taste of the devastation that scarred Watts. You wondered what hand of fate had kept it from being worse. All the elements were here. The opinions expressed in the editorial column are those of the students whose names are signed to them. Guest editorial views are not necessarily the same. Any opinions expressed in the Summer Session Kansan are not necessarily those of The University of Kansas Administration or the State Board of Regents. Some businesses were destroyed here, too, but they seemed to be second targets. The main enemy of the firebombers was a batch of old apartment buildings and other dwellings that have been abandoned and marked for eventual destruction under an urban renewal program. The mobs that touched off the Watts riot aimed at the business section. You see them scattered all through the Hough district, gaunt and empty, their windows smashed out by vandals. THE VIETNAM WAR HERBLOCK HERBLOCK THE WASHINGTON POST BOOK REVIEWS By United Press International FLYING SAUCERS—SERIOUS BUSINESS by Frank Edwards (Lyle Stuart, $5.75). Edwards, a serious, painstaking newsman and radio commentator, has been studying Unidentified Flying Objects since 1849. He believes that UFOs are real, intelligently guided, scientific beyond our most advanced knowledge—and about to land on earth. Edwards makes a case that UFOs date back to earliest Biblical times—the flaming chariots and heavenly visitors of the Scriptures—and have been coming into our atmosphere with frequency increasing to an alltime high in late 1965. He suggests explanations to many mysteries: the otherwise inexplicable crash of various earthly aircraft; the "buzzing" of U. S. and Soviet satellites sent into space; strange manifestations on the moon which indicate that orb is a UFO base and the first man to land will not be there alone; and the possibility that last fall's gigantic electrical blackout of the northeastern United States, as well as several other such blackouts, were caused directly by UFOS. SURGEON. U.S.A., by Frank G. Slaughter (Doubleday $5.95): A novel chronicling the World War II adventures of Maj. (later Col.) Bruce Graham, a brilliant surgeon who chose to volunteer for army duty. Graham temporarily abandoned a promising career in surgical research at a famous medical center in Baltimore (here called "Lakewood") to enter the army, where he distinguished himself as the commander of a hospital ship. Politics raises its ugly head from time to time. Graham takes time off from his medical duties to confound an unscrupulous congressional communist-hunter and to disrupt a conservative organization named for the first U.S. casualty of World War II. And then, of course, there are the ladies; beautiful Janet Josselyn, senator's daughter and USO star; and haunting Shane McLoon, journalism's Miss Ernie Pyle. Sisters under the skin, of course, but which twin gets the Graham? No one can touch Slaughter in making surgery come alive for the layman. The medical sequences of "Surgeon, U. S. A." are informative and absorbing enough to capture the reader who is not qualified even to administer an aspirin tablet. EXECUTIVES UNDER FIRE, by Chester Burger (Macmillan $5.95): Apparently things are tough all over, and being in the executive suite with your name on the door isn't all it's cracked up to be. That seems to be the main message conveyed in this book which consists of tape-recorded interviews with the men who make the decisions in business, the military, the university and other situations. The few women who reach executive status have special problems. It seems that in the arenas of high position, power and big pay, the competitive drives are intensified, spurred by ambition and greed, and the casualties high. Many of the woes of the people who wind the stem, are due to the fact that they are square pegs in round holes and often enough are not equal to the jobs for which they are paid so handsomely. The author of the book is a management consultant well acquainted with the types who can manage and those,who can't. THE ACHIEVEMENT OF WILLIAM FAULKNER, by Michael Millgate (Random House $6): A British look at the works of William Faulkner. Now professor of English at York University, Toronto, Millgate has critically analyzed all the novels and short stories. There is an introductory chapter narrating and documenting Faulkner's literary career with emphasis on what, when and why he wrote as he did. Millgate concludes that Faulkner, if he must be related to some other literary great, must be compared to Dickens "whom Faulkner most resembles in the sheer quantity and consistent quality of his achievement, and it is alongside Dickens, the greatest of the English novelists, that Faulkner must ultimately be ranked." Against capitol fund WASHINGTON — (UPI) — A Senate subcommittee proposed yesterday that Congress cut off the cash for a controversial $34 million proposal to extend the west front of the Capitol. Tuesday, July 26, 1966 Summer Session Kansan Page 3 AURH tests hall living practicality By Margaret Ogilvie "Buildings must serve people," says Brent Porter, Bolivar, Mo, senior and head of the Association of University Residence Halls Housing Board. "But what if a building such as the residence hall does not enhance the day-to-day lives of its inhabitants and what if some needed elements are totally missing?" The board sought answers to Porter's question when they surveyed 50 per cent of all hall residents in May. Four-page questionnaires returned by one-half of those polled will be compiled to determine what changes in their environment residents would like to see made. Porter, who is president-elect of the Student American Institute of Architecture, predicts that "people will listen" when results are presented to administrators, the Union Operating Board, and the All Student Council this fall. "Housing needs will be implemented," he said. Britons head for geology camp in west Fifteen English students of geology from the University of Leicester, England, passed through Lawrence this weekend en route for three weeks' study at the KU Geology Field Camp near Canon City, Colo. Heading the British group, all of whom are paying their own way for the educational experience, is Dr. P. C. Sylvester-Bradley, who was the Rose Morgan visiting professor at KU about 10 years ago. The visit by the English students, who correspond to juniors and seniors here, was planned a year ago when Daniel F. Merriam of the State Geological Survey at KU held a Fulbright fellowship to the University of Leicester, where he collaborated with Prof. Sylvester-Bradley. IT IS HOPED that a group of KU geology students can be organized for field work in Britain next summer, Merriam said, with the exchanges continuing in alternate years. The English students will be paired with KU students already at the KU "Canon City campus." The eight-week field study is a requirement for the bachelor's degree. Merriam and Frank C. Foley, professor and director of the State Geological Survey, accompanied the British group to Colorado. Architects, AIA make awards to 3 students The American Institute of Architects and the AIA Foundation Scholarship Program have made three awards for 1966-67 to KU students. Donald Craig Morris, senior from Parkville, Mo., will hold the $400 Desco International Association scholarship and a $100 Waid Education Fund award. Roger Vonder Brueggue, senior from St. Louis, will hold the $300 Blumcraft of Pittsburgh, Pa., Mitchell A. Brown, Lawrence junior, will receive $750 from the Waid Education Fund. Morris has been the ranking student of his class for three years. Critical of post office FORT SCOTT —(UPI) — Rep. Robert Ellsworth, R-Kan., yester- day called the U.S. postal service "a national scandal." Ellsworth said mail delays were the "fault of the red tape jungle that exists in the bureaucracy in Washington, D.C." Working with Porter on the project are Cindy Culbert, Larned senior; Wayne Smith, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore; Frank Uranac, Kansas City sophomore; Diane Monroe; Jay Jackson; Don Weiner, Cincinnati, Ohio, senior; Mark Lord, Overland Park sophomore, and Janet Whalen, Wichita senior. THE BOARD WILL apply for a grant to finance improvements when the final report is made which will include similar studies of the past two years. Findings of the 1000 questionnaires will be printed next spring in a program brochure. The first two pages of the questionnaires on "the immediate hall environment" were directed to students in large halls as well as scholarship halls. The third page, concerning over-all problems of the residence hall community, emphasized the issue of extending Kansas Union services. A fourth page was attached for scholarship hall residents to determine their satisfaction with facilities. Tabulation of the questionnaires has presented a problem which the board hopes to solve with computer services or through a behavioral science grant. Information from the American Institute of Architects library, Washington, D.C., will be used. The largest tabulation problem is relating demands for improved lighting, room decor, or study space to personal data on the student queried: where he lives and has lived, his class, age, and sex, whether or not he has a car at KU, and is perhaps a hall officer, counselor or resident director. A McCOLLUM RESIDENT, Porter pointed to Daisy Hill as representative of the situation itemized by the survey. He cited the need for a "stimulating" environment such as he said is provided at Wichita State University on a comparable site with "open handball courts, sheltered patios and grassy areas, and graceful walkways over streets and through parking lots." Porter said that "while administrators tend to believe such construction is architecture," Daisy Hill's dorms are "great monolithic structures" which "overwhelm the individual who lives there." "A more practical crux for student concern here at KU" he said is the fact that "some type of student center is needed . . . or a sundries store with coffeeshop and drug center incorporated in one of the dorms. "Vending machines have their place in halls, but they are not the complete solution. Laundry service in individual halls often is inefficient. Restaurants, barber and beauty shops are far away. A vital part of the living environment is missing." ONE PREVIOUS STUDY, "Residence Hall Design from Theory to Reality," was the discussion topic at the 1964 National Conference of University Residence Halls in Denver. KU's representatives researched the topic with a survey they distributed to residents and administrators of 29 schools. Subjects covered at the conference and in the survey included the functions of a residence hall, what facilities will be helpful in fulfilling the functions and how can students work to attain the desired facilities. Ballets set by camp this week The ballet division of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp will appear in a program in the University Theatre at 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday, July 29 and 30. Five ballets will be staged during each performance. The original presentations are "Sur le Bois," "Glinka Suite," "Set for Ten," and "Melange." The fifth presentation is "Sleeping Beauty Prologue." The guest artist will be Larry Long, the ballet master and choreographer of Ruth Page's International Ballet. Long will stage the second act of "Nutcracker" for the St. Louis Municipal Opera after his performances at KU. He will appear in St. Louis with his wife. ballerina Dolores Lipskiens. About 25 high school teachers and college students are enrolled in a five-week Latin Institute now in session at KU. Choreographers for the performances are Marguerite Reed, Marcia Weary, and Alexandra Zaharias. Mrs. Reed, a founder of the Tulsa Opera Ballet and co-director and co-founder of the civic ballet, Dance Showcase of Tulsa, and Miss Zaharias, president of the St. Louis Civic Ballet, are the directors of the camp's ballet division. Marcia Weary is also director of the Central Pennsylvania Ballet Guild. Gerald M. Carney, associate professor of music education at KU, will direct the camp ballet orchestra for the performances. Scenery and lighting will be done by Glenn Bickle, a KU staff member. In charge of costumes is Chez Haehl, assistant professor of speech and drama. Latin institute will end Friday The institute, ending Friday, is supported by the Joseph Fels Foundation, a group interested in classical studies. The participants are enrolled in two courses. One deals with medieval Latin and is taught by J. P. Heironimus, professor at the University of Wisconsin. The other course is new linguistics for Latin teachers. This course is taught by Gerda Seligson, professor at the University of Michigan, Ned Nabors, instructor of classics at KU, is the director of the institute. WASHINGTON —(UPI)—From 1966 through 1970, the nation's scheduled airlines are planning to buy at least 825 planes valued at $4.8 billion. Plane purchases due Thousands of American youngsters—including some of the most talented—got their first look at Kansas as participants in the Midwestern Music and Art Camp at KU. Midwestern camp continues growth Many of the out-of-staters who have flocked to the summer camp in its 29-year history returned to Mount Oread as KU students. Enrollment in the camp is setting new records every year as word - of - mouth advertising spreads in high schools and junior highs across the nation. Here are some typical comments from '66 campers: Fred Wiman, Snyder, Tex.