The Campus Chat (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 50, No. 65, Ed. 1 Friday, August 4, 1967 Page: 3 of 4
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1
Friday, August 4, 1967
PAGE 3—the campus chat
- Movie Marquee -
Six Spoofy Bonds Try
To Squash SMERSH
H> PRESTON II ANN A
A spoof to end all James Bond movie*,
"Ca*ino Royale,"' which opened ut the
Campus Theater Wednesday and runs
through Tuesday, is too much fur one
James Bond. There are six of them.
David Niven plays the main Bond role
in the movie. Bond has retired from his
super-spying capers and has settled
down in the country. But the leaders of
the world's intelligence forces persuade
him to try to eliminate a new enemy
force, Le Chiffre, paymaster of
SMERSH.
To carry out his order, Bond get* help
from a lady spy. Vesper Lynd (Ursula
Andreas). She persuades Tremble (Peter
Sellers), a card expert, to impersonate
Bond. Tremble is supposed to defeat I,e
Chiffre in a card game and thus put an
end to SMERSH's finances.
"CASINO ROY ALE" has 17 interna
tional stars and over 200 U'autiful
girls, This spoof doesn't need the girls
to make it one of the funniest movies in
the last several years.
The movie has an abundance of wild
scenes. In the gambling house scene,
Keystone Kops, cowboys and Indians
and the French Foreign Legion help
Private Art
Shown Today
The art department is having a show-
ing of its private art collection from 10
a.m. until noon each day through Wed-
nesday.
The works are gifts from outside art-
ists and former faculty members. The
majority of the articles are paintings
that come from India, the South Seas,
Japan, China and Panama, plus works
by Eskimos and Peruvians.
The collection includes ceramics and
some handmade pieces.
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Campus Personals
Bond in his fight against SMERSH. The
torture scene has Tremble going through
a psychedelic brainwashing.
Producer Charles K. Peldman has gone
all out to make this the last of the spy
movies. Except for several bad re-
marks concerning the original Bond
(Sean Connery) movies, this movie is
exceptional.
Seniors Set
Art Exhibits
Senior art students will present their
first exhibition of the second summer
session Aug. 11 through Aug. 14 in the
Art Galleries.
Six students will show their works.
They are Mary Ann Smith of Waco and
(>ena Kagsdale of Fort Worth, both art
education majors; Donna Bain of Cor-
pus Christi, an interior design major;
and Larry Davison of Graham, Duke
Horn of Pallas and Kit Wilson of Phila-
dephia, advertising art majors.
This will be the largest of the sum-
mer. A reception will be held the eve-
ning <>f Aug. 11, and participating stu-
dents will 1m* on hand to display their
works.
Each student is required to have a
show before graduation.
Dr. Mack Vaughan, department direc-
tor, said the primary purpose of the
show is to give the student experience
in organizing and setting up an exhibi-
tion from a variety of pieces.
The student prepares and dis-
plays his own materia). The works are
taken from past projects, usually done
in the senior year, in the students' field
of study.
The student sets up his display from
the ground up. He chooses the type of
the material, the arrangement of the
pieces and the display.
t
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Pam Purvis Wins National Honor
Miss Denton
Miss Donton, Ann Patterson, senior
music major from Snyder, was chos-
en as one of Ihe 10 Miss Texas semi-
finalists last Saturday. She was later
eliminated in the contest, held in
Fort Worth. She won the talent
competition for July 27 during the
preliminaries with an oboe solo
from the Russian opera "Prince
Igor" by Borodin. It included the
tune to "Strangers in Paradise."
NTSU Jazzman
Play for Church
By KATHI BOYD
Drums beat out the syncopated jazz
rhythm, a muted trumpet wailed and
singers intoned in discordant harmony
the ancient words of tl.e mass.
This was the scene at First Methodist
Church in Dallas Sunday night as a
combo of North Texas musicians and the
Robert Wortley Chorale presented the
premiere performance of "The Jazz
Mass'' by contemporary composer Joe
Masters,
THE NORTH TEXANS were Dick
Thompson, piano; Clyde Jones, alto sax-
ophone; Herb Porter, tenor saxophone;
Salvador Marquez, trumpet; Joe Caci-
hauda, bass; Robert Kneile, drums, and
Deane Peters, tympani.
