KU
THE SUMMER SESSION kansan
A student newspaper serving KU
WEATHER MILD
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
See Weather Below
77th Year, No. 7
Tuesday, July 2, 1968
Provost Surface closes sabbatical
By Meri Maffet Journalism Camp Reporter
Journism Camp Reporter Provost James R. Surface reported to work at Strong Hall last week for the first time in nine months.
On leave at Harvard since Sept. 1, Surface returned to Lawrence early last week to resume administrative duties in the Chancellor's office.
The leave was "a refreshing change of pace" for Surface who spent his year at Harvard teaching business policy and organizational problems, required courses for fulfillment of the Master of Business Administration curriculum.
HARVARD AND KU are similar in fundamental aspects of education, Surface said; both universities shum departmentalization and strive to provide graduates with a general education in business administration rather than attempting specialization in any one field. The major differences lie in the educational approach and available facilities.
The Harvard School of Business, a graduate school, has been a pioneer in the use of the case method of instruction.
Students are given actual cases involving company problems to research and evaluate in order to
propose realistic solutions. Students' individual recommendations are presented in class discussion after decisions have been reached.
CARL H. MORRIS
THIS CASE method provides the student with two advantages, Surface said. It allows a student to practice his persuasive techniques in trying to convince his classmates of the merits of his recommendation, and it allows students to learn persuasive techniques from others.
During a student's final semester at Harvard, he is required to write a research paper dealing with a contemporary problem of a company. The student is required to make personal contact with the company and gather all available information about the problem. After analysis, the student makes a recommendation for a solution of the problem, submitting one analysis to his professor and one to the company he represents.
Frequently students later find employment with the firm which they represented in university research.
James R. Surface
EDUCATIONAL FACILITIES at Harvard are oriented toward a large class atmosphere. Classes generally contain 80-105 students while at KU 40-70 is average. U-shaped discussion rooms similar to those in Summerfield and one and one-half hour sessions permit the larger classes.
Students at Harvard are expected to maintain an "A" or "B" average. Distinction, pass, low pass, and unsatisfactory are used instead of letters, but a number system of averaging grades is still retained.
During the school year, the Surfaces lived in Lexington, Mass. Surface said the distance between home and Harvard necessitated a 15-30 minute commuting trip each day which was a great disadvantage in bad weather.
Mrs. Surface worked with a volunteer group helping to improve school libraries in Roxbury, an underprivileged area of Boston.
"We had a wonderful year back there, but we looked forward to coming home," Surface said.
FABRICE E. MURRAY
— Kansan Photo by Mike MaGee
STARS OPEN TONIGHT
Repertory actors practice a scene for the opening performance tonight of "You Can't Take It With You."
'Cavalcade of Comedy' opens tonight on stage
By Christine Thompson Journalism Camp Reporter
"A Cavalcade of Comedy" opens tonight at 8:30 p.m. with the first performance of "You Can't Take It With You" by Kaufman and Hart in University Theatre.
The play is under the direction of Mike Pedretti, theater graduate student, on the main stage of Murphy Hall.
Single admission for individual shows for University students are $1.50 each. Season coupon books are $4 each. Campers will be admitted with an ID for 75 cents.
"YOU CAN'T Take It With You," is a story about a real zany family," Jed H. Davis, director of theater, said. It will also be performed July 5, 17 and 23.
The play centers around the family members' concern with
their own pursuits and interests and their not caring if their pursuits are socially acceptable.
KU summer theater repertory players will perform "La Parisienne" by Henri Beque under the direction of Robert Findlay, July 3, 6, 16, 20 and 25 in the Experimental Theater.
HENRI BECQUE'S "La Parisienne" (The Woman of Paris) is a biting but humorous satire on French marital involvements in the 1880's. A new twist is given the 'conventional' menage a trois when the dutiful wife Clotilde finds herself a new 'friend' who can advance her husband's position in government. The position once accomplished, however, Clotilde — with an appealing but nonetheless alarming applomb — is pleasantly satisfied to settle down with convention once again,
with happy husband on one hand and former lover on the other," stated Findlay.
The third in the series, "Once Upon A Mattress" which tells about the tribulations of a kingdom seeking a mate for its prince, will be performed July 10, 12, 19 and 24 "in-the-round" on the University Theatre stage.
Professor's Professor-III
Quirk to add 'chinks'
James P. Quirk, professor of economics, has been designated as a co-holder of a National Science Foundation grant to "add a few chinks" to the few basic theorems of economics there are in relation to the reaction of a nation's equilibrium to a severe shock.
WEATHER
Mild temperatures and partly cloudy skies will continue through today according to the U.S. Weather Bureau. The high today will be in the low 80s with the low tonight around 60.
"Once Upon A Mattress," based loosely on the musical, "Princess and the Pea" by Hans Christian Andersen, is directed by Pamela Roberts, theater graduate student.
According to Quirk, the model societies which the project studies only provide information that is useless to apply to any modern-day nation. The study's value lies in the expansion of basic truths such as, "businessmen try to make
THE REASON these theorems and their expanded versions cannot be applied to say, the United States, is because the cut-and-dried answers coming from these model societies are invalidated from the start by the necessity of using variables when dealing with modern nations.
profits," by using the answers to conceivable situations that might arise. In time he hopes the truths will be expanded to embrace the problems that face the definitely "non-model" nations of the world.
The unknown factors involved included the politics, the consumer needs, the technology of the producers and the organization of the markets within each separate nation. Every variable can produce a reaction different to each country.
The two questions that the study considers when it observes a society are whether it self-balances itself after a shock or whether it shows a tendency to oscillate. Eventually, the accumulation of information will lead to accurate predictions of an economy's reactions.
S. C. BROWN
THE BROADWAY hit that lampoons the Establishment, "A Thousand Clowns" will be performed July 11, 13, 18, 25 and 27 by the repertory company players in the Experimental Theater and is under the direction of Janis Hewitt, theater graduate student.
Kansan Photo by Jan Maxwell
Kansas Photo by Jan Maxwell
James P. Quirk
"A Thousand Clowns" by Herb Garner according to Miss Hewitt is "a unique comedy which has kept recent Broadway and movie audiences in high spirits. It involves Murray, a free lance TV script writer, who completely rebels against conformity within society until he is finally forced to 'deal with the available world.'
See CAVALCADE on page 3
Independence Day set as KU holiday
The Fourth of July will be an official University holiday and no classes will be held, although most classes are meeting Friday.
The Summer Session Kansan and the Kamper Kansan will not be published on Friday, because of the holiday. The next Kamper and Summer Session Kansans will appear next Tuesday.
The Midwestern Music and Art Camp will hold morning sessions although most classes will stop at noon.
A fireworks display in Memorial Stadium and sponsored by the Lawrence Jaycees will be held at 9 p.m.
2
THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN
Tuesday, July 2, 1968
Don't strangle the new committee
After ten sessions, the Committee of Twelve last week finally released their first major decision. Other decisions have been reached by this group, which was formed to iron out the student differences following the protests last Spring. However, these are not being released until there is no doubt they will not change.
The Committee is recommending that the University Senate Committee on Student Affairs have a membership of 50 percent students. If this committee can do something and not spend their time on piddling details, more power to the decision.
Several years ago another committee was formed. The Council of Student Affairs (COSA), which shares administration, faculty and students as their members, meets regularly. But after the first year the committee has proved worthless. They are so involved with meager details that they do not have time to make any major policies study.
A year ago a committee was formed to study
the sale of beer in the Kansas Union. Yet this fall they were so busy rewording the passage on drugs on campus in the student handbook that beer was forgotten.
Students need to be heard when it comes to student affairs. They have many good ideas and they do know what the student wants. But if this committee, which was recommended by the Committee of Twelve, turns out to be no more than another COSA, they can forget the idea. This University already has too many councils, boards, committees, associations, commissions, and subcommittees to have one more that has no function, just a name.
The Committee of Twelve is serious in their desire to have a functioning Student Affairs Committee, as they are serious in their work. They should be commended for the work they have and will put in. The Committee helped avert trouble in the spring and if successful this summer most likely should prevent any riots in the fall.
b. s. the editor
by Dick Bibler
Celebrating the Fourth of July this year may present problems. Is it better to wave the American Flag or tear it down and burn it? * * *
With the issuing of the "Red Badge of Courage" to all the campers, the counselors and supervisors were told to wear their blue ones at all time. It was only after Russell L. Wiley, camp director, was introduced last week as the wearer of Badge Number One, did he realize he had left his at home.
** **
Last fall residence halls added a steak night once a month. Now they plan to carpet the halls and add a shrimp night monthly. With this and co-educational living in not one but three halls next year, Rush Week could be a little sparse this year.
**
The officials at the Midwestern Music and Art Camp have out done themselves this year.
They will not allow any co-educational sunbathing, yet they let the boys and girls swim together in Robinson Gymnasium. Have the officials not heard of under-water kissing?
***
The Chancellor, at the Board of Regents meeting last week, complained that the campus was dirty because there were not enough men for clean-up. If all the student body would put the Kansan in the garbage cans, when they finish reading it, this would be a great step in eradicating this campus of dirt.
* * *
Snappish indeed must be the Band Campers and the Previewers. Both groups must roll out of the sack at 6 a.m., a time considered only human by the military and farm workers. The KU groups are getting a slanted view of Mount Oread; 6 a.m. is the time when many a KU swinger is just going to bed.
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS
BISLER P-1
WHAT SMELL! YOU KNOW TH' RULES ABOUT HAVING FOOD IN TH' ROOMS!
"WHAT SMELL? YOU KNOW TH' RULES ABOUT HAVING FOOD IN TH' ROOMS?"
THE SUMMER SESSION kansan
Kansan Telephone Numbers
Newsroom—UN 4-3646 Business Office—UN 4-4358
The Summer Session Kansan, student newspaper at the University of Kansas, is represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 Street, New York, N.Y., 10022. Mail subscription rates: $6 a semester or $10 a year. Publisher of second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas, every Tuesday and Friday for the period from June 3 to August 31, accommodations, goods, and employment advertised in the Summer Session Kansan are offered to students without regard to color, creed, or national origin.
The opinions expressed in the editorial columns are those of the editorial staff of the newspaper. Guest editorial views are not necessarily the same as opinions expressed in the Summer Session Kansan are not necessarily those of the University of Kansas Administration or the Kansas State Board of Regents.
Executive Staff
Business Manager Jack Haney
Advisor Keith Adams
Office Manager Helen Owens
Managing Editor Robert Stevens
Photography Bill Symour
Advisor Dr. Larry Day
Weekend Concert Schedule
Friday Concert, 7:30 p.m.
GOLD BAND
David Catron, Conductor
Tom Lee, Guest Conductor
Leo Kucinski, Guest Conductor
Theme Song
Irish Tune from County Derry ... arr. Percy Grainger
Nabuco ... Verdi
My Fair Lady ... Lerner-Lowe
R. R. Bennett
America the Beautiful Ward-Dragon
Americans We Fillmore
Music For a Ceremony ... Morrissey
Lee, conducting
Under the Double Eagle ... J. F. Wagner
Kucinski, conducting
Saturday Concert, 2:15 p.m.
CONCERT ORCHESTRA
Gerald M. Carney, Conductor
Leo Kucinski, Guest Conductor
George Lawner, Guest Conductor
A. H. Long, Guest Conductor
Theme Song
Irish Tune from County Derry ... arr. Percy Grainger
Merry Wives of Windsor, Overture ... Otto Nicolai
A Walk Through the
Paradise Gardens ... Frederick Delius
L'Arlesienne Suite ... George Bizet
Farandole
Lawner, conducting
Lawner, conducting Stradella, Overture Friedrick V. Flotow Kucinski, conducting
Long, conducting
RED BAND
LeRoy Esau, Conductor
Kenneth Bloomquist, Guest Conductor
Leo Kucinski, Guest Conductor
Allerseelen Richard Strauss
Cowboy Rhapsody Morton Gould
Barber of Seville Overture ... G. Rossini
Bloomquist, conducting
Chant and Jubilo ... W. Francis McBeth
Kucinski, conducting
Esau, conducting
Sunday Concert, 2:15 p.m.
Noble, conducting
COMBINED CONCERT AND CHAMBER CHOIRS Duncan Couch and Darrell Benne, Conductors Weston Noble, Guest Conductor Assisted by the Brass Choir Roy Guenther, Conductor
Christman Cantata ... Daniel Pinkham
I Heard a Great Voice ... Paul Christiansen
Christ Is Risen ... Paul Sjolund
I Know Where I'm Goin', arr. Geoffry Russell-Smith
An American Hymn ... Cecil Effinger
Combined Choirs and Chorale
Benne, conducting
Symphonic Choir, Mr. Couch, conducting
Brass Choir, Mr. Guenther, conducting
The audience is requested to join the choirs in singing the last verse of "An American Hymn":
O Beautiful for patriot dream,
That sees beyond the years.
Thine alabaster cities gleam,
Undimmed by human tears.
America, America,
God shed his grace on thee,
And crown thy good with brotherhood,
From sea to shining sea.
SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
STIMMY HONT ORCHESTRA
Gerald M. Carney, Conductor
Leo Kucinski, Guest Conductor
George Lawner, Guest Conductor
Theme Song
Irish Tune from County Derry ... arr. Percy Grainger
Carney, conducting
Symphony in C Major, #7 ... Franz Schubert
First movement, andante and allegro ma non troppo
Romeo and Juliette Second Suite ... Serge Prokofieff
Montagues and Capulets
Juliette
Friar Lawrence
Danse
Romeo and Juliette
Danse
Romeo at the Tomb of Juliette
Lawner conducting
Patrie, Dramatic Overture ... George Bizet
Caprice Espagnole ... Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov
Alborado
Variazioni
Alborado
Scena e canto gitano
Fandango asturiano
Kucinski conducting
SUNDAY EVENING CONCERT
7:00 p.m.
PROGRAM
BLUE BAND
Kenneth Bloomquist, Conductor
Robert Jager, Guest Conductor
Leo Kucinski, Guest Conductor
Theme Song
Irish Tune from County Derry ... arr. Percy Grainger
Flag of Stars ... Gordon Jacob
Lament ... Bill Davis
Chester ... William Schuman
Bloomquist, conducting
Third Suite ... Robert E. Jager
March
Waltz
Rondo
Jager, conducting
French Military Marching Song ... Sigmund Romberg Kucinski, conducting
Concert Band Russell L. Wiley, Conductor Robert Jager, Guest Conductor Leo Kucinski, Guest Conductor
Excerpts from "Manzoni
Requiem"... Verdi-Mollenhauer
Concerto for Saxophone... Frank Erickson
Siguid M. Rascher, Saxophone Soloist
Wiley, production
Wiley, conducting
Jager, conducting
Diamond Variations Robert Jager
Second Movement from
"Nordic Symphony" Howard Hanson
Rhapsody, "Legend of
Tsar Salton" Rimsky-Korsakov
Rimsky-Korsakov Kucinski, conducting
292
Tuesday, July 2, 1968
THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN
3
KUOK is off the air this summer
By Diane Wanek Journalism Camp Reporter
Journalism Camp Reporter.
Summer students living in dormitories have probably noticed that the student-operated radio station KUOK is not on the air in the summer.
Bruce Linton, director of the radio, TV and film department, explained, "We don't have any courses in the summer, nor
'Cavalcade—
Continued from page 1
The pressure to conform comes from the welfare agency when they insist that Murray make some changes or else his thirteen year old nephew, Nick, will be taken from him and placed in a foster home.
MANY LAUGHS are in store when Murray and Nick are visited by the social worker, Miss Markowitz and Mr. Amundson and also when Murray tries to back to work with Leo Herman through the help of his theatrical brother, Arnold."
"A Thousand Clowns' has very much to do with people trying to find a balance in their lives between security and responsibility, on the one hand, and freedom to be oneself on the other hand," stated Jack Brooking, summer repertory company director.
"Repertory concept' is the opposite of the star system and the emphasis is on the ensemble. The play becomes more important than a single star. An example of this is Kathy Milcher, playing the major role of Clotilde, which is very demanding because she's on stage almost all evening.
enough undergraduate students to operate it. Perhaps when the summer session grows in the number of students who are as interested in broadcasting as they are in putting out the newspaper, we could operate during the summer."
KUOK IS THE student training station of the radio, TV, and film department, on a parallel to what the Kansan is to journalism students. But, unlike the newspaper, which is supported partially by student fees, KUOK is supported entirely by advertising.
Because it is wired so that only people living in the residence halls can receive it, KUOK caters to the students living in dorms. It is basically a "rock" station, with rock, jazz, and contemporary music, and news reports. It carries no educational programs, and does not intend to expand in the educational line in the future. "Just as the Daily Kansan mirrors a small daily paper, KUOK mirrors a small radio station," Linton said.
KUOK ORIGINATED in 1950 in Green Hall. The station was housed in Flint Hall in 1953, and moved to its present location in the basement of Hoch in 1957. It has, since its origination, been a wire AC station, Linton said, and will continue to be. He also said that he hopes to bring it closer to Flint Hall, or even in Flint in the future, but that space now is a factor against such a move.
The radio station will resume broadcasting as soon as the fall semester begins, Linton said.
Classified ads get results
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There has to be a good reason why students and faculty alike continue year after year, to patronize us. It could be our warm, friendly atmosphere, fine food, "Old World" decor, or just the fact that we're different. Our four dining rooms, furnished in birch, cherry, walnut, and oak, are perfect for dinner dates, meetings, and even wedding receptions. But, whatever the reason may be, we're glad you've made us the most popular restaurant in Lawrence. We've been that way for 20 years.
If you're new in Lawrence, we'd like to get acquainted with you. If you already know about us, you will be glad to know that we're still here. We haven't changed!
PATRONIZE KANSAN ADVERTISERS
LIBUSE KRIZ
Phone VI 3-1151
1301-11 Mass. St.
Semi-annual
Shoe Sale
Discontinued Patterns
Women's—
Weejuns
Were to $15.95 Now $10.90
Trampeze loafers
Were to $11.95 Now $6.90
entire stock not included
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Summer Dresses and Sportswear Reduced 30% to 50%
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SMART CAMPUS FASHIONS
4
THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN
Tuesday, July 2, 1968
Barabba explains role of campaign computers
By Leslie Daniels Journalism Camp Reporter
The role of computers in today's political campaigns was the topic of Vincent P. Barabba, president of Datamatics, Inc., at Thursday afternoon's speech symposium at the Kansas Union.
Barabba said the firm for which he works is not a public relations firm, but one in which candidates can rely on for-accurate information concerning their campaign.
"Ethics in politics are not only practical but necessary. You have to present your case in a way to win. In order to make sure of this anticipated win, a candidate has to reach the people, and make sure his message reaches them. In order to do this, a candidate must have information on districts so he can find out where his support is, and then go to those districts. This is the purpose of Datamatics, Inc." Barabba stated.
"The computers used by Datamatics help isolate the same type of people into one group. This helps the candidate because he knows exactly where he stands in one particular group. It minimizes problem solvers and gives the candidate facts based on political judgments.
"In addition to isolating people into one group, the computers also help in telling a candidate how a certain precinct will vote. With this information, a candidate can
Chancellor sees desert and leaves
By Pat Ashford Journalism Camp Reporter
On July 15, 1874, S. H. Carpenter, a logic professor at the University of Wisconsin, was elected by the Regents of the University of Kansas as Chancellor.
He accepted and one hot day he came to Lawrence. The only cloud in the sky was a cloud of flying grasshoppers. He saw a bare hilltop to the southwest of town, where two buildings provided the only skyline.
At this he got on the next caravan and headed back to Wisconsin. He wrote the Regents and told them that he wished to be relieved of the appointment.
IN MARCH 1863 the Rev. R. W. Oliver was sent to Lawrence by the Episcopal Church. He was to take charge of the Lawrence parish and to conduct an investigation of the financial troubles resulting from churches' efforts to find a college.
The Regents were formed in 1865 after the act organizing the University was passed in 1864. The Rev. Mr. Oliver was elected by the Regents as their chairman and Chancellor of the University. The board included some of Kansas' outstanding citizens and their cooperation with the Rev. Mr. Oliver greatly helped the University.
ONE OF HIS first jobs was to spearhead the drive in Lawrence to raise money for the first building and the incentive to get the institution, which was $15,000 and 40 acres of land. This was accomplished.
AUTO
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TIRES AND GLASS
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concentrate on certain areas and not waste his time on an area that will vote against him anyway."
THE LONELY GENERATION AND THE SEARCH FOR TRUTH h...
Carlo Pietzner
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
Director Camphill Movement, USA (Sheltered Villages for the Mentally Retarded)
Loneliness and alienation are here seen in a new dimension, leading to a western understanding of Reincarnation and a Western Approach to Meditation. (Reprint of a Lecture)
Copies sent free of charge
Copies 500 free of charge
RUDOLF STEINER
INFORMATION CENTER
211 K Madison Avenue,
New York, N.Y. 10016
under-
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tonight-Dyche-7£9 75¢
HURRY! Only A Few Days Left!
FINAL REDUCTIONS
at the University Shop's
ANNUAL SUMMER SALE
One Large Group
SPORTCOATS
Now 1/3 Off
Reg. Now
39.50 26.95
45.00 29.95
55.00 37.95
DRESS SLACKS
One Group One Group
NOW NOW
½ 20%
PRICE OFF
One Large Group
SUITS
Now 1/3 Off
Reg. Now
60.00 39.95
75.00 49.95
Permanent Press
WASH PANTS
(One Large Group)
Reg. 7.00 to 9.00
Now 3.99
Entire Stock
SWIMWEAR
(Surfers, Boxers, Baggies & Warriors)
Reg. 5.00 to 7.50
Now ½ Price
Short Sleeve
DRESS SHIRTS
Group I Group II
Reg. 5.50 Reg. 6.50
to 8.00 to 9.50
All Now Now
3.98 $2 Off
One Large Group
KNITS
(Mostly Mock Turtlenecks)
Reg. 4.95 to 10.00
Now $1 Off
Two Groups
BERMUDAS
Reg. 5.00 to 10.95
Group I Group II
NOW NOW
½ PRICE OFF
Used
White Dinner JACKETS
(From our Rental Stock)
Now $9.95
and $14.95
Two Large Groups
SHOES
LOAFERS DRESS
Reg. 18.95 Reg. 27.95
Now Now
11.95 17.95
Permanent Press
SHORT SLEEVE
SPORTSHIRTS
Reg. 6.50 to 7.50
All One Price
3.98
Don’t Miss Our FAMOUS
"HALF PRICE TABLE"
Belts, Socks, Colognes, Ties
All ½ Price
All Sales Final No Refunds No Exchanges
AL HACK
the university shop
ON THE HILL
Tuesday, July 2, 1968
THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN
5
MARCO BELLINO
—Kansan Photo by Jan Maxwell
Franklyn Haiman
Franklyn Haimantalks on rhetoric
By Heather McNeil Journalism Camp Reporter
Franklyn S. Haiman, professor and chairman of the department of public address and group communications at Northwestern University, spoke Friday at the Forum Room as part of a symposium on issues in public communication.
Haiman's speech was entitled "Rhetoric of 1968—A Farewell to Rational Discourse." "My title is over-dramatized," Haiman said. "It was written at the time when LBJ and Nixon were the candidates for the presidency which was a pretty grim prospect."
HE SAID rational discourse is in more trouble now than it has been at any other time. "Today's rhetoric concerns hawks vs. doves, vis a vis war; black vs. white, vis a vis racism; drugs, sex, and student power."
Haiman divided the trends away from rational discourse into three sections:
- The emotionalization of verbal discourse
- Body rhetoric
- Body rhetoric
- Civil disobedience
"One doesn't need to remind his audience of the increase in body rhetoric," Haiman continued. "Instead of relying on facts and logic, the demonstrators rely on persuasiveness." Haiman specified the protest groups, marches and the lunch counter sit-ins.
Concerning the first, Hainam mentioned slogans, buttons, and "spicy four-letter words." "There is over-simplification, dramatization, and generalization. The students meet with demands and not requests. Rather than saying that one is mistaken he is a liar. There is more bluntness and escalation of emotionalization.
HAIMAN ADMITTED there is a thin line between civil disobedience that is an open defiance of the laws and between the body rhetoric. The sale of marijuana, draft dodging and school boycotts were examples of his idea of nonviolent disobedience of the laws.
Haiman continued with an evaluation of the effectiveness of the strategies as such:
- The new modes are effective in establishing solidarity and enthusiasm in the believers.
- The new modes alienate a hard core of opponents and backlash violence.
"The emotional ethics of the rhetoric of '68 must give way to rational discourse or the tension will disrupt the nation.
"The times are clearly out of joint. I can't be confident of the new rhetoric."
AT THE CONCLUSION of Hai-
man's speech, three critic-commentators reviewed his opinions. The critics were John G. Grumm, professor of political science; Warner Morse, department of philosophy, and Phillip Tompkins, visiting professor of speech.
Two of the criticisms were Haiman contradicted himself concerning his defenses of violence and that he omitted which laws to obey or disobey.
Bureau changes children's lives
By Janet Migdow Journalism Camp Reporter
Across the country the lives of thousands of children ages 6-21 are being improved by the KU Bureau of Child Research.
The Bureauau's projects include response tests with mentally retarded children, research into animal reactions, and Project Headstart.
Classified ads get results
Several of the Bureau's projects do not have their headquarters at KU. Most of the work done with mentally retarded children is done at Parsons.
NOW OPEN
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West End Hillcrest Bowling Lane
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DRESSES BAGS
SKIRTS BLOUSES
SLACKS COATS
TOPS
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Country House
At the Town Shop
839 Mass
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Country House
At the Town Shop 839 Maus
BOOKSTORE SUMMER HOURS
Beginning Monday, July 1, 8:30 to 4:30 thru Fri. Closed Sat.
Closed July 4 and 5
kansas union BOOKSTORE
6
THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN
Tuesday, July 2, 1968
New suits arouse attention
SUNDAY, MAY 18, 1972
JACK SMITH
THIS PHOTO IS COPIED FROM THE U.S. GOV.'S NEWSPAPER FOR THE WEEKEND
OF SUNDAY, MAY 18, 1972
JACK SMITH
THIS PHOTO IS COPIED FROM THE U.S. GOV.'S NEWSPAPER FOR THE WEEKEND
100
A KANSAN CLASSIFIED AD WILL WORK FOR YOU
THERE ARE A DOZEN GREAT SHOE NAMES, BUT IN SANDALS CAN YOU THINK OF MORE THAN ONE?
the suit and are worn mainly to and from the beach or pool.
BERNARDO
"Game" is a well-rounded sport of a sandal; sturdy enough to go stalking in, graceful for staying at home in. Small, medium, large or ex-large, in supple leather.
Brown, Navy Pewter, Yellow Thirteen Dollars
Bunny Black's Royal College Shop
Bunny Blacks Royal College Shop
By Joan Jarvis Journalism Camp Reporter
Hot weather calls for a cool pool! How many times have you wanted to go skiing, to the lake, or to beach parties, but could not find just the right suit? Never again.
Orange, yellow, green, pink; swim wear comes in every imaginable color. Bright yellow and white seem to be the favorite colors for those who wish to compliment their tan. Blonds seem to like the new green and brunettes are extremely fond of the orange. Black suits, however, have always attracted eyes from every direction.
daring than ever this year with bikini styles rousing the attention around pools all over the country.
One-piece suits have always been stylish and still are. But, girls are more
Many girls are particular about the material of their swimsuit. Terrycloth seems to be quite popular this year. It does not stretch out of shape and will not shrink. Cotton will probably stay number one on the material list. Little girl lace accents any suit for the innocent appearance. Just lately the artificial or synthetic leather suit seems to be quite flattering.
Of course every girl must have a swimsuit cover-up to make her summer outfit complete. Most cover-ups are made out of the same material as
gaslight tavern
Where the Action is!
Folk Singers . .
DALE & JUDY
VI 3-9869
Tuesday Night
8-10 p.m.
50c Admission: Applicable Towards Your First Pitcher of Beer.
1241 Oread
Campus WEST
1424 Crescent Rd.
Sale!
Dresses
Skirts
Pants
$2.99
Jackets
1/3 off
- Shorts
Baby doll p.j.'s
1/2 off
Pastel hose
Panty hose
1/4 off
Raincoats
$4.67
Varsity
THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065
THEATRE ... Te
Now Showing
John Wayne
David Janssen
"THE GREEN
BERETS"
Matinee—2:30
Eve.—7:15 & 9:50
Granada
THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5788
"The Fox"
with
Sandy Dennis, Kier,
and
Anne Haywood
Now Showing
Matinee—2:30
Eve. — 7:15 & 9:15
Sunset
DRIVE IN THEATRE • West on Highway 40
Saturday Nite
"COUNT DOWN"
"RED PLANET"
"TIME MACHINE"
Box Office Opens
7:00
Show Starts 10:00
Tuesday, July 2, 1968
THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN
7
Students pressured to excel in athletics
By Richard Viets
This fall, when high school and college students return to classes, the pressure will once again be on them to excel in sports.
High schoolers will be pressured by parents, friends and their high school faculty to strive for that glorious letter jacket.
A good education and preparation for later life is the purpose of high school, but how many high school athletes become professionals?
The athletes get all the recognition, not the good students. Not that athletics are bad, just not as important.
More intramural sports should be offered. Sports should be for everyone, not just the ones who are already fit.
The same largely applies to the college and university campuses in the U.S. Money that could be spent on professors and classrooms is spent instead on winning teams.
College administrators argue that winning teams bring large donations from proud alumni. That may well be true, but the problem of education vs. athletics remains unsolved.
The emphasis should be on education students as well as possible, not on producing winning teams.
Three Jayhawks get fellowships
Two Ph.D. degree candidates in the humanities and social sciences at the University of Kansas have been awarded Woodrow Wilson Dissertation Fellowships for 1968-69.
They are David G. Taylor, who is studying history; and Peter Feuerle, Lawrence, who is studying political science.
Each fellowship enables the recipient to devote full time to research and writing of his dissertation by providing a living stipend, a supplementary allowance to cover special research needs, the cost of research-related travel and manuscript-preparation expenses. The Graduate School concerned provides free tuition.
The program is supported by a grant from the Ford Foundation.
Classified ads get results
Watkins is KU haven for illness
By Barbara Kimble Journalism Camp Reporter
From sore throats and colds to major surgery and mental disturbances, Watkins Hospital is prepared to take care of almost any problem a person may have.
Located behind Watson Library, Watkins, under the direction of Raymond Schwegler, is equipped with general medicine, surgical facilities, a limited obstetrical and pediatric department, and an extensive mental health division. It has 42 beds and charges $15 a day.
ON STAFF AT the mental health department is a permanent psychiatrist, two clinical psychologists, a social worker, and three psychiatric residents. Because of no state grant, the department can only handle the diagnosis and treatment of illnesses and does not carry on research.
A radio communications unit will be installed in the hospital. It will be similar to those found in ambulances. This unit will enable Watkins to know the arrival time of all patients by ambulance, to receive reports on the conditions of those being transferred to another hospital, and to notify that hospital that the patient is coming.
Out they go at drastic reductions!
DON'T MISS OUR SPECTACULAR
CLEARANCE SALE
Would You Believe?? BACK TO SCHOOL FASHIONS COMING IN WE MUST MAKE ROOM
DRESSES... 1/3 & 1/2 OFF SUITS... SPORTSWEAR. ENSEMBLES..
the VILLAGE SET
the VILLAGE SET 922 Massachusetts
SUMMER SANDALS SALE PRICED
RADIANCE RADIANCE RADIANCE
Many Patterns in Wanted Colors
Were To $10.00
NOW . . . $4.90 5.90 6.90
M'Coy's
SHOES
WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services,
and employment advertised in the
handbook should be referred to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin.
FOR SALE
Western Civilization Notes
Ninth Edition. Comprehensive analysis of this year's reading list. Mimeographed and bound for $4.50. Jayhawk Reference Publications. Call VI 2-0113 for free delivery. 8-2
TYPEWRITERS- New & used office and portables, manual & electric. Olympia portables, SCM and small electrics. Typewriter rental and servicing. Copy office or office furniture. Lawrence Typewriter, 700 Mass., VI 3-3644.
Week-end flower special $1.00. Offer good Thursday thru Saturday at Alexander's Flowers and Gifts, 826 Iowa. Phone VI2-1320. 8-2
PSYCHEDELIC LIGHTING MANUAL!
Make your own light machines,
strobes, color organs, etc. with easy
diagrams and instructions. Send $2.00
to Lightways. 713B Pine Street. Philadelphia, Pa. 19106.
8-2
Carlisle's 13th street auction sale every Saturday night at 7:00. We buy Thursday and Saturday 8:00 A.M. to 5:30 P.M. 1301 Delaware. V1-348-481.
515 Michigan St. St. B-B-Q — outdoor pit, rib slab to go $3; $25. Bibr order,
$1.50 Rib sandwich, 85; $1.25 chicken,
$1.15 Brisket sandwich, 70; Hours,
11 a.m. to 11 p.m. Closed Sunday and Tuesday. Phone II 9-2510. 8-2
PRIMARILY LEATHER—custom made
clothes. 812 Mass. VI. 2-B6464. 7-2
clothes. 812 Mass. VI. 2-B6464. 7-2
1964 Yamaha 250cc with oversized tires, automatic starter and new engine. $340.00 Call Mark. Room 830. VI 2-7000. Helmet included. 7-2
WATCHBANDS — Primarily Leather custom makes watchbands to fit your wrist and watch. Sandals to fit your feet. 812 Mass. VI 2-8664. 7-2
Exclusive Representative of L. G. Balfour Co. For the finest in Fraternity Jewelry
- Badges Guards
- Novelties
- Lavaliers
- Sportswear
- Paddles
- Cups
- Favors
- Rings
- Mugs
- Trophies
- Awards
411 W. 14th VI 3-1571
New York Cleaners
for the best in:
● Dry Cleaning
● Alterations
● Reweaving
For the best in;
926 Mass. VI 3-0501
Gift Box
Andrews Gifts
Malls Shopping Center
VI 2-1523
Plenty of Free Parking
EVERYONE SAYS Everything in the Pet Field And Free Parking At Grents Drive-In Pet Center Experienced Dependable Personal service 18 Conn., Law, Pet Ph. VI 3-292
1967 Suzuki 80, 1,000 miles -Engine is
10% perfect condition. 125 Miles Per
hour -Excellent transportation. Very
low price. Must sell before leave.
VII 2-4133. 7-2
CREATIVE PHOTOGRAPHY — unusual portraits, interesting group photographs 11x14 inch enlargements. Great for gifts. Call Peter Dupe, RI 2-4133. 7-9
Experienced teacher will tutor in his
own room or after 5:00 during week
7-9
For sale—Philco TV, almost new; Webcor tape recorder, stereo-mike. VI 2-2714. 7-19
SEE AND COMPARE! New Edition of 'New Analysis of Western Civilization' a student edition; spine, first edition sold to Abington Bookstore, 1237 Oread. 8-2
TV-Stereo console. Danish modern hand-humbled walnut cabinet, AM-FM, 27" screen, UHF and VHF. Excellent condition. VI 2-1452. 7-19
FOR RENT
COLLEGE HILL MANOR renting for fall. Quiet one and two bedroom luxury apartments, furnished or unfinished. Walk to KU. On bus line. Central heating and air. Laundry facilities. Glen or Kay Drake VI 3-8220.
3 or 4 bedroom apartment 2 blocks from campus. All utilities paid. No limit on number of occupants. No warranty rules. Call VI 7-2253 or VII 7-3974
For summer only—Cool ground floor
furnished 2 b d room apartment. Close
to campus, 1011 Indiana. Call VI 2-
4475. 7-2
Sleeping rooms with kitchen privilege for male students. Borders campus and near downtown. VI 3-5767. 8-2
2 a/e furnished 1st floor apartments,
3 campus and near downtown,
9 I-3767
2 comfortable private rooms with good family meals for summer in large quiet home. Also reservation and deposit for fall term for 3 rooms being taken now. Short walk to campus. Call VI 2-8960. 7-16
Unfurnished 2 bedroom apt. 1st floor.
Unfurnished 3rd floor. S. Epm.
VI 2-6163 after 5 p.m.
7-19
For rent to graduate or mature undergraduate. Extra nice bachelor or studio apartments $1/block from law school, nicely furnished utilities paid, parking King Room for appointment conditions. For appointment call VI 3-8534. 8-2
NOTICE
Worried about the draft? For draft counselling contact the Lawrence courtroom 107 W. 9th St. VI 2-7932 or Wednesdays at 1:30 p.m. in the Union.
Loans to seniors and graduate stu-
lemen expenses. Call 8-224-
-VI 3-8074. Mail M-224-
1965 Rambler Convertible. Good condition. Fully equipped and will contain an office. Also room for apartment and rooms for men. Cooking facilities, 1304 Mass. 7-16
Something different for that special guy in the service. Popcorn, Cheesecorn, Caramel corn, Cinnamon corn, Chocolate corn or overseas. Special air tight containers guarantee freshness. Also popcorn balls and home-mads Chocolate pecan popcorn. Almond-flavored Popcorn and Ice Cream Shop. Malls container. VI. 3-7175. 7-16
SERVICES OFFERED
MOTORCYCLE INSURANCE—be safe with a low-rated policy and save money when those unsuspected accidents occur. CASES IN USURANCE DERWITTERS INSURANCE COMPANY, 2233 Ridge Court. Office—III 2-3170; home-VI 3-4798. 8-2
Need cash for those 2nd semester exp-
penses? We make personal loans to
Juniors, Seniors, and Grad students.
Contact Mr. Hamilton, Beneficial Fi-
nance Company, 725 Mass., phone VI
3-8074.
TYPING
Theses, term papers, miscellaneous works typed on pica electric typewriter, prompt and guaranteed. Mrs. Troxl. VI 2-1440. 8-2
Multilingual Secretarial Service. To have articles, reports, term papers, theses and dissertations typed in Foreign Languages or English. Call VI 2-6516. The Multilingual Secretarial Service. 7-16
Thesis, term papers, themes typed and/or edited by K.U. graduate (Eng-ing) education). SCM enterprise typewriter. Located close to Oliver Hall. VI 3:2873. 8-2
WANTED
Co-ed wanit roommate(s) and apart-
ment(s) per semester. Call VI 3-
7-16 after 5 p.m.
8
THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN
Tuesday, July 2, 1968
[Picture of a classroom scene with four students seated on a bench facing a teacher standing at the front of the class. The teacher is holding a globe and addressing the students. In the background, there are bulletin boards with papers attached.]
Section chief for geologic research in the state geological survey, Daniel F. Merriam has begun serving as chairman of the membership committee of the classification society, and has finished his work as a member of a committee on constitution and bylaws for the new International Association of Mathematical Geologists.
Geologist serves on new group
The latter assignment puts Merriam to work with men of seven other countries.
— Kansan Photo by Richard Viets
图
TRAVEL TIME
LET
MAUPINTOUR TRAVEL SERVICE
Make Your
SUMMER TRAVEL Reservation Now!
Malls Shopping Center VI 3-1211
Camp rules are discussed
For
Complete
Motorcycle
Insurance
Gene Doane
Agency
824 Mass. St.
VI 3-3012
Closing hours for Band Campers will be extended until after the Jaycee's fireworks display Thursday night, Russell L. Wiley, camp director, said at a press conference last week.
The campers will be admitted to the display for 25 cents, but Wiley said the hillside near the Campanile was just as good viewing point.
The Camp Council, which met for the second time Monday night, is the "sounding board" of the camp. From the Council meetings the camp supervisors gain ideas which many times are passed into regulations.
THE DRESS code of the camp is in conforming with the fashions of most high schoolers, Wiley said. A few campers have been told to shave and cut their hair, but the regulations are similar to the way most of them dress.
There is a possibility some of the dances this year will have a live band. He said that most of the camp's $700,000 budget has been spent and he will not ask the campers to pay for a band. The counselors under the leadership of Pat Taylor are forming a band and so are a few campers.
Closing hour and room check will be continued as they are now. Wiley said that 16 hours are sufficient to get everything done and that an extra hour would be play time. Room inspections are held each day so that the campers may live in a nice atmosphere. Wiley said it is much nicer to come back to a clean room than a pig pen.
Wiley stepped down from the post as director of the KU bands in May to devote full time to the camp. He said that next year he plans to go around and light a few more fires to keep the camp growing and expanding.
NOTICE
SALE
Summer Clearance Begins
SUITS ... SPORT COATS DRESS SHIRTS TIES ... SLACKS ...
Entire Stock, As Low As $42.50
All Styles, Most At Least 20% Off
Very Large Group, All At $5.00
Large Group At $ \frac{1}{2} $ Off Price
Group Of Solids Along With Most Of Our Popular Pattern Slacks, Your Choice At $10.00
SPORT SHIRTS ...
LEVIS ...
Many Durable Press, All At Only $4.00
KNIT SHIRTS ...
Press-Free Hopsacks Now Reduced To Only $4.00
Great Selection Of Mock-Turtles And Others Priced $4.00 To $6.00
MISTER
GUY
TRADITIONAL CLOTHIE
920 MASSACHUSETTS
KU
THE SUMMER SESSION kansan
A student newspaper serving KU
77th Year, No.8
WEATHER HOT
See Weather Below
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Tuesday, July 9, 1968
Strong Hall officials play 'musical chairs'
PETER E. HOLMER
KEITH NITCHER
In a shift of positions last week a new University comptroller was hired and five other KU personnel moved to higher positions.
William P. Hancock, director of data processing at FS Services, Inc., Bloomington, Ill., was appointed controller.
In preparation for Raymond Nichols' retirement from vice chancellor for finance, Keith L. Nitcher, present comptroller was promoted to deputy vice chancellor under Nichols.
IN ANOTHER major move, James K. Hitt, now director of admissions and registrar is moving to the newly-created post of director of records and system development.
William L. Kelly, associate registrar assumes Hitt's responsibility as registrar and Max F. Fuller, now associate director of admissions will take over this part of Hitt's former job. The office of admissions will become separate from that of the registrar's and will come under William M. Balfour, dean of student affairs.
THE KU comptroller is in charge of receiving, disbursing, and accounting for all university funds at the Lawrence campus.
Hancock was born in Salem, Ill., in 1936 and earned the bachelor of science in accountancy from Illinois University in 1958. He
earned the certified public accountant designation in 1963.
After graduation, Hancock worked for two years as accountant and auditor for Arthur Anderson and Co., national public accounting firm, in Chicago. In 1960 he joined FS Services as internal auditor and was promoted six months later to systems and procedures manager where he developed new billing and inventory systems. He was promoted to his present position in 1963.
Nichols, who has served the university as chief financial officer for 39 years, will reach the administrative retirement age of 65 during the coming fiscal year. He will continue after July 1, 1969, as executive secretary, a title he retained after he had been
NICHOLS WILL retire from that position on June 30,1969, at which time Nitcher will assume principal responsibility for the university's fiscal and business affairs, Surface said.
A. J.
Avery says disorder is biggest U.S. threat
By Rees Roderick Journalism Camp Reporter
named vice chancellor for finance in 1962.
JAMES K. HITT
NITCHER WAS born at Pomona in 1921, attended Kansas State Teacher's College, Emporia, from 1939-41, and earned the bachelor's degree from Washburn University in 1948. He became a certified public accountant in 1954. He
"My greatest concern, and the biggest challenge that faces the United States since the Civil War, is to save America from racial disorder, crime and violence, disrespect and especially poverty," said William B. Avery, candidate for Republican nomination to the U.S. Senate.
Unemployment causes many of
HE SAID Kansans are concerned about three things: Vietnam, the economy and internal problems. With Vietnam peace talks now in session, Avery said, the greatest emphasis is on internal affairs, particularly poverty.
Twenty-five people gathered in the Curry Room at the Kansas Union, June 27, to hear the former governor of Kansas and congressman. Avery introduced himself to each of the guests and then made a short speech.
served from 1942 to 1946 in the U.S. Army, with service overseas with the Sixth Infantry Division in the Philippines and in Korea. In 1941-42, he served as principal and 7th and 8th grade teacher at Lebo Grade School.
In 1949 Nitcher became assistant treasurer at Washburn University. In 1952 he was employed as an accountant by Homer J. Hennling and Company of Ottawa and from 1954 to 1956 was chief accountant for the accounts and reports division of the State Department of Administration.
America's problems, Avery said. The "hard - core" unemployed, who have made welfare a way of life, need the most help, he said. These citizens are third generation welfare recipients who rely heavily on government money because they have been raised to depend upon it.
In 1956 Nitcher was named the first comptroller of the university, in charge of receiving, disbursing, and accounting for all university funds at the Lawrence campus.
"IT IS UNFLAIR to write off the unemployed as non-workers. The hard-core unemployed know no other way of life, and this is the politicians' and society's fault. But, if we don't do something about this vicious cycle, we'll have a fourth generation that has lost its ambition to achieve a better standard of living," the former governor said.
The reorganization will provide direction to the new and growing area of information gathering and analysis created by the capabilities of data processing and the university's Computation Center.
Avery suggested several ways of solving the welfare problem. He called for increased emphasis on education and stability of home life of children of unemployed Americans.
See AVERY on page 3
HITT HAS been registrar and director of admissions at KU since 1940 except for four years' service as an artillery officer during World War II. A Summerfield scholar during his undergraduate days, he holds A.B. and M.A. degrees, both in mathematics, from KU. He taught at Dodge City Junior College and Wichita University from 1936 until 1940, when he returned to KU as assistant registrar.
Hitt has served in several national offices for the American Association of Collegiate Registrars and Admissions Offices, including the presidency.
Kelly became assistant registrar at KU in 1962. A native of McCook, Neb., he holds two degrees from Nebraska University, the A.B. in 1946 and the M.A. in 1948, with majors in music education. He served in the Army in 1941-45.
KELLY TAUGHT music for ten years in the high school and junior college at McCook.
By Claudia Peebles Journalism Camp Reporter
East Asia Studies gets new director
Crowded into a tiny cubbyhole and dwarfed by towering shelves of books, Grant Goodman discussed his newly appointed position as director of East Asian Studies.
"I guess you'd say my academic career is a realization of my childhood dreams," Goodman said. Goodman early acquired an interest in Asian countries and pursued this interest in college and graduate work. He began teaching Japanese history here six years ago and became director of the program because of the wish
KU faculty constantly roll press
No use trying to guess, but it takes a lot of paper to spread the ideas of the University of Kansas faculty in just one year.
A summary of faculty reports for 1966-67 shows 2,432 "publications" by members of 40 KU departments and schools:
There were 1,596 articles, but perhaps even more impressive were the 101 books credited to KU staffers.
The faculty contributed 245 book reviews and filled 126 editorial positions on periodicals.
KU TEACHERS are more bookish than poetic. Only 31 poems were published that year, most being by one professor in Slavic languages and literatures.
The artists and musicians, for whom exhibitions and performances are akin to "publications," were credited with 333.
In part because medicine provides so much clinical data, faculty of the School of Medicine easily led with 772 articles, the next being engineering with 89.
of Thomas R. Smith, former director, to devote full time to geography.
GOODMAN HAS concentrated most of his studies on Japan and Japanese history. This summer, because of sponsorship by the American Council of Learned Societies and a grant from KU, Goodman will be doing research into the archives of the Japanese Foreign Ministry for studies of Pan-Asianism, Japanese leadership of the Asian countries free from western influences.
Describing and explaining the many travel posters hung among the books in his office, Goodman stressed the importance of foreign travels and studies.
"We believe KU has the best East Asian program between Chicago and the West coast," he said. He attributed this to the frequent travels of the professors who teach the courses.
THE ONLY way to convey the feelings, the atmosphere, and the changing culture of a country to the students is to approach the nation with a "hopefully" academically trained mind and absorb the culture, Goodman said.
He termed himself "lucky" in this respect because of the many grants he has received from KU. Through these grants Goodman has been able to spend a portion of the year in an Asian country for the past five consecutive years. "That's what makes working for a university nice," Goodman said.
WEATHER
Clear to partly cloudy skies with a little warmer temperatures are forecast by the United States Weather Bureau. The highs today should nudge the century mark and the lows tonight in the 70s.
—Kansan photo by Steve Osborn
GUBERNATORIAL ASPIRANT LEADS OFF FIREWORKS
Lt. Gov. John Crutcher, with a friend, looks over the 15,000 people at the Lawrence Jayees Fireworks display Thursday before he spoke on patriotism. The display was the best attended ever in Memorial Stadium.
2
THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN
Tuesday, July 9, 1968
TV violence is here... ...and will not go away
HOLLYWOOD — (UPI)— The abolition of violence in popular entertainment such as television is hardly likely because, as Mae West once put it: "Virtue has its own reward but has no sale at the boxoffice." Well, in many cases, anyway.
But the abolition of wholesale brutality and unmotivated sadism is only the negative aspect of the anti-violence argument. The big question, of course, is: what do you use instead? Conflict, without doubt, is the essence of drama.
Yet there are many kinds of conflict, most of them more dramatic than the use of gums and fists. And just as important as the anti-violence crusade is the new need for network officials to take a positive step in the entertainment area:
To allow, instead of the standard cynicism criticized by Carl Sandburg, genuine feelings of optimism, pleasure, anger and style when writers want to express them—which is often.
For this goes to the roots of an attitude toward the nation itself. Where optimism and pleasure not the laugh-track kind and style are discouraged, the nation gets a very mean, nasty, distorted and cynical view of itself. One needn't
be a Pollyanna—but there are beautiful things happening too, and significant things, and there are real people and matters worth exploring.
The novelist Thomas Wolfe once wrote: "It is good to eat, to drink, to sleep, to fish, to swim, to run, to travel to strange cities, to ride on land, sea and in the air upon great machines, to love a woman, to make a beautiful thing."
This is the expression of health, exuberance, of juices joyously flowing in a man who loved life. When is the last time you remember getting that kind of feeling from watching a television entertainment program? Who wouldn't rather be lifted up than put down and thrown into the gutter again?
In "The Decline of Pleasure," Walter Kerr wrote: "We are all of us compelled to read for profit, party for contacts, lunch for contracts, bowl for unity, drive for mileage, gamble for charity, go out for the evening for the greater glory of the municipality, and stay home for the weekend to rebuild the house."
Where, indeed, is the pleasure?
Well, there is little doubt that it
is often hard to come by in the very upright circles of most of middle-class, suburban America. And if that is the case, then television might do well to seek it out in other age groups and other social levels throughout the land—using writers and producers and directors from these places. Surely we cannot be satisfied with brute force and cynicism as our chief outlets.
Enthusiasm about life is beautifully contagious. I remember, years ago, reading these words about New York by H. L. Mencken: "If only as spectacle, the city is superb. It has a glitter like that of the Constantinople of the Cemmeni. It rears with life like the Bagdad of the Sassanians." It was already living in New York when I read those words, yet it made me look at the city with freshness and a new sense of thrilling adventure.
Not long ago, there was a young lady here in Hollywood who trained hard to become a professional dancer. One day she went blind. But despite her affliction, she still loved to dance.
Kansan Review You can't take...
KU Summer Theatre Repretory '68 opened its season Tuesday presenting, "You Can't Take It With You," before a S.R.O. audience. This Moss Hart-George S. Kaufman comedy is the first of four plays to be presented this summer as "a cavalcade of comedy." It was an excellent beginning.
The director, Mike Pedetti, is to be commended for excellent blocking. This is difficult to achieve in the "in-the-round" setting used. The audience is placed on stage with the performers which gives a feeling of intimacy that greatly compliments this play. One gets the feeling you are in the middle of the Vanderhof madness instead of merely watching.
Connie Stachowiak as Penny, the hyperthyroid mother is adequate. Her facial expressions are a bit to repetitive. She is most convincing during the second act.
Holmes Osborne, as Grandpa Vanderhof is a geriatric genie. He scowls, growls and cavorts through this part with arthritic abandon. Osborne does have a tendency on occasion to sound similar to Hal Holbrook as Mark Twain. This does not in any way hurt his performance. Grandpa makes you believe people can still avoid income tax.
Adding near professional talent are Bill Meikle as Mr. Sycamore, Bill Boyd and Richard Gilliland as DePinna and Donald. They have learned well the fine art of well planned business and comedy timing. Evie Masterson and Ronald Shull handle the roles of Alice and Tony quite well. It is difficult to carry straight parts in the midst of such characters.
The costumes are appropriate with the exception of Ron's first appearance in a white Nehru jacket complete with necklace. It is a bit too much.
The overall production is good. The few rough spots should disappear with experience.
"You Can't Take It With You," will be presented again July 17 and 23. Go see it.
—Jane Feuerborn
THE SUMMER SESSION kansan
Kansan Telephone Numbers Newsroom—UN 4-3464 Business Office—UN 4-4358
The Summer Session Kansan, student newspaper at the University of Kansas, is represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 Street, New York, N.Y. 10022. Mail subscription rates: $6 a semester or $10 a year. Published and distributed in Kansas, every Tuesday and Friday for the duration of the Summer Session, externally accommodations, goods, and employment advertised in the Summer Session Kansan are offered to students without regard to color, creed, or national origin.
The opinions expressed in the editorial columns are those of the editorial staff of the newspaper. Guest editorial views are not necessarily the same as opinions expressed in the Summer Session Kansan are not necessarily those of the University of Kansas Administration or the Kansas State Board of Regents.
Business Manager
Advisor
Office Manager
Managing Editor
Photography
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Mel Adams
Helen Owens
Robert Stevens
Bill Seymour
Dr. Larry Day
Executive Staff
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REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY National Educational Advertising Services A DIVISION OF READER'S DIGEST SALES & SERVICES, INC. 360 Lexington Ave., New York, N.Y. 10017
Torch
Each night, using a cane to guide her, she would leave her little apartment near Sunset Boulevard, walk down the brightly lighted thoroughfare to a place that offered music and sit at a table until someone asked her to dance. And each night, tapping her cane, she would walk all the way home. It was about a mile, but she had no money for a car or a taxi.
One night, no one asked her to dance. And no one at the place ever saw her again. People there imagined terrible things—murder, assault. But it was nothing like that. She simply felt the place had helped her restore confidence in herself, and now she was moving on. She went home to the Midwest and married the boy who waited for her confidence to come back. No guns, no fists—but conflict, drama, courage, beauty and a reverence for the things life can bring.
BONITS
X-47
" BUT SHE JUST DIDN'T LOOK LIKE A PUYG ED.
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS.
New Books
A truly light touch marks several of the new books for summer. The Gothic damsel in distress, the western, the mystery, the thriller. Here are some:
" BUT SHE JUST DIDN'T LOOK LIKE A PHYS ED MAJOR TO ME."
Jane Aiken Hodge's WATCH THE WALL, MY DARLING Crest, 75 cents)—Political and romantic intrigue in old England, foggy marshes, carriages, masked strangers, and a kind of dopey heroine.
Phyllis A. Whitney's SILVER HILL (Crest, 75 cents)—The adventures of Malinda Rice at Silverhill, a Gothic castle full of horrifying memories and rather gruesome evidences of the present.
John Gardner's UNDERSTRIKE (Crest, 50 cents) — A new adventure of the improbable Boysie Oakes, the poor man's James Bond.
Ed McBain's KING'S RANSOM (Dell, 50 cents) — Detective Steve Carella in a new 87th Precinct mystery (and a good one, as usual).
Frank Kane's STACKED DECK (Dell, 50 cents)—Adventures of Johnny Liddell—blackmailers and dames and guns.
George Garland's BUGLES AND BRASS (Dell, 50 cents) — Arizona! The cavalry! Apaches! Brave men!
The devil may come
WASHINGTON—(UPI)—When Hanoi's negotiators in Paris said they would meet with "anyone except the devil," they betrayed considerable ignorance of U.S. presidential candidates.
Either that or they were planning to give up having tea with Averell Harriman anyway. There couldn't be time hereafter for both. Today we consider some of the visits they might expect.
Enter Eugene McCarthy, accompanied by a dozen well-scrubbed, bright-faced teenagers.
"How do you do, gentlemen," McCarthy nods. "I have journeyed these many miles to acquire your point of view on the differences which divide us and the dreams which unite us. Let me say I am pleased faint smile here that you did not invite the devil: He's far too busy signing bills in the White House.
"I share Pericles' visions of world brotherhood and political reform. I go further: I propose a world of scholars, governed by poets; our enmities forgotten in a new golden age of love and youth and beauty."
One Hanoi negotiator asked the other: "Did we invite Pericles?"
Enter Nelson Rockefeller, with a phalanx of ad writers and television producers.
"Hi, fellows," Rockefeller says, and shakes hands all around. "You fellows know my views on the war because everyone knows my views on the war which is more than anyone can say for my opponent.
"Feel the South Vietnamese should be fighting you instead of our fighting you. You fellows know we can't just quit fighting. But I'm sure we can work something out."
One Hanoi negotiator asks the other: "Who's his opponent?"
"Hello, men," he beams. "First, let me say that as vice president I am a member of the team; as president I will be my own boss.
Enter Hubert Humphrey, accompanied by Democratic party leaders, county chairmen and Lester Maddox.
"Let me make clear that my country is not divided about this war—it is a united, joyous country which is willing to shoulder its responsibilities and knows there may be some bad moments along the way. But we love change and welcome change and desire change and I am the disciple of change."