— "This is my second year at the camp. I heard about it through the National Science Foundation. It can't be beaten." RICHARD JONES, Hamilton, Ohio—"Last year one camper came here from Hamilton, and this year there are six of us at KU. We have nothing like this in Ohio." Some 1,650 teen-agers from 45 states and Canada are attending the six-week camp this summer. It will close Sunday. Actor Clift dies at 45 in New York NEW YORK —(UPI)— Montgomery Clift, an actor who preferred New York and his boat to the spotlight of Hollywood, died Saturday as quietly as he had lived. The enterprise shut down in the war years but reopened in 1945. "I don't have a big urge to act," he once explained. "I can't play something I'm not interested in." "THE CAMP REALLY caught fire in the summers of 1940-41," says Prof. Russell Wiley, founder and director. The camp is self-supporting and taught almost entirely by KU faculty. The divisions are art, music, ballet, journalism, speech, science and German. The 45-year-old bachelor died of a heart attack at his East Side townhouse. The sensitive, often moody star of stage and screen was found near death in his bed by his personal secretary. A doctor was summoned but Clift was pronounced dead upon his arrival. He was born Oct. 17, 1920 in Omaha. He first caught the public eye in the Broadway musical hit, "Jubilee." His other stage appearances included roles in "There Shall Be No Night," "The Skin of Our Teeth" and "You Touched Me." He turned down several film contracts before appearing in "The Search" in 1948, in which he portrayed a lonely GI helping a Czech boy find his mother after World War II. Other films included "Red River," "The Heiress," "A Place in the Sun," "Raintree County," "The Young Lions," "The Misfits," "Judgment at Nuremberg" and "Fred." Initiated to provide an opportunity for advanced study by talented high school students, the camp has grown to seven divisions. In 1935, its first year, band was the only offering and the camp drew 17 students. The only similar enterprise in the nation at that time was Interlochen. Warm weather treat DAIRY QUEEN FREEZES If you're droolin' for something coolin' ... make it a refreshing Dairy Queen freeze in your favorite flavor. It's smooth, and oh, so thick! Served fresh from the freezer, Dairy Queen is better tasting, better for you. Less fattening, too! Come in for a treat TODAY! What the campers get from their experiences at Mount Oread could be summed up in this comment from Mark Ankeles, 1966 camper from Peabody, Mass.: "There is a wonderful attitude here toward work. We don't need to be concerned about competition for grades because campers don't work for academic position. Instead, campers receive training and experience and learn for the joy of learning." MOMISENDED AND MASTURZED DAIRY QUEEN WHERE TO SEE, HAVE A DAY, AND BE A FUN! 1835 MASS. ST. Granada THEATRE ... Milkhouse V1 304-796-2888 Last 2 days — Last 2 days — “Ghost & Mr. Chicken” Matteines 2 p.m.-Evenings 7:15 & 9 Next! Starts Thursday Doris Day Rod Taylor 'Glass Bottom Boat' Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VP 3-105 Air-Conditioned Ends Tonite— "A Fine Madness" 7:15 & 9:15 Next—Starts Wednesday Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone V3-1645 Next—Starts Wednesday BEHIND THE BLINDFOLD IS THE GREATEST SECURITY TRAP EVER DEVISED! ROCK CLAUDIA HUDSON CARDINALE "BLINDFOLD" TECHNICOLOR PANAVISION' Sunset DRIVE IN THEATRE · West on Highway 60 Sunset DRIVE IN THEATRE - West on Highway 90 Ends Tonite — "FIREBALL 500" and "Swinger's Paradise" Next! Starts Wednesday "SHENANDOAH" Page 4 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 26, 1966 Titus to run for legislature By Charles Arndt A KU professor who says he's "a staunch believer in the two-party system" will have an opportunity to see the system in action in a brand new State Representative District. James E. Titus, associate professor of political science, has filed as a Democratic candidate for State Representative in Kansas' 40th District. The district which roughly includes the western half of Lawrence and of Wakarusa Township was created in the 1965 reapportionment. The district thus has no incumbent. PROF. TITUS IS OPPOSED in the August 2 primary election by Richard Nelson, a Lawrence physician. Morris Kay, the Republican candidate, is running unopposed. Prof. Titus said he has always been interested in the area of legislation professionally, and is curious as to how it works. He said when a person teaches government, it bothers him to see inefficient legislation, and that he objects strongly to the method in which the new Kansas' withholding tax is being collected. He explained that the state was in effect getting two years' taxes in one year. "This has resulted in a 1966 windfall of about 18 million dollars for the state." There are also many new names on the tax rolls now since the employer acts as the tax collector and declares many people who would not ordinarily file their tax return. TITUS GOT AN EARLY start in politics, beginning when he worked for his parents who were active in Oklahoma politics. He has served as precinct committeeman in Kansas and ran for the Lawrence City Commission in 1963. In September, 1964, his work was recognized when he was appointed by President Johnson as Kansas Chairman of the National Committee of Professors and Educators for Johnson and Humphrey. He said he thought his chances of winning the primary were better than even. "We have a voluntary organization of about thirty at present who have been working very hard at precinct level." Titus lives at 1602 W. 8th St. Terrace with his wife and three daughters, Terran, 16, Christine, Ann, 15, and Jeri, 9. This fall at KU he will teach American Government-52, Honors Western Civilization, Politics and Administration, American Political Ideas-162, Twentieth Century American Political Theory, and Advanced Seminar in American Government-321. TIRUS' CANDIDACY is allowed under the Board of Regents' decision of March 16, 1964. From the faculty handbook: "The Board of Regents has ruled that faculty, administrators and other unclassified employees are eligible to accept any public or political party position which does not require substantial time away from assigned duties or infringe upon them. "Those who wish to seek fulltime public office will be granted leave without pay or other benefits." This right is currently under discussion at Washburn University in Topeka where faculty members currently seek similar rights from their school's Board of Regents. As James R. Surface, provost, pointed out, however, KU faculty members served on the City Commission and the School Board for some time before the Regents' decision. Math teachers in session at KU "New Math" is not the only thing new in mathematics today. Thirty-nine teachers are attending the Summer Institute for High School teachers of Mathematics, now in session at KU, to learn new approaches to math. "New Math" is only a part of the material they are studying. Participants are also covering probability and the vector approach to geometry. The "students" are enrolled as special students in the KU Graduate School and will receive six hours' credit upon completion of the eight-week course. The institute, supported by the National Science Foundation, will end Aug. 5. Journalists take to air for KUOK programs Student radio "63," KUOK, will be on the air Wednesday afternoon between 3 and 6.30. At the controls will be members of the three-week and six-week journalism camp. According to Prof. Glenn Price, radio and television instructor for the camp, the campers will read news, weather, and sports, as well as presenting various disc jockey shows throughout the afternoon. A special attraction will be heard between 6 and 6:30—the playing of the tapes of five radio skits written, produced, and starring members of the six-week group. KUOK OPERATES on 630 kc, and will be beamed only to Templin Hall for Wednesday's stint. It may be heard by merely tuning a standard broadcast radio to the correct frequency, and staying in or near Templin. Taking part in the presentation are the six-weekers, Brian Black, Lee's Summit, Mo.; Peggy Thorn, Fort Madison, Iowa; Janice Moyer, Irving, Texas; Aaron Mermelstein, Kansas City, Mo.; Annie Reid, Ridgefield, Conn.; Cathy Austin, Salina; Bill Meredith, Lincoln; Joyce Lapekas, Battle Creek, Mich.; Chris Abercrombie, Lindsborg; Larry Holverson, Alexandra, Minn.; Taylor Huebner, Arlington, Texas; Susan Bailey, Coldwater, Mich.; Cindy Wright, Irving, Texas; Patricia Craig, Bristol, Va.; Cindy Byram, Fort Dodge, Iowa; Martin Umboltz, Lawrence; Martin Umholtz, Lawr- ence; Peggy Goalstone, Miami, Fla.; Nancy Teters, Kansas City, and George Wilkens, Miami, Fla. Three-week students involved include John Hagan Jr., Prairie Village; Elizabeth Brauer, Sissetan, S.D.; Barbara Woolcott, Newburgh, Ind.; Pat Porsberg, Kansas City; Patsy Jo Palmer, Fulton, Mo.; Colleen Dowling, Cincinnati; Ron Jennings, Stanberry, Mo.; Lee Henderson, Topeka; Thomas Morgan III, St. Louis; Bees Pride, Idabel, Okla.; Jane Rankin, Kansas City; Meredith Hoover, Shawnee Mission; Joy Ensign, Overland Park; Linda Lathan, Liberal, and Clark Underwood, Ottawa. Avery on 3rd tour of state centers TOPEKA—(UPI)—Gov. William H. Avery will leave today for his third tour this year of state institutions in preparation to the 1968 budget reviews. The governor and state administration officials will drive to Leavenworth and Kansas City. They will tour the Kansas State Penitentiary and the Women's Industrial Farm at Lansing, then drive to Kansas City and view the University of Kansas Medical Center and the School for the Blind. LAWRENCE launderers and dry cleaners 10th and New Hampshire "Specialists In Fabric Care" Phone VI 3-3711 For clothes of distinction, use the laundry of distinction. Lawrence Laundry gives free delivery to all living organizations. Let Lawrence Laundry handle all your clothing needs. Try Our Exclusive Sanitone Cleaning THE CHARTER FOR THE DAYS OF CHRISTMAS Tuesday, July 26, 1966 Summer Session Kansan Page 5 'TV teacher' favors new directions in language By Annie Reid The grammar method of teaching languages is a fallacy. Language is conversation, a means to communicate." These were the words of Mrs. Loris. Woolf, a "television teacher" of Spanish in Lafayette School District, California. Mrs. Woolf