Thursday, April 18, 1968 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 5 KU expects 2,800 at camps By Jill Brackbill Kansan Staff Reporter Six weeks of specialized study in a particular field will highlight the summer for an estimated 2,800 high school students during the 31st season of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp at KU. The camp not only provides specialized training in a variety of areas but gives the students a glimpse of University life as well. They will be attending classes conducted by the University faculty, using University facilities and living in residence halls. This summer the camp will have 11 divisions: music, art, ballet, science, mathematics, journalism, speech, German, Latin, Spanish and French. There also will be a Junior High Music Camp which will include grades six, seven and eight and will run from June 5 to June 15. Each program will be taught by the University faculty and selected high school teachers. However, the music and ballet divisions will have guest instructors who will also be featured as guest artists in concerts. Eighteen guest conductors, all of national or international reputation, will each spend a week at the camp lecturing and performing in concerts. Among them is Doc Severinsen, the well-known trumpeter. Staff teachers for the ballet division include Larry Long, ballet master with the Ruth Page Company; Marguerite M. Reed, a former choreographer and first dancer for the Tulaa Opera Ballet and co-founder and co-director of Dance Showcase of Tulsa, a regional ballet company; and Alexandra Zaharias, past president and choreographer for the St. Louis Civic Ballet and now choreographer and artistic director for the St. Louis Dance Theatre. In the speech division there will be guest lecturers and judges from various universities and colleges. The Senior High Music Camp will offer specialized training in four bands, three choirs, two symphony orchestras, music theory and small ensembles. A special class for advanced campers in introduction to music literature will be taught by Saul Feinberg of the Philadelphia school system. The speech division offers courses in debate, dramatic interpretation, various forms of speaking and duet acting. July 19-20 a Championship Forensic Tournament will be held. Students accepted for the ballet division will appear in concerts in the University Theatre. A seminar for teachers will be held during the third week of the camp. Designs win prize The students will be housed in Ellsworth, Lewis, JRP and McCollum Halls. Each residence hall will have a camp director, and each group of 15-20 student campers will have a counselor. The counselors will be college students. Dennis Wayne Jacobs, fourthyear architecture student from Kansas City, Mo., is the winner of the $250 prize in the eighth annual Reynolds Aluminum competition at the University of Kansas. KU junior wins $100 award for book collection Second prize of $75 in the KU competition goes to Bruce Goebel, fourth-year student from Columbia. Mo. A collection of books by and about Winston Churchill, including scrapbooks and a personal note from the statesman, has won first prize in the 12th annual Elizabeth M. Taylor Awards for Book Collectors competition. Students in the journalism division will work on the Summer Kansan as well as assume full responsibility for weekly issues of the Kamper Kansan, a newspaper published for the students attending the camp. They also will edit Tempo, the camp yearbook. Second-place ranking, and $50. went to Mrs. Janice Lintecum, Milwaukie, Ore., senior. Mrs. Lintecum has collected most of the titles in the long out-of-print Penguin Classics series. The prize, administered by the American Institute of Architects, is offered to accredited schools of architecture for the best original design in which creative use of aluminum is an important factor. Clyde Toland, Iola junior, compiled the collection, which won him $100. The awards were presented recently at a luncheon in the Centennial Room of the Kansas Union. Jacobs won with a design of a college guest house. His design is entered, along with winners from other architecture schools, in the national competition for the Reynolds Aluminum prize of $5,000 to be divided equally between the student and his school. The winning collections are on display in Watson Library. Open 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Sunday 1:00-5:00 Tempations tickets still on sale Tickets are still available for the Temptations concert, which will be at 8 p.m. Saturday in Allen Field House. The concert is sponsored by Student Union Activities (SUA). Appearing with the Temptations will be Chuck Jackson, Yvonne Fair and the Monitors. Tickets cost $3.50, $3 and $2.50 They can be purchased at the Information Booth and the SUA Office or downtown at Bell's Music Store or The Sound. Paper put-ons. Colt 45 Malt Liquor Paper Vest and Mini-Dress. Made from the plushest, most luxurious fabric on the market today-paper! Colt 45 Malt Liquor pattern in red, white & blue. Sheer, fire-retardant, water-repellent and party proof. A snip of the scissors makes the mini-dress a micro in a split second. Check your size below and send now—we're only knitting a limited quantity. a completely unique experience. Send to: Colt 45 Malt Liquor P. O. Box 1800 □ $1.50 mini-dress □ $1.00 vest □ $2.00 combination Charge now! P. O.Box 1800 Baltimore, Maryland 21203 Petite Enclosed find check or money order (Postage and tax included)! Name. are © The Also Pinnau State ___Zip Code___ d. et Baltimore, Md. ---