THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN 79th Year, No. 7 The University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas Tuesday, July 1, 1969 Student demonstrators are listed The University of Kansas Friday released the names of the 50 students whose cases were heard by the University Disciplinary Board and the punishments given them as a result of their participation in the disruption of the May 9 Cancellor's Review of the Reserve Officer Training Corps. This action came after a resolution was passed by the Kansas Board of Regents Thursday, directing the University to release the names. The names and punishments had previously been withheld from the public. The minutes of the Board of Regents meeting read: "It was moved by Mr. Henry Bubb and seconded by Mr. Jess Stewart that the Board of Regents heartily commend the University Disciplinary Board for its final action in the cases of those charged in connection with the disruption of the ROTC Review. In view of the fact that names were released at the beginning of the hearings, the Acting Chancellor is requested to release immediately the names of those originally published who were brought before the University Disciplinary Board for violating guidelines which the University had formulated for the ROTC Review. "This list is to indicate: "1) Names of those disciplined and penalty assessed each. "2) Names of those cleared by Board action. "It being the intention of the Board to eliminate any questions as to the action of the Disciplinary Board in regard to persons whose names have been published, many of whom were completely cleared. "In future cases, no list of those accused is to be published pending the establishment of a policy." "We cannot have academic freedom without academic safety," Bubb said, as he moved that the names be released. "These students think they are adults and should be treated as such. Personally, I don't think we should have gotten into Vietnam, and I think we should get out right away. These students say they feel the same way. But this doesn't give them the right to disrupt the ROTC Review," he said. The following were the findings and orders given by the University Disciplinary Board June 1. "The University Disciplinary Board of the University of Kansas has conducted hearings concerning charges by the University Senate Executive Committee that certain persons, while enrolled as students at the University of Kansas, on the afternoon of May 9, 1969, between 3:15 p.m. and 4 p.m., refused to act in accordance with the guidelines for the Chancellor's Review of the ROTC for the date mentioned which were duly established by the University Senate Executive Committee and approved by the Chancellor as University regulations to guarantee the rights of others to freedom of assembly at, and peaceable participation in, a regularly scheduled University function. "Each of the students so charged was informed in writing of the particular accusation made against him and of the time and place of the hearings, in accord with the procedures of the Board. "1. The Board finds that the stated purpose of the guidelines was to assure the right of peaceable assembly on the campus. Freedom of assembly and freedom of speech are the fundamental principles upon which any free society, particularly an academic community, must be based. These freedoms must be protected for all groups. The Board believes that many of the charged students acted out of deep moral commitment. However, moral commitment, no matter how strongly held, cannot excuse violation of these fundamental liberties. Philip M. Gary appointed urban action coordinator Philip M. Gary Philip M. Gary has been appointed assistant to the Chancellor and coordinator for urban action programs at the University of Kansas, Dr. James R. Surface, acting Chancellor, has announced. Gary will be responsible for coordinating the University's growing urban action programs. Gary, a native of Washington, D.C. and District of Columbia's position classification specialist in the Department of Economic Development, earned his B.A. in political science at the University of Cincinnati in 1967. While an undergraduate he founded the United Black Association effective in university reform. During college Gary worked as a summer intern for the International Union of Radio, Electrical and Machine Workers. In 1966 he prepared a book for the union on the effective use of governmental agencies. In his present position, he acts as management aide, labor-management relations representative and editor of the departmental news. Friday the Fourth Friday the Fourth of July will be an official University holiday, according to Registrar William L. Kelly. Classes for regular Summer Session Students will not meet and the Summer Session Kansan will not be published. Midwestern Music and Art Campers will attend classes as usual. All scheduled rehearsals will take place in preparation for the weekend concerts. lished by the University Senate Executive Committee and approved by the Chancellor as University regulations to guarantee the rights of others to freedom of assembly at, and peaceable participation in, a regularly scheduled University function. A record high $44,054,428 educational and general operating budget was requested for the fiscal year 1971 by Chancellor-elect E. Laurence Chalmers at the Kansas Board of Regents meeting last week in Topeka. Chalmers' budget request higher for 1971 fiscal year The budget requested represents a 12.5 per cent increase from the $39,167,444 operating budget for the 1970 fiscal year which begins today. Chalmers recommended that wages and salaries be increased 14.5 per cent, from $23,122,975 to $26,473,245, and that operating expenditures be increased 22 per cent, from $4,846,745 to $5,914,295 He asked for a "weighted formula" in determining the number of new faculty and staff members who may be hired. Chalmers asked for permission: The Regents indicated they will continue the practice of holding closed-door meetings to discuss budgetary requests made by beds the state schools. Budgetary cuts made by the Regents are announced by Max Bickford, executive officer for the Board. Chalmers' proposed budget asks general use fund support from state appropriations and student The Board then presents a package request to the Governor and the legislature in the fall. Final action on the budget comes with a recommendation by the Governor and approval of a final figure by the legislature. to hire 53 new faculty members, 21 new summer session staff members and 17 classified personnel. "3. The Board finds that the persons listed below violated the guidelines by remaining on the field after being requested to leave. The Board further finds that violation of the guidelines by these persons and others resulted in preventing the holding of the Review. The Board, considering that these actions constituted a serious violation of the guidelines, has assigned to such persons the following penalty: suspension for the fall semester 1969 only; disciplinary probation from June 1, 1969, to June 1, 1970. Such persons may, if they wish, enroll in the 1969 summer session. If any of such persons was to have completed degree requirements at the end of the spring semester or summer session 1969, a grade of incomplete will be assigned for each course, spring and summer 1969, to be replaced in January 1970 by the instructor's letter grade. He also asked the Board approval of 45 new buildings and Grounds Department positions in order to decrease the average amount of floor space cared for by the individual janitor from 26,000 to 18,000 square feet. fees totaling $200 per student per year. The current figure is $164.72. The increase is sought in order to improve library holdings and the teaching program, Chalmers said. Chalmers is seeking $119,244 for a disability and group life insurance plan for faculty. Currently, faculty members have an optional group life insurance plan, but no disability insurance plan. If approved by the Regents, the disability-group life package would be available at no cost to the faculty members. "To protect the freedoms of speech and assembly, the University may establish reasonable regulations, and these regulations must be enforced. "2. The Board finds that all the charged persons listed under findings 3, 4, 5, 6, and 7 along with others, while enrolled as students at the University, on the afternoon of May 9, 1969, between 3:15 p.m. and 4:00 p.m. refused to act in accordance with the guidelines for the Chancellor's Review of the ROTC for the date mentioned which were duly estab- Those students were: Donald L. Anderson, Washington, D.C., graduate student; Kevin T. Arnold, Overland Park sophomore; Elizabeth N. Atkinson, Lawrence senior; Bruce T. Bowman, Overland Park freshman; Marilyn Bowman, Merriam junior; Edward F. Dolan, Shawnee junior; Ronald H. Doyen, Ottawa sophomore; Tamara L. Dutton, (Continued to page 8) POTTER HOME Photo by Ron Bishop Wind damage? After the storms of the last week, people may wonder if this missing section of the Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity house was taken away by the wind. Actually the north wing of the house has been razed to make room for new construction. Campus Briefs SUA hostesses Thirty-six KU coeds will wear the blue and white uniforms of the Student Union Activities (SUA) Hostesses next year. The SUA group was begun this year as a service organization for the University. The group acted as hostesses for the chancellor's reception, all the after-game football receptions, the Homecoming and Parents' Day receptions, the dedication of Spencer Library and the Engineering Exposition Dr. J. P. Davidson, professor of physics, will be a lecturer in theoretical nuclear physics at the Summer Science Seminar of the National Tsing Hua University in Hsinchu, Taiwan, July 1-August 25. Enroute to Hsinchu he will visit the nuclear physics group at the Institute for Chemical Research at the University of Kyoto, Japan, and perhaps the University of Hong Kong. Taiwan lecturer Nancy Taylor, Lawrence junior, is the SUA Board Member in charge of next year's hostesses. Miss Taylor said the group will help to greet entering freshmen coeds as they move into their dormitories, and, for the first time, will help with the traditional SUA Activities Carnival and the Kansas Union Open House. The hostesses will also assist with some new events planned for next year, including a SUA sponsored Travel Test and a foreign student picnic. Dr. Davidson's place in the KU nuclear physics research group will be filled this summer by one of his former students, Dr. Melvin G. Davidson, now on the faculty of Western Washington State College, Bellingham. Dr. Melvin G. Davidson, also a nuclear physicist, will supervise graduate students and carry on his own research. He received the Ph.D. degree from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Troy, N.Y., in 1964, then spent three years at the Australian National University as a research physicist. 2 KANSAN Jly.1 1969 Four Judge W. B. Ham scholarships have been awarded at the University of Kansas for the 1969-70 school year. The Ham scholarships are awarded annually to students from Rooks County, Kansas. Judge Ham award The scholarship is renewable for undergraduate study upon maintenance of a satisfactory record at KU. The income for the scholarship comes from 760 acres of land near Stockton given to the KU Endowment Association by heirs of Mrs. W. B. Ham, widow of Judge Ham. The first Ham scholarships were awarded in the spring of 1951. Bradford Lee Bates, Stockton freshman; Edward Charles Hageman, Stockton freshman; Judith Marie Steeples, Zurick freshman; Joe Dean Stewart, Plainville freshman. The four recipients of Ham scholarships next year are: Visiting professor Dr. Henry Leland has been appointed Distinguished Visiting Professor for the summer at the University of Southern California. Leland is presently research associate in the University of Kansas Bureau of Child Research and coordinator of professional training, education and demonstration at Parsons State Hospital. Michael P. Blasberg, Sunnyvale, Calif., senior, has been awarded a $200 Goldsmith Scholarship at KU for the academic year, 1969-70. Known internationally for his work in rehabilitative education, Leland will also give the first in USC's 1969 series of lectures in special education. Goldsmith scholarship The scholarship is from a fund established by Prof. Goldwin Goldsmith, the first chairman of the Department of Architecture. Blasberg is an honor student at KU in the School of Architecture and Urban Design. JAYHAWKER TOWERS Apartments Casa De Taco Deliciously Different Mexican Food Now renting 2-bedroom furnished apartments. All utilities included in rent. 1105 Mass. VI 3-9880 - Immediately adjacent to campus - Swimming pool—club rooms - Air-conditioned - Elevators 1603 W. 15th Tel. VI 3-4993 - Off-street parking Convenient Location, a Time and Money Saver. Lawrence's Finest Apartment Complex Inspection Invited COMET $300 ALSO $150 TO 1975 WEDDING RING 34.75 CALYPSO $175 WEDDING RING 42.50 Forever Beautiful Forever Perfect As an authorized Keepsake jeweler, we are proud to offer an outstanding collection of fine diamond rings. Come in and let us show you what we mean. REGISTERED Keepsake DIAMOND RINGS Ray Christian "THE COLLEGE JEWELER" 809 Mass. "Special College Terms" VI 3-5432 10% DISCOUNT ON CASH & CARRY LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANING - Pick-up and delivery service - Use any of our three convenient locations DOWNTOWN 1111 Mass. VI 3-5155 Three Convenient Locations: MALLS 23rd and La. VI 3-0895 HILLCREST 9th and Iowa VI 3-0928 ACME Laundry and Dry Cleaners Campus Briefs Alumni president Robert B. Riss of Shawnee Mission is to be the new president of the University of Kansas Alumni Association for 1969-70. To serve with him are Charles B. Haines II of New York City, William F. "Bill" Barber of Saint Louis, Mo., and Frank Snell of Scottsdale, Ariz. William H. Sloan, son of Mr. and Mrs. William H. Sloan, 3102 Sheridan Road, Bartlesville, Okla., was awarded a $350 Kelogg Scholarship at the University of Kansas for the academic year, 1969-70. Sloan will be a freshman in the KU School of Architecture and Urban Design this fall. Riss is president of Republic Industries and of Riss International Corp., a subsidiary of Republic. He has been or is the director of many area organizations, including the Kansas City Philharmonic Association and the Kansas City Crime Commission. In 1965 he won the "Outstanding Young Man in Missouri" award. The 1949 graduate of the KU School of Business has served as the national chairman of the Greater Kansas City Alumni Association and he is now a member of its Board of Directors. Kellogg scholarship The scholarship was established in honor of the late Prof. Joseph M. Kellogg, for many years chairman of the Department of Architecture. Gets scholarship Roger L. Kennedy, Topeka, has been awarded a $200 Kivett and Myers Scholarship for the academic year, 1969-70. Kennedy will be a freshman in the School of Architecture and Urban Design this fall. The scholarship fund was established by the Kivett and Myers architectural firm of Kansas City, Mo. Clarence Kivett is a graduate of the KU School of Architecture. Jly.1 1969 KANSAN 3 A recent graduate of Topeka West High School, Kennedy received the Shield of Highest Merit and was a member of the Honor Society. USPHS grant A $42,506 grant from the U.S. Public Health Service, has been awarded to Ross E. McKinney, Glenn L. Parker professor of civil engineering at the University of Kansas. As a continuation of a three-year program, this grant is concerned primarily with familiarizing graduate students with the problems of solid waste disposal. The grant includes salaries for graduate students working with McKinney. According to McKinney, "the program allows study of the biological treatment of municipal refuse and farm manure." KU is the first University to work with the problems of solid wastes at the Ph.D. level. Religion board A Board of Governors has been created by the trustees of the Kansas School of Religion and its initial members are: Clarence Maloney, Topeka; A. T. Ashton, Leawood; Mrs. Philip Godwin and Mrs. Richard Barber, Lawrence. The trustees are representatives of the nine cooperating religious bodies that operate the KSR, which is affiliated with the University of Kansas and offers accredited, non-denominational courses to KU students. The Board of Governors will be made up of Kansans with business and community leadership experience. Their mission will be to broaden the school's base of support. Gets two scholarships Kenneth David Orth, son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert D. Orth, 108 Burch, Buffalo, N.Y., was awarded two scholarships at the University of Kansas for the academic year, 1969-70. Orth, who will enter the KU School of Architecture and Urban design as a freshman this fall, has won the $200 Joseph M. Kellogg Scholarship and a Greater University Scholarship, covering part of his fees. The late Professor Kellogg was for many years chairman of the department of architecture. Orth attended Jay Shideler Junior High School, Topeka, and Bellevue Senior High School, Bellevue, Nebraska. The intensive nine-week program in northern Germany offers advanced level studies in language and literature in addition to first-hand knowledge of the people by residence with German families. Pa ticipating students are regularly enrolled in summer school and receive KU residence credit. German Institute Fifteen KU students are attending the University of Kansas Summer Language Institute in Eutin, Germany, June 16-Aug. 30. Instruction is by regular KU staff and by native instructors. KU instructor is Helmut Huelsbergen, associate professor of Sunflower dress factory Select your own design and have it made in your choice of india prints. David Hiebert, Topeka; Dixie Hiett, Haven; Bodo Kerkmann, Logan, Utah; Linda Krell, Sioux Falls, S.D.; Edwina Price, Lawrence. dresses beads pants KU students in Eutin, Germany; are: Mrs. Mary Allen, Lawrence; Diane Beyer, Lyons; Ruth Dick, Newton; Joyce Goering, Moundridge; Alfred Gross, Chicago, Ill. skirts earrings Larry Rigby, Pocatello, Idaho; Nancy Rigby, Salt Lake City; Utah; Neil Slentz, Lewis; Doris Soden, Great Bend; Cecelia Wenger, Ontarioville, Ill. long gowns German at KU. Included in the program are visits to museums, guided excursions, and attendance at theater and concert performances. rings purses scarves men's shirts ALL HAND MADE 17th W. 9th St. ON COLUMBIA RECORDS Specials BLOOD, SWEAT & TEARS including: You've Made Me So Very Happy Spinning Wheel / More and More God Bless The Child IT'S A BEAUTIFUL DAY including: A Hot Summer Day / Wasted Union Blues White Bird / Girl With No Eyes / Bombay Calling Bulgaria / Time Is Reg. $4.98 $2.99 Check sale prices on many other new releases at KIEF'S IT'S A BEAUTIFUL DAY including: A Hot Summer Day/Wasted Union Blues White Bird/Girl With No Eyes/Bombay Calling Bulgaria/Time Is KIEF'S Featuring Female Vocalist "THE HAPPY MEDIUM" "Debbie Waltz" Sat. July 5, THE Red Dog Inn THE HONEYCOMB Creariore Italiana PER Danielle MADE IN ITALY d. BOSTON Crearione Italiana PER Danielle MADE IN ITALY d. BOSTON SANDALS Crearione italiana PER Danielle MADE IN ITALY di BOSTON SANDALS SALE PRICED MORRIS Lots of Styles in Desirable Colors Were to $9.00 NOW 4.90 and 5.90 McCoy's shoes 813 Mass. St. VI 3-2091 Guest editorial I'm Dorothy from Kansas and I want to go home...' I was born in a trunk in the Princess Theatre in Pocatello, Idaho... It may have been a trunk, but it wasn't in the Princess Theatre, and it wasn't Pocatello, Idaho. It was Grand Rapids, Minnesota. She was named Frances Gumm. She sang about the trunk in "A Star Is Born," in 1954. She became Hollywood's famous Judy Garland. She'd been singing many other songs in Hollywood movies for almost 20 years. "Pigskin Parade," "Everybody Sing," "Babes in Arms," "Babes on Broadway," one or two of the Andy Hardy pictures. She was round-faced and kind of pudgy and the voice, even for a 16-year-old, rocked the audiences. I've got you, you've got me, Who cares how rough the road may be. We'll go bumpty-bump, ti-bumpty-bump, On the bumpy road to love... Mickey Rooney, Gene Kelly, Jimmy Stewart, Fred Astaire, James Mason. These were some of the people she appeared with, from a trivial thing in 1936 called "Pigskin Parade" to the dramatic ones like "Judgment at Nuremberg." But the people we'll remember longest—along with her—were the straw man, the tin man, and the cowardly lion, and the old man at the end of the yellow brick road—Ray Bolger, Jack Haley, Bert Lahr, and Frank Morgan. They were the people in "The Wizard of Oz." Dear when you smiled at me. I heard a melody, It haunted me from the start, Something inside of me, Started a symphony, Zing went the strings of my heart. . . . and Shearer and Crawford and Lamarr and Garson were the big names. And she sang to the biggest name of them all: She was one of the queens of MGM in the days when Garbo I'm writing you this letter... Dear Mr. Gable. For several years she was big box office. Her fans loved her, but she was a troubled kid. Five marriages. At least one suicide attempt. She couldn't control her weight. Her voice would go out on her, and she'd forget the words. She sang in her "home state." Minnesota, during the state's centennial celebration in 1958, and forgot the words, and used some show business profanity, and shocked some people. But mainly the fans were with her, even in the times of trouble. The night is bitter, The stars have lost their glitter. Has gone and undone me. . . . The man who won me, There was an Academy Award nomination for "A Star Is Born," and another for "Judgment at Nuremberg." There were cruel gossip columns. There was applause for a daughter, Liza, and there were triumphs at the Palace, and in London. I cried for you. Now it's your turn to cry over me, She died at 47, in England, where she had made her home in recent years. Her fifth husband found the body. Scotland Yard said it was not suicide, but the old-time fans still speculated. One doctor said cirrhosis of the liver. Another said no. The autopsy report said an accidental overdose of barbiturates. Some day I'll wish upon a star and wake up where the clouds are far behind me, Where troubles melt like lemon drops away above the chimney tops, That's where you'll find me. . . That's one thing I'm learning. An Arthur P. Jacobs Production "THE CHAIRMAN" The countdown is ending.. México DF Mexico centro de investigación FACULTAD DE CIENCIAS Y TECNOS PRESENTADO por: Jorge M. Pinto Some day I'll wish upon a star If the Red Chinese don't kill him a computer in London will! 01 Every road has a turning, DETROIT 20th Century-Fox presents GREGORY PECK·ANNE HEYWOOD STARTS WED.! Hillcrest - Calder M. Pickett, Professor of Journalism Co-learning ARTHUR HILL • ALAN DOBIE • FRANCISCA TU • ORI LEVY • ZENIA MERTON • Alan Dobie • Francisca Tu • Ori Levy • Zenia Merton Directed by Conrad Yama • Mort Abrahams • J Lee Thompson • Ben Maddow as the Chairman Based on the book by JAY RICHARD KENNEDY. Music by JERRY GOLDSMITH. Music by Twentieth Century-Fox Productions HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER + 9TH AND IOWA Panavision* Color by DeLuxe 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. Accommodations, goods, and employment advertised in the Summer Session Kansan are offered to students 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 or the University of Kansas Administration or the Kansas State Board of Regents. NOW SHOWING! "THE STALKING MOON" GREGORY · EVA MARIE PECK SAINT TECHNICOLORH PANAVISION G HE STARTS A COUNTRY- MUSIC STORM OVER NASHVILLE! HE STARTS A COUNTRY-MUSIC STORM OVER NASHVILLE! MGM PRESENTS A TIME TO SING ATIME TOSING HANK WILLIAMS, JR. • SHELLEY FABAPES • ED BECGLEY PANAVISION® METROPOLTER Open----7:00 Start At Dusk Sunset DRIVE IN THEATRE - West on Ninervy 40 DRIVE IN THEATRE · West on highway 40 ...quotes... “... We the Court do not always agree. I hope the court will never agree on all things. If it ever agreed on all things, I am sure that its virility will have been sapped because it is composed of nine independent men who have no one to be responsible to except our own consciences.” WASHINGTON (UPI)—Retiring Chief Justice Earl Warren, speaking at the ceremony in which his successor, Warren Burgen was sworn in: G THEATRE Now Granada THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-5788 Daily Mat. 2:00 Eve. 8:00 Doors Open—7:00 At Regular Prices! DARRYL JANUCK'S THE LONGEST DAY Reserved for the Gate w/ 2241 606 7111 Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065 Mat. Daily 2:30 Eve. 7:15 - 9:25 Eye of the Cat Granada THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5788 Daily Mat. 2:00 Eve. 8:00 Doors Open—7:00 At Regular Prices! DARRYL T ZANUCK'S THE LONGEST DAY www.granada.com Broadcast 11:42 AM EST Copyright © 1986 Granada Theatre THE LONGEST DAY Recorded on the Bus or at station on 12/9/84 Released by MCA Records for www.mca-records.com Varsitu Eye of the Cat THE Hillcrest NATIONAL HISTORY LINES AND INSTITUTE "Guns of the Magnificent Seven" Mat. Sat. & Sun. 2:30 Eve. 7:20 - 9:25 MGM presents a in Elliott Kastner picture starring Hillcrest2 Where Eagles Dare MGM presents a berry Corserligh Eiight Kastner picture starring Richard Burton Clint Eastwood Mary Urs Panavision* and Metrocolor Mat. Sat. & Sun. 2:30 Eve. 7:00 - 9:30 Hillcrest3 "STOLEN KISSES" 7:30 7:30 8:15 2:30 - 7:30 - 9:15 SALE! SALE! SALE! SALE! BOYS-GIRLS-INFANTS VALUES TO ?? Odds 'N Ends from every department. Values to much, much more! We gathered overstocked items, discontinued styles, slightly shop-worn fashions and grouped them into 3 big groups for easy selection. ONE TABLE $1.00 Other Groups As Marked ONE TABLE $2.00 Boys - Girls - Infants - Boys - Girls - Infants Fashions for now and all thru the coming seasons at terrific savings! Shop early! 1/4 to 1/2 OFF 1/4 to 1/2 OFF ONE TABLE $3.00 Little Women 823 Massachusetts Downtown Regents' resolution restricts faculty actions A Kansas Board of Regents' resolution regarding suspension of faculty members who engage in disruptive activity is not retroactive, according to Max Bick- ford, executive officer of the Board. Bickford also said any faculty suspension "would imply suspension without pay." However, this is not specified in the resolution which the Board unanimously approved last Thursday. This means the Board move will not have any effect on the Liquori wins AAU mile; Jim Ryun drops out of race MIAMI (UPI)—Marty Liquori of Villanova pushed to a two-yard victory in the one-mile run in 3:59.5 in the National AAU Track Championship Sunday and world record holder Jim Ryun dropped out of the race after running less than two laps. The time was far slower than the world record of 3:51.1 set by Ryun at the same meet two years ago. John Mason of the Pacific Coast Club was second in 4 minutes flat and Sam Bair was third in 4:00.2. Ryun, who did not appear to be limping when he left the track, walked across the infield, scooped up his sweatsuit and walked out of the stadium. status of John Wright, associate professor of human development and family life. record holder Jay Silvester with a meet record toss of 208-feet,10 to win the discus throw. He commented only: "I don't want to talk about it." The mile run had been expected to produce another hot dual between Ryun, silver medalist in last years Olympic games and Liquori the man who upset him last week in the NCAA Championship in Knoxville, Tenn. Liquori who had been back in the pack early in the running, moved to the front with one lap to go. He was briefly passed by Chris Mason of the New York AC but he then spurred to take over the lead and held it all the way to the finish line. Johnson of Prairie View A&M was a close third in 1:47. A special KU ad hoc committee headed by Paul Gilles, professor of chemistry, met last week to consider charges that Wright violated guidelines for the May 9 ROTC Chancellor's Review. But Ryun after running in second place for little more than a lap, suddenly dropped behind the field and trailed slower and slower before he stopped before competing in the second lap. The committee, which met in secret will make a recommendation to the University Council which probably will not meet again until fall. The recommendation will not be made public, according to Charles Oldfather; professor of law and chairman of the Senate Executive Committee. tion, if any, will be taken against Wright. Wright has publicly admitted his presence on the field in Memorial Stadium last May 9. The University Council is composed of 39 faculty members and 10 students, plus the chancellor end the student body president. The group will decide what ac- The resolution directed the chief administrative officer of each state college and university "to immediately suspend any employee, faculty member or student engaged in disruptive activity." Bryon Dyce of New York stormed to a one yard victory in the 880-yard run in 1:46.6, a half second slower than the meet record. Dyce a New York University star, made his move at the head of the stretch and held off Jerry Luzins of William and Mary who was second in 1:46.7. Felix John Carlos of San Jose, Calif., who suffered a surprise defeat in the 100 yard dash Saturday came back to win the 220-yard dash in 20.2 seconds. The Regents passed the resolution which says "suspensions are to remain in effect pending such procedural steps as may be required under the rules and regulations of the state institution and the laws of the state of Kansas." Olympic champ Lee Evans of San Jose, Calif., set a meet record of 45.6 seconds in winning the 440-yard dash. The resolution went on to say, "Be it resolved that this action not be considered as limiting any authority of said chief executive officer in the performance of his duty." Jon Cole, 28-year-old weight- lifter from Tempe, Ariz., upset Jly.1 1969 KANSAN 5 THE HODGE POUGE 17 WEST 9th ● Sandals Handmade From $14.00 Choose from our styles and design your own. ● Handcrafts ● Candles ● Zodiac Signs and matches ● Strobe Candles ● Ceramics ● Leather Goods ● One of A Kind Gifts Conglomerate of the Unique! Easy going! The fully automatic transmission on TOYOTA CORONA One of the easy going options featured on the Corona. 2-door hardtop 4-door sedan Standard equipment includes: • Reclining bucket seats • 90 hp Hi-Torque engine - Wall-to-wall Nylon carpeting - Loads of luxury & safety extras Try out Toyota Corona and its easy going fully automatic transmission. Today! At easy going 842-2191 1209 E. 23rd COMPETITION SPORTS CARS Japan's No. 1 Automobile Manufacturer TOYOTA JAYHAWKER TOWERS Apartments Now renting 2-bedroom furnished apartments. All utilities included in rent. - Immediately adjacent to campus - Swimming pool—club rooms - Air-conditioned - Convenient Location, a Time and Money Saver. Lawrence's Finest Apartment Complex - Elevators Inspection - Off-street parking Invited 1603 W. 15th Tel.VI 3-4993 S VILLAGE SANDALS by DEXTER $11.95 Arensberg's = Shoes 819 Mass. VI 3-3470 DEXTER A Arensberg's = Shoes Pepper coaches West to All-American game win ATLANTA, Ga.-The favored West, refusing to wilt in 96-degree weather, rode fourth quarter touchdowns by Bill Enyart and Paul Gipson to a 14-10 comeback win over the East Saturday night in the annual Coaches All-America Football Game. Coached by Pepper Rodgers of the University of Kansas, the West scored its first touchdown early in the fourth quarter after the underdog East team had opened up a 10-0 lead. Atlanta Falcons, scored on a one-yard burst with seven minutes left in the game that gave the West its game-winning lead. Gipson. Houston's standout heading for a pro career with the Enyart, the Oregon State All-American signed by the Buffalo Bills, had powered over from the two, six minutes earlier for the West's first touchdown. The West's winning drive of 61-yards was helped by a pair of controversial pass interference penalties against the East. The first West score was set up by a 21-yard pass from Bobby Douglass of Kansas to Jim Lawrence of Southern California. It was Douglass' first completion after 12 misses. The East scored its 10 points on a 42-yard field goal just before half-time, and a one-yard plunge by Bob Campbell of Penn State following a 35-yard pass play from Buster O'Brien of Richmond to Campbell. Neither team displayed much offense in the hot, muggy weather until the West's late surge. Twelve of the first-round choices in last winter's pro draft skipped the game. Summer repertory theatre to feature American plays The fourth season of the University of Kansas summer repertory theatre will feature "American Theatre by Tens." Four plays, representing American playwrights of the past four decades, will be given on alternating evenings in the University Theatre. The four works being presented are "The Male Animal," a 1940's play by James Thurber and Elliot Nugent, on July 2, 5, 15, 19, and 25; "Ah, Wilderness," form the 1930's by Eugene O'Neill, on July 1, 3, 14, 18, and 22; "The Grass Harp," written by Truman Capote in the 1950's, on July 9, 11, 16, 21, and 23; and a trio of one-act plays from off-Broadway, 1960, on July 8, 10, 12, 17, 24 and 25. The plays will be directed by graduate students Richard Scharine, Mrs. Karen Husted, and Neal Fenter. Capote's "Grass Harp" will be directed by Dr. Jack Brooking of the KU speech and drama department. All of the plays are comedies and will be produced by a repertory company of 20 students. They spend mornings in summer school classes and afternoons and evenings in rehearsals. Among the group are seven new freshmen, accepted through auditions at high schools last spring. The plays will appear in two locations in Murphy Hall. "The Male Animal" and the one-act plays will be in the Experimental Theatre. The other two will be played "in-the-round" on the main stage, but provision has been made to seat the audience 6 KANSAN Jly.1 1969 Thurber's "Male Animal" is a 1940's comedy pertinent to today's scene. It deals with protest and public controversy in a midwestern university town. around the stage to make them an integral part of the production. "Ah Wilderness," the great O'Neill classic, treats the timely subject of the "generation gap", although this one is at the turn of the century. The one-act plays are: "Comings and goings: A Theatre Scene," by Megan Terry, an improvisation exercise; "Almost Like Being," by Jean-Claude van Italie, a take-off on the love ballad that spoofs the subject of love; "Fourteen Hundred Thousand," by Sam Shepard, built around a bookcase and its many books. Capote's "Grass Harp," is a comedy-fantasy about people, particularly two elderly sisters, who question the dogma of the society in which they live. All performances begin at 8:20 p.m. The theatres are air conditioned and tickets may be purchased preceding the performance. JAYHAWKER TOWERS Apartments Now renting 2-bedroom furnished apartments. All utilities included in rent. - Immediately adjacent to campus - Swimming pool—club rooms - Air-conditioned - Elevators - Off-street parking Convenient Location, a Time and Money Saver. Lawrence's Finest Apartment Complex Inspection 1603 W.15th Invited Tel.VI 3-4993 Serving KU Students for 60 Years. LAWRENCE launderers and dry cleaners 1029 NEW HAMP. VI3-3711 "Prompt Pickup & delivery to All Living Groups" Patronize Kansan Advertisers HAND MADE SANDALS The Primavilly Leather Specialty, over 20 styles to choose from or design your own. Priced from $14. And made just for you by the sandal makers at Primarily Leather SALE Summer Clearance Begins Suits from 39.50 Sport Coats...from25.00 Dress Shirts...5.50 Dress Slacks . . . 12.00 Knit Shirts . . . . . 4.00 Wash Slack $ . . . . 6.00 --- MISTER GUY 920 MASSACHUSETTS TRADE CLASSIFIED SELL BUY ADSLEASE Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the advertisementman are offered to all students with whom origin to color, crest, or national origin. FOR SALE PRIMARILY LEATHER—Handercraft belts, sandals, bags, watchbands, bracelets, rings, barrettes, and clothing. 812 Mass. Open 10-5. 7-8 NOW ON SALE. THE HODGE PODGE. Handcrafts, Makes Foods, Goods, Antiques, Glassware, Ceramics, one of the kind gifts. 17 West 9th St. p.m. to-5.30 p.m. Thurs. till 7-29 p.m. NOW ON SALE Revised, comprehensive 3rd Edition of "New Artists in Western Civilization." Carduuff's Campus Madhouse, 1241 Ileana 7-29 For Sale! 1967 Harley Davidson Sportster XLCH, 900 cc. Black and Chrome. Low mileage. One owner. new. Call VI 3-2537 after 5:00 pm. Short Wave Radio, reconditioned. May also be used as an amplifier. Also 2 nylon and one 12 string guitar for sale. VI 3-8729. 7-8 FOR SALE: 1968 Yamaha 125 twi scrambleer. 1700 miles. Excellent con- troll. 10 hours. 6 p.m. 842-933-8. See at 1810 Alabama—Also: Girl! 7-1 inch English bicycle. AUDIO SALE Right now we are offering 15% off on all AR and Dynaco equipment. See our student special, picked especially for student living; this is true Audio quality; Dynaco dealer. The Ray-Audio, Hillcrest Center, alt. 292 eve. VI 2-1944. HEADLINE Open for the summer—the Pawn Shop Coffee House. Invites all folk-lovers and artists to come in and display their talents and appreciate Weekend—Dave Bailieu! See you at the P. S. HOUSE. P. S. HOUSE 15 East 8th Street Tennis Rackets, Balls, Shoes for sale. Rackets stun. Reduced Prices. One racket cost. Rock east of Naufa and Oliver Hall. 1202 19th St, Terrace. VI 2-3691. Flying Club membership for sale. rates. Phone 842-3124 after six. Tx- 74 1967 HONDA 450 SCRAMBLER Ex- cellent condition. Call 843-7880-71 --- Rebuilt 40 HP Volkswagen Motor with guarantee. Call 843-8165. T-1 1 and 2-bedroom luxury apartments, located in small quiet complex at south edge of KU campus. Unfur- furred, convenient. Ideal for leagant old-style Danish walnut furnituring. All rooms have wall-to-wall carpeting, paneled living area. Very large kitchen with central closets and locked storage. Central heat and air paid. Reasonable rent and FOR RENT LOW SUMMER RATES Now showing at the COLLEGE HILL MANOR APARTMENTS. 1741 West 19th. Contact Fenton or Kay Drake at apartment 5-B, VI 8-3280. 7-15 Two rooms for girls within walking distance of campus and town. Meals available. Call 843-8165 or see at 124 West 13th. 7-1 Room in large house available for summer. 1 or 2 students, Share kitchen. $40 or less. 1219 Ohio Street 3-3587. 7-11 Now renting for summer and fall. University Terrace and Old Mill apartments. Reduced rates for summer. A/C, carpeting, and pool. Call for appointment 843-1433 for Old Mill and 842-1296 for University Terrace. WALK TO CAMPUS—three A/C two bedroom apts. $151—unfurnished $130 furnished, snake now. Also sleeping rooms. Sanitize Apartments 112d Ind. V 3-2116. Rooms one block from campus on east side. Kitchen and kitchenette. Cafes. CI 2-0173 DUPLEX, lr. 2 br., bath, kitchen w/stove & ref. Full basement w/ storage year lease. Phone VI 3-1679 $125.0 plus utilities. See at 1517 W. 3rd St. Sleeping rooms with or without kitchen privileges for males. Also furnished apartments. Borders can be and near downtown. Call V-1-5767. NOTICE 515 Michigan St. Bar-B-Q-outdoor 520 Chicago St. order, order, $1.65 Rib sandwich, 9.9c; $1.20 Brisket sandwich, $7.5 Hours $1.80 Sandwich, 9.9c Sunday Tuesday, Phone VI 2-9510 LEATHER Primarily primarily leather, mainly leather, leather, pri- marily leather only, leather only, primarily main leather, primary Primalley Leather. 812 Mass. 7-8 AUDIO SALE If you are interested in a record player or up-dating your present system you may be interested in Acoustic Research and Dynaco equipment. It's the best buy for serious music lovers. Face See and hear at Ray-Audio, Hillcrest Center, att. and eve. 842-1944. 7-29 XEROX SERVICE on Xerox's latest, most advanced 3600 III clouer, Crisper, sharper copies: faster service. Unsurpassed results for theses, papers, bulletins. Lawrence Typewriter, 700 Mass. VI 3-3644. 8-5 EVERYONE SAYS EVERYONE SAYS Everything in the Pet Field And Free Parking At Grants Drive-In Pet Center Experienced Dependable Personal service 18 Conn., Law, Pet Ph. VI 3-292 SANDALS—this summer have a pair of custom made sandals designed for you. Over 20 styles to choose. Prices from $15, $81 Mass. 7-8 HEADLINE! We are looking for (you) interesting, armed-on, music-loving or humorous people who can think well for the P.S. HOUSE. If you are interested in the P.S. HOUSE, log on to Wahoo! 7-29 Rick at VI-2 1944 **NOW** SUNFLOWER DRESS FACTORY — hand made originals. Design your india prints—men's shirts too. 19 WT. 9th. ENTRY 12-5. 7-15 THE HODGE PODGE. Featuring ce- rtain pieces, including Sandals, and Leather Goods. Old trunks, glassware, and handcrafts. 17 pounds. 10 a.m.-5.30 p.m. Thurs. 9 i-9 oo. Free Male SIAMESE CAT Leaving country and can't keep. 7-8 ATTENTION! Summer students will do your typing. Call 842-0115. - 815 TYPING Experienced typist will give fast, acc- pensive service; call VI 3-0828-7, 7-29 ports, telephone VI 3-0828-7 Theses, term papers, and miscellaneous. Electric typewriter. Quick efficient service. Call Mrs. Mary Wolken 1712 Alabama. IV 3-1522. 7-186 Will type term papers, themes, thesis, other miscellaneous typing. Have elec. a typewriter efficient service. Phone I 3-9545. Mrs. Wright. 7-29 Themes, Theses, Dissertations typed and /a/ edited by experienced typist K. Krishnan, D-Spec- Speech Education. Office-size electronic Located near Oliver Hall. VI 3-2873. Strick's Cafe 732 N. 2nd St. OPEN 7 a.m. to 10 p.m. Monday thru Saturday Pay-Less$ Self Service | SHOES Will type term papers. Also Ges- sels, the Jane and Anne downey Phone VI 3-8568 7-22 1300 W. 23rd Lawrence Thesis, term papers, and misc. Call Mary Wolken, VI 3-1522, 712 Alabama. 7-18 WANTED Design your own! Sandal styles for the creative or choose from our many fashions. Joe's Fudge Fodge, Fodge, 17 West 9th, 10 a.m to 11 p.m. Thurs. open till 9:00 p.m. 7-11 Looking for a .305sec Honda or comparable size. Year and condition not important. Price is! Call David at VI 3-3929. 7-18 WANTED - 4th Roommate for Spacious House, Family Style Living for summer, possible option for fall. Rent $30/month. Call for John. V1-72802 PERSONAL LOST WATCHBANDS—why not a custom made band from Primarily Leather. Many styles, wide or narrow. 812 Mass. 7-8 Lost: gold Lady Hamilton watch between Fresher Hall and Fiji House. Reward offered. Call Mikie Burnette at VI 2-1033. 7-18 LA PETITE GALERIE Newest Place For Now Fashions 910 Kentucky Lower Level TRAVEL TIME LET "We Care About What You Wear And If You Care" MAUPINTOUR SERVICE TRAVEL Bring Your Shoes To 8th Street Shoe Repair For Your Repairs, Shoe Dyeing and Shines. Two color .75 Shoe Shines,One color .50 Make Your Summer Reservations Now. Malls Shopping Center VI 3-1211 105 E. 8th 8:00-5:00 Closed Saturday at Noon JAYHAWKER TOWERS Apartments - Immediately adjacent to campus. - Now renting 2-bedroom furnished apartments. All utilities included in rent. - Convenient Location, a Time and Money Saver. Lawrence's Finest Apartment Complex Lawrence's Finest Apartment Complex Inspection 1603 W. 15th Invited Tel. VI 3-4993 Jennings Daylight Donuts Coffee & Sandwich Bar Malls Shopping Center HAROLD'S SERVICE 66 1401 WEST 6TH STREET LAWRENCE, KANSAS phone 843-3357 For Plywood, Moulding Plaster, Shelving Material Come to LOGAN-MOORE LUMBER 1011 N. 3rd VI 3-0931 6th & Mo. VI 3-2139 HEAD FOR HENRY'S For Top Quality Head for Henry's MEMO: TO ALL KU STUDENTS and STAFF The Secretarial Service has a new expanded office to serve you with the newest, most modern equipment in Lawrence, about all that's the same is the service-good fast, guaranteed-7 days a week, 7 a.m. 'til midnight. MAGNETIC/TAPE TYPEWRITING WAKE-UP AND ANSWERING SERVICE SPECIAL RATES ON THESIS AND RESUMES BUSINESS LETTERS ✓ TERM PAPER TYPING GIRL FRIDAY SERVICE (in your office) ABS √ TELEPHONE CANVASING EXPERT TYPING XEROX COPYING SERVICE MAGIC QUICK PRINT SERVICE ✓ MIMEOGRAPHING MAILING LISTS √ ENVELOPE ADDRESSING AUTOMATED BUSINESS SERVICES, INC. P.O. Box 423 Lawrence, Kansas 66044 901 Kentucky 842-0111 PRESENTED BY Student demonstrators are listed (Continued from page 1) Colby junior; Robert Feld, Kansas City, Mo., junior; Dale J. Gifford, Kinsley sophomore. Randolph E. Gould, Overlane Park sophomore; David M. Grobe, Wichita senior; Daniel R. Harkness, Topeka senior; Lance Hill, Lawrence freshman; Candida C. Howard, New York City junior; Robert E. Howard, Wichita senior; George R. Hughes, Ottawa freshman; Kay J. Kloppenberg, La Grange, Ill., senior; Beth Ann Lindquist, Waverly, Ia., senior; Phillip A. Lovett, Wichita junior; Stephen M. McMahon, St. Louis, Mo., junior; John R. Michael, Hutchinson senior; Peter J. Monge, New York City senior; John Naramore, Wichita senior. Stephen B. Parker, Rochester, N.Y., junior; David G. Ross, Morton, Tex., senior; Wayne S. Sailor, Lawrence graduate student; Norma Ann Showalter, Tucson, Ariz., junior; Margo Jean Smith, Topeka senior; Paula J. Southern, Wichita freshman; Ted E. Steiner, Overland Park junior; Alan G. Toy, Stamford, Conn, senior; John A. Tredo, Neptune, N.Y., junior; Michael M. Warner, San Diego, Calif., graduate student; Larry W. Yackle, Paola first year law student, and Leonard Zeskind, Miami, Fla., sophomore. "4. The Board finds that the person listed below violated the guidelines by remaining on the field after being requested to leave. The Board further finds that violation of the guidelines by such person and others resulted in preventing the holding of the Review. The Board, considering that these actions constituted a serious violating of the guidelines, and taking into account such person's prior offense on April 23, 1969, has assigned him the following penalty: "Indefinite suspension as of June 1, 1969, with the right to petition the University Disciplinary Board for termination of the suspension and for permission to apply for readmission to any of the schools of the University for the summer session 1970 or thereafter. That person was Richard C. Atkinson, Belleville graduate student. "5. The Board finds that the person listed below violated the guidelines by remaining on the field after being requested to leave. The Board further finds that violation of the guidelines by such person and others resulted in preventing the holding of the Review. The Board, considering that these actions constituted a serious violation of the guidelines, and taking into account such person's prior offense on April 23, 1969, has assigned him the following penalty: "Indefinite suspension as of June 1, 1969. Since such person was to have completed degree requirements at the end of the spring semester 1969, a grade of incomplete will be assigned for each of his spring semester 1969 courses, to be replaced on June 1, 1970, by the instructor's letter grade. He has the right to petition the University Disciplinary Board for termination of the suspension and for permission to apply for admission or readmission to any of the schools of the University for or after the summer session 1970. That person was William K. Berkowitz, New York City senior. "6. The Board finds that the persons listed below violated the guidelines by remaining on the field after being requested to leave. However, the Board has considered in mitigation of punishment the fact that the University Senate Executive Committee failed to prove that such persons did not leave the field before New Haworth Hall ready in September "New Haworth Hall", the new Experimental Biology and Human Development building at the University of Kansas, is expected to be ready for full occupancy by September. The eight story structure is located on Sunnyside Avenue, east of Summerfield Hall and south of Malott Hall. The building which also includes a Child Research Wing, will provide specialized laboratory facilities for research in biological and human development sciences. cancellation of the Review became necessary. Biochemistry, physiology and microbiology will also be studied in the main building. Laboratories and observation rooms, as well as a fenced, controlled research playground will be provided in the child research wing. 8 KANSAN Jly.1 1969 "The Board has assigned such persons the following penalty: Disciplinary probation from June 1, 1969, to June 1, 1970. Those persons were: Eric C. Kraft, Fairway junior; Peter Van Ruddick, Mission freshman, and Paul J. Vigil, Shawnee Mission senior. THERE ARE A DOZEN GREAT SHOE NAMES, BUT IN SANDALS CAN YOU THINK OF MORE THAN ONE? "7. The Board finds that the persons listed below violated the guidelines by remaining on the field after being requested to leave. However, the Board has considered in mitigation of punishment the fact that such persons left the field before cancellation of the Review became necessary." Therefore the Board reprimanded the following students: BERNARDO "Tee" for two pretty feet, Bernardo's classic sandal in the lightest of leathers. Small, medium or large Brown Black Harness Bunny Black's Royal College Shop Darryl F. Bright, Maywood, Ill., junior; Clarence J. Reynolds, Kansas City freshman; Mylene Rucker, Los Angeles, Calif., sophomore, and Charles S. Scott, Topeka junior. "8. The Board finds the person listed below not guilty of the charged violations of the guidelines for the Chancellor's Review." He was Terry P. Franklin, Humboldt junior. The Board dismissed the cases against the following persons for lack of evidence. They were: Bunny Black's Royal College Shop Elizabeth A. Lentz, Atchison senior; Gary Levine, Prairie Village freshman; Rebecca Sue Sitterly, Ottawa sophomore, and Richard J. Zasadny, Kansas City freshman. Eight Thirty-Seven Massachusetts Street AUTO GLASS Table Tops INSTALLATION AUTO GLASS Sudden Service East End of 9th St.—VI 3-4416 MGIM at LUM'S 9-11 P.M. TONIGHT Big 16-oz. Budweizer draw-25c 8-oz. Budweizer draw-15c BEEEEEEEEER! ATTENTION STUDENTS! Your Summer School Class Schedule is 8-12 a.m. Mon. thru Sat. Home of The Chalkhawk Your Pool Playing and Beer Drinking Schedule at the Lounge is: 12:01 to Midnight Monday thru Saturday Southwest Corner of Hillcrest Bowl in Hillcrest Shopping Center, 9th & Iowa Lounge Directly behind Hillcrest Billiards JULY CLEARANCE SALE! THURSDAY - SATURDAY - DRESSES - SLACKS - SHORTS - SWIMWEAR REDUCED 30-40% LINGERIE— DISCONTINUED STYLES NOW $ \frac{1}{2} $ PRICE FREE PARKING PROJECT 800 ● 835 MASS. ● VI3-4833 Jay SHOPPE Downtown THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN 79th Year, No. 8 The University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas Tuesday, July 8, 1969 Ryun may end career (Editor's Note: Parts of this story and all of the pictures were contributed by George Wilkens, Miami, Fla., junior in journalism. He attended the National AAU Track and Field Championships in Miami June 29 and on his own initiative took this series of pictures and collected the material for this story for the benefit of the readers of the Summer Session Kansan. Although this event happened more than a week ago, the Summer Session Kansan was unable to present this story until now because of the July 4 holiday.) A crowd of 10,000 spectators sat in 88-degree heat June 29 and waited to see who would win the AAU one-mile championships. At the same time, contestants in the event, including Jim Ryun, jogged around the Miami-Dade Junior College Stadium. When the race was ready to begin and the loud speaker blared out "In lane number one, Jim Ryun," the crowd cheered. Several small children held up a huge sign that said, "Go Ryun. Hello CBS." Ryun was loosening up with exercises, but he looked tense. As the loud speaker made the second call for all milers, Ryun walked off and headed for the starting line. The starting gun was fired and the runners were off. Ryun was running second, but soon dropped back to last place on the backstretch of the second lap. Finally he gave up. Ryun picked up his warm-ups, met his wife and left the stadium. As he headed for his car, reporters and photographers followed him to ask questions. Ryun turned to them and said, "I really don't feel like talking now, O.K.?" He attempted to give a half smile, but it was obvious that he was very upset. Ryun returned to the stadium an hour and a half later and said, "I just quit. It's just as simple as that. I was emotionally disturbed immediately afterwards and didn't want to talk to anyone." Ryun said he didn't know if he would quit running for good. He did say that he plans to run at Zurich, Switzerland, and West Berlin, and "then quit for the rest of the year." "When you see everyone else starting to pull away and there's no competitive response, the answer is staleness." Ryum said. Ryum told his friend Rich Clarkson, a photographer for the Topeka Capital-Journal, that he was, "stale from too much competition, too much pressure and too many races." As Ryun was walking to his car after quitting the race, Marty Liquori was winning the mile championship. Liquori said he felt confident he would win when Ryun dropped out of the race. "I sort of felt I could handle everybody else," he said. Liquori admitted he was worried when Ryun jumped out in the lead with Chuck LaBenz at the start of the race. "I had a feeling Jim might be up for this meet and go out at a fast pace and lead all the way. Three years ago in this meet, he took the lead and ran a 3:51.1, which was a new world's record. I thought he might do it again today." Liquori said. "I guess the reason for my good times the last three races was because I was running against Jim," Liquori added. "I'm sorry he couldn't compete all the way." KU administrators get salary raises Annual salaries for new University of Kansas staff members, as well as salary increases for KU's top administrators and deans of schools are included in the $39,167,444 educational and general operating budget for the 1970 fiscal year which begins today. Dale P. Scannell, who will begin duties as new dean of the KU School of Education this summer, will receive $24,000 annually. The salary for Arthur Katz, dean of the new School of Social Work, is $26,500 per year. The budget, approved by the Kansas Board of Regents May 15, sets the annual salary for KU Chancellor-elect E. Laurence Chalmer at $37,000. Chalmers will begin his duties at KU in late August. He will receive the same salary as did out-going Chancellor W. Clark Wescoe. Like Wescoe, Chalmers will also receive free use of the Chancellor's residence and an automobile. Lawrence Blades, new dean of the KU School of Law, will receive $26,000 annually. This represents an increase of $2,000 from last year. A United Press International count Monday showed at least 589 persons killed in traffic between 6 p.m. Thursday and midnight Sunday. Salaries for the deans of other BULLETIN Kansas counted ten fatalities on the state's streets and highways during the long Fourth of July weekend. Two drownings and three deaths in accidents classified as miscellaneous brought the overall total to 15. The same holiday a year ago saw five traffic deaths in Kansas. KU schools, all increased by $1,000 per year, are: Clifford Clark, School of Business, $26,000; Charles Kahn, School of Architecture and Urban Design, $23,000; William Albrecht, Graduate School, $25,500; George R. Waggoner, College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, $28,000; William Smith, School of Engineering, $26,800; Thomas Gorton, School of Fine Arts, $23,000, and Howard Mossberg, School of Pharmacy, $23,000. A salary for the dean of the School of Journalism is not listed because a full-time dean has not been appointed following the resignation of Dean Warren K. Agee. Lee Young, assistant professor of journalism, is the acting dean. Salary increases for the top KU administrators are as follows; David W. Heron, director of libraries, from $24,000 to $25,000; William Balfour, dean of student affairs, from $20,000 to $22,000; Francis Heller, dean of faculties, from $27,000 to $28,000; and George B. Smith, vice-chancellor for institutional planning, from $22,000 to $22,200. Raymond Nichols, retired vice-chancellor for finance and now executive secretary of the University, from $23,500 to $24,000; Keith Nitcher, new vice-chancellor for finance, $20,000; and Dr. Raymond Schwegler, director of student health services, from $21,800 to $23,100. Keith Lawton, vice-chancellor for operations, from $22,000 to $23,000; James K. Hitt, director of systems development, from $20,-300 to $21,300; Emily Taylof, dean of women, from $15,600 to $16,600; Donald K. Alderson, dean of men, rom $14,000 to $15,000; and James Gunn, administrative assistant to the chancellor, from $13,400 to $14,200. KANSAS Ryun prepares for the AAU mile . . . 243 and sprints to a strong challenging position on the heels of the pacesetter . . . L but soon fades to last and drops out. ASA Anne and Jim Ryun . . . AAU 241 walk toward an uncertain future in track. Private funds are sought for intensive care center Private funds amounting to $400,000 are being sought for the development of a highly specialized intensive care unit for the treatment of burns. The burn unit, which will be housed at the University of Kansas Medical Center in Kansas City, will be separate and isolated from the mainstream of hospital traffic, in order to minimize the danger of infection. Even though the Medical Center recieves many burn patients each year from all over the state, there are no facilities specifically designed for them," said Russell H. Miller, director of the medical center. "Patients are cared for in rooms on floors primarily devoted to routine surgical care." Most of the cost of the center, which includes $300,000 for construction and $100,000 for equipment, must come from contributions. Miller said. The burn equipment will include a room with a Hubbard tank, electronic monitoring equipment, burn treatment beds, and laboratory facilities. Individual items of equipmen range in price from $800 to $5,000. The burn unit will make possible more research as well as improved treatment of patients. Prospective contributors can obtain more information at the Medical Center or from the Kansas University Endowment Association. KU senior class sponsored making of documentary film The forward looking class or 1969 at the University of Kansas has been planning ahead to the year 1994, when this graduating class holds its 25th reunion. The class recently approved and financed the making of a 30-minute, 16mm color-sound film of the sights and sounds of KU in 1969. The film may bring a few lumps to seniors' throats as they Regents table motion for campus beer sales TOPEKA (UPI) — Students at Kansas' six colleges and universities will have to wait a little longer for an answer to the question of the sale of 3.2 beer on their campuses. The Kansas Board of Regents deferred action on the question last week, accepting the recommendation of the Council of Presidents, a body composed of heads of all state higher education institutions. The Council recommended deferment of the matter pending the outcome of a study to be conducted by the Kansas Legislative Council on laws pertaining to liquor and cereal malt beverages. Students at the University of Kansas and Wichita State University have voted in favor of beer on campus. Fort Hays State students have opposed the idea. Attorney General Kent Frizzell said earlier this year that the sale of 3.2 beer would be permissable on state campuses because it does not meet the definition of alcoholic liquor which is prohibited by state law on public property. 2 KANSAN view it at their breakfast before Commencement, but it is actually for viewing at the 25th reunion when what happened in 1969 will be even more nostalgic. The senior film committee began movie-making in 1968 with a 10-minute, 8mm film. The class of 1969 decided to continue the film idea, enlarging it and refining it to concentrate primarily on the seniors of this year, but also incorporating segments from the past four years, compiled from borrowed clips. Jly.8 1969 This year's film, "Where Is Yesterday?" was written by John M. Hill, senior class president, and edited and directed by Nicholas Eliopoulos, radio and TV film major. The film is interspersed with comments by 1969 seniors on a variety of topics including the happenings of four years, the Viet Nam problem and society as a whole. It is also peppered with guest appearances by Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe and Dean of student Affairs William Balfour. Interviews with Andy Williams, Pat Paulsen, and Walter Cronkite, all of whom were in the vicinity of KU in 1968-69, and a short monologue by Pepper Rodgers, head football coach, are included. Strick's Cafe 732 N. 2nd St. OPEN 7 a.m. to 10 p.m. Monday thru Saturday Eliopoulos, who besides editing and directing also did some of the camera work, he has made three 16mm films. He attended, on an undergraduate research grant from KU, the Southern California University cinema workshop last summer in preparation for the undertaking. Deliciously Different Mexican Food Casa De Taco 1105 Mass. VI 3-9880 Your Pool Playing and Beer Drinking Schedule Home of The Chalkhawk the Lounge is: 12:01 to Midnight Monday thru Saturday As chairman of the senior film committee, Eliopoulos has also had the aid of four other students this year: Jan Caldwell—production coordinator; R. L. Bailey—assistant editor; Richard Geary and Jim Bair—cameramen. at the Lounge A premiere showing for senior boys will be held at 8 a.m., June 2. However, a continuous public showing will be set up June 2 from 2 to 4 p.m. in Dyche Auditorium. A late showing will be at 10 p.m. that evening following the Commencement exercises, also in Dyche. Your Summer School Class Schedule is 8-12 a.m. Mon. thru Sat. ATTENTION STUDENTS! T Southwest Corner of Hillcrest Bowl in Hillcrest Shopping Center, 9th & Iowa Directly behind Hillcrest Billiards SALE! SALE! SALE! SALE! Boys-Girls-Infants Values To? All Inventory Regrouped and Repriced. Now At Even Lower Prices Little Women 823 Massachusetts Downtown Patronize Kansan Advertisers For Students on the Go, We're TOPS Wardrobe Care Centers In By 9 – Out By 5 Same Day Service For Students on the Go, We're TOPS Two Convenient Locations 1517 West 6th 1526 West 23rd Handy Drive-Up Window Easy Parking " you 'd better believe it! " Pent "You'd better believe it!" Summer & Fall Dresses—Pant Dresses—Jumpsuits 33 1/3% OFF Special Grouping of Sportswear, Dresses, Blouses, Shorts 50% OFF All Swimsuits & Cover Ups 33 1/3% OFF A Few Swimsuits $5.00 For A Cool, Carefree Summer SHOP AT the VILLAGE SET 922 Massachusetts Fabulous new Fall Fashions arriving! A small deposit will hold your choice until needed. SALE SALE KU a major contributor to health physics program As the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission's Special Fellowship Program in Health Physics celebrates its 20th birthday this month, the University of Kansas can free to eat a major portion of the cake. A member of the program for 13 years, KU has contributed more than 100 of the 1,200 graduate fellowships awarded under the program. This total includes 67 new fellows across the nation and seven from KU for the 1969- 70 academic year. Frank E. Hoecker, professor of radiation biophysics, has been director of the program at KU since its inception. In an age of specialization, health physics stands out as being somewhat unique. It is concerned with research and protection in the radiation sciences. Hoecker does not believe a humanitarian zeal is what prompts Dean gets grant Dr. Earl S. Huyser, professor of chemistry at the University of Kansas, has received a $15,108 grant from the U.S. Public Health Servire for research on hydrogen transfer reactions. Dr. Huyser, a specialist in organic chemistry, will be starting his eight year of study on this project which concerns atom transfer reaction and biochemical reactions. Recommendation for the award came from the National Institute of Arthritis and Metabolic Diseases. Working with Dr. Huyser will be two graduate students, each a candidate for the Ph.D. degree. USPHS grant given Dr. Arthur Katz, dean of the University of Kansas School of Social Work, has received a grant of $48,198 from the U.S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare for a social work training project at the university level. Dean Katz said he and colleagues will organize seminars and institutes for the development of practicing professionals who have at least a master's degree in social work and for the advanced training of KU faculty members in social work. The project will involve from 40 to 50 persons. most students to seek a fellowship in the program. "I think it's fair interest in radiation and its effect on materials," Hoecker says. He also said with some it's an "abstract interest" and with others it is an interest in "how radiation interacts with biological organisms." Jly. 8 1969 KANSAN 3 Hoecker says many graduates of the program enter jobs in hospitals, while others go into health programs in government laboratories or into university teaching. Concerning the financial prospects for a graduate from the program, Hoecker points to a recent Ph.D. graduate in health physics who received $14,000 as a startling salary. He said graduates with a master's degree earn between $10,000 and $12,000 their first year. The program originated in 1949 when S.E.C. instructed the Oak Ridge, Tenn., Institute of Nuclear Studies—now Oak Ridge Associated Universities—to develop and administer a fellowship program in health physics. Training includes special courses of study at the university and practical experience at national laboratories in handling problems related to radiation monitoring, shielding, waste disposal, and other aspects of nuclear research and technology. The fellowships at KU are open to persons with undergraduate majors in physics, chemistry, engineering and some biological sciences. First-year fellowship holders spend nine months at KU and three months at one of the A.E.C. Nuclear Reactor Testing stations. New frosh take honors classes Eighteen recent high school graduates are presently participating in the University of Kansas Honors Summer Institute, June 9-August. 2. The institute sponsored by the KU College of Liberal Arts and Sciences for selected high school graduates, consists of a combination of honors courses in biology, English, history and philosophy. Those freshmen participating are: Linda J. Barclay, Shawnee Mission; Timothy J. Basham, Eureka; Larry H. Batty, Raytown Mo.; Helen Behmann, Kansas City; Susan D. Casement, Sedan; Ramona Curry, Council Grove; Darryl Ann Dutton, Colby; David A. Eisenstark, Manhattan. Also attending are: Leroy E. Euler, Watenahe; William Robin McDonald, Larned; Christine L. Nelson, Chanute; Jane D. Ott, Eudora; Steven M. Ramberg, Topeka; Paul R. Schowalter, Wichita; Margaret R. Taylor, Kansas City; Jerry L. Totten, Jewell; Patti Wiggins, Independence; Barbara L. Schmidt, Pawnee Rock. JAYHAWKER TOWERS Apartments Now renting 2-bedroom furnished apartments. All utilities included in rent. - Swimming pool-club rooms - Immediately adjacent to campus - Air-conditioned - Elevators - Off-street parking Convenient Location, a Time and Money Saver. Lawrence's Finest Apartment Complex Inspection Invited 1603 W. 15th Tel.VI 3-4993 pre-inventory 50% OFF ON PAPERBACK BOOKS of selected titles from all subject areas. This sale will include an assortment of Bibles. All titles 1/2 of publishers list price. kansas union BOOKSTORE TOMMY HILFIGER JEWELRY Confidentially The wisest way to select a diamond ring is to rely on your own good taste... and look for the name "Keepsake" in the ring and on the tag. KISMET $400 ALSO $275 TO 1800 WEDDING RING 62.5C REGISTERED Keepsake® DIAMOND RINGS Ray Christian "The COLLEGE JEWELER" 809 Mass. "Special College Terms" VI 3-5432 filing enlarged to show detail. Trade-Mark Reg. SALE Summer Clearance Begins Suits ... from 39.50 Sport Coats ... from 25.00 Dress Shirts ... 5.50 Dress Slacks ... 12.00 Knit Shirts ... 4.00 Wash Slacks ... 6.00 MISTER GUY 920 MASSACHUSETTS Return to learning at last Students come to the University of Kansas to learn. This is a basic premise which we must assume. And considering this assumption, it would seem to follow that the action taken by the University Disciplinary Board (UDB) in expelling several students because of their participation in disrupting the Chancellor's ROTC Review might just bring the focus of other KU students back to that heading. During the past few years, a minority of students on College campuses throughout the country seem to have deviated from that high goal of a thirst for knowledge. They appear to be spending almost as much time holding demonstrations—and meetings to plan those demonstrations—as they do in attending classes and studying. But where has that brought them? Most probably into the very situation they are most vehemently protesting. The draft and the Vietnam war seem to be the favorite "cause" behind most protests and demonstrations these days. Almost to the point where they are becoming boring and trite. Possibly actions like those taken by the UDB will help curtail some of the disruptions. Hopefully they will. No University can function properly and do an effective job of teaching its students if it has to spend the better part of its time disciplining them and keeping order. The UDB kicked several students out of the University. Those students were protesting the draft and the Vietnam war by disrupting the ROTC Review. Many of them were male.And the presence of the female members of the group is somewhat puzzling. They were supposedly following their beliefs and ideals. But most probably all they did was, to quote an old saying, take themselves "out of the frying pan and into the fire" They were protesting the draft. And what did they do? They made themselves openly subject to it by getting ousted from school. This means that, from now until they are allowed to re-enter the University in the Spring semester, 1970, they will be without their only device for evading the draft—their college deferment. This, they brought upon themselves. And they have no one else to blame. But maybe—just maybe—this will serve as a lesson for those who would follow in their footsteps. Maybe some will learn from this University experience. Only time will tell. Don Westerhaus Managing Editor Guest editorial Regents interfered with UDB The names of the students taking part in the ROTC demonstration and the disciplinary action taken against them by the University have been made public. The Board of Regents ordered the administration to release that information to the press. The Regents decided that the action of the University in investigating the affair and determining discipline through a responsible committee of faculty and students was not enough. That the students found guilty should be publicly exposed and their parents equally embarrassed seemed to be the aim of some self-righteous finger pointing of some segments of the press. Discipline, harsh as it seems to some, was considered insufficient by the Regents. The action of such a highly respected group is disappointing, to say the least. The Regents over-reacted and in so doing not only added another penalty to the guilty parties, but put into question the good judgment of the disciplinary committee. It appears that the Regents were as much interested in revenge against the offenders as in using discipline as an educational tool and as a means of restoring the faith of the offenders in our redemptive purposes and standards of justice. What good has been served by such a public exposure? Is society at large, or the University, or the offenders any better by such action? Let's hope that the administration of the University, as it works through responsible committees can continue to deal with violations on the basis of good reason, good faith and what is best for the long range purposes of society. Public curiosity, public anger, or even public pressure are not always the best reasons for action. Let's hope that the Regents may give due credit and freedom to the sound judgment of University committees. Rafael Sanchez, Jr. Campus Pastor Kansan Movie Reviews If you've seen either "Arabesque" or "The Sand Pebbles," you have a fairly bad idea about what "The Chairman" is all about. Like "Arabesque," Gregory Peck is everyone's cool professor, recruited by intelligence to save the world. Like "The Sand Pebbles" the location scenes tend to leave the cinematic visitor to China in dream-limbo. But what "Arabesque" and "Pebbles" had in common, plot, is not the primary ingredient that makes "The Chairman" an evening of good entertainment. "Chairman" relies not so much on plot as it does on tension. Peck is sent into China in his capacity as a Nobel Prize-winning scientist to obtain a new enzyme formula. That's the plot. The stiff injection of suspense comes when we learn that, along with the secret transmitter implanted in his skull and monitored by satellite there has been placed a secret "fail-safe" miniature bomb device that will render old Gregory a pile of hamburger should he fall into enemy hands. The big catch here is that we know this, but Gregory doesn't. Director J. Lee Thompson plays out this motif for all it's worth, and then a bit more. Unfortunately, Thompson also seems to get carried away with contemporary China, and the film's namesakes, the Yellow Menace himself, Mao. As a documentary, it is hard to believe that "Chairman" at times seems to take itself seriously. The viewer is treated to fanatical little-red-book-waving Red Guardsmen and every Bircher's stereotype of what a Chinese revolutionary should look like. Even Mao is portrayed (right up there on the silver screen, in Panavision, no less) as a Commie ping-pong player. The film has its twists, its strengths and weaknesses. Peck plays his professor with the cool he should. His performance is pure Peck and that is good enough. The movie's attention to detail is commendable. The exterior of China are striking, wherever they were shot. The titles are very interesting—a combination or quick-cut stills and cutouts in a collage around the credits. As a suspense thriller, "The Chairman" is not the finest nor the best thriller of the year, but it is solid entertainment done on a proven formula with a good cast. ... quotes ... PARKERSBURG, W. Va.—Fifteen-year-old Susan Bailey telling, in a confession read in court, of her role in setting a fire that killed her parents and 10 brothers and sisters. The confession described pouring gasoline around the house prior to touching off the blaze: "I first started with father and mother's room, then in every room except the bathroom. After emptying the gasoline in the dishpan, I put it back under the sink where I first got it." WASHINGTON (UPI) — HEW Secretary Robert H. Finch testifying before a House committee on federal efforts to achieve desegregation: "We do not have to go in with an ax. We can and should use a scalpel, and work with the leadership in the community." Letters to the editor The University of Kansas Senate Executive Committee believes it necessary and timely to express its deep concern about the pressures which have been and are continuing to be brought to bear on the University of Kansas and on the Board of Regents in connection with the University disciplinary proceedings which resulted from the cancellation of the May 9 Chancellor's ROTC review. To The Editor: The necessity for those disciplinary proceedings arose at a time when the new internal governmental structure of the University was just going into effect. Nevertheless, and in spite of a magnitude and complexity not within the previous experience of this or any other Kansas University Disciplinary Board, necessary procedural decisions were made and the proceedings were effectively carried on. Continuation of the disruption experienced at the initial public disciplinary hearing was forestalled with the orderly assistance of a court restraining order. Following the holding of its hearings, the University Disciplinary Board concerned itself with the formulation of punishments appropriate to the maintenance of the internal peace of the University. That those punishments were to be the sole punishments received was an assumption basic to the deliberations of the University Disciplinary Board. It was to maintain the validity of that assumption that the University's position of nondisclosure of names was taken. The position was carefully considered, and, indeed, after the emergence of external pressures, it was carefully reconsidered and adhered to, in the interest of maintaining the integrity of the University's internal disciplinary processes. We do not deny the right of others to disagree publicly with the University's non-disclosure position. Nor do we deny their privilege to conduct newspaper and telephone campaigns against the University's position. We do, however, believe the campaigns to be ill-conceived and unwarranted. The campaigns are ill-conceived, because they are carried on without apparent understanding of, or attempt to understand, the significant difference between criminal conduct and conduct which is not criminal but which is detrimental to an institution's internal well-being, be that institution a church, a business enterprise, a newspaper, or a university. It is indeed inappropriate for any institution to shelter its members from the sanctions of the criminal law. It is, however, highly appropriate for any institution to develop and sustain internal procedures and sanctions for dealing with non-criminal conduct which it views as detrimental to its well-being. Such internal institutional action is an everyday occurrence. To make a witch-hunt of such occurrences is to strike at a basic source of social order. Finally, the campaigns are unwarranted, because, in a time of internal stress and public frustration, the University has shown itself able to avoid the violent confrontations that have plagued other educational institutions and has shown itself able to proceed in an orderly fashion to resolve its internal problems. The many within the structure of University governance—students, faculty, administrators and Regents—who have dealt as responsibly as they know how with the difficulties caused by unreasoning impatience from within should be able to expect not to have those difficulties compounded by unreasoning impatience from without. We believe, and assert, that the University has withstood a severe test. With the continued cooperation of those dedicated to its welfare, it will be able to withstand further tests the future may bring. The University of Kansas Senate Executive Committee Charles H. Oldfather, Chairman The Lighter Side 'It's embarrassing' By Dick West — UPI Columnist WASHINGTON — Every now and then someone will say to me, "What is Congress doing?" This is an embarrassing question. Particularly when the question is asked by a member of Congress. After all, I spend most of my time on Capitol Hill. So I am expected to be informed about congressional activities. To avoid appearing doltish when responding to the question, I have finally worked out an evasive answer. "Congress is buildup," I reply. When people say, "What is Congress doing?" and I simply look blank, they assume I am stupid. Yet that is the only way the question can be intelligently answered. I hope the matter will be dropped there, but occasionally I am pressed for an elaboration. "Building up to what?" "Building up to their summer vacation," I explain. For the first time this year, you see, Congress had scheduled a The Summer Session Kansan, student newspaper at the University of Kansas, is represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 Street, NY, NY. 10022. Mail subscription rates: $6 a semester or $10 a year. Publicity postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas, every Tuesday and Friday for the duration of the summer session. Accommodations, goods, and employment advertised in the Summer Session Kansan are offered to students without regard to color, creed, or national origin. Well, you could hardly expect Congress to plunge into a summer recess for the first time without any training or practice. Ergo, much of this year's session has been devoted to getting into condition for the recess. 