The Campus Chat (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 48, Ed. 1 Wednesday, April 13, 1960 Page: 1 of 4
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Women Voice Discontent
With Career-Housewife Life
— Page 2
The Campus Chat
Distance Men Steal Show
In Relays Ninth Running
— Page 4
♦3rd YEAR
NORTH TEXAS STATE COLLEGE. DENTON, TEXAS
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 13. I960
NO. 48
Called for Encore . . .
Lab Bands Draw
Praise at Concert
"Good music is the thing we are I ranged locally l y Breeden.
seeking constantly," Leon Breed
en. directol of the North Texas
Lab band, said at the annual spring
concert in the auditorium Tues-
day evening.
The award-winning band filled
two hours with music by five Lab
bands. Students, local citizens, and
visiting celebrities of the music
world from Dallas and the sur-
rounding area applauded the bands
to an encore following the final
stereo production.
As a highlight Breeden present-
ed the four-foot trophy given to
the Lab band by Stan Kenton as
first prize at the Notre l>ame Jazz
festival in March.
Marvin Stamm, lead trumpet
player, received the awards of best
trumpet performer and best in-
strumentalist at the festival.
Swinging out on such numbers
as I'owell One by composer-arrang-
er Morgan Powell, and Broadway,
arranged by Lanny Steele, the band
drew praise from the audience.
In the quieter vein of Angel
Eyes, arranged by Steele, and Old
Devil Moon, arranged by Tom Wir-
tel, the musicians demonstrated
the versatility which was praised
at the 19(10 Jazz festival.
First to perform was the 5:00
o'clock band, followed by the Jazz-
tet, the 3:00 o'clock band, the NT
Quintet, and the 2:00 o'clock band.
As a finale the 2:00 and 3:00
o'clock bunds combined to present
for the first time in Texas "Live
Stereo." The tune was In a Mellow
Tone by Duke Ellington and ar-
Student directors Bob Pickering,
Steele. Powell, and Paul Guerrero
joined Breeden in composing, ar-
ranging. and directing the even-
ing's performance.
"It certainly exceeded all my
expectations." Hugh Lampman,
emcee of Dallas Station KKLD's
Music Till Dawn," stated.
Opening the show Breeden ex-
plained that in the modern littiO
vorld loud crashing noises of jets
and low murmurs of underwater
subs combine in a campatible con-
trast. The Lab band attempted to
interpret these sounds and trans-
pose them for the sensitivity of the
listener, Breeden stated.
More than fifty musicians took
part in the annual concert.
On May 7 the 2:00 o'clock band
will appear in Washington, D.C.,
at the Georgetown Intercollegiate
Jazz festival. Other groups appear-
ing will come from Carnegie Tech,
Julius Hartt College of Music, and
Princeton university.
\
-Chat l'huto by ADK1AN
JANET NOBLE smiles as she receives the Relay Queen crown from
♦rack team captain David Clark Saturday at the annual moot.
50 Radiologists Gather
For Civil Defense Study
Thursday to Saturday
Debaters to Host
Tournament Here
Representatives Develop
Instrument Training Plan
Thursday through Saturday the
North Texas chapter of Pi Kappa
Delta, honorary forensic fraternity,
will host students front 22 schools
at the biennial convention and tour-
nament of the Lower Mississippi
province. Dr. William DeMougeot
announced Monday.
Registering Wednesday night
and Thursday morning will be en-
trants from Harding college of
Arkansas, Southwestern Louisiana
institute, Oklahoma State univer-
sity, Oklahoma City university,
Central State college of Oklahoma,
Secret Summit Notes
Prof to Read Paper on 1919 Meeting
Dr. Keith Eubank, history pro-
fessor, will read a paper, "The
Summit Conference of 1919," Sat-
urday at the Southwestern Social
Science association meeting in Dal-
las.
In this paper Dr. Eubanks used
the secret minutes taken by Maur-
ice llankey, the conference secre-
tary, and the notes taken by the
interpreter, Paul Manloux.
The first summit conference of
the 20th century was held during
the Paris Peace conference in 1919,
Faculty Members Will Attend
Association Convention in Dallas
Five members of the NTSC fac-
ulty will have parts on the pro-
gram of the Southwestern Social
Science association meeting in Dal-
las Friday and Saturday while two
others will attend sectional meet-
ings.
