" Connecticut Daily Campus^
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*** **»«! MAR 2.? 196? "Connecticut Daily Campus^ 7 ■ o o O Serving Storrs Since 1896 »-3 p-. ^ C o VOL. CXVI, No. 97 STORRS. CONNECTICUT WEDNESDAY. MARCH 21, 1962-= CO 3~ Junior Class To Recognize Hi Staff Samples Opinion c*> t- Two Outstanding Students I-I CO The Junior Class Council will a whole will then vote for the two 55 nonor two students for their lead- most worthy juniors. ership in class or campus wide af- In addition to giving credit for fairs at a meeting Thursday night. On WHUS Programs K Hie purpose of recognizing these outstanding work, the awards will Students is their contributions to give juniors and the student body The long-promised WHUS list- tributed to the Staff members. been revised and improved by the (he betterment of the campus an awareness of what their fellow eners poll is now being taken by Also distributed were lists of Executive Board of WHUS in Which under ordinary circum- students are doing in getting the the members of the executive order that it might, they believe, students interested in their school. people whom the staff members stances would not be given proper board of the radio station. In were expetced to interview. yield the information necessary eredit for their work. The Council hopes to set prece- response »o the increasing num- The past station manager of to bring the student the types of Qualifications for the Junior dent with the presentation of the ber of complaints and criticism programs that they desire. Recognition Award can be so- awards. The awards will be given of WHUS programming, the WHUS stated that they have The questionnaire itself is cial, political, academic, athletic monthly or bi-monthly. members of the executive board chosen a random sample of 130 divided into four parts: program- »r activity leadership. "There should be no complaints have composed a poll designed to students. He said that this group was fairly representative of the ming, listening times, reception, Any class council representative about the method of selection if test the reaction of the students and a general "all-inclusive" sec- may nominate a junior who he all dorms are represented," stated to the present programs. various groups on campus, thus tion. (eels is deserving of such recog- Council president Kevin Dunne. The poll also has allowances is an accurate sample. Each staff The programming section in- nition. He should give a list of All representatives should be for possible suggestions for bet- member has been assigned a por- tion of this list to use in his cludes questions abotu the type qualifications and other reasons present with their nominations. ter programming and other gen- of music that the students like, why he feels this person should be Final selections will be announced eral information about the area interviews. programs or coverage of campus recognized. The Class Council as in the Daily Campus. listening. The survey itself is an adapta- events that the students have At Monday night's staff meet- tion of a previous WHUS poll listened to. opinions about the af- Foreign Students' Speaker; ing, copies of the poll were dis- taken several years ago. It has filiation with CBS, and finally asks directly what per cent of the music played should be classical, Johannes Tonight In Ballroom what per cent should be top 40, Yale Photographer and what p°r cent general. Mrs. Phyllis Johannes, foreign lent in our modern world, and how 52 Per Cent Popular Itudent representative for the it contributes to and furthers' pov- As of the present, classical is 25%, top 40 is 52%, and the gen- Laubach Literacy Fund, Inc., will erty and hunger. With the emerg- ence of many independent coun- Lectures At Uconn eral category of jazz, show tunes, appear in the HUB Ballroom at tries in Africa and South America mood music and folk music is 7:45 tonight in a cultural program in our time, her topic should be "The University of Connecti- of Yale University. Mr. Bunnel 23%. of music, poetry, and interpretive very pertinent since many of these cut recognizes the importance of lectured on the subject of photog- The second part of the ques- dancing. Mrs. Johannes will talk peoples are illiterate. Since there instruction and understanding of raphy Monday night in the HUB tionnaire seeks information about also about the Laubach Literacy is an ever continunig struggle in photography," says Peter Bunnel, ballroom as part of the Fine Arts the optimum listening times and Charts, and will give her ideas on the modern world between the two research assistant and graduate Festival. | other general opinions. the problem of illiteracy. Her ap- powers of Democracy and Com- Mr. Bunnel stated that there The third section of