Brown and White Vol. 75 no. 7 |
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home admission price to football games set by john m kozero about this time of year the perennial hue-and-cry against the practices of mustard and cheese echoes through the pages of the brown and white charges rang ing from poor repertory to mis guided lighting are leveled at our theater department as a reviewer of the m&c pro ductions for the past three years this reporter has honestly if not cogently tried to point out both the admirable and the not-so-ad mirable tendencies of our thespians on the broughal boards now for the next year this re porter will be reviewing plays and movies available to the bethlehem community with the accent on local little theater productions perhaps this angry young man will be able to stimulate enough interest in valley theater so that the engineer audience will view m&c shows with a more compara tive eye to local theater if this fails there are always plenty of other windmills to joust sometimes the comparisons may prove unfair since the inadequate facilities of mustard and cheese may be unable to produce what better-equipped theaters can do in that event dear reader allay your wrath and kindly bear with the vagaries of a perhaps-too-ideal istic theater bug henceforth his column will be found under the title voice of the turtle and now to clt the civic little theatre of allentown opened its 36th season friday night with a witty comedy by neil simon come blow your horn a broadway success as well as a movie hit presents a semi believable plot spun with sophisti cated humor and crammed full of juicy characters alan baker is a suave 33-year old playboy living in a sumptuous new york apartment in the east sixties of the harem cuties he bedazzles and bedevils two are shown peggy evans a rich but vacant eyeful is a tempting little example of how our man gets his kicks in contrast connie dayton is that intelligent type of babe you marry horrors see come page 3 buddy the playboy's younger brother turns 21 and decides to come blow his horn at big brother's apartment inevitably little buddy usurps everything the apartment the scotch , the women and worst of all alan's barber the stolid mom and pop of the carefree lotharious provide opposition to the orgiastic life of wine and roses sheltermate no 17 the general admission price of future lehigh home football games will be reduced william b leckonby director of athletics announced yesterday spectators will be admitted to the gettysburg game on october 12 and the colgate game on november z for 1.50 a reduction of 50 cents from last year's charge reserved seats for these games will be priced at 3.00 tickets for the traditional lafayette game will be increased to 5.00 and no general admission tickets will be sold there will be on admission charge for the frosh games played at home both rutgers and pennsylvania games with the little en gineers will be played in taylor stadium all varsity ticket requests should be made to business manager paul e short at taylor gym circle in the square touring company will play luigi pirandello's six characters in search of an author at 3:15 p.m oct 20 in the broughal auditorium admission will be i.d card for students 1.00 for guests of stu dents and 2.00 for townspeople tickets are now on sale at the stu dent activities desk the office of public information and huff's music store the play introduced in america in 1922 will be directed by byron ringland who directed dylan thomas under milkwood here two years ago six characters was described in 1922 as an exciting adventure where metaphysics aesthetics moral and dramatic criticism mordant comedy and thrilling tragedy play their parts but it is all good fun too a continuing success six characters is regarded as pirandello's greatest play he had written some 300 short stories and 1 four novels before turning to dramatics and was 54 when six characters brought him international fame he re ceived the 1934 nobel prize for literature died a year and a half later circle in the square company founded in new york 12 years ago has been praised throughout the country for its fresh and vigor ous approach to contemporary playwriting now on its third national tour the company has received many of the nation's most coveted awards including the newspaper guild's page one award the antionette perry and variety awards the xernon rice mem orial award and the lola d'an nunzio award the 1963 produc tion of six characters received the obie award for the best pro duction of an off-broadway play lehigh university brown and white negativism deplored vol 75 — no 7 bethlehem pa — october 8 1963 866^033 dunlap scores attitudes of american intellectuals is that they may well foreshadow the fragmentation of the american people and the ultimate collapse of the american social order he de clared if the american system is to survive he said the rank-and-file must realign themselves behind new principles which must be foundations for new policies recalling that a committee had been appointed by former presi dent eisenhower to define the goals of the people dr dunlap said that these goals have two common themes the first is that the state is not an end but an instrument to pro mote the welfare of the human being the second is the stress on human rights not state's rights dunlap said he felt that these basic principles should be brought to light