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 opinions expressed in the Summer Session Kansan are not necessarily those of the University of Kansas Administration or the Kansas State Board of Regents. Members have been building up to it gradually, which was a wise approach. Otherwise, some of them might have been overextended. So the dates were fixed last winter—Aug. 13 to Sept. 3. They began tuning up with the Lincoln Day recess: Feb. 7-17, took a trial run at Eastertide April 3-14 and rehearsed again over Memorial Day May 28-June 2. Executive Staff Managing Editor ... Don Westerhaus Adviser ... James W. Murray Photography ... Bill Seymour, Gary Mason Business Manager ... Rodney Obwynne Adviser ... Mel Adams Office Manager ... Helen Ross In fact, it was the only part of the reform that was adopted. The reformers argued that congressmen could function more efficiently if they had a regular summer vacation, with the dates fixed in advance, rather than having to improvise time off while the session was in progress. summer recess. It was adopted as part of the congressional reform program advocated by a group of the younger lawgivers. The legislative program was kept to a minimum during the weeks preceding and following each of these warmup recesses, and a number of long weekends were interspersed between them. The House, for instance, held its Flag Day ceremony two days early this week, making it unnecessary to meet on Saturday. THE KAMPER KANSAN Volume 6, Issue 2 MIDWESTERN MUSIC AND ART CAMP, LAWRENCE, KANSAS Tuesday, July 8, 1969 Camp Council enters new phase By DAVID McMILLAN Kamper Kansan Co-Editor In the brief span of time since the original Camp Council was so abruptly disbanded, a new form of the council within each dormitory has come into being. The original council, consisting of elected representatives from each wing of the four residence halls, was disbanded following the first meeting. Camp Director Russell L. Wiley and his staff had decided the council was being used as a forum for complaints rather than an opportunity for constructive criticism. The new council is basically the same as the old council with, however, a few changes. The wing representatives from the original council meet at dorm meetings at least once a week. Then, if there is some issue that relates to the Camp as a whole or how the specific dorm fits into the Camp structure, the elected residents of each dorm meet at a weekly meeting with Supervisor Richard Brummett to discuss these and other Camp issues. McCollum's council meets on Monday nights, Templin's meets on Tuesday nights, Lewis' on Wednesday and Hashinger, the original dorm council, has no regular meeting schedule but does meet at least at least once a week. The presidents of, the separate dorm councils are: Sara Lytle, McCollum; Sue Hessle, Lewis; sidering "general questions and legitimate grievances," according to Paul Young, assistant supervisor of that hall. One problem was the establishment of a central lost and found office for the whole Camp instead of the separate ones presently in operation. Young compared the workings of his council to that of a student council in a high school. The council at Hashinger has discussed last Friday's picnic and other Camp functions on the Fourth of July. The council organized an advertising plan, by the art students, for last Saturday's Sadie Hawkin's Dance. Also organized were the clean-up crew and cooking crew for the Camp picnic. Issues that have been discussed at Lewis and McCollum's council meetings are decoration of the ID badges, remaining in the rooms during the inspection hours of 8 to 10 a.m., dating non-Campers, condition of irons and ironing boards, the decoration of windows during the annual Camp King and Queen campaign, fireworks displays and the Sadie Hawkins Dance. Greg Clopton, Hashinger; and Mike Caravella, Templein. "For the short length of time that we are here, I think the council is as effective as it can be," Russell Branden, Supervisor at Hashinger, commented. "With this kind of organization we can more easily solve the dorm problems," he continued. Formals to highlight Camp grand finale Templin's council was con- The Camp's annual formal dance will be held July 19 from 8 p.m. until 11:30 p.m. at the Union Ballroom. By DEBBIE SHERRY Long and short formals for girls, and dinner jackets or suits for boys will be the appropriate dress. Flowers will not be necessary. BUS SERVICE will be provided, beginning at 7:30 p.m. that evening. Decorations will be handled by Mrs. Margaret Hearnes, assistant Camp supervisor. Pat Taylor, counselor at Templin, has planned the music agenda. The Camper Stage Band, the Counselor Stage Band and the Camper Rock Band are among the musical entertainments being provided. Non-Camper date may attend the dance if they have advanced written permission from the Camper's parents. The climax of the evening will be the crowning of the King and Queen by Camp Director Russell L. Wiley, and the presentation of a small gift from the Camp to the couple. ON TUESDAY, July 15, all wings from the four residence halls will nominate a candidate to represent them as king or queen at the formal dance. The 36 girl and 22 boy candidates chosen may campaign with signs and speeches. Thursday, July 17, the candidates may present a five-minute skit between 7:30 p.m. and 9:30 p.m. at McCollum parking lot. Thursday evening members of the entire camp will vote on their individual choices at wing meetings. The plans for the dance have been arranged by Russell Branden, a Camp supervisor. The image shows a person wearing headphones and reaching towards a large stack of vinyl records. The individual appears to be engaged in an activity related to music production or audio work, possibly adjusting or selecting a record from the stack. — Photo by Herman Ward "For the hottest sound in radio, dial Camper KUOK." Students man KUOK "Stand by for Camper Radio KUOK, 630!" Every Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday nights journalism and speech Campers [Image of a man] pointing upwards with his index finger. He is wearing a dark shirt and has short dark hair. The background is blurred. Sir Vivian Dunn Sir Vivian Dunn pays third visit By SANDY NIELSEN Kamper Konsen Researcher Retired Colonel Sir Vivian Dunn of the Royal Marines knighted by Queen Elizabeth II for his services to British music in the Royal Marines Band, July 3 concluded two weeks as guest conductor for the Midwestern Music and Art Camp. IN HIS CLIPPED British accent, he related how the Queen had solemnly touched a sword to the shoulders of the man kneeling before her. She rose to lay a badge around his neck and to pin the star of the Royal Victorian Order to his jacket Col. Dunn was knighted last February 18 and remembered it as a "very personal and private experience which makes one very proud." Since his retirement last year from the appointment of Director of Music of the Royal Marines Band, Col. Dunn has devoted himself to free-lance conducting; composing, recording and band clinics such as KU's. His third visit to Kansas for the Camp ended yesterday when he left to visit friends in Washington, D.C. He admitted to liking Kansas and its people. Though he called the weather "a little unusual" he spoke of the band members as "very keen, very intelligent and very excellent." Internationally famous for his contributions to music, he was recently awarded a gold record by the Electrical Music Industries for the sale of more than one million Royal Marine Band Records. Though he is a native of Sussex, England, he travels continually throughout the world. He has made many trips to the United States, one of the more noteworthy being last year's trip to Washington, D.C., where he conducted the service bands on several occasions. take over campus radio station KUOK applying their talents to radio broadcasting. INCLUDED AS part of the radio and television courses for the journalism and speech divisions, broadcasting and many other station activities are done by the summer Campers. The students are being taught the radio skills at the station by KU students. Allan Levene, general manager of the station, and John Rylee, program director, guide the journalism Campers in the use of the station equipment and the understanding of the duties of a disjockey. Students experience the disc-jockey's role when they tighten their headsets and speak into a live microphone. Each Camper occupies the control room for a period of 30 minutes. IN CHARGE of the would-be radio broadcasters in the speech section of the camp is another KU student. Phil Huddon. KUOK Camper Radio broadcasts from 6 p.m. to 10 p.m. with Campers assuming control of the station. Besides running the control board, Campers read the news and weather reports. KUOK is located in the basement of Hoch Auditorium and broadcasts to the dormitories through alternating current electrical wires. Levene commented. "Manv DURING THE regular academic year, the station is operated by KU journalism students who are majoring in radio-television. students have a great future in store for them in journalism. The Campers are a very enthusiastic group and good learners." 'Daisy Maes' hook their Li'l Abners' Nervous chatter filled the air as anxious girls led their red-faced dates to the dance floor for the annual Sadie Hawkins Dance Saturday in the Templin Hall cafeteria. But as the night wore on, the strained expressions broke into smiles and the heat became bearable. The couples in costumes ranging from the sublime to the ridiculous, danced to the blaring beat of the band, joining each other in doing their thing. Russell Branden, a camp supervisor, was in charge of the event. The dance was well-attended despite the mass Camper evacuation for the Fourth of July weekend. 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 Mac. New councils offer promise Today is July 8, 1969. Just 193 years and 4 days ago, a document was adopted by the people of this country. This document was little more than ink and parchment, yet no other document since—and perhaps ever—will have the impact upon our world as this one parchment. In the days to come, we may disagree with some regulations and decisions. Yet the Declaration of Independence says, "Pruidence, indeed, will dictate that Governments long established should not be changed for light and transient causes; and accordingly all experience hath shown, that mankind are more disposed to suffer, while evils are sufferable, than to right themselves by abolishing forms to which they are accustomed." If all Campers and Administrators would read and believe this, our differences might pass without disturbing the entire Camp. Matters such as length of hair, dress, "lights-out" time, etc., are not so drastically evil that they cannot be put up with. Admittedly, there was cause for our Camp Director to be upset and disgusted with the council meeting two weeks ago. But, never has abolishing any institution solved the problem faced. Abolishing the Council solved nothing and probably made matters worse. Very few Campers had knowledge of the meeting until a piece of literature was found in their mailboxes informing them of the situation. The supervisor of Hashinger Hall established a separate council for Hashinger with representatives from each wing. The three other dorms followed. Each dorm council elected a president and the presidents of all four councils will meet and serve as the camp council. This idea is one of the best and all of you should support it. If these councils are used wisely, they will work and satisfy the camp needs. — Elair Yeager Saved by the badge Identification proves value Sirens blazing, red lights flashing, student-Camper Jane Doe is rushed to Watkins Memorial Hospital. Moving swiftly, the ambulance drivers transport her to the emergency room where a doctor and nurse are standing by. "Thank God, she's wearing her name tag," the physician gasps as he prepares a blood transfusion, "or we wouldn't have been able to find her correct blood type in time!" What's wrong with student-Camper Jane Doe? She stuck herself with her shiny, new Camer's I.D. badge and is suffering from symptoms of blood poisoning. So you see fellow Campers how important it is to wear your I.D. badge at all times? And not only are they necessary to your health and well-being but they are also ingeniously designed to compliment anything and everything you wear with them. This includes shirts, dresses, bathing suits, sleepwear and formal attire. Name tags will surely create more harmony and cooperation between Camp members. Boys will no longer have to go through the embarrassing process of asking a girl her name and address. By the same token, girls won't have to worry about when to volunteer this information and when to keep quiet. It will always be clearly visible on the badge for all to see. And the conveniences are unlimited, Just think after six weeks of wearing these cards on every piece of clothing you own, including your formal, anytime you wish to wear a pin or any other such article you will have two ready-made pin holes available. What a help to housekeeping these little badges will be. What better way to clean out those full-to-overflowing drawers or the debris under the bed, than while searching frantically for your I.D. badge at 6:30 in the morning? These name-plates also serve another important purpose, that of keeping you in pocket money. Although the average Camper doesn't seem to appreciate them, Lawrence boys and other non-Campers do. They seem to feel they are collector's items and will usually pay a nice little sum to rent or buy your badge. Yes, these coveted I.D. badges are just one of the many things that is being done to help—and I quote—"each student in this Camp to have a wonderfully rich and rewarding experience." 'Wade Down' heavily overloaded Mary Lind Wade Down was a typical Camper ... almost. He had a perpetually dazed, intellectual look on his face which was topped with a shaggy head of hair, with Don't complain about dull dances; make them come alive instead Complaining is an inborn trait for Campers. There has been more than enough complaining about the dances. Complaining about "lousy music" or about "dead" dances has long been a popular pastime. This complaining is pointless. The music is supplied by privately owned records and equipment. The only way to get a live band to play for an entire dance is to pay them. Since there is no dance fund, admission would have to be charged. How many good bands are there in Lawrence that you would pay money to hear? The only improvement that would keep the dances free is to volunteer your own record collection for a night—in the hope that a few of your favorite songs will be played. If you will not do this, then, to put it bluntly, shut up. As for the complaint of dead dances, whose fault is that but your own? The dances are only dead because the Campers make them that way. With that in mind, I would like to offer a few suggestions: - Show Up. No dance is alive without people there. And you're not going to thrill anybody by showing up a half an hour late, either. No dance will "come alive" when only 15 people are there. - Stay There. Just don't figure a dance will stay dead and leave. It will start moving a lot faster if everyone stays. Don't pop in and out all night, either. - Look Decent. Be feminine or be masculine according to your gender. No person, male or female, wants to dance with a person wearing an old T-shirt and dirty jeans. - Don't Stand In A Herd. You can't break out of a bad rut standing around in a group. Mingle. Meet people. - Don't Stick With Your Roommate. This rule is especially for the girls. Dance offers will be few if your roommate acts as a built-in chaperone. You see her all day anyway, why stick by her at a dance? Dead dances are nobody's fault but your own, fellow Campers. If you don't make the best of them, you are losing the best free entertainment available. — Brad Flynn 'Riley' protects hands Quick Draw fights back Well, kiddies, it's time for another great tale from our heritage of the Old West. Tonight's saga centers around one encounter that our heroes, Russler "Quick Draw" Riley and his faithful sidekick Dan "The Man" Brander, have with the local branch of a gang of dastardly outlaws known as the Dupes. In another tale you remember that Riley earned his nickname because of an earlier run-in with the notorious bad-guys. As you all know, he was calmly rambling along in a pleasant speech at his weekly ranch meeting when lo and behold a complaint was lodged against his time-honored custom of keeping his cattle well shorn. "It must be the Dupes behind this," Riley was heard to comment. "As everyone knows, only the Dupes go around shaggy looking and disheveled. Hey, maybe some of them snuck in among the herd when the new generation of cattle arrived awhile ago. however, I'll pull a quick one over on them. I'll discontinue my pleasant ranch meetings where I give all those nice speeches. That'll fool them. After all, I've been around quite awhile and somebody'd have to get up pretty early in the morning to fool me." Getting back to tonight's tale, it seemed that some outside ranch hands and possibly some of the dreaded Dupes had slipped past Riley's outer defenses and were trespassing on his ranch. After due deliberation with his sidekick and the various leaders of his ranch hands, Riley up with the idea that his cattle and ranch hands wear special uniforms, and as he put it, "The unwanted agents of the Dupes will stick out like sore thumbs because they will be without our uniforms." So after that fast action on his part, Riley was called "Quick Draw" by all who knew him. "At ease, 'Quick Draw,' at ease," Dan the Man muttered, "The cattle would never stand for that sort of thing. The basic idea is great but a simple mark or tag would do the job of identification and would be a less-obvious restriction of the cattle's liberty. And so, with some kind of simple mark, the Dupes can still be recognized with the minimum of resistance from the cattle." "And just think, if, by the work of some subversive Dupes, the cattle start to remove their identifying marks, we can scare them by warnings and possibly by sending some violaters back to less cultured pastures," Riley explained. "Excellent idea, my faithful Brander," Riley said, "I see I have trained you well, even in the few years that you have been here." "Anyway, as you know, Dan, all I want is for my cattle and ranch hands to have a good and enjoyable time in their visit at my humble ranch," Riley said. Well, children, that ends the tale, so rush off to bed. But, before you begin to worry about how to take this story, I want you to remember that this wasn't the last heard of the Dupes, for it seemed that the more they wer epersecuted and hounded, the greater their number swelled and the stronger they seemed to grow. David McMillan sideburns carefully cut off at the bottom of the ear. In other words, he was a normal boy Camper. He, like anyone else, dutifully attended the classes he had which were part of the science section: Advanced Uncomprehendology and Linear Confusiology. But there was something unique about Wade, for he was only four feet seven inches tall and extraordinarily weak. The start of Wade's undoing began quietly. He didn't complain when he had to carry about his little identification card to show he was a genuine authorized Camper. He didn't even mind when a counselor told him he'd also have to carry his room key—an ugly, bulky thing—with the card. Then came the day Wade was handed his rectangular badge with "Wade Ted Down 934 H" typed neatly upon it. Wade became uneasy. The badge was very heavy to be wearing on his shirt while he was carrying gigantic textbooks and was struggling up and down the ponderous hill that someone had had the vision on which to construct the dormitories. Next came a large metal button, still more weight for Wade to bear. It was emblazoned with bright red letters, "I am a Camper." But still Wade did not complain. This was followed by an armband with the University's seal stamped in the center of it. Wade found it was very loose around his arm and it constantly slid down keeping Wade busy pushing it back up. The next burden for Wade to support was a beanie which had the Jayhawk sewn on the front of it. This was also too large, causing it to fall over his eyes. Wade was now forced to make his way up and down the hill by feeling his way along, since he was blinded by the.beanie. At a dormitory meeting two days later the next forward step was 'proudly unveiled. At a great cost to the Camp—and consequently to the Campers—uniforms had been made, and everyone was to wear them constantly, from then on. Again the new offering was too large for Wade. The pants came piling about his feet, hiding his shoes completely. This discomfort was compounded by the combined muscle-straining weight of the card, key, badge, button, armband and beanie. But those who had kept churning out the burdens to wear didn't. They bought sand-wich signs from a local restaurant, painted over "Eat at Joe's" with "Daisy Hill Forever!", and started giving them to the Campers to carry. His counselor told the rest of the boys of his death at the next dormitory meeting. "He was a good, faithful boy," the counselor told the solemn group. "His remains will be sent on the next plane, train, or bus home. Let us have a moment of silence in his memory." That day, little Wade was attempting to eat his Jello salad—although he couldn't see it because of his beanie—when his counselor tapped him on the shoulder. Wade lifted up his beanie to see, saw the sandwich sign the counselor was offering, shrieked and ran off into an elevator. He then deliberately stuck it between floors and died of starvation before he could be rescued. After the glum quiet, the counselor discreetly cleared his throat and announced, "Now to the business at hand. We have here as our guest tonight Mr. Gregory. He is a professional tatooer. All you boys line up over there and Mr. Gregory will begin tattooing 'Property of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp' on your forehead." —David Danielson KANSAN The Kampfer Kanas, camp newspaper at the Midwestern Music and Art Camp, will be available on Fridays. It is written by the members of the Journalism Division of the Camp. THE KAMPER 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, goods, and employment offered in the Kamper Kansan are offered to students without regard to color, creed, or national origin. Executive Staff Executive Staff Co-Editor in-Chief Char Meister, David McMillan News Editor Pat Jordan Editorial Editor Blair Yeager Feature Editor David Danielson Sports Editor Ken Olson Photography Editor Mike Hitchcock Reporters: Brad Flynn, Jane Glazer, Barbara Kriel, David McMillan, Wendy White, June Kantz, Dwight Lee, Mary Aguilar, Chris Burnham, Maureen Eddy, Scott Chandler, Janette Hartman, Mary Jane Gunn- ning, Mary Lind, James Thomas, Debbie Sherry, Sandy Nellsen, and Debbie Wunn Kansar Adviser James W. Murray Assistant Advisers Jackie Raymond, Robert Stevens Photographic Advisers Gary Mason, William Seymour Brummett enjoys youth WASHINGTON BILLIARD DEO DENNIS COURTHOUSE By JEANNETTE HARTMAN Kamper Kansan Reporter Sitting with his elbows on his knees and his hands clasped in front of him, Richard Brummett, Camp supervisor, said, "It's a great experience just being with the kids. I look forward to Camp every year. It's the fastest six weeks of my life!" Richard Brummett THIS IS BRUMETT'S ninth summer with the Camp, having come to the Junior High Camp as a guest conductor in 1961. The next year he was invited back as a Camp supervisor by Russell L. Wiley, Camp director. The main thing about being a Camp supervisor is to like youngsters. That's why most of the Camp supervisors are teachers, because they like to work with youngsters," he said. "We all wish we could get better acquainted with everybody, but because a supervisor works all over the Camp, we don't get much chance." Besides being an administrator, Brummet handles sales for the Camp yearbook, Tempo, arranges pictures and works closely with the Tempo staff. CAMP SUPERVISORS ARRIVE a day before the Junior High Camp and leave at the end of the Senior High Camp. During the winter months, Brummett is supervisor of elementary music in Winfield. He graduated from Southwestern College in Winfield, majoring in music education. Although Brummet says he does not have any special hobbies, he enjoys watching pro-football and basketball on TV. He also has a record collection featuring band and orchestra music. Dorms' inspection system keeps rooms 'shaped up' By SCOTT CHANDLER Kamper Kansan Reporter Camp room inspection provides "incentive for clean and orderly rooms," Russell Branden, a Camp supervisor, said last week. A demerit, or "gig" system, has been in existence ever since the Camp opened in 1936. A "gig" marks a fault in room clean-up, Brandon said, but adds "decor and incentive for wings." Supervisors in each of the four residence halls check rooms daily to see that beds are properly made, floors and furniture are clean, desks are not cluttered and window shades and doors are shut. Air conditioners should be left on "low" and lights in each room should be "off", Branden said. Branden said he feels he and his assistant, Carl Johnson, are tougher than supervisors who inspect the three other buildings. He added that he would like to exchange inspections with the other residence halls in order to compare the ratings of each. THE ODDEST THING noticed in a room, Branden recalled, occurred several years ago when a student hung hundreds of metal "tabs" from soft drink cans from the ceiling of his room. He said the most enjoyable thing was looking at the pin-up sheets and posters in various rooms. Nancy Lloyd and Ivan Guskey Branden said the average daily high of "gigs" to one wing in Hashinger this year was sixteen, but one wing recorded 43 the first day. One individual room received four "gigs" in one day, Branden said. The wing in each residence hall with the least number of "gigs" in a week is awarded additional free time one evening and a pre-bedtime snack. - Photo by Jim Thomas Balance—with help Sixty students explore Spanish dialects, culture By MARY JEAN GUNNING Kansas Reporter The colorful customs and dialects of the Spanish people have come alive for the 60 students now enrolled in the Spanish division. Students attend morning classes of Hispanic culture, Spanish literature and reading, oral clinic and Spanish structure composition. INSTRUCTORS FOR THIS DIVISION come from eight Spanish-speaking countries: Cuba, Mexico, Panama, Argentina, Venezuela, Costa Rica, Bolivia and Spain. According to Ermal Garinger, Artists 'step' toward recitals director of the Spanish division, group conversations in which only four to six students and an instructor participate provide a chance for Campers to hear and learn different dialects of Spanish. EACH AFTERNOON a language activities program exposes the students to Latin American songs and dances, films on the various Spanish-speaking countries and other areas of Hispanic culture. After completion of the six weeks course, Spanish Campers may receive one credit of intermediate or advanced Spanish literature and culture. By BARBARA KRIEL Kamper Kansan Reporter Marking its 15th year with the Camp, the ballet division will present the results of the six weeks of intensive work in two recitals. The first performance will be at 7:30 Friday, July 25 and the second will be at 8 p.m. Saturday, July 26 at Murphy Hall. The program will include: Sea Moods, Polovestian Dances, Petite Sweet, and Pas de Joie. MRS. REED IS artistic director of the Dance Showcase of Tulsa. There are 87 students participating in this highly concentrated ballet camp. Marguerite M. Reed, director of the division, said the program offered is unique in that each student is given individual attention from four experienced dancers. Angry clouds over Daisy Hill bring wind and rain Photo by Scott Chandlw Alexandra Zahareas is artistic director for the St. Louis Dance Theatre. Larry Long is the principal dancer and ballet master of the National Ballet of Washington. Bud Heidebur is soloist and ballet master for Ruth Page's International Ballet. Each instructor teaches classes, has individual practice, choreographs and works on the costume and stage designs. The six boys and 81 girls are a selected group chosen on the basis of talent. They practice from 8 a.m. to 9 p.m. There are no outside activities scheduled for them. Mrs. Reed said, "The dancers are so exhausted all they want at night is to shower and go to bed." THE INCREASED MALE enrollment this year is attributed to the increased interest in ballet. "Public exposure to ballet has shown the real physical and mental strength dance requires." Mrs. Reed said. When asked if the boys wee good students, the answer was "Yes, they push the girls." Staffers of Tempo begin production Tempo, the Midwestern Music and Art Camp yearbook, is now in production by 16 members of the Journalism Division of the senior high camp. The yearbook costs $5 and may be purchased by leaving an application blank or money at the desk of one's residence hall. Money must be paid before the last week of camp. ACCORDING TO Robert Stevens, Tempo editor, two-thirds of the Campers will buy the yearbook. The Tempo will be distributed at a party the night of July 24, at the residence halls. The cover will be in color with art work to represent each of the Camp divisions. "The inside back cover is a beautiful panoramic view of the campus," Stevens said. THE TEMPO will have 88 pages and will be compiled by the yearbook staff: Debbie Sherry, Grand Blanc, Mich., assistant editor; David Danielson, Apple Valley, Calif., and Steve Williams, Los Angeles, band; Nancy Lewis, Newton, speech; Terry Algren, Knoxville, Tenn., Latin; Joel Bjorling, Gibson, Ill., French; David Willingham, College Park, Ga., art; Linda Johnson, Wichita, ballet. Emily Vonderschmidt, Reserve, Spanish; Jean Peplinski, Saginaw, Mich., science; Scott Chandler, Onancock, Va., journalism; Cindy Hines, Martin, S.D., German; Debbie Wunn, Estherville, Iowa, student life; and other staffers Mary Aguiar, Portsmouth, R.I., Caroline Gould, Atlanta, Ga., and Sue Walker, Colorado Springs, Colo. The first of the two sections, Student Life, will be informal views of dormitory life and formal pictures of each wing group. These pictures will be taken after dinner on June 30 and July 1-3. The second section will deal with the academics of Camp life. The pictures will be taken primarily by Gary Mason, journalism instructor. Jly. 8 1969 KAMPER 3 101 - Photo by Ken Olson "At least I'm getting exercise and sunshine" Girls' volleyball and softbam enthusiasts will have a busy schedule on tap for the remainder of Camp. Girls' sports on upswing VOLLEYBALL July 9 July 9 5:45-McCollum 4 vs. McCollum 10E; McCollum 5 vs. McCollum 10S; Lewis 4 vs. McCollum 8E. 7:15-Lewis 2S vs. McColm 9W; McColm 10W vs. Lewis 2N. 8:00 - McCollum 7E vs. Lewis 5S; McCollum 7W vs. Lewis 5N; McCollum 6S. 6:30-Lewis 3S vs. McCollum 85; Lewis 3N vs. McCollum 8W 5:00-McCollum 3S vs. McCollum 9E; McCollum 3W vs. McCollum 9S. July 15-W. C. Fields film festival (featuring a show of famous shorts) A round robin tournament in softball is also slated. An extensive time and team listing is posted in both girls' dorms. Camp movies July 10—"Robin and the Seven Hoods" July 18—"Arabesque" July 22—"Night of the Generals" And the rains came Weather hinders games By KEN OLSON Kamper Sports Editor Because of the rain during the first part of the Camp, many of the scheduled softball, basketball, and volleyball games have been postponed. "We will try to reschedule them toward the end of the Camp if it does not rain too much more," Gerry Denk, athletic director said. TEAM GAMES are not scheduled for the weekend because of concerts and the musicians' obligations to be in these concerts. Volleyball is the best received and most popular sport in the Camp so far, according to Denk. From the four boys' and girls' dorms, there are a total of 45 volleyball teams. Softball games are played on Monday and Thursday, basketball on Tuesday evenings, and volleyball on Wednesday. For the individual sports, it is up to the two opponents to contact each other and set a date to play the match. There are approximately 10 girls and 30 boys bowling in the mixed bowling league meeting Wednesdays at 6:30 at the Kansa Union bowling lanes. Warren M. Boozer is in charge of setting up schedules for the teams. Bowling trophies are to be awarded at the end of the Camp. VOLLEYBALL July 9 5:00 - Hashinger 5N vs Templin 5N, Hashinger 5N vs Templin, 70 5:45—Hashinger 8S vs. Templin 6N 6:30 - Templin 4N vs. Templin 6S; Hashing 6N vs. Templin 5N 7:15—Hashinger 7S vs. Hash- inger 5N; Templin 3S vs. Templin 5S. 8:00—Hashinger 4S vs. Hashinger 6S; Hashniger 5S vs. Templin 2. BASKETBALL July 15 5:00-Templin 3S vs. Hashinger 8S; Templin 5S vs. Hashinger 5S; Templin 6S vs. Hashinger 4S 6:00—Templin 6N vs. Hashinge 5N, Hashinger 7N vs. Templin 7S Templin 5N vs. Hashinge 6N. 7:00 - Hashinger 6S vs. Templia 7N; Hashinger 7S vs. Templin 4S; Hashinger 8N vs. Hashinger 4N. SOFTBALL July 10 4:00—Hashinger 5S vs. Hashinger 8S; Hashinger 7S vs. Templin 5S Night activity can become a unique, fun experience By JUNE KANTZ Kamper Kansan Reporter What's doing tonight? After dinner is over on Daisy Hill this question becomes the standard greeting and lament. The replies are generally the same "Dance in Templin's cafeteria." "W.C. Field movie in McCollum's basement." "Checker boards available at the desks." 6:00—Hashinger 8N vs. Templin 7S; Hashinger 4S vs. Templin 4S. There is of course, another side. For those who do not care for W. C., cannot dance and prefer to avoid the embarrassment of playing solitaire checkers in a crowded lobby, unofficial entertainment does exist. These range from boring to ingenious to unprintable. 7:00-Hashinger 6S vs. Hashinger 8S; Hashinger 4N vs. Templin 5N worthwhile, is known as look - for - a - place - where - every-one - isn't. Less intriguing un-sanctioned pastimes include such things as play - a - trick - on - your - counselor - sneak - a - smoke - in - the - dorm and bet - you - can't - eat - a - whole - pizza - in - three - minutes. The most predominant and popular of these off-the-record games is look-for-a-girlfriend/boyfriend. The follow up on it, highly difficult but definitely 5:00—Hashinger 5N vs. Templin 3S. Some official entertainments, not necessarily classified as such, also prove interesting if not exactly enjoyable. Included in this category are hauling your night owl roommate out of bed at 6 a.m., lining up with dignity to wait for an available sandbox, madly searching for a key to open your room which is not locked and decorating the floor under the beds in preparation for the "Daily Inquisition." SOFTBALL Everything considered, a Camper with any imagination at all need not sink in a morass of boredom. Quite the contrary. Just follow the rule of thumb; if they can't entertain you, entertain them. KAMPER Jl.: 8 1969 July 14 1:00 Lewis 5 vs. McCollum 9 7:00-McCollum 4 vs. McCollum 9; McCollum 7W & S vs. Lewis 3. 6:00-McCollum 8 vs. Lewis 4; McCollum 10 vs. McCollum 6S. 5:00-Lewis 5 vs. McCollum 9. Denk enjoys his association with high school students. "It's the age group I feel most at ease with, I can sometimes give them knowledge about colleges and sports." During the first week of competition, 11 victors emerged from volleyball including: McCollum 7S, McCollum 5, Lewis 2S, McCollum 10S, McCollum 6S, Lewis 6N, Lewis 6S, McCollum 10W, Lewis 2N, and McCollum 9E. All young people should be willing to take part in sports, Denk feels. "Kids think because Rec Director Denk organizes, schedules By DEBBIE WUNN Kamper Kansan Reporter "The average person has more fun, while the athlete is out there just to win." This is an important belief of Gerry Denk, Camp recreation director and nationally rated gymnast. A 1969 KU graduate, he participated in gymnastics for four years. As a sophomore, he was rated sixth nationally and fifth in the Big 8 on the trampoline. By attending summer graduate school, Denk plans to get his masters degree as soon as possible. In the fall, he will begin coaching gymnastics and baseball, and teaching physical education at New Trier High School in Wilmette, Ill. RESPONSIBILITIES OF the Camp recreation director include organizing wing teams and setting up schedules for both team and individual competition. He also has control of game equipment and supervises evening activities. they are not a tremendous athlete, they can't play—and this is not true. Kids are down here to have a good time." Sporting skills are important because they "can always carry over into later life," he said. With leisure time available, "it would be more beneficial to get out and do things." THUS FAR, Denk has been "unhappy with the participation" of Campers in intramural activities. He attributes this lack of interest to the eagerness of Campers to see the campus and get accustomed to Camp life. Denk spent many hours and much effort in scheduling all the sports. But he feels this is as far as his responsibility can and should go. It is now the responsibility of all Campers who indicated an interest, to show up and make the Camp intramural program a success. The first advanced student recital featuring music Campers will be held Wednesday, 8 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall. Advanced recital The free concert will feature 11 different soloists. The program ranges from Mozart to Gershwin and the soloists range from a percussionist to a soprano. 4 MWF Photo by Ken Olsou Four Campers scrap for rebound Oldsters remember Brown Bomber By STEVE SNIDER UPI Sports Writer NEW YORK (UPI)—Two famous names in boxing still pack a mighty wallop long after their ring deeds are done. For the grandfathers and great grandfathers of America, Jack Dempsey still is the king. For the dads who grew up in the tough depression years, it's Joe Louis. I nearly wept when Louis, creaking and broke at 37, tried his final comeback at Madison Square Garden and Rocky Marciano stretched him out on the ring apron in the eighth round. Rocky felt like crying, too. Kids of 12 aren't supposed to cry but I almost did when Dempsey lost to Gene Tunney that first time. "I hated to do it," said Marciano, then only a year away from the title, himself. "He was my idol." Thus, the older generations interested in boxing have an edge on the moderns whose memories don't go back as far as Joe Louis. The younger set, except for those followers of Cassius Clay, mostly look for idols in pro football, baseball, basketball or whatever. There is little to evoke emotional memories about the heavy-weight champs between Dempsey and Louis, Louis and now. When Joe went down for a count the other day, winding up in a New York hospital, it seemed the whole world suddenly remembered. It has been more than 20 years since Louis wore the heavyweight crown. But people remembered. Tehy remembered him as a fighter and as a man, not as an object of sympathy for ghastly financial errors he made. Phone calls, cables, letters and telegrams flowed in from around the globe. Dempsey and Louis were products of an era—Dempsey in the golden age of sports in the 1920's. Louis in the dark days of a depression, a world war and a period in which black athletes were beginning to emerge as human beings. KU won 'All Sports' trophy The University of Kansas has now officially edged out the Sooners of Oklahoma for the 1968-69 Big Eight Conference's "All Sports" trophy. The Jayhawks' 36 points in eleven sports will bring them the first trophy given in this contest and it will be on permanent display at KU. The basketball championship went to Colorado, Oklahoma State took the wrestling and baseball crowns and Iowa State was first in gymnastics. The big wins for Kansas came in track as they captured the cross country, indoor and outdoor championships. Kansas tied the Sooners for the football honors. Oklahoma, the winner of the "unofficial" title the past three years, also grabbed a first in tennis and seconds in swimming, gymnastics, wrestling, baseball and golf for their 39 points. The University of Colorado was third in the Big Eight with 50 points, Missouri was fourth with 51, and Kansas State and Oklahoma State tied for the fifth spot with $ 51 \frac{1}{2} $ points each. Following K-State and OSU were Iowa State with $ 56 \frac{1}{2} $ points and Nebraska with $ 60 \frac{1}{2} $ points. This is the sixth time Kansas has been tops in the Big Eight since it was formed in 1929. Over the years Oklahoma has won 26 times, Iowa State and Nebraska The signs of that emergence weren't easy to recognize. There was a feeling among officials, on a hot summer night in Chicago 32 years ago, that all hell would break loose in and around Comiskey Park when Louis, as expected, won the heavyweight title from James J. Braddock. 3 times, Oklahoma State twice and Missouri once. Jack Johnson, first Negro champion from 1908-15, had left a bitter image with the public by his way of life outside of the ring. The term "White Hope" was coined during Johnson's tenure. The color of a fighter's skin became an issue. In the eleven events Kansas was first in football,first in cross country, tied for second in basketball, first in indoor track, first in swimming, third in gymnastics, did not compete in wrestling, first in outdoor track, sixth in baseball, fourth in tennis and seventh in golf. Along came Louis. He was called such names as "Brown Bomber" and "Dark Destroyer." But somehow those became terms of affection rather than a racial issue. So there were mighty cheers in Comisky Park when Joe knocked out Braddock and became the first titleholder of his race since Jack Johnson. There were no riots, no fist fights, merely a general acceptance by the witnesses that here was a fighting machine perhaps more worthy of the title than any since Dempsey. Between 1937 and his first retirement in 1949, he defended his title a record 25 times by defeating the best men available as well as his "bums of the month." Jly.8 1969 KANSAN 5 JAYHAWKER TOWERS Apartments Now renting 2-bedroom furnished apartments. All utilities included in rent. - Swimming pool-club rooms - Air-conditioned - Immediately adjacent to campus - Off-street parking - Convenient Location, a Time and Money Saver. Lawrence's Finest Apartment Complex - Elevators Inspection Invited Schmeling kavoed him in their first fight before Joe became champ and later the income tax people threw him for a loss. His reaction to each disaster was the same: "I forgot to duck." 1603 W. 15th Tel.VI 3-4993 As a boxer and as a man, he suffered two key setbacks. Max Primarily Leather CUSTOM MADE Sandals, Belts, Bags, Watchbands, Vests, Rings 812 MASS. - DOWNTOWN terrill's LAWRENCE, KANSAS JULY CLEARANCE SALE Dresses - Sportswear Swimsuits Seperates-Fabrics NOW REDUCED terrill's LAWRENCE, KANSAS DOWNTOWN Carriage Lamp RESTAURANT ON THE MALLS Carriage Lamp RESTAURANT ON THE MALLS FAMILY STYLE CHICKEN SPECIAL WEDNESDAY ALL YOU CAN EAT FOR $1.59 Includes: Mashed Potatoes Gravy Cold Slaw Coffee or Tea FAMILY STYLE CHICKEN SPECIAL WEDNESDAY ALL YOU CAN EAT FOR $1 59 Includes: Mashed Potatoes Gravy Cold Slaw Coffee or Tea STYLE SPECIAL DAY ALEXANDER STANLEY Hoover raps college administrators for 'encouraging' campus violence WASHINGTON (UPI)—Campus violence is being encouraged by "bleeding heart" college administrators who are afraid to prosecute student militants, according to FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover. Hoover laid the blame for college disorders partly on "new left" instigators, but more on the easy-going school authorities. "Many of the school administrators appear unable to distinguish between legitimate protest and unlawful acts and there are far too many bleeding hearts among them whose palliative attitude has served only to magnify the problem by encouraging the escalation of demands and further disorders," Hoover said. 6 KANSAN Jly. 8 1969 For Plywood, Moulding Plaster, Shelving Material Come to LOGAN-MOORE LUMBER 1011 N. 3rd VI 3-0931 Pay-Less Self Service SHOES 1300 W. 23rd Lawrence EVERYONE SAYS Everything in the Pet Field And Free Parking At Grants Drive-In Pet Center Experienced Dependable Personal service 1218 Conn., Law, Pet Ph. VI 3-29 Hoover said students activists, "under the pretense of the struggle for student rights," deny the majority of students the right to pursue their education in peace. Metal Sculpture Supplies Tires and Batteries A Bankmark Store East End of 9th St. VI 3-0956 AUTO WRECKING NEW and USED PARTS JAYHAWKER TOWERS Apartments Now renting 2-bedroom furnished apartments. All utilities included in rent. - Immediately adjacent to campus - Swimming pool—club rooms - Air-conditioned - Off-street parking - Elevators Convenient Location, a Time and Money Saver. Lawrence's Finest Apartment Complex Inspection Invited 1603 W. 15th HEAD FOR HENRY'S H Home of Quality MAKE IT A POINT TO EAT OUT AT HENRY'S LOCATED AT 6th and MISSOURI Henry's Drive-In 6th and Missouri Town Shop ANNUAL SUMMER SALE Reductions SUITS - SPORTCOATS - SLACKS 20% OFF SPORT SHIRTS - SWIMWEAR 1/2 PRICE KNIT SHIRTS-BERMUDAS 25% OFF DRESS SHIRTS Long Sleeve Short Sleeve-Stripes & Patterns 1/2 Price 20% off WASH AND WEAR TROUSERS WASH AND WEAR TROUSERS Perm. Press Drip Dry 33 $ \frac{1}{3} $ off 20% off 839 Mass. THE Town Shop THE Town Uptown VI 13-5755 Entire stock not included No exchanges or returns Coming! WALT DISNEY Productions THE LOVE BUG The countdown is ending... 07 20th Century-Fox presents GREGORY PECK ANNE KEYWOOD An Arthur P. Jacobs Production "THE CHAIRMAN" Coining ARTHUR HILL, ALAN DOBIE ARTHUR HILL -ALAN DOBE FRANCISCA TU-OR LEVY-ZIENIA MERTO CONRAD YAMA - MORT ABRAHAMS As the Charger J. LEE THOMPSON - BEN MADDOW JAY RICHARD KENNEDY Music by JERRY GOLDSMITH Made to Teenage Fantasy Fo Productions Ltd Panavision* Color by Dell.us Now! Eve. Show 7:30 - 9:35 Hillcrest G THEATER now ranada Mat. Daily 2:00 Eve. 7:15-10:00 EATRE···Telephone VI 3-5788 Chitty Chitty Bang Bang Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065 ENDS TONIGHT PARAMOUNT PICTURES PRESENTS SERGIO LEONE FILM ONCE UPON A TIME IN THE WEST Motinee 2:30 Eve. 7:00 - 9:45 Hillcrest North 7:00 - 9:40 W. C. Fields "My Little Chickadee" — plus — "Can't Cheat An Honest Man" Now P Hillcrest apicious Summer IN COLOR A CARLO LIGHT PRESENTATION DISTRIBUTED BY USMARK MEDIA INC. Evening Show 7:25 - 9:15 TRADE CLASSIFIED SELL BUY ADSLEASE Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the answer book must be accorded to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin. FOR SALE NOTICE PREMARILY LEATHER—Handcrafted belts, sandals, bags, watchbands, bracelets, rings, barrettes, and clothing. 812 Mass. Open 10-5. 7-8 NOW ON SALE THE HODGE PODGE. Handerafts, Jewelry, Sandals, Leather Goods, Antiques, Glassware, Ceramics, and one of the kind glifts. 17 West 9th St. Open 10 a.m.-5:30 p.m. Thurs. till 9:00 p.m. 7-29 Revised, comprehensive 3rd Edition of "New Analysis of Western Civilization." Carduff's Campus Madhouse. 1241 Oread. 7-29 FOR SALE: 1968 Yamaha 125 twi serambler. 1700 miles. Excellent con- trol. 3 hours. 6 p.m. 842-969- See at 1810 Alabama to Girl: 27 inch English bicycle. Right now we are offering 15% off on all AR and Dynaco equipment. See our student special, picked especially for audio quality. Your AR-Dynaco deals Audio quality. Your AR-Dynaco deals Ray-Audio. Hillierst Center, aft, and eve. VI 2-1944. 7-29 Flying Club membership for sale, $35.00. Two planes and sailplane. Low rates. Phone 842-1124 after six. 7-4 AUDIO SALE Short Wave Radio, reconditioned. May also be used as an amplifier. Also 2 nylon and one 12 string guitar for sale. VI. 3-8729. 7-8 Tennis Rackets, Balls, Shoes for sale. Rackets sturge. Reduced Prices. One bib south Olver Oliver. East of Nathan South Olver Oliver. 1202 1967 7-4 Terrace. I 2-3691. 1954 Chevy, $100; or 1958 Ford, $150. Both in good running condition. Excellent low cost transportation. Call VI 3-7568 after 5:30 p.m. 7-22 Magnus Chord Organ with directions $25.00; 1—three speed bicycle; 1— two speed bicycle; $20.00 each; Ze- nith portable TV $49.00; VI 3-10-8 515 Michigan St. Bar-B-Q-outdoor pit, rib slab to go. $3.30; Rib order, $1.65; Rib sandwich, 95c; chicken, $1.20; Brisket sandwich, $7.5; Hours, 1 a.m. to 11 p.m. Closed Sunday and Tuesday. Phone VI 2-9510. 8-5 LEATHER Primarily primarily leather, mainly leather, leather, primarily only leather on primary, mainly only leather at Primarily Leather. 812 Mass. 7-8 AUDIO SALE If you are interested in a record player or up-dating your present soundtrack, find them at Dynacoimited in Acoustic Research and Dynacoimpute. It's the best buy you can get just fast. Just sat at Ray-Audio, Interest inter, aft, and eft. 842-1944. XEROX SERVICE on Xerox's latest, most advanced 3600 III cluver, Crisper, sharper copies: faster service. Unsurpassed results for theses, papers, bulletins. Lawrence Typewriter, 700 Mass. VI 3-3644. 8-5 SANDALS—this summer have a pair of custom made sandals designed for you. Over 20 style, to choose from. Prices from $15.812 Mass. 7-8 HEADLINE! We are looking for (you) interesting, interested, and good looking anything else you can think of for the P.S. HOUSE. If you are interested in working with the P.S. HOUSE, Rick at V-1 2-1944 NOW 7-29 ATTENTION! Summer students will do your typing. Call 842-1011. 8-5 THE HODGE PODGE. Featuring ceramics by JERRY BRYON. Jewelry, Sandals, and Leather Goods. Old trunks, glassware, and handcrafts. 17 West St. Open 10 a.m.-5:30 p.m. Thurs. till 9:00. 7-29 Male Siamese Cat Free, leaving Lawrence. Good Breeder, affectionate. Call VI 3-9180; after 5:00 p.m. 7-15 SUNFLOWER DRESS FACTORY — hand made originals. Design your own custom dress from a selection of india prints—men's shirts too. 10 W.9th, 19EN 12-5. 7-15 Free Male SIAMESE CAT. Leaving country and can't keep. 7-8 Need a catch Kitten? We have one left. Call VI 3-7568 after 5:30 p.m. 7-22 CHICKEN SUPPER Sunday, July 13th; 5:30-8:30 p.m. U.C.C.F. Bldg. 124 Oread. Donations $1.00. For tickets call Cindy Anderson, VI-7-2000, Room 424. Proceeds to Legal Defense Fund. 7-22 RUMMAGE & BAKE SALE Friday, July 11, 1-7 p.m. Sat, July 12, 8-5 p.m. Alabama St. Homemade refreshment, freshwater household items, clothing, jewelry, leather, furniture, antiques, misc. Proceeds to Legal Defense Fund. 7-11 1 and 2-bedroom luxury apartments, located in small quiet complex at south edge of KU campus. Unfur- furted living room. elegant old-style Danish walnut furnish. All rooms have wall-to-wall carpeting, panelled living area. Very large kitchen. Copenhagen 5 closets and locked storage. Copenhagen heat and air paid. Reasonable rent and FOR RENT LOW SUMMER RATES Now showing at the COLLEGE HILL MANOR APARTMENTS. 1741 West 19th. Contact Bent or Kay Drake at apartment 5-B, VI 3-8220. 7-15 Room in large house available for summer. 1 or 2 students, Share kitchen. $40 or less. 1219 Ohio Street. VI 3-3957. 7-11 Now renting for summer and fall, University Terrace and Old Mill apartments. Reduced rates for summer. A/C, carpeting, and pool. Call for appointment 843-1433 for Old Mill and 842-1296 for University Terrace. Rooms one block from campus on 218 North Avenue and kite or privileges. Call V1 2-0173 DUPLEX. lr, 2 br, bath, kitchen w/stove & ref. Full basement w/ storage, year lease. Phone I 3-1679. $125.00 plus 7-49. See at 1517 W. 3rd St. Sleeping rooms with or without kitchen privileges for males. Also furnished apartments. Borders cam and near downtown. Call 729-5767. TYPING Experienced typist will give fast, acc- petable support to give a report in ports, the Call Vi 3-02868, 7-29 Theses, term papers, and miscellaneous, Electric typewriter, Quick efficient service. Call Mrs. Mary Wolter 1712 Alabama . VI 3-1522 . Mary Wolter 1712 Alabama . VI 3-1522 . Will type term papers, themes, thesis, other miscellaneous typing. Have practiced and efficient service. Phone VI 3-9544. Mrs. Wright. 7-29 Will type term papers. Also Ges- tle type term papers. Jane Mac- downey. Phone VI 3-8568. 7-22 Themes, Theses, Dissertations typed and/or edited by experienced typist and/or editor in Eurex-Space Education. Office-size, electr. near Oliver Hall, VI 3-2873. Thesis, term papers, and misc. Farit, Wolken, VI 3-1522, 712 Tail, Wolken, VI 3-1522, 712 7-18 "We Care About What You Wear And If You Care" Shoe Shines, One color .50 Two color .75 Bring Your Shoes To 8th Street Shoe Repair For Your Repairs, Shoe Dyeing and Shines. 105 E. 8th 8:00-5:00 Closed Saturday at Noon Electric Machine, thesis, dissertations, papers etc. Fast, reasonable speed. 7-22 WANTED Design your own Sandal styles for the creative or choose from our many styles. From $4. The Hodge Podge Sandals, from $7.00 to $11.00. till 5:30. Thurs. open till 9:00 p.m. LOST WATCHBANDS—why not a custom made band from Primarily Leather. Many styles, wide or narrow. 812 Mass. 7-8 Looking for a 305sec Honda or comparable size. Year and condition not important. Price is! Call David at VI 3-3929. 7-18 WANTED—4th Roommate for Spacious House, Family Style Living for summer, possible option for fall. Rent $50/month. Call for John. VI 2-7920. Jennings Daylight Donuts Coffee & Sandwich Bar Malls Shopping Center PERSONAL JAYHAWKER TOWERS Apartments LEFT All utilities included in rent. - Immediately adjacent to campus. 6th & Mo. - Now renting 2-bedroom furnished apartments. - All utilities included in rent. - Convenient Location, a Time and Money Saver. Lawrence's Finest Apartment Complex VI 3-2139 LET Lawrence's Finest Apartment Complex 1603 W.15th Inspection Invited Tel. VI 3-4993 Make Your Summer Reservations Now. Malls Shopping Center VI 3-1211 MAUPINTOUR SERVICE TRAVEL HEAD FOR HENRY'S For Top Quality Head for Henry's HEADLINE Open for the summer—the Pawn, Shop Coffee House. Invites all folk-lovers and artists to come in and display their talents and appreciation—this weekend—Dave Bailey! See you at the P. S. HOUSE 15 Eight 8th Street LA PETITE GALERIE Newest Place For Now Fashions 910 Kentucky Lower Level HAROLD'S SERVICE 1401 WEST 6th STREET LAWRENCE, KANSAS phone 843-3557 MEADOWBROOK 15th and Crestline Phone VI 2-4200 ??GETTING MARRIED?? If You Are, Or If You Desire To Live Alone—Now Is The Time To Make The Move To MEMO: TO ALL KU STUDENTS and STAFF The Secretarial Service has a new expanded office to serve you with the newest, most modern equipment in Lawrence, about all that's the same is the service-good fast, guaranteed-7 days a week, 7 a.m. 'til midnight. ✓ MAGNETIC/TAPE TYPEWRITING WAKE-UP AND ANSWERING SERVICE $ \checkmark $ SPECIAL RATES ON THESIS AND RESUMES BUSINESS LETTERS √ TERM PAPER TYPING GIRL FRIDAY SERVICE (in your office) ABS TELEPHONE CANVASING EXPERT TYPING XEROX COPYING SERVICE MAGIC QUICK PRINT SERVICE MIMEOGRAPHING ✓ MAILING LISTS √ ENVELOPE ADDRESSING AUTOMATED BUSINESS SERVICES, INC. P.O. Box 423 Lawrence, Kansas 66044 901 Kentucky 842-0111 FOLLOWING THE GUIDELINES 10% DISCOUNT ON CASH & CARRY LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANING - Pick-up and delivery service - Use any of our three convenient locations - Personalized jet lighting service "There's A Definite Difference" At Our Three Convenient Locations: DOWNTOWN 1111 Mass. VI 3-5155 MALLS 23rd and La. VI 3-0895 HILLCREST 9th and Iowa VI 3-0928 ACME Laundry and Dry Cleaners beautiful earrings• rings strobe candles• beads lampshades art nouveau posters• sashes and carves handmade pottery• hats bags incense celestial lights underground papers essential oils and much more SUNGLASSES• JEWELRY• PIPES STRAWBERRY FIELDS MOODS UNLIMITED • 712 MASS., LAWRENCE, KANSAS • (913) 842 9501 OPEN 12 to 6 1247 LINCOLN, TOPEKA, KANSAS • (913) 354 9083 THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN 79th Year, No. 9 The University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas Friday, July 11, 1969 Campers told danger of drugs "It takes a long time, but finally it dawns upon the people who are passing laws that you can't legislate morality or horse sense." These remarks were made by Dr. Raymond Schwegler, director of student health services, at discussion on the effects of narcotics and dope Wednesday evening in Templin Hall. The discussion was held for the benefit of high school students attending the Midwestern Music and Art Camp. Approximately 100 Campers took part in the discussion. Schweegler said he felt the laws and their strengths should be in proportion to the issues being dealt with. He said he felt that possession of marijuana should be controlled more mildly than it is in some states where possession is considered a felony. He called these laws which ruin the offender's reputation "insane." During the evening, Schwegler mentioned several times that he felt alcohol was a much more (1) Dr. Raymond Schwegler dangerous "drug" than marijuana. He did not feel, however, that legalization was the solution to the marijuana problem. "There is a difference between legalizing marijuana and putting people in jail for simple possession," he said. Schwegler advocated the "thorough indoctrination of young people" in all aspects relating to marijuana and other drugs. SPEAKING OF the practical advantages of legalizing marijuana. Schwegler said that this legalization would help the quality of the drug and keep out impurities put in by "pushers," because, he said, "the pushers are very dishonest." "Most of us," he continued, "when we began to get to college age, were also in adolescence. Adolescence is a period in which a great deal of readjustment is necessary ... We suddenly begin to move away from home and form patterns that we use for the remainder of our lives," he said. HE EXPLAINED that all these changes help form an anxiety from which some people try to escape by turning to drugs. "The older people don't try acid and these other drugs because they've either arrived at some sort of solution or have given up hope and decided to go along with society, good, bad or indifferent," he said. Schwegler said he felt that a doctor's job was "to try to find out what the drugs do to people and why they use them." He emphasized that he wasn't trying to convince the audience of anything, but that he was trying to relate the facts about drugs so the Campers could form their own conclusions. He said he felt this was the way problems with "dope" should be dealt with. SCHWEGLER GAVE backgrounds on many of the more "popular" drugs in use today. "Historically, you see, these drugs aren't new at all," he said. "These drugs have been used literally for centuries—mostly related with religion. It is only within our society that these problems have become apparent. The laws relating to marijuana came about because of the La Guardia report of the 1930's which grouped marijuana with the 'hard' narcotics." He explained that "so little is known about a drug as old as marijuana, most of what one hears about it, and what the laws are based on, is just sheer prejudice and nonsense." Life would be easier and more "bearable" with marijuana, he said, because it would be an escape from reality and anxiety. "But since we live in a world of reality, it would be better to confront that reality," he urged. "None of these drugs have anything of realism in them." He said that people who lean on drugs are retreating from society. Therefore "it wouldn't be profitable for the individual or society to take them." Museum displays furniture sculpture Sculpt furniture by Wendell Castle, a KU alumnus, which has been on display in 25 museums and three one-man shows, is now on display in the University of Kansas Museum of Art until August 15th. Castle has received a BFA degree in industrial design (1958) and a MFA degree in sculpture (1961), both from KU. He worked four years at Radiation, Inc., a private firm which the government contracts for space research. Because he didn't enjoy the work, he returned to KU for a degree in sculpture. Castle is presently teaching furniture design at RIT in Rochester, N.Y. His first piece of furniture began as a sculpture, but with the addition of a crosspiece, it became a chair. The furniture is made from laminated wood. The wood is first glued together in the general shape that Castle wants. He then refines it, starting with a power saw, routers, rasps, and finally various hand tools and sanding equipment. If the piece is to be used in a private home, Castle usually begins the work by visiting the client's home to see what kind of surroundings and how much space the piece will have. Castle told Talis Bergmanis in an interview a year ago: "I like to have about six works going at once so I can leave a piece for a while and just think about it. I do that often. "You can get a lot of work done on a piece by not working on it at all." It usually takes Castle about six months to finish a piece, depending on how well the design goes, how complicated it is and what type of wood it is made of. Castle can finish about 35 pieces a year, each of which may sell for any where from $300 to $10,000. "Castle has told me that although he uses beautiful woods, he is more concerned with the form than with the wood," said Bret A. Wallers, Museum of Art director. In this respect, Castle has been called a perfectionist. Although most of his work has been in wood, Castle has done three pieces in lacquered fiber glass. Castle was at KU last fall as judge of the Kansas Designer-Craftsmen Exhibit. The plans for the present Castle exhibit were made then, in conjunction with the Wichita Art Museum. This will be the only exhibit this summer. COLLECTION 'Come in and --uh-- take a seat?' ALEXANDER M. KUBRICK Dean Lee F. Young Acting Dean moves rapidly Once head of his college yearbook at Syracuse University, Lee F. Young, assistant professor of journalism, assumed leadership over another group of journalists when he became acting dean of the William Allen White School of Journalism July 1. Young will occupy the dean's chair until a "search committee" has selected a permanent replacement for former Dean Warren K. Agee. Although he considered entering the history field, Young was drawn to journalism. "I was fascinated by the 'how' of yearbooks and newspapers, the lay-outs and make-up," he said. Young worked in many capacities while on the staffs of Syracuse publications: reporter, feature writer, sports columnist and advertising manager. His 15 years in the professional world before entering the academic realm were concentrated in the advertising area. Young was associated with a publishing firm that compiled yearbooks for professional athletic organizations. "It was pure chance or maybe fate," Young said, "that I came to KU. It was the closest university to my home!" In 1964 he began work toward a master's degree while also teaching a course in advertising. "In five years with the School of Journalism, I've seen many changes." Young observed. "Growth, primarily, in both student and faculty number. The teaching staff has increased 50 per cent. We now have 16 full-time instructors and 8 part-time staff members." Young cited "student activism" as the most prominent change in the University atmosphere. The School of Journalism has experienced little of the student unrest because, as Young pointed out, "Here in the School, students already have a voice. Representatives of the students attend faculty meetings and are also consulted about problems or proposed changes in the curriculum." "Journalism majors have doubled to nearly 400 persons, and new areas dealing with magazines, public relations and photojournalism have been added to the curriculum." Believing "there is no media competition between television and the newspaper," Young rejected the supposition that in the future, television will make the newspaper obsolete. "The newspaper provides the in-depth analysis that the quickness of television-reporting cannot." "Changes will come in the production of the newspaper. Someday there may be a kind of teletype-newspaper, a televisionnewspaper coming directly into the home," he said. Young has had several opportunities to return to the business world and leave the ivy-covered walls of Flint Hall, but as he said, "I'm very happy here at KU. I'll stay." Campus Briefs Spanish institute Eighteen students are presently attending the University of Kansas Summer Language Institute in Guadalajara, Mexico, June 3-Aug. 2. The program offers advanced level studies in Spanish conversation, composition, literature, creative writing and literature analysis. Students participating are regularly enrolled in the KU summer school and receive resident credit. Instruction is by regular KU staff and by native instructors. Prof. Raymond Souza of Kansas is the director. Included in the program are visits to museums, guided tours and theatrical and concert performances. KU students in Guadalajara are: Guillermo Benitez, Guadalajara, Mexico; Nancy Faunce, Independence, Mo.; Paularay Felling, Shawnee Mission; Debbie Foster, Prairie Village; Claudia Haefele, Ulysses; Karen Hardy, Pryor, Okla; Kathy Helton, Satanta; Karen Kinnan, Caldwell. Donna Lawson, La Plata, Mo; Marilyn McAmis, Kingsport, Tenn.; Walter Morrow, Kansas City; Gary Schilomoeller, Remson, Iowa; Fielda Smith, Colorado Springs, Colo. Edith Soule, DeSoto; Linda Sprague, Kansas City, Mo.; Shary Stafford, Belleville; Margaret Svoboda, Chapman; and Lucille Van Liew, Atchison. Cancer research Mathias P. Mertes, professor of medicinal chemistry at the University of Kansas, has received a $23,768 grant from the U.S. Public Health Service for continuance of a development award in its research career program. The grant will allow Mertes to continue his fifth year of research in discovering drugs with the potential to halt and cure cancer. The cancer process is dependent upon the rate of synthesis of thymidic acid. By treating certain isolated enzymes with various agents, Mertes hopes to discover a thymidylic acid inhibitor which would stop the cancer process and ultimately cure the cancerous tissue. Mertes, a 1960 University of Minnesota graduate, is one of a select group of American scientist granted this five-year award. 2 KANSAN Geology awards A. Lyndon Morrow, Lake Charles, La., and Glenn Lee Allen, Miami, Fla., have been named recipients of the Erasmus Haworth Distinguished Alumnus Award by the KU Department of Geology. Morrow, who received both his B.S. (1929) and his M.S. (1931) from KU was cited for his report based on studies of the continental shelf adjacent to the Texas-Louisiana coast. The report led to the first wildcat oil well drilled in the Gulf of Mexico in 1947. Allen received his B.S. in Mining Engineering (1915) from KU and his M.S. in Metallurgy (1916) from the University of Utah. From 1916 to 1957, he worked with numerous private mining companies, the U.S. Bureau of Mines and the Central Intelligence Agency. Other Erasmus Haworth Awards went to H. Meade Cadot, Wilmington, Del., and Richard B. Keopnick, Lebanon, Ohio, for outstanding work at the Masters level. Robert Evans, Southampton, England, was cited for outstanding work at the Ph.D. level. Glenn Talierfero, El Dorado fifth year engineering student, received the William A. Tarr Award, based on scholarship, character and service to the department. NSF grants The National Science Foundation (NSF) has made four grants totaling $31,600 to the University in its Undergraduate Instructional Scientific Equipment purchases program, and the University of Kansas is providing a matching amount of $31,600 from its own funds. The University of Kansas' funds from the NSF are $9,000 in chemistry, $13,700 in comparative biochemistry and physiology, $4,800 in human development and family life, and $3,200 in linguistics. Knox Scholarship Peggy J. Sears, Rose Hill, has been awarded a $350 Sarah D Knox Scholarship to the University of Kansas for the 1969-70 academic year. Miss Sears, who will be a senior majoring in psychology, has been on the Dean's Honor Roll at KU. She attended the KU French Language Institute in Paris, France, and last year held the Knox Scholarship. The award was created in 1960 for students from El Dorado or Butler County. WINNER! 3 ACADEMY AWARDS INCLUDING BEST ACTRESS KATHARINE HEPBURN Head Start The scholarship was established by Mrs. Paul J. Neff of St. Louis, Mo., in memory of her husband who graduated from the KU School of Engineering in 1908 and was president of the Missouri Pacific Railroad. Harrel, who will be a senior in chemical engineering, has a cumulative grade point average of 2.56. He is vice-president of the student chapter of the American Institute of Chemical Engineers, a member of Sigma Tau, national engineering honorary fraternity, and has been on the Dean's Honor Roll. WASHINGTON (UPI) — Sen. Robert Dole, R-Kan., announced a grant from the Office of Economic Opportunity has been made to the University of Kansas for use in the Head Start Leadership Development program. Warren B. Harrel, Jr., Lawrence, has been awarded a $375 Paul J. Neff Scholarship for the 1969-70 academic year in the University of Kansas School of Engineering. The $245,982 grant will be used to usure high quality teaching and use of effective new techniques for teachers. DON PETR DEVINE — AN AWK CARMBASS FILM PETER O'TOOLE KATHARINE HEPBURN OPENS WED. July 16th THE LION IN WINTER MARTIN POOL Hillcrest INDOOR CENTER, 47TH AND 50TH AVE. JANE MERRY JOHN CASTLE TIMOTHY DALTON ANTHONY HOOKINS NIGEL STORK NIGEL TERRY JAMES GOLDMAN JOSEPH LEVINE JAMES GOLDMAN MARTIN POLL ANTHONY HARRY Neff award Health study One hundred and sixty-two Head Start trainees in the OEO midwest region, including Kansas, Missouri, Idaho, Wyoming, Iowa, Nebraska, South and North Dakotas, Utah, Colorado and Montana will benefit from these funds. THE LION IN WINTER MARTIN PULL THE Hillcrest HUMPHY DALTON ANTHONY HOOKIN A problem in judgments of mental health will be studied by Dr. David A. Summers, assistant professor of psychology at the University of Kansas, backed by a $7,183 grant from the U.S. Public Health Service. The one-year project, recommended by the National Institute of Mental Health, will allow Summers to determine where discrepancies lie between professional and non-professional judgments of mental health. Burton hopes to determine what kind of systems individual body cells have for communication, plumbing and skeletal structures. In his research on the insulin forming cells of the pancreas, Burton is trying to find how insulin is created within the beta cells of the endocrine-producing pancreas. Burton holds a five-year appointment in the USPHS research career development program. This new grant supplements that appointment for research into microtubular systems and insulin-forming cells of the pancreas. Summers will present case studies to laymen and get their judgments concerning the mental health problems involved and the kind if help needed. Paul R. Burton, associate professor of zoology at KU has been awarded a $17,290 grant from the U.S. Public Health Service (USPHS). Burton grant He then will compare these findings with the judgments made by professionals in the field of mental health. Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VL3-1065 He crowded a life time into 37 suspenseful hours. SIDNEY POITIER THE LOST MAN A UNIVERSAL PICTURE Mat. 2:30 Eve. 7:15-9:25 Hillcrest Those Daring Young Men in their Jaunty Jalopies 7:00 - 9:25 Herbie will honk his way into your heart! WALT DISNEY productions' THE LOVE BUG TECHNICOLOR' Herbie 1984 Walt Disney Productions LOOK TO THE NAME WALT DISNEY FOR THE FINEST IN FAMILY ENTERTAINMENT Mat. Daily 2:30 Eve. 7:15 - 9:15 Granada THEATRE...telephone VI3-5788 Granada THEATRE...telephone VI 3-5788 Hillcrest 2 MGM presents Terence Young's "Mayerling" PANAVISION AND TECHNICOLOR Omar Sharif Catherine Deneuve 7:15 - 9:50 Hillcrest3 "GO!