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Summer News, Vol. 01, No. 06 (July 15, 1965)

Item Type Journal

Publisher University of Alaska

Download date 01/10/2021 13:51:33

Link to Item http://hdl.handle.net/11122/4251 : ' UNIVERSITY OF ALASKA' ' , .. 7 ■' " .. Bulletin for Summer Faculty,, Staff and Students • Vol. I No. 6 ' • July 15., 19-65

CHARTER INFORMATION

Pt. Barrow'- (July 17, Saturday) ■ . '

Schedule Change— The plane will leave at 9 'a.m. instead of 10 a.m. Check in at Wien at 8:30 a.m. If you do not have transportation a car will leave 'Constitution Hall at :8 a.m. ’ ’ . .

The Eskimo dances and blanket toss will be presented for an additional charge of $3 to those persons wishing to see the program. Be prepared for muddy streets and colder windy weather.

Riverboat (July 16, Friday) , : * ' ’ ' : Leave at 6:30 p.m. from Pikes La'rldlng or at 5:30 p.m. from 1 Constitution Hall if you have no -transportation'.- Bring a picnic supper or snack if you wish. •

Cripple Creek Excursion (July 24, Saturday, 3 p.m.)

Enjoy a visit to the old gold town of Ester City. Pan some of that famous gold and then have a '•family style Alaskan dinner of reindeer,' salmon and sh'etefish. - Price: $5 for adults- and3 f O :r children under 8 years. Sign up in the recreation off ice, ' 109 f-EieIsori (phone 292). Deadline is Tuesday, July 20. - '

OPERA "H.n.S. PINAFORE" SCHEDULED

The University Summer iiusic Camp for high school students, under the direction of Professor Charles Davis, will present the opera "II.M.S. Pinafore" at 8 p.m. July 21, 22, -and 23 in Schaiible Auditorium. Admission is $1 for • adults and 75$ for c h i l d .r e n , ’;''-' , ' •••'• ' ' •' 1 - During the Golden Days celebration in Fairbanksthe Music Camp * students will have a float in the parade and will present an open air band concert a t ' the Memorial Plaza-on campus at -8 ;pJiri'.'- bn J u l y '24. SUMMER NEWS PAGE TWO JULY 15, 1965

SWIMHIHG CLASSES OFFERED

, , , n°n.credit swimming classes for children and adults will be f °f Alaska swimming pool from July 19 to August 6 Classes for children between the ages of 10 and 16 will be held Monday Wednesday and Friday from 10:00 to 11:30 a.m. for advance? beainSSo “ sSWm beTe^T t°71i 30 P-m- f°r intermediate swfle?! intermediate ?'9 W e ^ a y and Friday for

p i Persons wishing to enroll should pre-register by calling 479-7295 enrollment is on a first-come, first-served basis, and classes are limited to 25 persons each. classes are

canscaps. A fee of $15 will J;hei?be charged. °Wn suits and towels- Girls must-have

COMPUTER LECTURES SCHEDULED

The University computer center will present a series of lecture on FORTRAN and FORTRAN II programming languages for the IBM 1620 computer July 26-July 30. Meeting times and place are subject to th^f acuity * staff^fs^ and'are open to X^mSber of , , r. student body. Interested persons are asked to July 2$e COmp r center/ Phone extensions 304 or 526 before Friday,

"EVERYTHING IS COMING OUT ROSES"

-eview^st-fc7^^n girls f^om 9 to 19 years old, will present a 4-H dress ^eview at 7.30 p.m. today m Schaible Lecture Hall (Bunnell Buildincr) ^ enlS-m°deled Wl11 range from aProns ^ formal dresses, on the theme a 4 Hyciib9r>i’S+-h°ming °Ut Roses-" The girls have made the clothing through tators Thp Project. Lisa May and Julie Lomen will be commen­ tators. The public is invited. There is no admission charge.

FRENCH POETRY RECITAL

.p Mie^re V^aia wil1 Present a recital of French Poetry in dramatized Institute^ ™ P’m; i".Duckeri"9 318 as part of the n SL t a n * u f 13 °pe? t0 the Public- Hr- Viala has toured the for'an ability tn h H Ca ^veral times with his recitals. He is noted ' , J o r yr bring French poetry alive. His program Monday will felectlons from French poetry through the ages with particulf.ar emphasis on recent poetry. There is no admission charge. »

SUMMER NEWS PAGE THREE JULY 15, T9 65"

1-iUSIC FACULTY CONCERT • The faculty of the Summer Music Camp for high school students will present a concert tomorrow (Friday) at 8 p.m. in Schaible Lecture ^ Hall (Bunnell Building). Participating will be Fred Schlichting, violin; Dave Goedecke, trumpet; H. T.. Payne, French horn; Charles Davis, voice; Mrs. Carolyne Fawcett, piano. There is no charge and the public is invited.

PROFESSOR tJILEY TO PRESENT THIRD LECTURE

Dr. Bell I. Wiley, visiting professor from Emory University, will present his third lecture open to the public Wednesday, July 21, at 8 p.m. in room 318 Duckering Building. His subject will be The _ Changing South."

THE LADY KNOWN AS LOU HAS COMPANY

Paintings by students of Alaska artist Fred Machetanz, distinguished associate in art at the University, will be displayed for a week beginning Monday, July 19, in the Library. They will hang under the famed and popular painting, The Lady Known,as Lou. SUMMER NEWS PAGE FOUR JULY 15, 1965

WEEKEND i-iOVIES ,

Friday— July 16--7:30 p.m.— Schaible Lecture Hall

The Three Faces of Eve

Cinemascope--Black-and-white— 95 minutes— Academy Award Winning Joanne Woodward, David Wayne, Lee J. Cobb; narrated by Allistair Cooke. Written (screenplay), produced and directed by Nunnally Johnson. Based on a true case-history, this is the intriguing and provocative story of a woman whose psychosis causes her to take on first one personality, then a second, and finally a third— a triple "split personality." Joanne Woodward's portrayal of the three phases is triumphantly compelling.

Saturday--July 17--7:30 p .m.--Schaible Lecture Hall

Pepe

Color--1960--157 minutes With Cantinflas, , Dan Dailey ana guests , Bing Crosby, Sammy Davis, Jr., Tony Curtis, Jimmy Durante, Janet Leigh, , , Dean Martin, , others. Cantinflas follows his junket "Around the World in Eighty Days" with a trip from his native to the United States to accompany a horse which he raised as a colt when it is sold to an American . The fabulous experience of simple, loveable Pepe in Hollywood, Las Vegas, , Acapulco, andTaxco provide numerous vignettes in which stars portray themselves. Grand family entertainment.

Sunday--July 18--7:30 p .m.--Schaible Lecture Hall

The Great Escape

Cinemascope— color--19 6 3--16 8 minutes Steve McQueen, James Garner, Richard Attenborough, James Donald. Allied prisoners plan a mammoth break from a German camp, but only a handful escape.