is at KU this summer finishing up her work for her M. A. in education, with a specialty in Spanish. She has taught at the Berlitz School of Languages, speaks Portuguese, Spanish, French, and English, and has been to four government-sponsored language institutes. This summer, Mrs. Woolf is finishing her thesis for her M. A., at her own expense, and says it is "quite a job" with one husband, four children, and five cats. MRS. WOOLF'S thesis is on the subject of guides, or aiding material, for teachers who work in the classroom while classes are taught in foreign language over the television. Many of these teachers, Mrs. Woolf says, do not speak the language as natives and have acquired only enough knowledge of the language to be allowed to teach it. As it takes eight to ten years of study, and preferably a visit to a place where the target language is spoken, for a teacher to master the language, the students benefit from being taught by a real speaker of the language over TV. It is necessary, however, for teachers in the classroom to work with the children and to prepare them for the TV lessons. In order to keep the children interested and enthusiastic, the teachers must have good guides from which to take material for preparing the children. MRS. WOOLF, born and reared in a four-lingual home in Brazil, teaches Spanish to schoolchildren in Lafayette over the closed-circuit Instructional Television (ITV). She does a telecast on Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, and Friday. On Wednesday, "We mop up the blood from the studio floor." According to Mrs. Woolf, teaching on TV is not as easy as it looks. Every minute must hold the interest of the students and must be carefully planned. For every minute on the air, an hour of preparation time is spent if the work of every person involved in the broadcast—directors, camera men, set men, technicians, etc. is counted. Mrs. Wooft believes strongly in the audio-lingual approach to teaching a language. On TV, she uses the Audio-Lingual Materials (ALM) method, although she does a lot to supplement it. The ALM method, she says, is especially lacking in cultural lessons and has bad tests. THE ALM METHOD was chosen because it is very adaptable to TV, and, Mrs. Woolf added, "we have done that very successfully." In the first four dialogues of Level I of the ALM, the students learn the whole phonology of the language: "That's why the ALM dialogues are so fantastic." In the ALM, as in other audiolingual approaches (as opposed to the traditional grammertranslation approach), the students at first only hear and repeat the language, and get a broad translation. Only after they have mastered the speaking and listening part do the students get to read the language, and not until much later do they write it. This is "the way the child learns his own native tongue." If the student has learned the pronunciation and sound of the language before he sees it written, the English orthography will not interfere with the reading. With the ALM and other audiolingual methods, the children build with vocabulary and dialogues. Grammar is taught "inductively": the students do oral "pattern drill" and "item substitution" drills. Repetition is the key here. The child gets to know what "sounds" right. He never really learns the rule; he gathers the rule from usage. MRS. WOOLF pointed out that the students must never be allowed to become bored or uninterested. This is a danger with these drills and repetitions. The teacher must be imaginative, and the dialogues and lesson material must fit the age level and interests of the students. Children between 8 and 12 years old are in the "magic age" for learning language, Mrs. Woolf said. Within six months to a year, the children will think and make jokes in the new language. After the age of 12 the children lose this magic ability. Languages should be begun in the fourth grade, according to Mrs. Woolf. The children are imitative and have a great mimical ability, are less inhibited, less afraid to make mistakes, and accept what they hear. After 12 Mrs. Woolf said, the children, like adults, are analytical. They must know the grammar rules, translations, and "why." This makes it harder for them to learn a language "naturally." MRS. WOOLF does not advocate starting to teach a foreign language to children before the fourth grade. By the fourth grade, the children are familiar with their own language, and have "learned the process of learning." They are ready to apply this process of learning to a new language, but are not yet self-conscious and inhibited. After the sixth grade, there is a difference in the rate at which students learn a language. This difference between fast and slow is not evidenced before sixth grade. Language classes in junior high school must have homogenous grouping for this reason. "Motivation, I think, is the basic problem with seventh and eighth graders...with eightth graders especially...They are bored, they are sophisticated. They want to be entertained..." There is no such problem with fourth, fifth, and sixth graders, who "lap it up, live it, ham it up." ALTHOUGH THERE is no such thing as an "instant foreign language," Mrs. Woolf said, she believes in "reinforcing games." These games are played with the children, not all the time, but occasionally, and are "painless." Paleontology works are published at KU The University of Kansas Press this week published two more volumes on the "Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology," bringing to 18 the volumes completed of a projected 30. Raymond C. Moore, emeritus Summerfield professor of geology at KU, is editor of the "Treatise", which will be a 20 to 30-year project involving 200 scientists from at least 17 nations. Eager to be politician WHEATLEY, England — (UPI) — Prime Minister Harold Wilson got a letter from Jonathan White last week that asked: "Dear Harold Wilson, pleas may I join the government?" Wilson wrote back that he hoped 6-year-old Jonathan could join the government at a later date, when he's a little older. The students learn without knowing it. Mrs. Woolf says it is a fallacy to try to do everything in the foreign language. The rules of games and tests must be explained in English. "They must know what they're doing, what is expected of them." A language teacher is actually "an ambassador of good will," for the nations speaking that language. If a teacher turns the child against the language, he also will turn the child against the country and its people. One of the toughest problems Mrs. Woolf ran up against was teaching colors on black and white TV. She finally solved the problem with a diagram of a traffic light. Everyone knows that the lights are red, yellow, and green from the top down. Mrs. Woolf sees the trend today toward the audio-lingual approach to languages, and thinks that it is dominating over the old translation-grammar methods. It does, however, require a skilled teacher who has a deep knowledge and familiarity with the language and who can speak it like a native. Less skilled teachers have a very difficult time with the method. Ober's Summer Clearance SALE A cool spring and late deliveries have caused a large carryover of hot weather apparel which is now priced to save you money just when the summer season is in full swing. SUITS 47.50 Tropical weight suits ... 39.95 59.95 Cool & Crisp Dacron $ ^{®} $ /wool suits...48.95 Some with second trousers at 5.00 89.95 Hart Schaffner & Marx Suits...69.95 SPORT COATS 35.00 Colorful Dacron /wool sport coats...27.95 39.95 Lightweight Dacron /wool blends...32.95 65.00 Hart Schaffner & Marx blazers...49.95 SPECIAL VALUES ON - Tropical Trousers - Swimwear - One Group of Sport Shirts 1/2 Price - Boy's Bargain Table Ober's Lawrence's Fashion Leader Since 1896 821 Mass. VI 3-1951 Page 6 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 26, 1966 Paul Revere & The Raiders PAUL REVERE AND THE RAIDERS ARE HERE- MIDNIGHT RIDE PAUL REVERE & THE RAIDERS KICKS FEATURING Just Like Me / Stepin Out Just Like Us! PAUL REVERE & THE RAIDERS from "Willow The Action Is" Here They Come! PAUL REVERE & THE RAIDERS One Night Only Two Shows-7:00 & 10:00 p.m. Friday, July 29th Topeka Municipal Auditorium Tickets-Kief's-Red Dog Inn & Jenkins & Katz in Topeka All Paul Revere & The Raiders Albums WIRMONT RIDE WITH PAUL REVERE & THE RAIDERS AND KICKS Special $2.22 Here They Come! PAUL REVERE & THE RAIDERS KIEF'S RECORD & STEREO Diamond Needle Sale 5.95 Permanent Discount on 8 Track Car Tapes 一 Tuesday, July 26, 1966 Summer Session Kansan Page 7 Most happy with art camp By Rose M. Lee "I'm awfully glad I came" that's an opinion expressed by many of the art campers who can be seen at work in Strong Hall, Bailey Annex, sketching in the History Museum, painting in the park, at the fountain, or almost anywhere on the campus. The Art Camp originated in 1952 with Marjorie Whitney, as director, and Arvid Jacobson as associate director. "We have watched it grow from a class of 40 to the current enrollment of 340." Prof. Jacobson said. "The campers range in age from 13 to 19, but the majority of them are 15 and 16. There are two girls for every boy, but this is a better ratio than in 1952, when there were 8 or 9 girls for every boy. They come to us from all over the United States and this year we have two here from Nova Scotia," Jacobson said. CLASSES ARE HELD every day. The campers choose five classes from the following: cartooning; commercial art; constructive, freehand, nature, pastel, pencil, pen and ink, and portrait drawing; design and color; fashion illustration; figure sketching; greeting card design; interior design; jewelry; lettering; oil painting; portrait painting; pottery and ceramics; print workshop; sculpture; paper and wire BELLEVILLE, Kan. —(UPI)— Sen. James B. Pearson, R-Kan., said yesterday that federal aid to education is necessary and desirable, and that undesirable federal control is not in sight. For aid to education "The prospect of federal control of education runs contrary to the American tradition." Pearson said in a speech at a breakfast meeting here. All the campers attend the Art Survey class held in Swarthout Hall every Saturday morning. sculpture; weaving; water color; and perspective. An exhibit of some of the campers work can be seen in Murphy Hall. The display is changed weekly. What do some of the campers think of the art camp? NEAL SHAPIRO, Kansas City. Mo.: "Obviously I enjoy it or I wouldn't have come back. This is my third summer." He is taking cartooning, commercial art, figure sketching, freehand drawing and oil painting. "This is my first experience in oils. Camp is a good place to gain fundamental knowledge in any of the media because you get such good basic training. The teachers are of such high caliber that the attention you get is really beneficial." Shapiro enjoys drawing cartoons and said he hopes to pursue a career as an illustrator. He has turned in two designs for the contest sponsored by Audio House Records Co. The Sunday Music Camp Concerts are recorded by Audio House and the winning design will be used to illustrate the cover for the records. Kathy Rouse, Rachine, Wis. senior: "The experience is wonderful. So much more is offered here than in high school and the variety helps me to decide which field of art that I want to go into." Some of Kathy's jewelry and a wall hanging of green wool interwoven with various seed pods are on display this week in Murphy Hall. Rebecca East, Wilmot, Tex, "The Art Camp offers a challenging programs. Because of the different levels of ability and the fact that none of our work is graded all of us are challenged. We are more free in our work and the classroom techniques enable us to see the techniques used by others and then we can try them out. You might be pretty good in your own little community but you come here and meet so many people so much better than you and learn so much from them." DOUG STORY, St. Joseph, Mo., finds the class in constructive drawing especially useful. "You get the basic idea of form—you loosen up and see the form at once so you can sketch it in minutes." Barb Pechota, Richland, Mich.: "I don't know why I'm surprised but the professors here seem to take such an interest in the things we do. It's so different than in high school—we almost get individual attention. The variety of divisions offered enables those of use who don't know exactly what we want to dabble in different things and often we find that what we thought we wanted doesn't interest us now at all. It's a very worthwhile experience—I even enjoy getting up at 6 a.m.