so all people could become tiware of the american purpose in conclusion dr dunlap said that america must use its original ideals as guides for conduct in all circumstances for society is judg ed by the direction in which it is moving the speaker was introduced by mau'ry b poscover a sophomore who is chairman of arrangements for the arcadia associates lec tures touring players to give off-broadway production tile negative attitudes of in tellectuals have alarming implica tions or america's future accord in to dr auric n dunlap associate professor of internation al relations in a talk sponsored by arcadia a^sociries in packard lab friday evening dr dunlap said that those with negative attitudes still profess to believe in the american goals however the intellectuals fail to see that these goals are properly handed down to new generations lie said they assume that the young will learn about the ameri can system by themselves dr dunlap said that the intel lectuals mistake means for ends and adopt a pragmatic approach to foreign policy which results in a short-range policy what is more disturbing about these essentially negative attitudes where there is a will — one of the 450 freshmen who attended the dink hop in grace hall saturday attempts to say good by matt giilespie and his orchestra supplied the music vvhise the rumrunners a folk music trio gave a short concert dur ing the band break the chaperones many of them deans of girls colleges termed the dink hop the best this year clt offers witty play voice of the turtle joan — discovered while roaming around university center joan is a junior at radciiffe college where she is majoring in psychology a sports car enthusiast she spends her idle hours behind the wheel of her tr-3 | third polio shot i will be given type 3 of the sabin oral polio vaccine will be given to members of the faculty staff and student body on thursday nov 7 at the university health center the vaccine will be available from 9 a.m to noon and from 1 p.m to 4:30 p.m on thursday only types 1 and 2 were given last semester by the northampton county medical association type 3 is the last of the series
Object Description
Title | Brown and White Vol. 75 no. 7 |
Date | 1963-10-08 |
Month | 10 |
Day | 08 |
Year | 1963 |
Type | Newspaper |
DPIX | 400 |
DPIY | 400 |
Source Repository | Lehigh University |
Coverage | United States, Pennsylvania, Lehigh, South Bethlehem |
LCCN | 07019854 |
Source Repository Code | PBL |
Digital Responsible Institution | Lehigh University |
Digital Responsible Institution Code | PBL |
Issue/Edition Pattern | Semiweekly |
Title Essay | Published twice a week druing the college year by the students of Lehigh University |
Description
Title | Brown and White Vol. 75 no. 7 |
Date | 1963-10-08 |
Month | 10 |
Day | 08 |
Year | 1963 |
Page | 1 |
Type | Page |
DPIX | 400 |
DPIY | 400 |
FileSizeK | 2738462 Bytes |
FileName | 196310080001.jp2 |
Source Repository | Lehigh University |
Coverage | United States, Pennsylvania, Lehigh, South Bethlehem |
LCCN | 07019854 |
Source Repository Code | PBL |
Digital Responsible Institution | Lehigh University |
Digital Responsible Institution Code | PBL |
Issue/Edition Pattern | Semiweekly |
Title Essay | Published twice a week druing the college year by the students of Lehigh University |
FullText | home admission price to football games set by john m kozero about this time of year the perennial hue-and-cry against the practices of mustard and cheese echoes through the pages of the brown and white charges rang ing from poor repertory to mis guided lighting are leveled at our theater department as a reviewer of the m&c pro ductions for the past three years this reporter has honestly if not cogently tried to point out both the admirable and the not-so-ad mirable tendencies of our thespians on the broughal boards now for the next year this re porter will be reviewing plays and movies available to the bethlehem community with the accent on local little theater productions perhaps this angry young man will be able to stimulate enough interest in valley theater so that the engineer audience will view m&c shows with a more compara tive eye to local theater if this fails there are always plenty of other windmills to joust sometimes the comparisons may prove unfair since the inadequate facilities of mustard and cheese may be unable to produce what better-equipped theaters can do in that event dear reader allay your wrath and kindly bear with the vagaries of a perhaps-too-ideal istic theater bug henceforth his column will be found under the title voice of the turtle and now to clt the civic little theatre of allentown opened its 36th season friday night with a witty comedy by neil simon come blow your horn a broadway success as well as a movie hit presents a semi believable plot spun with sophisti cated humor and crammed full of juicy characters alan baker is a suave 33-year old playboy living in a sumptuous new york apartment in the east sixties of the harem cuties he bedazzles and bedevils two are shown peggy evans a rich but vacant eyeful is a tempting little example of how our man gets his kicks in contrast connie dayton is that intelligent type of babe you marry horrors see come page 3 buddy the playboy's younger brother turns 21 and decides to come blow his horn at big brother's apartment inevitably little buddy usurps everything the apartment the scotch , the women and worst of all