"The Jazz Mass" — a modern setting
for the traditional words of worship
was first performed last fall and has
been recorded by Calumbja Records
wWtley, First Methodist's minister
of music, directed the performance. He
said, "I first heard the mass last spring
and thought it was an effective and ex-
citing way to present a worship service
in the modern world."
Wortley decided to present the* mass
and contacted Lab Band Director Leon
Breed en of NTSU about a jazz combo
for the performance. "Breeden was very
cooperative and provided us with seven
excellent musicians," he said.
WOPTLEV'S CHORALE, a select
group chosen from members of his
Chancel Choir, has Iwen together since
May. It is composed of amateur singers.
Soloi- ? i 'he group are Karen Grigsby
and Kd'i 1.. • een.
The Rev. Dr. Robert E. Goodrich Jr.,
pastor of the church, introduced the
performance by saying that the mass
was written by Masters "to answer in
contemporary setting the charge that
God is dead."
PAM Pl'RVIS, speech and drama
graduate of NTSU, has been granted a
two-year scholarship to study in the
American Academy of Dramatic Arts,
headquartered in New York City.
Miss Purvis, who graduated last
spring, was one of 16 students in the
country and two from the Southwest to
receive the coveted American Broad-
casting Company scholarship ABC an-
nually gives the scholarship to drama
students who have exhibited high talent
potentialities in the acting field.
• • •
DR. MACK VAUGHAN, director of
the art department, will attend the an
nual seminar of Hallmark Cards Inc.
Aug. 16-17.
The seminar, sponsored by the com-
pany's design department, will consist
of a discussion and a tour of the factory.
The discussion will be an exchange of
ideas between tradesmen and instructors
from campuses around the nation.
The purpose of this meeting will lie
to bring fresh ideas into the industry
and to give instructors an idea of what
industry expects of the college graduate.
• • •
The NTSU chapter of the Texas As-
sociation of College Teachers has elect-
ed new officers, headed by DR. KEN-
DALL P. COCHRAN, business adminis-
tration faculty, as president.
DR. DAVID R FITCH of the husi
ness education faculty is the new vice-
president. The secretary-treasurer is
LEWIS M A HERN ATHY of the eco-
nomics department.
New members of the executive coun-
cil are DR. JESS CHARLEY, director
of athletics, DR DARRELI. It DUN-
HAM of the education faculty and DR.
PA T MCLEOD of industrial arts.
• *
Three memtwr* of the NTSU Student
Education Association (SKA) will at
tend the state leaders planning confer-
ence of the Texas SKA today and Sat
urday.
They are BONNIE CAWTHON, state
parliamentarian. KAREN SCIILMTLER.
president of the NTSU group, and TIM
SEARS, a member of the state member-
ship committee.
About 50 memlwrs of SEA will at-
tend the conference at the 7-A Guest
Ranch near Wimberly.
• • •
RANSOM JEFFERY, a 11)66 NTSU
graduate from Denton, has been given
a research assistantship for the ll >7
li 6M academic year by the University of
Iowa, where he attends graduate school.
Jetfery also recently received a schol-
arship, sponsored by the Women's Di-
vision of the Board of Missions of the
Methodist Church The scholarship was
for a Drama Workshop on the United
Nations that took place in New York
July 10 to July 27.
At NTSU Jeffery wrote several one-
act plays, and he has co authored a
television script for "The Man from
U N C I, K "
• • •
Four North Texas teachers will have
their art works displayed at the first
showing in Wichita Falls' new art mu-
seum.
The teachers, 1>R GEORGIA B.
LE VCII. Bl DOI.PH A. FUCHS, RICH-
ARD H I.AIM. and FRANCIS STE-
PHEN, will have their works exhibited
from September through October.
The material submitted includes weav-
ing, ceranu , printed fabrics, sculpture
and jewelry.
CASINO
ROYALE
"S
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UJ 1
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Ahrens, Billy. The Campus Chat (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 50, No. 65, Ed. 1 Friday, August 4, 1967, newspaper, August 4, 1967; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth307365/m1/3/?q=%22~1%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.