The North Texas Daily (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 55, No. 67, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 3, 1972 Page: 3 of 6
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: North Texas Daily / The Campus Chat and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the UNT Libraries Special Collections.
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Thursday, February 3,1972
THE NORTH TEXAS DAILY-PADS 3
Tournaments
Scheduled
For Debaters
Debate teams from North Texas will
attend the Baylor University tournament
in Waco and the Bethel College tourna-
ment at Newton, Kan., this weekend, Dr.
Ben Chappell, director of forenics, said
Wednesday.
Storm Kuykendall, Marshville, N.C.,
junior, and Barbara Perry, Denton sopho-
more, members of the varsity team, will
represent North Texas in Waco. Stewart
Sharp, assistant coach, will accompany
them.
Dr. Lee Polk, a graduate and ex-debater
from North Texas, will host the tournament
in Waco. Polk is now the head coach of the
Baylor debate team.
At Bethel College, open division teams
attending from North Texas will include
Dan Kever, Sherman junior, and Tim Her-
ron, Mesquite sophomore; Roni Milam,
Mascoutah, 111., freshman, and Marsha
Rulenbar, Dallas sophomore; Debby
Branaman, Lubbock sophomore, and Mary
Guerrero, San Antonio freshman, Robert
James, Corpus Christi freshman, and Mike
McKinley, Brownsville freshman; and John
Richardson, Pittsburg freshman, and
George Robinson, Denton freshman.
Vic Kinney, Odessa senior, will enter
the tournament in oratory and poetry read-
ing. Dr. Chappell will accompany the
group.
“This is the first time we have competed
in this event, but since it is sweepstakes
competition, and we won first place in
Kansas earlier in the year, we hope to re-
peat,” Chappell said.
Choreographer Helps SAU plan*
In Nonmusical Play Cable Hogue
For Tonight
Stand Up Straight
Sharon Argo, Kansas City. Mo., graduate assistant, right, shows Clyde
McNeal, San Antonio freshman, center, and Joan Nelson, Dallas freshman,
left, how to walk, talk and breathe 17th century style This dance training
begins the rehearsal for “The Miser" each day The play will run Feb 22 26
By MARY READ
Daily Reporter
“The Miser,” the drama division’s next
major production, is not a musical but it
has a choreographer.
Many people relate dance only to a musi-
cal play, but dance training is important in
any play, Sharon Argo, choreographer and
assistant director of the production, said.
Mrs. Argo, a graduate assistant in
drama, earned a bachelor of fine arts degree
in dance from the University of Missouri
There, she studied under a researcher and
specialist in period dancing. Much of what
she learned is being used during the 30-
minute special dance movement sessions
she leads the actors through before every
rehearsal of “The Miser.”
The actors practice walking with their
spines straight, bowing and making the
mannerisms and deliberate gestures of
people of the early 17th century to a record-
ing of music from this time. Mrs. Argo
hopes the actors will “transfer what I’ve
been working with them on into the heart
ol the play.
If, when the actors move across the stage
or stand and say their lines, they no longer
stand and walk like 20th century man, then
the play will be total period period cos-
tumes, period music and period movement,
she said.
Because of the comedy nature of the play
and the lightness and brightness of it, Mrs
Argo said, it lends itself very well to dance
movements. Not quite half of the actors
play “charater characters." The only actual
Thursday, Feb. 3, 1972
Open Rush sign-up, Dean of Students Office, Administration
Building.
4 p m Planning session for Recycling Center, Room 302, Union
Building, free.
b p.m. Tri-Service Club meeting, Third Floor, Union Building.
6:30 p.m. David Cowperthwaite Trumpet Recital, Music Recital Hall,
free.
7:30 p.m. Dan Clark, Denton Sheriff candidate. Young Democrats
meeting. Room 305, Union Building, free
7:30 p.m Afro-American Student Union meeting. Third Floor, Union
Building.
7:30 p.m NT-Creighton University, Omaha, Neb
7:30 p.m. Missionary Baptist Student Fellowship meeting, “Security of
the Child of God,” University Chapel, Eagle behind Kerr Hall
X p.m “The Ballad of Cable Hogue," SAU movie, Main Auditor-
ium, Admission 50 cents and ID.
8:15 p.m. Kitty Carlisle Lecture, “First Person Singular,” Music Recital
Hall, free.
English Faculty Publishes
Regional Literary Journal
Interviews To Start
For Business Grads
Schedules arc now available for job in-
terviews for next week Interested persons
can obtain a schedule in the Business Em-
ployment Office, Room 168 in the Business
Administration Building.
The interviews are as follows:
On Monday, Robert R. Owen will be in
Suite E interviewing May and August grad-
uates holding a bachelor’s degree in
accounting. He is a representative of the
Alford Meroney & Co. and will be inter-
viewing for the position of accountant.
On Tuesday, Burl Wilcox from the U S.
Army Audit Agency will be in Suite A in-
terviewing May and August graduates with
bachelor’s and master’s degrees in Account-
ing. He will be interviewing for the position
of auditor trainee.
On Tuesday and Wednesday, Paul Day
from the Ford Motor Credit Company will
be in Suite E interviewing May graduates
with bachelor's degrees in business, eco-
nomics and accounting, or master’s degrees
in business, math, statistics, economics and
industrial relations. Day is interviewing for
positions in management, insurance claims,
finance, marketing and systems analysis.
