1961-04-28; Central Michigan Life |
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took Homeward, Angel
Review
Pag® 4
A <^
FORTY-TWO
o^^y
Foreign Students
View U.S.
Page 2
CENTRAL MICHIGAN UNIVERSITY, MT. PLEASANT, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, APRIL 28, 1961
NUMBER TWENTY-FOUR
fourl1.
3n, Ii
socr.
j's
BEYKi
'he Night Train Orchestra of
Eddy Morrow will return to
'hpus tonight for the third
secutive year when the band
is for the J-Hop in the Uni-
jity Center Ballroom.
'he Morrow band will pre-
t a concert jam session from
j 9 p.m. and the dance will
tin at 10 o'clock,
(The band's repertoire in-
ides popular music from,
cicland, rhythm and blues
full progressive jags inter-
[etalions. Included in last
„Jar's concert on campus
-5fere interpretations of tho
jorl stories of Edgar Allen
•pe.
Their recordings of "Night
sin" and "One Mint Julep"
rater
•a Sc?
WlcEr'
Ion? ■
Tett:
took s!
rt Dd
Ep<
Phil
i fJ
cent!
phaf <
:ed f
est, r
lames Tagg, president elect
J {the Michigan Press Associa-
■ ii. will address the first an-
|il convention of the Mich-
fn Collegiate Press Associa-
n (MCPA) in the University
hter Saturday, April 29. He is
hhsher of the Alma Record.
UCPA was organzied Febru-
11 when 13 newspapers and
lrbooks from 10 colleges and
iversities provisionally
ipted a constitution. Since
:n 24 publications at 19 coles have become charter
mbers.
and albums of "Golden Trombone" and "The Big Beat" have
been on the best seller lists.
Before forming his band in
1951, Morrow was featured
with the top orchestras of Paul
Whiteman, Tommy Dorsey and
Artie Shaw. The band's first
engagement was at Atlantic
City's Seel Pier in August, 1951,
and an extensive one-night tour
followed.
/ It was not until his recording
of "Night Train" that the Morrow group became a name band.
This golden record in 1952 was
followed up with a string of hit
records until the orchestra became a sought-after group for
not only college dances but also
country clubs, hotels and jazz
^concerts.
Born into a musical family.
Buddy recoived his first
irombono when he was 12 and
by the age of IS was playing
with ihe Yale Collegians. The
youngest member of the
group. Morrow traveled with
the Collegians throughout the
oast coast collegiate circuit.
After graduation from high
school, he won a scholarship to
the Juilliard School of Music in
New York for his improvisations. He quit the school to
join the newly-formed band of
Artie Shaw, He played with top
bands until 1951, when he
signed a recording contract
under his own orchestra with
RCA Victor.
Tickets for the dance, which
include the dance, concert and
a favor are available this after-
noon at the University Center
BRYON GALLAGHER, president of the Isabella County
Bar Association, presents Dr. Gilbert Rau, director of debate,
a new plaque to be ingraved with the names of winning
teams in the annual freshmen intramural debate tournament
which opened April 19. The Bar Association has donated the
plaque to replace the old one which is filled with the names
of past winning teams. (times-news photo)
ticket office across irom the"
bookstore for §4 a couple.
Tickets for the concert only
may be purchased for §1 a person.
A small walnut-wood placque
with the Central crest is the
favor this year.
Freshmen with 15 hours
credit and point averages of 3.5
or higher are eligible for an
honors program to be instituted
at Central this fall. Sophomores
and juniors with 3,25 averages
are also eligible for the program.
The program will use examinations, seminars, inter-departmental courses and independent
study, research and writing
rrrnjor-tg in nnriph tVio Vnnwl-
Advantages of the program,
besides educational values, include monthly honors colloquia,
early registration, assured freedom of course selection and
planning, careful consideration
for campus jobs, recognition at
the honors concovation and
commencement, honors breakfasts and dinners, departmental
prizes and awards and the notation "Graduated in Univer-
sity Honors Program" on the
President Judson W. Foust
was admitted to Henry Ford
Hospital in Detroit Monday'for
a physical examination and
tests. President Foust became
ill in Miami, Fla., Sunday evening. No report has been received concerning the exact
nature of his illness.
He went to Florida last week
with Charles Park and Harold
Wilcox of Field Services and
Thomas White and Charles
Owens of the Bridgeport
schools.
In Florida they visited educational television installations
in the Miami' area as well as
new school buildings in Sarasota and Melbourne. They also
were scheduled to attend the
National Audio-Visual Aids
convention in Miami.
oeds to Displa
Eleven Central coeds will
model dresses for a bridal
trousseau May 6, when the Associated Women Students pre-
sent a bridal style show in the-
University Center Ballroom. A
coffee hour at 9:30 a.m. will
precede the 10:15 a.m. showing.
