FinalSunday Concerts Summer Session Kansan Page 3 Friday; July 24, 1964 Concert Choir and Chamber Choir Sunday, July 26 Thomas Hillbish, Guest Conductor 3 p.m. University Theatre Chorale Liebes Lieder Walzes ... Brahms Mr. Ralston, conducting Soprano — Alto — Tenor — Bass — Jeanie Barnett Nancy Barrett Bruce Ford Martin Bebt Fran Flentje Cynthia Brown Leslie Gilbert Dan Curry Nancy Hamm Diane Dahl Terry Hyde Bob Flannery Cheryl Halstead Gayle Gallagher Doug Murdock Paul Herche Pat Holstege Beverly Gibbs David Newberry Bob Lesh Marti Larkin Diane Phillips Wayne Northcutt Don McNemar Lettie Palmer Dorothy Purdy Steve Sparks John Mount Judi Pickering Beverly Tesh Charles Simmons Alan Powers C. Ann Richards Cheryl VanDonge Jack Tracy John Shepard Carol Williams Peggy Victor Ronald Wackholtz Jim Willmoth St. Thomas Moss Mr. Hillbish, conducting 12-Minute Intermission Orchestra Victor Alessandro, Guest Conductor Benvenuto Cellini, Overture Berlioz Symphony in D Major, No. 1 Mahler 1. Slowly, like a sound of nature 2. Strongly agitated 3. Stormily agitated Theme Song Irish Tune from County Derry ... Grainger Concert Band and Symphonic Band Victor Alessandro, Guest Conductor KU Outdoor Theatre January-February March Gillis Folk Song Suite Williams St. Lawrence Suite Gould March of the Steel Men Belsterling 8 p.m. Symphonic Band Mr. Bloomquist, conducting Rakoczy March ... Berlioz Intermezzo from "Vanessa" ... Barber-Beeler Lincoln Portrait ... Copland Don Grant, Narrator Introduction and Wedding March from "The Golden Cockerel" ... Rimski-Korsakov Mr. Alessandro, conducting Concert Band William Tell Overture ... Rossini Mr. Wiley, conducting Laredo (Paso doble) ... Williams Symphony No. V. ... Beethoven-Godfrey Allegro con brio Andante con moto Scherzo-Allegro Finale-Presto played without pause March from "The Love of Three Oranges" ... Prokofieff Mr. Alessandro, conducting 1812 Overture ... Rossini Theme Song Irish Tune from County Derry ... Grainger Mr. Wiley, conducting Mr. Wiley, conducting Engineers Get Refresher In New Training Program PITTSBURGH—(UPI) Graduate engineers can discard about 50 per cent of their professional knowledge 10 years from now because it will be obsolete. The pity of it is that only about half of what the engineer must know by 1974 is available at present. RECENTLY 17 Westinghouse engineering managers from the United States and Canada put the finishing touches on a four-week program aimed at keeping professional engineers up-to-date on new trends and new knowledge. Westinghouse Electric Corp. is taking steps to remedy this situation with its New Engineering Concepts Program. This plan is designed for non-management engineers who have about 10 years' engineering experience "The graduate of 10 or more years ago received his college education at a time when modern techniques of design and analysis, now rapidly becoming conventional, were not taught in undergraduate schools nor, in many cases, even in graduate schools." John R. Van Horn. Westinghouse manager of professional development. said: VAN HORN said most of the men in the current Westinghouse program earned their engineering degrees from 15 to 20 years ago. They now supervise departments ranging in size from 20 to 100 engineers. Carnegie Institute of Technology helped design the program with top lecturers supplied by the University of Pittsburgh, Case Institute of Technology and Princeton University. The goals of the program are to encourage self-education of the engineering manager in new fields by providing understanding and familiarization with new concepts and developments. During the sessions, which ran five days a week and some evenings, managers covered such fields as modern and numerical analysis, probability and statistics, logic theory, physics. "BARRY GOLDWATER'S nomination was largely the result of four years of hard work by groups like the Birch Society. I think that if the average citizen was aware of the nature of some of these pro-Goldwater groups, he would think twice before voting for him," he commented. KU Target— (Continued from page 1) Friends of Wilcox often call him "the lever of this campus." However, the "lever" (Wilcox) believes that he may not be here next year because of grades. If this is true, the KU campus may at least be "quieter" next year. One thing is sure however—Laird Wilcox will be missed. Teaching of English as Foreign Language Will Receive New Emphasis at University The teaching of English as a foreign language will become a serious business at KU this fall. The new self-supporting Intensive English Center will receive about 40 men and women from abroad for a semester of intensive study of English. Most of them will be here with sponsorship by their own governments or by the United States. Edward Erasmus, director of the English Language Center at Michigan State University for the past three years, heads the new program. He is a graduate of Aquinas College in Grand Rapids, Mich., and received M.A. and Ph.D. degrees at the University of Michigan. African-America Institute, the Kuwait Student Bureau and the Saudi Arabia Cultural Educational Mission. AMONG THE SPONSORS OF students in the first class will be the The center's goal is to bring a student to proficiency in the English language in one semester. This is usually enough for those who have had previous instruction in English, although some may need a second semester. Prospective students are those from abroad who will enter the academic programs of American colleges and universities and visitors who wish to improve their English for business, professional or personal reasons. "MANY PERSONS from abroad are disappointed academically and personally simply because their lack of proficiency in English is a block in and out of the classroom," Erasmus said. Each student in the center will receive from 25 to 32 hours a week of instruction, depending on his initial proficiency. Sections of the program are pronunciation, grammar, pattern practice, language laboratory, composition, reading, American society, and the opportunity to audit KU lectures in the personal field of interest. KU for several years has had a program of remedial English for its own international students. It will be merged with the center a year from now after the latter has become established. --- A SPECIAL SALE AT The Round Corner Drug Store Prince Matchabelli Cologne Sale 1/2 Dram of Perfume FREE with 2 oz. of Matchabelli Cologne — A $4.50 value for only $250 1 Dram of Perfume FREE with 4 oz. of Matchabelli Cologne-An $8.00 value for only $400 In All Matchabelli Fragrances Visit Our Store Today For Complete Friendly Service Round Corner Drug Store 801 MASS. VI 3-0200 MEL FISHER ---