Marshall University Marshall Digital Scholar

The Parthenon University Archives

Winter 1-5-1962

The Parthenon, January 5, 1962

Marshall University

Follow this and additional works at: https://mds.marshall.edu/parthenon

Recommended Citation Marshall University, "The Parthenon, January 5, 1962" (1962). The Parthenon. 1518. https://mds.marshall.edu/parthenon/1518

This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the University Archives at Marshall Digital Scholar. It has been accepted for inclusion in The Parthenon by an authorized administrator of Marshall Digital Scholar. For more information, please contact [email protected], [email protected]. Summer Terms Will Be Held

MARSHALL UNIVERSITY STUDENT NEWSPAPER President Smith Sets he Five-Week Sessions By10HNNYmNES Editor;in-Chief University President Stewart H. Smi.th said earlier this week ======~~~~~;;;;;:~=~~~=~~~~=:=:;~~~~=~=~=~~~~~~~=d that Marshall will have two five-week summer terms in 1962. Vol= artheDOD •Prior to •this the first summer sessions had been six weeks 61 ======H=•~= •= N=G=TO=N=•~ W=·= V=A=·==~F'RI;;;~D~A~Y~,::::J;,;A:NU~·~~iAR;;;Y;::::;5~,,,;1;96;;2~== ==~N; ;;·;o 3~5 long and students attended classes five days a week. The second term was five weeks long and students attended classes six days a week. Paul Collins, administrative as­ Blue Law sistant and director of adult edu­ cation, said that classes will be Committee held only five days a week but Stirs Up they will be lengthened to make up for the extra day. Is Studying The three-hoar courses will be Comments extended from 90 to 105 minutes · By FRANK CHILDERS and the two-hour c o u r s e will Campus Editor Band Help meet, as it did before, for 90 min­ And LARRY ASCOUGH JSy ED BENNETr . utes. No information was avail­ Staff Reporter Feature Writer able on the length of the four­ The blue law controversy, An inve.stigating committee, set hour courses. which began last month and up at th:e last regular senate Mr. Collins said that the first which may spring up again on meeting, is studying the needs term will run from June 11 to any given Sunday, has many op- and problems of the Big Green July 13, and the second from July ponents and proponents. Marching Band. The committee is 16 to Aug. 18. In recent interviews, the presi- expected to reveal their findings In a report released to depart­ dents of each fraternity and and offer possible solutions at the ment chairmen and administra­ sorority on campus gave their senate meeting Wednesday night. tive staff, President Smith said, opinions on the issue. Several At the last regular senate meet- the amount reserved for summer faculty and staff members also ing Nancy Wood, Moundsville school totals $25,249.29, which is gave their views on the subject senior and Student Body Presi- almost $5,000 less than th~ orig­ from the aspect of their particular dent set up the committee. inal $30,000 which was trans­ fields of endeavor. The band also elected new of- ferred to the Board of Public The consensus of the students ficers and appointed them to Works three per cent reserve was practically unanimous in cer- work with the senate committee. fund for the June summer school. tain aspects. While some dis- The members appointed by Dr. Smith also said that wWa agreed whether there should be President Wood are: Berta Anne some additional funds that will a law, they y.,ere all unanimous Huhphreys, Huntington sopho- accumulate during the fiseal year in agreeing that it should be en- more and chairman; Martha in Personal Service, the univer­ forced or legally dropped. Ayres, Fayetteville senior; Bill sity will be able to operate a B et s y Daniels, Huntington Harman, Huntington junior; and llmlted first summer term. senior and president of Alpha Chi D e a n Thompson, Huntington "I hope that we will not have Omega, said, "I feel the laws need freshman. to resort to this method of financ­ to be examined and possibly re- '"•-r re Studri11 '..... • ••,. According to Miss Humphreys ing June salaries," he said. ''Our written so it would be in a popu- ' the senate committee held an or- regular appropriations for cur­ lar scope." THE STUQENT SENATE-appointed committee that's studying ganizational meeting last night in rent expense, repairs and altera­ Patty Poliskey, St. Albans the needs of the Big Green Band include Martha Ayres (seated, the student government office. tions and equipment are most in­ senior and president of Sigma left), Fayetteville senior; Hertle Anne Humphreys, Hunting-ton The band officers are Alan adequate. Much-needed buildin1 Kappa, said that the laws are sophomore and committee chairman, and Bill Harmon, Banting- Howcroft, Moundsville junior and and equipment repair, as well as wrong, because people should be ton junior. One committee member was absent when photo was president; Roy Webb, Kenova the purchase .of new equipmen't, able to exercise their right. She taken. · junior and vice president; and must be postponed again. went on to say that we must keep t------J Jeff Cowden, Williamson sopho- "It was necessary to find some in mind that all faiths do not 8 • G D L f d 65 63 more and secretary-treasurer. financial base. before s u m m e r recognize Sunday as the Sabbath fg reen erea 8 '/ - ; The joint committees will study schedules . could be issued. The and therefore the blue laws are I! h s the following problems and solu- only source was from current unconstitutional because the state rros core 84-67 Vidory tions: scholarships, student ac- budget appropriations. It is my is aiding a particular faith. The tivity fees for the band, money hope that the :funds we have ear­ "establishment" clause in the ~e Big Green dropped its fifth game of the season Wednesday making projects, ways of enlarg- marked for June salaries can be Constitution sets up a "wall of ni,ght to the Cavaliers of the Universi,ty of Virginia. Tjie score ing the band, and what the stµ• used for the purposes for which separation" between the state and was 65-63. dent body itself can do for the they were appropriated and for the church. Dick Wildt, filling in for the boil-ridden Bob Burgess, played band· which there is.such great need." Don Evans, South Charleston .a standout game at center, scoring 18 points; but it wasn't enough The band committee was set up (Continued on Page Four) as the cagers saw 8 IO-point second-half lead disappear. to give the problems of the band Nobody Was There and both commit~s are going to Professors at Marshall are cer­ The Cavaliers, playing a fine try to work out and solve these tainly dedicated. On Tuesday defensive game that harnessed the problems. morning, David E. King, in­ faSt break, went to a tour-point President Wood talked to the structor in social studies, enter­ lead in ,the closing moments of the game. A }ump shot lby Mickey committee last Wednesday night ed the Boo~tore and said, "Is my watch correct? Is it 10 min­ Sydenstrl.cker narrowed the score after senate meeting and gave the findings she had found thus far utes after 10?" He was told 'It to -two Points as the buzzer by her own investigation. She was correct. Then he asked, sound«l. said the senate will help in every "Where is my class?" way that they can. (See eutler s&ory, Pa,e 6) INDEPENDENTS WIN The posisbility of scholarships The Independent team won Sydenstricker w a s Marshall's is being studied by a group of over nine entries in the volleyball high point man with 22 points, competition of Women's Intra­ faculty members in the music de­ murals. Laidley Hall was second·, and middleman on the fut break, partment headed by Dr. Miriam Jodie Sword, garnered 7 points. Sigma Sigma Sigma third, and P. Gelvin, professor of music. University Hall fourth. Charlie Moore, standout in the Western Kentucky game, only hit three points and fouled out early Letters To Editor in the second half. Dear Editor: campus over the weekend? No The halftime__. __._, score stood at 32- . Being. a student, is a f u 11 t1me· study facilities are available and 32 as Sy~-icker again hit a responsibility, therefore it seems practically an affadavit has to be bucket as the buzzer sounded to that the.rstudent should be pro­ obtained to get into the men's knot the .te0re. vided with adequate facilities for gym for a workout. The majority The loss d r opp e d -the Bi.g that ~ull time. The case in point is of area schools also keep their , the_ bar the gates on Sunday" student unions open on Sundays. I Green record to 2-5. pohcy concerning not only the It seems if Marshall is to be a WMUL Stiff C6ecis Pllffer Titles But the freshman team, aveng- library but also other campus university in re~lity and not in ing two straight losses to bring facilities. Closing the library on name only it will at least have to THE SQUND OF MUSIC-lr.oy Lee Collins, Huntington junior nd and president of the Badlo Club, and Sylvia Hamood, White its record to 4-2, racked up an Su ay is possibly a very good equal if not excel the other 84-67 victory over Morris Har- reason for the "suit-case college" schools in services provided. Sulphur Sprlnp sophomore and head of the WMJUL music depart­ reputation that Marshall has. ment, eum.ine records donated by the Radio Club to WMUL. J'ames N. Spencer, vey's frosh squact Why should a student stay on the Meadow Bricl&'e Janlor FRIDAY, JANUARY 5, 1962 PAGE TWO THE PARTHENON Marshall Antics . By D. K. King .

