The Rambler (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 32, No. 5, Ed. 1 Tuesday, October 13, 1959 Page: 2 of 4
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Page 2
RAMBLER
Tuesday, Octol, ., % ;
m
ore
are
a
ean
Weeded 3or
Student C enter
Complaints have lujen made bv several persons, includ-
ing students, that we are not takinj? proper care of the
Hoax Student Center. Papers, books, candy wrappers, paper
cups and other such littering objects are continually left
lying about on tallies, tioor and couches.
The student center is for thevpleasure of the students
and we should have enough courtesy to pick up after
ourselves so that it will look its best at all times. We
have pride in our school and we are grateful for the op-
portunities which it affords us, and we could show our
appreciation by taking care of what we have.
Instead of picking up trash and depositing it in the
garbage cans, it seems much easier to let it lie where it
will be seen by all the visitors on the campus. Just
a few extra seconds on the part of everyone who uses
the privileges of the student center would give the center
a brighter, more enjoyable atmosphere.
Golden Shears
j4di on J, VeeJJ
+J^n Steel Strilti
The chances of a quick settlement of the steel strike
were judged hopeless Wednesday when United Steelworkers'
President McDonald dismissed the 170-man wage policy
committee of the union.
Both sides have been unyielding in their negotiation,
and the strike has continued for nearly three months. The
next step seemed to be the invocation of the Taft-Hartley
provisions for an 80-day cooling-off period, in which the
steel workers return to work.
The Unions disfavored the strike injunction and prefered
that a presidential fact-finding committee be appointed; but
under the provisions of the Taft-Hartley act, such a com-
mittee is limited to reporting the factsnvitffout a recommen-
dation.
We are in sympathy with the trade union movement and
recognize that without it the standard of living would be
much lower than it is, but we can see no excuse for this
strike.
It is reported that both the workers and the steel in-
dustry are in.a better financial situation than any others
in industry, and wage and price increases in our opinion
are not warranted.
We have long felt that there must be some stop to the
rising costs of living, and increased wages in the steel in-
dustry will only accelerate prices, because a raise in wages
will bring forth a proportionate rise in prices, and the spiral
continues to climb.
David Yates, senior social science
major from Waco, was presented
the Golden Shears award this
morning in chapel.
A transfer student from Baylor
University, Yates is a 1950 grad-
uate of Waco High School.
While in high school he was a
member of tha English Society,
Rostra Literary Society, school
choir and was a member of the
all-state choir.
Active in church work, he was
president of his MYF one year
while in high school and two years
when he attended Baylor.
At Baylor he was a member of
the a capella choir and served as
chairman of a fellowship team for
MSM.
Since coming to TWC he has
served as president of Men's Hall,
pledged Illotus Duodecim and was
elected president of Wesleyan
Singers last semester.
He is a member of the Collegium
Man About To
"if
JM
MAKING MUSIC TOGETHER—Mr. and
share an interest in music, both having
degrees from I.SU. The Bennetts will
Worth Symphony Orchestra this season.
Mrs. Roy K. Bennett
earned their masters'
both play in the Fort
l
Bennetts Make
Play Chamber
Music
C on Serua ti ue Ulcton
'©avid Yates
Musicum and has been active in
intramural sports; he was named
to the all-intramural basketball
team last year.
This year Yates is serving as
vice-president of the student asso-
ciation.
-y ,
Music is a family affair as well
as a profession for Mr. Roy E.
Letter To Seniors
To the Seniors:
Your attendance at the class
meeting recently was most en-
couraging, and I appreciated it
very much. My desire is that the
interest shown will continue
throughout the year making the
1959-fiO Senior Class the best ever.
I would urge all seniors who were
not present to attend all future
meetings. Participation is one of
the prime factors of a good class.
Again may-I say thanks for the
support and interest that was
shown.
Sincerely,
Richard Engle,
President.
Bennett and his wife.
Mr. Bennett, assistant professor
of music, teaches stringed instru-
ments, music theory and literature
and instrumental conducting but he
likes to relax in his home by play-
ing chamber music. Often he is ac-
companied by his wife, who plays
the piano and the French horn.