One negotiator asks the other: "Is team the same as troika?" Enter Richard Nixon, with makeup men, speech writers and staff psychologists.
"Negotiators, and my respected opponents," Nixon begins. "I think we should end the war and win the peace. You may interpret this any way you please, since I do not consider it seemly or appropriate for a candidate to discuss war policies while delicate negotiations are underway."
One negotiator turns to the other and shrugs.
One negotiator turns to the other and shrugs. Enter George Wallace, accompanied by 17 bodyguards, and a hillbilly band.
"Now you look here, boys," Wallace barks. "You all better straighten up or else when I'm president I am going to turn loose the full power of the mightiest military machine ever known to man on that backward little old country of yours."
Wallace leaves, and before Harold Stassen can even get there the Hanoi negotiators make an objection to the World Court.
"We said we'd talk to anyone except the devil," they protest, "but the perfidious Americans sent him anyway."
"Which one was he?" the court asks.
"There's a difference of opinion among us on that," the negotiators reply, "but we are sure as hell he was here."
Tuesday, July 9, 1968
THE SUMMER ISSESSION KANSAN
3
P
ALBERT GERKEN
Albert Gerken pounds hard to master KU carillon bells
By Linda Ehrlich
Journalism Camp Reporter KU's hills are alive with the sound of music.
Chimes from the 53 bells in the World War II Memorial Campanile fill the air each Wednesday night and Sunday afternoon as Albert C. Gerken, assistant professor of music theory, performs on the intricate carillon. Captivating all those nearby, Gerken brings to life works by such composers as Beethoven, Bach, Haydn and Handel.
ORIGINATED IN THE Netherlands in the 1500s, this instrument uses wooden baton-like keys which are struck with the side of the closed hand. The clapper of the bells varies in loudness as it responds to the touch of the carilonneur on the clavier (keyboard) or on the 27 pedals.
"I try to prepare musically sophisticated programs with enough variety in tempo and mood to say something to various types of people," this quiet-mannered man explained. Besides the original carillon pieces, Gerken uses eighteenth and twentieth century works and some simple folk songs. He claims that the compositions for the carillon by former KU pianist Roy Johnson are the hardest to master.
"These bells, made in Loughborough, England, are one of the finest sets in the world," Gerken said. Varying from seven tons to ten pounds, each was placed in the 120-foot Mt. Oread monument in honor of an individual or group.
Avery-
Avery answered questions from the audience on subjects ranging from foreign aid to gun restrictions. He said he did not approve of Abe Fortas' appointment as chief justice of the Supreme Court.
Continued from page 1
In conclusion, Avery explained his "Let's Save America First," platform. The platform contains four planks:
- If peace negotiations fail, the U.S. must devote its full strength to winning the Vietnam War.
- The Foreign Aid Program must be stopped.
- The Space Administration appropriations should be reduced by 50 per cent.
- Savings from the reductions in foreign aid and space should be used for jobs and training.
piano. He is now a member of the Guild of Carillonneurs in North America and editor of their official publication, "The Bulletin." Gerken recently played a formal recital at their congress at the Bok Singing Tower in Lake Wales, Fla.
Beneath the small room in the bell tower housing the keyboard is a practice studio which uses tuned metal bars instead of bells. Gerken gives lessons in this area during the year.
WHEN HIS CURIOUSITY was aroused while attending the University of Michigan in 1962, Gerken added carillon study to his previous work with the organ and
"I'm interested in music as an art form," Gerken pointed out. Calling most popular music "left overs," he said that classical music, his favorite, has more significance and meaning. He feels that university campuses are one of the few places today which can be instrumental in exposing the public to this kind of music.
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JoAnn G. Nelson files for Demo 40th nomination
Mrs. JoAnn Gresham Nelson, 23 and a senior in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, has filed for the Democratic candidacy for the House of Representatives from the 40th district.
Mrs. Nelson filed for office "when it became apparent that the major problems facing the state and the community were not going to be solved adequately by the present Republican dominated legislature."
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---
THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN
Tuesday, July 9, 1968
Archaic code cripples U.S.
By Richard Viets Journalism Camp Reporter
Journalism Camp Reporter The Olympic Games in Mexico City will find the United States competing with amateurs against the paid "amateurs" of countries such as the Soviet Union.
In these times, an olympic medal is more than an individual's lifetime goal, it promotes the international prestige of the winner's country.
Because of the importance of winning, countries like Russia are not following the less efficient amateur code. Instead, they provide their athletes with enough money so they can devote most of their time to athletics.
There is really nothing wrong with this if it advances athletic accomplishments, no matter what the motives.
Instead of aiding America's athletes, by providing some financial aid, the government allows other countries to have an unfair advantage over our athletes.
The idea of competing in a sport just for the love of it is a nice sentiment, but in this day and age when athletes are objects of international manipulation, efficiency is more important than idealism.
In ancient Greece, the reason for the games was much the same as today. The athletes were professional; they were paid for winning by their city-state.
True, when the games were revived in the nineteenth century, the amateur code was introduced But the reason for the games was to promote understanding between the armed forces of the world. Today it is different.
There shouldn't be great salaries given to our athletes, but much could be accomplished by giving financial aid to those who need it.
Even more important would be the addition of professionals to the ranks of the olympians.
There are many pros who
Boys' Intramurals
SLOW PITCH RESULTS June 28
Economics 19, Delta Functions 13.
Chem Gem 20, Radiation Institute 4.
Emergent Nations 15, Radiation Biophysics 11.
July 1
Chem Tech 28, Impossible Intruders 1.
Scrocs 21, Delta Functions 11.
Economics 12, Pharmacy 12.
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Chem Tech 1 3 0 0 1000
Economics 2 2 0 ½¹ 1000
Emergent Nations 2 2 0 ½² 1000
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Radiation Institute 7 0 2 2½⁴ 1000
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CONTROVERSIAL CAR
INDIANAPOLIS—(UPI) The STP-turbocar made only one run in Indianapolis 500 competition but the controversial race car established 17 track records in its 1967 appearance.
are capable of bringing home medals. Just as Red Grange won a gold medal, which was later taken away from him, other professionals could be winners also.
Any financial aid would necessarily not be given to high school or college students to eliminate the possibility of schools using salaries as recruiting aids.
It is of course too late for anything to be done for the Mexico Olympics, but now is the time to change the circumstances for the 1972 games.
8 week course
Principals are taught
By Brenda Jones
Journalism Camp Reporter
KU is teaching 30 elementary school principals to read.
Headed by Donald Richardson, assistant professor of education, elementary school administrators from Oklahoma, Kansas, Missouri, Colorado, Arkansas, Wyoming and Iowa are attending the second annual eight-week reading institute at KU.
"The purpose of the institute is to give greater insight into reading, and the principals can bring about great changes in the field of reading because of the influence they have over the teachers
and the methods used in their schools," Richardson said.
THE COURSES feature machines such as the pacesetter that is used to help a child speed up his reading skills, but most sessions are divided into grade levels. each using a different method.
The kindergarten level is using the Denver Study Method which consists of materials that have undergone extensive study since 1960 at Denver.
The first grade level is the only one using two methods: the Initial Teaching Alphabet, which has undergone extensive research in England and America, and the
linguistic, which is the study of language. Experts have recognized the English language is inconsistent in phonics and endeavors to teach children to read by starting with reoccurant vowel and consonant sounds.
A LANGUAGE experiment approach is being used on the second grade level with activities concerning both written and spoken communications.
Richardson said, "Reading is not a cut and dried subject. These approaches and the needs of children in different situations can be matched for the best possible results."
SUA BUS TRIP
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Bus leaves from front of Kansas Union 1:00 p.m. Friday, July 16 and returns by 5:00 p.m.
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SUA BUS TRIP
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Return of the MAGICAL TOUR
Bus leaves from front of Kansas Union 1:00 p.m. Friday, July 16 and returns by 5:00 p.m.
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IN SUA OFFICE, KANSAS UNION
KU Summer Theatre Rep. '68
presents
A
CAVALCADE OF COMEDY
University of Kansas—Murphy Hall
"YOU CAN'T TAKE IT WITH YOU"
by Kaufman and Hart
July 17, 23
"In - The - Round" Main Stage
"ONCE UPON A MATTRESS"
Music by Mary Rodgers and Book by Jay Thompson July 10, 12, 19, 24 "In - The - Round" Main Stage
"LA PARISIENNE"
by Henri Becque
July 16, 20, 26
Experimental Theatre
"A THOUSAND CLOWNS"
by Herb Gardner
July 11, 13, 18, 25, 27
Experimental Theatre
KU STUDENTS .75 PLUS CURRENT CERTIFICATE OF REGISTRATION
Tuesday, July 9, 1968
THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN
5
Oread theatre troupers return from Iron Curtain
The iron curtain is a real physical barrier in Eastern Europe, reports Tom Rea, assistant director of the Theatre, but not to personal relationships.
He and six other Jayhawkers have just returned from a two-month theatrical tour of Zagreb, Ljubljana and Belgrade in Yugoslavia; Bucharest, Rumania; and Prague, Brno and Bratislava, Czechoslovakia.
Warsaw, Poland, was struck from the original itinerary because Polish officials refused to issue visas for entering the country.
A SURPRISE in Yugoslavia, a drama student's delight, offset this disappointment. The KU troupe was invited on set to visit with Burt Lancaster and other movie notables filming "Castle Keep" near Belgrade.
Peter Falk, Scott Wilson, Patrick O'Neal, and Michael Conrad had been filming the World War II story with Lancaster since December, Rea said. Most of them are living in Novi Sad, a town of about 75,000 and approximately 40 miles from Belgrade.
"All of them just showed up in the third row the night after we met them and then came back-stage," said Sheri Romeiser, Salina senior.
The KU company presented 12 public performances of "Theatre Today," a medley of Broadway hits compiled by Rea, which was presented here in mid-November and toured Kansas in February and March. Further adding to stage jitters when the cast spotted such well-knowns in the audience, the production included a scene from "The Rainmaker," in which Lancaster played the motion picture lead.
A few weeks later the movie's elaborate castle scenery was destroyed in an accidental explosion.
AS THOUGH that wasn't excitement enough, Miss Romeiser and Carol Wilcox, Kansas City senior, again ran into two of the movie cast on a weekend side trip to Dubrovnik, Yugoslavia, and promptly were invited to spend the weekend boating on the Adriatic Sea.
Not only fellow Americans extended hospitality and enlivened the tour. Everywhere, the seven Jayhawkers constantly were overwhelmed with the intense desire of East Europeans to make friends.
The natural Yugoslav intensity and emotionalism, they said, spills over onto the stage, making everything appear twice as strong as here.
SOON THEY FOUND it affected them, too, and that their acting became more vigorous and physically demonstrative.
"All three countries have large movie industries," Rea said. "They welcomed us with a kind of treatment one would not get in Hollywood.
"No matter what time of-day we arrived, we were given formal receptions, complete with their traditional plum brandy, slivo-vitz," he said.
The United States ambassador to Rumania and his wife received the entourage and about 60 others at their residence. They honored the Jayhawkers with engraved invitations and included many major figures in Rumanian theatre on their guest list, along with some Americans in foreign service.
THE ANNUAL East European tour—only one of its kind among American universities—serves a dual purpose, in addition to its obvious international relations value: it demonstrates American drama to East Europeans, while directly introducing Kansas students to that system.
East Europeans study drama in four-year, specialized academies. The state pays for everything and requires those it trains to perform within its borders forever after.
Would Miss Romeise prefer the academy system? "Perhaps," she said, "but ours is more well-rounded.
"THE TIME of reckoning comes at a different point there," she noted. If an academy student graduates, his career is set for life. The crucial period for Americans begins with graduation.
The troupe consistantly met royal treatment, but each member sensed an effort in Rumania to prevent student - to - student conversation and the comparison that would inevitably result.
tact was about to develop between students, we were quickly shoved on to the next event. If I hadn't begged them to slow down, they'd have given us another play for lunch."
"It just seemed," Rea explained, "that each time real con-
In addition to Miss Romeiser and Miss Wilcox, the troupe this year included:
Jeri Walker, Shawnee Mission senior; Earl Trussell, Kansas City senior; Holmes Osborne, Bates City, Mo., junior; Michael Fisher, Lawrence senior. Kay Bethea, Baton Rouge, La., graduate student, directed music for the show.
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6
THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN
Tuesday, July 9, 1968
E E 7
LEBAN DEVISES CHINESE TYPEWRITER
Carl Leban (left), assistant professor of Oriental Languages, watches Gerald P. Crow program a computer to assimilate the typewriter.
Prof has Chinese writer
Carl Leban has invented the first true Chinese typewriter, and he is a frustrated man.
The assistant professor of Oriental languages and literatures has the problem all worked out on paper, but is unable to get anybody excited about it—not excited enough to support developing the idea into a true typewriter.
But he has not given up.
THE PROJECT began about five years ago when he wanted automatic methods to research his dissertation on Chinese history at Columbia University. He found there were none for his field.
Metaphorical wheels began to turn, and the creative graduate student realized that what he needed was a way to achieve for Chinese the same advantage alphabetical languages have: a small number of elements that compose all words.
He then devised a set of 36 simple elements which could be assembled to form all Chinese characters. He calls the system SINCO (Synthetic Index Nomenclature for Chinese Orthography). It automatically specifies the size and position of each element. As the elements are typed, the machine automatically makes the necessary adjustments to form the proper Chinese character.
Leban has applied for a patent on his typewriter, which he calls the SINCOder, by submitting his blueprints. It isn't exactly a typewriter, of course, but he thinks that typewriter best describes his innovation. It also could be developed into a Chinese teletype, photo-typesetter and other devices.
With a grant from the KU general research fund and support of
University hires Barnett in poli-sci
A specialist in British and African politics and Black American politics will become assistant professor of political science in September.
He is Malcolm Joel Barnett, a native of New York City with a bachelor's degree from Columbia University in 1963 and the Ph.D. from the University of London's School of Economics and Political Science in 1967.
Barnett was a Woodrow Wilson teaching fellow at Miles College in Birmingham, Ala., the past year.
His book on the British Rent Act of 1957 will be published next year.
the University's Computer Center, Leban and two student programmers have succeeded in simulating his typewriter. They used a digital computer and an incremental plotter. The plotter draws lines with a pen when instructed by the computer.
Gerald P. Crow, graduate student from Prairie Village, and Charles Baird, senior from Hutchinson, wrote the FORTRAN (computer language) programs which enable the computer to recognize and understand SINCO instructions.
The same machine could write Japanese, Korean and pre-Colonial Vietnamese, Leban said. Aside from its most obvious usefulness in preparing research aids, its creator visualizes the SINCOder providing machine aids to translation, "computational linguistics," and vastly improved international communications.
"It makes everything available to us in Chinese." he said, "that is now available to us in English."
Leban first became interested in Chinese after five years' experience teaching high school English in New York City. He said he became increasingly disturbed that the literature taught to Americans is chiefly English and American with perhaps some occasional French.
"We're cutting ourselves off from a tremendous part of the world," said Leban, who lived and studied three years in the Orient. "And I decided to become an academic missionary to Ämer-
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icans. My mission is to reveal China to Americans the best I can and to make it accessible to them," he said.
The SINCOder may help.
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With blue lenses, blue eyes can be made a deeper, richer blue. If you have green eyes, try orange or yellow lenses for a better effect.
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Tuesday, July 9, 1968
THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN
Improvements sought
KU studies Head Start
By Mary Hanks
A project for evaluating and improving Head Start programs in the United States is currently underway at KU. Head Start programs give poor children preschool training to help them adjust to regular school environment.
KU Head Start Evaluation and Research Center is one of fourteen such centers located at universities throughout the United States.
KU HAS BEEN interested in working with pre-school children's social and pre-academic development for several years. Through the efforts of Frances Horowitz, chairman of the department of human development, funds have been obtained from the Office of Economic Opportunity to set up an evaluation and research center at KU.
Purpose of the Evaluation and
Progress brings department break
Research Center is to discover how the Head Start Program can be made more effective. Its chief concern is not the evaluation of individual Head Start Centers but rather to collect data with which overall effectiveness of the programs may be evaluated and improved.
By G. G. Stradtman Journalism Camp Reporter
The recent separation of the schools of architecture and engineering is expected to bring about many progressive changes in the two newly formed departments.
This year there will be five sub-divisions within the school of engineering. In addition to offering master's and doctorate engineering degrees, at least three or four new courses will be offered by the school of engineering during the 1968-69 academic year.
AT LEAST TWO, possibly four, new faculty are to be employed in the school. The mechanical engineering division is to be moved to Fowler Hall in the near future. Plans for the space technology program, to be undertaken with the aid of NASA, are to be ready by the end of the summer.
A few new courses will be offered by the school of architecture and design. A six-year curriculum will be offered, with a graduate program for the last two years.
One aspect of the program is concerned with observing the Head Start students under actual classroom conditions and objectively reporting the findings, Russell Tyler, director of the Head Start Evaluation and Research Center, said.
There are expected to be many sweeping changes during coming months in the school. In the advocacy planning program in Kansas City and Topeka the School of Architecture and Urban Design hopes to work with the law school, medical school, and other related university departments in ghetto areas of the cities. A number of other programs are presently in the planning stages.
the University of Texas (1848-50), Sampson College (1946-48), Chicago Tech College (1939-41), and the University of Minnesota (1936-37).
HEADING THE School of Engineering will be Dean William P. Smith, who has been at KU since 1950 when he was employed as a professor of electrical engineering. He has also taught at
Smith is national president of Eta Kappa Nu, the electrical engineering honor society.
THE OBSERVATION procedure being used this year in all Evaluation and Research Centers across the United States, was developed at KU.
Each of the children are observed individually for short periods of time for several weeks. This gives an overall picture of how the children are interacting with their peers and adults.
Most of the children being observed are in the Head Start Program, although some control data are also being collected on children from middle income families.
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Western Civilization Notes
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SIaping rooms with kitchen privilege or male students. Borders campus and n.a" downtown. VI 3-5767. 8-2
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9 V-37678
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Ufnairhunb - 2 bedroom apt. 5th floor.
VI 2-6163 after S. p.m. 17-9
2 comfortable private rooms with good family meals for summer in large quiet home. Also reservation and deposit for fall term for 3 rooms being taken now. Short walk to campus. Call VI 2-8960. 7-16
For rent to graduate or mature undergraduate. Extra nice bachelor or studio apartments $1\%$ blocks from law school. Private parking. Quiet ideal study conditions. For appointment call VI 3-8534. 8-2
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Worried about the draft? For draft counseling contact the Lawrence Office, 07 W. 7th, 1-5pm VI 2-7932 or Wednesdays at table in the Union. 7-9
1965 Rambler Convertible. Good condition. Fully equipped and will condense nicely. Also available.apa-tm and rooms for men. Cooking facilities. 1034 Mass. 7-16
Something different for that special guy in the service. Popcorn, Cheese-corn, Caramel corn, Cinnamon corn, Cornbread, Potato chips or overseas. Special air tight containers guarantee freshness. Also popcorn balls and home-made Chocolate pecan bites. Ice Cream Shop, Malls Shopping Center. VI 2-7175. 7-16
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Need cash for those 2nd semester expenses? We make personal loans to Juniors, Seniors, and Grad students. Contact Mr. Hamilton, Beneficial Finance Company, 725 Mass., phone VI 3-8074.
TYPING
Theses, term papers, miscellaneous works typed on pica electric typewriter, prompt and guaranteed. Mrs. Troxel. VI 2-1440. 8-2
Multilingual Secretarial Service. To have articles, reports, term papers, theses and dissertations typed in Foreign Languages or English. Call VI 2-6516. The Multilingual Secretarial Service or VI 3-5040. 7-16
Thesis, term papers, themes typed and/or edited by K.U. graduate (Eng-
g., U.K.) at SCM. ECM typewriter. Located close to Oliver Hall. VI 3-2873.
Experienced in typing term papers, themes, dissertations, and other miscellaneous typing work. Have experience with Microsoft Reasonable rates. Prompt and efficient service. Call VI 3-9554, Mrs. Wright.
Experienced typist will type theses,
themes, term papers. Have electric
typewriter. Contact Mrs. Ethel Henderson,
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Co-ed wants roommate(s) and apart-
ments to attend semester. Call VI 31
after 5 p.m. 7-16
8
THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN
Tuesday, July 9,1968
In pre-Civil War days
First governor raided
By Eric Kramer Journalism Camp Reporter
Journalism Camp Reporter Under a bush by the special education building on Louisiana Street south of the campus, in the corner of the lawn is a marker saying, "Site of the first home of Governor Robinson, burned by Sheriff Jones, May 21, 1856."
Charles Robinson was the first governor of Kansas. He came to Lawrence with the Emigrant Aid Society. His house which was built on Oread Hill was destroyed in a raid that came before the famous Quantrill Raid.
Throughout early Kansas history the Governor fought both pro-slavery people and radical abolitionists like John Brown and General Lane.
Before 1856 pro-slavery, Missourians took advantage of the government policy called popular sovereignty by crossing the border and voting in the territorial election. Under popular sovereignty, the people in a territory were to determine whether they would enter the union as a slave or free state. The free-state men represented a majority of the people of Kansas, but with the votes from Missouri, the proslavery men won the election and set up the Lecompton Constitution.
In 1856 it was to be different. Busy emigrant societies poured hundreds of settlers into Kansas. These men were free-staters determined that fair elections would be held and free-state men elected so that Kansas would enter the union as a free state.
The pro-slavery party, still in power but sensing that Kansas would become a free state if something was not done, decided to try to make the free-staters go against federal authority.
Jones, the pro-slavery sheriff of Douglas County, came to Lawrence, the center of free-state activity, with warrants to arrest several anti-slavery leaders.
Purdue prof to work with KU writers
William H. Gass, Purdue University philosophy professor whose latest work has been reviewed broadly and favorably, will be here Oct. 21-Nov. 8 as writer-in-residence.
Gass published his first book, "Omensetter's Luck," at age 42. only two years ago, and won almost immediate acclaim from literary peers.
Reviewing his second and latest book of fiction—"In the Heart of the Heart of the Country and Other Stories"—Van Allen Bradley, literary editor of the Chicago Daily News recently predicted:
"It should be taken for granted that if the future is to give us another Joyce or Faulkner or emingway he will not write it. Joyce or Faulkner or Hemingway; he will be a man who has developed a style of his own.
"I tha we may have such a man in William H. Gass.
"... br. Gass is an original.
He may be one of the two or three writers we have today."
BRAVEY CALLS that first work "a novel of stunning power and realism" and says it "should have got considerably more recognition than it received."
At K. Glass will give at least one public lecture and work with Prof. Edward Wolfe's class in fiction writing, which brings in professional writers to work with advanced writing students for a period of one to three weeks each.
Gass also is a regular reviewer for the bi-weekly New York Review of Books.
The citizens of Lawrence would not let Jones make the arrests so he returned the next day with a possee. The sheriff couldn't find the men he wanted so he decided to spend the night in town. That night he was wounded by a sniper. Jones left Lawrence but he was determined to get revenge on the city.
Sheriff Jones returned with the federal marshal and federal troops. When the group was positioned outside of town, the sheriff announced that he would burn down the Eldridge house and destroy the office of the Herald of Freedom, one of the first newspapers in Kansas.
The Eldridge house, a hotel, was burned because it belonged to the Emigrant Aid Society. This was the first burning of the Eldridge House. The Hearld was destroyed because it was antislavery in viewpoint.
During the burning, the sheriff decided that the home of Governor Robinson should also be burned. The house, which sat on Oread Hill, was burned and looted by the sheriff's men.
Because the federal marshal and the sheriff were not defied by the citizens of Lawrence, the pro-slavery plot failed and Kansas was closer to becoming a free state.
Robinson veted a bill that would have built KU at Manhattan. The legislature was then forced to build KU at Lawrence.
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
THE LONELY GENERATION AND THE SEARCH FOR TRUTH by Carlo Pietzner
Director Camphill Movement, USA (Sheltered Villages for the Mentally Retarded)
Loneliness and alienation are here seen in a new dimension, leading to a western understanding of Reincarnation and a Western Approach to Meditation. (Reprint of a Lecture)
Copies sent free of charge
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THE
kamper kansan
4
KU
Volume 5, Issue 3
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Tuesday, July 9, 1968
—Kansan photo by Janette Clavton
FREAKISH ATTIRE POPULATES SADIE DANCE
Campers attired in Daisy Mae and L'il Abner costumes, dance at Sadie Hawkins.
'This is where the action is' describes Sadie Hawkins
By Barbara Kimble Kamper Kansan Reporter
"This is Where the Action Is," a sign on a McCollum Hall window, could have been the theme of the Sadie Hawkins Dance Saturday.
The Gaslight Gang, a Dixieland jazz band consisting of counselors and a few librarians and KU students initiated the dance at 8 p.m. in the McCollum southeast parking lot.
The Counselor's Kix band, comprised of counselors and KU students, and the Camper's Kix band, consisting of campers, played old dance band numbers. A camper rock 'n' roll band also performed.
ABOUT 71 couples entered the costume contest. The couples
chose a number at the contest table and filed past the six judges. The number was then narrowed down to ten finalists. Two couples were finally selected as the grand winners.
The two couples chosen were: Joyce Perrin and Charles Berger who portrayed Bonnie and Clyde; Sharon Kunst and Roland Stone who portrayed two Hawaiian natives.
Miss Perrin is from St. Joseph, Mo., and is study speech and debate. Berger of Natchez, Miss., and Miss Kunst of DuBois, Pa., are also studying speech and debate. Stone from Indianola, Iowa, is studying voice.
THE COUPLES were given charms which will be engraved with their names.
The six judges were: Russell L. Wiley, director of the camp; Gerald Carney, associate camp director; Richard Brummett, camp supervisor; Charles Lawson, Ellsworth supervisor; Mr. Racher, guest band director; and Merle Nay, athletic director.
Other costumes included cut-off jeans, painted skin and freckles, sultan costumes, and the ever present red identification tags.
Sadie Hawkins achieved its fame in the comic strip, Li'l Abner by Al Capp. On Sadie Hawkins Day the girls chase the boys in a race. Whoever the girl catches she can marry. Some of the main characters associated with this day are Marryin' Sam, Li'l Abner, and Daisy Mae.
Camp council elects officers
By Darryl Pinckney
Kamper Kansan Reporter
The Camp Council Wednesday discussed problems with Russell L. Wiley, camp director, passed important measures, and elected its officers.
The 45 wing representatives elected Frank Young as President, and Claudia Peebles as Secretary. The president's duties will include acting as chairman of the sessions, and representing the council. The secretary's duty is to take the minutes of the meeting.
AS A RESULT of the second session, camp council campers are allowed to sleep late on Sundays and Saturdays, if they don't have classes. Roomcheck on Sundays does not exist anymore.
The subject of dress at the camp dances was also discussed. Originally, campers, both girls and boys, were not allowed to wear shorts to the dances. The majority of the council agreed that the regulations was impractical. Casualwear is now acceptable attire to the dances.
A group of wing representatives, led by Tom Wood, said several of the plays given by the University Theatre during the week end after closing hours. Because of this, they said, campers were not able to attend the performances. Wiley said he could not extend the closing hours and he preferred not to make exceptions.
THE DIRECTORS said he would not object to a delegation to see if Tom Rea of the Theatre company, could reschedule the plays. Wiley said it was doubtful if the plays would be rescheduled to Saturday, but he would see to it those campers who have purchased tickets for week night performances would get refunds.
Several complaints were registered by the campers about not having ample time for study. Wiley said he had asked the professors to cut down assignments. He added if the homework still proved to be too much, then he would okay a trial study hall in
Lewis Hall after hours. However, supervision would be required.
The Camp Council asked camp authorities to see if the transit company would be willing to run buses downtown on Saturday nights so the campers would not have to walk.
THE DORMS ON Daisy Hill also have classes meeting during the day. Campers who are returning from their individual classes interrupt those which are meeting in the lounges. The council passed a measure to ask the officials to unlock the side doors, which would permit campers to walk up to their rooms, without interrupting classes.
Op-art fires imagination of campers
By Rees Roderick Kamper Staff Reporter
"What will I do with it? I'll set it up in my front yard for the Great Danes, of course!"
That's how Farris Chit木ip,
Guthrie, Okla., an art camper has decided to use the six-foot fire hydrant he's constructing.
THE IDEA TO create the fire hydrant was suggested by Chitwood's instructor, John Whitney. The class is studying op art, and Whitney encourages students to develop unusual projects.
Chitwood has been working on the hydrant in front of Strong Hall. He built the basic form out of chicken wire, then gradually added layers of papier mache. When the sculpture is finished, Chitwood plans to paint it bright red and yellow, and move it to his dormitory.
Chitwood says at the end of camp he will saw the hydrant in half and ship it home in a trunk.
Drill forensics prepare campers
By Mike Dohn
Kamper Kansan Reporter Practice tournaments involved 126 speech and debate campers last Friday and Saturday, Bobby R. Patton, speech division director, said.
Two sessions Friday afternoon and three sessions Saturday morning gave participants opportunities to practice debate, original oratory, extemporaneous speaking, interpretation of poetry, interpretation of prose, dramatic interpretation, duet acting, informative speaking and radio speaking. Debate was divided into Kansas beginning, Kansas advanced, national beginning and
Young prophecies
The group, spearheaded by Bill Cline, camp assistant supervisor, is entirely made up from campers and has been rehearsing since the beginning of camp.
Young Prophesies for '68, a folk-rock group, will present a program on July 16 for all campers.
national advanced levels. Campers elected two or three areas to enter for the tournament.
A championship tournament will begin Friday, July 19, with preliminary events through Saturday, July 20. Eliminations will occur Monday and Tuesday, July 22 and 23. The national advanced winners will debate campers from the University of Denver speech camp by an electronic audiovisual connection Thursday, July 25.
THE MAIN PURPOSE of the forensics was practice with an emphasis on constructive criticism by the judges. KU speech instructors and guest high school and college speech instructors served as judges.
WEDNESDAY, July 24, 7 p.m., Swarthout Hall, the speech and debate division will present an oral interpretation workshop convocation open to all interested campers. The assembly will feature dramatic readings and scenes including excerpts from "John Brown's Body."
Staging a debate for the benefit of the campers, the Wichita state national debate champions met KU debaters in Swarthout Hall Saturday, June 29.
COUPLE PREPARES SCENE
—Kansan photo by Janette Clayton
Speech campers practice duet acting to prepare themselves for the forensic championship tournament which begins Friday, July 19.
2
KAMPER KANSAN
Tuesday, July 9, 1968
7
Badges and gripes
This is an interesting question, and one which a camper might ask Camp Director Russell L. Wiley. Unfortunately, it is one many of us should be asking ourselves.
If one were to ask a professor why the students are attending the Midwestern Music and Art Camp, he probably would reply they are here to take advantage of the education offered in the various fields of study. However, if a camper were asked the same question, he probably would give a much different answer. Among other things, some campers seem to be spending a better part of their time complaining.
In many educational systems, there are protests and complaints because no one is completely satisfied with his surroundings. It seems to be human nature to complain. Yet, somewhere in the shuffle, I feel some of us have forgotten why we are here. Perhaps we came here with the wrong ideas.
Camp means fun. Yet, from the first day of camp there has been one trivial complaint after another, ranging from lights out, dresses on Sunday, and now to the wearing of the Camp ID badges. I use the word trivial because when they are compared to the real reason we are here-for an education—they are trivial.
I'll be the first to admit the badges are unattractive, awkward, and give an impersonal feeling to the wearer, but they aren't such a tragedy that the Star of David is needed to protest them.
Basically, we all came here because we had a particular subject interest or ability. Many came on scholarships. There is time for fun and studies as well. Maybe it's time for us to sit down and ask ourselves again just what we are doing here.
It's good to complain now and then. Constructive criticism and a little dissent can do a lot of good. However, when the complaints are on such trivial matters as ID badges, maybe someone's homework isn't receiving enough attention.
—Rosanne Morgan
nd gripes Down with tags
There has been some controversy over the newly issued summer camp identification badges.
The badges have been called many things: The prison pin, military identification plates, and the red badges of courage.
Russell L. Wiley, director of camp, has given a reason for wearing the ID's. He said the tags were to be worn so campers could be easily distinguished from non-campers. This system is not entirely effective, though, because some campers take their badges off as soon as they leave their dormitories, and some have been offered money for their badges.
A student protest has started in Strong Hall among the art campers against the wearing of the badges. The students who are protesting wear yellow six-pointed stars similar to those the Jews wore when they were being persecuted by the Germans. The students say they will continue to protest and wear the stars until they are told they no longer have to wear the ID's.
We feel these campers have a right to protest the tags, because we see no real purpose in them.
Since almost anyone could either buy or steal a tag from a camper, it does not really keep the non-campers from seeing the campers or attending their dances. The tags do not give the person's name or where he is from. Therefore we see no real reason why campers should be made to wear them everywhere they go.
—Mike Magee
A creative gem
The creative Midwestern Music and Art Camp office has come up with a delightful new design in jewelry. The finery is composed of a simple rectangular red block, enhanced from within by a novel white design. This artwork is being awarded to all campers deserving recognition. It is assumed that all recipients will be delighted to display this proudly at all times. Of course, a nominal fee is being charged.
Is this America?
America soon may be the center of some of the worst racial violence in the history of mankind. From every direction, racial prejudice and discrimination threaten the very bonds which tie our nation together. Riots, marches, and protests have become everyday occurrences in our daily life, emphasizing the lack of communication and understanding between the American people.
Is this the fate of America? Will our nation never cease undermining the jurisdiction our forefathers prescribed in the words ... "indivisible, with liberty and justice for all"?
How can there be an indivisible nation where there is the continuous threat of a second civil war?
How can there be liberty and justice for all citizens where there is a continuous prejudice for those who belong to a different racial, religious, or moral group?
It is the duty of each individual citizen, especially those of the younger generation, to observe the tragedies which have sprung from unwarranted hatred of minority group affiliation, and the promises of civil rights, and be determined to make America in their lifetime a place in which all individuals may enjoy the same freedom of existence.
—Sandy Barnett
kamper kansan
Kamper News Office-112 Flint Hall UN 4-3646
Camp Office—214 Murphy Hall UN 4-3755
The Kamper Kansan, camp newspaper at the Midwestern Music and Art Café on Friday, camp newspaper at the Kamper Camp on Fridays. It is written by members of the Journalism Division of Camp.
The opinions expressed in the editorial columns are those of the editorial staff of the newspaper. Guest editorial views are not necessarily those of the editorial staff. Any opinions expressed in the Kamper Kansan are not necessarily those of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp or the University of Kansas.
Accommodations $a_{goods}$, and employment offered in the Kamper Kansan are offered to students without regard to color, creed, or national origin.
Executive Staff
Photography Bill Seymour
Adviser Robert Stewours
Managing Editor Mary Gardens
News Editor Cheryl Gordon
Editorial Editor Sandy Barnett
Feature Editor Claudia Peebles
Sports Editor Craig Williams
Photographer Janette Clayton
Connie Bates, Mariel Bimm, Mike Dohn, Maureen Downey, Lucie Green, Sue Greenbaum, Patricia Hackney, Brenda Jones, Barbara Baillard, Kelly Slaughter, George Stradman, Lou Ann Thomas, Judy Bennett, Mike Magge, Leslie Seeman, and Tim Cine.
Four basic rules have been deemed necessary by the camp administration to keep everything running smoothly. In choosing to attend the camp, the students agreed to abide by these rules, which prohibit campers from:
- Dating non-campers.
Four rules called basic for campers
- Riding in cars unless their parents, a counselor or camp instructor is driving.
- Endangering their own lives or that of another camper.
- This editorial does not contest the validity of these rules, but it does protest the regulations that have been developed subsequently. Each of these added rules is fully covered in the four primary ones. The added rules demonstrate a lack of trust in the students.
- Drinking alcoholic beverages.
For example, the rule campers cannot enter any establishment selling alcoholic beverages (which includes most of Lawrence's pizza shops and restaurants) even if it is not their intention to purchase it.
Since there is the first regulation forbidding the consumption of alcoholic beverages, any camper following the rules would not have this purpose. Thus, the second rule is unnecessary and can only be considered evidence of lack of trust.
The administration should leave the obeying of the rules to the campers without adding limitations which often hamper legitimate activities. We are, for the most part, mature enough to accept the responsibility of following the basic regulations. We should be given the opportunity of doing so without these.
—Leslie Seeman
MIDWESTERN MUSIC & ART CAMP
KU '68 712
—Kansan Photo by Bill Seymour
Letters
I attended the meeting and later spoke to other representatives. We feel that Miss Peebles' letter is at best a gross exaggeration of what occurred. Judging from the manner in which she has twisted the facts, it appears that she was not even in attendance at the meeting.
July 1,1968
Dear Sir:
After reading Claudia Peebles' letter in the June 28th Kamper Kansan, I feel obligated to speak in defense of the camp council.
Her blanket condemnation of the camp rules is completely uncalled for. She claims that "The ENTIRE (my emphasis) council agreed that the rules of the camp were petty and ridiculous in their forms." This is not so I, and others with whom I have spoken are in agreement with most of the rules. In fairness to Miss Peebles, however, I must say that I feel that the co-eed sunbathing rule should be given serious consideration by the supervisors.
She says: "Most of the complaints the campers have are about repetitious and trite rules." The "trite rules" to which she refers must be the rules that we discussed in the meeting. The principal rules that we discussed concerned cigarette smoking, consumption of alcohol, closing hours, and co-ed sunbathing. None of these seem very trite to me.
The council also discussed the possibility of permitting campers to enter places that serve alcohol, such as the Pizza Hut or Shakey's.
It was brought to the attention of the council that assigning a place for cigarette smoking would be in violation of a state law prohibiting the use of tobacco by minors.
Since there already is a rule prohibiting the possession or consumption of alcohol by campers, the council failed to see why the secondary rule must exist.
The question of closing hours also arose. It was suggested that lights out time be extended because of excessive homework given to students in some language classes.
The council also expressed the opinion that the rule concerning co-ed sunbathing should be cancelled.
In her letter, Miss Peebles said: "Suggestions and complaints were beaten into oblivion by Brummett's repeated comment, 'Yes, yes, you're right, but those are the rules and they can't be changed, so let's not waste our time.' Neither I nor any of the other persons that I have spoken to can remember Mr. Brummett making this statement. However, I do recall him saying that he would bring or had already brought each of the above salient topics to the attention of Mr. Wiley or other responsible persons.
The council suggested that the Sunday morning room check be discontinued. Several reasons were brought out why this should be done. As you know, this has already been favorably acted upon. Is this an example of the "deaf ear" into which our voice was funneled??
Criticism is the basis of democratic government. In an orderly society, responsible and TRUTHFUL criticism is essential. It is my sincere desire that any further criticism be confined to the facts.
Thank you,
David Lawrence
Music Division
A search for a ring
Recently, while hitting a volley ball back and forth on the court in competition for the Winning Wing Wiley Cup, a camper felt her ring fly from her finger and onto the court. She could not see where it hit, and she asked her fellow players to stop the game so that she could recover the valuable high school ring which belonged to her boyfriend in her home town.
The other players, however, would not stop their play, and the girl was forced to continue in the game. After it was over, she and her roommate searched the court for the ring, but were unable to find it.
Wouldn't it have been nice if the players had been considerate and helped her find the ring, instead of being indifferent to the plight of another individual? —Sandy Barnett
Tuesday, July 9, 1968
KAMPER KANSAN
3
—Kansas photo by Janette Clayton
ELYAKUM SHAPIRA
Straining for the perfect pitch, Elyakum Shapira, guest conductor, directs the band in a concert June 30.
Instructor Cline livens activities
By Sue Greenbaum Kamper Staff Reporter
He walks with a beat, wearing a peace symbol around his neck. He stops to talk to a group of girls. He listens to what they say. Then he jumps on his trusty bicycle and heads for a class—not to learn, but to teach.
This is Bill Cline, German instructor for the Midwestern Music and Art Camp and holder of the title assistant supervisor, which means he is a counselor free to worry about anyone from the campers to the other counselors.
"HERR CLINE," born in Mansfield, Ohio, received his bachelor of arts degree from Oberlin College. He has a masters degree from the University of Colorado, where he is working on a doctorate.
He has taught German at Boulder High School and the University of Colorado for the past few years and beginning this fall he will be Foreign Language coordinator for the Boulder Valley School District.
Cline is married and has two children, a boy and a girl, ages 6 and 7.
In his years at Oberlin, Cline was a member of the track team. As a senior he became its captain. After entering the service, he made the All-Army track and tennis teams. Cline was stationed in Germany, where for 18 months he entertained GI's as part of WACOM Special Services and the 7th Army Soldiers Shows.
Cline sang with a quartet which went from entertaining soldiers to entertaining royalty. In Oslo, Norway, the quartet gave a command performance for the Norwegian King and Queen. Cline just missed appearing on the Ed Sullivan Show when his quartet came in second in the finals of the All-Army Entertainment Contest.
WIFELY WITNESS
ST. LOUIS —(UPI)— Phil Pollack's wife, Mary, was his witness. Pollack with a 3-wood got a hole-in-one on a 168-yard hole. Mrs. Pollack saw the ball drop into the cup.
"He's such a great guy," one student said, "he gets his point across in class but everybody still likes him. He's sort of incomparable."
Shapira leads band stimulates campus
By Pat Hackney Kamper Staff Reporter
From "back there," staccato trumpets sounded.
A loud voice with a foreign accent echoed down the hall from the band room. . . Long black hair hung limply over a moist forehead. . . Elyakum Shapira, guest conductor for last week.
Shapira's face glowed with enthusiasm. "Again from the beginning," the voice repeated. "More staccato back there." He flung his head back; his hair billed. Music filled the room, vibrating — reaching every corner.
Shapira was working. His energy was contagious. He was part of the music. The tired faces of the musicians radiated happiness as they heard, "Much better, much better."
ABOUT 18 YEARS ago Shapira came to the United States from Israel with the help of Leonard Bernstein, now conductor of the New York Philharmonic Orchestra. Shapira attended the Juliill
School of Music in New York City.
College courses taken in science
After teaching vocal music in Los Angeles, Shapira joined the New York Philharmonic Orchestra as assistant conductor. Six years ago he became associated with the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra.
Six previous Midwestern Music and Art Camp participants and another interested student came to KU this summer to begin college work in a special summer school Science Research Institute
The program which evolved from the summer camp is offered to any high school graduate who shows ability, achievement and motivation in science. According to Richard L. Middaugh, director of the program, little financial aid is given.
DURING THE EIGHT weeks students take regular college courses and spend much of their time in research laboratories.
Progress reports are given weekly at dinner discussion meetings held for science participants and selected faculty members.
Working under Middaugh,
Larry Brey is doing a project in
chemistry; Derald Carlson in computation center is studying under R. G. Hetherington, director of the computer center. Working in entomology with James F. Rohlf, associate professor of entomology, is George Gunnels.
Other students working in the Science Research Institute include: Ray Lash working in zoology under Richard Koehn, visiting professor of biology; Fred Murphy working under John Landgrebe, associate professor of chemistry in chemistry; Katherine Royer studying entomology under V. Eugene Nelson, assistant professor of entomology; and Donna Wilkin working under Byron S. Wenger, associate professor of zoology, in biochemistry and physiology.
ALTHOUGH SHAPIRA plays the piano and the trombone, photography, not music, is his main interest outside his work. Lacking a darkroom, he sets up enlargers, trays and developing tanks in his home.
Shapira likes to attend sports events and actively participates in tennis. He has not had time recently, for he conducts all four bands and the two orchestras, strings and woodwind sectionals.
THIS IS HIS THIRD YEAR as guest conductor at the camp. He said he enjoys the change of working with younger people.
After living six years in Baltimore, Shapira will move in August to England. He will travel in Europe as a guest conductor.
BIG REFILL
UNITED NATIONS — (UPI)—A plan to refill Lake Eyre, a 3,700-square mile marsh depression in Central Australia, with seawater to create a permanent inland sea is being considered by the Australian government, according to the U.N. Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO). Water, which would be brought 200 miles by canal from Spencer Gulf, is expected to aid irrigation, lower the inland air temperature and increase precipitation.
First mainland trip
Islanders happy, homesick
Dancing the hula, sand and body surfing, kite flying, and studying people are just a few hobbies of the three campers from Hawaii.
No. 2055 (Carol Yamada), No. 1831 (Dale Hamakawa), and No. 1931 (Irma Mukai) are all from Hilo, Hawaii, and are enrolled in the Latin division of the camp. The "natives," or "nats," as they are called by their fellow wingmates, are enjoying their first visit to the mainland, but are also a little homesick.
MISS YAMADA, 15, likes to body surf, play basketball, swin and fly kites. She also enjoys Latin, English and singing Hawaiian songs in English.
Miss Hamakawa, 16, likes volleyball, sand and body surfing, mud sliding and swimming. Her favorites academic subjects are Latin and world history.
Their eight-hour flight from Hawaii climaxed when they landed, covered with leis, on the mainland. They said everyone stared at them as if they were walking flower pots. The girls said that so far their visit to KU has been a wonderful experience. They are not only learning a lot, but enjoying it too. They really like their wing-mates and think their counselors are great.
Miss Mukai, 17, enjoys basketball, reading and studying people.
THE GIRLS agreed that Kansas is quite different from Hawaii. A few of the more notable differences were the bugs in the grass, (which is different from Hawaiian grass), the taste of the water, the hot, humid, fast-changing weather, and the fact that the houses are all built directly on the ground.
In Hawaii, all of the buildings are built on a slightly raised surface, Miss Yamada said, probably because of the termites. Also, it gets dark here so late. In Hawaii, in the summer, it is always dark by 7:30 p.m. Miss Yamada noted too that there were no Buddhist churches in the vicinity.
Miss Hamakawa said the only
differences in the boys is that the boys over here look so much older for their age.
Miss Mukai said every time she looks into the horizon it reminds her of the ocean, and she gets homesick.
The girls also noted the fact that there were no active volcanoes in Kansas.
ONE THING the girls found on
the mainland which they don't have in Hawaii was racial prejudice. In Hawaii, they said, everyone gets along with everyone else no matter what his race, religion or nationality is. They did add though that everyone here at KU was very friendly.
When asked what they missed most, they all agreed: Hawaiian food, and most of all, the ocean!
COACHES
—Kansan photo by Janette Clayton
KITE GETS HIGH
Campers from Hawaii, Dale Hamakawa and Carol Yamada, show off their highflying Kansas kite.
4
KAMPER KANSAN
Tuesday, July 9, 1968
Jumping into the pool.
A
—Kansan photo by Janette Clavton
LEISURE TIME BECOMES ACTIVE
Campers find varied activities from swimming (above) in the pool at Robinson Gymnasium to play table games including cards and monopoly (below).
In double overtime
Campers take counselors
By CRAIG WILLIAMS Kamper Sports Editor
For four quarters and two overtimes Campers and their Counselors battled before the Campers emerged victorious 61 to 59.
The teams played on even terms throughout the game which was held Saturday in Robinson Gymnasium.
In the foul-plagued first quarter the Counselors managed to edge out to a 10 to 9 lead. The period was highlighted by tough defenses and cold shooting.
Vic Harrison controlled the boards for the Counselors during
the first part of the second quarter. After trailing by eight the Campers staged a late rally to pull within four points at the half. The score was 27 to 23.
DURING THE third period both sides looked tired. The counselors expanded their lead to seven points at 38 to 31.
The Campers caught fire during the fourth stanza with Russell Faxon hitting consistently from the top of the key and Collis Temple dominating the boards. By midway through the fourth frame the Campers had overtaken their foes and jumped out into the lead. A late rally, climaxed
by Harrison's free throw with eight seconds left, knotted the score at 48 to 48.
THE FIRST three-minute overtime was highlighted by a tough defense by the Counselors and some clutch shooting by Kerry Summers and Hubert Thomas for the Campers. The Counselors overcame an early lead to tie it again at 55 to 55 at the end of the stanza.
The Camper defense, sparked by Howard Kelly, finally gelled in the second overtime as the Counselors scored only four points. The Campers netted six to bring home a 61 to 59 victory.
Faxon led the scoring for the Campers with 24 counters. Harrison lead the Counselors with 20.
Cager campers have busy week
By LESLIE SEEMAN Journalism Camp Reporter
Thursday afternoons were probably the only time most people on campus had a chance to even see the 150 boys attend the weekly sessions of the Jayhawk Basketball Camp.
That tour was also the campers' only break from the hard work routine of basketball all day. During the rest of the week, beginning when they arrived Sunday afternoon and ending when they left Saturday morning, their time was occupied with basketball.
A typical day began with reveille at 7:30 and lights out was at 10:30. The campers spent the day until 10 p.m. playing on the courts behind Naismith Hall where they were staying. In total, they devoted at least nine hours to actual basketball play daily.
THEIR ONLY break aside from meals was a mandatory rest period after lunch when they had to sleep. Ted Owens, head basketball coach for the University basketball team and director of the camp said, "After the first day, they don't have to, they want to."
Thursday morning the boys were tested on the skills they had learned and with this criteria they were assigned to teams on Thursday night. These teams competed with each other on Thursday night, Friday and Saturday morning.
Each week was divided into distinct instruction phases. On Sunday night when the campers arrived, there was an orientation session where the programs was introduced and explained. On Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday, the boys, divided into groups by age and skill, were taught the fundamentals of the game. The staff of 15 included the KU staff, professional players, and several high school coaches.
FOR THE MOST part the campers, ranging in age from 8 to 17, came from the midwestern states around Kansas. There were 590 campers in all attending one or more of the four sessions.
Owens said the goals of the camp were threefold. Frist, it was their hope that the boys left having improved their game and understanding how to further better it. Second, they hoped to
improve the boys' attitudes and instill a sense of dedication. Third, they wanted the boys to have fun.
MANY CAMPERS enjoyed themselves so much and found it so profitable that they chose to stay for further sessions. One such camper summed up their attitude when he said, "... good game, great camp; good for ya'."
This is the first year for the basketball camp and because of its success, Owens said he hopes that next year it can continue and expand.
Volleyball Standings
PURPLE LEAGUE
| | Won | Lost |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 3 north, Lewis | 3 | 0 |
| 8 west, McCollum | 3 | 0 |
| 9 south, McCollum | 2 | 0 |
| 5 west, McCollum | 2 | 1 |
| 6 south, McCollum | 1 | 2 |
| 2 north, Lewis | 1 | 2 |
| 5 south, Lewis | 0 | 2 |
| 7 east, McCollum | 0 | 2 |
| 10 west. McCollum | 0 | 3 |
TAN LEAGUE
| | Won | Lost |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 5 north, Lewis | 3 | 0 |
| 3 south, Lewis | 2 | 0 |
| 4 north, Lewis | 2 | 1 |
| 4 south, McCollum | 2 | 1 |
| 3 south, McCollum | 1 | 1 |
| 6 east, McCollum | 1 | 2 |
| 5 south, McCollum | 0 | 3 |
| 10 east, McCollum | 1 | 2 |
| 10 south, McCollum | 0 | 2 |
PINK LEAGUE
| | Won | Lost |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 2 south, Lewis | 3 | 0 |
| 7 west, McCollum | 3 | 0 |
| 7 south, Lewis | 3 | 0 |
| 6 north, Lewis | 2 | 0 |
| 8 east, McCollum | 1 | 2 |
| 6 west, McCollum | 1 | 2 |
| 5 east, McCollum | 0 | 3 |
| 9 west, McCollum | 0 | 3 |
CREAM LEAGUE
Won Lost
4 east, McCollum 3 0
7 north, Lewis 2 1
6 south, Lewis 2 1
4 west, McCollum 1 1
4 south, Lewis 1 1
8 south, McCollum 1 2
3 east, McCollum 1 2
3 west, McCollum 1 2
7 south, McCollum 0 2
Girls' Intramurals
* * *
Basketball Standings
RED LEAGUE
| | Won | Lost |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 7 east, McCollum | ... 3 | 0 |
| 4 north, Lewis | ... 3 | 0 |
| 3 north, Lewis | ... 2 | 1 |
| 4 south, McCollum | ... 2 | 1 |
| 10 east, McCollum | ... 1 | 2 |
| 5 south, Lewis | ... 1 | 2 |
| 9 west, McCollum | ... 0 | 3 |
| 4 east, McCollum | ... 0 | 3 |
BLUE LEAGUE
| Won | Lost |
|---|
| 5 north, Lewis | 3 | 0 |
| 3 south, Lewis | 2 | 1 |
| 6 north, Lewis | 2 | 1 |
| 4 west, McCollum | 2 | 1 |
| 3 west, McCollum | 1 | 2 |
| 8 east, McCollum | 1 | 2 |
| 8 west, McCollum | 0 | 3 |
| 3 south, McCollum | 0 | 3 |
GOLD LEAGUE
Softball Standings
| | Won | Loss |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 6 south, Lewis | 3 | 0 |
| 8 south, McCollum | 2 | 1 |
| 9 south, McCollum | 2 | 1 |
| 6 south, McCollum | 2 | 1 |
| 2 north, Lewis | 1 | 1 |
| 7 south, Lewis | 1 | 2 |
| 7 west, McCollum | 1 | 2 |
| 5 west, McCollum | 0 | 3 |
| | Won | Lost |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 5 east, McCollum | ... 2 | 0 |
| 7 west, McCollum | ... 2 | 0 |
| 6 north, Lewis | ... 2 | 1 |
| 4 east, McCollum | ... 2 | 1 |
| 5 north, Lewis | ... 1 | 1 |
| 7 south, McCollum | ... 1 | 2 |
| 3 north, Lewis | ... 1 | 2 |
| 3 west, McCollum | ... 1 | 2 |
| 10 east, McCollum | ... 2 | 2 |
YELLOW LEAGUE
GREEN LEAGUE
GREEN LEAGUE
8 south, McCollum ... 3 0
8 east, McCollum ... 3 0
5 south, Lewis ... 2 1
7 south, Lewis ... 2 1
north, Lewis ... 2 1
3 south, McCollum ... 1 2
6 south, McCollum ... 1 2
north, Lewis ... 1 2
9 south, McCollum ... 0 3
4 west, McCollum ... 0 3
ORANGE LEAGUE
ORANGE LEAGUE
4 south, McCollum 3 0
2 south, Lewis 2 1
7 east, McCollum 2 1
10 south, McCollum 2 1
5 west, McCollum 1 2
3 south, Lewis 1 2
5 south, McCollum 1 2
8 west, McCollum 1 2
9 west, McCollum 0 3
4 north, Lewis 0 3
Wrestling
-Kansan photo by Janette Clayton
MASS SCRAMBLE FOR THE BALL
Girl's intramural basketball turns into more of a female tag wrestling exhibition as the team members hustle to get the ball during intramural games.
Ku
THE SUMMER SESSION kansan
A student newspaper serving KU
77th Year, No.9
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Friday, July 12, 1968
Voters' needs told
By DIANE WANEK Journalism Camp Reporter
People who will be voting in Kansas this year for the first time need to meet certain qualifications to vote.
These include: He must be a citizen of the United States; he must be 21 years of age; he must have resided in Kansas for at least six months prior to the election; he must have lived at his address for at least 30 days immediately preceding the election.
Disqualifications include: persons under guardianship; individuals of unsound mind; persons convicted of a felony, unless restored to civil rights; persons dishonorably discharged from the service of the U.S., unless reinstated; persons convicted of defrauding the government of the U.S., or any of the states; persons convicted of giving or receiving a bribe, or of offering to do so; any person who has voluntarily borne arms against the U.S. or who has voluntarily aided or abetted in the attempted overthrow of the government.
VOTERS MAY register at any time during the usual office hours or other specified hours of the registration officer until 20 days prior to the election, which will this year, be until July 16.
The registration procedure usually requires the voter to go to the office of the registration official and apply for a registration
certificate. He must give his name, age, occupation, and place of residence. The registration officer then furnishes him with a certificate, stating that he has registered as a qualified voter of his city, ward, and precinct.
THE KANSAS statutes permit registration of persons under 21, but who will attain that age before the next general election.
If a voter is going to be absent from his home county on election day, he may file an affidavit of absence with the county clerk, for a primary or general election ballot. The ballot is then mailed to a designated address, filled out in secrecy, and returned to the county clerk by 9 a.m. on the Monday before the election. From there it is sent to the home precinct for canvassing on election day.
Voters who will be absent from their voting district on election
Warm and humid weather is forecast through tonight with a chance of thundershowers Friday before noon. The high today will be around 90 and the low tonight around 70, according to the U.S. Weather Bureau.
WEATHER
day may also cast their ballots at the county clerk's on the Friday, Saturday, and until noon on the Monday before the election.
IF A VOTER is absent in the armed forces or a civilian within the federal services he may use the regular absentee procedure, or he may apply for a federal service ballot 45 days before an election. In either case, registration is waived.
Voters who are sick or physically disabled may also vote absentee. Such voters must have registered where registration is required. The sick or disabled person must make application to the county or city clerk and this application must be accompanied by a formal declaration attested to be a duly licensed physician.
—Kansan Photo by Doug Underwood HAPPY NEWCOMERS
Two in-coming freshmen stand at the KU Previews registration table waiting for instructions from Ken Long, Salina senior, and head male preview counselor.
Regents ask more funds; Wescoe is given pay raise
The Kansas Board of Regents asked the State Legislature for a 11.5 per cent increase in funds for state schools for the 1970 fiscal year.
