Summer Session Kansan 52nd Year, No.8 Friday, July 3, 1964 Lawrence, Kansas Two Shaffer 1-Act Plays Start July 7 Two Peter Shaffer one-act plays, "The Private Ear—The Public Eye," will be presented July 7-10 to continue the University Theatre's arena-staged summer series. Peter Coulson and Jerry Davis, theater graduate students, are directing the productions. Coulson is working for the doctorate, and Davis is an M.A. candidate and a high school teacher in Kansas City. Bruce Levitt, Kansas City freshman; Allan Hazlett, Topeka senior, and Carolyn Landen, Pittsburg graduate student, comprise the cast of "The Private Ear." The play deals with a shy clerk who invites a typist to dinner and whose evening is ruined by a friend whom he has asked to come along in case conversation lags. BOTH PLAYS begin in straight comedy that gives no hint of the serious matters to come. "The Public Eye," however, is a bit more complicated. Here a prosperous accountant, having his wife shadowed for infidelity, finds that the man who has turned her head is the detective he has hired. The detective, played by John Dennis—an Iowa graduate student—is an eccentric who carries macaroons to keep up his strength. He takes control of the situation and saves the marriage by swapping roles with his employer, Jim Cope, a Kingston, Mo., senior. Laurie Crew, Connecticut graduate student, appears as the wife in the humorous triangle. SHAFFER, THE AUTHOR of "Five Finger Exercise," is said to demonstrate his subtle understanding of human feelings through these two plays in a way that is suddenly and immensely touching. Tickets are on sale at the Murphy Hall box office at $1.50. KU students may present their certificates of registration for a single free admission There are no reserved seats. Scenes from Plays Scheduled Tonight Excerpts from four plays will be presented by students in the drama division of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp at 7 p.m. today in the Experimental Theatre in Murphy Hall. The four scenes were chosen from a group of 10. Selections were made from the following plays: "A Midsummer Night's Dream" by Shakespeare; "Antigone" by Jean Anouilh; "Take Her, She's Mine" by Phoebe and Henry Ephron; "Red Peppers" by Noel Coward; "Tartuffe" by Moliere; "West Side Story" by Arthur Laurents; "Kind Lady" by Edward Chodorov; "The Crucible" by Arthur Miller; "The Most Happy Fella" by Frank Loosser, and "The Chalk Garden" by Enid Bagnold. Admission will be free. English Professor Named Acting Dean Acting assistant dean of the faculties for research at KU next year will be Dr. Harold Orel, professor of English. This will be in addition to his teaching duties. Dean John G. Grumm, a political scientist, will be on leave gaining practical experience serving on the staff of Gov. Brown of California. Dr. Orel, a KU teacher for seven years, has been a specialist in technical writing for industry and has published numerous articles on 19th and 20th century British and American literature. Among his recent books are "The World of Victorian Humor" and "Thomas Hardy's Epic Drama: A Study of The Dynasts." MELLOW TONES IN CORBIN—James Hardy of Wichita public schools directs girls in the chorus of the Junior High section of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp, meeting in Corbin Hall. Band Wins Halgedahl Praise Many comments of approval and praise were spoken by Howard Halgedahl, guest conductor of the Midwestern Camp symphonic band June 12. "I couldn't have asked for a better performance by the symphonic band!" said Halgedahl, a Winfield High School music instructor. "It was excellent. I had been expecting the sound to be very poor, since the band concerts are always held outside. However, the sound was terrific. "I WAS SO surprised that the students mastered the new music in only five days of rehearsals! I was very pleased with the students' attitudes, music ability and technicality. "The camp is efficiently operated and well planned," he added. "The work which Mr. Wiley and others have done in the past 27 years is marvelous." friend of Russell L. Wiley, the director of the Music Camp, is a member of the Ford Foundation Committee on Contemporary Music Project for Creativity in Music Education. Halgedabl. who is a personal The committee, consisting of seven famous composers and seven music educators, select composers which are sent out to the town which also have been specially chosen. "THE PURPOSE of the committee is to give young composers a break and to raise the standards of music in the school systems," stated Halkedahl. After being at the music camp for a week, Halgedahl said, "Working with the band campers was very pleasant. The choir and orchestra sounded fine, too. Any time my summer schedule will allow it, I would love to return and be a conductor for any of the groups of talented