Scholastical Athletics Take Place At

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Scholastical Athletics Take Place At ampgfiire VOLUME NO. 50 ISSUE 37 UNIVERSITY OF NEW HAMPSHIRE, DURHAM, N. H. — MARCH 30, 1961 PRICE —TEN CENTS Scholastical Athletics Dr. Heilbronner Is 3 Administrative Take Place at MUB Outstanding Teacher Posts Filled By by Harold Damerow The University of New Hampshire chapter of the American Association of Faculty Members The UNH version of the G. E. tele­ University Professors last week named vision program “College Bowl” is still Dr. Hans Heilbronner, an assistant pro­ by Paul Bates with us and will be for quite a while. fessor of history as an “Outstanding Last Sunday, the MUB saw the second Teacher”. Heilbronner becomes the sixth Three distinguished members of the installment of the first round of these U. N. H. faculty have recently been faculty member to be honored this year scholastical athletics. There are 16 hous­ appointed to new administrative po­ ing units participating. Each Sunday by the organization. sitions by the Board of Trustees. Dr. four teams face each other and two Extensive Research John F. Reed has been appointed Vice- winners emerge. Thus the first round President of the University; Dr. Allan still has two installments to go till every A native of Germany, Heilbronner A. Kuusisto, Dean of the Graduate team has had at least one chance. When served with the U. S. Army in both the School; and Dr. David C. Knapp, Act­ the total of winners has been reduced to Second World War and the Korean Con­ ing Dean of the College of Liberal four, the Committee hopes to have flict. He received his doctorate from the Arts. WMDR broadcast the semi-finals; and Dr. Reed has been serving in a tri­ to have the finals televised by WENH. University of Michigan in 1954, and be­ Greg Morrison fires back an answer to a question on last Sunday evening’s gan teaching at UNH in the fall of that ple function. He has been Dean of the Description ‘UNH Bowl’ quizdown. Registering enthusiastic approval are teammates Larry year. G raduate School since 1956, Dean of Jasper, Bob Moore, and Bob Ellis. The team, which represented East-West the College of Liberal Arts since 1958, Last Sunday Alpha Chi defeated Chi He is currently teaching courses in and Co-ordinator of Research. Dean Omega 120 to 40, and Alexander tri­ Hall, edged Phi Mu sorority in the first staging of the MUB-sponsored battle World History, Modern European His­ of the brains. Marty Wolf son Photo Reed stated that the purpose of new umphed over Sawyer 190 to 70. Perhaps tory, and Russian History, which is appointments was “to crystallize the the best way to describe this little league Questions Hard specialty. He devotes considerable time existence of a solid administrative team­ series of brain exercises is to describe to research. He is presently completing work approach . in order to serve the contest between Alexander and Saw­ After its initial start Sawyer made a study of the struggle between moder best the total interests of the Univer­ yer. The large Strafford room was the PAC Theatre Filled another 10 points before Alexander began ate and conservative interpretations of sity.” scene of activities. It was very sparsely catching up. Alexander not only caught He believes that a team approach of sprinkled with random spectators — up but started piling up its lead. The the Russian aristocracy in the 1880’s. Audience Enthused This study will be published in the Journ “closely integrated activity, because of mainly fellows from Alexander it sub­ audience applauded. However, it should comparable background of the appoin­ sequently appeared by the applause. be said both teams only answered about al of Modern History. tees, retains the perspective . of a The stage was filled with three tables 50 percent of the questions asked by the Over Limon Group Diligent Educator primary focus on the academic respon­ arranged in a half-circle. At the center Mistress of Ceremony. The questions were sibility of the University.” He contin­ of this semi-circle, directly facing the quite difficult. One question that was by Jean Stilson Heilbronner is seemingly unique in his ued, “proper emphasis on each of these audience, were Jackie Beauregard and missed was, “The territory of what two treatment of grading of student work. He Dennis McAlpine, Mistress and Master administrative functions will provide countries was considered to build the A capacity crowd last Thursday eve­ shuns the widely used graduate grader balance and allow functioning in an of Ceremony respectively. ning witnessed Jose Limon and Com­ Panama canal. One, of course, was Pan­ and the objective test. He reads all of integrated manner with the President.” To the right, from the audience’s point ama; what was the other?” pany’s ability to communicate emotions his