KU's request of the total budget
The record budget totals $146,-
652,649, compared with $131,204,
761 supplied by the current budget-
Professor's professor
Prof has vigor, modesty
M. S. A.
—Kansan photo by Doug Underwood JACOB KLEINBERG
Bv DON WALLACE
Journalism Camp Reporter Jacob Kleinberg, professor of chemistry, is enthusiastic—and modest—about his field.
Kleinberg fairly bubbles about the work of the department of chemistry, but dismisses his own work as if its meaning was something of little interest to the public.
True, the department of chemistry is important. And it can be counted lucky to have such a loyal supporter as Jacob Kleinberg.
THE DEPARTMENT has received over $500,000 in government grants, and also enjoys substantial industrial financing. He is quick to point out that the first Ph.D. was awarded in 1903, that since then 327 others have earned the doctorate and that there is a genuine and concerted interest in undergraduate teaching, in addition to the graduate work.
Kleinberg's work is something of importance, too. During the school year he spends about half of his time on administrative duties, and the other half on teaching and lecturing. His private interest in the field is "inorganic chemistry with emphasis on the area of the less common oxidation states of metals," a fact that his full bookcases attest to.
The department is large, so large that Kleinberg says it is the size of many schools on campus.
Jacob Kleinberg is very busy. In fact he would only admit to one outside activity of chemistry—lecturing high school teachers and small college teachers on the program of general education in chemistry.
is $40,108,034. The amount of the budget is up 11.4 per cent over the current budget of $36,013,832.
The proposed budget is $1/2 million dollars short of the amount requested by Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe.
THE REGENTS rejected plans for a ground-laid steam line; remodeling funds for Snow Hall for biological sciences; remodeling funds for Flint Hall; remodeling of the old electrical engineering laboratory; and funds for general research. Funds trimmed included money for maintenance, and upgrading the physical plant. The cuts totalled $584,328.
The Regents okayed Mount Oread request at a meeting July 1. Included plans of the budgets were: a seven and one half per
It will be held on July 21-23. Some of the summer preview activities include orientation of the KU campus, enrollment planning, placement exams and medical exams.
A ninth session of KU Previews has been added so that KU could accommodate all of the incoming KU freshmen who desire to attend.
By RUTHANN LEHMAN Journalism Camp Reporter
KU Previews adds another '68 session
The students will be housed at Gertrude Sellards Pearson Residence Hall and will eat their meals at the Kansas Union.
THE EXTRA session was scheduled because the last three regularly booked previews are filled to capacity and otherwise some students would have to be turned away.
The overflow load comes from the increased freshman enrollment for the fall and the acceptance by the new students of the orientation program.
Students who are new to KU in the fall and who do not attend one of these sessions must report at the beginning of orientation week for similar tests.
cent average faculty salary increase; a nine per cent salary increase for classified clerks, janitors and other personnel; A $19,-000 grant to install street lighting along Naismith Drive; Funds totaling $50,000 for expansion of Malott Hall's electrical capacity; An additional $50,000 for equipment to be placed in Malott Hall; A $200,000 grant for the campus electrical system; and $40,000 for the Upward Bound program.
THE ORIGINAL KU budget was $40,673,878 but was reduced to $40,108,034. The total state budget was also cut from $150,-235,926.
Wescool's salary received a boost, the Regents announced. The increase was from $33,000 to $37,-000.
Raymond Nichols, vice chancellor, had expressed concern over the federal government's decision to cut funds to state institutions of higher learning. Nichols said it would create problems "that we cannot ask the Regents to fill."
Bandits hit box office
"Several hundred dollars" was stolen over the weekend from the University Theatre ticket office cash box, Tom Rea, University Theatre assistant director, has reported.
The theft was discovered about 8:30 Monday morning by the theater business manager, Susan Ferguson. The exact amount stolen is not known.
An appeal was issued to anyone who wrote checks to the theater last week (Monday through Saturday) to contact the office and to stop payment on the checks.
THE KANSAS Bureau of Investigation plus the Lawrence and KU police are investigating the theft but have not released the details to the press concerning the robbery. The investigation is still being continued.
"We're trying to take steps to prevent this from happening in the future but there is no guarantee (that it won't happen again)," stated Rea.
"It was easier for them (robbers) than it should have been," Rea concluded.
2
THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN
Friday, July 12, 1968
Generation Gap
The generation gap is viewed by some as one of the larger problems in America, these editorials attempt to tell whether or not this is a big problem and if it is a large problem what can be done about it.
Gap no problem
"The "generation gap" is not a crucial and devastating problem.
Certainly parents and their children have trouble communicating, but don't many husbands and wives have the same problem?
No one can say there is a great difference of age and environment between two partners in the average marriage. Their lack of communication is caused by a breakdown in understanding and a failure to cement the relationship solidly. Why is it so vastly different for teenagers and their parents?
Many members of today's newer generation are not experiencing a reportable degree of the generation gap. Sure, there are problems and disagreements and minor skirmishes. But are these serious? Are they really caused by this new and faster-paced world, the greater pressures, and the difference between growing up now and then?
No. There is a basic human weakness when it comes to communication. This has been going on for centuries and is not at all new.
The only way the so-called generation gap can be remedied is through better personal and individual relationships between parents and the teens. If parents would take time when the child is still young enough to listen, not to talk—just listen, many problems between the generations could be avoided. Both groups would become accustomed to discussing separate and mutual problems with each other.
This gap has not been produced by today's society alone, it has just been recognized in modern times. Older generations have been shocked by younger generations since history first began to be recorded.
In some ways the generation gap is beneficial because it brings new ideals and ideas to the scene. The Chinese, for centuries, were completely under the control of the eldest member of the family and progressiveness was almost non-existent in the Chinese culture.
A sound, basic relationship is needed between the teenager and his parents, but their differences can be an asset too.
—Ruthann Lehman
Teenagers' problems are cause of age war
Too many people simply consider the generation gap a lack of understanding between two age groups. They do not examine the problem long enough to discover that the growing pains of the teenager are the real reason for the gap.
The teen years are spent traveling through several living stages. New ideas are constantly being formed and life is re-defined almost daily. It is nothing new to go to sleep with one philosophy of life and to awake with a different plan.
It once was said that the teen years are similar to trying out for roles in several plays. The role that is finally chosen by the teen is that of being himself. These trial roles illustrate that the teenager is desperately trying to find himself so that he can establish his own way of life.
This struggle for self-identity is the larges
single factor of the generation gap. For how can the older generation understand the younger when the latter does not understand itself and when the younger does not identify with one pattern long enough to be understood?
It is easier for the teen to comprehend his self-established elders. However, the changing teenager will usually see the same situation differently. Also, why should the teen conform to a set pattern without first trying several for himself?
It is doubtful that this vicious circle will ever be solved. Tolerance between these two groups is what must be strived for. This can only be done by teaching people that growing pains are a natural function which will always make it difficult for generations to cultivate an understanding. —Linda Eisenberg
What we have here is...
Anger, frustration, disgust. Father and son stare at each other. How can he be so narrow-minded and hypocritical, wonders the son. By God, when I was a kid, I listened to my old man, thinks the father.
What we have here is a failure to communicate. The communication battle between parents and children has been raging since the time of children. Each generation brings new ideas and philosophies.
With this generation came long hair, new morals, and "love." When a boy tries to relate this to a father of the depression—speakeasy, zoot suit eras, there is conflict. The father often is frightened by the changing world, and tries
to keep his son from being too much a part of it. The son, in turn, thinks his old man is a "real creep."
In both cases, father and son, the trouble is a failure to try to understand, and a lack of patience. The wall could be easily torn down with a little effort.
A good deal of the problem of the "Generation Gap" lies in lack of trust on the part of parent and child. The parent is afraid to let the child discover the pitfalls of life for himself. The child is afraid of the parent's over-bearing power, and thus rebels.
Much has been written of the "Generation Gap." Both parent and child have been criticized. But what most people fail to realize is this: communication is a compromise. It is a give-and-take affair.
The child must try to heed what his parents say. After all, they have been in this world and familiar with life longer than he. The parent should realize his child is a person also, and should quit shutting his ears to the teenage world.
Arguing will never solve any problems, especially between parents and children. A more mature approach is needed. Father and son must reason with each other and try a few suggestions of the other. They must be willing to sacrifice a little pride and must trust in each other's intelligence and self-respect.
To quote a song, "You've got to give a little, take a little, and let your poor heart break a little. . ."
-Kelly Slaughter
Prejudicial shields cause generation gap
You, a card-carrying member of the Pepsi generation, are the center of a storm, and that storm is youth.
This generation has been addressed in the same tone of voice as the bubonic plague and bad beer. We are not the spoiled, rotten brats those over 25 supposedly think we are if we believe television and the great metropolitan scandal sheets.
What is wrong with the older generation is the same thing that is wrong with the younger. It is simple as that
But at the same time, in all fairness to those over 25, for the most part they don't believe the garbage vomited up from so much of the mass media. There is just as much bigotry in thinking all adults are bad as there is in thinking all teenagers are bad.
Now we come to those unfortunates who want something they can't get—youth, and those fortunate who can get what they want—youthful money and votes.
The tale of the little old lady tooling about town in a candyapple red Mustang with a big, meaty engine, 12-inch slicks, and straight pipes is almost legendary. Trying to recapture your youth is
futile and any attempt is pitiful, but somehow Madison Avenue salesmen keep selling.
When not selling to little old ladies, Madison Avenue is busy selling to youth, and the youth market is worth billions. But selling is not confined to merchandise. Political personalities are hot items, and boyishly handsome middle-aged millionaires cash in on youthful idealism for base political advantage.
The fast approaching majority of those under 25 has been heralded as signaling a revolution in thought and practice in America. What most people don't realize is that this same thing happened twice before in the memory of the census takers, in 1893 and 1925. What followed was not a Renaissance but two world wars within 20 years—time enough for those under 25 to become over 25. There is little reason to believe things will be different.
Maybe it is time there was an end to prejudice by these two opposing forces of the new and the old since it seems in essence they are the same. Maybe it is time that youth put down its shield of self-righteous idealism and the
—Michael Albers
THE SUMMER SESSION kansan
THE SUMMER SESSION
The Summer Session Kansan, student newspaper at the University of Kansas, is represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 Street, New York, N.Y., 10022. Mail subscription rates: $6 a semester or $10 a year. Published and second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas, every Tuesday and Wednesday. Mail services: complimentary accommodations, goods, and employment advertised in the Summer Session Kansan are offered to students without regard to color, creed, or national origin.
The opinions expressed in the editorial columns are those of the editorial staff of the newspaper. Guest editorial views are not necessarily the same as those of the editor's. Any opinions expressed in the Summer Session Kansan edition may be shared with University of Kansas Administration or the Kansas State Board of Regents.
Kansan Telephone Numbers
Newsroom—UN 4-3464 Business Office—UN 4-4358
Executive Staff
Business Manager
Our leaders attempt to bridge the generation gap by catering to the youthful voter and supporter. Our clergy orient their sermons to topical subjects designed to create controversy and attract the young. Our parents strive to talk to us by dressing, acting and adopting some of the more striking symbols of our generation. They all want to eliminate the generation gap, and they all must fail.
'Gap' is progress
Advisor
Office Manager
Managing Editor
Managing Editor
Assistant Managing Editors
Jack Haney
Mel Adams
Helen Owens
Robert Stevens
older generation its shield of money and crass cynicism.
The United States is a nation of worriers. We worry about the lack of "meaningful dialog." We worry about the "credibility gap." We worry about "communication." And we worry about the "generation gap."
Photography Advisor ...
Eric Kramer, Daryl Pinckney,
Richard Vleits, and Diane Wandel
Robert Stevens Rees Roderick.
Bill Seymour Dr. Larry Day
Our clergy must never abandon their attempts to gain the youth, but they must never succeed.
Our leaders must never stop in their attempts to draw the majority of the younger generation to their side, but they must never succeed.
Our parents may understand, and always try to be "pals" with us—but they, too, must fail.
In other words, there must
In other words, there must always be a generation gap, but we must never stop trying to bridge it.
For the "gap" is the key to progress, progress that arises from the combination of the old and the new. Once there isn't a gulf between the old and the new dictatorship and tyranny may follow.
Neither Hitler nor Mao had a generation gap.
-Don Wallace
HE SAYS WE'RE the
"older generation!"
—Kansan Cartoon by Don Wallace
Friday, July 12, 1968
THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN
3
Nation needs gun laws
This country needs gun restrictions. Its citizens have shown a lack of responsibility by the great number of deaths, accidents, robberies and assaults with the use of guns.
Countries such as Japan, Germany, England and Canada have proved that restrictions can and do cut down the murder rate involving firearms. For example, the British require a certificate from the police in order to possess a gun.
Recently, England reported only 30 murders by firearms in one year. The United States does not compare favorably, reporting 6.552 murders by guns in 1966.
One of the greatest arguments against restrictions or registration is that "Guns don't kill people. People kill people." This statement would be more valid if revised to say "People with guns kill people."
The firearm should be compared to the car. Long before the gun registration controversy occurred, it was said that people with cars, not cars, kill. With increasing highway fatalities, restrictions were made; laws were created. Although this limited the way a person could drive, it did not deny him the freedom to drive. Instead, it made driving
Ideas of a nation
"...a stab in the back."
"If I could get my hands on
him . . .
"Run him down."
"Knock his brains out."
"He ought to be hung."
"I could kill him."
"He should be horse-whipped."
"I almost died."
"That just kills me."
"I could have shot him."
No, America is not a violence-oriented society.
safer. Firearm restrictions would do the same for gun owners without forbidding the use of guns.
Judy Bennett
Some say gun registration would not prevent any deaths, so why bother? Cars are registered and that registration makes it possible to hunt down the murdered of a small child, a hit-and-run victim.
The citizens of this nation
should realize that they need to give up some privileges in order to maintain safety and order for the public.
Automobile drivers gave up the right to drive as they please to save lives. Why shouldn't gun owners? A responsible citizen realizes that it is selfish to keep a privilege merely for the sake of having that privilege.
Guns don't kill...
...people do
On the bulletin board of the First Presbyterian Church in Lawrence there is a sign which says, "guns don't kill people: people kill people."
The message is not intended as a statement of policy in support or opposition to recent appeals for strict gun legislation. It is a call for mankind to re-examine its conscience.
The unexpected tragic death of Robert F. Kennedy in June bred an attention - getting over-night campaign for strict gun laws. Day and night, campaigners hounded congressmen with telegrams, phone calls, and petitions. The country's legislators, who for years have begged for correspondence from voters back home, were caught in a deluge of highly caustic mail.
Human nature is fickle, however. Aroused humans don't stay aroused long. Thus, as soon as the citizenry is given any sort of material satisfaction for its demands, it will again return to take refuge in docile stoicism, pretending that the problem at hand and all implications have been solved indefinitely.
REQUEST UNGRANTED GLASGOW, Scotland—(UPI) James Stewart, 33, was asked by a police court magistrate if he had anything to say.
REQUEST UNGRANTED
True, stricter gun legislation may discourage the old American tradition of trial by bullet, but it can't prevent it from occurring. Brutus, British Revolutionaries, and the Boston Strangler did not use guns.
"Yes, my lord," said Stewart. "May I have permission to kiss this policewoman?"
The citizens of the United States are to be commended for their recent attempts at justice, but unfortunately they are not hitting the nail on the head. The real problem lies with the people themselves, not the legislature. It is simply a matter of brotherhood.
Permission was not granted and Stewart, charged with breaking windows, was remanded for observation.
Brenda Jones
No congress or parliament can pass legislation to make self-examination mandatory. That is the responsibility of the individual.
Prominent figures not only gun victims
In each case, new gun control legislation was proposed in hopes that arms could be kept out of the hands of people who might turn on society. Also, each time the National Rifle Association fought against the proposals, arguing that these measures would be a violation of an American citizen's right to bear arms.
I would like to point out to the N.R.A. and other protesters of gun control legislation the incident in New York's Central park where a man, after hiding and killing a young woman, exchanged gunfire with policemen and pointlessly fired at anyone and anything.
Three men of great prominence in America, John Kennedy, Martin Luther King, and Robert Kennedy died of an assassin's bullet, fired from guns which had been secured with shocking ease.
A young woman is dead. A girl who probably never ran for an office higher than secretary of the garden club, whose opinions on public affairs probably never went much further than to friends over a cup of coffee. This girl is dead because an obviously insane man was able to procure a gun merely by walking into a store with a purchase price in his hand.
The N.R.A. backed up its argument with another point: men in the public eye such as these three were natural targets, as they either held public office or stated opinions that could endanger someone.
I want to ask the protesters of stricter gun control what would be wrong with screening applicants for a gun license to filter out the mental defects and other undesirables when some men with sane desires to handle a gun could go on his merry way to hunt and do whatever the right to bear arms allows Americans to do. Yes, this method might prove to be a little inconvenient for the sportsman who is used to buying guns at the department store counter, but it would hopefully prove a block for the man with murder on his mind from getting his hands on a gun.
I urge you defenders of the "gun for the asking" theory to remember that the next young woman in the park might be your daughter, granddaughter, niece, or wife, or it could easily be you.
Nearly 2000 years ago the phrase "do unto others . . ." was coined. It seems that it has since been forgotten.
—Meri Maffet
Violence
In the face of a growing crime rate and three assassinations the American people must decide if it is actually the possession of guns that make us such a violent nation or whether there are far deeper reasons for this violence that no gun laws can cure. This page is devoted to this issue presenting student views on the issues.
TV, magazines incite violence
Murders, suicides, robberies, assaults—this is the Land of Happiness, America the Beautiful?
We boast of our glorious nation and of its great opportunities the same nation where political figures, men and women trying to guide their country, live in constant danger of their lives.
Oh, yes, leaders have been killed throughout history—Caesar, Charles I, Czar Nicholas II, and Louis XVI; but let's look at the more modern world. Take four of the leading countries of the world—Russia, Britain, France and the United States.
During the past five years three U.S. leaders have been assassinated, in the other countries none have been. Even in smaller and less advanced civilizations, celebrities may travel and live in safety.
And where is the free and happy ordinary private citizen? He is barricaded in his gun-stocked home protecting his frightened family from rioters, looters, murderers, and robbers.
Where has America's moral decay come from? The type of movies, songs and magazines being presented to a public of men, women and children are one cause of violence in America. How can youth, whose thoughts and personalities are just being developed, help being influenced by the heroworship and glamorous life shown to be led by murderers and robbers?
Many people think that there should be stricter gun laws. Statistics show that countries with tighter gun restrictions do have fewer gun killings. Of course, if a person is really intent upon murdering someone this law would not stop him. It would, however, reduce the number of shootings occurring in sudden moments of anger.
Violence in America can be reduced only when the people really want it to be. They must want it enough to get out and demand that the screens and magazines be cleaned up. They must see that prisoners are given fair and just trials, but that the guilty are punished by law. They must teach their children high morals and the proper handling of a gun, and they must elect capable men and women to government offices.
Mary Scott
Nation is strong
Rocked by storms and weathered by ages, the nation stands strong.
Two hundred years of pushing and growing passed till now it is proud and sure among the great.
Founded out of revolution, today revolution sings again and people moan a terrible fate for America.
They say violence has become a way of life and that people no longer can go out on the streets.
Politicians scream for legislation and new enforcement—in their campaign speeches.
Orators and commencement speakers decry the generation of today and express great hopes for tomorrow's.
But tomorrow's generations
cannot handle the problems of today tomorrow.
The murders, knifings, rapes, assassinations, violence all over our nation must be handled today.
But not with violence in return.
AMERICA—a nation that can be great only if her sons believe in her and what she stands for.
Two hundred million people live within her boundaries; each one has a responsibility to her in re-evaluating himself and what he has done to help her.
When the citizens of the United States of America look at themselves as an important part of this institution and feel the greatness she is capable of, they can be proud of her once more.
—Doris Bolinger
Why all this fuss?
We don't need gun restrictions
4
THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN
Friday, July 12, 1968
Rodgers predicts tight league race
By RICK FOLKMIRE Kansan Staff Reporter
KU football coach Pepper Rodgers hinted that he expects a tight Big Eight Conference race this fall as he listed seven schools as possible contenders for the title in a recent interview.
"WE'RE BETTER physically," said Rodgers who also emphasized that KU would field a much improved team from that which began the 1967 season. Excellent quarterbacking, good receiving, better fullbacking and a solid defensive front line along with a hard core of experience are expected to bolster the team which jumped to the first division last season from a tie for last the year before.
The Jayhawks' mentor seemed to expect his team, which finished in a tie for second place last season with a 5-2 conference record, to be among the list of title contenders.
Quarterback Bobby Douglass heads the list of top players returning this fall. Douglass was the Big Eight back of the year as the total offense leader in 1967 with 1,741 yards rushing and passing. All-Big Eight defensive end John Zook, tight end John Mosier who was the 1967 sophomore-of-the-year, middle guard Emery Hicks, split receiver Donnie Shanklin, and offensive tackle Keith Christensen are also considered the top Jayhawks returning.
Tailback Don Autry, fullback John Riggins and split end George McGowan have been rated as the team's top newcomers, with Autry and Riggins coming up from the freshman team
OVERALL DEPTH is considered the number one problem. The rebuilding of the entire split side of the offensive line is necessary after the graduation of all-conference guard Johnny Greene, tackle Harold Montgomery and split end Ben Olison. An improving defensive secondary is needed by the Jayhawks who managed only 10 interceptions last season, although, as Rodgers points out, most of them came at the end of the season.
and McGowan a junior college transfer.
A number of position changes are being made in the Jayhawks' personnel so as to have the best 22 players starting the game at a time says Rodgers. Grant Dahl, a junior, is being changed from defensive to offensive tackle; Dave Aikins from center to offensive guard; Pat Hutchens from defensive halfback to linebacker; and Donnie Shanklin from split receiver to tailback.
As for the record, KU can do no worse in its first three games, which are all non-conference clashes, than last season when the Jayhawks dropped their first three games.
THIS YEAR Kansas opens with Illinois and then takes on Big Ten Champion Indiana in KU's home-opener. New Mexico will be the last of the non-conference opponents in the first meeting between the two schools.
The Jayhawks will meet their first Big Eight opponent in Nebraska. Oklahoma State, Iowa State, Colorado, Oklahoma, Kansas State and Missouri will follow in that order.
Newspaper intrigues Davis in The Hague
"The Newspaper" was the most interesting.
That dramatization presented and interpreted news events in a
That's what Jed Davis says about plays for young people that he viewed recently in The Hague, Netherlands. Davis directs the University of Kansas Theatre, including theatre for young people, and teaches speech and drama.
J-camper puts shot
Lou Ann Thomas, Kansas state girls champion shotputter, took first place last Saturday in the Missouri Valley District Track Meet. She is attending the journalism division of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp. Miss Thomas of Wamego, topped girls from all over Kansas and Missouri with her 38 foot seven and one-half inch toss in the meet held in Kansas City.
Miss Thomas also won the Junior Olympics held June 6 in Lawrence with what was then a state record throw of 37 feet 11 inches.
She started putting the shot three years ago to "keep it in the family." Her brother is a former champion shotputter and holds several records.
Last year she threw the shot 36 feet four inches which was good enough for sixth in the nation.
Lou Ann Thomas is athletic director for wing seven south in Lewis. She plays basketball, softball and volleyball.
highly stylized, non-realistic manner, interspersing ballet and pantome with dialogue, Davis reports. "It was like an exposure to violence with a wide dramatic range utilizing many contrasts," he said.
The CASTLE
TEA ROOM
is now
open on Sundays
1301-11 Mass. VI 3-1151
DAVIS WAS attending a conference of ASSITEJ, the French abbreviation for International Association of Theatre for Children and Youth.
A combination of Dutch professional groups did the current affairs stage collage called "The Newspaper."
Davis also remembers vividly, but for different reasons, "A Negro Girl's First Day in School" by the Scapino Ballet. "It was totally over-simplified and unclear," he said. "It enacted the European conception of America's racial problems — a false contrived concept—but left the Russians ecstatic."
Oklahoma is Big-8 pick
With a record outpouring of votes in the 23rd annual Big Eight football poll, newsmen of the midlands picked Oklahoma by a landslide to retain its conference championship in the 1968 race.
The Orange Bowl kings of last season received 116 first place ballots from the 157 sports writers and sportscasters who took part in the survey conducted by Kansas sports information director Jay Simon.
The previous record for participation was 142 votes in 1963.
Nebraska was second choice by a slim margin over Kansas, although the Jayhawks received one more first place vote than the Cornhuskers. KU was accorded the top spot by 14 forecasters, but in over-all voting the Huskers gained a 24-point edge for the runnerup position.
In another close race, Missouri shaded Colorado for fourth by 43 points despite trailing the Buffs in first place votes, 6 to 8.
None of the pollsters cast a first place ballot for Oklahoma State, Kansas State or Iowa State, which finished sixth, seventh and eighth in that order.
Only three voters picked the Sooners for a second division finish and just one thought Iowa State would wind up higher than sixth. Kansas and Colorado were the only schools receiving votes for all eight positions.
A year ago Nebraska was first in the poll, but wound up in a tie for fifth with Oklahoma State. The Sooners, who swept to the title with a 7-0 record, were picked for third.
Only twice in the last eight years has the winner of the poll gone on to claim the championship. Nebraska was correctly forecast for the title in 1965 and 1966.
Classified ads get results
THE LONELY GENERATION AND THE
Results of 1968 Big Eight Poll
SEARCH FOR TRUTH
Carlo Pietzner
Director Camphill Movement, USA (Sheltered Villages for the Mentally Retarded)
Loneliness and alienation are here seen in a new dimension, leading to a western understanding of Reinervation and a Western Approach to Meditation. (Reprint of a Lecture)
RUDOLF STEINER
INFORMATION CENTER
211 K Madison Avenue,
New York, N.Y. 10016
Copies sent free of charge
Points
Oklahoma 222
Nebraska 461
Kansas 485
Missouri 632
Colorado 675
Oklahoma State 892
Kansas State 1082
Iowa State 1203
NOTE — To determine total points multiply the number of votes for each position by the number of that position.
PREVIOUS PREDICTIONS
Picked How Year to win Voters Finished 1946 Missouri 30 Third (tie) 1947 Kansas 53 First (tie)
1948 Missouri 41 Second
1949 Oklahoma 42 First
1950 Oklahoma 41 First
1951 Oklahoma 71 First
1952 Oklahoma 66 First
1953 Oklahoma 75 First
1954 Oklahoma 56 First
1955 Oklahoma 76 First
1956 Oklahoma 59 First
1957 Oklahoma 67 First
1958 Oklahoma 75 First
1959 Oklahoma 81 First
1960 Oklahoma 92 Fifth
1961 Kansas 104 Second (tie)
1962 Missouri 134 Second
1963 Oklahoma 142 Second
1964 Oklahoma 137 Second
1965 Nebraska 108 First
1966 Nebraska 100 First
1967 Nebraska 124 Fifth (tie)
SALE OF BAREFOOT SANDALS
OUR DANIELLES
and JACKALINOS
A Grand Array of Styles and Colors Were to $9.00
$3.90
$4.90
$5.90
M'Coy's SHOES
SUA BUS TRIP Nelson Art Gallery Kansas City, Mo., July 16
Return of the Magic Theatre
Bus leaves front of Kansas Union 1:00 p.m. Friday, July 16 and returns by 5:00 p.m.
SIGN UP BY FRIDAY, JULY 12 IN SUA OFFICE KANSAS UNION
Friday, July 12, 1968
THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN
5
ROBERT KINGMAN & BETTY WASHINGTON
Clearance time prime for fall fashion shopping
By JOAN JARVIS Journalism Camp Reporter
Start shopping for fall clothes now. After the July 4 clearance sales is the best time to start scanning the stores for new shipments of back-to-school clothes.
The new synthetic leather outfits are becoming quite popular. Tailored blouses look sharp with skirts or under jumpers. Wool skirts and sweaters with knee socks and loafers still hold one of the top positions in the long list of comfortable school ensembles.
and-match colors add variety to the basic dressrobe.
Experiment with your fall clothes this season. Maybe you have more outfits than you thought you did.
THEY ARE then allowed to strike against targets of natural materials. Zeller has used diamonds and other crystals for these targets. "Molecules similar to organic-type compounds" are the expected results of the experiments.
Zeller is researching the effects of the protons, positively charged particles in the nucleus of an atom, on objects in outer space such as cosmic dust and the surface of the moon. His experiments utilize a proton accelerator which uses "several million" volts of electricity to speed up the protons.
Zeller, who has conducted the solar proton experiments since 1966, has been offered a $22,000 contract with the Air Force Research Center in Cambridge, Mass.
Cultural and sporting programs have been planned by the Student Union Activities (SUA) board to highlight the lazy days of mid-July.
SUA to bring pep into July days
By LINDA EISENBERG Journalism Camp Reporter
resembles a psychedelic funhouse
resembles a psychedelic funhouse.
Those wishing to participate in the program must pay a $1.25 bus fee at the Kansas Union SUA office today. The bus will leave the Union at 1 p.m. and return at 5 p.m. Tuesday.
A bus will transport students to the Nelson Art Gallery in Kansas City to view the special exhibit of the "Magic Theatre" Tuesday. According to Miss Barbara Rice, SUA summer board cultural chairman, this fascinating display
Every collegiate guy must have a sportcoat in his wardrobe. Houndstooth and windowpane seem to be the favorite patterns for this season. Under the sportcoat a plain shirt with matching tie is quite stylish.
This year the basic fall colors are the different shades of brown orange, rust, yellow and an occasional green. Coordinated mix-
Edward J. Zeller, professor of geology, may find "life" in outer space if his experiments with solar protons are successful.
By CATHY RAMIREZ Journalism Camp Reporter
Leave All Your Summer Cleaning To: TOPS Wardrobe Care Centers*
TOPS
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Summer
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To:
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Wardrobe Care Centers*
In By 9—Out By 5
Same Day Service
Shirts on hangers or folded 5 for $1.39
Two Convenient Locations:
1517
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and
1526
West 23rd
*A Division of Lawrence Launderers and Dry Cleaners, Inc.
Prof looks for 'life' in space
TOPS
CLEANERS
LAUNDERERS
SHIRTS
ON HANGERS
9-13 9
KU Summer Theatre Rep.'68
presents
A CAVALCADE OF COMEDY
University of Kansas-Murphy Hall
"YOU CAN'T TAKE IT WITH YOU"
by Kaufman and Hart
July 17,23
"In - The - Round" Main Stage
"ONCE UPON A MATTRESS"
Music by Mary Rodgers and Book by Jay Thompson July 19,24 "In - The - Round" Main Stage
"LA PARISIENNE"
by Henri Becque
July 16, 20, 26
Experimental Theatre
"A THOUSAND CLOWNS"
by Herb Gardner July 13,18,25,27 Experimental Theatre
KU STUDENTS .75 PLUS CURRENT CERTIFICATE OF REGISTRATION
6.
THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN
Friday, July 12, 1968
Saricks says
Students will reason
Ambrose Saricks, co-chairman of the Student-Faculty Committee on University Governance, stated a recent newspaper editorial wrongly suggested some students indicated to him they didn't want to reason with the faculty.
Steel meet ends today
Seventy-five union representatives and leaders from the Greater Kansas City and Missouri will conclude the 22nd annual Steel-workers' Institute here today.
Concentrating on union history and organization, communications, and labor legislation, the Institute sessions are taught by KU faculty and visiting labor consultants.
OTHER VISITING lecturers will be Paul S. Williams, labor consultant, Chicago; Edward A. Disch, organizer, Communications Workers of America, Evanston, Ill.; and V. Iden Reese, Kansas City Junior College.
This institute was one of the first sponsored by the United Steelworkers of America on a college campus and is one of the oldest continuous programs on the University Extension schedule.
KU faculty members are: E. C. Buehler, professor emeritus of speech; and Arvid M. Zarley, assistant professor of economics.
Union representatives attend classes according to the number of years they have attended the Institute. Each year the classes are more advanced. The third-year group meets as a seminar.
Coordinator for this year's institute is Irwin E. Klass, communications counselor for labor organizations, from Chicago, Ill. He will conduct two classes.
Business up at CRES
Firms that are unable to conduct their own research are turning increasingly to CRES.
Created in 1959, the Engineering Science Division of the Center for Research, Inc., has seen its annual volume go from $50,000 to well over a million dollars, an indicator of its role of service to business and industry.
Research through CRES can be sponsored through cooperative agreements, research grants, and special contracts, the current Kansas Business Review explains.
The BETA (Business-Engineering Technical Applications) program was organized three years ago. Graduate students in engineering and business administer this program.
THEIR FUNCTION is to supply answers to business and industrial problems in the form of pertinent technical information and assist in applying it to the particular use of the firm.
However, the basic research done on CRES will probably prove to be the greatest ultimate benefit CRES provides to this region, according to E. Dean Bevan, CRES research publications editor and author of the article. "Already, this research has brought a powerful vote of confidence from NASA in the form of a grant for a $2.3 million Space Research Building at KU."
BUENOS AIRES — (UPI)—A police patrol searching for bandits in the wilds of the Argentine Chaco this spring came across an assertedly 130-year-old chief of the Pilagra Indians, the newspaper "La Nacion" reported.
OLD MAN OF THE CHACO
Photographs showed the chief as a wizened man, bent with age, with white chin whiskers and mustache. The Pilagas live by weaving ponchos and sashes, raising sheep and goats, and hunting and fishing.
In a letter to the editor, Saricks has refuted the notion "that members of Voice or any other students have indicated to me 'that they really would prefer to be opposed than reasoned with,' here."
"I have no knowledge of the sources of your information," he stated flatly.
THE COMMITTEE has been "laboring diligently and in good faith" to make recommendations with wide acceptance, the letter went on, but the results of "our
labor's" cannot be ideal if it supposed to please everyone.
The problem of proper student representation "will not be resolved in a brief period of time, here or anywhere else," Saricks added.
The co-chairman also denied that the committee is composed of two groups, each opposed to each other. "On no issue has there been a simple division of students on one side and faculty on the other."
Instead, differences of opinion are found among the individual faculty members as well as the student members.
Gary Kirkpatrick, visiting lecturer in piano at the University of Kansas, will appear in a faculty recital July 15 at 8 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall.
Pianist Kirkpatrick to visit Swarthout
Classified ads get results
Kirkpatrick has given concerts in eight states and three foreign countries.
His program will include Variations by Mozart, Sonata, Op 57 by Beethoven, works by Chopin, and the Mephisto Waltzes by Liszt.
Kirkpatrick, a native of Kansas, studied piano at the Eastman School of Music, Rochester, N.Y., and toured Europe, the Near East, Poland, and Russia with the Eastman Philharmonic Orchestra in 1961-62. He also studied at the Academy of Music and Dramatic
Arts in Vienna from 1963-67 While earning the Art Diploma he held a scholarship from the Austrian government.
ART SALE
Matted & framed batik & tie dyes. Paintings, ceramics photographs.
Friday & Saturday
12th & 13th
2-7 p.m.
1242 Louisiana
NOTICE
NOTICE
SALE
Summer Clearance Begins
SUITS ... Entire Stock, As Low As $42.50
SPORT COATS ... All Styles, Most At Least 20% Off
DRESS SHIRTS ... Very Large Group, All At $5.00
TIES ... Large Group At 1/2 Off Price
SLACKS ... Group Of Solids Along With Most Of Our Popular Pattern Slacks, Your Choice At $10.00
SPORT SHIRTS ... Many Durable Press, All At Only $4.00
LEVIS ... Press-Free Hopsacks Now Reduced To Only $4.00
KNIT SHIRTS ... Great Selection Of Mock-Turtles And Others Priced $4.00 To $6.00
MISTER
GUY
TRADITIONAL CLOTHIERS
920 MASSACHUSETTS
Friday, July 12, 1968
THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN
7
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
AUTO
KURSS
INSTALLATION
AUTO
Table
Tops
INSTALLATION
AUTO GLASS
Sudden Service
East End of 9th St.——VI 3-4416
---
Don's Steak House
Delicious Steaks & Chicken South on Highway 59 Across from Golf Course—V1 2-9574
THE STARRING WOMEN
"THE SERVANT"
Dirk Bogarde James Fox Harold Pinter (Script)
Friday, July 12—7:00 & 9:30—Dyche--$.50
WE, at THE MAGIC CIRCUS invite YOU to see what we have to offer.
We have posters, beads, handmade jewelry,and imported earrings. We have pipes of all kinds, incense, cigarette papers, and our specialty BLACK LIGHTS. Come in and see us. We're unique.
We Are . . .
The Magic
Circus
706 Mass.
POLAND
THE RED DOG INN
Michelle's Going To Make It — Why Don't You?
"THE LEMON HARANGUE"
Saturday, July 13, 1968
HUCKY
"Come to the sign of
THE DOG—where the action is!'
EVERYONE SAYS
Everything in the Pet Field
And Free Parking At
Grants Drive-In Pet Center
Experienced
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Personal service
8 Conn.. Law. Pet Ph. VI 3-2
1218 Conn., Law. Pet Ph. VI 3-2921
Portraits of Distinction
Also
Passports
- Applications
- Lettermen
- Lettermen
K-Portraits
Please call for appointment
Hixon
Artist
Studio
Portraits of Distinction Bob Blank, Owner
721 Mass.
VI 3-0330
For
Complete
Automobile
Insurance
Gene Doane
Agency
824 Mass. St.
VI 3-3012
NOW OPEN Hillcrest Billiards West End Hillcrest Bowling Lane
Gift Box
Malls Shopping Center VI 2-1523
Andrews Gifts
Plenty of Free Parking
New York Cleaners
For the best in:
- Reweaving
VI 3-0501
- Dry Cleaning
- Alterations
926 Mass.
WANT ADS
FOR SALE
TRAVEL TIME
Accommodations, goods, services,
and employment advertised in the
weekly newspaper are credited to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin.
Western Civilization Notes
Ninth Edition. Comprehensive analysis of this year's reading list. Mimeographed and bound for $4.50. Jayhawk Reference Publications. Call VT 2-0113 for free delivery. 8-2
TYPEWRITERS—New & used office and portables, manual & electric. Olympia portables, SCM and small electrics. Typewriter rental and service copies open and houseware. Lawrence Typewriter, 700 Mass., VI 3-3644.
Week-end flower special $1.00. Offer good Thursday thru Saturday at Alexander's Flowers and Gifts, 826 Iowa. Phone VI 2-1320. 8-2
PSYCHDELIC LIGHTING MANUAL!
Make your own light machines,
strobes, color organs, etc. with easy
diagrams and instructions. Send $2.00 to
Lightrays. 713B Pine Street. Philadelphia.
Pa. 19106.
Carlie's, the 13th street auction sale every Saturday night at 10:00. We buy
Monday thru Saturday 8:00 A.M.
to 5:30 P.M. 1301 Delaware. V-13-0481.
515 Michigan St. St. B-Q — outdoor pit, rib slab to go. $2.25; Rib order. $1.50; Rib sandwich, 85¢; chicken. $1.15; Brisket sandwich, 70¢; Heurs, 1 a.m. to 11 p.m. Closed Sunday and Tuesday. Phone VI 2-9510. 8-2
SEE AND COMPARE! New Edition of 'New Analysis of Western Civilization' and a new edition of *Adventurism*, first edition sold out! Abingdon Bookstore, 1237 Oread. **8-2**
TV-Stereo console. Danish modern hand-rubbed walnut cabinet, AM-FM, 27" screen, UHF and VHF. Excellent condition. VI 2-1452. 7-19
For salc~ Philco TV, almost new-
ape recorder, stereo-men-
i 7-2174 7-19
2 Snow Tires on rims, 7.75-14, used one season, excellent condition-$30.00 Baby bed and mattress, $15.00. 3220 W. 9th V.I. 3-1035.
Records for sale. I tape records and sell them new. $2 for $7 list. All types of music: opera, baroque, modern, etc. VI 3-9180. 7-23
1964 Java Green Volkswagen. One owner. Fully equipped. Excellent condition. See to appreciate. VI 3-1625. 7-23
Coin Collection and Foreign Stamp
TV, VI, 3-4765
New Large Postage
7-19
Sailboat, excellent condition, one
Bantom saila (150 sq. ft.) by Thurston,
equipped with a trapeze, must sell.
Call Harry Brubaker. VI 2-7-19
Exclusive Representative
Full Size, Standard Royal Typewriter, like new, reasonable. Also 6-95-14vw snow tire and 14 inch wheel. Call VI 2- 4252 after 5:00.
of
L. G. Balfour Co.
Fraternity Jewelry
- Badges
- Guards
- Novelties
- Novelties
- Favors
- Lavaliers - Rings
- Lavaliers
- Sportswear
- Muas
Sportswe
Rings
Cups Awaras
- Paddles • Trophies
411 W. 14th VI 3-1571
Al Lauter
LET
---
MAUPINTOUR TRAVEL SERVICE
Make Your
SUMMER TRAVEL Reservation Now!
Malls Shopping Center VI 3-1211
English Bike $20, light brown fall
$5.00. VI 2-7981. 7-26
TEACHERS MOVING. FOR SALE:
Books: 20-vol. Modern World Encyce,
$10.00; 350 college texts, novels,
sci-fi books, from $6 to $4.50. Three-type-
writers: portable, $20.00; Underwood
upright, $15.00; electric, $10.00. VM
4-track stereo tape recorder, com-
panion, from $9 to $30. tapes, tape editing kit, $9.00.
Kodak Signet 80 camera with flash
attachment and portable slide viewer,
$20.00 GE portable TV antenna,
$40.00 color TV antenna,
$8.00. AM-FM clock radio, $10.00
Philco portable radio, $5.00. Set of 4
wall plaques, $10.00. Electric skillet,
screamer, bulletin board, Journal-World
double delivery bag. Also toys: AMT
racetrack, complete with table and
eazer, bulletin board, Journal-World
train, $10.00. Motorife racetrack;
other toys from 5c to 75c. CALL VI
2-8557 or see at 325 Tennessee. 7-12
FOR RENT
Sleeping rooms with kitchen privilege
and near downtown. VI T-3-5767. 8-2
2 a/c furnished 1st floor apartments.
3 campus and near downtown.
V 3-15767 8-2
Unfurnished 2 bedroom apt. I1 stoor.
East 12th Eat. 12th
VI 2-6163 after 5 p.m.
7-19
2 comfortable private rooms with good family meals for summer in large quiet home. Also reservation and deposit for fall term for 3 rooms being taken now. Short walk to campus. Call VI 2-8960. 7-16
For rent to graduate or mature undergraduate. Extra nice bachelor or studio apartments 1½ blocks from law office, library, private parking. Quiet ideal study conditions. For appointment call VI 3-8534. 8-2
2 furnished apartments $60 and $65.
VI 2-1107. 7-30
4 Bedroom apartment 2 blocks from campus. Available August 1-$200 per month. All utilities paid. Male or Female. No limit on number of occupants, no unreasonable rules and regulations. Call VI 72-7235 7-30
NOTICE
Loans to seniors and graduate students. Expenses. Cust-Master - VI 3-8074. M-2
1965 Rambler Convertible. Good condition. Fully equipped and will contain kitchen appliances. An apartment and rooms for Cooking facilities. 1304 Mass. 7-16
Something different for that special guy in the service. Poopcorn, Cheesecorm, Caramel Corn, Cinnamon corn, Balls and Ice Cream Shop. Balls or overseas. Special air tight containers guarantee freshness. Also popcorn balls and home-made Chocolate pecan balls. Also Ice Cream Shop. Malls Shopping Center. VI 2-7125. 7-16
SERVICES OFFERED
MOTORCYCLE INSURANCE—be safe with a low-rated policy and save money when those unsuspected accidents can cause Causes. Can you DERWRITERS INSURANCE COMPANY, 2323 Ridge Court. Office-II 3-2170; home-VI 3-4798. 8-2
Need cash for those 2nd semester expenses? We make personal loans to Juniors, Seniors, and Grad students. Contact Mr. Hamilton, Beneficial Finance Company, 725 Mass., phone VI 3-8074.
Theses, term papers, miscellaneous works typed on pica electric typewriter, prompt and guaranteed. Mrs. Troxl. VI 2-1440. 8-2
TUTOR for ENGLISH and INTENSIVE ENGLISH. Have tutoring experience and English degree from K.U. Call Bonnie Hill. VI 3-4765.
7-29
TYPING
Multilingual Secretarial Service. To have articles, reports, term papers, theses and dissertations typed in Foreign Languages or English. Call VI 2-6516. The Multilingual Secretarial Service or VI 3-5040. 7-16
Thesis, term papers, themes typed and/or edited by K.U. graduate (Eng-
typewriter). Located close to Oliver Hall. VI 3-2873.
Experienced in typing term papers,
themes, dissertations, and other
miscellaneous typing work. Have
electric typewriter skills. Have
rates for Prompt and efficient
service. Call VI 3-9554, Mrs.
Wright.
Experienced typist will type theses,
themes, term papers. Have electric
typewriter. Contact Mrs. Ethel Henderson.
VI 2-0122. 7-23
Experienced typist would like typing.
Has had experience in typing theses,
thesis, and papers for a typewriter,
typewriter with carbon, silk ribbon,
Call Mrs. Lancaster. VI 2-1705.
WANTED
Co-ed wants roommate(s) and apart-
ture after 5 p.m. semester. Call VI 3-76
7-16
8
THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN
Friday, July 12, 1968
Women staff is announced
By TERI STAAB Journalism Camp Reporter
The following women will serve as freshman counselors and staff assistants for women's halls this fall.
Beth Lindquist, Wichita senior; Patricia McCall, Raytown, Mo., junior; Kathy McGreevy, Paola senior; Brenda Miller, New York City junior; Sara Pyle, Lawrence junior; Sheryl Rickard, Lyons junior; Pat Scott, Topeka junior.
Freshman counselors:
SHERLY SPIVEY, Wichita junior; Carol Sue Stevens, Leawood senior; Shary Stafford,
Belleville junior; Ramona Terry,
Shawnee Mission junior; Phyllis
Wetmore, Wichita junior; Janet
Will, Memphis, Tenn., senior;
Candy Williams, Lawrence graduate
student.
Ellen Winkler, Webster Groves, Mo., graduate student; Pam Withers, Kansas City junior; Joan Yates, Shawnee Mission senior; Deb Youngstrom, Des Moines, Iowa; junior; Marilyn Baltz, Millstadt, Ill.; janet Bare, Wichita graduate student; Patricia Blackburn, Shawnee Mission senior.
Logan discusses nation's economy
James K. Logan, Democratic candidate for U.S. Senate Thursday night called for the establishment of fiscal priorities at home, increased exports, and the return of American troops in Europe.
"Clear priorities on spending at home should have been established long ago," he said. "The Democratic Party has traditionally been the American political party that has kept abreast of the times, but in this case, a Democratic administration has faltered. I will not defend the Administration's present fiscal policy, for it has lagged too far behind the rapidly shifting conditions of our times."
Logan, speaking in Hutchinson to the Democratic Club of Reno County, said he could not support the fiscal policies of the present administration.
EXPLAINING HIS position on priorites, Logan said that non-essential projects must be cut back.
"A federal construction project may well be worthwhile, but it must be considered in terms of whether it is essential now. If it is not essential now, it must be delayed."
He said, however, that when urgent demands have been met, these delayed projects can be reconsidered in terms of new priorities and the funds available."
He asked for up-to-date solutions to current problems.
"A QUARTER of a million U.S. troops are in Europe where they serve as a one-way funnel for U.S. dollars pouring into the economies of other nations. Our armed forces have demonstrated that they can fly thousands of troops to Europe on short notice to meet emergencies. But still we persist in the expensive practice of stationing troops there as though it would take weeks in a World War II troop ship to get them to a trouble spot from the United States. World War II was over 25 years ago; it's time we stopped using 25-year-old techniques to deal with a jet-age problem."
In reiterating his appeal for the end of the war in Vietnam, Logan said: "Our $25-billion a year expenditure there dwarfs the amount spent in Europe. We must begin to de-Americanize the war for as the war de-Americanizes in terms of the number of American troops involved, it also will de-Americanize in terms of dollars. It takes no economic wizardry to conclude that it costs far more to maintain an American soldier in Vietnam than it costs to maintain a South Vietnamese soldier in his homeland."
LOGIN SAID he believes that until Vietnam War ends, American balance of payments will be trained and fiscal priorities home will be distorted. Logan suggested the tools of tax decrease and tax increases as methods of implementing fiscal policy. He said that while no public office holder wants to raise taxes, an urgently needed tax hike was finally implemented after months of bickering.
"An unpleasant tax increase, however, is just one tool to be
used. A tax reduction can be equally useful. But office holders are not always as willing to cut taxes as you might assume. There is always the possibility that taxes might have to be raised again later and this is politically more sensitive than ignoring the need in the first place. It's a lot easier to pass the buck for inaction than action."
Cheryl Burnet, Oklahoma City, Okla., junior; Grace Dexter, Topeka junior; Jane Frazier, Winfield senior; Connie Finch, Bartlesville, Okla., junior; Anne Geiss, Ottawa senior; Joyce Goering, Moundridge senior; Becky Herold, Great Bend junior.
DEXIE HIETT, Haven junior; Carol Hinshaw, Wichita junior; Linda Hybarger, Independence junior; Candy Kane, St. Louis junior; Terry Knowles, Bloomfield Hills, Mich., junior; Susan Linton, Prairie Village junior; Mary Lippitt, Wichita junior.
Stephanie Kessler, Kansas City junior; Susan Duggins, Overland Park graduate student; Patricia Writt, Akron, Ohio, senior; Linda Pollnow, Oberlin junior; Diane K. Morrison, Cheyenne, Wyo., junior.
Upperclass hall staff assistants:
Pat Linneberger, Goodland senior; Solveig Rolfsrud, Alexandria, Minn., junior; Carol Rice, Wichita junior; Virgine Flakus, Ellinwood senior; Diana Javellana, Kapaa, Kauai, Hawaii, senior; Janet Fink, Kansas City, Mo., senior; Janean Meigs, Pratt senior.
Upperclass high school assistants:
Barbara Marx, Kansas City;
senior; Martha Fowler, Osawatomi
mier junior; Kathy Hinkley, St.
Joseph, Mo., junior; Linda Weir,
Wichita senior; Martha Scott, Salt
Lake City junior.
Rockefeller backers plan city-wide canvass
The KU New Majority for Rockefeller will sponsor canvassing to influence delegates to the Republican National Convention, Jay Curtis, Prairie Village senior and chairman of the group, said Tuesday.
The first group will send volunteers to Kansas City to help that chapter collect petition signatures Saturday, Curtis said. The petitions will be sent to delegates from the Fourth Congressional District and delegates at large.
Kansas has 20 delegates to the Republican Convention, two from each district and ten at large, Curtis said. He said all are committed to Sen. Frank Carlson as a favorite son on the first ballot and that eight have indicated preferences for later ballots.
Don't forget Sandy's Pepsi hour
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KU
kamper kansan
KU
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Volume 5, Issue 4
Friday, July 12, 1968
Council discusses future
BY LINDA EISENBERG
Kamper Kansan Reporter
Camp Council activities and future plans were discussed at the organization's third meeting Monday night.
Three major ideas suggested at last week's meeting during the presence of Russell L. Wiley, camp director, have since been investigated.
Late Saturday night bus transportation to and from Lawrence is now in effect. Tenatively, a bus is scheduled to leave the KU campus between 6 and 6:30 p.m. At 11 p.m. the bus will leave downtown and return to the campus.
WILEY SAID last week he doubted if the four University Theatre plays could be rescheduled to correspond with the camp's closing hours.
A committee to examine the situation last night reported that
there was a possibility that "You Can't Take It With You" and "Once Upon a Mattress" would be performed during the week as a special camp matinee. The matinees and Saturday night performances of "La Parisienne" and "A Thousand Clowns" would permit campers to see all four plays
The German division has opened the first study area at Lewis from 6 to 9 p.m. This small room can accommodate only German campers but is an attempt to solve the study hall problem discussed by the council last week.
RICHARD Brummett, council adviser, announced boys invited by their girlfriends to the July 20 formal dance could stay at Joseph R. Pearson Hall for $3. Visiting girls may stay at McCollam. The cost does not include food and guests must provide their own bedding.
Campers' formal will be July 20
By JOAN JARVIS Kamper Kansan Reporter
The camp formal will be held at the Student Union Ballroom, Saturday evening, July 20. The dance will begin at 8 p.m. and end at 11 p.m.
The dorm closing hours for that evening will be midnight, with lights out at 12:30.
The camp formal is the only time that campers are allowed, with parental permission, to date non-campers. Guests may visit their friends in camp from Saturday noon until Sunday evening at 9:30.
THE GIRLS will have a separate wing at McCollum Hall, and the boys at Joseph R. Pearson Hall. A fee of $3 is required for the guest staying in the hall, and linen, such as sheets and towels must be provided by the visitor.
For the girls, long or short formals are suitable. For the boys, suits are acceptable, or if they wish to rent a tuxedo or dinner jacket from one of the local stores, this is also okay.
Each individual wing from every dorm will nominate a candidate for king and queen. The king and queen will be crowned at the dance.
As always, during the weekend no camper will ride with a non-camper even with parental permission.
Brummett clarified a misprint on this week's schedule. Campers are to pick up their free tickets for the July 26 ballet performance at the McCollum desk instead of at the University Box Office.
IT WAS EXPLAINED the salt and pepper shakers were removed from the cafeteria tables at Ellisworth because campers were mixing salt and sugar. According to Brummett, this happens, every year and the utensils should be back on the tables within a few days.
By CLAUDIA PEEBLES
Kamper Kansan Reporter
Folk-rock show begins practice
The strumming of guitars, soft haunting melodies, a gentle voice filling the room and the dark moodiness of a Donovan style drew an audience to a practice of the Young Prophecies '68.
THE YOUNG Prophecies '68, organized and directed by Bill Cline, assistant camp supervisor, is made up of campers with an interest in folk-rock. They will perform in an hour long show which they hope will, as Cline expressed, "convey the message of today's teenagers." The performance is being held free of charge
The show will offer a wide range of songs from earlier folk songs to blues to folk rock. It features a variety of talented guitar players and folk singers.
As they began to harmonize and stum the strings of their guitars in plaintive chords, a crowd accumulated, silent almost in awe of the impromptu performance.
An excited group of campers gathered in Ellsworth's cafeteria to practice for a folk-rock performance to be held July 16 at 7:30 p.m. in the University Theatre.
SONGS FEATURED in the folk-rock show will be: "Four Strong Winds," "Scarborough Fair," "The Cruel War," "Dangling Conversations," and one which is an original composition by a performer. A four-piece combo will play four songs and dancers will do the slide during these numbers.
Timing of the show will be precise and professional. Much work was done timing each song with a stopwatch and the Young Prophecies '68 are making every effort to make their show a fast moving and enjoyable one for the campers.
Stage management done by Cline, provides for the singers to be on stage at all times, spotlighted during their act. Risers will be provided for the dancers, combo and singers. Co-master of ceremonies will be Phil Brown and Jim Kershaw.
Assistant director, Paul Young, assistant supervisor at Ellsworth Hall, has helped in the practices.
Campers flock to free films
By DARRYL PINCKNEY Kamper Kansan Reporter
An average of 470 people pack Swarthout Recital Hall for each showing of the free films given by the Midwestern Music and Art Camp.
The selection of these films is made by Russ Brandon, supervisor of counselors, who chooses from a standard list, which is in turn okayed by the camp's director and his staff.
The criterion for selection is the moral acceptance of the films by the campers' parents, and the scheduling. "The camp has a responsibility to the parents, too," said Brandon.
THE MOVIES are rented from a large distributing company, Swank of St. Louis, Mo. Because of this, the final list of planned movies cannot be made until five days before the beginning of camp. It is also hard to find dates
when movies can be scheduled according to the camp's own schedule explained Brandon.
The total spent by the camp this year for movies is $550. This includes rent of the projectors, rental fee of films, and maintenance. The movies generally fall into three prices: $27.50, $52.50, and $33.50.
In answer to those who complain because few Academy Award winners are shown, Brandon said that he had tried to rent those films before, but they could not be worked conveniently into the camp's schedule. The movie schedule includes four top movies, "Guns of Navaronne," six to eight better than average movies, and five to six average movies. The five week schedule totals eighteen films.
For the sixth week, a $75 to $100 film is planned which will be repeated three times. The title
or date for that movie is unknown.
Movies planned are:
The Cowboy—July 9
- The Barbarian and the Geisha - July 12
- A Taxi for Tobruk—July 13
- The Great Locomotive Chase
—July 16
● A Big Hand for the Little Lady—July 20
Museums lend culture
By HEATHER McNEIL Kamper Kansan Reporter
In the quiet and relaxation of the museums in Lawrence, KU campers can find enjoyment and culture.
1980
—Kansan Photo by Gail Walsman
Colonel Arnald Gabriel rehearses with the concert band, trying to destroy amateurish elements.
PROFESSIONALISM STRESSED
Band leader strives for professionalism
By MERI MAFFET Kamper Kansan Reporter
Gabriel, conductor and commander of the U.S. Air Force Band in Washington, D.C., will be guest conductor for Band camp concerts this weekend. He has spent this week rehearsing with six groups of musicians daily in preparation for the final offensive.
