1961-03-24; Central Michigan Life |
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On Peace Corps
Page Two
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Student Teaching:
Affiliation Optional
Page Four
foLUME FORTY-TWO
CENTRAL MICHIGAN UNIVERSITY, MT. PLEASANT, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, MARCH 24, 1961
NUMBER TWENTY
THE TREES ON CAMPUS are getting special attention these days from the maintenance department.' Here a Grand Rapids Iree firm sprays one with a DDT chemical to
prevent Dutch elm disease, which is spread by elm bark beetles. Although the disease
is not prevalent in Isabella County, it is at Midland and is slowly moving this direction.
The trees being cut down are not diseased but are being removed for a new landscape program to be planted next month.
Fill Iroe
The students of Central are student would support the or-
ow the "parents" of 53 Korean phanage for a year. So far S250
rphans. Two boys and girls has been sent to the orphanage
ave been added to the Moon which has a monthly debt of
on (unhanage in Korea since S105 and a standing debt of
lentral took over its support
ist fall.
The Korean Orphanage
Committee received a letter
from the founder and operator of the orphanage, Mrs.
Rang. She said, "I thank God
that he has permitted us an
opportunity to write this letter and let us become friends
with the members of Central
Michigan University..."
Neil Kirwan, committee
lan man, said that three-
miths cent a day or a dollar
cr semester from each Central
Ten Michigan colleges en-
rod 34 students in the Mich-
;an Peace Speech Contests
:-ie la^t weekend. Prizes totalis S200 were given by the
mshts of Pythias.
Colleges participating were
Imn. Calvin, Central Mich-
;n. Detroit Bible College, De-
->:t Institute of Technology,
astern Michigan, Hope, Uni-
r.-ity of Detroit, Wayne State
ui Western Michigan.
Winners in women's extenv
naneous speaking were: first,
ail Smith, DIT; second, Sandra
'■nVi'lsen. Wayne; third, Char-
ne VanHouten, Hope.
Winners in men's extempor-
u-ous speaking were: first,
'•wland Rowley, Western; sec-
Kl. Wayne Rietberg, Calvin:
ucl, Tom Faulkner, Hope.
Winners in women's oratory
fie: first, Jo Dene Septak,
jyne: second, Ann Herfst,
ope: third, Dorothv Ready,
In;;,.
Winners in men's oratorv
tie: first, Brian Gill. DIT;
end. Dan O'Neill, Wayne:
itei. Ed Powers, Alma.
S1.500.
The final drive for funds
will be Friday and Saturday,
April 7 and 8. The committee
will have cannisiers in all
dorms and the University
Center. The R. O. T. C. drill
team and ihe Vets Club are
both planning money raising
activities.
Pending approval of the student senate Sloan and Ronan
Halls are planning a dance in
Ronan for Friday evening,
April 7, which will also raise
money for the project. It will
t'be open to all students.
The Student Social Activi-
i ties Committee plans an all
university mixer for Saturday night, April 8, where
cannisiers will be available
for donations.
A number of girls in Barnard
are writing to the orphans, as
are the fifth graders at Mt.
Pleasant's Pullen Elementary
School. Kirwan points out that
all these gestures help orphans
feel that we really care.
Vandalism Problei
"I am glad that the Senate is
interested enough in vandalism
on Central's campus to consider
the problem," Dean of Students
Daniel J. Sorrells said at Monday night's meeting.
The Senate asked Sorrells,
Ilihard LichtcnfeU, dhmjlui ul
the University Center; Dr. N.
C. Bovee, vice president of business and finance, and Lee Pol-
ley, director of housing to discuss the matter with them. The
discussion was broadcast over
WCRG.
Dr. Bovee mentioned the
many acts of vandalism which
have occurred in recent weeks
and have been detailed in previous issues of LIFE.
Sorrells pointed out that vandalism is a problem affecting
all students. He said that it reflects both the presence of a
few students who are not here
for an education and a lackadaisical attitude of student
leaders.
It was pointed out that this
vandalism is undermining the
University's reputation and for
that reason may have a more
far-reaching effect than most
people realize.
@mfi IPi
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On ffepfei* P@rcl
The S350 painting of Pres.
Judson Foust is now hanging
prominently in the University
Center lobby for all to view.
The picture, wrapped in
newspaper, was left anonymously on the porch of Dr.