—it's the best time of the day." DENNIS LEARY. Wichita, doesn't share Barb's enthusiasm for early rising. He said he's used to "sleeping all day" at home but he commented: "Ive learned more in art here than in all my previous training." He will be a sophomore and may pursue acaerier in art or architecture. Martha Waggener, Omaha, Neb.: "You meet so many in teresting people." Diana Baldwin, St. Louis: "I love it—I'm real impressed with it." She plans to enter Washington University in the fall to study fashion design. Karen Thompson, Hannibal, Mo. senior: "I think it's just wonderful—the art camp gets better every year." This is the third summer at art camp for Miss Thompson. LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS C-65 Paul T AKE IT, MISS FARRAY, THAT THIS IS YOUR FIRST EXPERIENCE FOSING AS AN 'UNDRAFTED' MODEL!* Two enter hall of fame COOPERSTOWN, N.Y.—(UPI) The doors of baseball's Hall of Fame finally swung wide open yesterday for Ted Williams and Casey Stengel. Williams, the finest hitter of the last 30 years, and Stengel, the most successful manager in the last three decades, were formally inducted into the baseball shrine in the small community where, according to legend, the game was founded. William D. Eckert, the baseball commissioner, presided over the ceremonies inducting the 75-year-old Stengel and the 47-year-old Williams into the hall. The ceremonies were held at the rear of the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum, which is to be the site of a new baseball library. Stengel was elected to the hall last March by a special ballot of the veterans' committee. LAUNDRY & CLEANERS Malls Shopping Center VI 3-0895 3 Convenient Locations 10% Discount on Cash & Carry 1-hour Jet Service Dry Cleaners In by 10:00 out by 4:00 ACME Laundry & Dry Cleaners Page 8 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 26, 1966 A MEAL A SNACK 1 A COOL DRINK A PLACE TO RELAX You'll find them all in The Hawk's Nest in the Union HOURS: I HOURS: Monday thru Friday 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 Tuesday, July 26, 1966 Summer Session Kansan Page 9 Britain promotes E-TV, too By Dennis Buck Educational television has caught the attention of British educators, and their teachers are as much interested in the field as American teachers. That's the observation of Gale R. Adkins, associate professor of radio and television, who recently returned from a nine-month Fulbright professorship in England. THE BRITISH only recently have become intent on using educational television on a broad scale. Adkins pointed out this week. Adkins is now writing his final report on a study of the feasibility of closed circuit TV on technical colleges in England. The report will be published in England by the National Foundation for Audio-Viaual Aids in Education. "The strongest area of interest is in closed circuit television on the college level, and this includes the technical college," he said. The upswing of interest in educational television in Britain is ✩ ✩ ✩ On radio 'pirates' Asked about off-shore "pirate" radio stations that have figured in the news recently from England, Adkins declared that while they are regarded as outside British government control, they all have advertising offices in London. These stations, less than 10 in number and all started within the last five years, operate in international waters outside the 12-mile limit around the British coast. "Their main offering is popular music. Their revenues and profit come from selling advertising which is mostly for consumer products." Adkins said. They have set up their transmitters at any location they could find, Adkins pointed out. Some stations have transmitters in moored ships. Others have used abandoned lighthouses or deserted World War II anti-aircraft tower miles out in the ocean. For some time the British have discussed whether or not they should legalize such stations and thereby regulate them. Such a step could possibly trigger the establishment of independent private broadcasting stations in England. Adkins explained. Adkins noted that the present British radio programs and television programming is on the whole excellent. The EBC radio programs are comparable to the KANU programming on the KU campus. ✩ ✩ ✩ the result of several developments. Adkins explained. "Its partly because the British are now confronted with new and acute problems of overcrowded classrooms. And it's partly because the British are determined to improve technological education in an effort to assist the development of British industry," he said. DURING HUS STAY in England, Adkins was connected academically with the social psychology department of the London School of Economics. He was engaged in research in the Greater London area. Additional field work took him to other cities in England and Scotland. The main office for his research project was at the National Audio-Visual Aids Center, a government supported agency for demonstration and training in all kinds of audio-visual aids. Some of Adkins' time was devoted to instructing in demonstration courses on television education techniques at the National Audio-Visual Aids Center. British teachers were offered short courses to acquaint them with what television studio equipment does and how to employ television instruction in the classroom. "I FOUND BRITISH teachers just as intrigued with closed circuit television as American teachers are," Adkins said. "They recognize that television will be a part of the classroom of the future." Until now, Adkins said, only one community in the British Isles has operated an extensive system of closed circuit television. "Glasgow, Scotland, has been using a city-financed closed circuit TV system to serve elementary and secondary schools. Mathematics and French are taught in a number of grades," he said. Some instruction series, mainly on the elementary and secondary levels, have been broadcast by the BBC and Independent television. Less attention, however, has been given to college programs, Adkins said. "The British are responding to many world changes these days. They are very conscious that they must compete with other nations" "American industry has been hiring away many of their top men in science and technical fields. Competition pressures are causing them to step up their efforts to train more people for business and industry," he said. Adkins noted that this expanded interest in instructional television is in a British educational system setup on somewhat different lines than the American educational system. "THE SO-CALLED British technical college has no real counterpart in the American education system. Such colleges specialize in technical subjects in the broadest sense. They are definitely on the college level and students may earn degrees," he said. "The technical colleges are primarily day colleges with full time students, but they also put great emphasis on evening programs and on adult education." Long-established British universities have programs that are still confined chiefly to traditional academic areas, Adkins declared, the technical colleges being newer institutions and more progressive. Several are now becoming universities. "Quite a number of these technical colleges and other college-level institutions in Great Britain are starting modestly with closed circuit television education," Prof. Adkins said. Radio programs are supplied the British public through the non-commercial British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC). Three frequencies, each with different programs are offered the British radio listener, Adkins explained. "EDUCATIONAL RADIO has been well established in Great Britain for years. The BBC is still offering excellent educational radio programs on the elementary and secondary school levels." As with radio, television programs are available to the British people through the BBC television services. This government facility provides the viewer with two channels. On a third channel, the British viewer can see programs provided by the Independent Television Authority, which is owned by private enterprise. BRITISH CITIZENS are required to buy separate government licenses when they install radio and television sets. concerning a proposed university of the air, an institution that would offer degrees. During his stay Adkins also was involved in planning sessione "This has been supported by Prime Minister Wilson, and a government committee has already submitted a report on it," Adkins said. This university of the air, as the British are contemplating it, would operate partly through television, partly through correspondence study and partly through discussion meetings While it may come about in the next several years, Adkins said such an institution would require the cooperation of many institutions. Adkins was accompanied to England last September by his wife Paula. They lived in the Kensington area, which is close to the center of London. DURING HIS nine months' research, Adkins also attended discussions which explored benefits of linking several major universities together with closed circuit television. Commenting on the London winter, Adkins said that it was mild compared with Lawrence weather. He experienced the London fog only one day. Collins,Young home after annoying flight SPACE CENTER, Houston — (UPI)—John Young and Michael Collins, who performed the nation's most ambitious space flight, finally got home early yesterday following the frustrations of airplane engine trouble. A crowd surprisingly large considering the lateness of the hour greeted the space heroes at Ellington Air Force Base. The astronauts apologized "for keeping you folks up so late." KIEF'S RECORD & STEREO offers the best in component sound the MASTERWORK for only $19900 (nationally advertised at $235.00) A Is the sound terrible in your set? Come hear the - 30-watt—all transistor pre-amp-amp combination - New pickering V-15 magnetic cartridge - Guard changer - Girard changer - Pickering acoustic-suspension speakers (with electronic-crossovers) MASTERWORK Kief's Record & Stereo Malls Shopping Center For A Special After Dinner Snack Try Our Delicious... - Homemade Cheesecake . . . . 35¢ - Apple Pie . . . . . . . . . 25¢ - Cherry Pie . . . . . . . . . 25¢ - Strawberry Shortcake . . . . . 