Two time Bronze Star recipient Colonel Arnald Gabriel's brown eyes sparkle when he mentions his latest mission: find and destroy amateurism in Band Camp rehearsals.
"I THINK this is the most outstanding group of high school students in the United States or in the world. I don't know of any place where there is a greater pool of talent," he said.
In accordance with this philosophy, Gabriel is demanding nearprofessionalism of the groups. "When my friends Skitch Henderson and Carl "Doc" Severinsen both spoke highly of the camp, I chose the hardest music in the concert band repeteo," he said.
IN A SIMILAR manner he selected difficult music for the two orchestral groups, also. "The talent is here," he said. "I knew the kids would accept the challenge of performing these works."
A recipient of the Legion of Merit award for helping to improve international relations between the United States and 24 foreign countries through music,
Gabriel stressed the importance of music to world peace. "I encourage young people to have intense involvement in music; it is the international language. Good music played well does more for better international relations than any other thing our State Department can do."
"The music profession is one of the few things left in life that can improve relations with other countries," he said. He cites the Air Force Band's spring concert as an example. "We played 27 concerts in 19 cities in 12 Latin and South American countries before an audience of 174,000 people, and there was not a single demonstration. To quote one Peruvian reviewer, 'Quality obviously is the best propaganda.'"
IN ADDITION to his work with the Air Force Band, Gabriel spends his weekends guest conducting at youth clinics and festivals. This summer he is spending four weeks at music camps: one week at Iowa State, one week at KU, and two weeks at the State University of New York.
"Conducting is a very strenuous job both physically and mentally," said Gabriel. "I don't have to do this extra conducting, but I think it is a duty of the military to encourage young musicians." As if constant conducting isn't enough of a physical exercise, 43-year-old Gabriel spends his lunch
See BAND LEADER on page 4
The Art Museum was established in 1917 as a state-supported institution. Over 10,000 objects valued at $2 million are now on display. Furniture, paintings, sculptures, tapestries and works of silver and bronze are exhibited throughout the three floors. The art dates from 3000 BC to the present.
A WOODEN statue of St. Peter stands on the ground floor, pointing his finger towards the door of religion. In the basement, the "Head of a Man" from the 3rd century stares straight ahead, the nose broken sometime over the years.
A painting of the Duke of Monmouth hangs over the stairs to second floor where European art from every period of history can be found. There is a "Nerdure" tapestry from the late 17th century, the American eagle made from zinc, and a bronze of "The Bronco Buster" by Remington.
Modern art, too, from cartoon paintings to vacuform plastic is displayed.
A PANORAMA of North American animals begins a tour of the Museum of Natural History. Stuffed animals from Hawaii to Alaska are posed in their native environment. Each scene is trueto-life, with bobcats preparing to pounce on rabbits, coyotes howling to the moon, and bull moose entangling their antlers in battle.
In the basement are the bones of prehistoric animals. Clothing and articles of different peoples of the world are on second floor. The horse Comanche, sole survivor of Custer's Last Stand, is stuffed and stands in full cavalry uniform.
Both museums are open from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Saturday and from 1:30 to 5 p.m. on Sundays and holidays.
2
KAMPER KANSAN
Friday, July 12, 1968 obit
Cooperation needed for effective camp
When we as teenagers disagree with a situation, we often can be noted for our violent and fiery protest.
This has become increasingly evident as the first three weeks of camp have passed, and we have begun to realize the faults of this camp.
But are we, as protestors, helping to cause or eliminate problems?
First of all, campers must realize protesting is not the only way to change camp policies. If we as teenagers would act as maturely as we expect to be treated, the administration might change.
Look at some of the immature stunts campers have already tried. Putting toothpaste on toilet
handles, standing in the middle of the street to antagonize drivers and pressing all the buttons in the elevators to break it, illustrate just a few of the ridiculous and unnecessary tricks that have been pulled.
One must remember that rules may restrict everybody just to control a few that misuse their freedom.
Undoubtedly there is a need for some serious changes in this camp's rules and undoubtedly protesting will be needed to bring it to the attention of the administration. But do you see yourself as part of the reason for inflicting these rules?
Secondly, it may be argued that if the camp treated campers maturely the campers would act maturely. The basic problem is—what is the cause and what is the effect?
Possibly, immature acts of campers in the past forced the administration to make stricter rules. If this is true, it is then our responsibility to show the administration that we as mature teenagers can independently control ourselves and respect more liberal camp policies.
Efforts to change are definitely needed by both campers and administrators. If we can change, we also expect camp policies, procedures, and rules to be revised to cope with teenagers of today and not those of 34 years ago.
—Sid Speltz
Letters to the editor
July 3,1968
Sirs:
A fact not realized by many of the authorities at the Midwestern Music and Art Camp is that campers are living, THINKING, human, people. While we came here prepared to study in college-prep courses, it seems that the treatment of the campers contradicts itself inside the classroom and outside the classroom.
We are treated and expected to behave as adults in the classroom, but the minute we step outside the door our maturity decreases by leaps and bounds in the eyes of the authorities. The incentive to excel and enjoy work is lost in the tight restrictions placed upon us.
To cite a few of the many examples: a camper was sitting in the lobby of Murphy Hall and was about to light a cigarette when she was approached by an authority, who said that she, as a camper, could not smoke in the building.
Anyone who has been in Murphy has surely noticed the many ashtrays sitting in the halls, and we are sure that these ashtrays are meant to be used by people. Are campers not people? Must we go sit on a sidewalk or street to have a cigarette and look like something nearly subhuman?
We were told in letters from the directors of the different divisions that places would be provided for campers who wished to smoke. Where are these places? The streets and sidewalks? In addition, the lounges of all dorms are provided with ashtrays to be used "by guests only." Why can't
campers, who pay quite a bit of good money to come here, be allowed to use the facilities?
The restrictions on when and to whom we may speak is another example of the way in which we are treated like children. There are many interesting people on the campus who are not campers, and communicating with people is, or should be, part of every person's education.
Campers certainly agree that the rule of not dating non-campers is justified; however, the rule that prevents merely talking to a university student or a Lawrence High School student definitely does not seem justified. Most parents would not send their child to a camp for six weeks if they did not feel that he was mature enough to know right from wrong and when to go to bed.
This brings up the topic of bedtimes. Most students have enough sense to sleep when they need it. Many don't need as much sleep as some, and others need more than some. Why, since we are treated like adults in the classroom, can't we be treated in the same manner elsewhere?
We certainly have enough sense to know when to go to bed. Many people study better at night than they do during the day, and so they relax after dinner or after classes, and they then find that they haven't the time to study before "lights out," and the fact that "lights out" occurs when it isn't yet dark outside makes the whole thing seem rather ridiculous.
What we are asking, then, is for
respect. Because if respect is not shown to others, how can one expect any in return? We are not asking for a repeal of all rules, because we are intelligent enough to realize that rules are needed. What we want is to be treated with the respect we as intelligent human being deserve to be treated.
Contentment blocks camp's potential
Contentment is the basic reason for this situation. Band Camp is content in providing a camp that will keep students happy but will not give them the opportunity to gain as much as possible during the summer.
Referring to something as two-sided usually denotes a good and bad view. Most things are two-sided and Band Camp is no exception. However, in this case, the two lives of Band Camp, its social and academic lives, are both lacking.
"To give young people the beautiful experience to study in the fields that they are most interested in is the real reason of camp," said Russell L. Wiley, camp director.
True, most of the campers are here to study in specified fields but must this be the only area in which they learn?
Expanding the camp's social life to include discussion groups, prominent speakers and other
—Signed by 50 campers
Kansas City, one of the largest cities in the U.S. offers a multitude of opportunities that would correspond with our studies. Large newspaper offices, dance theatres . . . only 50 minutes away! Why not take advantage of them?
similar programs would give campers the chance to partake in a unique learning experience. For, how often do 2,000 teenagers of various religions, races and ideas have such an opportunity?
There is so much which Band Camp can do to give itself a stronger, well-balanced life. True, many campers will be satisfied with a mediocre camp but is this any justification when a few adjustments can correct the situation?
While the academic life is far beyond the mediocre level simple improvements would lend to an even more fulfilling summer.
—Linda Eisenberg
COOPS! DISCARD IT
Movie types inadequate
The lack of pre-planning which caused the lower-quality movies shown this year could be remedied next year by ordering earlier and by placing this responsibility on a less-overworked office.
The Bridge on the River
Kwai . . . Oklahoma . . . Rebel
Without a Cause . . . Damn the
Defiant . . . A Raisin in the
Sun . . . Gambit . . The List
of Adrian Messenger.
"You bunch of pinkos! What do you mean you don't like Walt Disney!"
—Kansan Cartoon by Don Wallace
Walt Disney's Savage Sam and The Great Locomotive Chase . The Rare Breed . The Prisoner . The Barbarian and the Geisha . Zotz . The Cowboy . Taxi for Tobruk .
An almost steady diet of cowboy, war and animal movies can scarcely be called edifying for students of the average age of 16. Available now at SWANK, according to officials there, are four Academy Award winners; three which received nominations and
Granted some of these films were not available while Brandon was placing his orders. Earlier checking to see what would be available could have changed this year's movie program from mediocre to excellent. Early orders, the only real answer, can make the difference in next year's program.
Films such as these are available now at SWANK Motion Picture, Inc. and cost no more (in many cases less) than the ones now scheduled for the camp.
It is usually possible to rent any film on the SWANK list by submitting an order one to two months before it is needed. To improve the movie program next year, there must be a change in the present camp policy of ordering films three or four days before they are to be shown (as Russell Brandon was forced to do this year).
All of these award-winning movies could have been entertaining Band campers this summer had more pre-planning been used.
On the Waterfront . . . The Anatomy of a Murder . . . Captain Newman M.D. . . . The Mouse That Roared . . . Good Neighbor Sam . . . Behold a Pale Horse . . . Fail Safe . . Advise and Consent . . .
six which have been presented awards by organizations such as the National Board of Review, Parents Magazine or the International Film Festival.
These films boast a team of stars like Henry Fonda, Walther Mathau, Jack Lemmon, George C. Scott, Sidney Poitier, Peter Sellers, Omar Sharif, Michael Caine, Walter Pigeon—the list is practically endless. Also, all of these movies have been approved morally for adults and youth by the Legion of Detency (National Catholic Office for motion pictures).
Surely the above-mentioned movies could be accepted "morally" next year by most of the camper's parents. Out of the films which have been announced for this year, many have received no special award. John Wayne seems to be upstaging just about everyone as the actor seen most often in Swarthout Recital Hall.
It is preferable to show different films each year. But previous use of a film is no real excuse for substituting an inferior work in the place of a readily-available top-rated one.
What about extra and unusual movies which could add an exciting, provocative angle to the camp evenings?
When Comedy was King (with Laurel and Hardy, Charlie Chaplin, Bustor Keaton and the Keystone Kops) . . . The Cat and the Canary (a silent movie) . . . The Hard Way (a documentary on poverty) . . Hand in Hand (a beautiful, frequently televised tale of two children and religion) . . When Brave Men Die (a documentary on sit-ins, draft card burning, Martin Luther King's march on Washington, D.C., and so on).
For the average price of $15 these shorter films could be a supplement to the program, providing stimulating material for all campers wanting to take advantage of them. This camp is composed of students of high intelligence and varied interests. Movies such as these would undoubtedly add a new dimension to the entire camp program.
Presently the movies are an integral part of the camp's social program. This week, for example, three were scheduled. Surely the administration could put forth a little extra effort and pre-planning to overcome scheduling conflicts in order to insure excellent movies instead of mostly average ones.
— Linda Ehrlich
kamper kansan
Camp Office—214 Murphy Hall
UN 4-3755
Kamper News Office—112 Flint Hall UN 4-3646
The Kamper Kansan, camp newspaper at the Midwestern Music and Art Center of Chicago, will be on Fridays. It is written by members of the Journalism Division of the Camp.
The opinions expressed in the editorial columns are those of the editorial staff of the newspaper. Guest editorial views are not necessarily those of the editorial staff. Any opinions expressed in the Kamper Kanan are not necessarily those of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp or the University of Kansas.
Accommodations, goods, and employment offered in the Kamper Kansan are offered to students without regard to color, creed, or national origin.
Executive Staff
Photography Bill Seynour
Adviser Roberts Stevens
Editor in Chief Steve Tonar
News Editor Allen Hartz
Editorial Editor Sidney Speltz
Feature Editor Doris Bolinger
Sports Editor Donald Wallace
Photo Editor Gall Walman
Photograph Michael Albert, Linda Daniels, Linda Erlich, Linda
Joan Jarvis, Michael Albers, Leslie Daniels, Linda Ehrlich, Linden Eisenberg, Ruthann Lehmman, Mriel Maffelt, Stephen Osborn, Darryl Knackey, Cathy Ramirez, Anita Schroeder, Douglas Uunadu, McNiel Viets, Diane Wanek, Eric Kramer, Terri Staab, and Heather McNiel
Friday, July 12, 1968 abi7
KAMPER KANSAN
3
Brandon practices whip
S
—Kansan Photo by Richard Vieets
What dorm supervisor in band camp is often seen cracking a bullwhip outside the dorm? Why Russ. "Bullwhip" Brandon, of course!
By RICHARD VIETS Kamper Kanan Reporter
Brandon, a band director at Sublette, Kan., during the school year, is supervisor of counselors and resident director in Joseph R. Pearson Hall.
The whip serves no practical purpose; Brandon does not actually use it to punish the campers.
"THE WHIP is just a curiosity item," Brandon said. "Tve had it since high school."
Brandon is the director of the senior high, junior high, and grade school bands in Sublette. "Whenever the band goes on a trip, they always take my whip along as a sort of mascot," Brandon explained.
He was born in 1936 at Kingman, Kan. He attended KU for his B.A. in music education and is currently working on his masters.
RUSS "BULLWHIP" BRANDON
HIS WIFE, Ann, and he have two children, Terri, age 7 and Russ, age 9.
As supervisor of the 140 counselors, Brandon aids them with problems that are bound to result when you put 2,100 high school students together.
"I think the counselors should establish the personal relationships with the campers," Brandon said. "I just help them with the problem campers."
He became supervisor of JRP when it became evident another dorm was needed to house the campers. "I just make sure the boys get enough food and take care of the dorm." Brandon said.
Brandon was also supervisor at the junior high camp this summer.
Famed saxophonist here for concert
By DIANE WANEK
Kamper Kansan Reporter
“Oo-oo-oo”—the last tones of a ghostly Edgy MacDonald piece filtered through the mouthpiece of Siguard Rascher's saxophone.
Rascher, gaunt and poetic looking, turned in his chair and said in a marked foreign accent,
"Sometimes I get so totally involved in the music, that I don't even know what I'm playing. The only experience comparable to it is a rainbow. With a rainbow one can see all the colors at one time; so it is with the notes in the music."
His musical career began in Stuttgart, Germany, when as a student in a music conservatory there, he found himself in need of money. He proceeded to a pawn shop, where he spent all his money on a saxophone. He had never played a saxophone before, but he did know some clarinet techniques. He soon became a member of a small musical group and made enough money to live on.
Rascher gradually made a name for himself in Germany, and he became a soloist with the Berlin Philharmonic in 1932. From there, he went on a concert tour to Australia. He decided instead of going back to Europe the way he had come, he would sail via the United States.
Arriving in New York, Rascher though he should try to get a job somewhere, so he applied for a
HIS ATTEMPTS to find an instructor of saxophone in Europe were in vain, and Rascher had to learn the mastering techniques himself. Thus, he has become an accomplished self-taught saxophonist.
position at the New York Philharmonic and was accepted after less than a five-minute audition. He also played with the Boston Symphony, and has played with more than 200 of the world's great symphonies since then.
RASCHER IS very proud he has played more concerts than any living woodwind player. He has also had more than 120 pieces composed solely for him by composers who believed in Rascher's affinity for music. Four of these pieces were performed by Rascher at his concert in the University Theatre Monday night. They included, "Particles" by Armand Russell, "Beyond These Hills" by Carl Anton Wirth, "Air and Scherzo" by Henry Cowell, and "Partita" by Erwin Dressel.
Art division has display
By CHRISTINE THOMPSON
Kansan Kammer Remorter
A cross section of class work from art campers will be on display starting today in Murphy Hall gallery.
The instructors select the best of the art students' work for display, which is open to the public. Displays are changed every Friday afternoon and remain up for one week each.
STUDENTS ARE offered classes in cartooning, jewelry, interior design, lettering, pottery, weaving, commercial art, print making, fashion illustration and pen and ink drawing.
Concert enlivens week-end
Friday evening
7:15 p.m.
PROGRAM
Kenneth Bloomquist, Conductor Les Sperling, Guest Conductor Lt. Col. Arnald Gabriel, Guest Conductor
Theme Song
Irish Tune from County Derry ... arr. Percy Grainger
Amparito Roca ... Jaime Texidor
Light Cavalry Overture ... Franz Von Suppé
Them Basses ... G. H. Huffine
Mr. Bloomquist, conducting
A Festive Overture ... Alfred Reed
Me Scribble Journal
Fiesta Del Pacifico ... Roger Nixon
Lt. Col. Gabriel, conducting
Saturday afternoon
2:15 p.m.
PROGRAM SYMPHONIC CHOIR
Symphony No. 5 in C Minor ... Ludwig V. Beethoven
Lt. Col. Gabriel, conducting
Duncan Couch, Conductor
Paul Salamunovich, Guest Conductor
Magnificat Anima Mea ... Dietrich Buxtehude
Cantique de Jean Racine ... Gabriel Faure
In Dulci Jubilo ... Michael Praetorius
Mr. Salamunovich, conducting
Barbara Rundle, accompaniest
CONCERT ORCHESTRA
Gerald M. Carney, Conductor
Lt. Col. Arnald Gabriel, Guest Conductor
A. H. Long, Guest Conductor
Theme Song
Irish Tune from County Derry ... arr. Percy Grainger
Coq d'Or, Suite ... Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov
Introduction and Wedding Procession
Mr. Carney, conducting
Merry Wives of Windsor ... Otto Nicolai
Mr. Long, conducting
GOLD BAND
Mr. Lee, conducting
Chorale ... Vaclav Nehybel
David Catron, Conductor
Tom Lee, Guest Conductor
Lt. Col. Arnald Gabriel, Guest Conductor
Jubilee George Kenny
Toccata Frescobaldi
Symphony No. 1 in E Flat Saint-Saens
Mr Cottus and his friends
Procession of Nobles from Mlada .. Rimsky-Korsakov Lt. Col. Gabriel, conducting
Sunday afternoon
2:15 p.m.
PROGRAM
CONCERT CHOIR
Duncan Couch, Conductor Paul Salamunovich, Guest Conductor Zoltan Kodaly
Missa Brevis ... Zoltan Kodaly
Kyrie
Gloria
Credo
Sanctus
Benedictus
Agnus Dei
Mr. Salamunovich, conducting
Mr. Salamunovich, conducting Barbara Rundle, accompainis
CHAMBER CHOIR
Darrell Benne, Conductor
Paul Salamunovich, Guest Conductor
Exsultate Justi ... L. da Viadana
Te Deum ... Joseph Haydn
Mr. Salamunovich, conducting
Barbara Rundle, accompanist
SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
Gerald M. Carney, Conductor Lt. Col. Arnald Grabiel, Guest Conductor
Theme Song
Irish Tune from County Derry ... arr. Percy Grainger
Romeo and Juliet,
Overture-Fantasy ... Peter Tschaikowsky
Mr. Carney, conducting
Egmont, Overture ... Ludwig v. Beethoven
Ports of Call ... Jacques Ibert
I. Palermo, clam
II. Tunis-Nefta, moderate, very rhythmic
III. Valencia, animated
Lt. Col. Gabriel, conducting
Sunday evening
7:00 p.m.
PROGRAM
RED BAND
LeRoy Esau, Conductor Tom Lee, Guest Conductor Lt. Col. Arnald Gabriel, Guest Conductor
Theme Song
Irish Tune from County Derry ... arr. Percy Grainger
Strategic Air Command March ... Clifton Williams
Italian in Aligiers ... G. Rossini
Mr. Esau, conducting
Elsa's Procession to the Cathedral from "Tohloengrin" ... Richard Wagner
Mr. Lee, conducting
Symphonic Dance No. 3 from "Fiesta" ... Clifton Williams Lt. Col. Gabriel, conducting
CONCERT BAND
Russell L. Wiley, Conductor
Lt. Col. Arnald Gabriel, Guest Conductor
Larry Wiehe, Trombone Soloist
Finale from the Ballet Suite
"Estancia"...Alberta Ginastera
Dance of the Seven Veils from
"Salome"...Richard Strauss
Celebration Overture ...Paul Creston
Trombone Chronology ...Wehrle
Lt. Col. Gabriel, conducting
Larry Wiehe, Trombone Soloist
Dixieland Band: The Gaslite Gang
4
KAMPER KANSAN
Friday, July 12, 1968
35
—Kansan Photo by Gall Walsman
VOLLEYBALL RUNS AT FAST PACE
Girls' volleyball action keeps on the move as each wing sets their eyes on the Winning Wiley Wing trophy.
Just for fun
Dancing-here's how!
By ANITA SCHROEDER Kamper Kansan Reporter
"Can you Surrey? Wo-oh-wo-
wo-wo-oh-wo-oh! Can your Surrey?
"Most have heard these
words sung on the radio at one
time or another during the past
few months.
What is the "Surrey"? It falls in the same category as "The Funky Broadway," "The Eighty-One," and "The Pony." If it's not a street, a number, or an animal, then it must be a DANCE! Yes, these strange names are dances that the teens of '68 are dancing.
Well known by all is "The Skate." This is very easy to do—after it is learned. In order to do the Skate, one must slide to the right with the right foot followed by the left foot . . . slide. . . kick with left foot, and then slide to the left repeating the procedure.
A DANCE that is a little harder to learn is "The Horse." Step forward with the right foot and touch the toe and then the heel to the floor. Do the same with the left foot and step back in place with the right foot and then left
foot. Snap fingers to each step.
"The Jerk," the "Shimmy," and the "Shake Your Tail Feather" are dances that are good to do for reducing weight. "The Jerk" is an easy dance. Just try to dislocate the joints and one has mastered "The Jerk!" "The Shimmy" is just shaking your whole body all over. "Shake Your Tail Feather" is self-explanatory.
Girls' Intramurals
After three and a half weeks of competition, these are the compiled wing results for softball, basketball and volleyball.
"THE BUGABOO" is somewhat like the "Shimmy," but one only shakes or wiggles the top part of his body. While this is going on, his legs are sliding right and left (refer to the "Skate").
Name of hall, wing won lost
Lewis, 3n ... 10 2
McCollum, 4s ... 10 3
Lewis, 5n ... 8 3
McCollum, 7w ... 8 3
McCollum, 8s ... 8 2
Lewis, 6n ... 8 4
McCollum, 8e ... 8 4
McCollum, 7e ... 7 4
Lewis, 6s ... 7 1
Lewis, 7s ... 7 4
Lewis, 3s ... 7 4
Lewis, 4n ... 7 5
Lewis, 7n ... 6 4
McCollum, 4e ... 5 3
Lewis, 2s ... 5 3
McCollum, 8w ... 5 6
McCollum, 5w ... 5 7
Lewis, 2n ... 5 7
McCollum, 5e ... 4 4
McCollum, 4w ... 4 7
McCollum, 6s ... 4 7
McCollum, 9s ... 4 7
Lewis, 5s ... 4 7
Lewis, 3s ... 3 8
McCollum, 3e ... 2 2
McCollum, 3w ... 2 10
McCollum, 10s ... 2 5
McCollum, 5s ... 2 6
Lewis, 4s ... 2 1
McCollum, 6e ... 1 2
McCollum, 6w ... 1 3
McCollum, 10w ... 0 4
BUGGY BANKING
DURANT, Okla. — (UPI)— Mr.
and Mrs. Lee Wood will go for
drive-in banking, but refuse to
buy a car.
The elderly couple drive their buggy pulled by a horse up to the bank window each month to pay their light bill.
McCollum, 7s ... 0 7
McCollum, 9w ... 0 12
McCollum, 9e ... 0 0
Boys take big interest in sports
By BRENDA JONES
Tennis is being played by 120 boys in a single elimination process to determine the top ten winners of points.
The boys of the Midwestern Music and Arts Camp are well underway in competition for the Winning Wing Wijley Cup.
Seven games each of basketball, volleyball, and softball are being played by the 20 teams of boys—the winner receiving 1000 points and each place down to ten receiving 100 points less.
PING PONG will be played in a two day tournament Wednesday and Thursday, each wing represented by one boy.
Chess and checkers have 98 and 60 boys signed up, respectively, and the winners will be determined by random pairings.
MERLE "BONES" Nay, camp athletic director, said, "Sports are necessary in camp because the concentrated work demands healthy people. America is basically not a physically fit nation and anything we do to remedy the situation is good."
A track meet will be held the fifth week but it will not be included in the point system for the WWW Cup.
"The Jazz" and "The Jump" are extremely movable dances. "The Jazz" is mastered by hopping on the right foot and kicking the left foot wherever one wants. Then hop on the left foot and kick the right foot. Meanwhile, you are pushing hands forward and back. "The Jump" is just what it says. Jump up and shake your head in a no-no position, while your hands give subtle signs to those around you.
A dance with a weird name is the "African Stomp." To do this foreign-named dance, you step your right and left feet forward and back into place, while your shoulders snap back and forth to the beat. Also, emphasizing the rhythm by snapping your fingers.
From Florida comes the "Tighten Up." Stand in place, shake your head up and down and move your hands in the general direction that you would if you were milking a cow. The top half of your body moves more than the bottom (part of your body).
LAST MONTH, the big rage at Kansas State University was "The Line." This is a dance—any dance—that is done in a line. Most generally it is a moving line that travels all over the dance floor.
"The Heap," from New York, is a lot like football. Everyone moves (dances) in their own position and when the music suddenly stops, everyone hits the floor in a heap! Summer camp students at KU are asked not to try this at the dances. This is worse than co-educational sunbathing.
From the Big State of Texas comes "The Gator," which will not be explained or described. All that will be said is that "it's different."
Yes, the teens of '68 are 'tough' and 'boss!' And if you think they have no talents — watch them dance.
Aesthetic Athletes
By DON WALLACE Kamper Kansan Reporter
I shall devote this column to the little-known sports practiced by campers.
It seems that so many of my athletic-type heroes are either disclaiming the amateur status of the Olympics, or boycotting them or planning to play professional football instead of going there that I feel I must do my bit in the way of sympathetic neglection of the Games. So here they are:
In the fore of the pack is the fun-type game of running from the McCollum Hall counselors as they pursue you. This is usually played by casually-dressed boys on Sunday and badgeled campers almost every day. This is a good exercise for practice in losing weight, privileges and counselors.
Following closely is that which Steve Tonar, journalism camper from Topeka, calls, "sleeping hard." It is probably the most restful form of exercise available.
Another camper told me her favorite non-organized sport is feeding the ducks at Potters Lake. She also said that she is rarely attacked by the ducks, although chiggers are more vicious.
Other sports mentioned by athletic-minded campers were hill climbing (unavoidable around here), wrestling and car-dodging at the fountain. Perhaps if the Olympics should fail due to the lack of so many American athletes, and the National Football League players go on strike, then maybe all-camp trials in sleeping, running from counselors, feeding ducks and getting chigger-bit would be in order.
It's something to think about.
Boys' Intramurals
After three and a half weeks of competition, these are the compiled wing results for softball, basketball and volleyball.
Name of hall, wing won los
Ellsworth, 9n 11 1
Ellsworth, 10s 10 1
Pearson, 3n 10 2
Pearson, 4s 10 2
Ellsworth, 5s 9 4
Pearson, 2n 8 4
Pearson, 4n 8 4
Ellsworth, 6n 6 6
Ellsworth, 7n 5 3
Pearson, 3s 5 7
Ellsworth, 3s 5 7
Ellsworth, 8n 5 7
Ellsworth, 7n 5 8
Ellsworth, 4s 4 7
KU staff adds Japanese prof to East areas
A native of Japan will be visiting assistant professor here next year to assist in the growing international theater studies program here.
Tsubaki, born in Tokyo in 1931, earned the B.A. degree at Tokyo Gakugei University in 1954, the master of fine arts from Texas Christian University in 1961, and the Ph.D. from the University of Illinois in 1967.
He is Andrew Takahisa Tsubaki, who for the past four years has been instructor and designer-technical director at Bowling Green State University in Ohio.
The Japanese theater is his specialty.
Ellsworth, 5n ... 4 8
Ellsworth, 6s ... 4 8
Ellsworth, 9s ... 4 8
Ellsworth, 4n ... 3 9
Ellsworth, 10n ... 1 11
Ellsworth, 8s ... 0 12
George P. Elliott lectures at the forum July 23
George P. Elliott, holder of a distinguished professorship at Syracuse University and an author widely published in literary magazines, will speak on "Nihilism and Literature" July 23.
The public lecture in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union at 8 p.m. will be part of his visit as writer-in-residence July 22-24, when he will participate in Prof. Edgar Wolfe's class in fiction writing.
The 50-year-old native of Indiana has published two collections of short stories: "Among the Dangs," about seven years ago and another one just released.
Elliott's books deal with modern life in a modern world. In the novel, "Parktilden Village," he examined juvenile delinquency and in the novel, "David Knudsen," the ethical problems of nuclear physics.
He also has published a collection of personal essays, "A Piece of Lettuce," a long poem entitled "Fever and Chills" and other pieces.
Band leader—
Continued from page 1
hour working out in a city gymnasium in order to keep in shape.
Since 1964 Gabriel has served as commander and conductor of the Air Force Band in Washington. There are 231 musicians affiliated with the band; many are also members of affiliated combs. The band performs two or three times monthly at the White House and on a weekly basis at the Lincoln Memorial and on the steps of the Capitol Building during the summer. The concerts are free to the public, a concept which Gabriel instituted.
THE BAND GOES on two tours each year — one in the United States and one abroad.
The Band's winter program also includes a student artist series; outstanding high school students
from outlying district are invited to solo with the group.
Gabriel entered the Air Force in 1943 after graduating from high school in Courtland, N.Y. He served in Europe during World War II as a machinegunner. He left the service in 1946 when he returned to school at the Ithica New York School of Music where he earned a B.A. and an M.A. in music education.
Re-enlisting in 1951 he served as band director first at Samson Airbase in New York and later at Langley Airbase in Virginia. From 1958-1963 he was commander and conductor of the U.S. Air Force Band in Europe where he toured 26 countries with the musicians. At the conclusion of his service in Europe he was presented the Legion of Merit Award, the second highest peace time service award.
KU
THE SUMMER SESSION kansan
A student newspaper serving KU
WEATHER MUGGY
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
See Weather Below
77th Year, No.10
Tuesday, July 16, 1968
Registrar takes unique position
By ALLEN HARTZ Journalism Camp Reporter
The shift of positions in the KU Office of Admissions and Records has led to the creation of a new University post, Director of Records and System Developments.
It will be filled by the man who has been registrar for 22 years— James K. Hitt.
"This is a new kind of job anywhere," Hitt said. "It has the responsibility of making the best use of the computer to assist in the accomplishment of the university's administrative process."
The Office of Records and System Developments must make a study of all the University offices that keep records and determine what tasks can best be done by the computer and which can best be done some other way.
Hitt first came to the University as a student in 1930. He received his bachelor of arts degree in 1934 and his masters in 1936.
HITT, WHO holds the responsibility for this task, seems to have a personality as complex and businesslike as his speech.
Hitt has a wife, a son, Alan, a lieutenant in the army, and a daughter, Nancy, who will be a senior in the school of fine arts next year.
He was appointed assistant registrar in 1940 and registrar in 1946 after serving during World War II in the anti-aircraft artillery. He has since remained active as a colonel in the army reserves.
HITT IS AN imposing man, not only in stature, but also in his manner of speech. When asked to comment or express an opinion, a
long pause usually follows during which he seems to be composing his thoughts so he may say exactly what he wishes to in the exact words he wishes to.
When he does speak, his sentences are interspaced with pauses while he seems to reach for the precise word.
His interest seems to center on one thing, the University, which serves to amplify his businesslike manner. The only sideline he cared to mention was his involvement in the reserves and selective service.
HITT believes many people see him as a very businesslike person.
TOMMY L. MURRAY
He sees himself as a person interested in other people, willing to converse with them on a friendly, personal basis. He is inclined to share with other people.
In regards to the college student, Hitt said, "The students I talk to are the same type of people they have always been. They are in an age where things are moving fast and they are trying to catch up to find out."
NEW POSITION
—Kansan photo by Richard Viets
In celebration of his new position, James K. Hitt attends a reception held in his honor Friday in 122 Strong Hall, by his staff members.
Pastor rejects old
(EDITOR'S NOTE—The Rev. Ronald Sundbye, pastor of the First United Methodist Church of Lawrence, was interviewed in a journalism division press conference last Thursday. The following is a compilation of the news stories the Campers wrote.)
VENUS GABRIELLE
—Kansan Photo by Bill Seymour
EXPRESSES VIEWS
The Rev. Ronald L. Sundbye, Methodist minister from Lawrence ponders a question of a journalism campers in a press conference Thursday.
Many persons who claim to be atheists are simply rejecting "Mother Goose" church doctrine, the Rev. Sundybe said.
The traditional concept of a gray-bearded God sitting in the sky upon a throne has been disproved, Mr. Sundbye said. Instead, the concept that God is a dimension of life is gaining widespread acceptance.
"THEERE IS MORE to life than meets the eye," he said. "There is a mystery to life and God is that mystery."
The pastor summed up his philosophy of life. "I certainly don't want to spend my whole life preparing for death; I want to live right now—risking, loving, enjoying.
In keeping with his modernistic approach to religion, the pastor has introduced modern music to his church services, although a few elderly members of his congregation have found it difficult to identify with the change. Mr. Sundbye said the trend toward modernization is making church more relevant. "We haven't gone nearly far enough," he said.
"A lot of people are walking up and down the streets dead. They're bored... Nothing turns them on... Life is the sense of security within yourself. You're putting something back into the sea of life, and you're making it meaningful for others."
STARTING HIS third year as pastor of the local church, the attendance has more than doubled and closed circuit television is piped into the basement during the third Sunday service to accommodate all those who attend.
Mr. Sundbye looked to the recent hippie movement as a source of religious inspiration and revival, but he feels the effectiveness of the cult in shaping popular opinion has diminished due to hippie association with dope, free love and communal living.
"Jesus was a Hippie" is one of his famous controversial sermons. He bases his belief in similiarty on the supposition that Jesus wore long hair, a beard, and sandals and was opposed to the value system of his day. Both Jesus and the hippies were also non-violent.
"SOMETHING ABOUT life to
FACTORI
See PASTOR on page 7
KU dean assumes NAFSA leadership
By CHERYL GORDON Journalism Camp Reporter
Clark Coan, dean of foreign students at the University of Kansas, has assumed the presidency of the National Association for Foreign Students Affairs.
The association, with headquarter offices in Washington, D.C., has about 1,800 members. Included are foreign student advisers, teachers of English as a second language, foreign student admissions officers, Fulbright program advisers, advisers to U.S. students abroad and community volunteers. It's 20th convention was held in May in San Francisco.
Dean Coan will preside at the 1969 national conference in Boston, Mass., and have responsibilities for the 1970 conference which will be in Kansas City, Mo., at the Hotel Muehlebach in late April.
IN THE 1968-69 academic
CLARK COAN
years there were more than 105,000 foreign students studying at 2,200 colleges, universities and junior colleges in the United States.
Dean Coan has been working with foreign students at KU for more than a decade, first as assistant dean of men and foreign student adviser. When he officially became foreign student adviser in 1957, there were 203 foreign students here. Last year there were 642.
Dean Coan attributes the growth of foreign students to the growth of KU and KU's provisions for foreign students.
As dean of foreign students, Dean Coan coordinates the activities of the foreign students. Besides providing personal and social counseling, he advises the students in such matters as financial aid, student housing, immigration issues and academic decisions.
Dean Coan received his bachelors, masters and doctorate degrees from KU. He majored in education.
WEATHER
Partly cloudy skies, clearing by noon, are forecast by the United States Weather Bureau. Temperatures will stay in the upper 90's this afternoon and drop to the mid 70's tonight. Precipitation probability is 10 per cent.
2
THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN
Tuesday, July 16, 1968
Violence mars 'America the Beautiful'
Murders, suicides, robberies, assaults—this is the Land of Happiness, America the Beautiful?
We boast of our glorious nation and of its great opportunities—the same nation where political figures, men and women trying to guide their country, live in constant danger of their lives.
Oh yes, leaders have been killed throughout history—Caesar, Charles I, Czar Nicholas II, and Louis XVI; but let's look at the more modern world. Take four of the leading countries of the world—Russia, Britain, France, and the United States.
During the past five years three U.S. leaders have been assassinated, in the other countries none have been. Even in smaller and less advanced civilizations, celebrities may travel and live in safety.
And where is the free and happy ordinary private citizen? He is barricaded in his gun - stocked home protecting his frightened family from rioters, looters, murderers and robbers.
Where has America's moral decay come from? The type of movies, songs, and magazines being presented to a public of men, women, and children are one cause of violence in America. How can youth whose thoughts and personalities are just being developed help being influenced by the hero-worship and glamorous life shown to be led by murderers and robbers?
Many people think that there should be stricter gun laws. Statistics show that countries with tighter gun restrictions do have fewer gun killings. Of course, if a person is really intent upon murdering someone this law would not stop him. It would, however, reduce the number of shootings occurring in sudden moments of anger.
Violence in America can be reduced only when the people really want it to be. They must want it enough to get out and demand that the screens and magazines be cleaned up. They must see that prisoners are given fair and just trials, but that the guilty are punished by law. They must teach their children high morals and the proper handling of a gun, and they must elect capable men and women to government offices.
—Mary Scott
Boredom causes violence
The rate of violent crimes in America goes up nearly 10 per cent every year now. What are the causes of this immense problem? How can it be stopped? Why haven't we already stopped it? Here is how I feel.
Of the many causes of violence the most understandable is the fulfillment of some physical need. Perhaps the kid who steals in order to eat is justified, but this is not what is happening. We don't murder, steal, or riot because we are hungry or cold.
Perhaps the greatest cause of violence in America is the supposed lack of anything better to do. The gang fights and particularly vandalism result in absolutely no personal gain. But they are exciting and it is fun to clobber a guy over the head. There is even a kind of primitive satisfaction in knowing that your gang is better than the other guy's.
Then, of course, there are the professional murderers. Violence is their business and they are well paid for it.
Another cause of violence is sudden, uncontrollable anger. In over three-fourths of the murders
in the United States the murdered person was acquainted with his assailant. Often they were relatives.
Finally there is undeniable public apathy. This may not cause violence—but it does allow it. Violence in the United States could virtually be eliminated if the people in the United States wanted it to be.
Pinckney's Potpouri
If Averell Harriman appears happier these days, it is because his vacation in Paris has no end in sight.
The North Vietnamese have enjoyed the after-session-tea more than usual. They were so delighted with the tea they stayed 42 minutes. Soon, diplomats will spend more time drinking tea that attending peace talks.
Maybe the Americans put whiskey in the tea, but Washington will most likely say it was bourbon.
$$
* * *
$$
The American populace is settling back for the two highest rated programs on television; the Republican and Democratic conventions. There is speculation that the elephants and the donkeys will splatter more blood, or mud, on the screen, than did Zale and Graziano.
* *
De Gaulle may be tearing down the Maginot Line, but the wall that divides his kingdom is still in tact. The General's men won the elections, which leaves the Gaullists faced with the problem of fulfilling the promises he made to the French people. Not even his nose can hide the problems that lie ahead.
*
As the Olympics draw near, the Chinese have begun the season of their favorite sport, factional fighting. The Chinese students are apparently the cause of the worse fighting since last year. What thoughts of Mao were in the heads of those Chinese who threw 43 people, bound by hands, feet and neck, into the Pearl River?
THE SUMMER SESSION kansan
The Summer Session Kansan, student newspaper at the University of Kansas, is represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 Street, New York, N.Y., 10022. Mail subscription rates: $6 a semester or $10 a year. Published and second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas, every Tuesday and Thursday; free mail services for accommodations, goods, and employment advertised in the Summer Session Kansan are offered to students without regard to color, creed, or national origin.
The opinions expressed in the editorial columns are those of the editorial staff of the newspaper. Guest editorial views are not necessarily the same as those of the editor's own. Any opinions expressed in the Summer Session Kansan edition are those of those at the University of Kansas Administration or the Kansas State Board of Regents.
Executive Staff
Business Manager
Managing Editor Assistant Managing Editors
Office Manager
Jack Haney
Mel Adams
Helen Owens
Roes Rotvehik
Roes Rotvehik
Eric Kramer, Darrary Pinckney,
Richie Viets and Diane Wane
Photography Bill Seymour
Advisor Dr. Larry Day
The first cause of violence is probably the most tangible and therefore easiest to solve. The easiest way to stop people from killing to get food is to supply them with food in the first place. In a country as rich as ours this should not be a problem.
The way to stop violence for lack of anything better to do is to give these people better things to do. Put some meaning back in their lives with jobs. The majority of offenders in this group are youth. If they are too young to work full time give them part time jobs and recreational facilities. It is just as much fun to clobber a guy's fast ball over the fence as it is to clobber the guy.
This solution would go a long way towards stopping the next cause of violence also. Fewer people will get killed in acts of passion if the potential murderer doesn't have easy access to a weapon.
It is up to you and me. If we want violence to be stopped bad enough we can virtually end it.
Craig Williams
William Allen White's Wit and Wisdom
THAT MAN WHITE
Jan. 13, 1914, Emporia Gazette
A number of Progressives at Lakin, more kind than considerate, yesterday resolved in favor of this man White, of Emporia, for governor. They wanted him to run as a Progressive candidate. To which the GAZETTE says no—a thousand times no. For we are on to that man White, and without wishing to speak disrespectfully of a fellow townsman, who, so far as we know, may be at least outwardly decent in the simpler relations of life—perhaps he pays his debts when it is convenient, and he may be kind to his family, though that's not to his credit, for who wouldn't be—and he may have kept out of jail, one way or another, for some time; without, as we say, desiring to speak disrespectfully of this man, we know that he's not the man either to run for governor or, if such a grotesque thing could be imagined, to serve as governor.
He can't make a speech. He has a lot of radical convictions which he sometimes comes into The GAZETTE office and exploits, and which are dangerous. He has been jawing politicians for twenty years until he is a common scold, and he has set up his so-called ideals so high that the Angel Gabriel himself couldn't give the performance that this man White would have to advertise on the bills.
So, in the words of the poet, nix on Willyum Allen. The GAZETTE'S nose is hard and cold on the proposition to make him governor. He is a four-flusher, a ring-tailed, rip-snorting hell-raiser, and a grandstander. He makes big noise. He yips and kyoodles around a good deal, but he is everlastingly and preeminently N.G. as gubernatorial timber—full of knots, warts, woodpecker holes and rotten spots. Men and women would be trampled to death at seven o'clock election mornings, trying to get at the polls to cast the first vote against him, and at night perfectly good citizens, kind fathers and indulgent husbands, would risk a jail sentence to get in at least ten votes against him as repeaters. It may be that the Progressive party needs a goat, but the demand doesn't require a Billy-goat!
New Books
Mary Roberts Rinehart's THE STATE VS. ELINOR NORTON (Dell, 50 cents)—Mystery and courtroom drama going back three decades.
Agatha Christie's THE REGATTA MYSTERY (Dell, 50 cents) —Nine stories featuring such folks as Hercule Poirot and Miss Marple.
\* \* \* \* \* \*
Some new paperbacks are worthy to be classed as among the distinguished volumes of the year. They won't sell like Harold Robbins, but they'll be around longer.
Like Phyllis McGinley's TIMES THREE (Compass, $1.65), poetry from three decades, with 70 new poems and an introduction by W. H. Auden. Miss McGinley's delightful style and humor come through strong.
Like D. H. Lawrence's THE LOST GIRL (Compass, $1.85). This is a work that Lawrence completed in the early twenties, a story about a young English woman from Lawrence's Midlands who falls in love with a young Italian and goes to live with him (as his wife, incidentally) in a mountain village in Italy.
Plus these:
GREEK TRAGEDY AND COMEDY (Compass, $2.45), edited by F. L. Lucas. This includes complete translations of "Prometheus," "Agamemnon," "Antigone," "Oedipus the King," "Hippolytus," "Bacchae," and "The Clouds," with summaries and extracts of the other extant plays.
A TREASURY OF YIDDISH STORIES (Premier, 95 cents), edited by Irving Howe and Eliezer Greenberg—Forty stories selected from a vast body of Jewish literature, including both classic and contemporary writings.
STRASBERG AT THE ACTORS STUDIO (Compass, $1.95), edited by Robert H. Hethmon-Tape-recorded sessions from one of the truly significant theatrical creators of our time.
b. s. the editor
Saturday night, Miss Finland who was the only blonde in the finals of the Miss Universe pageant, was named only second runner-up to Miss Brazil. Blondes may have more fun, but they certainly do not win beauty contests.
\* \* \*
James K. Hitt, who is being promoted from his position as registrar and director of admissions, was honored by his former office staff with a party Friday. It just goes to prove that anyone in Strong Hall would rather throw a party than do a little work.
* *
With two weeks of Midwestern Music and Art Camp left, most of the campers are dreaming about what they are going to do when they get home. Some are looking forward to riding in a car once more while a few of the wild ones keep yearning for that tall frosty "students' favorite BEvERage," but it is reported that a few have sent word home to include switchblades in
their CARE packages. All this caused by just a few Lawrence ruffians?
* *
In the midst of a passionate love scene in "Musician," which closed Sunday, Forrest Tucker, playing the role of Professor Harold Hill, stopped the show Friday to complain about the spontaneous sound effects. It seems that the airplane flying overhead had not been invented yet.
* *
Is anyone interested in 2,000 red name badges. Two weeks from now anyone desiring them may contact Russell L. Wiley, Midwestern Music and Art Camp. 214 Murphy Hall. It seems he may have a surplus.
\* \* \*
Now that the money for building dark rooms in Flint Hall has been vetoed by the Board of Regents, there is only one thing left to do. We can put a canvas roof over Old Robinson Hole and it will be cooler than the present facilities.
Tuesday, July 16, 1968
THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN
3
THOMAS J. HUBBARD
FOUR COMEDIES BEING PRESENTED IN REPERTORY
Four directors of the KU summer "Cavalcade of Comedy": Pam Roberts, Northridge, Calif., graduate student, "Once Upon a Mattress"; Janice Hewitt, Fresno, Calif., graduate, "A Thousand Clowns"; Michael Pedretti, Genoa, Wis., graduate student, "You Can't Take it with You"; "La Parisienne," Robert Findlay, assistant professor of speech and drama, Joliet, Ill.
Chemistry prof studies catalysis
By CATHY RAMIREZ Journalism Group Research
Marianne Camp Reporter
Most people would not give catalysis a second thought, but Richard L. Schowen, associate professor of chemistry, will spend the next five years studying it.
Schowen recently received a Research Career Development Award from the National Institutes of Health. The award is given to those who have contributed to health through research. It will provide Schowen with financial support during the five years.
CATALYSIS IS the action of catalysts, substances used to speed up chemical reactions without changing the effect of the reaction. Biological systems regulate chemistry by means of catalysts. They are necessary to many of the body functions such as respiration and digestion.
Schowen is concerned with basic questions about catalysis. He wishes to find what makes a good catalyst and why they sometimes fail to react, often causing disease. Although he is not interested in developing cures for the diseases, Schowen felt the understanding he gains from the research may help other researchers in doing so.
Schowen will conduct his research at KU assisted by graduate and undergraduate students of the school of chemistry. He is hopeful but not certain his work will take him to the University of Tokyo next year.
EXPERIMENT
SANTA CLARA. Calif.-(UPI) A select group of eighth graders will participate in an experimental program this summer at the University of Santa Clara.
Labeled "Project 50," the program hopes to inspire 50 youngsters from low income backgrounds with college potential to enroll in a college preparatory curriculum when they enter high school in the fall.
Professor Hatton, a Norwegian citizen, will come to KU from the London School of Economics and Political Science. Professor Kendall, formerly a Ford Foundation and Guggenheim fellow, will take temporary leave from the Regents distinguished professorship he has held at Ohio University since 1959.
Internationally known historian Ragnhild Hatton and Shakespear ean scholar Paul Kendall will fill the 23rd and 24th Rose Morgan visiting professorships at KU in the fall and spring semesters.
Rose Morgan, emerita professor of English, made possible the honorary chair by giving her home adjoining the campus to the KU Endowment Association.
Rocky Supporters,
Nabih Amin Faris, international Arabic scholar, was the first Rose Morgan visiting professor in 1953. Kendall will become one of the few Americans so honored.
Although provided by a member of the English Department, the Morgan chair is available to any department.
It provides a fully furnished
Morgan fellows invited
versity of Virginia, specializes in 15th Century historical studies. He ranks, however, among that rare breed of scholars who transcend disciplinary boundaries.
residence for the visiting scholar and his family to supplement the backing salary.
Professor Hatton went from the University of Oslo, Norway, to the University of London for graduate work in history, concluding with her doctorate.
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4
THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN
Tuesday, July 16, 1968
Last four months in quick review
Editor's Note: The significant events of the past four months at the University of Kansas are itemized in the following summary prepared by James E. Gunn, assistant to the Chancellor for university relations.
"The Fifth National Sculpture Conference, held at the University of Kansas in Lawrence last month, was a chastening reminder that if the island of Manhattan should join the island of Atlantis tomorrow, creative art on this continent would boom along without serious interruption."
John Canaday,
The New York Times
Record-breaking summer session enrollment (up 12 percent over last year) reached 5,481—not including an all-time high of 2,000-plus high school students enrolled in the 10 divisions of the 6-week Midwestern Music and Art Camp and non-credit enrollments of more than 5,000 attending University Extension short courses. Credit enrollments are expected to reach 7,500 by Aug. 31.
A $7,430 grant from the National Science Foundation and the U.S. Economic Development Administration makes KU part of a 9-state project aimed at determining how state and local governments obtain advice and reach decisions involving scientific and technical matters.
Awards for outstanding teaching went this spring to Lawrence Sherrr, business administration, the H. Bernerd Fink award; Eldon Fields, political science; Fred S. Van Vleck, mathematics; and W. Keith Weltner, business administration, the Standard Oil Company (Indiana) Foundation; Harry E. Talley, electrical engineering, the Henry E. Gould award.
The first Kane Professor of Law was announced in the Chancellor's State of the University message June 2. He is Paul E. Wilson, widely known for pioneering the use of law students to counsel prison inmates.
Two new University Professors were appointed in June: E. Thayer Gaston, music education, a faculty member since 1937 and "father of music therapy"; and James P. Quirk, economics, a faculty member since 1966, receiving two National Science Foundation grants since then.
Gov. Nelson Rockefeller, Republican presidential hopeful of New York, spoke in Allen Field House May 9 at an all-University convocation.
Low energy nuclear physics research at KU will get a boost with an additional $30,250 on its Atomic Energy Commission contract for a modification increasing its Van de Graaff accelerator energy from 3 to 4.5 million electron volts.
The Adams Campus, a 340-acre recreational and seminar area for the University, is scheduled for future development near the planned Clinton Reservoir southwest of Lawrence. Purchase of land for the future was made possible through a $100,000 gift two years ago from Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Learned of Bartlesville, Okla., in honor of Kenneth S. "Boots" Adams, also of Bartlesville.
Twenty education writers from the Midwest and other parts of the nation visited KU on a 6-day tour of six state universities in late April.
Current problems of persuasion and the ethics of controversy were considered in a symposium June 27-28 organized by the University department of speech and drama.
Twenty - four scientists from
Mexico and Brazil came to KU in early June to learn about the use of radar in studying the earth's resources from aircraft.
Writers - in - residence in the English Department this summer and next year will be George P. Elliott ("Among the Dangs"), William H, Gass ("In the Heart of the Country and Other Stories"), poet Galway Kinnell of Colorado State University, and novelist Robie Macauley, affiliated with "Playboy."
Fifty-two KU journalism students are gaining practical experience this summer as interns in newsrooms, advertising offices, corporations and radio-television studios in a dozen states and Paris, France.
Four members of the National Assembly of Vietnam visited KU May 16 after spending four days in Washington.
Seventy business executives from over the nation spent a month on the University campus this summer learning ways to become better administrators.
Shakespearean Scholar Paul Kendall, distinguished professor at Ohio State University, will be the Rose Morgan visiting professor next spring. Besides giving public lectures, he will teach the Shakespearean seminar and rapid reading course for undergraduates, which covers a play a week.
A total of $1,659,296 in grants and contracts for research and associated graduate training on the Lawrence campus and in its Center for Research in Engineering Science was received between January and March.
Three faculty members who specialize in the affairs of Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union received grants to travel in those areas during the coming academic year: J a r o s l a w Piekalkiewicz, studying comparative local East European governments; E. J. Czerwinski, studying comparative Slavic drama; William Kuhlke, studying Soviet theatre directors of the 1930s, the great innovators of Russian theatre.
A record 3.723 students were awarded degrees at Commencement.
The Kansas Regional Medical Program observed its first anniversary June 8 with an address from Steven J. Ackerman, associate director for planning and evaluation, Regional Medical Programs, Washington, D.C. An open house and luncheon were held in the state headquarters adjacent to the University of Kansas Medical Center.
David W. Heron, formerly director of libraries at the University of Nevada at Reno, will be the new director of the 1,300.-000-volume University of Kansas libraries, including the soon-to-be-completed Kenneth Spencer Research Library.
Bids for the 15-story, $5.8-million Humanities Building will be received Aug. 8.
Pulitzer Prize Winner Norman Dello Joio was the featured guest composer for the Tenth Annual Symposium of Contemporary Music May 5-7.
Seven KU teachers at Lawrence, all younger than 45, have received U.S. Public Health Service Research Career Development Awards, and another six faculty members have such awards at the Medical Center in Kansas City. Three other Research Career Awards are held by University faculty.
Solons restrict transplants
Nineteen Woodrow Wilson Designates and a Danforth Fellowship were won by KU seniors this spring for graduate study next fall at the university of their choice.
By JUDY BENNETT Journalism Camp Reporter
The Kansas Legislature recently passed a bill governing the conditions in which the transplant of human organs can take place. Where did the legislators get their information on this scientifically detailed matter? This is the type of question that William H. Cape hopes to answer.
Cape, associate director of the Governmental Research Center and professor of political science, is participating in a project to determine how state and local governments gather advice and reach decisions on scientific and technical problems. He has received a joint grant of $7,430 from the National Science Foundation and the Economic Development Administration for this purpose.
Studies of this kind are also being made in California, Kentucky, Massachusetts, Michigan, Mississippi, New Mexico, New York, and North Carolina. Cape has already met with the representatives of these eight states in Washington, D.C., and he said that he will remain in close correspondence with all the representatives during the project.
Cape explained that the states were chosen because each has a different type of organization for scientific development within their government framework. In 1963, the Research Foundation of Kansas was established to encourage scientific inquiry and to assist in publishing scientific news for use by the public.
At the end of one year, the representatives from the nine states will meet again to discuss their findings. They hope to answer three basic questions.
What type of scientific organizations do we have now? How can these organizations help government officials? What can be the national significance of this work?
The representatives will then publish a report with suggestions
for improving or developing state scientific structures."
In order to gather information, Cape said that he would interview state and local officials, scientists and engineers, in addition to sending out questionnaires and reading the literature published by various scientific organizations. He is also working with the Kansas Academy of Science and the Research Foundation of Kansas.
SOUND WORDS
ST. LOUIS — (UPI)— St. Louis Cardinals pitcher Steve Carlton says he'll always remember the words of teammate Roger Maris in rounding bases. In a game against the New York Mets, Carlton failed to touch third base and, although he reached home plate, was declared out. After the game, Maris greeted Carlton in the clubhouse with:
"Thou must touch four before thou canst score."
Are the nuns possessed by demons? See
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Tuesday, July 16, 1968
THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN
5
Wallace on sports
New records mark Olympics
By DON WALLACE Journalism Camp Reporter
Records are made to be broken, but how long can man continue to set them?
Common sense tells me there is a limit to how far a man can jump, how high he can vault or how fast he can run. But is there a limit? The times have been getting lower and the heights are getting higher with each Olympics. Barriers thought impossible to break 20 years ago are being breached in ordinary competition.
$$
\* \* \*
$$
Will man ever run the 100-yard dash under eight seconds? Three sprinters recently were timed in the 100 meters at 9.9 seconds, breaking the old Olympic record held by Bob Hayes. Conceivably, if these three represent the United States in Mexico, the Olympic record could be lowered to the 9.9 they are capable of.
In 1964 the standard of 10.2 was broken by Bob Hayes when he did a 10 flat. The important thing to note here is the Hayes' effort in Tokyo was one-tenth of a second better than his personal best of 10.0 While a comparison may not be justified, these three runners—Greene, Hines and Smith—could be pushed by the competition to a 9.8 clocking in the 100 meters.
This is comparable to running the 100-yard dash in 8.9 seconds. The world record is 9.1.
$$
* * *
$$
The jumping events are different from the running in recordbreaking potential because high jumpers and pole vaulters have a tendency to perform poorly in the Olympics.
