The Campus Chat (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 39, No. 61, Ed. 1 Friday, June 29, 1956 Page: 3 of 4
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I
Friday, June 29. 1956
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Church Groups Announce Speakers,
Hold Devotionals, Plan Discussions
The Campus Chat
Company Records Summer Opera
Local Composition Workshop Will Give Performance
cu>sed "The Lost Kutenai Indians"
at the Presbyterian Student cen-
ter Wedneadmy at 7:30 p.m. He
first became interested in these In-
dians when ho discovered them
during a tour of northern Idaho
and he has spent the last three
years compiling information and
making studies of them.
On Sunday night, Mrs. Agnes)
Socials and devotional programs
hurhhght the plans for student re-
ligious activities this week.
Assembly of (Jod
f'arl K. Callihan, Waxahachie,
will be the devotional speaker to-
night following a social at the city
park. This will be the second in
a series of devotional periods
planned for the summer. The first
one was held last Friday night
when Mrs. William Pyle led the
discussion on the first chapter of
(ialatians.
Methodist
Darrell Dunham of the School of
Education will discuss "Sharing
the Gospel With the World" on
Sunday at 9 a.m. This program is
a continuation of the study of the
book of Acts.
Alice Larsiln, Fort Worth, was
discussion leader Wednesday dur-
ing the regular devotional period. !
On Wednesday Krin Brooks will
be discussion leader. The meeting i
will be held at the home of the j
Rev. and Mrs. Ferris Baker, 92*. j
W. Hickory street, and ice cream >
will be served.
Presbyterian
Dr. Paul Baker, a teacher at
Boise (Idaho) junior college, dis-
Artists Present
Senior Exhibits
Next week Beverly Wade, Kil- !
gore, art education major, and 1
Nancy Goff, Dallas, costume de-
sign major, will present their sen-
ior art exhibits in the show cases
and the Little art gallery of the I
library building.
Miss Wade's exhibit, to open
Saturday, will consist of a variety •
of techniques and media used in >
teaching. As her theme she has
used the circus, and her main ex- j
hibit consists of shadow puppets |
to be used behind a curtain of thin
T , Students, Too
.Miss Wade will also display ex- 1—
amples of masks, aqua tints, hand j
puppets, and sculptures made from
wire, toothpicks, and clay. Also)
examples of weaving, ceramics, pa- j
per mosaics, textures, and figure '
drawings will be shown.
Miss GofPs costume design ex-
hibit will remain on display in the 5
Little art gallery throughout the
remainder of this month.
I.uella Vanderworth, Houston,
advertising art major, will display
her work in the exhibition show
cases July 9-13.
Baptist
Mrs. Doyle J. Baird conducted
the installation service for the
members of the Summer Execu-
tive council of the Buptist Student
union on June 20 at the center.
The first Bible study retreat for
the BSU was held Monday. Stu-
dents assembled at the Baptist
Rogers and Virginia Ruffin, En- j Student center for a picnic. Indi-
nis, will give th«- origins and au- j vidual study of the Bible and a
thors of favorite hymns. Each group discussion completed the ac
hymn discussed will also be surtg. t.ivities of the day.
The regular schedule for the
BSU includes varied activities.
On Tuesday nights, beginning at
(5:30, Songspiration and BSU choir
activities are held. The executive
council meets at 8. Regular vesper
I service is held Wednesdays at
|t>:30 p.m. Thursday activities in-
'elude vesper service at 6:30 p.m.,
j visitation at 6:45,
| at 7:30. Vesper
promptly at 6:30 p.m. every Fri-
day, and the Bible discussion fol-
lows at 7 p.m.
Hocause I'm Here With You, a
soiin written by Hill Baker, assist-
ant property manager at North
Texas, is soon to be released by
Mli.M records, according to the
composer.
Baker said Tuesday that lie had
I notified by his publisher re
centl> that MGM records had ten-
tatively set the date for the rec
>
ord's release in late June. Lyrics
and fellowship 1 for the song were written by Miet/,1
service begins j Miller, TSt W graduate now living
in California, Baker said.
Baker, who has been employed
by the college since February,
graduated from North Texas in
1950, receiving a master's degree
in education. He has written sev-
eral songs, but Because I'm I lore
With You is the first one to be
recorded, he said.
In IMIBKRT II M l.
Opera Workshop, under the di
root ion of Miss Mary Mot'orinic,
will present act four of "La II"
heme" by Puccini and "Down in
the Valley" by Weil in the main
| auditorium July 12.