-FOR THE FURY FORCE AND FUN OF if..." LOOK 7:30 9:40 if... KU SUMMER THEATRE REP. '69 presents Plays by American playwrights representative of the past four decades 1930, 1940, 1950, 1960. THE MALE ANIMAL bv James Thurber and Elliott Nugent The 1940's comedy which sounds like today, with protest, public controversy—all in a midwestern university town July 15, 19, 25 Experimental Theatre AH, WILDERNESS by by Eugene O'Neill O'Neill's great comedy of the 1930's about the "generation gap" at the turn of the century. "In-the-Round" Main Stage THE GRASS HARP by Truman Capote The comedy-fantasy of the 1950's about the people of spirit against the dogma of society in which they live July 11,16,21,23 ONE-ACT PLAYS "In-the-Round" Main Stage 1960 Comedies from Broadway ... OFF & OFF-OFF July 12,17,24,26 Experimental Theatre All performances 8:20 p.m. ● Tele. orders accepted; amount due on receipt of tickets ● Box Office UN 4-3982 (24 hour answering service) ● Hours 10-12 a.m., 1-5 p.m. ● 10-12 Saturdays if a performance that evening ● 7-9 p.m. performance nights No Reserved Seats Single admission tickets for individual shows $1.50 ● Season coupon books $4.00 each ● Coupon holders must exchange for tickets for each production prior to date specified on each coupon. UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS MURPHY HALL ... Campus Briefs Study German Sixteen KU students are among the 34 attending the University of Kansas Summer Language Institute in Holzkirchen, Germany. Darrell W. Woelk, Hutchinson, has been awarded a $400 Muchnic Foundation Scholarship for the 1969-70 academic year in the University of Kansas School of Engineering. KU students in Holzkirchen are: Betty Bartsch, Overland Park; Steven Berline, Mission; Michael Bowman, Leavenworth; Ruth Cathcart, Manhattan; Dan Conyers, Florence; Kathleen Currey, Kensington; George Davidson, Salina; Stephen Davis, Shawnee; Leland Eaton, Plainville, Tex.; Diedre Emery, Hutchinson; Steven Engwall, Roswell, New Mex.; Farzin Ferdowsi, Tehran, Iran; Robert Franzen, Webster Groves, Mo.; Stephen Glover, Leawood; Ann Goodall, Prairie Village; and David Gripp, Smith Center. Muchnic Scholarship The nine-week program in Holzkirchen offers an intensive study of the German language, composition and literature. While in Germany, participants will live with Bavarian families. The students are enrolled in KU summer school and receive KU resident credit. Woelk, who will be a senior in engineering physics, has a cumulative grade point average of 2.48 and has been on the Dean's honor roll. The scholarship was established by the Muchnic Foundation of Atchison to encourage and reward excellent academic work by juniors and seniors in the School of Engineering. Trainee program James G. Stachowiak, KU associate professor of psychology, has been awarded a $113,203 grant from the U.S. Public Health Service (USPHS) for continuation of a trainee program in clinical psychology at the Ph.D. level. The regular KU staff and native instructors conduct classes. The director of the institute is Francis Lide, assistant professor of German at KU. Included in the program are museum visits, guided excursions and theatrical and concert performances. Included in the program are two years of university clinical experience and a 12-month clinical internship. The long range emphasis is upon rehabilitation, child-clinical and mental retardation. The grant includes trainee salaries for fourteen graduate students, one of whom has yet to be named. Those named are: Nikola Trkula, Niles, Ohio; Alan G. Willner, Sherman Oaks, Calif.; Joseph H. Evans, Atchison; Robert G. Urie, Flagstaff, Ariz.; Daniel D. Elash, Lawrence; Janet F. McCown, Austin, Tex.; William J. Charlestrom, Lawrence; George J. Kimes, Scranton, Pa.; Arthur L. Novak, Los Angeles, Calif; Gerald L. Schroeder, Hillsboro; Roderick D. Bush, Rochester, N.Y., and Linda M. Joslyn, Beverly Hills, Calif. Jly. 11 1969 KANSAN 3 ??GETTING MARRIED?? If You Are, Or If You Desire To Live Alone—Now Is The Time To Make The Move To MEADOWBROOK 15th and Crestline Phone VI 2-4200 Jack L. Collins, Shawnee Mission, has been awarded a $300 Charles A. Haskins Scholarship in the University of Kansas School of Engineering. Haskins scholar Collins, who will be a juior in the department of petroleum engineering has been on the Dean's Honor Roll. His cumulative grade point average is 2.62. Gary E. Leikam, Hays, has been awarded a $300 William J. Squire Scholarship for the academic year 1969-70 in the University of Kansas School of Engineering. The scholarship was established in 1957 in memory of Charles A. Haskins, an alumnus of the University of Kansas and an engineer in Kansas City, Mo. Leikam, who ranks in the top five percent of his class at KU. will be a senior in electrical engineering. Squire scholar The scholarship is given by Mrs. William J. Squire of Kansas City, Mo., in memory of her husband who was an engineering graduate of KU and operated the Squire Electric Company there. Wins scholarship John S. Smith, Wichita, has been awarded a $300 Muchnic Foundation Scholarship for the 1969-70 academic year in the University of Kansas School of Engineering. Smith, who will be junior in mechanical engineering, has a cumulative grade point average of 2.14. The scholarship was established by the Muchnic Foundation of Atchison to encourage and reward excellent academic work by juniors and seniors in the School of Engineering. Geology grant A $20,000 grant to H. Robert Malinowsky, assistant director of libraries at the University of Kansas, has been made by the American Geological Institute for an "Inventory Analysis of the Geoscience Serials of the World." Geoscience includes all areas of geology plus related topics in physics, chemistry, astronomy biology, and engineering. Most of the project will be compilation of a list of the world's continuing geoscience publications, estimated to include between 5,000 and 7,500 titles. Malinowsky said each title will be analyzed in regard to place of publication, languages, copyright data, periodicity, where indexed and abstracted, publisher, price, and library holdings. The inventory analysis being made at KU is part of the American Geological Institute's larger goal to create an "Inventory System for Specialized Geoscience Information Resources." After the various basic inventories of geoscience resource materials are made, the system will function as a continuing clearing house and information center for U.S. earth scientists. Duer Scholarship John B. Edwards, Wichita, has been awarded a $350 Duer Scholarship at the University of Kansas for the 1969-70 academic year Edwards, a physical therapy major, will be a senior. He is a member of Owl Society, honor for junior men, and is a varsity letterman in gymnastics. The scholarship was established in 1946 by Dr. G. R. Duer, an alumnus in Marinette, Wisc., to offer financial assistance to deserving men students of high scholastic standing and potential. Wilbur Jorgenson, assistant professor of civil engineering, is a second-year research fellow at the National Aeronautics and Space Administration's (NASA) Lewis Research Center in Cleveland, Ohio, this summer. Research Fellow SANDALS Custom Made Just For Your Feet Over 20 Different Styles. Immediate Delivery Primarily Leather During the 10 week program, Jorgenson will do research in the field of materials and structures and attend lectures and seminars. He was one of 28 men who pioneered the summer faculty fellowship program that now functions at seven other NASA centers. Gets scholarship Christopher M. Carrier, Prairie Village, has been awarded a $250 Muchnic Foundation Scholarship for the 1969 fall semester in the University of Kansas School of Engineering. 812 MASS. - DOWNTOWN The scholarship was established by the Muchnic Foundation of Atchison to encourage and reward excellent academic work by juniors and seniors in the School of Engineering. Carrier, who will be a senior in civil engineering, has a cumulative grade point average of 2.30 Nieman Fellows One of the 1966 recipients, William F. Woo of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, received his B.A. in English from KU in 1960. Eugene F. Goltz, an alumnus of KU, is among 11 journalists in the 1969-70 class of Nieman Fellows at Harvard University. Knox scholar Goltz, a reporter for the Detroit Free Press, will study law and American history. He attended KU in 1951-52 and is the second KU alumnus in three years to receive an appointment to the program established in memory of Lucius W. Nieman, founder of the Milwaukee Journal. Barbara N. Conner, El Dorado, has been awarded a $400 Sarah D. Knox Scholarship at the U iversity of Kansas for the 1969-70 academic year. Miss Conner, who will be a junior at KU, held the same scholarship last year. The award was established in 1960 for students from El Dorado or Butler County. Hey! Topsy's is Open! 711 West 23rd Malls Shopping Center "Bring in this coupon and you'll get . . . 50c off on a PIZZA!" Ice Cream "Bring in this coupon and you'll get . . . 50c off on a PITCHER OF BEER!" GOOD FOR FRIDAY, SATURDAY & SUNDAY SHAKEY'S PIZZA PARLOR & ye public house 544 W. 23rd V1 2-2266 Viet civilians or GI'sWho should be protected? No matter what one's personal view of the war in Vietnam is, the following news item which came across the Kansan's United Press International teletype wire has some very serious connotations and contains some food for thought. The story was this: WASHINGTON - The Air Force chief of staff has told a secret Senate committee session that North Vietnam was able to rebuild about 75 per cent of its bomb damage within five months after the total halt to U.S. bombing. Gen. John P. McConnell made the estimate in April 16 testimony just released by the Senate Armed Services Committee. Practically everything in North Vietnam has been rebuilt," McConnell said. "All the highways, the bridges, the trans-shipment points that were destroyed, and, what little industry they have, which is not much. Former President Lyndon B. Johnson ordered a partial bombing halt March 31, 1968, and a total bombing halt last Oct. 31 as an inducement to get the current peace talks started. "Supplies now enter North Vietnam without any difficulty and are brought right down to the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) without any difficulty, and the tonnages are extremely high. "We are not allowed to bomb. They have free rein to come in. They moved their supplies from the north right down to positions north of the DMZ" McConnell said. "They have moved their supplies from the North to points just across the border between Laos and South Vietnam, so therefore they have them much closer. "So I would say that the troops are in more jeopardy than they would have been had the supplies been under attack all the way back up to the Chinese border and Haiphong, or at least to 19 degrees north, as it was before the bombing halt." People have mixed emotions about the bombing of North Vietnam. Many approve and condone it because of the decreased pressure it gives U.S. ground units in controlling the flow of Communist supplies across the DMZ. Many, however, violently disapprove of it because of humanitarian reasons, namely the unavoidable killing of some of the civilian population during bombing raids on military targets. Lyndon Johnson called off the bombing because of pressure from demonstrators at home who wanted the bombing stopped. But it would seem that a priority must eventually be determined and a line of demarcation drawn. While Johnson called a halt to the bombing in order to get the peace talks started on a positive course (which it evidently did not) and to quell ill feelings at home, his decision had a very opposite effect on the military personnel fighting in Vietnam. It made their job more difficult. The American people, or at least the outspoken ones among them, wanted two things accomplished which completely negated each other. On the one hand, they wanted the war ended, either by victory or by pulling out—the latter being seemingly out of the question as far as the U.S. government was concerned. On the other hand, they wanted the bombing stopped because North Vietnamese civilians were being killed by bombs which sometimes unavoidably missed their targets. The U.S. government finally gave-in to the latter group. This may have helped the North Vietnamese civilian population escape injury or death, but it certainly did not help the friends and loved ones of the people who prevailed. Instead of being able to stop those supplies at their places of origin in the North, the U.S. troops had to stop them after they reached the hands of the Viet Cong. In war, priorities have to be set. Decisions must be made as to who should be protected. Unfortunately, these decisions cannot be made without hurting one side. Compassion for one's fellow man, while highly desirable, is a funny thing. It grows and grows until it grows so strong that one ends up hurting himself. This has happened in Vietnam. - Quotes - NEW YORK (UPI)—The Rev. Billy Graham predicting the second coming of Christ; "I've gotten in the habit of wondering when I go to bed if He's going to come during the night. When I wake up in the morning I wonder if He's coming that day." BOSTON (UPI)—Former Defense Secretary Robert McNamara talking about defense spending: "Congress has bought defense the way women buy perfume. If it costs more, they conclude it must be better." JACKSON, Miss—Bishop Stephen Spottswood, chairman of the board of directors of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, commenting on the failure of the Nixon administration to propose new civil rights measures: "The encounters with sheriffs, the days in jail, the cracks of billy clubs and the sickening sigh of the death bullets may have been in vain." WASHINGTON—Former Surgeon General Luther L. Terry, telling a hearing of the Federal Trade Commission, that strict controls or elimination of cigarette advertising is needed: "Let us try to prevent one million youths from annually taking up cigarette smoking by warning them of the hazards from the very day they view their first cigarette commercial." SAIGON — Lt. Col. Andrew Marquis describing fighting at Ben Het in the Central Highlands: "The enemy is paying a tremendous price." "I will not hesitate to ask the government to call in reservists ...to fill defense requirements and to train for the possibility of a new war." TEL AVIV — Israeli Defense Minister Moshe Dayan addressing frontier settlers; 4 KANSAN Jly. 11 1969 AUTO GLASS Table Tops INSTALLATION AUTO GLASS Sudden Service East End of 9th St.----V1 3-4416 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 the duration of the Summer Session. Accommodations, goods, and employment for 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 editor's. Any opinions expressed in the Summer Session Kansan are in no way related to the University of Kansas Administration or the Kansas State Board of Regents. Managing Editor Executive Staff Media Editor Adviser Photography Business Manager Adviser Office Manager Don' Mesterhain Jill W. Meyer Bill Seymour, Gary Mason Rodney Osborne Mei Adams Alan Davis Member Associated Collegiate Press 图 REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY National Educational Advertising Services A DIVISION OF READER'S DIGEST SALES & SZVICES, INC. 360 Lexington Ave., New York, N. Y. 10017 II JAYHAWKER TOWERS Apartments Now renting 2-bedroom furnished apartments. All utilities included in rent. - Immediately adjacent to campus - Swimming pool—club rooms - Air-conditioned - Elevators - Off-street parking Convenient Location,a Time and Money Saver. Lawrence's Finest Apartment Complex Inspection Invited 1603 W. 15th Tel.VI 3-4993 MEMO: TO ALL KU STUDENTS and STAFF The Secretarial Service has a new expanded office to serve you with the newest, most modern equipment in Lawrence, about all that's the same is the service-good fast, guaranteed-7 days a week, 7 a.m. 'til midnight. √ MAGNETIC/TAPE TYPEWRITING WAKE-UP AND ANSWERING SERVICE SPECIAL RATES ON THESIS AND ✓ TERM PAPER TYPING BUSINESS LETTERS RESUMES GIRL FRIDAY SERVICE (in your office) ABS TELEPHONE CANVASING EXPERT TYPING MAGIC QUICK PRINT SERVICE XEROX COPYING SERVICE MIMEOGRAPHING MAILING LISTS √ ENVELOPE ADDRESSING AUTOMATED BUSINESS SERVICES, INC. P.O. Box 423 Lawrence, Kansas 66044 901 Kentucky 842-0111 A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z THE KAMPER KANSAN Volume 6, Issue 3 MIDWESTERN MUSIC AND ART CAMP, LAWRENCE, KANSAS Friday, July 11, 1969 J-Camp shifts division chiefs By LINDA JOHNSON Kamper Kansan Reporter Kumper Kansan Reporter Change is the key word in the Camp's journalism division these days. When Lee Young, assistant professor of advertising, was appointed to serve as acting dean of the School of Journalism, he vacated his position as director of the journalism division. Replacing him is Calder Pickett, professor of journalism, who formerly served as director of the journalism division from 1965-1967 when Young took over. Debaters vie in tourneys Debate tournaments for Kansas and National debaters are to begin the afternoon of July 18 and continue all day July 19 in Fraser Hall. During this time the six preliminary rounds will take place. Semi-finalists begin competition the following Monday with the winners debating Tuesday as finalists. Paul Page, director of the debate division, explained the tournaments are to be a climax of the course, enabling students to use what they've learned on a more competitive level. Debaters will be judged on a point basis by high school and college instructors. Four groups, composing the National division and each containing several teams, will compete against each other. The team earning the most points will be declared sweepstakes winner. All winners will receive certificates. IN A RECENT interview, Young remarked the Campers he encountered in his magazine course appeared interested in their work, were well-read and enthusiastic, while Pickett stated he was impressed with the awareness and sophistication of the youths he worked with. Commenting on his recent appointment to director, Pickett explained the significant difference between being a teacher and combining teaching and administrative work is the added responsibility one acquires. In discussing the recent change in position, Young stated he would serve as acting dean for approximately one year and was unable to determine what would follow at that time. He said he found teaching a thoroughly rewarding experience. When asked to comment on qualities which would help students become good journalists, both men stated that the student in the mass media must keep up with and understand world affairs, read extensively and—most important—work hard. T - Photo by Jim Thomas Campers look their finest in Sadie Hawkins promenade Fourth explodes with picnic By SUE WALKER Kamper Feature Editor The sedate, peaceful purr of the air conditioner in the room didn't reveal it. Nor did the nerve-shattering metallic clang of the alarm clock. Not even the sand-papered rustling of an early riser brushing his teeth told you that it was finally July 4. THEN POW, it dawned on you! The annual all-Camp picnic behind McCollum Hall was at 4:30! Visions of mouth-watering hotdogs topped with relish and onions, iced pink lemonade and baked beans formed in your mind. Saliva foamed in your mouth as hunger pains made their presence known. Only ten more hours. Most classes were over at noon and the hours dragged by until it was finally 4:30. Mobs of starved girls and boys staggered to the picnic area. Able-bodied gentlemen from the two Camp dorms greeted the large crowd as they stood behind tables waiting to serve their "picnic brew." An ideal 4th of July was spoiled when hundreds of naked black and red wieners were spied, stacked in boxes on the table. you into all sorts of trouble. You found that an extra arm or two might have come in handy. Suddenly you got slapped in the face with a huge mound of over-sized cookies that looked delicious, with the exception of a couple of hundred calories. Then, juggling an orange ice-cream bar in your free hand and a cup of lemonade between your teeth, you were all set. Here for second year Brown stresses work WHOOPS! THERE went some of the lemonade on someone's tennis shoe and a cookie slid off the plate. You threaded your way through paper cups and plates, stepping on deformed wieners left by some passing dog. By JOEL BJORLING Kamper Kansan Reporter Dressed in a dark blue sports shirt and white slacks, Harry John Brown began his week as guest conductor in the Camp. Brown, former conductor of the Milwaukee Symphony, is in his A. P. M. Harry John Brown second year of conducting at the Camp. Brown initiated his career in music in Chicago playing the piano, violin and later the cello. At the age of 16 he won the Young Composers Award sponsored by the New York Philharmonic. He studied at the Eastman School of Music and later received a masters degree in humanities from the University of Chicago. LATER BROWN became associated with the Manhattan Concert Orchestra as well as the Boston Pops Orchestra. He is now with the Fredonia Symphony in Fredonia, N.Y., which is affiliated with New York State University. Brown said it is not possible to succeed in music unless you are willing to put in some work. There is no easy way, nor is there any certain amount of practice needed in a day to assure success. When not conducting, Brown enjoys swimming, tennis and reconstructing old houses. "Dress me quickly!" they seemed to scream out. So, you put a wiener on your expensive paper plate. About the future of music, he said although musical styles and rhythms tend to change, the music of Bach, Beethoven and Mozart will always be here. If this is not the case, however, orchestras will probably lose their meaning. "SHE'S GONNA get it," joked an "experienced cook," as he slipped a deformedWiener under the table to a passing dog. Easy now. Only six more steps to go. One, two, three ... wham! Another hungry person carrying his loaded plate just knocked you down. Food flew everywhere. AWiener in your lap, potato salad in your hair, catsup on your shirt, orange ice cream on the shorts. Trying to balance the plate while shoveling tons of potato salad and baked beans onto it got After all that, you weren't really hungry. Council makes plans for royalty campaigns The king and queen elections for the Camp formal were the main items of business when the Camp Council convened Monday. The meeting of the four dormitory council presidents followed individual council meetings in each hall. The presidents met with Richard Brummett, Camp supervisor. The king and queen elections will be next Friday and all campaign posters must be down by the night before election. Those displaying posters will use masking tape to affix them to the windows. EACH WING nominates a candidate. The crowning ceremonies will climax the annual Camp formal Saturday night in the Kansas Union. Thursday night each wing will perform a short skit to promote their candidate. Any ski containing objectionable material will disqualify that wing's candidate A CLARIFICATION of catera- tion policy was announced by Brummett. "You may have seconds on soup, vegetables and potatoes," he said, "You may have two salads in place of a desert. At breakfast there is often a variety to eat. If they offer you one egg and one slice of bacon, you may have another slice of bacon instead of an egg." The Templin council suggested the Camp fee be raised $5 to cover recreation. Brummet pointed out that Russell L. Wiley, Camp director, sets the enrollment price and this was out of the jurisdiction of the council. THE COUNCIL also asked for police protection every night at Murphy Hall. Brummett said a patrolman will be on duty at the building. Susan Hessle, president of the Lewis Council, complained at the dorm council meeting about the early Saturday revelille. Mrs.Russell Myers, Lewis housemother, said the girls could only sleep late after they eat breakfast and have their rooms inspected. Focus on self changes We are all, first as young adults and secondly as Campers, concerned with a common interest—ourselves. From this interest stems the greatest change that Camp life motivates. This is the switch in focus from ourselves to other people. In connection with this arises the situation called the "invasion of privacy." Suddenly, we are plunged into a world with many others sharing an interest which previously made us singular. Not only this, but the adjustment to a totally new social involvement, where people must not merely be liked, but lived with. For the first time, many of us must cope with the compromises that are necessary in order to live successfully with other people. The financial responsibility, too, is something that faces all of the Campers as a sharp contrast to the insouciance of home life. There is the heady excitement of being away from home, and yet discerning the need for self-discipline. But there is the other side of the coin. It is the learning experience that formulates our six-week stay. There is the awe of hearing the professionals speak not the words of books, but of 'Reds' dig in As I was making my last trip around the neighborhood before leaving for Camp, Rory Bushwitz, the father of one of my acquaintances, pulled me aside. Mr. Bushwitz is a retired Army sergeant and has often astounded me with his hard-line viewpoints. "Come here,young man," he said to me. "Yes, sir." I replied. I always called him "sir" or else he would wait until I did. "There's only one thing I want to warn you about before you go down to KU. That's about the Communist chiggers." "What are chiggers, sir?" I had visions of some new leftist group. "Chiggers are insidious little Communist bugs which plan to overthrow our American society,"he told me. "How could little bugs do that, sir?" "You have to understand their tactics, son. They crawl around in the grass waiting for somebody to sit down. As soon as you do, they crawl all over you. You can't feel them or see them, because they are so small. You don't know they've got you till they bite. Once they bite you, you're gone. Soon you are covered with big scars. What's worse, they are even colored red. They plan their takeover when everybody is in a hospital recovering. Oh, they're treacherous." "Listen, boy, you should be prepared to die before you lie down in the Kansas grass. If you do, you'll be covered with red." "Better dead than red, sir." I agreed. "Better dead than red, sir," I agreed. — Read Flynn — Brad Flynn experience. It is actually applying the things that we have learned and followed so closely, and molding interest into utility. It is every day, every minute, associating our concerns with others who share our enthusiasms. And it is slowly realizing, as we meet many people seemingly foreign to our way of life, that our beliefs, attitudes, and problems are also of others, and that in many ways these people are all much alike. For 1,700 young people, the emphasis was removed from self, and modified into their combined concentration. Now the Camp throbs with the intensity of youth discovering so much and having so little time. Yes, it is the sweet urgency of maturity. Of meeting, discussing, and employing ourselves—enjoying the other things, the finer things, than self. Cindy Helms Where to go Rules exist of which the Camp neglects to inform the prospective Camper. These "nit-picking" regulations cause one to fight deformed drawers and hide away in dark rooms to find peace of mind. The room inspection chart includes the small, unimportant items and avoids the significant. According to the chart, the important thing is whether or not one drawer or a closet door is cracked. It is irrelevant that half an hour is spent sweeping and dusting all the unseen corners of the room. In addition, the housemother checks to see that you are not in your room from 8 to 10 a.m. If you break this rule and remain in your room to study, you must do so in total darkness. All lights must be off and the blinds tightly closed. The Campers paid for the use of the room and no where does any fine print state times that these rooms could be occupied or the light regulations. Maybe the unfortunate students who have no morning classes would be less upset if there were a solution to the problem this free time imposes. Where are they to go? Where can they finish their homework? The floor lobbies are filled with classes, as is the main lobby. Campers are banned from the recreation room in the basement. Some suggested the stairwells at the end of each hall, but the smell is so choking that one can remain on the stairs only a few minutes. Sun bathing was another possibility. However, even on warm days, 8 a.m. is a little early to venture out into the sun and on rainy days the idea is hopeless. The remaining solution is for the Campers to ride up and down the elevators for two hours until a more suitable place is found. Jill Pierce 'Nicholas and Alexandra' Fate unveils life parallel The son of Robert K. Massie is a hemophiliac. The Tsarevich Alexis, heir to the Russian throne at the beginning of this century, was also a hemophiliac. It was this connection that brought Robert K. Massie to write "Nicholas and Alexandra," although he declares that it was fate who brought the strange connection to light. Perhaps it was. With the connection, the book has become filled with understanding, a dimension not often Massie's personal attitude is shown in his work—mainly through his tone and choice of words. The subject is treated with reserve and subtle humor, the sum of which is Massie's style of writing. Eloquent passages are not a part of "Nicholas and Alex-andra," but appropriate use of found. It is not merely a book telling about the Romanofs and their tragic life, but rather a story of warmth and love and of history, as it was made. Paperbacks Massie did a great deal of work in researching his books and the bibliography reflects this work. Undoubtedly, this was done at great expense and with a good deal of trouble. He read all of the personal diaries and other accounts that survived the Bolshevik Revolution. With these and other works, he was able to construct a vivid picture of the life of the royal family and of the Russian people. 17 X INFINITY, edited by Groff Conklin (Dell, 75 cents)—A collection of science fiction: Asimov, Bradbury and even Forster and Kipling. There are 17 stories altogether, ranging from writings of the past to the most contemporary stories of space. STOP-TIME, by Frank Conroy (Dell, 95 cents)—A good contemporary depiction of a young man growing up in America, but not quotes throughout the text provide interesting conversation and also new facts. 2 KAMPER Jly. 11 1969 The former newsman explained in great detail the relationships of the family members with one another, the struggle of the Russian people, Russian affairs within the nation and with the rest of the world, and general descriptions of life. All of these are entirely necessary for the reader to understand about Alexis and his condition, as it was the concern for Alexis' life that led to the dynasty's fall. the America of the gentle past. His America is the city, with all its problems and conflicts. The work is obviously autobiographical, and its descriptions are honest and candid. THE BAT, by Mary Roberts Rinehart (Dell, 60 cents)—One of the earliest of the Rinehart thrillers, a detective tale that takes place in a spooky mansion, treating a clever criminal who has terrorized a community but who is finally run down by a tough old spinster—a common type in the Rinehart books. Old-fashioned and kind of fun. The greatest compliment that I can say about Massie is that he is so interested in his work that he captivates his readers. He has defended both the honor and the memory of the Romanofs to the highest degree. —Terry Algren Rev Olution stirs campus Edward Olution, known to his fellow Campers as Rev, was a typical student at Camp. He trudged miles to classes, screamed and sang in his wing hallway at night, crawled weakly out of bed in the morning and made cracks about the dorm food. One day while Rev and a few friends were reciting the usual string of after-dinner jokes, his counselor broke in on the sniggering. "All right, boys; I'm supposed to tell all of you this," bellowed the counselor. "No man may decorate his ID badge unless his name is readable afterwards, the artwork is acceptable, and the blue printing at the top is not covered." Later that night, Rev suddenly wondered why the printing had to be blue. Why not make the letters red, or yellow, or even—here his imagination began to carry him away—green? It was then that the turning point came for Rev Olution. He decided Camp education was inadequate because of the ID badge's printing. Educational standards had to be changed so that the printing would be green. He had become a student militant. That evening he gathered his friends into a grubby laundry room with his faithful girl friend. Ann Archy, taking the minutes "I'm fed up with that blue printing!" he growled ominously. "Yeah!" screamed his gang. "We'll do anything, even attack the campus, though risking our lives to bring relevance to those badges!" he yelled. So the next day they gathered on a dormitory window ledge, arms linked together, singing the latest protest song. The Camp administration panicked at seeing the spectacle of five students huddled together, croaking a song that was rumored to be Communist inspired. They called the police. Rev, Ann and the other three activists were hauled off to jail. Nobody bothered to ask anybody what they were protesting about. "Are we going to stand for such treatment?" demanded an angry young man unexpectedly in a dormitory cafeteria a few minutes later. He stood on top of a table, smearing Jello underfoot, yelling to all the Campers in the area. "Can this Camp be allowed to crush dissent so easily? I would hope not! This is war!" Once again, the Camp administration was thrown into a panic. A moment before all the directors, assistant directors, subdirectors, vice-directors, assistant sub-directors, dormitory supervisors, assistant supervisors, housemothers and counselors retreated from the buildings, someone managed to place calls to the National Guard, the Governor and the President of the United States. The Campers' demonstration was put down brutally by the National Guard clubbing away; the Governor appointed a committee to see if the whole thing had been Communist inspired and the President issued a statement saying, "This incident is of grave concern to all of us in Washington, and we will not let the unexcusable riot pass without actions." He then flew to Florida for the weekend. "How are we ever going to get the color of the ID badge printing changed now?" Rev asked forlornly, shuffling his feet in the ashes. In the meantime, Rev, Ann and company were released from the small Lawrence jail to make room for over a thousand Campers who had been arrested by the National Guard. Rev's gang returned to Daisy Hill only to find it a smoking ruin. "Well," suggested Ann doubtfully, "we could write a petition, and all five of us could sign it. The administration can't very well ignore a petition signed by every Camper still actively attending the Camp." Ann's suggestion was followed up, and the petition was presented to H. I. Sayikawa, who had been appointed as acting Camp director. Sayikawa was delighted. He never could understand all the singing and shouting and marching. But this was a petition! This he could understand! There was no chance of a petition being Communist inspired. A day later, he signed a bill changing the color of the printing from blue to green, with Rev, Ann and the other three rebels standing in the ashes nearby. Moral: When changing something, try the peaceful method. It works . . . at least if you're trying to change the color of blue printing. — Dave Danielson THE KAMPER KANSAN Kamper News Office - 112 Flint Hall UN 4-3646 Camp Office - 214 Murphy Hall UN 4-3755 The Kemper Kansan, camp newspaper at the Midwestern Music and Art Center, is on Friday. It is written by the members of the Journalism Division of the Camp. The opinions expressed in the editorial columns are those of the editorial staff. We cannot endorse or criticize any 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. The opinions expressed by the Kamper Kansan are offered to students without regard to color, creed, or national origin. Executive Staff Executive Stan Editor in Chief David Willingham News Editor Cheryl George Editorial Editor Cindy Helms Feature Editor Sue Walker Sports Editor Terry Algren Photo Editor Don Hood Reporters: Joel Biorling, Agnes Fields, Cindy Hines, Melissa Lewis, Carol Jennon Kline, Emily Vonderchhimis, Lincoln Johnson, Wendy Elliott, Jeanie Peplinski, Steve Williams, Lorraine Rainer Larry Grewach Adviser James W Murray Assistant Advisers Dorothy Bowles, Jackie Raymond, Robert Stevens Photo Advisers Gary Mason, Bill Seymour A Photo by Ken Olson Branden finally finds that little piece of lint 'Demand produces quality,' explains musical conductor By JEANIE PEPLINSKY Kamper Kansan Reporter He unlocked the door of his office with a confident look. He has a big build which oddly fits his small office. Behind his desk his deep laugh puts his visitors at ease instantly. This man is Ken Bloomquist, director of the music division. Bloomquist has been associated with the University of Kansas for 11 years and this is his 12th summer at the Camp. He plays the trumpet and believes the quality of music depends on the demand. "High C years ago was unreachable—now it isn't high at all" he explained. French division offers linguistic challenge By CINDY HINES Kamper Kansan Reporte "Je suis tres fatigue" is an appropriate remark for the French Campers as they maintain a rapid pace of classes, homework and fun. The French division, in its second year at the Camp, has 36 Campers and five instructors, one of whom is a native of Brussels, Belgium. THE MAIN OBJECTIVES during the six weeks of intensive training are to develop a speaking ability of the language and to gain knowledge and understanding of French culture and literature. Tests were taken during the first week, placing the students into beginning, intermediate or advanced classes. Morning studies in each section consist of grammar, pronunciation and conversation, while afternoons are devoted to compositions, reading and the study of French culture. Classes are conducted mainly in French and tests are administered each week. A final examination will be taken near the end of Camp to assess student improvement. DAVID DINNEEN, director of the French division and KU associate professor of linguistics, expressed his enjoyment in working with the Campers and said they were very cooperative. He regretted, however, that more Campers were not enrolled. Singing is the primary means of class recreation, although several skits have been presented. Last year a small newspaper was published and a recording was made of the French choral group. These proved so successful, Dineen pointed out, that plans are being made to include these projects again this year. Jly. 11 1969 KAMPER 3 French Campers feel that not only are the classes "stimulating" but also that the instructors are "well-informed and interesting." Several commented on the individual attention they are receiving. Kamper assistant left to 'back seat' By JUDY BLACK By JUDY BLACK Kamper Kansan Reporter After a rough night of exacting work with the sharp, alert staff of the Kamper Kansan, she eagerly looked forward to the refreshing shower and quiet relaxation of Ellsworth Hall. Pushing and banging on the glass barrier produced only sore hands and weary knuckles. She tried in vain to awaken the protector of lives of the hall—the night watchman—with no tangible results ... LOCKED OUT. With thoughts of rest, the hard- working, conscientious journalist pulled at the inside door of her residence hall and ... LOCKED! Before waving a tired adieu to a Kamper Kansan cohort, she cautiously checked the outside doors to be certain no locks were barring her entrance at the late hour of 12:30 a.m. Yes, the doors would not hold her back. Her cohort drove away. SHE GATHERED her strength to take the few more steps that would bring her to an oasis of comfort. ABANDONING THOSE thoughts of physical and emotional rest, the frustrated Kamper Kansan advisor climbed wearily into the less than delightful back-seat of her 1965 white Ford. She realized her predicament and with a heavy sigh breathed, "This is the last time I take a backseat for the Kamper Kansan!" HE HAS TAUGHT junior high and high school. He graduated from the University of Illinois and directed an army band while in the service. When he first arrived at KU he played the trumpet and was marching band director. "The more I got into it the more I enjoyed it," remembered Bloomquist. So concluded another day in the tranquil life of Mrs. Jackie Raymond ... backseat rester at large At present he is the director in charge of three concert bands, the marching band and the basketball band. Every year he auditions 250 students and places them into three categories. He noted a great many of his University band members were previously Campers. Bloomquist says that as director he feels the Camp is "a good start toward a concentrated study of music." He is pleased with the intense attitude, drive and determination on the students' part. Bloomquist said it is a refreshing experience for a professor to teach at the Camp. College students are hesitant to express any emotion. He never underestimates his band students; he expects a lot and they never fail to produce. Quality, motivation and demand are the most prominent features Bloomquist emphasizes for good music. "These students know the good from the bad," he said, referring to the conductors. To him, the Camp has a three-fold purpose. First, these students have a good taste of professional performance and pressure. Second, there is the advantage of name-conductors. Third, and perhaps most important, is that Camp may help the student to choose a career before a lot of money is spent. Counselor director socks 'super gigs' "Mr. Terrific," a four year Camp veteran better known as Russell Branden, is the director of the counselor staff and the supervisor of Hashinger Hall. "I like the Campers and the quality of work they display," Branden said explaining the reasons he comes back every year. "I dig the art work, new music sounds, and the creativity of the journalism writers. I am inspired with the work math-science, speech and language students are doing. I like working for Mr. Wiley. He helped send my wife and me through college. The main reason I come back is because I like the Campers." An alumnus of KU, he has earned two degrees in music. During the regular school year, Branden is the director of bands at Sublette, where he has been teaching for nine years. BRANDEN GETS his relaxation by taking a day off work and going to the country. A 10-minute beauty-rest after lunch sets the mood for the rest of the day. His favorite sport is a fast game of basketball, which in his opinion is the best spectator sport. He enjoys a shady spot at a fishing hole, ping-pong, and good music when he finds the time. Branden is known for his fast funnies and his strikingly harsh, handsome face. Campers say they like him for the "super gigs" that he "socks" to them. Body gyrations mark newest dance crazes After Camp is over Brandon and his family are going to California to fish, swim and relax. By LORRAINE FOSTER Kamper Kansan Reporter Body involvement seems to be the main objective in any and all dances and this is certainly evident at all of the Camp dances. BOTH SOUL and psychedelic types are popular around campus. "Soul" dance is composed of preplanned steps, while psychedelic is a "do your thing" or "whatever you feel" type. The same dance may be known by several names. Reasons for this vary, such as differences and group identifications. However, some dances are known nationally by the same title. ONE OF THE MOST danced steps around is the "Popcorn," and the name is appropriate for this "poppin'" dance. The basic step to this is to bend the knees and bob up and down with the ever-heavy beat of the music. Original additions and variations in the movement can create a fascinating scene to spectators. Another of the popular steps is the "camel walk." As the name implies, the movement resembles that of a slow, "drag'n" camel. As the dancer slides one foot in front of the other, a slight hump or wave is apparent in the back. Then, alternating feet while standing in place, one can "groove on with the camel walk!" THE "FOUR CORNERS" is a more difficult dance, requiring well-developed co-ordination. In executing this dance, the body from the waist up is kept relatively stable, while the lower half really swings. Throw hips to one side and then to the other, while bending each knee in turn in the same direction as the hips are going. Then add a little twist in the middle, and "Baby You've Got It!" A new dance destined to be popular is the "T.C. Meditation." A few soulful Campers are doing it now; it seems that the number increases at every dance. In this dance one must appear totally "cool" and somewhat sophisticated. Speech camp plans tourney "This is the best group of students we've ever had in the speech and debate department," Bobby Patton, director of the speech and debate division said. "There are 124 students participating in this year's Camp program," Patton said, "and they are representative of 28 states throughout America." The Camp is divided into two main parts, interpretive speaking, which includes extemporaneous speaking, persuasive speaking, interpretation of literature, radio and television and debate. THE VARIOUS classes of the department are dedicated to two different workshops. The entire speech and debate camp is working toward a definite goal. The speech department held their first tournament the weekend of July 4 and 5. The final contest will run from July 18 to the 22, with both the speech and debate departments taking part. The champion of this journey will compete against the debate champ from the University of Denver speech and debate workshop. The radio division will be working for the campus radio station, KUOK, as announcers and disc jockeys. The directors of this department are Mr. Phil Higdon, Mr. Brick Poulsen, and Mr. Steve Gillam. Commenting on the program, Dr. Patton said, "It is very important that we know ourselves to effectively communicate with others." [People] in a group discussion. One person is holding papers. Another person is wearing a hat. —Photo by Ken Olson Journalism Campers concentrate on Prof Peter Dart's words of wisdom Artists display talent Colorful designs, silver rings and pendants, abstract prints, drawings and paintings—these are all a part of the Campers' art display in Murphy's Exhibition Gallery. Instructors choose works to go into the display from what the students do during the week. An effort will be made to exhibit at least one work of each of the Campers, according to Arvid Jacobson, associate director of the art division. Exhibits change each Friday, and all artwork is returned to the students. SOME OF THE drawings and paintings now on display picture scenes on the campus. Ceramics, which are not yet completed, will be featured in later exhibits. The 282 art Campers are required to take art history, design and drawing and may elect three of the following courses: ceramics, sculpture, jewelry, painting, weaving, printmaking and calligraphy, the art of fancy lettering. Twenty students enrolled in other divisions are also taking art courses. Reasons for attending the Camp vary from getting an idea for future plans in the field to having the opportunity to paint and study new techniques. THE GREATEST advantage of this Camp over the regular high school art course, in the opinion of one Camper, is that there is a wide variety of instructors, and having all of their opinions is more helpful than having just one person's opinion. At the end of the session, an honor roll will be released and the outstanding boy and girl named. The honor roll lists students selected by their fellow Campers and teachers. John McKay, associate dean of visual arts, is serving his first year as division director. The division, which began with 55 students in 1952, reached its peak enrollment last year with 400 students. ARVID JACOBSON, professor of design, has been the associate director of the division since its beginning 17 years ago. He feels this is the best session as far as manners, behavior and enthusiasm are concerned, and that the division has "just a very fine bunch of kids." Jacobson, a KU graduate, is pleased with the attendance so far. He feels that with the five and one-half days of class a week, "the students work hard and have the opportunity to learn a lot." - Photo by David McMillan A thoughtful critic stops . . . ponders . . . sips . . . Intramurals in full swing; girl participants increase Approximately one-third of the Campers at Midwestern Music and Art Camp are involved in some sort of intramural sports. Camp recreational director Gerry Denk says that getting girls to play their games is the biggest obstacle to the girls' intramural program. Even so, three and even four times more girls are participating in the sports than before. The girls play from 5 to 8:30 each Monday and Wednesday night. According to Denk, the most enthusiastic teams are from Lewis Hall 4 floor, 5N and 6 floor, and from McCollum 5 floor, 6S and 8S. INDIVIDUAL SPORTS such as tennis, badminton, and ping-pong have been set up as single elimination tournaments. The second round is finished and third round play has started. The boys have also shown their skill as athletes these past few weeks. Denk says Templin 5S has particularly exhibited enthusiasm and willingness to participate with their complete team, appearing at the scheduled time and place. EVERY WEDNESDAY night, volleyball and bowling teams meet. Volleyball has had a large turnout so far. Individual games in badminton, tennis and checkers are also played. These results have not been tallied. All girls are asked to attend the boys' softball and basketball games and cheer for their favorite teams. Softball games are played every Monday and Thursday evening and basketball every Tuesday starting at five p.m. at Robinson Gym. Kamp Kalendar Friday 7:15 p.m.—Blue Band Concert, East Side Allen Field House 7:15 p.m.—Motion "Fest of Eden" Colmoll Dining Room 8:00 p.m.—Dance. Templin Hall Saturday 2:15 p.m.-Concert Choir and Orchestra and Gold Band Concert, University Theatre 7. 15 p.m.—Movie, McColum Dining Room Sundav Monday 8:00 p.m.—Dance, Templin Hall 10:00 p.m.—Chapel Service, Swarthout Recital Hall 2:15 p.m.—Chamber Choir and Symphony orchestra concert, University Theatre 7:00 p.m.-Red and Concert bands Concert, University Theatre 7:00 p.m. Dormitory presidents meeting, McCollum 8:00 p.m.—Historical Costume Recital, Mrs. Miriam Green, soprano. She will be assisted by Charles Hale, professional costume designer and Tom Rea, University Theatre. They will join for an evening of fun and entertainment. 4 KAMPER Jly.11 1969 Four concerts will provide weekend music FRIDAY EVENING CONCERT 7:15 p.m., East Side Allen Field House Blue Band Kenneth Bloomquist, Conductor Tom Lee, Guest Conductor Jack Herweg, Guest Conductor Harry John Brown, Guest Conductor Theme Song Irish Tune from County Derry ... Percy Grainger Pepper Rodgers Triumphal March ... James Barnes Victory at Sea ... Richard Rodgers arr. Robert Rurell Roett Semper Fidelis ... John Philip Sousa Pageant ... Vincent Persichetti Lee, conducting Sonata for Band ... Paul W. Whear Herweg, conducting Procession of Nobles from "MLADA" ... N. Rimsky-Korsakov arr. Liedzen Brown, conducting SATURDAY AFTERNOON CONCERT 1:25 p.m., Murphy Hall Chamber Choir James Ralston, Conductor Chris Oldfather, Accompanist Paul Salamunovich, Guest Conductor Super Flumina Babylonis Palestrima Four Choruses from the Lamentations of Jeremiah Carl Schalk I. The Lord is Righteous II. From Above He Hath Sent Fire III. For the Sins of Her Prophets IV. Remember, O Lord Stabat Mater Vex Salamunovich, conducting Concert Orchestra Gerald M. Carney, Conductor Harry John Brown, Guest Conductor F. Robert Hollowell, Guest Conductor Theme Song Irish Tune from County Derry Percy Grainger Carney, conducting Swan Lake, Ballet Peter I. Tschaikowsky Waltz Gold Band David Catron, Conductor Tom Lee, Guest Conductor Jack Herweg, Guest Conductor Harry John Brown, Guest Conductor Passacaglia on a Well-Known Theme Gordon Jacobs Variations on a Shaker Melody Aaron Copland from "Appalachian Spring" Brown, conducting Festive Overture Shostakovich elude... Alfred Reed Hollowell, conducting Chorale and Alleluia...Howard Hanson Brown, conducting Symphonic Suite Clifton Williams Intrada - Charade - March Antique Dance - Jubilee The Dragons of Villars ... Maillart Lee, conducting SUNDAY AFTERNOON CONCERT 2:15 p.m., Murphy Hall Concert Choir Symphony Orchestra Darrell Benne, Conductor Chris Oldfather, Accompanist Paul Salamunovich, Guest Conductor Vere Languores Victoria The King Shall Rejoice Handel Of the Father's Love Begotten Chenoweth Symphony No. 2 in B Minor Alexander Bonodin Third movement, andante and animato Fourth movement, allegro Gerald M. Carney, Conductor Harry John Brown, Guest Conductor Carney, conducting Merry Wives of Windsor, Overture Otto Nicolai Death and Transfiguration Richard Strauss I. Largo (Sleep, Illness and Reverie) II. Allegro molto (Fever and Struggle with Death) III. Meno masso (Dreams, Childhood Memories) IV. Moderato (Transfiguration) Brown conducting The Chorale James Ralston, Conductor Terry Knowles, Accompanist Fa Una Canzona... Orazio Vecchi She Dwelt Among Untrodden Ways .. Albert Lee Carr Oh dear! What can the matter be?... Gail Kubik La Biche... Paul Hindemith Puisque tout passe... Paul Hindemith Go, Lovely Rose... Eric Thinman Nelly Bly... arr. John Halloran Bill Bailey, Won't You Please Come Home?... arr. Stanley Lebowsky arr. Stanley Lebowsky Ralston, conducting SUNDAY EVENING CONCERT 7:00 p.m., Murphy Hall Red Band LeRoy Esau, Conductor Tom Lee, Guest Conductor Jack Herweg, Guest Conductor Harry John Brown, Guest Conductor Theme Song Irish Tune from County Derry ... Percy Grainger Chimes of Liberty ... Edwin Franko Goldman Italian in Algiers ... G. Rossini Esau. conducting Fantasia for Band ... Vittorio Giannini Lee, conducting Adagio and Allegro Vaclav Nelhybel Herweg, conducting Elsa's Procession to the Cathedral Richard Wagner Brown, conducting Concert Band Russell L. Wiley, Conductor Harry John Brown, Guest Conductor John Thyhsen, Trumpet Soloist Celebration Overture Paul Creston Concerto for Trumpet Joseph Haydn I. Allegro II. Andante III. Presto John Thyhsen, soloist Wiley. conducting e Opera Polonaise from the Opera "Christmas Night" N. Rimsky-Korsakov Espana Emanuel Chabrier Overture to "Rienze" Richard Wagner J-School interns scatter for summer More than forty University of Kansas journalism students are continuing their summer education this month in newsrooms, advertising offices and radiotelevision studios throughout the United States. Nearly half of the students, mostly seniors in the William Allen White School of Journalism, will work as summer interns on Kansas media and the rest will scatter to distant points stretching from Florida to Hawaii. The students receive no college credit for their work but do receive pay and professional experience. The interns and the papers and stations are: Bob Kearney, Olathe senior, Miami Herald; Linda Loyd, Ottawa senior, Miami Herald; Linda McCreary, Honolulu senior, Honolulu Advertiser; Joanne Bos, Lena, Ill., senior, Rockford Record- Register; Lark Billick, Des Moines Register; Marla Babcock, Ottawa senior, Ottawa Herald; Carolyn Bowers, Ottawa junior, Arkansas City Daily Traveler; Shelley Bray, Bartlesville, Okla., senior, Hutchinson News; Susan Brimacombe, Kansas City, Mo. senior, Wichita Beacon; Chuck Chowins, Leawood senior, Chanute Tribune; Sarah Dale, Garden City senior, Garden City Daily Telegram. Allen Eagan, Topeka senior, KSTB-TV, Topeka; Mike Frederick, Wichita senior, Hutchinson News; George Freeman, Iola senior, Topeka Pictorial-Times; Kit Gunn, Lawrence junior, Salina Journal; Jean Hershey, Holton senior, Topeka State Hospital Public Information; Phyllis Jones, Wichita junior, Wichita Eagle; Tim Jones, East Aurora, N.Y. senior, Topeka Capital-Journal; Richard Louv, Wichita junior Hutchinson News; Steve Nafus, Tonganoxie senior, Hutchinson News; Fred Parris, Manhattan senior, Wichita Eagle; Rick Pendergrass, Crossett, Ark., sophomore, Topeka Capital-Journal. James E. Seaver, KU professor of history, is president of the board of trustees of the Kansas School of Religion for 1969-70. Seaver named to board Chip Rouse, Leawood senior, WIBW, Topeka; Donna Shrader, Salina senior, Hillsboro Star- Journal; June Tongish, Lawrence senior, Oberlin Herald; Joanna Wiebe, Hillsboro senior, Topeka Capital-Journal; Craig Morey, Leawood senior, Detroit Free Press; Jim Anderson, Lawrence graduate student, John Deere & Co., Kansas City; Bob Butler, Prairie Village senior, Kansas City Times; Steve Haynes, Emporia senior Kansas City Times; Ted Iliff, Prairie Village junior, Kansas City Times; Jo Ann Marinelli, Wichita senior, Bruce B. Brewer Co., Inc., Advertising, Kansas City. Mike Nagel, New York City senior, Kansas City Times; Ruth Rademacher, Arkansas City senior, University of Nebraska Editing Program; Diane F. Samms, Wichita senior, Newark News; Mike Shearer, Topeka senior, Albuquerque Tribute; Kyle Craig, Joplin, Mo., senior, IBM, Whitewater; Judy Diebelt, Atchison senior, Rochester Times-Union; Carol Sue Stevenson, Leawood senior, Magazine Publisher's Assn, New York City; John Gillie, Bartlesville, Okla., senior, Oklahoma City Daily Oklahoma; Pam Snook, Amarillo, Tex., senior, Amarillo Globe-News. Other officers chosen by the trustees for one-year terms are the Rev. Harvard Wilbur, rector of Trinity Episcopal Church in Lawrence, vice president; Miss Ruth E. McNair, emeritus member of the KU biology faculty, secretary; and Prof. Lawrence Sherr of the School of Business treasurer. Jly. 11 1969 KANSAN 5 MGIM at LUM'S 9-11 P.M. TONIGHT Big 16-oz. Budweiser draw – 25c 8-oz. Budweiser draw – 15c BEEEEEEEEER! THE WEDDING OF MICHAEL AND JESSICA 8 RENAISSANCE LADY'S $44.75 MAN'S $44.79 Like You, They Go Together LA FEMME MAN'S $125.00 LADY'S 125 Henry and Jake CARWIN LADY'S $44.75 MAN'S 39.75 Keepsake wedding rings are perfectly matched to symbolize your marriage . . . perfectly. Quality crafted in 14K natural or white gold. TRADITIONAL Keepsake WEDDING RINGS Ray Christian "THE COLLEGE JEWELER" 809 Mass. "Special College Terms" VI3-5432 Patronize Kansan Advertisers NEW PAPERBACK RELEASE 1 THE NUMBER ONE NOVEL OF THE YEAR BY THE AUTHOR OF HOTEL! ARTHUR HAILEY AIRPORT SOON TO BE A MAJOR UNIVERSAL MOTION PICTURE AIRPORT BY ARTHUR HAILEY THE SKOLNICK REPORT TO THE NATIONAL COMMISSION ON THE CAUSES AND PREVENTION OF VIOLENCE BLACK MILITANTS • STUDENT RIOTS ANTI-WAR DEMONSTRATIONS THE POLITICS OF PROTEST kansas union A Report Submitted by Jerome H. Skolnick, Director Task Force on Violent Aspects of Protest and Confrontation of the National Commission on the Causes and Prevention of Violence With a Special Foreword by the Authors of BLACK RAGE William H. Grier and Price M. Cobbs THE POLITICS OF PROTEST BY JEROME H. SKOLNICK A RUNAWAY BESTSELLER! INSTANT REPLAY The Green Bay Diary of JERRY KRAMER SUNSET NOON EDITION • CUBES • $1.25 INSTANT REPLAY THE GREEN BAY DIARY OF JERRY KRAMER BOOKSTORE Heart attack can't stop Stallworth By FRED McMANE UPI Sports Writer NEW YORK—Nobody can ever accuse Dave Stallworth of not having enough heart. The former All-America basketball star from Wichita State University will be attempting something this winter which requires a lot of heart. He will be trying a comeback with the New York Knickerbockers after an absence of two years during which time many doubted he would ever play professional basketball again. Actually, Stallworth's heart is liberally responsible for his come-back. He suffered a heart attack during the 1966-67 campaign and was advised by doctors to forget about the strenuous life of the National Basketball Association and settle for something less taxing. The doctors told him that he could continue to play basketball but not on a rigorous schedule. Saddened by the decision, Stallworth followed his doctors' orders only to find out two years of rest has strengthened his heart to the point that doctors have given him the green light to resume his old profession. "It was always in the back of my mind that I'd be able to play pro ball again," Stallworth said by phone the other day from his parents' home in Compton, Calif. "I took the advice of my physician, who said there was little risk in my coming back. There is always a chance something might happen, but the risk is minute. I'm positive I can make it back." Yet, Dave can still recall that day when the doctors told him he would have to quit pro basketball for his own good. "My reaction was the typical reaction anyone would take. Naturally, I was hurt. But then ! John Zook to Falcons LOS ANGELES (UPI)—Kansas University's 1968 All-American defensive end John Zook went from Los Angeles to Atlanta via Philadelphia Monday in a multi-player, three-team trade. The Los Angeles Rams sent Zook and wide receiver Harold Jackson to the Philadelphia Eagles in exchange for fullback Izzy Lang. The Eagles then sent Zook, along with defensive tackle Frank Molden and defensive back John Mallory to the Atlanta Falcons for linebacker Jim Purnell. Field House addition With construction moving smoothly and only being impeded by bad weather, the addition to Allen Field House is finally taking shape. The $441,000 addition, which was begun in December, 1968, is scheduled for opening and use this fall, according to Keith Lawton, vice-chancellor for construction. The two story building will house offices for the coaches and directors, space for receptionists, an area for student studying and an indoor handball court. 6 KANSAN Jly.11 1969 realized that if it happened, it happened. You can't let it be the end of the world." During his two-year absence from the NBA, Stallworth has been busy working with the poverty program and doing some school work, but still has found time to get in some basketball on the playgrounds of Wichita. "The team physician told me I could play but not to get over-exhausted. I played mostly in summer leagues," he says. Dave, who was becoming an integral part of the Knicks team before his misfortune, has seen the new Knicks play only a few times on television but likes what he sees and can't wait to get back into action. "We Care About What You Wear And If You Care" Bring Your Shoes To 8th Street Shoe Repair For Your Repairs, Shoe Dyeing and Shines. Shoe Shines, One color .50 Two color .75 105 E. 8th 8:00-5:00 "Everyone is playing as a team "On the playgrounds of Wichita, I got into some pretty good one-on-one games and I've been going pretty hard the last few weeks. But in New York I'll be able to go all out and really participate," says Dave. 105 E. 8th 8:00-5:00 Closed Saturday at Noon now, and they have one of the best floor leaders in the game in Walt Frazier. They seem to be a lot more confident in themselves," says the 6-foot-7 inch forward, who remembers when things weren't quite so pleasant on the court of Madison Square Garden. "I haven't had a chance to sit down and talk with Red Holzman yet, but I'm anxious to. I'll be coming to New York next month to participate in a summer league and I hope to get to see them then." fellow pros like Willis Reed and Emmette Bryant and should get a general idea about his chances for a successful comeback. The 27-year-old Stallworth doesn't think the two years he missed is going to hurt him very much. He doesn't feel he will have to make much of an adjustment, as, say, Bill Bradley did when he came into the league after missing two seasons as a Rhodes scholar. "Our situations aren't really the same. I have participated in pro basketball before, whereas Bradley had not. He was going into something new, and I'm not. There will be a few adjustments to make, but they will be minor," said Stallworth. A big test for Stallworth should come next month in the New York playgrounds. There he will be playing against some Dave Stallworth always had the head and hands for pre basketball. It appears he has the heart again, too. JAYHAWKER TOWERS Apartments Now renting 2-bedroom furnished apartments. All utilities included in rent. - Immediately adjacent to campus - Swimming pool—club rooms - Elevators - Air-conditioned - Off-street parking Convenient Location, a Time and Money Saver Lawrence's Finest Apartment Complex Inspection Invited ATTENTION STUDENTS! 1603 W. 15th Tel.VI 3-4993 Your Summer School Class Schedule is 8-12 a.m. Mon.thru Sat. Home of The Chalkhawk Your Pool Playing and Beer Drinking Schedule the Lounge is: 12:01 to Midnight Monday thru Saturday the the Lounge Southwest Corner of Hillcrest Bowl in Hillcrest Shopping Center, 9th & Iowa Directly behind Hillcrest Billiards TOWN SHOP ANNUAL SUMMER SALE Reductions SUITS - SPORTCOATS - SLACKS 20% OFF SPORT SHIRTS - SWIMWEAR 1/2 PRICE KNIT SHIRTS - BERMUDAS 25% OFF DRESS SHIRTS Long Sleeve Short Sleeve-Stripes & Patterns 1/2 Price 20% off WASH AND WEAR TROUSERS Perm. Press Drip Dry 331/3 off 20% off THE Town Shop 839 Mass. Uptown VI 3-5755 Entire stock not included No exchanges or returns TRADE CLASSIFIED SELL BUY ADSLEASE Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the University Catalog are offered to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin. FOR SALE THE HODGE PODGE Handcrafts, Jewelry, Sandals, Leather Goods, Antiques, Glassware, Ceramics, one of the kind gifts. 17 West 9th St. Open 10 a.m.-5:30 p.m. Thurs. till 9:00 p.m. 7-29 NOW ON SALE CONSIGN SALE Revised, comprehensive 3rd Edition of "New Analysis of Western Civilization." Carduff's Campus Madhouse, 7-25 1241 I敦限 FOR SALE: 1968 Yamaha 425 twin scrambler. 1700 miles. Excellent con- trol w/ 8-passenger. 4 p.m. 842-993-9 See at 1810 Alabama--Also: Girl 7-18 inch English bicycle. 67 Triumph GT-6, 67 Triumph GT-6, loaded ___ $2500 64 Ford Galaxie 390 $750 63 Buick LeSabre 63 Buick LeSabre ___ $895 63 Buick Wildcat- convert. ___ $795 62 VW—Reconditioned ------- $695 62 Corvair Monza 62 Corvair Monza $395 Ford Falcon Ford Falcon ------- $350 61 Triumph TR-3 -------- $450 COMPETITION SPORTS CARS AUDIO SALE EVERYONE SAYS Everything in the Pet Field And Free Parking At Grants Drive-In Pet Center Experienced Dependable Personal service 18 Conn., Law, Pet Ph. V 3-29 Right now we are offering 15% off on all AR and Dynaco equipment. See our student special, picked especially for student living; this is true Audio Dynaco dealer. The Ray-Audio, Hillcrest Center, aft. 725 evi. VI 2-1944. 1954 Chevy, $100; or 1958 Ford, $150 Both in good running condition. Excellent low cost transportation. Call VI 3-7568 after 5:30 p.m. 7-22 Magnus Chord Organ with directions $25.00 eagle; 1—three speed bicycle; 1— two speed bicycle; $20.00 each; Ze- nith portable TV $49.00; VI 3-16- 7-27 515 Michigan St. Bar-B-Q-outdoor pit, rib slab to go. $3.30 Rib order. $1.65 Brist sandwich. 95c¹ chicken. $1.20 Bristet sandwich. $7.5 Hours. 1 a.m. to 11 p.m. Closed Sunday and Tuesday. Phone VI 2-9510. 8-5 NOTICE AUDIO SALE If you are interested in a record player or your present senior friend, get interested in Acoustic Research and Dynaco equipment. It's the best buy for most young people. See and hear at Ray-Audio, Hillcrest Center, gter, aft, and eve 842-1944. 7-29 XEROX SERVICE on Xerox's latest, most advanced 3600 III cluor, Crisis, sharper copies: faster service. Unsurpassed results for these, papers, bulletins. Lawrence Typewriter, 700 Mass. VI 3-3644. 8-5 HEADLINE! LEADLINE! We are looking for (you) interesting, turned-on, music drama recording or anything else you can think for the P.S. HOUSE. If you are interested in entertaining, contact Waldy or Rick at VI 2-1944 NOW. 7-29 ATTENTION! Summer students will do your typing. Call 842-1011. 8-5 HEADLINE Open for the summer—the Pawn Shop Coffee House. Invites all folk-lovers and artists to come in and display their talents and appreciation—this weekend—Dave Bailey! See you at the P. S. HOUSE 15 East 8th Street PHILIPP 66 SERVICE HAROLD'S SERVICE 66 1401 WEST 6th STREET LAWRENCE, KANSAS 203-2557 phone 843-3557 Male Stamese Cat Free. leaving Lawrence. Good Breeder, affectionate. Call VI 3-9180 after 5:00 p.m. 7-15 THE HODGE PODGE. Featuring ceramics by JERRY BRYON. Sandals, and Leather Goods. Old trunks, glassware, and handcrafts. 17 West 9th St. Open 10 a.m.-5:30 p.m. Thurs. 9th 9:00. 7-29 CHICKEN SUPPER Sunday, July 15th; 5:30-8:30 p.m. U.C.C.F. Blvd. 1204 Oread. Donations $1.00. For tickets call Cindy Anderson, VI 2-7000, Room 424. Proceeds to Legal Defense Fund. 7-11 Need a kitten? We have one left! Call V1 3-7568 after 5:30 p.m. 7-22 SUNFLOWER DRESS FACTORY — hand made originals. Design your own style, choose from a selection of shirts sheta's to 19. Wed 9th. OPEN 12-5. 7-15 RUMMAGE & BAKE SALE Friday, July 11, 1-7 p.m. Sat, July 12, 8-5 p.m. 2616 Alabama St. Homemade items, donations, household items, clothing, jy jewelry, furni- ture, antiques, misc. Proceeds to Legal Defense Fund. 7-11 FOR RENT 1 and 2-bedroom luxury apartments, located in small quiet complex at edge of Kirk campus. Unfurnished, old-style. Danish walnut furniture. All rooms have wall-to-wall carpeting, paneled living area. Very large, flat apartment with closets and locked storage, Central heat and air paid. Reasonable rent and LOW SUMMER RATES Now showing at the COLLEGE HILL MANOR APARTMENTS. 1741 West 19th. Contact Agent or Kay Drake at apartment 5-B, VI 3-8220. 7-15 Room in large house available for summer. 1 or 2 students, Share kitchen. $40 or less. 1219 Ohio Street VI 3-3957. 7-11 Jennings Daylight Donuts Coffee & Sandwich Bar Malls Shopping Center Malls Shopping Center For Plywood, Moulding Plaster, Shelving Material Come to LOGAN-MOORE LUMBER 1011 N. 3rd VI 3-0931 JAYHAWKER TOWERS Apartments - Immediately adjacent to campus. - Now renting 2-bedroom furnished apartments. - All utilities included in rept. - Convenient Location, a Time and Money Saver, Lawrence's Finest Apartment Cananley. Inspection Invited LA LA PETITE GALERIE 1603 W. 15th Tel.VI3-4993 Newest Place For Now Fashions 910 Kentucky Lower Level Serving KU Students for 60 Years. LAWRENCE launderers and dry cleaners 1029 NEW HAMP. "Prompt Pickup & delivery to VI3-3711 Now renting for summer and fall. University Terrace and Old Mill apartments. Reduced rates for summer. A/C, carpeting, and pool. Call for appointment 843-1433 for Old Mill and 842-1296 for University Terrace. All Living Groups" Sleeping rooms with or without kitchen privileges for males. Also furnished apartments. Borders cam- and near downtown. Call 7-295 5767 TYPING One bedroom apartments, air-conditioned, carpeted units with parking closer than many campus parking lots. Apt. 8 Call V. 8153 or 842-7350 7-29 Nicely furnished A/C apt, for summer; 2 bedrm, furn or unfurn. apt, for summer and fall; small studio apt. for men, summer and/or fall. Utilities paid. All close to Union. Phone VI 3-8534. 7-29 Experienced typist will give fast, acc portures, thes call V3-01 92888, 7-29 Theses, term papers, and miscellaneous. Electric typewriter. Quick efficient service. Call Mrs. Mary Wolter 1712 Alabama. VI 3-1522. I-789 Will type term papers, themes, theses, other miscellaneous typing. Have electric typewriter and efficient service. Phone VI 3-5453. Mrs. Wright. 7-29 will type term papers. Also Ges- hwyer will type papers: Jane Dow- nley, Phone VI 3-8568, 7-22 Themes, Theses, Dissertations typed and/or edited by experienced typist with KU degree in English-Spanish Education. Office-size electric Located near Oliver Hall VI 3-2873. 7-16 Thesis, term papers, and misc. Call Wolken, Wolen, VI 3-1522, 712, 718 bama. Electric Machine; thesis, dissertations, Electric Fast, reasonable rates. V 2-1561, 7-223 Strick's Cafe 732 N. 2nd St. OPEN 7 a.m. to 10 p.m. Monday thru Saturday Former Harvard and University of Minnesota Secretary will type term papers, reports, etc. Call Mrs. Mattila. VI 3-7207. 7-29 WANTED WANTED--4th Roommate for Spacious House, Family Style Living for summer, possible option for fall. Rent $50/month. Call for John. VI 2-7920 Design your own Sandal styles for the creative or choose from our many Hodge Podge, 17 West 9th, open 10 m, till Thurs. open till 9:00 p.m. Looking for a 305sec Honda or comparable size. Year and condition not important. Price is! Call David at VI 3-3929. 7-18 Roommate for fall, Large, 2 bedroom, per month with utilities. Close to campus neighborhood. Potential upper classroom or school. Call VI 2-3752 after 5 p.m. 7-18 HELP WANTED REGISTERED PHYSICAL THERAPIST with at least one year experience to work 10-20 hours per week Flexible, new, creative, co-ordinated home care program serving Douglas County. Write: Douglas County Visiting Nurses Assoc. 342 Mo. Street, Lawrence, Kan. 7-29 Young woman to do housework, half day per week, $16 per hour. Young man to do yardwork, house chores. Daily per week; should be familiar with baskets; pay dependent on qualifications. Wax, VI 3-2789, 912 La. LOST Casa De Taco Lost: gold Lady Hamilton watch between Fraser Hall and Fiji House. Reward offered. Call Mikie Burnette at VI 2-1033. 7-18 Deliciously Different Mexican Food 1105 Mass. VI 3-9880 H HEAD FOR HENRY'S Chicken Special XX You can buy Henry's famous fried chicken at discount prices. Stop by for lunch, dinner, snack or anytime for a chicken delight you will never forget. HOME OF INSTANT SERVICE & QUALITY 6th & Missouri VI 3-2139 Club would rather dance than eat Mayim, Troika, Makazice, Dayagim, Sepastia Bal, Alunelul, Jovane Jovanki! Not typographical errors, but, members of the University of Kansas Folk Dance Club say, the names of a few of their jigs, among the 25 ot so they selected from a possible 2,000. A small but determined group has been meeting weekly since fall of 1967 in Robinson Gymnastium. Many work during the week, but instead of feeling tired by Friday nights, they say kicking up their heels makes them feel good and is relaxing. They'd rather dance than eat, literally. Since eating beforehand would slow them down they acquired the habit of eating together after rehearsing. "You dance when you're happy or in the face of adversity, like Zorba the Greek," said Milton Rosenberg, associate professor of mathematics and faculty sponsor. Greeks have participated as well as Indians, Serbs, Chinese, Israelis, and, of course, Americans. The international dances represent almost every culture, including the American. Stephen Resovich of Kansas City, a KU alumnus, organized the club and based it on the predominantly circle-type Balkan dances he prefers because of his family's Serbian background. Rosenberg and others added some couple dances and other formations for variety. He said dances Official Bulletin Friday, July 11 SUA Films. " Tumbleweeds" -7 pumice 9. pM, Dycha Ducchin 4 pM Music Camp Band. Allen Field House Lawn, 7:15 p.m. "The Grass Harp," Truman Capote. University Theatre, 8:20 p.m. Music Camp Choirs, Orchestra, Band, University Theatre, 2.15 p.m. Three One-Act Plays, Experimental Theatre, 8:20 p.m. with the simplest steps often are the most enjoyable. Sunday, July 13 Carillon 2 p.m. Carillon 2 p.m. Music Camp Choir and Orchestra University Theatre, 2.15 p.m. Music Camp Bands, University The- Music Camp Bands. University Theatre, 7 p.m. Monday, July 14 Monday, July 14 Faculty to room 104 Stewart soprano. Swarthout Recital Hall, Half 7. Resovich attends folk dance festivals around the country and started the KU club with the possibility of a performing group in mind, but really more for social, recreational, and educational purposes, not to mention cultural and historical benefits. The members much prefer dancing for their own enjoyment anyway. "Ah, Wilderness," Eugene O'Neill. University Theatre, 8:20 p.m. Tuesday. July 15 Faculty Recital. Kenneth Smith, bass; David Holloway, baritone; Jean Barnes Vigil, soprano; Doris Holloway, soprano. Swarthout Recital Hall, Wednesday, July 1 "The Male Animal." Nugent-Thurber, Experimental Theatre, 8:20 p.m. Tuesday, July 19 Music Camp Receital, University Theatre, 7 p.m. Film. "Thief of Paris," Dyche Aud. 7:30 p.m. Albert Gerkent, 8 p.m. "The Grass Harp," Truman Capote. University Theatre, 8:20 p.m. Thursday, July 17 Bus to Starlight, 17 Peter Pan, Robin Hood, 6:45 p.m. Organ Recital, William Wilkins Swarthout Recital Hall, 8 p.m. Three Theatricals, Experimental Theatre, 8:20 p.m. Friday, July 18 Explaining his interest and involvement in folk dance, Resovich said that while his family didn't teach him Serbian dances, his father always played a Serbian shepherd's flute, a frula, about the house. His personal involvement stemmed from a "growing conviction that the rapid changes of our technologically-oriented society are leaving out some important values of the past. "Dancing provides an opportunity," Resovich continued, "for people to become physically involved in the full range of human emotions in a safe, sane and SUA Films..."Top Mam." 7 p.m. drive*rate" 9 p.m. Dyche Aud- torium. Music Camp Band. Allen Field House Lawn. 7:15 p.m. "Ah, Wilderness,"ugene O'Neill. University Theatre. 8:20 p.m. Saturday, July 19 Music Camp Choirs, Band, Orchestra. University Theatre, 2:15 p.m. "The Male Animal," Nugent-Thurber Experimental Theatre. 8:20 p.m. 8 KANSAN Jly.11 1969 Resovich teaches elementary school science and leads a performing group of boys with a tamburitza orchestra at St. John's Catholic Church in Kansas City, that has appeared on television. He also is affiliated with a performing group that has appeared at Grecian Garden in Kansas City, Mo. therapeutic way that isn't often provided in today's world. "The frustrations, joys, sorrows, resoluteness, pride, anger and dignity of Serbs at Kossovo, the French a* Waterloo, the Russians at Sevastopol, are all contained in dance—somewhere. 