In the high jump, Brumel of Russia won the '64 Olympics with a jump of $7^{\prime} 1 \frac{3}{4}$', breaking the old record by $3 \frac{4}{4}$'. Brumel, however, holds the world record with a leap of $7^{\prime} 5 \frac{1}{2}$"—a full $3 \frac{3}{4}$' higher.
This year in the Olympics, Brumel may not equal his personal best, but a host of U.S. jumpers should give him stiff competition. In later meets, he will probably do much better than in Mexico, simply because of the intense pressure there. It should not be a surprise for a high jumper to top the 7"7" mark by the 1972 games, but the question of how far a high jumper can go is still hard to gauge.
The pole vault shows the most rapid improvement, largely because of the improvement of poles, track runways and techniques in jumping.
The old Olympic record of 15'5" was shattered in 1964 by Fred Hanson with his $16^{8\frac{3}{4}}$ vault; Hanson, however, has done 17'4" in other meets. This year Bob Seagren and Paul Wilson both have been aiming for the 17'8" mark, and coming very close to success.
$$
\* \* \*
$$
The long jump is easier to predict. Ralph Boston and the Russian Ter-Oversnesian have both hit the 27'5" mark, and Lynn Davies of England and Bob Beamon of the United States have topped the 27' mark. More distances like these can be expected, now that the 27' barrier is being so decisively broken.
This steady increase in distance will continue, and I see a 30' jump relatively soon, although not before the 1976 Olympics. In 1972 the world record should be close to the $28^{\mathrm{m}}$ mark, a prophecy I justify with the natural tendency of athletes toward improvement.
$$
\* \* \*
$$
Reasons for the improvement of performances have been discussed by scientists, dieticians and manufacturers of athletic equipment.
Certainly food and equipment will play a big part, but what about the man?
Sprinting is an ability that is governed by natural speed and oxygen intake. The more oxygen a runner can take in, the longer he can sustain long bursts of speed like those needed in the dashes. It is almost impossible to increase oxygen intake beyond that which is normal for each individual's body, and speed is something more frequently born with than acquired, so training can only improve to the fullest ability a sprinter has.
In the field events, equipment and training will be the factors that influence improvement, but a general increase of speed in the pole vault and broad jump should have a dominant effect on those performances.
Youth should also affect pole vaulting and sprinting, for the old Olympic record in the pole vault of 15'5" (1960 mark) has been broken by many high schoolers, while again in California there were five 9.5 second and a dozen 9.7 second sprinters in the 100-yard dash, and two 440-dash men whose times were under 47.5, a time that was good enough for qualification for the '64 Olympics.
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XX
Kansan photo by Richard Viets
FOILS COUNSELORS
Fighting for possession in the Camper-Counselor Basketball game is Collis Temple, science and math student, as counselor Ken Wiley gapes. Campers won, 70-61.
Dormitories display pop art
By JANET WYSOCKI
Camper's rooms have gone camp. Throughout the dorms lodging campers of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp, one can find all sorts of para- phernalia decorating the walls, bulletin boards, radiators, desks and pipes in an otherwise dull room.
Even venetian blinds haven't been overlooked. In one window
of Lewis Hall an American flag has been arranged on the blinds.
ALONG WITH American flags on windows, psychedelic paintings have been painted directly on the window, words acknowledging the cities campers are from, and stained glass windows, can be seen from all over the camp.
coms, and in place of drapes, posters of the Statue of Liberty and Shirley Temple in a flying suit are suspended.
Paper flowers growing from radiators, peace signs on inter-
Posters are still by far the most popular of room decorations. Everything has been hung. Prints of Aubrey Beardsley, reproductions of the New York Times, personality posters and psychedelic posters are not uncommon to dorm rooms.
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6
THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN
Tuesday, July 16, 1968
Humanism begins KU Child Research
By JANET MIGDOW Journalism Camp Reporter
KU's Bureau of Child Research originally started by Florence Sherbon, a concerned doctor who thought the people of Kansas should spend as much money on child research as they had been spending on animal research.
Due to her efforts, in the early 1920's a statute was passed allowing for a child research bureau at KU.
The bureau's headquarters in Bailey Hall are under the direction of Richard L. Schiefelbusch and his associate directors, Frederic Girardeau, Ross Copeland and Joseph Spradlin.
THE BUREAU'S initial project, working with mentally retarded children, established the first mental retardation laboratories at Parsons State Hospital in 1957.
A new building for continuation of this work will be completed this fall under the direction of Joseph Spradlin.
Besides the Parsons center, Bureau facilities are situated in Kansas City and at KU.
Kansas City has facilities in two locations. The first is a behavioral science lab at the KU Medical Center under the direction of Frederic Girardeau. Three new units for the study of mental retardation are now under construction.
THE SECOND location is Juniper Gardens, site of a children's project coordinated by R. Vance Hall.
KU has several different laboratories for bureau research. Varsity house contains an infant study laboratory operated in cooperation with the Speech Department, under the direction of H. John Michel. Also located at Varsity House is a voice science laboratory.
The bureau also helps to operate a nursery school in Lawrence and an animal study laboratory on campus. A new unit for study of mental retardation will be located in the Experimental Biological and Human Development Building now being constructed.
J-school hires four
Four new names will appear on the faculty in the William Allen White School of Journalism at KU in September.
The recent staff additions include:
Emma Auer of Northern Illinois University in DeKalb, who will lead in research and graduate studies in the school's advertising sequence.
Joseph Collier, a veteran news-
paperman and college professor
from California, who will teach
reporting and editing courses.
George Richardson, a reporter-photographer for the Kansas City Star for almost five years, who will advise the University Daily Kansan and teach reporting.
Gary Mason, former photography instructor at Kansas State Teachers College in Emporia, who will teach photojournalism and serve as assistant director of university news photography.
71
toward a master's degree in journalism at KU.
Collier will fill a one-year visiting lectureship in the school. He is completing a Ph.D. degree in American Studies at KU and is on leave from El Camino Junior College in Torrance, Calif., where he has taught in the English department for the past 11 years. Collier's newspaper experience includes work on the Tucson (Ariz). Daily Citizen and the Washington D.C. Times-Herald.
Miss Auer, who will be assistant professor, has spent more than 25 years in fashion merchandising, retailing, advertising and other marketing activities with Harper's Bazaar magazine, Carson Pirie Scott and Co. in Chicago, the Independent Retailers Syndicate in New York and Famous-Barr Co. and Boyd's both in St. Louis.
Mason, originally from Independence, taught photography for five years at Emporia, where he also worked in the library's department of special collections.
She also has taught at Millikin University in Decatur, Ill., Washington University in St. Louis and the University of Illinois. In August she expects to complete her doctoral studies in communications, with a major in advertising, at the University of Illinois.
In every state except Hawaii, where the Lieutenant Governor acts as the secretary, the office of secretary of state is a distinct agency of state government.
In at least 48 states the secretary is responsible for the publication of a variety of state materials. Although one of his major functions is the keeping of clerical records, 43 states designate him as the chief elections administrator and 40 states make him responsible for the issuance of charters to domestic corporations.
The secretary of state's vast and diversified duties, which run the gamut from A (archives) to Z (zoning of legislative districts), often defy enumeration into definitive categories.
The secretary of state may also have to handle a multitude of licensing and registration tasks, such as the registration of parties and lobbyists. Some states make him the legal agent for the service of summons or process against non-residents. In a few states the secretary of state becomes Acting Governor if the Governor is unable to perform the functions of his office.
Richardson started with the Kansas City Star as a summer intern in 1963, then went to work full-time in 1964 while working on his undergraduate degree at the University of Missouri in Kansas City. During the past two years, he has concentrated on feature writing, stories pertaining to race relations and anti-poverty programs and investigative reporting. In addition to advising the Kansan and teaching reporting, Richardson also will work
State official forgotten
He is usually a member of a large number of boards and commissions to which he has either been appointed or serves in an ex officio status. Although this is a time-consuming activity, it still serves as a useful way in which he can remain well-informed on problems confronting his state.
The secretary of state, though he may be constitutionally disassociated from the state legislature, often plays an important role in legislature policy making. This occurs through the secretary's informal and personal contacts, particularly if he holds an important position as many state secretaries do.
The long list of miscellaneous duties a state secretary of state
may be called upon to perform, from handling of pistol permit registrations to the administration of outdoor advertising laws, earns him the title of "jack of all trades."
Most state secretaries of state have had prior experience in public office and some have used the secretaryship as a springboard for higher political goals. Part of this success is due to the fact that state secretaries have shown themselves to be well-educated, gregarious and active in civic and social endeavors.
TRIPLE WINNER
Although some state secretaries are allegedly underpaid, most states have recognized the importance of his office by significantly increasing his salary and compensatory payments during recent years. Staff sizes also reflect the growing importance of the office. While nine states will have a staff of less than 10 assigned to the secretary, many other states are increasing the size of the secretary's staff.
MONTREAL — (UPI) Stan Mikita, center for the Chicago Black Hawks, is the only player in National Hockey League history to win three individual NHL trophies in any one season.
Theatre coupons need exchanging
Persons who bought season-ticket coupons to the four summer productions of the University of Kansas Theatre should exchange them immediately for actual tickets.
The coupons alone will not admit patrons to any of the Summer Repertory Company's "Cavalcade of Comedy." They must be exchanged for tickets to performances on specific evenings.
Special 2 p.m. matinee showings have been planned for "You Can't Take It with You" July 17 and for "Once Upon a Mattress" July 19.
Tickets for a number of performances already have sold out, diminishing the coupon holder's choice of evenings.
Tickets to "La Parisienne" and "A Thousand Clowns" are depleted for every performance except specials on July 15 and 22. Again, a few tickets are available at 7 p.m. that evening.
Professors Jed Davis, University Theatre director, and Tom Rea, assistant director, said they can't explain this summer's increased business over last summer' except that the comedy repertoire has such universal appeal.
KU Summer Theatre Rep. '68
presents
CAVALCADE OF COMEDY
University of Kansas-Murphy Hall
"YOU CAN'T TAKE IT WITH YOU"
by Kaufman and Hart
July 17, 23
"In - The - Round" Main Stage
"ONCE UPON A MATTRESS"
Music by Mary Rodgers and
Book by Jay Thompson
July 19, 24
"In - The - Round" Main Stage
"LA PARISIENNE"
by Henri Becque
July 16, 20, 26
Experimental Theatre
"A THOUSAND CLOWNS"
by Herb Gardner
July 13, 18, 25, 27
Experimental Theatre
KU STUDENTS .75 PLUS CURRENT CERTIFICATE OF REGISTRATION
Tuesday, July 16, 1968
THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN
7
I am a Christian man. I believe in God and love. I am a strong advocate of Christianity. I am a Christian man. I believe in God and love. I am a strong advocate of Christianity.
—Kansan Photo by Bill Seymour
OUTLINES HIS POSITION
The Rev. Ronald L. Sundbye, pastor of the First United Methodist Church in Lawrence, tries to convey his views on the 'God is dead' question.
Pastor rejects—
Continued from page 1
day breeds violence. Violence won't die out by itself. It won't die until we find someway to structure our lives that isn't violent," he said. Americans have always been violent.
"War is evil. There is no need to get bogged down with the war in Vietnam; all wars are wrong. Man has a brain and he ought to be able to work these things out. Man has never used his brain before. War is easier. But nuclear warfare brought about a completely different issue," Mr. Sundbye said.
Although he is for the unconditional evacuation of Vietnam, he is not a pacifist. "The difference between the pacifist and me is he is courageous and I am a chicken." Mr. Sundbye said. The truth is "most of us are chickens."
THERE HAS always been a generation gap, the minister said. But the gap today is greater than the past because of the advanced education of today's youth.
The morals are also changing,
but Mr. Sundby will make no judgment if it is for the better or worse. Today, he said, teenagers have less hangups in talking about sex, than in the past.
A TEEN ACTION Group (TAG) has been organized in his church recently to bring the high school age youth of Lawrence to church. He said many of these have been alienated from the church for many years. TAG is concerned more around social action than religious study, according to Mr. Sundhye.
The major group has their own lounge above the sanctuary they have decorated and where they hold dances about twice a month. The big group also breaks down into small discussion groups with an adult leader. Here real dialogue is carried forth involving the problems of a teenage existence.
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FOR SALE
Western Civilization Notes
Ninth Edition. Comprehensive analysis of this year's reading list.
Mimeographed and bound for $4.50.
Jayhawk Reference Publications. Call VI 2-0113 for free delivery. 8-2
TYPEWRITERS—New & used office and portables, manual & electric. Olympia portables, SCM and small office portables, commercial and office. Xerox copies and office furniture. Lawrence Typewriter, 700 Mass., VI 3-3644. 8-2
PSYCHEDELIC LIGHTING MANUAL!
Make your own light machines, strobes, color organs, etc. with easy diagrams and instructions. Send $2.00 to Lightrays. 713B Pine Street. Philadelphia, Pa. 19106. 8-2
Week-end flower special $1.00. Offer good Thursday thru Saturday at Alexander's Flowers and Glits, 826 Iowa. Phone VI 2-1320. 8-2
Carlslie's 13th street auction sale every Saturday night at 7:00. We buy Wednesdays and Thursdays. Monday thru Saturday 8:00 A.M. to 5:30 P.M. 1301 Delaware. V 3-0481.
515 Michigan St. Bar-B-Q — outdooft,
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$;$1.50. Rib sandwich, 85%; 1½ chicken.
$;$1.15. Brisket sandwich, 70%; Hours,
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SEE AND COMPARE! New Edition of "New Analysis of the Civilization student response, first edition sold out! Abingdon Bookstore, 1237 Eadre. 8-2
TV- Stereo console. Danish modern hand-humbled walnut cabinet, AM-FM, 27" screen, UHF and VHF. Excellent condition. VI 2-1452. 7-19
For sale - Philo TV, almost new,
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2 Snow Tires on rims, 7.75-14, used one season, ex-cellent condition on $30.00 Baby bcd and mattress, both £15.00, $15.00, 3220 W. 9th VL-310-353
Set of encyclopedias, travel books,
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1964 Java Green Volkswagon. One owner. Fully equipped. Excellent condition. See to appreciate VI3-1625. 7-23
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FOR RENT
Sleeping rooms with kitchen privilege for male students. Borders campus and near downtown. VI 3-5767. 8-2
2 a/c furnished 1st floor apartments,
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V 31-5766
Unfurnished 2 bedroom apt. 1st floor.
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2 comfortable private rooms with good family meals for summer in large quiet home. Also reservation and deposit for fall term for 3 rooms been taken now. Short walk to campus. Call VI 2-8960. 7-16
furnished apartments $60 and $65.
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For rent to graduate or mature undergraduate. Extra nice bachelor or studio apartments 1/3 blocks from law school, nicely furnished, utilities patio, parking. Quart ideas daily conditions. For appointment call VI-8534. 8-2
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7-20
8
THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN
Tuesday, July 16, 1968
STYLISH FASHION
—Kansan photo by Richard Viets
WAITING FOR SATURDAY NIGHT
Ann Crawford, a speech camper from Salina, and Brenda Hodge, a speech camper from Shreveport, La., model typical attire for the female Band Campers at the formal Saturday night.
Formal lengths may vary from midis to floor length
By JOAN JARVIS Journalism Camp Reporter
The summer formal—mini, mid-calf, or the traditional floor length, any are suitable.
It is difficult to pin down which formals are fashionable for this year. There are many styles coming back from the "days of old." The 17th century, waisted formal is quite attractive. The blouse is usually piled high with lace, long-sleeved and more lace on the cuffs. A wide belt accents the semi bell-shaped skirt — long or short.
The empire style remains one of the favorites. These come with a variety of sleeve lengths and necklines. A scoop neckline with short babydoll sleeves is very becoming.
The straight sleeveless formal has an air of sophistication about it. A floor length formal with matching floor length coat is very stylish.
HOT FILM
WHITSTABLE, England — (UPI)—It's real cops, not Keystone cops, in the latest police chase involving Charlie Chaplin.
Someone stole a 54-year-old Chaplin film from a car here. Officers who started an area-wide search warned that the old film has a high nitrate content and could explode into flame at the slightest exposure to heat.
Today's formals serve a double purpose. Many girls have found by cutting the hems from their floor length dresses
they make attractive mini or mid-calf formals.
The all camp formal is coming up Saturday!
Casual fashions highlight summer
By TERRI STAAB Journalism Camp Reporter
Although campers are restricted somewhat in their choice of clothing, camp fashions do not lack the flare of youth or style.
Casual is the word describing the camp fashions this year. Bright colors and various prints and plaids also highlight summer fashions in camp.
Girls prefer the pant dress and culottes. Complement the outfit with a matching hat, knee socks and laofers and the girl camper is ready for class.
FOR DANCE parties the feminine look is in. Ruffled dresses and gathered skirts with large sashes and belts at the waist in pastel colors set the scene.
Shorts, whether they be cut-off jeans or bermudas, give a casual
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and sporty tone for the boy camper. The new turtleneck shirts and pullovers bring a note of class to everyday wear.
Overwhelmingly popular for footwear are sandals. In spite of the great number seen, seldom does one find two pairs alike.
The fashion news would be incomplete if one did not mention the shirts identifying campers with the Midwestern Music and Art Camp insignia or the colorful KU Jayhawker. And finally, to complete the camper look is the red number badge.
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THE SUMMER SESSION kansan
A student newspaper serving KU
WEATHER SULTRY
77th Year, No.11
See Weather Below
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Friday, July 19, 1968
— Kansas photo by Bill Jeffries
6
TALENT UNLIMITED
Performing before a capacity crowd, two folk singers wall out a tune by Simon and Garfunkle at the Young Prophecies '68 concert.
Logan cleared provost rules
By CHUCK STOKES Journalism Camp Reporter
A KU official indicated that James K. Logan, former dean of the KU Law School, did not violate a Kansas Board of Regents ruling.
Such accusations were made by William I. Robinson's campaign manager, Paul Aylward of Ellsworth, Logan and Robinson, a Wichita attorney, are running for the Democratic nomination for U.S. Senator.
Aylward said he had been informed that Logan broke a re-gents rule in filing for political office 10 days before Logan's resignation became effective. Aylward did not name his informant.
"The recent accusation by my
KU PROVOST James R. Surface said Logan left his KU post June 10. Logan was paid for the month of June because he had accumulated vacation pay coming to him, Surface said.
Logan testified that he had left his post as dean in good standing and answered Aylward's criticism by pointing out that KU Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe had reminded him to vacate his office immediately upon filing, and that he had done so.
Campers sparkle
By STEVE TONAR
Journalism Camp Reporter
For a non-professional performance, it was handled in the best possible way.
Young Prophecies '68 was presented to a full house in the University Theatre Tuesday night.
Kansan Review
Under the direction of Bill Cline, assistant Ellsworth Hall supervisor, a small group of industrious campers who were tired
KU appoints chairman for Eastern area
Richard Lansmon Spear will join the KU faculty in September as associate professor and become the first full-time chairman of the department of Oriental languages and literatures.
Spear has been assistant professor of Japanese at the University of Wisconsin the past two years and last year was acting chairman of the department of East Asian languages.
He earned the B.A. degree in Greek at Lafayette College in 1952 and for two years was a lieutenant in the U.S. Army infantry. He earned the master of arts degree in Far Eastern studies in 1960 and the Ph.D. with a major in Japanese in 1963, both at the University of Michigan. Spear remained at Michigan as lecturer in Japanese for two years before going to Wisconsin.
The KU department offers 35 courses leading to majors in both Chinese or Javanese languages. It also teaches courses not requiring a knowledge of oriental languages for students interested in East Asian studies.
of the steady diet of records they had been getting, decided to do something entertaining and worthwhile for a change.
IT WAS AN excellent show and it is too bad that it was not started earlier and no more shows will be presented. If any camper came with doubts of having a good time and seeing a great show, he left with none.
Folk songs by Bob Dylan, Simon and Garfunkel, Peter, Paul and Mary; rock songs by Jimi Hendrix were dedicated to campers who were to be in the show but were removed from camp for breaking one of the four major camp rules.
MOST OF THE show was handled extremely well for a nonpaid performance and on more than one occasion, the performers received a standing ovation. Everyone performed well, with no apparent stage fright, but Phil Brown of The Smak adibled a bit too much on "Foxey Lady." He was so loud at times it was impossible to hear the song but, as a whole, he did well.
This was an example of the talent in camp which is seldom presented. Last year, there was talent just as good, but there was no opportunity to enjoy it. In future years, the camp supervisors should encourage such activity and shows like Young Prophecies '68.
Unfortunately, Young Prophecies was a one night stand. Those who attended the show will never forget the performance.
WEATHER
Hot and humid weather is forecast by the United States Weather Bureau with the highs today to be in the 90's and the low tonight around 70. There is a slight chance of rain and winds from 10 to 20 miles per hour.
Youngberg recalls long tenure at KU
By ANN NORE
Journalism Camp Report
"Corn and alfalfa were growing where Templin and Lewis Halls are now," Irvin Youngberg said as he reminisced over his 20 years as executive secretary of the Kansas University Endowment Association.
Youngberg entered KU in 1935 as a freshman. He taught economics in the business school as a graduate assistant prior to World War II. After service with the Navy amphibious force in the Mediterranean and Pacific Theaters, he became director of dormitories at KU in 1946 and served until he joined the Endowment Association in 1948.
Youngberg, sometimes called "the Swedish ambassador to KU," said much of his life is built around his two grandchildren who are 4 and 7 years of age. He still claims loyalty to his home town, Osage City.
"WHEN I joined the Endowment Association, I had $1 \frac{1}{2}$ employees—now the staff has 22 members. In 20 years the campus—both in Lawrence and Kansas City —has doubled in area." Youngberg said.
"This morning as I walked down Jayhawk Boulevard, I noticed some of the elm trees were dying. I remember when they were saplings. I guess I'm getting old," Youngberg said.
Students basically haven't changed, Youngberg believes, but he said they do seem to be better-trained, more polite and courteous, and healthier. He feels students study harder today than in the years past because there is more knowledge at hand. He noted the complete spectrum of student attitudes present at KU are essentially as they were thirty years ago.
ADHERING TO the Endowment Association's motto, "To build a better University than the State alone can build," Youngberg's job is to encourage the con-
ribution of private funds to the University and to administer the resources which are received. In this capacity, he is responsible to a board of trustees composed of 60 alumni.
"We are always seeking to do things for others," he said of his office. Youngberg said the high point of his career has been the privilege of being associated with three outstanding chancellors and with alumni members of the Association.
opponent's state chairman must mean that I am winning. Cursory examination would verify the fact that I have left the University in good standing. I question why an outsider would bring this up except for political purposes. I can only imagine that my opponent was unaware of the charge and hope we can return to the rational campaigning that we have enjoyed until this time," Logan said.
LOGAN'S RESIGNATION became effective July 1, as announced when his plans were revealed at the regent's meeting in Hays, April 18. At that time he planned to become a partner in the firm of Payne, Jones Anderson, Martin and Payne in Olathe.
After the assassination of Robert Kennedy, his plans were changed, however. Logan, 38, revealed his political ambitions June 10, and his campaign was officially opened with a kickoff dinner at the Eldridge Hotel in Lawrence.
In December, 1966, the regents passed a resolution regarding political activity by faculty members. The resolution:
"FACULTY, administrators and other unclassified personnel are eligible to accept any public or political party position which does not involve any conflict of interest and does not require substantial time away from assigned duties or in other respects infringe upon them.
"Such eligibility covers membership on a city commission, school board, planning group or county, state or national party committees and like organizations, either by appointment or by election.
"Leave without salary or other benefits will be granted to those who wish to seek public office requiring full time or lengthy periods away from assigned duties. Congress, state and country offices and appointments to similar offices fall within this category. The ruling is effective as of the date of filing for or appointment to such office."
B. M. HOFFMAN
IRVING YOUNGBERG
2
THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN
8de1 91 vblu vbii3
Friday, July 19, 1968
Register those firearms
Stronger gun control laws asked for by President Lyndon B. Johnson are causing increasingly bitter controversy in Washington. Congress is urged by the White House to compel registration of every firearm in the United States and to require that gun owners be licensed under strict federal standards.
Johnson's gun control plan immediately has set off hot controversy in Congress. Some members accused the President of reacting to a wave of "hysteria" set off by the recent assassinations. His call for registration and licensing came after a new law prohibiting mail-order sales of pistols and while Congress is considering extending that ban for shotguns and rifles.
On June 24 Johnson told Congress:
"Registration and licensing have long been an accepted part of daily life in America. Automobiles, boats, even dogs and bicycles in many communities, are commonly registered. Our citizens must get licenses to fish, to hunt, and to drive.
"Certainly no less should be required for the possession of lethal weapons that have caused so much horror and heartbreak in this country. Surely the slight inconvenience for the few is minimal, when measured against protection for all.
"There are now more firearms than families in America. The estimates range between 50 and 100 million guns in this country. Last year more than 3 million guns were added to private stock, building a massive arsenal which arms the murderer and the robber."
Violators of the law—which is administered by the Secretary of the Treasury—could have a $10,000 fine and up to five years in prison.
The law would require national registration of all firearms (except antiques) within 180 days of the effective date of the legislation.
Registration certificates must be carried with the firearms and presented to officers on their demand.
Anyone selling a firearm would be required to send his certificate of registration to the Secretary of Treasury within five days and also tell the name and address of the new owner and the date of delivery. If the firearm is lost, stolen or destroyed, it must be reported in 10 days. If a state did not adopt a federally acceptable
permit system, the federal government would do the licensing there. Federal gun permits could legally possess a firearm after Sept. 1,1971.
Those that would be denied permits would be: convicted felons, those under indictment, alcoholics, the mentally disturbed, drug addicts, persons convicted of violating firearms laws and juveniles.
According to the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the hand gun is the basic problem in firearms crimes, but no license or permit is required to buy or own them in 41 states.
New York State has a law which makes it illegal to buy or own a handgun without a permit from the police. In New York City the law is so strongly enacted that only 17,000 out of 8 million hold permits. But the city's crime rate keeps growing and criminals keep getting guns.
According to the FBI, states that require a permit to purchase hand guns have substantially lower gun-homicide rates than those that don't.
After the Robert Kennedy assassination there was an avalanche of mail for gun controls to hit Congress. Later, the mail was still coming in enormous amounts, but congressmen found mail turning heavily against federal controls.
On June 26 the Associated Press reported that a survey of 90 members of congress showed that immediately after the Kennedy assassination their mail ran strongly in favor of control laws, but by late June many were receiving letter ratios of up to 25 to 1 against controls.
Most Congressmen report that letters from big city areas and the East are usually for firearm control; those from Western and Southern areas generally oppose controls.
With the gun murder and robbery rate going as it is now it seems almost imperative that we do something in respect to the controlling of firearms sales. Not all gun owners are murderers, by any means—it is just a small, but growing, percentage we have to guard against. But to control them, all of them have to be controlled.
It is true that any laws enacted now could still be called a result of the "mass hysteria" after Kennedy's death, but now is the time to act. When the conscience of the people is aroused toward a good cause it is the time to act.
Timothy Cline
Guns keep on killing
Since 1900, more Americans have been killed by privately owned guns than by all the warfare in U.S. history. In five years, the nation has lost three of its more prominent citizens to assassin's bullets. Following the most recent Kennedy murder, many Americans from the President down have said they want to call a halt. They want to show the rest of the world that American society is not sick and that Bonnie and Clyde are not national heroes.
It has taken a long time. The U.S. tradition has been taming the frontier, and many have assumed that the right to own and bear arms is guaranteed in the constitution. But all the second amendment says is: A well-regulated militia, being necessary to the security of a free state, the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed.
The right to bear arms is firmly tied to state militia requirements. In 1939, for example, the Supreme Court upheld restrictions on sawed-off shotguns with the observation that these weapons were not ordinary military equipment. Two federal laws on gun control were passed in the 1930's because of the gang warfare.
In contrast to the loose U.S. laws, most European countries have strict laws. In Britain, even Bobbies do not wear guns. Only 30 murders by gunfire occurred there last year. Twenty thousand state and local laws take the place of uniform gun control laws in America.
Operating within these local laws, one of the oldest American industries thrives. A revolver can be bought for $9.50 and a shotgun for up to $5,000. Fifteen magazines are devoted to hunting and gun advertisements. The whole gun industry would be affected by a comprehensive law.
The National Rifle Association, a powerful lobbyist group, sets forth the contradictory arguments that: (1) Gun control is unconstitutional. (2) There are 30,000,000 law-abiding gun lovers. (3) Guns do not kill; people kill. (4) Criminals would get guns anyway.
If gun control laws are passed, the law abiding gun owner will not go through any more inconvenience than if he were obtaining a driver's license. Maybe fewer guns would be available to the public. Good! Fewer guns could mean fewer accidents.
The United States needs gun
THE SUMMER SESSION kansan
Kansan Telephone Numbers
Newsroom—UN 4-3646 Business Office—UN 4-4358
The Summer Session Kansan, student newspaper at the University of Kansas, is represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 Street, New York, N.Y., 10022. Mail subscription rates: $6 a semester or $10 a year. Published and second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas, every Tuesday and Wednesday. Postage to Kansan accommodations, goods, and employment advertised in the Summer Session Kansan are offered to students without regard to color, creed, or national origin.
The opinions expressed in the editorial columns are those of the editorial staff of the newspaper. Guest editorial views are not necessarily the same as the opinions expressed in the Summer Session Karsan are not necessarily those of the University of Kansas Administration or the Kansas State Board of Regents.
control laws. The first one in 30 years was rushed through in the aftermath of the assassination. It was only a half-way measure. Guns must be kept out of the hands of children, criminals, and psychopaths. Violence is not the American way of life.
-Audrey Shalinsky
IT'S BETTER TO HAVE TRUED AND FAILED...
5-15
"NO, NO THAT'S NOT MY CHALK DRAWER!—THAT'S WHERE I KEEP MY TEST PAPERS!"
Land of the bullet
The stars
Are like bullet holes.
In your flag,
wrote Soviet Poet Yevgeny Yevtushenke.
From the nation's beginnings, in fact and fiction, the gun has been provider and protector. The Pilgrim gained a foothold with the harquebus. A legion of loners won the West with Colt .45 Peacemakers holstered at their hips or Winchester 73 repeaters cradled in their arms. This image is wildly over-played, but in U.S. folklore nothing has been more romanticized than guns and the larger-than-life men who handled them.
Often the frontiersman was an anti-social misfit who helped create lawlessness. No matter. Daniel Boone and Buffalo Bill, Jesse James and Billy the Kid, hero and villain alike, were all men of the gun and were idolized. "Have gun, will travel" was more than a catch phrase. It was a way of life.
On the national day of mourning for Robert F. Kennedy, promoters of a Davenport, Iowa, pistol-shooting match decided to go ahead with the event but to observe a moment of silence after each volley, out of respect to the assassinated senator.
The gun problem is naturally highest in areas of recent riots. In Michigan, Dearborn's racist Mayor Orville L. Hubbard exhorted townpeople to "take up arms, learn to shoot and be a dead shot."
Increasing numbers of guns are falling into the hands of juveniles; in Chicago last year, 1,293 youths, one only eight years old, were arrested with guns in their possession. In Oklahoma, two brothers, 12 and 10, were charged with shooting a 49-year-old grocer to death.
The right to bear arms is being taken advantage of. Let's do something to save our country from being slammed by poets like Yevgeny Yevtushenke.
-Lou Ann Thomas
We need no more violence
This statement expresses explicitly and dramatically the stand of pro-gun Americans. The pro-gun Americans, and specifically the National Rifle Association, argue the constitutional right of the citizens to possess arms is being taken away from them by the proposed gun legislation. They argue guns are not responsible for crime and, at the same time, argue that gun control would not stop crime anyway. They argue gun legislation would "inconvenience" and "hamper" law-abiding gun holders.
"We are not about to surrender our firearms. I'll kill anyone who tries to take away my gun," an Indiana man wrote his senator regarding the recent controversy over gun control legislation.
The second constitutional amendment states: "A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be inscrformed."
The private ownership of arms is quite removed from the military today. The gun is no longer the ultimate weapon. The protection of the nation no longer depends upon the private ownership of arms. An outdated amendment is misquoted and misread to fit a modern situation.
The amendment has been translated as a guaranteed right to possess arms, while all it states is that for the security of the nation a citizen can hold arms.
Therefore, the proposed gun legislation is not unconstitutional. No right is being taken away. A stricter gun control law has become the necessary action for a modern problem.
That problem is the deaths of 100,000 Americans by private guns. President Johnson
counted 6,500 murders with guns a year, 10,000 suicides, 2,600 accidental deaths, 44,000 serious assaults, 50,000 robberies and 100,000 nonfatal injuries. The Department of Health, Education and Welfare reported that three-fourths million Americans have died by privately owned guns since 1900, which is one-third of the number of Americans killed in all the wars in U.S. history.
America has had up to this time a web of 20,000 state and local laws which are essentially inadequate. If a gun cannot be obtained in one city or state, it is quite easy to go to another state where a gun can be purchased with merely the show of a driver's license, and often not even that. Is it any wonder so many are killed by a weapon so easily obtained?
American finally is sick of unjustified murder, blood and violence. It is sick of the society that allowed John Kennedy, Martin Luther King and Robert Kennedy to fall under a man's gun. America wants relief.
Former President Eisenhower, President Johnson, Robert Kennedy, Senator Dirkson and many congressmen have supported the gun laws. Can we not place our trust and confidence in elected, renowned, experienced and educated leaders? We can not risk to remain deaf and blind to the beliefs and warnings of these men.
One woman seeing a 4-year-old child playing with a toy gun pleaded with the Mother, "Don't let them play with guns. I can't stand to see it anymore." We can also say to our Congressmen, "Don't let us play with guns. We can't stand to see the blood, violence and grief anymore."
-Terri Staab
Friday, July 19, 1968
THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN
3
Midshipmen indoctrinated in summer program
Seventy-nine Navy ROTC men are participating in the summer program, receiving training on board ship and at Naval bases.
First class midshipman Harald Freybe, Lawrence senior, and third class midshipman Lee A. Chapin, Springfield, Mass., sophomore, were selected for special training. Freybe has been assigned to the seventh fleet of Vietnam for his training. Chapin will receive the basic third class training for three weeks then be transferred to an aircraft squadron for anti-submarine warfare instruction.
FIRST CLASS midshipmen, all to be seniors, and their ships are Robert M. Bickel, Wichita, USS Independence; Edward L Bohannon, Coffeville, USS Shangri La; William W. Broach, Hays, USS R. E. Kraus; Alden R. Carter, Eau Claire, Wis., USS Stribling; Raymond A. Davidson, Vidor, Tex., USS Bugara; Stephen J. Dreiling, Hays, USS Capricornis
James A. Eagan, Suffern, N.Y., USS Brownson; Robert L. Ferriman; Hardy, Ark., USS Sea Fox; Richard P. Hall, Overland Park, US Sylvania; James M. Haney, Miami, Fla., USS Contz; Dwight P. Holm, Wright-Patterson AFB, Dayton, Ohio, USS Capricornus; Richard F. House, Arlington Heights, Ill., USS Platte; Stephen D. Kraft, Tulsa, Okla., USS Daniel Boone; Ray B. Lancaster, Alexandria, Va., USS Bauer.
Richard C. M. Pasley, Ames,
Iowa, USS Agerholm; Robert D.
Payne, Jr., Lawrence, USS Alagash;
Christopher A. Randall, Wichita,
USS Agerholm; Geoffrey K.
Renard, Tulsa, Okla., USS Oglethorpe;
John A. Russack, Mullica Hill.
N.J., USS Fort Snelling.
Perry Edward Sprague, Shawneee Mission, US Platte; Dwayne A. Tieszen, Rialto, Calif., USS Boxer; Charles M. Toomey, Wilmington, Del., USS Shadwell; and Donald J. Westerhaus, Marion, USS Wrangell.
SECOND CLASS midshipmen,
all to be juniors, are Richard W.
Bond, Shawnee Mission; Michael P.
Calloway, El Dorado; Ronald
G. Carpenter, Weiser, Idaho; John
D. Casko, Putnam, Conn.; Ralph
E. Chatham, Chagrin Falls, Ohio;
Terry Lee Clark, Bartlesville,
Okla.; Phillip M. Conner, Grosse
Point Peak.
Franklin P. Dunn, Virginia Beach, Va.; Terry D. Exsturm, Grand Island, Neb.; William H. Fischer, Valley Center; Kenneth W. Guest, Coffeyville; Bruce A. Hames, Topsfield, Mass.; Daniel R. Hedman, Stockholm, Maine; Joseph E. King, Potwin.
**STEVEN F. MATHEY**, Topeka; Philip D. Patterson, Topeka; William C. Pitcher, Monterey, Calif.; Steve E. Rasmussen, Overland Park; Dwight G. Rickman, Joplin, Mo.; James H. Thorp III, Topeka; Peter E. Shirey, Norridge, Ill.
William W. Knox, Colorado Springs, Colo.; James R. Laughead Jr., Des Moines, Iowa; Kevin G. Mercier, Valley Falls; Richard D. Metcalf, Tallahassee, Fla.
Anthony M. Turbeville, Waianae, Hawaii; Timothy L. Vocke, Two Rivers, Wis.; and Robert M. Wasko Jr., Kansas City
Third class midshipmen, all to be sophomores, and their ships are Owen K. Ball Jr., Evergreen, Colo., USS Dale; Douglas C. Beach, Fort Worth, Tex., USS Fort Marion; Charles M. Blakely, Topeka, USS Dale; Richard A. Boeckman, Wetmore, USS Fort Marion; Gerald A. Caldwell, Parsons, USS Fort Marion.
James P. Cobb, Wichita, USS Sperry; William R. Conner, Vienna, Va., USS Cook; Michael J. Eby, Huntington, N.Y., USS Dale; Stephen L. Flickinger, San Francisco, Calif., USS King; Thomas
H. Hough, Davisville, R.I., USS King; Eric C. Johnson, Overland Park, USS Cook.
Mark L. Johnson, Overland Park, USS Cook; Philip V. Keenan, Flushing, N.Y., USS Black;
James S. Keith, Kansas City, Mo., USS Black; Douglas R. Kraft, Tulsa, Okla., USS King; Clinton L. Laing, Topeka, USS Morton; Leslie K. Lampe, Goodland, USS Morton; Gregg D. Larson, Tulsa,
Okla., USS Morton; Colin L. Martin, Rapid City, S.D., USS Black.
Larry W. McGough, Great Bend, USS Frank Knox; John T. Pierce, Coffeyville, USS Rogers.
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4
THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN
图 1
Friday, July 19, 1968
Balfour attends Berkeley talks
By AUDREY SHALINSKY Journalism Camp Reporter
William J. Balfour, dean of student affairs, recently returned from the five-day "Conference on Innovations for Student Development" held at the University of California at Berkeley.
The conference was sponsored by the National Association of Student Personnel Administrators and the Center for Research and Development in Higher Education of the University of California. The purpose of the conference was to discuss new ideas that might be tried on campuses, Balfour said. About 85 people attended the conference.
REPRESENTATIVES f r o m large universities talked to officials from East Tennessee University, a school that has doubled in enrollment in the last five years. Balfour's group studied the problems the school faced and proposed a university planning committee be set up to be composed of students and faculty.
The remainder of the conference was spent discussing individual problems of the schools represented. The conference took place from June 30 to July 4.
While in Berkeley, Balfour witnessed riots in the area of the university. The demonstrations wanted Telegraph Ave., a main street into the campus, blocked off so a political rally could be held there, Balfour said.
OVER 1,000 demonstrators attended a meeting of the city council which refused to grant permission for the street to be blocked. A strict curfew was in effect, some windows were broken and the police were charged with brutality, Balfour said. He listened to one rally in which the demonstrators were deciding their next act.
"The rally was orderly but after two hours they were still trying to come up with a plan. So many people wanted to talk for so long a time that nothing could be accomplished." Balfour said.
The city council allowed the street to be blocked off and a peaceful rally was held on July 4, Balfour said.
KU for McCarthy slates contributed art work sale
By JANET DOMOWITZ Journalism Camp Reporter
KU for McCarthy is sponsoring a sale of donated artwork at 2 p.m. Saturday in the Kansas Union.
KU for McCarthy, a campus activity, is sponsoring the auction. Proceeds will meet local needs first and the remaining amount will go to the campaign.
Block print, collage, drawing, etching, jewelry, lithograph, painting, pottery and sculpture are some of the different types of art that have been contributed. Donations are still arriving and will be accepted until the auction.
WORKS HAVE come from Washburn University, the Kansas City Art Institute, Kansas State University and the University of Kansas.
Donors from KU include John Talleur, professor of drawing and painting; Carlyle H. Smith, professor of design and Latin American areas; Alan Bell, assistant instructor of design; Jerry Bryan, assistant instructor of design; Erena Friedrich, Hopkins, Minn., senior; and Gregory Walstrom, Topeka senior.
Minimum bids are posted on some items while others are open. About 100 pieces of artwork will be auctioned.
Jean Esch is coordinator of the auction. Bret Waller, director of the art museum, is the technical director of the auction. Henry M. Smith, St. Paul, will serve as the auctioneer.
KU for McCarthy is presently conducting a canvass in Lawrence which should be finished before the end of July. Student members hope to set up a downtown office in August.
OOPS!
ST. LOUIS — (UPI)— The U.S. weather bureau will find it hard to live down the day Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey came to town to dedicate the Gateway Arch, 630-foot high national monument. The forecast was "cloudy but dry."
Instead, heavy rain delayed ceremonies which eventually had to be moved indoors. Some events were canceled and Humphrey ducked in and out of the rain all the time he was in town.
By MAUREEN DOWNEY Journalism Camp Reporter
Natural History Museum holds workshop
People have to start getting interested in whether they want their woodlands and fields resembling garbage dumps and cesspools or rather than nature's home as they should.
This is why summer workshops for young people at the Museum of Natural History have been established. It is hoped that by teaching children at an early age about the beauties and benefits of nature, they will be less inclined to help ruin them when they are older. In these workshops they also hope to instill an interest in conservation or some branch as a career.
Edward Judd and Dwayne Chanay are the instructors for the three sessions that will meet Monday through Friday from 9 a.m. to noon. Each session has been limited to 12 students. The dates of the sessions are July 8-19. July 2-Aug.2. and Aug. 5-16.
THE FIRST day the students, who range from fourth to sixth grades, will study the basic principles of ecology and how animals get along with one another.
An aquatic environment will be studied by a trip to Potter's Lake to study its plant and animal life. An aquaria will then be set up in the laboratory for further observations of the creatures that live underwater through microscopes.
The class will take a trip through the Washington Creek area to record the diversity of size and number of plants in a forest environment. They will also make a study of woodland animals with emphasis on their importance in the community of life.
TWO DAYS will be spent in field trips to a farm pond to study the plant and animal life and how they relate to one another.
Specimens and museum exhibits will be used on the eighth day to show how various kinds of animals are adapted to their environments.
Animal anatomy will be studied by the dissection and comparison of the structural organization of a fish, frog, lizard, snake, bird and mammal, with a view
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into understanding their similarities and differences as adaptations to their special way of life.
Revisions of the schedule of daily activities may be in accordance with the weather conditions.
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Friday, July 19, 1968
THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN
5
Yugoslav director ends Oread visit
The director of a Yugoslav avant-garde theatre company frequently playing such international playwrights as T. S. Elliot, Jean Paul Sartre and Henry James visited the University of Kansas Theatre this week.
She is Mrs. Miro Trailovic, manager, artistic director and one of six founders of Atelje 212, who recently met Prof. Tom Rea, assistant director of the University Theatre in Belgrade.
Rea was accompanying six student actors presenting "Theatre Today" (a medley of Broadway hits) in Rumania, Czechoslovakia and Yugoslavia under State Department sponsorship. Mrs. Trailovic told him her company had been invited to perform in the Lincoln Center Festival '68 in New York City this summer.
Emphasizing creativity and experimentation, Atelje 212 was so named because its original hall would seat 212. The name remains, however, even after a modern 400-capacity house was erected in 1964, complete with spacious stage, handsome foyer, basement scenery storage space and other improvements. The city of Belgrade furnished funds
for the design by Bojan Stupica,
well-known Yuzoslav director.
A PIONEER in its field, the still relatively small theatre provides the setting for fiery discussions in dramatics. Renowned playwrights and authors visiting Belgrade frequently accept an invitation to lecture on Atelje's platform. Among those who have spoken there are Jean - Paul Sartre, Arnold Wesker, Angus Wilson and Julian Beck.
The drama that Mrs. Trailovic considers the greatest success in Belgrade is Edward Albee's "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?" which she opened two months after its October 1962 Broadway debut and kept on the boards four years.
IN ADDITION to heading Atelje 212, Mrs. Trailovic produces shows for Belgrade Radio and TV and teaches at the Belgrade Academy of Theatre.
At the morning lecture, Mrs. Trailovic spoke about current theatre trends in Yugoslavia and Eastern Europe. That afternoon, she told about her theatre company, its operations, objectives, styles and performances at the Lincoln Center.
Two KU geology profs to teach at WSU this year
Philip H. Heckel and Curtis D. Conley, both of the Geologic Research Section, the State Geological Survey at KU, have been appointed visiting professors at Wichita State University.
Jack Blythe, chairman of the WSU Department of Geology and Geography, and Frank C. Foley, director of the State Geological Survey, jointly announced these appointments. The Lawrence geologists will alternate in teaching "Special Studies: Carbonate Petrography and Environments," during the academic year 1968-69. The course will meet Wednesdays from 3:30 to 5:20 p.m. in McKinley Hall on the WSU campus.
Heckel and Conley became number two and three of the State Survey staff to teach at Wichita State. Their Section Chief, Daniel F. Merriman, journeyed to Wichita on Wednesdays during the Spring term of 1688 to handle an evening course called "Computer Techniques in Geology."
Heckel, a 1960 graduate of Amherst College with the Ph.D. from Rice University, joined the Kansas Survey in 1965. Conley graduated in 1952 from the Colorado School of Mines. He earned the Ph.D. in geology at The University of Wyoming in 1964, spent three years in Libya, with Oasis Oil Company of Libya, Inc., and came to the Kansas Survey in 1967.
Students attend USSR institute
Six KU students are attending the Summer Language Institute in Leningrad, U.S.S.R. It is held in cooperation with the University of Colorado.
Instruction is by regular KU and CU staff and by native instructors. KU instructors are Joseph Conrad, associate professor of Slavic languages and literature, and Valentina Golondzowski, teaching assistant in Slavic languages and literature.
Included in the program are visits to museums, guided excursions, and attendance at theater and concert performances.
The students are Michael Dudek, Milwaukee, Ore., senior; Richard Frampton, Lawrence, graduate student; John Mason, Salina sophomore; Rochelle Listrom, Kansas City, Mo., senior; Mark Scott, Topeka sophomore; and Tamara Wyshywany, New York City graduate student.
The program in Leningrad offers intermediate level studies in Polish, and intermediate and advanced work in Russian. Students participating are regularly enrolled in the KU summer school and receive resident credit.
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6
THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN
Friday, July 19, 1968
Wallace on sports
Football's future look
It might be time to take a look at where professional, college and high school football is going.
Football, fortunately or otherwise, is a sport where specialization is a great advantage, especially in training. There, the player can concentrate on his own job. However, there is such a thing as going too far.
I suppose that in pro football, specialization is the best way. Perfection is easier to acquire if the team is made up of the very "cream of the crop." Perfection is what calls the public's attention to the stadium or TV set when two evenly-matched teams meet in a contest where a single person's unique ability may make the difference.
Teams, mostly professional but not a few college and high school, are searching and recruiting for kickers, punt and kick-off return men, field goal blockers and even quarterbacks who have a distinct and probably single talent.
After all, many games have been won by the grace of an excellent kicker's field goal.
Even in pro football, however.
there is a danger of over-specialization. The prices that rookies are commanding today, not to mention the veterans now that the threatened strike has been resolved, will soon be eating up the profits in football.
A basketball team can support a couple of $100,000 a year players. Can football support top backs, ends, kickers, linemen and special runners at the same prices?
\* \* \*
College is also becoming a bit of a problem. For a long time
there has been dissatisfaction with the scholarships that many colleges award for athletics, and much of this controversy can be attributed to the growing specialization.
Coaches no longer want a good all-around player. When they scout a high school player, they rarely look for talents other than those which he currently is employing. This may seem normal, a simple policy of looking for the out-and-out best, but it can end many a promising career.
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Bill Webster and Alan Hill invite you out to see Mobile Acres Park designed especially for the progressive,economy minded students.
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Friday, July 19, 1968
THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN
7
A KANSAN CLASSIFIED AD WILL WORK FOR YOU
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FOR SALE
Western Civilization Notes
Ninth Edition. Comprehensive analysis of this year's reading list. Mimeographed and bound for $4.50. Jayhawk Reference Publications. Call VI 2-0113 for free delivery. 8-2
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4 Bedroom apartment 2 blocks from campus. Available August. Work as a Female or Male or Female. No limit on number of occupancy situations. Calls Vi. 7-2735 7-30
For 2 Men Students: Furnished basement or apartment in new home south of KU. Walking distance to Campus. A/C, private entrance and bath. Utilities paid. Call VI 3-6313 weekend or evenings. 7-30
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Experienced typist will do thesis and theme typing. Standard prices. Specializes in formulas. 143 Malott. Call UN 4-3226. 7-26
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Loans to seniors and graduate students for expenses. Call Mara J. Volz at VI 3-807-625-1400.
HELP WANTED
Production artist. Full time opening in our art department for individual capable of doing finished art, pastel painting and work Exciting opportunity to work in a new graphic arts facility, dealing with 3-D photography and animal modeling Impact, I mile north of 135, Gardner-Antioch Intoch, Gardner, Kansas. 7-26
8
THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN
Friday, July 19, 1968
NASA contributes to KU research
By SANDY BARNETT Journalism Camp Reporter
Funds for a new $2.3 million Space Research Building to be located between the CRES, Center for Research, Engineering, Science, Center and Pioneer Cemetery have been made available to KU by a NASA grant.
B. G. Barr, associate professor of mechanical engineering at KU and associate director of the KU Center for Research in the Engineering Sciences, said that the new building is scheduled to begin operation in the spring or fall of 1970.
It will join CRES and three other research facilities, the U.S. Geological Survey Building constructed by the KU Endowment Association and leased to the Survey; a laboratory used by Prof. Takeru Higuchi, regents professor of pharmaceutical chemistry; and the Botanical Research Building, in the developing research area west of Iowa Street.
"KU'S SPACE Research Building should be the most important facility on the KU campus for communicating university research to the region." Barr said. "The National Aeronautics and Space Administration, which granted $1.8 million for construction of the new building, is particularly interested in developing ties between research centers, especially those in universities and the larger community in which they are located.
"Results where such close relationships have been developed have been remarkably beneficial to both parties," Barr continued. "The most notable examples of this type development are the clusters of research groups and technological industries in the Boston and Los Angeles areas."
Others, less sizeable but no less successful, have grown up in university communities in Stanford, Calif., and Boulder, Colo. The likelihood is strong that a similar development could be in store for KU and the surrounding region."
Barr said, "It is easy to see that such growth is conceivable by looking at the growth of space research at KU which led up to the NASA grant. In 1961 CRES began
operation. During the next five years, supported research in space - related areas increased about 20 times.
"SUPPORT WAS about $50,000 in 1961, and it was almost $1,000,- 000 in 1966," Barr said. "Interaction between regional industries and the research effort of the university was instrumental in this growth."
KU Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe said the NASA Space Technology Building will be a major asset to the University's research effort, for which lack of space has been a limiting factor.
"The building will be a particular asset in the educational programs which stress application of man's knowledge to practical problems of man and his world society." Wescoe said.
A COMMITTEE of KU faculty members and administrators is now working with architects Hollis and Miller of Topeka on the building design. It is anticipated the three-storied Space Research Building will have a total floor area of 65,000 to 70,000 sq. ft. Current planning calls for a three-storied structure of two wings joined by a rather open central area.
The Remote Sensing Laboratory, now located in the CRES facility, will occupy about one third of the new building. Laboratory director is R. K. Moore, professor of electrical engineering at KU. His group has proposed design recommendations for spacecraft radars to be used in the advanced Apollo program for the mapping of planetary environments.
Another pioneer in relating university research to the surrounding larger community is KU's Business Engineering Technical Applications Group, known as the BETA program. Now located in the CRES building, the group is to be moved to the Space Research Building.
BETA WORKS on the premise that no firm can conduct all its own research. Small, private firms, in particular, could benefit from the scientific and engineering know-how produced by such efforts as the national space program. BETA provides a way for tapping that know-how.
Francis assumes Garden City post
Cliff Francis has taken up the duties of the directorship of the KU Southwest Kansas Center in Garden City, filling the vacancy created by the death of O. D. Calhoon, Jr., last December.
Francis, a native of Texas, retains the dual appointment of lecturer in English and technical writing at KU, where he has been since 1965 when he began candidacy for the Ph.D. degree in English.
DURING THE past year Francis has been assistant in industrial extension serving both KU Extension and the Kansas Industrial Extension Service. He has been doing research in engineering literature at KU and the Linda Hall Library in Kansas City, Mo., one of the nation's largest technical libraries.
As director of the KU Extension Center he will provide extension class service in 24 southwestern counties.
BETA was organized three years ago by professors from KU's Schools of Business and Engineering: B. G. Barr and R. R. Galts. Graduate students in both fields administer the program. These student representatives contact personnel in the region who are interested in using the program and finding out what type of information they are looking for.
Upon graduation from high school in Silsbee, Tex., Francis entered Tulane University on an honor scholarship to study electrical engineering in 1954.
M. A. degree in American literature in 1962 from Sam Houston State College, where he had been teaching both beginning and junior-level work.
After three years of engineering study and work in industry he changed his field to English at Lamar College, Beaumont, Tex. There he won the Eleanor Weinbaum Poetry award, acted in several dramas, and earned the B.A. degree in 1960. He earned the
Frances has now completed course work for the Ph.D. in English.
Answers to the business and industrial problems are then supplied, usually in the form of pertinent technical information, along with assistance in applying it to the particular needs of the firm.
research effort benefits members of the faculty, who now have a channel through which to seek and receive support for their research activities.
This institutionalization of the
IN 1965 Francis came to KU for additional graduate study and taught freshman and sophomore English and technical writing to junior and senior engineering students.
Francis is a lieutenant in the Naval Air Reserve. He and Mrs. Francis have two children, a son, age 6, and a daughter, 4.
Dr. John Lee Haslam will join the University of Kansas faculty in September as assistant professor of chemistry.
A native of Salt Lake City, Utah, Dr. Haslam earned the B.A degree in 1963 and the Ph.D in physical chemistry in 1966 from the University of Utah. For the past two years he has been a postdoctoral fellow at Cornell University with support from the National Institutes of Health.
RESEARCH THAT would serve as such a link between University researchers and the larger community was anticipated in the three tenets upon which CRES was formed;
Haslam joins in chemistry
As a linguist Francis knows a range of tongues from Old and Middle English through French and German to Fortran IV, a computer language.
THESE PRINCIPLES have been validated by the increasing significance of the research efforts at CRES. Its increase of the numbers of graduate students within the School of Engineering has been tremendous, many of whom participate directly in sponsored research.
1. The University is responsible for the performance of worthwhile research.
Most research projects at CRES are developed from the ideas and initiative of individual faculty members. The staff of CRES and the heads of departments can, when desired, help the prospective sponsor find a faculty member interested in the sponsor's area of research. Similarly, the interests of various faculty members are communicated by CRES to potential sponsors, both government and private.
2 Combining academic training with industrial practice enlarges our technological capacity.
3. The challenging problems of industry and government produce significant research goals.
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MISTER GUY
TRADITIONAL CLOTHIERS
920 MASSACHUSETTS
MISTER
GUY
TRADITIONAL CLOTHIERS
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Royalty will be crowned Saturday
STUDIO
-Kansan Photo by Bill Jeffries
THE CAMPAIGN TRAIL
Two female campers campaigning in the JRP dining room try to persuade Russell Branden to support their wing's queen candidate. Many girls carried out trays to earn votes for their favorite candidate.
KU
kamper kansan
KU
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Friday, July 19, 1968
By EMILY RUDIN
Volume 5, Issue 5
Rampler Start Report Elections were held Thursday night to select the King and Queen for the formal dance Saturday.
In each dormitory two people counted half the ballots and two counted the other half. They then submitted their totals to Russell Branden, counselor supervisor. This procedure prevents anyone but Branden from knowing who the King and Queen are before the formal itself.
THE CANDIDATES for Queen are Susan Barry, Carolyn Hamblin, Demity Herber, Vatrice Goodloe, Leslie Willhite, Lisa Von Schwarzbeck, Liz Arcangeli, Emese Vathy, Adria Harrison, Janet Garrison, Ann Crawford, and Connie Bates.
Also included are Debbie Myers, Salley Imke, Debbie Baca, Sandy Yablin, Ora Shaw, Jamie Janke, Le e Stephen, Debbie Friendl, Sherry Small, Susan Boros, Linda Zeiner, Beth Nix, Marilyn Rose, Linda Wyllie, Leslie McLain, Pamm Chew, True Cooper, Linda Jones, Kristi Anderson, Pat Benjamin, Cassandra Parker, Quenana Hefner, Debbie Vance, and Betsy Brockman.