Campus Inquirer (Photos by Student Photograph­ By NANCY CLAY er Bob Kruthoffer) Staff Reporter QUESTION: Do you agree with the Student Senate's decision to send d e I e g a t e s to the NSA meetings? Jim Buckalew, Ripley senior: I think we made the right deci­ sion in sending delegates to the convention. The delegates; in bringing back their own opinions, Leonhart Buckalew will allow us to know if the NSA :J. is a communistically inspired or­ )JI ganization. '·., Jack Archer, Huntington sen­ ior: Since the NSA hak been in­ vestigated by the Justice Depart­ ment and the House Committee On Unamerican Activities, and · the organization has been cleared, Wallen Archer I feel that no harm was done by sending delegates. .Lucy Wallen, Huntington sen­ Tutor Plan ior: If the NSA is not a Communist organization, there is no harm in Sponsored going. If they are, it is a good idea to see what is going on at Alpha Lambda Delta, national the convention. women's scholastic honorary, is Walt Leonhart, Huntington sen~ sponsoring a tutoring program on ior: campus. According to G r a c e I feel that we should have Chirico, Logan sophomore and waited until next year . to see president of the group, the fee what happens in response to the Tr1cis Aid Ters for little Bers will be one dollar per hour. new law requiring Communists to The following students will register before we sent· delegates TEN BOYS FROM the Cammack Children's Center were given a Christmas party by Sigma tutor in the subjects listed: Ac• to______the NSA convention. .,__Alpha______Epsilon Fraternity at the _ S.A.E. house. (Picture by student photographer Frank Childers.) counting 215, 216, Regina Mc­ callister; Art 312, Sharon I. Grif­ Theses & Term Papers Expertly Typed fith; Biological Science 107, 108, The Parthenon Six Years Experience With Campbells Form. Carolyn Ash, Patricia O'Brien, Gloria Chafin; English 103, 104, MARSHALL UNIVERSITY STUDENT NEWSPAPER CALL Establiohed llllHI JANE GILES LEITH Carolyn Christian, Sally Jewell, Member of Weal Vtrslnla Intettollesiate Presa AMoclation RE 6 .. 5095 after 6 P.M. Gloria Chafin, Karen Smith, Judy . Full-leased Wire to The A•oct.ated Pren. Entered as econd claS5 matter. May 211,' IMS, at the Poat OUlce at Huntinslon, Duncan; English 215, Gloria West Vlr,rinla. under Act of Con,rreu, March 3, 1871. :======; Published twice weekly durtn11 the reirular school terma and once • Wftk durtnc Chafin, Judy Duncan; French 121, the •ummei term• with the follawins exception.e: Complete Line of 122, Carolyn Christian, Sharon I. November-The Thankaa:lvlrur holiday December-The Chrlstma1 holiday of approximately two and one half weeu. Griffith, Judy Duncan; French Jan11ary- The first week of JanuarY whlch fln~ea the ChJ'utmaa holldaJ'. STUDENT SUPPLIES The lut week of January whlch Is final exa,nlnation week. I 223, 224, Gloria Chafin; German Aprll- The week of Easter vacation. l03, 104, 203 .and 204, J 4q.y Dun­ Ma:v-The last week of May which la final ·examlnatlan 'Week. ART SUPPLIES STUDY AIDS by Departm.,nt of Journallam. Marohall Unlverolty, 11th Street and 3l'd Aftn­ can; Math 120, ·125, Pat~icia Hunllrurton, Weat Vlr1lnla. O'Brien; Music 175, 123, 115 and Off-campu1 aubscrlptlon fee la $11.00 per J'ear. Actlvlt:v fee cov"ra .on-campus student aubocrlptlona at the rate of fa.00 - 116, Judith Hurley; Physical semester plus 50 cents for each 1ummer term. l A T T A S STAFF Science 109, 110, Carolyn Chris­ Pl)one J A 3- 8581 or Journallam Dept., l!x. m ol. JA a-Mll tian, Sharon I. Griffith; Political Editor-In-Chief ...... ,1obnnJ' Blnm 150Z Fourth Avenue Phone 523-9433 Manaslns Editor ...... Patti' Po~ Science 101, 102, Diann McCor­ Buslneaa Manuer ...... • ...... Johll WarnM HUNTINGTON, W. VA. mick; Russian 101, 102, Diann Mc­ ...:ampu1 Editor . . . . . ,...... J'ru>k Chllden /ual. Campus Ed!tor ...... , ...... Kusle W11llamt Cormick; Social Studies 104, 105, Society Editor ...... Dolly Lock£ Asst. Sports Editor ...... Reno Unser ~======~ Gloria Chafin; Social Studies 201, Fca.ture l!ldltor ...... Archie 0~ Grace Chirico, and Speech 101, Staff Photollrapher ...... i...... _...... Charlie 1AISh Editorial . Counaelor ...... WW!am l'ruM:O» l 02, Marcia Moore. Faculty Advloer ...... W. Pea 1'111 PH ,OTOGRAPHY INC. Students may be contacted as ~ follows: Carolyn Ash, Proctor­ COIOIZRCIAL PrO. & LlTRO. CO. 1416 FOURTH AVENUE ville, 0., JA 6-442; Gloria Chafin, 1912 11th Avenue, JA 5-4459 ( after 5 p. m.); Caroly n Christian, ROYAL TYPEWRITERS ANNOUNCES SPECIAL STUDENT DISCOUNTS 1001 West 4th Street, JA 2-6604; Sharon ]. Griffith, University RENTALS SALES - SERVICE Film and Amateur Photo Equipil!ent Hall, JA '2-9721; Sally Jewell, Laidley Hall, JA 2-9901; Regina $5.00 one month Fraternity and Sorority Dances McCallister, 1619 6th Avenue, $13.50 three months Job Application Portraits Room 20; . D i an n McCormick, Rent applied to purchase Laidley Hall, J A 2-9339; Marcia Photo Finishing Moore, Laidley Hall, JA 2-9339; Weddings Patricia O'Brien, University Hall, SPURLOCK'S INC. J A 2-9721; Karen Smith, Laidley 1318 4th A VENUE Hall. JA 2-9339; Grace Chirico, CALL 523-8954 1318 Rear 6th Avenue, Judy Dun­ can, 2136 4th Avenue, JA 3-9977. FRIDAY, JANUARY 5, 1962 THE PARTHENON PAGE TH}U)E Can Serious· Music Appeal To Masses? quite frequently and with great fault Is Lack success. It's pure snobbism, I think,_to want to keep the whole field of music drama for the se­ Of Opportunity, lect few who may profess they can understand the entire score in Professor Says Italian, German, French, or Ru_s­ sian as the case may be. By MRS. JANE SHEPHERD Associate Professor of Music 'IDGHBROW' CURBED In these days when our young The question of bringing se­ people and many of our adults a.11 rious music to the