own exam papers. He claims he spends of view, sat four pretty scholars from Some amusing moments occurred when through the art form of the dance. Broad Background Sawyer. The Alexander team sat to the Sawyer after correctly answering a toss- The program opened with “There is “an uneconomic time, an immense time left of the Master of Ceremony. Each up question was given a bonus question a Time”, twelve variations on the theme in correcting tests. He contends a test Dean Reed has served on the facul­ contestant had a buzzer and a light in dealing with baseball. The team was taken from Chapter 3 of Ecclesiastess should be an educational tool, not mere­ ties of Amarillo College, Baldwin-Wal- front of his seat to indicate his desire to asked to name the World Series winner “To everything there is a season, and ly a test to find out how much a student lace College and the University of Wy­ answer a question. When the teams were for several years. Not really knowing, a time to every purpose under the heaven; knows. oming. He was also Dean of Men at Baldwin Wallace and Manager of the introduced, each person rang his buzzer but realizing that the Yankees had won . ” The curtain rose on the entire Heilbronner joins Dr. Marion James, in succession, partly to test the buzzer University of Wyoming Science Camp. many; the girls answered “Yankees” group holding hands in a circle. All Dr. Gwynne H. Daggett, and Professors and partly to acknowledge the introduc­ four times. Unfortunately, the Yankees, through these dances, the circle, used by A specialist in plant ecology, Dean tion. Limon as a symbol for time, kept re­ Stanley Shimer, Harold Iddles, and Wil­ Reed is a native of Maine and received out of spite, had refused to win the liam F. Henry as recipients of the Sawyer Early Lead World Series in any of these years. appearing ; the dancers completed the his B.A. degree from Dartmouth, and cycle and at the end returned to their AAUP award. M.A. and Ph.D. degrees from Duke With the formalities out of the way, Solicitude original formation. University. / the game began for earnest. Sawyer was In 1951-1952 he and his family were Another light moment came when New Sphinx off to a quick 30 to 0 start by answering Polish Mazurkas in the Belgian Congo while he served a 10 point toss-up question and the fol­ Jackie solicitously started to answer a The class of 1964 has chosen the fol as a plant ecologist under the Economic toss-up question after one team could lowing 20 point bonus-question. Here a The Mazurkas were inspired by the lowing for 1964 Sophomore Sphinx. Joy Cooperation Administration for the word about indicating the score of the not quite answer it after it had pressed courage of the Polish people as witnessed Anderson, Richard Brams, Tom Buckley, Belgian Government in its East Afri­ the buzzer, but before the other team teams. It used an elaborate computer on the Company’s recent tour of Poland. Jonathon Gregory, Philip Haskell, Pam can mandated territories. He is the system — two students wrote the re­ had had a chance at the question. She was somewhat flustered at her mistake. But There seemed to be no separate mean­ ela Holmes, Mary Jane Johnson, Marcia author of several technical publications spective score on a blackboard and erased in the field of botany and has served as it if it changed. Twice the Masters of this illustrates the involvement of par­ ing attached to each dance, but through­ Judd, Sue Lipponcott, Bill Mayher, out one could not help feeling the cour­ Cathie Parry, James Philbrick, Penny Secretary of the Ecological Society of Ceremony asked for the score _ on the ticipants and spectators. Many times the America. audience could hardly refrain from an­ Poole, Pamela Potter, Chris Riley, board and once it was corrected in Saw­ age and buoyant optimism of those op­ Dr. Kuusisto yer’s favor. swering some of the questions. pressed people. Brooks Smith, Richard Sykes, Patt Tay­ Here, in contrast to the first part of lor, David Tullio, Brad Thomas, and Dr. Kuusisto when interviewed con­ the program, the group appeared in reg­ Barbara Wood. cerning the Graduate School stated, John P. Adams Dorm, Greek Heads ular dance tights, allowing the complete “I look forward to meeting the chal­ movements of the dance to come through. The lighting arrangements were especial­ lenges of an expanding graduate pro­ It must be said, however, that the cos­ ly effective in the new Paul Theatre. gram at this University. I think UNH Receives Honors Talk Discrimination Limon’s Master Class, conducted by bears the primary responsibility in this tumes were admirably simple and con­ state for offering specialized graduate tributed much to the sweep and flow of Betty Jones, member of the Company, by Lionel Biron drew around 60 participants, many of programs.
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