THE CANDIDATES for King
are Fritz Ledbetter, Dennis Corbett, David Cooley, Bob Wedemeyer, Ed Rathert, Dale Pahl, Kent Bailey, Leon Roberts, Frank Young, Dave Lovelace, Alvin Haywood, Walter Pitts, and Deke Wilcox, Phil Brown, and Adrian Call.
Other King candidates are Lin Diacon, Bo Kinzie, Jim Moddrell, Hubert Thomas, and Doug Ethel.
Campaigners displayed posters, gave mealtime speeches, visited cafeteria tables, and gave four-minute skits in McCollum's SE parking lot.
DURING THE formal there will be a floor show in which Darrrell Benne, choir director, will conduct the camp chorale. A ballet solo will be presented. Also featured will be the Camper's Kix Band and the Counselor's Stage Band.
The candidates for King and Queen will promenade and then Russell L. Wiley, camp director, will crown the winners and present them with gifts.
Campers should submit their guest permission slips as soon as possible. Guests are advised to stay one night only. Girls will be housed in McCollum Hall and boys in Oliver Hall.
Speech department to present plays
The dramatic interpretation workshop of the speech and debate division will be presenting cuttings from three plays in Readers Theater.
Two of the plays, under the direction of Jack Garrison, are entitled, "America Hurrah," and "Telemeus Clay." The plays being presented, will not be acted,
but merely interpreted with scritts.
The third play, "John Brown's Body" by Steven Vincent Benet, is being presented under the direction of Jack Wright.
The three plays will be presented at 7 p.m. in Strong Auditorium on July 24. They will be open to the public.
Dietician serves 'good food'in JRP
By HOWARD STEPHAN Kamper Staff Reporter
Mrs. Laura Sample, head dietitian at Joseph R. Pearson Hall, said the food served there is "good food."
Mrs. Sample received her education at Kansas State University in Manhattan. Her background includes courses in dietetics and nutrition.
"For an average lunch of roast beef needed to feed the 160 persons in Pearson Hall we use between 80 and 100 pounds of roast beef, 100 pounds of potatoes, and 30 pounds of vegetables." Mrs. Sample said.
"ALL THE MEAT served at JRP is choice grade, and none of the food is government surplus," she said. "We get all our food from Swifts and Armours or from special vendors."
Mrs. Sample commented on the salt peter issue, a rumor convicts the cook of inserting this chemical into the food, by saying there is none. In fact the tale about salt peter is an old old wives tale. Asked if there was anything being placed in food that had the opposite effect on people, Mrs. Sample said, "There are no preservatives of any kind in this food."
Another first for Kansan
The Kansan, which made the initial step to offset printing in April has taken another step toward the full cold-type process today.
The editorial page of the Summer Session Kansan was set on new IBM equipment which arrived last week, instead of on the traditional linetypes.
MRS. SAMPLE said, "I have been at the University of Kansas for nine years, and I have loved every minute of it." During the regular school year Mrs. Sample is the head dietitian at the athletic table.
"The hardest but most enjoyable part of my job." Mrs. Sample said, "is to keep everyone happy." When asked what one of her most discouraging moments was, Mrs. Sample said, "I thought I would have to cook the meal myself because my morning cook was ill."
The camp provides the dormitory department with $1.20 per camper each day with which to feed campers.
Members of the German camp will present "Die Physiker," a German play by Durrenmatt, the night of July 25 or 26. The performance will be in Swarthout Recital Hall.
Germans plan plays
This is the second play the German students have presented. The first was "Das Verhor" by Bert Brecht.
PARTICIPANTS in the production are Karen Doerner, Gail Altschwager, Priscilla Arsove, Gary Ash, Devid Devins, Garnet Herring, Eileen Meoni, Gary Mee, Nanci Randolph, Jo Scheibe, David Shumaker and Joan Torkelson.
All campers are invited to attend the play, which will be spoken in German.
Ballet students to perform
By JANET DOMOWITZ Kamper Staff Reporter
About 100 dancers from 25 states will perform at 8 p.m. July 26 and 27 in the University Theatre. Students from all four ballet divisions of the Band Camp are included.
Brahms' waltzes, choreographed by Larry Long, Marguerite Reed, and Miss Alexandra Zaharias will be performed. "Facets," choreographed by Bill Evans, "Fanfare," choreographed by Miss Zaharias, "Bagatellen," choreographed by Long, and "Capriccio Espagnole." choreographed by Miss Reed are also scheduled.
EVANS AND Greg Lizenbery, guest artists, will dance in "Faecets." Evans and Miss Reed will perform in "Capriccio Espagnole."
Long is ballet master of the International Ballet Co. Evans and Lizenbery are from the Repertory Dance Theatre. Miss Zaharias is director of the St. Louis Dance Theatre. Miss Reed is with the TulaS Dance Showcase.
"Facets" and the Brahms' waltzes use live piano accompaniment by Joanne Atkins. Chez Haehl, of the University Theatre at the University of Kansas, designed the costumes.
The first concert is for all campers and the second one is by reserved seat only.
Tempos at Ellsworth
Tempos may be picked up at Ellsworth Hall Thursday, July 25 beginning at 6:30 p.m. Campers who have not already purchased a copy may do so at this time.
Campers are asked to bring their receipts which will be placed in their mail boxes at the beginning of next week.
RACHEL GARDNER
—Kansan Photo by Bill Jeffries
2
KAMPER KANSAN
Friday, July 19, 1968
Fight vs. vote argued
The statement "If you're old enough to fight, you're old enough to vote" is over-used, over-emphasized, and over-rated. It is almost the only argument given from those who are for the voting age being lowered. That, and "It will increase the electorate by 10 million."
To sum up the opposite argument, 18-year-olds are not ready to vote. They haven't the knowledge, experience or maturity of those who are 21.
Someone who is 18 has the physical ability to shoulder a gun and march as many miles as an adult. But the mental and emotional stability is not the same. Even the Army recognizes this, and new recruits are never given positions of decision.
President Johnson said in his message for lowering the voting age, "... time has affected the wisdom and the right of these decisions. ... Time, too, has already affirmed the wisdom and justice of our continuing efforts."
From the time someone is born in the United States of America he enjoys his rights of liberty. He should be willing to physically protect those liberties be he 18, 21, or 45.
Time is exactly what is needed. Time to learn, time to experience, time to experiment.
time to taste. At 18 one has just left the shelter of his home and the instructions of his family. If he were to vote then, his vote would be written for the candidate and terms heard at home.
It is the college students who are exposed to the radicals and speakers for the New Left, the New Right, Nazism, and other extremes. The reason is simply because these students haven't their own concrete ideas yet. Their minds are open for suggestions. They are listening and waiting for something that sounds good.
Too often they are overcome with the idea of being on their own and in order to prove they are mature, their decisions are hasty and to the extreme. Too often their opinions change. Too often they are swayed.
Maturity doesn't appear all of a sudden at 21. But it can be gained and approached through those three years after one is on his own and exposed to the bare facts of life in the world around him.
Granted, some 18-year-olds are ready to vote. Some who are 21 aren't. It is impossible to have each voter take a test on maturity. Why not be safe and keep the voting age at 21? That would be better than the majority of those 10 million voting irrationally.
—Heather McNeil
CAMPUS HUMOR MAGAZINE ON SALE
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CAMPUS HUMOR MAGAZINE ON SALE
PETER F.25
'Bird of youth' should fly to polls
Does killing for your country make you an adult? Or does legally being able to go out on a binge and drink as much beer as you are physically able make you mature? Or is it on the big night of graduation that you suddenly turn, overnight, from child to man?
Affirmative answers to these questions seem to be the basis for the side that wishes the voting age be lowered to 18. They feel the popular, if rusty saying, "If you are old enough to die for your country you are old enough to vote." should be upheld.
What people cannot understand is that growing up is a slow process. When young people graduate from high school they are essentially on their own for the first time in their lives, especially when they go off to college and to jobs. This is the first time they are able to get their own ideas about things and are able to influence themselves instead of having others influence them.
During the time between 18 and 21, young people are learning and forming their own opinions, and at 21 they are ready to voice those opinions as their own, not just as words someone else has told them all their lives.
Another argument for lowering the age limit is the fact that people are better educated today at 18 than previous generations have ever been. Therefore, since they know more, young people should be allowed to vote at an earlier age than were their parents. What isn't brought to light is that there is much more to learn today than previously, so proportionately the same amount of learning is being accomplished.
Besides, if the younger generation knows so much about everything at 18, then just think how much they are going to be able to learn in three years since their minds are able to consume so much more than any minds in previous generations.
In some courts, 18-year-olds are treated as adults and are given adult pusillments, but does this mean that because a person has the mind to commit a crime terrible enough to have come before a court when just 18, that this mind is capable of voting for people to run the lives and beings of others?
In the Jewish religion a boy is officially declared an adult at the age of 12. Yet certainly he is not able to sensibly vote at this age. He may be an adult in the official record but he is still just a young boy, continually learning.
In this same way, when a young person graduates from high school, or can legally drink beer, or has to go to fight for his country, he is in the stage where society says he is an adult. But in his own mind, is he an adult? Has he learned how to make decisions for himself and be able to act on them maturely? Or must he have time before he can logically re-arrange things in his mind and come up with what he thinks about things? This is the question that the 18-year-old must decide and face up to today.
—Maureen Downey
kamper kansan
The opinions expressed in the editorial columns are those of the editorial staff of the newspaper. Guest editorial views are not necessarily those of the editorial staff. Any opinions expressed in the Kamper Kansan are not necessarily those of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp or the University of Kansas
Rees Roderek, Sue Bunge, Janet Wysocki, Pat Ashford, Patricia Baser, Beth Cherry, Janet Domowitz, Chris Hass, Demity Herber, Ann Nore, Emily Rudin, Mary Scott, Howard Stephan, Steven Walker and Joe Weinie
The Kamer Kansan, camp newspaper at the Midwestern Music and Art Camp in Chicago. It is open on Fridays. It is written by members of the Journalism Division of the Camp.
Accommodations, goods, and employment offered in the Kamper Kanan are offered to students without regard to color, creed, or national origin.
Executive Staff
Photography Bill Seymour
Adviser Robert Stevens
Editor in Chief Dan Shirey
News Editor Nan Dunker
Editorial Editor Janet Migdow
Feature Editor Mary Hanks
Sports Editor Chuck Stokes
Photo Editor Bill Jeffries
Bees Boderick, Sue Burge, Janet Wysocki Pat Abbord
Adolescent adult-no vote
The adolescent adult. The world has many of them today. The men and women who just never grew up.
Many teenagers are more mature than their elders. So when it comes to the question of lowering the voting age to 18, the pros seem to have a sound basis for argument. Many people also feel that if the sons of America serve their country and give their lives in combat, they should have a voice in the government.
And is not the 18-year-old today more mature than his father was at his age? Yes, society has matured the child and formed him to become a part of the adult world faster than ever before.
With a nation of half the population under 25, it seems only logical that the voting age should be arranged so the half under 25 has as much to say as the other half. These are a few of the pro arguments.
The other side of the picture is a strong one too, though it seems the arguments for the cons are not quite so numerous. Though many of the 18-year-olds of today are mature beyond their years, the majority, it seems, are not ready to take on the responsibility of voting.
Many of the young people supporting presidential candidates have no idea what the convictions of that candidate are. A majority of these young people
are just entering college and are for the first time finding out that life is not what it seemed from their sheltered high school years. They will learn too soon that the yellow brick road is not quite so yellow.
After viewing the unrest in our nation, and seeing the
average 18-year-old barely knows himself, the contention that the lowering of the voting age would be a mistake seems agreeable. If the voting age is lowered, I can say I will not take advantage of that privilege.
-Kelly Slaughter
To drip or not to drip
Once upon a time in the far off land of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp, there lived some 2100 campers who walked around campus with chapped hands. This outbreak of chapped hands was due to the fact that there weren't any paper towels in the dormitory washrooms.
Cases of chapped hands prevented music people from practicing their instruments because of a tightening of the fingers; journalism campers were unable to type; art students were unable to create their masterpieces; and so on down the line it went.
True to human form, the band campers had very lax memories. They forgot to carry towels with them every time they wanted to wash and DRY their hands. Up and down the halls they ran, arms extended, water dripping to the floor.
Methods of drying their hands had to be invented. Campers took to walking around with wet wets and thighs because shorts are as
good as any towel, aren't they? Groups of campers seemed to be doing tribal dances while waving and shaking their hands above their heads.
The situation grew so bad that the campers started to complain. They wanted paper towels in their washrooms.
As a result of the complaints, some checking was done and it was found out that no provisions had been made by the camp administration to supply the washrooms with paper towels.
There is only one week left in camp. It is not likely there will be paper towels supplied before the time we leave, but next year . . .
Wouldn't it be nice if as a going away present from the 1968 campers provisions were made with housing by the camp administration to supply washrooms with paper towels? Or at least a good hand cream?
— Janet Wysocki
Sirs:
Letters to the editor
I would like to write this letter in response to the letter written in the July 12, 1968, issue of the Kamper Kansan. Although I can agree with some of the ideas presented, I would like to refute the logic and some of the demands made by the 50 campers who signed it.
First of all, in reference to the smoking incident in Murphy Hall, I would like to say, of course teenagers are living, thinking people but legally they are minors until they are 18.
What this means in essence is that the University of Kansas could be arrested for contributing to the delinquency of a minor if they allowed teens to smoke in Murphy Hall. Technically it also means a teenager could be arrested for even having possession of cigarettes because by law they are not allowed to buy them.
Secondly, the logic the 50 signers used to justify smoking in the building was not very reasonable. They said, "Anyone who has been in Murphy has surely noticed the many ashtrays sitting in the halls, and we are sure that these ashtrays are meant to be used by people. Are campers not people?"
This could be true in some cases but it must be remembered that for 9 months out of twelve, college students are the people who use these ashtrays and the majority of college students are over 18. The majority of campers are not over 18 and are therefore not the people intended to use the ashtrays.
The signers went on to say in their letter, "We certainly have enough sense to know when to go to bed." Maybe those who signed the letter know when to go to bed, but again it must be realized that there are some campers who by their previous actions have proved they can't be trusted with a can of shaving cream, let alone to be trusted as to when they should go to bed.
I do not intend to disagree with every point made in the letter but I do feel that to present a logical criticism one must give a logical reason for change and also offer an alternate plan that would work more effectively. I think the 50 campers who signed the letter failed to take this into consideration.
Jerry Brown, Music Division
Friday, July 19, 1968
KAMPER KANSAN
3
Supervisor Lawson likes hunting, fishing
Fishing, hunting, and kids are a few of the hobbies of Charles Lawson, one of the supervisors for the 1968 Midwestern Music and Art Camp.
Standing approximately five feet six inches, Lawson is a man very well known around the camp. Lawson has brown hair, hazel eyes, and a deep, stern voice. He has a very distinct manner that makes him unmistakable to any camper. Lawson has worked with the camp for
three years in which time he has held various positions.
Lawson feels that there is a problem with the student rebellion against camp rules. He is very concerned about this and is trying to improve the present situation.
Being supervisor is not an easy job by any means. Along with the supervising, Lawson has to handle many disciplinary measures.
Some campers feel that he is unjust in a lot of his decisions.
There are some who feel that he is just a very hard man with a lot of power that he likes to throw around. Despite the feelings of the campers, Lawson says that he loves all high school students.
During the year Lawson is a band and orchestra teacher at a Wichita High School. Lawson has taught there since the opening of the school seven years ago. He enjoys his work very much, he says.
It's Really Great
Boy campers like ballet
By MERI MAFFET Kamper Kansan Reporter
Nicky Gardner and David Smith have an unusual girl problem.
As the only male campers in the ballet division, they have the 104 young ballerinas of the troupe competing fiercely for their attention.
ISN'T THE situation frustrating?
$400 given for study in design
James H. Johnson of Buckner, Mo., has been awarded a Joseph Mitchell Kellogg scholarship for an entering freshman in the School of Architecture and Urban Design at KU. The scholarship is for $400 in the 1968-69 academic year.
Johnson, a graduate of Fort Osage High School, is the son of Mrs. Phyllis E. Johnson and the late Thornton A. Johnson of Buckner.
The Kellogg scholarship memorializes the late professor who taught architecture at KU for 34 years before retirement in 1956. He was chairman of the department for many years when it was in the School of Engineering and Architecture.
"It's great!" 15-year-old Gardner grinned, flopping his long blond hair to one side. "The girls say how good it is to have boys here. They look up to us."
The unique position has more than one advantage, the boys agreed: the girls confide in them. "I get in on all the gossip," Nicky said. "It's fun because I know all the secrets."
THE TWO "Romeos" are old pros. Since they began their study of ballet in grade school, they have been thrown into a constant working situation with the opposite sex. But although they seldom have other boys in their dancing classes, they do not feel self-conscious.
"The girls understand about dancing," Gardner explained. He added with satisfaction, "When they find out I'm better than they are, we get along fine."
THE BOYS, who plan to become ballet masters, have not had the manliness of their occupational expectations questioned since grade school. There never was much of a problem for Gardner. Because he was the fastest runner in his school. His friends convinced themselves that he studied ballet to improve his track skills. Gardner was not about to tell them differently, he said.
"Only the ones who are envious of you razz you," he said, reflecting the philosophy of his profession.
Gardner, a native of Lawton,
Okla, started formal study of ballet three years ago when a short course in tap dancing whetted his appetite for the challenge of classical ballet.
THE REPORTER
BALLET IS a tradition in the Smith family. Fourteen-year-old Smith of Lancaster, S.C., received his first instruction at the barre unenthusiastically at the age of four from his mother. Today his teacher is still the same, but his attitude has been reversed.
The boys' experience at camp has been so favorable that they both plan to return next year. Life at camp, however, has not been without its minor problems.
Gardner is sporting a broken toe, his first broken bone, as a result of a dance rehearsal. It was not a painful experience; he didn't know it has been broken until 36 hours later after X-rays were taken.
For Gardner, camp has been a challenging experience. While he has accustomed himself to many aspects of dorm life—toothpaste on appliance handles, shampoo in beds, and after-dark snacks—he still has not adjusted to the normal routine of locking his room—he keeps losing his key.
-Kansan Photo by Bill Jeffries
COL. VIVIAN DUNN
During the first three weeks of camp he lost the key to his room twice, had his wallet stolen, forgot his "red badge of courage" on several vital occasions, and had $15 lost to theft.
Although neither of the daneurs said that he was anxious for camp to end, Smith has expressed hope that with a change of scenery his luck will improve.
He said he wasn't sure that a trip home would be the answer, however. Two weeks ago he visited home only to discover a pair of sheers waiting to snip off his long brown locks. He managed to avoid the inevitable end for two days, but eventually the snippers caught up with him. He returned to Kansas the next day with what resembled an extra-long crew cut.
Only one thing could be worse than the haircut, the boys agreed: the age old problem of finance. David is 1,200 miles away from home with only 50 cents in his pocket.
THE FIELD
-Kansan Photo by Bill Jeffries
GUARDING THE DOOR
Charles Lawson, Ellsworth supervisor, places his imposing self at an entranceway to keep all non-campers from entering.
Students tour KC
course into Kansas City and showed them the different departments of the station. During the tour Boles explained the complete facilities of the AM, FM, and television medias.
A lot goes into the production of the news, weather, and sports as journalism students will testify to after a guided tour through the radio and television departments of KCMO.
Lew Boles, instructor of journalism, took the students enrolled in the radio-television
According to the students the most interesting part of the tour was the witnessing of a live television news broadcast.
Counselors accept challenge of positions
By JENNIE WEIN Kamper Staff Reporter
One of the necessary groups at Band Camp are the counselors.
Camp are the counselors. The counselors accepted the challenge of riding herd on high school students for many various personal reasons. (Some might enjoy it! The only benefit they receive is free room and board for the summer.
High school students are old enough to think of ingenious ways to make a counselor's life
Counselors are not helpless before such tricks; they have different ways to deal with any problems that arise. Often a stern rebuke will serve, but, if not, counselors have not forgotten all of their tricks either. Woe to the unwary camper that underestimates his counselor.
more interesting. These range from asking foolish questions, to sly tricks such as salting sheets, or a mass throwing of tin cans down halls.
Guest band conductor explains his like for music and his career
By ANN NORE Kamper Staff Reporter
Col. Vivian Dunn, principle director of music of the Royal Marines and professional head of Royal Marine School of Music, is this week's guest conductor at the band camp.
"I don't have a favorite composer. The composer I am working with at the time is my favorite. It must be this way if the best performance is to be given," he said in a crisp English accent.
"I love all instruments in the
DUNN WAS an original member of the BBC Symphony orchestra in 1930.
family of the orchestra. I probably have a special love for the violin since I was a violinist in the early days of my career." he said.
"My entire life is spent at music through composing, arranging, conducting, teaching, and recording and broadcasting. All these activities are time consuming but they have led me to an exciting and thrilling career," Dunn said.
"It IS A VERY great honor and pleasure to be a guest conductor at the Midwestern Music and Art Camp. I have grown to appreciate and admire the enthusiasm and dedication of the young student campers. They all work extraordinarily hard in the most natural and good-mannered way. No conductor could have had a more devoted response to his demands than I have had." Dunn said.
Dunn said he enjoys play golf and meeting and entertain his friends during his leisure t
4
KAMPER KANSAN HT
Friday, July 19, 1968
Aesthetic Athletics
Lazy man's sports
By CHUCK STOKES
The athletic program of the camp is designed for brain or brawn.
Basketball, softball and other sports invigorate the physically fit while chess and checkers stimulate the mentally awake.
But along the line somewhere the lazy person has been left out. Left behind by speeding sneakers or cut down by lightning minds they wait to be recognized in their
BEFORE...
AFTER!
own field. It is time for the lazy to be brought to the fore with the lazy man's sports.
Fork-lifting is one of the most strenuous of the lazy sports because of its repeated performance (sometimes 30 lifts per exercise, three times a day). This sport helps build up the arm muscles and for ambitious participants, the lip muscles. Fork - lifters with large intestinal cavities have been known to lift the fork many thousands of times in a 24 hour period.
Elevator button pushing and Coke can ring pulling are related sports both involving action in the fingers. The professional EBP and CCRP is easily recognized by the huge index finger on right or left hand and the absence of a fingernail on that particular digit. Vending machine button pushing, cold food window prying and many other sports can be added to the EBP and CCRP's line-up.
Breathing hard is one of the more popular sports as it is extremely cheap to enter. No equipment is necessary. Training is minimal, requiring one to breathe once of twice during the preceding day. Competition is intense and judging is difficult.
One of the more popular of the lazy man's sports is talking. The talker is identified by massive lip and cheek muscles and well-muscelled tongue. The talker is judged by words per minute alone. Content is not considered in judging. Those that are able to put the judges to sleep win automatically.
I'll just use the text as it is.
The image shows two individuals playing a game of table tennis. One person is in the foreground, holding a paddle and preparing to hit the ball. The other person is in the background, standing behind the table with a ping pong ball. Both players appear to be focused on the game. The room has a brick wall and large windows with curtains.
—Kansan Photo by Bill Jeffries
DROY EXECUTES FOREHAND SMASH; CHITWOOD GAPES
One of the common sights around JRP, Lance Droy and Ferris Chitwood in the intellectual pursuit of table tennis.
Foreign students take education in U.S. seriously
Do foreign students take their education seriously in the United States?
The 1968 Commencement program lists 107 foreign students who earned graduate degrees from KU in a 12-month period. Nineteen earned the Ph.D. degree and 88 the master's. Another 35 received bachelor's degrees.
They do, says Dr. Clark Coan,
dean of foreign students at the
University of Kansas and president
of the National Association.
There were 642 foreign students on the Lawrence campus last fall. Since many are unable to be here more than one year, Dean Coan considers the record of degrees earned remarkable.
Concert artists provide entertainment
FRIDAY EVENING CONCERT
7:15 p.m.
RED BAND
RED BAND
LeRoy Esau, Conductor
Charles Lawson, Guest Conductor
Lonn Richards, Guest Conductor
Col. F. Vivian Dunn, Guest Conductor
His Honor Henry Fillmore West Side Story Selection Leonard Bernstein
Esau, conducting
Lawson, conducting
Manhattan Beach ... John Philip Sousa
Richards, conducting
Marche Slave ... P. Tschaikowsky
Cockleshell Heroes Lt. Col. F. Vivian Dunn
Serenata Lerov Anderson
Col. Dunn, conducting
SATURDAY AFTERNOON PROGRAM
2:15 p.m.
THE CHORALE
Darrell R. Conkleton
Two Folk Songs ... Johannes Brahms
In Stiller Nacht
Die Wollust in den Maien
Go, Lovely Rose ... Eric Thiman
Bird of Youth ... Russian arr. Sveshnikov
Camptown Races ... Foster arr. Halloran
CONCERT ORCHESTRA
Gerald M. Carney, Conductor
Col. F. Vivian Dunn, Guest Conductor
William R. Porter, Guest Conductor
Theme Song
Irish Tune from County Derry ... arr, Percy Grainger
Russlov and Ludmilla, Overture ... Michail Glinka
Paul Bunyan, Suite ... William Bergsma
The Dance of the Blue Ox
Country Dance
Night
Carney, conducting
Porter, conducting Sigurd Jorsalfar, Suite Edward Grieg March of Allegiance Col Dunn conducting
Porter conducting
BLUE BAND Kenneth Bloomquist, Conductor William Porter, Guest Conductor Neill Humfeld, Guest Conductor
St. Lawrence Suite ... Morton Gould
Dedication
Quickstep
Col. Vivian F. Dunn, Guest Conductor
France Suite ... Morton Gould
Col. Vivian F. Dunn, Guest Conductor
Mannin Veen Haydn Wood
Bloomquist conducting
Bloomquist, conducting
The Vanished Army ... Kenneth Alford
Porter, conducting
Divertimento for Band...Vincent Persichetti
Divertimento for Band ... Vincent Persichetti
Prologue
Song
Dance
Burlesque
March
Humfeld, conducting
Scenes Pittoresques ... J. Massenet
Fete Boheme
Col. Dunn, conducting
Col. Dunn, conducting SUNDAY AFTERNOON CONCERT
2:15 p.m.
CONCERT, CHAMBER, and SYMPHONIC CHOIRS Duncan Couch and Darrell Benne, Conductors
Gloria
Laudamus te
Domine Deus
Domine fili unigenite
Domine Deus, Agnus Dei
Qui sedes ad dexteram Patris
Suzanne Jouvenat, Soprano
Benne, conducting
Orchestra: Tuba
Peyton Cudable
Flutes
Tacy Weidman
Jinny Sloan
Oboe
Candy Hedberg
Morton Rader
English Horn
Mike Seyfrit
B Flat Clarinet
Chuck Lawson
Scott Bridges
Bass Clarinet
Barbara Wells
Bassoon
Charles Rader
Bill Davis
Horns
Mike Berger
Carolyn Godwin
Ken Wiley
Candy Devine
Trumpets
Mike Latimer
Paul Gray
Trombones
Roy Guenther
Jack Coleman
Vincent May
Piccolo
Feryl Cauble
Tuba
Jim Barnes
Tymany
Dave Cook
Horn
Ineta Bebb
Bass Stan Ricker George Puckett
Violins I
Bob Waugh
Marion Scheid
John Williams
Ann Carson
Violin II
Charlotte Gibson
Eleanor Allen
Cynthia Tamer
Ruth Ann Brown
Viola
Toni Riley
Esther Shriver
Tom Schrandt
Gary Storm
Cello
Cello
Carl Peiper
Anita Johnson
Don Watts
John Smith
SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA Gerald M. Carney, Conductor Col.F. Vivian Dunn, Guest Conductor
Symphony No. 2 in D Major ... Ludwig v. Beethoven
Symphony No. 2 in D Major ... Ludwig v. Beethoven
Fourth movement: allegro vivace
Roumanian Rhapsody No. 1 ... Georges Enesco
Oberon, Overture ... Carl Maria v. Weber
Swan Lake Ballet, suite ... Peter Tschaikowsky
Waltz
Symphony No. 5 (New World) ... Anton Dvorak
Fourth movement: allegro con fuoco
Carnev. conducting
Col. Dunn, conducting
SUNDAY EVENING CONCERT
7:00 p.m.
GOLD BAND
David Catron, Conductor
Wendell Hodges, Guest Conductor
Col. F. Vivian Dunn, Guest Conductor
Theme Song
Irish Tune from County Derry .. arr. Percy Grainger Marche Hongroise from "Damnation of Faust" Berlioz Variations On A Korean Folk Song ...
John Barnes Chance
Catron, conducting
Scenes from "The Louvre" ... Dello Joio
The Portals
Childrens Gallery
The Kings of France
The Nativity Paintings
Finale
Hodges, conducting
Song of Jupiter Handel
La Mascarada Harold Walters
Col. Dunn, conducting
CONCERT BAND
CONCERT BAND
Russell L. Wiley, Conductor
Neill Humfeld, Guest Conductor
Col F. Vivian Dunn, Guest Conductor
Carmina Burana...Carl Orff
1. Ecee gratum, Behold the spring
2. Fortune plango vulherna, I lament Fortune's blow
Danza Final from Suite "Estancia" Alberto Ginastera
Wilev, conducting
Incantation and Dance ... John Barnes Chance
Humfeld, conducting
Overture, Russian and Ludmilla ... Michail Glinka
Music for Festival, Suite for Band ... Gordon Jacob
Overture
Scherzo
March
Festival in Badged from "School"
festival in Badgad from "Scheherazade" ...
Rimsky-Korsakov
Col. Dunn, conducting
KU
THE SUMMER SESSION kansan
A student newspaper serving KU
WEATHER COOLER
See Weather Below
77th Year, No.12
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Tuesday, July 23, 1968
Accusations denied
Coach stresses teamwork, skill
"Football is a team game and to play a good game we all have to try and work together," Franklin (Pepper) Rodgers, KU football coach, said in reference to the discrimination of Negroes.
In a series of articles in Sports Illustrated on the "Black Athlete," KU has been given widespread publicity about its discriminatory policies.
"There is a problem in the country," Rodgers said in a press conference Thursday, but he insisted there is not a racial problem on the football team.
THE SECOND article of the series was based on the statements of KU football players, Don Shanklin and Willie McDaniel. "What they do is take the skilled Negroes and stack them at one or two positions and let them fight it out, while the white players get their positions automatically.
"The reason is simple, the fans don't want to see too many black faces on the field at one time. The heroes are supposed to be white. That's why they allow a few more Negroes on the defensive team—not as many heroes are produced here."
Coach Rodgers said the selection of athletes is based on skill alone. "I always try to find the best players . . . the only thing that matters to a coach is to win."
RODGERS SAID the actions of the players when outside practice were not regulated by the coaching staff. Rodgers said he had not received any reports of discrimination off the field.
The KU mentor suggested some of the charges might stem from a simple attitude that "every player thinks he should be playing," and it might be comfortable for a Negro that hasn't the football ability to think of his individual failure to play as simple prejudice against all blacks.
Rodgers described the recruiting scholarship situation as a guarantee to athletes of an education, while the athlete guarantees nothing to the team. "All we
A KU ATHLETE must be moving toward a degree as one of the requirements he must meet before he may play. "The coach can not make an athlete study. We can, however, provide the opportunities for an athlete," he said. The athletic program offers a tutoring and counseling service."
ask of the athlete is that he tries to play," he said.
"Anyone who is interested in getting an education can get it," Rogers said. The practice schedule is set up so the athlete can get his class work done and football should not hamper him in school.
The recruiting violation incident last spring, Rodgers explained as his father's anxious efforts to help his son. Two Alabama athletes were recruited by
See COACH on page 5
UNIT 9
—Kansan photo by Richard Viets
OH, THE LIFE OF A CANDIDATE
James Logan, Democratic contender for the U.S. Senate, answers questions in a television interview with Claude Dorsey (with microphone) at KMBC.
Manslaughter plaintiff filed in student death
A 21-year-old KU student died Saturday morning of stab wounds received shortly after midnight in a fight in the parking lot of College Hill Manor Apartments, 1741 W. 19th St.
Douglas Weakly, Prairie Village junior in the School of Business, was pronounced dead on arrival at Lawrence Memorial Hospital.
David Carl McArdle, 21, of 816 Lyon Street, was charged with third-degree manslaughter and his bond was set at $5,000.
A preliminary hearing was set tentatively for 10 a.m. Wednesday in County Court. The prison sentence upon conviction of a third degree manslaughter charge is six months to three years.
Tight schedules fill Logan's day
By SID SPELTS Journalism Camp Reporter
The morning had been rough on James K. Logan, Kansas Democrat candidate for U.S. Senator.
Logan had only four hours of sleep the night before and his pale white face and the slight rings under his eyes reflected it. He
started his day at the KMBC television station in Kansas City, Mo., at 9 a.m.
He walked into the building, not anxiously but not reluctantly. He shook the hand of Claude Dorsey, the television announcer, and spoke quietly with him about the television interview they were about to do.
Professors' professor
Fields wins HOPE award
By DIANE WANEK Journalism Camp Reporter
Quiet, well-read, and dedicated is J. Eldon Fields, professor of political science.
THE AUTOGRAPH OF THE CHURCH
—Kansan photo by Judy Bennett
Gesturing for emphasis, KU football coach Frank "Pepper" Rodgers answers a question for journalism campers during a press conference Thursday.
DISCRIMINATION CHARGES QUESTIONED
Fields, a native of McPherson, has been a KU faculty member since 1946. He received his undergraduate degree in political science from KU in 1934, and was later awarded the doctorate at Stanford University. Before coming to KU, he taught at Syracuse University and the University of Chicago.
DURING THE school year, Fields serves as associate chairman of the Political Science Department. He advises approximately one hundred undergraduates majoring in political science.
WHEN ON CAMPUS, the door to Fields' office is never closed to students. A colleague once said of him, "I don't know a better example of the traditional concept of the teacher who is interested in his students as well as his subject."
Fields specializes in political theory "from Plato to the present." "I enjoy teaching. The material never wears out," he said. "For example, one can gain something new each time he reads Plato."
He is spending the summer at KU, as he has for the last 17 years, teaching in the KU Foreign Student Orientation Center.
Because of his dedication to his students, Fields was awarded the only honor presented KU faculty members by students. The award was the HOPE award, which stands for Honor for the Outstanding Progressive Educator.
The winners are selected by students for "willingness to help students; success in stimulating and challenging students in thinking; and contributions to the cultural life at KU and excellence in the general field of education."
DESCRIPTIONS OF the HOPE award winner who was chosen because of the atmosphere and learning situation he provides in the classroom, several seniors agreed.
"We didn't have lectures, we all participated in a give-and-take discussion," said Allen Russell, Scottsbluff senior, of the classroom atmosphere. "There was something about it; I always felt guilty when I didn't keep up on the reading."
Fields is interested in flowers and gardening. "I'm not one of those rare orchid gardeners, though," he said. "I like to grow things like zinnias." Along with his interest in flowers, he also likes to photograph wild flowers and has compiled a collection of slides of wild flowers which were taken on trips in the southwest United States and as far south as Mexico City.
Fields and his wife Cornelia reside at 1910 Marvonne. Their son James is a KU graduate.
WEATHER
The United States Weather Bureau predicts the cool trend will stay in Kansas for the greater part of the week with highs around 90 and the lows to be in the 60s.
DRESSED IN a gray conservative suit so as not to create a glare on television, Logan walked outside and started an interview on the sidewalk.
Gun control, Vietnam, the draft and to some degree civil rights were cited by Logan during the interview as issues concerning Kansans. His voice was soft but serious as he talked before the cameras.
When the interview was completed, Logan left to talk with labor union officials in private conferences. His purpose was to move the union officials to his political camp. This was not an easy task, however, because Governor Robert Docking is officially neutral and the unions apparently seem to follow his example.
FOLLOWING THE conferences Logan went to the office of his state campaign director, John Jurcyk. Here Logan, Jurcyk and Nick Derrough, Logan's campaign aide, spent an hour planning his time for the rest of the day.
It was evident that the business of his day was sporadic. At times he was busy, running all the time with a schedule planned to the second. At other times it was slow with nothing pressing at hand and nothing to do except make phone calls and plan.
This morning was one of his slower periods. He spent this relatively free time checking his schedule, making plans for the evening and using the telephone to align support.
LOGAN SEEMED to reflect deep thought at all times and it usually looked as if he were thinking of a million things at once. While the three men made rapid plans, Carrie Feinstein, Logan's press secretary, made several phone calls trying to obtain television interviews with the other two commercial Kansas City television stations. She suc-
Continued on page 2
2
THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN
Tuesday, July 23, 1968
Ex-KU dean finds votes
A
FDIC
LOGAN
SEMATOR
Text by SID SPELTS
Continued from page 1
ceeded in getting an afternoon interview at WDAF.
In Logan's campaign plans advertising presents one of his major problems. Money is important in a campaign and Logan's opponent in the primary is a millionaire.
LOGAN'S TIGHT schedule was beginning to reflect on him now. His balding head made him look older than he really was, and an expression of complete exhaustion on his face seemed to make it impossible for him to continue but he managed with a forced vitality.
Logan needs funds to have his name publicized. It may not be the primary factor to his winning but as he said to his campaign director, "Many a good man has lost because his name wasn't that well known by the people."
Logan spent his time at the luncheon shaking hands and distributing campaign brochures. After a half hour of campaigning and introductions, he went through the cafeteria line, looking more relaxed than he had all morning. He had to smile forcibly at times, but generally he seemed to enjoy the people he was with.
A television interview with WDAF had been set for early in the afternoon. Logan was forced to leave the luncheon early in order to make the trip across Kansas City to the Missouri-side television station.
At 11:30 a.m. he went to a cafeteria where the Johnson County Democratic Women's Club was honoring a past president.
This interview was inside the television station. He was interviewed by Lena River Smith, an announcer, and he reviewed his
reasons for resigning as dean of the law school at KU and jumping into the political arena. He looked ghostly white as he sat beneath the bright lights used for the camera.
WHEN THE interview was completed, Logan seemed very pleased. It was a short interview but he had given his views on many issues. His statements were brief enough that it seemed unlikely they would be cut.
He said the "divisiveness" of the country was the reason for entering politics. "People need someone who is at least working on the problems," he said.
Logan and Stratton left, after a short greeting, for the Security National Bank where Stratton's wife worked.
They agreed that "Black Power" was and should be a means of moving the Negro population to the equivalent of the white population in order to make a better society. They also agreed that "Black Power" should not be a means for Negroes to gain control of this country.
There he met two men who were apparently officers of the local organization. Logan discussed the aspects of "Black Power" with the two men.
The Kansas City City Hall was the next stop. Here Logan met a man named Bob Stratton who worked in the Mayor's office.
Logan walked through the bank handing out brochures and talking with the employees and bank officials. He went to the Douglas State Bank next. This bank is Negro - owned and -supported. Negroes are also an important, although minority, group to which Logan wants to appeal.
AGAIN LOGAN did some campaigning and soliciting of support within the bank. From there he went to the Kansas City office of the United Struggle for Black Employment.
LOGAN APPEARED completely exhausted by late afternoon, but he still had campaigning to do. He then walked through the Negro section handing out brochures and shaking hands.
That night he attended an ice cream social and spoke to the Wyandotte Young Democrat Club. After that his public campaigning was finished for the day, yet he still had to work on the farm speech he was to present later that week.
For, as he had said earlier in the day, "A candidate does not have time to think unless he sacrifices his sleep."
The day appeared to be a typical one in his new life as a contender for the U.S. Senate.
I
Photos by RICHARD VIETS
MICHAEL RYAN
82 11 ES ylul yobz
Tuesday, July 23, 1968
THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN
3
University extension hosts many students
The informal student body of KU traditionally is one-and-one-half times as large as the officially enrolled resident student body.
This "student body" comes to the campus for the institutes, conferences, and short courses organized by University Extension. These programs, varying from a day to several weeks, provide upgrading services for adults and school age youth.
Graduate will study in German
John C. Hoppe, a June graduate of KU with majors in English and history, has been awarded the Dankstipendium, the scholarship granted annually to a KU graduate student or graduating senior by the Academic Exchange Service of the Ministry of Education of the Federal Republic of Germany.
He is the son of the Rev. and Mrs.L.H.Hoppe,409 S. Elm St., Ottawa.
The award is made available to a KU student in recognition of the scholarships offered to German students by KU through its Graduate School.
The award provides full maintenance for 12 months, round trip travel and full tuition and fees at any German university offering a graduate program appropriate to the study plans of the scholarship holder. Hoppe will study German history at the University of Bonn.
LAST YEAR 24,704 persons participated in these programs compared to 16,000 resident students.
The oldest, continuous adult education program is the Water and Sewage Works School, which will have its 48th session August 20-23.
The format and program content has changed greatly through the years, but the purpose remains the same: The upgrading of the personnel who operate the water supply facilities and sewage treatment plants of Kansas.
THE DRIVING force behind the first school was the late Samuel J. Crumbine, executive secretary of the State Board of Health and dean of the School of Medicine.
He achieved national fame for his campaigns for "swat that fly," against "spitting," and to abolish the public drinking cup on trains and public places.
By Patty Baser Journalism Camp Reporter
Some of tomorrow's architects now studying at KU will have the advantage of scholarships next fall.
Architects receive various scholarships
The 1968-69 recipients of aid from a New York architectural firm, the Haines, Lundberg and Waehier Scholarships for KU are Bruce Goebel, Columbia, Mo., senior who received $600; Robert
KU health grant finances research
The two KU institutes are part of the eight-week summer session
The U.S. Public Health Service has made a grant of $93,144 to the University of Kansas for traineeships and research in 1968-69 under the direction of Dr. Edward E. Smissman, the university professor of medicinal chemistry.
The grant will provide stipends and payment of fees for seven predoctoral fellows and one postdoctoral fellow in medicinal chemistry. The grant also provides for supplies and special equipment for the research.
Berlin visit planned
The 56 students in the KU summer German language institutes in Eutin and Holzkirchen, Germany, will have the opportunity for three-days visits to Berlin this month.
A. J. "Toni" Burzle, associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, when in Germany last month, negotiated an educational exchange grant from the West German government for the visit. The subsidy is 6,000 marks.
with instruction provided by KU staff and native teachers. The 23 students at Eutin are at advanced level in literature and language. The 33 at Holzkirchen have had the introductory courses in German and are now completing the proficiency requirement for the B.A. degree.
Burzle, who several times has been honored by the West German government for his work in cultural and student exchanges, was the initial organizer of the summer institutes in Germany.
Hefferon, Baltimore, Md., senior,
$250, and Dennis Jacobs, Kansas
City, Mo., senior, $500.
Senior recipients of $100 scholarships were Arnold Lerner, Overland Park; John Kelly, Chesterfield, Mo., and Elizabeth Mellinger, Topeka.
Chi Hung Poon, Hong Kong senior, was awarded a $600 scholarship.
Joseph Elwood King, Potwin,
Kan., senior, has been appropriated a $250 National American Institute of Architect Scholarship from the Henery Adams Fund.
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4
THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN
Tuesday, July 23, 1968
Young actors reflect on roles
By DARRYL PINCKNEY
Journalism Cam Reporter
Clothed in shorts, sneakers, and relaxing with cigarettes, members of the '68 Summer Repertory Company discussed themselves and the plays they were in.
John Young, who plays Prince Dauntless in "Once Upon A Mattress," and Ed in "You Can't Take It with You," is a KU junior majoring in language arts.
His experience includes roles in high school plays in Shawnee Mission, several University Theatre productions, and Concert Chorale. When speaking about the attributes an actor must have, Young said, "In order to get up on the stage in the first place, you have to say, 'I'm going to be the best.'"
YOUNG BECOME interested in acting when he was in his youth. "I can't evaluate myself as an actor this early, but as a performer, I think I'm damn good." Young prefers leads in comedies, because he is "definitely afraid of serious roles."
Portraying Mr. Kirby in "You Can't Take It with You," La Font in "La Parisienne," Sir Harry in "Once Upon a Mattress," and Albert Admundson in "A Thousand Clowns," is Lance Hewett.
HEWETT PREFERS serious roles, and would like to go into motion pictures and Broadway. Hewett cited the qualities of a good actor as being "alert . . . having feeling . . . and intelligence."
Hewett, a junior from Haddonfield, N.J., has experience as a member of the Creede Colorado Repertory Company, Village Playbox, South Jersey Theatre Guild and New Jersey's School of Performing Arts.
Lance Shull, a junior from Haven, plays the king in "Once Upon A Mattress" and Tony in "You Can't Take It with You." His acting experience consists of work on various crews for shows and appearances in showcases.
Shull prefers serious roles also, and lists sensitivity as a quality of a good actor. He would like to continue to go on to Broadway. Shull said an actor must believe the role he is portraying in order for that audience to believe it.
HUGH KRANITZ, who is a freshman from St. Joseph, Mo., plays the wizard in "Once Upon A Mattress," and a policeman in "You Can't Take It with You." Kranitz hopes for a degree in acting, but he plans to go into law.
Irene Ballinger is a senior from Mission Hills. She has worked in UMKC Playhouse, several theatre companies including the Circle Theatre, and the Barn Theatre. She plays Princess Winnifred in "Once Upon a Mattress," and Essie in "You Can't Take It with You."
The Repertory Company will continue until August with its "Calvalcade of Comedy."
SAMANTHA LUTHER AND BENJAMIN WILSON IN "THE BROADWAY PICTURE" BY JOHN WESTMAN. THE PHOTOGRAPH IS BY MICHAEL SHEERAN.
—Kansan Photo by Doug Underwood
THEATRE MEMBERS REHEARSE
Lance Hewett, Evie Masterson, and Holmes Osborne rehearse a scene in "You Can't Take It with You."
Geology applies computer
Frank C. Foley, director of the Kansas Geological Survey, announced John C. Griffiths as visiting scientist at the State Geological Survey at KU and C. W. Ondrick as the first Pan American post-doctoral fellow.
Both newcomers will work in computer applications to geology during their stay at the Kansas Survey. Griffiths is a pioneer in geological uses of the computer, and Ondrick modified a computer program to process the data on
which he based his doctoral dissertation.
ONDRICK received his bachelor's degree in geology at Michigan State University in 1963, began his graduate studies at Pennsylvania State the same year, and was awarded his Ph.D. degree in March of 1968. He was nominated for the fellowship by Griffiths.
source Development" in March, was head of the Department of Mineralogy and of the Department of Geochemistry and Mineralogy at Penn State from 1955 through 1966. His undergraduate degree came from the University of Wales, where he won his Master of Science and Ph.D. degrees, later taking a diploma from Imperial College, Royal College of Science, South Kensington, London, and another Ph.D. from the University of London.
Griffiths, who last appeared at KU during the "Forum on Long Range Planning for Mineral Re-
SUMMER SANDALS
SALE PRICED
Many Patterns in Wanted Colors
Were To $10.00
NOW . . . $3.90 $4.90 $5.90
McCoy's
SHOES
SANDALS
LAWRENCE
McCoy'S
SHOES
LAWRENCE
Stay Cool and Crisp All Through the Summer
aunderers and dry cleaners Daily Pickup & Delivery drive up window & off street parking One day service on request hours: 7 a.m.-7 p.m. (Mon-Fri.) 7 a.m.-5:30 p.m. (Sat.) Now at 1029 New Hampshire
*
Tuesday, July 23, 1968
THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN
Gandhi: non-violence symbol
By TIM CLINE Journalism Camp Reporter
It was Sunday, Jan. 30, 1948. The place was New Delhi, India. About 500 men and women were waiting around a small wooden platform for a prayer service to start.
At 5.10 p.m, a little old man dressed only in loincloth emerged from a hut and made his way to the platform. The crowd rose and then bowed before him. He was the man who had caused them to conduct a successful non-violent revolution against British rule. He was the man many of them regarded as their 20th Century prophet and savior. He was Mahatma Gandhi.
Ghandi was only a few steps away from the platform when a young Hindu stepped in front of him and bowed. Someone tried to brush him aside but was shoved away.
IN THE TWENTY years since Gandhi was assassinated, many changes have occurred in politics, ethics and virtually every aspect in the "modus operandi" of the world, but his teachings and methods of controlling and influencing people seem at least relevant to current events. In many cases it seems as if he is speaking directly to people and races of today.
The Hindu stood directly in front of Gandhi, leveled a gun and fired three shots. The smile faded from Gandhi's face and his arms fell to his sides. "Oh, God," he murmured and was instantly dead.
As a young man, Gandhi was sent to London to study law. He had gradually developed a distaste for his native religion, Hinduism. But, he realized his leaning toward atheism and immediately tried to change.
He said later that he had traversed "the Sahara of atheism" and emerged thirsting for religion.
He was gradually being reconverted to Hinduism when he read the New Testament: "... resist not evil, but whosoever shall smite thee on thy right cheek, turn to him the left, also . . . Blessed are the meek . . . Blessed are ye when men shall revile you and persecute you . . . Agree with thine adversary quickly . . . Forgive men their trespasses . . . Lay not for yourself treasure upon the Earth . . . for where your treasure is there will be your heart also . . ."
These sayings by Jesus were Gandhi's favorites, and he tried to live by them as flawlessly possible throughout his life. Just one man's obedience to a few Christian postulates affected the history of the Indian sub-continent and the world.
GANDHI SUMMARIZED all the good qualities to be found in a man in one word: "Desireless-
Europe hosts KU students
Nine KU students will attend universities in England, France and Germany during the academic year 1968-69 under KU's direct exchange scholarship program with those universities.
Under the direct exchange scholarship program doctoral candidates at KU engage in foreign study and research which strengthens their programs. An equal number of European students spend a year in graduate study in the United States.
Each of the nine has been awarded a grant covering tuition, fees and maintenance from his host university. A similar grant is offered by KU to a student from that institution to do graduate study here.
Students holding direct exchange scholarships are eligible for Fulbright Travel Grants, and those not receiving Fulbright or private grants have received awards from KU for travel.
ness." He surely must have followed his own principles as well as any man ever could.
But Gandhi did not even hint or know in any way that he would be a great man who would affect history until long after he was out of college.
He returned to India and failed miserably as a lawyer. In Bombay once he had a $10 case but he was too shy to present it. After a while, though, it looked as if he had a good government job secured when a crooked politician stole it.
GANDHI WENT to the government offices to protest and after much heated argument he was thrown from the building.
The shock of this, Ghandi said,
"changed my entire course of life." Till then he had never had any direction or plan for life—now he at least had a negative direction: he knew what he did not want to do.
That incident intensified his abhorrence of the "petty intrigue, palace pomp, subservience, and snobbery which pervaded the government."
Just then he was offered a job as lawyer for a firm in South Africa. Upon arriving there he bought a first class train ticket to Pretoria. After the train had left the station he was told he would have to accept third class because of segregation. He had them stop the train and let him off. Thus began his historic and successful fight for integration for Indians in South Africa.
WITHN A WEEK of the train incident Gandhi called a meeting of the Indians in Pretoria and gave a speech on white discrimination.
He did not call for fighting in the streets or guerilla warfare but
he told the people to "tell the truth in business, adopt more sanitary habits, forget religious and caste differences and learn English."
Since his aim was fair treatment for the Indians of South Africa, the Indians, who were the means of achieving that end, first had to improve themselves and discard their own bad habits.
Often it seemed that Gandhi was more interested in improving the human means than in attaining means. He believed, what does it benefit a man if his status is raised when he himself is not raised?
It was a long, hard-fought battle for Gandhi, that fight for integration in South Africa, and the other side often got brutal and in some cases uncivilized.
But he and his supporters never resorted to violence. They accepted persecution without violence and soon won their peaceful battle. Blood was shed, but not nearly so much as if an armed revolt had taken place.
The British were ruling in India with more power than even a dictator would have. In a vague way the state of India then could be comparable to the state of the United States before its revolution. But the independence of India was achieved in a much more desirable way.
GANDHI NEVER was a leader in the political sense of the word; he never held any political job or governmental office of any kind, but he was much more influential than in any other way possible.
To make the story short: Gandhi began a peaceful revolution. His followers did not resort to violence (some cases of their resorting to violence did occur but he denounced them and prayed
it would remain peaceful) even when attacked.
In their revolution, Gandhi's followers simply did not support the British government in any way and disobeyed unjust laws. This followed the age-old concept that a government can't exist without the support of the majority of the people.
Whenever violence broke out as a result of his efforts, Gandhi would fast until it was discontinued. The Indians regarded him so highly that they would do anything to keep him alive, and the British knew the effect his dying would have on the Indian people. There would be much bloodshed.
TO BE SURE, there was bloodshed; such as in one instance when the British opened machine gun fire on a crowd of Indians. But many fewer were killed altogether than if there had been open warfare.
Gandhi's revolution had practically met success when fighting broke out between the Hindus and Islams, giving the British the permanent advantage.
Indian independence was finally granted, but unfortunately, because of this Indian split, it was not a direct result of Gandhi's efforts.
IT IS INTERESTING to note one of Gandhi's reflections here . . . one that perhaps every citizen of the free world should keep in mind: "The West, perhaps, is so frightened of Bolshevism, or Stalinism, or Sovietism, because it feels the germ of the same disease within itself."
In his lifetime, he was frequently reminded that he would say one thing one day and then not long after change his stand. In reaction to this, he wrote: "My aim is not to be consistent with my previous statement on a given
question, but to be consistent with the truth as it may present itself to me at a given moment. The result is that I have grown from truth to truth . . ."
Coach-
Continued from page 1 Rodger's father two days before the designated date. "He just got a head start on everybody," Rodgers said. Due to this violation Rodgers lost 15 scholarships, cutting KU to 35 this year.
Rodgers said he thought KU's most difficult competition this year would be Oklahoma University. He said the team was good but "if we don't continue to improve we won't get anywhere." He said he expected some problems because the team lost some good offensive linemen. He also added that the team has good throwers and receivers.
In closing the conference, Rodgers said, "This is one of the roughest times to be a football coach. The questions of the athletes and the young people are hard to answer. Not all the answers come out the way they were meant to.
AUTO
WRECKING
NEW and USED PARTS
TIRES AND GLASS
East End of 9th Street
VI 3-0956
KU Summer Theatre Rep. '68
presents
CAVALCADE OF COMEDY
University of Kansas—Murphy Hall
"YOU CAN'T TAKE IT WITH YOU"
by Kaufman and Hart July 23 "In - The - Round" Main Stage
"ONCE UPON A MATTRESS"
Music by Mary Rodgers and Book by Jay Thompson July 24 "In - The - Round" Main Stage
"LA PARISIENNE"
by Henri Becque
July 26
Experimental Theatre
"A THOUSAND CLOWNS"
by Herb Gardner
July 25, 27
Experimental Theatre
KU STUDENTS .75 PLUS CURRENT CERTIFICATE OF REGISTRATION
6
2
1
BBE1 ES ylut yobouT
THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN
Tuesday, July 23, 1968
Camp needs civic help
For 31 years the Midwestern Music and Art Camp has added to the economy of the community of Lawrence. The relationship basically has been a good one, but a few people are trying to darken it.
The camp has rules, most of them necessary for the continuing operation of the Camp. When campers violate these rules they are punished. Why is it then when Lawrence citizens violate city laws and ordinances on the premises of the camp no action is taken?
For years it has been the game of Lawrence High School boys to sneak into the Camp grounds. With 31 years of practice the game has become pretty sophisticated. This year red camp badges were made and distributed to all campers to help identify them in cases of emergency and to keep intruders away. With the old cardboard identification cards imposters were many. But now with the new identification badges imposters run the hills again.
A Lawrence merchant, wanting to make a fast profit, is providing most any young man who wants a badge, with an almost perfect copy. He sells these badges for more than 10 times his cost of manufacture. The only discrepancy in them, is that they have a red back instead of white.
Other Lawrence merchants, in good faith of the camp, have cashed checks and readily identified campers by their red badge. Now a non-camper may walk into many Lawrence businesses and cash checks with someone else's good number. A non-camper may shop lift and with his fake number the blame goes to an unknowing camper. And even more tragically, a non-camper with a fake number may be injured and the wrong set of parents called because he is wearing someone else's identification number.
Also in the last week young people of the Lawrence community have taken to the streets to taunt and instigate trouble among campers. Three young campers have been treated in the past week at Watkins Memorial Hospital for injuries resulting from such scuffles. Yet no charges have been pressed, only parents have been called.
The Camp does much for KU. It is one of the biggest recruiters KU has. It brings talented young people in many fields to the campus for a summer and many return for their college education. With these students comes more money for the Lawrence economy.
It is about time that the University and the Midwestern Music and Art Camp receive a little more cooperation from the City of Lawrence. When Campers are wrong they are punished. When city laws are violated then the offenders should be punished.
The late summer novels range from history to science fiction, with plentiful spy stuff along the way. Here are some of them:
Elliott Arnold's A NIGHT OF WATCHING (Crest, 95 cents) — A book based on the Danish rescue of the Jews in World War II. Here is an exciting story based on real-life events of a quarter century ago. Arnold wrote the famous "Blood Brother," the story of the Indian Cochise. Many suspenseful stories are available in paperback today; here is one with significance.
Daniel Panger's OL' PROPHET NAT (Gold Medal, 75 cents) — One that appeared—coincidentally?—the same year as William Styron's already celebrated "Confessions of Nat Turner." This slight work also is based on the famed confession made by the Negro slave who led the great rebellion in the summer of 1831.
