Sporting Scenes By DARYL HOLLOMAN It doesn't matter what game or sport you're viewing because you'll always find some clown who believes he's either an authority on the game or is an all-star player whether or not he's had much experience with the sport. Therefore, the band camp must certainly have some of these types, and believe me, it certainly does. Take a look at any dormitory wing game or a conversation on sports, and you can pick him out with no problem at all. He's the one who is usually spouting off rules and getting them interchanged and confused with other rules. Otherwise, he's the player who envisions himself as a superstar among the other players, but who in reality is the one who makes the most blunders in a game. Therefore, this character is of no more use than a tire pump on a canoe. \* \* \* BESIDES HAVING its own special clown, each sport has hazards which each participant must cope with. The hazards in tennis also can be found in baseball, basketball and football, which are all played on the KU campus by band campers. In all of these sports you can suffer from heat, blisters, exhaustion and occasional concrete burns. Baseball takes in a few interesting possibilities with the presence of a bat and ball. If you give a bat to some fool who grips the fat end of the bat and only swings it to see where it might land when he releases it; if you give the pitching position to some sadistic nut who's only out there to find out how many spectators standing along the sidelines he can main, then you'd better think twice before attending a camp baseball game. The hazards of playing football on campus are not unlike the injuries that can be sustained in a regular game of football, except that you have to be on the lookout for buildings, bushes and spectators that occasionally interfere with the progression of play. THERE SEEM to be more injuries sustained through camp basketball games to this date than any other sport. These include such injuries as jammed fingers, bruises of all sizes and shapes, sprained ankles, torn ligaments, concrete burns and scars incurred by merciless clawings of the arms, backs and faces during a mad scramble for a rebound or a last attempt to block a shot. Yet, even the less rugged and more harmlessappearing games are also taking their toll—games like skate-boarding (which has previously proven to be injurious to the daring as well as the inept), throwing frisbees and even playing checkers. Sprained arms have been incurred before by falling from a speeding skate-board, so it is no surprise that band campers have already bruised and sprained themselves by means of this down hill conveyance. Whereas turning to frisbee throwing and checker playing, one may wonder how an injury can possibly be incurred. I myself imbedded a rock in my kneecap when evading a frisbee during a frisbee fight. As for acquiring an "injury" while playing checkers, it's easily done when a sore loser bashes you over the head with a checker board. Activities in Full Swing Basketball, softball, and bowling have been organized and are in full swing, while tennis and table tennis tournaments are being planned to begin in the upcoming week. Boys' basketball was the start of the organized recreation with wing teams competing against each other every Monday. Wednesday and Friday. Some of the more fortunate competitors of the first week of play were Templin 3-South, Templin 5-North, Templin 7-South and Ellsworth 5-North. TONIGHTS CAGE schedule is as follows with the dorm abbreviated at the first letter, along with the abbreviation of the wing and the floor number: 6 p.m.-T2N vs. T4N, T4S vs. T5S, T3N vs. T5N, T3S vs. T6S; 7 p.m.-E5N vs. T6N, E5S vs. T7S, and T2S vs. T7N. Last Thursday, the Mickey Displays By Artists An exhibit of outstanding work from the students of the art division was first presented on June 30 in Murphy Hall. The exhibit included a representation of each of the 20 art classes except sculpture and weaving. Arvid Jacobson, who is in charge of the art exhibit, said that each Friday a new exhibit will be put up. The exhibit is selected by the faculty. Usually the exhibit includes the best of each class, but the instructors hope that before camp is over each student will have at least one work displayed. After one week of display, the exhibits are returned to the students and a new exhibit is put up. The purpose of the exhibits is to give the students a chance to watch themselves and others improve and to give the whole camp a chance to see what the art division is doing. Mantles and the Willie Mayes got together for slow pitch softball. Softball also is played by wings and each wing has a game every Tuesday and Thursday on the softball fields behind Robinson Gymnasium. Friday a bowling league was formed. The bowlers roll three lines a week for $1 a week and it is both a team effort and an individual effort. John Fletcher compiled the highest average of 179 after rolling the second highest scratch single and the best three game series of 537 after the first week. OTHERS WHO MADE a show of the first week's activity were Eugene Sanders, who put a 202 on the scoresheet, and Owen Ball who hit for a 192. Ball had the second highest series with 492 pins while Brandy Byers knocked down 479 pins. The Lonely Bulls, the Tigers, the Buzzards and the Sharks were