The Campus Chat (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 50, No. 49, Ed. 1 Friday, April 21, 1967 Page: 3 of 6
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Friday, April 21, 1967
PAGE 1—THE CAMPUS CHAT
Band To Play
In Ft. Worth
The 1 O Clock Lab Band will play a
concert at Scott Theater in Fort Worth
Sunday. The 3 p.m. concert will repre-
sent the seventh time the I.ab Band has
played at the theater since it opened
last year.
Hand Director Leon Breeden is plan*
nin>r to cover u wide music range in the
hour-and-a-half performance. The hand
will play such numbers as "Why Do 1
Love You?," "Funny Valentine" and
"(ireasy Sack Blues."
Sponsors of the concert are Mr and
Mrs. A. M. I'ate Jr. of Fort Worth.
1 ate, who is president and chairman of
the board of Texas Refinery Corp., is
sponsoring a month of band concerts at
the Scott Theater. His purpose is to show
the talent of the local l>ands and to ex-
pose the theater to the public.
Breeden said, "The concert is open to
anyone who wants to come." Tickets are
on sale at the theater for $1, $2 and
$2.50.
Sunday's concert will be the Lai. Band's
final semester appearance before going
to Miami to compete in the National
Jaez Finals May 4, 5 and fi.
A Question of Caring
Cal Thomas, left, Susan Heimer and Mike Harrell rehearse for the University
Players' production of "Look Back In Anger," starting Tuesday night in the
Studio Tneater. The play shows the struggle between "those who care and
those who don't."
Organization Briefs
Pledges To Sponsor Heart Fund Dance
The pledge class of Delta Sigma Phi
will hold a benefit dance for the Heart
Fund at the National Guard Armory
tonight at 7:30.
Music will Ik? provided by "Them
What's Got," a local band that is do-
nating its services.
The cost of the dance is $2.50 per
couple.
RECITALS
An afternoon and an evening recital
are scheduled next week in the Music
Recital Hall.
Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia, national mu-
sic fraternity, will sponsor a graduate
brass quintet recital Tuesday at 5 p.m.
David Pickthorn, senior from Odessa,
will give a clarinet recital at 8:16 Fri-
day night.
THETA SIGMA PHI
Eddie Barker, news director of KRLD-
TV, will be the guest speaker at the
annual Theta Sigma Phi Matrix Table
dinner tonight.
The women's journalistic fraternity
has broken tradition and invited all
journalism students to the 0:30 p.m.
banquet at Underwood's Cafeteria.
Formerly only members and special
guests were allowed to attend the din-
ner.
CONGRATULATIONS
To
Mike Driskill
Who made his first solo flight on Feb. 18 at . . .
VOSE FLIGHT SCHOOL
HARTLEE FIELD
(Five Miles Northeast of Denton)
Phone 387-6507
F.A.A. Approved Primary and Commercial Flight School
You won't live like
an orphan at
The College Inn.
No peeling wallpaper, drafts through the floor or
chnlis n the walls. No old ladies next door who
raise petunias. The College Inn is rooms and rooms
of luxury, solid comfort, air conditioning. Privacy.
Home-type food. The College In is a semester of
happiness at a low price. Who are you to deny
yourself such value?
In the way ofvalue, The College Inn offers
private outside entrances
3-minute walk to campus
recreational lounges
quality furnishings
laundry facilities
walk-in closets
quiet study room
barber shop
single and double occupancy
lots of off-street free parking
wall-to-wall carpeting
private dining room
peace and quiet
color tv lounges
swimming pool
maid service
The Colege Inn
MAKE RESERVATIONS NOW! 200 AVE. D. 387-3526
Angry Young Man on NT Stage
Look Back In Anger' To Open Tuesday
Another custom discontinued by the
society is the selection of the Top Coeds
on Campus. The practice was stopped
because of a lack of interest.
Awards will 1* presented to the top
woman journalist at NTSU and to three
outstanding sophomore reporters.
PHI ETA SIGMA
Phi Eta Sigma, freshman honor so-
ciety, will initiate new members at a
formal banquet at the Ramada Inn
April 2JJ.
SIGMA PHI EPSILON
Sigma Phi Kpsilon fraternity won the
activities trophy at the annual Delta
(iainma activities banquet Tuesday night
at the Ramada Inn. Runnersup were
Delta Sigma Phi and Sigma Nu frater-
nities.
