The Ithacan, 1964-03-06

The Ithacan, 1964-03-06

Ithaca College Digital Commons @ IC The thI acan, 1963-64 The thI acan: 1960/61 to 1969/70 3-6-1964 The thI acan, 1964-03-06 Ithaca College Follow this and additional works at: http://digitalcommons.ithaca.edu/ithacan_1963-64 Recommended Citation Ithaca College, "The thI acan, 1964-03-06" (1964). The Ithacan, 1963-64. 16. http://digitalcommons.ithaca.edu/ithacan_1963-64/16 This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the The thI acan: 1960/61 to 1969/70 at Digital Commons @ IC. It has been accepted for inclusion in The thI acan, 1963-64 by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons @ IC. .. Building Program Continues The 2nd Phase Nears Completion 3rd Phase Begins In April Ithacan The College has announced it several academic buildings was will begin in April an •additional carried out this week by the New Vol. 36-No. 16 $8.75 million in building construe- York State Dormitory Authority tion on its new South Hill campus. through the sale of bonds in the This will be ithe third and climatic amount of $4.98 million. phase of the College's booming These buildings include what the building program. College refers to as "a general IC Publications President Howard Dillingham studies complex" of two classroom Choir _To Sing B· Mi.nor Mass; Awards Accepted said that this new constructon, buildings, a lecture hall, a faculty with -that already completed and office buiding, and an administra­ By Ithacan Staff under way, would "provide the tive office building. This group Bach .Work. Slated For Sunday College with a complete campus will be connected with second floor Each of Ithaca College's two pub­ lications The Ithacan and the capable of caring for the educa­ level glass enclosed bridges so that Cayugan won Class "B" certifi­ tional needs of 3,000 students." students and faculty in winter may cates in the 1963 College Publica­ He added that the new campus go from one building to another tions Competition in Rochester, of the 72-year-old College is slated without being outdoors. New York, on February 28. for completion within five years A library will be next on the At the Fifth Annual Newspaper after the cornerstone of the initial construction agenda this summer. Conference, sponsored by R.I.T. building was laid. "This time sched­ Construction of the last of the and the Rochester Gannett News­ ule in carrying to fulfillment a new buildings announced today, the papers, Ithaca College was repre­ sented by Ithacan staff members: campus building program of this fine arts, is expected to get under Irving Wood, Managing Editor; size is probably unprecedented," he way by next Sept. 1. This building Philip Sandler, Business Manager; said. would include a theater; television Miriam Jacobs, Feature Editor; "Five years will ,be cut from the and radio studios; also studios for and Jeffrey Fink, photographer. 10-year program on which the painting and sculpture. The conference started at 9 a.m. College ambitiously embarked less Friends Hall, now in temporary with the registration of represen­ than three and a half years ago." use as a library and classroom tatives. Dr. Mark Ellingson, Presi­ Bids will be sought March 5 on building, will be finished and be­ dent of R.I.T., addressed the con­ two 14-story dormitories with a ference participants, and empha­ come one of the two classroom sized the importance of the news­ connecting two-story dining hall structures in the general studies paper in college life. and ~tudent lounges. Each dormi­ complex. tory will house 356 students. Fac­ The remainder of the morning Reviewing the College's build­ was divided into two one-hour ulty clubrooms and student lounges ing activities since they began, Dr. sessions. During each period clinics will ·be· located on the 14th floors. Dillingham said that the College were held which ·covered various The dormitories will be con­ will have expended around $23 1.c. Concert Choir under the dirttetlon of Don Craig areas of newspaper writing-edi­ structed at a cost of $3.75 million million for buildings, equipment torials, features, news; managing through a loan from the Com­ and landscaping on its scenic and layout planning; and photog­ raphy. There were also several munity Facilities Administration campus when the program an­ panels where the many problems of the Housing and Home Finance nounced is completed. The campus The Mass i11 8 minor by Johann Fifteen Great Chorus.es are in­ encountered by college newspaper Agency. is slated for completion