Approximately four hundred col-
lege professors from a nine-state
area are expected to attend the
meeting at the Stutler-Hilton hotel.
Areas represented will lie account-
ing, agricultural economics, busi-
ness administration, business man-
agement, business research, eco-
nomics, geography, government,
history, and sociology.
Carl B. Compton of the art de-
partment will present a paper en-
titled "Communication and Infor-
mation: A Problem." Dr. Keith Eu-
bank of the history department will
present a paper .in "The Summit
Conference of 1919."
Dr. C. L. Littlefield of the divi-
sion of management in the School
of Business will chair a session
on "The Graduate Management
Program and the Gordon Report,"
while Dr. R. B. Melton of the eco-
nomics department will preside at
a session of papers by graduate
students.
James L. Riddlesperger of the
government department will dis-
cuss papers dealing with "The
Middle East in Ferment, 1960."
Dr. William T. Hagan of the
history department will serve as
chairman of the nominating com-
mittee for the history section and
as chairman of the committee for
constitutional amendments for the
association.
Thursday night Dr. Sam Mc-
Alister, director of the government
department, will attend a meeting
of all the heads of the government
departments attending the associ-
ational conference. The group will
discuss problems and issues of the
departments.
Other faculty members from
North Texas will attend the two-
day meeting.
Dr. Eubank stated. Because of
delays in writing the treaty of
peace with Germany, President
Woodrow Wilson suggested that
the heads of the principal Allied
governments meet secretly.
Wilson, Premier Georges Clem-
enceau of France, Premier Vittorio
Orlando of Italy, and Prime Min-
ister David Lloyd George of Great
Britain met to draw up the Ver-
sailles Peace treaty. Only a sec-
retary and interpreter were pres-
ent at the sessions, Dr. Eubanks
notes.
He stated that fear that Ger-
many would not sign the Versailles
treaty pervaded the summit con-
ference. The Allied generals saw
no way to force the signature short
of beginning the war again. Such
a method frightened the mem-
bers of the summit conference.
Germany solved the problem by
signing the treaty. Dr. Eubank
said. "I believe that the Germans
might have gained more by refus-
ing to sign and starting a cam-
paign of passive resistance."
Critics of this summit confer-
ence have neglected the inexperi-
ence of the Big Four in the art of
"summitry," stated Dr. Eubank.
None had ever attended such a
high level conference or planned
for one. The meeting suffering
from lack of planning.
The confernce wasted too much
time with details of punctuation
and phraseology.
Contrary to what has been
thought in the past, Wilson was the
dominant figure in the summit
conference.
Foundation Sponsors
Visitors See Science Displays
Ives Prepares
Writers' Guide
"A New Handbook for Writers"
by Dr. Sumner Ives of the English
department is scheduled for pub-
lication Friday. The book has been
in preparation for five years, Dr.
Ives said Wednesday.
According to the author, the
book is composed of approximately
380 pages, and is designed for a
college composition course. "It is
mainly a reference work contain-
ing information about how to use
the English language effectively,"
Dr. Ives said.
Explaining the basis of his book,
Dr. Ives said, "It is a completely j
different procedure for describing
the elements of the English langu- j
age about such matters as parts of j
speech."
Practically all English textbooks j
until a few years ago taught and
used descriptions of grammatical
structure based on Latin and not j
English, according to Professor j
Ives. "People who are specialists I
in language have recognized this j
situation and have tried to change i
it for the last 30 years, but none j
were very fruitful."
"The Phornology of Uncic Re-
Students and professors from 20
Texas schools visited the science
division at NT Thursday for the
Collegiate Research conference
sponsored by the Nationa
foundation.
Groups of lour students and one
faculty sponsor toured stations set
up in the science division of the
campuses of North Texas and Texas
Woman's university. Half of the
representatives inspected NT and
the other half TWIJ. The groups
rotated in the morning and after-
noon.
In the physics - mathematics
building four stations were desig-
nated. Three were set up in the
physics department and a fourth
was devoted to math.
