Page 8 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, June 9,1964 Students Preview Austria Shows A group of 13 KU students last week gave a sneak preview of dramas which they will present in Europe this summer on the campus of Vienna University in Stroble, Austria. The students and Tom Rea, instructor in speech and drama and a University Extension coordinator, will spend the summer at the Austrian school. Rea will teach Theater in Education and the KU students will take work in history of art, history of music and German. Free University in Berlin. The party will leave here June 19 for Manchester, England, where they will present productions at the University of Manchester. Other stops will be at Erlanger University in Germany and Utrecht University in Holland. They also may appear at AT ALL TIMES the students will live with their European counterparts. Lewin Goff, director of theater, made arrangements for the tour in 1961, when he attended the Congress of International Theater Institute. Three scholarships from Vienna University are helping to provide financial assistance. Each student is paying his own travel expenses. An earlier tour group, also including Rea, appeared in productions in the summer of 1962. SUMMER SCHOOL at Vienna lasts from July 13 to Aug. 22. The KU group will attend the International University Theatre Student Festival at Erlanger University over one weekend. cluded segments of "The Zoo Story" and "A Taste of Honey" and musical numbers from Broadway shows. The students will present "The Tiger" and "Oh Dad, Poor Dad . . ." as well, while in Austria. Productions previewed here in- Members of the troupe include Mr. and Mrs. Richard Scharine of Lawrence; Sylvia Groth, Mayville, N.D., graduate student; Carol Strickland, Kansas City, Kan.; senior; GiGi Gibson, Shawnee Mission junior; Mary Phillips, Kansas City, Mo., junior; Betty Maline, Cozard, Neb., graduate student; Jo Anne Smith, Wellington junior; Tom Winston, Dallas senior; Bill Bowersock, Shawnee Mission freshman; Rick Friesen, Prairie Village junior; Tom Woodward, Des Moines senior; and Bob Rumpf, Webster Groves, Mo., senior. Cape Kennedy Threatened by Strike By United Press International By United Press International Picket lines have threatened to stop construction on America's moon probe project at Cape Kennedy. Another strike shut down the two major newspapers in Columbus, Ohio. Eight thousand aluminum workers prepared to strike against Aluminum Company of America (ALCOA) plants, and a settlement has been rejected in the strife-torn strike against the Essex Wire Corp. at Hillsdale, Mich. THE CAPE KENNEDY picket lines were ordered by the Brotherhood of Maintenance of Way employees. Their leaders said they were protesting use of a government-owned railway spur by the strikebound Florida East Coast Railway. Some of the 4,000 construction workers at Cape Kennedy refused to cross the picket lines. The construction men are at work on a $110 million vertical assembly building for the moon launch program and a $40 million complex for the Titan-3 program. same issue halted construction at Cape Kennedy for three days last February. There was another work stoppage over a different dispute at the cape in March. OTHER UNIONS striking over the At Columbus, members of the International Typographical Union. Local 5, and of the Mailers Local No. 103 went on strike against the afternoon Columbus Dispatch and the morning Columbus Citizen-Journal. ROBERT A. MILLER, president of the mailers local, said the strike was ordered after management notified the unions it was discontinuing their pension plan. The two unions have been working without a contract since Jan. 2, and the last negotiating session Friday reported no progress. The Aluminum Workers Union said it would call 8,000 members out on strike at ALCOA plants in Bettendorf, Iowa. East St. Louis, Ill.; Warwick, Ind.; Cressona, Pa.; Lancaster, Pa.; Lafayette, Ind., and Chillicothe, Ohio. A shaky armistice remained in effect at Hillsdale, where national guardsmen have been on duty to prevent violence at the Essex Wire Corp. plant. But members of the striking International Union of Electrical Workers refused to ratify a proposed contract which Gov. George Romney helped work out. Graham Sees New Conflicts CHICAGO —(UPI)— The large cities of the United States will face a "hot, long, bloody summer" on the racial front, evangelist Billy Graham said