1961-10-27; Central Michigan Life |
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)LUME 43
CENTRAL MICHIGAN UNIVERSITY, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1961
NUMBER-
THE BROTHERS FOUR, creators of "Greenfields" will
house Saturday. Nov. 4, from 7-9 p.-__. Tickets are now on
ticket office.
appear in She CMU Field-
sale at the University Center
W -i^C't/'-n p_"\
? ffl r
According to Dean George N.
luer, Registrar, each student
ho is registered for on-campus
asses during the fall semester
ust file a "Declaration of In-
ntion" card for the spring se-
campus students through the
residence hai^s and ai the
Registrar's Office. Anyone not
filing the "Declaration of Intention" for the spring semester will not be considered eli-
ester during the period from gible to register in Feb.
;ov. 1 to Nov. 30, indicating After the card is completely missions
jhether or not he plans to re- <S>
m for the spring semester,
162. A deposit will not be reared of these students.
Any student who is admitted
> the University and is not en-
plled for on-campus classes
uring the fall semester must
le an application for re-en-
ance with the enrollment cer-
fication deposit form and $45
eposit by Jan. 6, 1962, to be
ligible to register for the
filled out, deposit it in the ballot box outside the Registrar's
Office in Warriner Hall.
Students who have not been
admitted to the University must
file an application for admission with the Director of Ad
oring semester. Refunds will
e made upon request, until
an. 2G, 1962.
Declaration of Intention"
cards wall be available to on-
tag Cd/Dtolte
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Two CIvIU students and an
instructor have been recalled to
active duty by the Army.
The students are William S.
Jones, Wyandotte senior, scheduled to graduate in June, and
David A. Ewing, Essexville
senior, who expected to graduate a year from January,
Russell Herron, a member of
we Information Services staff
and adviser to LIFE has also
been recalled to active duty.
The Brothers Four will give
a two-hour concert Saturday,
Nov. 4, in the Fieldhouse. The
concert, which begins at 7 p.m.,
will be sponsored by Men's
Union.
Tickets, priced at $1.25 a person, are on sale at the University Center ticket office. About
1,200 tickets had been sold by
Tuesday, according to Tom
Kromer, Men's Union president.
.JETe... also. said thai__janly___^50jQ
tickets will be available.
♦ The members of the quartet—M ike Kirkland, Bob
Flick, Dick Foley and John
Paine—met as fraternity
brothers .in . Jshi_Gamma_]Delia_..
at the University of Washington. All natives of the Seattle
area, they began their career
as amateur entertainers at
the university.
Their professional career began with a practical joke when
a coed called to say that she
was secretary to a Seattle club
manager, who wanted them to
audition.
When the men went for the
audition, they were told that
the caller was joking, but that
they could audition anyway.
They did and were hired, beginning a successful career on
college campuses, television and
with records.
All thr
te report to Ft. Lewis,
Washington, Oct. 31.
Not being individually recalled for duty are those who
aie working full time on a doc-
£iate, those in an active re-
drfl! Unit' and those receiving
son, ments for reasons ^ per-
unai or community hardship.
A United States Army Reserve heavy artillery battery is
being organized in Mt. Pleasant.
Membership in this reserve unit
will set 48 paid drills per year
in the members' respective
grades, and two weeks training
at summer camp.
Before authority is given to
activate the unit, names, addresses, serial numbers, and
military occupational numbers
must be obtained from those requesting assignments. Vacancies
Those interested are io report to ihe Chamber of Commerce Building on Broadway.
today or tomorrow between
10 a.m. and 5 p.m. for further
information and registration.
will be filled in all grades and
positions from E2 to E7 (from
Pfc. to 1st Sgt.). The only prerequisite for joining the unit is
prior Army or Air Force service. Experience in the artillery
is not necessary.
Presently, the Army is calling back only those in the
stand-by reserve. An active reserve unit is safe unless the entire unit is called. Those in the
Mt. Pleasant unit will not be
called back unless the entire
battery is called.
If enough men are interested
the unit will rent space in Mt.
Pleasant. Eventually, it is hoped
to build an armorv to house the
unit and the CMU ROTC department.
<&-
//
//
"Please Do Not Disturb" signs
are being printed by the Uni4
versity Press for distribution in
dormitories.