The three stations in the physics
delegations were conducted by
members of the W. N. Masters
Chemical society.
, Work being done under the direc-
Sctence j tion of Dr. Price Truitt in the field
of organic synthesis, supported
by a $50,000 grant by the National
Institute of Health and a $2400-
per-year grant from Parke-Davis
and company, was inspected.
Research under Dr. Gerald Per-
kins' direction with the major pur-
pose of the delineation of the struc- j
ture of liquids, particularly liquid I
salts at elevated temperatures, was j
also observed. This work is sup-
ported by the Robert A Welch j
foundation and the North Texas j
Faculty Research fund. Financial ,
aid has also been contributed by the j
Research Corporation of New York, j
physical evidence for identity of
structural features in matter, as
opposed to chemical evidence ob-
tained via transformation of mat-
ter, were of interest to visiting
groups.
Members of Beta Beta
national honorary biologiea
acted as guides during th<
when conference members were
touring the scientific stations in
the biology department.
Beta, a
I society,
periods
Musicians Slate
Final Performance
section were concerned with the
Van de Graaf accelerator, one with
the Cockcroft-Walton accelerator,
and another with solid state re-1
search.
Stations in the physics section
were under the direction of Dr.
L. F. Connell, director of the de-
partment.
In the chemistry department, the
Dr. ('. W. Schimelpfenig's re-
duction of certain hetrocyclic sys-
tems containing both nitrogen and
oxygen by metallic hydrides was
observed.
Dr. R. B. Escue's investigating
the physiology of pigment cells
derived from melanotic, or black,
tumors and other research was
visited. Instruments which provide
■Press Time Chatter
Players to Present
Year's Last Effort
College Players' final production
for the semester, "Visit to a Small
Planet," will open April 2(1 for
five nights. The play will begin
at 8:15 p.m. nightly in the Studio
theatre.
The cast includes Frank Hill, Ab-
ilene, as Kreton; Wayne Kendricks,
Hreckenridge, as (ten. Tom Pow-
ers; Robert Graham of Houston
as Roger Spelding, and Judy Bogan,
Fort Worth, as Reba Spelding.
John Peninger, Bridgeport, por-
trays Conrad Mayberry; the Aide
is played by Steve Linn of Sweet-
water; Charles Roberts, Dallas,
as Deltori 4; the television tech-
nicians are played by Don llallen-
ger, I'ipan, and Frank Haley, Den-
ton, and Lynna Counts, Dallas, is
the assistant to the director.
Mel Cummings, Dallas, will elec-
tronically create vibrations and
sounds which represent the landing
of a space ship and the throwing
of the space men's voices.
Ballenger, who plays the part of
the television technician, made the
TV camera which he uses in the
play with lens from cameras and
floodlights,
After the holidays tickets may
be obtained from a booth in the
Howdy room or at the speech of-
j fice upon the presentation of a
i student activity card.
Southeastern Oklahoma, North-
eastern Oklahoma, Phillips univer-
sity, Rethany-Nazarenc, South-
western of Oklahoma, and East
Central State college of Oklahoma.
Entered from Texas will be North
Texas, Abilene Christian college,
Lamar Tech, Saint Mary's univer-
sity, Toxas Christian university,
Stephen F. Austin, and Howard
Payne college.
Tentative Entries
Schools that have sent in tenta-
tive entries are Ouachita Baptist
college of Arkansas and McNeese
college of Louisiana, Schools to
send delegates but no competitors
include Hardin - Simmons and
Northwestern State college of
Louisiana.
The tournament consists of four
rounds each of oratory and extem-
prancous speaking, two rounds of
speech to entertain, and eight
rounds of debate.
Banquet Friday
Friday 'light a banquet will be
held at the Pat Boone Country Inn.
Awards will be made at the final
business session on Saturday.
There will be trophies for the best
men's and women's debate teams,
for the school scoring the most
points in men's events, a similar
award in the women's division, and
a grand sweepstakes trophy. Those
placing in the upper 10 per cent
in any event will receive gold
medals denoting superior ratings,
and the next 20 per cent will re-
ceive certificates for excellent
ratings.