level of mass seem to be devotees of the cur­ appeal causes much consternation rent "pop" tunes-whe,ther they Chicago, where some very wealthy professional sfnger, however, he to all of us. No audience ever be called Rook 'N Roll or Twist or philanthropist le.aves a legacy of hadn't much chance to avoid it. wants to be "sung or played down w,-iat have you-those of us whose several million dollars (nine mil­ What happened tohim could hap­ to." Yet this theory seems to have professions embrace serious music lion at Chicago, I understand) th-e pen, I should think, to many po­ convinced many in the manage­ are constantly asking ourselves income of which pays off the tential listeners if they were af­ rial end of the business that there where we've ''missed the boat" orehestra deficit every year, the forded a similar opportunity. is no other way. Back in the '20s, in making our type of music -symphony orchestras in our coun­ a man named Ward French more popular with the masses. No .try are _always in trouble as far DUTY IS PLAIN started a big business for Colum­ phase, it would seem, of the en- as making ends meet financially. So there's our first duty: Seeing bia Artists Management Incorp­ tet1tair,ment field-not the theater, Up to now, most of them have to it that our children, from the orated, which boasts of being the nor ,the movies, nor certainly any managed .to find an "angel" some­ first. grade on up through high largest in the world, when he of the sports~has harder sledding where about, but the ''angel" has school, have . some public school conceived organized audiences. to make a "go" of being popuiar lo have lots of money and has to exposure to · gooq music. Given He started "Community Concerts" than does that phase in which we love_ music enough to be willing the ideal opportunity with an en­ and, at its_peak , it serviced some , s e_r i .o us musicians are involved to ,part with a big hunk of it. I've thusiastic teacher presenting such 2,000 or more small cities and ' 1 through our entertainment e-fforts. watched conductors, who would music to·_them, some of these chil­ towns all over the U. S. and Can­ 111ie di,fference in popularity much prefer to confine themselves dren mo~t certainly will become ada. In my first touring season, I between ,these various enteritain- to "·making music", become real the btse audience serious music sang about 70 "Community" dates. ment fields shows up in many operators because they find it entertainers ever had.- All singers and instrumentalists ways. First of all, for the man- necessary to cultivate the money­ Earlier in this Article I touched covet these performances because agers, it shows up in fin.ancia1 ed few in -their cities so that on the subject of presenting one that's how they ·make their big­ records. The preS'5 is, periodically, their orchestras can continue phase of serious music~pera­ gest money. Orchestra dates are full of reports of symphony or- operating. in a manner in which our masses not sufficient in number in one -chestras which are in the "red", The same situation has been Mrs. J11e s,,,,.,,, could understand it. The ideal season to make it a big item, of the Metropolitan Opera Com- true ~ven in our education.al in­ situation would be, if we could money-wise, but if an entertainer pany which always h.as a deficit stitutions dedicated .to trainin;1 Mrs. Jane· Shepherd (who surmount our old financial buga­ has enough "Community" or of more than a quariter of a mil- professional musicians. The best slnrs u n d e r the professional boo, to have small opera com­ "Civic Music" dates ("Civic lion dollars and tha,t · in spi,te of example of this is my own alma name of Jane Hobson) is an panies all over the United States Music was the rival organization good box ofice sales most of the mater, the Cincinnati Conserva­ associate' professor of music. She acquainting the public with great of "Community") he can really tirne. It's hard for us to Wlder- tory of Music. First came to Marshall ln the operatic literature in English! make · a fine financial showing. st.an?. h~ such_ org~nizat~ ~ 'ANGElt' SOLVED PROBLEM fall of 1958, then returned the Our young American singers are Now the whole theory of Ward t?e Met staY m this sad fu~an Back in the days afte_r the first followinr year as a permanent very keen on this ideal and French, and it was one about cial state when ,they are charging, W Id W Mi B th Ba faculty m.ember. there's lots being done through which he was very vocal, was and getting, such ifant11.Stic prices Ol' ar, ss er a uer, Professor Shepherd is widely such efforts as the NBC Opera that you have to give the · ts Th" t "'all some who headed ,the Conservatory, had au­ f or the1r sea . 1s pas :1. , • known ,for her sinrinr ability. Co. on TV and touring companies diences in these small cities and of the main floor seats at the no money worries. She went to Since 1950 she has been a pri­ whlch· confine themselves to pro­ towns what they like. He told me famed old opera house sold, on :urope fr;1u:n~lyt to eng1\pro­ vate teacher of singinr and, ductions in English. However, in no uncertain terms when I opening night, ·for just under $50 Nessot rsallw oth a d' op redpedu af1obuns. since 1948, she has ·been a solo­ these efforts are the proverbial _.._, Th · h · a ur y, ey eman a - sang my "Community" program e-,u. e1y pay,ro11 , . owever, 1s lo . d ia· M. ist and concert singer under "drop in the bucket." Sad but for him that first season that I so enormous and i.t ·encompasses us sa1 anes cer m 1Y iss :in Columbia Artists manarement. true: what we're doing is just not was not to sing too much "High­ such a mumtude of things that ~nth-a cou!~n t hope to pay t?em She has sung more than 300 enough! brow" stuff!