Mr. and Mrs. Bennett both came
to TWC from Louisiana State Uni-
versity, where they had teaching
fellowships and earned their mas-
ters' degrees. Prior to that they
had earned bachelors' degrees in
music educationwfrom Stetson Col-
lege in DeLand, Florida.
The Bennetts call Florida home,
having gone to school there and
married there, even though Ben-
net is a native of Pittsburg and
v
J/JfU WoMProLLm
The Labor Party of Great Britain took a crushing
defeat in the general elections of last week and left observers
wondering if perhaps this was not the death knell of the
party.
Prime Minister MacMillan, the leader of the Conserva-
tive Party, was left in command of the British government
and faces the next term of office with a strong Conserva-
tive majority in the House of Commons.
This has strong implications for the United States and
the Western Powers in that British foreign policy will re-
main the same with the possible summit conferences this
winter.
MacMillan has been a strong advocate of the conferences
and his government has taken a stronger position in the
leadership of the free world than the British government
has in the past.
While we have often been inclined to take a rather
weak stand against Russia, we feel that not having a change
in the British government will help the world situation at
this time.
The Rambler
OL Voice of owe
Student*
MEMBER
Texas Intercollegiate Press Association
Newspaper Advertising Executive Association, Inc.
Represented For National Advertising By
National Advertising Service,. Inc.
College Publishers Representative
t/jdZSMif 420 MADISON AVE. NEW YORK, N.Y.
P,<ESS Chicago - Boston - Lob Angolen - San Francisco
Entered as second-class matter September 17, 1947, at the poBt
office of Fort Worth, Texas, under the Act of Maroh 6, 1897.
Published each Tuesday during the school year, except holiday periods,
by students of Texas Wesleyan College, Fort Worth, Texas.
SUBSCRIPTION - School Year $1.50
Editor Joella Stephens
Assistant Editor Linda Boon
Faculty Advisor Mrs, Joann Langston
Page two editor Larry Rosser
Sports editor Larry Rosser
Business Manager Vance Englenian
Reporters: Bob Cash, Pat Kyser, Bill Childress, David Yates, Jane
Scott, Larry £itchens, Phyllis Alford, Joan Baumgartner,
Bill Russell and John Black.
Jackson's Company Visits Italy
Sees Milano, Agape, Genoa, Rome
first major stopping point.
The company visited a cathedral
which holds 30,000 people and was
used as a defense refuge in the
Middle Ages.
Agape, a protestant youth work
camp where young people from
many nations come to know each
other, was the sight of the group's
performance in Italy.
Young people of the camp are at
Editor's note: This is the
fourth in a series of articles
concerning the Christian Faith
and Arts Tour of Europe taken
by Dennis Jackson, senior Eng-
lish and music major from Fort
Worth.
Italy was the next country tour-
ed by the performing group; and
Milano, a city which was 45 per
cent destroyed by war, was the
QUESTION OF THE WEEK
Students Favor Use
Of Taft-Hartley Bill
Do you think President Eisenhower should have invoked the Taft-
Hartley act against the steel strikers? Why?
Dennis Jackson, senior social science major from Fort Worth:
Yes. he should have invoked the Taft-Hartley act because they
have not used collective bargaining in the right way. I'm not in
favor, however, of the federal government having too much power.
The labor unions are pricing American businesses out of the
/market. Labor unions a re forcing the American workers to lose their
individualism. % ^
* # * *
Jack Beech, special student from Fort Worth who is working on
his Bachelor of Arts degree:
Yes, President Eisenhower should have invoked the Taft-Hartley
act against the steel strikers.
The unions are hurting their own cause in this strike. The econ-
omy will not stand more advances in steel prices. The foreign markets
are now under-pricing us by approximately 20 per cent.
* + * *
Vance Engleman, senior social science major from Dallas:
If the steel strike had been allowed to continue, it would have
created not only a national emergency but an international conflict
as well.
* * *
Merrick Davis, senior social science major from Fort Worth:
Y«s. The steel industry and the union- had had ample time to
settle this dispute. Every day more and more related areas are being
forced to curtail operations because of the lack of steel.
The coal industry is laying off workers because the closed
steel mills use no coal. The railroads which transport, the coal, steel
products and ore have been forced to halt onto operations and lay-
off workers.