The signs were suggested by
the Inter-Dorm Council as a
solution to the socializing problem between rooms during potential study hours.
fcifer
The number of dropouts since
the Fall semester began is 42
this year as compared with 37
last year, according to Daniel
Sorrells, dean of students.
Most of the dropouts occurred
in the early days after registration, 22 were before September
25 and the other 20 dropped
out by October 6.
Freshmen lead in the class
breakdown with 12 dropouts,
sophomores have had 12, juniors 4, seniors 6 and 5 withdrawals were graduate students. •
111 health was the'major reason for the dropouts, followed
by financial difficulties.
M
m% fi
Eleven new members have
been selected for the Central
Singers, a small vocal ensemble
of mixed voices selected from
the members of the Concert
Choir.
The new members are: Lyn-
ette Lukas, White Cloud junior;
Patricia Stodolak, Standish
sophomore; Audrey Bauman,
Elkton freshman; Sherry Bauman, Elkton sophomore; Beverly Wells, Pontiac sophomore;
and Robert Healy, East Jordan
sophomore.
Other members are: Eugene
Monroe, Alma sophomore;
David Parrish, Walled Lake
freshman; Arthur Brown, Detroit sophomore; Dennis Sopor re, Traverse City freshman;
and Richard Maybee, Mt. Pleasant freshman.
This popular vocal group
presents numerous programs
throughout the year both on
and off campus.
Members are selected by Dr.
Eugene F. Grove, director of
the group and Head of the Department of Music.
The Concert Choir will go to
Bay City Nov. 3, to appear before a convention of 2500
teachers in District 12 of the
Music Educators Association.
The 63 Concert Choir members
are directed by Dr. Eugene F.
Grove.
"Epic Interlude" is the theme
for Central's 38th annual homecoming celebration which will
officially open at 4 p.m. today
when alumni register and are
greeted at a coffee hour in the
University Center.
Students will kick off activities with a procession at 6:30
p.m. through campus led by the
Pep Band to a bonfire rally at
the practice field. The pep rally
will be highlighted with an Indian dance by Jim Stromer,
1954 alumnus, and a display of
fireworks.
Various coffee hours and
breakfasts are scheduled for
Saturday morning. Beginning
the afternoon activities is the
parade at 12:30 preceding the
game ~-wit__—-Noi-thei...—Illinois—
University. Marsha Young, Al-
bi-on sophomore, will be
crowned Homecoming Queen of
1961 at half-time ceremonies.
Following the game will be
open houses at all the residence
halls—Barnard, Sloan, Tate,
Ronan, Robinson, Larzelere,
Calkins, Trout, Sweeney and
Merrill.
Silver C Club awards will be
presented to alumni of 1936 at
an all-alumni banquet in Robinson Hall food commons at
6:45 p.m.
The orchestras of Don Pablo
and Bob DuRant will play for
the Homecoming balls in the
University Center Ballroom and
the Gymnasium.
Robert Fisher, Brown City
junior, has been elected chief
justice of the Student Court, it
was announced at the Student
Senate meeting.
Others appointed to the court
are, Jolene Cassens, Marshall
junior; John Lynch, Saginaw
sophomore; Gertrude Schuette,
Pigeon senior; David Van
Strien, Grand Rapids sophomore; and Linda Lucke, Cincinnati senior, recorder.
A Homecoming budget ©f
$250 for gowns, $35 for shoes,
§50 for gifts, $60 for flowers,
and $135 for the float, making a total of $530 was approved by the Senate,
Tammy Hartz, in the Homecoming report, said that dorm
decorations should be up by 9
a.m. Saturday for judging. She
also said that United States and
Central flags will be up in
downtown Mt. Pleasant, and
placeards stating that it is
Homecoming at Central will be
placed in the resaurants around
town.
Marjorie Heath, Milan junior,
read her paper entitled "Higher
Education in America Today—a
critical Analysis," as a part of
her application to the Aims of
Education Conference to be
held in Racine, Wis. in Nov,
Should her application be approved by the conference committee, she will be sent by the
Senate at Central's delegate.
.Vd_flEy
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Object Description
| Title | 1961-10-27; Central Michigan Life |
| Date | 1961-10-27 |
| Publisher | Students of Central Michigan University |
| Description | Friday, October 27, 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 |