6th & Mo. VI 3-2139 HEAD FOR HENRY'S For Top Quality Head for Henry's Rosenberg said that in New York, his hometown, "you could "People don't vent their feelings through music—song and dance—today as they once did, not for themselves at any rate. The burden of the black man was made easier through commiseration in song. The immigrants relieved their loneliness through song. The hopeful expressed their faith through song." Robert J. Smith, professor of anthropology, will sponsor the club throughout the summer and into the fall. Rosenberg is returning to New York City. Mrs Hazel Miller, a secretary in the Chancellor's office, will serve as secretary. The KU club hopes to do something about that and has resumed its Friday night dances, meeting at 6 p.m. in the Potter Lake picnic area and continuing weekly at that time throughout the summer into the fall. TRAVEL TIME However, he thinks dancing is in "very bad shape in the country. The vast majority—99 and 99/100 per cent—of the population doesn't dance knowledgeably, if at all." LET run into 13 or 14-year-olds who know about 400 to 800 different folk dances and were real experts." Experienced folk dancers have organized into federations in other parts of the country where they are concentrated, such as California, Chicago, Denver, Houston and Minneapolis. MAUPINTOUR SERVICE TRAVEL Make Your Summer Reservations Now. Malls Shopping Center VI 3-1211 JAYHAWKER TOWERS Apartments Now renting 2-bedroom furnished apartments. All utilities included in rent. - Immediately adjacent to campus - Swimming pool—club rooms - Air-conditioned - Elevators - Off-street parking Convenient Location, a Time and Money Saver. Lawrence's Finest Apartment Complex Inspection 1603 W.15th Invited Tel.VI 3-4993 TIRE TREAD SANDALS GUARANTEED AGAINST ALL NORMAL "ROAD HAZARDS" Punctures, Blow outs, Rim cuts, or 30,000 miles REAL BRASS HANDMADE Top Grain Leather Long Lasting Sole Sizes 7 to 12 $8.95 McCoy's shoes 813 Mass. St. VI 3-2091 Top Grain Leather Long Lasting Sole THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN 79th Year, No.10 The University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas Tuesday, July 15, 1969 Apollo 11 is 'go' By EDWARD K. DELONG UPI Space Writer SPACE CENTER, HOUSTON (UPI)—Man's age-old yearning to set foot on the moon seems about to be realized. If all goes as planned, Apollo 11 commander Neil A. Armstrong will place the first human footprint on the moon's surface at precisely 2:19 a.m. EDT, Monday, July 21. Never before will man have taken such a giant step. For the first time he will have journeyed to another world—an accomplishment that only a few years ago seemed a crazy, impossible dream. How has it been done? Why has it been done? Moon Travel The moon, shimmering so invitingly in the night sky like a golden magnet since the dawn of his life on earth. Through the aeons, men have worshiped the moon through such deities as the Greek goddess Artemis. They have written poems and songs with the moon as their theme. It was fine stuff for fictions and fables—and dreaming. And, since at least the second century A.D., men have sprinkled their literature with stories of travel to the moon. Then President John F. Kennedy—with a single sentence spoken May 25, 1961—challenged this nation to turn the dream into reality. A Special Message "I believe," he said in a special message to Congress, "This nation should commit itself to achieving the goal, before this decade is out, of landing a man on the moon and returning him safely to earth. "No single space project in this period will be more impressive to mankind, or more important for the long-range exploration of space; and none will be so difficult or expensive to accomplish." Just 62 words. Yet they stirred the Congress, won speedy acceptance of a moon-landing as a national goal that would cost $20 billion or more, and set in motion the greatest mobilization of a nation's effort ever seen outside wartime. Kennedy was not the first man to seriously propose a moon landing. ROCKET GENIUS Dr. Wernher von Braun, father of the Saturn 5 launcher that will speed Apollo 11 toward the moon, had seriously considered manned lunar landings since 1952. On Jan. 2, 1959, the original Select House Space Committee issued a report quoting 20 experts saying such a goal could be reached by 1968-if the nation was willing to pay the price. In July of 1960 the House Space Committee—controlled by Democrats—demanded that the Republican administration of President Dwight D. Eisenhower commit the nation to placing a man on the moon by 1970. National space plans at that time included unmanned exploration of the moon and a series of one-man Mercury flights in earth orbit to see if man could survive in space. The fledgling space agency had on its drawing boards a plan, code-named "Apollo," to fly a three-man spaceship in earth orbit for up to 14 days and ultimately to hurl it nontop around the moon. But it was just, in one congressman's words, a "designer's dream." Eisenhower's advisors such as Vannevar Bush who once told a congressional committee rockets could not span the ocean, James Killian who felt instruments could do more than man in space and Lee Dubridge, now President Nixon's chief science advisor, and Go-Slow Policy more committed now than then to man-in-space projects advised the President to adopt a go-slow policy. He did, but he kept the program alive. In September of 1960 "Apollo" was upgraded to full study status, and industry was asked to propose ways it could be carried out. That was the space program Kennedy adopted when he took the presidency. Man had yet to fly in space, but. on April 12, 1961, Russia announced it had flown a man, cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin, once around the globe. He was the first man in space and the Soviets had chalked up another first. Suborbital Flight America's Alan B. Shepard made his suborbital Mercury flight 23 days later, on May 5, but in the interim—on April-17, just five days after Gagarin's flight the Cuban Bay of Pigs invasion started and ended in disastrous failure. The United States needed something that could capture the imagination of the world and present the nation in a good light. Kennedy turned to space and technology, where Russia had grabbed so many propaganda points. He knew the existing Russian arsenal of rockets was far more powerful than anything the United States possessed. So he asked his advisors to find a space goal where the two nations would have to start as equals, and where American technology could likely win. The experts suggested a moon landing. All the necessary equipment existed or had been designed, they said. But it would take rockets more powerful than either nation possessed. Kennedy liked the idea. Three weeks later he started his famous May 25 speech with words: "Now Famous Speech is the time . . . for this nation to take a clearly leading role in space achievement, which in many ways holds the key to our future on earth." Opponents of the moon goa from that have criticized it bitterly as an overly expensive "crash program." They have said it takes money away from more worthy causes here on earth, that it is a spectacular more valuable for political and propaganda purposes than for science. Those who favor the program disagree with the critics. They point to the rapid technological advance the Apollo program has fostered, including much technology that has been applied outside the space program. They also point to the burning scientific interest in the moon, and to the potential military advantages of being "on the moon." "The perils will be successfully navigated. There will be footprints in the lunar dust," the late Hugh L. Dryden, deputy space agency administrator, predicted with confidence in 1964 as he viewed the almost complete plans for Apollo. This month his words, and Kennedy's goal, are put to the test of fulfillment. Miss Kansas chosen; KU coed places fourth PRATT (UPI)—Miss Margo Sue Schroeder of Hillsboro, representing Marion County, Saturday night was crowned Miss Kansas for 1969. The 18-year-old, brown-eyed beauty is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Dean Schroeder. She has auburn hair and stands 5-9 and weighs 130 pounds. Miss Schreeder is a student at Wichita State University and is majoring in business education The first runner up was Miss Hutchinsin, Kyle Simmons, 19, of Larned. Next in order were Miss Newton, Joleen Kay Classen; Miss Lawrence-KU, Susan Wassenberg, 20, Topeka, and Miss Solomon Valley, Cleta Elaine Robbins, 21, Paradise Valley Miss Robbins also was awarded the Margine Savage scholarship for a vocal performance. The winner of the Miss Con- geniality was Miss Southern Kansas, Marsha Briggeman, 18, of Iuka. She is the cousin of the current Miss Nebraska, Jane Briggeman, also of Iuka. The Debbie Bryant scholarship, a special award made by the judges, was won by Miss North Central Kansas, Pamilla Kay Kohler. The Debbie Barnes scholarship went to Miss Woodson County, Elaine Marie Buttermore of Yates Center. Both were preliminary talent winners. Miss Schroeder, who says she likes to eat steak with mushrooms as her favorite meal, wants to obtain a degree in her major field and then qualify as a teacher on the secondary level. She says her favorite participating sport is swimming and hobby is the piano. She adds she can cook. MOVISCOP Movie madness hits senior class - see pages 6 and 7 Education professor dead of heart attack Acting Chancellor James R Surface said, "Fred Montgomery earned two degrees from the University of Kansas and served it with great dedication for more than three decades as a faculty member and as director of its Bureau of Visual Instruction. Fred S. Montgomery, associate professor of education and for 32 years director of the Bureau of Visual Instruction, died this morning (July 14) at the home shortly after suffering a massive heart attack. He was 67 years old. "The University was built through the untiring efforts of men like Fred Montgomery and we are poorer today now that he is gone." Born in Memphis, Mo., Montgomery earned the B.A. degree from KU in 1925 and for the next four years was a teacher of government and debate coach at McPherson and Lawrence High Schools. He went to Paola as principle of the high school in 1929 and in 1936 joined the KU education faculty and head of the visual instruction service. He earned the M.A. degree in 1933. Montgomery built the Bureau of Visual Instruction from a small operation to a position as one of the largest, if not the largest educational film library in the nation supported primarily by fees. Its 4,000 reels of film are sent into more than 40 states each year in about 30,000 transactions. The National Education Association gave him its Pioneer Award in 1964 for his work in audio-visual education. Montgomery was a member of Phi Delta Kappa and Pi Sigma Alpha, honorary societies in education and political science. He was a past president and long-time secretary-treasurer of the Kansas Educators Club, a past president of the local Kiwanis Club, and served the Boy Scouts in many capacities at troop and Pelathe District and Kaw Council levels. He also was a past national chairman of the audio-visual department of the National University Extension Association. Funeral services will be at 11 a.m. Thursday at the First Presbyterian Church. KU dean of law attends judicial conference Dean Lawrence E. Blades and Professor Paul E. Wilson of the University of Kansas School of Law were among the participants in the Tenth Circuit Judicial Conference at Jackson Lake, Wyoming, on June 30 to July 3. The conference, which was sponsored by the American Bar Association, was attended by more than 500 federal and state judges, lawyers, teachers and bar officials. The entire 3-day program was focused upon the recommendations of the American Bar Association Special Committee on Minimum Standards for Criminal Justice, which has recently proposed far-reaching changes in the administration of criminal justice in the United States. The Committee is headed by Chief Justice Warren E. Burger. Carter Justice Warren E. Burger. Wilson, who is Kane professor in the School of Law, was one of twenty experts on criminal law who appeared on panels on the conference program. Jly.15 1969 2 KANSAN Among the other panelists were Chief Justice Burger, retired Supreme Court Justice Tom C. Clark, Richard G. Kleindienst, Deputy Attorney General of the United States, U.S. Senator Roman L. Hruska of Nebraska and Chief Judge Alfred P. Murrah of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit. Professor Wilson commented upon Sentencing Alternatives, Criminal Appeals, and Post-Conviction Procedures. Law Section of the American Bar Association to acquaint the nation's judges and bar leaders with the nature and purpose of the proposed new standards. The conference was the first of a projected series of circuit conferences planned by the Criminal More than eighty of the country's leading judges, lawyers and public officials have participated in the minimum standards study, which has extended over a period of four years. It is the first project in the history of the American judiciary to establish and recommend uniform procedures for the expeditious and fair handling of criminal cases from investigation and arrest, through trial, sentence and post-conviction remedies. Wilson was on the staff of the project during its pilot phase and, as a member of the Council of the ABA Section of Criminal Law, has worked with the project throughout the entire period of the studv. Both Blades and Wilson are members of a group designated by Louis Nichols, Chairman of the ABA Section of Criminal Law, to consider ways and means of implementation of the standards in Kansas. Educ. prof appointed to committee Prof. Robert W. Ridgway, associate dean of the University of Kansas School of Education, has been appointed to the new national planning committee of the Council on International Educational Exchange. The committee, which is concerned with teacher education programs, will review reports of several survey teams and make recommendations on potential educational sites in France, Germany, Spain, Columbia, and Japan. group visiting Bogota and Medellin in Colombia later this month Ridgway will be in a survey in the Columbia later this month. The Council, which is supported by several foundations, already has established educational program sites in Italy, Japan, East Africa and Sweden. The Italian center is for prospective teachers of art. In Sweden, the area is elementary education. A sneeze is a reflex action by the body attempting to get rid of dust, pollen, odors or infection in the nasal passages. Campus Living Takes a Lot of Money - The Best, Cheapest and Safest Way to Pay is By Our New "D.C." personal checking account. - "D.C." Checks cost less than money orders . . . only 10c! - No minimum balance is required - Money is protected against loss - Cancelled checks prove you paid your bills - Your name printed free on all "D.C." Checks! The best way to pay campus bills is with "D.C." Checks! Open your account today. Jayhawk Special "D.C." Checks designed for students, faculty and friends of the University of Kansas are available only at Douglas County State Bank. DOUGLAS COUNTY STATE BANK THE BANK OF DOUGLAS COUNTY, LAKESIDE Lawrence's Newest, Most Modern Bank Welcomes You to Lawrence and to K.U. 439 BANK PLENTY OF FREE PARKING, PLUS FOUR CONVENIENT DRIVE-UP WINDOWS Douglas County State Bank Member F.D.I.C. "The Bank of Friendly Service" 9th and Kentucky VI 3-7474 Special Collections a busy department By MARY AGUIAR BY MARY AGUILAR Summer Kansan Reporter Alexandra Mason, Head of the Special Collections Department of the Spencer Library, knelt on the floor of her office and unpacked cartons and packages from Europe. "I bet you thought librarians just sat behind a desk and stamped cards," she said. I admitted that I had, but after 30 minutes of sitting in Miss Mason's office, my ideas were drastically changed. In the short time I was there, Miss Mason did everything—even advising a Latin Camper on library work. "It is a continuous educational process. It never ends. That's the fun of it," from explaining the proper way of cleaning the glass casing of the collections to a janitress, to showing me around the Department and explaining and describing the Collections. "Special Collections is a place where we accumulate the research and primary source matter in humanities, history and the history of science," said Miss Mason. The specialties of this department include a collection of the european renaissance, the political, economic, and social Miss Mason said most of the readers who use the Special Collections are interested in history. history of England in the eighteenth century, voyages and travels, the History of ornithology, and medical botany. Throughout this department, there are various isolated rooms. No book may leave the building. As a result, there are special manuscript reading rooms, general reference reading rooms, and small classrooms where whole classes may use the available materials. Also, there are rooms for individual study for people who are working on huge, long term projects. The department and building is open from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. to all people who have need of the material housed in it Miss Mason said readers at Spencer range from the occasional 10-year-old school child to visiting professors. At 4 p.m. a guide is on tour duty at Special Collections. If anyone is in the building at that time he may go on an informal guided tour. It is designed so that each person may browse and observe at his own pace. KU Journalism graduates fare well in job placement KU Medical Center receives a $30 million budget annually Although the University of Kansas Medical Center in Kansas City has an annual budget of $30 million, only $7 million comes from state tax revenue funds, according to Provost George A. Wolf, Jr. About two-thirds of the budget is for salaries to employees, thus returning to the state a certain amount in taxes and generally adding to the total economy of the state. Equipment and supplies purchased for the Medical Center are mostly bought in Kansas, according to Dr. Wolf, who also is dean of the School of Medicine. Eleven million dollars of the budget come from charges to patients and represents the costs of these services. Another $8 million comes from grants, mostly from the federal government for research activities. The hospital cares for nearly Only a small portion of income is derived from fees charged to students. 550 inpatients daily and a quarter of a million outpatients annually. It takes 2,300 employees, not including the medical faculty and students to take care of the patients, physical facilities, supplies and accounts. At one time each day, there are approximately 5,000 people in the Medical Center, including staff, faculty, patients and students, and not including visitors to patients, according to Dean Wolf. The advertising and news-editorial sequences claimed the majority of degrees conferred by the William Allen White School of Journalism in 1969. With an average weekly salary of $142, many former KU students have been placed in various jobs throughout the advertising field. Some of the more interesting jobs include those held by William J. Myers who is project co-ordinator and a advertising manager for Bill Strong and Associates in Kansas City, and Richard Whitson, who is working in the ad sales department of the Kansas City branch of the Packer Publishing Company. Working as an international correspondent with Time-Life or being a reporter for the UPI are just a couple of the more interesting jobs for students with an interest in news or editorial writing. The average weekly salary for jobs in these areas is $135. $110 is the average weekly salary for those graduates finding jobs in the magazine field. Many students went to work for nationally known magazines such as Time, Life and Look. The average monthly salary for graduates who specialize in radio, television and films is $575. Of the 29 students who were not placed,16 were going into various branches of the armed forces and four were planning to attend graduate school. Anthropology professor boasts of department's fine equipment By DEBBIE WALDEN Summer Kansan Reporter William M. Bass, professor of anthropology, refers to the anthropology department at the University of Kansas as "the best equipped in the United States." Bass modestly claims that he has refused several higher paying positions because the facilities were not comparable. After an hour of discussion, it became obvious that the personnel of the department had everything they could want. Next fall, plans to remodel a portion of Fraser Hall's basement are in effect to substitute the makeshift storage area to a more sophisticated work area. At this time the one large room holds hundreds of bones; ranging from human frames to bird skeletons. Although there has been quite a bit of organizing, the room can be made more convenient for the students who must work there. Every year more skeletons are added to the collection. Excavations usually reveal 300 to 400 burials. However, excavations in South Dakota and Mexico this summer are estimated to bring only 50 to 60 burials to light. Funds are provided either by the National Geographic Society or the National Science Foundation. Instead of having cardboard containers for the skeletons the department is having metal boxes installed on all four walls. Several more tables will be provided for the cleaning and studying of the bones. A partition will be installed to utilize and organize the space more effectively. Sex education to be studied TOPEKA (UPI) — A five member committee to study sex education in the state has been named by the Kansas Association of School Boards. Appointed to the committee were Mrs. Evalyn Whitecomb, Wichita; Dr. Arnold Baum, Dodge City; the Rev. S. E. Hopkins, Ottawa; Dr. Robert Hughes, Marysville, and Mrs. Connie Meninger, Topeka. Jly. 15 1969 KANSAN 3 1 Prof William M. Bass CLOSE-UP THE LETTERMEN C 2 Record Set on Capitol Records Capitol $4.99 KIEF'S RECORD & STEREO JAYHAWKER TOWERS Apartments Now renting 2-bedroom furnished apartments All utilities included in rent. - Immediately adjacent to campus - Swimming pool一club rooms - Air-conditioned - Elevators Off-street parking Convenient Location, a Time and Money Saver. Lawrence's Finest Apartment Complex Inspection Invited 1603 W. 15th Tel.VI 3-4993 Primarily Leather 812 Mass., Downtown 812 Mass., Downtown Hills of Appalachia By ANDY LAUGEL Summer Kansan Reporter Things don't change much in the coal-emptied hills of Appalachia. Men with broad backs and calloused hands sit around a radio or a wood stove and talk about work and why there isn't any. They live in tarppaper shacks with newspapers pasted on the walls to keep out the wind. There was a time when the whole nation was out of work, and the papers told about riots and picket lines and men huddled against the Salvation Houses waiting for dinner. Names like Big Mike DeVanney, Mush Fake Tom and Hobo Ben Benson clattered through the night on the Fruit Grower's Express or the Union Pacific and ended up scrawled on a watertank beside a hundred other names from a hundred different places. Or they rubber-tired it through the belts, picking cotton or threshing wheat, gypsy-riding away from plowed out farms and dust-blown dreams. There was a time when a cripple tried to talk a nation back to prosperity each night over the radio. And many prayed he would do it. The papers pasted on the walls told about economic reforms, new deals and getting the nation back on its feet. On the inside pages, you could see Mae West sprawled on a black velvet sofa with a toy poodle and you could read about Clark Gable strafing German aces and Spencer Tracy killing Indians. The men around the radios heard how people flocked to see movies like "G-Man" and "The Public Enemy," when in New York and Chicago you could make a living with an icepick and an Italian name. Faces like Babe Ruth's and Lou Gehrig's went up on the walls to keep the wind out. Charlie Chaplin went up in the uniform that made people laugh at a German house-painter who was busy brown-shirting his way to World War II ... The people saw these things in the papers and pasted them on their walls so that they saw them again until something else happened or a new hole needed mending. Now pictures of the moon's dark side cover cracks in those ceilings and the radio talks about too much money and kids trying to get away from the suburbs. In the coal-emptied hills, men with broad backs and tired eyes talk about work and why there isn't any, and why there isn't going to be any. Things don't change much where the faces pasted on the wall keep the wind out. Kansan Book Review "When not to obey—" By JUDIE BLACK Summer Kansan Reporter He believes youths should look to their parents as people first, parents second. Likewise, parents Although it appears in the final chapter, the theme of Mallett's book can be crystalized in "It doesn't all depend on you. It depends on all of us." Becoming an adult is a trying period in the lives of today's youths. Complex problems concerning ethics, responsibility and the adult world confront young people each day. In Harold Mallett's "When Not To Obey Your Parents," young people can find a frank, honest guide to a clearer understanding of themselves and the hurdles they must jump in becoming a "cultured adult." must realize their offspring are struggling individuals first and children second. With this mutual "people awareness," both parents and young adults will realize that both are human, sometimes short-sighted and often impatient. Mallett urges the adult and youthful worlds to meet through communication. He tells each faction to share not only their problems but also their happy moments and achievements. If parents and children can come to realistic terms with one another, Mallett predicts, they will soon find they are simply "people ... needing other people." This is a good book for parents to give to their "young adult" offspring and start the dialogue rolling. The reverse of this statement is also true. W.C. Fields-‘all-time nasty guy' By EVE FISHER Summer Kansan Reporter "Till be sober tomorrow, but you'll always be crazy." This caustic comment by one of Hollywood's all-time nasty guys, W. C. Fields provided the proper finish for the movie many critics acclaimed as the best of his long career. "It's a Gift," a 1924 production based partly on earlier silent films, was a classic example of Fields' special brand of humor—the humor that destroys American sacred cows like children and dogs. Strangely enough, Fields abandoned his role of the cruel opportunist for that of a good-natured Everyman whose sarcasm was provoked by everyday frustrations. Baby LeRoy, Fields' target in previous films, once again initiated some of the funniest scenes in the movie. The first of these slapstick scenes came early in the film when Baby LeRoy unplugs a barrel of molasses in the grocery store of Harold Bissonette (Fields) and floods the entire building. Upset by numerous similar encounters, Bissonette decides to move his family, nagging wife and all, to the wonderful opportunity land of California. (A distant relative has conveniently died leaving the family a ranch in the golden land.) The auto trip to the coast is a delightful scene, making full use of the typical Fieldsian businesses of losing his hat and wrecking a car. Once in California, the family finds a racing grandstand is to be built on their somewhat desolate property and Bissonette negotiates a fittingly outrageous price for the land. After moving to one of the most productive orange groves in the state, Bissonette settles down, content with the life of a gentleman farmer. "It's a Gift," one of the most realistic of Fields' films, was not widely acclaimed at the time of its release, but time has proven it superb creative and one of the best Fieldsian comedies. 'Generation gap'—not really By JUDIE BLACK Summer Kansan Reporter Some call it "the generation gap." Others refer to it as "the understanding gap." Many speak of it is "the communication gap." Whatever nomeclature is attributed to that impasse between generations, most persons will agree such an impasse does exist. Several areas of contention are evident in that generation deadlock. The older generation—young during the 1930's—is quick to point to the extreme hair lengths on head and face, the trend toward uni-sex fashions, the scandalous moral standards and the absurd, often suggestive music of the "Now Generation." Elders wrinkle their noses and cover their ears to the beat reverberating from huge amplifiers. If those adults only opened their ears to the music's words and messages, they might make a startling discovery: The music of their lost youth and that of today's young people is identical in content. "Wake up and live," advised a song of the Thirties. In 1968 SPANKY AND OUR GANG told the world to "make every minute count, make it groove." Outside happenings had very little effect on a lover of the Thirties—"I've got my love to keep me warm." For Petula Clark in 1968, "love ... is warmer than the warmest sunshine." Although the lean years of the 1930's took work and respect from many persons, "they can't take my love away from me," declared a man of the times. So said THE FOUNDATIONS in 1968 "Now that I've found you, I can't let you go." The Thirties wanted only "you ... breathing my name with a sigh." However the Sixties, in the voices of the NEW CHRISTY MINSTRELS, demanded "you call me, any old time that you want me." "Look through any window, what do you see?" asked HERMAN'S HERMITS in 1967. "By the window, that's where I'll be," answered a tune of the Thirties. THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN Both generations were plagued by doubts as a song of 30 years ago sought reassurance—"Please ...tell me that you love me." The Sixties were even less confident in emotional stability—"Do you love me? Do you love me ..." asked Chubby Checker in 1961. Generations of the Thirties and the Sixties admonished war. A song of the Thirties predicted—"You put a rifle in his hand ... You send him far away ... Look at him today." 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. Pub.-Second class postpaid paid at Lawrence, Kansas, every Tuesday and Friday for the Summer Session Kansan. Accommodations, goods, and employment advertised in the Summer Session Kansan are offered to students without regard to color, creed, or national origin. Kansan Telephone Numbers Newsroom—UN 4-3646 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 opinions expressed in the Summer Session Kansan are not necessarily those, or the University of Kansas Administration or the Kansas State Board of Regents. Don Westerhans Jon Watterson Bill Seymour, Gary Mason Rodnyv Osborne Mike Adams Helen Roe Managing Editor Photography Business Manager Office Manager Executive Staff Member Associated Collegiate Press REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY National Educational Advertising Services A DIVISION OP READER'S DIGEST SALES & SERVICES, INC. 360 Lexington Ave., New York, N. Y. 1017-1 The words . . . Yet as Rod McKuen observes in STANYAN STREET AND OTHER SOR-ROWS—"Words are only necessary after love has gone." Thirty years separate the words that ask the same questions, seek the same loves and doubt the same institutions. "I didn't start that old crazy Asian war ... I'm not the man I used to be..." tells THE FIRST EDITION in 1969. Now You Know The Apollo 11 astronauts will be the first men on the moon, but 23 unmanned spacecraft from earth, 17 American and six Soviet, already have landed or crashed on the lunar surface. 4 KANSAN Jly.15 1969 The Lighter Side Pentagon pictures By Dick West — UPI Columnist WASHINGTON—Nearly everybody agrees that it would be nice if military spending could be reduced without unduly weakening the nation's defenses. I don't know whether Rep. John M. Murphy, D-N.Y., had that in mind when he introduced a bill to prohibit Pentagon cooperation in the filming of motion pictures. But it could work out that way. At the present time, as you may know, when a movie script calls for an Army, Navy or Air Force, the producer customarily borrows one from the Pentagon. Murphy moved to end that practice after six servicemen were injured during the filming of "Tora! Tora! Tora!" a 20th Century-Fox treatment of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. Should this bill be enacted, motion pictures studios would have no choice but to recruit, train and equip their own armed forces. Otherwise, they could not continue to produce war epics on the scale to which we movie goers have become accustomed. Once each studio has its own army, navy and air force, the military potential of the United States obviously will be several times greater than it is now. Twentieth Century-Fox, for example, would have to scale down "Tora! Tora! Tora!" to just plain "Tora!" This would make it possible for the Defense Department to In event of an emergency, it could simply borrow an army, navy or air force from one of the studios, depending on which one happened to be between pictures at the time. cut the military budget by discharging a few million servicemen. The department no longer would need such a large force to meet its commitments in Southeast Asia, Europe, the Middle East and Hollywood. Proper credit would be given, of course. As they marched forth into battle, the troops would carry a banner reading: "This war could not have been waged without the cooperation of 20th Century-Fox." One immediate result would be a speedup in the withdrawal of American troops from Vietnam. The U.S. Army could pull out and let the South Vietnamese and Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer assume a larger share of the fighting. There is, however, an element of risk in this concept. It would, I fear, greatly complicate disarmament negotiations with the Soviet Union. The United States might reach an agreement with the Russians, but if Paramount refused to sign it, claiming it needed a large standing army for its next picture, the treaty would be meaningless. STEERING This is Mr. Meyers using the John Bean LIFT-A-MATIC wheel alignment machine. Save your tires . . . line up today! Precise accuracy guaranteed. We also have COMPLETE BARRETT BRAKE SERVICE. FRITZ CO. 745 N.H. VI 3-4321 Complete Apollo 11 TV schedule listed HOLLYWOOD (UPI)—This is the week of the scheduled moonlanding mission of the manned Apollo 11 flight on television, and nothing else on the home tube will much matter. Barring changes, it all begins Wednesday with liftoff, and concludes July 34 with splash-down after the eight-day journey. On Tuesday, NBC-TV and CBS-TV will offer one-hour prime time previews of the flight on its eve. The NBC-TV entry is entitled "Apollo: A Journey to the Moon—The Threshold." The CBS-TV presentation is called "Man on the Moom: The Epic "Man on the Moon: The Epic After that comes the real thing, and—a gain barring changes—the following are some television highlights of the mission for those who care to make note of their scheduled times and would like a handy referral list. Network reporting of the launching starts at 8 a.m. EDT Wednesday. Liftoff is set for 9:32 a.m. EDT. There will, of course, be countless video reports of the progress of the mission during the eight days. New space language SPACE CENTER, HOUSTON (UPI)—Some of the language from the lexicon of space you are likely to hear during the Apollo 11 mission to the moon: Ags, or "Aggs"— For abort guidance system, the system aboard the Apollo lunar landing spacecraft the astronauts would rely on to steer back to a rendezvous with the command craft if something went wrong. Apocynthion— The farthest point from the moon's surface in the orbit of an object launched from a body other than the moon. Apogee—the farthest point from the earth in the orbit of the moon or other earth satellite. Apolune—The farthest point from the moon in the orbit of an object launched from the moon Bmag, or "Beemag"—For body mounted attitude gyro, a gyroscope mounted on the lunar vehicle for use in emergencies. Deda, or "Deeda"—For data entry and display assembly, the instrument panel the astronauts use to control and monitor the Ags. Delta V—The measurement of velocity changes, stated in feet per second. IMU—Inertial measurement unit, part of the guidance system used both on the command spacecraft and the lunar lander which measures and records changes in velocity and direction. Heliocentric—Any space phenomenon which is centered around the sun, such as the orbit of the earth and the planets. LM, or "Lem"—Originally, for lunar excursion module, the lunar landing spacecraft which is now called simply the lunar module, or LM. Jly. 15 1969 KANSAN 5 LOI- For lunar orbit insertion, the point at which the Apollo command spacecraft—with the moon lander still attached to it- decelerates after its journey from earth to swing into orbit around the moon. MSI—Moon sphere of influence. Pericynthion—Nearest point to the moon's surface in the orbit of an object launched from a body other than the moon. Perigee—Closest point to the earth in the orbit of the moon or other earth satellite. Perilune—Nearest point to the lunar surface in the orbit of an object launched from the moon. Pipa, or "Pippa"—For pulse integrating pendulous accelerometer, a device in the IMU which measures acceleration by converting the movements of a pendulum into pulses and feeding the signals into a computer. PLSS, or "Pliss"—For portable life support system, the backpack oxygen, air conditioning, communications and power system the astronauts use during their moon walk. Selnographic—Relating to the physical geography of the moon. Selenocentric—Centered around the moon. SLA, or "Slah"—For spacecraft lunar module adapter, the section at the front of the third stage of the Saturn 5 booster which houses the LM during the ride into space. SPS—For service propulsion system, the system which fires the Apollo Command ship's main engine to put the craft into lunar orbit, and fires it again to kick the astronauts out of orbit around the moon and send them back to earth. TEI- For translunar injection, the point where the SPS fires to start the astronauts away from earth orbit toward the moon. WINNER! 3 ACADEMY AWARDS INCLUDING BEST ACTRESS KATHARINE HEPBURN DON PETE & LEVINE — AN AWCO & MASSY FILM PETER O'TOOLE KATHARINE HEPBURN OPENS WED. July 16th JANE MERROW JOHN CASTLE THE LION IN WINTER MARTIN FOLL THE Hillcrest BIBLIOTHECARY SCHOOL CENTER A GAMES AND COOKS TIMOTHY DALTON ANTHONY HOOKIN NIGEL STOCK NIGEL PERRY JAMES GOLDMAN JOSEPH LEVINE JAMES GOLDMAN MARTIN DELL ANTHONY HOOKIN THE LION IN WINTER MARTIN POLE THE Hillcrest SCHOOL CENTER 910-263-8000 SCHOOL CENTER 910-263-8000 THE LION IN WINTER MARTIN POLL THE Hillcrest COLLEGE SHOPPING CENTER & SAFETY TOWER On Saturday, plans call for a video transmission from the spacecraft as it flies in lunar orbit. Pictures are expected to be seen in the 15-minute period from 4:02 to 4:17 p.m. EDT. Beginning at 11 a.m. EDT Sunday, the networks will wipe out all regular programming for 31 hours and present continuous coverage of the period focusing on man's landing on the moon. This means there will be nothing but moon coverage until 6 p.m. EDT Monday. On Thursday, a color television transmission from space, 15 minutes in length, is tentatively scheduled for 7:32 to 7:47 p.m. EDT There will be a television transmission Sunday from 1:52 to 2:22 p.m. EDT—half an hour—showing the undocking and start of the descent of the lunar module for the moon landing. Touchdown of the module is planned for about 4:23 p.m. EDT. A television transmission is scheduled from 1:57 to 2:07 a.m. EDT Monday—10 minutes—just before astronaut Neil Armstrong leaves the space craft to set foot on the moon. Quickly following that is the scheduled historic transmission: A program of two hours and 40 minutes, in black and white, live and direct from the moon. Then, in the middle of the night across the nation—late Sunday in the West, early Monday in the East—the high drama will build. Sunday and Monday, if everything jells, will be the days that give viewers something to tell their future grandchildren about. It is planned for about 2:12 Violinists concentrate in Music Camp rehearsal Herbie will honk his way into your hearts I WALT DISNEY productions' 1948 LOVE BUG TECHNICOLOR" Herbie 3 LOOK TO THE NAME WALT DISNEY FOR THE FINEST IN FAMILY ENTERTAINMENT Eve. 7:15-9:15 Granada THEATRE...Telephone V13-5786 a. m. EDT Monday, ending approximately 4:52 a.m. EDT, and occurring as astronauts Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin leave the lunar module and carry out their duties on the moon surface. Mat. Daily 2:30 Varsity THEATRE ... telephone V1-3-1065 He crowded a life time into 37 suspenseful hours. Varsity THEATRE .. Telephone V1.3-1065 He crowded a life time into 37 suspenseful hours. SIDNEY POITIER THE LOST MAN A UNIVERSAL PICTURE Mat. 2:30 Eve. 7:15-9:25 THE GREAT BANK ROBBER OPENS WED. Hillcrest 2 Hillcrest THOSE DARING Young Men in their Juntly Jalopies 7:00 - 9:25 Hillcrest "GO!-FOR THE FURY. FORCE AND FUN OF if..." LOOK 7:30 9:40 if... --presents KU SUMMER THEATRE REP.'69 bv Plays by American playwrights representative of the past four decades— 1930, 1940, 1950, 1960. THE MALE ANIMAL James Thurber and Elliott Nugent The 1940's comedy which sounds like today, with protest, public controversy—all in a midwestern university town. July 15,19,25 Experimental Theatre AH, WILDERNESS by Eugene O'Neill O'Neill's great comedy of the 1930's about the "generation gap" at the Truman Capote at the turn of the century. July 14,18,22 "In-the-Round" Main Stage THE GRASS HARP The comedy-fantasy of the 1950's about the people of spirit against the dogma of society in which they live July 11,16,21,23 "In-the-Round" Main Stage ONE-ACT PLAYS 1960 Comedies from Broadway OFF & OFF-OFF July 12,17,24,26 Experimental Theatre All performances 8:20 p.m. ● Tele. orders accepted; amount due on receipt of tickets ● Box Office UN 4-3982 (24 hour answering service) ● Hours 10-12 a.m., 1-5 p.m. ● 10-12 Saturdays if a performance that evening ● 7-9 p.m. performance nights No Reserved Seats Single admission tickets for individual shows $1.50 • Season coupon books $4.00 each • Coupon holders must exchange for tickets for each production prior to date specified on each coupon. UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS MURPHY HALL ... EAGLE Senior class film documen ... 'Taking lessons from an old pro?' PROD. NO. SCENE TAKE SOU DIRECTOR CAMERAMAN DATE EXT. IN "Where Is Yesterday" is the title of the film produced by the 1969 Senior Class. 'Roll 'em, this is a take' Written by John Hill, senior class president, and edited and directed by Nicholas Eliopoulos, the film is a stream of images which capture KU. Shooting began in May 1968. It was edited and assembled in four days and three nights in May of this year and premiered June 1 at the Class of 1969 Senior Breakfast. The class supplied the $2,000 budget to make the film. The project was initiated with hopes to show the film at the 25th reunion of the class in 1994. Its value should be fully appreciated then, when its makers can look nostalgically back with memories of friends, places, and sounds of 1969 frozen on the 30 minute piece of celluloid. Andy Williams tells in the film how when he was nine-years-old, his father drove he and his brothers to Lawrence, Kansas, for the cornhusking contest. Pat Paulsen advises KU Seniors that they should 6 KANSAN Jly. 15 1969 'Quiet, everyone' 10% DISCOUNT ON CASH & CARRY LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANING - Pick-up and delivery service - Use any of our three convenient locations - Personalized jet lighting service "There's A Definite Difference" At Our Three Convenient Locations: DOWNTOWN 1111 Mass. VI 3-5155 MALLS 23rd and La. VI 3-0895 HILLCREST 9th and Iowa VI 3-0928 ACME Laundry and Dry Cleaners ments 1969 campus scene EAGLE THE CINEMA FILM PROJECT M PRO uiet, everyone' not steal in order to become good citizens. Walter Cronkite sums it all up by twisting his classic line into "And that's the way it is, May, 1969 in Lawrence, Kansas." 'Up two feet, now to the left...' Former Chancellor Wescoe and Dean of Student Affairs William Balfour add three comic scenes, and coach Pepper Rodgers makes his film debut in a sole introduction to the Orange Bowl footage. Several Seniors are interviewed on current problems — Vietnam, society and their feelings toward their college career. Pop songs accompany shots of campus and town. There are close to 1,000 faces throughout the film, one of them may be yours. Where Is Yesterday? It will be on request at the Bureau of Audio Visual Aids for any future campus showings. It will be shown in Dyche Auditorium Thursday for 2 showings, one at 8:00 and 9:00 p.m.The public is invited at no charge as guests of the Class of 1969. This will be the last formal showing sponsored by the class until its 25th reunion. Ralph Waldo Emerson 'Someone else got the part' C. W. H. H. "Goodnight Clarke" (1) "Goodnight Walter" CLOSE-UP LOU RAWLS Capitol 2 Record Set on Capitol Records $4.99 KIEF'S RECORD & STEREO Jly. 15 1969 KANSAN 7 + GRACE $200 WEDDING RING 75 CIRCLET $500 ALSO $150 TO 1975 CIRCLET $500 ALSO $150 TO 1975 REGISTERED Keepsake DIAMOND RINGS Every Keepsake engagement diamond is flawless, so you can choose your Keeepsake ring with confidence. Ray Christian "THE COLLEGE JEWELER" Special College Terms 809 Mass. VI 3-5432 Rings enlarged to show detail. Trade-Mark Reg. Carriage Lamp RESTAURANT ON THE MALLS FAMILY STYLE CHICKEN SPECIAL WEDNESDAY ALL YOU CAN EAT FOR $159 Includes: Mashed Potatoes Gravy Cold Slaw Coffee or Tea STYLE SPECIAL SDAY A America's space program yields fascinating history (EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the second of five articles describing the step by step progress of America's space program, due to be climaxed on July 21 with man's first landing on the moon.) SPACE CENTER, HOUSTON (UPI)—More than three years passed between the opening of space age in 1957 and the first human ventures into orbit. Man had barely rippled the vast, forbidding ocean of the cosmos when President John F. Kennedy boldly proposed in 1961 that the United States land men on the moon "before this decade is out." Only two space pilots had looked down on their home planet from above its atmosphere. One was the Russian, Yuri Gagarin, the other America's Alan B. Shepard, and both their flights had occurred within the two months before Kennedy spoke. Combined, their flight times totaled only 2 hours 3 minutes. Hurling unmanned satellites into orbit was still quite an accomplishment. Three times the United States had tried to send small, unmanned spaceships to the moon—and three times it had failed. Man's conquest of space was still in its infancy. The space age dawned upon a startled world Oct. 4, 1957. On that morning, a great white rocket climbed away from the launch pad of South Central Russia and placed a 23-inch diameter, 184-pound ball in an oval path around the earth. The Russians called it Sputnik 1. Its name meant "fellow traveler of the earth." Later, millions heard that awesome shrill "voice from space" on American radio and television broadcasts. Amateur radio operators tuned it in. News commentators struggled to explain that the earth now had a new moon, one made by human hands. Scarcely had the United States—and, indeed, the world—adjusted to the shocks of Sputnik 1 when the second shoe fell. Another Russian satellite soared into orbit 30 days later, on Nov. 3, 1957. Sputnik 2, weighing an amazing 1,121 pounds, carried a little black-and-white dog named Laika and a self contained artificial atmosphere that kept her alive for seven days. It was the first firm indication that Russia's real space goal was to orbit men. The Sputnik launches of October and November, 1957, caused consternation and soul-searching in the United States. Some have called it the greatest shock to the nation since Pearl Harbor. Words like "space race" and "space lag" entered a vocabulary already But it was a month later, on Dec. 6, 1957, that American embassment in the field of missiles and space reached a peak. striving with "arms race" and "missile gap." On that dismal day, before scores of newsman at Cape Canaveral, now Cape Kennedy, and millions watching on television, America's first attempt to orbit a grapefruit-size Vanguard satellite failed. The first stage of the rocket exploded on ignition, and the rest of the rocket crumpled on the wet Florida beach sand. America's first satellite—a little 3.25-pound ball—sent out its plaintive "beep-beep" from a palmetto flat instead of from the realm of space. The failure took on disastrous proportions. "Overnight" recalls space pioneer Dr. Wernher von Braun, "it became popular to question the bulwarks of our society, our public education system, our industrial strength, international policy, defense strategy and forces, the capability of our science and technology, "Even the moral fiber of our people came under searching examination." Against this background of pessimism, Von Braun and his German rocket team which had been transported to the United States after World War II were called into the breech. They were working for the Army on missile development at Huntsville, Ala. The comeback was swift. On Nov. 8, 1957, Von Braun had promised to orbit a satellite within 90 days. On Jan. 31, 1958, he did. Explorer 1 streaked atop a Jupiter-C missile into the night sky and soared into orbit, a 31-pound package of instruments. The next Vanguard and the next Explorer launched failures, but on March 17, 1958, a Vanguard rocket finally sped into orbit. It, too, came up with a startling bit of information—that the earth is rather pear shaped. During the next three years, the United States moved out to the launch pad 76 times, logging 42 successes and 34 failures in unmanned flights. But Russia was busy, too. In this same period it logged three spectaculars—first probe to hit the moon, first pictures of the lunar backside and a probe toward the planet Venus. In the spring of 1958 President Dwight D. Eisenhower set up the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), responsible for "space activities . . . except . . . those projects primarily associated with military requirements." Project Mercury was born. A one-day flight was the goal. But Russia once more pulled off a spectacular—its biggest yet—when on April 12, 1961, 27-year-old Maj. Yuri A. Gagarin orbited the earth one time inside the eight-foot diameter ball of a Vostok spaceship. His flight lasted 1 hour, 48 minutes. Perhaps the bitterest disappointment was felt by seven American astronauts who were preparing for one of their number—Alan B. Shepard—to ride a bell-shaped Mercury capsule on a bullet-like trajectory briefly into space and then down into the Atlantic. Listening to the news of Gagarin's flight at Cape Canaveral, however, astronaut Donald K. Slayton found reason for optimism. "There's one good thing about Gagarin's flight," he told a newsman. "It proves there is no serious obstacle to a man going into space. Maybe we ought to be happy to know it can be done." Twenty-three days later, Shepard wedged himself into the Freedom 7 capsule atop his Redstone rocket and shot into the morning sky toward a maximum altitude of 116.5 miles. He splashed safely into the Atlantic 302 miles from the cape 15 minutes 22 seconds later. Military junta rules Greece By PHIL NEWSOM UPI Foreign News Analysi In Greece, the military junta gives and the military junta takes away. In April, in an apparent move to forestall pressure from Greece's NATO partners for a restoration of constitutional government, Premier George Papadopoulos restored by decree three basic constitutional rights. They dealt with the inviolability of citizen's homes, the right of association and the right of assembly. But in late June the regime destroyed the one institution capable of curbing government excesses. At the same time, the premier also announced some liberalization of press curbs and the government attitude toward exiles and military court convictions. This was the Council of State, which in effect is the Greek supreme court. It forced the resignation of the council's president, who held the appointment for life, and announced it would ignore future council rulings which went against government policy. In the resulting revolt of Greek judges, the government exiled one prominent judge and three lawyers to remote mountain vill- lages for renewable terms of six months each. The evidence of continuing and even mounting opposition to the Greek military regime and the harsh measures it must take to remain in power has a direct bearing on the United States and Western Europe. Late last year the United States agreed to resume shipments to Greece of military aircraft and some other heavy equipment banned after the April, 1967 coup that toppled the elected government. It refused, however, to send tanks, presumably on the theory that they not only could be used for stricty military purposes but also could be turned against street demonstrations. The Nixon Administration has reassured the American Congress and expressed directly to the Greek government its concern not only with reports of torture of persons jailed by the regime but also over continued denial of civil liberties. The dilemma confronting the United States and Western Europe is the key role allotted to Greece in NATO. Neither has yet been willing to face it. Campus Briefs New English prof Michael L. Johnson, a native of Lebanon, Mo., will become assistant professor of English at the University of Kansas in September. A lecturer in English at Rice University the past year, he earned the B.A. degree from Rice in 1965, the M.A. at Stanford University in 1967, and the Ph.D. from Rice in 1968. As a senior Johnson won a Woodrow Wilson fellowship for the first year of graduate study and later was named a Ford Foundation scholar. Wins scholarship Thomas R. Sheahan, Topeka, has been awarded a $300 Muchnic Foundation Scholarship for the 1969 fall semester in the University of Kansas School of Engineering. Sheahan, who will graduate in mechanical engineering at the end of January, has a cumulative grade point average of 2.70. The scholarship was established by the Muchnic Foundation of Atchison to encourage and reward excellent academic work by juniors and seniors in engineering. 8 KANSAN Jly. 15 1969 Plywood, Moulding Plaster, Shelving Material Come to LOGAN-MOORE LUMBER 1011 N. 3rd VI 3-093 Pay-Less$ Self Service SHOES 1300 W. 23rd Lawrence EVERYONE SAYS Everything in the Pet Field And Free Parking At Grants Drive-In Pet Center Experienced Dependable Personal service 218 Conn., Law, Pet Ph. VI 3-29 JAYHAWKER TOWERS Apartments Now renting 2-bedroom furnished apartments. All utilities included in rent. Elevators - Air-conditioned - Immediately adjacent to campus - Swimming pool—club rooms - Off-street parking Convenient Location, a Time and Money Saver. Lawrence's Finest Apartment Complex Inspection Invited 1603 W. 15th The scholarships were provided by Mr. and Mrs. Oscar S. Stauffer of Topeka for graduates of Hope High School to attend KU. Stauffer scholars The recipients are: Christine Lynn Davis, a junior and Sharon Anne Morgan, a sophomore, both of whom previously held the scholarship; and Barbara Jane Riffel, who will enter KU as a freshmen this fall. Three University of Kansas students from Hope have been awarded $250 Stauffer Scholarships for the 1969-70 academic year. Tel. VI 3-4993 Business seminars The first of the two will concern Operational Administration. The second will concern the Application of Operational Research to Accounting Data. During the week of September 8, the KU School of Business will host two separate seminars. The seminars are designed for businessmen with five years experience. THE HOUSE POOGE 17 WEST 9th Conglomerate of the Unique! Handcrafts. Sandals Leather Goods Ceramics Candles Glassware Gifts for the discriminating. 17 West 9th For Students on the Go, We're TOPS TOPS Wardrobe Care Centers In By 9-Out By 5 Same Day Service Two Convenient Locations 1517 West 6th 1526 West 23rd Handy Drive-Up Window Easy Parking KU sports sign many new freshmen With 35 signees, football leads the list of KU sports in the number of high school graduates who have signed national letters of intent to enroll here this fall. Nineteen of these signees are from Kansas. They are: John Ballard, Shawnee Mission South; Reggie Ballew, Atchison; Hank Bauer, Jr., Bishop Miege; Mike Burton, Washington; Mickey Casey, Wichita North; Mike Cerne, Lawrence; Bob Clements, Humbolt; Mike Douglas, Assaria; Hal Edwards, Shawnee Mission East; Curt Gasper, Salina; Danny Gay, Topeka; Richard Jones, Columbus; Geary King, Lawrence; Bob Martin, Ulysses; Don Perkins, Topeka; John Schroll, Hutchinson; George Schuler, Lawrence; Jim Schumm, Bishop Miege, and Carl Searcy, Valley Center. KU grad becomes Harvard prof Edward S. Mason, former Lawrence resident and recipient of the University of Kansas alumni citation for distinguished service, will become University Professor Emeritus at Harvard University this summer. Mason, an economics graduate of KU in 1919 who earned his M.A. degree in 1920, has been a member of the Harvard faculty since 1923. From 1947 to 1958 he was dean of the now Kennedy School of Government and this spring, although he had reached his 70th birthday, was acting dean of Harvard's Faculty of Arts and Sciences. He has held a series of distinguished professorships: Frank W. Taussig Research Professor of Economics, George F. Baker Professor of Economics, and since 1961 the Lamont University Professor. At KU, Mason was a football letterman and won a Rhodes Scholarship. Mason headed development teams to advise the governments of Pakistan and Iran and Pakistan has awarded him its highest decoration for a non-citizen. During World War II Mason was chief economist of the Office for Strategic Services. The Air Force awarded him its Medal of Freedom. Swimming is second to football as Coach Dick Reamon announced the signing of letters of intent by nine swimmers. These include state champions Chris Holmer and Marc Wagoner of Wichita Heights and Hal Kennedy of Topeka. Almost two-thirds of all foundations are small operations with assets of less than $200,000 or annual grants totaling less than $10,000. Most are operated by the donor, his children or the family lawyer. "This is the best recruiting year we've ever had," Reamon said. "If these men improve to the same extent of our freshmen in the past, we should have some outstanding talent and potential conference champions in these freshmen." The other signees are Roland Sabates, Kansas City, Mo.; Rick Heidinger, Tulsa; Mike Tackett, Indianapolis; Steve Rice, Deerfield, Ill.; Dana Staats, Deerfield, Ill., and Bob Mauer, Evanston, Ill. In addition to the Ford Foundation, foundations having more than $500 million each are the Rockefeller Foundation with $890 million, the Duke Endowment with $629 million and the Lilly Endowment with $580 million. Leonard Gray, Kansas City; Ken Sumrall, Osawatomi; Mike Bossard, Washington, D.C., and Mark Williams, Denver. foundations. There are 26 foundations with assets of over $100 million each, led by the Ford Foundation which has $3.66 billion, Fortune Magazine reported Sunday. Foundations control U.S. money Canfield, Gray, and Sumrall were Kansas all-staters, Bossard was an all-metro star in Washington, D.C., and Williams was all-metro in Denver. The five basketball signes include Randy Canfield, Wichita; Four Kansans will run for the Jayhawk track team as freshmen next year. Jon Cullen, Wichita; Larry Larimore, Wellington; Frank Johnson, Wyandotte, and Dave Anderson, Shawnee Mission, have signed letters of intent. In 1945 he became deputy assistant Secretary of State and in 1947 he was chief economic adviser at the Moscow Conference. The magazine said the 22,000 U.S. foundations control $20.5 billion and 90 per cent of this money is in the hands of fewer than seven per cent of the In 1962 Mason served as president of the American Economics Association and now is a member of the board of directors of Resources for the Future and of Education and World Affairs. Baseball coach Floyd Temple announced Clyde "Andy" Aldridge, Tulsa, has signed a letter of intent to pitch at KU. Jly.15 1969 KANSAN 9 Aldridge, a rightfander, compiled a 6-3 won-lost record and a 1.05 earned run average at Tulsa Hale this spring. Toyota gives you easy going safety features on the new Toyota Corona 2-door hardtop & 4-door sedan • Collapsible steering column • Impact absorbing, glare resistant instrument panel • Soft rubber knobs & window regulator handles • Breakaway day-night glare proof rear-view mirror • Safety door latches & handles • Dual braking system • Seat belts front & rear • 4-way flasher warning lights • Heavy gauge steel —unitized body construction Japan's No.1 Automobile Manufacturer TOYOTA COMPETITION SPORTS CARS 1209 E. 23rd la Toyota gives you easy going safety features on the new Toyota Corona 2-door hardtop & 4-door sedan • Collapsible steering column • Impact absorbing, glare resistant instrument panel • Soft rubber knobs & window regulator handles • Breakaway day-night glare proof rear-view mirror • Safety door latches & handles • Dual braking system • Seat belts front & rear • 4-way flasher warning lights • Heavy gauge steel —unitized body construction Japan's No.1 Automobile Manufacturer TOYOTA COMPETITION SPORTS CARS 1209 E. 23rd CLOSE-UP NANCY WILSON 2 Record Set on Capitol Records Capitol! $4.99 KIEF'S RECORD & STEREO CLOSE-UP NANCY WILSON 2 Record Set on Capitol Records Capitol! $4.99 KIEF'S RECORD & STEREO CLOSE-UP NANCY WILSON NOTICE SALE Summer Clearance SUITS - one group at $39.50 SPORT COATS, group values to $50.00 at $25.00 DRESS SHIRTS, very large group, all at $5.50 TIES - large group at ½ off price Group of Solids Along with Most of Our Popular Pattern Slacks SLACKS - your choice at $12.00 Many Durable Press SPORT SHIRTS - all at only $4.00 CASUAL SLACKS - reg. to 10.00, $6.00 Great Selection of Mock-Turtles and Others KNIT SHIRTS - priced $4.00 to $7.50 BERMUDAS - from $4.00 MISTER GUY TRADITIONAL CLOTHIERS 920 MASSACHUSETTS MISTER GUY TRADITIONAL CLOTHIERS 920 MASSACHUSETTS MISTER GUY TRADITIONAL CLOTHIERS 920 MASSACHUSETTS Ex-Yankees aid Jackson in homer quest By MILTON RICHMAN UPI Sports Writer NEW YORK—Any day now somebody is sure to buttonhole Roger Maris, jump the gun a little, and ask him whether he thinks fence-wrecking Reggie Jackson can break his home run record. "Sure, why not?" Roger Maris will say. "Records were meant to be broken." Reggie Jackson, who could turn out to be baseball's newest superstar and the first one the Oakland A's ever had, isn't so sure about that. Although the season isn't half over yet, Jackson already is beginning to hear the Maris-Ruth talk and because it is so early, he's trying to block it out the same way Maris tried during the first half of 1961, the year he hit 61 homers to pass Ruth's 60. "Sixty homers is a tremendous feat to me," says Oakland's 23-year-old powerhouse, "and it's something I'm not capable of right now." Three persons are responsible for Jackson's overnight emergence as the major leagues' No. 1 seat-buster. The first two are a pair of ex-Yankees, Hank Bauer, who manages the A's, and Joe DiMaggio, who coaches them while the third is Richie Allen, who is having a spot of difficulty with the Phillies at the moment. Bauer's role in Jackson's home run output is the most intriguing. He merely tells his young right-fielder to go up there and hit one out and Jackson does. It sounds like a gag but it really isn't. "If we're in a close game or need a run," Jackson says, "I'll look at Hank and say, 'any way on base,' which means does he want me to bunt, push or do something like that, and he'll say, 'heck no, hit the ball outta the park.' This has a bearing on what I do up there at the plate, like what I'm gonna look for or what I'm gonna try to do." Jackson also has been getting considerable help from DiMaggio, who did a little hitting himself in his day. "Joe and I have been very close on the field and when we're traveling on the plane," Jackson says, "We're talking and conversing baseball all the time. Back in spring training Joe and I worked about an hour, an hour and a half a day on just making contact with the ball. I went to a heavier bat, up to 37 ounces, and I asked Joe if he thought it was too much for me to handle. He said no." Even before coming to spring training, Jackson had this idea in his head of trying a heavier bat, so he got in touch with the fellow who swings the biggest one around, Richie Allen. He used a 40-ouncer. "Richie was very helpful, too," Jackson points out. "Swinging a heavier bat makes me more aware of what I have in my hands. I really can't go for a bad pitch with a bat of this weight and by being conscious of what I have, it makes me bear down and try to pick out a good pitch." little use for the Yankees generally and for that matter, he may feel the same way now, although he hasn't said one way or the other lately. What he has been saying is that the A's won't draw their full potential of customers until they come up with a legitimate super-star. Reggie Jackson could be it and wouldn't be be a touch of irony if two former players from the club Finley always knocked had a hand in the whole thing? Meanwhile, Jackson goes his own sweet way hitting baseballs over the fence. He hit 29 homers last season, his first full one with the A's. Oakland fans are supposed to be hard to impress but they gave Jackson a standing ovation when he hammered his last homer over the wall. "It touched me," he says about the reception he got. "Made me have a nice feeling." Quotes - SAIGON—Spec. 5 Washington Clemons, 21, one of the first 814 U.S. soldiers leaving South Vietnam: "I didn't really get the feeling in my heart that we were leaving until we got to the airport." FAYETTE, Miss. — Mayor Charles Evers, at his inauguration ceremonies; "Men have gone and given their lives that all men—black men, white men, rich men, poor men—can live on this God's earth and enjoy the things God put here for us without being hated and without being discriminated against." "This debate will affect us and in a large measure determine our national security for years to come." WASHINGTON—Sen. Frank Church, D-Idaho, attacking New York Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller's mission to Latin America: "The truth is that our relations with Latin America are in disarray. The Nixon administration has yet to devise a policy to deal with the deterioration; Rockefeller's odyssey was hit upon as a diversionary tactic." WASHINGTON - Sen. John C. Stennis, D-Miss., looking ahead to the Senate debate on the anti- ballistic missile system: CAPE KENNEDY—Apollo 11 launch Director Rocco A. Petrone addressing his staff as plans for the moontrip enter their final stages: "This is the big one we've been working on for eight or nine years. We're going into it with good posture. Let's keep everything moving." 10 KANSAN Jly. 15 1969 ATLANTA—Gov. Lester Maddox, commenting on television on the Justice Department's suggestions for immediate integration in Georgia's public schools: There was a time when Charlie Finley, the A's owner, had "So far as I'm concerned, they can take their ultimatum and ram it in their satchels—or suitcases if they want to, and phoey on the whole crowd." LONDON — Elizabeth Taylor announcing she is considering retiring from her acting career: "Unless something comes along that absolutely captivates me, the life of leisure—if you can call being married to Richard Burton and the mother of four children leisure—is for me." CHICAGO — A police officer replying to a service. station attendant wanting to know how to give water to two African lions, a mountain lion, a black bear, and a hyena-stranded animals on a disabled flat-bed truck: "Cautiously." YALTA, USSR—American astronaut Frank Borman, thanking Russian teen-agers for their hospitality at a youth camp near here: "We came as friends and we will leave as closer friends." MONROE, Ga. — A Federal Aviation Agency investigator at the scene of the crash of a small airliner which killed 14 passengers: "It's torn up about as bad as anything I've ever seen." HAROLD'S SERVICE 66 1401 WEST 6TH STREET LAWRENCE, KANSAS phone 843-3557 Now renting 2-bedroom furnished apartments. All utilities included in rent. JAYHAWKER TOWERS Apartments - Air-conditioned - Elevators - Swimming pool—club rooms - Immediately adjacent to campus - Off-street parking Convenient Location, a Time and Money Saver. Lawrence's.Finest Apartment Complex Inspection Invited 1603 W. 15th Tel. VI 3-4993 Astronauts will leave moon plaque WASHINGTON (UPI) — The Appollo 11 astronauts will leave a metal plaque behind when they depart from the moon later this month. Here is its message: here men from the planet Earth First set foot upon the moon. July 1969 AD We came in peace for all mankind. Neil A. Armstrong Edwin E. Aldrin Michael Collins. Richard Nixon, President, United States of America" The National Aeronautics and Space Administration said the White House passed on and edited the inscription and it considers the choice of words to be those of the President. Etched on top will be two circles symbolizing the two hemispheres, with a dot in one to signify Cape Kennedy, where the mission began. Hey! Hey! Topsy's Hey! Topsy's is Open! Ice Cream 711 West 23rd Malls Shopping Center Creazioni Italiana PER Danielle MADE IN ITALY d. BOSTON Crearione italiana PER Danielle MADE IN ITALY d. BOSTON SANDALS SANDALS SALE PRICED (1) Lots of Styles in Desirable Colors Were to $9.00 NOW 4.90 and 5.90 McCoy's shoes 813 Mass. St. V13-2091 TRADE CLASSIFIED SELL BUY ADSLEASE Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the University Manual are reserved to all students without regard to color, creed, or origin national. FOR SALE THE HODGE PODGE. Handeraffa, Jewelry, Sandals, Leather Goods, Antiques, Glassware, Ceramics, and one of the kind gifts. 17 West 9th St. Open 10 a.m.-5:30 p.m. Thurs. till 9:00 p.m. 7-29 NOW ON SALE Revised, comprehensive 3rd Edition of "New analysis of Western civilization." Carduitt's Campus Madhua-7291 1241 Eread NOW ON SALE FOR SALE: 1968 Yamaha 125 twin scrambler. 1700 miles. Excellent con- trol. $499 plus ppm. 842-2938 See at 1810 Alabama also. Girl's 27 inch English bicycle. Right now we are offering 15% off on all AR and Dynaco equipment. See our student special, picked especially for your quality or quality. Your AR-Dynaco dealer. The Ray-Audio, Hillcrest Center, aft. and the eve. VI 2-1944. 7-29 1954 Chevy, $100; or 1958 Ford, $150. Both in good running condition. Ex- cellent low cost transportation. Call VI 3-7568 after 5:30 p.m. 7-22 515 Michigan St. Bar-B-Q-outdoor pit, rib slab to go. $3.30 Rib order. $1.65 Rib sandwich, 95c .2 chicken. $1.20 Brisket sandwich, $.75 Hours. 1 a.m. to 11 p.m. Closed Sunday and Tuesday. Phone VI 2-9510. 8-5 Magnus Chord Organ with directions $25.00; 1—three speed bicycle; 1—two speed bicycle; $20.00 each; Ze- nith portable TV $49.00; VI 3—18 AUDIO SALE NOTICE Need a kitten Kitten? We have one left. Call VI 3-7568 after 5:30 p.m. 7-22 ??GETTING MARRIED?? If You Are, Or If You Desire To Live Alone—Now Is The Time To Make The Move To MEADOWBROOK 15th and Crestline Phone VI 2-4200 AUTO WRECKING NEWand USED PARTS Metal Sculpture Supplies Tires and Batteries A Bankmark Store East End of 9th St. VI 3-0956 AUDIO SALE LA LA PETITE GALERIE Newest Place For Now Fashions 910 Kentucky Lower Level VI 3-2139 HEAD FOR HENRY'S 6th & Mo. For Top Quality Head for Henry's If you are interested in a record player or up-dating your present husband, you can be interested in Acoustic Research and Dynaco equipment. It's the best buy you can get; no cost just fact See "How to Audit Interest Group" aft, and eve 842-729-7-29 XEROX SERVICE on Xerox's latest, computer, from which you can sharpen, sharper copies; faster service. Unsurpassed results for these, papers, journals, and typesetter Typewriter. Mass: VI 3-3644. 8-5 HEADLINE! We are looking for (you) interesting, readable or anything else you can provide to the P.S. HOUSE. If you are interested would you be willing to help Waltz- Rick at V 1-2444 NOWYORK? ATTENTION! Summer students will do your typing. Call 842-1011. 8-5 THE HODGE PODGE. Featuring ceramics by JERRY BRYON Jewelry, Sandals, and Leather Goods. Old trunks, glassware, and handcrafts. 17 West 9th St. Open 10 a.m.-5:30 p.m. Thurs. 11 t:00. 7-29 Male Sianmese Cat Free, leaving Law Clerk at 5-9180 after 5:00 p.m. Call VI 3-9180 at 5:00 p.m. 7-15 SUNFLOWER DRESS FACTORY — hand made originals. Design your own dress from a selection of mens' prints-men's shirts too. 19 W 9th. OPEN 12-5. 7 W-15 FOR RENT Sleeping rooms with or without kitchen privileges for males. Also finished apartments. Borders census and near downtown. Call 713-5767. Now renting for summer and fall. University Terrace and Old Mill apartments. Reduced rates for summer. A/C, carpeting, and pool. Call for appointment 843-1433 for Old Mill and 842-1296 for University Terrace. One bedroom apartments, air-conditioned, carpeted units with parking closer than many campus parking spaces. Apartment, Apt. 8, Call VI 7-2815 or 842-7350. 1 and 2-bedroom luxury apartments, located in small quiet complex at south edge of KU campus. Unfurried, elegant manicured, long-agent old-style Danish walnut furniture. All rooms have wall-to-wall carpeting, paneled living area. Very large kitchen, enclosed closets and locked storage. Central rent and air paid. Reasonable rent and LOW SUMMER RATES Nicely furnished A/C apt for summer; 2 bedrm, furn or unfit apt, for summer and fall; small studio apt for men, summer and/or fall. Utilities paid All close to Union. Phone VI 3-8534. 7-29 Now showing at the COLLEGE HILL MANOR APARTMENTS 1741 West 19th. Contact Agent or Kay Drake at apartment 5-B, VI 3-8220. 7-15 New Studio Apt. at Town Manor. Quelt, furnished. A/C. Steam Heat. Parking. Professor or mature student. Call 843-8000. 7-29 Experienced typist will give fast,处- ported, telecoms calls VI 3-0288, 7-29 ports, theses Call VI 3-0288, 7-29 Theses, term papers, and miscellaneous. Electric typewriter. Quick efficient service. Call Mrs. Mary Wolken 1712 Alabama VI 3-1522. 718 TYPING Will type term papers, themes, thesis, other miscellaneous typing. Have practiced the use of a pertinent and efficient service. Phone VI 3-9554. Mrs. Wright. 7-29 Will type term papers. Also Ges- gelerated by MISCHA, 86584 downey. Phone VI 3-8568 7-22 732 N. 2nd St. OPEN 7 a.m. to 10 p.m. Monday thru Saturday Strick's Cafe Themes, Theses, Dissertations typed and edited by experienced typist on KU data base, English-Speaker Education Office-size located near Oliver Hall. Vi 3-2875. Thesis, term papers, and misc. Call Wolken, Wollen, VI 3-1522, 712 buma. Electric Machine; thesis, dissertations, papers, etc. Fast, reasonable rates. VI 2-1561. 7-22 Former Harvard and University in Minnesota Secretary will type term papers, reports, etc. Call Mrs. Mattila VI 3-7207 7-29 HELP WANTED REGISTERED PHYSICAL THERAPIST with at least one year experi- flexible, new, creative, co-ordinated home care program serving Douglas County in Douglas County is Nurses' Assoc. 342 M. Street Lawrence, Kan. 7-29 Young woman to do housework, half day per week, $1.60 per hour. Young man to do yardwork, house chores, half day per week; should be familiar with basic tools; pay dependent with basic qualifications. Wax, VI 3-2789, 1612 La. Deliciously Different Mexican Food Casa De Taco 1105 Mass. VI 3-9880 HEADLINE Open for the summer—the summer for the Coachella House. Invitations all folk-lovers and artisans come in and display their talents and appreciation—this weekend—Dave P. S. HOUSE 15 East 8th Street WANTED Roommate for fall. Large, 2 bedram. $50 per month with utilities. Close to campus in the school or woodshop. Prefer in university or lawwoman or orad Call VI 2-375 after 5 p.m. 7-18 Looking for a 305cc Honda or comparable size. Year and condition not important. Price is! Call David at VI 3-3929 7-18 WANTED-4th, Roommate for Spacious House, Family Style Living for summer, possible option for fall. Rent $50 monthly. Call for John. VI 2-9200 LOST Lost: gold Lady Hamilton watch between Fraser Hall and Fiji House. Reward offered. Call Mikie Burnette at VI 2-1033. 7-18 Jennings Daylight Donuts Coffee & Sandwich Bar Malls Shopping Center "We Care About What You Wear And If You Care" Bring Your Shoes To 8th Street Shoe Repair For Your Repairs, Shoe Dyeing and Shines. Shoe Shines, One color.50 Two color.75 TRAVEL TIME 105 E. 8th 8:00-5:00 Closed Saturday at Noon FT LET MAUPINTOUR SERVICE TRAVEL Make Your Summer Reservations Now. Malls Shopping Center VI 3-1211 JAYHAWKER TOWERS Apartments - Now renting 2-bedroom furnished apartments. - All utilities included in rent. - Immediately adjacent to campus. - Convenient Location, a Time and Money Saver. - Lawrence's Finest Internet Complex. Lawrence's Finest Apartment Complex Inspection 1603 W. 15th Invited Tel. VI 3-4993 MEMO: TO ALL KU STUDENTS and STAFF The Secretarial Service has a new expanded office to serve you with the newest, most modern equipment in Lawrence, about all that's the same is the service-good fast, guaranteed-7 days a week, 7 a.m.'til midnight. √ MAGNETIC/TAPE TYPEWRITING WAKE-UP AND ANSWERING SERVICE SPECIAL RATES ON THESIS AND √ TERM PAPER TYPING BUSINESS LETTERS RESUMES GIRL FRIDAY SERVICE (in your office) ABS TELEPHONE CANVASING EXPERT TYPING MAGIC QUICK PRINT SERVICE XEROX COPYING SERVICE √ MIMEOGRAPHING MAILING LISTS √ ENVELOPE ADDRESSING AUTOMATED BUSINESS SERVICES, INC. P.O. Box 423 Lawrence, Kansas 66044 901 Kentucky 842-0111 PUBLIC SERVICE events listed for summer Tuesday, July 15 Faculty Recital. Kenneth Smith, bass; David Holloway, baritone; Jean Barnes Vigil, soprano; Doris Holloway, Swartout Recital Hall, 7:30 p.m. "The Male Animal," Nugent-Thurber, Experimental Theatre, 8:20 p.m. Wednesday, July 16 Music, Camp Recital, University Theatre, 7 p.m. Film, "Thief of Paris," Dyche Aud., 7:30 p.m. Carillon. Albert Gerken. 8 p.m. "The Grass Harp," Truman Capote University Theatre, 8:20 p.m. Thursday, July 17 Bus to Starlight Theatre, "Peter Pan" Robinson Gym. 6:45 p.m. Pam. Robinson Gyn. 8:45 p.m. Organ Recital. William Wilkins Organ Recital. William Wilkins. Swarthout Recital Hall. 8 p.m. 12 KANSAN Jly.15 1969 Three One-Act Plays. Experimental Theatre, 8:20 p.m. Friday, July 18 SUA Films. "Top Hat" - 7 p.m. *mature rate* - 9 p.m. *Dance Audiol* *ringer* Music Camp Band. Allen Field House Lawn. 7:15 p.m. "Ah, Wilderness," Eugene O'Neill. University Theatre, 8:20 p.m. Saturday, July 19 Music Camp Choirs, Band, Orchestra. University Theatre, 215 p.m. Sunday, July 20 Carillon, Albert Gerken. 2 p.m. Music Camp Choir, Orchestra. University Theatre, 2:15 p.m. "The Male Animal," Nugent-Thurber, Experimental Theatre, 8:20 p.m. Music Camp Bands. University Theatre 7 p.m. Monday, July 21 "The Grass Harp." Truman Capote. University Theatre, 8:20 p.m. Tuesday, July 22 Recital. Susan Heald, pianist with Anita Johnson, cellist, and two Chamber Music Ensembles. Swarthout Recital Hall, 8 p.m. Wednesday, July 23 Music Camp Recital University Theatre, 7 p.m. Film, "The Puritan" Dyche Aud., 1.20 Carilion. Albert Gerken. 8 p.m. Carillon Albert Gerken 8 n.m. "The Grass Harp," Truman Capote. University Theatre, 8:20 p.m. Bus to Starlight Theatre, "George M.," Robinson Gym, 6:45 p.m. Thursday, July 24 Organ Recital. John Ellis. Swarthownd Recital Hall, 8 p.m. Three One-Act Plays. Experimental Theatre, 8:20 p.m. Friday, July 25 Films, "High Sierra" - 7 p.m., "The Film of Falcon" - 9 p.m. Dyeu Audi- torium. Music Camp Band. Allen Field House Lawn, 7-15 p.m. Music Camp Ballet. University Theatre. 8 p.m. "The Male Animal," Nugent-Thurber. Experimental Theatre, 8:20 p.m. Music Camp Choir, Band, Orchestra, University Theatre. 2:15 p.m. Saturday, July 26 Music Camp Ballet, University Theatre, 8 p.m. Three One-Act Plays. Experimental Theatre, 8:20 p.m. Sunday, July 27 Carillon, Albcrt Gerken, 2 p.m. Music Camp Choir and Orchestra Music Camp Choir and Orchestra. University Theatre, 2:15 p.m. Wednesday, July 30 Music Camp Bands, University Theatre, 7 p.m. Films. The Playhouse," An American Articoracey." Dyche Publisher 7:30 KU KU KU KU KU KU KU KU KU KU KU KU KU KU KU Carillon. Albert Gerken. 