Summer Session Kansan Friday, June 19, 1964 52nd Year, No.4 Program for Concerts Lawrence, Kansas Concert Choir and Chamber Choir Sunday afternoon, June 21 3 p.m. University Theatre Concert Choir Crucifixus ... Antonio Lotti Exsultate Deo ... Alessandro Scarlatti Grant Unto Me the Joy of Thy Salvation ... Brahms From Motet, Op. 29, No. 2 She Walks in Beauty ... David Foltz Tribute ... Ronald Lopresti If I But Knew ... Joseph W. Clokey Ride On, King Jesus ... Negro Spiritual Mr. Ralston conducting Chamber Choir Lift up Your Heads, Ye Mighty Gates ... Leisring Selig Sind Die Toten ... Schutz Alleluja ... Bach from Motet #6, Lobet den Herrn, alle Heiden Sea Charm ... Frederick Piket Reflection ... Houston Bright Mary Wore Three Links of Chain ... Negro Spiritual arr. Joseph W. Clokey Mr. Ralston conducting 12-minute intermission Orchestra Gerald M. Carney, Conductor Theme Song Irish Tune from County Derry ... Grainger Trumpet Voluntary ... Purcell La Gassa Ladra, overture ... Rossini Symphony No. 3, Scotch ... Mendelssohn Third Movement: Adagio Fourth Movement: Allegro Vivacissimo Rodeo, suite ... Copland Saturday Night Waltz Hoe Down Mr. Carney conducting Concert Band and Symphonic Band Sunday evening, June 21 Howard Halgedahed, Guest Conductor Symphonic Band Symphonic Band Overture for Winds ... Carter Mother Goose Suite ... Ravel Overture to the Impresario ... Mozart Amparito Roca (Spanish March) ... Texidor Beguine for Band ... Osser Finale from Death and Transfiguration ... R. Strauss Chorale and Alleluia ... Hanson Mr. Halgedahl conducting Concert Band Toccata ... Frescobaldi Iphigenia in Aulis ... Gluck Polonaise ... Rimsky-Korsakov Pictures at an Exhibition ... Moussorgsky March from Love for Three Oranges ... Prokofieff The Voice of the Guns ... Alford Theme Song Irish Tune from County Derry ... Grainger Mr. Wiley conducting 'Epitaph for George Dillon Opens KU Run Next Week "Epitaph for George Dillon," to be presented June 23-26, will be the second summer production in the University Theatre's "Side Door '64" series. The three-act comedy, by John Osborne and Anthony Creighton, is set in the home of the Elliot family just outside London in 1958. The world George confronts must be very much like that confronted by the authors when they wrote, for both of them were, at that time, unemployed actor-playwrights. JOHN OSBORNE, Britain's archetypical "Angry Young Man," followed his hit production of "Look Back in Anger" with the production of this earlier play—a collaboration—which was perhaps less angry, perhaps less commercially successful, but to many critics considerably more human. "Dillon" treats the problem of the poetic soul in the stifling environment of contemporary society. Osborne and Anthony Creighton create in George Dillon a talent fated to spiritual suffocation unable to write, to act, or even to love successfully. Steve Callahan, a Lawrence graduate student, is director of the play. assisted by John Hazleton, Alexandria, La, graduate student. Settings for the comedy are by James Hawes, Lawrence graduate student; costumes by Chez Haehli, assistant professor of speech and drama; lighting and sound by William B. Birner, Lawrence graduate student; and properties by Bela Kiralyfalvi, Hungary graduate student. The cast of "Dillon" includes the following; Josie Elliot, Ann Thompson, Iola senior; Ruth Gray, Mary Lynn Speer, Merriam senior; Mrs. Elliot, Pat Melody, Miami, Okla., senior; Norah Elliot, Glenda Harwell, Springfield, Mo., senior; Percy Elliot, Steve Callahan; George Dillon, Byrne Blackwood, Springfield, Mo., graduate student; Geoffrey C. Stewart, Harper Barnes, Lawrence graduate student; Mr. Webb, John Hazleton, and Barney Evans, Clayton Crenshaw, Topeka graduate student. Tickets, on sale in the University Theatre box office at $1.50 each, may be obtained free by students on presentation of registration certificates. There are no reserved seats available. Curtain time for performances, all produced in arena style, is 8:15 p.m. on the main stage in Murphy Hall. Science-Mathematics Camp Draws 100 Students to KU More than 100 youthful scientists and mathematicians have arrived to participate in the ninth annual Science and Mathematics Camp. Participants were selected from applications submitted by 1,100 high school sophomores and juniors from all over the United States. Initially, KU received 2,300 requests for information about the program. the campers finally chosen come from 24 communities in Kansas and from towns in 27 other states, Guam and the Canal Zone. They will use their six weeks at KU for concentrated study in two of eight areas: anthropology, microbiology, chemistry, mathematics, physics, psychology, radiation biophysics and zoology. Each camper will choose his areas after an orientation period this week. The campers will hear senior members of the KU faculty lecture