John Godey's A THRILL A MINUTE WITH JACK ALBANY (Gold Medal, 50 cents)—Wild comic adventure of a character involved with crooks and police. As a movie it's called "Never a Dull Moment."
Richard Stark's THE BLACK ICE SCORE (Gold Medal, 50 cents)—The anti-hero Parker is back again, in a wild tale of jewel thievery and much sex.
New Books
Hugh C. Rae's SKINNER (Crest, 60 cents)—The story of a sadistic pathological killer. Here's a sickening tale of violence, if that's what you're looking for.
Clay Randall's AMOS FLAGG HAS HIS DAY (Gold Medal, 50 cents)—A western that describes what happens when a town honors, of all people, the sheriff, and he spends the day defending himself and the town.
Fred Houle's OCTOBER THE FIRST IS TOO LATE (Crest, 60 cents)—Science fiction that shows time all in turmoil as the world is ready for that long-predicted end.
There are some real rousers ready for you in that display at the supermarket. Sex and competition in the garment industry. A biography of the fantastic Howard Hughes. A kid out to kill the whole faculty of a junior high school. Terror from Mary Roberts Rinehart. Western excitement. An old one about Hercule Poirot. Sex and desire all over the place. A new tale of the cops of the 87th Precinct.
Alongside which William Saroyan's THE MAN WITH THE HEART IN THE HIGHLANDS AND OTHER STORIES (Dell, 50 cents) seems sweet and pale. There was a time when Saroyan
was mighty "in." Like, say, 1939. His humor and his pleasant tales seem alien to an age of anti-heroes, but they're good to return to. There are 32 stories in all that came from the once-celebrated novelist-playwright-short story writer.
About the garment industry story—it's by Norman Bogner, and it's called SEVENTH AVENUE (Dell, 95 cents). It may take you a few days to get through the experiences of Jay Blackman, who goes from Brooklyn slums to Seventh Avenue. His method is quite like that of O'Hara's Pal
Joey or the early heroes of Jerome Weidman (see, especially, "I Can Get It for You Wholesale.") But it's the feeling of the sixties rather than the thirties.
And so to the relief of Ed McBain's GIVE THE BOYS A GREAT BIG HAND (Dell, 50 cents), which is violent but so is the life of a cop. It's about Patrolman Genero, who finds a severed hand in an abandoned suitcase, and the messy business that follows. The 87th Precinct stories are good ones, some of the best, in fact.
White's Wit and Wisdom
FLOWERS AND THINGS
May 23, 1922, Emporia Gazette
When a house is adorned by garden flowers, it is a sign that someone in the house, perhaps everyone in the house, is trying to give pleasure to the neighbors and passing strangers. Flowers are planted to make beauty out of doors where every one may see them, may enjoy them and share in the joy that comes with seeing beautiful things.
Flowers about a house are a sign of kind hearts inside. Flowers about a house are the sign that the house is a neighborly house. Flowers are the insignia of generous folks trying to teach their neighbors by mute tokens of good will.
And so when a passerby steals flowers, he steals the cement that holds us together. He steals the joy that belongs not to one household but to all wayfarers, to the whole neighborhood. He steals the good will that makes this a better world. And such a thief is either blindly ignorant or grossly selfish. In any event he is a low-life who ought to be shot at sunrise, drawn and quartered and buried at the crossroads with a spike in his entrails.
Nothing is too mean for the flower thief.
The Castle Tea Room
IN LAWRENCE
STILL THE MOST UNIQUE RESTAURANT
There has to be a good reason why students and faculty alike continue year after year, to patronize us. It could be our warm, friendly atmosphere, fine food, "Old World" decor, or just the fact that we're different. Our four dining rooms, furnished in birch, cherry, walnut, and oak, are perfect for dinner dates, meetings, and even wedding receptions. But, whatever the reason may be, we're glad you've made us the most popular restaurant in Lawrence. We've been that way for 20 years.
If you're new in Lawrence, we'd like to get acquainted with you. If you already know about us, you will be glad to know that we're still here. We haven't changed!
LIBUSE KRIZ
Phone VI 3-1151
1301-11 Mass. St.
THE SUMMER SESSION kansan
The Summer Session Kansan, student newspaper at the University of Kansas, is represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 Street, New York, N.Y. 10022. Mail subscription rates: $6 a semester or $10 a year. Published and second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas, every Tuesday and Friday for the duration of the Summer Session, except on Sundays. Commissional subscriptions are offered to students without regard to color, creed, or national origin.
Kansan Telephone Numbers Newsroom—UN 4-3464 Business Office—UN 4-4358
The opinions expressed in the editorial columns are those of the editorial staff of the newspaper. Guest editorial views are not necessarily the same as those of the editors. Any opinions expressed in the Summer Session Kansas University of Kansas Administration or the Kansas State Board of Regents.
Executive Staff
Business Manager Executive Sun Jack Haney
Advisor Mel Adams
Office Manager Keen Russ
Managing Editor Robert Stevens
Assistant Managing Editors Eric Kramer, Darryl Pinckney, Res Roderick,
Richard Viets, and Diane Wanek
Photography Bill Seymour
Advisor Dr Larry Day
Member Associated Collegiate Press
KANSAN EDITORIAL PAGE
Letters Policy
The Summer Session Kansan encourages signed letters to the editor for publication. They should be typed and contain the writer's classification and home town. Letters are subject to conservative editing by the Kansan staff. Libelous statements will not be printed. Send letters to the editorial desk, 112 Flint Hall.
Please limit length to about 250 words.
Gene Doane Agency
For Complete Motorcycle Insurance
824 Mass. St.
VI 3-3012
Don't Forget - Come In Early For Our Sensational CLEARANCE SALE
Back-To-School Fashions Coming In We Must Make Room
All Summer Items Gathered At Drastic Reductions
Dresses
Sportswear
Suits
Ensembles
Swimwear
UP TO
1/2
OFF
Entire Stock Not Included ALL SALES FINAL
the VILLAGE SET
922 Massachusetts
Tuesday, July 23, 1968
THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN
7
Campanile honors KU dead
By LINDA EHRLICH
Pointing its white tips skyward, the KU Memorial Campanile stands as an enduring monument to 276 World War II dead.
Kansas . . . Missouri . . . Oklahoma . . . New York . . Colorado . . the Philippines . . . New Mexico. The names of men and women from states like these are engraved in gold letters in Virginia Greenstone for those passing by to read and remember.
CROWNING MOUNT Oread, this 120-foot tower overlooks the beautiful Kaw Valley and is reflected below in Potter Lake. The terrace around the base made of pebble-finished colored concrete extends the monument's design and provides benches at four points. Surrounded by stately trees, bushes and flowers, this limestone structure towers over the stadium, a KU memorial to veterans of yet another war—W.W.I.
The Memorial Room on the ground floor forms the heart of the monument. Suggested by the late Prof. Allen Crafton, the frieze's message in this room serves as a constant reminder of the Memorial's purpose. "Free government does not bestow repose upon its citizens," it reads, "but sets them in the vanguard of battle to defend the liberty of every man."
Above the Memorial room is the practice room for the carillon; above that the actual clavier. A winding stairway is the cariloneur's only access to his instrument.
WORKS BY such composers as Bach, Handel and Beethoven fill the air as the piano-like carillon brings the tower's 53 bells to life. The unusual harmonics and tones which carry over after the bells have been struck provide hauntingly beautiful music for miles around. Made by an English company dating back to 1360, these six tiers of bells rank KU's carillon seventh among the 65 in North America for their range of tone.
THE FIRST GIFT of memorial planting—a rock garden including thyme, phlox and myrtle—was provided by the Class of 1925 as their silver anniversary gift in 1950.
Over 8,000 people contributed some $343,000 to make this entire plan a reality. An additional 1,200 became "Bell Ringers" by donating $100 or more.
Gifts from all over the country memorializing someone not connected with the war service were also accepted. The lighting was provided by a family in Pennsylvania, the doorway panels by a Dodge City man, The KU Endowment Association purchased the big 7-ton bell in honor of the late Dean Olin Templein who had first visualized the carillon.
Justice Hugo T. Wedell, president of the University of Kansas Memorial Association, turned the historic first shovelof earth on January 11, 1960, to begin the $200,000 construction job.
The cornerstone laid at that year's commencement exercises contained a box of mementos placed there by the Association's vice-president Carl V. Rice.
However it was May 27,1951, which marked the greatest day for the Campanile. On that day, homage was paid to 8,000 KU students and alumni serving during World War II at the war memorial's dedication ceremony.
To the bugles call and under the flying colors, Justice Wedell presented the University with the Campanile and Driveway. The first harmonic notes of "America" ended the carillon's silence.
Anton Bees, world-famous carillon of the Mountain Lake Singing Tower and of Duke University, also made the bells ring to such songs as "The Battle Hymn of the Republic," "Onward Christian Soldiers," a Bach's Chorale "Our Father" and "The Star Spangeled Banner."
No one could doubt that these were appropriate songs for men and women who had set themselves "in the vanguard of battle to defend the liberty of every man."
Campus Madhouse handles recent fads
By LINDA EISENBERG Journalism Camp Reporter
There are countless things one can do with a musty old basement
It can be a storing place for odds 'n' ends.
It can be decorated to serve as a rathskeller.
Or, if one is ambitious, it can be transformed into a college novelty shop.
"Anything that comes into fad we try to stock," Miss Eleanor Womack, shop manager, said.
IT REQUIRED this ambition and the creativity of Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Carduof of Kansas City to transform the basement of the Gaslight Tavern into the Campus Madhouse.
ACCORDING TO Miss Womack, the bulk of business is centered around sweatshirts which are printed with anything on them on 24-hour notice.
Fraternal organizations, various campus activities and private groups have ordered 5,000 to 6,000 sweatshirts yearly.
The sweatshirts, plus t-shirts and nightshirts are designed by Miss Womack herself or by KU art students and are produced by a silkscreening process.
Plain sweatshirts are sold for $3.15. They can be printed for an additional 35 cents and personalized for $1.
ALSO FEATURED at the Madhouse are several imported objects. Wood carvings and incense burners are imported from Taiwan, Japan and India supply the shop with incense.
Earrings are on sale by the parents of a KU foreign exchange student from Iran. Berkeley students provide most of the other earbobs.
THE MADHOUSE was originally a franchise of the Spooper Shop, a company with its parent store in Denver. The Carduff got the idea of a fast-service sweatshirt shop from their college-age son who arrived home after his first year of college without the pledge sweatshirt his fraternity had ordered at the beginning of the year.
While in Denver three years ago for their second honeymoon, the Carducci bought a franchise of the now extinct parent company. Besides owning the Madhouse they possess similar stores at Kansas State Teachers College, Emporia and in Prairie Village, Kansas. They plan to branch to Kansas State University at Manhattan and the University of Missouri at Columbia.
According to Miss Womack,
this college-type novelty shop is
rather unique. This accounts for
the large amount of mail orders
received at the Madhouse. Twenty-five per cent of the shop's business is done by filling orders
from all over the country.
Set of encyclopedias, travel books,
science books, other literature. A
number of them cost $150.00.
About to be drafted, must
sli. VI 2-3511 after 5: 30. - 72
2 Snow Tires on rims, 7.75-14, used one season, excellent condition-
baby Babc on rattles and rainless, both excellent $15.00. 3220 W. 9th.
V.I. 3-3015.
Records for sale. I tape records and sell them new. $2 for $7 list. All types of music: opera, baroque, modern, etc. VI 3-9180. 7-23
1964 Java Green Volkswagen. One owner. Fully equipped. Excellent condition. See to appreciate. VI 3-1625. 7-23
SFE AND COMPARE! New Edition of
"New Analysis of Western Civiliza-
tion in the American student
basket," first edition set to Abington
Bookstore, 1237 Eard. 8-2
Ninth Edition. Comprehensive analysis of this year's reading list. Mimeographed and bound for $4.50. Jayhawk Reference Publications. Call VI2-0113 for free delivery. 8-2
515 Michigan St. St. B-B-Q — outdoor pit, rib slab to go $2.95; Rib order, $1.50; Rib sandwich, 85%; chicken, $1.15; Brisket sandwich, 70%; Hours, 1 a.m. to 11 p.m. Closed Sunday and Tuesday. Phone VI 2-9510. 8-2
PSYCHEDELI LIGHTING MANUAL!
Make your own light machines, strobes, color organs, etc. with easy diagrams and instructions. Send $2.00 to Lightrays. 713B Pine Street. Philadelphia, Pa. 19106.
Carlslie's the 13th street auction sale every Saturday night at 10 a.m. We buy for $40.00 Monday thru Saturday 8:00 A.M. to 5:30 P.M. 1301 Delaware V-1-9841-88
Week-end flower special $1.00. Offer
good Thursday thru Saturday at
Alexander's Flowers and Gifts, 826
Iphone. Phone VI2-1320. 8-2
TYPEWRITERS—New & used office and portables, manual & electric. Olympia portables, SCM and small electronics Typewriters and small and large Xbox copies and office furniture. Lawrence Typewriter, 700 Mass., VI 3-3644. 8-2
EVERYONE SAYS
Everything in the Pet Field
And Free Parking At
Grants Drive-In Pet Center
Experienced
Dependable
Personal service
8 Conn. Low Pet Ph. VI 3-"
Western Civilization Notes
FOR SALE
WANT ADS
1
Accommodations, goods, services,
and employment advertised in the
newspaper are served to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin.
1218 Conn., Law. Pet Ph. VI 3-2921
LET
NOW OPEN Hillcrest Billiards
Make Your SUMMER TRAVEL Reservation Now! Malls Shopping Center VI 3-1211
New York Cleaners
TRAVEL TIME
MAUPINTOUR TRAVEL SERVICE
For the best in:
• Dry Cleaning
• Alterations
• Reweaving
926 Mass. VI 3-0501
West End Hillcrest Bowling Lane
WED., JULY 24-7:30 - DYCHE $ . 75
"A zany farce, Highly enjoyable." - Time.
Gift Box
Andrews Gifts
"EVE WANTS TO SLEEP"
Malls Shopping Center VI 2-1523
"A cinema collector's item-a most unusual film." Crowther, N. Y. Times.
Plenty of Free Parking
Exclusive Representative of
L. G. Balfour Co.
For the finest in
Fraternity Jewelry
- Badges
- Guards
- Novelties
- Favors
- Lavaliers
- Rings
- Favors
- Sportswear - Mugs
- 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571
- Paddles - Trophies
- Cups - Awards
Al Lauter
Mugs
Full Size, Standard Royal Type-
writer, like new, reasonable. Also
6-935-14w4 snow tire and 14 inch
wheel. Call VI 2-2452 after 5:00.
7-30
English Bike $20, light brown fall
$5.00 VI 2-7981. 7-26
Gibson Semi-Hollow GB-2 Bass Guitar,
2 years old, Cherry Red, like new because I hardly used it, $240, no case.
Scott Pro, VI 2-8227. 7-26
Pets of distinction. Newfoundland male puppies. 5½ months old. Have all shots: A.K.C. Litter registered. RI 8-094. Lawrence, Kansas. 7-26
BSA STARFIRE, 1967, only 600 miles,
still on break-in, like new, must see,
for $58.00 for $58.00.
4-3633 days or 816-PL - 3-6394
(K.C.) nites.
FOR RENT
Sleeping rooms with kitchen privilege
and heat downtown, VI 3-S787, 8-2
2 furnished apartments $60 and $65
VI 2-1107. 7-30
2 a/c furnished 1st floor apartments,
3 campus and near downtown.
V 3-15767 8-2
For rent to graduate or mature undergraduate. Extra nice bachelor or studio apartments 1/3 blocks from law school, nicely furnished, utilizes paid, private parking. Quired idea for private residence. For appointment call VI 3854. 3-8-2
4 Bedroom apartment 2 blocks from campus. Available August 1-$200 per month. All utilities paid. Male or Female. No limit on number of occupants, no unreasonable rules and regulations. Call VI 2-7235 7-30
Apartment for 6 weeks. Unfurnished—A/C, I Bedroom, private parking—Close to campus. 1419 Ohio. Mgr. Apt. 9–VI 2-1107. 7-30
SERVICES OFFERED
Need cash for those 2nd semester expenses.
Students, Seniors, and Grad students.
Contact Mr. Hamilton, Beneficial Ft.
3,8074 Company, 725 Mass., phone
8-213
MOTORCYCLE INSURANCE—be safe with a low-rated policy and save money when those unsuspected accidents occur. CALIFORNIA INSURANCE COMPANY, 2323 Ridge Court. Office-II 3-2170; home-VI 3-4798. 8-2
TUTOR for ENGLISH and INTENSIVE ENGLISH. Have tutoring experiences and English degree from K.U. Call Bonnie Hill. VI 3-4765
7-29
TYPING
Theses, term papers, miscellaneous works typed on pica electric typewriter, prompt and guaranteed. Mrs. Troxel. VI 2-1440. 8-2
Thesis, term papers, themes typed and/or edited by K.U. graduate (Engli-
gh-Spanish education). SCM education. Located close to Oliver Hall. VI 3-2873.
Experienced in typing term papers, themes, dissertations, and other miscellaneous typing work. Have electric typewriter with pica handle reasonable rates. Call VI 3-9554, Mrs. Wright.
Experienced typist will type theses,
themes, term papers. Have electric
typewriter. Contact Mrs. Ethel Hend-
erson, VI 2-0122. 7-23
Experienced typist would like typing.
Has had experience in typing.
Electric typewriter with carbon or silk ribbon.
Call Mrs. Lancaster. VI 2-4
8-2
Experienced writer will type your thesis, term papers, reports, etc. De- pendable and prompt. Call Topeka, CE 2-0164. 7-30
Experienced typist will do thesis and theme typing. Standard prices. Specializes in formulas. 143 Malott. Call UN 4-3226. 7-26
WANTED
Male graduate student, wants two graduate students to share nice furniture aparecido aparcado en la UE. Everything furnished but linens, $35.00 each. VI 3-4349.
7-20
Teacher wants daytime baby sitter for fall. Starting September 16. 1
2 1/2 year old child. Call now at VI 3-5950. 7-30
Male graduate student, wants two graduate students to share nice furnished apartment, nine bedrooms furnished, six bathrooms furnished but linens, $35.00 each. VI 3-4349
NOTICE
Loans to seniors and graduate stu-
peres - VI 3-8074. Call Manager
TO GIVE AWAY: Four male and
female callers Call I 3-8333 or II 7-7671. 7-30
HELP WANTED
Production artist. Full time opening in our art department for individual capable of painting, letting and some lea-
work. Exciting opportunity to work in a new graphic arts facility, dealing with 3-D photography and summa-
tial drawing. Visual Impact, 1 mile north of 135, Gardner-Antoch Antech, Gardner, Kansas. 7-26
8
THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN
Tuesday, July 23, 1968
'Viet war is impoverishing VISA volunteer reports
By DORIS BOLINGER Journalism Camp Reporter
Carolyn Hamm, former Voluntary International Service Assignments (VISA) worker in Vietnam, told approximately 20 people Wednesday at a meeting in the Oliver cafeteria that the Vietnamese people's view is "the Americans are impoverishing us so we have to depend on them."
Sponsored by the American Friends Service Committee, Miss Hamm worked with other volunteers under the direction of UN organizations in a program based on a pacifist position.
"THE WAR is causing suffering on all sides, so we should help on all sides," Miss Hamm said. She believes this is the best way because of the basically neutral position and non-relief view.
Working in the district town of Ankhe on the edge of the Central Highlands, Miss Hamm lived in a kind of barn within the large
refugee area. This is the location of the 1st Cavalry Division, where many of the peasants worked at the base doing menial jobs for from 50 cents to a dollar a day.
"As I got to know these families, and it took a long time, we began to relate to each other as people, rather than as Americans and Vietnamese," Miss Hamm said. She added that after she learned the language, people told her more and more about themselves and how the war affected them.
CONSTIENTLY, especially among the farmers, their stories told of their homes being destroyed by American bombs and ill treatment by American soldiers at the base.
The people understand the American soldier's viewpoint, she said, but wish there was some other form of communication between the soldiers and themselves besides one of physical contact.
Some of the G.I.'s give gifts to the refugees, but this only strains the relationship, she said. "They want to be able to give back, if it is given out of friendship."
They view Americans as imperialists, Miss Hamm assured the group. "In terms of Vietnamese history in trying to achieve national independence, they feel that because we supported the French, how can we be for their independence?"
"THE REAL HOPE is giving them a chance to establish a neutral government," she offered as a solution for South Vietnam. She added that the NLF had a realistic solution with their "independent, neutral, democratic, South Vietnam."
She sees unification of the country as a gradual thing. "They consider themselves basically as brothers with a few cultural digressions."
Alumni treasurer notes changes
By DIANE WANEK
Journalism Camp Reporter
Jewell M. Campbell, former KU baseball letterman and treasurer of the KU Alumni Association in Seattle, has noted many changes on campus since he arrived here.
"The changes in this campus since I've last been here are like the changes between day and night," he said. "The building of the new dormitories is probably the greatest change."
A CHANGE Jewell would like to see is a new $155,000 track with more lanes at KU. He said that the Alumni Association in Seattle would probably contribute toward the building of a new one and that he would like to see KU alumni from all over the nation contribute to this.
tors. His wife is also a graduate of KU and majored in music. She, too, has been an officer in the Alumni Association.
terested in the track than a normal graduate of KU because he was on the track team here in 1932. "One of my most vivid recollections is when Glen Cunningham and I were on the track team together," he said.
Now employed as chief claim clerk for the Milwaukee Railroad in Seattle, Jewell keeps his fingers in the athletic pie. He sells tickets for all the University of Washington home games.
Jewell majored in physical education and had James Naismith and Forrest C. Allen for instruce-
Mid-calf coats added for fall
Fads and Fashions
Jewell is probably more in-
By JOAN JARVIS Journalism Camp Reporter
If you can buy only one coat this fall, consider a mid-calf.
Also changed will be KU's Photo-Interview Day, since Big Eight rules specify that a football squad may not assemble for pictures earlier than one day prior to the start of fall practice.
THE REVISED photo-interview session will be August 29 starting at 9 a.m. at Memorial Stadium.
The mid-calf coat is an allweather coat for cold, rain or snow. Mid-calf coats are usually worn over skirts that are longer than the coats.
The reporting schedule for Jayhawk gridders, announced last week will be changed because of a misunderstanding of the new formula for calculating the earliest opening date for fall football practices.
Coach Pepper Rodgers said the Jayhawks will drill without pads August 30 and 31 and September 2 and begin two-a-day practices in full gear on September 3.
Grid practice set back day
The University of Pittsburgh (Pa.) School of Dental Medicine has a chant, "Rock Chalk' Jayhawk! Pitt Dental!"
For this fall there are three major skirt lengths. The shortest skirt this year should be no more than three inches above the knee. The newest skirt length is one inch below the knee and third, the mid-calf length, which is really not appropriate for day dresses or skirts in the city, but great for coats and skirts in the country. All of these lengths will vary according to the individual.
It is believed at Pitt that it was introduced in the fall of 1912 by three students who had attended KU.
The Jayhawk is happy that for more than half a century he has been of some service to the Panthers.
Boots wear best with midcalf coats. Boots are for the country and all the different types of weather.
Capes are stylish substitutes for coats. The mid-calf cape, like the coat, is an all-weather wrap. Patterned in tweed or herringbone, capes also look sharp with boots.
An adaptation of 56 years' standing has just come to light here.
The new fashions for this fall are really considered mood fashions. You have got to understand them and work with them. Try different accessories with them and experiment with unusual hair styles. They are not everyday clothes. Wear them only when you feel like it.
'Rah, rah Jayhawk'
Thousands of fans in stadia and fieldhouses have thrilled to the "Rock Chalk, Jayhawk!" chant of the University of Kansas.
Teddy Roosevelt called it "the world's greatest college yell."
No apology is due the Jayhawk's Wildcat neighbors up the Kaw river. In those days the University of Kansas often was called the Kansas State University.
GOOD YELLS inevitably are borrowed and adapted. Thousands of colleges and high schools must get a repertoire of pep-inducers somewhere.
More millions have heard it in nationally televised football and basketball broadcasts.
THE "ROCK CHALK, Jayhawk" has gone a long way since its ancestor tumbled from the fertile mind of Prof. E. H. S. Bailey of the chemistry faculty in 1886.
LOS ANGELES - JULY 15, 1963
A scene from "The Inferno" featuring a young man in a plaid suit. The setting appears to be an outdoor urban environment with blurred figures in the background.
CLOTHIER
Our own silk and wool plaid sport coat... Only one of our many traditional patterns and colorings with the finest in shirtings and accessories to complement the gentleman's wardrobe.
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kansan
A student newspaper serving KU
WEATHER HOT
77th Year, No. 13
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
See Weather Below
Friday, July 26, 1968
Counselors list given by Dean
By DOUG UNDERWOOD Journalism Camp Reporter
The Office of the Dean of Men Wednesday released a list of counselors for the fall 1968 semester in the men's residence halls.
Counselors at Olin Templin Hall will include: Ernest Bauer, Clay Center, Junior; David G. Dekenen, Wathena, Senior; Robert Ferguson, Menlo, Senior; W. David Fretz, Liberal, Senior; George Livingston, Plainville, Senior; Scott A. Puyear, Greensburg, Junior; Michael Simpson, Evanson, Ill.; Junior; Michael Spencer, Wichita, Senior; Robert Taylor, Plainville, Senior; Clyde Toland, Iola, Senior; Gerald Wall, Garfield, N.J., Senior; David Winegardner, Atchison, Senior; Gordon Wood, Pittsburg, Kans, Graduate Student; Larry Yackle, Paola, first year law, assistant resident director.
ELLSWORTH HALL counselors will be: Gene Bauer, Highland, Junior; Steven Bradebeeoft, Overland Park, Junior; James Burke, Denver, Colo., Senior; Gary Gammon, Leawood, Junior; Carl R. Goode, Kansas City, Mo., Junior; Robert L. Harper, Charleston, Mo., Junior; Gary Lemon, Chafing, Junior; Orlyn Lockhard, Raytown, Mo., Orlyn Kenneth Washington, West Cape May, N.J., Junior.
The following students will be among the counselors at McCollum: Larry Black, Wichita Senior; Michael Conklin, Wichita Senior; William Conklin, Wichita Senior; Hubert B. Hess, Kansas City, Mo., Senior; Donald Huggins, St. Louis, Mo., Junior; Orville Kolterman, Onaga, Senior; John Plump, Prairie Village, Senior; Robert Quagliano, Hoboken, N.J., Junior; Thomas Rhodes, Arlington, Va., Senior; Michael Rubin, University City, Mo., Senior; Harley Schlotterbeck, Toronto, Kan., Senior; Norvel Smith, Leawood, Senior; Frank Starkey, Clinus, M.N., Graduate Student, Assistant Resident Director; Mike Swafford, Hugoton, Senior; Timothy Vollmer, St. Louis, Mo., Senior; David Wright, Winfield, Senior.
FALL 1968 semester Joseph R. Pearson counselors include: John Bowie, Newark, N.J., Senior; Don Butler, Kansas City, Kan., Senior; Elbert DForest, Wichita Senior; Doug Lindsey, McQuire AFB, N.J., Bill; Bill Ludt, Yonkers, N.Y., Senior; Assistant Resident Director; David P. Neagher, Oklahoma City, Okla., Junior; Dennis Morrell, Prospect Heights, Ill., Senior; John Munkres, Oklahoma City, Okla., Senior; John T. Reed, Fort Scott, Senior; David C. Shelley, Westminster, Colo., Senior; Victor Walner, Overland Park, Senior; H. Edward Booker, Bessemer, Ala., Graduate Student.
Among those at Oliver Hall will be the following counselors: John R. Burke, Parkville, Mo., Junior; Ronald Carpenter, Weiser, Idaho; Junior; Patrick J. Cheek, Bolivar, Mo.; Junior; David Jeans, Independence, Mo., Junior; Steven K. Smith, Shawnee Mission, Junior; James Zakoura, Osawatomie, Senior.
Kuo is made Chinese prof
Joseph Cheng Kuo, native of Peiping, China, with a law degree from the University of China in that city in 1946, will become assistant professor of oriental languages and literatures at KU in September.
Kuo, who is co-author of three books and manuals for the teaching of spoken Chinese published by the Yale University Press, has been teaching in Hong Kong and the United States since 1958.
HE TAUGHT at KU in the summer of 1966.
He was an instructor at Yale 1959-65 and since has taught at Washington University, Loyola Academy and the University of Texas.
His books are "Speak Mandarin—Student's Workbook," "Dictionary of Spoken Chinese," and "Speak Chinese—Teacher's Manual."
Professor Ethan Allen memorial services held
Memorial services for Ethan P. Allen, director of the Governmental Research Center and chairman of the political science department, were held on Thursday at the First United Methodist Church.
Mr. Allen died last Monday evening at the University of Kansas Medical Center in Kansas City. He was admitted to the Medical Center on July 9, and just recently was transferred to the intensive care ward. Although the doctors said his condition was critical, they would not describe the nature of his illness. Mr. Allen had heart surgery last fall.
ORIGINALLY FROM Chehalis, Wash., Mr. Allen received a bachelor of arts degree from Colorado University. At the University of Iowa, he received the master of arts and doctor of philosophy degrees. He served as an assistant professor and, later, an associate professor of political science at Iowa State from 1937-45.
He took several leaves of absence during World War II so that he could work on various federal commissions and agencies. He worked with the Office of Civilian Defense, the War Production Board, and the Bureau of the Budget.
Mr. Allen became a professor of political science at KU in 1945, and was named as the department chairman in 1946. He joined the executive committee of the Gov-
enerimental Research $ ^{a} $ Center in 1962.
He has served as an adviser for the Governor's Juvenile Code Commission, the Governor's Commission on Administrative Organization, the Governor's Library Commission, the Governor's Committee on Federal-State Relations, the Governor's Commission on Constitutional Revision and the Legislative Committee on Efficiency and Economy.
CHANCELLOR W. Clarke Wescoe was with Mr. Allen at the time of his death. He said, "The University of Kansas is saddened by the death of one of its most loyal and dedicated faculty members. He served the University, the students and the state for 23 years as professor of political science and director of the Governmental Research Center. We will miss his services, and we will miss his cheerful wit and his willingness to assist the University in many ways. Beyond that, we will miss a constant friend."
Mr. Allen is survived by his wife, Mary, and two daughters, Mary and Martha. Mrs. Allen, of 1719 Mississippi St., was once the president of the District No. 60 Board of Education. On May 16, she filed as a candidate for the State Board of Education from the Third District. On July 17, she withdrew because of her husband's illness.
P. S.
Both of the daughters graduated from KU. Mary was formerly a secretary at the FMC Corporation, and Martha worked at the KU public relations department for two years. Martha is touring Africa this summer.
DR. ETHAN P. ALLEN
The family asks that the contributions be sent to the Pi Sigma Alpha Scholarship Fund with the KU Endowment Association. Pi Sigma Alpha is the honor society in political science for which Mr. Allen was the faculty adviser and member.
JuCos seek staffs
KU supplies new educators
By BRENDA JONES Journalism Camp Retorter
Journalism Camp Reporter The state of Kansas is experiencing growing pains in her junior colleges.
As the need for education grows each year, college entrance exams become stiffer, permitting only the very top students to attend a four-year college, Herold Regier, director of the education department placement bureau, feels that junior college growth is the
answer to easing this education problem.
"Junior colleges in the United States are experiencing growth not only in the development of new junior colleges, but in the expansion and development of the existing junior colleges we now have," he said.
REGIER FEELS KU is a good source of junior college administrators and instructors, as more graduates than ever before are turning to work at the junior college level.
American College Test needed for incoming frosh
KU will require all freshmen entering the University after June 1, 1969, to have completed the American College Test Battery (A.C.T.). Provost James R. Surface announced today.
The new requirement will not affect students entering in September or the spring semester of 1969.
AFTER STUDENTS were admitted, the University administered placement examinations to help in student advising and placement in various classes and at various levels of work in particular subjects.
Until now the University of Kansas has admitted all graduates of accredited Kansas high schools and has used whatever test data and high school records were available to help determine the admission of out-of-state students.
The admission of Kansas students will not be affected by the new test requirement, but early availability of test results will help high school and University counselors advise entering students. The A.C.T. also will provide uniform data for admission of out-of-state students and for the awarding of scholarships and other financial aids.
The A.C.T. tests will replace the University's general placement examinations. The role of
the specialized examinations in biology, physics and the foreign languages are under continued study.
THE QUESTION of requiring common examinations to be taken during the senior year of high school was studied for a year by a University committee before the new requirement was recommended and approved, and the matter had been under careful consideration for several years, Provost Surface said.
The decision to adopt the A.C.T. Battery, one of two national testing programs for college-bound students, was influenced by the fact that almost all Kansas colleges and universities require the A.C.T. Battery and most Kansas high school students already take this examination.
The Placement Committee members were: Russell N. Bradt, professor of mathematics, chairman; Clark E. Bricker, professor of chemistry; Max Fuller, director of admissions; Jerry Lewis, assistant dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, executive director of the Colleges-Within-the-College; Robert D. Michal, assistant professor of education and counselor in the Guidance Bureau; Karl M. D. Rosen, assistant professor of classics and classical archaeology and of linguistics; and Gerhard H. W. Zuther, associate professor and acting chairman of English.
At the administration level, five men have been placed by KU to work in junior colleges:
Steve Poort, dean of the State Fair Community College in Sedalia, Mo.;
JAMES C. SANDERS, president of the Neosho County Community College, in Chanute;
Raymond Wamskey, dean of arts and science at Barton County Community Junior College, Great Bend;
Gwen Nelson, president of Cowley County Community College, Arkansas City;
Al Cerne will be vice president for business affairs at the Johnson County Junior College, at Shawnee Mission. He is currently assistant superintendent of Lawrence Public Schools.
INSTRUCTORS are coming from KU as well as administrators.
WEATHER
The United States Weather Bureau predicts decreasing cloudiness with hot and humid weather through today. The high today will be around 90 and the low tonight will touch 70.
M. Duane Chaney will be teaching biology at Black Hawk Community College in Moline, Ill; Janet Daniels will go to MiddleSE county College at Edison, NJ.; Billy Jump will teach at Dalton Junior College in Dalton, Ga.; and William Stanley will teach at Cooke County Junior College. Gainsville. Tex.
The only English instructor will be Allyn Goese who will teach at the Area 10 Community Junior College in Cedar Rapids, Iowa.
A guidance instructor who will go to Eastern Iowa Community College in Muscatine, Iowa, is May Vincent.
Students pay for new wing
Next year the students of the University of Kansas will have to pay a construction fee for an extension to Watkins Memorial Hospital.
Fees will be $1.50 each semester and 50 cents during the summer session. The money will go to the fund for the retirement of the quarter million dollar bonds that are to be sold.
An extension to Watkins will be made with the money from the bonds. A new wing,with a new lab, a new clinic,and more office space is planned. With most work done with outpatients,a new clinic is the most urgent need. This year 13,000 more people passed through the clinic than last year.
THE BONDS will be placed on the open market and will be sold in $1,000 units. The money will be given to the contractor and building will begin. Through the student construction fees, the money will be paid back in probably a 10-year period.
2
THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN
Friday, July 26, 1968
Camp makes good parents
Last Saturday night, according to a story in the Lawrence Journal-World, 16 young people were found in an apartment attending what appeared to be a beer blast. The same night three female campers were discovered by a camp official on their way to the Holiday Inn and four male campers were apprehended as they intended to leave their residence hall.
The Midwestern Music and Art Camp has been the "parent" for more than 2,000 teenagers for the last six weeks. The supervisors of the camp nominally became the guardian for each of the campers for the duration of the camp.
They have the responsibilities that go along with parenthood.
No group of teenagers so large does not have problems. Teen - age pregnancies, drunkenness, vandalism, joy - riding and shop-lifting prevail among students in almost every high school. And the campers here are teenagers.
Yet, through four basic rules, camp officials keep all of these problems to a minimum. While 16 Lawrence young people partied at a private apartment, only two of the girls' parents became worried. At the same time camp officials apprehended their seven delinquents.
They do not catch all of the delinquent campers, but they probably know more about the wrong-doings of the campers than their parents.
Lawrence police chief, Robert Richardson, was quoted as saying in Monday's Journal-World: "It bothers me there are this many juveniles running around at midnight and after without anybody apparently being concerned about it. We have a lot of young kids who are not adult enough to be responsible for their actions. This bothers me—you're damn right it bothers me—and indicates to me a lack of family concern."
Many people over-generalize that all teenagers get into trouble. This is not true, but parents must be concerned about their young people if they are to stay out of trouble.
Camp officials are concerned as are most Lawrence parents. But teenagers are getting away with more and more because they have more money and they drive faster cars. They can go further and spend more to entertain themselves.
Camp officials are concerned because most of their "children" are on the big college campus for the first time. Some of the rules may seem trivial, but this is the only way the camp can be the parent of 2,000 teenagers at the same time.
New Books
Bliss Lomax wrote the western, SHADOW MOUNTAIN (Dell, 50 cents). A guy named Maclane and his troubles with a fast gun, a rancher, and a wild cowtown. Seen this one before?
The Hercule Poier is THE LABORS OF HERCULES (Dell, 50 cents), and the writer, of course, is Agatha Christie. The great detective this time is involved in crime that moves from foggy London to the Swiss Alps. But he comes through grandly.
There's one by Jack Lang called THE HARD CASE (Dell, 60 cents). It's about a tough character named McLintock who gets tangled up with a tough character named Hazel—tough but classy.
THE SUMMER SESSION kansan
Kansan Telephone Numbers
Newsroom—UN 4-3646 Business Office—UN 4-4358
The Summer Session Kansan, student newspaper at the University of Kansas, is represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 Street, New York, NY., 10022. Mail subscription rates: $6 a semester or $10 a year. Public subscription class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas, every Tuesday and Friday for the during Session, except July 5. Accommodations, goods, and employment advertised in Summer Session Kansan are offered to students without regard to color, creed, or national origin.
The opinions expressed in the editorial columns are those of the editorial state of the newspaper. Guest editorial views are not necessarily the same as those of the opinions expressed in the Summer Session Kansan are not necessarily those of the University of Kansas Administration or the Kansas State Board of Regents.
Business Manager
Executive Staff
Advisor
Office Manager
Managing Editor
Assistant Managing Editors
Jack Haney
Mel Adams
Robert Stevens
Rees Roderick
Robert Steven
Eric Kramer, Darryl Pinckney, Rees Roderick
Richard Viets, and Diane Wann
Bill Seymour
Dr. Lee; Dr.
Richard Viets, and Diane Wanek
Photography
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Dr. Larry Day
'Clowns' called best of season
The KU Summer Theatre Repertory '68 saved the best 'til last. Herb Gardner's brilliant comedy. "A Thousand Clowns," opened July 11, the fourth and final production of the 1968 repertory season. And what a way to go! This is some show.
Anyone familiar with this comedy knows the lines are the funniest written in recent
Member Associated Collegiate Press
years. The characters are spouting ideas and frustrations and the audience is convulsed.
All six performers precisely fit their roles. The director is to be commended for excellent casting. Holmes Osborne as Murray Burns, the unemployed but free wheeling television writer is excellent.
—Jane Feuerborn
THE EXECUTIVE PRODUCERS OF THE FILM "THE MISTER" RECEIVED A BOXING BEST DEBUT FROM THE DIRECTOR, RICHARD M. COHEN, FOR THEIR VISION OF A NOVEL BY JOHN KEMPENHOFF, AND A NEW EDITION OF HARRY POTTER'S WORLD OF GAME OF THRONES BY TERRY WINDSOR, AND THE ORIGINAL NOVEL BY JOHN KEMPENHOFF, BY JOHN KEMPENHOFF.
JAMES DEAN Steinbeck's "EAST OF EDEN"
Fri., July 26-7 & 9:30 - Dyche - $.50
When you want to -kansas union BOOKSTORE
SELL YOUR BOOKS!
Bring them to the lower level entrance of the BOOKSTORE
August 1 & 2 8:30 to 4:30; Monday through Friday
Now paying patronage refunds for
Period 42-valid through Dec. 68
Period 43-valid through June 69
Friday, July 26, 1968
THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN
3
Kansan Review
'Mattress' bounces on stage, staggers
A capacity audience watched "Once Upon A Mattress" bounce on stage July 10, as the KU Summer Theatre Repertory '88 presented its third production.
This musical by Richard Rogers' daughter Mary, is very loosely based on the old fairy tale, The Princess and the Pea.
Irene Ballinger as Princess Winnifred takes command the instant she stumbles on stage dripping wet after a swim through the moat. She sings, dances and mugs with exquisite lunacy. The show, which at times drags, sparkles when "Fred" is onstage.
Connie Stachowiak as the harping, nagging Queen is ideal as she bustles about keeping everyone in a royal turmoil.
Ron Shull has great fun as the mute King. His gyrations as he gestures his way about the court are well planned.
John Young is excellent as the over-mothered Prince Dauntless.
Lance Hewett and Evie Masterson as members of the
Boys Intramurals
FAST PITCH SOFTBALL RESULTS July 2
Med. Chem 15, Biochemistry 4 Speedrats 13, Gadflys 3 Secondary Source 9, Skempts 2
Julv 9
Med. Chem 16, Head Hawkers 6 Gaslight Gang 9, Speedrats 2 Secondary Source 9, Biochemistry 8
July 11
Gadfats 17, Skeptics 13
Head Hawkers 15, Speedrats 10
Med Chem 11, Secondary Source 0
July 10
Secondary Source Forfeit to Head Hawkers
Gaillac Gang 12, Skepics 5
Biochemistry and Phys. 22, Gadget
Speedrates 15, Skoptics 6
Med Chem 11, Gadflys 0
Gaslile Gang 7, Biochemistry and
Phys 6.
July 18 Speeddrive 15 Sky
SLOW PITCH RESULTS July 8
July 10
Emergent Nations 17, Delta Functions 7
July 12
Economics 3, Chem Gems 2
Radiation Biophysics 10, Pharmacy 7
July 10
Chem Gems 8 Scrocs 7
Delta Functions 26, Radiation Institute 20
Economics 10, Impossible Intruders 2
Emergent Nations 11, Pharmacy 1
Scrocs 19. Chem Gems 6
Chem Tech 9, Radiation Biophysics 4
July 15
Economics 6, Radiation Institute 4 Pharmacy 16, Delta Functions 15 Scrocs 9, Impossible Intruders 8
July 17
Chem Tech 10, Emergent Nations 8
Radiation Biophysics 16, Chem Gems 10
Pharmacy 17, Radiation Institute 5
July 19
Economics 10, Scrocs 9
Chem Tech 18, Delta Functions 6
Radiation Biophysics 7, Impossible Intruders 0
Economics 10, Scrocs 9
court performed well although Hewett's superior voice overpowered Miss Masterson's in their duets.
The chorus has two disadvantages. The orchestra is weak and the choreography is sloppy. The costumes are very disappointing. Costuming must be done with greater care for the intimacy of theatre-in-the-round than for proscenium productions. The ladies-in-waiting looked almost shabby. It is difficult to understand why so much white was used in their costumes. The knights fared better; their clothing looked a bit more elegant.
A musical is an energetic project when rehearsal time is plentiful. Rehearsal time is extremely limited for a repertory group especially during the summer, The KU group and its director are to be commended for courage and daring. Your efforts were appreciated.
—Jane Feuerborn
Young people too rebellious says Wiley
Relaxed temporarily in his office chair, Russell L. Wiley, Band Camp director, commented on the 1968 summer session of camp.
"It was the greatest camp we've had in 31 years," Wiley said. "We've had our problems. But all in all the young people were a more mature group this year. It was a better camp in every division. The students produced and gained more."
WILEY SAID his main disappointment was the resentment of young people against authority and regulations. "They have to learn some place, some time, to live in an orderly society," Wiley added. "If they don't learn, they've got a hard life ahead of them."
He spoke of the students dismissed this summer. "It hurts me as much as anybody to send somebody home." Wiley said. "I hope for next year not to have to do it even once," he added.
"Ninety-eight per cent of the students are great. We should be allowed to enjoy that percentage here for business. Instead, we have to be concerned with the 2 per cent on the other side of the fence. It's not fair to us or the other people."
**COMPARING THE camps of '67 and '68. Wiley said there is more resentment and proar this year than last. Next year, only if necessary, he said they would tighten the rules. He mentioned no beards would be allowed and those students dismissed this year would not be allowed to return.**
"Actually there was so much good this year I shouldn't even discuss the other," Wiley commented. "I would like to express my deepest appreciation to those campers who put forth true efforts to make this camp better." he said
Wiley said he will be devoting his full time to the camp from now on. He is resigning his position with the University band. "I want to give more of me to the camp and the building of the camp," he said. "The camp needs full attention now that it is such a huge development."
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book are for the use of students
perpetuated to all students without regard to
color, creed, or national origin.
FOR SALE
Western Civilization Notes
Ninth Edition. Comprehensive analysis of this year's reading list. Mimeographed and bound for $4.50. Jayhawk Reference Publications. Call 912-0113 for free delivery. 8-2
TYPEWRITERS—New & used office and portables, manual & electric. Olympia portables, SCM and small electrics. Typewriter rental and serviced copies copy and office furniture. Lawrence Typwriter, 700 Mass., VI 3-3644.
Week-end flower special $1.00. Offer good Thursday thru Saturday at Alexander's Flowers and Gifts, 826 Iowa. Phone VI2-1320. 8-2
PSYCHDELIC LIGHTING MANUAL!
Make your own light machines,
strobes, color organs, etc. with easy
diagrams and instructions. Send $2.00
to Lightrays. 713B Pine Street. Philadelphia, Pa. 19106.
8-2
Carlisle's 13th street auction sale and Saturday night at 8:00 a.M. We buy the Wednesday Saturday 8:00 A.M. to 5:30 P.M. 1301 Delaware V-13-0481.
515 Michigan St. St. B-B-Q — outdoor pit, rib slab to go. $3.95; Rib order;
$1.50; Rib sandwich, 85; $1.25; chicken;
$1.15; Brisket sandwich, 70; Hours,
1 a.m. to 11 p.m. Closed Sunday and Tuesday.
Phone VI2-9510. 8-2
Full Size, Standard Royal Typewriter, like new, reasonable. Also 6-95-14w4 snow tire and 14 inch wheel. Call VI 2-4252 after 5:00.
English Bike $20, light brown fall
$5.00 VI 2-7981 7-26
Gibson Semi-Hollow EB-2 Bass Guitar,
2 years old, Cherry Red, like new
because I hardly used it, $240, no scuse.
Scott Pro, VI 2-8227. 7-30
Pets of distinction. Newfoundland male puppies. $5^{½}$ months old. Have all shots: A.K.C. Litter registered. RI 8-1946. Lawrence, Kansas. 7-26
BSA STARFIRE, 1967, only 600 miles,
still on break-in, like new, must see.
for $549 for 3-4-6-8-14
4-3633 days or 816-PL 3-6394
(K.C.) nites. 7-3- 7-30
EVERYONE SAYS
Everything in the Pet Field
And Free Parking At
Grant's Drive-In Pet Center
Experienced
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Personal service
1218 Conn., Law. Pet Ph. VI 3-2921
NOW OPEN Hillcrest Billiards
West End Hillcrest Bowling Lane
Gift Box
Andrews Gifts
Malls Shopping Center VI 2-1523
Plenty of Free Parking
Exclusive Representative of
L. G. Balfour Co.
For the finest in Fraternity Jewelry
- Badges
- Guards
- Novelties
- Favors
- Novetés
- Pavors
- Lawnings
- Piper
- Lavaliers Rings
- Sportswear - Muas
- Sportswear - Mags
- Raddles - Trades
- Paddles
- Trophies
411 W. 14th VI 3-1571
Al Lauter
- Cups
- Awards
Smith-Corona Classic 12 typewriter,
Call VI 319-784-0000 after $30 P.M. $60
7-30
SEE AND COMPARE! "New Analysis of Western Civilization." Second edi-
tion in September. Third edition in September. Abington Bookshop,
1237 Gread. 7-30
1964 Richardson "Kingston" mobile home, 10x50 with 12x18 expandable living room, two bedrooms, central air conditioner, washer/dryer, carpeting. Parked on quiet well-shaded lot. Call VI 2-6669. 7-30
FOR RENT
Sleeping rooms with kitchen privilege
and neat downtown. VI 3-5767, 8-2
furnished apartments $60 and $65
VI 2-1107. 7-30
2 a/c furnished 1st floor apartments.
3 campus and near dormitory
V 31-5767 8-2
For rent to graduate or mature undergraduate.
Extra nice bachelor or studio apartments 1/3 blocks from law school, nicely furnished, utilities paid,
the parking. Quiet ideal school conditions. For appointment call VI 3-8534.
Apartment for 6 weeks. Unfurnished—A/C. 1 Bedroom, private parking—Close to campus. 1419 Ohio. Mgr. Apt. 9-1 2-1107. 7-30
SERVICES OFFERED
4 Bedroom apartment 2 blocks from campus. Available August 1-$200 per month. All utilities paid. Male or Female. No limit on number of occupants, no unreasonable rules and regulations. Call VI 2-7235 7-30
Need cash for those 2nd semester expenses? We make personal loans to Juniors, Seniors, and Grad students. Contact Mr. Hamilton, Beneficial Finance Company, 725 Mass., phone VI 3-8074. 8-2
MOTORCYCLE INSURANCE—be safe with a low-rated policy and save money when those unsuspecting accidents occur. Call INVERSAL UNI-
SURSE INSURANCE CO., PANY, 2323 Ridge Court. Office—31-270; home-VI 3-4798. 8-2
TUTOR for ENGLISH and INTENSIVE ENGLISH. Have tutoring experience and English degree from K.U.Call Bonnie Hill. VI 3-4765
TYPING
Theses, term papers, miscellaneous works typed on pica electric typewriter, prompt and guaranteed. Mrs. Troxl. VI 2-1440. 8-2
Thesis, term papers, themed types and/or edited by K.U. graduate (English-Surveyor). SCM elective. Located close to ViH. VI 3-2873.
Experienced in typing term papers, themes, dissertations, and other miscellaneous typing work. Have experience with Reasonable rates. Prompt and efficient service. Call VI 3-9554, Mrs. Wright.
Experienced typist would like typing. Has had experience in typing theses, dissertation reports, newspaper with carbon or alk silk fabric. Call Ms. Lancaster. VI 2-1705.
Experienced writer will type your thesis, term papers, reports, etc. Dependable and prompt. Call Topeka, CE 2-0164. 7-30
Experienced typist will do thesis and theme typing. Standard prices. Specializes in formulas. 143 Malott. Call UN 4-3226. 7-26
WANTED
7-20
Male graduate student, wants two graduate students to share nice fur-lice in place. Five place live close to KU. Buy fur-lice turner, but linens. $35.00 each. VI 3-4349
Teacher wants daytime baby sitter for fall. Starting September 16, 1 2 1/2 year old child. Call now at VI 3-5950. 7-30
Male graduate student, wants two graduate students to share nice furry sweaters; close to KU, everything furnished but linens, $35.00 each. VI 3-4349
Female roommate wanted for fall semester. Prefer graduate. Complete housewares, utilities paid. Grand piano—ideal for music student. Call Michele-VI 2-8709 after 5:00 P.M. $65 per month. 7-30
NOTICE
Loans to seniors and graduate students. Expenses. Call M-841-AGI—V1 3-8074.
TO GIVE AWAY. Four male and
male girls.
CVI 31 - 8331 or VLI 2 - 7761. 7-30
7-30
HELP WANTED
Production artist. Full time opening in our art department for individual capable of doing finished art, pastel painting and digital work. Exciting opportunity to work in a new graphic arts facility, dealing with 3-D photography and animation, in person or with Visual Impact, mile pace at 135 feet. Antioch Exoch, Garden, Kansas. 7-28
HS or College student needed now thru August. 2 days/wk. 2-10 p.m. Driver's license and references required. VI 3-3465. 7-30
4
THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN
Friday, July 26, 1968
MARY MAYBLEY
FOREIGNERS
Foreign students sit in lounge discussing American culture. These students are undergoing an eight week orientation program in Lawrence. At the completion of the course the foreigners will travel to 44 different universities to study this fall.
Fifty-five foreign students start University orientation
Fifty-five foreign students from Latin America, East Asia, Europe, the Mid-East, and South America have begun their eight-week orientation program at KU Orientation Center in Lawrence.
By DIANE WANEK Journalism Camp Reporter
THE KU ORIENTATION Center is one of nine such centers in the United States. The KU center is the oldest; it was established in 1951 by the State Department under President Truman.
One of the main concerns of the center is making foreign students proficient in the English language. This is being done through classroom situations and in a more informal setting at meals in the Kansas Union on the campus, where the students eat with several American counselors and teachers and discuss in English the American culture and the American way of life.
KU commercial art senior gets Alpha-O scholarship
The first recipient of the Alpha Omicron Pi-Jessie Marie Cramer scholarship at KU is Cheryl Kay Decker, a senior in commercial art.
"During this, their first eight weeks in the United States, the students—for the most part, Fulbright scholars—will be given a comprehensive introduction to the American way of life and be prepared linguistically as well as sociologically for the academic year ahead, which they will spend at 44 different universities in the U.S." said J. A. Burzle.
the Kansas City Alumnae Chapter of Alpha Omicron Pi, honors the past international president of the sorority, Mrs. Cramer. Preference is given a woman from the Greater Kansas City area.
The $250 award, established by
Lawrence's Most Popular Drive-In "Menu"
No Waiting-Instant Service
We are running our Summer GetAcquainted Specials this week.
HEAD FOR HENRY'S
Burzle, professor of German and associate dean of KU's College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, has been the director of the center from its inception
STARTS THURSDAY, JULY 25
THRU SUNDAY, JULY 28 SEA FOOD SPECIAL - ONLY 99c 4 DELUXE FISH SANDWICHES or
1 DOZEN GOLDEN BROWN SHRIMP
6th and Missouri VI 3-2139
This land, at the moment is not state owned, but will be deeded to the state soon. The building itself, which will be built out of Kansas stone, is under R. Keith Lawton, vice chancellor for operations, plant development and coordination.
Architect sought for Geological Survey building
By PAT HACKNEY
Journalism Camp Reporter
Approximately $750,000 has been appropriated by the State Geological Survey of Kansas.
At the present, the state architect, who is over all state construction, is looking for an architect to work on the building.
The money became available July 1, with the new fiscal year. The building will be located west of Iowa Street, which is Highway 59, and south of 19th Street. It will be attached to an existing building at this location, which was occupied February, 1968 by the Water Resources of the United States Geological Survey.
FRANK C. FOLEY, director of the State Geological Survey of Kansas, said the members of the State and the U.S. Survey work very closely and have some mutual employees. He also said that the Survey is affiliated with the University. "We are a research organization and we fit into the University and it fits into us." This is why it is convenient for the building to be located on campus.
KU Summer Theatre Rep. '68
presents
A CAVALCADE OF COMEDY
University of Kansas—Murphy Hall
"A THOUSAND CLOWNS" by Herb Gardner
JULY 27
Experimental Theatre
"LA PARISIENNE"
by Henri Becque
JULY 26
Experimental Theatre
KU STUDENTS .75 PLUS CURRENT CERTIFICATE OF REGISTRATION
KU
kamper kansan
KU
Volume 5, Issue 6
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Friday, July 26, 1968
Camp debaters hold tourney
By SUE BUNGE Kansan Staff Reporter
The Kansas debate topic is different than the national one, because the schools of Kansas have a rule prohibiting Kansas debaters to debate the national topic before school in the fall. Therefore, the Kansas topic is resolved that college students should have greater freedom in determining campus policies.
The tenseness wich prevails at all debate tournaments was at least doubled Tuesday afternoon in Fraser Hall as debaters met for the finals in both National and Kansas debate topics.
The national debate was won by Bill Pray and Joe Roby in a 3-2 judge decision against Alan Prater and Brenda Hodge.
The Kansas topic victory was obtained by Don Bucker and Ann Crawford with the judges decision being 4-1. Their debate was against Linda Listrom and Dave Holston.
Roby and Pray, the winning national team, will debate the Denver University debate workshop champions Friday, July 25, over a telephone hookup. There will be loud speakers set up at either end of the room for the debaters to hear, Bobby R. Patton, director of speech and drama division, explained. There will be a three minute critique of that debate, but no judge.
THIS YEAR'S national debate topic is resolved that; the United States should establish a system of compulsory service for all citizens.
Food Costs Corrected
Last week's Kamper Kansan mistakenly quoted the price of food preparation for Camps at $1.20 per day. The actual fee fee the Camp pays the dormitory department is $15 per week per camper.
Cold type continues
Again the Kansan expands its use of the new computerized offset type leased by the KU Printing Service. The four pages of this issue of the Kamper Kansan has been set by the machine.
The debaters for the negative on the national team, Prater and Hodge, are both from Shreveport, La. Roby, national affirmative is from Watertown, S. Da., and his partner Pray lives in Oakpark, Ill.
Don Bucker, Ann Crawford, and Dave Holston, finalists in the Kansas debate are all from Salina. Dave's partner, Linda Listrom, lives in Topeka.
