Annual Close Harmony to Feature Seven New England Colleges

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Annual Close Harmony to Feature Seven New England Colleges Springfield Exhibition Team Program Is Cancelled On Tuesday and Wednesday March 11-12, from 2-5 p.m. S.U. and W.R.A. Ticket Holders Will Receive Refunds In The Memorial Union Building Main Lobby VOLUME NO. 48 ISSUE 4 Durham, N. H., March 6, 1958 PRICE —- SEVEN CENTS Future Airmen Visit Senator ... Annual Close Harmony To Feature Seven New England Colleges Senior Key will present the composed of ten students from their efforts to entertaining- at fourth annual inter-collegiate the Glee Club, was organized in army camps and hospitals. Close Harmony tomorrow night, 1948 as a barbershop group. At T Dissipated Eight from March 7th in Ne.w Hampshire the present, however, the Injun- Middlebury College originated in Hall. Seven New England col aires have a more versatile and Alpha Sigma ^ Psi Fraternity legate groups are participating modern program consisting of P 01'36',!1 "T - mcludes stude"ts ,i • 1^1 'tm t\ i 1 i* .1 irom tne entire C c t m p u s . xiris tins year and they are : The Dart- such songs as Standing on the has ,md ienFce in tele. mouth Injunaires, ihe Simmons Corner , from the Broadway vjsjon< appear frequently at New Bluettes, The Dunster Dunces show Most Happy Fella plus England colleges, and have sung (Harvard), and The M.I.T. Loga- the well-known “Mood Indigo”, in the Boston Symphony Hall. rhythms plus the Trinity Pipes, A popular northeastern college Tickets can be purchased at the The Dissipated Eight (Middle- group, the Simmons College Blu- Wildcat and the Bookstore and Twelve ROTC Cadets bury), and The Wheaton Whims, ettes was formed during World will also be on sale at the door The Dartmouth Injunaires, War II when they contributed the night of the performance. Interview Bridges On Trip To Washington A trip to W ashington D. C. which military flavor by reviewing current le­ included an interview with Senator gislation concerning the services. Bridges was enjoyed by twelve Air A tour of the Senate and senate of­ Force ROTC cadets from this Univer­ fice building including: a Senate ses­ sity on Feb. 26. Arrangements for the sion, the W ashington Monument, Capi­ tol Building, White House, Smithson­ flying trip were set up by Colonel ian Institute, Mount Vernon, National James H. Starbuck, Professor of Air Gallery of Art, and the Arlington Cem- Science with Grenier Field, as part of etary. , a troop movement training exercise. The trip, which under normal cir­ The cadets, who are members of the cumstances would have required a Saber Flight Drill Team, were impress­ week, was begun at 9 a.m. and ended ed by the royal treatment provided by at 8:30 p.m. Included in the student the Air Force. They were amazed not party were: James Allen, Newmarket; only by the split second operational Dwight Baker, Bethany, Connecticut; movements of the aircraft but also by Charles Neos, Manchester; Richard the timing of transportation which met Coleman, Penacook; Curtis Dunham, j the airplane at Bolling Field and whis­ Manchester; David Daniels, Andover, i ked tnem into the Capital. Massachusetts; James Highet, Laco-1 Four hours were allotted for sight nia; Paul Richardson, Somersworth; seeing. The first stop by the group was William Joziatis, Hudson, New York; at the Office of Senator Bridges who Robert O’Connell, Newcastle; Oliver provided a cordial reception to the Northcott, Concord; and Joseph Phe­ New Hampshire men. The senior Sen­ lan, Hudson. Members of Detachment ator was part of a group picture taken No. 475 who supervised and accom­ by the Air Force to commemorate the panied the group were Captain Albert event. Some members of the State J. Britton, Technical Sergeant James American Legion who were present A. Nash and Staff Sergean Richard J. also greeted the party and provided a Phillipo. Interview Finds Sinnott ‘ROLL ’EM!’ . Dartmouth College’s Injunaires await cue to sing during filming of one of Pleased With Situation their specialities, “Standing on the Corner Watching All the Girls Go By.” The Injunaires, a 10-voice group composed of members of the Glee Club will appear in Durham on Friday, March By DAVE SNOW 7. From left to right they are: Dick Watson, Wethersfield, Conn.; Ray Dilworth, Pittsburgh, Pa.; Jack Keigley, Grand Junction, Colo.; (on ladder) Hew Baldwin, Westbury, N. Y.; Chuck Dr. Edmund E. Sinnott, the Universi­ ing reporter about a cure for the com­ ty’s first Lecturer in Residence, greeted mon cold brought an indulgent smile to Darrow, Solvay, N. Y.; Bob Weston, Washington, D. C. (by mailbox); Greg Holthusen, Stevens a reporter from the New Hampshire his face. Although he admitted that he Point, Wis.; Phil Stoddard, Batavia, N. Y.; A1 