the winning teams after the first night's action. J-Campers Go, Come The journalism division of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp has two three-week courses in addition to a six-week course. The first three-week group produced the first Kamper Kansas, and one six-week group produced this issue. Another group of six-weekers also will work on the third paper, and the last The three-week campers had their choice of the first or last three weeks of camp. Those who are here for the first session are preparing to leave, and the division soon will have the other three-week students in its midst. WITH A GREAT interest in raising quarter horses, Severinsen now makes his home in upstate New York along with wife, Evonne, and five children. Early Start— He believes that young people appreciate music much more than they are given credit for and that many older people tend to underrate the younger generation's appreciation for music. The youth's appreciation is, in his opinion, "pretty sharp." But, he warns, it is the youth's "responsibility to upgrade our musical culture—you must realize this every time you turn on the radio and hear the kind of trash they play all day." Continued from page 1 The second group of threeweek campers will have the same courses as the other groups but will not have as extensive instruction in radio and television. The six-week group will delve into the complexities of modern journalism and examine the legal aspects of their field. three-week group will produce the final Kamper Kansan. Several of the three-week campers enjoyed camp life so much that they plan to stay the entire six weeks. Every winner in the wing receives a whole pizza. The winners are determined by the housemothers and the supervisors in the dorms. Each day all the rooms are inspected. The final decision is based on which wing has been the neatest for the entire week. In case of a tie, a wing is eliminated if the members of the wing received any demerits during the week. Hungry stomachs and screams of joy greet pizzas each Monday when they are awarded to the cleanest wing in each of the dormitories. Joy, screams 4 Kamper Kansan Friday, July 7, 1967 Concert Program Saturday, July 8, 2:15 p.m. Concert Orchestra Gerald M. Carney, Conductor John Corley, Guest Conductor George Lawner, Guest Conductor Saturday, July 8, 2:15 p.m. Theme Song Irish Tune from County Derry ... Percy Grainger Symphony in F Major, No. 8 ... Ludwig V. Beethoven 1st movement, allegro Mr. Corley, Conducting Peer Gynt Suite, No. 1 Edward Grieg La Belle Helene, overture Jacques Offenbach Dr. Lawner, Conducting Varsity Band LeRoy Esau, Conductor George Brite, Guest Conductor John Corley, Guest Conductor The Foundation March R. F. Goldman Beguine for Band Glen Osser Mr. Esau. Conducting American Civil War Fantasy ... Jerry Bilik Sabre and Spurs ... John Philip Sousa An American in Paris ... George Gershwin Mr. Corley, Conducting The Chorale James Ralston, Conductor Fa Una Canzona (Sing Me A Song) ... Orazio Vecchi I Beheld Her, Beautiful As Dove ... Healey William Six Chansons ... Paul Hindemith Trois Chansons ... Claude Dubussy 1. Dieu, qu'il La Fait Bon Regarder! (Lord, Leved Hast Made My Dear!) Bourree ... Bach In the Still of the Night ... Cole Porter Nelly Bly ... John Halloran Sunday, July 9, 2:15 p.m. Concert Choir Darrrell Benne, Conductor Jane Fager, Accompanist A Choral Flourish R. Vaughan Williams De Profundis (Psalm 130) Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Laudate Dominum (Psalm 117) Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Sea Charm ... Poems by Langston Hughes Water-front Streets Long Trip Sea Calm Sailor Seascape Mexican Market Woman Beggar Boy Parisian Beggar Woman Irish Wake Death of an Old Seaman Sea Charm Nobody Knows ... Spiritual arr. Shaw-Parker Gay Robinson, Contratto Chamber Choir James Ralston, Conductor Jane Fager, Accompanist O Magnum Mysterium ... Tomas Luis de Victoria An Apostrophe To The Heavenly Hosts ... Healey William Behold! I Build A House ... Lukas Foss Merry Let Us Part and Merry Meet Again ... John LaMontaine Symphony Orchestra Gerald M. Carney, Conductor John Corley, Guest Conductor George Lawner, Guest Conductor Theme Song Irish Tune from County Derry...Percy Grainger Pohjolas Daughter, A Symphonic Fantasy ... Jean Sibelius Licutenant Kijie Suite ... Sergei Prokofiev Licutenant Kije Suite ... Sergei Prokofiev The Birth of Kije Romance Kije's Wedding Troika The Burial of Kije Fourth movement, allegro Symphony in C Minor, No. 5 ... Ludwig V. Beethoven Symphony in C Minor, No. 5 ... Ludwig V. Beethoven Sunday, 7 p.m. Symphonic Band Kenneth Bloomquist, Conductor John Corley, Guest Conductor Chorale and Alleluia Howard Hanson Symphonic Songs for Band Robert Russell Bennett 1. Serenade 2. Spiritual 3. Celebration Mr. Bloomquist, Conducting Jubilation—An Overture...Robert Ward Prelude and Scherzo "Hammersmith" Op. 52...Gustav Holst Variants on a Medieval Tune...Norman Dello Jolo Mr. Corley, Conducting Concert Band Russell L. Wiley, Conductor John Corley, Guest Conductor Overture to "The Tsar's Bride" Rimsky-Korsakov Stenka Razine Alexander Glazounow Praeludium and Allegro Vittorio Giannini Meditation (1963) Gunther Schuller Symphony in B40 for Concert Band Paul Hindemith II Andante grazioso—Fast and Gay III Fugue Mr. Corley, Conducting