The Rambler (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 37, No. 13, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 17, 1964 Page: 4 of 8
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—««S$I
Page Four
THE R A MBIEK
Steps Taken To De
?vei oi
US. ' Musicales Chapter J
. . . AND THE SHAVING CREAM spread from the Deka pledges to the Sakkara pledges and then
back again. No telling who got the worst of it as the rain fell and the temperature dropped, but
all went well in the annual shaving cream fight last week. Rambler Staff Photo
First. Mej/s hast' °« en
develop a nationwide ne'work ■'
Jmimw Musicales chapter's or.
the campus <M accredited four-yea r
colleges and universities in ihe
United Slates.
Theae chapters will be allied to
"Carnegie Hali-Jeunessc-s,
calesa new national organiza-
tion. which brings the United
States into the ranks of the world-
wide Jeunes.se-s Musicales. move-
ment,...,
Jeunesses Musicales Ls a move-
ment which makes gwl music
more readily accessible to youth
and young adults between the ages
of 15 and 30. It stimulates their
involvement in •music- as listeners
and ew--ou rages their participation
in the mufyeai life of the country,
as performers, composers and cri-
tics 1
fv.'
Ac
City
The
forum
activ it
ideas .
Organizations
Sakkara Initiates Nine Members
Though its activities vary from
country to country, its basic pat-
tern is the presentation of concert
series, supplemented by the for-
mation of youth ensembles, the en-
couragement of gifted young ar-
tists through competitions and in-
ternationai exchange and the publi- ] ,1
cation of a national journal. Some
of the national organizations oper-
The night that the rains came SSkkara pledges held their the Sakkara pledges wound up
down — so did the shaving cream! Christmas drawing Dec. 8 for the their nine weeks pledgeship Sun-
For Deka and Sakkara pledges, RCA portable record player. The day afternoon. At that time the
the rain Dec. 9 did not stop the winning ticket belonged to Mary nine pledges took their oath of , . ... ,
annual pledges shaving cream Alice King, junior from Fort membership. New members include 'J.'. ."J,"1. euous. ne>\ rr.u
fight. The event was held in front Worth. The drawing was held as Tony Torres. Don Ray. Jack Stute-
of Dora Roberts Dining Hall. It's a money-making project for the ville, Jim Nored, Rick Child. Dick
hard to say who won — for both 1964 Sakkara pledge class. Kidd, Walter Hoover, M. L. Ward
teams came out on bottom — with Pledgeship Ends and Darryi Wheat.
shaving cream flying! With many peojects now past. .Autiss
may b
ture-s
from '
dua'.e
office;
Life
sic and issue recordings.
Its basic purpose is to bring
students together in a campus or-
Engineering, Mathematics
Jr.-Year-Abroad Program To Begin
Next September in France by T.E.S.
Autiss pl^dges^'Yiave !>een busy
with their Christmas greeting to
the school and various projects to
raise m o n e y. Last week they
had a donut sale in all four dor
mitories.
Last Friday, Autiss and Altoco
had their Christmas party at the
home of Ann Dews. Tonight the
club will go caroling at a local
rest home.
Peggy Jay was installed as pres-
ident upon the resignation of Ann
ganization which advocates music
and related arts as an integral
part of the civilized way of life.
This is accomplished through con-
certs. lectures, discussions, exhibits
and, when the need is felt, the
formation of choral and instrumen-
tal ensembles. Assistance in plan-
ning these events is provided by
NOTICE!
AU students who wish to re-
appiy for scholarships and'or
workships for the spring semester
must come by the office of the
Registrar immediately and com-
plete the necessary forms.
The first junior-year-abroad has also been designed for stu-
program for U. S. engineering.., dents of French language and
and mathematics students will be French classical literature, who
inaugurated next September may also want to take courses in
(1965) in Nantes, France, by the mathematics. In contrast, the In-
Institute of European Studies, ac- stitute's Paris center emphasizes
cording to an announcement made modern French literature and his- Dews. Jo Ann Queen and Judy Hitt
Dec. 9 at the nonprofit institu- tory, political science, and eco- were elected project chairmen of
tion's Chicago headquarters. nomics. ' the pledge class.
The new foreign-study program Chief among the program's pre- SEA r~— —— — -
will be conducted by the Institute requisites are junior standing and The Student Education Associa- LETTERS TO THE EDITOR (ConT
in cooperation with the Ecole N'a- a year of college French. Engi- tion held a meeting Monday night human body to be able to stay in
tionale Superieure de Mecanique neering and mathematics majors in the faculty lounge of the stu- A-l physical shape without prac-
and the University of Nantes. will be able to take regular dent center. Refreshments were ticing.
