The Campus Chat (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 40, No. 25, Ed. 1 Wednesday, January 9, 1957 Page: 3 of 4
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Wednesday, Jan. 9. I9S7
Organizations Schedule Elections,
Plan Meetings Before Dead Week
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The Campus Chat
AMUSEMENTS-ACTIVITIES
A.-- dead week draws close, cam-
pus organizations are m a k i n g
plans to bring semester activities
to a close.
Clubs are preparing for next
semester with election of new of-
ficers, consideration of prospective
members, and end-of-the-seniester
parties.
\V. N. Masters Club
Members of the W. N. Masters
club will meet Thursday at 7:30
p.m. A nominating committee will
be chosen to elect next semester's
officers, club members indicated
Monday.
Delta Sigma I'i
About twenty-five members of
Delta Sigma I'i, professional bus-
iness fraternity, and their dates
attended a New Year's eve party nt
the Travis hotel in Dallas, accord-
ing to Johnny Kuehn, chapter re-
porter from Wichita Falls.
Officers of the fraternity were
elected Dec. 17 with Jack Fincher
from De Kidder elected as junior
vice-president. Other officers elected
CO-ED
Drive - In - Theatre
Now Showing Thru Saturday
Features 7:05 & 9:00
"FIRST RUN"
Wherever he rode
his past was always
ahead of him
4 , • i
TEXAS
Thursday Friday Saturday
• •
* •
MARK HFUINGER ?
BURT LANCASTER
AVA GARDNER
KnXEBS
7
EDHOMOMOl
AUXST DOWER - SAM UYUK1
RICHARD CONTE
ICOUf M OUAYl
were Jay Wilhite from Weather-
ford, secretary; Harold HatclitT
from Dallas, treasurer, and Bill
Pearson from Olney, reporter-his-
torian.
(•amma Iota Chi
Members of Gamma Iota Chi will
nominate prospective members for
next semester at the weekly meet-
ing to be held Thursday at C:30
p.m. The names will be presented
at the following meeting and voted
on, Conrad Kzell, club secretary
said Monday.
Chat Error Swamps
Movie With Calls
An error of approximately one
month in the Dec. 19 Campus Chat
swamped the Campus theatre tele-
phone for approximately three
hours, according to Betty Ander-
son, secretary to J. P. Harrison,
manager of the theatre.
The error was an advertisement
of the film "Giant," which will be-
gin Jan. 17 at the theatre.
Gamma lota Chi is a fraternity
composed entirely of ex-service
men who receive a favorable vote
of the entire membership.
Theta Sigma Phi
Thela Sigma Phi, national wo-
men's journalism fraternity, will
have a meeting today at 6:30 p.m.
in the journalism building. They
will discuss election of officers
for next semester.
Senior Mary Arden
Dr. Virginia Haile, club sponsor,
showed slides of her travels in
Canads. and the United States last
summer at a meeting of Senior
Mary Arden Monday at 0:30 p.m.
at the Mary Arden lodge.
Betty Ledbetter, Lewisville, was
program leader for the meeting.
Hostesses were Caroline Uriegas,
Uvalde; Joann Switzer, Dallas;
Kdra Smith, Fort Worth, and Pat
Few, Midlothian.
Sigma Tau Delta
"Opportunities for English Ma-
jors" was the topic of discussion
for the meeting of Sigma Tau
Delta Tuesday at 6:30 p.m. in the
auditorium building.
A ill an
like SHANE
..the suspense
of HIGH NOON
RADIO PICTuHS
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Now Showing
• • •
W
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ON THE
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STUDENT
ART THEATRE
"GAY and AMUSING...
• nd lh« girlt, ooiIIki ol llirni.
bouncing about in bri«fii>«. Bikini*
•nit otb«r
attractively
abbreviated
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MAIWCE
CHEWIER
Afy Seve/J
— — f
2 performances daily; 2 p.m.
& 7:30 p.m.
All Seats 50 cents
Free coffee in lobby
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Drama Group Will Present
Comedy as Season's Finale
Supper Theatre's lirst comedy of
the season will be presented Thurs-
day and Friday, according to Da-
vid Maberry, managing director.
This last play of the semester will
be presented following supper at
7 p.m. in the union building cafe-
teria. he added.
"Spreading the News," by Lady
Augusta Gregory, is a "story of
how rumors start and grow," said
Bob Baruch, director of the play.
"It is an Irish comedy, and it is
the lirst show of the season to be
done completely in-the-round," he
added.
