The Redbird (Beaumont, Tex.), Vol. 13, No. 18, Ed. 1 Friday, March 15, 1963 Page: 4 of 6
six pages : ill. ; page 18 x 12 in.View a full description of this newspaper.
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Page 4
THE REDBIRD
March 15. 1963
•kSS
The best
tobacco
makes the
best smoke!
BLEW# -
EVERY INCH A
REAL SMOKE!
There's no cigarette like a Camel. Its
taste is distinctive. Alert. AM there.
Camel s got swagger—yet it’s smooth.
Get the clean-cut taste of rich tobaccos.
Get with Camel. Every inch a real smoke
comfortably smooth, too!
GARY GOULD—Skilled water sportsmen... deep-sea fisherman.... Camel smoker!
©1963 R. j> Reynolds Tobacco Company, Winston-Salem, N. C.
Eugene Jemison, a tal-
ented and versatile artist
who is a painter, folk-
singer and printmaker,
will be a campusvisitor
at Lamar Tech on Mar.
2 5-26. H is appearance
here is part of a tour to
several outstanding col-
leges and universities in
various sections of the
country. The tour is being
made under the auspices of
the Arts Program of the
Assoc iation of American
Colleges.
Studies in the ballad,
music, b oice and guitar
were done by Mr. Jemison
at Washburn University,
the Conservatory of Music
Colloquy Announces
Meeting March 20
"The Vile, the Noble, and
the F rail: A Dialogue on the
Nature of Man," is the next
presentation of the Lamar
Coll oquy on March 20, at
7:30 p.m. in the Cardinal
Room. Drs. Robert Barnes
and Robert Olson, Profes-
sors of English, and Dr.
Richard Zaner, Assistant
[Professor of Philosophy,
will potray each of these
aspects of man's nature.
Therapy Majors
Attend Program
On LSU Campus
A group of students who
represent the first majors
in the Speech and Hearing
Therapy program at Lamar
Tech departed (March 11)
for their first professional
conference. The newly
inaugurated program is
included in the division of
Speech under Dr. Ted
Skinner.
The conference is a two
day affair on the campus of
Louisiana State University
at Baton Rouge, Louisiana,
and will include guests
from a five state region.
The featured speaker will
be Dr. Wendell Johnson
from the State University of
Iowa, who is considered one
of the best known of author-
ities in the field of stutter-
ing and semantics. Dr.
Johnson is the author of
manv ioumal articles
The trip is under the
guidance of Dr. E. J. J.
K r a m a r , Director of the
Speech and Hearing Clinic
at Lamar Tech. Students
who are accompanying him
are: Rita Agnello, Beau-
mont; Bonnie Bond, Baytown;
Shirley Beeson, Orange;
Deanna Marceaux, Bridge
City; Shelly Sipes, Liberty;
Laura Taylor, Beaumont;
and Glen Tinsley, Galves-
ton.
Versatile
Lectures
Setters Battle Southwest
Conference Foes TCU, SMU
Coach Bill Tipton's
Lamar Tech tennis team
faces two Southwest Con-
ference challengers today
and Saturday, the Cardinals
playing TCU at Fort Worth
in the first match and then
swinging over to battle
SMU at Dallas Saturday.
Tech has a 55-consecutive
match victory streak going
that stretches back to over
three seasons ago.
Sophomore Alfonso
Ochoa may have to miss1
the match. He has been
playing in a tournament in
Mexico City this week.
If he makes it, he will
take over the number one
spot. If not, senior Tim
Heckler will assume the
top seeded position. Other
m e mbers of the team will
be junior John Maloney,
sophomore Francis Raw-
s t o r n e and either junior
Jerry Johnson or freshman
Mike Hilley if Ochoa is
unable to play.
THE SAFE WAY to stay alert
without harmful stimulants
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alert with the same safe re-
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lutely not habit-forming.
Next time monotony makes
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working or studying, do as
millions do ... perk up with
safe, effective NoDoz tablets.
Another fine product of Grove Laboratories.
Performer to Conduct
on Tech’s Campus
in Kansas City, and with
Mr. John Jacob Niles at
the University of Kansas
City. Folk music studies
were done at Columbia
University under Professor
Willard Rhodes. Mr.
Jemison has appeared at
numerous colleges and
universities and for var-
ious cultural organizations.
As a capable mural
painter and excellent print-
maker, Mr. Jemison has
held numerous one-man
exhibitions of his work, and
has contributed to galleries
throughout the country.
He has done outstanding
work in the development of
new painting materials by
e m p loying such contemp-
orary media as plastics
and vinylite.
In his development as an
artist, Mr. Jemison has
distinguished himself as a
painter and printmaker of
folk themes. Finding his
inspiration in folklore, folk
songs and folk poetry, he
has attempted to synthesize
this cultural expression
and translate it into visual
forms. As an accomplished
singer of folk songs and a
recognized scholar in the
field of folklore and folk
music, Mr. Jemison is
well- qualified to present
his own ideas on the inter-
relationship of the folk arts
and the other fine arts.
"Many people can do
more than one thing well,"
he says, "but our age of
specialization does not, in
the majority of instances,
e n c o urage multi-aptitude
individuals. No one today
would re commend anti-
specialization, but we may
do well to recommend a
broader concept of special-
ization, not at the expense
of specialization but
rather by working on the
borders of each subject
and find ing out where it
touches, penetrates, or
supplements another.
For his visit here Mr.
Jemison will present a
concert of folk songs and
ballads. During his visit
he will also lecture on
"The Creative Process in
Art" and will hold informal
d i s c u ssions with various
class groups. Admission
will be by student or faculty
a c t ivity card. There will
be a $2 charge for the pub-
lic. $1 for high school and
under.
The concert will be
Tues. Mar. 26, 8:15 p.m. in
the Lamar Theatre.
A selection exhibition qf
prints and drawings -
recent work by Mr. Jemison
and representative ex-
amples of prints produced
by his students will be hung
in the Lamar Theatre
Lobby. The artist will
lecture on "Graphic Arts
and Printmaking."_
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du Perier, Mary Anne. The Redbird (Beaumont, Tex.), Vol. 13, No. 18, Ed. 1 Friday, March 15, 1963, newspaper, March 15, 1963; Beaumont, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth499176/m1/4/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 4, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lamar University.