this ques- pearance is being sponsored by munism, her topic should have are many "camera operators,'' tionnaire deals with the reception the Foreign Students of Uoonn. even farther reaching consequen- | but few real photographers. of WHUS on campus and its gen- Mrs. Johannes studied at King's ces since the politics of these new ■ Photography is an art of selec- eral quality, on both AM and College, London, and at the Royal nations will depend upon tne liter- tion. The photographer must ' FM. Academy of Dramatic Art. She acy of its people. , realize that the photograph is but The fourth section is made up has traveled throughout the world a selective medium that depends of four "open end" questions in- and has therefore had first hand Members Ousted volving general criticism of the Bontact with the peoples, cultures, on his visual phenomena. A special committee of State Thus, like a painter, he must station and suggestions for im- religions, and art of many coun- provement. tries, being versed in five lan- Republican leaders has upheld [depend on his imagination to guages. [choose what will be essential to a M:III.IL'-T Comments the ouster of eight members of good photograph. Because the While working on the TEN the Meriden Town Committee. tSation manager Tellis urges COMMANDMENTS in a techni- photographer must constantly the 130 students involved to take cal capacity, Mrs. Johannes came The eight lost their seats on the use his vision and understand I this survey seriously, as it is a to this country. She was deeply committee when they were re- what he sees, photography prom- chance for them to voice their ises a great potential for instruc- impressed by the work of Dr. moved from the party for sup- opinion on a matter of extreme Frank Laubach, an authority on tion in, the visual world. Photog- importance to the campus at l adult literacy, and has been work- porting an independent slate in raphy can be a bridge to the un- WHUS. He further added th ing to help the cause of literacy last year's city election. Their derstanding of ■modern seeing." Would appreciate complete co- ever since. Mrs. Johannes is try- places were then filled by the According to Bunnel, the point operation from all students, ing to impress upon people the ex- election of new committee mem- of comparison of an artist and it is only through know tent to which illiteracy is preva- bers. PBTBS BUNNEIX a photographer should be the is wrong and what the stU artists, not the art. That is, the Jwant, that WHUS Will he al creative ability of the artists in improve Its ■' as a student both cases should be the decid- radio station. ing factor in a comparison of the two arts. Creative photography is not Sachs Receives different than any other creating: the only difference is the photog- rapher begins with the finished Memorial Award product. All the photographer's experience must come into the Joel Sachs of New Haven, a moment of the snap of the shut- senior at the University of Con- ter of "moment of reality," as necticut's School of Business Ad- Bunnel puts it. ministration, will receive the Mr. Bunnel divides photographs Howard V. Krick Memorial Si h il- .into four distinct categories: arship Award at the 24th Annual straight photographic approach, Sa es Congress of the Connecticut photo and journalist ic approach, Association of Life Underwriters Ion Wednesday, March 21 at Yale 'experimental form, and equiv- University. alent form. The scholarship award will )* He defines the straight photo- pre-ented by Ivan Vrbanieh. graphic approach as a simple C.L.U., president of the Connect!- photograph. Clarence White was .cut Association of Life Under- this type of photographer. writers, and C. H. Scott McAlis- I'ln,in Journalism ter, assistant professor of the The photo-journalistic approach School of Business Administra- covers reproduction and news tion at the University of Connect- media. Here the photographer icut. pliotogra,)hs immediate news ma- Mr. Sachs was selected for the terial or reproduces past material award on the basis of his out- of news material. standing academic achievements The experimental is one of and personal qualifications. Mr. early and pioneering photographs Vrbanieh said. After graduation Mr. Sachs plans a careeY as a life particularly abstract photographs insurance agent. The equivalent form is an in- 'Hie scholarship fund was estab- terpretation of a time, place or lished in 1959 by the Connecticut thing through a photograph. This (Photo by: Laugluey) Association of Life Under- form uses an object as a symbol writers in memory of Howard v\ and the photograph is Intended to Krick who died July 7, 1958. after trigger a strain on unconscious an extensive career in life insisr* SPRING IS HERE thought concerning the object lanca.