Representing North Texas at the
tournament will be Anne Hodges,
Dallas, and Bill I'errin, Trenton, in
men's debate, and Miss Hodges and
Perrin in oratory. Gayle Wonders.
Fort Worth, and Al Conant, Waco,
are entered in both extemporaneous
speaking and the speech to enter-
tain.
by CAROLYN PAYNE
Fifty university science institute
faculty members from six states
will In- at NTSC today through
Friday for a radiological sciences
conference, according to Dr. L. F.
Connell, director of the physics
department.
Under the direction of Dr. Con-
nell, the conference will lie con-
ducted by the college in co-opera-
tion with the Denton regional Of-
fice of Civil and Defense Mobili-
zation. A grant of $9100 was
awarded to North Texas by the
National Science foundation for the
program. The conference will lie
held in the physics-mathematics
building.
The purpose of the conference
is to set up a training program in
the use of radiological instru-
ment kits, which contain 11 pieces
of radiological equipment. The
Of DM has distributed 15,000 of
these to high schools over the na-
tion.
Hearing the visiting speakers
will be 50 college faculty members
who lire either directors or pro-
fessors of NSF-sponsoreil summer
science institutes for high school
teachers on their campuses.
• •
Participants in the conference
will come from Arkansas, Louis-
iana, New Mexico, Oklahoma,
Kansas, and Texas.
♦ • «
The lecturers will represent such
institutions as the Los Alamos
laboratory of the Atomic Energy
commission; the Oak Ridge Na-
tional laboratory in Tennessee;
OCDM Radiological Defense school
in Battle Creek, Mich.; Columbia
university; the University of
Texas; Southern Methodist uni-
versity, and the Baylor university
medical center.
Many of the speakers will dis-
cuss topics relating to the pro-
tection of the public from radia-
tion hazards. Included will be the
facts and fallacies about fallout,
and effects of nuclear weapons,
techniques of handling radioactive
materials, monitoring of water
samples and contamination, and
food and water decontamination
problems.
•
Other topics of value to the
teachers will be the operation
and use of survey meters and
dosimeters, radioisotope techni-
ques for researrh in cellular
biology, beta- and gamma-ray
identification and high school
physics applications, use of ra-
dioisotopes in biochemistry, and
materials and squipment sources
for high school science teachers.
* • •
Lecturers for the conference are
Dr. J. K. G. Silvey, director of the
biology department; Dr. Irene U.
Boone, biomedical research staff,
I.os Alamos Scientific laboratory;
Dr. Martin W. Fleck, AEC research
consultant, Los Alamos; Dr. Ear-
nest F. Gloyna, director of waste
disposal engineer. Oak Ridge Na-
tional laboratory, and Claude
Jones, traveling science teacher.
Also David McLaughlin, OCDM
Radiological Defense school; Dr.
Robert J. Speer. head of chemistry
laboratory, Baylor university med-
ical center; Dr. J. Herbert Taylor,
Columbia university botany pro-
fessor; Dr. C. W. Tittle, head of
the nuclear engineering section,
SMU, and Joe W. Tyson, head of
the biology department at the
Wl liam B. Travis high school,
Austin.
Girl Wants Roomie -
Hubby?' Asks Male
A sign on a cluttered campus
bulletin board read:
"Clean, quiet girl wants to
share apartment with a room-
mate. II' interested call "
Written arross it in large
masculine scrawl:
"Matrimony in mind?"
Departments Busy
Trips Fill Teachers' April Calendar
Conventions, meetings, mid field |
trips are filling the calendar foi l
representatives of NT's math, geo j
graphy, accounting, biology, ami
home economies departments.
Dr. Florence Schoular, dean of]
the School of Home Economics, is
in ( hicago attending the annual
meeting of the Federated Societies
for Experi nental Biology and Med-
icine which opened Monday in the
Conrad Hilton hotel and concludes
Friday.
Dr. Scoular will also attend
Accounting meeting Thursday, and
the Southwestern Social Science
meeting Friday and Saturday.
Geography Department
Members of the geography de-
partment will participate in local
arrangements committees for the
American Association of Geograph-
ers' convention in Dallas Monday
through April 22.