at a rally here. Graham told 30,000 persons at a rally in Arlington Park race track that the internal crisis of racial strife is as serious as that faced by the nation at the beginning of the Civil War. "THE MOOD OF the nation is violent and dangerous," Graham said. "America has to get back to God in the next five or six years, or we will face troubles and blood such as you cannot dream about in your lovely suburban homes." Auditions Scheduled For Opening Show Auditions will be held at 7 p.m. today in 341 Murphy for "The Private Ear" and "The Public Eye," University Theatre production that will run July 7-10. The directors of the play are Peter Coulson, Tucson, Ariz., graduate student, and Jerry Davis, Kansas City, Kan., graduate student. All students are eligible to read for the summer program of plays. No experience is necessary. The ex-president was authoritatively reported to have restrained Gov. William W. Scranton of Pennsylvania in a telephone call from taking the lead in any attempt to head off Sen. Barry M. Goldwater's stretch drive for the Republican presidential nomination. Ike Halts Move To Block Barry CLEVELAND — (UPI) — Former President Dwight D. Eisenhower threw his weight against a budding stop-Goldwater movement after apparently starting the movement 24 hours earlier. Eisenhower talked to Scranton about an hour before the governor appeared on a national television program at the beginning of the annual Governors' conference which at the time was rife with stop-Gold-water talk. An authoritative source said Eisenhower told Scranton, however, that he had received a number of calls after their Saturday meeting at Gettysburg, Pa., at which the former president asked Scranton to make himself "more available" for the presidential nomination. In his Sunday call, it was reliably reported. Eisenhower said he did not want to participate in a stop-Gold-water movement. He further suggested that Scranton "not participate in a cabal directed against anyone," the source said. Scranton then made his television appearance and later held a news conference at which he failed to do much about projecting himself deeper into the presidential picture. KU Title Ends Lonborg Era The 1963-64 Big Eight All-Sports championship, clinched ahead of the final round of conference baseball play, was Kansas' third during Dutch Lonborg's regime as Jayhawk athletic director. It was a farewell presentation to the one-time three-sport star, who officially retires from his 14-year post July 1. In addition, the Jayhawkers have finished runner-up seven times. It was their fifth overall title since the modern circuit was formed in 1928 as the Big Six. This is more than any other school except Oklahoma, which once took 12 in succession, en route to a total of 23. Nebraska has three, Iowa State and Oklahoma State two and Missouri one. The Jayhawkers unseated Oklahoma's defending champions by $7\frac{1}{2}$ lengths, $33\frac{1}{2}$ to 41, over the expanded 11-sport card. Kansas opened that bulge through the seven fall-winter sports and matched the Sooners, 10-10, in the spring stretch run by winning its first tennis crown since 1948 and adding another surprise championship in outdoor track. Trailing in order under the inverse rating system, were Oklahoma State $ 47 \frac{1}{2} $ Colorado 48 Missouri $ 50 \frac{1}{2} $ Nebraska $ 52 \frac{1}{2} $ Iowa State 57, and Kansas State 66. For the first time since the early thirties, the Jayhawkers benefited by fielding a wrestling club, a sport in which they formerly were forced to absorb a full point load automatically because of non-participation. They also installed gymnastics, which was officially added to the conference's complement of varsity sports last winter. Engineers Wanted NEW YORK—(UPI)An increased demand for young engineers as result of increased production and higher metals prices in the minerals industry is predicted by Dr. Sanford S. Cole, president of the Society of Mining Engineers. "The mineral industry, one of the four basic industries by which wealth is created, requires engineers with training in several disciplines." For The Finest TRY DIXON'S From making your malt extra thick to dressing your sandwich a certain way - at Dixon's your sandwich is prepared the way you want it orders are never pre-cooked at Dixon's. Come out tonight and take your pick from our wide selection of sandwiches and soft drinks. 2500 W.6th VI 3-7446