12 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Friday, May 3, 1968 Prize-winning guest at music symposium Composer Norman Dello Joio, winner of the 1959 Pulitzer Prize in music and twice winner of the New York Music Critics Circle Award, will be the guest composer at the tenth annual Symposium of Contemporary American Music, to be held at KU on Sunday, Monday and Tuesday. This year works by Hal Tamblyn, Englewood, Colo., graduate student; James Wintle, Kansas City graduate student; James Barnes, Hobart, Okla., freshman, and Anthony Cius, Miami Beach, Fla., graduate student, will be featured with compositions by such American composers as Samuel Barrier, David S. Bates, Walter Skolnik and Maurice Weed. Also featured is a composition by John Pozdro, professor of music theory. The schedule for the symposium: 3:30 p.m. Sunday in Hoch Auditorium, concert of works by Norman Dello Joio, guest composer; 2:30 p.m. Monday in Swarthout Recital Hall, recital of University student composers; 8 p.m. Monday in Swarthout Recital Hall, chamber music concert; 2:30 p.m. Tuesday in Swarthout Recital Hall, address by Norman Dello Joio on "The Role of Music and the University"; 8 p.m. Tuesday in Swarthout Recital Hall, choral music concert. KUOK will present marathon in Naismith KUOK, the student radio station, will present its second marathon of the spring semester beginning at 3 p.m. Friday and ending at midnight Sunday in Naismith Hall. The Naismith broadcast will closely follow the format of the marathon at McCollum Hall earlier this semester, with recorded and live entertainment, providing the latter is available. Dave Winegardner, Atchison junior and program director for KUOK, said organizing a marathon takes four weeks of planning. To include live entertainment, equipment must be adjusted differently for broadcast and the public address system must be the station's rather than the hall's. A remote broadcast, Winegardner said, gives the students an opportunity to see what is done during a regular broadcast. Perhaps the biggest problem with the Naismith marathon is finding enough space. The only space large enough in Naismith is the cafeteria. An advantage to the cafeteria set-up is the lack of competition from the lounge television. The regular staff of KUOK students in journalism 76 and 77 will broadcast the marathon. "I spent three hours trying to cram 14 announcers into the 57 hours of air time," Winegardner said. Most shifts are two hours long. In addition, each announcer serves as an engineer at one time or another. Phone requests help determine how many persons listen to the broadcast, although this type of survey is not too accurate. Wine-gardner estimated a 95 per cent listening audience during the McColum marathon. Ph.D. Final Examination. 2 p.m. James, Sanders. Education. 2 p.m. Official Bulletin CU reopens classes Day, Kansas Union. KU Muslim Society. 12:45 p.m. Kansas Academy of Science. All TODAY Ph.D. Final Examination. 3:30 p.m. Sociology. Room, 727, Frasr R, Hall 781 KU Muslim Society. 12:45 p.m. Preachers Kansas Union Ph.D. Final Examination. 4 p.m. Jerry Downhower, Zoology Room 950 South College Drive Popular Film. 7 & 9:30 p.m. "On the Waterfront." Dyche Auditorium. Chancellor's ROTC Review. 3:45 o.m. Memorial Stadium SATURDAY AU Film Society, 7:30 p.m. Born. Saved from Drowning. Renoir: "Blood of the Poet." Cocteau. Room 203. Bailey Hall. Kansas Academy of Science. All Day. Interior Design Symposium. All Day. Opera. 8:20 p.m. "The Rake's Progress." Stravinsky, University Theatre. Ph.D. Final Examination. 9:30 a.m. Lindley Hall. Geology Room 402, Lindley Hall. Interior Design Symposium All Day. "Design Exhibition" Five Equal Seats 9:30 am German Reading Examination. 9:30 a.m. Room 101, Currrh-O'Leary. Foreign Language Proficiency Examination 1:30 p.m. French, 41 Summerton German, 101 Carson English, 104 Carruth, Spanish, 205 Robinson Gym. Hindu Society Meeting. 5 p.m. Worship service and discussion of "The Path of Devotion." Methodist Student Center. Popular Film. 7. & 9.30 p.m. On the Opera. 7. 8:30 p.m. Opera. 8:20 p.m. The *Rake's* Pro- gress. 7. Stravinky. University Theatre. 8. 8:30 p.m. Club. 8. 30 p.m. Palladium. 1131 Kentucky. Indian Movies, 8:45 p.m. "Life of Rabindranath Tagore" and "Symphony of Life." Admission free. Wesley Foundation. Symposium of Contemporary American Mudie. 3:30 p.m. University Chorus and Orchestra. Hoch Auditorium. Popular Film. 7 & 9:30 p.m. "On the Waterfront." Dyche Auditorium Experimental Theatre. 8:20 p.m. "The Blacks." Ninth heart swap made at Houston About 140 students were injured when they were dragged, carried and led from the buildings they occupied April 23, led by the militantly leftist Students for a Democratic Society, which had two demands: That the university halt construction of a gymnasium in nearby Harlem which the students said would deprive residents of a recreational area; and that the university end its participation in a defense department research program. HOUSTON—(UPI)—Doctors at St. Luke's Episcopal Hospital transplanted a heart into a 47-year-old Phoenix, Ariz., accountant today and reported after a boost with an electric shock, the heart was functioning all right. NEW YORK—(UPI)—Columbia University reopens some classes today in the face of a student strike called in protest against alleged police brutality. The mayor said most of the 1,000 policemen who cleared the buildings acted "with great professionalism and restraint." Police action Tuesday to evict students from buildings they held in a protest against university policy ended in a bloody melee. Another scuffle Wednesday ended with some bloodied heads on both sides. Lindsay said he had asked Police Commissioner Howard Leary to submit a preliminary report by the weekend on police use of "excessive force" and "a fuller report after a thorough investigation." City officials said the reports of brutality came from Lindsay's aides and private citizens. The student strike, supported by some faculty members, was called by a group with much broader support than the SDS. Mayor John V. Lindsay said Thursday that "some police officers . . . used excessive force" in clearing five university buildings of more than 700 rebellious students who had held them for seven days. As a result of the protest and strike, the 17,500-student university has been closed since last Friday. Its leaders are demanding the resignation of university President Grayson Kirk and Vice President David B. Truman for the decision to call police on the campus. About 300 police who had occupied the campus since Tuesday were withdrawn Thursday to the gates of the university in Morningside Heights in upper Manhattan. It will be at 8 p.m. May 11 in Hoch Auditorium. Tickets for Picadilly Square, a benefit musical to raise money for Project Concern, will go on sale in the Information Booth Monday. Benefit tickets on sale Monday The musical is the story of people who are lonely. They search to find other people and happiness. The text of the musical is the poetry of Rod McKuen. The music is "the sounds of today." It includes such songs as "The Theme from the Valley of the Dolls," "I've Got You Under my Skin," "The Look of Love," "Love is Blue," and "The Theme from a Man and a Woman." The show is sponsored by the Board of Class Officers. The proceeds from the show will go to Project Concern. Project Concern is an international organization to raise money to help build a child welfare addition to a hospital in Vietnam. Collegiates for Concern is the KU committee of the organization.