Modeling the apparel will
be Lynne Kane. Greenville
junior, iloor-lengih gown;
Jane Dylthouse, Charlotte
Eophomoro, short gown; Peg
Twining, Ann Arbor freshman, going-away suit; Nancy
Wonder, Mt. Pleasant junior,
after-five dress; Joanie
Fisher, Traverse City junior,
play clothes; Lenore Jensen,
Allen Park junior, cotton sun
dress; Sherry McKian. Traverse City senior, swimsuii and
Carolyn Pappin, Greenville
junior, nightgown.
C a r 1 e n e Kimble, Linden
sophomore, will wear an honor
attendent's dress, and Jan Berg-
quist, Mt. Pleasant freshman,
and Nancy Helber will wear
bridesmaid's dresses. Mrs. Mary
K. Potter, Tate Hall housemother, will model a dress for
the mother of a bride.
The moderator for the show
will be Carolyn Reiss, Riverton,
Wyoming freshman.
Margo Helber, Mt. Pleasant
sophomore and Sue Haddix,
Greenville sophomore, are co-
chairmen. Committee chairmen are Prudy Pardee, Owos-
so freshman, publicity; Jo
Cummings, Greenville freshman, invitations; Carol Lod-
ing. Reed City freshman, refreshments; Suzanne Goodwin, Mt. Pleasant freshman,
displays and Nancy Joslin,
Mt. Pleasant freshman, decorations and hostess.
An Alma women's apparel
shop is furnishing the dresses
for the show.
VETS TO ELECT
Election of officers for. the
Campus Vets will be held Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. in the Wolverine Room of the University
Center.
TOM FITCH WITH MIKE FORSYTHE (seated) Ann Arbor
senior voted the "Outstanding Student Senator of the Year"
at Monday evening's Senate meeting.
Rife® [FoirssTfc Etaowgdl
DISfiOB"
Mike Forsythe, Ann Arbor about an editorial concerned
senior representing Barnes Hall, with the elections committee in
was elected the "Outstanding last week's LIFE. Jones then
Student Senator" of the year at said that the committee will
The Student-Administrative
Advisory Council has brought
new life to the senior exam issue which LIFE had earlier reported (April 21) as nearly
dead.
At the Council's second and
final meeting of the semester
Tuesday night, a recommendation was passed asking , the
President of the University to
establish a new committee to
work on the problems involved
in the issue. This new committee will include students, faculty members, administrators
and alumni representatives.
The committee's two-fold
goal will be to attempt So
solve the problems involved
in having seniors iaJic final
exams before commencement—and having commencement before students vacate
the campus after examination
week.
Dean of Students, Dr. Daniel
J. Sorrells, said that everyone
recognizes that this is the right
way to have graduation, and it
is "highly desirable" to perform it this way. Sorrells and
Vice-presidents Wilbur Moore
and N. C. Bovee agreed that a
solution to the problem may be
possible. Bovee said that the
two ideas in the committee's
goal seem incompatible, but
shouldn't be insurmountable.
Bovee said that one of tho
questions io be considered in
choosing a time for commencement is whether or not
students other than the grad-
■HT
uaies win t>e on campus,
expresed ihe belief that a
"dead campus" would not
create a desirable atmosphere
at commencement time.
The formation of the committee was brought up when
two Student Senate members,;
Carol Schulz and Mike For- -
sythe, came to the Advisory
Council meeting in order to discuss the possibility of having
commencement after all senior
examinations are finished at the
end of exam week.
Many ideas and opinions were
offered on this, one being, making seniors take only 300 and
400 courses their last semester".
These numbered courses might
have exams scheduled early in
the exam week. The reason being that it takes about five days
to process a student's final
grades.
Student Senate President,
Tom Fitch, said that the student-faculty committee which
has been working on the issue cannot go much farther
because many of the probloma
involved are administrative.
Vice-President of Academic
Affairs, Wilbur E. Moore, said
that the original committee had
been made up of no members
of the administration because it
was felt that that was the way
the students wanted it. Also,
Moore said that one of the
prime problems didn't concern
the administration—that of getting faculty members to give
and correct separate exams to
graduating seniors.
Fitch said that the original
committee had gone as fax as
it could. He asked the Council, "Where do we go from
here?" The adoption of ihe
new committee was then proposed and readily accepted.
Moore wanted all members of
the SAAC to understand that
faculty members and administrators are not at cross-purposes
on the issue, as was suggested
in last Friday's LIFE.
:arm' Safir©
Saturday morning profes-
nal newsmen will lead
mps in four areas of journal-
John C. Tucker, state edi-
of the Saginaw News, will
id a "Daily Grind" session
daily newspapers. Mrs. Vir-
la Redfern, society editor of
Lansing State Journal, will
d a group on society 'and
men's news.
eonard C. Hall, publisher of
Houghton Lake Resorter,
I have a session on "Weekly
w.spapers—Training in Com-
nications." A session on news
jotography will be led by
iris Ingells, city editor of the
. Pleasant Times-News.