Dr. Walter Hansen, director of
the department, will be on the re-
ception committee, and Miss Flor-
< nee Cuilin will work with registra-
letiding were David Barros, Abi-
lene; Arthur Gillespie, Galveston;
Nelva D. Carroll, Waco; Don Park-
er, Gainesville, and Joseph Batcha
Jr., Denton.
BioloKy Department
Dr. James R. Lott, biology pro-
fessor, is attending the 44th annuul
meeting of the Federation of Amer-
ican Societies for Experimental
Biology at the Morrison hotel in
Chicago.
Dr. Lott will hear lectures and
papers on research work during
meetings of the American Institute tion. Lee Knox and Nelson Leo will the five-day meeting which began
f which he is a mem j lie members of the audio division,! Monday.
Activities to Halt for Easter
As Spring Vacation Begins
# School will officially halt for
| spring vacation Thursday at noon
! and will resume at 8 a.m. Tues-
day.
Oak Street hall is the only girls'
(dormitory which will remain open;
| others will close at 5 p.m. Thurs-
day and will reopen at 1 p.m. dur-
! ing the vacation.
mus Stories," published in 1954,
war, also written by Dr. Ives. "It | Spring vacation library hours
interpreted and examined the ex- will be from 8 a.m. until 5 p.m. on
tent of Joel Chandler Harris* rep- 1 Thursday, but from 8 a.m. until
resentation of the Negro speech i 4 Pm- <"> Friday, Saturday, and
in the stories," Dr. Ives said. Monday. Tuesday the regular
Dr. Ives taught nine years at *''hpdule wi" resumed.
Tulane university before joining j Today is the iatt Chat until
the North Texas English depart i April 22.
ment this year. After receiving his
B A. and M.A. degree* from Fur- j # Faculty member* and several
man university in South Carolina, students from the industrial arts
Dr. Ives obtained his Ph.D. from department attended the North
the University of Texas. Texas Industrial Arts association
Collegium Musicum, directed by
Kenton Parton, will present its
third and final concert of the sen-
son April 21 at K;15 p.m. in the
main auditorium.
The first, part of the program I
will be a series depicting various j
types of harpsichord music. A
Trio Sonata by W. F. Bach will be
played by Sherry Smith, flute, of!
Edinburg; Sally O'Reilly, violin, of! Fnr MrJirlav/c
Dallas; John Maus, cello, of Dallas, nOIIOdyS . .
j and Anita Davis, harpsichord, of j
| Arlington.
The Trio Sonata Number 5 ofj
i J. D, Zelenka will Ik- performed
featuring Miss O'Reilly; Carol b>. DENNIS PHILLIPS
Thompson oboe, of El Paso; Jerry j Thursday noon will
Voorhees, bassoon, of Dallas; Maus,
and Kenton Parton, harpsichord.
A lute tablature by Simone Mo-
linaro furnishes two dances to be
played in a modern transcription
of Nutrition
lier.
Mrs June Kelsay Pace, who re-
i ccived degrees in food and nutri-
! tion from NT, is co-author of two
j papers to lie presented at the Amer-
j iean Institute meeting.
Accounting Staff
Accounting staff mem tiers will
attend two meetings at the Statler-
liilton hotel in Dallas Thursday,
Friday, and Saturday, according to
Tom Rose of the accounting faculty.
The staff will attend the annual
Texas association of Instructors in
j helping about ninety speakers
Math Department
Three faculty members and five
graduate assistants from the math
department were in San Antonio
Friday and Saturday for the an-
nual meeting of the Texas Section
of the Mathematical Association of
America, according to Dr. II. C.
Parrish, director of the depart-
ment.
Faculty members attending were
Dis. George Copp, John Mohat, and
Parrish. Graduate assistants at-
Registrar Convention
J. E, Tompkins, associate reg-
istrar, will leave Monday to at-
tend the 50th annual meeting of
the American Association of Col-
legiate Registrars and Admissions
Officers at Los Angeles.
The convention, which begins
with an informal reception and
registration Monday, will hold
workshops to discuss problems and
ideas as related to admissions, rec-
ords, foreign students, transcripts,
and transfer students.
International Students Will Visit Ranch
meeting at Eastern Hills high
school in Fort Worth Tuesday
night.