Soon the automobile industry will use up their stockpiles of steel
and will be forced to cut back th, ir labor forces.
The steel strike affects the entire American economy. The person
who should be most, concerned with this problem i the President, who
represents the American people. He face the decision of whether to
ask the courts for an injunction or allow the economy of the nation
to be harmed.
The President's decision Was fairly obvious.
present building a church for the
Waldensens, the first true protec-
tants dating as far back as 1183.
Here the company experienced
singing hymns simultaneously with
people speaking French, Italian,
German and English.
In Genoa the performers swam
in the Mediterranean, saw the
Leaning Tower of Pisa and the
baptistry, in which Jackson says a
single note of an instrument can
be played and the entire chord will
be heard.
Going over the countryside in a
leisurely manner to Rome, the
group saw the typical Italians and
their ways of life.
In Rome they visited one of the
48 catacombs, the colosseum, the
Roman Forum Palatium, the Ap-
pian Way and listened to music
in sidewalk cafes.
They saw the Vatican, met the
Pope in a conference along with
300 other students and visited St.
Paul's Cathedral and Michael-
angelo Square. 6
Journeying on to Florence, the
group saw the unfinished works of
Miehaelangelo, heard music in
the Babali Gardens and visited
the Roman Amphitheater.
Jackson was impressed by the
beauty of the mosaics in the
tombs at Ravenna.
At the University of Padua the
group saw the funeral of a pro-
fessor who committed suicide after
riot receiving a much wanted pro-
motion. "II is unbelievable bow im-
portant promotions and things of
that sort, are in Italy,"' Jackson
said.
\ iewing Renaissance art was one
of the high points of the stay in
Florence, according to Jackson.
In Venice the touring young peo-
ple rode gondolas, watched glass
blowers, swam at Lido Beach and
saw St. Mark's Cathedral.
One evening they went out on
a lagoon and heard music. *'Venice
is a city of music; the common
people hum and whistle the operas
and classical music," Jackson in-
formed.
Witnessing the opera Faust in
(Continued on Page
Theatergoers in this area have
the rare opportunity of seeing a
thoroughly delightful brand new
comedy stage show even before
it opens on Broadway. Fresh from
the pen of young New York prize-
winning playwright, Kenneth Cam-
eron, Physician For Fools is enjoy-
ing a highly successful premiere
at the Margo Jones Theater in
Dallas. '
Physician For Fools, set in early
eighteenth century England, con-
tains an ingenousely and closely
interwoven plot that leaves the
audience either laughing or think-
ing from the opening to the closing
curtain. The play lives up to its
expectations as a comedy and yet
offers more philosophy than is nor-
mally to be found among comedies.
This is more of an asset than a
liability to this show.
Besides being a new play, the
production took place in the newly
opened Margo Jones proscenium
stage at the new Mnple Theater,
which was recently opened as an
off-Broadway type house.
Guest, director Bill Butler has
done a splendid job of creating life
to Mr. Cameron's script, which was
one among eight chosen from a
field of 240 to receive the highly
coveted $10,000 Ford Foundation
grant by the Foundation Cultural
Together,
To Relax
his wife comes from Spartanburg,
S. C.
After graduating front Stetson
Bennett taught public school mus-
ic in the Orlando school district in
Florida before he and his wife
went to Baton Rouge to attend
LSU.
While living in Baton Rouge,
Bennett and his wife claim to have
lived better tha-n most of the mar-
ried students on the campus by
buying a trailer to live in. This
was a necessity, Bennett reported,
because of the crowded housing
conditions on the LSU campus.
Even so, bicycles were required
for the Bennetts to commute from
their trailer to school. Automobiles
are not allowed on the LSU cam-
pus.
Active in civic music organiza-
tions, Mr. and Mrs. Bennett were
both members of the Baton Rouge
Symphony Orchestra while they
were at LSU. They will both play
in the Fort Worth orchestra this
year.
Mr. and Mrs. Bennett also share
tennis as a hobby. "We are both
strictly amateurs in the game,"
Bennett ccrffflessed, "but we have
fun on the clay."
Another hobby his wife enjoys
is sewing.