8 p.m. KU KU KU JAYHAWKS JAYHAWKS ...ALL OVER THE PLACE! KU KC KU KU KU KU KU KU KU KU KU KU KU KANSAS JAYHAWKS Solid Bronze Jayhawk Paperweight—$3.50 Playing Cards Double Deck—$3.00 Single Deck—$1.50 TOTAWA Car Tag $1.00 The Union Book Store has Jayhawks of every description all over the place .cartags, paperweights, stuffed Jayhawks,and playing cards (to mention just a few). You, too, can have Kansas Jayhawks all over the place. Order some today. EUROPE KU 9 inch Stuffed Jayhawk (shown)—$3.95 7 inch Stuffed Jayhawk—$2.60 KU KU kansas UNION BOOKSTORE KU KU KU KU KU KU KU KU KU KU KU KU KU KU KU THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN 79th Year, No.11 The University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas Friday, July 18, 1969 Apollo 11 rockets to moon SPACE CENTER, Houston (UPI)—The three Apollo 11 astronauts blasted off from Cape Kennedy Wednesday on a historic voyage to fulfill man's age-old dream of setting foot on the moon. "We're looking good," called Command Pilot Neil A. Armstrong, as he and his crewmen, Michael Collins and Edwin E. Aldrin, thundered from launching pad 39-A atop and earthshaking Saturn 5 rocket and into space exactly on time at 9:32 a.m. EDT, the culmination of eight years of toil. "This is the big one," said Launch Director Rocco Petrone after the perfect lift-off. "Our first step has been started right. Every step of the mission has got to work. Every step has its own risks and dangers," he said. The crew of Apollo 11, sticking to business and refraining from chit-chat, hurtled into a 119-mile-high earth orbit. On their first pass over the United States, the astronauts tried to make an unscheduled television broadcast back to earth but Cape Kennedy only received one minute of signal because they were so low and could not relay it. The "big" television show is set for Sunday and Monday with all of the moon-walk scheduled to be beamed back to earth in black and white. During the moon-walk, the astronauts will gather about 130 pounds of lunar rocks and dust. They will also set out a series of experiments that will continue to tell scientists about the moon after they leave. After checking out the ship's systems, they triggered a five-minute, 20-second burst of the Saturn 5 third stage rocket which accelerated Apollo 11 about 7,000 miles per hour. "It was beautiful." Armstrong radioed, three hours after the launch, as the rocket's third stage jolted Apollo 11 out of its earth orbit and right on target for its quarter-million-mile trip to the moon. "That Saturn gave us a magnificent ride," Armstrong said. Their lack of extraneous remarks to the ground reflected not only their demanding duties, but their general scientific minds as well. All are dedicated experimental aviators and are expected to concentrate far more on the engineering aspects of their mission rather than the romantic. So magnificent was the launch that even the Rev. Ralph D. Abernathy, at Cape Kennedy with his followers to protest the spending of billions on space instead of fighting poverty, said that at the moment of liftoff, "I really forgot the fact that we had so many hungry people. I was one of the proudest Americans as I stood on this spot." If the epic journey continues as flawlessly as it began, Armstrong and Aldrin will spend 21 hours and 36 minutes on the moon late Sunday and early Monday—2 hours and 41 minutes of it walking on the moon's bleak, airless, surface. Just half an hour after breaking out of earth orbit at 25,188 miles per hour, Apollo 11 separated from its rocket stage, turned around and gently docked nose-to-nose with the Lunar Excursion Module (LEM) atop the third rocket stage. The LEM, nicknamed "Eagle," rides to its destined moon orbit atop the nose of the command ship "Columbia," after being pulled from the rocket stage housing. The LEM was extracted with precision and the astronauts fired a brief burst of the command ship's main rocket to maneuver away from the spent Saturn rocket stage drifting near the spacecraft. Five hours into flight, project officials reported that Apollo 11's course was so accurate that a mid-course steering correction had been canceled. Armstrong and his crewmates dwelled mostly on technical talk, skipping the glowing descriptions of the earth fading behind that were radioed back by some of their predecessors. Armstrong, however, did offer this observation: "You might be interested that out my left-hand window right now, I can observe the entire continent of North American, Alaska, over the Pole, down to the Yucatan Peninsula, Cuba, the northern part of South America and then I run out of window." Hundreds of dignitaries, led by Vice-President Spiro T. Agnew and former President Lyndon B. Johnson, watched the liftoff from the cape. President Nixon, who Tuesday night told the astronauts by telephone that they were embarking on "the greatest adventure man has ever undertaken," watched on television in the White House. "We should, in my judgment, put a man on Mars by the end of this century," Agnew said. Johnson called it an "endeavor to bring peace to mankind." The mission of Apollo 11 begins its climax Saturday, when the ungainly space rig drops into orbit around the moon. The men of Apollo 11 are scheduled to turn man's dream of reaching the moon into a reality Sunday when Armstrong and Aldrin leave Collins in lunar orbit (Continued to page 8) BULLETIN In compliance with Governor Robert B. Docking's proclamation declaring Monday, July 21, a state holiday, all University offices will be closed all day, and all University classes will be dismissed. The only continuing University operations will be the previously scheduled "KU Preview," and functions vital to the security of the University. The Midwestern Music and Art Camp will hold classes on a revised schedule. Most divisions will begin classes at 9:30 a.m, with the following exceptions: Speech and Debate, 10:20 a.m.; Spanish, 10:30 a.m.; Latin, 10:10 a.m., and Music, 9:40 a.m. Photo courtesy of UPI and KMBC-TV Moment in history JIMMY JOHNSON Edwin Aldrin UPI Telephoto A. K. SMITH UPI Telephoto Michael Collins AMS UPI Telephoto Neil Armstrong Archaeologists from KU uncover new Kansas, Missouri artifacts Archaeologists from the University of Kansas are unearthing new discoveries about earlier residents of Kansas and Missouri. Students in the summer Great Plains Archaeological Field School are working on fertile finds near Kansas City, which may date to before the birth of Christ. The school is sponsored by the University of Kansas, Kansas State University, and a private donor. In the past, Wichita State University and the National Science Foundation also have participated. Although headquartered the past two years at White Cloud, the school moved to Park College in Parkville, Mo., to be near the two sites under study this summer. Headed by Dr. Alfred E. Johnson, associate professor of anthropology at KU, and Miss Patricia O'Brien, assistant professor of anthropology at K-State, the school has 14 students enrolled. Housing is provided by Park College where students can spend any spare time using college facilities. However, during the day, they spend long hours under the sun at two ancient Indian village sites. The students take turns working both sites: the Hopewell Indian "dig," about 71 B.C., at Line Creek Park in Kansas City, Mo.; and a village of the Mississippiian culture, about A.D. 1200, at Farley, Mo. The site at the Hopewell excavation is creating much interest in the Kansas City area as it is owned by the Kansas City Parks and Recreation Department. Artifacts had been found in the area, once a farm, for 2 KANSAN Jly.18 1969 Strick's Cafe 732 N. 2nd St. OPEN 7 a.m. to 10 p.m. Monday thru Saturday ??GETTING MARRIED?? If You Are, Or If You Desire To Live Alone—Now Is The Time To Make The Move To "We Care About What You Wear And If You Care" MEADOWBROOK 15th and Crestline Phone VI 2-4200 Bring Your Shoes To 8th Street Shoe Repair For Your Repairs, Shoe Dyeing and Shines. Shoe Shines, One color .50 Two color .75 105 E. 8th 8:00-5:00 Closed Saturday at Noon The Park Board was persuaded to buy the site to preserve it for further study. Since then, the 25-acre plot has yielded many storage or refuse pits, a 5-foot fire hearth, and a wide array of pottery bits, tool fragments and animal bone. many years before an amateur archaeologist from North Kansas City discovered its true worth. At the time, the area was to become part of a sewage plant. Home of the "Big Shef" BURGER CHEF FURNISHED BURGER CHEF So much interest has been generated by the archaeologists digging in the park that an open house was held last Sunday, sponsored by the Kansas City Museum of History and Natural Science and the City Park Board. Try One Today 814 Iowa The students work for only eight weeks, but during this time they devote seven days a week to the work for which they earn eight hours of credit. They are selected on the basis of academic grades, previous course work, and interest in anthropology as a career. Out-of-state students are often granted scholarships to cover tuition, the highest cost of the school. This year they are from Ohio, Nebraska, California, Missouri, Boston and Chicago. KU graduate students assisting with the "dig" are: Paul Katz, Chestnut Hill, Mass.; Susanna Katz, Spring Valley, N.Y., and Peter Cooper, Durham, N.C. AUTO GLASS Table Tops INSTALLATION AUTO GLASS Sudden Service East End of 9th St.—VI 3-4416 JAYHAWKER TOWERS Apartments Now renting 2-bedroom furnished apartments All utilities included in rent. - Swimming pool—club rooms - Immediately adjacent to campus - Air-conditioned - Elevators - Off-street parking Convenient Location, a Time and Money Saver. Lawrence's Finest Apartment Complex Inspection Invited 1603 W. 15th Tel.VI 3-4993 75 Perfect symbol of your love All your most cherished moments will be forever symbolized by your diamond engagement ring. If the name, Keepsake, is in the ring and on the tag, you are assured of fine quality and lasting satisfaction. Every Keepsake engagement diamond is flawless, of superb color and precise modern cut. Diamond Ring 5ONATA $400 ALSO $150 TO 1975 REGISTERED Keepsake DIAMOND RINGS ALSO $150 TO 1975 HIBISCUS $350 TO 1250 WEDDING RING 200 18K YELLOW GOLD SOLID STAINLESS STEEL CINEMA JEWELRY MISTY $300 ALSO TO 2100 9 CATALINA $250 TO 1650 WEDDING RING 125 Ray Christian "THE COLLEGE JEWELER" 809 Mass. "Special College Terms" VI 3-5432 Rings enlarged to show detail. Trade-Mark Beg Patronize Kansan Advertisers MEMO: TO ALL KU STUDENTS and STAFF The Secretarial Service has a new expanded office to serve you with the newest, most modern equipment in Lawrence, about all that's the same is the service-good fast, guaranteed-7 days a week, 7 a.m. 'til midnight. MAGNETIC/TAPE TYPEWRITING WAKE-UP AND ANSWERING SERVICE SPECIAL RATES ON THESEIS AND RESUMES ✓ TERM PAPER TYPING GIRL FRIDAY SERVICE (in your office) √ BUSINESS LETTERS ABS √ MAGIC QUICK PRINT SERVICE XEROX COPYING SERVICE TELEPHONE CANVASING ✓ EXPERT TYPING MIMEOGRAPHING MAILING LISTS √ ENVELOPE ADDRESSING AUTOMATED BUSINESS SERVICES, INC. P.O. Box 423 Lawrence, Kansas 66044 901 Kentucky 842-0111 PUBLICITY Endowment receipts down this year BY HOLLYE CAPPLEMAN Summer Kanye Duranti Summer Kadson Reporter Private giving to the University of Kansas in the last year reached $6,452,034.79, according to the figures announced at the annual meeting of the Kansas University Endowment Association trustees, June 1. The total represents gifts, bequests, grants and income earned from Association investments. The amount for the year was exceeded by the total of the previous year, when receipts were swelled by a major gift from the Spencer Foundation for construction of the recently completed $2,125,000 Kenneth Spencer Research Library. Otherwise, all records were broken last year—both in the total value of gifts and the number of donors which amounted to 17,000. Many of the gifts were sums of $5 to $10 from recent graduates. Larger gifts to the University included a bequest of $25,000 to establish the Earline Lockwood Loan Fund for students in journalism; the David H. Wenrich Fund, to be used for the purchase of special books in the field of Zoology; the Dr. C. F. Rumold Scholarship Fund; the Dr. Claude J. Hunt Fund, for a scholarship and lectureship at the Medical Center; the Warren Bellows Professorship in engineering and the Franklin E. Reed Scholarship. Other funds are the Grover Simpson Fund, for a special laboratory and treatment center for respiratory diseases; the Pauline Ketchum Scholarship Fund for students in music; the Howard Fuqa Scholarship Fund; the Bessie Wilder Scholarship Fund and the Ellis B. Stouffer Professorship Fund in mathematics. The Endowment Association is now a $25 million organization with approximately $10 million in a merged fund which is invested by a finance committee. Student loans also established a new record at $724,632. This figure does not include large amounts loaned to students through the National Defense Student Loan program or the United Aid Fund. Expenditures for scholarships, fellowships and prizes increased $17,000 this year to $884,229. Re-elected president of the Endowment Association was Dolph Simons of Lawrence. New officers were also announced at the Association's annual meeting. Other officers re-elected were vice-president L. H. Ruppenthal, second vice-president Olin K. Petefish, secretary Irvin E. Youngberg, assistant-secretary Maurice E. Barker, treasurer Arthur B. Weaver and assistant-treasurer Carl H. Lavery. Campus Briefs Dr. Carl E. Burkhead, native of Kansas City, Mo., and an active researcher on the treatment of industrial and municipal wastes, has been appointed associate professor of civil engineering at the University of Kansas. Engineering prof Dr. Burkhead, who has been assistant professor at the University of Kentucky the past three years, earned the B.S. degree in chemical engineering from the University of Missouri-Rolla in 1957. At the University of Kansas he received the M. S. in 1964 and the Ph.D. in 1966, both in environmental health engineering. Dr. Burkhead is author or coauthor of six major publications on waste treatment, two of them with Dr. Ross E. McKinney, the Glen Parker Professor of Civil Engineering at KU. After graduation from UM-Rolla, Dr. Burkhead was an engineer for the Phillips Petroleum Company in Borger, Tex., for two years and taught at Frank Phillips Junior College there. He also served for a time as an Army platoon leader at Fort Hood, Texas. He was with the Midwest Research Institute, Kansas City, Mo., 1958-62 and then came to Kansas for graduate study. Mrs. Burkhead is the former Joyce Follard. They have two children, Jeffrey A., age 10; and Carl Joy, age 8. Jly.18 1969 KANSAN 3 Med Center grants The U.S. Public Health Service has renewed eight grants for research and training programs totaling $342,218 at the University of Kansas Medical Center in Kansas City. The awards are: Dr. Lucian L. Leape, assistant professor of surgery, $16,168 for a study of early tissue changes in burns. Dr. G. O. Proud, professor of otorhinolaryngology, $72,309, for study of communicative disorders. Dr. Catherine Norris, associate professor of nursing education, to organize a conference on the development of nursing theory. Dr. John T. Brauchi, associate professor of psychiatry, $44,550 for research in maternal-fetal relationship in the placenta. Dr. Martha Pitel, professor of nursing education, $3,028 for a public health nursing traineeship. Dr. Dewey Ziegler, professor of neurology, $78,878 for research in neurology. Dr. M. K. Shellenberger, instructor in pharmacology, $20,-469 for the study of basal ganglia chemical-electrophysiologic correlates. Carmelita Smith, associate professor of nursing education, $80,-024 for a program in graduate psychiatric nursing. HAROLD'S SERVICE 66 66 SERVICE 1401 WEST 6th STREET LAWRENCE, KANSAS phone 843-3557 Nichols retires July 1 WINNER! 3 ACADEMY AWARDS INCLUDING BEST ACTRESS KATHARINE HEPBURN Nichols duties consist of explaining the philosophy of the budget to the Chancellor, besides being available for research information. He is also a representative from KU to the state Board of Regents and represents KU in budgetary business with the State Legislature and State Budget Office. Ravmond Nichols, who was appointed vice-chancellor in charge of finance in 1962, retired July 1. However, he is still executive secretary of the University, a position he has held since 1929. Nichols graduated from KU in 1926, and after earning his Bachelor of Arts degree and Master of Arts degree in 1928, he worked as a reporter on the Larned Tiller and Toiler, that city's newspaper. After spending six months in Larned, he joined the Kansas City Kansan for six months. In 1929, he came to KU as its first executive secretary to the Chancellor. In 1945, his position changed to executive secretary of KU, and since 1962, he has held both positions of vice-chancellor in charge of finance and executive secretary. JOSEPH LEVINE — AN AX C MASSY FILM PETER O'TOOLE KATHARINE HEPBURN THE LION IN WINTER For Now! 7:15-9:15 THE LION IN WINTER THE Hillcrest JANE MEEROW JOHN CASTLE TIMOTHY DALTON ANTHONY HOUKIN ANGEL STOCK NIGEL TERRY JAMES GOLDMAN JOBELE LEVINE THE Hillcrest STATE ESTATE & LAND UNIT Elected to the executive committee were Balfour Jeffrey of Topeka, Howard Immel of Iola, Michael Chalfant of Hutchinson, John W. Starr of Kansas City, Mo., and John T. Stewart III of Wellington. For Plywood, Moulding Plaster, Shelving Material Come to LOGAN-MOORE LUMBER 1011 N. 3rd VI 3-0931 Retiring members of the committee were A. H. Cromb of Kansas City, Paul Endacott of Bartlesville, Okla., and R. C. Clevenger of Topeka. Three alumni were added to the board of trustees: W. W. Keeler of Bartlesville, chairman of the executive committee of the Phillips Petroleum Company, Jordan Haines, executive vice-president of the Fourth National Bank of Wichita; and Franklin "Planet of The Apes" Murphy, chairman of the board of the Times Mirror Company and former KU chancellor. The Love Bug TECHNICOLOR "Dead Run" Retiring Chancelor W. Clarke Wescoe, now vice-president for medical affairs for the Sterling Drug Co. in New York, was also named to the board of trustees. PLUS Saturday Night Bonus — AND — Granada THEATRE • Telephone VI 3-5768 Mat. Daily 2:30 Eve. 7:15-9:15 COLOR by DELUXE PANAVISION SMA Valley the of Dolls Granada THEATRE...Telephone VI-5788 Mat. Dairy 2:30 Eve. 7:15-9:15 WALT DISNEY productions The Love Bug TECHNICOLOR (C) © 1986 Walt Disney Productions Varsity Open at 7:00 Start at Dusk Sunset DRIVE IN THEATRE • West on Highway 40 20 LOMBARDNE wizz drip bolts THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065 John Wayne Glen Campbell TRUE GRIT TECHNOLOGY • PAMMANT PICTURE G Mat. Daily 2:30 Eve. 7:15-7:40 Stars Zero Mostel Kim Novak 7:15-9:10 With apologies to Willie Sutton Jesse James and Bonnie and Clyde THE GREAT BANK ROBBERY Hillcrest2 if... Hillcrest "GO!-FOR THE FURY, FORCE AND FUN OF if" LOOK 7:30 9:30 if... KU SUMMER THEATRE REP. '69 presents Plays by American playwrights representative of the past four decades 1930, 1940, 1950, 1960. bv THE MALE ANIMAL James Thurber and Elliott Nugent The 1940's comedy which sounds like today, with protest, public controversy—all in a midwestern university town. July 15, 19, 25 Experimental Theatre AH, WILDERNESS by Eugene O'Neill O'Neill's great comedy of the 1930's about the "generation gap" at the turn of the century. July 14, 18, 22 In-the-Round" Main Stage THE GRASS HARP Truman Capote The comedy-fantasy of the 1950's about the people of spirit against the dogma of society in which they live. July 11, 16, 21, 23 "In-the-Round" Main Stage ONE-ACT PLAYS 1960 Comedies from Broadway OFF & OFF-OFF July 12, 17, 24, 26 Experimental Theatre All performances 8:20 p.m. • Tele. orders accepted; amount due on receipt of tickets • Box Office UN 4-3982 (24 hour answering service) • Hours 10-12 a.m., 1-5 p.m. • 10-12 Saturdays if a performance that evening • 7-9 p.m. performance nights No Reserved Seats Single admission tickets for individual shows $1.50 ● Season coupon books $4.00 each ● Coupon holders must exchange for tickets for each production prior to date specified on each coupon. UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS MURPHY HALL --- Guest Editorials Sex education in schools By ANDY LAUGEL Summer Kansan Reporte Summer Kansan Reporter Those violently opposed to sex education in the schools often raise cries of "animal" during their denunciations. If vigilantes want to prevent that, they are too late. "Sex education will turn my Johnny into an animal," they cry, Johnny happens to be an animal. He was born one. He is probably one of the better examples of all-round animalism on earth. He has fair mobility and extraordinary finger agility; he obtains and digests food easily and has sufficient muscle power to obtain it with; he has fairly safe and regular mating habits, and he can live in varied environments or move out of them when he needs to. Johnny sounds like a safe bet in the animal kingdom. He will be around for a while. But Johnny does something that makes him an animal with a difference. He thinks. And his thinking has gotten him further than he could go without it. He has built mountains, changed the courses of rivers, the growing seasons of crops; he has deeply affected the existence of his fellow animals. He has discovered things of deep beauty: the rhythm of the stars, the breathing earth and the icy-hot pains of love. Johnny has come a long way by thinking. And sound thinking has never hurt him. But he becomes a strange and terrible creature when his thinking is twisted by seemingly very natural things inside him—things like pain, ignorance, lust and fear. Those opposed to sex education say that Johnny will be overcome by lust and frightened by it if it's introduced to him. Johnny as badly as his ignorance of it will. But lust will not frighten Johnny operates on personal knowledge more than any other animal on earth. When he discovers something he doesn't understand, it frightens him. Both fright and ignorance will warp Johnny and those around him—and twisted humanity has an awesome power for destruction. Johnny must be able to think soundly-without the fears of ignorance or guilt. Sex education will not solve Johnny's problems—but the lack of it will be the cause of some of them. It is too late to keep Johnny from being an animal. The rhythms inside him and the pulsing of his blood and the music in his ears are all animal. Johnny needs to know these rhythms, this music. Knowing is important. That's what makes Johnny a different sort of animal. Letter to parents By JANE GLAZER Summer Kansan Reporter Dear Mom and Dad. When I got your letter yesterday I was shocked. I have always considered you open-minded and liberal—but I guess I was wrong. In the very first line of your letter you stated "how shocked you were" when you found out that Sue had to get married. You also said that you were so surprised, because she was "brought up right." I was surprised, too, but I know that you are wrong in your thinking. She was not "brought up right." Sure her parents gave her everything she could want materially, but when it came to instruction in morals they just "forgot." Sue's parents gave her love —but they forgot to tell her the facts of life—and she had to learn just like the rest of us, from one another and "true confession" magazines. Is that any way to learn? We all tried to get the right education, and do what we thought was right, but sometimes I guess we didn't—and I guess in this case Sue didn't. So, here's the situation. You and most of the parents your age, criticise us for our actions, yet fail to do anything about it. Why? Your most violent action on the subject was your opposition to the sex education in the schools program. Most of the reasons for the opposition was that you "taught sex in the home" and you didn't feel a need—or want—to teach it in the schools. I am not saying that if we had been taught sex education in school none of the pregnancies would have happened or we would have all been perfectly straight people, but it sure would have helped. Ignorance breeds "wrong," and too many of my friends didn't know right from wrong. Well, now that I have "chewed" you out I hope you are upset. The matter of morality is one to be upset about and I think parents have been "sitting" too long. I hope that you get out and take action on the sex education question. It is so important. Too many parents don't "bring their children up right." Take care and write. I love you. Jane Interpretation of 'Black Power' By WILMA MOORE Summer Kansan Reporter It seems the interpretation of Black Power has been accepted in several different ways. It is necessary to bring black history up to date and to put the meaning of Black Power in the proper perspective. Black Power, unfortunately, is frequently connected with destruction, burning and looting However, Black Power in the mind of the black man means —among other things—being able to buy a house anywhere he chooses; being able to get any job he desires if he has the qualifications; being able to go into any restaurant or business and receive respect and courtesy; being able to get the same classroom grade as the white student for the same effort put forth; and being able to worship in any church of his choice without receiving the white's "get-out" look. These are among the important factors behind the meaning of Black Power. Black Power is not only being able to do these things with equal standards, but it is thinking black. Thinking black is the black people with their natural hair styles and their Afro clothes, giving the Black Power salute and taking a joy in blackness as exaggerated as the shame of blackness has always been in White America. Thinking black is not being interested in guns or going back to Africa, but the black man separating in spirit before he can integrate in fact—that he must break his old ties of dependency on whites. The black man must develop political and economic independence and then move for integration as a unit of equals. Despite this citizenship, the black man was still accorded semi-slave status ... plowing the white man's fields, tending to the white man's housework, clothes, children and kitchen. He was also denied equality of opportunity in employment and education. The spread of black thinking should not surprise anyone. The black man in America has never been permitted the luxury of forgetting that he was black. He was ripped out of the culture of Africa, shipped to America in chains and freed from slavery at last—to become not quite a free man but a second class citizen. Because the black man is still segregated, poorly housed, shortchanged educationally, without jobs and all but shut out of business and economics, one can see things have not greatly changed. By Dick West - UPI Columnist WASHINGTON — For a long time I had some misgivings over spending $24 billion to land a man on the moon. But I no longer feel that way. There remains, however, a sliver of doubt that the artifacts which the astronauts will leave behind when they return to earth are entirely adequate for the occasion. My reservations about the lunar program were swept away by this week's announcement that the Apollo 11 astronauts planned to deposit on the moon's surface a silicon disc bearing the names of 77 members of Congress and Vice President Agnew. Even if nothing else were accomplished, this somehow would make it all seem worthwhile. Now ask yourself this: When you go somewhere, how can you always tell whether someone else has been there already? 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 Kansan. Accommodations may be arranged in the summer session. The Summer Session Kansan are offered to students without regard to color, creed, or national origin. Executive Stan Managing Editor ... Don Westerhaus Adviser ... James W. Murray Photography ... Bill Seymour, Gary Mason Business Manager ... Rodney Osborne Adviser ... Mel Adams Office Manager ... Helen Ross 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 Edition are the opinions of the University of Kansas Administration or the Kansas State Board of Regents. How Can You Tell? Answer: If man has been in that particular spot before, there will be a chewing gum wrapper lying around some place. Very well. In order to make America's space feat unmistakably clear to posterity, NASA should have arranged for Neil Armstrong to drop a gum wrapper when he descends from the lunar module. THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN Not knowing they were transported in an unmanned vehicle, future lunar explorers who discover these items could easily conclude that Russia beat the United States to the moon. America's claim of having achieved the first moon landing could have been further protected by having Col. Edwin E. Aldrin Jr. flick a cigarette butt into a nearby crater. As a result, Black America is determined to be free. Blacks will do their thing ... they will find their identity. They will understand who they are and that power derived from a sense of dignity is worth the effort. Blacks will continue the pursuit of education and knowledge. The overwhelming majority of Black Americans will work—with help from whites—to change the system. Terrestrial Souvenirs That vehicle may well have contained a Soviet flag, a peace plaque and silicon disc bearing the names of 77 members of Soviet Presidium. And just to be on the safe side, it might also have been wise to have equipped the astronauts with a popsicle stick and to have changed the wording on the plaque to read: "Kilroy was here." The Lighter Side Leave a sign In addition to the disc immortalizing the aforementioned lawgivers, the terrestrial souvenirs will include an American flag and a peace plaque. Whites must do their thing—individually—they must purge themselves of all racial prejudices. Whites must accept the fact that blacks are determined to be free, deserve to be free and the whites must work at all levels to help the blacks secure this freedom. For if Black America is not free neither is White America. I'm not suggesting these items aren't appropriate. But when you are planting evidence of man's first visit to the moon, you should make certain that future moon visitors will recognize it. What I'm leading up to here is the possibility that Russia may try to steal the credit from the United States with the unmanned vehicle it sent to the moon earlier this week. "The vice president is really hurting. He has to buy his wife $600 dresses and she can only wear them three or four times." Simon and Garfunkel's words in their song "America" are quite effective in characterizing our feelings—the feelings of today's youth. WORCESTER, Mass.—A bartender commenting on a new change in city regulations that permit women to sit at bars with men: Campus turmoil, drugs and draft card burnings make the older generation cry out in alarm that today's youth is "lost." But we know we are lost—lost, confused, tormented and unsure. Campuses in turmoil WASHINGTON — Senate Republican leader Everett M. Dirksen, talking about the need for a pay raise for Vice President Spiro T. Agnew: By MARY AGUIAR "Kathy, I'm lost," I said, though I knew she was sleep- "Women on the bar stools will cause a lot of arguments and fights. Let's face it—any woman who sits at a bar is no good." It is this confusion that we are trying to clear up by examining values and institutions established long ago that are not applicable today. "I'm empty and aching and I don't know why." Quotes - "They (the North Vietnamese and Viet Cong) have not said they don't want to negotiate. But so far they have not come around to discussing the issues with us." PARIS—A spokesman for the U.S.-South Vietnamese negotiating team at the Paris peace talks on the prospects for a start of serious peace talks: McCHORD AFB, Wash.-South Vietnamese ambassador Bui Diem, addressing returning U.S. soldiers from Vietnam: "The time has come for the South Vietnamese to realize that the more we grow in strength, the more responsibility we must face." We are coming up with emptiness and hollow aching as the deeper we search for answers and the closer we get to truth—the stronger the wall of confusions becomes. The Vietnam War is not the only cause of our unrest. If it ended tomorrow we could not turn from our search for a relief from our aching. Vietnam and its threat to us made us critical of its value but it has opened our eyes to the whole country and the institution we know as American society. We don't like what we see. The deeper we delve into the problems, the more contradictions we find, contradictions between the values our parents instilled in us and the values of society as a whole. We were told to love our neighbor—not just the family in the next house—but mankind in general. Picking up a newspaper or a book we read about a little Negro girl, Mary Louise Baker, lying on a Southern street after being hit by a car. Why did she die? Was it because an unknowing person called a "white" instead of "negro" ambulance? We can't ask this question and be satisfied. We have to dig deeper into the causes. We have learned to question. We're not finding the answers—but we're trying. Right now we are seeing—really seeing—what American society and the world has become. What we see is confusing us and we are still lost—but we're searching. Drugs, rioting, violence—these things we are stumbling against. They will pass when we begin to see clearly—perhaps when society stops contradicting its values. As a song by John Lennon and Paul McCartney says: "I saw a film today, oh boy. The English army had just won the war. A crowd of people turned away. But I just had to look Having read the book ...” We—our generation—have opened the book. Never will we be able to close it. Thoughts 'go' about Apollo By CAROLINE GOULD Kamper Editorial Editor "I believe that this nation should commit itself to achieving the goal before this decade is out, of landing a man on the moon and returning him safely to earth"—the late President John F. Kennedy, May 25, 1961. Many doubted the statement, many questioned it. Some feared it and some dreamed of it. Near the closing of the decade, man on the moon is no longer a dream; it is almost a reality. WEDNESDAY interested Campers were allowed to tune in, on color sets, and soar with the Astronauts Neil Armstrong, Edwin Aldrin and Michael Collins—from the earth to its satellite—the moon. Campers patiently wait as Neil A. Armstrong, 38, commander of the $23.9 billion project, Apollo 11, is destined to be the first human to set foot on the lunar surface. Armstrong was America's first civilian to fly in space as command pilot for the Gemini 8 mission in March 1966, which performed the first successful docking of two vehicles in space. SERVING AS pilot of the Apollo 11 command module, is Air Force Lt. Col. Michael Collins, 38, a veteran of the Gemini 10 mission and two space walks. Air Force Col. Edwin E. Aldrin, Jr., 39, who made his first space flight aboard Gemini 12 and performed three space walks, is lunar module pilot for the Apollo 11 mission. Actual touchdown is scheduled for 1:22 a.m. Sunday. ARMSTRONG AND Aldrin will remain on the lunar surface 21 hours and 27 minutes. They will eat and begin a four hour rest period after touchdown. One will rest on the floor and the other on top of the descent stage engine housing. After the rest period they will take about an hour to eat again before preparing for their walk on the lunar surface-programmed to begin at 1:19 a.m., Monday. ARMSTRONG WILL be the first out. He will climb down the ladder, feet first. Upon reaching the second rung of the ladder, he will reach out and pull a D-ring, opening a LEM exterior storage area containing a black and white TV camera. Overshoes, the portable life support systems, a camera and some other items that will not be needed during the rest of the mission will be discarded on the lunar surface before liftoff. TESTS WILL be made, data recorded—and after a rest of 4 hours and 40 minutes—three history making men will return home to still a bit more history. Apollo 11 will be the first space mission that will not end with a splashdown. What do Campers think of America's invasion of the lunar surface? The majority of responses to this question have been, "Wow, it's really exciting that they can do all that stuff!" SOME CONSIDER it is a fascinating contribution to science, to history and to man, its creators. Some feel it isn't important enough to take the regularly scheduled programs off the air. "Especially," they say, "the early morning cartoons!" Others are very pessimistic about the Apollo flights and feel as though the Americans should go to places like Asia or Europe if they want to travel. Then, there are those who feel as though the money it takes to (Continued to page 3) KAMPER KANSAN Friday, July 18, 1969 Volume 6, Issue 4 LAWRENCE, KANSAS Formal climaxes Camp By DOROTHY MORGAN Climaxing the 1969 Camp activities will be the coronation of the king and queen at the formal dance. A group of 54 candidates nominated by their respective wings avidly solicited Camper votes for the election which took place last night during wing meetings. The winners will be announced tomorrow following a processional of nominees at 9:30 p.m Festivities will be at the Kansas Union Ballroom tomorrow from 8 to 11:30 p.m. MUSIC FOR the dance will be provided by the Counselors' Stage Band, the Campers' Stage Band, and the last hour of entertainment will feature the Tide. Refreshments will be served throughout the evening. Bus service to the formal will be furnished free for Campers from 7:30 to 8:30 p.m. and from 10:30 to 11:30 p.m. Flowers are not necessary for dates. ID badges will be required for admission to the dance but Campers need not wear them. Boys are advised to arrange to meet their dates in the lobby since the switchboard will be overcrowded. German division to present play By WILMA MOORE Kamper Kansan Reporter "Liebestrev and Gravsankeit" or "Faithfulness in Love and Cruelty" is the title of the three-act play to be presented by German Campers Thursday, July 24. The satirical play by William Busch is about a princess who feels no one is good enough for her. Josten's American Yearbook Company was the first stop. A tour through the plant was taken by the students, starting with the receiving of page lay-outs and proceedings to the final binding of covers. Journalism Campers go to Topeka; see, learn how professionals do it THE GERMAN Division, in its fourth year at the Camp, has 64 Campers and three instructors: John Troyanovich, Sam Vinson and Guentar Pfister, a native of Rheinland, Germany. Eighty-six journalism students left by bus at 7 a.m. last Thursday on a field trip to Topea to visit the Josten's American Yearbook Company, WIBW Radio and Television station and the Stauffer Publications Plant. By EARLENE ELLIOTT Kamper Kansan Reporter The buses then stopped at Gage Park where students ate sack lunches before continuing their day's journey. A LIVE NEWS telecast was viewed at WIBW Radio and Television Station. Pat Taylor, program director at WIBW, explained broadcasting techniques and procedures to the Campers and then conducted a tour of the studio. The last visit of the day was to the Stauffer Publications Plant, where the Topeka State Journal and the Daily Capital newspapers are printed. The printing process was explained step-by-step. vision, and the Campers, were Lee F. Young, acting dean in the School of Journalism, Dorothy Bowles and Robert Stevens, instructors in the journalism division of the Camp. Accompanying Calder M. Pickett, director of the journalism di- When Pickett was asked his opinion of the trip, he replied, "I enjoyed the trip very much myself and I think the students did also." Modern Language Associated quality tests were taken during the first week, placing the students into beginning, intermediate, or advanced classes. Wilma Moore, senior from Wichita commented, "The trip was rewarding. I felt I learned something by watching the actual process of producing a yearbook, a television broadcast and a newspaper." MORNING STUDIES in each session consist of grammar reviews, class discussions, and pronouncements while afternoons are devoted to watching cultural films, singing German folk songs, and reading Troyanovich's book, GERMAN CONVERSATIONAL READER, in its first published use. Classes are conducted mainly in German and tests are administered each week. A final examination will be taken near the end of Camp to assess student improvement. Preparing the German play is the primary means of class recreation, although playing voiker ball (dodge ball) takes up some of the recreational time. A weekly duplicated newspaper has been published by and among the German students. Most of the paper's contents are editorials, features, and jokes. TROYANOVICH, director of the German division, expressed his enjoyment in working with Campers and said that he was "satisfied with the good progress of the Campers and their well-motivated and cooperative attitudes." Costumes for the play are being furnished by the University Theatre. The king and queen candidates are: KING CANDIDATES Hashinger Hall Templin Hall Ronald Robertson, 4N; James Capacione, 4S; Alvis Stinson, 5N; Andy Schaaf, 5S; Frank Behm, 6N; Richard Streator, 6S; Jim Dodson, 7N; Dave Fisher, 7S; Roger Lundberg, 8N, and Francis Lamore, 8S. Kent Burton, 2N; Peter Kaplar, 2S; Dean Barnhard, 3N; Irvin Kuch, 3S; George Muth, 4N; Norm Weinberg, 4S; Mike Caravella, 5N; Don Penn, 5S; Steve Axtell, 6N; Rod Runyan, 6S; Bard Tronvald, 7N, and Cameron Mueller, 7S. QUEEN CANDIDATES McCollum Hall Kim Price, 3E; Debbie Douglas, 3W; Sandy Mason, 3S; Maeve Dolan, 4E; Mary Jo Alvord, 4W; Geneva Childress, 4S; Sharon Phillips, 4E; Andrea Huber, 5P; Patti Christianson, 5S; Liz Lillich, 6E; Arlen Columbo, 6W; Kay Porter, 6S, and Karen Craft, 7E Lynne Tobin, 7W; Carma wien- ner, 7S; Sue Hack, 8E; Adriane (Continued to page 2) Computers find dates for Formal Computer-like service aids Dan Cupid! To insure girls of having escorts and boys of having dates for the Camp Formal Saturday, this new program has been introduced. THIS SERVICE was arranged by the Camp Council at its meeting last week at which Greg Clapton, president from Hashinger, presided. An extended closing time for the ballet recital next Friday was also discussed. No decision was reached. To allow Campers to view the moon walk Sunday night a late hour is planned. The Camp was able to obtain nine television sets, two for Lewis, Hashinger, and Templin and three for McCollum. Richard Brumnett said, "Council will not meet next Monday, but we would like to have the presidents from each dorm write out some statements that can be given to Mr. Wiley to help next year's Campers." 1 —Photo by Ken Olson Alison - Photo by Scott Chandler 1980 — Photo by Scott Chandler Students tour American Yearbook...WIBW Television...Topeka Capital and Journal 'Monster' claims another victim 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 17 - Photos by Brad Reynolds Not that I have anything against candy machines, but I was a little hesitant when asked to go out and write a story on one. It would have been a lot simpler and rewarding, I thought, to interview the sub-head director of the Swahili division, or to write a biting editorial on one of the many evils we face in camp. "Not so," replied my cohorts. "The candy machines at Camp are not merely structures of scrap metal pieced together by a few nuts and bolts. Nay! They have been transformed into ugly, slithering monsters; flailing their outrageous prices into the faces of prospective customers, gnashing up countless quarters, dimes, and nickels, never to be returned again; mocking others by lighting up its 'Out of This Selection' sign." "Perhaps you can erase this gross inequity between man and machine. Make it so that your children, and your children's children, will never have to face the pain of an unreceived Baby Ruth, or the agony of an empty coin return. "You must expose this atrocity, my son!" they all cried. After a thorough investigation of the matter, I was both surprised and shocked at my findings. Here, on film, is some of the evidence, exposing this heartless beast known as the Candy Machine. Brad Reynolds Next to poker and tennis, the favorite game of many Campers seems to be a not-so-recently invented sport called "put-on." So popular is this game that many of its avid fans spend up to twenty-four hours a day playing it. Many Campers have no doubt run across a put-on tournament at one time or another since they have arrived at KU. Some of you may even have been contestants yourself. But for anyone who may be unfamiliar with this game, here are a few of the basic rules. You can win; be a 'put on'! Get clearly in mind before you begin to read the rules that the object of "put-on" is to try to impress everyone. The kind of impression you wish to make is optional. If you want to be loved by all, be sure you say exactly what you think each person wants to hear. Never disagree with anyone's viewpoint, even if it differs drastically from your own. Smile and greet everybody warmly, no matter how much you detest them. If you develop this skill enough, you may even win the grand prize of being elected Camp King or Queen! 1,700 run loose—yipes! Concentrate your efforts on changing your personality to fit a certain image. Camp is almost over and much controversy has arisen concerning various rules applying to Campers. Rules which might be ridiculous to some are designed for the most part to protect Campers. When 1,700 teenagers are running loose on Daisy Hill and other parts of the campus, rules have to be instituted. Granted, they are rough. But wouldn't it be worse if there were no rules at all? If each of these 1,700 Campers could do as he wished, the Camp would be in such confusion that nothing could be accomplished. Rules have been a part of every society throughout the years. They are a part of living that has to be accepted or tolerated, depending on the individual's reaction to each rule. The right to protest against rules is open to each person. But in protesting, both sides of the issue should be considered as objectively as possible to see if emotions aren't overshadowing common sense. There will always be some individuals who will criticize the rules but rules have to be in existence for the welfare of all Campers. -Kathy Lanford Science, math feature labs By BRAD REYNOLDS Kamper Kansan Reporter Participating in the 14th annual science and math division are 78 high school students. Although no credit is given to Campers for attending, Richard Middaugh, division director says, "What we're really after is to develop the students' interest and knowledge in certain areas of science." The average science Camper spends around four hours a day in classes, having about three MIDDAUGH REPORTS that this year's division consists of six departments; sociology, chemistry, mathematics, physics, physiology and radiation biophysics. During the first week of Camp all students listened to lectures and attended a lab in each of these areas. Then they chose two courses on which to concentrate for the remaining weeks. COMMENTING ON the lower enrollment this year, as compared to around 100 the year before, Middaugh cited the main cause as being the higher cost of attending the Camp this year. Jim Krevitt, Kansas City, Mo., science Camper, added, "It hasn't been exactly what I expected, but I've learned enough to make my time and money spent here worthwhile." days of lectures and two days of lab a week for each class. The classes are conducted in various buildings around the campus and are taught by teachers at KU. On the other hand, if you want to be considered radical or "hip," do just the opposite. Go out of your way to contradict people. Make frequent references to your outstanding feats back home. Talk about topics considered "hip," even if you know little about them. This act ought to move you two bases closer to the pinnacle of "with-it-ness." Since non-conformity is definitely "in" newadays, why not try out this image? Be an individual—try the "hippie" look. This is extremely effective in the great sport of "put-on." But be sure you go about it in the correct manner. Be certain you get the genuine, standard "hippie outfit." This includes love beads, a peace medal and regulation sandals. Pay close attention to your appearance. This is almost as important as your personality in "put-on." If you have any doubts about how to achieve this look, just consult any of the dozens of pseudo-hippies around the Hill. They'll be happy to help you become a real individual—like themselves. If you are already a hippie because the image happens to fit you, you will have to reach the "put-on" goal by a different route. It will be just the opposite of the preceding one. This means reversing your efforts and discarding the clothes you feel comfortable in. You will avoid a lot of criticism that way, and at the same time will be drawing closer to the finish line. Ignore onlookers who may be poor sports and call you a phony. Remember that they're just jealous because they don't have enough skill to participate in "put-on" themselves. Understand that these poor fools have to be content to be just themselves. Pity those who have to miss the thrill of competing in the "put-on" contest. Get the general idea of "put-on"? Sounds like fun doesn't it? But before you rush off to change yourself into something completely alien to your original self, let me point out a few dangers in this game. There are sacrifices you'll have to make. They involve giving up personal values, donning an outfit that conflicts with your own tastes and saying one thing but thinking the opposite. When it starts to get you down, a little therapy works wonders. Just for old time's sake, try on some of your old clothes—ones that you really like. Spend a little time doing something you enjoy, even if it's "out of it." You might even try talking face to face with a wall and saying exactly what you feel. But for heaven's sake don't let anyone see you like this. That could get you disqualified. After all, the name of the game is "put-on." Barb Chapman THE KAMPER KANSAN Formal- (Continued from page 1) Casper, 8W; Paulie Elliott, 8S; Judy Nelson, 9E; Paula Beardon, 9W; Jan Dickinson, 9S; Mary Claire Harris, 10E; Ann Sommerville, 10W, and Amy Shaffer, 10S. Lewis Hall Catherine Yoe, 2N; Debra Eubanks, 2S; Lea Anne Brown, 3N; Patricia Jordan, 3S; Charmaine Rohrberg, 4N; Deanne Currie, 4S; Nancy Burstein, 5N; Becky Engley, 5S; Monica Schirmer, 6N; and Nancy Shelman, 6S. Kamper News Office - 112 Flint Hall UN #4-3646 Camp Office - 214 Murphy Hall UN #4-3755 The Kemper Kansan, camp newspaper at the Midwestern Music and Art Camp, is published five times during the six-week camp sessions on Fridays. It is written by the members of the Journalism Division of the Camp. The opinions expressed expressed in the editorial columns are those of the editorial staff of the newspaper. Any opinions expressed in the editorial staff are necessarily those of the editorial staff. Any opinions expressed in the Kampfer are those of the editorial staff. Academic and Art Camp or the University of Kansas. Accommodations, goods, and services offered to students without regard to color, creed, or national origin. Executive Staff Executive Staff Editor-in-Chief ... David Appleton News Editor ... Angie Minden Editorial Editor ... Caroline Gould Feature Editor ... Claudia Corgen Sports Editor ... Ron Barnes Photo Editor ... Brad Reynolds Reporters: Charley Petty, Betty Lee Haller, Witney - Brad Reynolds* Charley Petty, Betty Lou Heitman. Wilma Moore, Barbara Cohen. Lynford Lanford, Debbie Walden. Don Lewis, Jeff Richmond, Robbie Eggers. Adviser James W. Murray Assistant Advisers Dorothy Bowles, Jackie Raymond, Robert Stevens Photo Advisers Gary Mason, Bill Seymour 'Super' Hollowell quips By DON LEWIS By DON LEWIS Kamper Kansan Reporter "Always ready for a good time," is how Mrs. Robert Hollowell describes her husband's hobby and no better way can anyone describe this man. Hollowell is supervisor of Templin Hall which houses nearly 300 boys in the music and ballet divisions. THIS ISN'T Hollowell's first position at the Camp. Last year he appeared as guest teacher of a Camp orchestra. While the responsibility of supervisor takes most of his time, he also finds time to conduct this summer's Concert Orchestra. This year's attendance of concerts is "quite superior to last summer's." Hollowell pointed out. Before taking the job of supervisor, he had been told many stories of harried supervisors who were always beset with prank- 1960 Bob Hollowell Thoughts- (Continued from page 1) send up the many spacecrafts, could have fed the world's hungry. "OUR COUNTRY has done so many things," one girl commented, "sending a man to the moon doesn't mean any more than an airplane going from Georgia to California in three hours! We just expect so much." And as in the beginning, many doubted the statement, many questioned it. Some feared it and some dreamed of it. Near the closing of the decade, man on the moon is no longer a dream; it becomes a reality! sters plotting their overthrow. Upon arriving, he discovered it "a pleasant experience." His greatest responsibility, Hollowell said, "is understanding each kid and trying to let each one keen his personality." SOME OF HIS "run of the mill" chores as supervisor are inspecting rooms, endorsing checks and keeping Templin residents and building in order. In doing this he tries to be friendly without acting like the student's buddy. He has this manner because he feels that teenagers, "though they won't admit it, like to have someone older to look up to." One of the things he has observed about the students at Templin is, "that they came for a fine musical training." He continued by saying they are getting fine training through a great staff. MRS. HOLLOWELL, who is spending the summer at Templin, said that she finds herself "hanging loose" while her husband takes on the problems at the dorm. Hollowell loves spectator sports but claims the right to be the "worst golfer." To further this he said, "probably Mrs. Esau could beat me in golf." Kansas weather foils would-be sunbathers By DEBBIE WALDEN Kamper, Kansan, Reporter Kamper Kansai Reporter Summer—a time of sunbathing and swimming. Campers, aware of Kansas's notorious heat, arrived from all over the United States anticipating the "great tan we can go home with." THE FIRST WEEK of Camp proved disastrous to many Campers who arrived decked in summer clothes. The temperatures ranged from 40 to 60 degrees, and it rained continuously. The Kansas Union was besieged with Campers buying sweatshirts and umbrellas. Letters to home begged for warmer clothes to be sent immediately. Postmen were overwhelmed as packages arrived from confused and amused parents. PROMISES THAT the weather would revert according to legend were heard from native Kansans—and it did. The temperature soared to the high 90's, although the unusual amount of rainfall continued. After an evening downpour, one was able to guess that the following day would be hot and humid. Every morning Campers, leaury of the weather, set out for classes wearing loose, cool clothes and carrying an umbrella and raincoat. "It has to get better; it can't get any worse," one Camper complained. "Shuffling up and down these hills isn't helping matters either," he added. ONCE A WEEK one can expect to hear an announcement ordering everyone out of his or her room into the halls. Tornado watches, which had frightened out-of-staters, are now calmly accepted. Listening to the radio during a storm, one can expect to hear of a tornado somewhere in the vicinity. Slipping behind the dorms, the girls say, "finally, we can get a tan." Again they are disappointed. STANDING up, the temperature isn't too bad—lying down is another thing. As the Camper lies there, she can feel the sun's heat penetrating her body. That is when she goes inside, where it is cool. Seldom does anyone stay out more than 30 minutes. The few brave (or foolish) ones who do are struck down by either sun-stroke or dehydration. So, as one can see, Kansas weather leaves much to be desired. Speech sets pace Finals are scheduled By BETTY HEILMAN Kamper Kansan Reporter Campers in the speech and debate division will set the pace The Perfect Camper 4in bursting with intellect (although slightly off-balance; otherwise, he wouldn't be spending his summer studying) Sideburns neatly cut off at ends of ears Mouth well stocked for jokes about Lawrence Keys on string around neck so someone can pull it and half-strangle him Insensitive stomach, invulnerable to cafeteria food and monstrous amounts of candy from coin food machines Big, grasping hands for finding bed after counselor has flicked off all the lights Huge, muscular legs for walking, walking, and still more walking Frizzy hair from humidity Keep ears for bearing tumblers fall (great need for safecracking your own mailbox) Deep bags under eyes from getting up at six in the morning Badge with plenity of decorations but none obscuring the name Well coordinated arms so he can lower his Venetian blinds Body opens to large hollow cavity for storing illegal firecrackers and feed Nimble fingers for punching elevator buttons when getting off it Padded, giant feet for kicking uncooperative coin food machines Over-all characteristics: Infinite patience in waiting for coin food machine refuels, short height and very youthful looks for implementing counselors, and ability to handle a large number of tasks. during the last week of Camp as they compete in forensic tournaments and present a Reader's Theatre production. — Cartoon by David Danielson EVENTS WILL begin at 3 p.m. today and continue through next Thursday. Results will be announced late afternoon or evening of each day except Tuesday, according to Bobby Patton, director of the speech division. Tuesday evening will be a Reader's Theatre presentation in Lewis cafeteria, tentatively scheduled to begin at 7:30. The three presentations and their directors will be "Alice in Wonderland." Jayanne Angell; "Theatre USA," John Oblak; and scenes from "Spoonriver Anthology" and selected poetry, Mike Pedretti. Directing the interpretive workshop is Jack Wright. SWEEPSTAKES AWARDS will be offered for individual events, including duet acting, dramatic interpretation, poetry, prose, extemporaneous speaking, oration, informative speaking and for the National debate squads. A grand sweepstakes will be awarded by combining point totals for individual events and debate. In the midst of the week's activities a division picnic is scheduled for 5:30 p.m. Wednesday. Concluding the 1969 speech and debate division's work on July 25 will be a film presentation which Professor E. C. Buehler, emeritus professor of speech and drama and former head of the speech department, has made for McGraw-Hill. The announcement of teacher awards will be made by Patton. BEGINNING —Photo by Don Hood Appel molds dance to fit individual styles Appel is versatile By SYLVIA GIBSON Kamper Kansan Reporter Raoul Appel stands on a chair above a mass of gyrating youth. He leans forward, bouncing on the balls of his feet and clapping his hands to the rhythm of the music. His face contains an animated expression. Occasionally, he shouts directions to the whirling group before him and he often wipes his face with a towel. THE MAN is a director-choreographer-teacher of American jazz dancing and was instructing ballet students of the Camp. APPEL DEFINES jazz dancing as "the American dance," explaining that it is, "a combination of the technical discipline of ballet, the freedom of modern dance and individual style and rhythms." Sitting in a tiny room, and sweating heavily, the short, dark-haired man turns an interested face to his questioner. A towel hangs around his neck and he uses it often. His legs are crossed and his huge arms move widely and freely as he talks. He often smiles when talking and his eyes take on a mysterious gleam. He explains that he develops a dance according to the framework of the people with whom he is working and according to their individual skills. A GROUP of students do knee-bends and other warm-up exercises while waiting in a practice room. Appel strides into the room, the ever-present towel around his neck. He starts the tape recorder and the group falls into the dance pattern, each concentrating on his steps. APPEL HAS a long list of credits. He is an independent choreographer for NBC and CBS. He was a soloist with the Los Angeles Youth Symphony at the age of nine years, and solo dancer with the Charles Wiedman Company. A professional dancer since 1951, he choreographed for theatre and television in London for one year. His most recent choreography was done on Broadway this year in "Sweet Charity." In the midst of the group is Raoul Appel, matching each dancer's steps. A certain animation has appeared on his face. Journalism 'shutterbugs' invade summer campus By CLAUDIA CORSON Kamper Feature Editor Have you ever stepped demurely from behind the shower curtain, only to find yourself forced to jump back in? Have you ever swallowed a spoonful of oatmeal only to find your nauseated facial expression being recorded? Have you ever, while looking for a lost contact lens with your posterior prominently in the air, heard a frightening "click" behind you? THOSE OF YOU flattered by the hordes of cameras watching your every movement are not really celebrities, only victims of the sneaky, stealthy, surreptitious journalism "shutterbugs." The journalism division of the Camp offers a photography workshop. To enter this fascinating field, one must have imagination, dedication and photographic skill. Emotional feeling provides much of the foundation for photographic education and experience. any combination of the proper photographic tools, but most important, one must be able to communicate in visual terms. GOOD PHOTOGRAPHIC quality prints can be produced with Photographic equipment and chemicals are provided for use by the University. Students furnish supplies such as film and paper. GARY MASON, instructor in journalism, demonstrates methods of loading and using various types of cameras for novice photographers. Their assignments consist of utilizing d_rkroom techniques and focusing on campus life. At first, students were somewhat discouraged, until Mason demonstrated the techniques and advantages of what is called burning in, dodging and using contact sheets and test strips. These methods enable the printer to produce better results. Inspired? Well then, get out your Brownies and Instastatics and start shooting! Jly.18 1969 KAMPER VINCENT MARICI Lt. Col. Arnaid Gabriel Air Force conductor inspires musicianship By ANGIE MINDEN Kamper News Editor Conducting the various bands for the upcoming week will be Lt. Col. Arnald D. Gabriel, presently director of the United States Air Force Band and Symphonic Orchestra. HAVING CONDUCTED the Air Force Band for five years, Lt. Col. Gabriel has conducted in 48 of the 50 states and in 40 countries. The Air Force band has with it 24 male voices called "The Singing Sergeants." GABRIEL BEGAN his conducting career at Samson Air Force Base in New York following with Langley Field in Virginia, Weisbadn, Germany, and the Air Force Base at Colorado Springs. Since 1964 he has conducted the Air Force Band in Washington, D.C., where he is presently stationed. A former flute player, Gabriel now enjoys conducting summer camps and boating as hobbies. Beginning his second year of conducting the Camp, Gabriel stated that this is an "extremely well organized group." He feels that for young boys and girls of this age group to take a piece of music and learn it in a week is quite an accomplishment, and they should be proud of it. 4 KAMPER Jly.18 1969 AS FOR MUSIC in the years ahead, Gabriel says any music played well will get a good reaction. For this week's concerts Gabriel will be dressed in the Air Force blues on Friday and Saturday, then on Sunday he will wear the semi-blues with the decorations. The Who plus Led Zeppelin Two rock groups which have literally made dents in today's young music are the WHO and the LED ZEPEPELIN. The two bands have recently released albums, both of which are splendid. By JEFF RICHMOND Kamper Kansan Reporter Perhaps the better of the two is the WHO's plastic entitled "Tommie." Tommie is a deaf, dumb Rock Review and blind boy who is born in today's modern era. The album is a double-pocket, and sells for $12.- 95. Vocalist Roger Daltrey plays the part of pathetic Tommie. Lead guitarist, Peter Townshend, does a magnificent job in the musical and composing departments. Drummer, Keith Moon, does the best of his career and bassist, John Entwistle, backs up the group with his amazing vitality. IT IS A first in rock music because it is the only rock opera ever recorded. Probably the best rock album ever released. LED ZEPPELIN, which was formed six months ago by ex-Yardbird Jimmy Payge, has recorded the most mellow "progressive blues" by an English group. Payge is probably one of the finest lead guitarists around. Robert Plant, vocalist, can really sing up a blues storm and John Paul Jones, who is also an ex-Yardbird, plays some of the best organ and bass music I have ever heard. John Bonham has a good future ahead of him as the drummer of this super-group. The better cuts of the album are, "Good Times, Bad Times," "You Shook Me" and "Black Mountain Side." The lp sells for $4.95. You couldn't ask for more. Rain slows down intramural action By RONALD BARNES Kamper Sports Editor Rain has been the major setback for the intramurals this year. back for the intramurals this year. Gerry Denk, recreational director, said an average of 20 games per night had to be postponed due to heavy rains. The only thing left to do is to try to re-schedule the games and then continue by the schedule. There will be no play-offs for championships. Instead, the last few days will be used to allow every team to participate. INDIVIDUAL SPORTS such as ping-pong, tennis and badminton have been well received by the participants. The third round of elimination is over and the players are preparing for the fourth round. Softball games are played every Monday and Thursday evenings while basketball is played each Thursday. Wednesday evenings, bowling and volleyball teams meet. No games are played on Fridays, due to the concerts THE RESULTS of the intramural score are tallied below. BOYS' SOFTBALL Division I Team Won Loss T6N 2 1 H5N 2 1 T5S 2 H4N 1 1 H8S 1 1 H6S 1 T3S 3 Division II Team Won Loss H5S 3 H7S 3 T5N 1 1 T7S 1 1 T4S 1 2 H4S 1 1 H6N 3 H8N 3 BOYS' BASKETBALL Division I Division II Team Won Loss H5N 3 T6N 3 H6S 2 1 T7N 1 2 T3S 3 H8S 3 Division II Team Won Loss T5S 3 T7S 3 H7N 2 1 H5S 1 2 T4S 3 H7S 3 Division III Team Won Loss T5N 3 H4S 2 1 T6S 2 1 H4N 1 2 H6N 1 2 H8N 3 Kamp Kalendar Friday 7:15 p.m.—Movie "Arabesque," McCollum 8:15 p.m.—Brass Forum—Larry Wiehe (All brass players required to attend) Saturday Sunday 5:00 p.m.—Concert Playbacks, McCallum 7:15 p.m.—Double Feature, McCollum 10:00 am.—Chapel Service, Swarthout Recital Hall Thursday 8:00 p.m.-All Camp Formal Dance, Kansas Union Ballroom Tempo sign up party (Deadline for ordering Tempos is Monday, July 21. Receipts will be placed in your mailbox Tuesday, July 22. You will need your receipts to obtain your copy). Tempos can also be purchased Thursday evening. Four concerts provide weekend joy FRIDAY EVENING CONCERT East Side Allen Field House, 7:15 p.m. Red Band Red Band LeRoy Esau, Conductor Milburn Carey, Guest Conductor Kenneth Bloomquist, Guest Conductor Lt. Colonel Arnald Gabriel, Guest Conductor Larry Wiehe, Trombone Virtuoso Irish Tune from County Derry ... Percy Grainger Zampa Overture ... F. Herold Strategic Air Command March .. Clifton Williams Esau, conducting The King and I ... Rodgers - Hammerstein II Carey, conducting English Folk Song Suite ... R. Vaughan Williams Bloomquist, conducting Crown Imperial ... William Walton Blue Bells of Scotland ... Arthur Pryor Larry Wiehe, Trombone Soloist Col. Gabriel, conducting SATURDAY AFTERNOON CONCERT Murphy Hall, 2:15 p.m. The Chorale James Ralston, Conductor Terry Knowles, Accompanist $ ^{*} $ Zum Schluss Johannes Brahms Terry Knowles and Fred McClure, pianists I Want to be Ready arr. Harry Geller Another Summer Gone Willard Straight David Cook, Tenor Ralston, conducting Michael Fink Concert Orchestra Gerald M. Carney, Conductor Lt. Colonel Arnald Gabriel, Guest Conductor Gary Fletcher, Guest Conductor Trumpet Voluntary ... Henry Purcell - Wood Carney, conducting Symphony No. 8 in F... Ludwig v. Beethoven First movement, allegro Norwegian Dances ... Edward Grieg III. Allegro moderato alla Marcia IV. Allegro molto and tranquillamento Prelude in Eth Minor .. Shostakovich - Stowkowski Fletcher, conducting Finlandia Overture ... Jean Sibelius Col. Gabriel, conducting Blue Band Kenneth Bloomquist, Conductor William Beck, Guest Conductor Glenn Arnold Schultz Lt. Colonel Arnald Gabriel, Guid Conductor Lt. Colonel Arnaud Gabriel, Guest Conductor March from "A Little Suite" Malcolm Arnold Rocky Point Holiday Ron Nelson Curacao Henderson Bloomquist, conducting Beck, conducting Bernstein SUNDAY AFTERNOON CONCERT Murphy Hall, 2:15 p.m. La Procession Du Rocio ... Joaquin Turina Col. Gabriel conducting Suite from "Dolly" Fauré 1. Tendresse 2. Mi-A-Ou La Procession Du Rocio Joaquin Turina Concert Choir, Chamber Choir, and Orchestra James Ralston, Conductor Darrell Benne, Conductor Lord Nelson Mass Joseph Haydn Kyrie Et Resurrexit Gloria Sanctur Qui Tollis Benedictus Quoniam Osanna Credo Agnus Dei Et Incarnatus Dona Nobis Ralston, conducting Symphony Orchestra Gerald M. Carney, Conductor Arnold Gabriel, Guest Conductor Lt. Colonel Arnald Gabriel, Guest Conductor Appalachian Spring, Ballet Suite ... Aaron Copland III. Introduction IV. Folksy feelings—suggestion of square dances and country fiddlers V. Solo dance of the Bride. Mixed feelings of joy and fear. VII. Scenes of daily activity for the Bride and her Farmer husband. Variations on a Shaker theme. VIII. Coda. The couple are left "quiet and strong" in their new home. Carney, conducting Carley, conducting La Gazza Ladra, Overture Gioaccino Rossini The Pines of Rome ... Ottorino Respighi The Pines of Rome I. The Pines of Villa Borghese II. The Pines near a Catacomb III. The Pines of the Janiculum IV. The Pines of the Appian Way Col. Gabriel, conducting SUNDAY EVENING CONCERT Murphy Hall, 7:00 p.m. Gold Band David Catron, Conductor William Beck, Guest Conductor Kenneth Bloomquist, Guest Conductor Lt. Colonel Arnald Gabriel, Guest Conductor Irish Tune from County Derry ... Percy Grainger Citation ... Claude T. Smith Masque ... Frances McBeth Catron, conducting Burst of Stars ... Ronald Thielman Incidental Suite ... Claude T. Smith Burst of Stars ... Ronald Thielman Incidental Suite ... Claude T. Smith 1. Nocturne 2. Tarantella Beck, conducting Suite of Old American Dances ... R. R. Bennett 1. Cake Walk 2. Schottische Ritmo Jondo ... Carlos Surinach Bulerias Saeta Garrotin Col. Gabriel, conducting Concert Band Concert Band Russell L. Wiley, Conductor Milburn Carey, Guest Conductor Lt. Colonel Arnald Gabriel, Guest Conductor Larry Wiehe, Trombone Virtuoso Symphonic Requiem... Vaclav Nelhybel I. Preambulum III. Passacaglia Wiley, conducting Le Corsaire Overture... Hector Berlioz Carey, conducting Washington Grays March... C. S. Grafulla Jericho Rhapsody... Morton Gould Trombone Chronology... Sgt. Floyd Werle Larry Wiehe, Trombone Soloist Col. Gabriel, conducting Moonmen have strict time schedule SPACE CENTER, Houston (UPI)—The first thing Apollo 11's landing crewmen will do after settling down on the moon is prepare to launch themselves back into space. One of the next things they do is eat dinner. Here is a schedule of their lunar surface activities, including the first moonwalk men have attempted. All times are EDT, approximate, based on the on-time launch from Cape Kennedy and subject to change: Sunday, July 20 4:19 p.m.—Lunar lander named "Eagle" touches down on moon. Astronauts Neil A. Armstrong and Edwin E. "Buzz" Aldrin quickly check craft in case they have to blast off immediately. 4:22 p.m.-A decision whether to remain on the surface, at the southwest corner of the lunar Sea of Tranquility, for the next seven minutes is made. 4:29 p.m.—Safely past the first two checkpoints, a decision is made whether to remain on the moon inside the landing craft for about two hours while fellow crewman Michael Collins circles the moon once in the command ship "Columbia." Armstrong and Aldrin begin simulated countdown for blast-off, but with power to ascent engine cut off. 5:38 p.m.—Decision is made whether to go ahead with surface stay. 6:23 p.m.—Armstrong and Aldrin begin first meal on moon. 7:03 p.m.—Astronauts start four hour rest period. 11:03 p.m.-Rest period ends and crew eats a snack. Monday, July 21 Monday, July 21 12:18 a.m.-Armstrong and Aldrin begin donning the backpacks which will keep them alive outside the lunar lander. 1. 15 a.m.-Final communication and equipment checks before leaving the lander begin. 2:12 a.m.—Armstrong begins moving through the hatch. 2:17 a.m.—Armstrong pulls lanyard opening panel in front of television camera, then moves down to stand on landing craft footpad. 2:19 a.m.—Armstrong places his left foot on the moon, gingerly testing the surface. Then he steps from landing craft footpad onto the surface. 2. 27 a.m.—Armstrong begins collecting small two-pound "Grab" sample of moon material in case mission has to be terminated before other rock samples are gathered. He stows this in a pocket on the left leg of his space-suit. 2:44 a.m.—Aldrin joins Arm- strong on moon surface. 2:52 a.m.-Aldrin sets up an experiment to capture particles from the solar wind stream. It looks like an aluminum foil window shade. 2:53 a.m.—Armstrong, joined by Aldrin, places television camera on stand about 30 feet from landing craft so it can survey remainder of surface exploration. 2:56 a.m.Armstrong begins collecting about 50 pounds of soil, rock fragments and loose rocks. This is the first of two lunar surface samples. 3:13 a.m.—Armstrong closes and seals the first sample box. He Aldrin begin detailed walkaround inspection of lunar lander. 3:25 a.m.—Aldrin opens equipment bay door and removes two scientific experiments to be left behind on moon. One checks and reports to earth lunar seismic activity. The other provides a reflector target for laser beams measuring precise earth-moon distance. Aldrin carries experiments to their location about 70 feet from lander. 3:33 a.m.-Armstrong positions ray laser reflector and adjusts it. 3:34 a.m.—Aldrin begins setting up the seismic experiment. He pulls a cord and solar panels to provide electricity flop open. Then he adjusts antenna toward earth. 3:42 a.m.—Astronauts begin collecting second major material sample, documenting and photographing the location of each sample. Aldrin picks up rocks. Armstrong puts them in numbered bags, and drops them in a sack Aldrin wears on his waist. 4:10 a.m.—Armstrong retrieves solar wind experiment and puts it in sealed bag. 4:24 a.m.—Armstrong joins Aldrin in the cabin. 4:40 a.m. - Astronauts close hatch and repressurize cabin. 5:51 a.m.—Astronauts depressure cabin, open hatch to throw out equipment no longer needed, then reclose cabin and fill it again with oxygen. Pay-Le$ Self Service SHOES 1300 W. 23rd Lawrence A University of Kansas student will take part in an intensive special study of Stratford Hall, the home of the Lee family in Westmoreland County, Va., according to an announcement from the National Parks Service. Denis W. Jacobs will participate in the project, which is being handled by the Historic American Buildings Survey. George B. Hartzog, Jr., park service director, said the survey will prepare measured drawings of the main house, including plans, elevations, sections and full-sized details. The information will be placed in National Archives. Melvin M. Rotsch, a professor at Texas A&M, will head the survey team. Rotsch will be assisted by Jacobs and Charles F. Sanders, a student at Tulane. Stratford study Jly.18 1969 KANSAN 5 THE HOUSE POUCE 17 WEST 9th Conglomerate of the Unique! ■ Handcrafts ■ Sandals ■ Leather Goods ■ Ceramics ■ Candles ■ Glassware ■ Gifts for the discriminating. 17 West 9th MGIM 6:13 a.m.—Astronauts eat. at LUM'S 9-11 P.M. TONIGHT Big 16-oz. Budweiser draw -25c 8-oz. Budweiser draw -15c BEEEEEEEEEER! 6:53 a.m. -- Armstrong and Al-Dirn nap for 4 hours, 40 minutes. 11:58 a.m.—Astronauts eat final meal on moon. 1:55 p.m.—Ascent school of lander off from moon with a 6.6 minute rocket blast, using lower half of lander as launch pad, and hurls astronauts into lunar orbit. 5:32 p.m.—Ascent stage of lander docks with command ship. Moon explorers rejoin Collins in command ship and jettison landing craft cabin. The Official UNIVERSITY of KANSAS RING WHILE IN LAWRENCE BANK AT Checking accounts . . . savings accounts . . . financial advice . . whatever the banking need, you'll find help in a hurry at University State. We're the Lawrence bank with the student's point of view (we're named for you) . . . try us soon. University State Bank Your community minded bank... 955 Iowa Street. Viking 3-4700. Member F.D.J.C. LIVE Personalized: Josten's UNIVERSITY 18 65 UNIVERSITAS UNIVERSIDAD SAN FRANCISCO 1930 Owatonna Minnesota SERVING THE THIRD GENERATION OF AMERICA'S COLLEGE STUDENTS Available in two sizes, in yellow or white gold your choice of synthetic birthstones, black onyx or diamond with your degree or year of graduation. kansas union BOOKSTORE Med school associate dean named KANSAS CITY—Dr. Robert T. Manning, a member of the faculty of the University of School of Medicine since 1958, has become associate dean in charge of student affairs. The 41-year-old physician also is professor of internal medicine and biochemistry. Dean George A. Wolf, Jr., provost of the KU Medical Center, said that in the new position, Dr. Manning would be concerned with all students—medical and those in the allied health professions. Of the more than 1,400 students at the Medical Center about 500 are studying for the M.D. degree. Dr. William J. Camerson will LUMPY MATTRESS CHATHAM, England (UPI)—The mattress somebody left in the parking lot was lumpy, but the little girls who were bouncing around on it stopped complaining when the lumps turned out to be wads of pound notes worth $120 in all. Eight-year-old Leslie Allen and her friend Paula Boost will have a claim on the money if the police are unable to locate the owner. 