I /

PAGE FOUR THE PARTHENON FRIDAY, JANUARY 5, 1962 Blue Laws Are Aired (Continued from Page 1) senior and president of Alph Sigma Phi, said, "I'm. for i moderately. I don't see any sense for them to stay open. Not be cause of the religious standpoint, but there is no sense for clothin stores, hardware stores, etc., to be open. In some states drug stores are required to sell drugs on Sun­ , days, if necessary. Establishment like this should be open. From a faculty point of view, Dr. 0. Norman Simpkins, As­ sociate Professor of Sociofogy, was questioned since the contro­ versy is a social problem. "This kind of thing runs in cycles. There is a rash of it every few years then it dies down. The events themselves aren't impor­ tant but the factors behind them are. "I see no particular problem in­ volved· except a commercial riv­ alry and an insignificant law that hasn't-been enforced in years. As far as a sociologist is con­ cerned, it is a "tempest in a tea _ cup." Concerning the religious aspect, Judr Turner Is SAE Sweetheart Sig Eps Crown Queen . \ Reverend Lander L. Beal, re­ Judy TURNER, Huntington junior, was crowned sweetheart · of LINDA STOLLINGS, St. Albans senior, was crowned Sigma Phi ligious student counselor, re­ Sigma Alpha Epsilon at their annual Winter Formal on Dec. 15 at vealed his sentiments. Epsilon "1961 Queen of Hearts," at their annual Winter Formal the American Legion Hall.· Miss Turner is the pinmate of Charles held Dec. 2, at the Georgian Terrace in the Hotel Frederick. Jim ''We should sit down and do Ferrell, Logan junior. She ts corresponding secretary of Sigma some real creative thinking and Kappa social sorotjty, was junior Homecoming queen and was Gallion, Flatwoods, Ky., senior, holds the rotating trophy whfoh decide whether to have blue laws recently crowned \\'est Virginia's Tobacco Queen. (Photo by will go to Miss Stollings for the following year. Miss Stollings Is or not. Richard Moses, student photographer.) the pin-mate of Mr. Gallion. "Personally I believe in keep­ ing the Lord's day holy: I also believe in personal freedom and let"ting people keep to their own Seniors Urged To Contribute Minor Sports Gai~ In Stature; convictions. It's really an eco­ nomic problem so I think the ma­ To Research Grant Program Wrestling Squad Lists Record jority of the people should decide A contribution to the Research1 urge each senior to contribute to By MIU WOODFORD on what theyc. want and do it," Grant Program, initiated this year this fund, that through our contri­ Sports Writer Beal concluded. I Mr. by the Student Senate and the butions a growing, expanded and Sports fans in this area have long been avid followers of During the interviews an in­ Senate Academic Affairs commit­ adequate· Research Program can "Big Green" basketball and football, but such minor spol\ts as teresting question arose. Does tee, will be the project of this be established at Marshall Uni- wrestling, tennis and baseball had drawn only a small foHowing Marshall observe blue laws or year's graduating seniors, accord- versity." until the past few years. any Sunday regulations? Last year marked a great upswing in the popularity of these A brief meeting with President ing to Frank Dent, Charleston He said the Senate initiated the minor sports. Their new .popularity was probably due to the Stewart H. Smith quickly answer­ senior and° class president. program because it is often losing seasons of the football and basketball teams, and the comple­ ed the question. Earlier in the year the·students through the research program tion of the New Men's Health and Physical Education Building with "There are no written rules who will graduate in January carried on at a school that that its facilities for spring baseball practice, winter tennis practice, and concerning Sunday regulations, comfortable seating for w.atching wrestling. but traditionally there are no were contacted and asked to vote school gains recognition and pres. Surprisingly, the mos,t popular scheduled activities." on such a project. Dent reported tige. of the minor sports is now wrest­ The president pointed out, how­ that only one of the replies was The Senate already has ap- ling. Onc.e followed only by the ever that occasionally there are Professor Cites negative. propriated a grant for the pro- participants, close friends and a some events held on Sunday, such few avid mat fans, it now draws J ohn A n d r e w s, Clendenin gram and has sponsored a paid as the Mother's Day Sing and one Music Problem relatively large weekend crowds. or two vesper services. senior and class senator, said, "I mix to secure funds. (Continued from Page Three) The team is coached by Ed Pre­ vinces," the latter being the way laz who is beginning his fifth year big .city folks like to refer to our at the position. Prelaz did not milieu. Just this fall, a New York wrestle while attending Marshall, City critic really "blasted" Re­ but became a student of the sport gina Sarf-arty (who sang here on when he took the assistant's job. the Marshall Artists Series year class Opera House and Symphony before last in Carlyle Floyd's Orchestra and the musical atmos­ opera, "Susannah") for, as he put phere is a deep-rooted part of it, wasting her voice and talent on their fine and vast cultural life. a "junky" program he heard her In answer, you are probably sing out in one of the Long Island saying to me: "But we're such a communities. So here we poor young country. Give us a artists are, torn between what chance!" Well, to that I can only our-managers say we have to do, answer that we are· NOT getting what the critics say we shouldn't younger and we do have far to do, and what our paying public grow. A country that goes wild wants us to do! over baseball, basketball and Well then, where are we? There football to the tune of millions are times when I feel most sin­ and millions and millions each cerely that we are trying here in year to perpetuate these worthy the U. S. to advance ourselves. endeavors ought surely to have However, there's so much wrong enough left-overii of their en­ and so much that should be thusiasm to help sponsor the en­ changed. There's SI) much that deavors of all who would make should be our goal of accomplish­ good music as much a part of the ment, and so little actually being national scene. It's a dream ever done, that I get fairly dizzy even to expect serious music to become trying to organize my thoughts popular with the masses "en about it all. toto"; but we are all convinced ~ororitr Entertains At fester Memorial Home COMPARISON DISCOURAGING that there are multitudes among the so-called disinterested who CIIBISTMAS IS FOR ALL ages. This prompted the Sigma Kappa sorority to entertain the ladies at I get especially discouraged are that way because they've 1he Foster Memorial Dome before the holiday vacation. The program, which consisted of singing, when I compare u.s to Europe never had an opportunity to find dancinr and pantomlnes, Is part of the sorority's national gerontology project. Sorority women in where a little country like Italy 1ht picture are, from left to rig-ht, Judy Turner, Huntington junior; Barbara C o 11 ins, Huntington out how they really feel about sophomore; Rosie Sadd, Charleston senior; Sonja Robinson, Charleston junior; Vicky Miller, Hunt­ has literally scores of thriving Bach and Beethoven because all inlton sophomore, and Barbara Charles, Bunting-ton junior (seated). There are 47 ladies at the opera houses going; where in Ger- they've ever heard is "Big Bad home. The oldest ls Mrs. Jessie Berry (seated second from the rirht> who will be 100 on March to. many, every major city has a first John"! FRIDAY, JANUARY 5, 1962 THE PARTHENON PAGE FIVE Big Green Wins Over Hilltoppers By RENO UNGER Assistant Sports Editor The Big Green started of.f the holiday season with a 77-49 loss -to top rated Cincinnati, sank lower into the cellar by dropping one· to Miami University, 77-59 then caught fire and started the new year by edging Western Kentucky, 89--84, in an unexpected upset. Captain Bob Burgess and' sop­ homore Larry Williams turned in Again on its home floor, the Marshall's b es t performances Big Green engineered a suprising with 13 and 10 points respectively. 