Maine Campus September 17 1964 Maine Campus Staff
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The University of Maine DigitalCommons@UMaine Maine Campus Archives University of Maine Publications Fall 9-17-1964 Maine Campus September 17 1964 Maine Campus Staff Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/mainecampus Repository Citation Staff, Maine Campus, "Maine Campus September 17 1964" (1964). Maine Campus Archives. 321. https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/mainecampus/321 This Other is brought to you for free and open access by DigitalCommons@UMaine. It has been accepted for inclusion in Maine Campus Archives by an authorized administrator of DigitalCommons@UMaine. For more information, please contact [email protected]. • 41" • mber 10, 1964 the mame Elections Elections for off-eampus men Senators are scheduled for Fri- day, Sept. 25. Petitions may be obtained now from the Dean of Men's office in the Library. ill petitions must be returned to that office by 5 p.m. IP Wednesday, Sept. 23. A Progressive Newspaper PusServing A Growing University 2 17, 1964 Number Vol. Z 270 ORONO, MAINE, SEPTEMBER Enrollment U-M Grad Selected Hits Record Fraternity Assistant U-Maine High By STAN LAMES of the said Tuesday that a 1960 graduate This year's enrollment has swelled Dean of Men John Stewart the Dean of Men. Stewart said a new record high. A total of University has been appointed Assistant to to Littlefield, will devote at 5,455 have registered for classes on the 29-year-old Sigma Nu alumnus, Maurice the Orono and Portland campuses. least half of his time to fraternity affairs. of Trustees ad hoc Last year the record was set with The appointment was made following a Board registration of a combined campus committee recommendation that the post be established. to the no drinking 5,292. The committee also condemned with respect shows and recommended that Trus- • Broken down, this figure fraternity hazing as "unproductive rule reconfirm the rule as trustee an enrollment on the Orono campus and hazardous." It said, "While not tees The ad hoc committee of 4,937; on the Portland campus major problem, it is of some con- policy. a the University bier. of 518. sequence in the overall fraternity commended arehy for its strict enforcement on the Orono campus problem." Students and of the rule. 281 graduate students: 20 In the report submitted include June The committee said the Nolde fifth-year students: 1.027 seniors; accepted at the Trustees' fails to requested Report, issued in January, juniors; 1.067 sophomores; meeting, the committee i.018 submit a substantiate the general statement 1,240 freshmen; 112 special stu- that University officials is anti- AIR—Chief announcer Bob Dumais, faculty adviser Curtis Mc- for that "the fraternity system 40 three-year nursing stu- ON THE no hazing rule to the Board always dents; Carty and production manager Rod Douglass surround station manager intellectual and probably has the Orono dents; 13 unclassified degree candi- located in Room 275, Stevens Hall. approval, are impressed," Janiece Bacon in the WMEB-FM studio said part of Little- been so." "We dates; three audition students; 80 The report "by the action give, "not through committeemen said, two-year agriculture students and field's job is to t compleie to the ren- of the 1FC last year." students. limitation, high priority fraterni- 35 two-year to accom- The report showed that Adopts New ovation problems so as students, number of WMEB housing over 550 men re. Men's Although the actual plish minimum standards in frater- ties, represent at least $4,000,000 in out-of-state students has increased nity houses as soon as may reason- class. University investments in dormitory due to the large freshman ably be." ur perusal. dining facilities and looked for- the percentage (usually an approxi- Program Schedule Littlefield, a Belfast native, was and to a potential capacity of 700 mate 20%) of out-of-staters has travelling representative for his ward go, there's radio" junction with the Maine Masque. and a $1,000,000 increase dropped. "Wherever you fraternity for three years after students This year it .as well as coverage of all special facilities. is a familiar cliche. graduation. In 1963 he resigned and in on the University events. It saw no area where the Uni- will be adapted entered the University of Virginia, "Wherever you WMEB-FM will go on the air at should now undertake any of Maine campus to where he received his MA. versity 6 p.m. Monday and will broadcast financial obligation related to Tonight Marks go, there's WMEB-FM." The committee report noted major banner bearing from 6 to 11 p.m., five days a either new capital expenditures or The blue station that last year there was "marked numbers identi- week, on the following schedule: (Continued on Page Five) the letters and call improvement" by the fraternities Last Performance fying the student-run campus radio 6-7 p.m.