The Rice Thresher (Houston, Tex.), Vol. 52, No. 5, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 15, 1964 Page: 4 of 8
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Burger-Ville
The Quality Hamburger
HAMBURGERS —HOME MADE
CHILI —ORDERS TO GO
#1 JA 3-5117
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(IN THE VILLAGE)
#2 JA 2-8797
5503 Kelvin
• laS i 1
Enjoy Pocket Billiards, Snooker, Regular Billiards, Your
Favorite Food, Refreshments, Best in Stereo Music at . . .
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2438 Rice Blvd. Phone JA 4-9253
(In The Village)
Rally Club Picks
The following were elected
recently to the Rally Club,
Rice service and exclusive
social club: Ricky Blume, Dale
Callihan, Chuck Dedmon, Bill
German, Preston Johnson,
Jack Kellam, Chuck King,
Ralph Knoohuizen, Ted Lit-
ton, Tom Mosby, Bill Red-
wine, Dave Richardson, Jim
Scurlock, Vince Speeg, Jim
Stark, Larry Tiner, Jim
Travis, and Gene Walker.
Last Wednesday the in-
itiates performed the tradi-
tional rotten-fish drag around
campus.
Havens To Direct Rice Players In
'A Man For All Seasons' Nov. 5-10
DEAN'S
GROCERETTE
Southgate & Travis
BEER
ICE
SOFT DRINKS
The Rice Players have an-
nounced their first play will be
"A Man For All Seasons," by
Robert Bolt. The Players' new
advisor, Neil Havens, will di-
rect.
The cast has 'been chosen for
the play, which will be present-
ed in Hamman Hall November
5-10. Tickets and season tick-
ets will be available soon.
Thomas More
The play deals with the strug-
gle of Sir Thomas More against
the divorce of Henry VIII from
Catherine of Aragon. Within
this historic framework Bolt re-
creates the struggle between
conscience and convenience and
between morality and temporal
power.
The play received high critical
acclaim on Bi*oadway when it
opened in 1960.
The large number of talented
freshmen and "old-guard" Play-
ers applying for roles made cast
selections a difficult choice. Bill
Seward was cast as Sir Thomas
More, Tom Davis as the Com-
mon Man, John Epstein as Hen-
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THE RICE THRESHER, OCTOBER 1 5, 196 4—P AGE 4
ry, Jenny Baird as Alice More,
and Joy Oppenheim as Margaret
More.
Also in the cast are Chuck
Marstrand, Joe Caruthers, Ida
Abramowitz, Joe Parsons, Thom
Scrutchin, Bob Lowenstein,
John Harris, and Bob Sculley.
Rehearsals Rough
Stage design will be by Ed
Cragg. Bob Bacon will do the
lighting.
Havens noted that, because of
the short time left until per-
formance, there would be a
rough rehearsal schedule ahead,
but was confident that the cast
could meet the challenge.
About future Player produc-
tions, he stated that a set of
five one-act plays is planned for
early March (in two sections)
and a final Shakespeare festival
in April. New ideas for the
Players include at least one
choral reading and other "small"
productions throughout the
year.
Classroom Dearth
Moves Tutorials
Into 3 Colleges
Conference rooms in several
of the residential colleges are
now being used for classes.
Weekly Economics 200 precept-
orials are meeting in Jones,
Hanszen and Will Rice Colleges.
Of the six out of ten tutorial
sections held in colleges four are
in the Jones conference rooms.
Classes in the men's colleges
have male students only, but the
classes held in Jones are mixed.
It is reported that the stu-
dents seem to enjoy their sur-
roundings. The' department is
satisfied with the conduct of
the classes and plans to con-
tinue the use of the. colleges.
Registrar Dr. James More-
head predicted that the Uni-
versity will not use the college
facilities for more than tutor-
ials. If the classroom space ,
proves to be too limited, classes
will be shifted to get full use
of the rooms during the less
popular hours.
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EIGHTH FLOOR
FIRST CITY NATIONAL BANK BUILDING
HOUSTON
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INCLUDING SATURDAYS
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Kelly, Hugh Rice. The Rice Thresher (Houston, Tex.), Vol. 52, No. 5, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 15, 1964, newspaper, October 15, 1964; Houston, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth244923/m1/4/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Rice University Woodson Research Center.