Featured ill "La ISobeme" are
Carman Luber, Graham, who will
portray Mimi: Bill Chandler, Port
Arthur, who miik- the role ol Ro
didfo; Paul Harrison, Dallas, who
plays Marcollo; John Hunter, who
sings Collino, and Melvin Kconey,
Lawton, Okla., who sings the role
of Schaunnrd.
In the opera, Rodolfo, a poet;
Marcel In, a painter; Schaunnrd, a
musician, and Collino, a philoso-
pher, are starving in a Paris attic
when one of them gets enough
money for a decent meal. Rodolfo
wants to go on with bis work and
the other go to eat. His writing is "La Boheme," considered by
interrupted by Mimi, an upstairs many Ui bo Puccini's masterpiece,
neighbor who has stumbled into was first performed at the Teatro
Denton
Rock
f i
n
Films
Roll
to Offer
Animals
EACH WEDNESDAY NIGHT North Texans dese.t tlioir studies for an hour or two and dance un-
der the stars to the music of 'Fessor Floyd Graham and the Aces from 8 to 10 on the slab behind the
building. Admission is free to students possessing activity tickets and 50 cents otherwise.
(.That Photo by MOSKS
union
Denton movies will offer a menu
of rock and roll music, Jane Rus
sell cheesecake, and a nature film
to highlight week-end screen enter
| tainnient. •
Co-Ed
"The Revolt of Mamie Stover,"
; a vivid novel about a re Iheaded
| girl from Mississippi who made an
, indelible impression on American
; soldiers in Honolulu, has I
' brought to the screen by Twon
j tieth Century-Fox in CinomaScopo
and Do Luxe color now showing at
j the Co-Ed through Tuesday.
Jane Russell co-stars with Rich-
! aril Kgan in this screen adapta-
tion ol' William Bradford flute's
story of conditions in Honolulu be
fore and after the Japanese attack
on Pearl Harbor.
The novel is an expose of the
social order in Hawaii, a sort of
benign feudalism that was shat-
tered by the impact of millions ol
members of the Armed Forces who
Exes Keep June Tradition, Repeat Vows
"Marriage" and "engagement"
are two very important words at
this time of the year, especially
for North Texas students.
Sunders—Voyles
Wedding bells rang in Decatur
Saturday for Miss Myrtie Berneice
Sanders and Gilbert Ervin Voyles.
The groom received his bachelor's
and master's degrees from NTSC.
CO-ED
DRIVE-IN
THEATRE
NOW SHOWING THRU TUESDAY
20th Century-Fox presents
JANE
RUSSELL
RICHARD
EGAN
(/J/jfdfccL
i
CO Stirring
JOAN
-ti. AGNES MOOREHEAD
MICHAEL PATE
Jroduetd h 0"Kl««
BUDDY ADLER • RAOUL
Ir.fntltl bi
SYDNEY BOEHM
COtO« by 01IUXI
CINemaScoPc
STARTS WEDNESDAY. JULY 4th
-i uiirr ——
ro^k arounothe clock
Lee—Richey
Miss Hedy Marilyn Lee of Ir-
ving and Heartsill Lanier Richey
of Atlanta, Tex., plan an Aug. It
wedding at the First Baptist,
church in Irving. The bride-elect
attended NTSC. Her fiance is now
a senior here.
McDowell—Smithu irk
Miss Daisie Ann McDowell be-
came the bride of Richard Meade
Smithwiek of Richardson Friday
night in Craig chapel of the Gas-
cdiMPUs
Friday Saturday
Walt Disney's
THE ANIMAL WORLD
Sunday Tuesday
THE GREAT
LOCOMOTIVE CHASE
witl^
Fess Parker
Wednesday Friday
SANTIAGO
with
Alan Ladd
NOTICE!
Beginning with this issue of the
Campus Chat, ten studentt will
be picked by the CAMPUS
management at random from
the student directory to receive
four passes each from the
Campus Theatre. This week's
winners are:
Clyde Koehne, Joe Davenport,
Jimmy Gage, Wayne Heskin,
Shirley Karnaghan, Peggy Car-
roll, Conrad Ezei!, Patty Pen-
degress, Gwen L. Stewart, Phil
Love.