89 to 84 victory over the tough Cincinnati finished the first Western Kentucky Hilltoppers half with a 24-15 lead and piled it before 2000 spectators. on in the second period, hitting 33 Scrappy Jody Sword, starting of 80 tries. The Bearcats were also his first game this season, stole masters of the backboards, snar­ the show with his assists account­ ing 66 rebounds to Marshall's 35. ing for 12 points and sinking 16 Back at Memorial Fieldhouse, points personally. the Green fought all the way, but Burgess hit his stride too with again lost. Miami's LeVern Ben­ a 27 point total in addition to 18 son and Gerry Saunders riddled rebounds. 11 of his 13 shots were Marshall's zone defense, leading made from the field. the Redskins to a 77-59 victory. "Our morale has been excellent The Big Green dropped ten all year," said Jule Rivlin, head points behind at the outset, but basketball coach. "Those boys were able to pull back up to a 5 really try, but after the Kentucky ffolidar o,,,, frosl, lead, for Adi11 point deficit at the half, 36-31. game they are fired up more than At the 13:44 · mark Marshall THE 1961-1962 FRESHMEN basketball team, with a 3-2 record up until last Wednesday, lncludea switched from a zone to a man-to- ever. They seem to be finding (front row, left to right,) Larry Tincher, Bill Francis, Bill Treacy, and Jimmy Ma:,; second row, man defense and moved even themselves and are beginning to Dick LeJeune, Bruce Belcher, and Walt Smittle; third row, Joe Mucheck, Ed Peltz, Dan Goheen. closer witloi a score of 50-48. An- relax a little." and Forrest Newsome. 0ther try at a zone defense failed ~------and the Redskins inched ahead again to a 7 point lead. This time Miami was ready when the Green again tried a man-to-man defense and started a drive that didn't end until the buzzer closed the action at 77-59. Frosh Cagers "THE Lose 2 Games, INTELLECTUALS" Record Is 3-2 By SAM WOOLWINE Sports Wri~r " ... but think of it The freshmen basketball team this way, Gwen, tried to get back on the winning I'm here, and trail last Wednesday night after Lord Byron isn't." having absorbed two straight losses during the holiday. The Frosh were on a winning streak of three games when they met the Bearkittens from the University of Cincinnati. The streak was stopped by the Bear­ kittens as they defeated the Little Green 76 to 62. The Little Green put up a heroic battle, but finally bowed to the superior height and , shooting skill of the Cincinnati team. Walt Smittle led the Little Green in scoring with 17 markers, but he had to yield scoring honors to the Bearkittens fine center, ." To lose one's individuality is to Ron Krick, who tallied 30 points. lose the meaning of life itself!" The Frosh went right back into action two nights later when they met a veteran Superior Drug team, headed by former Marshall players Jack Freeman, Ed Lamb­ ert, Don Moreland, and also Mar­ shall "red shirt" Jerry Roy. The Superior team brought back many memories of former Marshall teams with their fast­ break style of play. The game was played on fairly even terms with the taller frosh team getting several more shots than the Su­ perior squad, but marksmanship told the tale as the Superior team mustered a shooting percentage of 47 per cent and came out on top 83 to 80. IF YOU'RE AN INTELLECTUAL, be thankful you're living at the right time. The Walt Smittle again was the top climate of our contemporary culture is _sympathetic to new voices, new ideas. point-getter for the Little Green The new age of enlightenment explains, among other things, the popularity of as he poured in a total of 21 points. Bruce Belcher added 18, Luckies on college campuses. Deduce this yourself: Enlighten up a Lucky. As besides pulling down 18 rebounds its heady aroma swirls about you, reflect on this profundity: College students to gain game honors in that de­ smoke more Luckies than any other regular. partment. Jack Freeman rocketed home 22 markers for the Superior team as he won game honors. He was backed up in the scoring CHANGE TO LUCKIES and get some -taste for a change'! ~.P ~ . 1'~ --· ;::? - - ··· .. 'T.P ' .. column by Lambert, 12, and Roy, Produd of r.Hil, ~ J~- Urunch at the Sigma The final result would be that all Marsl;lall affirmative team mem­ au.omobile has been ln existence, bers are Tom Dunfee, Huntington Kappa house at 9:30 a. m. Sunday more persons have been killed' ln the iresponsible drivers would junior, and Stuart Thomas, Hur­ in observance of the sister soror­ auto a.ccidents than in all the soon remove the source of the ricane senior. Pat Lordeon, Hun­ ity ·policy. The two sororities will wars. Also over $13 billion can be problems. Schedule Is tington senior and Aubrey King; attood church at Beverly Hills accounted for by checking the According -to Dr. Frederick A. Methodist Church following the costs of auto accidents. Fitch, chainnan of the Physical Iaeger junior, will debate the negative side. Teams from Ken­ brunch. Why does thi shappen? It is a Education Department and in­ Listed For DZ PARTY SET result of poor a.ttitudes on the structor in drive_r instruot.ion, the tucky, Ohio, Indiana and West Virginia will compete in the tour­ Delta Zeta pledges are having part of drivers with poor driving main prolblem w~th people of col­ ha.bits, lack of. knowledge of the lege age is their youth, inex,per­ nament arguing the issue of plac­ a party for their actives at 5 p. m. 'U' Station today at the home of Sandy Law­ rules and laws pertaining to the ience and desire for thrills and ing labor unions under the juris­ roads, inability to cope with var- speed. Of course, there are .those Those looking for good music diction of anti-trust. rence. ious _situations that occur during best tea<::her, but sometimes the on their radio dial need search no -~ •course of a normal driving who ar.gue that experience is the longer. Each evening from 6 to day, and uncooperative feelings first lesson in ex;perience is the l p. m., Monday through Friday, toward other drivers. final one. WMUL features classical music In this day and age, we teach Professor Fitch said that the on "Night Class." sa.fe driving practices in driver reason behind driver education The program schedule for Jan­ education courses in high schools cou,rses is to "try to develop good uary features: and colleges, but the laok of funds habits, attitudes, knowled,ge of JANUARY 5 and public apathy toward the the rules, and the skill to insure Prokofiev-Lieutenant Kiji problem hinder the purpose of fruitful driving." Stravinsky~Song of the Night- these training programs. A major problem that he has ingale . Nineteen states so far have set to deal with in his Instruction is Falla_.:Nights in the Gardens of the bacf habits a driver may have Spain acquired in the early days of bis Tchaikovsky-"1812" Overture driving career. These habits stay Tchaikovsky-Capriccio Italien with us, but must be changed to TV Special sensible practice beiore any de­ JANUARY 8 «ree of success can be attained. Gershwin-Rhapsody in Blue Education is one of the ways to Gershwin-American in Paris To Feature stop all the present carnage of Rodgers-Victory at Sea (Vols. the nation's roads. It bas been 1 and 2) Night-time .beauty treatment. proven that an educated person . JANUARY 9 · A balanced blend of emol­ ·MU Talent Brahms-Symphony No. 4 in E has a much greater chance for lients, moisturizers and hor­ minor, Op. 98 A number of well known per- survival during the normal course mon-es. Rich, cr_umy, yet sonalities will join with out.stand- of driving than an un-educated Berlioz - Symphonie Fantas­ tique cup_ petal-light to help your •!ti~ ing area talent, which includes a person. become younger loolting than good representation of Marshall Once a P e rs on develops his Tchaikovsky-:--Symphony No. 4 of Unive~sity, in an all-out appeal skill and has a good working in F minor you ever hoped! · for the March of Dim~s ,beginning knowledge of the rules of the JANUARY 10 Regular S5.00 $ . tomorrow night on an 18-hour road, he can progress to the point Debussy-Quartet No. 1 youth Sav~ S2.SO IlOW 50 entertainment type program over of being a:ble ,to recognize the Ravel-Quartet in F 2 WHTN-TV. The program will faults of other drivers and be cap­ Faure-Sonata No. 1 in A Op. begin at 11 :JO and rnd at 5 p. m. ~ble of_ ~riving defens!vely; that 13 ' Sunday.- ·· · IS, watihmg out for hunself and D~bussy-Sonata No, 3 in G · !;tars appearing