The two day convention
?ns Friday evening with stu-
it round table discussions
ut campus publications. Fol-
ing the Saturday luncheon
which Tagg will speak, stu-
ts will have another round
discussions before the con-
tion adjourns.
he association's first full
to of officers will be elected
the Saturday business meet-
- !■ J. W. Click, journalism in-
uctor, has been serving as
uporary executive secretary
cc the first meeting.
Nash Has Artflel®
jblisbec! in Journal
3r. Curtis E. Nash, associate
an of the School of Education
ently had an article pub-
ed in "The Journal of
gcher Education."
the article, entitled "A New
ogram in Teacher Educa-
n." was published in the
irch 1961 issue and describes
'■ Teacher Education Project,
€mm§hm Mmi
on no iuo.
Guidance and personnel
counselors of the personnel department attended the spring
conference of the Michigan College Personnel Association at
the University of Detroit, April
20 and 21.
Those representing Central
were Dr. Arnold L. Form, president of the organization, Dr.
Allen F. Cordts, Dr. Donald W.
Kilbourn, Dr. Leslie O. Carlin,
Harold O. Sealock and Dorothy
Schaefer.
The general theme for the
conference was "The Impact
of College Experiences on the
Value System of the Student." Key speakers included
Dr. Harold Sponberg, Vice-
president, Northern Michigan
College; Malcolm Carron, S.
J. Dean, College of Arts and
Scionco, University of Detroit
and Rov. Walter E. Cole, minister. First Congregational
Church, Detroit.
The program also included
various panel discussion groups
concerned with the implications
for student personnel workers
in junior and community colleges, orientation, student activities, housing and counseling.
edge and analytical skills of its
members.
The eligibility requirements
are these:
1. A student may apply after
completing 15 semester hours
of credit, but not later than,
the semester when he will be
carrying his 75th semester
hour.
2. For admission a point average of 3.5 or higher is required for second semester
freshmen and 3.25 or higher
for sophomores and juniors.
An average of 3.15 is a minimum requirement for continuation.
Prospective* honors scholars
will go through four steps for
admission:
1. They will be identified as
potential honors scholars
through testing and survey of
past scholastic records.
2. The recommendations of high
school principals and university faculty, personal conferences and teachers' ratings, as well as the student's
high school and university
record will be examined.
3. Students file applications for
the program after they receive invitations from the
Honors Council.
4. The Honors Council takes
action on the applications
and notifies the students.
Dr. Wilbur E, Moore, vice-
president in charge of Academic
Affairs says that Central is instituting the program at a time
when there is much encouragement to students for independent study.
A faculty senate committee of
20 members drafted the program which was approved by
the faculty senate April 17.
diploma.
On the basis of present records approximately 14 freshmen will be eligible the second
semester. A total of 160 sophomores and juniors may be eligible.
Honors Convocation
ear lomposei
the Monday evening Senate
meeting.
Forsythe is chairman of ihe
Senate's Educational Awareness Committee which is currently working on the regulation of Senate scholarships.
He is also on the student-faculty senior exam committee'
(see LIFE, April 21).
Earlier in the evening student
body president, Mike Jones,
made a few derogatory remarks
function sometime this spring.
He said that five people have
tenatively been chosen to fill
the Senate positions on the
newly revised committee, BUT
that the Men's Union and AWS
have not yet elected members
to ihe committee.
"What Makes the Arts Liberal" will be the lecture topic
of Dr. Ross Lee Finney when
he speaks at the honors convocation May 11.
Finney is composer in residence at the University of
Michigan. H i s compositions
have been performed by orchestras throughout the United
States, Europe and South
America.
He was awarded the Pulitzer
Prize in 1937 for his first string
quartet composition, the Connecticut Valley Prize for his
setting of poems by Archibald
MacLeish in 1935 and Guggenheim Fellowships in 1937 and
1948.
He was commissioned to
write the Fantrosy in Two
Movements for solo violin
which was first performed at
the International Exposition in
Brussells in 1958.
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CfflPPEWii CHIEF O-EE-MOS ("STATE CHIEF"), better known as Gov. Swftin&ob,
takes time oaf torn logislafivo duSloa to vtoit tho CMppowa tribe at the-Control McMtgaa
Exposition hold In tho CEOT fioldhotojo loot woolrond. Chiof Willio Jackson (loft) presented S\-yG*mnoni'wifc a hcsd-dEODa xm& saada Msa a memhot of tho fr&o. Hmos-stowa Photo-
Clarence Gohdes, editor of
American Literature magazine
and professor of English at
Duke University, will speak on
"How Walt Whitman Wrote
Poetry," at Warriner Auditorium on May 5, at 11 a.m.
Gohdes, a noted author and
editor of several anthologies
of American Literature, will
illustrate the lecture with a
slide collection.
The program is Sponsored by
the English Department and the
University Research Advisory
Committee.
e Wins
BicSdte Coronation
At AWS Spring Ba
La Nuit des Fleurs, the annual AWS spring ball featuring
the James Russell Orchestra,
will be held Friday, May 5,
from 9-12 in the University
Center Ball Room.