alan's barber the stolid mom and pop of the carefree lotharious provide opposition to the orgiastic life of wine and roses sheltermate no 17 the general admission price of future lehigh home football games will be reduced william b leckonby director of athletics announced yesterday spectators will be admitted to the gettysburg game on october 12 and the colgate game on november z for 1.50 a reduction of 50 cents from last year's charge reserved seats for these games will be priced at 3.00 tickets for the traditional lafayette game will be increased to 5.00 and no general admission tickets will be sold there will be on admission charge for the frosh games played at home both rutgers and pennsylvania games with the little en gineers will be played in taylor stadium all varsity ticket requests should be made to business manager paul e short at taylor gym circle in the square touring company will play luigi pirandello's six characters in search of an author at 3:15 p.m oct 20 in the broughal auditorium admission will be i.d card for students 1.00 for guests of stu dents and 2.00 for townspeople tickets are now on sale at the stu dent activities desk the office of public information and huff's music store the play introduced in america in 1922 will be directed by byron ringland who directed dylan thomas under milkwood here two years ago six characters was described in 1922 as an exciting adventure where metaphysics aesthetics moral and dramatic criticism mordant comedy and thrilling tragedy play their parts but it is all good fun too a continuing success six characters is regarded as pirandello's greatest play he had written some 300 short stories and 1 four novels before turning to dramatics and was 54 when six characters brought him international fame he re ceived the 1934 nobel prize for literature died a year and a half later circle in the square company founded in new york 12 years ago has been praised throughout the country for its fresh and vigor ous approach to contemporary playwriting now on its third national tour the company has received many of the nation's most coveted awards including the newspaper guild's page one award the antionette perry and variety awards the xernon rice mem orial award and the lola d'an nunzio award the 1963 produc tion of six characters received the obie award for the best pro duction of an off-broadway play lehigh university brown and white negativism deplored vol 75 — no 7 bethlehem pa — october 8 1963 866^033 dunlap scores attitudes of american intellectuals is that they may well foreshadow the fragmentation of the american people and the ultimate collapse of the american social order he de clared if the american system is to survive he said the rank-and-file must realign themselves behind new principles which must be foundations for new policies recalling that a committee had been appointed by former presi dent eisenhower to define the goals of the people dr dunlap said that these goals have two common themes the first is that the state is not an end but an instrument to pro mote the welfare of the human being the second is the stress on human rights not state's rights dunlap said he felt that these basic principles should be brought to light so all people could become tiware of the american purpose in conclusion dr dunlap said that america must use its original ideals as guides for conduct in all circumstances for society is judg ed by the direction in which it is moving the speaker was introduced by mau'ry b poscover a sophomore who is chairman of arrangements for the arcadia associates lec tures touring players to give off-broadway production tile negative attitudes of in tellectuals have alarming implica tions or america's future accord in to dr auric n dunlap associate professor of internation al relations in a talk sponsored by arcadia a^sociries in packard lab friday evening dr dunlap said that those with negative attitudes still profess to believe in the american goals however the intellectuals fail to see that these goals are properly handed down to new generations lie said they assume that the young will learn about the ameri can system by themselves dr dunlap said that the intel lectuals mistake means for ends and adopt a pragmatic approach to foreign policy which results in a short-range policy what is more disturbing about these essentially negative attitudes where there is a will — one of the 450 freshmen who attended the dink hop in grace hall saturday attempts to say good by matt giilespie and his orchestra supplied the music vvhise the rumrunners a folk music trio gave a short concert dur ing the band break the chaperones many of them deans of girls colleges termed the dink hop the best this year clt offers witty play voice of the turtle joan — discovered while roaming around university center joan is a junior at radciiffe college where she is majoring in psychology a sports car enthusiast she spends her idle hours behind the wheel of her tr-3 | third polio shot i will be given type 3 of the sabin oral polio vaccine will be given to members of the faculty staff and student body on thursday nov 7 at the university health center the vaccine will be available from 9 a.m to noon and from 1 p.m to 4:30 p.m on thursday only types 1 and 2 were given last semester by the northampton county medical association type 3 is the last of the series |
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