Baruch explained that when
Lady Gregory began writing the
script of "Spreading the News,"
she saw the play as a tragedy, but
she wrote an Irish comedy to meet
HURSHEL FARROW and Mary
Anne McNamara rehearse a
scene from Lady Augusta Greg-
ory's "Spreading the Nows."
The play will be Supper Thea-
tre's final offering for the fall
semester.
N« wh Service I'hoto
As Semester Closes . .
Students, Exes Reveal Wedding Plans
Congratulations are in order for
North Texas students and exes
who are announcing recent mar-
riages and engagements.
Bailey-MrKlhanon
Miss Naomi Frances Bailey be-
came the bride of First Lt. Michael
Owen McKlhanon Saturday night
in Memorial chapel of the First
Methodist church in Fort Worth.
The bride attended North Texas.
Logan-Goforth
Miss Lerline Virginia Logan and
Joe Evans Goforth, Overton, will
be married on Feb. at Oak Knoll
Baptist church, Fort Worth.
Miss Logan is a graduate of
North Texas and is attending the
School of Medical Technology at
St. Paul's hospital in Dallas. Her
fiance is a student at North Texas,
where he will be graduated this
###########################♦###•
Classifieds
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BKCCE DAVIS, Attorney
208-200 McClurkan Building
(Over Russell's Department Store)
Denton, Texas Telephone C-4022
General Civil Practice All Courts
month. He is a member of Kappa
Mil Epsiion.
Parvin-llubbard
Miss Peggy Nell Parvin and
Robert Gene Hubbard announced
their engagement and approaching
marriage. Hubbard is a graduate
of North Texas.
Austin-llnys
Miss Andrea Austin and Joe Sam
Hays, hot.i of Fort Worth, were
married Friday in the home of the
bride's parents. Hays attended
North Texas.
Braden-Snrgent
Miss Jonnie Dell Braden and Ar-
thur Sargent will lie married on
Felt. 0 in St. Barnabas Episcopal
church, Denton.
Miss Braden is a graduate of
Polytechnic high school in Fort
Worth, and her fiance is a student
at North Texas.
Cslvert-ltrowser
Miss La Metta Calvert and
Barry L. Browser, Indianapolis,
Ind., were married Saturday night
in the First Baptist church, Dal-
las.
The bride attended North Texas
and is a graduate of Texas State
College for Women. She belonged
What young people are doing at General Electric
Young engineer
pioneers new ways
to use x-ray
A new x-ray inspection system which intensi-
fies an x-ray image more than 10,000 times in
brightness and transmits it to a conventional
TV screen has been developed recently by
General Electric. When perfected, it may en-
able medical specialists to perform "long-dis-
tance." diagnosis on patients in remote areas.
One of the principal men who developed x-ray
television — called TVX for short — is Dr. John
E. Jacobs, Manager of the Advanced Develop-
ment Laboratory of General F.lectric's X-Ray
Department in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.
Jacobs' Work Is Important, Responsible
As an electronics specialist, Dr. Jacobs' work
in the past has been devoted to the study of
photoconductors—substances whose properties
change under the influence of radiation — and
the use of x-ray in industrial inspection. This
in turn led to his development of the x-ray-
sensitive camera tube used in TVX,
His present administrative duties with the
Advanced Development Lab allow him more
time for teaching others what he has learned.
Me now teaches the second-year graduate course
al Northwestern in vacuum-tube networks, and
ha* recently been named McKay Visiting Pro-
fessor for 1957 by the University of Galifornia
at Berkeley, where he will give a two-week
series of lectures on photoconduction.
27,000 Collefe Graduates at General Electric
Since his youth, when he was a licensed radio
'"ham. John Jacobs has been devoted to the
study of electricity and electronics. Like each
of our 27/KK) college graduates, he is being
given the chance to grow tnd realize his full
potential. For General Electric ha* long be-
lieved this: when fre«h young mind* are given
the freedom to develop, everybody benefits —
the individual, the Gompany. and the country.
Educational Relations, General Electric
Company, Schenectady 5, New York
D* JOHN E JACOBS <>n. r;il ! !.■. ■
trie full limn in I9!i0, uftrr rcccififig lii*
U.S. in rtwiriml engineering in '17, lii*
M S. in '-18, ami hi* I'll l>. in '50, all a
Nortliw * lcrii Univ. If«• served in till* Navy
in World War II. and worked part time
at (General Electric while in college
I
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<««•* •
Progress Is Our Most Important Product
GENERAL % ELECTRIC
to Delta l'si Kappa, Alpha Chi,
and L'Allegro and is a member of
the American Occupational Ther-
apy association.