Tickets for the dance will be
on sale May 1-5 from 9-11 a.m.
and 1-3 p.m. in the University
Center ticket office across from
the bookstore.
Coronation of the 1961 Most
Eligible Bachelor will be the
feature of the evening.
Candidates for MEB are Bill
Rheaume, Dearborn sophomore,
sponsored by Alpha Chi Omega
and Alpha Sigma Alpha; Ali
Shariatzadeh, Tehran, Iran,
junior, sponsored by Alpha Xi
Delta; Stan Kendziorski, Dearborn junior, sponsored by Sigma Kappa and Zeta Chi Zeta;
Jack Reams, Lisbon, N. D. junior, sponsored by Alpha Sigma
Tau; Bob Tuckey, Cass City
sophomore, sponsored by Delta
Tau Alpha and Alpha Gamma
Delta, Bill Becker, Flushing
freshman, sponsored by Delta
Zeta, and Ed Langenberg, Bay
City sophomore, sponsored by
Sigma Sigma Sigma.
The dance is girls bid.
u
i@xocon
ersa
Rose Marie^Hyde, Kent City
junior, has been awarded a
scholarship to athe summer session at the University of Guadalajara in Mexico.
The scholarship is in conjunction with the University of
Arizona. It covers the six-weeks
session and a two-week travel-
study course through Mexico.
Last year the scholarship Was
won by Sharon Price, Lansing
senior.
SINGERS AT ITHACA
The Central Singers will present a program on May 4, at the
Methodist Church In Ithaca.
The program is sponsored by
the Men's Club of the Methodist
Church'.
Dr. Leon Henkin, "creative
mathematician," will be at
CMU, May 4 and 5, seeking to
help stimulate and strengthen
Central's mathematics program.
A creative mathematician, as
defined by Dr. Lauren Woodby,
head of Central's mathematics
department, is one who "delves
into the unknown and comes up
with new ideas; one who discovers or invents in the area of
mathematics."
Dr. Henkin's field is logic as
a research mathematician. He is
a professor at the University of
California and is also serving as
visiting math professor at Dartmouth College.
Dr. Henkin is visiting CMU
under the visiting lectureship
program, supported financially
by the National Science Foundation. His first lecture, "Axio*
ma tic Foundations for the
Theory of Sets," will be at 11
a.m., May 4 in 312 Warriner
hall. His afternoon lecture,
"Mathematical Induction," will
follow a coffee hour for mathematics students in the university center. On May 5 Dr. Henkin will be the luncheon
speaker for the Frontiers Day
Program. His topic will be "An
Outline of Mathematical Logic."
Dr. Henkin obtained his Ph.D.
from Princeton University in
1947. Besides being an editor of
the Journal of Symbolic Logic,
he has written many research
papers on the foundations of
mathematical theories. He has
lectured at universities in Norway, Denmark, Germany, Belgium, France and Poland and
Russia. His movie on mathematical induction for the M.A.A. is
scheduled for showing on Monday and Tuesday prior to Dr.
Henkin's arrival.
SCHOLARSHIPS SET
The Senate approved ihe
allotment of two scholarships
fpr two semester's tuition io
a CMU male and female student. Applications for the
scholarships are now available in the Dean of Student's
Office and must be returned
by May 8. Students must have
a 2.5 grade average to apply.
NSA. Committee chairman
and president-elect of the student body;. Dennis Moore, said
that the controversal film "Operation Abolition" Will, be
shown on this campus in May.
A specific date .has not yet been
chosen.
The film will be brought to
Central by Wayne State University students affiliated witn
the National Student Association.
Moore said he plans to set up
a panel to discuss the 45-minute
film after .its showing. When
the date of showing is known
LIFE will give background information on the controversy
and publish some of the "pros
and cons" on the issue.
In other Senate business, Phi
Epsilon Kappa, a professional
health and physical education
club, and Senior Women's Honor Board, for senior women
with a 3.2 grade average or
better, had their constitutions
approved.
Dcuav b mm
fm Ccifes! Entries
Today is the deadline for entries to the prose and poetry
contest sponsored by the Department of English. Entries
will be accepted by any member of the department.
Poems 75 to 100 lines long
and short stories over 1,000
words are eligible for entry.
Spsee Awarded Grant
For Advanced Sfydy
Paul Spece, instructor, of
business administration at
CMU, is among 20 Midwest
educators awarded fellowships
for advanced and post-doctoral
study in business this summer
at Indiana University.
The grants are part of a
three-year program sponsored
by the I.U.- School of Business
and the Ford Foundation, and
are designed to upgrade the
teaching effectiveness at Mid-
Western colleges and universities.
"Animal Farm", a movie on
George Orwell's famous book,
will be shown in Warriner Auditorium Thursday, at 8 p.m.