HARD TO BEAT, is Rutge~• football team, not to mention IN the marks of her Captain, Alex Kroll '62. A Phi Beta Kappa candidate, the books are no hidden play. Note cardigan sweater and button-down shirt, with buttons buttoned down. CAMPUS

, - " To look ~ the ida behind the subject,~ memoriz~tion comes natural~.

To make the_most of your college clays: Y,CMl'I tllldJ18 about them the ~ of your llfe... •

students oncet·too. .

To riYl

DORMITORY COCOON: Lounging made easy. A GO WEST, YOUNG MAN, in gaily printed and toasty a wool melton jacket em­ wann quilt jacket with long blazoned ac1'088 back with slim panta in cotton suede. college seal or name, and with knit trim at collar, cuffs and bottom.

GO MIDWEST, YOUNG MAN, in a fly-front Prnldent: "· Edward Calllle semi - chesterfield, 11 £alt 50tll strwt co11aa1ata ._ New Yort 22, N. Y. left, in tweed, cheviot or shetland for dress­ Publlaber: Fred L IClJdow Alloclated COlltlllta PNU up. Right, shearling llnlvllrslty of Mi-tot.a coata with shearling­ ·Dlaast 1anuar11s62 ...... 111-.-u Edtor: Fnderlc A. llrmllllllaffl type linings are top An official publication of the Associated Collealate campus everyday Press, Inc., 18 Journalism Blq., University of Art Dl1'9dor: Jack Sc:11newer fashions for the cold Minnesota, Mlnnupolls, Minnesota. RAINY DAY WAY: Handsome months. coverage for a rainy day Credits, Girls' fashions on this pa&• courtesy National Cotton Council; -•• faalli-.-tap, courtesy on campus ia a white poplin Rutters University, New Brunswick, N. J.; below, both courtny American lnatltuta of Ilea'• 111d loYI' raincoat with contrasting Wear. Article, p. 3, courtesy Yale University Preas 111d the AasoclatlOII of AA!ertc:an Uni-stty Pmaa1 ~ .P,8J1ela and al.eevea of photo1rll)lls courtesy Yale University. Pictures 111d text, p. 4, iq,per featllra, courtesy Doubleday l Co., Inc., inky black. Pllbllahtrs and Authors mentioned. Pap 5, text 111d photocraplla fl'IIIII UPI . P11e 6-7, pllotocraplllc ,...,. from Globe Photos, Inc., photos by Dick MIiier and Phll Ballet. -

Crisply modem, the Yale University Press adheres to an enduring tradition.

HE Harvard University Press has recently Press pointed out "The commercial publisher Bulletin of the Johns Hopkins Hospita,l T published a definitive work on John Adams. must hav~ two yardsticks--quatity and poten­ (monthly), ELH (quarterly), Modern La,n­ The Columbia University Press has come out tial profit - whereas the university press has guage Notes (five times a year) , and Isis, an with an equally significant work on Alexander only one----quality." International Review Devoted to the History Hamilton. And, just to prove that alumni in­ That this criterion seems to be worthwhile of Science and its Cultural Influences terest is not only what makes the university may be judged from the current membership of (quarterly) . presses go 'round, the University of Texas the Association of American University Presses. The Yale University Press publishes ''Books Press has devoted a special issue of "The Texas There are forty-seven U'. S. University mem­ that in their content and presentation con­ Quarterly" to an "Image of Italy." bers; three foreign member "associates"-'-()x­ tribute to an understanding of human affairs Works of this scope and permanence might ford, Cambridge, and the Uniyersity of Toronto whether in thJ;l arts or sciences, 'The Chronicles llt!ver achieve print were it not for the univer­ -and seven members such as The Museum Of of America,' 'The l>a:geant of America,' and sity press. So that it is not unsuitable for stu­ Metropolitan Art which are also non-academic The Yale Review, a national quarterly." dents who propose to keep on reading after "associates." Multiply these accomplishments by the num­ graduation to look into the idea of the univer- The typical university press is associated ber of university presses, add the future, and sity press. · with the university faculty in some form, either you have a fine recipe for the dissemination of It is quite true that it has been sa,id that "a with professors on its board of directors, or­ learning. ~niversity press is an organization whose func­ as in the case of certain presses set up as unat­ tion is to publish works which no one will read." tached corporations-they are still within the But the statement itself is not true, as every creative aura of the University, and a non-profit ..schoolboy knows who has scanned the list of reflection of its teachings. titles in the university catalogues. The University Press exists for more than The university press already has a distin­ the publication of scholarly works by it associ­ guished record. Andrew W. White of Cornell, ated faculty. Taking three separate pre~ses at William Rainey Harper of Chicago, and Seth random, we find that they issue not only a wide Low of Columbia joined Daniel Colt Gilman of variety of publications other than books,.. but Johns Hopkins in 1880 in the concept that the that these embrace a wide coverage of topics. diffusion of knowledge at a university must ex­ The Iowa State University Press, for instance, tend far beyond its campus. By then, Cornell prints books on subjects stressed at Iowa State had already attempted its own "press" and so - -agriculture, engineering, home economics, had the University of Pennsylvania. But the science and humanities, veterinary medicine, first one to start, and then keep going, was at and books of a regional nature about Iowa and Johns Hopkins in 1890, and within the next few the Midwest but also the Iowa State JournaJ, of years, at Chicago and Columbia. Science, and Farm Policy Forum, both quar­ There are certain well defined advantages to terlies. The Johns Hopkins Press prints schol­ the university press. Of some 16,500 titles pub­ arly books a,id the following journals: lished since 1878, for instance, it was found America,n Journa.J, of Hygiene (bimonthly), that over ·70% were still in print 70 years later. American Journal of Mathema,tics (quarterly), Today there are some 30,000 titles. And as AmericanJourna.J, of Philology (quarterly) Bul­ The Harvard University Preas displays ita publica- Thomas J. Wilson, of the Harvard University letin of the History of Medicine (bimonthly), tions in its own J ,oobtore. · ' · suzuki ~ meet ••• a little bipeter beri introduced ae one or the moat wiuning book beane peraonalitiee or the ap the baby beatnik I