On Wednesday, Homer Smith from
Southwestern Life Insurance Company
will be in Suite A interviewing May and
August graduates with bachelor’s degrees
in any major from the School of Business
Administration. Smith will be interviewing
for positions in management development
Also on Wednesday, Tom Hassey from
National < hemsearch Corp will be in
Suite B interviewing May graduates with
bachelor’s and master's degrees in any
major from the School of Business Admin-
istration. He will be interviewing for posi-
tions as management trainees
Chester DeCordova from the tirm of
Laventhol, Krekstein, Horwath & Hor-
watli will be in Suite f interviewing May
and August graduates with bachelor's and
masters degrees in accounting for the posi-
tion of accountant.
Wednesday through Friday, represen-
tatives from the Marines will be in the first
floor lobby of the Business Administration
Building to give information on their vari-
ous officer training programs
On Thursday, representatives of the
Women’s Army Corps (WAC) will be in
the first floor lobby of the Business Admin-
istration Building to give general informa-
tion on the different programs for the W AC
On Friday, Fred I... Jones from the Fort
Worth National Bank will be in Suite 1
interviewing May and August graduates
with bachelor’s degrees in all business re-
lated majors for positions in marketing and
credit trust
Persons interested in being interviewed
by a representative of any of these com-
panies should go by the Business Employ-
ment Office and sign the company schedule
for the time preferred Company literature
is available in the office for review pro-
ceeding the interviews.
The second issue of “Southwestern
American Literature" has been released by
the English faculty.
Edited by Mrs. Helen L. Leath of the
English taculty, the journai contains uiti-
des on literature and other related fields
of interest in the Southwestern region.
Commenting on the journal, Mrs. Leath
said, "The aim of the journal is not to ex-
amine exclusively the so-called great litera-
ture of the Southwest, but to expand and
encourage the new literature peculiar to
this region "
“This new literature deals with, among
other things the chicano and Indian heri-
tage which is found in the Southwest," she
added.
The current journal contains articles by
Cecil Robinson, University of Arizona, on
“An updating of‘With Ears of Strangers’ ”;
John N. Igo Jr., San Antonio College, on
"A Hidden Southwest Cycle”; Henry L.
Alsemeyer, a doctoral English student at
Texas A&M University, on “A Preliminary
Southwestern Reconnaissance”; Turner S.
Kohler, TWU, on “Alice Marriott: The
Anthropologist as Artist”; and Steven
Turner, UT-Arlington, on "Bill Casey:
Jottings Before a Journey."
The journal also contains essay reviews
by Richard W. Etulain, Idaho State Uni-
versity, on Benjamin Capps’ “The White
Man’s Road"; and Richard B. Sale, North
Texas, or. three novels of Winstnn Weath-
ers. The journal includes a section of book
reviews.
A publication of the Southwestern
American Literature Association, the jour-
nal is financed by the membership dues of
the four Southwestern states: Texas, North
Mexico, Arizona and Oklahoma.
Subscription rates for the journal are S3
yearly; single copies are $1 and back issues
$1.50.
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dance in the play involves the “delightful
little quintet of goofy, bumbling servants,”
she said
Mrs. Argo, whose husband Neil, a com-
position major, plays the lead role of Har-
pagon, believes in the fusion of music, thea-
ter and dance. With those departments in
different buildings and the curriculum not
being planned for it, it is hard to make this
a reality, she said In today’s creative envi-
ronment, it is becoming increasingly neces-
sary and valuable for all of these three areas
to work together, she said.
“Singers who traditionally just stand
and sing, bodies totally immobile, should
have acting and dance training,” she said
Actors, to move or dance, should have
an understanding of movement on stage
and an understanding of music. According
to Mrs. Argo, the most exciting performer
today is the one who has freedom of body
movement the one who is able to integrate
whatever particular art form he is using
with body movement and expression, to
create overall visual excitement through
movement
“There are many dance-oriented people
in this department (speech and drama)
and many fine dancers. They create a very
exciting visual form because of their body
movement and their freedom,” she said
When an actor uses his body in perform-
ing, people say he is a “natural,'' but this
can be learned, she said.
The play is scheduled for Feb. 22-26
in the University Theatre.
“The Ballad of Cable Hogue" is the Stu-
dent Activities Union (SAU) movie of the
week tonight at 8 in the Main Auditorium.
The warm, human story about love and a
constant battle for survival is from Warner
Bros, and is directed by the notoriously
violent Sam Peckinpah.
Peckinpah turns from the violence of the
“Wild Bunch” to create a truly comical
story, with sad moments and episodes Tilled
with dramatic action
Jason Robards stars as the flinty desert
rat who learns to survive in the desert.
Stella Stevens is his true love and David
Warner is the self-styled, itinerant preacher
with an unfailing eye for women
Time magazine calls "Cable Hogue”
"an exceptionally fine movie.” Newsweek
and Life praise the performers, saying, "a
remarkable set of performances” and “the
best Robards has ever had a compelling
film
Also showing will be a short of the adven-
tures of Commander Cody.
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The North Texas Daily (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 55, No. 67, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 3, 1972, newspaper, February 3, 1972; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth760034/m1/3/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting UNT Libraries Special Collections.