This film is a fairy story
with a serious message. In iho
narrow sense ii io a satire on
the Russian Revolution an4
its betrayal of original Marxian goals - equality and tjeli-
direction for the masses. Sa
ihe broad senso, "Jlralsaei
Farm" reflects iho poBoiinilSrti.
which prevaded Offwoll'o
post-war observation .on Mao
future of ihe human tacio.
The film is sponsored by the
Associated Women Students,
with Mary Jo Gabel as chairman,
COMMEK.CS »fSQ3
Mrs. lone Douglas, director ol
wometfs personnel, Cow Chest-
ical Company, Miflland wiH ho
the speaker at the Mo.v 4 Gem.*
met'ce Club meeting.
Object Description
| Title | 1961-04-28; Central Michigan Life |
| Date | 1961-04-28 |
| Publisher | Students of Central Michigan University |
| Description | Friday, April 28, 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 |
Description
| Title | 1961-04-28; Central Michigan Life |
| Date | 1961-04-28 |
| Publisher | Students of Central Michigan University |
| Description | Friday, April 28, 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 |
| Transcript | took Homeward, Angel Review Pag® 4 A <^ FORTY-TWO o^^y Foreign Students View U.S. Page 2 CENTRAL MICHIGAN UNIVERSITY, MT. PLEASANT, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, APRIL 28, 1961 NUMBER TWENTY-FOUR fourl1. 3n, Ii socr. j's BEYKi 'he Night Train Orchestra of Eddy Morrow will return to 'hpus tonight for the third secutive year when the band is for the J-Hop in the Uni- jity Center Ballroom. 'he Morrow band will pre- t a concert jam session from j 9 p.m. and the dance will tin at 10 o'clock, (The band's repertoire in- ides popular music from, cicland, rhythm and blues full progressive jags inter- [etalions. Included in last „Jar's concert on campus -5fere interpretations of tho jorl stories of Edgar Allen •pe. Their recordings of "Night sin" and "One Mint Julep" rater •a Sc? WlcEr' Ion? ■ Tett: took s! rt Dd Ep< Phil i fJ cent! phaf < :ed f est, r lames Tagg, president elect J {the Michigan Press Associa- ■ ii. will address the first an- il convention of the Mich- fn Collegiate Press Associa- n (MCPA) in the University hter Saturday, April 29. He is hhsher of the Alma Record. UCPA was organzied Febru- 11 when 13 newspapers and lrbooks from 10 colleges and iversities provisionally ipted a constitution. Since :n 24 publications at 19 coles have become charter mbers. and albums of "Golden Trombone" and "The Big Beat" have been on the best seller lists. Before forming his band in 1951, Morrow was featured with the top orchestras of Paul Whiteman, Tommy Dorsey and Artie Shaw. The band's first engagement was at Atlantic City's Seel Pier in August, 1951, and an extensive one-night tour followed. / It was not until his recording of "Night Train" that the Morrow group became a name band. This golden record in 1952 was followed up with a string of hit records until the orchestra became a sought-after group for not only college dances but also country clubs, hotels and jazz ^concerts. Born into a musical family. Buddy recoived his first irombono when he was 12 and by the age of IS was playing with ihe Yale Collegians. The youngest member of the group. Morrow traveled with the Collegians throughout the oast coast collegiate circuit. After graduation from high school, he won a scholarship to the Juilliard School of Music in New York for his improvisations. He quit the school to join the newly-formed band of Artie Shaw, He played with top bands until 1951, when he signed a recording contract under his own orchestra with RCA Victor. Tickets for the dance, which include the dance, concert and a favor are available this after- noon at the University Center BRYON GALLAGHER, president of the Isabella County Bar Association, presents Dr. Gilbert Rau, director of debate, a new plaque to be ingraved with the names of winning teams in the annual freshmen intramural debate tournament which opened April 19. The Bar Association has donated the plaque to replace the old one which is filled with the names of past winning teams. (times-news photo) ticket office across irom the" bookstore for §4 a couple. Tickets for the concert only may be purchased for §1 a person. A small walnut-wood placque with the Central crest is the favor this year. Freshmen with 15 hours credit and point averages of 3.5 or higher are eligible for an honors program to be instituted at Central this fall. Sophomores and juniors with 3,25 averages are also eligible for the program. The program will use examinations, seminars, inter-departmental courses and independent study, research and writing rrrnjor-tg in nnriph tVio Vnnwl- Advantages of the program, besides educational values, include monthly honors colloquia, early registration, assured freedom of course selection and planning, careful consideration for campus jobs, recognition at the honors concovation and commencement, honors breakfasts and dinners, departmental prizes and awards and the notation "Graduated in Univer- sity Honors Program" on the President Judson W. Foust was admitted to Henry Ford Hospital in Detroit Monday'for a physical examination and tests. President Foust became ill in Miami, Fla., Sunday evening. No report has been received concerning the exact nature of his illness. He went to Florida last week with Charles Park and Harold Wilcox of Field Services and Thomas White and Charles Owens of the Bridgeport schools. In Florida they visited educational television