6 KANSAN Jly.18 1969 LA PETITE GALERIE Newest Place For Now Fashions 910 Kentucky Lower Level continue as assistant dean for medical student affairs and be responsible for individual counseling of medical students. Dr. Manning, a native of Wichita, earned the B.A. degree at Wichita University in 1950 and the M.D. from KU in 1954. He interned at General Hospital in Kansas City, Mo., and completed residency training in internal medicine at the KU Medical Center. The senior medical class of 1962 gave Dr. Manning the "Jayhawker M.D." award as the faculty member who had shown the greatest devotion to teaching. Before appointment to the faculty in 1958 he was a research fellow in the McLvain Biochemical Laboratory and held a traineeship at KU from the National Institute of Arthritis and Metabolism. Dr. Manning earned membership in Alpha Omega Alpha, the honor society in medicine, and is a fellow of the American College of Physicians. Deliciously Different Casa De Taco Mexican Food 1105 Mass. VI 3-9880 Hey! Topsy's is Open! 711 West 23rd Mall Shopping Center Entire Stock of Women's Summer Shoes 1/2 price 711 West 23rd Malls Shopping Center Bandolinos - Bernardos Capezio·T&C·Palizzio Pipe Stride Entire Stock Not Included All Sales Final. Bunny Black's Royal College Shop Eight Thirty-Seven Massachusetts Street Patronize Kansan Advertisers 10% DISCOUNT ON CASH & CARRY LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANING - Pick-up and delivery service - Use any of our three convenient locations - Personalized jet lighting service "There's A Definite Difference" At Our Three Convenient Locations: DOWNTOWN 1111 Mass. VI 3-5155 MALLS 23rd and La. VI 3-0895 HILLCREST 9th and Iowa VI 3-0928 ACME Laundry and Dry Cleaners TRADE CLASSIFIED SELL BUY ADSLEASE Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the Kansan Kensan offered to all students is required to regard to color, creed, or national origin. FOR SALE THE HODGE PODGE. Handicrafts, Jewelry, Sandals, Leather Goods, Antiques, Glassware, Ceramics, and one of the kind gifts. 17 West 9th St. Open 10 a.m.-5:30 p.m. Thurs. till 9:00 p.m. 7-29 NOW ON SALE Revised, comprehensive Edition of "New Analysis of Western Civilization." Carduff's Campus Madhouse, 1241 Oread. 7-29 FOR SALE: 1968 Yamaha 125 twi- scramber. 1700 miles. Excellent con- trol. p.m. 842-838. See at 1810 Alabama -- Also: Girls 27 in high bicycle. AUDIO SALE Right now we are offering 15% on all AR and Dynaco equipment. See our student special, picked especially for student signing. This is true Audio quality with our Dynaco deal. Ray-Audio, Hillcrest aft, aft, eve. VI 2-1944. 1968 two-door hardtop Super Sport. 396 with 4 speed. Red lined tires and wheel covers. In top condition. See at 1419 Ohio, Apt 1, or Cail VI 2-799 1954 Chevy, $100; or 1958 Ford, $150. Both in good running condition. Excellent low cost transportation Call VI 3-7568 after 5:30 p.m. 7-22 Magnus Chord Organ with directions $25.00 eit; 1—three speed bicycle; 1—two speed bicycle; $20.00 each; Zehn- th portable V $4.90 V; II 3-8128 Brumo Ventura Guitar with Case, Like new $45.00 Call Jere VI 3-604-7 7-25 NOTICE BATISKS-TIE-DYES-for sale July 24-25-26-12, 1242 Louisiana 1-5 p.m. Jennings Daylight Donuts Coffee & Sandwich Bar Malls Shopping Center Open for the summer—the Open for the Summer Course Invites all folk-lovers and artists to in and display their talents and apprentices—Davon Daw Bailey! See you at the HEADLINE P. S. HOUSE 15 East 8th Street 6th & Mo. VI 3-2139 HEAD FOR HENRY'S For Top Quality Head for Henry's 515 Michigan St. St. Bar-B-Q-outdoor pit, rib slab to go. $30; Rib order. $1.65; Rib sandwich, 95e¹; chicken. $1.20; Brisket sandwich, $75; Hours, 1 a.m. to 11 p.m. Closed Sunday and Tuesday. Phone VI 2-9510. 8-5 FOR RENT AUDIO SALE Need a kite Kitten? We have one left. Call VI 3-7568 after 5:30 p.m. 7-22 If you are interested in a record company, you should be interested in Acoustic Research and Dynaco equipment. It's the best buy can get, but just fast. Sofa and chair at Ray-Audio, Interior Center, and aeve. 842-194-7. 7-29 XEROX SERVICE on Xerox's latest, max. advanced technology, shapes copies; faster, service. Unsurpassed results for these, papers. Includes Typewriter, Typewriter. Mass. VI 3-3844 8-5 ATTENTION! Summer students will do your typing. Call 842-0111. - 85 HEADLINE! THE HODGE PODGE. Featuring ceilings, a large wood-framed wall, Sandals, and Leather Goods. Old trunks, glassware, and handcrafts. 17 Thurs., till 9:00. Ten 10 am -5:30. Tuesdays, thurs., till 9:00. We are looking for (you) interesting, music, drama, reading, anything else that we can do. The P.S. HOUSE. If you are interested to join us, please contact Rick at Rick at V-12 3444 NOW 7-29 Finale ART SALE for the summer. 19, 20, 21, 22 27, 124 Louisiana. 1-5 p.m. 7-25 Now renting for summer and fall. University Terrace and Old Mill apartments. Reduced rates for summer. A C. carpeting, and pool. Call for appointment 843-1433 for Old Mill and 842-1296 for University Terrace. Sleeping rooms with or without kitchen privileges for males. Also furnished apartments. Borders cans and near downtown. Call V1- 75767 One bedroom apartments, air-conditioned, carpeted units with parking closer than many campus parking lots. Apt. 8, Tiger View 8153 or 842-3750. V 7-29 Nicely furnished A/C / A/cpt. for summer and fall; small room apt. for summer and fall; small room apt. for men, summer and/or fall. Utilities All close to Union. Phone VX-8534 7-29 New Studio Apt. at Town Manor. Quiet, furnished, A/C. Steam Heat. Parking. Professor or mature student. Call 843-8000. 7-29 A/C rooms for rent. Private entrance. 1625 W. Iwens, west of Naimshim. Call VI 3-7535 before 9 a.m. or after 6 p.m. or anytime Friday and Saturday 7-25 Experienced typist will give fast, acc- petive support in ports, these. Call VI 3-02885, 7-29 TYPING Will type term papers, themes, thesis, other miscellaneous typing. Have electric typewriter, pica type. Ex- amples of text types: 1-93544. Mrs. Wright. 7-29 Theses, term papers, and miscellaneous. Electric typewriter. Quick efficient service. Call Mrs. Mary Wolter 1712 Alabama IV 3-1522 7-18 Will type term papers. Also Ges- man type term papers. One Ms. downey. Phone VI 3-8568 7-22 TRAVEL TIME Thesis, term papers, and misc. Call Mary Wolken, VI 3-1522, 712-789 and William Wolken, VI 3-1522, 712-789 LET Electric Machine; thesis, dissertations, rates, etc. Fast, reasonable rates 2-156 2-160 Want male student, preferably grad student to attend. Call Vi C1 2-79-25 identifies the student. Former Harvard and University of Minnesota Secretary will type term papers, reports, etc. Call Mrs. Mattila VI 3-7207. 7-29 WANTED LET HELP WANTED Young woman to do housework, half day per week, $1.60 per hour. Young man to do yardwork, house chores, 8 hrs per week; should be familiar with basic tools; pay dependent qualifications. Wax, VI 3-2789 1612 La. REGISTERED PHYSICAL THERAPIST with at least one year experience, new, creative, co-ordinated home care program serving Douglas County Visiting. Lawrence Assoc. 342 Mo. Lawrence, Kan. 7-29 MAUPINTOUR TRAVEL SERVICE Roommate for fall Large, 2 bedroom, $5c per month with utilities. Close to campus in good neighborhood. Prefer to study or work good student. Call VI 2-3752 at 5 p.m. 7-18 Make Your Summer Reservations Now. Malls Shopping Center VI 3-1211 Two roommates, Large turn A/C apt. Carpeted. Parking available. Female graduate students preferred $37 a month, include lunch and a p.m. on weekdays. VI 2-03855. 7-29 Roommate needed for fall semester. Two bedroom apt. Your half: $62.50 plus half utilities per month. Ray Coover, R. I., Barnard, Kansas. -75 LOST Now renting 2-bedroom furnished apartments All utilities included in rent. JAYHAWKER TOWERS Apartments - Immediately adjacent to campus Looking for a 305cc Honda or comparable size. Year and condition not important. Price is! Call David at VI 3-3929. 7-18 - Swimming pool-club rooms - Air-conditioned - Off-street parking Elevators Convenient Location, a Time and Money Saver. Lawrence's Finest Apartment Complex Inspection Invited 1603 W. 15th Tel.VI3-4993 Lawrence, Kansas Lost: gold Lady Hamilton watch between Fraser Hall and Fiji House. Reward offered. Call Mikie Burnette at VI 2-1033. 7-18 CHICKEN SPECIAL 99c SPECIAL FOR ONLY WORLD'S BEST STEAK BUY INCLUDES - Baked Potato RANDY'S RANCH - Texas Toast 1811 W. 6th St. SALE Summer Clearance Begins Suits from 39.50 Sport Coats . . from25.00 Dress Shirts . . . . 5.50 Dress Slacks ...12.00 Knit Shirts . . . . 4.00 Wash Slack $ . . . . . 6.00 MISTER GUY 920 MASSACHUSETTS Destination: The Moon! (Continued from page 1) (Continued from page 1) and fly the LEM to a gentle touch-down on the moon's vast, arid Sea of Tranquility at 4:19 p.m. EDT. After several hours of observation, Armstrong, 38-year-old civilian commander of the mission, is set to crawl first through a 32-inch square hatchway, ease slowly down a nineinch ladder and set the first foot on the dark, sandy surface at 2:21 EDT Monday. Aldrin, a 39-year-old Air Force colonel, will follow and for two hours and 40 minutes the astronauts will explore the lunar surface, implant the American flag, set up a remote geophysical station and collect 130 pounds of some of the most valuable rocks man will ever have. After spending nearly 22 hours on the lunar surface, the astronauts will take off on the 3,500-pound push of "Eagles"-lone ascent engine and fly to a rendezvous with Collins and the mothership "Columbia" in lunar orbit The three pilots are scheduled to blast out of the moon's gravitational grasp shortly after midnight July 22 and return to a Pacific Ocean splashdown at 12:51 p.m., July 24. President Nixon will be aboard the recovery ship to greet them, but the moon pilots will have to wait out a three-week quarantine period before receiving the world's acclaim. Before launch, Armstrong gave his mission about an 80 per cent chance of total success—meaning a landing on the moon and a return to earth. He said the chances the pilots would come back safely were "far greater than that." But the mission was the riskiest yet attempted by the United States and the flight commander said fear was not an emotion unknown to him and his colleagues. The launch of Apollo 11 was the high point of the U.S. space program that has cost $24 billion, taken eight years, and lost three lives. Three astronauts training for the first Apollo flight were killed when a fire swept their spacecraft during a ground test at Cape Kennedy Jan. 27, 1967. Unlike Christopher Columbus and his benefactor, Queen Isabella, no one had to hock their jewels, exactly, to get the three Apollo astronauts launched to the new world of the moon, but the Apollo program price tag has incurred the wrath of critics. The immediate payoff for America will be about 130 pounds of rock and dust that the astronauts will bring back with them. By analyzing these samples, however, scientists hope to find clues to the origin of earth and its solar system, and perhaps even evidence of how life began. Wernher Von Braun, the German rocket genius who engineered the uncannily accurate Saturn 5, has a pat answer for critics who question whether the barren moon is worth exploring. He quotes from the 19th century English chemist and physicist, Michael Faraday, who answered such questions with another one: "What is the purpose of a newborn child. We find out in time." Much of the nation and the rest of the world came to a standstill when Apollo 11's mighty Saturn 5 booster rocket blazed into life with a roar that heralded a new era for mankind. A record million persons jammed the beaches and resorts surrounding Cape Kennedy to watch the launch, and many seemingly had a hard time believing what they saw. President Nixon, who told the astronauts before their launch that their flight would "lift the spirits of the American people and the whole world," ordered government offices closed next Monday. Armstrong and Aldrin are scheduled to walk on the moon's surface early that morning. While stopping short of declaring a national holiday, the President asked Americans to spend the day concentrating in "a national day of participation." "I also urge private employers to make appropriate arrangements so that as many of our citizens as possible will be able to share in the significant events of that day. So, finally, I call upon all of our people, on that historic day, to join in prayer for the successful conclusion of Apollo 11's mission and the safe return of its crew. "As the astronauts go where man has never gone; as they attempt what man has never tried, Regents change disciplinary policy TOPEKA (UPI)—An amended resolution calling for the "immediate suspension" of any state college or university employee or student who "endangers the safety of persons or property" was approved Monday by the Kansas Board of Regents. ted a revised resolution which addressed itself to the constitutional rights of the suspended person. we on earth will want, as one people, to be with them in spirit; to share the glory and the wonder, and to support them with prayers that all will go well." A similar resolution was adopted by the regents June 26, saying the suspension would remain in effect "pending such procedural steps as may be required under the rules and regulations of the state institution and the laws of the state of Kansas." 8 KANSAN Monday's action after Atty. Gen, Kent Frizzell submit- Jly.18 1969 Chester Southernland, an Easley, S.C., textile mill supervisor tried to bring home the importance of the event to his 21st year old son. The University of Kansas "junior year at Bonn" is one of 23 American academic programs now accredited by German Universities. Junior year abroad "There it goes. Look Ben. There goes a rocket to the moon!" It was subject to Frizzell's approval. The KU program, established in the early 1960's, enables KU undergraduates to spend their third or fourth year at the University of Bonn, in the capital city of West German. The credits earned at Bonn apply towards the KU degree. Kansas also offers a "year abroad" program at the University of Bordeaux in France. This is in cooperation with the University of Colorado. - Immediately adjacent to campus Mark A. Williard, Atlanta senior, has been awarded a $500 Ross H. Forney Scholarship in the University of Kansas School of Engineering. Forney Scholarship JAYHAWKER TOWERS Apartments Williard has a cumulative grade point average of 2.54. He has been on the Dean's honor roll and is a member of Tau Beta Pi, honorary engineering fraternity. - Swimming pool—club rooms - Now renting 2-bedroom furnished apartments. All utilities included in rent. - Air-conditioned - Off-street parking Elevators The scholarship is from an endowment created by Mr. Forney, a 1912 KU alumnus in mechanical engineering and the retired president of the Forney Engineering Company of Dallas, Tex. Convenient Location, a Time and Money Saver. Lawrence's Finest Apartment Complex Inspection Invited 1603 W. 15th Tel. VI 3-4993 BIT DEAL BIRMINGHAM, England (UPI) —Thomas Morris, a 68-year-old retired maintenance man, has been informed his old age pension will be boosted—by a penny a week. A letter from his former employer added the increase would be "subject, of course, to a deduction of income tax, if appropriate." EVERYONE SAYS Everything in the Pet Field And Free Parking At Grants Drive-In Pet Center Experienced Dependable Personal service 1218 Conn., Law. Pet Ph. VI 3-2921 JAYHAWKER TOWERS Apartments : - Immediately adjacent to campus. - Now renting 2-bedroom furnished apartments. All utilities included in rent. - Convenient Location, a Time and Money Saver. Lawrence's Finest Apartment Complex Inspection 1603 W. 15th Invited Tel. VI 3-4993 Patronize Kansan Advertisers H HEAD FOR HENRY'S H Head For Henry's For A BIG BIG Special Stop by for lunch, dinner, snack or anytime for a delight you will never forget. HOME OF INSTANT SERVICE & QUALITY 6th & Missouri VI3-2139 Serving KU Students for 60 Years. LAWRENCE launderers and dry cleaners 1029 NEW HAMP. VI3-3711 "Prompt Pickup & delivery to All Living Groups" THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN 79th Year, No.12 The University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas Tuesday, July 22, 1969 HOW SWEET IT IS!! JIMMY HAWKINS A. S. M. KLEIN A American Eagle Edwin Aldrin American Eagle Michael Collins American Eagle Neil Armstrong 'One small step for man- SPACE CENTER. Houston (UPI)—Man reached the moon Sunday at 4:17:45 p.m. EDT. The landing by Neil A. Armstrong and Edwin E "Buzz" Aldrin Jr. in a spaceship named Eagle culminated a millennium of dreams and a $24-billion American project that opened the worlds of the universe to mankind. So technically smooth was the landing and so confident were Armstrong and Aldrin that they decided to go ahead with their moonwalk Sunday night rather than waiting until Monday morning. For several long minutes the world seemingly stood still while their final altitude figures in the cool space fliers called out their final altitude figures in their drop toward the lunar surface. Capsule Communicator Charles M. Duke—Eagle you're looking great. Coming up 9 minutes. Mission Control-We're now in the approach phase. Everything looking good. Altitude 5,200 feet. Astronaut Edwin E. Aldrin Jr. —Manual attitude. Control is good. Duke—Roger. Copy. Mission Control—Altitude, 4,- 200 feet. Duke- Houston, you're go for landing. Over. Aldrin—Roger. Understand go for landing. Duke- We're go. Think tight. We're go. Aldrin-2,000 feet. Into the AGS abort guidance system. 47 degrees. Duke—Roger. Aldrin—37 degrees. Duke—Eagle, looking great You're go. Mission Control—Altitude, 1,-600. Duke—1,400 feet. Still looking good. Aldrin----35 degrees. Duke----35 degrees. Aldrin—750 coming down to 23. 700 feet-21 down, 33 degrees .feet down to 19. 540 down to 30...15. 400 feet down at 9. A forward. 350 feet down at 4 static. The fires given for forward and down by Eagle are reports of their speed—velocity in feet per second—both across the face of the moon and down toward its surface. Aldrin—300 feet. Down $ 3^{1/2} $47 forward. One minute. $ 1^{1/2} $down, 70. Altitude velocity light. 15 forward. Coming down nicely. 200 feet. $ 4^{1/2} $down, $ 5^{1/2} $down. 9 forward. 100 feet. $ 3^{1/2} $down, 9 forward. 75 feet. Looking good. Down $ \downarrow_{1} $2. 6 forward. 60 second lights on. Down $ 2 \downarrow_{2} $ . Forward. Picking up some dust. Big shadow. For 4 forward. 4 forward driving to the right a little. Down $ \downarrow_{2} $ . 30 seconds. Astronaut Neil A. Armstrong —contact light. Okay, engine stopped. ACA at a descent. Mode control both auto. Descent engine command override off. Engine arm off 413 is in. When Armstrong reported "contact light," probes on the lunar module's landing pads had touched the moon. Armstrong—Houston. We uh... Tranquillity Base here. The Eagle has landed. Duke—Roger, Tranquillity. We copy. You are on the ground. You got a bunch of guys about to turn blue. We're breathing again Thanks a lot. 2 KANSAN Jly. 23 1969 At the time of landing the moon was about 238.548 miles from earth. Michael Collins, the third astronaut of the Apollo 11 team, kept the command ship Columbia in a 69 mile high lunar orbit while Armstrong and Aldrin eased their way down. Collins would have been able to swoop in and rescue his colleagues, had anything gone wrong on the descent, but now that they were on the lunar surface, they were beyond his reach. One of the few problems during the descent occurred when Armstrong observed the Eagle's automatic guidance system was heading the ship into a rough landing site. He told ground control: "Houston, that seemed like a very long final phase. The auto target was taking us right into a football field size crator with a lot of boulders ... it required us flying manually over the rockfield to find a real good area." Armstrong sk im m ed the spaceship about 200 feet above the crator and landed four miles downrange from the proposed landing bullseye on the lunar Sea of Tranquillity. NASA said the landing site appeared to be at 799 degrees north latitude and 23.46 degrees east longitude. "Very smooth touchdown," confirmed Aldrin. They had 55 seconds of fuel left for the descent engine when they landed. Ground controller Charles M Duke then told Collins in the command ship; "He has landed, Tranquility Base. Eagle is in Tranquility." But in Communist China—home for one-fifth of mankind there was no report, no announcement, no word that two humans had reached the moon. Almost all the world bore witness Sunday to mankind's greatest achievement. Communist China apparently took very extensive steps to make sure that its citizens were not able to hear broadcasts of America's moon landing. The Voice of America (VOA) said Monday the Red Chinese began "very extensive" jamming of VOA broadcasts from Taiwan, Nationalist China, when it started to give the report of Apollo 11 landing operation on Sunday. CLOSE-UP NANCY WILSON CLOSE-UP NANCY WILSON 2 Record Set on Capitol Records Capitol $4.99 KIEF'S RECORD & STEREO C Collins, like Armstrong, is 38 years old, and is a lieutenant colonel in the Air Force. Aldrin, 39, a full Air Force colonel, has been called one of the best scientific minds America has ever sent into space, and it did not take long for him to put that mind to work; "We'll get to the details of what's around here, but it looks like a collection of just about every variety of shape, angularity, granularity and every variety of rock you could find. The color, well it varies pretty much depending on how you're looking ... there doesn't appear to be too much of a general color at all. However, it looks as though some of the rocks and boulders—of JAYHAWKER TOWERS Apartments Now renting 2-bedroom furnished apartments. All utilities included in rent. - Immediately adjacent to campus - Swimming pool-club rooms - Air-conditioned - Elevators - Off-street parking Convenient Location, a Time and Money Saver. Lawrence's Finest Apartment Complex Inspection Invited 1603 W. 15th Tel.VI3-4993 Hey! Topsy's is Open! Ice Cream Cones 711 West 23rd Malls Shopping Center Carriage Lamp RESTAURANT ON THE MALLS Carriage Lamp RESTAURANT ON THE MALLS FAMILY STYLE CHICKEN SPECIAL WEDNESDAY ALL YOU CAN EAT FOR $1.59 Includes: Mashed Potatoes Gravy Cold Slaw Coffee or Tea FAMILY STYLE CHICKEN SPECIAL WEDNESDAY ALL YOU CAN EAT FOR $1.59 Includes: Mashed Potatoes Gravy Cold Slaw Coffee or Tea STYLE SPECIAL SDAY one giant leap for mankind' which there are quite a few in the near area—it looks as though they're going to have some interesting colors to them." Duke replied: "Sounds good to us Tranquility. We'll let you press on through the simulated countdown in preparation for lunar blastoff Monday. And we'll talk to you later." Then Duke added: "Tranquility. Be advised there are lots of smiling faces in this control room ... and all over the world." "There are two of them up here." Duke: "Roger. It was a beautiful job you guys." Armstrong responded: Collins: "And don't forget the one in the command module." Duke: "Borger." Duke: "Roger After Eagle had been on the moon for about 3 hours, Aldrin radioed back: "This is the LEM pilot. I'd like to take this opportunity to ask every person listening in, whoever and wherever they may be, to pause for a moment and contemplate the events of the past few hours, and to give thanks in his or her own way." "Now comes the gymnastics," said Armstrong, as he started to depressurize the spacecraft at 10:27 p.m. EDT to begin the moonwalk. At 10:28 p.m. EDT, Armstrong began breathing oxygen from his back pack moon walk breathing unit. Armstrong and Aldrin then opened the hatch of their Eagle lunar lander and prepared for a walk on the moon. Armstrong slid carefully through the hatch of his Eagle moon lander feet first and started down the nine steps of its ladder toward the lunar surface. He stepped from the footpad of his Eagle moon lander to the lunar surface at 10:56:31 p.m. EDT Sunday. "That's one small step for man. One giant leap for mankind," he said. He said the surface was powdery. "I only go in an eighth of an inch, but I can see my foot prints in the fine particles." "There seems to be no difficulty in moving around," he said. Jly. 22 1969 KANSAN 3 as he tested man's equilibrium on the surface of the other world for the first time. The television camera that televised the historic moment to earth was mounted inside an equipment bay that Armstrong opened as he climbed down the ladder. Armstrong and Aldrin launched off the moon at 1:54 p.m. EDT Monday in the Eagle, ending a lunar surface stay of 21 hours 36 minutes. They first blasted off from the Sea of Tranquillity into an eggshaped orbit and then performed three smooth course corrections to catch up with Michael Collins in the command ship Columbia. The rendezvous occurred about 5.15 p.m. EDT and the two spacecraft linked about 5.35 p.m. The exact time of the rendezvous was not immediately determined because the pilots didn't report to earth. First indication that the docking maneuver was achieved came when ground controllers overheard a discussion between the two spacecraft. After 60 epic hours on and around the moon, they fired their rocket engine and headed toward a Thursday splashdown in the Pacific and 18 days in isolation that will be their initial heroes' reward. "You'll have to open up the LRL doors," Collins radioed as the engine fired at 12:56 a.m. EDT. He referred to the lunar receiving laboratory, an $11 million building here where the three pilots will be quarantined on their return to guarantee that no moon germs peril the earth. A little over 7 hours earlier, Armstrong and Aldrin, flying "right down U.S. 1," piloted their Eagle lunar module to a rendezvous and docking with Collins' command ship Columbia. "How does it feel to have some company?" ground controller Charles M. Duke asked Collins after Armstrong and Aldrin crawled back aboard. "Dammed good, I'll tell ya," said Collins, who flew the Columbia in a lonely, 70-mile orbit for 28 hours while Armstrong and Aldrin took Eagle to a moon landing and Armstrong's first human step there. Monday night Armstrong and Aldrin, first men on the moon, linked up with Columbia, crawled into the command ship with their 80 pounds of rocks and dirt from the moon, and jettisoned the Eagle. "There she goes," Collins radioed. That was at 7:40 p.m. EDT, just about three hours after Armstrong and Aldrin completed a space chase through 12.00 miles and rendezvous and docking with Columbia. Part of the time between the rendezvous and the jettisoning of Eagle was spent by the astronauts vacuuming the insides of both spaceships and all their moonsuits as part of their anti-contamination program. Although scientists concede there is only a remote possibility the astronauts might bring back some unknown organism from the moon, they ordered a 21-day quarantine on them, their rock samples and their equipment. The 21 days began when Eagle landed on the lunar surface Sunday in a swirl of moondust, so if everything goes according to plan Armstrong, Aldrin, and Collins won't be out of quarantine until Sunday. Aug. 10. 18 days from their splashdown. When the Apollo 11 pilots do get out, they're sure to be accorded wild welcomes back to earth almost anywhere in the world they go. The astronauts were told that The New York Times had used the largest headline type in history on the story of the lunar landing and moon walk. "I'm glad it was fit to print." one of them said. Armstrong, 7 minutes, 17 seconds after launch from the moon, told anxious ground controllers. ??GETTING MARRIED?? If You Are, Or If You Desire To Live Alone—Now Is The Time To Make The Move To MEADOWBROOK 15th and Crestline Phone VI 2-4200 "Eagle is in safe orbit, having left Tranquillity Base and leaving behind a replica of our Apollo 11 badge and olive branch." The astronauts also left the U. S. flag, two scientific experiments and more than $1 million worth of equipment they no longer needed, including a $250,- 000 camera. JAYHAWKER TOWERS Apartments - Immediately adjacent to campus. - Now renting 2-bedroom furnished apartments. - All utilities included in rent. - Convenient Location, a Time and Money Saver. Lawrence's Finest Apartment Complex Lawrence's Finest Apartment Complex Inspection 1603 W. 15th Invited Tel. VI 3-4993 For Students on the Go, We're TOPS TOPS Wardrobe Care Centers In By 9-Out By 5 Same Day Service Two Convenient Locations 1517 West 6th 1526 West 23rd Handy Drive-Up Window Easy Parking Primarily Leather 812 Mass., Downtown SALE Most Unusual Fashions—This Side of the Moon Dresses— Summer—Fall Sportswear— Slacks—Jumpsuits 1/2 OFF Blouses—Shorts Swimsuits Cover Ups the VILLAGE SET 922 Massachusetts the VILLAGE SET 922 Massachusetts Guest Editorials Racial prejudice historic By MARY LIND Summer Kansan Reporter Lives there a man who, if born in another time or another place, would not have suffered all his life for his beliefs or differences? It so, he is already a minority group. During the period of the Roman Empire, Christians were thrown to the lions for their beliefs. In medieval times the peasant classes were persecuted, and later in our own colonial times innocent people were burned at the stake because children called them witches. Africans were kidnapped and sold in the United States as slaves. History abounds with such atrocities. It would seem that mankind would learn from past mistakes and failures, but today even another problem complicates such issues. At whom and by whom is racial prejudice aimed? Is it the whites who are prejudiced against the Negroes? Such has been the case for many years. But then there are the black militant groups to consider. At whom is their prejudice aimed, if not whites? As a rule most people are indifferent to such matters. Whether a store owner is Negro or white is of little consequence as long as the goods are of high quality and sales are frequent. Little thought is given to what race the neighbors are as long as their lawn is cut and they buy daughter Susie's Girl Scout cookies. Said one Negro girl, "I'm black and I'm proud, but not necessarily because I'm black." Although this girl has undoubtedly encountered racial prejudice, she hasn't let it throw her. Is the racial prejudice problem really as bad as it is said to be, or has it been blown out of proportion by radical antagonists in search of a cause? Have the news media, by paying so much attention to racial demonstrations, inadvertently strengthened the case for racial differences? Has the civil rights issue become nothing but one mammoth publicity stunt created to aid those in high places? The answers to these questions will bring the answer to what extent racial prejudice exists in the U.S. today. Prejudice is nothing new to man, it has plagued him through the ages and will undoubtedly continue to do so. It is the amount of existing prejudice that has changed from decade to decade and it is the decreasing of this amount that is the starting point of the answer to the problems of racial differences. Black history or American studies? By TERRY ALGREN Summer Kansan Reporter One of the main concerns of educators today is the incorporation of "block history" into social studies curricula. What most of the black studies advocates fail to see, however, is that this incorporation would lead to the need for the study of other groups—the Indians, Jewish, Italians, etc. All of these groups have played roles in American history, therefore, by the extension of the black studies theory-all different groups should be studies as to their specific color, nationality, ideas and other determining factors. What is needed, however, is not black studies or Jewish studies or Pelish studies or Mexican or Indian studies. I believe in American studies—the sum of history of the United States, regardless of who it was who made the history. All persons of the United States should be proud enough of their nation to accept its history. They should work to make future history go "forward together." And if sectional, racial or national interests still conspire to make their history a separate part of American history, they should become distinct parts of social studies—as are world history. Far East history and other histories. 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: $0 a semester or $10 a year. Publisher has second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas, every Tuesday and Friday for the two editions. The Summer Session 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 any opinions expressed in the Summer Session Kansan are not necessarily the opinion of the University of Kansas Administration or the Kansas State Board of Regents. As American history is a composite, small groups who feel they are unfairly represented should work together to make a worthwhile contribution to their nation's history. Executive Staff Don Westerhaus James W. Murray James Seymour Gary Rodney Rodney Osborne Mel Adams Helen Managing Editor Adviser Photography Business Manager Adviser Office Manager H 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 WINNER! 3 ACADEMY AWARDS INCLUDING BEST ACTRESS KATHARINE HEPBURN DON PRI LEVINE — ANAWC CO MASSY FILM PETER O'TOOLE KATHARINE HEPBURN Now! 7:15-9:15 MARTIN POLL THE LION IN WINTER THE Hillcrest JANE MERIDOW JOHN CASTLE TIMOTHY DAFTON ANTHONY DOUKINS NIGEL STOCK NIGEL TERRY JAMES GOLDMAN DESIRE LEVINE JAMES GOLDMAN MARTIN POLL ANTHONY HARRY THE Hillcrest MARTIN POLL COLLEGE AVE. AND 10TH ST. LA PETITE GALERIE Newest Place For Now Fashions 910 Kentucky Lower Lovel Blacks start action; negligent in follow-up By CRISPIN BURNHAM Summer Kansan Reporter In October of 1968, a group of Negro students staged a walk-out at Lawrence High School. They demanded that there be (1) a black queen, (2) a black cheerleader, (3) a black Student Union and (4) a course in black history. Some time later, the entire student body was asked to vote on a measure that would give minority groups a chance to have a cheerleader. A small majority voted, however, and the measure barely passed. The shocking thing about this affair is that only two black students voted. After demanding that the cheerleaders elections be changed, the blacks didn't even have a majority of their group vote on the subject. It is ironic that next year's cheerleading squad at Lawrence High won't have any blacks on it. There are rumors that the Negro students would demand that one be added. I feel that if the black people want their demands to be met they should work together—not by walking out or by riots—but by peaceful means. Only then shall man be equal—no matter what race, creed, or color. And especially color. A man is a man whether he is white, red, black, yellow—or even green. Granada THEATRE...Telephone VI3-5788 Mat. Daily 2:30 Eve. 7:15-9:15 WALT DISNEY productions The Love Bug TECHNICOLOR © 1986 Walt Disney Productions Granada THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-5788 Mat. Daily 2:30 Eve. 7:15-9:15 WALT DISNEY productions' The Love Bug TECHNICOLOR © 1986 Walt Disney Productions Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065 John Wayne Glen Campbell TRUE GRIT TECHNICOLOR® • A PARAUMOUR PICTURE G Mat. Daily 2:30 Eve. 7:15-7:40 three or the Dolls "Planet of The Apes" AND 20 Valley the of Dolls COLOR BY DELUXE PANAVISION SMA PLUS TRUE GRIT "Dead Run" Sunset DRIVE IN THEATRE · West on Highway 40 Open at 7:00 Start at Dusk Hillcrest 2 THE GREAT BANK ROBBERT With apologies to Willie Suiton, Jesse James and Bonnie and Clyde. Stars Zero Mostel Kim Novak 7:15-9:10 Hillcrest 2 THE GREAT BANK ROBBERT With apologies to Willie Sutton Jesse James and Bonnie and Clyde Stars Zero Mostel Kim Novak 7:15-9:10 Hillcrest 3 "GO!-FOR THE FURY, FORCE AND FUN OF if..." LOOK 7:30 9:30 if... Hillcrest "GO!-FOR THE FURY. FORCE AND FUN OF if... LOOK 7:30 9:30 if... KU SUMMER THEATRE REP. '69 presents Plays by American playwrights representative of the past four decades 1930,1940,1950,1960. THE MALE ANIMAL by James Thurber and Elliott Nugent The 1940's comedy which sounds like today, with protest, public controversy—all in a midwestern university town. July 15, 19, 25 Experimental Theatre AH, WILDERNESS by Eugene O'Neill O'Neill's great comedy of the 1930's about the "generation gap" at the turn of the century. July 14,18,22 In-the-Round" Main Stage THE GRASS HARP Truman Capote The comedy-fantasy of the 1950's about the people of spirit against the dogma of society in which they live. July 11, 16, 21, 23 "In-the-Round" Main Stage ONE-ACT PLAYS 1960 Comedies from Broadway OFF & OFF-OFF July 12,17,24,26 Experimental Theatre All performances 8:20 p.m. ● Tele. orders accepted; amount due on receipt of tickets ● Box Office UN 4-3982 (24 hour answering service) ● Hours 10-12 a.m., 1-5 p.m. ● 10-12 Saturdays if a performance that evening ● 7-9 p.m. performance nights No Reserved Seats Single admission tickets for individual shows $1.50 Season coupon books $4.00 each Coupon holders must exchange for tickets for each production prior to date specified on each coupon. UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS MURPHY HALL Displays limited by Art Museum facilities By JEANNETTE HARTMAN Summer Kansan Reporter Because the University of Kansas Art Museum has no elevator, pieces of Wendell Castle furniture, currently on display on the lower floor of the museum, had to be carried downstairs by museum director, Bret A. Wallers, the curator, and various workmen. This was possible because the furniture only weighed up to 200 pounds apiece. Larger exhibits, like sculpture. Wallers reported are ridiculous to even consider because of the greater weight. "Our program is definitely hurt by not having facilities even equal to those had by small colleges and universities all over the United States," Wallers said. He mentioned two other problems—storage space and display space. "Our storage space is so inadequate, it would be laughable if it weren't so sad," he said. Approximately 9,000 pieces are stored in various areas of the building. Often pieces are unavoidably damaged because the storage areas have no climate control. Wallers gave as an example a 17th century Dutch painting on a wooden panel which now has a crack across it. The painting has been stored, off and on, for 10 years in one of many storage areas between the walls of the building and the display rooms. It would cost the University $500 to restore the painting, not to mention the loss in value accompanying the repairs. More than 90 per cent of the museum pieces are in storage like this. Damage is difficult to assess as it occurs over several years. The total value of all museum collections is $2 million. One-million dollars worth of these pieces are displayed in the upper galleries of the museum, which have no climate control. These pieces are no better preserved than if they were in storage, said Wallers. The problem is complicated by the need for office space for a full time faculty of seven from the department of history of art and classroom facilities for 700_students. During the past year, one exhibit gallery was converted into faculty offices. The museum office, intended for two people, now holds four, plus a reference library and storage area for several hundred ceramic pieces. The lack of display space is another problem. No more than one-tenth of the pieces are on display. Occasionally for major exhibits, the permanent collection is moved. But, as Wallers said, "We don't even have a place to store the things when we take them down. And besides, if it's always in storage, what good does it do to have a permanent collection?" During the regular academic year, there are 6-12 temporary exhibits. Some are package exhibits put together by other museums, but the most important ones are put together here from objects the museum has in storage. The museum is a major educational resource of the University "For People in studio arts (drawing, painting and design), it is vital that they see original works, especially contemporary ones. With our present facilities, we are not able to provide for these students." Wallers said. David R. Coffin, chairman of the department of art and archeology at Princeton University, said in his report to the Graduate Council of KU, in 1967: "The greatest strength of the Kansas Department of the History of Art, at present, is its Art Museum. "I believe that the Kansas Museum has one of the most imaginative programs of acquisitions, exhibitions and education of any of the university or college art museums of the country, with Jennings Daylight Donuts Coffee & Sandwich Bar Malls Shopping Center much less resources or stuff than many of these museums. It is obvious that students of all levels of knowledge and interest are fully involved in the operation of the museum and that the museum is thereby a truly 'teaching museum'." the art history and visual arts department what the library is to liberal arts students, or the lab is to science students. "In addition." Wallers continued. "The museum is a resource that is and should be used by all members of the University community." This includes not only the Uniervity's students and faculty, but also the people of Lawrence and visitors, many of whom are school children. Wallers made the analogy that the art museum is to students in These deficiencies in the museum are not new. The University has known for about 10 years that the museum is inadequate, and has been hoping for private funds. "But this just hasn't come about," Wallers said. SIDEWALK BAZAAR SPECIALS! Thursday, 9:30 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. SUMMER — SLACKS SHORTS PANT SKIRTS 1/2 Price Knit Tops----$4 (were to $15) Earrings----50c (were to $2) Knit 1 pc. Swimsuits----$7 (were $18) See other drastically reduced summer items inside the store. FREE PARKING PROJECT 800 ● 835 MASS. ● VI3-4833 Jay SHOPPE Downtown Jly. 22 1969 KANSAN 5 HEADLINE Open for the summer—the Pawn Shop Coffee House. Invites all folk-lovers and artists to come in and display their talents and appreciation with friend—Dave Bailey! See you at the P. S. HOUSE 15 East 8th Street THE HOGE PONGE 17 WEST 9th Conglomerate of the Unique! Handcrafts Sandals Leather Goods Ceramics Candles Glassware Gifts for the discriminating. 17 West 9th MEMO TO ALL KU STUDENTS and STAFF The Secretarial Service has a new expanded office to serve you with the newest, most modern equipment in Lawrence, about all that's the same is the service-good fast, guaranteed-7 days a week, 7 a.m. 'til midnight. ✓ MAGNETIC/TAPE TYPEWRITING WAKE-UP AND ANSWERING SERVICE SPECIAL RATES ON THESIS AND √ TERM PAPER TYPING RESUMES BUSINESS LETTERS GIRL FRIDAY SERVICE (in your office) ABS TELEPHONE CANVASING √ EXPERT TYPING XEROX COPYING SERVICE ✓ MAGIC QUICK PRINT SERVICE MIMEOGRAPHING MAILING LISTS ✓ ENVELOPE ADDRESSING AUTOMATED BUSINESS SERVICES, INC. P.O. Box 423 Lawrence, Kansas 66044 901 Kentucky 842-0111 AUTORAL BOOKS SALES KU summer fashions feature umbrellas Any attempt to briefly sum up "fashion" on the KU campus this summer would be futile. Students, Campers and faculty are assembled from every state in the union, most for only a few weeks or months, and are therefore not attempting to shed their native dress. Umbrellas are currently an accessory and necessity. Black, usually about four feet in diameter, they represent the only uniformity to be found. If you are a guy and a mid-westerner, your uniform probably includes a short-sleeved shirt (tail out), cut off levis, sneakers and an absence of socks. If you are from the West Coast, literally or emotionally, you are most likely seen tripping around campus in an old shirt tucked in and grubby bluejeans from which protrude your sandaled feet, defying KU's air of summer apathy. The females, of course, head the fashion news. From campus grubs and California beach wear to Fifth Avenue chic, the fashion gamut is run. The only point of agreement seems to be the wearing of sandals. Women's footwear this summer is almost invariably anti-shoc. A month ago there existed a wide gulf in sandal styles. Now, however, after many rainstorms, mud bogs, rocky miles and limited-stock Lawrence shoe stores, uniformity has taken a firm hold. "I've given up worrying about what to put on in the morning. Here, everyone dresses strangely and criticizes his neighbors for their weird clothes." This statement from one student about covers "fashion" as it exists on the KU campus this summer. 6 KANSAN Jly.22 1969 Unique plan aids college By EMIKO YANO Summer Kansan Reporter The University of Kansas has grown considerably in the last decade. To accommodate the rising student population, the Colleges-within-the-College program was inaugurated in 1965. Every year, about 5.000 freshmen and sophomores enter the College without attachments in any one field of study. In order to give the students a more personal contact with the College, administrative reorganization had to be arranged. This is the basic function of the College-within-the-College program. All freshmen and sophomores in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences are assigned to one of five separate colleges, according to the living group they have chosen. The administration of each "college" is made up of representatives from the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, the offices of the Dean of Men, Dean of Women and the registrar. In Fall 1966, Centennial College began as a pilot program. For the project 450 freshmen men and women were placed in two residence halls and in similar classes. The main goal was to "bridge the gap between the student's academic and social lives and to provide an administrative center where all questions—academic, social, personal—could receive individual attention." The curriculum of the five Colleges-within-the-College goes beyond the classroom work, Social and extra-curricular activities have been set up, because, as Dean Jerry Lewis, Executive Director of the program, believes, "Education doesn't stop at 50 minute classes." CLOSE-UP LOU RAWLS CLOSE-UP LOU RAWLS 2 Record Set on Capitol Records Capitol $4.99 KIEF'S RECORD & STEREO Capitol HEAD FOR HENRY'S Head For Henry's For A CHEESEBUGER SPECIAL Stop by for lunch, dinner, snack or anytime for a delight you will never forget. HOME OF INSTANT SERVICE & QUALITY 6th & Missouri VI 3-2139 10% DISCOUNT ON CASH & CARRY LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANING - Pick-up and delivery service - Use any of our three convenient locations - Personalized jet lighting service "There's A Definite Difference" At Our Three Convenient Locations: DOWNTOWN 1111 Mass. VI 3-5155 MALLS 23rd and La. VI 3-0895 HILLCREST 9th and Iowa VI 3-0928 ACME Laundry and Dry Cleaners TRADE CLASSIFIED SELL BUY ADS LEASE Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the traveller's KansasManifesto referred to all students who intend to color, creep, or origin national. FOR SALE NOW ON SALE THE HODGE PODGE Handcrafts, Jewelry, Sandals, Leather Goods, Antiques, Glassware, Ceramics, one of the kind gifts. 17 West 9th St. Open 10 a.m.-5:30 p.m. Thurs. till 9:00 p.m. 7-29 AUDIO SALE NOW ON SALE Revised, comprehensive 3rd Edition of "New Analysis of Western Civilization." Carduff's Campus Madhouse, 1241 Oread. 7-29 Right now we are offering 15%; off all AR and Dynaco equipment. See our student special picked especially for this. This is true Audio quality. Your AR-Dynaco dealer: Ray-Audio, Hillcrest Center, aft, 72 and ave. VI 2-1944. 1954 Chevy, $100; or 1958 Ford, $150. Both in good running condition. Ex- cellent low cost transportation. Call VI 3-7584 after 5:30 p.m. 7-22 Magnus Chord Organ with directions $25.00; 1—three speed bicycle; 1—two speed bicycle; $20.00 each; Ze- nith portable V $49.00 V 2-3812 1968 two-door hardtop Super Sport. 396 with 4 speed. Red lined tires and wheel covers. See at 1419 Ohio, Apt. 1, or Call VI 2-2058. Bruno Ventura Guitar with Case, Like new $45.00 Call Jarel VI 3-604-7-25 7-25 BATISKS-TIE-DYES—for sale 24-25-26, 27, 142 Louisiana 1-5 p.m. Two FIRESTONE TOWN & COUNTRY TIRES, used. Volkswagen size $4.50 each. Call VI 3-4529. Rodney Parr 7-29 EVERYONE SAYS Everything in the Pet Field And Free Parking At Grants Drive-in Pet Center Experienced Dependable Personal service 1218 Conn, Law. Pet Ph. VI 3-292 Casa De Taco Deliciously Different Mexican Food NOTICE 1105 Mass. VI 3-9880 Strick's Cafe 732 N. 2nd St. OPEN 7 a.m. to 10 p.m. Monday thru Saturday AUTO WRECKING NEW and USED PARTS Metal Sculpture Supplies Tires and Batteries A Bankmark Store East End of 9th St. VI 3-0956 515 Michigan St. St. B-R-Q-outdoor pit, rib slab to go. $3.30 Rib pit $1.65 Rib sandwich, 95c. 1 chicken $1.20 Briar sandwich, $75. Hours. 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. Closed Sunday and Tuesday. Phone VI 2-9510. 8-5 FOR RENT Need a kitten Kitty? We have one left. Call VI 3-7588 after 3:50 p.m. 7-22 AUDIO SALE If you are interested in a record player or in up-dating your present system, buy an up-to-date interested in Acoustic Research and Dynaco equipment. It's the best buy on the market, just fast and heat at Ray-Audio, Audio Center, aft, and eve 842-1943. 7-29 XEROX SERVICE on Xerox's latest most advanced 3600 III ieluer, Crisper, sharper copies; faster service. Unsurpassed results for these, papers, bulletins. Lawrence Typewriter, 700 Mass. VI 3-3644. 8-5 HEADLINE! We are looking for (you) interesting, turned-on, music, drama, reading, or anything else you can think of for the P.S. HOUSE. If you are interested in entertaining, contact Waldy or Rick at VI 2-1944 NOW. 7-29 ATTENTION! Summer students will do your typing. Call 842-1011. 8-5 THE HODGE PODGE. featuring cramishes by JERRY BRYON. Jewelry, Sandals, and Leather Goods. Old trunks, glassware, and handcrafts. 17 West St. 10. St. 10 a.m.-5:30 p.m. Thurs. 9 11 9:00. Finale ART SALE for the summer 34-25-2021 27. 1242 Louisiana, 1-5 p.m., 7-25 "We Care About What You Wear And If You Care" Bring Your Shoes To 8th Street Shoe Repair For Your Repairs, Shoe Dyeing and Shines. Shoe Shines, One color .50 Two color .75 105 E.8th 8:00-5:00 Now renting for summer and fall University Terrace and Old Mill apartments. Reduced rates for summer A C, carpeting, and pool, Call for appointment 843-1433 for Old Mill and 842-1296 for University Terrace. Closed Saturday at Noon Sleeping rooms with or without kitchen privileges for males. Also furnished apartments. Borders campuses and near downtown. Call 7-295 5707 One bedroom apartments, air-conditioned, carpeted units with parking in campus parking lots. Sue at 1419 Ohio, Apt. 8 T-7-29 8153 or 842-3750 Nicely furnished A/C apt. for summer; 2 bedrm, furn. or unfurn. apt for summer and fall; small studio apt. for men, summer and or fall. Utilities paid All close to Union. Phone VI 3-8534. 7-29 New Studio Apt. at Town Manor. Quiet, furnished. A.C. Steam Heat Parking Professor or mature student. Call 843-8000. 7-29 A C rooms for rent Private entrance 1625 W. 19th, west of Naishtmh Call VI 3-7535 before 9 a.m. or after 6 p.m. or anytime Friday and Saturday 7-25 Room for rent to girl graduate stu- dium UU and JU campus Hilton Drive 2-29 TYPING Want male graduate student to share with two others, nicely furnished apt, close to KU, off-street A C, $35, utilities paid. Call VI 3-4349 or VI 3-3956. Ask for Bob Cope 7-29 Experienced typist will give fast, accurate service on term papers, reports, theses. Call VI 3-0288. 7-29 Will type term papers, themes, thesis, other miscellaneous typing. Have electronic typesetting service Ex- P1-3 V 9-3543 an efficient service Ex- P1-3 V 9-3543 Mrs. Wright 7-29 Will type term papers. Also Gestetner mimegraphing. Jane McEldowney. Phone VI 3-8568. 7-22 Former Harvard and University of Minnesota Secretary will type term papers, reports, etc. Call Mrs. Matilla VI 3-7207 7-29 Electric Machine; thesis, dissertations, papers, etc. Fast, reasonable rates. VI 2-1561 7-22 WANTED Want male student, preferably gra- student to share furn. A C apt. $50 includes utilities. Call VI 2-7920. 7-25 Roommate needed for fall semester Two bedroom apt. Your half. $62.50 plus half utilities per month. Ray Coover, Rt 1, Barnard, Kansas. 7-25 HAROLD'S SERVICE 66 1401 WEST 6$^{th}$ STREET LAWRENCE, KANSAS phone 843-3557 6th & Mo. VI 3-2139 HEAD FOR HENRY'S For Top Quality Head for Henry's HELP WANTED Pay-Le$$ Self Service SHOES Two roommates. Large furn. A C apt. Carpeted Parking available. Female graduation student, offered $37 a month. Carpeted at $49 a week. on week days VI 2-0385 7-29 REGISTERED PHYSICAL THERAPIST with at least one year experience. Flexible, new, creative, coordinated home care program serving Douglas County and Douglas County Visitors. Nurses Assoe 342 Moe Lawrence, Kanwe 1300 W. 23rd Lawrence For Plywood, Moulding Plaster, Shelving Material Come to LOGAN-MOORE LUMBER 1011 N. 3rd VI 3-0931 For TRAVEL TIME --- LET MAUPINTOUR TRAVEL SERVICE Make Your Summer Reservations Now. Malls Shopping Center VI 3-1211 V13-4321 STEERING This is Mr. Meyers using the John Bean LIFT-A MATIC wheel alignment machine. Save your tires . . . line up today! Precise accuracy guaranteed. We also have COMPLETE BARRETT BRAKE SERVICE. FRITZ CO. JAYHAWKER TOWERS Apartments Now renting 2-bedroom furnished apartments. All utilities included in rent. 745 N.H. - Immediately adjacent to campus - Swimming pool—club rooms - Air-conditioned - Elevators - Off-street parking Convenient Location, a Time and Money Saver. Lawrence's Finest Apartment Complex Inspection Invited 1603 W. 15th Tel.VI 3-4993 CLOSE-UP THE LETTERMEN © 2 Record Set CLOSE-UP THE LETTERMEN on Capitol Records Capitol $4.99 KIEF'S RECORD & STEREO CHICKEN SPECIAL SPECIAL FOR ONLY 99c INCLUDES • Baked Potato - Texas Toast RANDY'S RANCH WORLD'S BEST STEAK BUY 1811 W. 6th St. Lawrence, Kansas Summer Kansan Reporter Foreign grad student entry not easy By BARBARA KRIEL Summer Kansan Reporter For the many foreign graduate students coming to KU this fall, the journey has been long and hard. Each student must have attained proficiency in his area of study. This proficiency is judged by both the native country and KU. The student must qualify not just scholastically, but prove adequate knowledge of English and financial security. Upon approval by the graduate school of the transcript, the specific department evaluates it. The Graduate School then reevaluates the applicant's qualifications. Each student is given the Test of English as a Foreign Language. This test, put out by the Educational Testing Service, determines 8 KANSAN Jly. 22 1969 the student's mastery of English. This test is critical in determining a student's acceptance. The test is administered in the student's homeland. The Intensive English Department at KU gives the students another test when they arrive If scores show a need for further study, the student is enrolled in English classes at KU. The student must be able to financially support himself for the first year. This is critically important, because foreign students are not allowed to work during their first year of study. while a foreign student comes here. Both parties must pass the entrance requirements of their foreign school. Few foreign students are awarded scholarships or fellowships. This is due to a lack of available funds. The Institute of International Education does award funds, but they are separate from KU. KU does have an exchange program with various European countries. This enables a KU student to go to Europe Of the foreign graduate students attending KU, 80% are from India and China. Home of the "Big Shef" BURGER CHEF HAMBURGERS Try One Today 814 Iowa JAYHAWKER TOWERS Apartments Now renting 2-bedroom furnished apartments. All utilities included in rent. - Immediately adjacent to campus - Swimming pool—club rooms - Air-conditioned - Elevators - Off-street parking Convenient Location, a Time and Money Saver. Lawrence's Finest Apartment Complex Inspection Invited 1603 W. 15th Tel.VI 3-4993 Campus Living Takes a Lot of Money - The Best, Cheapest and Safest Way to Pav is Bv Our New "D.C." personal checking account. - "D.C." Checks cost less than money orders . . . only 10c! - No minimum balance is required - Money is protected against loss - Cancelled checks prove you paid your bills - Your name printed free on all "D.C." Checks! The best way to pay campus bills is with "D.C." Checks! Open your account today. Jayhawk Special "D.C." Checks designed for students, faculty and friends of the University of Kansas are available only at Douglas County State Bank. DOUGLAS COUNTY STATE BANK THE BANK OF PRESIDENT TERCHE Lawrence's Newest, Most Modern Bank Welcomes You to Lawrence and to K.U. BANK PLENTY OF FREE PARKING, PLUS FOUR CONVENIENT DRIVE-UP WINDOWS Douglas County State Bank "The Bank of Friendly Service" Member F.D.I.C. 9th and Kentucky VI 3-7474 THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN 79th Year, No.13 The University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas Friday, July 25, 1969 All hail return of Columbia, Gem of the Universe!!! ABOARD USS HORNET (UPI)—Apollo 11's astronauts, their footprints stamped forever in history, splashed down in the south Pacific to make good America's commitment to walk on the moon in the 1960's. President Nixon headed the welcoming committee aboard this aircraft carrier 1,000 miles southwest of Honolulu. The explorer's epic voyage ended at 12:50 p.m. EDT. Ahead lay 18 days of isolation as a guarantee they brought no germs back from their walk on the moon's surface. Neil A. Armstrong, Michael Collins and Edwin E. Aldrin, Jr., blazed back through the atmosphere after nearly a million miles in space to complete the goal President John F. Kennedy set for the nation eight years ago. "This is Apollo 11. Everybody take your sweet time. We're doing all right in here." Collins said as frogmen swarmed around them in the water and aircraft circled overhead. The nation's chief space official said the Russians would duplicate the feat within 18 months, and warned his countrymen not to sacrifice their leadership in space by "turning inward." Nixon watched, his face lighted by the first rays of dawn, and frequently grinning broadly, from the flag bridge of this prime recovery ship. The astronauts in the command ship they named Columbia shot straight in from the moon, plowed into the earth's atmosphere in a blazing fireball, and floated down on three big parachutes into the ocean. "Splashdown, splashdown," a helicopter pilot radioed. The spacecraft, as Apollo craft have frequently done in the past, flipped upside down and it took several minutes for flotation bags around its top to pull it upright again. Swimmers dropped into the water from a big SH-3D "Sea King" helicopter and deployed a sea anchor around the rolling spacecraft at 1:01 p.m. EDT. "The crew is excellent," came the word from a hovering helicopter. The flotation collar was attached at 1:05 p.m. and three frogmen in the water inflated it. One helicopter reported that the spacecraft was less than 10 miles from the Hornet. Nixon watched the operation intently, alternately peering out into the deep blue-black sky and watching through binoculars. Sailors lined the rails of the Hornet, dressed in their whites. Although the spacecraft was sighted in its flaming approach by recovery aircraft and fleetingly by sailors on the Hornet itself, it was not visible on television from the carrier, and the splashdown occurred too far away from the carrier to be seen. Nixon was joined by astronaut Frank Borman, and space and government officials including Dr. Thomas O. Paine, administrator of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, and Adm. John S. McCain, Jr., commander of U.S. Pacific forces. Paine told newsmen Russia would probably be on the moon, too, within 18 months and America could not afford to turn away from the space program toward its internal problems. "Our condition is excellent," Collins said from Columbia as the astronauts went into the most complete medical quarantine in history from the moment their hatch was opened by a frogman in the ocean. The frogman, Lt. Clancey Hatleberg, 25, of Chippeway Falls, Wis., opened it and handed through coverall garments which filtered the astronauts breath and sealed them completely, before they went off to enter an aluminum quarantine trailer on the deck. The 60 pounds of lunar rocks and dust they brought back from the moon were to be taken later from their spacecraft and sped to the U.S. Space Center near Houston, Tex. for analysis by the world's top scientists. Fifteen minutes before Apollo 11 entered the atmosphere, the astronauts fired explosive bolts and kicked their service module loose to burn up in the air. Aldrin told ground controllers they saw it "going by," slowly rotating. "You're still looking mighty fine here," ground communicator Ron Evans told the spacemen after the separation. "You're clear for landing." "You're looking mighty fine to us," Evans radioed the crew just before blackout. "See you shortly," came Aldrin's voice. Columbia slammed into the first fringes of air 400,000 feet high northeast of Australia traveling 24,600 miles per hour at 12:35 p.m. EDT. Electrically charged particles, ripped from the superheated air, enveloped the spacecraft and cut off radio communication with the ground. Engineers first encountered the problems of friction-generated heat when they built airplanes to go twice the speed of sound. The early days of the space age brought more problems with military guided missiles. They first tried streamlining. "Half the heat generated by friction was going into the missiles." said Harry Julian Allen of that approach to the problem. He was an aeronautics engineer at the Ames Research Center then. "I reasoned we had to deflect the heat into the air and let it dissipate. Therefore streamlined shapes were the worse possible; they had to be blunt." The blunt end plows into the air first and as the temperature builds rapidly to around 5,000 degrees,the special heat-shield material boils off in superheated gases. The shape of the spacecraft spews the gas out and away from the spaceship and its precious cargo. Inside it's like sitting in an air conditioned office—if the spacecraft hits that layer of air at the right angle. The hole in the sky—about 30 miles in diameter is the critical target. At Apollo 11's speed-24,- 000 miles per hour—a miscalculation could be fatal. Too sharp an angle would push the temperatures higher than the craft could stand and the buffeting of the air would break it up. At too shallow an angle, Apollo 11 would skip off like a stone on water into a long looping orbit. The astronauts jettison the bulk of their supplies before re-entry and they would run out of oxygen before they got close enough to try again. The spacecraft, a blazing fireball in the night sky, had already been spotted by tracking aircraft from the recovery fleet, then by the Hornet itself. Twenty-eight seconds after entering the air, the first weight returned to the astronauts. Then 54 seconds later, they felt the peak gravity load of re-entry-6.12 times their normal weight. The spacecraft dropped to suborbital speed and about two minutes later the masking gasses whiffed away, restoring radio communication after almost $ 3 \frac{1}{2} $ minutes of silence. After, Evans called to the spacecraft several times, the astronauts came cooly on the air and reported all was right on schedule. Three orange-and-white striped 83.5-foot main parachutes were pulled from the compartments at 10,000 feet and slowed the spacecraft from 175 miles an hour to 22 miles an hour, the speed at which it hit the water. Aldrin, Armstrong and Collins dropped into the Pacific Ocean about 940 miles southwest of Honolulu and 230 miles south of Johnston Island at 12:50 p.m. EDT-195 hours 17 minutes after they blasted away from launch pad 39a at Cape Kennedy. (Continued to page 2) All hail Columbia- (Continued from page 1) The seas were warm and moderate and the sun was just coming up over the ocean. The spacecraft turned upside down and the astronauts immediately began the slow process righting it. The same thing has happened twice before. The astronauts flipped a switch, inflating three brown-and-yellow balloons to pop their spacecraft upright. This was a process that normally takes eight to 10 minutes. Five minutes after splashdown, a helicopter reported to the ship that "two flotation bags (the balloons) are visible at this time." "It is coming upright," another circling airplane said. "The bags are inflating." President Nixon, standing on the Hornet bridge with a big grin on his face and his left hand resting atop his right on a rail, watched and chatted with ship's officers. Once he waved in the direction of someone on the deck below. Bedlam broke out in many American cities large and small. Car horns, city and ship sirens screamed and firecrackers crackled in San Francisco, where Mayor Joseph Alioto had asked every noise-making device in the city to be turned on for five minutes. Church bells rang in New England. The astronauts were taken by helicopter to an aluminum trailer on the deck of the Hornet, to be sealed away from the world for 18 days to make sure they did not bring back any deadly germs from the moon. The astronauts stepped on the Hornet's deck at 2:12 p.m. EDT. They waved as they walked steadily, clad in their isolation suits, into the rear door of the trailer that will be kept sealed for a two-day trip to Honolulu on the Hornet and then by air to the U.S. Space Center near Houston, Tex. A moment later one astronauts' face appeared at a window and a great cheer broke out on the hanger deck. In the suburb of Nassau Bay, Tex., near the Space Center, Mrs. Pat Collins watched on television as sailors on the Hornet cheered, and said she was "especially thankful." Americans to honor Eagles SPACE CENTER, Houston (UPI)—The nation can hardly wait to give Appollo 11 astronauts Neil A. Armstrong, Michael Collins and Edwin E. Aldrin, Jr., a hero's welcome back to earth. President Nixon arranged for the astronauts to visit New York, Chicago and Los Angeles on the same day, Aug. 13, after they get out of lunar quarantine. Tickertape parades are planned down New York's Broadway and through Chicago's Loop, and Nix-on will host a dinner that night in their honor in Los Angeles. In addition, San Francisco promises them its biggest parade ever, and Wapakoneta, Ohio—Armstrong's hometown—expects "maybe even hundreds of thousands" for its blowout. These plans were quickly taking shape and the astronauts still had more than a day in space. The space agency expects an avalanche of demands on the astronauts' time now that they are safely home. Russia praises US feat MOSCOW (UPI)—A top Soviet space expert hailed America's Apollo 11 moon mission as one of the most "outstanding and significant" events in the 20th Century and indicated the Soviet Union was working on a new manned space flight. In an article written for Pravda and transmitted by the Soviet news agency Tass, academician Leonid Sedov said, "The Soviet people together with the people of the USA and other countries congratulate the crew of Apollo 11 on this outstanding and significant flight. "Man's walk on the moon win go down into the chronicles of the Twentieth Century as a marvelous event." He said due to the high level of technical development achieved by man, "prospects for interplanetary travel are already outlining." Sedov said the Soviet Union is currently conducting a very extensive space research program. "Soviet space explorations will be continued in various directions including manned space flights," he said, but in keeping with customary Russian silence on planned launchings, did not give any indication when the next manned shot would take place. Astronauts Charles Conrad, Jr., Richard F. Gordon, Jr., and Alan L. Bean were scheduled to blast off in September for a moon landing if Apollo 11 was unsuccessful. SPACE CENTER, Houston (UPI)—Lt. Gen. Sam C. Phillips, Apollo program director, said today the Apollo 12 astronauts will have their moon landing postponed for at least two months. 2 KANSAN Jly. 25 1969 Apollo 12 delayed Before anybody has a chance at them, however, the three spacemen must go through an 18-day quarantine on earth to make sure they didn't bring any unearthly germs with them from the moon. Home of the "Big Shef" BURGER CHEF AMBURGUESA BURGER CHEF The secret to the anticontamination system is the pressure inside the MQF. It maintains air pressure at a lower level than outside, thus keeping germs out because air flows from areas of high pressure to areas of low pressure. Try One Today 814 Iowa As an added safeguard, air removed from the trailer is filtered to 99.99 per cent purity. The astronauts will walk into the trailer's side door where six airplane passenger seats rest on a carpeted floor. Few persons in the space program believe any harmful substances will be brought back from the moon. But just in case they are, NASA has ordered four MQF's at $50,000 each and an $11 million moon isolation building in Houston. Now renting 2-bedroom furnished apartments. All utilities included in rent. - Air-conditioned - Swimming pool—club rooms - Immediately adjacent to campus - Elevators JAYHAWKER TOWERS Apartments - Off-street parking Convenient Location, a Time and Money Saver. Lawrence's Finest Apartment Complex 1603 W. 15th Doctors plan to release them Aug. 11. They will have just one day with their families before they head for New York by Presidential jetliner for the first of three celebrations Aug. 13. Decontamination Lock The trailer's kitchen is located next to the lounge. It has the usual apparatus found in any trailer kitchen with one additional feature-a decontamination transfer lock. Since the astronauts will carry their lunar samples into the MQF when they arrive on the carrier, every one of the samples taken from the lunar surface must pass through the hatch. Costly Precaution When the hatch is closed the chamber is filled with liquid antiseptic for 20 minutes before the material can be removed from the outside. The same process works in reverse to get material into the MQF. Other rooms in the facility are a bedroom with six twin-sized beds and a small bathroom with a tiny shower. Waste water from the sinks, bath and transfer lock empties into tanks where it can be stored after mixing with a strong germ killer. The tanks will be emptied only when scientists are sure it is safe to do so. Film and rock sample containers will be sealed in a plastic sack and dropped in the lock. Inspection Invited There will be two trailers aboard the recovery carrier. In the event one of the astronauts becomes ill, he can be transferred to the second facility. It is called the Mobile Quarantine Facility (MQF) and astronauts Edwin E. "Buzz" Aldrin, Michael Collins and Neil A. Armstrong will take it on only one trip—a one-way journey from the carrier Hornet to Houston where they will enter a special building built to house them for the 18 days scientists believe it will take to determine if they have brought back any alien diseases. SPACE CENTER, Houston (UPI)—It looks like an ordinary house trailer, but that shiny 35-foot long aluminum vehicle houses a large amount of exotic equipment which has been designed for one 66-hour trip. Tel. VI 3-4993 Quarantine facility set LA PETITE GALERIE Newest Place For Now Fashions 910 Kentucky Lower Level MEMO TO ALL KU STUDENTS and STAFF The Secretarial Service has a new expanded office to serve you with the newest, most modern equipment in Lawrence, about all that's the same is the service-good fast, guaranteed-7 days a week, 7 a.m. 'til midnight. MAGNETIC/TAPE TYPEWRITING WAKE-UP AND ANSWERING SERVICE SPECIAL RATES ON THESIS AND ✓ TERM PAPER TYPING RESUMES BUSINESS LETTERS GIRL FRIDAY SERVICE (in your office) √ TELEPHONE CANVASING EXPERT TYPING XEROX COPYING SERVICE MAGIC QUICK PRINT SERVICE MIMEOGRAPHING MAILING LISTS √ ENVELOPE ADDRESSING ABS AUTOMATED BUSINESS SERVICES, INC. P.O. Box 423 Lawrence, Kansas 66044 901 Kentucky 842-0111 Campus Briefs Lecturer appointed Stanley J. Sterling, an assistant professor in the Columbia University School of Social Work the past five years, has been appointed lecturer in the new School of Social Welfare at the University of Kansas. Sterling earned the B.A. degree in 1950 from the University of Miami and the M.S. in 1953 from Columbia's School of Social Work. After professional work and the directorship of group work for the Institute for Crippled and Disabled in New York City, he became senior field instructor in social work at Columbia in 1961. He has served as consultant to the Veterans Administration in New York, the U.S. Public Health Service Hospital there and the public schools of Montelair, N.J. Prof from England Dr. Keith Percival, native of Leeds, England, has been appointed associate professor of linguistics at the University of Kansas. For the past five years he has been chairman of the linguistics department of the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee and was a staff member of the Research Laboratory of Electronics at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1960-64. Dr. Percival received the Ph.D. degree from Yale University in 1964 and the M.A. from Yale in 1959. He earned the B.A. degree from Leeds University in 1951. Eisenhower professor Jly.25 1969 KANSAN 3 Dr. Herbert C. Miller, Jr., chairman of the pediatrics department of the University of Kansas Medical Center in Kansas City, has been renamed the Dwight D Eisenhower-United Cerebral Palsy Professor in Pediatrics. In accordance with the wishes of the late President Eisenhower, the KU Medical Center in 1966 became the first medical school in the midwest and third in the nation designated for this professorship. In that appointment Dr. Miller directs programs supported by an annual research and training grant of $25,000 by the United Cerebral Palsy Research and Education Foundation. One of the principal sculptors of the Philippines is at the University of Kansas this summer. Philippine sculptor Jose Malat Mendoza, of the National Park Development Committee, of the Philippines is studying the techniques of bronze casting during a two-month visit to KU. As the chief sculptor of the National Park Development Committee, Mendoza has been traveling around the world, primarily visiting parks. He earned his Bachelor of Fine Arts degree in commercial art from the University of Santo Tomas, Manila, in 1963. He was a commercial artist until 1965 when he became interested in sculpturing. inflower Dress Factory 19 West 9th hand made originals - dresses - beads - jewelry - shirts - india print KU is picked for third By MIKE BRAHAM Summer Kansan Reports Sunny, Kansas Reporter A record of 202 Mid-America sportswriters and sportscasters picked Oklahoma, Missouri and Kansas to finish first, second and third respectively—in the 1969 Big Eight football season. The survey, conducted by KU sports information director Jay Simon, projected Oklahoma to finish on top with 135 votes. Missouri was picked to place second with 99 votes while the Jayhawks were predicted to pull a third place finish, with 78 votes. Colorado was picked to finish fourth, followed by Nebraska, Kansas State, Oklahoma State and Iowa State. The closest balloting this year came between Oklahoma State and Iowa State for last place as Oklahoma State beat out Iowa State for seventh by 19 votes. In last year's poll, Oklahoma was picked to finish first and KU third. The '68 season instead saw a tie between KU and Oklahoma for the championship. The '68 poll drew a record 157 votes, falling 45 below this year's record 202. 