Forensics champions declared
By BARBARA KIMBLE Kansas Staff Reporter
A week-and-a-half long forensics tournament has been held by the Speech and Debate Camp prior to the end of the summer's activities.
Finals were held in poetry interpretation, prose interpretation, extemporaneous speaking, dramatic interpretation, and original oratory.
Others were held in duet acting, informative speaking, and radio speaking; debate semi-finals were held.
The extemporaneous speaker draws a current event topic half an hour before he is to speak and prepares a five to seven minute speech. Original oratory is persuasive speaking. Informative speaking is a five to seven minute speech giving just information, no opinion, on specified topics.
BURMAH SMITH,
Middlesboro, Ky. won poetry
interpretation. Prose
interpretation was won by Sue
Short, Pullman, Wash., Brenda
Hodge, Shreveport, La., won
extemporaneous speaking and
Burmah Smith placed first in
dramatic interpretation. The
first place winner in original
oratory was Alan Prater,
Shreveport, La.
Duet acting was won by Joan Babbage, Harlan, Ky., and Burmah Smith. Bill Russell, Omaha, Neb., placed first in informative speaking and Martha Mackey, Hutchinson, won radio speaking.
Winners of the individual contests presented their selections in recital Thursday. An interpretation workshop recital was held Wednesday night that included "John Brown's Body."
SUNDAY, JANUARY 10TH
—Kansan photo by Mike Magee
HAIL THE NEW KING AND QUEEN! Their majesties, Debra Baca and Adrian Call, reign over the camp formal.
Baca, Call crowned
By CONNIE BATES Kansan Staff Reporter
The highlight of the '68 camp took place as Debra Baca and Adrian Call were crowned Queen and King of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp Saturday evening at the formal dance in the Kansas Union Ballroom.
Following the singing entertainment of the Concert Chorale and a ballet interpretation of West Side Story, the guests parted to allow the promenade of the king and
queen candidates down the center of the ballroom. Each king candidate escorted a queen candidate on his arm to the speaker's platform as their names and hometowns were read by counselor Emerv Goad.
WHILE THE candidates formed a semi-circle, Russell L. Wiley, camp director, stepped up to the speaker's platform. He gave a brief speech thanking the 99% of the campers that had worked to make this year's camp a success and said he hoped they
had benefited from it in some way. He was then handed the envelope containing the names of the candidates selected by the all-camp vote.
Recital is planned by Ballet Division
Tonight at 8 p.m. in the University Theatre, the Ballet division will perform a modern dance "Facets" for the first time, in addition to the traditional ballet.
"Fanfare," a classical ballet, choreographed by Miss Alexandra Zaharis, "Bagatellen," a humorous, contemporary ballet, choreographed by Larry Long, and "Capriccio Espagnole," a character ballet, choreographed by Miss Marguerite Reed are scheduled to highlight the evening.
MISS REED, Miss Zaharis and Long have also choreographed Brahms' waltzes which will be
included in the program. According to Long, the choreography was just finished this past week. The finishing stages were polished hastily.
A brief moment of silence was observed as he fumbled with the paper, but was erupted as he announced, "Your queen is Miss Debra Baca, and...your king is Mr. Adrian Call. Would Debra and Adrian please step forward?" Following tradition, Wiley crowned and kissed Queen Debra, while King Adrian was only crowned. Both Adrian and Debra are in the music division of the camp.
About 100 dancers from 25 states have been rehearsing six weeks for the recital.
Bill Evans, who choreographed "Facets," and Greg Lizenbery, are the guest artists performing in "Facets." Evans and Miss Reed will dance in "Capriccio Espagnole."
The ballet performers will wear costumes and live piano accompaniment will be provided by Joanne Atkins.
The audience of well-dressed couples represented a large percentage of the camp. Both the dance floor and the balcony were comfortably filled.
MUSIC FOR the dance was provided by the Kamper's Kix Band, consisting of volunteer campers and counselors. The dance was their first public appearance. Pat Taylor, an Ellsworth counselor, was responsible for the program and was assisted by Emery Goad.
Since the campers are not allowed to ride in cars, a special bus service was provided from the dorms to the Union throughout the evening.
Strict regulations were enforced involving the weekend guests invited by the campers. They stayed in JRP and McCollum and were given special guest cards to prove their identity.
Spanish students
Spaniards eat lunch at KU
By NANCY RANDALL Kansan Staff Reporter
Fifty-four students from a university in Seville, Spain stopped at KU for an informal luncheon with the Spanish division of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp.
After lunch about an hour was spent chatting with the Spanish campers. Since most of the Spaniards could not speak English all conversations were in Spanish.
THE GROUP, spending 10 days in the United States, came to visit Seville's sister city, Kansas City, Missouri. The Geralda Tower, a replica of the Geralda Tower in Seville, located at the Kansas City Plaza, was
one of the highlights of their trip.
The Spaniards told of their costumes and the differences they noticed here. In Spain a chaperone is taken on all dates but they generally do not have any set hour to be in.
"They were all very friendly, warm natured and easily liked," said Jenny Ledbetter, Irving, Texas, a Spanish student.
THE SPANISH people live an unscheduled life and come and go as they please. "I think they are pretty contented people," Jenny said.
A lot of comments were made on "the red badge of courage." Everything in the states has a number said one
Spaniard.
Another Spanish student said she was surprised they knew so much about American politics. "They knew all about our presidential candidates; who they liked and who they didn't like," said O'linda Wright, Manter, Kansas.
Making of fake I.D.'s halts
One Spaniard said most of the people in Spain had no opinion about the U.S. involvement in the Viet Nam War. However, he also said most of the college students feel we should pull out.
They also commented on the food served in the U.S. One liked it because it was so different and another missed the wine and beer.
Suspension of the manufacture of false camper identification badges has been agreed upon by a downtown merchant and officials of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp.
Charles Lawson, Ellsworth Hall supervisor and Richard Brummett, Camp supervisor, visited the store and protested to the operator that non-campers were acquiring the badges. After a later telephone call to Russell L. Wiley, Camp director, a settlement was reached and the store supposedly stopped making the false badges.
The only discrepancy in the badges and the real ones seems to have been that the fakes did not have the white backing present on the originals. The store's manager reported only half a dozen badges were sold,
but eight badges have been confiscated by camp officials and another four were displayed at the store.
Two Ellsworth Hall counselors investigated the store. One of them said, "We found a Lawrence teen-ager in front of Lewis Hall after closing last Wednesday with a fake badge on." The two counselors went downtown and ordered two counselor badges. When they received their badges, paying $1.50 each, four more counselor badges were ordered. These badges, after camp officials visited the store, were given to other counselors free of charge.
The store had apparently been selling the badges to campers and non-campers alike. The manager said he never questioned buyers if they were campers until camp officials complained.
2
KAMPER KANSAN
Friday, July 26, 1968
o b
Gripes now seem less important
It does not seem too important any more that co-ed sunbathing is forbidden or all lights have to be out by 10 p.m. Campers have become used to running to their rooms to dry their hands. Some have even furnished their own paper towels.
What about not riding in cars? Many campers will undoubtedly return home more fit than when they left. It was recognized by most campers that this rule was established for the protection of both campers and administration.
Dating non-campers? No one complains about this anymore. It was annoying, but camp lasts only six weeks. That leaves 46 weeks to date non-campers.
Having to wear dresses on Sundays drew many complaints from girls at the beginning of camp. The complaint lessened as campers enjoyed seeing their friends well-dressed.
One complaint, which should possibly be taken under consideration, concerns the director of the camp, Russell L. Wiley. It disturbed some campers that when they would ask Wiley questions he would have to turn to his associates for the answers. The opinion was formed that Wiley himself was only indirectly related to the camp.
The complaint can be answered when one stops to realize that Wiley directs a summer camp of 2100 high school students and that he, like a high school principal, needs advisers to keep him informed of the activities of the seven camp divisions.
There were miscellaneous complaints, such as being forbidden to enter the Trail Room or see "Rosemary's Baby." These complaints blew away in the wind. The Trail Room soon lost its importance. Many campers could wait until they returned home to see "Rosemary's Baby." Those who could not wait probably managed to see it anyway.
Having to wear badges was considered a major issue. Wearing them no longer troubles many campers, although having impostors wear them causes an even larger issue.
So ends the list of trivial complaints which occupy some of the camper's time. Before leaving camp, those young people who felt the rules were unreasonable should place themselves in the administration's position. They should picture themselves responsible for 2,100 people ranging between the ages of 13 and 18.
There might only be five years of difference, but those five years represent many stages in habits, morals, ideals and maturity. It has been pointed out and proven through the actions of some campers that there are those who are not yet responsible for themselves and must therefore have someone else responsible for them.
By now campers are reminiscing about camp. Hopefully, they are thinking about good times, new friends, new outlooks and an invaluable experience in people and education. Perhaps too, the administration of the camp is reminiscing and judging the 1968 camp so they will be able to work with the 1969 campers and take further steps in having a more successful Midwestern Music and Art Camp.
CAMP FORMAL
JACKSON of vice squad here, mA'Am. I've had a REPORT OF SOME NAKED LIGHTS...
Naked lights mar formal dance
- Naked lights strung across the room.
- No decorations.
- No danceable music.
- Dresses caught in closing bus doors.
These were some of the reasons the camp formal has been called by many campers "the worst activity of the entire six weeks."
It would seem the formal dance would be the one opportunity when the entire camp could be brought together in friendliness and fun, a last chance to get together before going home. Instead, the movies in Murphy Hall and downtown Lawrence seemed to receive a larger percentage of the campers than did the dance.
The ballroom was called by one camper, "a barren, hollow warehouse," because of the lack of decoration and the strings of naked light bulbs strung across the room.
The system of transportation to and from the Kansas Union should also be improved. The bus situation was so bad that some campers were forced to ride standing up. One girl was so unfortunate after the dance was over that her dress was caught by the quickly closing bus doors, leaving part of her dress and her date behind.
to appropriate funds to buy decorations, the Art department could have made decorations, transforming the ballroom into one with a camp "theme."
All of these things contributed to at least some campers attending the dance, the formal was a flop.
The music at the dance should have been coordinated with the musical style of the day by a professional band rather than jazz played by the counselor's Kix band and the Kammer Kix band.
Definitions
R often T ouchy H appiness
U gly A dministrative O ver
L aws G oof of Mutual
E explaining S ummer E cstasy
S in
Let's hope next year's formal is better.
Even if the camp officials did not want
—Sandy Barnett
New Books
The Hughes book is called BASHFUL BILLIONAIRE (Dell, 95 cents), and it's by Albert B. Gerber. The cover emblazons the fact that the book is unauthorized, but what book about Hughes wouldn't be? Recently Hughes has been on the front pages in his efforts to buy the controlling interest in ABC, and he has been the mighty mystery man of the airplane industry for 35 years. There also was a time when he was famous for his Hollywood affairs,
Campers come from 49 states
15 Washington
26 Montana
North Dakota 8
28 Oregon
17 Idaho
11 Wyoming
South Dakota 17
Minnesota
89 Wisconsin
73 Michigan
17 New York
11 Massachusetts
R.I.Conn
Nebraska 101
74 Iowa
136 Illinois
68 Indiana
97 Ohio
Pennsylvania
47
New Jersey
Delaware Maryland
Nevada 3
8 Utah
59 Colorado
KANSAS 733
319 Missouri
17 Kentucky
24 Virginia
14 North Carolina
10 Arizona
New Mexico 46
133 Oklahoma
11 Arkansas
20 Tennessee
5 South Carolina
15 Georgia
14 Louisiana
8 Alabama
5 Florida
ALASKA - 5
HAWAII - 3
MEXICO - 1
LIYA - 1
The Library
AS SEEN BY
THE FRESHMAN
The Library
AS SEEN BY
THE FRESHMAN
GRAD STUDENT
RESERVE BOOKS
PAY
FINES
HERE
LittleTown on Campus*
The Library
AS SEEN BY
THE FRESHMAN
GRAD STUDENT
RESERVE BOOKS
PAY
FINES
HERE
'Little Man on Campus'
TUNNEL
OF
LOVE
THE LOVERS
THE PROFESSORS
5-22 BELL
THE TIRED STUDENT
RESERVE BOOKS
PAY
FINES
HERE
LittleTian on Campus
TUNNEL
OF
LOVE
THE LOVERS
THE PROFESSOR
S-22 Failure
THE TIRED STUDENT
kamper kansan
The Kamper Kansan, camp newspaper at the Midwestern Music and Art Club in Chicago, posted on Fridays. It is written by members of the Journalism Division of the Kamper Kansan.
The opinions expressed in the editorial columns are those of the editorial staff of the newspaper. Guest editorial views are not necessarily those of the editorial staff. Any opinions expressed in the Kemper Kansan are not necessarily those of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp or the University of Kansas.
Photography Bill Seymour
Adviser Robert Stevens
Editor in Chief Claudia Peebles
News Editor Sue Greenbaum
Editorial Editor Pat Hackney
Feature Editor Muriel Bimm, Lucia Green
Sports Editor Craig Williams
Photo Editor Mike Magee
Connie Bates, Janette Clayton, Mike Dohn, Maureen Downy, Cheryl Gordon, Brenda Jones, Barbara Kimple, Evangeline Moss, Julie Sullivan, Danielle Stevens, Lia Slaughter, George Stradman, Lou Ann Thomas, Judy Bennett, Claudia Leebies, Mary Gaydos, and Tim Cline
Friday, July 26, 1968
KAMPER KANSAN
1960
Kansan photo by Mike Magce
RICHARD BRUMMETT
Camp rebellion bugs Brummett
By LUCIA GREEN
Kansap Staff Reporter
A man who says little, agrees readily and appears willing, Richard Brummett, camp supervisor, said the camper rebellion against rules is much more pronounced this year than in years past.
Working out of Russell Wiley's office is a full-time summer job for Brummett. He also directs a band in the Junior High Camp. His winter job consists of direction of bands at the Winfield, Kansas junior high and senior high.
BRUMMETT HAS been with the band camp, which he describes as a learning institution
at an accelerated rate, for eight years and has hopes of returning next year.
Besides working with teenagers at camp and in Winfield, his three children are also teenagers. His oldest daughter was married two weeks ago.
During his spare time, he watches professional ballgames on TV or attends major university games. He occasionally plays trumpet in dance bands in Wichita. He received his music degree from Southwestern University at Winfield and is studying now at Wichita State University.
Yearbook writers correct mistakes
When proofs were read for the 1968 Tempo a week ago, only three mistakes were found—and they were, fortunately, corrected.
It seems that the photographer's name was accidentally left off the staff listing, a guest conductor was not put on the conductor's page—and page one was planned for a left hand page instead of a right hand page.
These mistakes were minor, however, when compared to the problems involved in putting out an 88-page plus four-color cover yearbook in what amounted to eight class meetings.
The students were assigned specific divisions to plan and execute. They worked with Bill Seymour, photography instructor, in setting up time schedules, getting proofs of photographs, and choosing enlargements.
When pictures of each division had been selected, students planned layouts and chose quotes from popular Simon and Garfunkel songs—a style they had previously agreed to follow.
The form for the copy has been set by a poem used on the move-in pages by Leslie Seeman, Washington, D.C.
Four colors were used on the book for the first time this year.
ACCORDING TO Carrie Feinstein, editor, this was done for two purposes: "The students had so little time to work on the inside I didn't want them to get involved on choosing a cover. And besides, when color is used, getting it ready for the press is difficult and time-consuming. But I think the cover is an excellent one and one students will like."
A professional designer was called in to design the cover late in May before camp began.
Students agreed to use few cutlines in the book so campers could identify situations and classes instead of specific individuals. Quotes from songs were chosen to fit the picture and create a mood.
Mrs. Feinstein pointed out that there were events in camp such as the election of the king and queen, that were not included in Tempo.
"Our deadlines simply don't let us, although we'd like very much to include it," she said. "We can't have candids from all the guest conductors either, because we must have most of the book to the printer by the first week in July. Our final deadline for copy, pictures, anything at all, was July 9, this year. Considering that, the students did a fine job of putting out the book."
No more reveilles
Proctors close shop
The close of camp this week-end will mean the start of a normal life for Bob Flannery and Tom Wilcox, counselors of 4 South at Joseph R. Pearson residence hall.
There will be no more 5:30 reveilles, friendly sabotage missions by wing campers, or practical jokes. During the past six weeks Flannery and Wilcox have labored under a hectic schedule. The duo started their day at 5:30 a.m. in order to dress for daily rounds at 6.
They found, however, their morning visits were seldom met with enthusiasm. The boys had their share of "passive resistance" tactics during the six weeks. Tape and shaving cream on light switches and screams of anguish were just a part of the daily morning routing.
After the boys had finally been dragged from bed, the counselors held room inspection. While most of the boys left their rooms reasonably neat, Flannery said, sometimes it was obvious by the room's appearance no attempt had been made to clean anything. It was angering, he said, to give the boys one or two chances to prevent gigs and have warnings fall on deaf ears.
The counselors have created their own list of penances. Having campers sweep stairwells and lobbies after lights out are among their favorites.
From 7 a.m. to 5 p.m. the counselors were free to pursue their own interests. Many of the counselors worked or attended classes during the day. The 4 South counselors were no exceptions. Flannery works at a department store during the day, and Wilcox took voice lessons, but they usually returned to the dorms to eat lunch and supervise wing athletic meets in the afternoon.
"It is the duty of a counselor to encourage sports among the boys." Flannery said. He and Wilcox stressed the importance of participation in athletics by signing each boy in at least one event. Their campaign had a good degree of success-4 South of JRP was in top position in competition for the Wiley Cup
At 5 p.m. all counselors had to be on the campus, although not necessarily in their respective dorms. During unstructured time from 5 to 9:30 p.m., many counselors found time to enjoy recreational facilities attend concerts and plays, and visit friends.
Although 10 p.m. "lights out" did not arouse quite as much anathema as did "lights on," Flannery and Wilcox still had
their share of problems. Constant pleas for extended hours, missing campers, and switching rooms were just a few normal pranks that piagued them.
What do counselors think of the new camp rules? Flannery, who attended camp for two years during high school, said although many camp rules have remained the same in the past few years, the general attitude is stricter.
"I can see the reasons for rules about staying away from dangerous places, riding in cars, and dating non-campers, and I realize the campers have been told they would be sent home if they didn't obey these rules. But I think that usually a camper ought to be given a second chance before he is sent home.
Flannery also expressed concern that counselors were not allowed to play active parts in determining whether a camper is dismissed from camp or not. He feels that while
counselors can have no real power in the camp, they might be able to help work things out between campers and administrators. He reported in some cases counselors were not notified of a student's dismissal
Flannery and Wilcox found a large part of their job is passive rather than active. The campers furnish more entertainment than is often anticipated, but when comedy is involved, the counselors are more often than not the butt of the jokes.
Light-hearted boys in 4 South JRP have nicknamed Wilcox "Jerry." As a camper explained it, "That is short for Jerry Lewis (whom Wilcox resembles) or 'Tom and . . .,' whichever you prefer." Regardless of the boys' aims they managed to keep the two counselors who try admirably to avoid giggles, in a constant state of blushing existence.
No more 5:30 a.m. reveilles,
friendly sabotage missions, or
practical jokes . . . camp is
finaly over.
Conductor sees career as work
By EVANGELINE MATHY
Kansas Staff Reporter
"I decided to be a conductor when I was three," Victor Allesandro, one of this week's guest conductors, said.
Allesandro, regular conductor of the San Antonio Symphony and Grand Opera, has been conducting symphony orchestras since he was 22, and this is his 14th year at the Midwestern Music and Art Camp.
"I have always been impressed with the Camp," Allesandro said. "Mr. Wiley has done a fantastic job." He noted the progress the Camp has made in the last 14 years, and attributed much of this to the outstanding faculty. He summed his opinion up in two words, "It's outstanding!"
Every student who comes to the camp realizes there are no short cuts, Alesandro added. It is hard work.
The San Antonio Symphony is one of the 22 major symphony orchestras in the United States.
"They do a tremendous amount of work, but they also learn a tremendous amount."
"It is unique." Allesandro said, "in that it is one of the few to have the symphony and opera in the same organization." Last
year Allesandro conducted 179 performances and seven operas. He also conducted the New York City Opera. The San Antonio Symphony has just made two recordings, "Music of Rodrigo" and "Music of Vivaldo." In January CBS is going to videotape the orchestra, and in march they will do a half-hour program for television.
While he is here, Allesandro will conduct numbers in the Symphony Orchestra, the Concert Orchestra and the Concert Band.
Starting August 1, he will conduct at the Hollywood Bowl, and following that, he will go to Saratoga to conduct the Congress of Strings. In November he will be conducting in Europe.
Allesandro does not recommend a career as a conductor to anyone unless they want to "work long, hard hours, never see their family, and never get a vacation."
He added a conductor must have an unusual amount of endurance and patience. He has got to keep a board of directors, 90 musicians, and an audience happy. "At least that's what I try to do."
SALVATORE LUPA
VICTOR ALLESANDRO
--Kansan photo by Mike Magee
Concentration and motion play an important part in directing, as Allesandro, guest conductor, displays while conducting the orchestra.
4
KAMPER KANSAN
Friday, July 26,1968
Girls Intramurals
SOFTEALL
Yellow League
Name of hall, Wing Won Lost
VOLLEYBALL
Green League
Name of hall, Wing Won Lost
McCollum, 8s . 6 0
McCollum, 8e . 5 1
Lewis, 7n . 5 1
Lewis, 7s . 3 3
Lewis, 2n . 3 3
Lewis, 5s . 2 4
McCollum, 6s . 2 4
McCollum, 3s . 1 5
McCollum, 4w . 0 6
McCollum, 9s . 0 6
Pink League
of hall. Wing Won Lost
White League
Tan League
Chartruse League
Name of hall, Wing Won Lost
Lewis, 3s . . . . . . . . . 6 0
Lewis, 5n . . . . . . . . . 5 1
McCollum, 4s . . . . . . . . 5 1
Lewis, 4n . . . . . . . . . 4 2
McCollum, 3s . . . . . . . . 2 4
McCollum, 10e . . . . . . . . 1 5
McCollum, 6e . . . . . . . . 1 5
McCollum, 5s . . . . . . . . 1 5
McCollum, 10s . . . . . . . . 0 6
Name of hall, Wing Won Lost
Lewis, 6s... 6 0
McCollum, 4s... 5 1
McCollum, 7e... 4 2
McCollum, 5w... 3 3
Lewis, 2s... 2 4
McCollum, 10s... 2 4
Lewis, 3s... 1 5
McCollum, 8w... 1 5
Name of hall, Wing Won Lost
Lewis, 6s ...5 1
Lewis, 4s ...5 1
Lewis, 7n ...4 2
McCollum, 8s ...4 2
McCollum, 4e ...3 3
McCollum, 3e ...3 3
McCollum, 4w ...2 4
McCollum, 3w ...0 6
McCollum, 7s ...0 6
10101010101010101010101010101010101010101010101010101010101010101010101010101010101010101010101010101
—Kansan photo by Mike Magee
VOLLEYBALL
HIGH JUMPERS
BASKETBALL
Name of hall, WingWon Lost
Lewis, 3n .6 0
McCollum, 6s .4 3
Lewis, 2n .4 3
McCollum, 8w .3 3
McCollum, 9s .3 3
McCollum, 5w .3 3
McCollum, 7e .2 4
Lewis, 5s .1 5
McCollum, 10w .0 6
Purple League
hall, WingWon Lost
Name of hall, Wing Won Lost
Lewis, 3s . . . . . . . . . 5 1
Lewis, 5n . . . . . . . . . 5 1
Lewis, 6n . . . . . . . . . 4 2
McCollum, 8e . . . . . . . . 3 3
McCollum, 4w . . . . . . . . 2 4
McCollum, 3w . . . . . . . . 1 5
McCollum, 8w . . . . . . . . 1 5
McCollum, 3s . . . . . . . . 0 6
Blue League
Boy's Intramurals
Frantic play coupled with enthusiastic leaps helped win or lose the WWW cup for many volleyball teams.
VOLLEYBALL
SOFTBALL
Skunk League
Name of Hall, Wing Won Lost Name of Hall, w
Ellsworth, 10s . . . . . 6 1 Ellsworth, 10s
Pearson, 3n . . . . . . 6 1 Pearson, 3n . . . .
Ellsworth, 7s . . . . . . 5 2 Ellsworth, 8n . . . .
Pearson, 4s . . . . . . 5 2 Ellsworth, 6n . . . .
Ellsworth, 8n . . . . . . 4 3 Ellsworth, 5s . . . .
Ellsworth, 5n . . . . . . 4 3 Ellsworth, 7s . . . .
Ellsworth, 9s . . . . . . 2 5 Pearson, 2n . . . .
Ellsworth, 6s . . . . . . 1 6 Ellsworth, 9s . . . .
Ellsworth, 7n . . . . . . 1 6 Ellsworth, 8s . . . .
Ellsworth, 4s . . . . . . 0 7 Ellsworth, 3s . . .
BASKETBALL
Name of Hall, Wing Won Lost
Ellsworth, 10s .5 1
Pearson, 3n .5 1
Ellsworth, 8n .5 1
Ellsworth, 6n .4 2
Ellsworth, 5s .3 3
Ellsworth, 7s .2 4
Pearson, 2n .2 4
Ellsworth, 9s .1 5
Ellsworth, 8s .1 5
Ellsworth, 3s .1 5
Donkey League
Squirrel League
Name of Hall, Wing Won Lost
Pearson, 2n .5 0
Pearson, 4s .5 0
Ellsworth, 3s .3 2
Ellsworth, 7s .3 2
Ellsworth, 5s .2 3
Ellsworth, 6s .2 3
Ellsworth, 5n .2 3
Ellsworth, 6n .1 4
Ellsworth, 7n .1 4
Ellsworth, 8s .0 5
Concerts close another Camp
FRIDAY EVENING CONCERT 7:15 p.m.
GOLD BAND
David Catron, Conductor
Al E. Rembold, Guest Conductor
Claude Smith, Guest Conductor
Milburn Carev. Guest Conductor
Valdres ... Hanssen
Prelude and Fugue ... Houston Bright
Suite of Old American Dances ... R. R. Bennett
Gerhardt
Overture in C ... Catel
Catron. conducting
Rembold, conducting
Incidental Suite ... Claude Smith
Tarantella
Nocturne
Rondo
Smith, conducting
Symphony No. 6 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Tschaikowsky
Andante
March
Theme Song
Carey, conducting
Irish Tune from County Derry . . . . arr. Percy Grainger
SATURDAY AFTERNOON CONCERT
2:15 p.m.
Verbum caro factum est . . . . . . . . . Hans Leo Hassler
Everything In Its Place . . . . . . . . . Joseph Haydn
Time . . . . . . . . . . Benjamin Britten
sam was a man . . . . . . . . Vincent Persichetti
THE CHORALE
Darrell Bonne, Conductor
SYMPHONIC CHOIR
Duncan Couch, Conductor
Jordan Pfeuchh, Coach
CONCERT ORCHESTRA
Gerald M. Carney, Conductor
Lloyd Pfautsch, Guest Conductor
Pfautsch, conducting Barbara Rundle, Accompanist
Pfautsch, conducting
Benne, conducting Mike Berger, French Horn
The Mystic Trumpeter ...Norman Deilo Joio
Carnev. conducting
Kenneth Thompson, Guest Conductor
Trumpet Voluntary...Henry Purcell
Victor Alessandro, Guest Conductor Kenneth Thompson, Guest Conductor
Coriolanus, Overture . . . . . Ludwig v. Beethoven
Symphony No. 6 in B Minor . . Peter I. Tschaikowsky Second movement: Allegro con grazia
Thompson, conducting
Fugue in G Minor ... Bach-Caillet
Alessandro, conducting
RED BAND
LeRoy Esau, Conductor
Richard Brummett, Guest Conductor
Claude Smith, Guest Conductor
Col. F. Vivian Dunn, Guest Conductor
Smith, conducting
Brummett, conducting
Esau, conducting
Golden Eagle March . . . . . . . Harold Walters
Festivo ... Vaclav Nelhyb
Chorale and Allegro ... Claude Smith
SUNDAY AFTERNOON CONCERT
2:15 p.m.
Famous Songs of the British Isles . . . F. Vivian Dunn
Die Diedermass . . . Johann Strauss
Theme Song
Irish Tune from County Derry . . . . arr. Percy Grainger
Col. Dunn, conducting
CHAMBER CHOIR Darrell Benne, Conductor Lloyd Pautsch, Guest Conductor
Pfautsch, conducting Barbara Rundle, Accompanist
Praise to the Lord, The Almighty . . . . . . . Hugo Distler
Heilig . . . . . . . . . . . Felix Mendelsohn
More Nursery Rhymes . . . . . . . . . . Ralph Hunter
Sing a Song of Sixpence
Little Miss Muffet
The Queen of Hearts
Hev Diddle. Diddle
CONCERT CHOIR Duncan Couch, Conductor
Ave verum . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . W. A. Mozart
It's a Raggy Waltz . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Dave Brubeck
Sing Praises . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Liovd Paufsch
Lloyd Pfautsch, Guest Conductor
Pfautsch, conducting Barbara Rundle, Accompanist
Pfautsch, conducting
COMBINED CHOIRS
Duncan Couch and Darren Benne, Conductors
To St. Cecelia ... Norman Dello Joio
Benne, conducting Steve Dickson, Bass with Brass Ensemble
SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
Gerald M. Carney, Conductor
Victor Alessandro, Guest Conductor
Academic Festival Overture ... Johannes Brahms
Carney, conducting
Symphony No. 2 in E Minor . . . . Sergei Rachmaninoff First movement: Lento and moderato Third movement: Adagio Fourth movement: Allegro vivace
Allegro vivace Alessandro, conducting
Irish Tune from County Derry . . . arr. Percy Grainger
Carney, conducting
SUNDAY EVENING CONCERY
7:00 p.m.
BLUE BAND
DECEE BARN
Kenneth Bloomquist, Conductor
D. O. Wiley, Guest Conductor
Col. F. Vivian Dunn, Guest Conductor
Theme Song
Irish Tune from County Derry ... arr. Percy Grainger
Jericho Rhapsody ... Morton Gould
Bloomquist, conducting
Il Guaranv A. Carlos Gomez
Wiley, conducting
Crown Imperial . . . . . . . . . William Walton
Col. Dunn, conducting
Finale from Symphony No.1 in G Minor . . . Kalinniko
CONCERT BAND
Russell L. Wiley, Conductor Milburn Carey, Guest Conductor D.O. Wiley, Guest Conductor Col.F. Vivian Dunn, Guest Conductor Victor Alessandro, Guest Conductor
Overture to "William Tell" ... G. Rossini
Russell Wiley, conducting
Toccata Marziale ... Vaughan Williams
Carey, conducting
Overture to "Euryanthe" . . . . Carl Maria von Weber
D. O. Wiley, conducting
Concerto for Band . . . . . . . . . . . . Gordon Jacobs
Allegro con brio
Adagio
Col. Dunn, conducting
Pines of the Appian Way from "Pines of Rome" ... Ottorino Resnighi
Alessandro, conducting
1812 Overture . . . Peter Tschaikowsky
Theme Song
Irish Tune from County Derry . . arr. Percy Grainger
Irish Tune from County Derry . . arr. Percy Grainger Russell Wiley, conducting
KU
THE SUMMER SESSION kansan
A student newspaper serving KU
WEATHER SUNNY
77th Year, No.14
See Weather Below
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Tuesday, July 30, 1968
1975
—Kansan Photo by Jan Maxwell
CAMPERS HIT THE ROAD
The 2,100 high school students attending the 31st session of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp began leaving Friday afternoon and by Monday morning the four dormitories housing the campers were empty.
Draft reforms sought by Dole
Full-time students in good standing at junior and community colleges should be allowed draft deferments for the future well-being of America, Rep. Bob Dole said last week.
"Education is certainly a vital force in America's well-being," Dole said. He is the author of an eight-point bill recently introduced in Congress to achieve "urgently needed draft reforms."
The U.S. Congressman from Kansas, is a candidate for the Republican nomination to the U.S. Senate this year. He spoke at the sidewalk bazaar here.
Dole said his bill would also extend deferments, but not exemptions, to students already in graduate school, allowing them
"IT IS IMPERATIVE the Congress affirm this year its commitment to make the draft as fair and as just as possible," he said.
To accomplish this the draft laws must be revised and viewed in terms of the total manpower needs of the nation.
to complete their academic work. Part-time students in essential fields of study would also be granted deferments.
"TODAY, THE draft is not fair and just. It is not administered with complete impartiality or with total justice, and the Armed Forces requirements for manpower are not weighed or determined within a coherent framework of the nation's total manpower needs," he said.
Dole's bill also requires, except in wartime, physical and mental standards for induction be no lower than those for voluntary enlistments and that national standards for occupational deferments be established.
It also reiterates the Congressional statement of intent that military manpower needs be met as far as possible by volunteers, and that draft quotas be set far enough in advance to give draftees 30 days notice before induction
Frosh program starts 3rd year
WEATHER
By ERIC KRAMER Journalism Camp Reporter
Sunny skies will prevail today according to the U.S. Weather Bureau. The highs today will touch 90 degrees and the lows tonight will hover around 70.
The college within a college program will begin its third year at KU this fall, for all freshmen enrolled in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
The same five colleges which were established last year will continue this year with the offices to be in the residence hall which houses the plurality of members. The program is designed to give freshmen and sophomores the advantages of a small college within the framework of a large university.
"Many parents are pleased with the program even more than the students," Lewis said. He emphasized that the program is not designed in any way to hurt fraternities.
THEIS PROGRAM was first conceived several years ago by two University committees, the Educational Policies Committee and the College Intermediary Board. Since KU's initiation of the plan, many other states have begun putting similar programs into operation—particularly California.
THE SYSTEM was designed to give students a sense of community spirit. Students will live together and know each other better because they will attend some of the same classes and extra-curricular activities together, Jerry Lewis, director of the program, said.
An experimental fore-runner, Centennial College, was opened in the fall of 1966 with 300 students. At this time all of the students were housed in Oliver and Ellsworth residence halls. Last year the program was expanded to include all incoming freshmen in the College, no matter where they lived.
The five colleges again this year are Centennial, Oliver, Pearson, North and Corbin.
CENTENIAL COLLEGE will have offices in Ellsworth Hall and will include 445 men and women from Ellsworth and Oliver halls, Phi Delta Theta, Phi Kappa Psi, Phi Kappa Tau and Tau Kappa Epsilon.
Oliver College will have offices in Oliver Hall and will include 430 men and women from Oliver, Naismith, McColllum and Templin halls, Alpha Kappa Lambda, Lambda Chi Alpha, Phi Gamma
Delta, Sigma Phi Epsilon and Phi Kappa Sigma.
FINALLY, THE bill removes current prohibitions against the lottery in order to open other avenues to the selection of inductees.
The offices for Pearson College will be in Joseph R. Pearson, JRP and Gertrude Sellards Pearson halls; Pearson, Sellards, and Watkins Scholarship halls; and Delta Tau Delta, Delta Chi Phi, Phi Kappa Theta, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Sigma Nu, and Theta Chi fraternities will house the college's 400 students.
North College, named after the original college building in Lawrence, will have offices at GSP and will include 380 students from
JRP, GSP, Douthart, Grace Pearson and Stephenson Scholarship halls, and Acacia, Alpha Phi Alpha, Alpha Tau Omega, Beta Sigma Psi, Beta Tau, Beta Theta Pi and Kappa Sigma.
Last Kansan
Corbin College with 400 students has offices in Corbin Hall. The students will reside in Corbin and Joseph R. Pearson Halls; Battenfeld, Jolliffe and Miller Scholarship halls; and Alpha Epsilon Pi, Delta Sigma Phi, Delta Upsilon, Kappa Alpha Psi, Pi Kappa Alpha, Sigma Chi and Triangle fraternities.
"We must insure that our draft practices are both scrupulously fair and are in agreement with and subordinate to the total manpower needs of the nation," Dole concluded.
The Summer Session Kansan suspends publication with today's issue for the 1968 Summer Term. The University Daily Kansan will begin publishing for the fall semester on Sept. 14.
New KU librarian
Heron predicts transmission of books
By LUCIA GREEN Journalism Camp Reporter
In a quiet, excited voice, David W. Heron, new director of libraries at KU, presented the hope of eventually transmitting pages of a book by high frequency radio systems for interlibrary services.
This new process is known as telefacsimile and according to Heron will become extremely efficient for the interlibrary service.
Another process being experimented is the use of cathode ray tubes. The page will be projected on the tube of which a picture will then be taken. This process is similar to reproducing photographs for newspapers but with more speed of relay and better definition of the pictures.
Heron came from the University of Nevada at Reno where he had been director for seven years. He also served as special library adviser of the University of Ryukyu and as librarian of the American Embassy in Tokyo.
HERON CAME to KU partly out of an initial curiosity and because the library facilities at KU are large enough to present a challenge.
When Heron was working in Japan, the Embassy had just been reactivated from the war. Other libraries in Tokyo were not yet functioning and the Embassy library received many requests for information. As the libraries opened the Embassy library's role decreased plus funds were
insufficient to keep operating on the proper level.
KNITTING HIS BROW, Heron described his philosophy of library administration. As funds permit, as much material as possible should be made available to the students in a well-organized setup To him, there is a challenge in organizing a big university library.
KU has 200,000 volumes that have not yet been catalogued. This reflects a "very adequate expenditure on books but not quite enough on a staff." Heron said.
Heron said most students are more interested in participating in the administrative affairs of the library which is reflective in the expectations of service.
"MOST IMPORTANT to the student," Heron said, "is for the administration to be sensitive to the frustrations students encounter by using a big library." The bigger the library facility the harder it is to be convenient for the student.
Filling his "corn cob" pipe and leaning back in his chair, Heron commented on his family. His oldest daughter, Holly, is now in Europe on a guided tour. When she returns she will be a second semester sophomore at Berkeley.
James, the oldest son, is at the University of Washington studying oceanography under the Summer Secondary Science Program. One other son, Charles, 3, is "a constant source of great pleasure and strain." Heron said.
M. G. S. M. R. I. R. R. I. R
—Kansan Photo by Jan Maxwell
DAVID W. HERON
2
THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN
Tuesday, July 30, 1968
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS
T-3
© BRODER
— SHE'D MAKE YA SWELL BLIND PATE! ASK WORTHAL — I FIXED HIM LIP WITH HER EARLIER THIS EVENING.
THE SUMMER SESSION kansan
Kansan Telephone Numbers
Newsroom—UN 4-3646 Business Office—UN 4-4358
The Summer Session Kansan, student newspaper at the University of Kansas, is represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 Street, New York, N.Y., 10022. Mail subscription rates: $6 a semester or $10 a year. Published and second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas, every Tuesday and Friday for the duration of the Summer Session, except July 5. Accommodations may be available upon request. The Summer Session Kansan are offered to students without regard to color, creed or national origin.
The opinions expressed in the editorial columns are those of the editorial staff of the newspaper. Guest editorial views are not necessarily the same as those of the editor's. Any opinions expressed in the Summer Session Kansan University of Kansas Administration or the Kansas State Board of Regents.
Executive Staff
Business Manager
Jack Haney
Mel Adams
Helen Ross
Robert Stevens
Advisor
Office Manager
Managing Editor
Assistant Managing Editors
Eric Kramer, Darryl Pinkney, R Richard Viets, and Diane Wanek
Photography Advisor ...
Bill Seymour Dr. Larry Day
Cell research specialist hired
Kenneth John Morrow Jr., a specialist in genetics and cell research, has been appointed assistant professor of zoology at the University of Kansas.
A native of Seattle, Wash. Morrow holds degrees from the University of Washington, including the Ph.D. in 1644. For the next two years he held a National
Institute of Health post-doctoral fellowship at the Institute of Genetics University of Pavia in Pavia, Italy.
Since 1966 he has been a research associate at the Institute for Cancer Research in Philadelphia, Pa. This summer he is an assistant professor at Temple University in Philadelphia.
Dreams become nightmares
"Ask not what your country can do for you; ask what you can do for your country," John F. Kennedy said.
"Some men see things as they are and ask 'why'; I dream things that never were and ask 'why not?' said Robert F. Kennedy.
"I have a dream," said Martin Luther King.
These men were all dreamers in an age when dreams seldom come true.
All their dreams were started on their way to peace, harmony, and brotherhood. They were glorious plans to be put into effect without violence. The benefits of
peace were for people of all races.
Violence turned their dreams into nightmares; we are allowing peace to die a dream instead of continuing the cause.
Assassination, rioting, looting, violence are fast becoming America's middle name.
America, the beautiful, America, God's home town, is being smashed beneath torrents of uncontrolled violence.
The time has come to leave our ideals and face reality NOW before it hits us in the face again.
Violence in America cannot be dealt with and overcome by love hanging from a hip-
pie's flower, or mass murder or a supreme belief in a god who will "deliver us from evil."
He has left the problem up to us.
The supreme belief must now be in ourselves. Belief in each one of us. Belief and understanding. The way to salvation? Perhaps.
To paraphrase the philosophers, "Is life one long period of peace broken up by short sessions of war, or is life one period of war broken up by short periods of peace?"
Which is it?
Publicity of gap is problem
—Janet Wysocki
The "generation gap" is no wider today than it ever has been before. The gap between the generations is widest in the area of communication between the generations. Just because the so-called "generation gap" is so well publicized doesn't mean that it exists.
Modern mothers don't inform their children about many aspects of life in the 20th century. Mothers don't talk with their children about their problems, they just talk at them. Soon they realize their children just "tune them out," and that their children don't pay any attention.
Fathers don't provide adequate information to their sons on various issues and problems which they are forced to deal with in their daily existence, thus causing
WE, at THE MAGIC CIRCUS invite YOU to see what we have to offer.
We have posters, beads, handmade jewelry, and imported earrings. We have pipes of all kinds, incense, cigarette papers, and our specialty-BLACK LIGHTS. Come in and see us. We're unique.
a void in their relationships with their sons.
—Christine Thompson
The Magic Circus 706 Mass.
We Are . . .
CAMPUS SEX- an Important New Report
A definitive report on a twoyear study by a major university. Vance Packard describes the revolution in sex attitudes and behavior of college students here and abroad. Just how far students have come—and will go—with sex. His documented findings, based on thousands of questionnaires distributed throughout the world are revealed in an authoritative look at what the "now" generation thinks, feels and does about sex. Don't miss this challenging, direct and important feature
"SEX On The Campus"
in August
McCall's
at all newsstands now
New Books
Chaucer and His Contemporaries: Essays on Medieval Literature and Thought, edited by Helaine Newstead (Premier, 95 cents)—A selection that will bring the 14th century to life for many readers. The major poets who are treated are Geoffrey Chaucer, William Langland, and the anonymous author of "Sir Gawain and the Green Knight."
The book about the teen-age baddie is called ANGEL LOVES NOBODY (Dell, 75 cents), and the author is Richard Miles. Angel is a brainy kid full of hate, and to take care of his hates he plots against the establishment of Betsy Ross Junior High. Let us hope that this one doesn't give anybody any ideas.
The Mary Roberts Rinehart thing is a group of stories going back a quarter of a century — THE FRIGHTENED WIFE (Dell, 50 cents). Mrs. Rinehart's skill was in quiet and polite suspense, intricate crimes and complex solutions, damsels in distress. No tough private eyes trying to get in bed with every broad in the book.
Finally, a suspense story by Phyllis Brett Young called Undine (Crest, 60 cents). Though it's a notch better than the usual Gothic novel it is somewhat incredible stuff, likely to remind some readers of such thrillers as "Rebecca" and "The Uninvited." But, come to think of it, how can you do much better than those two—thrillerwise?
For Student Living This Fall It's NAISMITH HALL
New Features added this year for your pleasure:
- Heated Swimming Pool
Large Recreation Room
Vacancies still available
For Information call VI 3-8559
THE HILTON BAY MALL
Tuesday, July 30, 1968
THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN
3
Army ROTC-
Cadets attend training
By MIKE DOHN
BY MIKE DOHN
Journalism Camp Reporter
Fort Riley is the six-week summer home for 42 seniors-to-be in the Army ROTC program at KU.
The cadets are attending one of the two sessions at the Kansas military reservation where they are joined by other seniors from the 17-state Fifth Army Area, which has headquarters in Chicago.
Those from KU this summer include: Thomas W. Barker, Topeka; Joseph Barnes, Fort Monroe, Va.; Leon E. Bergman, Kansas City; Angelito T. Buhison, Leavenworth; John A. Callaghan, Prairie Village; Richard E. Daly, St. Louis; Michael F. Delaney, Fort Leavenworth;
STEPHEN H. DEXTER, Fort Leavenburge; Duane L. Fager, Topeka; Phillip C. Fussman, Humboldt; David F. Guyst, Perryville, Mo.; John B. Hall, Kansas City; John W. Huey, Wamego; Michael W. Huggins, Independ-
dence; Michael D. Isom, Smith Center;
David L. Lane, APO, New York; Robert T. Lattimer, Raytown, Mo.; Warren L. Larson, Parsons; Thomas J. Lavin, APO, New York; George P. Lohmann, APO, New York; John M. Malaney, Wichita; Stephen C. Meredity, Shawnee Mission; Cuchman N. Miller, Winfield; Richard D. Moen, Mission; Alvin Mshower, Norfolk, Va.; Karl D. Musick, Concordia;
William S. Peltman, McPherson; John Plump Jr., Prairie Village; Glenn R. Putter; Carl D. Reinhardt, St. Louis, Mo.; Frank E. Robbins, Wichita; Charles E. Ruby, Edwardsville; Robert N. Starck, Shawnee Mission; Christopher J. Stark, Bartlesville, Okla.; Richard Stegelman, Winfield; Gregory M. Thomas, Ft. Sheridan, Ill.
Thomas D. Washburn, Leavenworth; William W. Weaver Jr., St. Louis, Mo.; Christopher B. Wells, Aurora, Colo.; John H. Westerhoff IV, Milwaukee, Wis.; and David O. Wilson, Overland Park.
State Department praises KU troupe
The "diplomatic" services of the several student theatre demonstration teams from KU have
Few B-school grads accept jobs in Kansas
By MARY SCOTT Journalism Camp Reporter
"Kansas continues to do poorly in attracting KU graduates in the School of Business," Kemp Tool, placement director of the School of Business. said.
The greatest demand is for salesmen of consumer products, insurance salesmen, and corporate accountants, he said.
This year's statistics indicate that the Midwest, especially Missouri, does hold on to many of its students," Tool said. "Were it not, however, for the petroleum industry in Kansas-Oklahoma-Texas, there would be little to hold the KU graduate in the Midwest area."
The number of KU graduates working is Mo. is 33, Ill—9, Kan.
—7, Calif.-6, Ohio, Okla, and Tex.-5, Pa., N.J. and N.Y.-2, and Mich., Minn., N.C., Colo., Wash. and La.-1.
Companies interviewing KU students have increased from 185 in 1966-67 to 210 in 1967-68, and the number of interview schedules has increased from 345 to 435. The average salary per month for a person with an MBA degree for 1967-68 was $850—a 9 per cent increase, MS was $793—a 4 per cent increase, and a BS was $675—a 9 per cent increase.
"I don't know of a single area with too many people," Tool said. "With the Vietnam War and the number of liberal arts graduates going into non-business jobs such as the Peace Corps and government agencies, there is never an oversupply."
been praised by a State Department official.
William K. Braun, cultural affairs officer of the U.S. Embassy in Bucharest, Romania, wrote to Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe:
"I have had the pleasure of assisting with visits of three different groups of theatre students and professors from the University of Kansas. I shall be departing this post this summer for an assignment elsewhere, and before I go, I want to tell you how pleased we at the Embassy have been with each group.
"THE PROFESSORS and the students have been outstanding representatives of the United States both as personalities and as talented performers.
"Whatever I could say in favor of the contact between the U.S. and Romania to which the University of Kansas has contributed so much would be echoed by the Romanian, officials and non-officials, who have been involved in these visits. . . The Rector of the Theatre Institute in Bucharest now refers to this contact as 'traditional.'
"Through your office I would like to thank once more the three professors who have brought groups to Romania during my stay in Bucharest: Bill Kuhlke, Jim Hawes and Tom Rea."
FOR SALE
Accommodations, goods, services,
and employment advertised in the
layer of the publication are accorded
to all students without regard to
color, creed, or national origin.
Western Civilization Notes
Ninth Edition. Comprehensive analysis of this year's reading list. Mimeographed and bound for $4.50. Jayhawk Reference Publications. Call VI2-0113 for free delivery. 8-2
///////////////////////////////
Mid Summer Savings on all used boats and motors. Several to choose from. Come out today.
C&M BOAT SALES
2206 Iowa VI 2-4480
TYPEWRITERS—New & used office and portables, manual & electric. Olympia portables, SCM and small electrics. Typewriter rental and serv- coxes copy and office furniture. Lawrence Typewriter, 700 Mass. VI- 3-3644.
Week-eend flower special $1.00. Offer good Thursday thru Saturday at Alexander's Flowers and Gifts, 826 Iowa. Phone VI 2-1320. 8-2
PSYCHEDELIC LIGHTING MANUAL!
Make your own light machines,
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diagrams and instructions. Send $2.00
to Lightrays. 713B Pine Street.
Biladelphia, Pa. 19106.
Carlslie's 13th street auction sale every Saturday night at 8:00 a.m. to buy Christmas stock. You can buy Monday thru Saturday 8:00 A.M. to 5:30 P.M. 1301 Delaware. V1-3081-084
515 Michigan St. St. B-B-Q — outdoor pit, rib slab to go to $BQ; rib order;
$1.50; Rib sandwich, 85%; chicken;
$1.15; Brisket sandwich, 70%; Hours,
1 a.m. to 11 p.m. Closed Sunday and Tuesday. Phone VI 2-9510. 8-2
WANT ADS
Smith-Corona Classic 12 typewriter.
Call VI 31-7000 at 3:30 P.M. P.M. $80 7-30
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For Complete Motorcycle Insurance Gene Doane Agency
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VI 13-3012
The Castle Tea Room
IN LAWRENCE
STILL THE MOST UNIQUE RESTAURANT
There has to be a good reason why students and faculty alike continue year after year, to patronize us. It could be our warm, friendly atmosphere, fine food, "Old World" decor, or just the fact that we're different. Our four dining rooms, furnished in birch, cherry, walnut, and oak, are perfect for dinner dates, meetings, and even wedding receptions. But, whatever the reason may be, we're glad you've made us the most popular restaurant in Lawrence. We've been that way for 20 years.
If you're new in Lawrence, we'd like to get acquainted with you. If you already know about us, you will be glad to know that we're still here. We haven't changed!
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Phone VI 3-1151
LIBUSE KRIZ
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TRAVEL TIME
---
LET
MAUPINTOUR TRAVEL SERVICE
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Gift Box
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Andrews Gifts
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Exclusive Representative
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For the finest in Fraternity Jewelry
- Badges
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Full Size, Standard Royal Typewriter, like new, reasonable. Also 6-95-14wheel snow tire and 14 inch wheel. Call VI 2-4252 after 5:00.
7-30
Gibson Seni-Hollow EB-2 Bass Guitar, 2 years old, Cherry Red, like new because I hardly used it, $240, no case. Scott Pro, VI 2-8227. 7-30
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still on break-in, like new, must see,
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4-3633 days or 816-PL-3-6394
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SEE AND COMPARE! "New Analysis of Western Civilization." Second edi-
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FOR RENT
2 a/c furnished 1st floor apartments,
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V1-3767 8-2
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VI 2-1107. 7-30
Sleeping rooms with kitchen privilege
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2.
For rent to graduate or mature undergraduate. Extra nice bachelor or studio apartments 1½ blocks from law school, little parking, utilities paid by a parking Quarter ideal for dry conditions. For appointment call VI 3-8534. 8-2
4 Bedroom apartment 2 blocks from campus. Available August 1-$200 per month. All utilities paid. Male or Female. No limit on number of occupants, no unreasonable rules and regulations. Call VI 2-7235 7-30
Apartment for 6 weeks. Unfurnished—A/C. 1 Bedroom, private parking—Close to campus. 1419 Ohio. Mgr. Apt. 9—VI 2-1107. 7-30
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Need cash for those 2nd semester ex-
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TUTOR for ENGLISH and INTENSIVE ENGLISH. Have tutoring experience and English degree from KU. Call Bonnie Hill, VI 3-4765.
7-29
TYPING
Theses, term papers, miscellaneous works typed on pica electric typewriter, prompt and guaranteed. Mrs. Troxel. VI 2-1440. 8-2
Thesis, term papers, themes typed and/or edited by K.U. graduate (Engl- Speech-Science) education). SCM electedty. Teacher. Located close to VI. HI 31-287. 8-2
Experienced in typing term papers, themes, dissertations, and other miscellaneous typing work. Have electric typewriter with pica typeable rates. Provides client service. Call VI.3-8541. Mrs. Wright.
Experienced typist would like typing.
Has had experience in typing theses,
dissertations, term papers. Electric
typewriter with carbon or silk ribbon
Call Mrs. Lancaster. VI 2-1705
8-2
Experienced writer will type your thesis, term papers, reports, etc. Dependable and prompt. Call Topea CE 2-0164. 7-30
WANTED
Teacher wants daytime baby sitter for fall. Starting September 16, 1 2 1/2 year old child. Call now at VI 3-3590. 7-30
Male graduate student, wants two chairs in a room with a nished spartan room, nice place to live, close to KU, everything furnished but linens, $25.00 each. VI 3-4349
Female roommate wanted for fall semester. Prefer graduate. Complete housewares, utilities paid. Grand piano—ideal for music student. Call Michele-V12-8709 after 5:00 P.M. $65 per month. 7-30
NOTICE
Loans to seniors and graduate stu-
员 expenses. Call M-82
AGI - 31-8074. M-82
TO GIVE AWAY Four male and
male subjects
VI C3 1-8383 or VI C 2-7661 7-58
HELP WANTED
HS or College student needed n thru August. 2 days/wk. 2-10 p Driver's license and references quired. VI 3-3465.
4
THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN
Tuesday, July 30, 1968
Fads and Fashions
Pantsuits flair in fall attire
By JOAN JARVIS
Journalism Camp Reporter
Pantsuits have always been favorite fall outfits. This year the Nehru jacket has given the same old pantsuit a new flare.
The high collar and straight seam are the two factors that made the jacket's fame rise.
They are usually worn with a turtleneck sweater of a contrasting color and if one is really daring one small string of beads sets off the sweater quite well.
The slacks should be either tapered or stovepipe to give
C. E. B. G. A. S. T.
the Nehru jacket its best effect.
—Kansan Photo by Jan Maxwell
Two of the more noted wearers of the Nehru coats are Johnny Carson and George Hamilton. Carson introduced the coats one evening on his show. Other celebrities picked up the fad and now the jackets have become quite popular with all sorts of people.
Plain colors seem to be better than patterns for the Nehru coats. Some coats have their edges trimmed in a different type of material which accents both coat and pants.
Wallace on sports
Tiny Tim loves LA; casualty rate is up
By DON WALLACE Journalism Camp Reporter
Tiny Tim has said he loves the Los Angeles Dodgers and Rosie Grier has announced he will not play professional football anymore. The connection?
There may not be one, but the reports are Grier is going to play guitar on television. The 6'5", 287-pound tackle cannot be anything on the guitar like Tiny is on the ukelele . . . ?
A-school hopes less troubles than J-school in opening
THINGS WERE FAR from "normal" when the Board of Regents authorized the William Allen White School in 1944, shortly after the death of the great Emporia editor.
That year saw the greatest battles of World War II, KU had
The School of Architecture and Urban Design was born on July 1.
Its birth and babyhood are expected to be much simpler than those of KU's 10th school - the William Allen White School of Journalism.
New Dean Charles H. Kahn arrives from North Carolina State University to find nearly 400 students in architecture, which was part of the School of Engineering for more than six decades.
True, journalism had been taught continually at KU since 1903. And it had had department status since 1911 in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
fewer than 2,000 civilian students, most of them women. There were but a handful of journalism majors.
For four years the "School" of Journalism continued to function as a department in the College with no change in graduation requirements.
AUTO WRECKING NEW and USED PARTS
AUTO WRECKING
NEW and USED PARTS
TIRES AND GLASS
East End of 9th Street
VI 3-0956
Recently the casualy reports of the American and National football league training camps have made the ones from the Vietnam camp look pale in comparison.
At your newsstand NOW
The new Renaissance by Daniel P. Moynihan
THE Atlantic
issue 1988
"My life is a crystal teardrop..."
excerpts
from the journal
of John Beez
Alfred Kazin
On Modern Class Storytellers
Nelson Algren
Home to Shawnee town
James Dickey
Victory - a new poem
JOAN BAEZ
plus
A LARGER ROLE
FOR THE SMALL COLLEGE
Among other things the president of Sarah Lawrence says, good-bye to dormitory living.
THE NEW RACIALISM
by Daniel P. Moynihan Who gets hurt by the quota system?
When you want to -kansas BOOKSTORE union
SELL YOUR BOOKS!
Bring them to the lower level entrance of the BOOKSTORE
August 1 & 2 8:30 to 4:30; Monday through Friday
Now paying patronage refunds for
Period 42-valid through Dec.68
Period 43-valid through June 69