installations in the Miami' area as well as new school buildings in Sarasota and Melbourne. They also were scheduled to attend the National Audio-Visual Aids convention in Miami. oeds to Displa Eleven Central coeds will model dresses for a bridal trousseau May 6, when the Associated Women Students pre- sent a bridal style show in the- University Center Ballroom. A coffee hour at 9:30 a.m. will precede the 10:15 a.m. showing. Modeling the apparel will be Lynne Kane. Greenville junior, iloor-lengih gown; Jane Dylthouse, Charlotte Eophomoro, short gown; Peg Twining, Ann Arbor freshman, going-away suit; Nancy Wonder, Mt. Pleasant junior, after-five dress; Joanie Fisher, Traverse City junior, play clothes; Lenore Jensen, Allen Park junior, cotton sun dress; Sherry McKian. Traverse City senior, swimsuii and Carolyn Pappin, Greenville junior, nightgown. C a r 1 e n e Kimble, Linden sophomore, will wear an honor attendent's dress, and Jan Berg- quist, Mt. Pleasant freshman, and Nancy Helber will wear bridesmaid's dresses. Mrs. Mary K. Potter, Tate Hall housemother, will model a dress for the mother of a bride. The moderator for the show will be Carolyn Reiss, Riverton, Wyoming freshman. Margo Helber, Mt. Pleasant sophomore and Sue Haddix, Greenville sophomore, are co- chairmen. Committee chairmen are Prudy Pardee, Owos- so freshman, publicity; Jo Cummings, Greenville freshman, invitations; Carol Lod- ing. Reed City freshman, refreshments; Suzanne Goodwin, Mt. Pleasant freshman, displays and Nancy Joslin, Mt. Pleasant freshman, decorations and hostess. An Alma women's apparel shop is furnishing the dresses for the show. VETS TO ELECT Election of officers for. the Campus Vets will be held Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. in the Wolverine Room of the University Center. TOM FITCH WITH MIKE FORSYTHE (seated) Ann Arbor senior voted the "Outstanding Student Senator of the Year" at Monday evening's Senate meeting. Rife® [FoirssTfc Etaowgdl DISfiOB" Mike Forsythe, Ann Arbor about an editorial concerned senior representing Barnes Hall, with the elections committee in was elected the "Outstanding last week's LIFE. Jones then Student Senator" of the year at said that the committee will The Student-Administrative Advisory Council has brought new life to the senior exam issue which LIFE had earlier reported (April 21) as nearly dead. At the Council's second and final meeting of the semester Tuesday night, a recommendation was passed asking , the President of the University to establish a new committee to work on the problems involved in the issue. This new committee will include students, faculty members, administrators and alumni representatives. The committee's two-fold goal will be to attempt So solve the problems involved in having seniors iaJic final exams before commencement—and having commencement before students vacate the campus after examination week. Dean of Students, Dr. Daniel J. Sorrells, said that everyone recognizes that this is the right way to have graduation, and it is "highly desirable" to perform it this way. Sorrells and Vice-presidents Wilbur Moore and N. C. Bovee agreed that a solution to the problem may be possible. Bovee said that the two ideas in the committee's goal seem incompatible, but shouldn't be insurmountable. Bovee said that one of tho questions io be considered in choosing a time for commencement is whether or not students other than the grad- ■HT uaies win t>e on campus, expresed ihe belief that a "dead campus" would not create a desirable atmosphere at commencement time. The formation of the committee was brought up when two Student Senate members,; Carol Schulz and Mike For- - sythe, came to the Advisory Council meeting in order to discuss the possibility of having commencement after all senior examinations are finished at the end of exam week. Many ideas and opinions were offered on this, one being, making seniors take only 300 and 400 courses their last semester". These numbered courses might have exams scheduled early in the exam week. The reason being that it takes about five days to process a student's final grades. Student Senate President, Tom Fitch, said that the student-faculty committee which has been working on the issue cannot go much farther because many of the probloma involved are administrative. Vice-President of Academic Affairs, Wilbur E. Moore, said that the original committee had been made up of no members of the administration because it was felt that that was the way the students wanted it. Also, Moore said that one of the prime problems didn't concern the administration—that of getting faculty members to give and correct separate exams to graduating seniors. Fitch said that the original committee had gone as fax as it could. He asked the Council, "Where do we go from here?" The adoption of ihe new committee was then proposed and readily accepted. Moore wanted all members of the SAAC to understand that faculty members and administrators are not at cross-purposes on the issue, as was suggested in last Friday's LIFE. :arm' Safir© Saturday morning profes- nal newsmen will lead mps in four areas of journal- John C. Tucker, state edi- of the Saginaw News, will id a "Daily Grind" session daily newspapers. Mrs. Vir- la Redfern, society editor of Lansing State Journal, will d a group on society 'and men's news. eonard C. Hall, publisher of Houghton Lake Resorter, I have a session on "Weekly w.spapers—Training in Com- nications." A session on news jotography will be led by iris Ingells, city editor of the . Pleasant Times-News. The two day convention ?ns Friday evening with stu- it round table discussions ut campus publications. Fol- ing the Saturday luncheon which Tagg will speak, stu- ts will have another round discussions before the con- tion adjourns. he association's first full to of officers will be elected the Saturday business meet- - !