( \ The Nantes center will be the 'French-taught courses in their ma- served and a program on the need The basketbaiUeam is not above
V. \ Institute's fifth, and the fourth it jor fields at the E.N.S.M. French of a professional organization was admit tin
has established since 1961. It now literature majors will study in presented. Peggy Jav was the
offers academic-year and spring- that field in the University's fac- gram chairman. ' have a tende«cv to make them
semester programs in the liberal ulty oMetters. Those who have candy monev feel unable to"spend a great ma-
Came. .
cales .\
•S1<i T €* > ! j :
cate
has pl-r.
f, t y..-
-inV:-: e-
succe —
A gran*
tion has :
negie 11-..
come
non-profit
imme-d i u t
lishing 1
and unive
the ir.*e;r
which C.-.;
e-d
Secret u: ;
Music "lies
New Y- ■:
Circle
»s that studying, working
and labs, along with practice, do
arts and social sciences in Paris, The Institute will supplement
Vienna, Madrid, and Freiburg, university and E.N.S.M. courses
West Germany. with a curriculum of its own in
Institute President Robert T. French language and literature.
Bosshart said many U. S. educa- history, and art history. Taught in
are urged to turn it in.
jority of their time backing all
Sociology school activities or even loung-
Dr. Jess Lord, chairman of the ^ ^°*tie s.
division of social sciences, has an- i5. certainly easy to pick on
tors have wished that overseas French bv French professors, this noun^eci that he sponsor a of campus life and
study could be opened to engi- curriculum will employ U. S. clubrfor sociolo=-v n-aJors that held .f ,ch " closeI>- to find faults
neering and science students as it Teaching techniques and will be 'V". irs* meeting today at assem- ' ." *c ' ca" oe numerous
has been for many years to hu- conducted in smaller classes, Boss- pen .f *' 1 one •oesn: take into
manities students. hart said. The club's purpose will be to u^ue 6*a lon 00tfl sides of the
"But scientific ai<BOtechnical It is designed primarily for un'te the sociology major^, an$ '"'ue
schools abroad have-*)t>een under American students who must meet Promote interest on campus byN- * Ray Wilson
great pressure," B(*shart said. U. S. college requirements outside bringing speakers pertinent to the . December 9. 1964
"There weren't'enough of them to their major fields while they are anc* organizing field trips. "_e'e er
satisfy national scientific and in France. Bosshart noted that Meetings will be held on the e-van College
''^-"TrnMiri
technological needs, and those that such curriculums are common third Thursday of the month at the
existed were extremely crowded, practice in overseas programs, regular assembly period in room
As a result, they were generally since European university lectures 12 of the administration building
closed to American undergradu- are meant for students specializ- Officers were elected at the meet-
ates." ing in particular fields, and tend ing. The club will probably be open
However, he said, the situation to be too far advanced for the stu- to sociology minors also,
has eased up considerably in dent seeking general knowledge Sophomore Class
France. Numerous modern and outside his chosen field. Attention. Sophomores'
well-equipped engineering schools Institute students will live in Start making plans to attend the
and science faculties have been private homes in Nantes and take Sophomore Class havride'
opened there. their meals with French families weiner roast at Fort
The Nantes program will not 'be and in student restaurants... The Jan. 8.
limited to engineering and math- intensive oVientation period be-
ematlcs students. Bosshart said it (Continued on Page $■"' The cost is fifty cents a person
nuec "
agree with '•
pipsqueak '
It was h;s
wing repor.r.;:
feat Sena" r
branded ever-
disagree with '■
osophy an "■
winger." He
same old lir.f?
the American ;
32 years.
I will have
smart boy as t
importance. ' :
different poir.t
I hope his re.
up any dcuv"
reporting d .r-
radio, and r.--
during the
think the Am
up with this
porting by tw;:
of his strip.
I have use i -
Worth. Texas
Dear Sir: *"• •
I just had to write a letter to
your column after reading the
Star-Telegram article in which
news commentator Martin Agron- denouncing
sky made some pretty reckless least I haven -
charges about the recent national in?' raving
election. the conservat t
He said. "The American people ica are due an
? .and demonstrated they had growrt-uc man. and I h i>-.
> estern in the way thev ,vma<4 in ti,4 Sin-:e.
J. B V.":
Box 2r
American men and women do not A. ie 7
m the waj thev .voted in the pas?^
election. I want to sav nn<-«
Meet at the «I"Ti ot c..i- """"x "ant to say here, and
the .A-B at G.lo p.m. now that 27 milli^patriotic
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The Rambler (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 37, No. 13, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 17, 1964, newspaper, December 17, 1964; Fort Worth, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth771936/m1/4/: accessed April 26, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Texas Wesleyan University.