After dinner and a business ^ guitarist ' harles Merrill of Eu-
meeting, representatives from the A suite from the Royal Brass
Delta Manufacturing company and
John Miller company demonstra-
ted machines used by industrial
arts departments and showed slides
on the use of the machines.
• •
# Four students in the North
Texas government department at-
tended a conference on government.
Music of King James the First will
lie played by trumpeters Donald
Owen, Gastonia, N.C., Deverl Over-
man, Fort Worth, and John Crews,
Dallas; trombonists John Reinke,
Bay City; Pat Brooks, Graham, and
Gerald Campbell, Kingsville, and
tuba player Bill Merrill of Beau-
and law Wednesday at the South-
ern methodist university School of
Law in Dallas.
Attending the conference were
Walter Mile of Arlington, James
I)i<k«>n of I>enton, Lindsay heffer
of Seymour, and Ed Smith of Dal-
The final number on the program
is a setting of Street Cries of Lon-
don by Orlando Giblions. The sing-
er* are Judy Brassefl of Carthage,
soprano; Dorothy Crim of Bryan,
alto; l^irry Corse of Sherman, ten-
or, and baritones Kenneth McNatt
las. Dickson and Keffer are grad-1 of Garland and Ed Waddill of Aus-
uate assistants in the department, tin
by
Thursday noon will find North
Texas students packing for the
trip home for Easter holidays with
their families. But what, about the
international students? Most of
their families are thousands of
miles away.
Several of them will make up the
majority of a group from NTSC
that, will lie among approximately
two hundred guests at the ninth
annual International Student re-
treat at Mo-Ranch near Kerrville.
The retreat is sponsored every
year by Texas Baptist students to
provide a holiday away from the
campus for overseas students. Many
American collegians are foregoing
their Easter vacation at home to
join with the international repre-
sentatives io participate in dis-
cussions on decisive world i«*ii«'
The retreat and conference pro-
vides a place for international
«tud"nt,s to meet new friends from
their country and other parts of
the world, anil Mo-Rauch provides I
recreational facilities for the visit-
students who will converge from!
all parts of the state.
Dr. Paul Green, director of the those to lead discussions on the
Dallas Council on World Affairs , world situation. Communism, racial
and former diplomat to India, Sy- {
ria, and Jordan, will be among]
Allstate Insurance Awards
Grant to Driver Ed Program
A $2500 grant has been awarded
the driver education program by
the Allstate Insurance company
of Dallas, announced Lincoln Flin-
sch, public relations manager for
the foundation recently.
W. A. Cooper, director of the
driver's safety program, explained
that this is the seventh year that
the grant has been in effect.
"The grant will provide scholar-
ships and administrative expenses
of the driver's training program
for this summer," Cooper said
Monday.
Recipients of the $2500 award
will have to hove a bachelor's de-
gree to receive the specialization
certificate in driver's education,
Cooper adcil.
He also stated that the grant
is principally for in-service teach-
ers who plan to teach driver's
training during the fall and spring.
Interested applicants should con-
tact Cooper at the department of
health, physical education, and;
recreation. Applications will be
considered on the basis of the in-
dividual's qualifications.
tensions, and the new nationalism
will be problems for discussion by
groups of international and Ameri-
can students.
Mo-Ranch is located on the north
fork of the Guadalupe river, 23
miles west of Kerrville in the heart
of the Texas hill country. It was
originally built by Daniel J. Moran
as u private estate for hi* family,
but upon his death the Synod of
Texas of the Presbyterian church
U.S. purchased 377 acres of Im-
proved land along with 6600 acres
of ranch lands. The ranch lands
were later sold to the Texas Game
and Fish commission and are now
useil as a game preserve.
With a housing capacity of 376,
Mo-Ranch provides boating, fishing,
Imdminton, bowling, ping pong,
swimming, soccer, baaeball, and
hiking. It has an inlaid tile swim-
ming pool, but most guests prefer
the waters of the Guadalupe river.
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Looney, Johnnie Lou. The Campus Chat (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 48, Ed. 1 Wednesday, April 13, 1960, newspaper, April 13, 1960; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth307151/m1/1/: accessed May 21, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting UNT Libraries Special Collections.