The Rambler (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 36, No. 19, Ed. 1 Tuesday, March 17, 1964 Page: 4 of 6
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Page Four
THE
CLUB NEWS
R A M B t E R
$—
Tuesday, March 17, 1964
Tues<
Dr, Greenlee Speaks to BSU
% SERIOUS SUBJECT is the topic of discussion in this scene
from Clecpafrn, opening Thursday at the Ridglea Theatre. Rex
Harrison stars as Julius Caesar and Elizabeth Taylor as Cleopatra.
The multi-million dollar spectacle has been nominated for multi-
Academy Awards too. The Thursday opening marks the first run
in Fort Worth qt popular pricej. ^
DATELINE... TWC
TuestJa^, March 17
Mid-semester examinations
Wednesday. March 18
12:00 noon, BSU
6:30 p.m., MSM
Mid-semester examinations
Thursday, March 1"
5:30 p.m., WSQ
Midrsemes I er examinat ions
Friday, March 20
Autiss Work Night
Senior Recital
Mid-semester examinations
Saturday, March 21
DD-EA Easter Eg? Hunt
DD-EA Party
Band Clinic
APO Social
Mid-semester examinations
Monday, March 23
K-W !)., Deka
7 .70 " m. SE \
Dr. William P. Greenlee will lie
the speaker in Wednesday's Noon
Luncheon program at the BSU. Dr.
Greenlee is reference-research li-
brarian and assistant profess^' a
Southwestern Baptist Theological
Seminary. He is a 1949 graduate
«f Vanderbilt University. He re-
ceived his bachelor of divinity
(1957> and doctor of theology
(1960! decrees from Southwestern
Baptist Seminary. Dr. Greenlee
did his work for his doctor's degree
in the department of philosophy of j
"r'eligion. He has alsd'corripleted the
resident requirements for the M.A.;
degree in -philosophy at Texas
Christian University.
Dr. Greenlee is 'married to the |
former Sarah Lynn Estes, and he j
and Mrs. Greenlee have two dauash-I
ters, ages one and three. Dr. Green-1
lee ^served four years in the Air j
F(fl?e, and is presently a captain in
the Air Force Reserves. "
■%
Dan Hall
At their regular monthly meet-
ing, Dan Hall girls elected next j
year's officers. They include: pres-
ident, Ann MeClain: „,vice presi
dent, Patty Rucker; secretary
Elaine Blair; reporter, Carol Phil- ]
lips; social chairman, Kathleen I
Crenshaw.
The new officers will preside
over the April and May meetings.
This year's officers$vere: presi-
dent, Jane Rudolph; vice president.
Martha Hokett; secretary, Linda
Baldridge; reporter, Wanda John-
son,; social chairman, Susie Ford.
Omega Chi
The regular meeting of Omega
Chi will be held„in the Visual Aids
Room of the Library March 19,
The meeting will begin promptly
at 10:45 a.ni. and anyone that is
interested in finding out more
about Omega Chi and its program
is invited to come.
A film will be presented for this
month's program, The Valley of
Shadows.
Ca- n-.a Or.iicron
"A sM&wing of new spring fash-
ions was presented Tuesday night,
for Gamma Omlcron by Jean Kirk-
pa trick a "graduate of TWC and
fashion co-ordinator for Monnig s
Department Store.
The Home Economics Depart-
ment will have a style show at
' rr>:";l's Department Store Thurs-
and Friday afternoons. A fash-«
j->n show was also presented during
the weekly Tuesday assembly to-
day.
■Ca'hleen Crenshaw has been
named Home Economics Girl of the
Month.
*tV
Seersucker
Sport Coat
. <S>
Lightweight in Natural
shoulder, 3 button
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styled coat will
give ydu lots of
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warm weather wear
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in burgundy," gray, blue and gold.