John Hepler, head of the English Department, whose house
is south of the University Center.
Richard Lichtenfelt, director
of the University Center, said
he believes the theft of the picture started out as a prank but
the culprit or culprits, upon
finding its value, became
frightened and decided to use
this method of returning it.
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Central's newly formed Women's Honor Society for outstanding senior women met for the
first time last week to select
officers and advisors.
KOREAN STUDENT Jai Chun Kim talks with four visiting Koreans on campus Tuesday. From left to right they are Sang Sun Kim, Yong Hun Kim, Daniel Kim and Sang
Chul Kwum
IFC Award
olarshi
Elaine Hackett, Mt. Pleasant
junior, was elected president of
the Associated Women's Society
Tuesday.
Ann Lowrie, Waterford junior, was elected vice-president,
Janis Coyle. Saginaw junior,
secretary;' Kay Andrews, Saginaw sophomore, treasurer; Sue
Nyblad, Kent City sophomore,
upperclass representative, and
Sue Bryan, Charlotte freshman,
loweiclass representative.
The polls were open all day
Tuesday and 766 women voted.
The Inter-Fraternity Council
awarded its first scholarship to
Roy McPherson of Phi Sigma
Epsilon fraternity. It is a S50
scholarship which will be
j awarded to a different person
I each semester. The requirements are a 2.5 accumulative
point average and academic im-
I provement.
| The I. F. C, is presently proposing a plan whereby they
will be able to give two S50
scholarships each semester.
| A traveling scholarship trophy
! is also given by the I. F. C. It
is awarded to the fraternity
;with the highest point average.
Tau Alpha Upsioln has won it
12 out of the 13 times it has
been presented, including last
semester.
The otticers are: President,
Lenore Jensen, Allen Park;
Vice-President, Margaret
Sweeney, Mt. Pleasant; Secretary, Elain Hackett, Mt. Pleas-
and; Treasurer, Betty Tatar,
North Branch and Editor-His'-
torian, Harriet Moss, West
Branch.
Dennis Moore, St. Clair
Shores junior, and Don Brooks,
Romulus junior, were elected
the next president and vice-
president of Central's student
body at Wednesday's elections.
Eighteen hundred students
voted in, the election which also
passed a proposed constitutional
amendment to the student gov-
e r n m e n t constitution. The
amendment dealt with the
make-up of the Student Senate's Elections Committee.
Moore headed the University
ticket whtich swept the board.
Along with Moore and Brooks,
Carleen Kimble was voted secretary of the student body and
Frank Manning will be the new
student body treasurer.
Also elected with the ticket
were senior, junior and sophomore class senators—J a n e t
Jones, Mary Mead and Dick
, Potter. None of the three senate
: candidates were opposed.
ELECTION RESULTS
; STUDENT BODY PRESIDENT
i Denny Moore 895
I Roger Kisseberth 505
j Ric Cooper 400
STUDENT'BODY
VICE-PRESIDENT
Don Brooks 1181
Linda Lucke & 593
STUDENT BODY SECRETARY
Carlene Kimble 1164
Peggy Sadler 594
SSUDENX-BODY TREASURER
«
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Final plans are now being
made for this spring's Greek
Week, April 10-16, according to
Carol Dopp and Paul Heyden-
burg, co-chairmen of the annual
event.
A dance and jam osession
by Maynard Ferguson's 12-
piece orchestra on Friday,
April 14, will feature ihe
week of activities. Jam session tickets may be purchased
from any Greek.
Central's 17 Greek social organizations will participate in
the week's activities which will
start with a torch-lighting ceremony on Monday in frotn of
Warriner Hall.
New events that have been
added this year are a tricycle
relay race, bowling tournament, pie-eating contest and an
auction at which three members of each sorority and fraternity will be auctioned off to
faculty members. The three will
go as a single unit.
Play Bingo Tonight!
An All-University Bingo
Party is scheduled tonight in
the gymnasium from 9 to 12
p.m. There is no admission
charge. SSAC is providing all
the prizes.
Three Korean school principals, Sang Sun Kim, San Chul
Kwan and Yong Hun Kim, and
their interpreter, Daniel Kim,
visited Central Tuesday.
Their visit here was part of
a month of observing how coeducational schools in Michigan
operate.
They will return home next
month after visiting schools
in New York state, Washington D. C. and Sacramento,
Calif.