49¢ Cake Air-Conditioned Dining Room Drive-In Restaurant DIXON'S 2500 W. Sixth VI 3-7446 PACIFIC CAPITAL. Orientation Center students view U.S. By Annie Reid Although the students in the orientation program for foreign students have been in this country only a very short time, they have some vivid first impressions of America and some observations about Americans in relation to other peoples of the world. Doris Maravi, a student from Lima, Peru, will study chemistry at KU. Miss Maravi was surprised, when she attended a Catholic mass, at the high percentage of men who took communion. She had visited the U.S. in 1963 and stayed for a month and a half with a farmily in Cincinnati, and was surprised by the closeness of family life. She had previously thought the members of an American family would "go their own way." MISS MARAVI was impressed by the organization in the orientation program and in American life. In her own country, she said, "we need organization . . . an advisor for each student." She said that the students from her country in this program "do not represent our country really" because, having attended the universities, they are "above average." Programs such as Operation Amigo, an exchange student program, are "a good idea," Miss Maravi said, because "people have an opportunity to know the life" in another country. One student from Okinawa said, "America is very large, spacious I have realized why the American people haven't realized the Okinawan people's feeling for land." When the American army wants to expand its base at Okinawa, the small amount of land owned by the farmers must be taken. "The land is life for the farmers. They have no substitute. The U.S. Army pays money . . . a very small amount that does not last for a long period." Americans are cutting a bad image in Okinawa in other ways. "Give me liberty or give me death.' That's the spirit of America. I don't think there is much of that spirit in America." pertaining to the idea that America is "a country of uniformity, a standardized country," one student said that "one side looks uniform; the other side looks very diverse." There is "peaceful coexistence" between the two sides of America. For instance, one can see the same kind of doors all over the country. An example of diversity noted by the students was the state governments. Each state has its own government and constitution. All the school systems of the U.S. are different. Photos by Taylor Huebner THE DANCE WEEKLY SWING YOUR PARTNER! Orientation Center students enjoyed a part of Americana recently when they participated in an old fashioned square dance sponsored by the Center. The dance is just one part of the round of social activities the students enjoy during the summer. M. R. C. C. P. A. M. B. C. Tuesday, July 26, 1966 Summer Session Kansan Page 11 CLASSIFIEDS Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the Summer session Kansas are offered all students served to accorded to color, creed, or national origin. FOR SALE TYYPEWRITERS—most brands portables including Olympia, Royal and SCM Electric portables Sales service purchase plan Office equipment and furniture. Lawrence Typewriter, 700 Mass., VI 3-3644. tf SHERWOOD AMPLIFIER. 20 watts. good condition, $45. V1 2-1644. 7-26 For Sale: 33 x8' 1952 housealler, priced to sell. Suitable for students or lake front retreat. See at 1600 W. 4th. No Lot. No. 7. 7-26 Contemporary bedroom and living- room suits. Good condition. Willing to bargain. Call VI 2-4361 after 1:00 p.m. 8-2 For Sale: Irish Setter puppies; registered A.K.C.; Champion bloodline; 7 weeks old; ready to go-VI 2-3110. MISCELLANEOUS Western Civilization Notes. Completely revised, extremely comprehensive, meticulated and bound for $1.25 per call. Call VI 2-1801 for delivery Expert typing, Themes, Dissertations, etc. Electric typewriter. Mrs. Mishler. VI 3-1029. tf TYPING Downtown Health & Foreign Foods Natural Foods Better Nutrition Better Health 9th & N.H. VI 2-277 Typing- Theses, term papers, dissert- ations. Rates, paper finished. VI 2-1561. Fire ttf Tuxplist, experienced with term papers, research articles, and your typing immediate attention with electric machine with extra symbols. One the Higley at 408 W. 131f. III 6-3048 Experienced typist with new electric tensions, theses and term papers. 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Private entrance and private shower. Util. pld. $65.00. Call V 1-3830 after 5 p.m. 7-29 The only store in Lawrence with complete lines in western wear. -Lee Rider Jeans Justin Boots For Rent: Nice air-conditioned bachelor apartment, available in August. May work out part or all of rent. Very close to KU. Phone VI 3-822-8-822 - Brushed Denim Bonanza Shirts $8.70 910 Mass. VI 3-0077 Room and board for men: Only at the Manor Lodge can you find a quiet study environment and wonderful meals served 3 times a day, 6 days a week and twice on Sunday—all for free. Visit our college and licensed by the State Board. Call today for further information: VI 3-3408, BUT HURRY! GRANT'S Sept. 1—Old Mill Apts., 905 Emery, 1 Bedroom Apet. Central Aid-Conditioned, Wall to wall carpeting, Furnished. Luxury Living. From $125.00. Swimming pool and Party Room Privileges. VI 3-1433. 8-2 Drive-In Pet Center Established — Experienced 1218 Conn. Pet Ph. 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VI 3-7474 SUA FRIDAY FLICKS SUA "Experiment in Terror" Starrring: Glen Ford and Lee Remick Friday, July 29 In Air Conditioned Dyche Auditorium 7:00 & 9:00 p.m. Admission 35c Page 12 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 26, 1966 You'll Be Going Home Soon FLOOD You'll be going home soon and you will want to have your clothes expertly cleaned and neatly folded for ease in packing. When you do, remember us. INDEPENDENT Laundry and Dry Cleaners TWO CONVENIENT LOCATIONS 740 Vermont VI 3-4011 9th & Mississippi Summer Session Kansan 76th Year, No.13 Lawrence, Kansas Friday, July 29, 1966 WHERE THE WATER IS BLEEING (Photo by Glen Phillips) SLIPPERY WHEN WET! The side of the Roosevelt fountain in Central Park on Mass. Street proved a precarious perch for this frolicking youngster. He was one of group of six of so children who forsook propriety for a cooling dip in the fountain during one of the recent muqoo days. Camp awards given; Wiley pledges dorm By Margaret Ogilvie Outstanding students in the eight divisions of Midwestern Music and Art Camp were recognized at a camp meeting Tuesday in Hoch Auditorium. The high schoolers will leave Sunday after a final round of events this weekend. "HANSEL AND GRETEL," a play written by Joseph Veneroso, Amsterdam, N.Y., an outstanding German student, was presented by his division last night in Strong Auditorium. Each of the other top German students also was recommended by camp instructors: Carol Bowman, Boulder, Colo.; Jane Barry, Lewiston, N.Y.; Barbara Bush, Plainfield, N.J.; Jill Kendall, Norman, Okla., and Frances Sierra, Bovina, Tex. Camp Director Russell L. Wiley was assisted by departmental directors in doing the honors. He concluded the program by promising a third air-conditioned dormitory to house an anticipated enrollment of 1,500 to 1,600 next summer. WILEY ALSO predicted a doubled enrollment in the junior high music camp when it is moved from Corbin Hall to a larger, cooler dorm for the 1967 season. Nick Daily, Coldwater, was ATHLETIC DIRECTOR STINSON named outstanding speaker in the speech division's preliminary debate tournament. Recognized for overall superior work in individual forensic activities were Debbie Hyler, Parsons; poetry; Cherry Smith, McCook, Neb., prose, and Faye Van Vleck, Topeka, extemporaneous speaking. Another student will be recognized for oratory, and a debate team will win the final tournament today. FOUR GIRLS and two boys were selected from the art division "mainly for their ability and because they were leaders who set an example for others by hard work and good attendance," said Arvid Jacobson, co-director. Each instructor named four girls and two boys in each of his classes, and each art camper chose one girl and one boy by ballot. An honor roll will be posted tomorrow in Murphy's Recital Hall. He survives, despite blasts By John Casady Rebecca Best, Beaumont, Tex, was named the outstanding girl, followed by Elissa Karg, South Norwalk, Conn.; Karen Thompson, Hannibal, Mo., and Barbara Shanklin, Kansas City, Mo. Outstanding boy was Neil Shapiro, Kansas City, Mo., and runner-up was Selan Hall Jr., Stillwell, Okla. Each was given an art book from the Kansas Union Book- store. In his two years as director of intercollegiate athletics at KU, Wade Stinson has been the object of a number of public controversies. He has been hanged and burned in effigy on the front lawn of Strong Hall, criticized in the national press, and taken to task in numerous Kansas editorials. The event that preceded most of the public furor was the firing of Bill Easton, KU's phenomenally successful track coach, in the spring of 1965. Since Easton's dismissal was connected with his supposed problems in staying within the track budget, the scrapping of KU's wrestling team in the spring of 1966, "for financial reasons," had the effect of gasoline on the still smoldering embers of editorial and sports pages. As the chief administrator of the Athletic Corporation, Stinson is nced with problems that are somewhat different than those of other administration officials. ALTHOUGH HE was wearing a crimson-and-blue Jayhawk necktie with a KU clasp, he refrained from any of the back-slapping and "How's the family" routines. AS A RESULT, STINSON has unofficially been labeled by the press as a human cash register and assigned to a position somewhere between Jack Mitchell and Dean Emily Taylor on the prevailing bad-guy lists. Having read a great deal about Wade Stinson, I naturally held a number of pre-conceived notions of what the man was like, based on what has been written about him. As I walked into his office in Allen Field House, I was disappointed to find that what I had expected was not there. "This is a financially separate corporation," said Stinson, "yet we are controlled by the University. We have to operate on what we take in, so we have to watch finances. If we don't handle ourselves in a business-like manner, we'll find ourselves ending up in the red, and no one backs us up. We're on our own." HE CONTINUED. "It is most gratifying to see young men in athletics, along with their coaches, perform in a manner in which they can be proud and a manner in which the University can be proud. Hobart, Okla.; Floyd Cooley, Knoxville, Iowa; Bill Davis, Nitchitoches, La.; Cathy Allen, Roswell, N.M.; Michael Brinegar, Santa Fe, N.M.; Stephen Charpie, Kansas City, Mo.; Tom Hart, Ros- well, N.M.; Ann Marshall, Atchison; Martha Bagnall, Sac City, Iowa, and Patricia Walle, Ogden, Utah. Elissa and Pamela Parker, Waterloo, Iowa, had the winning designs for the front and back covers of LP recordings made this year at the music division's concerts. They each received six of the records, and Shapiro, as runner-up, received three. TACY WEIDMAN, Lawrence, and David Cook, Wichita, the outstanding girl and boy musicians, each received an anonymous gift of $50 toward college educations. A medal from Phi Mu Alpha, music fraternity, was engraved with his name and presented to David. Best in the advanced theory classes of the music division were Heidi Kuglin, Bern; Nancy Rinne, Bern; Coy Lea Rose, DeSoto; Larry Baker, Poteau, Okla., and Carol Brewer, Elmo. Leading elementary theorists were Alice McBride, Mt. Carroll, Ill.; Cathy Morrison, Robinson, Ill.; Phillip Speary, Wichita; Judy Stuckey, Pittsburg, and Ralph Thomas, Fredonia. Other top musicians, selected by instrument, were James Barnes, Outstanding in the journalism division's six-week session was Annie Reid, Ridgefield, Conn. Vicki Asbury, Leavenworth, led fellow campers in the first three-week unit, and Patsy Palmer, Fulton, Mo., those in the second three-week group. The examination consists of four parts: two essay sections, short answer, and multiple choice. Scores on the spring exam were lower than usual in the short answer section, but better in the multiple choice, Powers said. Eight o'clock Saturday morning is the time long awaited (and dreaded) by many KU students scheduled to take the Western Civilization comprehensive examination. Western Civ to be taken Saturday The test scores should be available in about a week. Prairie (Photo by Glen Phillips) WOULD YOU LOOK AT THAT... A group of aspiring young artists, not music and art campers they carefully informed the photographer, gathered at the Chi Omega fountain to polish their sketching form. Page 2 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 29,1966 ONE PEE, ONE VOTE Rally 'round th flag A Kansas editor and former member of the Board of Regents has kept a critical eye on rising student fees. Salina Journal editor Whitley Austin (a financially distant relative) suggests that the