■ J. W. Click, journalism in- uctor, has been serving as uporary executive secretary cc the first meeting. Nash Has Artflel® jblisbec! in Journal 3r. Curtis E. Nash, associate an of the School of Education ently had an article pub- ed in "The Journal of gcher Education." the article, entitled "A New ogram in Teacher Educa- n." was published in the irch 1961 issue and describes '■ Teacher Education Project, €mm§hm Mmi on no iuo. Guidance and personnel counselors of the personnel department attended the spring conference of the Michigan College Personnel Association at the University of Detroit, April 20 and 21. Those representing Central were Dr. Arnold L. Form, president of the organization, Dr. Allen F. Cordts, Dr. Donald W. Kilbourn, Dr. Leslie O. Carlin, Harold O. Sealock and Dorothy Schaefer. The general theme for the conference was "The Impact of College Experiences on the Value System of the Student." Key speakers included Dr. Harold Sponberg, Vice- president, Northern Michigan College; Malcolm Carron, S. J. Dean, College of Arts and Scionco, University of Detroit and Rov. Walter E. Cole, minister. First Congregational Church, Detroit. The program also included various panel discussion groups concerned with the implications for student personnel workers in junior and community colleges, orientation, student activities, housing and counseling. edge and analytical skills of its members. The eligibility requirements are these: 1. A student may apply after completing 15 semester hours of credit, but not later than, the semester when he will be carrying his 75th semester hour. 2. For admission a point average of 3.5 or higher is required for second semester freshmen and 3.25 or higher for sophomores and juniors. An average of 3.15 is a minimum requirement for continuation. Prospective* honors scholars will go through four steps for admission: 1. They will be identified as potential honors scholars through testing and survey of past scholastic records. 2. The recommendations of high school principals and university faculty, personal conferences and teachers' ratings, as well as the student's high school and university record will be examined. 3. Students file applications for the program after they receive invitations from the Honors Council. 4. The Honors Council takes action on the applications and notifies the students. Dr. Wilbur E, Moore, vice- president in charge of Academic Affairs says that Central is instituting the program at a time when there is much encouragement to students for independent study. A faculty senate committee of 20 members drafted the program which was approved by the faculty senate April 17. diploma. On the basis of present records approximately 14 freshmen will be eligible the second semester. A total of 160 sophomores and juniors may be eligible. Honors Convocation ear lomposei the Monday evening Senate meeting. Forsythe is chairman of ihe Senate's Educational Awareness Committee which is currently working on the regulation of Senate scholarships. He is also on the student-faculty senior exam committee' (see LIFE, April 21). Earlier in the evening student body president, Mike Jones, made a few derogatory remarks function sometime this spring. He said that five people have tenatively been chosen to fill the Senate positions on the newly revised committee, BUT that the Men's Union and AWS have not yet elected members to ihe committee. "What Makes the Arts Liberal" will be the lecture topic of Dr. Ross Lee Finney when he speaks at the honors convocation May 11. Finney is composer in residence at the University of Michigan. H i s compositions have been performed by orchestras throughout the United States, Europe and South America. He was awarded the Pulitzer Prize in 1937 for his first string quartet composition, the Connecticut Valley Prize for his setting of poems by Archibald MacLeish in 1935 and Guggenheim Fellowships in 1937 and 1948. He was commissioned to write the Fantrosy in Two Movements for solo violin which was first performed at the International Exposition in Brussells in 1958. & r *s" *\, J <-> p. Sir ®X>fr' >y'i ■r, t f -Sp*k X \\ CfflPPEWii CHIEF O-EE-MOS ("STATE CHIEF"), better known as Gov. Swftin&ob, takes time oaf torn logislafivo duSloa to vtoit tho CMppowa tribe at the-Control McMtgaa Exposition hold In tho CEOT fioldhotojo loot woolrond. Chiof Willio Jackson (loft) presented S\-yG*mnoni'wifc a hcsd-dEODa xm& saada Msa a memhot of tho fr&o. Hmos-stowa Photo- Clarence Gohdes, editor of American Literature magazine and professor of English at Duke University, will speak on "How Walt Whitman Wrote Poetry" at Warriner Auditorium on May 5, at 11 a.m. Gohdes, a noted author and editor of several anthologies of American Literature, will illustrate the lecture with a slide collection. The program is Sponsored by the English Department and the University Research Advisory Committee. e Wins BicSdte Coronation At AWS Spring Ba La Nuit des Fleurs, the