43 sportswriters picked Missouri to finish first while 11 tabbed a first place finish for the Jayhawks. Kansas, Oklahoma and Missouri played in bowl games last season. The Sooners lost to Southern Methodist University in the Astro-Bluebonnet Bowl, Missouri overcame Alabama in the Gator Bowl and KU was edged by Penn State in the Orange Bowl. Hey! Topsy's is Open! 711 West 23rd Malls Shopping Center When you want to— SELL YOUR BOOKS! Bring them to the lower level entrance of the BOOKSTORE THURSDAY:JULY 31, FRIDAY:AUGUST 1, 8:30-4:30 kansas BOOKSTORE union Money well spent The entire flight of Apollo 11, and its most notable part of putting a man on the moon, has been simply "incredible." It has accomplished in just a relatively short time what man has dreamed of since his first moment on earth. And contrary to the objections of those who feel the money spent on space might have been put to better use, the entire space program has greatly benefitted mankind Aside from the obvious external accomplishments which we, the American people, have seen in the space flights we have witnessed, there have been innumerable accomplishments and discoveries that preceded and contributed to these flights which will ultimately benefit us all in our everyday life. When we talk about where that space money could have been used, we should also stop and think for a moment about what it has done. Such things as dietary, communications and radar research which went into the space program will bring about benefits far beyond their original application. When we think about solving the problem of starvation in our country and the world, we should keep in mind that the highly nutritional foods which come in small packages for space travel might also be used to adequately and readily feed starving populations. The television and voice broadcasts which millions of people all over the world saw and heard are only an indication of what space research has done and will continue to do to further man's contact with his fellow man. And the research on the adaptations of radar to many facets of society is astounding. Research is being done in universities throughout the United States in learning to make more precise interpretations of radar maps, not only of bodies in outer space, but also of our own earth. Imagine being able to make radar maps from airplanes flying above the fields of western Kansas, and then being able to interpret those maps to the point of telling what plants are growing in those fields and even detecting diseases in those plants. Research of this nature is being conducted. If some persons feel bound by either conscience or their stomachs to protest money spent on space, are they thereby willing to forget the added food supply which such agricultural applications of space research could help to increase? Perhaps not. Somehow all that space money does not seem to have been so poorly spent. Don Westerhaus Managing Editor Portrait of a professor Quinn likes 'fresh' students By SUE WALKER Summer Kansan Reporter He was late. When he finally arrived we went into his office. His warm smile put his interviewer immediately at ease. "What would you like to know?" He cleared his throat and settled back into the high-backed chair placing his feet on the edge of the desk in front of him. This was Professor Dennis Quinn, director of Pearson College. Past newspaper pictures had not done him justice. His short-cropped brown hair gave way to obvious signs of greying at the sides, complimenting his ruddy handsome face. His voice was soft but persuasive. "I teach early seventeenthcentury literature—primarily poetry and prose. I enjoy teaching undergraduate courses in English best of all." He smoothed out a wrinkle in the blue-white striped shirt indicating perhaps his desire for neatness. "The earlier an instructor gets to his students the fresher they are—they don't have quite as many fixed ideas and attitudes. I aim to influence and impress rather than to force my ideas and opinions upon them. I'm here with the intention of teaching." Quinn holds A.B., M.A., and Ph.D. degrees from the University of Wisconsin. He joined the KU faculty in 1956. He received the $1.000 H. Bernard Fink award for distinguished classroom teaching in 1966, and was cited by students of the College Intermediary Board for his "dynamic lectures." His most recent award and perhaps most prestigious was the HOPE (Honor for the Outstanding Progressive Educator) award for 1968. The senior class annually selects the HOPE recipient. A former student commented, "Professor Quinn really deserved that award. He gives of himself so much and is interested in each of his students. He always finds time." "All I do is tell my students the truth." Quinn revealed, "I use no particular teaching methods and rarely prepare my lectures. I'd rather engage in discussion to raise issues that the students wish to learn about." Quinn gave certain qualifications for good teachers. "First of all I think that intelligence is important. Then comes knowledge and finally the ability to see knowledge as something always new and fresh—to be able to convey a sense of freshness to the students." Waiting astronaut endures solitude SPACE CENTER, Houston (UPI)-Let this be recorded too: That while his two fellow astronauts walked the moon, Michael Collins endured a solitude and an isolation more total than even Adam may have endured in Eden. If Neil A. Armstrong were the first man to walk the moon since man was born, Mike Collins in the command space ship Columbia was the first to orbit the moon with so little contact with his fellow man. All he had for company was a radio receiver and a tape recorder. But the radio was good only when he was on the front side of the moon. Each time the Columbia made its 45-minute sweep behind it there was silence. Collins made 14 lonely orbits while waiting for his two companions in the lunar ship Eagle to rejoin him for the journey back to earth. As Connins vanished behind the moon one orbit. Houston space commentator Terry White said: "Not since Adam has any human known such solitude as Mike KANSAN Jly. 25 1969 Mike Collins would be the first to say that the world properly concentrated all of its attention on Armstrong and Aldrin Sunday during their dramatic descent to the lunar surface in the spaceship Eagle. Yet not even Adam could have been so utterly isolated from living things. For there is the testimony of Genesis that God had already created plant and animal when he said: Collins, with no one to talk to except his tape recorder." But there might have been a bit of wistfulness or lonesomeness in his voice when ground control radioed to Eagle: "Let us make man in our image, after our likeness." "That was a beautiful job, you guys." Visiting Holland and Spain is considered to be his greatest type of relaxation. "We go there quite often just to see the country and to learn about it." Quinn also said that he likes to indulge in the readings of his favorite poet, Virgil. "And don't forget one in the command module," Collins said. Moon baby TOLEDO, Ohio (UPI) — Mrs. Delmar Moon of nearby Elliston gave birth to a boy only hours before America's lunar astronauts blasted off for earth Monday. "I think that in comparing today's poetry to that of my seventeenth-century prose is difficult. There is a scientific outlook on today's poetry. There is just so much I could tell you but I wouldn't want to give you a lecture." His name: Neil Armstrong Moon. 4 He stood up and calmly informed me that the fleas were invading the carpeted offices of the college and that we'd better leave. The Lighter Side 'Bottled air' It wouldn't be good business to introduce bottled air at this time, however. Better we should wait until the atmosphere deteriorates a bit more, meanwhile building up our inventory. Already, on muggy days when the smog index is soaring, the average city dweller likely would pay a handsome price for a whiff of good mountain air. WASHINGTON (UPI) — I've been travelling around the country for the last three weeks, ostensibly on vacation. Actually I was on a business trip. By Dick West — UPI Columnist Now consider that the air probably is being polluted at an even faster rate than water. Indeed, some ecologists figure that at the present rate of pollution the earth's atmosphere will only be good for another 50 years or so. I spent most of the time scouting around for a suitable mountaintop on which to locate a bottled air plant. Tap water in a lot of piaces tastes funny because of so much chlorine is needed to kill bacteria in municipal water systems. I didn't want word of the venture to leak out until I had signed a long-term lease. Now that the deal has been completed, I am ready to start raising the necessary capital. If you dare to come in with me on this project, I can virtually guarantee you riches beyond your wildest dreams. Eventually, I figure, cities will have to start putting chlorine in their air supply as well as the water system. That will make it safe to breathe, but it will smell funny. The investment may not pay off right away, but in 25 or 30 years we should be rolling in dividends. By about 1990, non-medicated air should be getting scarce enough to command premium prices. And by that time we will have our warehouse full of bottled mountain ozone. The idea for going into the bottled air business came to me as I was reading a report that bottled water sales are expected to total about $60 million this year. Thousands of Americans are now buying bottled water from stores, vending machines and route salesmen to avoid drinking tap water. The demand was created primarily by pollution. Drinking heavily chlorinated water straight is bad enough. Mixing it with bourbon is a social felony. So it is easy to see why the bottled water industry, which usually features pure mountain spring water, is prospering. Sex is best taught in school systems By BRAD FLYNN Summer Kansan Reporter In many issues, people tend to speak their minds, no matter how confused or uninformed they may be. This is certainly true about sex education. People should quit their blindeyed shouting and sit back and view the aims and principles of sex education. Sex today, to many minds, is as taboo as it was 50 years ago. Victorianism and conservatism are great influences on our sexual thinking. It is unhealthy to supress and hush up a perfectly natural bodily function. Sex should be considered a pleasurable act as well as a means for creation. In the past, intercourse was viewed as an unpleasant but necessary duty—rather like having an enema. The Sex Information and Education Council of the United States (SIECUS), a prime backer of sex education, has been 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 St. Street, 10022. Mail subscription rates: $6 a semester or $10 a year. Published and seasonally paid issue paid at Lawrence, Kansas, every Tuesday and Friday for the duration of the session. 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 start 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. Executive Staff Managing Editor Managing Editor Media Photography Business Manager Advisor Owner/Manager Don Westerhans Janey W. Murray Jamie R. Murray Gary Seymour Redney Osborne Mel Adams Ike Rall Member Associated Collegiate Press Sex is not best taught at home. Normal parents cannot be good sex educators just as they cannot be good mathematics teachers. Parents ignore the subject, saying, "Oh, he will learn it by himself." He will, too. Out on the street. The Kinsey Report showed that over 75 per cent of all boys in a survey used other boys as their sex educators. Talk about the blind leading the blind! Their aim is to teach that sex is normal, healthy function of the human body—to be treated with respect. What is Communist about that? Many schools, however, shun any reference to humans and either go on teaching reproduction using stamens and pistils—or ignore it completely with a statement like, "Such things are best taught at home." attacked as being Communist and unpatriotic. REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ACCEPTING BY National Educational Advertising Services It's time to move. We have to stop this incomplete and inadecate unprofessionalism. Most of all, we have to lift the beauty of sex out of the streets. 金 READER'S DIGEST SALES & SERVICES, INC. 360 Lexington Ave., New York, N.Y. 10017 Y Give sex education to trained sex educators. Much of the sexual revolution is not because youth doesn't care—it's because they don't know. Youth today needs professionals trained in sex education a lot more than they need a string of four-letter words in an alley. NEW YORK—Arthur J. Goldberg in a letter to California Gov. Ronald Reagan regarding Sirhan B. Sirhan; - Quotes - "There is an increasing body of legal opinion supporting the view that the imposition of the death penalty ... is proscribed by the Eighth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution as 'cruel and unusual punishment.'" WASHINGTON - Sen. Thomas J. McIntyre, D-N.H., discussing the upcoming Senate vote on the ABM: "I believe it stands a good chance of being defaced." 1 Ballet recital debuts tonight By LEA ANNE BROWN Kamper Co-Feature Editor In a panorama of pireouettes, arabesques, leaps and bourees, the ballet division of the Camp will debut in their Fifteenth Annual Ballet Recital. The curtain rises at 7:30 tonight and at 8 p.m. tomorrow to reveal the colorful, Russian-inspired scenes from "Prince Igor." This ballet, "Danse Polovtsienne," was adapted by Marguerite Reed, division director, from the original by M. Folkine. THE SECOND number, "Pas de Joie," features the entire company in the opening and the finale and includes variations and pas de deux. The costumes are styled after a new trend using ribbons and jewels on a white dress. This dance, as well as "Serenade," which follows it, were choreographed by Bud Heidebur. "Serenade" has an all-girl cast dressed in classic ballet dresses. Jane Bair, Miss Kansas of 1969, originally choreographed the next number "Sea Moods" for her pageant talent presentation. It has been adapted and directed by Mrs. Reed. A special lighting effect is used in this dance to achieve an underwater look. TENNIS SHOES, pony tails and blue jeans characterize "Jazz Excerpt" which Raoul Appel, guest dancer, choreographed during his visit to the Camp. After intermission, "Widows Walk," a modern interpretive ballet done in stark black and bare feet, glides onto the shaftlighted stage. It is followed by "La Plus Que Lente," a classic, featuring instructors Marguerite Reed and Larry Long. "Petite Suite," choreographed by Alexandra Zhabarias concludes the second part of the program. This ballet which also uses the entire company is the only classical dance the Camp performs. THE FINALE of the 1969 ballet recital is a character ballet, "Dolly," choreographed by Larry Long. It is the story of a young girl in the Paris of the 1880's. Costumes for this dance were designed after the styles of that period. Special scenery is being brought in from the East Coast. Music for the ballet has been taped and directed by Glenn Bickle, production supervisor. Charles Stewart, Scott Addams and Clarence Seaver are in charge of additional scenery and properties. The nearly 150 costumes in the production were designed and produced by Chez Haehl and his assistants. THE KAMPER KANSAN Volume 6, Issue 5 LAWRENCE, KANSAS Friday, July 25, 1969 AUGUST 1984 Photo by Ken Olson Rising cost of living pushes fees upward By MIKE BRAHAM Kamper Kansan Reporter Inflation and the general rising cost of living forced the Camp to increase the tuition this year, Camp Director Russell L. Wiley has explained. "I want to keep the Camp open," he said. The Camp closed with a deficit last year. Rising teaching salaries, food prices, maintenance costs and postage rates have added to the increase. The rise in mailing costs soared the Camp's postage allotment to more than $30,000 this year. WHILE FIGURES were not available regarding the appor- Queen Kay Porter and King Norm Weinberg tionment of the Camp fees, Wiley said "Every nickel we get from the student fees goes right back into the Camp." Despite the tight Camp budget, partial scholarships are given to every Camper. However, the amounts vary with the need and abilities of the individual. Many outside sources also contribute to the tuition fees of many Campers. Last year's deficit was caused by the sharp rise of living costs in 1968. Now in its 32nd year, the Camp did begin on a small balance which remained in the reserve fund. Wiley described the situation by saying "We live on faith." Royalty is crowned By DEBBIE WUNN Kamper Co-Feature Editor Highlighting an evening of soft lights and romance was the coronation of Camp Queen Kay Porter and Camp King Norm Weinberg at the formal dance held Saturday, July 19. The king and queen were crowned by Russell L. Wiley, Camp director. He presented each a small gift from the Camp. Miss Porter, a tall, slender, blue-eyed blonde is from Amarillo, Texas. Weinberg, from Prairie Village, has smiling green eyes set off by almost black hair. Both king and queen are in the music division and are members of the Concert Band and Symphony Orchestra. Queen Kay is first chair flute while King Norm is a timpanist. As KU freshmen this fall, both will be taking courses directed toward majors in music. Miss Porter hopes to teach private flute lessons at a college or play for Broadway shows after completing her higher education. Teaching or being a studio musician is Weinberg's goal. While in high school, Queen Kay was celebrities editor of the annual, a member of Quill and Scroll, a twirler and a choir member. She also took part in All-State Band and All-Region Band and was elected the outstanding musician in her school. Director wears many different 'hats' 1973 Russell L. Wiley Photo by Don Hoon BY SAYE SUTTON Kamper Co-Editor Like a polygon, Russell L. Wiley is many sided. His life is very diversified with music at its center. At different times one may see a different man. First, Wiley is the musician. His passion for violin and most instruments is apparent. On the stand in the practice room, he demands and his musicians respond actively. His waving baton stops abruptly as his sensitive ear picks up a wrong note. "Trumpets, will you please follow the music!" Fifteen minutes later when he is happy with those two bars, they move on. "It's coming, it's coming." SECONDLY, ONE sees the administrator. He sits behind his desk looming over reams of paper. A line of people form outside his door. "May I speak to him now? This is the third time I've been here today and the sixth time this week." Seventeen-hundred vibrant youths can present plenty of red tape. After passing a barrage of protective secretaries, Wiley's smile fills the room as he extends his large hand in welcome. His Texas uphiring appears in his quiet voice and gentlemanly manner. Here one sees the diplomat. Thirdly, one sees the performer Thoroughly composed, he easily coaxes the music to flow from the musicians. Few conductors display this ease in using their "magic wand." Proudly he speaks about the fine young musicians behind him. Modestly, yet beamingly, he accepts applause. AFTER THE concert is over, it is a different story. He didn't quite receive the excellence he had demanded. Those "fine young musicians" were not up to par. His gentle voice takes on a new tone and the whole group has no trouble hearing him. With furrowed brow and disgusted stance, Wiley tells them they are "fine young musicians" and "fine kids," but if they don't shape up . . . Wiley has a large seasonal family. Two months every year he is a father to over 2,000 teenagers. He is understanding and encouraging.. always ready to listen, maybe not to agree but to listen at least. His office is a nucleus of activity. Notes dance in his eyes. Figures march through his head. He laughs and shouts, but he is a man with a great dream. Anyway you look at it, "It's coming!" And Wiley has seen his family grow. In 1935 his first family contained only 17 Campers. He remembers how he had to literally beg to keep the Camp open and out of financial trouble. King Norm was drum major, band president, percussion ensemble member and was also selected outstanding musician of his high school. After leaving Camp, he will be touring parts of Great Britain and Spain as a member of the Kansas City Youth Symphony. Campaigning took on many fun aspects for the team. On election day, they set up a stand and dispensed about 15 gallons of Kool-Aid. Five supporters also organized a Blues Kazoo Band which presented patriotic concerts in the McColum and Lewis cafeterias. This is Weinberg's sixth year at Camp while Miss Porter has attended three summers. Last summer, he received the distinction of being named the outstanding male music Camper. Annuals are here "Tempo," a photographic momento of life at Camp, was distributed yesterday to those Campers who had ordered it in advance. Seven hundred copies of the yearbook were ordered, which is a drop in sales from last year. Tempos may still be purchased today at Room 214 Murphy Hall. Last year the cost of the Tempo was $3.00, but it had to be raised to $5.00 this year in order to meet the production costs. Contemporary music influences, involves By CHARLES PETTY and JOEL BJORLING Ever heard of the Jefferson Airplane or the Strawberry Alarm Clock? The driving beats and pulsating rhythms of these "hot" groups "turn on" many of the youth of today. With their amplifiers turned up full blast, the psychadelic musicians send their listeners on musical trips in rock palaces such as Fillmore East. Just what is this "new music?" Where did it come from? What does it mean to today's youth? Actually, there is no absolute answer to these questions, but most fans of today's music will agree diverse influences go into it and it really lets you get "involved." One of the pioneering steps in rock was taken about 16 years ago when Bill Haley and his Comets came up with a song called "Rock Around the Clock." The group often drove audiences to the verge of utter hysterics. Then along came Elvis Presley with his wavy haircut, side-burns, flashy white coat, and suede shoes. Nicknamed "Elvis the Pelivis" by horrified parents, he made recording sale history with his "You Ain't Nothin' But a Hound Dog" and "Love Me Tender." Branching out into movies, Elvis is still around today. The Beach Boys appeared in the early 1960's with such hotrod songs as "Little Deuce Coupe" and "Fun, Fun, Fun." The American music scene was becoming dull by this time, but in 1963, America was invaded by a long-haired, howling group from England—the Beatles. The Beatles added a new vitality to pop music. Their records sold by the millions, and their three movies, "A Hard Day's Night," "Help," and most recently, "Yellow Submarine," were great successes. In the fast-paced society a fast-paced music is appropriate. Today's music is moving music. Today's "turned-on" generation "digs" the psychadelic light shows and modern sounds. There's always that search for something new and different. What is the message of this new music? It "tells it like it is." More and more songs are concerned with life, society and problems of the individual. The youth of today wants to be aware of what is going on and music is the medium which informs them. In recent years music has been influenced by various cultures as well as by individual experiments. The pioneering Beatles once again led the way when they brought traces of Eastern music to their tunes. Other groups delved into the music from the Baroque period in Europe. Still others went back to the roots of rock—the blues. Blues bands became bigger in both England and America. Today, everyone has been exposed to the blues through such groups as Cream. Many Campers, involved with music, have definite opinions on its future. Some said it is headed towards traditionalism, while others argue that rock music will remain forever. Still others said music is headed in two directions: back to the blues and more psychadelic. "To go on from here, I can't use words. They don't say enough."—Jefferson Airplane in "Today." THE KAMPER KANSAN Kamper News Office - 112 Flint Hall UN #4-3646 Camp Office - 214 Murphy Hall UN #4-3758 The Kamper Kansan, camp newspaper at the Midwestern Music and Art Center on Fridays. It is written by the members of the Journalism Division of the Camp. The opinions expressed in the editorial columns are those of the editorial staff. The opinions 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. All accommodations for artists who attend the Kamper Kansan are offered without regard to race, creed, or national origin. Executive Staff Co-Editors-in-Chief Les Bryan, Saye Sutton News Editor Peggy Robinson Co-Editorial Editors June Kantz, Gary Manko Co-Feature Editors Lea Anne Brown, Debbie Wunn Co-Feature Editor Harriet Ward Reporters: Emiko Yano, Mary Aguiar, Mike Brahm, Brad Reynolds, Dave Danielson, Dave Appleton, Dave Willingham, Judie Black, Don Lewis, Charles Petty, David McMillan, Blair Yeager, Hollyle Capppleman, Joel Blarling, Steve Yelvington Karanan News Advisor James W. Murray Assistant Advisers Jackie Raymond, Robert Stevens Photo Advisers Gary Mason, William Sevmour That is how one Camper described his student government in a recent survey. Student power can be influential, positive force By GARY MANKO and STEVE YELVINGTON "It's a snow job!" "It's an institution devised to make the students thing they have a voice in the decision-making process," he continued. "But actually the final decisions are made without student opinion being considered." It also revealed many Campers do not remember what their student government's biggest project was last year. Those who did remember reported such uncontroversial things as a homecoming dance, a suggestion box that was emptied twice a year and raising money. A majority of the Campers think their high school student governments are not effective in representing them to their school administrations. Student governments are really elite clubs reserved for status seekers. Nearly 53 percent of the students surveyed said government elections were popularity contests while only 25.5 percent said they were serious political contests. Small schools often have a problem because of strong, self-centered school administration. Schools over 2000 often have a problem where students do not know their representatives and do not realize the potential of a good student government. A school of over 2000 is too big for effective communication and discussion of small matters, and when something big enough for the attention of all the students does come, there may be serious confrontations between students and administrators. This can be avoided by constructive action taken ahead of time by a strong and involved student government. Utopia High is a school of 1600 students. It is a progressive institution, having abolished its antiquated study halls a year ago. Students no longer are forced to go to a programmed study room every day, but go anywhere they want in their free time. Utopia High School, in San Perfecto, Calif. provides a good example of a strong and involved government. A school of 1000 students is the ideal size for building a strong student government. If the government does not become effective at this point, there will be trouble as the school grows. However, the students found the only rooms open to them were the library and the "quiet There were others who felt that a lounge would create a temptation for those students who find it hard to "sit down and study." study" rooms. Many students wanted a place to go where they could talk, have a snack, smoke and just relax. A heated debate arose. Pressure was put on the president to do something. He went to the principal and explained the situation to him. The student government president informed the principal about the situation and discussed with him the possibility of creating a student lounge before the debate on the subject had reached political proportions. Little time was wasted on silly campaign slogans and funny speeches. There was little mention of the nominees' appearance or personality. Instead, the campaign was centered around the lounge issue. The principal agreed that a student lounge could be created if the students voted for it and the student government could raise money to furnish it. On election day, over 80 percent of the student body turned out at the polls. The proloungers were victorious winning all but three of the positions. The lounge was constructed and the students were happy. This is student government at its best. A group of students had a legitimate idea and worked through their student government to accomplish their goals. The pro- and anti-lounge factions united into two opposing parties, each nominating a candidate who campaigned on his party's platform concerning the lounge. A student government's main purpose is to represent the student body by making its desires known to the administration and working toward fulfilling those desires. Student government obligated to aid its administration in improving the school for the benefit of its students. By having an election that revolved around a political topic and not on the popularity of the candidates, the student government can live up to its final ideal. Utopia High, of course, is fictional. No high school can have that effective a student government. Or can they? Student government is the political organization of the student body. The student body, by working through it, makes it effective and by working around it, a waste of time. Sex bounces from streets into educational systems By JUDIE BLACK and DEBBIE WUNN "Take sex out of the schools and put it back on the streets where it belongs!" Although this tongue-in-cheek comment was spoken on NBC's "Laugh-In," deep thought found it not so laugable. People who feel there is no need for sex education are out of touch with the times. With rising numbers of forced marriages, illegitimate births, widespread promiscuity and venereal disease, some sort of sex education is necessary. Moon step stops Earth At 9:56 on a Sunday evening, July 20, 1969, as Neil Armstrong placed his left foot upon the surface of the moon. Earth came to an end. The Egyptians and their Pyramids blew away in the desert wind. Moses again flung the Commandments at the children of Israel. The Grecians no longer turned to Zeus for guidance. Buddha melted. Allah fled. Napoleon went to Waterloo once more. Hitler's tyranic speeches choked in his throat. Victoria, the virgin queen, closed her eyes, shivered and stopped breathing. Washington took a seat in the boat crossing the Delaware and sunk from view. Churchill folded his hands and made "V" with fingers no more. The train of millions and millions of years abruptly halted, withered and died. Van Gogh's paints blurred upon the canvas. Picasso's cubed figures fell to the ground like a pile of child's blocks overturned. God's and Man's fingers touched; the Sistine Chapel collapsed. The black dots and lines of Mozart, Bach and Beethoven turned to fire and burned. Don Quixote lost his insane vision and the windmills were no longer giants. Tom Sawyer's raft flipped over in the current and the boy was gone. Scrooge and the ghosts faded away together. In the USSR, the premier was lost. Mao Tse-Tung left his China forever. Both Golda Meir and Nassar passed away. Harold Wilson and Georges Pompidou were flooded into the channel. Richard Nixon could not be found. Prehistoric bones crashed to the floor in countless museums, broken. Pictures of ancestors in thousands of attics turned to powder. Antique cars stopped their coughing. At 9:56 on a Sunday evening, July 20, 1969, as Neil Armstrong placed his left foot upon the surface of the moon, Earth came to an end. All of it came to an end—the whole world. And left in its place was a planet that belonged to the universe, no longer isolated, no longer alone. Thousands of other worlds waited. Because of parental concern, 60 percent of the nation's public, private and parochial schools have begun within the last five years some type of training in family living and the reproductive process. Dave Danielson According to Alan F. Guttmacher, president of the Planned Parenthood of World Population, "Young people's behavior (sexually) is likely to be responsible behavior if it is based on sound knowledge and healthy attitudes." But when does this knowledge need to be acquired? Many parents feel, as was reported in a recent Newsweek, teaching sex education at the grade school level only incites and arouses youngsters rather than having any educational merit. However, Guttmacher believes sex education should include "an appreciation of human relations and human values." He feels this appreciation can be attained by following a three step program. The initial exposure to the sexual aspect of life would come in the fifth grade. At this level, the essentials of human reproduction would be discussed. In eight grade when many youths begin thinking about boy-girl relationships, subjects such as dating would be covered. In the third step the program would attempt to convey an understanding of adult sexual activity. Many parents feel the home is the only place a subject so personal as sex and related topics should be discussed. Agreed, these adults, however, have too often shirked this important parental duty. Too often parents know as little or less about sex as their offspring. This almost unbelievable situation stems from their parents' inability to deal effectively with the problem of sex. Others have no established lines of communication which would enable them to speak frankly with their children. If youngsters cannot rely on their parents as a source of the knowledge they desire, they will turn to other means of information. Famphlets, books, movies and other forms of literature which could only confuse them are easily obtainable. Charles W. Socarides, a Freudian analyst who specializes in treating serious sexual disorders, said, "In doing away with sex education we may be throwing away untold benefits that will probably come from the programs, including a decrease in crime, violence and lives blighted by sexual maladjustments." It is when adults shirk their parental responsibility concerning sex education for their children the educational complex must assume responsibility to teach that which is the essence of living. Either that or put sex back on the streets. Underground press prospers Publication risky By JUNE KANTZ and DAVID WILLINGHAM What is the "underground press"? Today the connotation of "underground press" has somehow come to represent obscene or revolutionary newspapers that are often published only to financially exploit those foolish enough to buy them. The true meaning of "underground" press is simple. It is a publication that is printed and distributed "underground," that is, without the sanction that would be necessary to publish such a work in complete cooperation with all persons and sources affected by it. The underground press and the suppression of it are almost inseparable. Unsanctioned publications invariably meet opposition. If there were no opposition, there would be no need for them. Suppression of the underground press takes many forms. Throughout the ages the standard punishment of its writers and publishers has been death. In the Dark Ages, publications against rulers or the church were considered to be among the worst of crimes and were dealt with accordingly. American writers and publishers of underground publications flourish with virtually no overt official hindrance. However, the number of them thrown in jail and otherwise restricted on pretexts having little to do with their work on their publications lends a suspicious atmosphere of suppression. During last winter's troubles at San Francisco State College and the nearby Berkley campus, the editors of the Berkely Barb, Gidra and two other unsanctioned newspapers in the area were arrested within a week on different charges, having little to do with their publications. The need for an underground newspaper arises when there is a lack of communication in a school. The most obvious example of this is a school without any newspaper. Such a situation exists when there are not enough interested students, if there is no faculty sponsor or when the principal decides it might be a financial risk to print a school newspaper. Little better off is the school with the "official" newspaper. Such newspapers are often dominated by the editor, controlled by the sponsor or censored by the principal or a combination of these. Letters to the editor may be edited or left out if they do not agree with the editor's beliefs or if they criticize the school. The sponsor may find it necessary to censor some articles to keep his position. Many high school newspapers include little which is relevant to the needs or desires of the students. In such cases an underground newspaper may fill the void. The staffs are volunteers who want to see some changes. If they are not afraid of administrative control, they will print articles which would be censored in the "official" newspaper. They accept contributions from all students. The underground press discusses things such as the ABM, fluoridation, zoning and incompetent teachers—subjects which many "official" newspapers do not discuss. In many cases, students publish an underground newspaper without taking precautions. Such negligence gives the administration an excuse to "punish" these students. For distributing the paper on school grounds, a student can be expelled and branded as an "agitator" on his permanent record. If the paper has no connections with the school, is distributed off the grounds and says nothing untrue about the school, there is little the administration or faculty can do except keep the suspected students out of faculty-chosen organizations. If it meets the needs of the students—the underground newspaper is more popular than the official publication. If the new publication is free, the official paper will have a small circulation and must raise the price to stay in business. Or, the principal or staff may decide it is no longer profitable. The official newspaper must, in order to survive, include things the students want. As long as there is the desire for a free press in the high school, students will meet that desire by printing the kind of newspaper that meets their needs. — Photo by Herman Ward Marijuana and its family raise concern and questions By HOLLYE CAPPLEMAN "And God said, let the earth bring forth grass" . Genesis 1:11. God was speaking of grass which would benefit all mankind and not "grass"—technically known, Cannabis sativa L. or mariana. Ask the hippie and he will tell you "grass" is as old as Eden and he would probably use the Bible to substantiate his contentions. Hippies, however, do not quote from Genesis the comment made by God some 60 verses later, when He dispatched Adam and Eve from their garden: "Personification occurs when You begin by endowing a tree with your own passions, its gleanings and swayings become your own and soon you are the tree. Let us suppose that you are sitting and smoking. Your gaze rests a moment too long on the bluish clouds emerging from your pipe. The notion of a slow, steady, eternal evaporation will take hold of your mind and soon you will apply this notion to your own thoughts and your own thinking substance." One of the most graphic descriptions of the drug was written during the late nineteenth century by the poet Charles Baudelaire. "Cursed is the ground for thy sake," He said. "In sorrow shalt thou eat of it all the days of thy life; thorns also and thistles shall it bring forth to thee; and thou shalt eat the herb of the field." The use of "pot" among the youth of today is widespread, but is the drug safe? According to Daniel Efron. a paychopharmacologist with the National Institute of Mental Health, scientific facts to answer that question are not readily available. "Medical scientists," agrees science writer Patricia McBroom, "do not know, for instance, whether marijuana poses a threat comparable to alcohol, or is more serious, or is less." Psychiatrists define drug addiction as "a state in which a person has lost the power of self-control with reference to a drug and abuses the drug to such an extent that the person or society is harmed." In 1939, the Marijuana Tax Act was passed by Congress. The law attempted to control the use of "pot by employing federal police power and by the imposition of penalties upon both the buyer and the seller when they were not in possession of this special tax stamp. The penalties were increased in 1951 and again in 1956 by the passage of the Federal Narcotics Control Act. Punishment at the federal level for violation of the act may result in maximum sentences ranging from 10 to 40 years in prison. E. R. Bloomquist, M.D., categorizes "pot" users in three main groups: "First," he says, "there are the uneducated and unemployed who have from the beginning used the drug as an added chorus to an already established refrain of antisocial activities." "Group two," he continued, "is far more interested in self-exploration and mind expansion. We find the intellectuals, psuedo-intellectuals and religious and psuedo-religious people in this group." Group three is actually the largest of the three. Bloomquist says it is composed primarily of average, curious, uninhibited people out for a lark—the high school or college student. One fifteen-year-old apprehended by police made this statement as he was arrested, "I don't plan on smoking the stuff; I just keep it around as a status symbol." Other teenagers smoke "pot" because it is easier for them to obtain than alcohol—and less expensive. In recent surveys, as many as 70 per cent of the teenagers interviewed thought marijuana ought to be legalized. The other 30 per cent of those interviewed who did not believe in legalizing the drug, seemed to think that society does not need the burden of another intoxicating drug. Some said the laws should be more lenient; others didn't care. In an editorial that appeared in the Haight Ashbury Freepress, the writer commented, "It seems to be logical that a man has a right to do damn near anything he chooses until he interferes with the rights of others. The exceptions to this must, of course, be where violence or coercion is involved." The time has come to make the decision as to what society does with marijuana. Drugs can offer people an escape through illusions, but there is only one way of life that can give happiness—facing up to reality. If society comes to the point where it cannot do this—the drug will be the victor. Youth are turning from Church By DAVID APPLETON To some teenagers today God does not exist, to others He is a "feeling," a "concept," an "internal spirit" or "something on that order" and to a few He is a superior being. To discover how youth feel about religion, a questionnaire was circulated among Campers. The answers were highly opinionated—some people were even offended to have been asked about their religious beliefs. It seems the only common factor to the answers was that they were all different. Ever since the youth of today have been old enough to understand things, they have had their heads filled with the doctrine of their respective faiths. Yet, when these same children went to school they were taught how to reason to find answers and to question things—not merely take one's words as proof. In the recent Camp survey one-third of the Campers questioned said there was "no God." Another third said that He existed, but only one said "God is the Superior Being." "Is God dead?" This time over half said there has Jly. 25 1969 KAMPER 3 Over half of those interviewed said organized religion is either dead, dying or "sort of sick." One-fourth said religion's place has changed, while the remaining quarter saw no change. Concerning a "trend toward agnosticism or atheism," 100 percent agreed there are definitely more atheists and agnostics today than in the past--although this could be the product of a permissive age. The answers differed greatly concerning the power, control and role of religion. Some said religion had too much power and more than half said it was not beneficial. But most said religion was crucial to our society—whether beneficial or not. been no change in the Almighty, while the remainder said He never existed. One person said the only change was in the "mode of thinking" concerning God. Another surprise was that four-fifths of the answers contended there are harmful religions in the world today, reflecting prejudices young people have acquired from their environment. When asked if their parents and their views on religion were alike, one-half said they were—the other half emphatically said. "No!" "If you were persecuted for your religion and beliefs, how would you react? Would it strengthen you or cause you to falter?" Although answers ranged from "mildly rebel," to "fight to the death," all agreed their beliefs would strengthen and not falter. When asked about the effect caused by a possible disappearance of religion, one-half said there would be little or no change. (one person said the world would be "better off"), while the rest foresaw "moral decay" and an end to society. The questionnaire also asked what religion children would choose if they were raised without any formal religious education, and with no influence whatsoever. Two said the children would choose the religion right for them, several others said the children would start their own religion. But most agreed the children would choose atheism. "Have you ever entertained the idea of changing your religion," was a question to which almost half replied affirmatively. An interesting question asked respondents to classify themselves religiously. Two-thirds claimed they were either "somewhat religious" or "unconcerned with religion." while the remaining third said they were "agnostic or atheist." Not one person said he was "very religious." All in all, young people today are searching for change in many things—including religion. Many still hold their parents' beliefs, but they have modified them. A great number have become completely disillusioned and have turned to agnosticism and atheism. But whatever young people believe in, they believe in strongly. Pavlova's pupil Dancer charmed world KATHERINE HAYNES Ruth Page Homeward bound, Campers look back By JUDIE BLACK Kamper Kansan Reporter Very soon you will be weighted down with suitcases, boxes, dresses, sacks of uneaten food, shoes and dirty laundry for the long trip home. You will walk through the doors of your dorm for the last time and be amazed that six weeks could have passed so quickly. Although you will be slow to admit it, you have grown to like dormitory living. It will be hard to leave... ● the hole you kicked in your right closet door. ● the shower nozzle that never sprayed, only dripped. - the air-conditioned bliss of your room which was kept at a constant 98 degrees. - the privacy of the hall telephone. ● the thorough, daily maid service of your roommate. ● the community hair dryer that blew cold air for 15 minutes. - the quiet elegance of the cafeteria. ● the yellow couch in the northwest corner of the lounge. ● the loving, parental care and concern of your counselor. - the panoramic view of the parking lot from your fifth story window. - the sometimes cool, often beautiful and never predictable Kansas weather. - the cute little black bugs in your bed. - ● the expensive excursions to downtown Lawrence. - the nights of stereo, radio and conversational solitude. ● the unwelcomed rapping at your door each morning at 6 a.m. ● the fourth tree in the third row at the bottom of the hill. the unwelcomed rapping at - the pair of sandals at the bottom of Potter's Lake. - ● the fluffy lumps in your 56- year-old mattress. - the five inches of new muscles in each of your legs. able voice of the public address system. the clear, easily understand- the tears of paring. the last glimpse of Daisy Hill. 4 KAMPER Jly. 25 1969 the tears of parting. By LEA ANNE BROWN Kamner Feature Editor Little more than five feet from the floor, a wispy cap of fawn-colored hair frames the animated face of Ruth Page. Tragic brown eyes dominate that face, yet the lines surrounding them tell of laughter and success. Watching this woman, one does not think immediately of bourées and arabesques, but Ruth Page was perhaps the greatest American ballerina of her time. AT THE age of 11, without any formal training, Miss Page danced for Anna Pavlova and was immediately invited to study privately with the great prima donna in Chicago. According to Miss Page, Pavlova gave her the "spark" which launched the fabulous career including performances all over the world. Looking back, she said, "I was one of those people things just happened to ... I don't know why." MISS PAGE no longer dances professionally, but she has a noticeable reputation as a choreographer and director. "Frankie and Johnny," "The Bells." "Billie Sunday" and "Carmina Burana" are some of her more famous accomplishments. She claims none of the new futuristic ballets really shock her since she was doing "wild things with elastic, masks and strange costumes long ago." A native of Indianapolis, she now divides her time among her home in Chicago, a Paris studio and a villa at St. Tropez on the French Riviera. Advising today's youth, Miss Page chuckled, "Oh, I think all boys should take ballet so they can play football." She continued more seriously, "Dancers of today mustn't ruin their lives for the ballet. They have to be hep about other things too." Then, gesturing impulsively Miss Page concluded, "I guess I was lucky. My life has been one great, marvelous adventure." [Pictures of conductor] —Photo by Steve Yelvington Victor Alessandro Conductor started on back row seat By SAYE SUTTON Kamper Co-Editor Standing on a seat in the back row of a concert hall during World War I, a conductor was in the making. With his grandfather by his side and pencil in hand, Victor Spectacular jump-17-700! By BRAD REYNOLDS "The student plays as much music in these six weeks of Camp as he would normally play during three years of high school," said LeRoy Esau, Camp administrative assistant. The music division has remained the dominant part of Camp enrollment since the Camp began in 1935 with 17 students. Since then the division has expanded, adding more bands, orchestras and choirs along with other classes. This year there are over 700 students in the music section alone. Most Music Campers are busy all week. Each is in an orchestra, band and/or chorus all of which present a concert every weekend. Besides practicing with these groups, many students also take private lessons from instructors at KU. The Campers are expected to practice about one to two hours a day, besides attending their regular classes. There are classes in theory and advanced theory which give the students an opportunity to compose their own music. Emphasis is also placed on individual performance. Auditions are held to give the Campers a chance to play at one of the advanced student recitals which are given Wednesday nights during the last three weeks of Camp. This division is also highlighted with the visits of 14 nationally known musicians who serve as guest conductors during the weekend concerts. Regular conductors include Russell Wiley, Camp Director, who heads the Concert Band; LeRoy Esau, Red Band; Kenneth Bloomquist, Gold Band; Dick Caton, Blue Band; and Gerald Carney, associate director, who heads the Symphony and Concert Orchestras. Choral director is James Ralston. Washington 8 Montana 17 North Dakota 5 Minnesota 42 Wisconsin 34 Michigan 65 Pennsylvania 17 New York 10 Oregon 12 Idaho 13 Yawing 7 South Dakota 15 Iowa 77 Nebraska 72 Illinois 106 Ind. 30 Ohio 59 W.Va. 4 Virginia 24 Delaware Maryland California 79 Arisona 13 New Mexico 17 Oklahoma 105 Arvansas 9 Miss. 11 Alabama 11 Georgia 18 South Carolina 7 Texas 106 Louisiana 23 Florida 15 1969 STATE ATTENDANCE MAP MIDWESTERN MUSIC AND ART CAMP Alessandro waved just as hard and intensely as the conductor before him. Here is where he learned to love music before he could even talk well. For the fourteenth year Alessandro returns as a Camp guest conductor. He controls the young musicians well and though they sit in awe of his demand for excellence, they respect him. PACING BACK and forth he runs through a piece for the first time. The band is tired before he starts. He senses it. He starts out slowly. "Fine, now let's crank it up a bit," comes while rubbing a deservingly tired right arm. They play it again. This time he snaps out the beat orally as if trying to bite the notes off to get the rhythm wanted. Sitting behind a desk later, Alessandro said, "Conducting here at the Camp keeps me posted on how the next generation is developing and thinking musically and otherwise." He said he knows no "generation gap" because his summer work here gives him a definite cross-section of youth across the country. At 16, the NBC Symphony performed a piece that he composed. Since that time he has decided that a good conductor needs to devote himself to conducting alone. In the 31 years that he has been conducting professionally since his first post with the Oklahoma Symphony at the age of 22, he has toured internationally. ALESSANDRO BELIEVES good music needs to have a certain balance between the emotional and intellectual. Too much fantasy or too much reality seem to throw it off in his opinion. Being a conductor of his intensity is demanding. While conducting the New York City Opera in 1967 he became so involved that he unknowingly stuck his baton into the bone of his left hand and went right on directing. It was only when he finished that he realized that half of his baton was in one hand and the other half in the other. In spite of all the snapping and growling he does from the stand, he produces clear and melodic music every time. That is pretty good for a kid with nothing but a pencil. Schedule for final Camper concerts FRIDAY EVENING CONCERT 7:15 p.m., East Side Allen Field House Gold Band David Catron, Conductor Al Rembold, Guest Conductor Pat Lopez, Great Conductor Pete Long, Guest Conductor The Free Lance John Phillip Sousa Chorale Vaclav Nelhybel Scenes from "Du Louvre" Norman Dello Joio I. The Portals II. Children's Gallery III. The Kings of France IV. Finale Catron. conducting Apollo March Anton Bruckner Classic Overture Francois Gossec Oklahoma Rodgers-Hammerstein THEME SONG Irish Tune from County Derry Percy Grainger Catron, conducting SATURDAY AFTERNOON CONCERT 2:15 p.m., University Theatre 2:10 p.m., University Theatre Chamber Choir James Ralston, Conductor Chris Oldfather, Accompanist Guest Conductor Edward Anderson, Guest Conductor Coronation Anthem Handel I. Let Thy Hand Be Strengthened II. Let Justice and Judgement Be Thy Preparation III. Alleluia Come Gentle Spring Haydn Four Pastorales Effinger II. Noon III. Basket Chum-Ba-Ba A Arr. William Martin Arr. William Martin Anderson, conducting Anderson, conducting Concert Orchestra Gerald M. Carney, Conductor Victor Alessandro, Guest Conductor Pete Long, Guest Conductor Long, conducting Toccata Girolamo Frescobaldi Danse Macabre Camille Saint Saens Zampa, Overture Louis J. F. Herold Ballet Music from Faust Charles Gounod Waltz Adagio Baccanale THEME SONG Irish Tune from County Derry...Percy Grainger Country, graduation Alessandro, conducting Red Band R and LeRoy Esau, Conductor Al Rembold, Guest Conductor rete Long, Guest Conductor Einzugs Marsch Johann Strauss Fantasia in G Major J. S. Bach West Side Story Leonard Bernstein Esau, conducting La Forza Del Destino G. Verdi First Movement, "Symphony in B Minor" Franz Schubert Long, conducting THEME SONG Irish Tune from County Derry...Percy Grainger Esau, conducting SUNDAY AFTERNOON CONCERT 2:15 p.m., University Theatre Concert Choir Darrell Benne, Conductor Chris Oldfather, Accompanist Edward D. Anderson, Guest Conductor Evening Song to God Haydn Prayer to Jesus Oldroyd Three Madrigals Emma Lou Diemer I. "O Mistress Mine, where are you roaming?" II. "Take, O take those lips away" III. "Sigh no more, ladies, sigh no more!" Creep Along, Moses Gail Kubik Anderson, conducting Concert Choir, Chamber Choir, and Brass Choir James Ralston, Conductor Darrell Benne, Conductor To Saint Cecilia Norman Dello Joto An American Hymn Cecil Effinger Ralston, conducting Symphony Orchestra Symphony Orchestra Gerald M. Carney, Conductor Victor Alessandro, Guest Conductor Victor Alessandro, Guest Conductor Prelude and Fugue in D Minor Handel-Kindler Polovetsian Dances from Prince Igor Alexander Borodin Dance of the Slave Maidens Dance of the Wildmen Dance of the Archers Finale Carney, conducting Symphony No. 1 in D Major ("The Titan") Gustav Mahler Fourth Movement, In a Stormy Manner Alessandro, conducting THEME SONG Irish Tune from County Derry Percy Grainger Carney, conducting SUNDAY EVENING CONCERT 7:00 p.m., University Theatre Blue Band Kenneth Bloomquist, Conductor Al Rembold, Guest Conductor Pete Long, Guest Conductor Pete Long, Guest Conductor Bloomquist, conducting American Overture for Band Joseph Wilcox-Jenkins Tancredi Overture G. Rossini In Storm and Sunshine J.C. Heed Rembold, conducting Second Symphony Alexander Borodin First movement Long, conducting Finale from Symphony No.1 in G Minor . Kalinnikov Antiphonal Choir provided by Red and Gold Band Bloomquist, conducting Concert Band Russell L. Wiley, Conductor Victor Alessandro, Guest Conductor Overture to the Opera "William Tell" Gioacchino Rizzi Rossini Symphonic Requiem ... Vaclav Nelhybel I. Preambulum III. Passacaglia Danza Finale from the Ballet "Etancia" ... Alberto Ginastera Wiley, conducting Alessandro. conducting Symphony NO. IV in F Minor Peter Tschaikowsky IV. Allegro Vivace 1812 Overture Peter Tschaikowsky THEME SONG Irish Tune from County Derry Percy Grainger Wiley conducting Jly. 25 1969 KANSAN 5 Griff's BURGER BARS A NATIONWIDE SYSTEM OLD FASHION SALE! THURSDAY, FRIDAY,SATURDAY AMERICA'S FAVORITE FOR THE STUDENT 1618 W. 23rd Ham..15 Cheese.20 Fries.12 O-Rings.20 Shakes.20 Fish.19 Gt.Ham..25 Gt.Cheese.34 JAYHAWKER TOWERS Apartments ● Immediately adjacent to campus. ● Now renting 2-bedroom furnished apartments. All utilities included in rent. ● Convenient Location, a Time and Money Saver. Lawrence's Finest Apartment Complex Inspection 1603 W. 15th Invited Tel. VI 3-4993 GO GREEK! - Every President of the United States born since 1820, except two, has been a fraternity man, and every vicepresident since then except two has also been a fraternity man! - More than one out of 27 Americans is Greek! PARTICIPATE IN MEN'S OPEN RUSH JULY 1,-AUG.31, FORMAL RUSH WEEK-SEPT.1-4 Register at Dean of Men's Office 228 Strong Interfraternity Council Office 112B Kansas Union Pavlova's pupil Dancer charmed world Ruth Page Homeward bound, Campers look back By JUDIE BLACK Kamper Kansan Reporter Very soon you will be weighted down with suiteases, boxes, dresses, sacks of uneaten food, shoes and dirty laundry for the long trip home. You will walk through the doors of your dorm for the last time and be amazed that six weeks could have passed so quickly. Although you will be slow to admit it, you have grown to like dormitory living. It will be hard to leave... - the hole you kicked in your right closet door. - ● the shower nozzle that never sprayed, only dripped. - the air-conditioned bliss of your room which was kept at a constant 98 degrees. ● the privacy of the hall telephone. ● the thorough, daily maid service of your roommate. - the community hair dryer that blew cold air for 15 minutes. - the quiet elegance of the cafeteria. - the yellow couch in the northwest corner of the lounge. - the loving, parental care and concern of your counselor. - ● the panoramic view of the parking lot from your fifth story window. - the sometimes cool, often beautiful and never predictable Kansas weather. - the cute little black bugs in your bed. - the expensive excursions to downtown Lawrence. - the nights of stereo, radio and conversational solitude. - ● the unwelcomed rapping at your door each morning at 6 a.m. ● the fourth tree in the third row at the bottom of the hill. - the pair of sandals at the bottom of Potter's Lake. - ● the fluffy lumps in your 56-year-old mattress. - the five inches of new muscles in each of your legs. the clear, easily understandable voice of the public address system. the tears of parting. - the tears of paring. * the last glimpse of Daisy Hill. 4 KAMPER Jly.25 1969 By LEA ANNE BROWN Little more than five feet from the floor, a wispy cap of fawn-colored hair frames the animated face of Ruth Page. Kamper Feature Editor Tragic brown eyes dominate that face, yet the lines surrounding them tell of laughter and success. Watching this woman, one does not think immediately of bourrees and arabesques, but Ruth Page was perhaps the greatest American ballerina of her time. AT THE age of 11, without any formal training, Miss Page danced for Anna Pavlova and was immediately invited to study privately with the great prima donna in Chicago. According to Miss Page, Pavlova gave her the "spark" which launched the fabulous career including performances all over the world. Looking back, she said, "I was one of those people things just happened to ... I don't know why." MISS PAGE no longer dances professionally, but she has a noteable reputation as a choreographer and director. "Frankie and Johnny," "The Bells." "Billie Sunday" and "Carmina Burana" are some of her more famous accomplishments. A native of Indianapolis, she now divides her time among her home in Chicago, a Paris studio and a villa at St. Tropez on the French Riviera. She claims none of the new futuristic ballets really shock her since she was doing "wild things with elastic, masks and strange costumes long ago." Advising today's youth, Miss Page chuckled, "Oh, I think all boys should take ballet so they can play football." She continued more seriously, "Dancers of today mustn't ruin their lives for the ballet. They have to be hep about other things too." Then, gesturing impulsively Miss Page concluded, "I guess I was lucky. My life has been one great, marvelous adventure." -Photo by Steve Yelvington A. H. BALDINI Victor Alessandro Conductor started on back row seat By SAYE SUTTON Kamper Co-Editor Standing on a seat in the back row of a concert hall during World War I, a conductor was in the making. With his grandfather by his side and pencil in hand, Victor Spectacular jump-17-700! By BRAD REYNOLDS "The student plays as much music in these six weeks of Camp as he would normally play during three years of high school," said LeRoy Esau, Camp administrative assistant. The music division has remained the dominant part of Camp enrollment since the Camp began in 1935 with 17 students. Since then the division has expanded, adding more bands, orchestras and choirs along with other classes. This year there are over 700 students in the music section alone. Most Music Campers are busy all week. Each is in an orchestra, band and/or chorus all of which present a concert every weekend. Besides practicing with these groups, many students also take private lessons from instructors at KU. The Campers are expected to practice about one to two hours a day, besides attending their regular classes. There are classes in theory and advanced theory which give the students an opportunity to compose their own music. Emphasis is also placed on individual performance. Auditions are held to give the Campers a chance to play at one of the advanced student recitals which are given Wednesday nights during the last three weeks of Camp. This division is also highlighted with the visits of 14 nationally known musicians who serve as guest conductors during the weekend concerts. Regular conductors include Russell Wiley, Camp Director, who heads the Concert Band; LeRoy Esau, Red Band; Kenneth Bloomquist, Gold Band; Dick Caton, Blue Band; and Gerald Carney, associate director, who heads the Symphony and Concert Orchestras. Choral director is James Raiston. Washington 8 Montana 17 North Dakota 5 Minnesota 42 UNITED STATES Oregon 12 Idaho 13 Wyoming 7 South Dakota 15 Wisconsin 34 Michigan 65 New York 10 Delaware Maryland Nevada 1 Utah 2 Colorado 80 Kansas 571 Missouri 203 Illinois 106 Ind. 30 Ohio 59 W. Va. 4 Virginia 24 North Carolina 7 South Carolina 8 Georgia 18 Florida 15 Alaska-7 Canada-1 Hawaii-1 1969 STATE ATTENDANCE MAP MIDDESTERN MUSIC AND ANT CAMP Alessandro waved just as hard and intensely as the conductor before him. Here is where he learned to love music before he could even talk well. For the fourteenth year Ales-sandro returns as a Camp guest conductor. He controls the young musicians well and though they sit in awe of his demand for excellence, they respect him. PACING BACK and forth he runs through a piece for the first time. The band is tired before he starts. He senses it. He starts out slowly. "Fine, now let's crank it up a bit," comes while rubbing a deservingly tired right arm. They play it again. This time he snaps out the beat orally as if trying to bite the notes off to get the rhythm wanted. Sitting behind a desk later, Alessandro said, "Conducting here at the Camp keeps me posted on how the next generation is developing and thinking musically and otherwise." He said he knows no "generation gap" because his summer work here gives him a definite cross-section of youth across the country. At 16, the NBC Symphony performed a piece that he composed. Since that time he has decided that a good conductor needs to devote himself to conducting alone. In the 31 years that he has been conducting professionally since his first post with the Oklahoma Symphony at the age of 22, he has toured internationally. ALESSANDRO BELIEVES good music needs to have a certain balance between the emotional and intellectual Too much fantasy or too much reality seem to throw it off in his opinion. Being a conductor of his intensity is demanding. While conducting the New York City Opera in 1967 he became so involved that he unknowingly stuck his baton into the bone of his left hand and went right on directing. It was only when he finished that he realized that half of his baton was in one hand and the other half in the other. In spite of all the snapping and growling he does from the stand, he produces clear and melodic music every time. That is pretty good for a kid with nothing but a pencil. Schedule for final Camper concerts FRIDAY EVENING CONCERT 7:15 p.m., East Side Allen Field House Gold Band David Catron, Conductor Al Rembold, Guest Conductor Pete Long, Guest Conductor The Free Lance ... John Phillip Sousa Chorale ... Vaclav Nelhybel Scenes from "Du Louvre" ... Norman Dello Joio I. The Portals II. Children's Gallery III. The Kings of France IV. Finale Catron, conducting Apollo March Anton Bruckner Classic Overture Francois Gossec Oklahoma Rodgers-Hammerstein THEME SONG Irish Tune from County Derry Percy Grainger Catron, conducting SATURDAY AFTERNOON CONCERT 2:15 p.m., University Theatre Chamber Choir James Ralston, Conductor Chris Oldfather, Accompanist dward Anderson. Guest Conductor Coronation Anthem ... Handel I. Let Thy Hand Be Strengthened II. Let Justice and Judgement Be Thy Preparation III. Alleluia Come Gentle Spring ... Haydn Four Pastorales ... Effinger II. Noon III. Basket Chum-Ba-Ra xa Arr. William Martin Long, conducting Anderson, conducting Concert Orchestra Gerald M. Carney, Conductor Victor Alessandro, Guest Conductor Pete Long, Guest Conductor Danse Macabre Camille Saint Saens Toccata Girolamo Frescobaldi Zampa, Overture Louis J. F. Hero'd Ballet Music from Faust Charles Gounod Waltz Adagio Baccanale THEME SONG Irish Tune from County Derry ... Percy Grainger Carney conducting Red Band LeRoy Esau, Conductor Al Rembold, Guest Conductor Pete Long, Guest Conductor Einzugs Marsch Johann Strauss Fantasia in G Major J. S. Bach West Side Story Leonard Bernstein Esau, conducting La Forza Del Destino ... G. Verdi First Movement, "Symphony in B Minor" Franz Schubert Long, conducting THEME SONG Irish Tune from County Derry ... Percy Grainger Esau, conducting SUNDAY AFTERNOON CONCERT 2:15 p.m., University Theatre Concert Choir Darrell Benne, Conductor Chris Oldfather, Accompanist Edward D. Anderson, Guest Conductor Evening Song to God ... Haydn Prayer to Jesus ... Oldroyd Three Madrigals ... Emma Lou Dierem I. "O Mistress Mine, where are you roaming?" II. "Take, O take those lips away" III. "Sigh no more, ladies, sigh no more!" Creep Along, Moses ... Gail Kubik Concert Choir, Chamber Choir, and Brass Choir To Saint Cecilia Norman Dello Joio An American Hymn Cecil Effinger Darrell Benne, Conductor Ralston, conducting Symphony Orchestra Gerald M. Carney, Conductor Victor Alessandro, Guest Conductor Prelude and Fugue in D Minor ... Handel-Kindler Polovetsian Dances from Prince Igor ... Alexander Borodin Dance of the Slave Maidens Dance of the Wildmen Dance of the Archers Finale Carney, conducting Symphony No.1 in D Major ("The Titan") Gustav Mahler Fourth Movement, In a Stormy Manner Alessandro conducting THEME SONG Irish Tune from County Derry Percy Grainger Carney, conducting SUNDAY EVENING CONCERT 7:00 p.m., University Theatre Blue Band Kenneth Bloomquist, Conductor Al Rembold, Guest Conductor Pete Long, Guest Conductor American Overture for Band Joseph Wilcox-Jenkins Tancredi Overture G. Rossini In Storm and Sunshine J.C. Heed Rembold, conducting Second Symphony Alexander Borodin First movement Long, conducting Finale from Symphony No. 1 in G Minor . Kalinnikov Antiphonal Choir provided by Red and Gold Band Bloomquist, conducting Concert Band Russell L. Wiley, Conductor Victor Alessandro, Guest Conductor Overture to the Opera "William Tell" Gioccchino 20 Rossini Symphonic Requiem ... Vaclav Nelhybel I. Preambulum III. Passacaglia Danza Finale from the Ballet "Etancia" ... Alberto III. Passacaglia Danza Finale from the Ballet "Etancia"...Alberto Ginastera Wiley, conducting Wiley, conducting Symphony No. IV in F Minor Peter Tschaikowsky IV. Allegro Vivace Alessandro, conducting 1812 Overture Peter Tschaikowsky THEME SONG Irish Tune from County Derry Percy Grainger Wiley conducting Jly.25 1969 KANSAN 5 Griff's BURGER BARS A NATIONWIDE SYSTEM OLD FASHION SALE! THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY 1618 W. 23rd Ham..15 Cheese .20 Fries .12 O-Rings .20 Shakes .20 Fish .19 Gt. Ham..25 Gt. Cheese .34 AMERICA'S FAVORITE FOR THE STUDENT JAYHAWKER TOWERS Apartments ● Immediately adjacent to campus. ● Now renting 2-bedroom furnished apartments. All utilities included in rent. ● Convenient Location, a Time and Money Saver. Lawrence's Finest Apartment Complex Inspection 1603 W. 15th Invited Tel. VI 3-4993 GO GREEK! - Every President of the United States born since 1820, except two, has been a fraternity man,and every vicepresident since then except two has also been a fraternity man! - More than one out of 27 Americans is Greek! PARTICIPATE IN MEN'S OPEN RUSH JULY 1,-AUG.31, FORMAL RUSH WEEK-SEPT.1-4 Register at Dean of Men's Office 228 Strong Interfraternity Council Office 112B Kansas Union Blue Angel jet makes final landing at KU By CINDY HINES Summer Kansan Reporter "Blue Angels" written in bright yellow letters on the side of the huge blue aircraft drew attention not only to its tremendous size but also to the past granduer of the F-11 jet now stationed at the Lawrence Municipal Airport ior use in the aerospace engineering department's research activities. The jet was acquired when the Navy's "Blue Angels" converted to F-4's—newer, faster and more powerful airplanes. Several of the F-11 jets were then made available to universities through surplus. It was at this point that Dr. David L. Kohlman, associate professor of aerospace engineering, began the long process which resulted in KU's ownership of the "Grumman Tiger." Last year Kohlman sent an involved application to the Navy, requesting one of the planes and describing how it would be used in the aerospace department. In January, KU was recognized as one of the recipients. On the condition that the jet would be used only for ground study. Now the second phase of the operation began. Because the Lawrence Municipal Airport is not equipped to handle jet traffic, the F-11 was flown to Forbes Air Force Base in Topeka. The problem of how to get the jet to Lawrence became more complex as original plans to tow it on the turnpike failed. Even with the wings partially folded, the jet was too wide to pass through the turnpike entrance gates. The next possibility considered was complete removal of the aircraft's wings. However, this proved too difficult a procedure. Kohlman, after learning of plans for a Lawrence Air Show, decided to make the F-11 moving problem a part of the featured activities. Thus, he contacted the Army and requested an airlift. In late May, the F-11 was lifted into the air by a CH-54 helicopter sent from Ft. Sill, Oklahoma. Eupipped with a sling rig, the giant helicopter carried its burden of 15,400 lbs. at an altitude of 1,500 to 2,000 ft., and delivered the jet safely to Lawrence. This fall the senior airplane design class is planning to use the jet as a "workshop" of modern airplane construction. By doing this, they will have a "physical grasp of how the hardware actually looks," Kohlman pointed out. Plans are being made to remove one wing and one tail surface and attach them to a rigid object. Students will then be able to measure deflections caused by loads and learn what pressures these components will withstand. The cockpit may also be used in conjunction with a computer and a screen, much like those used in driver education courses. When sitting in the cockpit and operating the controls, the student will have the feeling of actually flying and will be faced with same problems and dangers that face piplots during flight. Intensive English Center busy By CHERYL GEORGE Summer Kansan Reporter 106 students from 23 foreign countries are attending a 10-week English studies program at the Intensive English Center, held in Foster Hall. Courses in pronunciation, grammar, reading, composition, American society, oral pattern practices and work in the language laboratories are being offered and all designed to help students improve their English skills. Enrollment has increased steadily since the program's beginning in 1964. This summer, students represent Latin America, South America, the Middle East, the Orient and Southeast Asia. Thailand's 31 participants constitute the largest delegation from any single country. The main purpose of the Center is to raise the proficiency level of the students sufficiently to allow them to enter American colleges. Approximately 10-15 per cent of the participants enroll at KU. Any capable advanced student may audit University classes. Jly.25 1969 6 KANSAN Students sponsor themselves or are sponsored by parents, relatives or the Latin America Scholarship Program of American Universities (LASPAU). To receive aid from the LASPAU, students must be in some financial need and do work at the advanced undergraduate or graduate level. They promise to work through their Master's degrees and return to their native countries to teach. Edward T. Erazmus, director of the Center since its start, said, "For the most part, students can get to a satisfactory level in one semester; they can understand, write and read fairly well." "Our goal," explained Erazmus, "is to give the students enough training in one semester to develop enough proficiency to start a program at the university level. Most students are successful in doing this. This program is recognized as a great help to the students." Jennings Daylight Donuts Coffee & Sandwich Bar Malls Shopping Center KENNEDY 5 WALT DISNEY productions' Rascal ...the masked bandit TECHNICOLOR* Released by BUENA VISTA DISTRIBUTION CO., INC. ©1969 Walt Disney Productions —AND— THE STORY OF WALT DISNEY'S MOTION PICTURE BLACKBEARD'S GHOST Rasca the masked bandit THE STORY OF WALP DISNEY'S MOTION PICTURE BLACKBEARD'S GHOST Rascal at 2:10-7:25-10:50! Granada THEATRE Highland V13 2780 Ghost at 3:35-8:50 only! U.S. NAVY - Photo by Scott Chandler Law students helping Prof David Kohlman checks out reporter Cindy Hines on F-1) By DEBBIE SHERRY Summer, Kenson, Reporter Summer Kansan Reporter The Kansas Defender Project, affiliated with National Defender Project and financed by the Ford Foundation, has been a public service to indigent prisoners since 1966. The purpose of the project is to improve criminal aid and assistance in the defense services for poor criminals charged with crime. KU senior law students, enrolled in the Legal Clinic, are assigned the prisoners who have shown written interest and have been approved as needing legal and financial aid by prison officials. Last year, an average of forty seniors enrolled in some phase of the Legal Clinic. Indigent prisoners at the Federal Prison in Leavenworth, State Prison in Lansing and the State Women's Prison are aided by law majors who prepare documents, research cases and give advice in legal matters as well as communicating with prisoners and family relations. "Prisoners feel it is a great day when law students talk to them about their problems," said Paul Wilson, KU professor of law. This program has provided students with a basic understanding of real work in the law profession and supplied needy prisoners with legal aid. ??GETTING MARRIED?? If You Are, Or If You Desire To Live Alone—Now Is The Time To Make The Move To Move To MEADOWBROOK 15th and Crestline Phone VI 2-4200 Dring Your Shoes To 8th Street Shoe Repair For Your Repairs, Shoe Dyeing and Shines. Shoe Shines, One color .50 "We Care About What You Wear And If You Care" 105 E. 8th Two color .75 Closed Saturday at Noon 8:00-5:00 AUTO CLASS Table INSTALLATION AUTO GLASS Sudden Service East End of 9th St.-V1 3-4416 INSOMNIACS... ARISE... IT'S MIDNITE MOVIE MADNESS... THE ROUTINE-BREAK FOR FRIDAY AND SATURDAY NITES! FRIDAY NITE ONLY! all seats $1.25 11:30 p.m. only --- THE MIRRICH CORPORATION SIDNEY ROD POTTERT STEIGER THE NORMAN JEWSON WALTER MIRRISH PRODUCTION "IN THE HEAT OF THE NIGHT" SATURDAY NITE ONLY! "THE GREAT ESCAPE" STEVE 'BULLITT' McQUEEN All Seats $1.25 11:30 p.m. only THE Hillcrest 2 6th & Mo. VI 3-2139 HEAD FOR HENRY'S For Top Quality Head for Henry's Varsity TUENTE ... Telephone VI. 1046 Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065 GREGORY / OMAR PECK / SHARIF CARL FOREMAN'S MACKENNA'S GOLD SUPER PANAVISION TECHNICOLOR' Mat. 2:30 Eve. 7:15-9:45 Eve. 7:15-9:45 THE Hillcrest THE HILLCREST LIVING ASSOCIATION North THE LION IN WINTER Sun-Thurs 8:00 only Sun-Thurs 8:00 only Fri-Sat 7:00-9:45 Hillcrest2 "HOW TO COMMIT MARRIAGE" M TECHNICSLOR CRC Bob Hope-Jackie Gleason 7:30-9:25 Adult $1.25 Child $.50 Hillcrest "FOR MOVIE-GOERS WITH A HUNGER FOR PURE COMEDY!" ATT WEEKEND 7:15 9:15 Adult $1.50 WHAT WILL YOU NEVER HUNGER AT THE WIN? "bedazzled" MADONIK GRAHAM TRADE CLASSIFIED SELL BUY ADSLEASE Accoummodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the annual bulletin must be credited to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin. FOR SALE THE HODGE PODGE. Handerattis, Jewelry, Sandals, Leather Goods, Antiques, Glassware, Ceramics, and one of the kind gifts. 17 West 9th St. Open 10 a.m.-5:30 p.m. Thurs. till 9:00 p.m. 7-29 NOW ON SALE NOW ON SALE Revised, comprehensive 3rd Edition of "New Analysis" Western Civilization." Carduuff's Campus Madhuse, 1241 Iread. 7-29 Bruno Ventura Guitar with Case, Like 145.50 $ Cable Jere. V 3-1604- p.m. 7-25 AUDIO SALE 1968 two-door hardtop Super Sport- 396 with 4 speed. Red lined tires and wheel covers. In top condition. See at 1419 Ohio. Apt 1, or Call VI 2-2058. Right now we are offering 15% off all AR and Dynaco equipment. See our student special, picked especially for you. Our Ar-Dynaco Aero quality. Your AR-Dynoco dealer. The Ray-Audio, Hillcrest Center, aft. and eve. VI 2-1944. 7-29 Two FIRESTONE TOWN & COUNTY TIRES, used, Volkswagen size, $4.50 each Call VI 3-4529, Rodney Parr 7-99 Casa De Taco Deliciously Different Mexican Food BATIKS-S TIE-DYES—for sale 24-25-26-27. 1242 Louisiana 1-5 p.m. NOTICE AUDIO SALE If you are interested in a record playback or up-dating your present session of interest, please be interested in Acoustic Research and Dynacock equipment. It's the best buy you can get. No brag. Just fact. See our Rack Room at Rainbow Center, att, and eye. 842-1944-7-29 515 Michigan St. Bar-B-Q-outdoor pit, rib slab to go. $30: B30 rib order. $1.65 Rib sandwich, 95e; $2 chicken, $1.20 Brisket sandwich, $75: Hours. 