and will spend time in laboratory or field work—about 10 hours total in each of the two areas chosen. Dr. Delbert M. Shankel, assistant professor of microbiology, is the program director. The camp is supported by the National Science Foundation and is affiliated with the Midwestern Music and Art Camp. A phase of the 1964 Science and Mathematics Camp is a research participation program, also directed by Dr. Shankel. The program's enrollees are 25 outstanding students from last year's camp who are conducting independent research June 7-Aug.2. Physics Institute To Host Teachers The third annual Summer Institute for College Teachers of Physics will be held at KU from June 22 to Aug. 28. Thirty teachers of physics from all parts of the United States will attend, plus one teacher from Shirae, Iran, who is being sponsored by the National Science Foundation. Gordon G. Wiseman, associate professor of physics at KU and director of the institute, said the purpose of the 10-week program is mainly to acquaint the participants with recent developments in physics. Applications from teachers with recent degrees in physics were refused on the grounds that they already were acquainted with modern physics and would not benefit as much as others might. Selected topics in nuclear physics and solid state physics will be offered. They will be taught by Prof. Wiseman, director; D. S. Ling, associate professor of physics, and John McKinley, assistant professor of physics. The 30 chosen were selected from more than 130 applicants as those most likely to benefit from the program. Rare Books on Birds On Exhibit June 25 An exhibition of old and rare books on ornithology, presented by the department of special collections, will open in the exhibition hall in the basement of Watson Library June 25. Entitled "Notable Books in the Development of Ornithology," the exhibition will last until Sep. 10. The exhibit, made up primarily from the Ralph Ellis Ornithology Collection, is in honor of the rare books section of the American Library Association, which will meet here June 25-June 27, and the American Ornithologists Union, which will meet here Aug. 30-Sept. 4. AN OLD-FASHIONED RIDE—Exploring the KU campus along Jayhawk Drive are Christine Broeker, 13, of 11 E. 11th St., left, and Mary Walker, 12, of 1027 Vt. Providing the power is Christine's pony, Major. Central America Notes Growth in Liberal Arts The liberal arts and sciences, which have had their ups and downs in student popularity but are now having boom times in United States universities, are making their first big break-through in Central American schools. Fifteen administrators spent last week on the KU campus at a meeting of the Commission for General Studies of the Council of Central American Universities. IT WAS THE FIRST such meeting held in the United States and was designed for a close look at general studies programs in this nation. DEAN GEORGE R. Waggoner of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, an adviser to the commission and host for the meeting, said: "Central American universities have been oriented to the professional schools such as law and medicine. General studies have been offered only in the last half dozen years." Arturo Quesada, head of the National University of Honduras and council president, said universities have important roles to play in the development of Central America, "so they must reform most of their curricula and organize new career training to fulfill that mission. We have had a panoramic view of the American educational system at this meeting." RAFAEL CEDILOS of the University of El Salvador noted that the influence in education there is now from the United States rather than France. "We are an underdeveloped country, and the university has a big role in changing this. In the past the university only had professional studies. We are changing educational patterns to equip more people for industrial and agricultural developments. This is an important tool in changing social and economic conditions." "WE ARE NOT satisfied yet," said Mariano Fiallow Oyanguren of the National University of Nicaragua, "but compared with 10 years ago, we have done something." From Guatemala, where economic development is handicapped by illiteracy, Jorge Arias, head of the University of San Carlos, noted that "there has been more American influence in planning education than in practicing it, and the latter is something we do need." THE EDUCATORS have both kind words and regrets about the Alliance for Progress. Rector Quesada of Honduras said, "The Alliance for Progress is not attaining all of its goals. It can and must do a better job." Claudio Gutierrez of the University of Costa Rica, which for several years has had an exchange with the University of Kansas, said his school no longer has a program with the Agency for International Development.