IIF - ia auz\lki beane i have a pad on bleaker street with hugh and •roia

she aaid----what'a your name

suzl.lki----1 said oh----are you ot Japanese extraotion--•- no----i aaid--- this ia our pad--- what extraction are you dab-li111--­ we all have a ball here van1lla--1 aaid we don't have auoh bread but bread ia really not very iaportant when you have aood relationahipe cop.rright C 1961 by Sandra Sco9pettone and Louise Fitzhugh. this ia one ot aaroia'a aoutpturea---- ,publiahed by doubledq & coa~, inc. it'a .a gas isn't itf

WHAT:S TH& OH, I WORKED AND SLAVED AN t> STUPIE.P ,ALL WE u.., MAYr,I: You JUST MATTER, lLI/PE? THE G~EAT W~ITEl?S AND POETS, AND I U)Er?EN'T CUT OUT TO FlNAW..ll REALLY HAD SC>METHIN6 WRIT£ FDRrvNf ~,ss TO SA IT DO\.UN COL-P/ " / :.J Getting Around. To It: Moscow-UNIVERSITY

An exclusive report on the a:nost secretive campus In the world

by ~r. J. BINYON The students, especially the girls, look very young and slightly bewildered. One notices, too~ the immense number of .old women, with shawls . Moscow UNIVERSITY is immense. Its new and huge shopping bags, whose precise function buildings, situated above the river on the -­.._._ in the university is difficult to imagine. Lenin Hills, dominate the city. They form the ··-··-, · They don't take their holidays on the Black Sea, centre of what is envisaged as the new Moscow. ----,.r_____ ..••• _ • All around are later, slab-sided skyscrapers, ···---­ but at Varna, in Bulgaria, or at Karlovy Vary, in uniformly bleak, austere and boring-but a wel­ Czechoslovakia. They don't wear Russian clothes, '.:.. ~ . ...~, .. come contrast to the architectural exuberances of ~-­ but French, English, Jugoslav or Polish. They l~d the Stalinist era represented by the university ... . ~ = lives remote from reality, complicated by intricate buildings. To the citizen of Moscow th'ey are emotional entanglements. . ~' .,. known as krushchoby-a pun on the Russian word - They spend their time queueing for vegetables trushchoby-slums. and fruit, queueing for shoes and shirts, queueing In the main building of the university and in ) .f: C •;• for buses and trams. They buy postcards of neighbouring blocks are all the science faculties, Gagarin and Lenin and Khruschev and hideous and here live some undergraduates and graduates -;._,-. -;. ,I;J ' imitation marble inkstands and ashtrays and busts from all faculties and all foreign students except of Marx and Engels. They eat standing up in the those attached to the separate Friendship Uni- Not "West Side Story." These are students. little self-service canteens and get drunk in the versity. · cb'eaper restaurants. But this is not a vice peculiar Others live in hostels, and all whose families are Should a student return late and drunk to the to them. Everyone tends to get dl'unk. in Moscow are obliged to live at home. The ·arts hostel, the committee would probably send a man Drunkenness has always been one of the char­ faculties and the main university library are in with a camera to his room to obtain a picture of . acteristic traits of the Russian. Drunks mutter the old buildings in central Moscow. him sprawled across the bed vomiting into the incoherently throughout the pages of Russian lit­ It would be possible for students of the science was~paper basket. This photograph would later erature. Practically all Russian jokes are about faculties to spend their entire time as under­ appear on the board with the legend "Shame on them. graduates within the walls of the university M-orozov!" and perhaps a rhymed quatrain (Rus­ Despite all this, public drunkenness does not building. It has shops, restaurants, a cinema, a sians are extraordinarily fond of lapsing into seem to have decreased. It is rare for there not hairdresser, a launderette, a tai}Qr ana dressmaker. usually bad verse at the slightest opportunity) to be at least one drunk per restaurant in the Men and women students can meet in the main telling of the dangers of alcohol. evening. On occasions of public rejoicing the num­ building, but cannot penetrate into one another's The students who live in the university itself ber of drunks, of course increases. living quarters without a pass. Married students are generally looked down upon by those who live live together. in Moscow: they are considered to be provincial This segregation is abnormal for a Soviet uni­ and unintellectual. versity and was brought into force only last year. The contrast between life in the two parts of The official excuse is that it was done "to avoid the university-the main building on Lenin Hills confusion" when foreign delegations were being and the arts faculties in the centre-is great. On taken round. Lenin Hills the tone of life is set by one's first The male student is apt to blame this on "the sight in the morning, which is usually a group Arabs"-meaning all students from the Near and of Chinese students, clad in identical shabby, blue Middle East. Perhaps this springs from jealousy: tracksuits, grimly performing exercises. "Arab" students receive a monthly stipend two It is said that in 1959 when the number of or three times as large as that of the Russian Chinese students was much greater than it is now student, and a large lump sum on arriving,,in they would all run in a solid phalanx round the Moscow, which makes them attractive to Russian university in the morning. One day a Russian stu­ girls. · . dent met a Chinese acquaintance looking unusually All students hold a general pass, without which cheerful and' asked him what had happened. "The • it is impossible to enter any university building. history faculty has won," he said. "We added up This system, I was told, was necessary to prevent Studeny at Moscow University listen· with the distances we ran each morning and the history serious disbelief to Chou En•lai. - students from bringing their families to live witJt faculty reached Peking first." them at the hostels. These rooms, though ex­ Inside the main building one is immediately What I have said may have given an extremely tremely small, nevertheless offer more comforts struck by the all-pervading smell. This smell tends forbidding impression of life in Moscow. In'l­ than can be had in the town. But some slip through to be everywhere in Russia, to a greater or Jess roeose)y wide 11treeb with tl>'~riag b11i1Eliass the net, and periodica1ty the1e is a purge· in the degree. It is not the boiled-cabbage smell of Eng­ dwarfing the shabbily-dressed figures who scurry hostels leading to the eviction of whole families lish institutional life, nor the smell of Gauloises about at their feet. Queues everywhere, drunks on of squatters. and garlic of the French Metro, but something street corners and in restaurants. Rude and in­ A different pass is needed to get into each , much worse than either. Its main elements are, I competent officials together with a bureaucratic library and institution. As well as this all citizens think, sickly and rancid Russian perfume, cook­ system which can take weeks over the simplest of the Soviet Union have a passport, to be pro­ ing and cigarettes. operations. duced when being paid, when collecting mail, Inside the long, low corridors with no windows, · But this is only the public face; the private face applyipg for a job; joining a library, or selling the squat and bulbous columns spaced close to­ of life in Moscow is completely different, and it anything to a second-hand shop ( the only legal gether, give one the feeling that the whole weight wonld be difficult to find anywhere where it can be way for private individuals to sell goods). of this immense and unwiedly structure is con­ more pleasant. Student discipline within the university is left centrated just above one's head. Here drably The Russians are incredibly generous, friendly largely to the student committees, who expose the dressed students--again many wear blue track­ and warmhearted. They are almost completely free misdeeds of those who break the rules through suits-hurry back and forth. There is little con­ from affectation and snobbery, and have a refresh­ "wall newspapers," according to universal Soviet versation and no one saunters or stands still unless ingly healthy contempt for the material, the custom. · waiting in a queue. "good" things of life. ~ I Students Make a Movie II ••