Through their interpreter,
Daniel Kim, they told members
of Phi Delta Kappa, professional fraternity in education,
at a luncheon Tuesday, that
they want to get "some idea of
the comprehensive high school
in the United States." He
pointed out that "all Korean
high schools are purely academic."
Daniel Kim also said that
high schools in Korea are not
co-education now, but that coeducational schools are being
considered, and they wanted to
see how co-education works
here.
He pointed out that the Koreans had to build their school
system up from practically
nothing after World War II.
"Korea was under the
Japanese 36 years," he said,
"and at thai time only a few
people had a chance to go io
college." Opportunities for
schooling at all levels were
slight.
After the Japanese occupation ended, the Koreans went
about building up a public
school system as quickly as possible.
Today all Korean children
are required io complete six
years of school, and about 80
per cent go beyond elementary school. Only about 30 per
• cent go to college, but Daniel
Kim said ihe number going io
college is steadily increasing.
Frank Manning 926
John English 599
CONSTITUTIONAL
AMENDMENT
Yes 1^94
No 212
SENIOR CLASS SENATOR
Janet Jones 441
SENIOR CLASS PRESIDENT
John Herrington
JSn Gothard
Bill Kelly
193
143
134
SENIOR CLASS
VICE-PRESIDENT
Sally Cooper
Tom Walker
313
160
SENIOR CLASS SECRETARY
Mary Hill 239
Sue Bublitz 222
•reheslra to Give
unday Af!ari@@n
A spring concert will be pre-
Mod by the Symphony Or-
estra Sunday in Warriner
iditorium at 4 p.m.
The concert will open with a
lozart Overture to Cosi Fan
lite' followed by "The Walk
the Paradise Garden" by
edrick Delius, "Hungarian
i>'ch" by Berloiz and "Carni-
1 of the Animals" by C.
int-Saens'
"Carnival of the Animals,"
lich is the feature piece of
2 concert, is comprised of 14
-tions. The music in each sec-
*i gives a description of vari-
s animals in a satirical man-
r.
Mrs. Jean Mayhew will read
Yf ft. *
/v-fe:
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A SPRING CONCERT will be presented by the Symphony Orchestra Sunday afternoon in Warriner Auditorium. The picture shows the Orchestra practicing Monday night
under the direction of Dr. Rivard.
the noems by Ogden Nash that Norma Wood Will be guest The concert will be con-
were written for this selection, piano soloists in "Carnival of ducted by Dr. - William H.
Mrs. Lucille Davis and Mrs. the Animals". Rivard.
Keep Your Girl Out
An Extra Hour-How?
Tenny-A-Minute'
Keep your girl out till 11:30
p.m. without wasting a late
per! That's the fun of this
year's A. W. S. "Penny-A-Min-
ute" night on Thursday, April
6.
Each dormitory and off-campus woman will be permitted
to stay out till 11:30 that night
if her escort will pay a penny
for each minute after 10:30. That
last good-night kiss, instead of
causing many demerits and late
minutes, will cost only a penny!
And a real, real long kiss may
run about a nickel.
Collection boxes will be set
up just inside the dorms, with
A. W. S. members gathering
the funds. Off-campus housemothers will collect the money
and turn it in the following day.
Sorry! No late pers that
night. If a student wants to
keep his date out till 11:30, he'll
have to pay the 60 cents!
Proceeds of this late-minutes-
without-demerits night go to
the A. W. S.—Men's Union Loan
Fund.
T@ Lecture Here I^WS Career Day
Veterans7 Signatures
Veterans on campus as
regular students are asked to
sign their monthly report on
Monday or Tuesday. Veterans
attending Saturday classes
are to sign tomorrow. Austin
J. Buchanan, director of Admissions, reminds ihe vets
that it is imporiant io sign
before leaving .for spring vacation.
As part of a National Science
Foundation project. Dr. A. Nelson Dingle, associate professor
of meteorology at the University of Michigan, will present
two lectures and discussion
periods on the science of the
atmosphere here on April 6.
At 10:00 a.m. in 103 Central
Hall Dr. Dingle will discuss the
earth's atmosphere as the universal environment of man, its
composition and structure, its
functions and the prospect of
controlling its behavior.
The second lecture, to begin
at 1:30 p.m., will deal with the
contamination of and effect on
the atmosphere by nuclear
tests.