honorable farmers and bankers who compose the august Regents may soon reach a crisis point as they turn to Kansas students for cheap financing. In fact, it appears that Austin is formulating a soaped-down crusade against the board he once chaired. BUT MAYBE THAT CRUSADE ought to be souped-up instead of soaped-down. And although the Salina editor was surely glib when he said it, the idea of ONE FEE, ONE VOTE doesn't wax badly at all. Think about it. ONE FEE, ONE VOTE. The consequences of such a movement would make the Chicago riot seem like an SUA picnic. For example, the gray manes of the Kansas House could go back to building interstate highways instead f sweating the Kansas Statute that says no "t i tion" shall be asked at any state institution of h e r education. THOSE FA RMERS AND BANKERS mentioned earlier could come out of those pungent closed-door m meetings and hightail it back to their respective farms and banks. Student government, a high point of campus humor to all sa e the poll sci majors, could break its chains and start legislating, content in the knowledge it had something to legislate about. You student is could all come over to Flint Hall and wat h the lights in the Buildings Across the Str et go out, one by one. (Or vice-versa.) IT WOULD BE STANLEY LEARNED, Mrs. Spencer and t e KU student body against the world. Yes, it's frii Intening. But think about it when you pay your "fees" or whatever next fall. ONE FEE, ON E VOTE. Dan Austin DIRECTOR OF THE F.B.I. OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF THE UNITED STATES WHO AUTHORIZED ILLEGAL BUGGING AND WARETAAPPING? © M. HERBLOK East New York is a place of fear as racial tension keep erupting By Richard V. Oliver By Richard V. Oliver United Press International United Press International NEW YORK—East New York is a frightened white man who parks his 1957 sedan on different streets, hoping that his new battery and tires will not be stolen again. East New York is a pretty young Puerto Rican girl in a tight pink skirt standing at the corner of Sutter and Pennsylvania Avenue, trying to ignore the rowdy Negro youths who wolf whistle and taunt her. Like many other areas of this city-like Harlem, Berford-Stu- vesant and Brownsville—East New York is block after block of dismal, decaying tenements. Packs of half-naked children play in the streets. YET LIKE MANY other neighborhoods—like parts of Queens, Brooklyn and the Bronx-East New York has tree-lined streets shading newly built two-family homes, bright and pleasant 14-story public housing projects, cheerful parks and playgrounds and spanking new schools. East New York about eight miles from Times Square in mid-Manhattan, is a neighborhood in flux. The status quo is precariously balanced. The past pulls one way, the future tugs another and the present inches along from day to day. Last week the whole structure collapsed in the worst racial violence this city has seen since the terrible Harlem and Bedford-Stuyvesant riots of two summers ago. ALL OF THESE policemen are looking for the slightest sign of a spark, the trigger that might set off another round of racial trouble. AND TODAY EAST New York is an armed camp ready for anything yet prepared for nothing. Ironically, last week's violence began outside a meeting of community leaders seeking ways to ease the racial tension that had been troubling the neighborhood. Since World War II, whites in increasing numbers have steadily Cautious policemen patrol the streets in threes, their bright blue riot helmets dangling from their belts. "These things just make good targets," says one officer. Many carry extra ammunition. Police emergency service and communications vehicles are manned every few blocks. Radio cars and unmarked sedans carrying plainclothesmen cruise along East New York's streets. moved out of East New York while, at the same time, more and more Negroes and recently, Puerto-Ricoans moved in. AT THE CENTER of this area however, a group of whites, mainly Italian-Americans, steadfastly maintained their ground, shrinking almost daily. As a result, a kind of buffer zone has gradually been formed on either side of Livonia Avenue over which the elevated subway trains make their noisy way back and forth to Manhattan each day To some in East New York Livonia Avenue is not just a buf — fer but a barrier, a racial wall built by fear and ignorance. "THEY DON'T WANT colore folks shopping over there," sai an elderly Negro woman. "We g to our stores and they go t theirs." "They ought to stay in their own neighborhood and leave alone," a white man said, looking across Lvivia Avenue. Yet to others, white, Negro an Puertorican, there is no boundary; it exists only in the minds of those who want it exist. The boundary lines may vague, but the extent of East New York's racial intolerance is not. In another area a white yout standing with a group of your toughs, yelled at me: "Hey, COR worker, nigger lover, nigg lover." "HEY, WHITE, goin' print sort more lies in the paper," a Neg youth snarled at me. The East New York-Brown ville sections of Brooklyn just a few years ago were notorious f or their teen gangs and gang wa s. Today, however, the gangs a re loosely knit but organized eth i-cally. With such racial tensions in mind, a group of East New York's community leaders, including several Negroes, gathered ast Thursday night at Frank's Restaurant, located on New Orleans Avenue, a few steps from Livonia SUCH IS THE CASE with t ne group known as SPONGE So iety for the Prevention of Negro es Getting Everything. A rac ist group of white youths of Itali n, Irish and Polish backgroun ls, SPONGE came into the pub lic eye during the 1964-65 New Y o rk World's Fair when they picke ed against Negroes. By most accounts, SPON E was the catalyst for last week k's violence in East New York. Avenue and the last stop on the elevated subway. OUTSIDE THE SMALL tavern a group of 40 white youths who identified themselves as members of SPONGE chanted: "Two, four, six, eight, we don't want to integrate." Shortly before, Mayor John Lindsay dropped in on the meeting to confer with the local leaders, seizing the occasion as an opportunity to establish new communication between whites and Negroes in the area. Lindsay left Frank's at about 9 p.m. During this time, the crowd outside grew steadily to about 250 persons, most of them white and some joining in the Sponge chants. THE CHANTING could be heard for blocks, apparently attracting a group of about 40 young Negro toughs to the area. The rival groups spotted each other and immediately began shouting curses. Police moved in to separate them but street fighting broke out. The Negroes, badly outnumbered, retreated across Livonia Avenue. Tuesday, Eric Dean, the boy who had wanted to see the mayor, was buried. A short time later, 11-year-old Eric Dean, a Negro, was walking toward Frank's, where, according to his mother, he wanted to get a glimpse of Mayor Lindsay. A BLOCK FROM his home, a shot ripped into the boy's chest. He had been hiding behind a newsstand during a volley of shots by a sniper armed with a 25-caliber semi-automatic pistol. About 300 Negroes gathered around the body but a quick-thinking police sergeant averted a possible riot at that point by telling the crowd young Eric had fainted. The boy was dead on arrival at Brookdale Hospital. Then, as word of the Dean boy's death began spreading, the crowds grew into mobs. Bricks, bottles and firebombs began flying from rooftops and hurtling through store windows. There were a series of sporadic incidents Friday night and early Saturday, including the arrests of 25 persons and the shooting of two Puerto Rican men, fired on from a passing car. THE POLICE MOVED swiftly. Within minutes, 350 men had been rushed from other borroughs to break up the violence in Brooklyn. By the next night, an extra 1,500 policemen were patrolling the East New York area. Coach in'32 gets KU note Could you imagine a letter arriving at the White House today addressed to "Mr. Herbert Hoover, President of the United States?" One just about as unlikely came to Allen Field House this week for "Mr. Brutus Hamilton, University of Kansas Track Coach." The letter, opened by mistake, came from an old-time Kansas track fan now living at St. Petersburg, Fla. HE WAS STIRRED by the recent world record feats of Kansas running star Jim Ryun and offered this salute to Hamilton: "Congratulations on having another record-holder and great miler on your track team. Jim Ryun is not only a fine runner but a fine fellow. "There was another of your Kansas boys who really made a name for himself...Glenn Cunningham." Hamilton was the Kansas track coach in 1930-31-32, leaving KU (while Hoover was still president) at the end of Cunningham's sophomore year to become track coach at California. He retired at Cal last year after an illustrious career that included coaching the 1952 United States Olympic team. CUNNINGHAM, WHO SET the world mile record at 4:06.7 two years after Hamilton left Kansas, was the last American to hold it until Ryun regained the mark recently with his fantastic 3:51.3 at Berkeley, Calif.-where Hamilton coached for more than three decades. Bob Timmons, the present Kansas track coach, was only 7 years old when Hamilton left KU. Timmons got a chuckle out of the letter and had it forwarded on to Hamilton in California. BOOKS By United Press International THE U. S. MINT AND COINAGE by Don Taxay (Arco 12.50): The history of U. S. coinage is so interwoven with political, military, art and economic history and biography that a full story of the Mint must include much conventional history too. This big book purports to tell the complete story from 1776 onward for the first time. In the words of Gilroy Roberts, chief engraver of the Mint from 1948 to 1964, who wrote the foreword to the book: "Without doubt, The U. S. Mint and Coinage is the most complete and authoritative treatise on the subject ever written." The author is a numismatic historian and is the curator of the Chase Manhattan Bank money museum in New York. THE CORRESPONDENCE OF JAMES BOSWELL AND JOHN JOHNSTON OF GRANGE, edited by Ralph S. Walker (McGraw-Hill $17.50). This is volume one in the Research Edition from the Archives of James Boswell in the Yale University Library. It is intended primarily for Boswell scholars and researchers of 18th century manuscripts, and reproduces the text of 142 letters from Boswell to Johnston and 22 from Johnston to Boswell, with exact adherence to spelling, word order, capitalization and punctuation. The entire project will eventually run through more than 40 volumes. *** MOTORCYCLE SPORT BOOK, edited by Lynn Wineland and the editors of Hot Rod Magazine (Trident Press $4.95): For the motorcycle enthusiast this book has everything from specifications of all domestic and foreign bikes to suggestions for trail riding, competitions, care of the cycles, recommended clothing, driving regulations and discussion of the performance of each machine. Replete with photos. Summer Session Kansan For 76 Years, KU's Official Student Newspaper KANSAN TELEPHONE NUMBERS Newsroom—UN 4-3646 Business Office—UN 4-3198 The Summer Session Kansan, student newspaper at The University of Kansas, is represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St., New York, 10022. Mall subscriber to The University of Kansas and second Summer Session at Lawrence, Kau., every Tuesday and Friday during the Summer Session except University holidays and examination periods. Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the Summer Session Kansan are offered to all students without regard to color, creed, or mar- the opinions expressed in the editorial column are those of the students whose names are signed to them. Guest editorial views are not necessary. Any opinions expressed in the Summer University Journal are not necessarily a cause of The University of Kansas Administration or the State Board of Regents. Friday, July 29, 1966 Summer Session Kansan Sunday Concerts Page 3 CONCERT CHOIR AND CHAMBER CHOIR James Aalston, Director Darrell Benne, Assistant Director Jane Fager, Accompanist Paul Salamunivich, Guest Conductor Sunday, July 31, 2:15 p.m. UNIVERSITY THEATRE CONCERT CHOIR Exultate Justi ... Viadana Ave Maria ... Thomas Vittoria O Voto Tremendo ... W. A. Mozart Baile de Gaita ... Spanish Folk Tune God of Comfort ... Wilbur Chenoweth CHAMBER CHOIR Mr. Salamunivich, conducting O Vos Omnes Thomas Vittoria Music, Spread Thy Voice Around G. F. Handel Nelly Bly Stephen Foster 1 Want Jesus Jester Hairston Alleluia arr. Roger Wagner Mr. Salamunivich, conducting COMBINED CHOIRS Norman Dello Joio 12 MINUTE INTERMISSION ORCHESTRA Gerald Carney, Director or Alessandro Guest Condu Gerald Carney, Director Victor Alessandro, Guest Conductor Russlan and Ludmilla Michael Glinka Symphonv No. 3 (Eroica) Ludwig von Beethoven Mr. Carney, conducting Mr. Carney, conducting Ein Heldenleben (A Hero's Life) Richard Strauss Ein Heldenleben (A Hero's Life)... Richard Strauss The Hero The Hero's Adversaries The Hero's Helpmate The Hero's Battlefield The Hero's Works of Peace The Release from the World Mr. Alessandro, conducting Theme Song Irish Tune from County Derry... Percy Grainger Mr. Carney, conducting CONCERT BAND Russell L. Wiley, Director Symphonic Band Kenneth Bloomquist, Director Victor Alessandro, Guest Conductor A Festive Overture Alfred Reed Overture to "Tannhauser" Richard Wagner Mr. Bloomquist, conducting SYMPHONIC BAND E brighton Beach ... William Latham The Royal Fireworks Music ... G. F. Handel I. Overture II. Bourree III. La Paix IV. Menuet V. Allegro Louis S. Cormier "Boris Godounov" Modeste Moussorgsky Love Scene from "Boris Godounov" ... Modeste Moussorgsky INTERMISSION CONCERT BAND William Tell ... Giacomo Rossini Introduction and Wedding March from "The Golden Cockerel" Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov Till Eulenspiegel Richard Strauss Mr. Alessandro, conducting 1812 Overture ... Peter Tschaikowsky Theme Song Irish Tune from County Derry ... Percy Grainger Mr. Wiley, conducting 7 have articles in Search Seven KU students have research articles in the 1966 issue of Search, a KU publication of selected studies by undergraduate honors students. James Nickum, liberal arts senior from Wichita, explains in the introduction that Search represents the best work by undergraduate honors students who pursue independent studies in areas of special interest to them. Most of the research was supported in part by undergraduate research funds from such sources as the National Science Foundation, Kansas Heart Association and University General Research Fund. THE STUDENTS and their articles: Jeff Nichols, junior from Stockton, Kan., majoring in mathematics, chemistry, and microbiology—"The Lag in DNA Synthesis after Non-Lethal Ultra-violet Exposure." Roger Mellgren, psychology senior from Kansas City—"The Effect of Method of Presentation on Learning." John Fitch, anthropology and zoology senior from Lawrence—"Weight Loss and Temperature Response in Three Species of Bats in Marshall County, Kan." W. Charles Kerfoot, zoology senior from Lawrence—"Cellular Constituents of Anthropod Blood." CHARLES E. WHITED, junior from Wichita—"Thermoelectricity at Low Temperatures." Anne S. Lockhart, speech communications senior from Wichita — "Indicators of Conversational Strain." Maxwell Sanford II, mathematics, physics and astronomy senior from Kansas City, Mo.- "Ephemeris Generation by Vector Iteration Techniques." Three movies will be shown east of old Robinson Gymnasium at 8 p.m. today. They are "Portage to Alaska" "The World Is One" and "This England." The films are to be the last of the series this summer. Goff lists plays for'66-67 season "The Rehearsal," the play presented this week by the KU Resident Acting Company, will be one of several constituting the 1966-67 theatrical season at KU. It will be presented Oct. 7-8 and 14-15 as the opening play of the season. Tonight's films listed Lewin Goff, director of the University Theatre, announces that other productions next season will be: Lionel Bart's musical version of Dickens' "Oliver Twist," known as "Oliver!," to be shown Nov. 3-4-6 and 10-11-12. Richard B. Sheridan's School for Scandal," Feb. 8-11. "The Persecution and Assassination of Jean-Paul Marat as Performed by the Inmates of the Asylum of Charenton Under the Direction of the Marquis de Sade." March 15-18. Mozart's opera, "The Magic Flute." April 21 and 28-29. The Experimental Repertory Theatre will open the season with "The Tour Show" Oct. 27-29. Others scheduled: Ariano Suassuna's "The Regues' Trial," Dec. 7-10 and 13-16 Joan Littlewood's "Oh, What a Albrecht to give talk William P. Albrecht, dean of the Graduate School, will be the commencement speaker for Kansas State College at Pittsburg Aug. 5. The exercises will be in Brandenburg Stadium at 8 p.m. Because of its heavy teacher-training emphasis, Kansas State College's summer commencement is predominantly at the graduate degree level. Lovely War," Feb. 16-18 and mas," March 22-25 and 28-31. 21-24. "The Wicked Cooks," May 11- "An Evening with Dylan Tho- 13 and 16-20. Free Parking in "Project 800" Jay SHOPPE DOWNTOWN Jay SHOPPE DOWNTOWN Have you been to the Jay Shoppe this week? It's bustin' out all over with new Fall Fashions And all remaining summer clothes are 1/2 Price except swimwear — It's Reduced 40% Olde Mill Apartments Available Sept. 1 1 & 2 Bedroom Apts. Swimming Pool & Party Room Privileges ● Furnished ● Central Air ● Wall-to-Wall Carpet ● 1½ baths (2 bedroom only ● Convenient to Campus ● Luxurious Living 1 Bedroom From $125.00 2 Bedroom From $185.00 905 Emery Rd. VI 3-1433 Page 4 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 29,1966 Londerholm sees new police roles Sweeping social changes are "putting the monkey on the back of the peace officer," Kansas Attny, Gen. Robert Londerholm said at the opening session of the 20th annual Peace Officers Training School at KU. He cited the civil rights movement, recent decisions by the Supreme Court, and new theories about human behavior and treatment of persons convicted of crimes as forces altering the nature and techniques of law enforcement. The state official did not comment pro or con on the changes themselves, but emphasized that they place a heavy responsibility on the peace officer. "IN GENERAL, law enforcement today is doing a good job in a field where there are many new responsibilities and demands,"Londerholm told more than 200 lawmen and correctional personnel. But, he cautioned, these rapid changes require constant retraining and revision of methods on the part of the lawman. He said Kansas is one of the states that has not yet adopted mandatory basic training for law enforcement personnel, but said such a proposal probably will be introduced in the next session of the Legislature and should be supported. "WE IN LAW enforcement will want to lend our support to this. It has to come," he said. "Society has come to expect an expert on every job, whether it's having a car repaired or a tooth pulled—and law enforcement is no exception." Looking to the future of law enforcement, Londerholm predicted that there will be "new rules, new Supreme Court decisions...we can only hope that the pendulum will begin to swing back the other way in the court's interpretation of the rules of enforcement." He remarked that the recent Supreme Court decision regarding interrogation of suspects "means that you will have to rethink some of your methods and alter them to achieve law enforcement that will result in prosecution of criminals in a way that meets the requirements." ON TUESDAY, law enforcement officials were told that LSD and other hallucinogens are more dangerous in their own way than narcotics and barbituates. "Most of the people who have trouble with narcotics and barbituates are people who already are in trouble in one way or the other. "But the thing about LSD is that it can ruin an otherwise normal, well adjusted person," said Donald K. Fletcher, former Texas law enforcement official now with Smith, Kline & French Laboratories, Philadelphia. TOPEKA — (UPI) — Kansas has never had a woman U.S. senator, but Mrs. Ava Anderson, wife of a Concordia dentist, is waging a vigorous campaign to change that record. Woman vying for seat in Senate A political newcomer, Mrs. Anderson, 58, is a certified dental assistant and has attended the Kansas City Business College, ceramic school and engineering school of the University of Utah, art school and is a graduate cosmologist. Her campaigning throughout Kansas is done in a camper bus. Her platform extends from economics to the American Indians. MRS. ANDERSON will face incumbent Sen. James B. Pearson, R-Kan., Rep. Robert Ellsworth, R-Kans., and former Wichita Mayor William Tarrant in the Aug. 2 primary election. One of her planks is a proposal to raise the income tax exemption from $600 per person to $8,000 or $9.000. She called the present tax structure a burden on the poor and said tax money is spent for things "that are just making things worse." Mrs. Anderson also feels something should be done about the crime wave, particularly against women. SHE SAID WOMEN now are not safe on the streets and pointed to the Kansas City area which is second in the nation as "the most dangerous for women." She called the crime rate "shocking" and asked for more protection of the people. On the draft, Mrs. Anderson said it was like a ball game with the 10 best players sitting on the bench. It was a reference to exemptions. She said college exemptions "might have started with good intentions, but it has turned into a divide and conquer maneuver" and charged that some students taking the national draft examination "have the answers before they take the test." TWO OF THE PLANKS in her platform called for an "every person census" and "perimeter defense." On the census, Mrs. Anderson said the bureau should take an "every person census and then we would know the people in this country." "How long has it been since someone from the Census Bureau asked you how you are getting along?" Mrs. Anderson asked. She suggested the information on this be kept in the Census Bureau and the Social Security Administration. NOW! Varsity YWEATRE ... Telephone VI3-1065 Tonight 7:15 & 9:15 Cont. Sat. & Sun. 2:30-4:40-7:05-9:15 - Air-Conditioned — ROCK CLAUDIA HUDSON·CARDINALE "BLINDFOLD" TECHNICOLOR® PANAVISION® KUNG FU Granada THEATRE...phone V1 3-5784 NOW! Granada THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5784 Tonight 7:15 & 9:15 Cont. Sat. & Sun. 2:30-4:40-7:05-9:10 METRO GOLDWYN MAYER presents A MARTIN MELCHER EVERETT FREDMAN PRODUCTION DORIS ROD ARTHUR DAY TAYLOR GODFREY IN PANAVISION' AND METROCOLOR The Glass Bottom Boat METRO GOLDWIN MAYER PRESENTS A MARTIN MELOHER EVERETT FREEMAN PRODUCTION EDITION DORIS ROD ARTHUR DAY TAYLOR GODFREY IN PAVAHISION AND METROCOLOR The Glass Bottom Boat Ends Tonite Sunset DRIVE IN THEATRE • West on Highway 40 “AND NOW MIGUEL” "SHENANDOAH" Saturday 3 big hits!