Summer Session Kansan 52nd Year. No. 6 Lawrence. Kansas Friday, June 26, 1964 INSPIRED BY NATURE—Surveying his work is Carl Dick, Carrollton, Mo., an art camper in the Midwestern Music and Art Camp. Carl, 15, has painted a water color of Potter Lake. Summer Art Campers Are Deep in Creative Work By Laurie Lankin A blaze of paint splashed on a canvas, a student self-consciously posing for his fellow campers, a piece of silver mercilessly pounded in jewelry class—these are all sights familiar to art division campers of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp. Two different techniques were used in oil painting classes for the first two weeks. Campers under A. Dwight Burnam, associate professor of design, chose their own subjects, real or imaginary, and experimented with individual techniques. Instructor of design Robert O. Wright's whole class painted the same still life from different angles and viewpoints. CARTOONISTS UNDER Prof. Arvid Jacobson, associate director of the camp art division, are using fellow campers as subjects for cartoons. Comical drawings of many exasperating and humorous situations decorate the classroom. Brightly colored floor pillows, ponchos, place mats, and room divider are the current project instructor of design Mrs. Tonya Rhodes' weaving classes. Most water color classes, such as those of John Wyant, design instructor, hold their painting sessions outside, where all nature is their subject. LBJ Invites Wescoes to White House STUDENTS POSE for their classmates in Prof. Alexander Boyle's fashion illustration classes. Elongated "fashion-type" bodies are drawn and students are encouraged to imaginatively design the clothes they draw on their sketches. Original bricks to be put into a "creative wall relief" are designed and executed by campers under Bill Bagley, instructor of design. Instructor of design Philip Risbeck's commercial art students design the layout and artwork for a travel ad and are investigating different type faces and styles of lettering. Instructor of design Robert Whyte's design and color classes chose a simple geometric design and changed unpleasing color combinations into harmonious ones by altering the value and intensity of the colors. LINOLEUM WOOD block mono- prints are the projects of print work- shop campers under the direction of Prof. Alexander Bovle. Chancellor and Mrs. W. Clarke Wescoe have accepted an invitation to a dinner at the White House given Tuesday, June 30, by President and Mrs. Johnson in honor of the visit of the President of the Republic of Costa Rica and Mrs. Francisco Orlich. The basic project of instructor of design Joe Atterberry's jewelry classes was a key chain or charm. They plan to begin putting a design of their choice on a pin, pendant, or cuff links. On Wednesday the University of Kansas Chancellor and his wife will attend a reception for President and Mrs. Orlich at the Pan American Union given by Costa Rica ambassador to the United States, Gonzalo Facio and Mrs. Facio. The University of Kansas has enjoyed a particularly close relationship with Costa Rica since the beginning, half a dozen years ago, of an unusual, pioneering program of cultural, student and faculty exchanges. A Peace Corps project directed by KU in Costa Rica is coming to a close after two years. One Costa Rican statesman said recently, "Kansas now is better known in Costa Rica than almost any other part of the United States." A KU alumnus who built a thriving paint and chemical industry in Costa Rica, Dr. Frank Jirk, was awarded a distinguished service citation by the University at its recent Commencement exercises. Eight KU students now are in Costa Rica taking their junior year at the University of Costa Rico, and as many KU faculty members are on their way to Costa Rica to spend all or part of the summer. Ten students from Costa Rica were studying at KU last spring. U.S. Still Fights Reds, As in Korean Conflict TOKYO — (UPI) - The 14th anniversary of the start of the Korcan War yesterday found the United States still losing lives and spending money to frustrate Communist ambitions in Asia. American servicemen were on duty along a broad are running thousands of miles from northern Japan to the Himalaya Mountains of India. THEIR CHIEF antagonist was Communist China, a nation whose leaders are dedicated to proving to the world that the United States has no role to play in the Far East. Soviet Russia, whose atomic bombs kept a cautious United States from attempting an all-out effort against China in the Korean War, was quarreling bitterly with her one-time ally. There was hope in the West that the days of Moscow support for Peking's Asian ambitions were over. In South Korea, the land the United Nations and the United States saved from Communist takeover, President Park Chung Hee warned his countrymen that the North Korean Communists were looking for another chance to conquer the southern half of the country. "THE COMMUNISTS are not only seeking another chance to invade us across the 155-mile truce line," Park told a commemorative rally in Seoul, "but they are also tenaciously attempting aggression everywhere in the world, thus threatening the peace and freedom of mankind." The Korean president, badgered by economic problems, and the target of angry demonstrations