1 a.m. to 11 p.m. Closed Sunday and Tuesday. Phone VI 2-9510. 8-5 1105 Mass. VI 3-9880 XEROX SERVICE on Xerox's latest, model. Inspect the hardcover, sharper copies; faster service. Unimpassed results for these papers, paper- type typewriter, Typewriter, Mass. VI 3-3644. 8-5 HEADLINE! We are looking for (you) interesting, anything else you can think of for the P.S. HOUSE. If you are interested anything else, you can call Rick Rick at V 1-2944 NOW 7-29 ATTENTION! Summer students will do your typing. Call 842-1011. 8-5 THE HODGE PODGE. Featuring ce- vet leather and customized Sandals, and Leather Goods. Old trunks, glassware, and handkerchiefs. Truels to 10 a.m.-5:30 p.m. Thrurs till 9:00. Finite ART SALE for the summer 24-25 September 97-124 Louisiana, 1-5 p.m. 7-25 Pay-Less Self Service SHOES 1300 W. 23rd Lawrence Need 2nd upperclass woman for furn bdrm. apt. sept. through Spring $149. Only one room per student. Only 1 bik. From campus HURRY! CALL BAR A AT 842-0719 7-29 FOR RENT Sleeping rooms with or without kitchen privileges for males. Also furnished apartments. Borders cars and near downtown. Call V-3-25767 Now renting for summer and fall, University Terrace and Old Mill apartments. Reduced rates for summer. A C. carpeting, and pool. Call for appointment 843-1433 for Old Mill and 842-1296 for University Terrace. One bedroom apartments, air-conditioned, carpeted units with parking closer than many campus parking lots. 8153 or 842-7500, Apt. 8, Call V. 7-29 8153 or 842-7500, Apt. 8, Call V. 7-29 Nicely furnished A/C apt. for summer; 2 bedroom, furn. or unfurn. apt. for summer and fall; small studio apt. for men, summer and, or fall. Utilities paid. All close to Union. Phone VI 3-8534. 7-29 New Studio Apt. at Town Manor. Quiet, furnished. A.C. Steam Heat. Parking. Professor or mature student. Call 843-8000. 7-29 A/C rooms for rent. Private entrance. 162 W. w19, west of Naimshim. Call VI 3-7535 before 9 a.m. or after 6 p.m. or anytime Friday and Saturday 7-25 Plywood, Moulding Plaster, Shelving Material Come to LOGAN-MOORE LUMBER 1011 3.rd VI 3-0931 For Room for rent to girl graduate stud- ent UU and shopping 7-29 Hilltop Drive Want male student, preferably grad includes utilities. Call VI 7-7920 7-25 includes utilities. Roommate needed for fall semester. Two bedroom apt. Your half: $62.50 plus half utilities per month Ray Covert, R. 1, Barnard, Kansas. 7-25 Want male graduate student to share with two others, nicely furnished car parking. A C, $35, utilities paid. CA 4349 or Y I 3-9565 Ask for Bob Cops WANTED WALK TO CLASS--available Avail 1st: A 4 C 2 bedroom apts. $115 & $120 unfurn: $130 & $135 furn SANTEE Apts 1123 Ind. Call VI 31-281 7-29 Two roommates. Large furn. A/C apt. Carpeted. Parking available. Female graduate. Students prefer $35. includes incl uplift. p.m. on weekdays. VI 2-0385. 7-29 EVERYONE SAYS EVERYONE SAYS Everything in the Pet Field And Free Parking At Grants Drive-In Pet Center Experienced Dependable Personal service 18 Conn., Law. Pet Vl 3-25 1218 Conn., Law, Pet Pth. VI 3-2921 732 N. 2nd St. OPEN 7 a.m. to 10 p.m. Monday thru Saturday Strick's Cafe WANTED Male to share apartments on campus at VI 2-7000 for George Rose 7-29 Former Harvard and University of Minnesota Secretary will type term papers, reports, etc. Call Mrs. Mattila. VI 3-7207. 7-29 TYPING HELP WANTED REGISTERED PHYSICAL THERAPIST with at least one year experience. FLEXIBLE, new, creative, co-ordinated home care program serving Douglas County. Write Douglas County Visitation cards #342. 342. Lawrence, Kan. 7-29 Will type term papers, themes, thesis, other miscellaneous typing. Have electric typewriter and office service. Phone I 3-9545 Mrs. Wright. 7-29 Experienced typist will give fast, accurate service on term papers, 7-29 HAROLD'S SERVICE 66 1401 WEST 6th STREET LAWRENCE, KANSAS phone 843-3557 HEADLINE Open for the summer—the Pawn Shop Coffee House. Invites all folk-lovers and artists to come in and display their talents and appreciation—this weekend—Dave Bailey! See you at the P. S. HOUSE 15 East 8th Street Serving KU Students for 60 Years. LAWRENCE launderers and dry cleaners 1029 NEW HAMP. VI3-3711 "Prompt Pickup & delivery to All Living Groups" TRAVEL TIME LFT LET MAUPINTOUR TRAVEL SERVICE Make Your Summer Reservations Now. Malls Shopping Center VI 3-1211 MGIM at LUM'S 9-11 P.M. TONIGHT Big 16-oz. Budweiser draw-25c 8-oz. Budweiser draw-15c BEEEEEEEEEER! JAYHAWKER TOWERS Apartments Now renting 2-bedroom furnished apartments. All utilities included in rent. - Immediately adjacent to campus - Swimming pool—club rooms - Air-conditioned 1603 W. 15th Tel.VI 3-4993 - Elevators - Off-street parking Convenient Location, a Time and Money Saver. Lawrence's Finest Apartment Complex Inspection Invited CHICKEN SPECIAL SPECIAL FOR ONLY 99c INCLUDES - Baked Potato - Texas Toast RANDY'S RANCH WORLD'S BEST STEAK BUY 1811 W. 6th St. Lawrence, Kansas By MAUREEN EDDY Summer Kansan Reporter "Students are important as individuals," said Mrs. Jeanne Stump, winner of the $1,000 Standard Oil Company of Indiana Foundation award for outstanding classroom teaching, in a recent interview at the Museum of Art. Mrs. Stump, a KU art history instructor, believes in small classes. Although enrollment for her lectures covering art from Egyptian to twentieth century times numbers around 200, she hopes to make an impact upon each student. She tries to use the Museum of Art in teaching and feels it is "one of the most valuable contributions to the cultural life of the University." Modern art is Mrs. Stump's specialty. She studied in Paris for three weeks this summer, doing doctorate work on her favorite artist, K. X. Russell. Russell relates to post impressionistic and symbolic styles. Mrs. Stump received her B.A. degree at the University of Illinois and her masters at KU in 1966. She has since been editor of the "Register," the publication of the Museum of Art, and has taught beginning art courses. Nominated twice for the HOPE Award. Mrs. Stump commented on the high standards of the University of Kansas. As her bright eyes quickly scanned the lobby inside the Museum, she added, "It's unfortunate that some students don't take full advantage of our many cultural opportunities." `Pepper' plays it cool By MARY LIND Summer Kansan Reporter Football's not an easy game ... guys who make it through have to be great," said KU football coach Pepper Rodgers at a recent interview. And KU's Big Eight football team has a "great" coach in Pepper. Known as being exceptionally calm during games, Rodgers admits much of his "calmness" is a front for the benefit of the players. "I just play it cool," he said. The theory behind this statement is that of positive thinking. He feels the players want to think they are going to win every game. "Actually I'm a very concerned person," says Pepper. He proves this by getting up at 4:00 or 5:00 am, on game days. An all-around athlete, he finds exercising relaxes him. Tennis and golf are two favorite pastimes. A busy man all year, the month of July is one of the few chances he has to relax and rest up before fall training, beginning this year on August 29th. Pepper Rodgers came to KU two years ago. Before taking over as KU's head coach, he had been assistant coach at UCLA. 8 KANSAN Jly.25 1969 An interesting facet of Rodgers' charismatic personality is his love for music. "Music makes me feel so good," said Pepper, also staring he'd once wanted to be a singer. "I really can't sing, but I think I can." Actually Rodgers always wanted to be a football coach. He feels the choosing of a career depends on who your heroes are. As a child he liked to read, especially books on sports. His reaction to last year's season is that it was "great" and he's looking for a good upcoming season. Summer Kansan Reporter New Dean starts Aug.1 By DEBBIE WUNN Dale P. Scannell will assume his duties as dean of the School of Education Aug 1, when the resignation of Kenneth Anderson becomes effective. During his administration, enrollment in the School has increased from 426 undergraduate students in 1952 to 1,781 in 1967, and from 161 graduate students to 678. "What Dean Anderson has done for the University and for the School of Education is literally Anderson, who is resigning after 16 years as the dean of the School of Education, plans to return to full-time teaching, concentrating on the field of higher education. He will also act as a consultant to junior colleges and other colleges. Anderson earned his B.S. degree in 1932 from the University of Minnesota as well as his M.A. in 1934, and his Ph.D. in 1949. phenomenal and the University and the state are in his debt," said former Chancellor Clarke W. Wescoe. Anderson has received several awards throughout his career. They include: the Outstanding Achievement Award of the University of Minnesota, election to Sigma Xi, and an award of recognition for outstanding service to the North Central Association of Colleges and secondary schools. Scannell, who was a member of the faculty and administration at KU from 1959 to 1967, was nominated to fill the position by a selection committee of faculty members and students in the School of Education. His nomination was approved by the Kansas Board of Regents Scannell's first collegiate position was at the University of Berkeley in 1958 as acting assistant professor of educational psychology. At KU, he served as director of the Bureau of Educational Research and Service and associate dean of the Graduate School. From 1967 until returning to KU, Scannell held the position of director of the University Evaluation and Examination Service at the University of Iowa. JAYHAWKER TOWERS Apartments Now renting 2-bedroom furnished apartments. All utilities included in rent. - Immediately adjacent to campus - Swimming pool—club rooms - Air-conditioned Elevators Convenient Location, a Time and Money Saver. Lawrence's Finest Apartment Complex - Off-street parking 1603 W. 15th Tel.VI 3-4993 Inspection Invited THE HODGE POOGE 17 WEST 9th Conglomerate of the Unique! Handcrafts Sandals Leather Goods Ceramics Candles Glassware Gifts for the discriminating. 17 West 9th 10% DISCOUNT ON CASH & CARRY LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANING - Pick-up and delivery service - Use any of our three convenient locations - Personalized jet lighting service "There's A Definite Difference" At Our Three Convenient Locations: DOWNTOWN 1111 Mass. VI 3-5155 MALLS 23rd and La. VI 3-0895 HILLCREST 9th and Iowa VI 3-0928 ACME Laundry and Dry Cleaners THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN 79th Year, No.14 The University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas Tuesday, July 29, 1969 KU geochemist to test moon rocks Moon rocks brought to earth aboard Apollo 11 will enable a University of Kansas geochemist to test his theory that the lunar surface may contain water. Prof. Edward J. Zeller and Miss Gisela Dreschhoff, a KU graduate student in physics, will be among the first scientists to examine the precious lunar samples. They expect to depart in a few days for the Manned Spacecraft Center at Houston. Zeller and Luciano B. Ronca of the Boeing Scientific Research Laboratory, Seattle, Wash., will examine lunar samples for chemical alteration and radiation damage caused by the solar wind. Analysis of the samples also will test Zeller's theory that a chemical reaction produces water trapped inside lunar surface materials when they are bombarded by the solar wind (a stream of protons from the run) or solar flare protons (the result of storms on the sun). Zeller and Ronca plan to conduct preliminary tests with equipment available at the Lunar Receiving Laboratory in Houston, and then to bring lunar samples to the University of Kansas for further tests. Their initial tests at Houston may be performed while the lunar samples are still under quarantine. Mariner spacecraft nearing Mars, will send possible life support data PASADENA, Calif. (UPI) — The United States is aiming for a multimillion milestone in space this week which in some respects will surpass even man on the moon. Two littler Mariner spaceships will fly to within 2,000 miles of the planet Mars—one on Thursday and the other next Tuesday. They have no men aboard and after they fly past they will go into eternal orbit around the sun. But the information they will flash back may give scientists the answer to whether the red planet has the environment to support some form of life comparable to what we know on earth. Campers get top awards Eighteen students have been recognized by the journalism division of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp for outstanding work in the 1969 summer program. They were singled out at an awards program Thursday morning in Flint Hall. Certificates and copies of the "Autobiography of William Allen White" were presented to five students, and certificates to the other 13. Judie Black, McPherson; Scott Chandler, Onancock, Va.; Wilma Moore, Wichita; Saye Sutton, Athens, Ga.; and Debbie Wunn, Estherville, Iowa. Awards were made for overall performance, most of the winning students having been enrolled in such classes as reporting, editing, advertising, magazine, graphic arts, radio and television, photography, editorial and feature writing, editorial problems and policies and yearbook. Some of them worked on the camp yearbook, Tempo, and all were staff members of both the Summer Session Kansan and the Kamper Kansan. The other 13 who were recognized: The top five students: Mary Elizabeth Aguiar, Portsmouth, R.I.; David Appleton, Murphysboro, Ill.; Hollye Cappleman, Austin, Texas; David Danielson, Apple Valley, Calif.; Wendy Elliott, Thayer; Cheryl George, Grinnell, Iowa; Jane Glazer, Sioux City, Iowa; Cindy Hines, Martin, S.D.; Donald Ohm, Omaha; David McMillan, Ventura, Calif.; Peggy Robinson, Knoxville, Tenn.; Sue Walker, Colorado Springs, Colo; and David Willingham, College Park, Ga. If the answer is yes, it will be a giant propulsion for the efforts to put American men on Mars. Vice President Spiro Agnew has called for a national commitment to do so by the close of the century. Others are calling for a reappraisal of the space program. Mariner 6, the first of the two 850-pound, windmill-shaped craft, has been on the voyage from launch at Cape Kennedy since Feb. 24 and will have travelled 241 million miles in 156 days when it reaches "near encounter" with Mars at 1:15 a.m. EDT Thursday. Mariner 7 was launched on March 27 and will have flown 197 million miles in 130 days when it approaches 2,000 miles from Mars at 1 a.m. EDT Thursday, Aug. 5. A spokesman at the jet propulsion laboratory at the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena, which has conducted the Mars probes for NASA, speaks rather wistfully of Mariner coming right after the moon landing. "If it hadn't been for Apollo 11," he says, "Mariner would be the No.1 scientific event of 1969." The factor that makes Mariiner 6 and 7 so significant is the meshing of photographic, temperature, and atmospheric findings that may find an answer to man's dream of living things on another planet. Mars is six-tenths the size of earth. Previous scientific research, including the flypast of Mariner 4 in 1965, shows it does have a gaseous atmosphere, its temperatures may be roughly equivalent to those on earth and it has clouds floating above its surface. One of the vital requirements to support of life is water and that is one of the principal clues that Mariner will seek. The world's television public will get another incredible show from space. The two spacecraft are programmed to transmit back 143 still pictures, some showing a closeup of as little as 900 feet of the planet's surface. interpreting the data obtained are Larry J. Kevan, associate professor of chemistry, and Robert J. Friauf, professor of physics. KU Aids office hampered by lack of available funds By TERRY ALGREN Summer Kansan Reporter Students who are in need of financial aid in order to attend KU are the concern of the Office of Student Financial Aid. Robert Billings, director of the office, states that the current problem is not simply that more students are applying than can be given aid, but that more students are applying and less money is given to the office through governmental agencies—and therefore fewer students are being helped. Those who are helped are being helped to a lesser degree than they would have been a few years ago. Aid from the government is given through three main channels. This coming fall, about 700 students will share in about $400,000 worth of Educational Opportunity Grants. Another 250 will benefit from the Work-Study Program, and receive a total of $130,000. The largest of the three programs is the National Defense Students Loans (NDSL). This program will give aid to about 1200 students at KU and it will total over $650,000. Even as much as this seems to be, the amount has been reduced as much as 25 per cent from its level of a few years ago, 2,000 to 2,500 students regularly apply for grants, but only around 1,200 are given aid. 2,500 incoming freshmen have requested consideration for aid in scholarship form for the fall term, but only 600 can be given the scholarships. The problem is federal allocation of funds. Under the NDSL plan, 1,377 KU students were aided in 1965-66. They received $1,014,000 in grants. There were 15 fewer aided in 1967, but the amount of aid was down to $969-600. In 1967-68, the number of students receiving assistance from NDSL was up again, but the total figure of aid was down by $14,000. Last year only 1,124 KU students received the aid, and the total amount was down again, this time to a figure much lower than that of other years----$709,350. During the past four years Zeller and Ronca, who earned the Ph.D. degree at KU, have conducted experiments showing that chemical reactions occur when solids are irradiated with high-energy protons. They expect that the solar wind or solar flare protons produce similar chemical reactions on the lunar surface. Since some of the compounds resulting from these reactions are capable of exploding on contact with oxygen or water, Zeller and Ronca believe the compounds may be hazardous to activities on the lunar surface. Approximately 45 per cent of KU's students will receive aid through the Financial Aid office this fall. Many others will apply, and it will be their misfortune to be rejected as aid applicants because of lack of funds. Little can be done to expand the amount of funds made available. The potential dangers suggested by Zeller's and Ronca's experiments were taken into consideration in planning the Apolla 11 mission, Zeller said. He hopes that the tests he and Ronca will conduct in Houston and at the University of Kansas will be of substantial help in planning future Apollo missions. Other University of Kansas scientists who may assist Zeller, Ronca, and Miss Dreschoff in examining the lunar samples and In laboratory experiments using protons to bombard glass, a silica compound, Zeller found that water was produced by the resulting chemical reaction. The protons, which are the nuclei of hydrogen atoms, jar oxygen atoms loose and react with them, he explained. The silica compound used in his experiments has a close chemical resemblance to the materials scientists believe make up the lunar surface, and the laboratory proton bombardment corresponds to the effects of solar flares. Zeller said NASA is interested in finding a lunar source of water not for drinking, but for fuel. If the solar wind produces water inside the rocks on the moon, as Zeller's experiments indicate it may, the water could be extracted and separated into hydrogen and oxygen by using solar energy. The hydrogen and oxygen could in turn be used for fuel, Zeller explained. If Zeller's theory proves correct, it could be of long-range significance to the space program. A. A. is a woman he be Lea Anne Brown, Journalism Camper, ponders packing chore for homeward trip Opinion roundup on Senator Kennedy By United Press International By United Press International Sen. Edward M. Kennedy's televised account of the automobile accident that killed a young woman continued to draw critical editorial comment from newspapers which said many questions were still unanswered. The New York Times said Kennedy's story "raises more questions than it answers." The Times added: "Personal and political sympathy aside, his emotion-charged address Friday night leaves us less than satisfied with his partial explanations for a gross failure of responsibility, and more than ever convinced that the concerned town, county and state officials of Massachusetts have also failed in their duty thoroughly to investigate this case because of the political personality involved." The Akron Beason-Journal Sun said in an editorial by John S. Knight, president and editor of Knight newspapers: "One must deplore the excessive gloating over his misfortune by some Republicans and other detractors whose blood boils whenever the Kennedy name is mentioned. "The damage to Sen. Kennedy's political aspirations is very real, perhaps fatal. The hurt to members of his family, already plagued by years of misfortune, must be more than most could bear. Isn't that enough?" The Newark, N.J., Sunday News said: "As politics has repeatedly proved, public memory is notoriously short, the reaction of an emotional public almost impossible to guess, and personal crises have been surmounted before. "Nevertheless, more than a mail-order campaign by Massachusetts voters will be required to restore Mr. Kennedy to the privileged place he occupied in the Democratic party prior to the tradey on Chappaquiddick Island." An editorial cartoon by Conrad in the Los Angeles Times portrayed a limousine with the license plate 1972 being hauled out of a pond by a derrick. The Pittsburgh Press said: "Sen. Kennedy's explanation has not rolled away the clouds of doubt as to his qualities in hours of crisis." The Cleveland Plain Dealer: The senator's appearance on television Friday night, forthright as he tried to make it. did not spell out for the American people the complete story of the unusual accident which claimed the life of Mary Joe Kopechne. Moon samples hold many fascinating secrets SPACE CENTER, Houston (UPI)—The moon rocks brought back by the Apollo 11 astronauts, after being unpacked, sliced and quarantined, will become the most studied chunks of stone in history. And if you think the Apollo 11 astronauts are getting a royal welcome, you should see what is planned for the rocks. Some of the brightest people in the world have gathered at the Space Center to welcome two boxes filled with dirt and rocks, carrier USS Hornet still inside the "Columbia" command shu. The rocks, along with the films made on the moon, a strip of foil that was exposed on the lunar surface for more than one hour to collect solar particles, and the filter canister from the vacuum a roll of foil and a used vacuum cleaner bag. The lunar samples, including the two containers of rocks and core samples collected by Armstrong and Aldrin on the lunar surface, were hoisted aboard the cleaner used to clean the astronaut's space suits, were loaded aboard two twin-engine prop planes for a flight to Johnston Island. Then everything was loaded aboard a C-141 Air Force cargo plane for the flight to Ellington AFB near the Space Center. Faculty-student committee picked to choose new journalism dean A joint faculty-student committee will help select the new dean of the William Allen White School of Journalism at the University of Kansas. The committee will begin interviewing candidates in the fall to select a successor for Dr. Warren K. Agee. Dr. Agee resigned to become dean of the Henry W. Grady School of Journalism at the University of Georgia. Lee F. Young, assistant professor of journalism, is serving as acting dean. Dr. Francis H. Heller, dean of faculties, is chairman of the committee. The other faculty members are: Dr Robert W. Ridgway, associate dean of the Graduate School, and Profs. Peter Dart, James E. Dykes, William O. Seymour and John Bremner of the School of Journalism. A full-time security guard is on duty at Ellington to keep the curious away as the samples are loaded into a truck and escorted to the Lunar Receiving Laboratory at the Space Center today. The three student members, all majoring in journalism, are Alan T. Jones, East Aurora, N.Y.; Philip R. Higdon, Prairie Village; and Reacon O'Neill, Overland Park. They represent students enrolled in the news-editorial, radio-TV-film, and advertising sequences. The School of Journalism has had a major growth in the past 2 KANSAN Jly. 29 1969 four years. Enrollment has increased from 135 students in 1965 to 361 undergraduate and 19 graduate students in the 1969 spring semester. During the same period the full-time faculty has increased from 12 to 18. Programs have been added in international communications, communication theory, advertising research, film documentary, magazine, public relations and photojournalism. First words on moon SPACE CENTER, Houston (UPI)—The first words spoken on the moon by Apollo 11 commander Neil A. Armstrong are as much of an enigma now that he's said them as they were before. Before he left for the moon, Armstrong was asked countless times what he would say, and he had no answer. When he stepped onto the lunar surface Sunday night, Armstrong said to the world: "That's one small step for me; one giant leap for mankind." Monday, nobody was sure whether the words were original. A space agency official said he space agency official said he spent several hours studying reference books and could find no quote similar to what Armstrong said. "I guess we'll just have to wait until he gets back," he said. One sample, the contingency lunar soil sample Armstrong collected first on the moon's surface, will go another route, just in case. This sample was placed in the Mobile Quarantine Trailer used to transport the astronauts back to the receiving lab. It will arrive Sunday. - Immediately adjacent to campus - Swimming pool—club rooms - Off-street parking - Now renting 2-bedroom furnished apartments All utilities included in rent. - Elevators - Air-conditioned Once the samples are so secured and isolated, then the scientists, leading men in all areas of physical and chemical sciences, will start the job of trying to unlock the secrets they may contain. Convenient Location, a Time and Money Saver. Lawrence's Finest Apartment Complex JAYHAWKER TOWERS Apartments Then, the pieces of rock—ranging in size from a single grain to several hundred grams—will be shipped to 142 scientists in various parts of the world. They will use them to hunt for the secrets of the moon. 1603 W. 15th Tel.VI3-4993 quarantine manager, said the animals and plants were raised in germ-free environments and have an "exquisite sensitivity to infection." For 50 days the pieces of lunar landscape will be kept in isolation at the Lunar Receiving Laboratory (LRL) here while a team of scientists make certain there are no dangerous elements on, in or around them. "We will know more about those lunar rocks than any comparable terrestrial rocks," said Dr. Wilmot N. Hess, director of science applications at the manned spacecraft center. Inspection Invited This is where the first word could come if a strange moon organism affects earth forms of life. Testing Rocks While the soil and rocks are being quarantined, the Apollo 11 astronauts—Neil A. Armstrong, Edwin E. "Buzz" Aldrin and Michael Collins—will be undergoing a very similar process. For 21 days from the time the Eagle lunar module hatch was closed, the astronauts will not be considered safe. A team of scientists will live with them in the specially-designed quarantine facility through the period considered long enough for any lunar disease to show itself. The rocks will undergo radiation and gas tests in vacuum moonlike conditions before being sliced wafer thin and sent to members of the hand-picked study team. The containers they are in will be given acid baths before they are opened to keep earth germs from spoiling the virgin condition of the moon rock. For the lunar samples, first-class handling all the way. Although the "clean rooms" employ every possible tactic to keep living things from coming into contact with possible contamination, one section of the LRL will be used to deliberately expose plants, white mice, oysters, minnows and single-cell animals to the untouched lunar rock. However, there were no plans for a ticker-tape parade. Dr. William Kemmerer, LRL If You Are, Or If You Desire To Live Alone—Now Is The Time To Make The Move To ??GETTING MARRIED?? MEADOWBROOK 15th and Crestline Phone VI 2-4200 HEAD FOR HENRY'S Thank You Jayhawkers and Faculty For Eating Out at Henry's This Summer! Come Back Anytime! HOME OF INSTANT SERVICE & QUALITY 6th & Missouri VI 3-2139 Computers—like humans—need time and money By WENDY ELLIOTT Summer Kansan Reporter Harried journalists may have been overlooking the answer to their dreams, Tucked away in a corner of Summerfield, artfully disguised as Room 110 is "The Big Blue Box." This wonder machine could revolutionize the journalistic world. Given proper information, along with a reasonable span of time and money. "The Box" could spit out a news story-complete right down to the Kansan writing style. At this point, before professional and would-be journalists invade Summerfield, there are some things that should be explained. First, as may have been suspected, "The Box" is none other than the GE 635 computer housed in the KU computation center. Secondly, proper information would consist of feeding all the Kansans for the past year into the computer. Information must be reduced to something it can understand, such as numbers. Next some diligent person must make up a program telling the computer certain things to look for in the writing. Examples would be: (1) How often adjectives are used in each paragraph, (2) How far the verbs usually are from the noun, or (3) What level words are used most. This helps to establish the standard Kansas style. Now the facts for the story are ready to be run. The computer can rearrange, make coherent sentences and produce grammatically correct copy. There are drawbacks to this method, however. Some people might feel the element of time is important. A project of this caliber would take about a year to complete. Those scientifically curious people to whom time is no problem, may have their minds changed at the mention of a cost soaring to nearly 1.5 million dollars. Jly. 29 1969 KANSAN 3 Most people don't realize the effects the computation center has on this campus. Many jobs that are taken for granted would virtually come to a standstill without the computers. A graphic example comes to mind in the fall of each year. Approximately 17,000 students are enrolled in three days for the regular school year at KU. Each student has to have records showing his qualifications for college; high school transcripts, test scores, high school activities and grade point averages. All this information has previously been sent to the college and compiled in computer tapes. When the students enroll, these are checked. The records are continued throughout college life and kept on file for about ten years. Professors also find use for the computer. It can grade certain types of tests and make a comparative analysis. This means it can show what percentage of the class answered each question which way on a multiple choice test, for example, if 40 per cent of the class missed a particular question, the instructor would know that either he didn't cover that area very well or that he simply wasn't getting through. The computer is also used in compiling grade point averages. All this involves time and money, and of course, the proper programs. If major projects are planned, outrageous prices may be expected. Regular programs will run anywhere from $1 to $1,000, depending whether it is a short or long job. The expense is the cost of the computer plus manpower to run it. Average time to run a program is 3-4 hours. There are reports of jobs taking only a half hour. Other computers may take several days. Programs are accumulated much the same as a library collects books. New programs are continually being written; those likely to be in demand are added to the "library." KU produces a large number of programs supplemented by those bought from other colleges. Computer privileges are not open to everyone. Professors and students make up the bulk of the work. School policy, plus a shortage of space, workers and time-prevent it from being open to the public. in one second. Print-out proceeds at 1,000 lines a minute; an equivalent of 260 typists producing 100 words per minute for 24 continuous hours. The Computation Center has 3 computers. The GE 635 is the largest computer of its kind and would cost nearly $3\frac{1}{2}$ million dollars. According to an employee, "The great thing about the computer is that it can remember and it's fast." Two numbers can be added in 1.8 millionth of a second. This would compile the numbers of all the Kansas City phone books WHILE IN LAWRENCE BANK AT Checking accounts . . . savings accounts . . . financial advice . . . whatever the banking need, you'll find help in a hurry at University State. We're the Lawrence bank with the student's point of view (we're even named for you) . . . try us soon. University State Bank Your community minded bank . . . 955 Iowa Street Vlking 3-4700. Member F.D.I.C. VIVIENNE BRAUN TRANSFER SALE SALE MERCHANDISE SENT FROM OUR THREE KANSAS CITY STORES WILL BE PUT ON SALE AT 1/2 OFF BEGINS WEDNESDAY ALL SALES FINAL... ALTERATION EXTRA MISTER GUY Clothing Consultants 920 MASSACHUSETTS Campers were great! One of my colleagues just met me in the hall and said, "Well, they're gone." For a few seconds I was puzzled, wondering if somebody had been in town that I should have known about; then I realized he was talking about our high school kids. They're gone, all right, and Flint Hall is quieter. Maybe you noticed it when you drove to work this morning: No kids streaming from Daisy Hill, holding up traffic at the Murphy Hall intersection. The whole campus seems quieter. And though we can relax a little, we must admit that we've lost something from our lives: in our case 86 bright young people who sometimes wore us out but who gave us six inspiring weeks. Some of us who have worked with the high school students over the years (seven summers, in my case) sometimes wonder if the University as a whole has any real appreciation of the significance of the campers. Some people, we gather from their comments, think we're playing a game for six weeks, and that we're not engaged in the real work of the world as we piddle around with our high school kids. Others maybe know what we know: that a full-fledged academic program is in operation for six weeks. That it's a strain. But also it's something extremely gratifying to the camp faculty. We often think of the good will (and, in some cases, the bad will) felt toward the University of Kansas by those 2,000 young people who have returned, now, to their homes in all of the 50 states. We look for some of these people to return, but we know that even those who don't return have good feelings toward the place where they spent six inspiring (and hot) weeks in the summer of 1969. We in journalism have a special involvement with these students, for they work with us on the Summer Session Kansan and on Tempo, and they publish their own supplement to the Kansan. We come to know most of the students well. We are almost always impressed with their ability. But what we remember most is the enthusiasm. High school students have not yet taken on that blase attitude that so many university students have. They behave like high school students, and this is what some of us like best, especially when we can observe that in many cases they think as well and know as much as students on the university level. They're a little more sophisticated than they used to be, and some are a little readier to go out and fight great battles against injustice and the hated establishment (two terms that to some students seem synonymous). But they are still excited about putting out a better school paper or yearbook, and they come back to us to report, delightedly, that they have just seen the Museum of Natural History and think it's really "cool." How many KU freshmen would make such an admission? The summer of 1969 was a special one for our campers, because it was the summer they watched three men leave for, land on, and depart from the moon. It was an especially hot summer, too, and an especially wet one, and we wonder how many parents of campers were puzzled by depressing weather reports from their children: the day camp started was cool and lovely, and the day it ended was the same, and those are the two days father and mother were in town. Little vignettes brightened the summer for those of us who taught the camp bunch. There were always a few who discovered the freedom of being away from home and decided to experiment with things Dad or Mother forbids: long hair, short skirts, smoking. There were a few who preferred sitting under the trees to coming to class, and occasionally a summons was necessary. There was the usual student bitterness toward identification tags. There was a panicky last week when students, parents and camp officials became convinced that it would be necessary to get the kids off the campus before air transportation was halted. There were the teary goodbyes, and the Tempos to sign, and a lot of squealing girls running through the halls. And, for us, a thrilling awards program, when those who had not been bused to Kansas City saw some of their friends recognized, heard their own names called out, and unselfishly applauded those who received the top recognitions. And the long hot six weeks came to an end, and the weekend became an anticlimax, and Monday morning we realized that we really missed the noisy, enthusiastic, extremely able Summer Class of 1969. —Calder M. Pickett (Journalism Camp Co-Director) The Lighter Side UFO's sighted "It passed right over my head," said Mrs. Maudie Tribling, who lives in Crater 22. "I could see two wierd-looking creatures peering out of the windows as it went by." By Dick West — UPI Columnist Despite official skepticism, however, residents of the Sea of Tranquillity insisted they saw a strange vehicle land on Sunday and take off again Monday. THE MOON (UPI) — The lunar air force disclosed today that it is investigating reports that an unidentified flying object (UFO) was sighted last Sunday in or near the Sea of Tranquillity. However, an air force spokesman scoffed at suggestions that the UFO may have been a space ship from earth or some other planet. "We get reports of this type quite frequently and we routinely check them out," the spokesman said. "The so-called 'flying saucers' usually turned out to have been optical illusions caused by crater gas or something of the sort. "We have no evidence that there is any kind of life on earth. And even if the planet were inhabited, it would be ridiculous to think that the earthlings would be able to fly to the moon." Asked to describe the vehicle, Mrs. Tribling said it "looked something like a spider with spindly legs and dishes instead of feet." She said it was "breathing fire" when she first saw it. She said it seemed to hover briefly over the crater and then descend a short distance beyond the rim. Mrs. Tribling's story was corroborated to some extent by Clyde Kipper, who vowed that he actually saw the vehicle land and two unmoonly figures emerge. "They were white all over and had big square backs and glass faces," Kipper said. "I couldn't tell if they were robots or living things, and believe me I didn't hang around to find out." Kipper was asked what the creatures were doing when he saw them. "I know you aren't going to believe this," he said, "but they were kind of leaping around and picking up rocks. Once them stopped and . . . I'll swear I'm not making this up . . . they stopped and set up a red, white and blue cloth and saluted it." A lunar air force official called Kipper's statement "sheer fantasy." He said, "I've heard some wild stories in my time but this one tops them all. "He must have been reading too much science-fiction." Have a happy August! 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. 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 editors. Any 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 Managing Editor Don Westerhaus Adviser James W. Murray Photography Bill Seymour Gary Mason Business Manager Rodney Osborne Adviser Mel Adams Office Manager Helen Ross Hey! Topsy's is Open! 711 West 23rd Malls Shopping Center MEMO TO ALL KU STUDENTS and STAFF The Secretarial Service has a new expanded office to serve you with the newest, most modern equipment in Lawrence, about all that's the same is the service-good fast, guaranteed-7 days a week, 7 a.m. 'til midnight. MAGNETIC/TAPE TYPEWRITING WAKE-UP AND ANSWERING SERVICE SPECIAL RATES ON THEIS AND √ TERM PAPER TYPING RESUMES BUSINESS LETTERS GIRL FRIDAY SERVICE (in your office) TELEPHONE CANVASING √ EXPERT TYPING XEROX COPYING SERVICE ✓ MAGIC QUICK PRINT SERVICE MIMEOGRAPHING ✓ MAILING LISTS √ ENVELOPE ADDRESSING ABS ABS AUTOMATED BUSINESS SERVICES, INC. P.O. Box 423 Lawrence, Kansas 66044 901 Kentucky 842-0111 Treadmill for today's youth must be changed By DAVE DANIELSON Guest Editorial Writer The crowd massed about the university's doors, milling, vibrating and shaking. Enraged screams drifted through the air, as helmeted policemen with blank, expressionless faces, strode into the gigantic mob. Young students—fighting, twisting, struggling—were dragged into the paddy wagons, some hit by the billy clubs the policemen carried. In the background, television reporters kept their cameras filming, and across the nation, people sitting in comfortable chairs watched in horror as they saw the violence bursting from their television sets. One stout man, about 40 years old, stared at the scenes flashing at him from his color tube. He was surrounded by a large ample home in a suburb where all the houses were alike—looking almost like rows of cardboard boxes. He had two children and a marriage which was uneventful, if not happy. He had a good job, which paid well, although he wasn't completely satisfied with it. He had ulcers, and his doctor had told him to lose some weight. He stared at his set and was repelled and alarmed by the terrible violence centering about the shaggy-haired, moustached students and the robot-like, determined police. Questions hammered his mind. Why did the students scream and holler so, as if something unjust was going on? Why did they bring police to them and battle on the lawns of institutions of learning? Why didn't they go to their classes and sit there, listening to teachers? Why can't they be happy with the way things are? Student riots have become more common and more violent in the past few months, and they seem to dance across our TV screens with regularity. Violence seems to be the cry of agony from youth, or at least from part of them. This part, whether it is a minority or not, has had great impact upon America. Why do they rebel? As their elders wonder, why can't they be happy with the way things are? Perhaps they view the United States as one of its prominent features: the highways of America. You grow up; you go to school. You turn onto the entrance ramp to the highway. You go through elementary school, then junior high, and, quietly, you are being prepared for a society that's been planned for you without your advice. You catch glimpses of the cars rushing forward on the highway ahead. By ninth grade you're supposed to have a good idea about what college you're going to and what your major will be. By 11th grade, you must have almost certainly made up your mind. You're accelerating to highway speeds on the entrance ramp so you can merge smoothly with the highway traffic itself when the time comes. You go on to college, even if you're tired and bitter with school and need the challenge of an adult life now. You study, and you do what your teachers tell you to do, whether or not they're good at it. Jly. 29 1969 KANSAN 5 You take a fleeting look over your shoulder to see if there's an open space for you to squeeze into. You graduate from college, and finally you marry. You have children and raise them so they, too, may grow up to get on the highway. You sit in a chair behind a desk and spend most of the rest of your life working on a job that sometimes turns out to be tasteless and boring. You've finally squeezed into the mass of cars—vanished without a ripple. This is a black, dull, tedious vision of American life, but many youths are seeing it. They want something more. What about the person who would like to travel by a country road that has intersections with other roads and room on the side to pull over and rest awhile? And what if a person does enjoy the highway system, but wants to get more out of it than simply holding on to the steering wheel? What if he want more than just growing up, going to school, finding a job, getting married, and dying—all without joy. What if he wants to do things he really wants to do, instead of meeting requirements of society and taking so many classes of such-and-such that just don't appeal—or apply—to him? The politician, the microphone held in front of him, licked his lips uneasily before answering the question the reporter had just put to him. Some youths are afraid the highways are too stiff, having been made out of concrete that has long ago set—rock hard. "I'm glad you asked that question," he said carefully, considering what might be the popular view. "My belief is that these students are ruining a great American institution—college. They're keeping students who want to learn out of class. They tear apart; they're 6th & Mo. VI 3-2139 HEAD FOR HENRY'S For Top Quality Head for Henry's WALT DISNEY productions' Rascal the masked bandit TECHNICOLOR* Released by BUENA VISTA DISTRIBUTION CO. INC. © 1969 Walt Disney Productions WALT DISNEY productions' Rascal ... the masked bandit TECHNICOLOR* Released by BUENA VISTA DISTRIBUTION CO., INC. © 1965 Walt Disney Productions —AND— THE STORY OF (WALT DISNEY'S) MOTION PICTURE BLACKBEARD'S GHOST Rascal at 2:10-7:25-10:50! Ghost at 3:35-8:50 only! Granada THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-5783 THE STORY OF WALY DISNEY'S MOTION PICTURE BLACKBEARD'S GHOST Rascal at 2:10-7:25-10:50! Granada INEARTE...telphone VI 3-3782 Ghost at 3:35-8:50 only! Then, there are their quiet brothers, the so-called "silent majority" on campus. un-American. I wouldn't be surprised if these riots are Communist inspired." The problem is that students wonder if they would be noticed at all—if not for violence. As Kenneth Keniston, a psychologist who has made a study of student protestors, remarked, "it's doubtful that the activists are used for any political purpose of their own." Their movement, he believes, is too open for subversion, and Communism is a far cry from their idea of government. "Look," one might speak up, "I can see why some of these guys are rebelling—I mean, I've been through the same system they have. My parents have a miserable marriage; I don't want to get stuck in some rubber-stamping job. I hope that the radicals will change the 'establishment' for the better, but I fear that they'll only tear apart what's good about the country already." But violence is blurring the American public's view of youth. If youth keep on destroying, America will continue to ignore the valuable points youth bring up and see only the pointless destruction. Meanwhile, frustration builds in the student activist. He sees intensely the cracks and fissures in the past generation's freeway, as all youths do, although he too often ignores the smooth and pleasurable features of the road. Most often, he sees the scars on the cement of education. He attacks the college because it is the system he has been in for so long and knows it well. For this was during the 1950's, when the country was much quieter in general. Then came the civil rights movement, which gave students who wanted to speak a voice, and the student movement has continued to build since then. Now our country is not quiet. It is loud and yelling. Almost everything is questioned. Few believe our country is always faultless. "Students and youth are like the rest of us—only more so," was the remark in the magazine "Psychology Today" by Clark Kerr, former president of all the campuses of the University of California. "If you want to understand the country," he advised, "you'd better look at the students, because they are a very sensitive weather vane that will tell you which way the winds of change are blowing." Keniston, the psychologist, pointed out that only a little over a decade ago, offspring had unsettled their elders by being silent and apathetic. "Students and youth are like the rest of us—only more so." Our students, who have grown up by the light of the television set—as no other generation has—who have seen the earth reach for the moon, who have known amazing technological advances, are even more severely involved in the anguish and turmoil. Youth has a stake in the future. Some may escape through drugs or drop out. Others may JAYHAWKER TOWERS Apartments Now renting 2-bedroom furnished apartments. All utilities included in rent. - Immediately adjacent to campus - Swimming pool—club rooms - Air-conditioned - Elevators - Cff-street parking Convenient Location, a Time and Money Saver. Lawrence's Finest Apartment Complex Inspection 1603 W. 15th Invited Tel. VI 3-4993 For Students on the Go, We're TOPS Wardrobe Care Centers In By 9 - Out By 5 Same Day Service Two Convenient Locations 1517 West 6th 1526 West 23rd Handy Drive-Up Window Easy Parking stand by and be silent. But most are committed. These youth hope for the future but fear the present. They erupt and bubble and boil. Again a youth of the "silent majority" speaks. "It's too bad that the protestors, in their search for change, have become violent because they met frustration elsewhere. America has only two extremes and not the moderate middle she desperately needs. America needs someone who will speak up bravely but will not turn to violence and arrogance. America needs someone to widen the highways, but not tear apart what is already there, someone to fill in the cracks in the cement. America can only hope that someday youth will compromise. STARTS TOMORROW STARTS TOMORROW THE WILD BUNCH TECHNICOLOR 'PANAVISION' FROM WARMER BROS. SEVEN 825 THE WILD BUNCH Varsity THEATRE ... telephone V1.3-1065 Mat. 2:30 Eve. 7:00-9:45 Varsity THEATRE ... telephone V13-1065 Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone V13-1065 GREGORY / OMAR PECK / SHARIF CARL FOREMAN'S MACKENNE'S GOLD SUPER PANAVISION TECHNICOLOR Mat. 2:30 Eve. 7:15-9:45 Hillcrest THE HILLCREST ENTERTAINMENT COMPANY Now THE LION IN WINTER Sun-Thurs 8:00 only Fri-Sat 7:00-9:45 Hillcrest 2 "HOW TO COMMIT MARRIAGE" M TECHNICOLOR CRC Bob Hope-Jackie Gleason 7:30-9:25 Adult $1.25 Child $.50 Hillcrest 3 "FOR MOVIE-GOERS WITH A HUNGER FOR FINE COMEDY!" 7:15 9:15 Adult $1.50 "bedazzled" —Photo by Saye Sutton Journalism Division Campers of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp turned their cameras on a wide spectrum of human events and recorded their impressions in these photographs. 1970 Photo by Jim Thomas When you want to— SELL YOUR BOOKS! Bring them to the lower level entrance of the BOOKSTORE THURSDAY:JULY 31. FRIDAY: AUGUST 1, 8:30-4:30 kansas UNION BOOKSTORE JUSTICE —Photo by Saye Sutton Many of the Campers were beginning students,but their artistry with the camera is readily apparent. The Campers did their own darkroom work producing negatives and prints of excellent quality. H Photo by Wilma Moore 3 Photo by Ken Olson JOIN THESE STUDENTS... 1970 ] AND THOUSANDS OF OTHERS, BECOME A DYNAMIC READER SPECIAL INTENSIFIED COURSE IN AUGUST BEGINS MONDAY, AUG. 4th, 7-10 p.m. ENDS FRIDAY,AUGUST 29th In just 4 short weeks you will at least triple your reading efficiency or receive a full refund of the course tuition. You will meet twice a week and learn improved speed and comprehension, greater retention and recall, and better study habits. ALL IN 4 SHORT WEEKS PHONE VI 3-6424 to reserve class space or mail in Coupon below This is the only Reading Dynamics Class to be offered in August and class space is limited. READING DYNAMICS TO: Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics 1314 Oread Lawrence, Kansas 66044 Please enroll me in the special intensified course in August and send me full information. Name Address Phone School Major I Longwood Road READING DYNAMICS Bristol 7. Armed forces duty opposed by young doctors Many young doctors and medical students agree they would rather be drafted into slums than into the armed forces, a UPI survey has indicated. Dr. Roger O. Egeberg, soon to become the nation's top health officer, proposes to do just that with some doctors, many of whom are required to go into the armed services after spending 10 or 12 years in school. "I think most of us would rather work in a ghetto than in the Army." said John Frey, 26, a senior at Northwestern University Medical School. "Not because we don't want to go into the Army—which is a relatively easy service—but because we want to do something more." 8 KANSAN Jly.29 1969 Army bases he said, are usually overstaffed. After Egeberg announced his proposal before a Senate Labor Committee this week, the University of Chicago posted a questionnaire to poll its students. It was no contest. Egeberg's plan was favored 30-0. "I want to go where the people need me, said Lloyd Dodd, 21, of Las Vegas, a freshman at Baylor Medical School, and Cary Young, 23, a junior at Baylor from Redland, Calif., said. "I concur completely." "I offered a choice between working with the poverty program and serving in the armed forces, I would work with the poverty program," he said. Under Egeberg's plan, some of the new physicians, chosen by lottery, would donate their services for one year to city slums, Indian reservations or other places where doctors are urgently needed instead of serving in the armed forces. "I see this as a step forward in helping our national health," said Richard Wulfsberg, a fourth year medical student at the University of Southern California. "The only reservation I would be is that it might not provide the teaching aids that a large military hospital might." Egeberg, a former dean of USC's medical school, said he felt that the average young doctor would rather practice in a wealthy suburb than a ghetto. "The question is, how are you going to get doctors to go where you need them," he said. "You may have to make them." A 22-year-old student from Birmingham, Ala., agreed. "There should and must be legislation before the doctors will go where they are needed," he said. "I personally plan to enter that type of practice after I get out of medical school anyway," Ed Connelly, 28, of Boston, a student at Temple Medical School in Philadelphia, said. "It certainly would be receptive to me as an alternative to the military service." "I feel the draft should be abolished altogether, but since that probably won't happen, I'd much rather be drafted into medical work than into the military." David Wren, 26, a student at the University of California Medical Center in San Francisco, said. "Good medical care is something that's urgently needed in minority areas." There was one other dissenting voice in a survey of medical students from coast to coast on Ege- berg's proposal. Linda Artlip, 21, a senior at the University of Iowa does not want to see the young doctors drafted in to the slums or anywhere else. "I think it might do more good to send out some of the old, fat doctors and let them help a little," she said. AUTO GLASS Table Tops INSTALLATION AUTO GLASS Sudden Service East End of 9th St.——VI 3-4416 Campus Living Takes a Lot of Money - The Best, Cheapest and Safest Way to Pay is By Our New "D.C." personal checking account. - "D.C." Checks cost less than money orders . . . only 10c! - No minimum balance is required - Money is protected against loss - Cancelled checks prove you paid your bills - Your name printed free on all "D.C." Checks! The best way to pay campus bills is with "D.C." Checks! Open your account today. Jayhawk Special "D.C." Checks designed for students, faculty and friends of the University of Kansas are available only at Douglas County State Bank. DOUGLAS COUNTY STATE BANK THE BANK OF PENNSYLVANIA Lawrence's Newest, Most Modern Bank Welcomes You to Lawrence and to K.U. BANK PLENTY OF FREE PARKING, PLUS FOUR CONVENIENT DRIVE-UP WINDOWS Douglas County State Bank "The Bank of Friendly Service" Member F.D.I.C. 9th and Kentucky VI 3-7474 Campus lake has rich history of fact and fiction By SUE WALKER Summer Kansan Reporter A legend lies in our midst and few realize it. "Seek and ye shall find," became my motto as I spent countless hours searching for the truth...about Potter Lake. As the first decade of the twentieth century came to a close, a problem was discovered that needed attention right away, fire protection for the University of Kansas. The Board of Regents selected a spot in a ravine north of Marvin Hall to be used as watersupply. A 60-foot dam was to cross the ravine, forming a two-acre lake 16 feet deep at one end. The spring thaws assisted by the city water-mains soon turned the ravine into a lake. The lake claimed its first victim before it was completed in the spring of 1911. A group of civil engineers attended a party in Marvin Hall and were returning home late that night. They decided to swim across the lake and back. One stayed out in the center too long and drowned. Commencement, in the early 1900's, included an annual regatta on the Kaw River at the boating docks above the dam. With a lake in their own backyard, students decided to hold the activities there. Swimming events, logrolling, canoeing, diving competition and water-baseball with an early evening band concert filled out the program. The regatta served as something of a dedication for the lake, named in honor of State Senator T. M. Potter of Peabody. During one of the land events, a student glanced out onto the lake and to his surprise and several hundred other spectators, a huge whale was seen rising out of the water spouting water. A few brave young men jumped into their canoes and rowed out to capture the whale, obviously a misplaced Loch Ness monster. The boat capsized and the great whale, fearing capture, plunged to the depths never to be seen again. No one ever attempted to explain how a whale appeared in a man-made fresh-water lake. In 1924, a diving pier, springboards and dressing rooms were built and life guards provided. For three years this was the favorite "swimming hole." In 1927 a public pool was constructed for the city and Potter Lake was banned from bathing or swimming. At one time, officials considered cementing the entire lake basin. KU students back in the 30's and 40's used to pass afternoons trying to knock golf balls across the lake. A seven-hole golf course started on the slope above the dead-end street west of the stadium. The third hole was on the west side of the lake. It was here at the water trap that most Jly. 29 1969 KANSAN 9 golfers ran into trouble. The course was hardly recognizable, after the war. The scattered oak trees had grown and the recreation ground had been built up west of the lake. Oread Hall had also been constructed near the former location of the last green. Nature lovers went even further in the attempt to destroy the course. They planted shrubs and flowers where the smooth course used to be. Weeds have conquered all and today the area is a complete jungle. As the years went by, the lake has been used as a bathtub for throwing newly pledged members of frat-houses, melting-pots for the sororites, boys romancing their lady-fair and skinny-dipping, whether the surface is blanketed with slimy moss or ice. In June of '58, Potter Lake was a mudhole. However, the condition was only temporary. It was drained because it had become filled with silt until the deepest point was less than six feet. The only fish in it were goldfish, carp, bullheads and some bass. During the summer it was dried, dredged, the dam was repaired and a small silt pond built at the south end. It was announced that the lake would be used as a laboratory for research purposes by the Zoology Department. Skating on the pond has become almost a tradition in the winter months, providing the ice is at least 4" thick. Ten years later, and even today, the week-end beer parties created some controversy about the possibility of changing the name of the lake to the "Campus Dump." By Sunday afternoon, beer-cans, newspapers, milk cartons, pop bottles and clothing cluttered the grounds. But thanks to Harry M. Bucholtz, superintendent of building and grounds, "the week-end messes" were cleaned up by the first of each week—although the litter was back by the following Sunday. It is the summer of '69 and we can now peer out on the glossy surface of a real legend portrayed on an artist's canvas . . filled with whales( romance and silt. . But we sought and we found . . the truth about Potter Lake. Home of the "Big Shef" BURGER CHEF BURGERS Try One Today 814 Iowa BURGER CHEF HAMBURGERS Now renting 2-bedroom furnished apartments. All utilities included in rent. JAYHAWKER TOWERS Apartments - Immediately adjacent to campus - Swimming pool—club rooms - Elevators - Air-conditioned - Off-street parking Convenient Location, a Time and Money Saver. Lawrence's Finest Apartment Complex 1603 W. 15th Tel.VI 3-4993 Inspection Invited 1. BOSTON (UPI)—A Bostonian has been found who did not know of the successful Apollo 11 moon landing, and where else but on Moon Street. Potter Lake simmers in the Summer sun as an artist paints the scene Unaware of moon flight -Photo by Sue Walker "What do you mean, what do I think about living on Moon Street at a time like this? What kind of a time is it?" replied a woman Tuesday. "Oh, you mean the people who rode the rockets," she said, when it was explained. "Have they reached the moon?" She was told that "they" indeed had reached the moon, walked around on the surface and were now on their way back home through space. The woman, who declined to give her name, commented, "Good." Again she was asked about living on Moon Street—didn't the idea strike her, perhaps, as being a little timely? "It's a nice street, but I don't live here. I'm babysitting," she said. STEERING This is Mr. Meyers using the John Bean LIFT-A MATIC wheel alignment machine. Save your tires . . . line up today! Precise accuracy guaranteed. We also have COMPLETE BARRETT BRAKE SERVICE. FRITZ CO. 745 N.H. VL3-4321 Patronize Kansan Advertisers GO GREEK! Although 20 percent of the nation's college students are fraternity men, three out of four chief executives of the country's 750 largest corporations are fraternity men. Of the current congress, 69 per cent of the senators are fraternity men, and 35 per cent of the house is Greek. PARTICIPATE IN MEN'S OPEN RUSH JULY 1,-AUG.31 FORMAL RUSH WEEK-SEPT.1-4 Register at Dean of Men's Office 228 Strong Interfraternity Council Office 112B Kansas Union Baseball still needs autos to draw crowds By STEVE SNIDER UPI Sports Writer The kids in our town were about 50-50 for the St. Louis Cardinals and Chicago Cubs back in those happy-go-lucky years before the Great Depression. Chicago was up the railroad tracks about 150 miles in one direction and St. Louis was 150 miles south. The kids on the north side of town went big for the Cubs. The south belonged to the Cardinals. We never thought much at all about the White Sox or the Browns. The older folks felt about that way, too, and any time they got up parties to drive to a weekend ball game the caravans usually went off in opposite 10 KANSAN Jly.29 1969 directions. Naturally, if the Cubs were at St. Louis or the Cards at Chicago, the traffic was all one-way. Those were exciting adventures, believe me, and not just because of big league baseball. Asking an automobile to make a 300-mile round trip in those days wasn't exactly like planning a trip to the moon in today's hardware but it was daring stuff, at that. I suppose the people back there now are whizzing up or down Route 66 in their shiny new cars with nothing much on their minds except baseball—or maybe a place to park when they get there. Cars are vital to baseball attendance and that's a fact you tend to forget after a spell in New York where the subways deliver the most customers in masses of happy humanity. But the other day a thoughtful survey of attendance at Baltimore pointed up that while the Orioles have been doing okay they're still losing some fringe auto traffic to the Braves since that franchise switch from Milwaukee to Atlanta. The survey covered the general picture from 1966 when the Braves landed in Atlanta. This year there could be some excuses. The Orioles had a runaway going in their division from early in the season while the Braves were close all the way in the National League's West. But it's worth noting Baltimore's top crowd up to All Star time was 39,789 for Detroit on June 27 and the low was 2,337 for Cleveland April 14. Atlanta's high was 46,414 for a San Francisco doubleheader June 22 and the low was 5,854 for San Diego on May 1. Atlanta, a team that really belongs to the South, is in an enviable position but it's possible some errors have been made in laying out the current baseball map. Charley Finley was in a hurry to move his Athletics from Kansas City to Oakland, in an area pioneered by the San Francisco Giants, but the results hardly have been spectacular. The California Angels of the American League and the new San Diego team in the National, both bucking Dodger competition, are struggling. Meanwhile, the Boston Red Sox, with no competition, are flying. The Red Sox, who have been adopted by their entire-auto-driving area and perhaps should be known as "the New England Red Sox," recently became the first team in the majors to go over the million mark in home attendance. Still, the subway isn't all that bad. Top crowd in the majors was 60,096 at Yankee Stadium for the White Sox on June 8 and top for the National League was 59,083 at Shea Stadium as the Mets played host to the Cubs July 9. LA PETITE GALERIE Newest Place For Now Fashions 910 Kentucky Lower Level ACME LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANERS Says: — Welcome New Jayhawkers Faculty and Students "Acme Cares" We will be happy to take care of all your Cleaning and Laundry SEND IT ALL TO ACME AND RCM INC Call VI 3-5155 for FAST Pick up & Delivery or take advantage of our 10% Discount on Cash and Carry Laundry and Dry Cleaning DOWNTOWN 1111 MASS. ACME LAUNDRY DRY CLEANERS Three Convenient Locations HILLCREST 925 IOWA MALLS 711-W.23rd TRADE CLASSIFIED SELL BUY ADS LEASE Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the University Daily Kansan are offered on campus. Students are warranted to color, creed, or national origin. FOR SALE NOW ON SALE THE_HODGE-PODGE. Handerfits, Jewelry, Sandals, Leather Goods, Antiques, Glassware, Ceramics, and one of the kind gifts. 17 West 9th St. Open 10 a.m.-5:30 p.m. Thurs. till 9:00 p.m. 7-29 NOW ON SALE Revised, updated and revised Edition of "New Analysis in Western Civilization" Carduuf's Madhouse, 1241 Oread 7-29 AUDIO SALE 1968 two-door, hardtop Super Sport. 396 with 4 speed. Red lined tires and wheel covers. In See at 1419 Ohio. Apt. 1, or Call VI 2-728 Right now we are offering 15%; off on all AR and Dynaco equipment. See our student special, picked especially for student living. This is true Audio Ray-Audio, DYNACo dealer. The Ray-Audio, Hillcrest Center, agee of evi EVI 2-1944. 7-29 Two FIRESTONE TOWN & COUNTRY TIRES, used, Volkswagen size, $4.50 each. Call VI 3-4529, Rodney Parr 7-29 NOTICE ATTENTION! Summer, students will do your typing. B42-8111 8-5 515 Michigan St. Bar-B-Q-outdoor pit, rib slab to $.30; Brik order. $1.65 Briak sandwich, 95c¹ chicken. $1.20 Brisket sandwich, $.75 Hours. 1 a.m. to 11 p.m. Closed Sunday and Tuesday. Phone VI 2-9510 8-5 AUDIO SALE If you are interested in a record player or in up-dating your present sound system, you can learn your equipment in Accor Research and Dynaone equipment. It's the best buy for most people, but just fact heat and bear at Ray-Audio, Hybrid Center, aft, and eve 842-1944 7-29 XEROX SERVICE, on Xerox's latest, most advanced 3600 III cluver, Crisper, sharper copies; faster service. Unsurpassed results for these, papers, bulletins. Lawrence Typewriter, 700 Mass. VI 3-3644 8-5 HEADLINE! We are looking for (you) interesting, interested in working or anything else you can think of the P.S. HOUSE If you are interested Kevin Riess If you are interested Rick at VI 2-1944 NOW Waltz 7-29 THE HODGE PODGE. Featuring ceramies by JERRY BRYON Jewelry, Sandals, and Leather Goods, Old trunks, glassware, and handcrafts. 17 West 9th St. Open 10 a.m.-5:30 p.m. Thurs. till 9:00. 7-29 Need 2nd upperclass woman for furn- bdm apr. sept. through Spring $850 a.m. until next week Only 1 blk From campus HURRY! CALL BAR B AT 842-0719 7-29 FOR RENT Room for rent to girl graduate student UU and shopping 7-29 Hitchpin Drive Now renting for summer and fall, University Terrace and Old Mill apartments. Reduced rates for summer. A C. carpeting, and pool. Call for appointment 843-1433 for Old Mill and 842-1296 for University Terrace. Sleeping rooms with or without kitchen privileges for males. Also furnished apartments Borders camp and near downtown. Call 7-29 5767 One bedroom apartments, air-conditioned, carpeted units with parking closer than many campus parking lots. Apt. 819 Call V. 8153 or 842-7500 T. 7-29 Nicely furnished A/C apt for summer; 2 bedroom, furn. or unfurn. apt, for summer and fall; small studio apt. for men, summer and or fall. Utilities paid. All close to Union. Phone VI 3- 8534. 7-29 New Studio Apt. at, Town Manor. Quiet, furnished. A.C. Steam Heat. Parking. Professor or mature student. Call 843-8000. 7-29 Want male graduate student to share with two others, nicely furnished with a table and a parking lot. $35, utilities. Cal. 4349 or VI - 3-356. Ask for Bob Cope. WALK TO CLASS--available Avail. 1:4 A 2 C bedroom apts $115 & $120 unfurn; $130 & $135 furn. SANTEE APTS 1132 Ind. Call V 3-2116 7-29 For rent to women grad students; 2 large rooms, walk-in closets; A/C near campus. Also garage. To see Call VI 3-2840. 7-29 TYPING WANTED Male to share apartment on 4th floor, 2-7000 for George Roc. 7-29 JAYHAWKER TOWERS Apartments Experienced typist will give fast, acc ports, calls Call VI 3-0288h . 7-29 HELP WANTED Two roommates. Large furn. A/C apt. Carpeted. Parking available. Female room. Month includes utilities. Call after 1 pm. on week days. VI 2-0385. 7-29 Will type term papers, themes, thesis, other miscellaneous typing. Have elected pica type pica type Ex- emplified and efficient writing. V 3-1954 Ms. Wright. 7-29 Theses, manuscripts, term papers typed accurately on IBM electric typewriter, by experienced typist calligraphy. Call Phyllis Lee VI 2-2124 7-29 REGISTERED PHYSICAL THERAPIST with at least one year experience to work 10-20 hours per week. Flexible, new, creative, co-ordinated home care program serving Douglas County. Write: Douglas County Visiting Nurses Assoc. 342 Mo. Street, Lawrence, Kan. 7-29 Former Harvard and University of Minnesota Secretary will type term papers, reports, etc. Call Mrs. Mattila. VI 3-7207. 7-29 WANTED - Now renting 2-bedroom furnished apartments. - All utilities included in rent. - Immediately adjacent to campus. - Now renting 2-bedroom furnished apartments. All utilities included in rent Patronize Kansan Advertisers TRAVEL TIME - Convenient Location, a Time and Money Saver. Lawrence's Finest Annotated Guide - Convenient Location, a Time and Money Saver. Lawrence's Finest Apartment Complex Inspection 1603 W. 15th Invited Tel. VI 3-4993 MAUPINTOUR TRAVEL SERVICE HAROLD'S SERVICE 66 1401 WEST 6th STREET LAWRENCE, KANSAS phone 843-3557 Deliciously Different Mexican Food Casa De Taco Pay-Le$\ Self Service SHOES 1300 W. 23rd Lawrenc EVERYONE SAYS Everything in the Pet Field And Free Parking At Grants Drive-In Pet Center Experienced Dependable Personal service 218 Conn., Law, Pet Ph. 3-292 1105 Mass. VI 3-9880 AIRLINES Make Your Summer Reservations Now. Malls Shopping Center VI 3-1211 Shoe Shines, One color .50 Two color .75 "We Care About What You Wear And If You Care" Bring Your Shoes To 8th Street Shoe Repair For Your Repairs, Shoe Dyeing and Shines. LET Jennings Daylight Donuts Coffee & Sandwich Bar Malls Shopping Center 105 E. 8th 8:00-5:00 Closed Saturday at Noon Open for the summer—the Pawn Shop Coffee House. Invites all folk-lovers and artists to come in and display their talents and appreciation—this weekend—Dave Bailey See you at the P. S. HOUSE 15 East 8th Street HEADLINE Strick's Cafe 732 N. 2nd St. OPEN 7 a.m. to 10 p.m. Monday thru Saturday 1811 W. 6th St. Lawrence, Kansas SPECIAL FOR ONLY WORLD'S BEST STEAK BUY INCLUDES RANDY'S RANCH 99c - Texas Toast CHICKEN SPECIAL - Baked Potato Lord of the Flies William Golding THE AGE OF ANALYSIS President and Oversee of GALILEO Soliloquia American Book, The Writer in America great ideas in psychology DEMOCRACY IN AMERICA THE POCKET ADINAS THE ENSPIRITUAL AGILISTINE Collected by William F. Pascoe THE HISTORY OF THE UNIVERSE ELECTIONS FROM THE RESGATE OF E. M. HUSSEY WALDEN Platages of PLATO The Pocket ARISTOTLE THE ENLIGHTENMENT BARKER SOCIAL CONTRACT The Utilitarianism FRIEDMAN HERITAGE OF WESTERN CIVILIZATION Soliloquia 2nd Edition IF YOU ARE TAKING WESTERN CIVILIZATION THIS FALL, YOU SHOULD TAKE THE READING DYNAMICS WESTERN CIV. CLASS... AND PASS - Improve your reading efficiency at least three times while covering the W. C. Readings. - Then pass the W. C. Comp. Exam or receive a full refund of the Reading Dynamics tuition. - Next Class begins this September. - PHONE VI 3-6424 TO ENROLL NOW — CLASS SPACE IS LIMITED! or send in this coupon: TO: Evelyn Wood Reading Service 1314 Oread Lawrence, Kansas 66044 [ ] Please send me more information on Reading Dynamics W.C. Class. Please save a place for me in the Fall Reading Dynamics W.C. Class. Name ... Address Phone ... Major Year in school .. Survey reveals teachers favor formal sex education NEW YORK (UPI)—In many places, bird-and-bee talk in the schools isn't nice, isn't proper and according to some critics, is a Communist plot. In places where sex education courses have been okayed, course content dwells more on family life education than on anatomy. And in those places where the heat of the debate most often 12 KANSAN Jly. 29 1969 grows molten—the superintendent's office—the leaning sentiment is F-O-R introducing formal sex education, according to an opinion poll survey of a sampling of the nation's 14,000 school administrators. The poll shows that the recent growing and, in some cases, very vocal opposition to sex education in schools finds little sympathy among top schoolmen. Granted anonymity in published results of the survey, the administrators participating in the poll conducted by "Nation's School." indicated—an impressive 70 per cent of them—that they believe some form of sex education ought to be offered by the schools. But getting it approved, more and more means standing up to community, political and religious organizations opposing it, as trends of the last six months indicate. Slightly less than two thirds of the schoolmen surveyed do not have sex education programs in their districts. And this is understandable. According to authorities the number of sex education programs has remained relatively stable since 1966. Among those polled, a five per cent proportional sampling of the 14,000 in 50 states, 48 per cent noted a revival of opposition in their states to sex education. This seems to fit in with an increasing number of published reports that focus on a full-scale siege against sex in the schools, the editors of "Nation's Schools" noted. One fourth of polled schoolmen said parents are the greatest single roadblock to sex education courses. Some attributed the opposition, in great part, to newer sex education programs. These offer more explicit information at an earlier age—often kindergarten and the primary grades. Opposition comes from various groups, but a number of schoolmen felt the majority of opposing organizations have strong ties with the far right. Carriage Lamp FAMILY STYLE CHICKEN SPECIAL WEDNESDAY ALL YOU CAN EAT FOR $1.59 Includes: Mashed Potatoes Gravy Cold Slaw Coffee or Tea STYLE SPECIAL DAY T PAY NOW, PLAY LATER (PRE-ENROLL IN EVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMICS) So you've been meaning to take Reading Dynamics. So you've been meaning to take Reading Dynamics. You may take it this fall. Why not pay now and play later. PAY NOW the pre-enrollment fee of $25. This will guarantee you a place in the fall Reading Dynamics series. This will also help us plan ahead and just to show our appreciation we will reduce the balance of your course tuition by an additional $25. Not a bad savings for just planning ahead (and if anything happens to these plans we'll gladly refund your $25). PLAY LATER this fall as you become a Dynamic Reader. You will increase your reading speed and comprehension so much that you will have lots of time to do the many other fun things you like to do (besides study). Fill out and send in the coupon below. Pay now and play later. You'll be glad you did Fill out and send in the coupon below. Pay now and play later. You'll be glad you did. To: Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics 1314 Oread Lawrence Kansas 66044 Lawrence, Kansas 66044 Please save a place for me in the September series Enclosed is a check to you for $25. Please just send me additional information and the fall schedule. Name Address Phone Major Year in School.