in the Sebastian Bach will be performed terspersed with duets and solos. staffs were discussed. Financing of the construction of spring of 1965. Duets will be sung ·by Amanda Sunday, ·March -8 py the llthaca An "Evaluation and Rating of College Co~~ert Choir, Chorus, and Ober and Sheila Simons, Patricia the 1963 College Newspaper" was Orchestra. Duncklee and Jim Sullivan, and given at noon by the participating The concert will be the third in Joan Zajac and Mary.Jo Anthony. judges. Representatives were en- _ the annual series of four pre­ Soloists are: Susan Baraban, couraged to ask questions pertain­ H.F.R.R. FINALLY ARRIVES; sented by the cbQral organizations Amanda Ober, Don Ellsworth, ing to the methods of evaluation of the College. There are forty-five Frank Hoffmeister, and Tim Jer­ used by the judges. A question­ FREE FROSH EVENT TODAY voices in the Choir and fifty-five in ome. answer period ensued. the Chorus. The orchestra numbers The program is at 8:15 p.m. in DO YOU KNOW WHAT THE raffle tickets only cost 25¢ or five twenty,mx players. The entire work the College Music Hall, Seneca -and (Continued on Page 4) H.F.R.R. IS? Well you should. for a dollar. will be performed under the di- Geneva Streets. All are invited to Many people do not believe me But this is not all that will take -, rection of Prof. Don Craig, bead afttend. when I tell them what the H.F.R.R. place at the H.F.R.R.! At 6:00 the of vocal music. is, so now I will make it clear to biggest surprise of the night will The Man in B minor is reputed ··-~?)?\Jj everyone. The H.F.R.R. is FREE present itself. It will just be the to be the greatest work ever com­ to everyone. It is taking place to­ beginning of a night of surprises '' .;, ,, day at 6:00 in the College Union. posed for chorus. It was written ' (',,~~ and FREE fun presented by the An ad. hoc. faculty committee ,~, ~ between ithe years 1733 and 1738 ·::< At 6:45 ,there will be a HOOTEN­ class of "67". made a recommendation for a as an applic-ation for appointment ANNY in the lounge. At 8:00 there There will be free food at the to the Electoral Chapel of ~ King new Dean of Arts and Sciences will be a dance featuring AL AND H.F.R.R. given to us through the of Roland and the Elector of at their meeting February 3. Dr. THE VARIATIONS. At the dance. Ithaca College Food Service who is Saxony. Parts of the Mass may be Robert Morton Davies, Profes­ the winners of the "NAME THE also paying for the Band. familiar ,to listeners '3S belonging sor of English and Chairman of H.F.R.R."" contest will be an­ In the words of BARON DAE­ nounced and their prizes given to to various cantatas, for Bach re­ the Division of Humanities at MON, "If you go to the H.F.R.R. arranged several numbers especial­ them. you will have a BLOODY good ly for the Mass. Thiel College, Greenville, Pen­ A student may still enter the time. If you don't go you may just The Mass is not liturgical, hav­ nsylvania, was recommended. contest by turning their answer end up BLOODY! ! BLAAH" ing been composed in several seg­ The recommendation was ac­ and name to the Information Desk. What docs this all add up to? It ments and not specifically 1X> co­ cepted and referred to the Board The prizes are being displayed at adds up to a night of FREE fun the Union Cafeteria. ordinate wiil:b the liturgy of the of Trustees. That body con­ for the whole college. We don't Also at rthe dance ,the winners of want to make money, how could Roman Church. It is a moving firmed the recommendation at work, full of the great strength of the $5.00 gift certificates will be we with everything FREE?? We the ·music of the master composer their meeting February 19. Ithacan Staff Attends announced. Raffle tickets for this just want you to have fun at the of the Baroque era. Conference at RIT drawing will be sold till 10:00. The H.F.R.R. TODAY IN THE UNION. THE ITHACAN, MARCH 6, 1964, PAGE 2 Shaded Opinions It is rather common ·to we.rr dark glasses in bright sunlight in order to avoid damaging the eyes. This is particularly true 1~ !He case of the near-sighted person, whose eyes are very hght-sens1t1ve. How easy it is too, to "put on dark glasses_'' in the ~rig~t ligbt of opinion either shading another's from our view or adJustmg our own to a 'comfortable brightness. Here, too, it is the near-sighted by Mike Ay~rs person who shields himself behind a dark. screen : . , . Not that there is anything wrong wit? mod1fymg ones op1_mon. That time of year is here again.

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