young musicians." President Gets Civil Rights Bill WASHINGTON—(UPI)The House finally passed and sent to the White House yesterday far-reaching civil rights legislation born of race violence, bombings, vote curbs and continued resistance to school integration. The milestone measure — enacted' after more than a year of congressional consideration — was sped to the White House where President Johnson planned to sign it into law last night at a televised ceremony. THE FINAL congressional action came when the House voted to accept the bill as amended by the Senate. The vote ended a prolonged and bitter fight by southern foes of the legislation. The bill puts new federal muscle in efforts to end race discrimination in schools, voting, and use of publicly owned parks, playgrounds and the like. It imposes a new federal ban on race discrimination in "public accommodations" such as hotels, motels, theaters, service stations and restaurants. It bars discrimination by employers and unions. It sets up machinery to cut off federal aid funds where discrimination is practiced and cannot be halted by less stringent methods. FINAL ENACTMENT throws the boiling civil rights fight into the forefront of the coming presidential election. Sen. Barry Goldwater, R-Ariz., was among only six Republicans who voted against it when the Senate approved the bill 73 to 27 June 19. The House on Feb. 10 had passed its own version of the bill by a lopsided 290-130 vote. Yesterday's vote was on accepting the Senate amendments, and the only question in the minds of the managers of the bill as they went into the final test had been how many of the 138 House Republicans who originally voted for the bill would switch to follow Gold-water's lead. Urban Tasks Called Urgent Why put a man on the moon if we can't solve the urban problems that exist at home, a University of Kansas professor asked this week at a hearing of the special subcommittee on air and water pollution of the Senate Public Works Committee. "No engineering programs in the United States are devoting sufficient time and effort to the training of engineers capable of handling the problems created by municipal refuse disposal," testified Ross E. McKinney, chairman of the civil engineering department at KU. "SCIENTIFIC technology has furnished us with the techniques to dispose adequately of municipal refuse without creating air pollution problems," he said, "but engineering technology has not yet learned how to translate the basic scientific criteria into operating plants." Engineering schools should devote a portion of their efforts to educating engineers to meet the problems of urban areas, Dr. McKinney said. Air pollution from municipal refuse disposal is only a small part of the overall problem of urban engineering, he added. APPEARING BEFORE the Senate group at the invitation of its chairman, Sen. E. S. Muskie, D-Me., Dr. McKinney traced changes in municipal refuse collection and disposal practices. Here's Program for Two Sunday Concerts Concert Choir and Chamber Choir Sunday Afternoon, July 5 Daniel Moe, Guest Conductor University Theatre 3 p.m. Concert Choir Gloria 1. Gloria 2. Et in terra pax Almighty and Everlasting God ... Gibbons Blessed Be the Lord ... Moe Every Nite When the Sun Goes In ... Arr. Owens Symphony of Psalms ... Stravinsky Part I Mr. Moe, conducting Chamber Choir Commit Thy Way ... Liebold Tenebrae ... Ingegneri Hosanna to the Son of David ... Moe Sure on This Shining Night ... Barber Standin' on the Walls of Zion ... Arr. Gardner Marches of Peace ... Frackenpohl Mr. Moe, conducting 12 minute intermission Orchestra Vilem Sokol, Guest Conductor Theme Song Irish Tune from County Derry ... Grainger Old American Country Set ... Cowell Meeting House Charivari Cornhuskin' Hornpipe Canland Mr. Carney, conducting The Planets, Suite ... Holst Mars Venus Jupiter Mother Goose, Suite ... Ravel Favan of the Sleeping Princess The Princess of the Pagodas The Fairy Garden Symphony No. 5 ... Tschaikowsky Finale, andante maestoso Mr. Sokol, conducting Concert Band and Symphonic Band Sunday Evening, July 5 Vilem Sokol, Guest Conductor KU Outdoor Theatre KU Outdoor Theatre 8 p.m. Symphonic Band March, The Youth of Britain ... Coats Andante and Finale from "The Firebird Suite" ... Stravinsky Prelude in A Major ... Chopin Slavonic Rhapsody, No. 2 ... Friedemann Cmdr Brendler conducting Cmdr. Brendler, conducting Water Music Suite ... Handel I. Overture II. Bouree III. La Paix IV. Menuet V. Allegro Fatue of the Bowers ... Halvorsen Mr. Sokol, conducting Concert Band Celebration Overture ... Creston Pictures at An Exhibition ... Moussorgsky 1 Promenade 2 The Old Castle 3 Hut of Baba Yaga 4 Great Gate of Kiev Mr. Wiley, conducting Jubilation Overture ... Ward First Suite in E Flat ... Holst Chaconne Intermezzo March Amoroso Salute ... Gould Mr. Sokol, conducting