Mart in-McClcwkey
Miss Frances Martin, Dallas,
and Carl McCIeskey, Stephenvillc,
arc planning a Feb. 1(1 wedding at
Oak ClilT Christian church. Mc-
CIeskey is a North Texas grad-
uate.
Hodgson-Harvey
Jonell Hodgson and Allan Har-
vey will be married Jan. .'10. Miss
Hodgson is business manager of
the Campus Chat, and Harvey is
editor of the Avesta.
Kibler Office Supply
Your only authorized
Royal Typewriter Distributor
Now colored 1957 model Royal
portables with twin pale ribbons
--nothing down, 24 months to
pay
SALES SERVICE RENTALS
202 N. Elm Ph. C-6322
the demands of the theatre she was
working with. The gossip of a
small Irish town provides the back-
ground for the Irish wit which the
play possesses.
Members of the cast include:
Magistrate, David Maberry; Po-
liceman, Hob I.indley; Mrs. Tar-
pcy, Mary Anne McNamara; Mrs.
Fallon, Deloris Wooldridge; Bart-
ley Fallon, llurshel Farrow Jr.;
Jack Smith, Kent Chapman; Tim
Casey, Hob Martin; James Ryan,
Hohert Sewell; Mrs. Tully, Janet
Harris, and Shawn Karly, Bob
Iser.
Thespians Announce Choice
For Original One-Act Drama
"The Constant Game" by Bob
Porter, a senior student from Mes-
quite, has been selected as the
original one-act play that will be
presented by Supper Theatre, an-
nounced David Maberry, managing
director of the group. The play will
be presented on Feb. 14 and 15.
Porter's play has been chosen
because of its "originality and
cleverness of dialogue," noted Ma-
berry. "The characters are also
definite," he added.
The selection of the play was
made during the holidays by Dr.
K. V. Holland, director of the
speech and drama department, and
officers of Supper Theatre.
Uuth Gill, secretary of Supper
Theatre, will direct this fifth origi-
nal play by a North Texa.i student.
IT'S FOR REAL
by Chester Field
PINNY WISE*
POUND FOOLISH
"I'm sad to any," said Tootaie Brown,
"The weight I gain just gets me down,
Each bite, each drop of this or that,
Immediately turns to fat.
Some girls, I note, can eat. and eat
And yet they still look trim and neat.
To aggravate the situation
I much dialike my fat's location.
I wouldn't so much want to change mo,
If only I could rearrange me."
MOIALt Rearrange your smoking
ideas and find what contentment
means. Get rval pleasure, rra/
satisfaction, with Chesterfield—the
cigarette that's packed more
smoothly by Accu • Ray for the
smoothest-tasting smoke today!
Smoke for rool .. . smoke Chesterfield
'tM> gnrt to ANN III ACKMAH. /louVin* Oiwn
State Unn+rtity fur her ('he*ter Field poem
O U««ett A Mrert Totoreo Co.
rjjm
m
clearance
♦ Use our easy credit plans
CHARGE ACCOUNT—LAY-AWAY
REVOLVING CREDIT
FALL AND WINTER DRESSES
NOW </j PRICE
Tailored, semidross and
after-five frocks in an
excellent assortment.
Values 9.98 to 39.98
$5.00 to $19.98
SALE! LEATHER SPORT JACKETS
Only a few remaining.
Waist length and fingertip
jackets reduced. Values
19.98 to 29.98
$15.00 and $20.00
SALE! WARM WINTER COATS
A few wool coats in full
length and shortie length
styles. Values
$19.98 to $39.98
$13.00 to $25.00
SALE! WARM QUILTED ROBES!
Cotton, nylon, and rayon
crepe robes—a few
cotton flannels
Values 7.98 to 22.98
SPORTS WEAR
Odds and ends in blouses,
Bermuda shorts, skirts,
jackets and sweaters
NOW Vi PRICE
CASHMERE
COATS
Pull length luxury cashmeres
in navy, red and grey.
Limited selection
Reg. $110.00 Values
NOW $65.00
$5.00 to $15.00
SWEATERS
A group of orlon cardigans
in many attractive styles
and colors. Values to $12.98
NOW $7.00
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Graves, Frances. The Campus Chat (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 40, No. 25, Ed. 1 Wednesday, January 9, 1957, newspaper, January 9, 1957; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth306885/m1/3/: accessed April 24, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting UNT Libraries Special Collections.