Htarfmla namnl alw * ran oktaln th tr
fra* paaaaa kr ralHn« IK. CAMPUH
tkaatra totwaan ana an4 lia pm Prt-
4mr and Satardar Pima Mill.
ton Avenue Baptist church, Dallas.
The bride attended NTSC,
Stewart—Tyson
Miss Frances Lucille Stewart bo-
came the bride of John Nelson Ty
son Saturday night in the 'Irving
Boulevard and Delaware Church
of Christ in Irving. The bride did
graduate work at NTSC.
Tomlinson—Bur not to
Miss Louise Tomlinson and Rob
ert D. Burnette have set. Aug. 22
as the date for their wedding in
Perkins chapel on the Southern
Methodist university campus. The
bride-elect is a graduate of NTSC.
Burnette, a student here, is a
member of Sigma Phi Epsilon.
Belton—Farrar
Miss Carolyn Sue Belton became
the bride of Sidney Bob Farrar
Saturday in the First Methodist
church of Clinton, Mo. The groom
attended NTSC.
Bat la—Krntl
Miss Mary Lou Batla will be
come the bride of Troy T. Scott on
Aug. 31. Scott is a senior here
where he is president of Gamma
Iota Chi.
Echols Mills
Miss Ava Jane Echols and John
Mills will be married Aug. -1 at j
the First !'u;itist church in San i
Angolo. Miss Echols is a graduate!
of NTSC where she was a mom
tier ol Theta Sigma Phi, honorary
journalism fraternity,
lllll—Morris
The First Methodist church in
Dallas will be the scone of the j
marriage of Miss Elizabeth Hill,
poured through the islands during
World War II.
Starting at the Co Ed Wednes
day will be "Rock Around the
Clock," a Columbia picture featur
nig Kill llalo\ and bis Comets in
a rock 'n' roll musical, teller
rhythm and Imp artists included in
the show are the Platters, Tony
Martinez and his baud, and Fred
die Hell and his Bellboys.
( II in pus
"The Animal World," showing at
tlie Campus today anil Saturday,
is a filmed account of the lioirin-
: ning of life iu the form of a one
collet! animal, on through the rag
ing reign of the dinosaur age. and
: onward 70 million years to the
present.
The Technicolor feature film
was written, produced, and di-
rected by Irwin Allen whose ear
lier nature film, "The Sea Around
Us," was an Academy Award win
nor. "The Animal World" was in
J spired by the dinosaurs in the
! paintings of Charles Knight, a
noted artist in this field.
The film is said to show for the
1 first time in full color scenes do
| picting battles between prehistoric
j dinosaurs that roamed the earth's
surface long ago. It captures on
film creatures from the depth of
| 1 be sea, Irom the far corners of
; the world, and from the sky.
-Jewel Rosa
his room iu a faint.
Rodolfo and Mimi fall in love,
but Rodolfo's tremendous jealousy
places many slinks in the path of
their love, and finally Mimi loaves
him.
In the final act, the one to be
presented by the Workshop, Mar
cello and Kodolfo are living iu an
attic studio, making a pretense of
working, while each is dreaming
of the woman lie loves. Schaunard
and Collino enter with food and
drink and a party develops Mil
sotta, Marcollo's love, arrives and
tolls them that Muni, who is con
sumptivo, lias come to say farewell
forever to Kodollo. They prepare
a lied for her and bring her in
She embraces Kodolfo and asks
forgiveness. Musetta tells the
others that Mimi is dying and of-
fers her earrings to buy medicine.
All go out, leaving Rodolfo and
Mimi alone. While they recall their
love for each other, she is seized
with a fit of coughing and falls
back fainting. Just then Musetta
and the rest re-enter with the
medicine. Mimi speaks again to
Rodolfo, telling hint of her love for
him, and falls asleep. Amid the
prayers of Musetta, the sobs of Ro-
dolfo, ami the grief of the others,
she dies.
Rogio, in Turin, Italy, in 1896.
The other presentation for the
evening, "Down in the Valley,"
has not yet been cast.
Hall Will Lecture
On Jazz Aspects
At Music Festival
Dr. M. E. Ilall, professor of mu-
sic, will bo a speaker at the third
annual American Jar/, festival
July (5-8 at Newport, R.I. lie will
lecture on tin- academic aspects of
jazz and its implication for the
future.
Dr. Ilall, who lias been named
"the hep professor" by newspapers
and music magazines, is the origi-
nator of the Laboratory jazz band
at North Texas.