Danson, Larchmont, N. Y., and A1 Glick, New with .his quick smile that periodically had his own preventive remedy that Rochelle, N. Y. dotted the entire interview. He com­ worked pretty well for his own family mented on the New Hampshire weather he said that it probably wouldn’t work as Dance Club Try-Outs and scenery, especially favoring the lat­ well for others. Rustin Lectures On Town and Faculty Aids ter. He and his wife like living in the Since Dr. Sinnott retired, a year ago, For Spring Dance Concert Red Cross Blood Bank old Frost-Sawyer Homestead, on the he said he has never been so busy. He The Red Cross Blood Bank to be Oyster River. He has already acquainted has been on speaking dates around the Any students interested in joining himself with the local history, finding it Dance Club should plan to try out on Racial Segregation held in the Commons Trophy room will country, has been teaching and writing. be staffed by volunteers from town very interesting. A querie from a suffer­ Monday, March 10 at 4:00 p.m. in New Bayard Rustin, a Quaker authority Last semester he taught a course in Hampshire Hall. The recent dance de­ and faculty. All sororities are assisting Plant Genetics, at Yale University, and on- the use of non-violent techniques in canteen services and the girls’ dor­ monstration at Murkland Auditorium in human relations, will be on campus did research in the same field. Here, he included some dances in progress for mitories are working in the donor is teaching a course in Plant Morpho­ from March 19 through 21 to lecture room. IFC through Wayne Sinclair, the spring program. The dancers anti­ classes and student organization-spon­ genesis and fioWing a bi-weekly seminar. cipate an interesting and stimulating IDC through Roger Doyan, WIDC In addition he holds an open discussion sored meetings on the major areas of through Roberta Hatch and Pan Hel­ spring concert with many and varied national and international conflict. in the Memorial Union every Thursday approaches to modern dance. lenic through Bunny Jackson are co­ night. He will, upon request, speak to Rustin, having intimate experience operating to receive enough donors to campus organizations, and may be heard Try-outs for male dancers will be in the field of racial strife and, as a make the drawing a success. this Thursday at convocation. held Monday evening, March 10, at 7:00 p.m. in New Hampshire Hall Negro, dedicated to inter-racial har­ Recently he completed his latest book, mony, will tell how the forces of dis­ “Matter, Mind and Man”, (now on the Games Room. The Spring Dance Con­ crimination can be met and overcome. market) and he is currently revising his cert will be held on April 25. In 1948 he received the Jefferson text. This will be the sixth time the Award from the Council Against Into­ Official Notices text, “Botany Principles and Problems”, lerance in America as “one of the All students are responsible for knowledge has been revised in its thirty five years of Student Union Holds Table Americans who has done most in re­ of notices appearing here. use. He admitted that it was quite a job Tennis Tournament Finals cent past to better relations between to keep up with the times, the book colored and white citizens”. He has Seniors and Graduate Students. Dur­ needing constant revision, but added The final matches of the Student also been associated with Dr. Martin ing the week of March 10, a tentative laughingly that it put his children Union Table Tennis Tournament will Luther King, leader of the Alabama bus boycott. list of students who expect to complete through college. begin at seven thirty on the tenth of their requirements for graduation in Dr. Sinnott is being sponsored here March. They will be held in the Straf­ His trips abroad for conferences with June 1958 will be posted in the Univer­ by the Alumni Association, and is full ford Ballroom of the Memorial Union. leaders in Europe and Asia qualify him sity buildings. Will all prospective gra­ of praise for what he calls their “for­ The six finalists will play off in a to speak authoritatively on pressing duates please check this list and report ward looking” attitude. He feels that the double round-robin for the Memorial world issues. In, 1952, he traveled in any errors or omissions immediately to Association is wise in spending a por­ Union men’s singles Table Tennis Tro­ Europe, the Gold Coast, Nigeria, and Mrs. Hauswald in the Recorder’s Of­ tion of its money on programs of this phy. The top players of this tourna­ French West Africa, spending time fice,, 102 Thompson Hall. kind, rather than using the entire fund ment will be entitled to represent the with Kwame Nkrumah, now prime solely for athletics.
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