6 Tuesday, June 10, 1975 University Daily Kansan Enrollment blahs Staff photo by DON PIERCE Nearing the end of summer enrollment, Cindy Buckwalter, Hutchinson senior, waits in line at the final check out. Although final enrollment figures are not yet totaled, summer enrollment at the University of Kansas to have increased over last summer's totals. Several schools reported increases from 30 to 60 per cent. Despite warnings students will be placed on academic probation, students enrolled problems with long lines at Hoch Auditorium during Friday's afternoon session with lines of reaching from the stage nearly to Jayhawk Blvd. More than 1,000 enrolled in Music and Art camp BY ALICE DELEHANTY Kansan Staff Reporter More than 1,000 high school students will participate in the annual Midwestern Music and Art Camp at the University of Kansas this summer. This is slightly less than last summer's enrollment of 1,100 students in the camp. Lynn Schornik, a staff member for the music division of the camp said yesterday that "Considering the economic situation, enrollment was pretty good." The camp staff directs courses in journalism, music, art and speech. Sessions for the American Drill Team, the International Cheerleading Foundation and the American Scholastic Drill Team Association are associated with the program but they are not taught by the camp staff. Students in the journalism workshop arrived yesterday to study either photography or newspaper and the internship at KU faculty teachers' institute KU faculty journalism members. This session will continue through June 13 and will be followed by a two week workshop starting June 15. Forty students will participate in Shaw, summer camp director said. The second session will be a more intense program, Shaw said. KU faculty members will teach courses in radio, documentary film, and writing, including communication law and photography. Regular KU faculty members, guest artists and conductors will instruct the music division of the camp, which will consist of 720 students. A junior high school program is scheduled for June 11-20 for students interested in music. The regular five week music camp will start June 22. The music will place more emphasis on jazz than last year and stage bands to meet the increased demand for such sections. Schornick said. The student orchestra, with concert bands, orchestras and choruses, will present public concerts each weekend. Thais to exile Laotian leader BANGKOK (AP)—Laotian mercenary leader Gen. Vang Pao is to leave Thailand within a week for exile in the United States because Thailand feels his continued presence would jeopardize relations with former Kukit Pramoj said yesterday. The U.S. Embassy, however, said it had received no visa application from the extend of the CIA-supported secret army who controls the last month with thousands of followers. The music camp has been expanded to include a series of workshops for teachers and advanced students to study various aspects of high school musical groups. The workshops comprise building a junior high orchestra, building junior high band, wind instrument repair, practical band arranging and percussion repair. The visual arts division of the camp, which will include 230 students, under the supervision of six KU faculty members and offer instruction in color and light media, environmental studies, drawing-animation, musical studies, cultural studies and perception of visual arts. Geared in much the same manner as last year's camp, the five-week workshop will begin June 22, and the art students will have the opportunity to exhibit their work during the yorkship. The speech division will offer two workshops for high school students. Both workshops will take place June 22, 2022 full time KU faculty members, graduate students and undergraduate students will give instruction in persuasive writing, oral presentation, debate, human relations and individual debate. The four-week session will provide more intensive analysis of debate theories and an opportunity for more practice debates. Bill Brown, a member for the speech department, said. We shop all continents. Why don't you? Shop hours: 10-5 Mon.-Sat. 1:30-5 Sunday Museum of Natural History Dyche Hall The University of Kansas Summer Theatre Festivals present Landmarks of the American Theatre Richard Kelton-Sue Niven—Sean Griffin (Returning Alumni Stars) John Brown's Body Stephen Vincent Benet's Pulitzer Prize Winning Epic Poem About the Civil War July 2,3. &5 The Time of Your Life The 1939 Pulitzer Prize Winning Drama about The Great Depression by William Saroyan July 10, 11, & 12 Oklahoma! The National American Musical by Rodgers and Hammerstein A Lawrence Community-Wide Production July 18, 19, 24, 25, & 26 July 24th Performance is a benefit for the Lawrence Arts Center Performances at 8:00 p.m., University Theatre, Murphy Hall Admission: $2.50 for all performances—K.U. Students $1.50 Save 20% by buying a Summer Season Coupon for $6.00 For Reservations Call 864-398 Box Office Opens 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Mon.-Fri. Beginning Monday, June 9 ERA views heard YOUR BEST BUY FOR SUMMER ENTERTAINMENT The panel consisted of Finney, Kansas State Senator Jan Meyers, R-Overland Park, and Nancy Hambleton, president of the Kansas League of Women Voters. More women are needed in state government, State Treasurer Joan Finney said last right during a panel discussion on women's rights at Girls State on "Women's Role in Politics." "The ERA easily opens up all sorts of options for women." Mews said. The Kansas Legislature passed the ERA during its 1972 session. With the Equal Opportunity Act and other laws that have been passed to reduce discrimination, is the ERA necessary? Meyers said yes. Hambleton former mayor of Lawrence, said the ERA was misinterpreted by many groups. She said it would be erroneous to assume that mixed restrooms and homosexual marriages would result from the passage of the amendment. Another misconception involves the drafting of women, which would be legal under the ERA, Meyers said. Some individuals fear that the drafting of women would place pregnant women in the trenches. "When the draft boards in the past have felt perfectly comfortable about rejecting a man because he had flat feet," Meyers said, "I think that they consider drafting a pregnant woman?" Call the classified department at 864-4358 - Hardcover and Paper - Chess Sets - Me-Books ADVENTURE a bookstore Hillcrest Shopping Center 9th and Iowa Phone 843-6424 - Books for Children and Adults - Simulation Games - Magazine Subscription Service Fine Service Fine BOOKS Read faster! Understand better! Remember longer! Evelyn Wood READING DYNAMICS Rapid reading and study skills SUMMER SESSION: Tuesday evenings 7-9:30 p.m. June 17-July 29 Mary Michener, Instructor FREE SPEED READING MINI-LESSON 7:30 AM, Thursday, Feb. 21 7:30 p.m., Thurs. and Fri., June 12 and 13 Come see how it works. Increase your reading speed within the hour with no obliquity. Come see how it works . . . . WE GIVE DISCOUNTS ON HL-FI COMPONENTS Located in ADVENTURE a bookstore [Hillcrest Shopping Center 9th and Iowa Phone 843-6424] Located in ADVENTURE a bookstore MALLS SHOPPING CENTER LAWRENCE, KANSAS 1-913-842-1544 SAVINGS SAVE IN A MARKET SAVINGS SAVE IN A MARKET