Dr. Dingle has a Sc. D. degree
in meteorology from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Currently he is doing atmospheric research for the
Atomic Energy Commission, the
National Science Foundation
and the Air Force.
© Explore SSideiS
nferesfs S
Film lust for Life'
To Be Presented Sat.
"Lust for Life", a color cinemascope film presenting the
life story of artist Van Gogh,
will be presented Satur day at
8 p.m, in Warriner Aud.
The film is being featured as
a part of Central's annual Festival of Arts Week which draws
to a close Sunday, March 26.
All students will have the opportunity to explore their
j fields of interest all day tomorrow during "Career Day,"
; sponsored by A.W.S.
j The entire University Center
has been scheduled for the day
■ in order that the various de-
i partments can set up displays
■ and distribute pamphlets. Sev-
] eral departments will have con-
{sultants there to talk to the
students. The Department of
j Drama has invited Dr. Bill
' Gregory from the Van Guard
j Theatre in Detroit to the conference. Dr. Gregory is a former
! graduate of CMU.
! The Conference will begin at
I 9:30 a.m. and continue until 3:30
I p.m. except for an hour break
| at noon. At 3:30 p.m. A.W.S. invites everyone to a coffee hour
in the cafeteria.
This is the first time such a
project has been undertaken at
Central. A.W.S. hopes to make
it an annual affair.
The Mt. Pleasant Town
Players will present Agatha
Christie's "The Mousetrap" tonight and tomorrow at 8 o'clock
in the Mt. Pleasant Junior High
School Auditorium.
Stories, Poems, Essays
HbbM by Tempo Staff
The TEMPO staff is in the
process of compiling material
for the spring issue to come ouL
the first week'of May.
This means the staff has approximately one month to accept short stories, poems and
essays. The material may be
serious, humorous or critical.
The field is wide open.
Send your material to Herbert Schapiro of the Department of English or to Helen
Hubbell, 208 Larzelere Hall.
SENIOR CLASS TREASURER
Bernadine Jakubiak 257
Stan Kendziorski 221
JUNIOR CLASS SENATOR
Mary Mead 440
JUNIOR CLASS PRESIDENT
Rusch Dees 425
JUNIOR CLASS
VICE-PRESIDENT
Duane Lewis 419
JUNIOR CLASS SECRETARY
Mary English 257
Mary Carole Hastie 187
JUNIOR CLASS TREASURER
Carolyn Moore 417
SOPHOMORE CLASS
SENATOR
Dick Potter 477
SOPHOMORE CLASS
PRESIDENT
Fred Warman 307
•Pete Hauffe 279
SOPHOMORE CLASS
VICE-PRESIDENT
Terry Jacobs 346
Jack Webb 239
SOPHOMORE CLASS
SECRETARY
Nancy Spamer • 337
Carol Vanderlip 244
SOPHOMORE CLASS
TREASURER
Beth Hampton 306
Marsha Young 272
Serigraphy, the silk-screen
process of painting, was demonstrated Monday night in a
synchronized slide-tape program in the Wightman Hall Art
Gallery.
The program, sponsored by
the Western Serigraph Institute, was narrated by Robert
W. Brown, chairman of the Institute.
Brown, on the taped lecture,
defined true serigraphy as the
fine art of silk-screen painting,
distinguishing it from the commercialized version.
Included in the program was
a step-by-step demonstration of
making a serigraph. Also
shown were works by the various members of the WB1 Which
is celebrating its 10th anniversary.
J_.
i i
i I
I1
Object Description
| Title | 1961-03-24; Central Michigan Life |
| Date | 1961-03-24 |
| Publisher | Students of Central Michigan University |
| Description | Friday, March 24, 1961 issue of the student newspaper of Central Michigan University. Also known as CM-Life. Originally published biweekly. Later published three times a week during the academic year and once a week during the summer. Began publication in 1941. Previously known as Central State Life. Issues from 1999 to the present are available online at the CMLife website. |
| Subject/Keywords | Central Michigan University - Newspapers; Mount Pleasant (Mich.) - Newspapers; Isabella County (Mich.) - Newspapers; College student newspapers and periodicals; |
| Copyright Permission | Copyright 1961 by Central Michigan University. This material is copyrighted and any further reproduction or distribution is prohibited. |
| Type | Newspaper |
| Format | JPG/JPEG |
| Language | English |