The festival is expected to at-
tract 50,000 fans from the United
States, Canada, and Mexico and
will feature more than one hundred
American jazz artists.
Also taking part in the festival
will lie Jutla Hipp, a German;
Toshiko Akiyoshi, a Japanese, and
Friedrieh Guida, an Austrian mak-
ing his first American jazz ap-
pearance.
College Drama Organization Schedules
Mississippi River Comedy Production
A comedy in three acts, "The "The Great Big Doorstep" is a
Big Doorstep," will be bold comedy built around a Cajun fnm-
union build ily in Louisiana that finds an old,
July 10 and exquisite plantation doorstep float-
< ireal
in tlie air conditioned
intr cafeteria at H p.m
11, David Maberry,
speech and drama major, said j
Tuesday.
Tickets for the summer theatre I
production will be on sale for 50]
cents in the speech and drama of- i
fiee one week prior to the opening
day of the play. Any remaining i
tickets may be bought at the door
of the cafeteria on the night of j
the play.
Ilurshel Farrow, Lake Dallas, I
speech and drama major, will play '
the lead as the Commodore. Sarah j
Maltory, Paris, speech and drama j
major, will be cast as Mrs. Crochet 1
in the female lead.
Dr. It. V. Holland is directing
the play, assisted by students hav- i
ing part-time directing as their j
summer projects.
Fort. Worth, | j))K down the Mississippi river and
attaches this doorstep to their
house. The real fun begins when
the family attempts to get a house
equal to their newly acquired
doorstep.
The stage will be sot in a three-
quarter round against a back-
ground of black drapes.
There will bo no special lighting
or stage effects, Maberry ex-
plained, other than a doorstep in
front of the drapes.
Dallas, to
14. The I
student of
Joe Morris,
irlde-eloct is a
NTSC.
Van, J uly
former
TYPEWRITERS
We ront all makes
Wo repair all make1.
New and U'.od
Machines
American Typewriter
And Office Supply
18 month purr ha-e plan
PV^uD and delivery
103 Ave. A
C 4482
RANCHO
DRIVE-IN THEATRE
One Mile North on Highway 77 — Denton. T->-a',
FRIDAY-SATURDAY
THE MAN FROM LARAMIE
JAMES STEWART
ALSO
SPY CHASERS
THE BOWERY BOYS
SUNDAY MONDAY
THE WESTERNER
GARY COOPER WALTER BRENNAN
ALSO
GARDEN OF EVIL
GARY COOPER SUSAN HAYWARD
TUESDAYWEDNESDAY
THE WHITE TOWER
GlEN FORD EALLI CLAUDE RAINS
alto
SHACK OUT ON 101
TERRY MOORE FRANK LOVEJOY
THURSDAY
50c KARNITE
RANCHO NOTORIOUS
ARTHUR KENNEDY MEL FERRAR
MARLENE DIETRICH
Try Our
Merchant's Lunch
75c
SOUTHERN HOTEL
Plenty of free parking.
Two blocks south of square on Locust.
C-4101
PLAZA THEATRE
East Side Square
ridllAV - SATI KHAV
THE TROUBLE WITH HARRY
Kdmiind ( uinn—Shirley Marl.ainr
MA AND PA KETTLE
AT THE FAIR
Marjory Mail)—Perry Kilbride
SI NI AV - WBDNK8DAV
BOTTOM OF THE BOTTLE
Van John n—Hulh l(« man
RETURN TO
TREASURE ISLAND
Tab Hunter
Till IISOAV - SATURDAY
THE COURT JESTER
llaiiii; K y —<;lynnl« John«
THE PURPLE MASK
Tony Turlla—C'nileen Miller
A
IMWfWv
t li n f • • •
alop at Ihe knee
H*lar*eal*C'li to cling
atay cool A comfy
$1.35 pair
Freedom of the knees means you'll keep
a lot cooler this summer. And with
skirts the length they are, no one will
ever know. See our SHALEEN KNEE-
HI STRETCH NYLONS in pretty sum-
mer shades.
If you prefer—try our ABOVE-THE-
STRETCH elastic top SHALEENS.
$1.65 pair
HOSIERY—M«in Floor I
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Gambrell, Adell. The Campus Chat (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 39, No. 61, Ed. 1 Friday, June 29, 1956, newspaper, June 29, 1956; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth306819/m1/3/?q=%22~1~1%22~1: accessed July 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting UNT Libraries Special Collections.