-by Bob ('ash-
Arts and Huttiaiii
in a nutshell th
an embittered d«)<-<..
tempt for most hi
life In general due
he had once been
unfaithful wife. 11
sophical gloom
quity by accidet \
seduced his wife
scene, as do a n
unexpected and ui"
in his home.
The doctor d e \
scheme to exi-hatic
soul mate for an
from the gallmvs w
coaling in aunt hi
house. This works -
iently as the soldi
tioner seeking the •
do not actually care
as long as they can ;
for their own satis!'.,
ing that they have
The manner in»■
carries out his plan at
of comic episodes in
of his other guest-
One of these two go,,
the doctor in bis i !
sightly, but wise old I
other, a beautiful w<
the doctor's ago wh-'
house originally on:;
fuge front a raging
and to whom the >i'
tingly attracted by ;
coted by the beggar,
own way, the role i
couple.
The co-leads of 1.)" •
and Madame B«aupr>- a
played by Albert DekK.
Atwater respectively,
whom are seasonal ;
theatrical world. Too ■■
not be said in their b< ;
One of the true star
cast was David Hurst,
the part of the begga:.
in complete command
at all times, as was
company. After view
(Continued on IV
It.ii
a?
." a ho;
""<! ti
«'k n
, lbri
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■I Era
Sophomores C
Two "Typica
Two seemingly heavy-
dragged onto the stage
arts auditorium by
Johnny Nabors and D
the Thursday chapel.
Dove, president of
more class, then made
tation speech annou:
Judy Johnson and Frar.i
the sophomore choic.
"Typical Fish" award
1960. They were ea 1
with one of the boxv
Digging into the b,
found that they we:
only with scads of new
freshman beanies with
and the instription 1
embroidered in white
',00!
isli
moves
jfj Englen
year's
■ and thl
CLUBS|
I
fin
The it,
chapters
dav fml
| pal lor c
f Guest
RlC R('\|
I flargari
Mrs. C
dent. 'I
iosts a|
The Kaleidoscop
by Larry Rosser
WASHINGTON—President Dwight I). Eisenhower ,
three-man fact-finding committee to investigate the
Saturday. Appointed to the committee were George V,
Iniversity of Pennsylvania professor, John N. Perkiiv
of Delaware University, and Paul N. Lehoczhy of Obi >
versity. All three are veteran .labor arbitrators. Tavloi
chairman of the war labor board during World War 11
finding group is to report its findings by Oct. lfi, bin
sooner if it reports a national emergency. The govern
then seek an 80-day injunction, which will return the >-■■■
to their jobs.
MOSCOW—Russian Premier Nikita Khrushchev told a K':
in Siberia that they w^re beginning to dress better, but t!
a little dull. This would indicate that Khrushchev was imr
bright colors of American dress, but in the same speech
door on the interchange of American films and books, !<
ers that the American people wanted to send poisonec
them.
i rike
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lues
Wedl
Thu|
Friill
Sat il
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Monl
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TAIPEI, FORMOSA—Nationalist Chinese report a
type landing on the Clmta mainland Sunday by Natii-
men. In the landing, the^ogmen planted Nationalist II >■,
plies for Nationalist sympathizers on the mainland, T'
said to have a propaganda value rather than a military >
lPtrati.J
some
iuildinJ
Two 1
tli' • V I'||
from
from I'J
An
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federal!
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MOSCOW -A Soviet scholar has said that Christopher 1
ly knew about the American continent before he sailed
maps of the Caribbean Islands. The Russian further
bus and King Ferdinand were in agreement to paint the
as a land of opportunity to encourage Spanish coloni.',*
* * * * *
STOCKHOLM—Citizens and patrons of the arts are in
in the Swedish capitol over the redecoration of the intt
Royal Theater. The interior has been finished in red. but
call for a blue interior. Citizens are saying that il gets <
in Stockholm without the aid of blue paint to give the
actress is threatening to quit the theater if they carry <
design. She says that it will be impossible for her to
audience in such a place.
. pros'
of
plai
nut'1
'W'.VHtfiii
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Stephens, Joella. The Rambler (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 32, No. 5, Ed. 1 Tuesday, October 13, 1959, newspaper, October 13, 1959; Fort Worth, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth415866/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Texas Wesleyan University.