Foreign students face busy summer By Swaebou Conateh KU's 500 foreign students will study, travel, work or return to their homes during the summer. About 200 will go to summer school, according to Clark Coan, assistant dean of men and international student adviser. Another 200 hold full time jobs through the summer. The rest work part time or travel. Group lauds music men Three KU music professors. Clayton Krehbiel, Robert Baustian and Laurel Anderson, were honored last Sunday afternoon during initiation ceremonies of Xi Chapter of Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia, professional fraternity for men in music. The three men will leave the KU Fine Arts Department at the end of the semester. The chapter recognized Krebiel for his activities as a chapter alumnus. He leaves his KU post as director of choral activities to assume direction of the Cleveland Orchestra Chorus this summer, a position previously held by Robert Shaw. Baudian, a member of the KU faculty since 1957 as director of the Opera Workshop and University Symphony, became an honorary chapter member. He joins the staff at Oberlin Conservatory in Ohio. Anderson, university organist and professor of organ and theory, retires this year after 39 years of teaching at KU. Instructor likes flunking A KU lab instructor in German recently emphasized to his class that any male who flunked his course would just put his name farther down the Selective Service list. The announcement followed the request of a student as to the requirements for getting a "D" or just barely passing the course. The instructor replied, "With your attitude, no amount of work could earn you an "A," and besides the more students I flunk the better it is for me!" Might mail Jayhawker The fourth issue of the Jayhawkwer will be mailed to students without cost if it cannot be distributed before students leave the campus, said Tom Yoe, faculty adviser. In this event, full instructions for registering summer mailing addresses will be published in UDK advertisements and on posters. However, a mailing charge would be required for students who did not obtain covers, and first, second and third issues before leaving. Official Bulletin Foreign Students: Please complete and mail the forms found on the last pages of the May issue of the Interpational Campus newsletter. Holzkirchenr. Rektor Kaluza will be on campus today and tomorrow; all invited to attend a reception tonight at 7:30, Kansas Room, Union. TODAY "Man and the World" Informal Discussion Group, 7:30 p.m. Alceves University Student Peace Union Open Meeting 7.30 am, Union. STUDENTS WITH full time jobs do work pertinent to their fields of study in order to gain practical experience. Some work to earn money for school next year, however. **Senior** *Recital*. 8 p.m. Patricia *Stoneton* *Recital*. 8 p.m. bass-baritone, Swarthout Hall. David Finch, British graduate student, will work on the Arkansas City newspaper for example. Finch is studying journalism. TOMORROW Like many of the students, Finch plans to return to KU in the fall. Some students are planning to go all the way home for a summer holiday. Protestant Worship, 7 a.m. and 9:15 p.m. Wesley Foundation Methodist "I GO HOME every summer and come back in the fall." Blas Melvin Linscale, Panama junior, said. He will travel by plane, take a two night stop in Miami to renew acquaintance with some old friends from Cuba before leaving the United States. Burglary and Larceny Seminar, All Day, Union Christian Service Organization, 7:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel, Graduate Recital. 8 p.m. Joyee Bridgman, pianist. Swarthout. Javed Rasheed. Pakistan sophomore, plans to work at a hospital, probably in Canada. He will live with two of his countrymen in Nova Scotia. "This is my first time to go to Canada," Rasheed said. "I have some research to do during the summer, so I will be on campus," James Kin-Fung Fung, Taiwan graduate student, said. NOT ALL THE students will go home or hold summer jobs. Another student who will be going to summer school is Girma Negash, Ethiopian senior. He has plans to go to summer school at Stanford University and then return to KU in the fall. Emmanuel Akuchu, Cameroon junior, will go to summer school here. "Afterwards I will relax a little in preparation for the fall semester. At the same time I will travel in the state of Kansas to acquaint myself with it," Akuchu said. Forty secondary school English teachers, primarily from Kansas and adjoining states, have been selected to participate in a National Defense Education Act Institute for Advanced Study in English at Kansas University June 10 to Aug. 6. Teachers to institute Some students here do not yet know their final plans. Uusually, they are those who are still looking for jobs. One such case is Surendra Kumar Puri, India, graduate student. "I plan to do any available job in the summer," he said. "I will especially want to gain experience in the field I am interested in, pharmacy. I have applied to four manufacturing companies, but all sent me letters of regret. I need money to go to school." Puri said. HE SAID HE WOULD end up in summer school if no job is available. wherever they stop. One organization, the Council for Student Travel, organizes a "farewell look at America" program for those foreign students leaving the country for good. For many students, the lure of the big cities or of traveling in general beckons them. "They travel in organized groups or go on private trips," Dean Coan said. Pao Ping Chang, Taiwan junior, worked in New York last year. This year he will fly to New York to work with a consulting engineering firm for the summer. A number of organizations provide homes for the students along their route of travel so that they stay with American families "I PREFER TO go to a big city." Puri said. "I want to meet many kinds of people. I want to broaden my experience." Some of the students will never come back. They return home, go to other institutions or even get grabbed by industry. "We usually have about half come back in the fall," Coan said. Those returning join new foreign students to perpetuate the foreign student enrollment figure. Daily Kansan Monday, May 23, 1966 LEAVING FOR THE SUMMER? It's much easier for you to travel light and it's much easier on your hard-topack bulky winter clothes to have them - Cleaned with gentle Sanitone care - Moth-proofed FREE! - Stored in our refrigerated, fire, moth and theft-proof vault - Returned to you in the fall freshly pressed, ready to wear. Why haul heavy closet-filling winter clothes back and forth. Store them in a large box at Lawrence Laundry and keep them safe and SANITONE clean. All this service . . . and only $3.95 per box, plus regular cleaning charges. LAWRENCE launderers and dry cleaners 1001 New Hampshire VI 3-3711