\ o
Sizes 36 -42
18.95
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WA 7-0507
BUS MaxShuIrnan
(Author.of Raily Hound the Flag, Boys!!f
and ''Banfoot Bon With Check.1')
WELL-KNOWN FAMOUS PEOPLE: No. I
This,is the first in,.a series of 48 inilliop columns examining the
careers of men who have significantly altered the world we live
nave .--l
in. We begin today vvitTi Max Planck.
Max Planck (or The Pearl of the Pacific, ,as he is often
called) gave to modern physics the law known" sis PUuick's
Constant. Many people when they first hear of this law, throw-
up their hands and exclaim, "Golly whiskers, this is too deep
for little old me!"
(Incidentally, speaking of whiskers, I cannot help but men-
tion Personna Stainless Steel Razor Blades. Personna is the
blade for people who can't shave after every meal. It shaves
you closely, cleanly, and more frequentlythan any other*
■stainless steel 'blade on the market. The makers of Personna
have publicly declared—and do here repeat—that if Personna
Blades don't give you more luxury shaves than any other
stainless steel blade, they will buy you whatever 'Had
think is better. Could anything be more fair? 1, for one,
not.)
you
think
U?
wx mil's,4 W micdlon.
But I digress. We were speaking of Planck's Constant, which
js not, as many think, difficult to understand. It simply states
that matter sometimes behaves like waves, and waves some-
times behave like matter. To give you a homely illustration,
pick up your pencil and wave it. Your pencil, you will surely
agree, is matter—jWTfSiMPat the little rascal wave! Or take
flags. Or Ann-Margret.
Planck's Constant, uncomplicated as it is, nevertheless pro-
vided science with the key that unlocked the atom, made space
travel possible, and conquered denture slippage. Honors were
heaped upon Air. Planck (or The City of Brotherly Love, "as
he is familiarly known as). He was awarded the Nobel Prize,
the Little Brown Jug, and Disneyland. But the honor that
pleased Mr. Planck most was that plankton were named after
him.
Plafikton, as we know, are the floating colonic of one-celled
animals on which fishes* feed. Plankton, in their turn, feed
upon one-half celled animals called krill (named, incidentally,
after Dr. Morris Krill who invented,the house cat). Krill, in
their turn, feed upon peanut butter sandwiches mostly—or,
when they are in season, cheeseburgers.
But I digress. Back to Max Planck who, it must be said,
showed no indication of his scientific genius as a youngster.
In fact, for the first six years of his life he did not speak at all *
except to pound his spoon on his bowl and shout "More gruel!"
Imagine, then, the surprise of his parents when on his seventh
birthday little Max suddenly cried, "Papa! Mama! Something
is wrong with the Second Law of Thermodynamics!" So aston-
ished were the elder Plahcks that they rushed out and dug the
Kiel Canal.
Meanwhile Ma$, constructing a crude Petrie dish out of two
small pieces of petrie and his gruel bowl, began to experiment
with thermodynamics. By dinner time he had discovered
Planck's Constant. Hungry but happy, he rushed to Heidelberg
University to announce his findings. I le arrived, unfortunately,
during the Erich von Stroheim Sesquicentennial, and everyone
wafS'so busy dancing and duelling that, young Planck could find
nobody to listen to hiin.jThe festival, however, ended after
two years and Planck was finally able to report his discovery.
Well sir, the rest is history. Einstein gaily cried, "E equals
mc squared!" Edison invented Marconi. Eli Whitney invented
Georgia Tech, at)d Michelangelo invented the ceiling. This
later became known as the Humboldt Current.
(j$ 1UG4 Max fthulrnan
Mr. Shulnian in, of course, joshing, but the makers of
Personna IIlades arc not: if, after truing our blades, you
think {here's another stainlesA steel blade that gives gou
more luxury shaves, return the unused Pcrsonnas to Box
500, Staunton. Va., and we'll buy you a pack of any blade
you think i* better, " *
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Harvey, Rosanne. The Rambler (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 36, No. 19, Ed. 1 Tuesday, March 17, 1964, newspaper, March 17, 1964; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth337040/m1/4/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Texas Wesleyan University.