annual AWS spring ball featuring the James Russell Orchestra, will be held Friday, May 5, from 9-12 in the University Center Ball Room. Tickets for the dance will be on sale May 1-5 from 9-11 a.m. and 1-3 p.m. in the University Center ticket office across from the bookstore. Coronation of the 1961 Most Eligible Bachelor will be the feature of the evening. Candidates for MEB are Bill Rheaume, Dearborn sophomore, sponsored by Alpha Chi Omega and Alpha Sigma Alpha; Ali Shariatzadeh, Tehran, Iran, junior, sponsored by Alpha Xi Delta; Stan Kendziorski, Dearborn junior, sponsored by Sigma Kappa and Zeta Chi Zeta; Jack Reams, Lisbon, N. D. junior, sponsored by Alpha Sigma Tau; Bob Tuckey, Cass City sophomore, sponsored by Delta Tau Alpha and Alpha Gamma Delta, Bill Becker, Flushing freshman, sponsored by Delta Zeta, and Ed Langenberg, Bay City sophomore, sponsored by Sigma Sigma Sigma. The dance is girls bid. u i@xocon ersa Rose Marie^Hyde, Kent City junior, has been awarded a scholarship to athe summer session at the University of Guadalajara in Mexico. The scholarship is in conjunction with the University of Arizona. It covers the six-weeks session and a two-week travel- study course through Mexico. Last year the scholarship Was won by Sharon Price, Lansing senior. SINGERS AT ITHACA The Central Singers will present a program on May 4, at the Methodist Church In Ithaca. The program is sponsored by the Men's Club of the Methodist Church'. Dr. Leon Henkin, "creative mathematician" will be at CMU, May 4 and 5, seeking to help stimulate and strengthen Central's mathematics program. A creative mathematician, as defined by Dr. Lauren Woodby, head of Central's mathematics department, is one who "delves into the unknown and comes up with new ideas; one who discovers or invents in the area of mathematics." Dr. Henkin's field is logic as a research mathematician. He is a professor at the University of California and is also serving as visiting math professor at Dartmouth College. Dr. Henkin is visiting CMU under the visiting lectureship program, supported financially by the National Science Foundation. His first lecture, "Axio* ma tic Foundations for the Theory of Sets" will be at 11 a.m., May 4 in 312 Warriner hall. His afternoon lecture, "Mathematical Induction" will follow a coffee hour for mathematics students in the university center. On May 5 Dr. Henkin will be the luncheon speaker for the Frontiers Day Program. His topic will be "An Outline of Mathematical Logic." Dr. Henkin obtained his Ph.D. from Princeton University in 1947. Besides being an editor of the Journal of Symbolic Logic, he has written many research papers on the foundations of mathematical theories. He has lectured at universities in Norway, Denmark, Germany, Belgium, France and Poland and Russia. His movie on mathematical induction for the M.A.A. is scheduled for showing on Monday and Tuesday prior to Dr. Henkin's arrival. SCHOLARSHIPS SET The Senate approved ihe allotment of two scholarships fpr two semester's tuition io a CMU male and female student. Applications for the scholarships are now available in the Dean of Student's Office and must be returned by May 8. Students must have a 2.5 grade average to apply. NSA. Committee chairman and president-elect of the student body;. Dennis Moore, said that the controversal film "Operation Abolition" Will, be shown on this campus in May. A specific date .has not yet been chosen. The film will be brought to Central by Wayne State University students affiliated witn the National Student Association. Moore said he plans to set up a panel to discuss the 45-minute film after .its showing. When the date of showing is known LIFE will give background information on the controversy and publish some of the "pros and cons" on the issue. In other Senate business, Phi Epsilon Kappa, a professional health and physical education club, and Senior Women's Honor Board, for senior women with a 3.2 grade average or better, had their constitutions approved. Dcuav b mm fm Ccifes! Entries Today is the deadline for entries to the prose and poetry contest sponsored by the Department of English. Entries will be accepted by any member of the department. Poems 75 to 100 lines long and short stories over 1,000 words are eligible for entry. Spsee Awarded Grant For Advanced Sfydy Paul Spece, instructor, of business administration at CMU, is among 20 Midwest educators awarded fellowships for advanced and post-doctoral study in business this summer at Indiana University. The grants are part of a three-year program sponsored by the I.U.- School of Business and the Ford Foundation, and are designed to upgrade the teaching effectiveness at Mid- Western colleges and universities. "Animal Farm", a movie on George Orwell's famous book, will be shown in Warriner Auditorium Thursday, at 8 p.m. This film is a fairy story with a serious message. In iho narrow sense ii io a satire on the Russian Revolution an4 its betrayal of original Marxian goals - equality and tjeli- direction for the masses. Sa ihe broad senso, "Jlralsaei Farm" reflects iho poBoiinilSrti. which prevaded Offwoll'o post-war observation .on Mao future of ihe human tacio. The film is sponsored by the Associated Women Students, with Mary Jo Gabel as chairman, COMMEK.CS »fSQ3 Mrs. lone Douglas, director ol wometfs personnel, Cow Chest- ical Company, Miflland wiH ho the speaker at the Mo.v 4 Gem.* met'ce Club meeting. |