—Easy Listening station will be seen at nearly all (mood musk) events—from football games to po- 7-8 p.m.—Campus News & Of Terrell's Play etry hours and lectures by visiting Events dignitaries. National & Local Sophs Hold Dance The second and last performance This coverage is part of a new News 7:45-8:00 Coffee House produc- Music the night if cas- of the first series of programs planned by 8-11 p.m.—Classical The sophomore class will spon- charge. Dress for tion of the season will be staged station man- 11 p.m.—.Sign Off ORD Janiece Bacon, current sor an open dance Saturday night ual. at 8:15 p.m. pro- Weekly program bulletins will be be a good opportun- tonight ager, and Rodney Douglass, in the Memorial Gym from 8 p.m. This should manager. Throughout the available to anyone who sends his ity for frosh to meet upper-class- The author of the play. Midnight duction a.m. interviews with name and address to WMEB-FM to 12 men, and for upper-class men to on the Emperor's Walk, is Dr. Car- year there will be The a series at 275 Stevens Hall, or who con- Music will be provided by froth women. roll Terrell of the English depart- student faculty leaders and meet con- tacts the station manager. a campus combo. are Prof. and Mrs. ment. The cast includes two student of radio drama produced in Cumberlands. Chaperones attend Barushok and Prof. and members, Maruti Achanta and An- All classes are invited to James I. Duff Gillespie. na Carparelli. this affair, which will be free of Mrs. The play concerns the conformist MCA Opens Center propaganda of American culture and how it stunts the potential for human growth of an intelligent or Study, Discussion ejuns. and woman. center is not open exclusively to Stressing the Maine Christian As- set off when Protestant groups. The main action is sociation not as a fellowship group arrives in Construction of the building was ER has .1 an orthodox clairvoyant but as the Protestant Church at the and stirs initiated last October and was com- a suburban neighborhood University of Maine. Rev. John W. on per- pleted in June. Although it will be up questions of the effect Pickering described the use of its so close at belief; open on Sunday for a Freshman sonality of an unendurable new A-frame center not as a meet- percep- Forum at 5 p.m.. the official open the ambiguities of psychic ing house but rather as a place the house will be held sometime in late d women's tion and visual hallucination; where small informal groups may guilt; October, Pickering said. character effects of repressed converge for discussion, study Of hysteria. t) are ol- the momentary madness of relaxation. The building features a sunken and the terror of the soul when one carpeted lounge, complete with added that the begins to fear God. Pickering also brick fireplace. The stained Douglas der servicl fir and cedar pitched roof and two A-line front and back glass walls efer. Men's lend an atmosphere of wintery warmth conducive to light discourse 104 Students Disciplined and leisure. women's Pickering stressed that the MCA questions draw from the University. The five In answer to many center will supplement, not dupli- on advised to withdraw are not eligible about the University Committee cate University facilities; it is open Discipline's actions during the 1963- for readmission. were dismissed for to groups wishing to hold light sup- academic year, Registrar Five students 1964 five pers and is a place where students S IS has announced the disciplinary reasor. and were George Crosby The may get together informally off dealings. suspended for .ime reason. RONO following committee campus. placed act on three other cases s) Seventy-six students were power to Clubs and meeting groups which on 40 on censure: seven were placed was left with the individual stu- normally use on-campus facilities Women's 5:00 probation to the Dean of dents' personnel dean, academic will continue to do so. Maine Christian Association on office NEW MCA CENTER—Newly-completed Office; six were placed Committee The building also includes several Avenue opens in October. :00 and !dean, and Discipline Center on College censure with the Dean of Men: (Continued on Page Eight) five students were advised to with- Chairman. • Page Two THE MAINE CAMPUS Ilrono, Maine, September 17, 1964 Maine Masquers To Present Orono, Mains, Shaw's 'You Neve!' Can Tell' !he Maine Masque Theatre will tine. .1 30-year-old dentist with an present You Never Can Tell, an east manner; Dolly, a vivacioes 18- 1896 George Bernard Shaw comedy, year-old girl; Philip.