by Korean students, called on the nation for unity. He said attacks on his government benefit only the Communists. THE HOTTEST SPOTS in Asia were South Viet Nam and Laos in the Indo-China peninsula. In Peking, Red China's leading newspaper trumpeted that the outcome of the war proved anew Chinese strongman Mao Tz-tung's thesis that determined people can confront atomic weapons. Funeral Set Today For Shulenberger A KU professor and a Lawrence high school teacher were killed Tuesday night about 9:30 when their car crashed into the side of another car at the Jarballo cutoff about 14 miles northeast of Lawrence on the Leavenworth-Tonganoxie Road. Dead are Arvid Shulenberger, 45. KU English professor, and Richard M. Samson, 49. Lawrence high school English and journalism instructor. Services for Shulenberger will be at 1 p.m. today, with burial and requiem at the Trinity Episcopal Church, 10th and Vermont. Burial will be in Omaha. Funeral arrangements for Samsor are set for 10 a.m. Saturday at downtown Byrd-Snodgrass Funeral Home in Wichita. Burial will be at Old Mission Mausoleum. Officers at the scene of the accident said the two men probably died instantly when their car hit a car driven by William Shultz, 62. Route 1, Bonner Springs. Shultz and his wife Stella, 62, were hospitalized. HIGHWAY PATROL Trooper Ronald Cranor said the Shultz car was making a left turn when the collision occurred. Shulenberger was driving the car when it crashed into the side of the Shultz vehicle. Both men were thrown against the windshield by the force of the impact. The two teachers had been in Leavenworth teaching Composition and Literature I for the KU Extension Department. Samson also taught at the Leavenworth Federal Penitentiary. They had finished their classes and were on the way back to Lawrence when the accident occurred. Cranor said he thought charges would be filed against Shultz although he wanted to discuss the case with the Leavenworth County attorney before he would know for sure. SHULENBERGER, AN author and critic as well as teacher, joined the KU faculty in 1951 as an assistant professor. He taught courses in criticism, creative writing, American literature and Shakespeare rapid reading. A native of South Dakota, he received an A.B. degree from Yankton College in 1941 and an M.A. and Ph.D. from the University of Chicago in 1948 and 1951. He taught at Dakota Wesleyan in Indiana and University College in Chicago before coming to KU. He was the author of a novel, "Roads from the Fort," published by Harcourt, Brace and Co. in 1954. The book, about mid-continent United States in the 1850's, was a Book-of-the-Month Club recommendation. HIS REVIEWS and poetry have appeared in a number of periodicals, including the New Yorker. Shulenberger held a Ford Foundation grant in 1955-56 to study creative writing as an academic subject. Arvid Shulenberger In 1958-59 he was a Fulbright lecturer on American literature at Aligarh Muslim University in India. He also conducted studies there on the relation of Oriental to modern Western literature. Surviving are two daughters, Anne and Jeanette, and two sons, Arthur and Eric, all of Lawrence; his father, Melvin Shulenberger of Mitchell, S.D.; two sisters, Mrs. Charles Buergeleem of Washington. (来源:nurse.) (Continued on page 5) Camp Paper Today The inside four pages of this edition of the Summer Session Kansan are the Kamper Kansan, official newspaper of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp. 170 Librarians Attend International Conference The subject of rare books, manuscripts and illustrations relating to the natural sciences is drawing 170 persons from all over the world to KU through Saturday. The International Conference on Rare Books in Natural History is being conducted by the KU and the Linda Hall Library of Science and Technology in Kansas City, Mo., for the rare books section of the Association of College and Research Libraries. ATTENDING ARE historians, librarians, museum curators, scientists and bibliographers. Dr. William T. Stearn, botanist and bibliographer from the British Museum in London, is the keynoter, speaking on the uses of bibliography in natural history. Other princinal sneakers will be: Other principal speakers will be: Thomas Buckman, director of libraries at KU, who organized the conference; Jacob Zeitlin, Los Angeles; Robert M. Mengel, KU instructor of zoology and bibliographer for the Ellis collection of rare books; Prof. Sten Lindroth, Uppsala University, Sweden; Vivian Lee, Stanford University. Dr. Frans A. Staffleu, Utrecht, The Netherlands; Prof. Richard Rudolph, University of California at Los Angeles; Prof. Robert C. Stauffer, University of Wisconsin; Alan Boyden, visiting Rose Morgan professor at KU from Rutgers University, and John C. Greene, professor of history at KU. Others participating in the conference are Foster E. Mohrhardt, Washington, D.C.; George H. M. Lawrence, Pittsburgh, Pa.; Phillip C. Ritterbush, Washington, D.C.; Jerry Stannard, Yale University; W. Stuart Forth, associate director of libraries at KU. Terrence Williams, department of special collections at KU; Charles A. Leone, professor of zoology at KU; Elizabeth Woodburn, Hopewell, N.J.; Joseph C. Shipman, Kansas City, Mo., and Robert P. Multhauf, Washington, D.C.