FINANCE CLUB
The Finance Club and Delta Sigma
Pi business fraternity will sponsor a
field trip Wednesday to the Federal
Reserve Bank in Dallas — one of 12
regional reserve banks. The trip will
involve a lecture, a film and a tour.
By SVKAH WHITSOS
"Those who don't care are worse than
criminal."
It was thus, in the confusion of erect-
15 From NT
To Perform
In Workshop
Fifteen NTSU student composers and
performers of music will participate in
a composers-performers workshop at
SMI' Tuesday through Friday.
The workshop is made possible by a
$10,000 grant from the Rockefeller Foun
dation. Tin ■mas Wirtel, composer in-res-
idence for the Dallas Symphony Orches-
tra. is the workshop coordinator.
The workshop is sponsored by the
foundation in cooperation with NTSIJ,
SMI', TCI', the University of Texas at
Austin and the orchestra. Dr. Kenneth
N Cuthbert, dean of the NTSU School
of Music, is consortium chairman
"The purpose of the workshop," Dean
Cuthbert said, "is to encourage the de
velopment of talented young composers
and performers by giving them the op-
portunity to perform with or hear their
works played by a professional orches-
tra."
Sessions of the four-day workshop will
be devoted to rehearsals of student com
positions and solo numlx-rs. NTSU stn
dents Elaine Cormany, soprano, and
Grady Coyle, flutist, will perform.
Alternate performers are pianist Ron-
ald Hays and French hornist David Reis
wig
Composers from NTSU include Bruce
Loyd, William C. Robertson, James
Stroud, Richard Gard/.ina, Connie Seidel,
Adolph Labi**, Loyd Lott, Charles Miller,
W. Alan Oldfield, John Blackwood and
Frank Payne.
Compositions selected for performance
will Im> made by a panel made up of Wir
tel and John Ardoin, music editor of the
Dallas Morning News; Kugene Lewis,
music editor of the Dallas Times Herald;
Lloyd Taliaferro, faculty member of the
University of Texas at Arlington; and
Donald Johanna, musical director of the
Dallas Symphony
ing the set for the next and final Uni-
versity Players production, that director
E Robert Black stated the theme of
"Look Back In Anger "
The play will he presented in the
Studio Theater from Tuesday till April
29
"This play is a product of the 50s,
when the young authors became con-
cerned with the seeming lack of social
conscience or any conscience," Dr Black
said this *cek in discussing "Look Back
In Anger." It was the first of the pro
test plays, he said
The characters in the play personify
this struggle between those who care
and those who don't. Jimmy Porter,
played by Cal Thomas, is the first angry
young man, the first long-hair He takes
out all his hatred for the upper classes
on his wife, Allison, played by Susan
Heimer. She is a member of that class
Allison is typical of the intelligent,
gifted college person too intense alxmt
everything. She is naive and tends to jcet
too involved
Cliff, played by Mike Harrell, is caught
in the middle He understands Jimmy's
protest but doesn't feel that anything
ran be done alwiut the situation.
"Look Back In Anger" was the first
really significant piece to voice anger
over the loss of old values, old honesty
and the old ord >r, Dr Black said.
"Why did we kill ourselves fighting
the Na/.is and then ignore the evils of
( ommunism," he cited m a parallel
All the protesters of today are follow
ing in Jimmy s footsteps, except that
Jimmy knows what he is fighting for
He is emotionally involved
Dr Black said that he and th<> depart-
ment decided to do this play because "it
was time we did thi-< sort of thing." Il>-
wanted to work with a smaller cast after
many large ones Th«- play has only five
parts Tickets art- available in tbase
ment of the Historical Building
BLOOD DONORS
DONORS PAID FOR SERVICE
Extra Fee for RH Negatives
8-3:30 Daily 3-11 Saturday
Donors between 18 & 21 must havo
written consent of parents.
Community Blood Service
2109 Commerce RI8-9354
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Smead, Jim. The Campus Chat (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 50, No. 49, Ed. 1 Friday, April 21, 1967, newspaper, April 21, 1967; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth307347/m1/3/: accessed July 3, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting UNT Libraries Special Collections.