The Campus Chat (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 50, No. 45, Ed. 1 Friday, April 7, 1967 Page: 3 of 6
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Friday, April 7, 1967
Club Roundup
PAGE 3—THE CAMPUS CHAT
Scholarship Week Planned
The five national honor fraternities
at NTSU will sponsor Scholarship Week
April 17-21, to emphasize academic
achievement and better acquaint the
student body with the functions and
purposes of the organizations.
The fraternities are Blue Key, Meri-
tum, Alpha Chi, Phi Eta Sigma and Al-
pha Lambda Chi. They will sponsor
events and displays for the five days.
One Monday, April 17, a debate con-
cerning draft deferment for students will
be held at 4 p.m. in Room llti of the
Business Administration Building.
The Honors Concert will be presented
in the Music Recital Hall at 8:15 p.m.
April 18.
A lecture will be given April 20, and
the Who's Who Banquet will be held
that night at 6 p.m. The banquet is the
only activity to which the entire student
body is not invited.
The groups will sponsor an art ex-
hibit in front of the Union Building all
day April 21.
Each day, one of the fraternities will
display information about its history,
functions and requirements. The displays
will 1* on the second floor of the UB.
The fraternities have united in another
project, a $100 scholarship, to l>e awarded
May 8 at the Honors Day Assembly.
Basic requirements to qualify for the
scholarship are: at least sophomore
standing, a 2.0 average, specific need
and extracurricular activities. Applica-
tions will be available in the office of
the vice-president for academic affairs.
This will be the first annual presenta-
tion of the scholarship.
ANGEL FLIGHT
Angel Flight board members have
selected 140 applicants to compete for
next year's Angel Flight.
LEVI
Wrangler* & Lee Riders
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Arnold Air Society members anil An-
gels will judge applicants at a series of
three board meetings.
Final selections will Ik> made after a
week of marching and the last board
meeting. Finalists will then begin an
eight-week pledge ship,
ALPHA CHI
Applications for Alpha Chi's annual
$150 scholarship are available in Room
107 of the Auditorium Building. Alpha
Chi is the scholastic honor fraternity.
Anyone who has earned at least 45
hours including .'in at NTSU may
apply.
Applications must be returned
Thursday.
by
Poet Provides Warmth
In An Evening's Frost'
PRESS CLUB
Jerry Smith, a sophomore from Piano,
was elected Press Club president Tues-
day night
The Blue Max'
George Peppard, James Mason and Ursula Andress star in the dramatic
story of a World War I German flier's quest for his country's highest award
in "The Blue Max," now at the Fine Arts Theater.
"An Evening's Frost," a dramatic por-
trait of Poet Robert Frost, will be pre-
sented Wednesday night at 8:15 in the
Main Auditorium.
This is the sixth and final production
in this year's Fine Arts Series, which
has included Elisabeth Schwarzkopf, the
New Christy Minstrels, the Dallas Sym-
phony, the Robert Joffrey Ballet and
"The Odd Couple." Tickets can be ob-
tained at the University Store with a
student identification card.
"An Evening's Frost" was written by
Donald Hall, now poet-in-residence at
the University of Michigan. It. is from
an idea by Marcella Cisney, director of
the Professional Theater Program of the
University of Michigan. It is a dramatic
presentation of the life of Robert Frosi,
based on his letters, poems and conver-
sation. Will Greer, starring at Froat, haa
been praised by critics. One reviewer ex-
claimed that Greer becomes Robert
Frost before the evening is over.
Thomas Coley appears with Greer as
narrator; Jack Davidson, as the younger
Frost, and Anne Lee Byrd, as The Wo-
man.
"An Evening's Frost" is the first dra-
matic treatment of the poet to be auth-
orized by the literary executor of the
Frost estate. Cue magazine said of it:
"The wonder of living how rare to
find this communicated in the theater
today. It is precisely this elusive, civiliz-
ing quality that emerges from these dra-
matic readings of the late Robert Frost's
poems, prose and letters."
Movie Marquee
Blue Max'-A Battle of Hypocrites
B> KI N S< \RMOROUGH
"A Maltese cross executed in blue
enamel and edged with silver, the Ger-
man imperial eagle laced in silver be-
tween the bars of the cross" The
Blue Max. Coveted by all of Germany's
World War I fliers, but sought most by
Bruno Stachel.
Born of common stock, Stachel, played
by George Peppard in this movie now at
the Fine Arts Theater, is a common
soldier for two years of World War I.
Then, the movie insinuates, through his
cunning and wits he is sent to flying
school to become "an officer and a gen-
tleman." In the final gasps of an era
when a gentleman was truly born that
way, Stachel's elevation to the officer
corps thrusts him violently into this
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tight little "gentleman's" clique, into
a war waged by, as Stachel puts it,
"hypocrites, men who will kill a man
and then honor him." In this circle he
neither understands or is understood.
Stachel is socially rejected by the
members of his squadron. The Blue Max,
Germany's highest award, becomes, for
him, the way to prove he is as good as
they. Stachel is ruthless in his en-
deavors to make the 20 kills necessary
to win the Blue Max. In knocking off 20
of the English baddies, he manages to
help Germany's enemies shoot down a
Bardas, Students
Present Recitals
One music faculty member and three
students will perform next week in re-
citals and Mu Phi Epsilon music sorori-
ty will present a musicale Sunday at 3
p.m. in the recital hall.
The faculty member is resident pian-
ist Stefan Bardas, who will present a
recital Thursday at 8:15 p.m. in the
Music Recital Hall.
'1,11 e students are Roxanna Hoover of
Alamo and Cathleer Habern of Pueblo,
Colo., who will give a violin-piano re-
cital April 14, at 8:15 p.m. in the Musi
Recital Hall, and Lurline Speer, senior
from Beaumont, who will present an
organ recital at 8:15 p.m. the same day
in the Main Auditorium.
Bardas will perform works by Von
Weber, Mendelssohn, Schumann, Chopin
and Strauss,
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few of his roomies at the officers club.
Some magnificent flying scenes in-
volving the shaky old aircraft provide
loads of entertainment to anyone who
has any interest in flying, or even an
interest in daredevilry.
A swoop here and a zoom there keep
things hopping, or rather the swoops
and zooms plus a few scminude heavily
darkened bedroom shots keep things on
the move.
In the acting department, well, there
just wasn't much. Peppard is too limited
for the part and he doesn't quite catch
the bitterness needed.
Ursula Andress is lovely window
dressing ami certainly spices up several
otherwise dull scenes. But she is cer-
tainly no actress—so back to Bond with
her.
One cannot help but marvel that
James Mason seems to fit virtually any
part, much the way an old slipper fits—
comfortably. Mason, as count Von Klug-
ermann, is convincing; he actually seems
to l>e a dedicated German officer. But
a good performance by James Mason has
long since ceased to be anything of an
amazement.
Although sagging in acting by two
stars, the movie has enough air combat
and bedroom battle scenes to make it
worth the price of admission.
Jjulij VbwA
Books-Magazine
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Smead, Jim. The Campus Chat (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 50, No. 45, Ed. 1 Friday, April 7, 1967, newspaper, April 7, 1967; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth307343/m1/3/: accessed July 8, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting UNT Libraries Special Collections.