UCLA theatre arts students create a 111-rnlnute motion picture from Idea to proJected fllm

Production crew unknowingly is subject for shot with dramatic back-lighting.

Members of the crew ready Peggy Miller, 12, for a close-up. CLA's famous motion picture U course takes on a 15-minute black-and-white 16mm production. Shown here are sequences from "Tender Is The Spring," the crea­ tion of writer-director-student Jon Kubichan. The story is simple and poetic : Two teen-agers get caught in a spring rain. When the sun breaks through, the flowers in bud, and the trees bearing early fruit, touch the youngsters with an aware­ ness of growth. The idea is not, how~ver, to cap­ ture eternity on film. The job itself is the job-map it out and get it done. Jon Kublchan, writer­ Editor's Note: They finished this director; goes over a scene one and it looks worth it, besides. with his teen-age cast. , The next step for the crew: Ad­ vanced Motion Picture Workshop, and then, perhaps, Hollywood careers. Not ''The Alamo" but a plug-in bit on location at George K. Hunter Ranch Peggy and her leading man, Jimmy Olson, 14, study at Malibu. their lines. ------~- - --

The Status Seekers, by V. Packard (60¢-Pocket Books) Tropic of Cancer by H. Miller (96¢-Grove) The Hustler by W. Tevis ,(86¢­ Dell) Breakfast At· Tifjan11's, by T. Capote (60¢ - New American Library) The Leopard, by C. Di Lampedusa (75¢__:_New American Library) In Dubious Battle, by J . Steinbeck (60¢-Bantam) ; - Memoirs of Hecate Count11, by Paper backs being the college stu­ Edmund Wilson (75¢- New dent's 4-for-the-price-of-one-~r­ American Library). better lifesaver, here is another Main Street, Babbitt, Arrowsmith list of selected reading. I can by Sinclair Lewis (75¢ each - recommend each one either on New American Library) the basis of it's being a best-seller, Are You Hungry, Are You Col,d, or having special intrinsic merit, by Ludwig Bemelmans ( 60¢­ or both. So here goes: . New American Library) Doctor Zhivago, by B. Pasternak ( 96¢--Signet) In The Midst of Life, by Ambrose Bierce (60¢ - New American Making motion pictures takes creativity. It also requires a certain amount of The Poetry of Boris Pasternak, Library) muscle, and, sometimes, beards. by B. Pasternak ($1.25-Cap­ ricorn) The Negro Vanguard by R. Bar­ tolph ($1.85-Random House­ Kiss, Kiss by R. Dahl (60¢-Dell) Vintage) Catcher In The R11e, by J. D. Webster's New W orl,d Dictionary Salinger (60¢-New American Library) Of The . American Language Myth of Sisyphus, by A. Camus ($1.95-Meridian) ($1.10-Vintage) Frank Lloyd Wright: Writings and Buil,dings by E. Kaufman Subways Are For Sleeping by and B. Raeburn E. G. Love (60¢-New Ameri­ can Library) ($1.95-Meridian) West Side Story by I. Shulman DIANA ·sTEELE (60¢-Pocket Books) Cornell University '68 . orF TtlE

-T : !!£!~ ~~ 0 The youngsters romp unknowingly in the field, unseen by prying eyes ~~d~ct::t~:::!~ions~~:~; '1-ati'4EA Monophonic) you gotta read. His -except 14 belonging to t4e student titles, that is. ,au~ I movie makers. There's TerraFirmalrma, Non- Viennese Waltz , You're The EUROPE JAPAN · Only Girl In the Next Worl,d For ROUND THE WORLD Me, Heleen, and Diminishing. BERMUDA PUERlO RICO This neatness with a word gets right on into the music (There's - , - alto sax, Dick Whit­ tington - piano, Jimmy Bond - bass, and Milt ·Turner-drums.) Joe has been greatly influenced by Dizzie Gillespie and Clifford Brown, but he's got a wide field of his own in harmony and rhythm. ) - Better look in on Lookin' Good. Now Hear This: Ebb Tide, Earl Grant (Decca DL 4165-M, 0L 74165-S) Peer Gynt Suites Nos. 1 & 2, Duke Ellington (Columbia-CS8397) Glllespiana, Boris Shiffrin (Verve V6· 8394) The Best Of The · Dukes of Dixieland (AF-Mono. AFLP 1956; Stereo, AFSD 5956) Sound Effecb Volume 2 (AF-Mono West coast office: DFM 3010; Stereo, OFS 7010) 2161 Shattuck Ave. Movie caravan-one ·truck, a carryall, ten cars, about 30-40 in the total LAWRENCE BENZ ,· - crew, two actors and one faculty advisor. . Berkeley .t, Calif. University of Wichita '64 dept cd - I -I I I

r· # • ,.. ,.

/ \ , "' J • I ·.·.•a.. e ~ I . '

· menthol fresh • rich tobacco taste =·==· -=- . : . . 5: ; .. ':" - ! -= • ~ . • :: . : : .:.. - = ; - '::" . : : .:: : : : ~ ; t -= 5.:: ':" -· • - ': . : - •.: : . -:- : - .: ~--;- • s • modern f ilter_ too

; .. , : . , ,: : • I . ; ' .• : : ' : : •: . : • : - : ,: •.