-21 stun!! “Mirage” & “Son of a Gunfighter” Plus Bonus Hit—“PSYCHO” Open 6:45—Show Starts At Dusk SUA SUA FRIDAY FLICKS "Experiment in Terror" Starrring: Glen Ford and Lee Remick In Air Conditioned Friday, July 29 Dyche Auditorium 7:00 & 9:00 p.m. Admission 35c terrill's LAWRENCE, KANSAS Final Clearance SALE 285 Dresses Reg. $12.00 - - - - Now $ 6.88 Reg. $13.00 - --- Now $ 7.88 Reg. $15.00 - --- Now $ 8.88 Reg. $18.00----Now $10.88 Reg. $20.00 - --- Now $11.88 Cole of California SWIM SUITS—Reduced 40% Entire Stock Included Sportswear Reg. $ 4.00 - --- Now $2.45 Reg. $ 5.00 - --- Now $2.85 Reg. $ 7.00 - --- Now $3.85 Reg. $ 8.00 - --- Now $4.85 Reg. $ 9.00 - --- Now $5.45 Reg. $10.00 - --- Now $5.85 terri's LAWRENCE, KANSAS Friday, July 29, 1966 Summer Session Kansas Page 5 PAUL REVERE & THE RAIDERS One Night Only Two Shows-7:00 & 10:00 p.m. MIDNIGHT RIDE PAUL REVERE & THE RAIDERS PLAYER IN KICKS FEATURING Just Like Me / Elsepah Ouk Just Like Us! PAUL REVERE & THE RAIDERS from "Where The Action Is" Here They Come! PAUL REVERE & THE RAIDERS Friday, July 29th Topeka Municipal Auditorium Tickets-Kief's-Red Dog Inn & Jenkins & Katz in Topeka All Paul Revere & The Raiders Albums MIDNIGHT RIDE WITH PAUL REVERE & THE RAIDERS FROM KICKS Special $ 2^{2 2} $ Here They Come! PAUL REVERE & THE RAIDERS KIEF'S RECORD & STEREO Diamond Needle Sale 5.95 Permanent Discount on 8 Track Car Tapes Page 6 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 29,1966 Students respond to query about residence halls By Margaret Ogilvie Having lived in a KU residence hall, what change would you make in the facilities if you could do so?" This question was asked of 10 KU students, who may see their suggestions included in improvements now under study by the Association of University Residence Halls Housing Board. Dyann Long, Anita, Iowa, senior, who has lived in Ellsworth: "I think I'd put in more drawer space and definitely more bookshelves. There's not enough room for two girls and all their stuff... I never will forget the first time I went in that room and tried to turn on the light above the mirror. Being short is my big problem." Extension group elects Walker T. Howard Walker, director of University Extension and of Statewide Academic Extension for the Board of Regents, is the new president-elect of the National University Extension Association. Walker's election came this week at the NUEA's annual meeting at the University of New Mexico in Albuquerque. walker, who has held the directorship at Kansas since 1953, served a 3-year term on the board of directors of the association. He has held the chairmanship of three national committees of NUEA and has served on a half dozen other committees including world affairs and governmental relations. He also was NUEA's official representative to the Association of State Accrediting Agencies. TOM SYSTER, Shenandoah, Iowa, graduate student living in McCollum: "I kind of like things the way they are, partly because I come from another college and the dorms here are much nicer." Ann Sargent, Oklahoma City graduate student: "I have no complaints about Lewis, but the corner rooms in Ellsworth I think are too small. If they had moved some of the furniture out it would've been better." Don Lucas, Paola sophomore, who has lived in Joseph R. Pearson: "The rooms aren't big enough for two guys by the time you get it all in there...you'd be surprised what all you find in those rooms. Breakfast is too early. They should stop at 8 a.m. and then start again at 9 a.m. or so. A lot of guys don't feel like eating as soon as they get up in the morning." MARGOT BIERY, Kansas City, graduate student living in McCollum: "The only thing that really irritates me is the elevator system. They don't have enough, but I don't know where they would put any more in." Larry Ratzlaff, Garden City graduate student living in McCollum who also has lived in Ellsworth: "The food's just not good. They might give you bigger rooms." Jan Gates, Prairie Village senior who has lived in Gertrude Sellars Pearson, Lewis, and Ellsworth: "I like Lewis' floor plan the very best. Ellsworth, I think, is a mess. It's too big. I don't think you can get over 250 girls in a hall and call it home. No girls should have to live on the ground floor where there are no recreational areas... If you'd feed people decent food instead... starches we could live in closets, for that matter." KEITH KINYON, Greensburg senior who has lived in Ellsworth: "The rooms aren't too bad, but they could carpet the rooms." Klonda Speer, Scottsville senior who has lived in GSP, Lewis, and Ellsworth, and is now living in an apartment ("whew"): "I just object to the whole thing... a blanket objection! I've seen dorms on other campuses with different room arrangements. The rooms don't have to be all in a line and all the same. They could be arranged around a central communal room. But every room is just this little box. They use absolutely no imagination!" Terry McElhaney, Scotch Plains, N.J., junior who has lived in JRP: Actually, I think the dorm situation is very good except I think a student should be able to make collect long-distance calls through the dorm phone or calls of any kind, and be assessed for it, just like in a hotel." Dance to The SHADOWS at THE VILLAGE GREEN 23rd & Naismith VI 3-6966 Friday and Saturday Special - Catfish Fillet on Friday When you want to- SELL YOUR BOOKS! Bring them to the Bookstore during Final Week August 4th and 5th. Please bring your books to the lower level entrance 8:30 to 4:30. We are paying patronage refund period 38 valid through December 1966 and period 39 valid through June 1967. kansas union BOOKSTORE Summer Session Kansan Page 7 CLASSIFIEDS Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the knowledge of Karen are offered to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin. TYPEWRITERS-most brands portables including Olympia, Royal and SCM Electric portables Sales, service purchase plan Office equipment and furniture. Lawrence Typewriter, 700 Mass, VI 3-3644. tt FOR SALE Contemporary bedroom and living- room suits. Good condition. Willing to bargain. Call VI 2-4361 after 1:00 p.m. For Sale: Irish Setter puppies; registered A.K.C.; Champion bloodline; 7 weeks old; ready to go-VI 2-3110. 2 contemporary tweed chairs & sofa in good condition, ready for sale. Also lovely TV chairs, aqua leather chair holstered in excellent condition. $80 each. $2-80 each. MG B_63, 63 perfect condition through After 5 p.m. V1 3-8304 Kask for 8-2 Pickering Competition Cars SPORTS CARS TO GO 1966 Triumph sedan, demonstrator with 2,000 miles, large discount 1965 Triumph Spitfire, new car trade- ing hit. This red body is a bargain. 1964 Triumph Spitfire, fully equipped, complete new engine. 1959 Simca sedan, runs good, looks nice—price provided to eco nomical transportation. COMPETITION SPORTS CARS GOEWE Franchised Dealer for Triumph Automobiles Friday, July 29,1966 For a lastening gift buy a Navajo handwoven rug. Lovely colors and designs. One week only. See Dean Maughan after 4 p.m. Room 742, Ellsworth Hall. 1960 Rambler sta. wg., std. tr., real sharp & in top condition $495.00.1960 Rambler sta. wg., A.t., real nice, Rambler Sta. wg., A.t., real nice, Rambler & 1954 Ford 6, each $85.00. Benson's Auto Sales, 1902 Harper, I 3-0342, open evenings, 8-2 WANTED BabySitting and light housework job Call W1 2-3151 Bachi W2 1-3152 Wanted: Girl to share large, 3 rm. Call: Call on 4:30-7 p.m. B-2 BUSINESS Western Civilization Notes. Completely revised, extremely comprehensive. Minneapolis and bound for $4.25. Call VI 2-1801 for delivery. MISCELLANEOUS TYPING Expert typing. Themes. Dissertations, typewriter typewriter, Mistler VI 3-10293. *Typing- Theses, term papers, dissertation*. Wiley. Rates, paper furt- nished. V1 2-1561. Typist, experienced with term papers, theses and dissertations. Will give your typing immediate attention with electric machine with extra symbols. Mrs. Marlene Higley at 408 W. 13th. VI 3-6048. tf Experienced typist with new electric office typewriter will type dissertations, theses and term papers. Fast and accurate service with reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Lancaster at VI 2-1705. 8-2 FORMER HARVARD AND UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA SECRETARY WILL TYPE REPORTS, TERM PAPERS, THESIES. VI 3-7207. 8-2 Typing Wanted, theses, essays, and themes—Fast, accurate, Reasonable Rates. Mrs. Hallenbeck, VI 3-4156. DIRECTORY Experienced typist, 10 years experience in theses and term papers. Elec- trical equipment required. Reasonable rates. CALL Mrs. Barlow, 2407 Wale, VI-21648. tt 2407 Wale, VI-21648. tt FOR RENT LIVE CLOSE TO CAMPUS. Air-conditioned one and two bedroom apartments, furnished and unfurnished. Rents beginning at $5 per Santee Apts., 123d Ind. V 3-216-216f Sept. 1. Old Mills Apts. 2 Bedroom, wall to wall carpeting. Central Air Conditioned. $1½ baths. Luxurious Living. furnished. Swimming pool and Party Room Privileges. From $185.00. See 905 Emery Rd. Phone VI 3-1433. www.emeryrivals.com Furnished basement apt. in new house, walking distance to building. Utilities paid. For two senior or graduate men students. 1103 W. 19th Terrace. V1 3-6313. Basement Apt. for rent for 2 boys, furnished. Private entrance and private shower. Util. pdl. $65.00. Call 3-1930 after 5 p.m. 7-29 Health & Foreign Foods Natural Foods Better Nutrition Better Health Downtown 9th & N.H. VI 2-2771 TRAVEL THIS SUMMER Arrange Your: Flight Home Vacation Reservations Trip Abroad Other Summer Reservations The Malls VI 3-1211 at: MAUPINTOUR Open Wednesday Evenings Malls Shopping Center Plenty of Free Parking Andrews Gifts VI 2-1523 Have your sports car tuned where performance is proven with race-winning cars. Gift Box Go With The Winner TRIUMPH SALES & SERVICE 1209 E. 23rd St. VI2-2191 Competition Sports Cars HAVING A PARTY? Al Lauter Room available in private home for girl student interested in staying with children occasionally for payment of room. Call for interview VI 3-82 under one roof GRANT'S FREE PARKING Sportswear Awards The only store in Lawrence with complete lines in western wear. Drive-In Pet Center For Rent: Nice air-conditioned bachelor apartment, available in August. May work out part or all of rent. Very close to KU. Phone VI 3-8354. - Lavalleri Complete Center - Paddles We are always happy to serve you with FRED GREEN Western Wear Brushed Denim - Lee Rider Jeans Established - Experienced 1218 Conn. Pet Ph. VI 3-2021 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 - Mucus Bonanza Shirts $8.70 Now Renting For Fall—Extra Nice Bachelor Apartments for graduates or older undergraduate men. 2 Blocks—units paid. 1 Room—utilities paid. PRI. Parking, some air-conditioned. For appointment call VI 3-8534. tt Justin Boots - Rínos Sept. 1 - Old Mill Apts, 905 Emery, Bedroom Apt., Central Aid-Conditioned, Wall to wall carpeting, Furnished. Luxury Living. From $125.00. Swimming pool and Party Room Privileges VI. 3-1433. Chips, nuts, cookies - Work Guaranteed — of course - Plessing Prices - Only Genuine Material Used Written paper Using the Latest Electronic and Ultrasonic Equipment to Compare Estimates on Remarks Variety of grocery items LAWRENCE ICE COMPANY 616 Vt. Ph.VI 3-0350 Room and board for men: Only at the Manor Lodge can you find a quiet study environment and wonderful meals served 3 times a day, 6 days a week and twice on Sunday for school with the college and licensed by the State Board. Call today for further information: VI 3-3408, BUT HURRY! Watch Repairing at its Finest — Cups Crushed ice, canned Ice cold 6 pacs all kinds Ice cold beverages - Budges OPEN TO 10 P.M. EVERY EVENING Trophies - favors Crushed ice, candy of - ("words VI 3-9603 910 Mass. VI 3-0077 see us at the... Exclusive Representative WAGON WHEEL - WATCHES - DIAMONDS - GIFTS - YES! We're open for the summer. Come down and For the finest in Eternity Jewelry Fraternity Jewelry L. G. Balfour Co. DOUGLAS COUNTY STATE BANK 1401 Ohio VI 3-7474 Member F.D.I.C. Office VI 2-1150 Home VI 2-3755 Area Code 915 - Can be cashed anywhere 914 Mass. St. Vacancies Available - Immediate replacement if lost Purchase Travelers Checks - Low in cost, only $1 per $100 2350 Ridge Court Lawrence, Kansas, 66044 At The Bank of Friendly Service 9th and Ky. - Safer than carrying cash Daniels Jewelry Southridge Plaza, Inc. MRS. RAMON H. PICKERING Manager Planning A Vacation? SUA Presents "La Dolce Vita" Directed by: Federico Fellini Starring: Marcello Mastroianni Anita Ekberg Anouk Aimee Saturday, July 30 7:30 p.m. Admission 50¢ Kansas Union Ballroom Page 8 Summer Session Kansas Friday, July 29, 1966 You'll Be Going Home Soon FLOOD You'll be going home soon and you will want to have your clothes expertly cleaned and neatly folded for ease in packing. When you do, remember us. INDEPENDENT Laundry and Dry Cleaners TWO CONVENIENT LOCATIONS 740 Vermont VI 3-4011