The Oklahoma Daily (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 53, No. 26, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 12, 1966 Page: 1 of 16
sixteen pages : ill. ; page 20 x 12 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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The
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Compiles Staff
Oklahoma
Daily
se-
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Press Sets
Pe-et Select
’Turn to Page 2)
ODK Forms
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Tecumseh
manager;
new
and cafeteria now under
southeast of Adams Center.
AP-UPI Wire Services
53rd Year. Na. 26
So far. we look in vagi for a
he said. "But even so.
A Student Newspaper Servtag
The University sf Oklahoma
I
during tryouts
NO RECORDED music will be
permitted during the performance
since music will be provided by a
Scandal's orchestra Accompanists
for tryouts for an act need not
Because of the inability of the
present club house of the univers-
al
r
Personality
Applications
Applications fer Campes Per-
sonality for the Sowr Year-
book are now available in 133
f opeland Hall. Juniors and sen-
iors may apply leadline for
applications is Tneeday. Oct. 25.
College Bowl team on television at
4:30 p m
The Daily's new Goss Suburban
offset press will go through dem-
onstration runs every half hour
throughout the open house period
Applications are new available
to junior and aentor men for
O micron Delta Kappa, national
leadership and scholarship fra-
ternity. Completed forms are
due Monday. Oct 17. at 5 p.m.
Ill
‘Jw
Ba solo, Muskogee, financial and
ticket department; Linda Hunke.
Dallas. Tex., program; Mary Ann
Reed. Norman, program vice-
chairman. Janie Semple, Durant,
general art; Jolinda Lower. Mid-
west City, production secretary;
Nancy Breeden, Vinita. Norman
publicity, and Carol Pickens. Ok
lahoma City, finance and ticket (
vice-chairman.
Scandal tryouts
Scandal tryouts are Saturday
Dec 11. from 5-8 p m in Meacham
auditorium There will be no cos-
tumes or constructed props allow-
NORMAN. OKLAHOMA, WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 12, INC
I
bers of Mortar Board would walk
to each dorm and sorority bouse
and conduct a procession or
"walkout to the location of the
announcement program
An Indian word. Ne-book-sede-
Pe-et-e-de-do-wah-de. meaning "10
Best Men." was chosen in pre-
ference to a Greek letter name
for the senior men's honorary
which began at OU in 1910 Peet
did not select Top Ten Freshman
Men until much later, although it
did select one outstanding fresh-
man man who was named in the
fall as were the 10 freshman wo-
men
The 1968-67 Mortar Board mem-
bers will meet Wednesday night
at 6 in front of the Administra-
tion Building under the large tree
called the "Mortar Board Elm"
to begin this year's walkout
MEMBERS of Tassels and Al-
pha Lambda Delta will also walk
with Mortar Board to the baseball
diamond where Pe-et will begin its
Pow Wow at 6 30 After the an-
nouncement of the Pe-et selection
of the Top Ten Freshman Men. all
the honoranes will go to Holmberg
Hall to bear the Mortar Board
selection
British Proposal
Asks UN Support
UNI I ED NA LIONS, N.Y. — (A*) — British Foreign Sec-
retan George Brown appealed to the United Nations Tues-
day to support his detailed plan for a Viet Nam peace settle-
ment. He also challenged the Soviet Union to join in a first
step toward opening negotiations.
“There cannot he, nor should there be, a military
solution to this conflict. Brown said in a major policy speech
to the 119-nation U.N. General Assembly.
“We believe that the only feasible solution is a political
settlement reached through negotiations.”
Brown put new pressure on the Soviet Union by again
inviting Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gromvko to join in a
call to reconvene the 1954 Geneva conference. Brown and
Gromyko are the co-chairmen.
Gromyko returned to New York
Monday night after a talk with
President Johnson in Washington
Brown will be in Washington later
this week
The United States has offered
to halt the bombing of North Viet
Nam and agree on a timetable
for supervised joint military with-
drawals if there are signs of de-
escalation by North Viet Nam
BROWN CHARGED that Hanoi
has blocked progress on negotia-I
tions by spurning the U.S. propos-
Mortar Board
Newspaper Depar tvent
r - i stcrical Society
, . .: . 731 ;
67 Scandals
Regents Approve
Construction, Fund
Approval of new construction
projects and an addition to the
athletic scholarship fund were
major items of business at the
It Ain't Hay, Or Is It?
AU suited up for the ISA barn brawl dance, to be held Saturday
from 8 to 12 p.m. are Ilene Peart. St. Louis freshman, and Allen Me-
( ollum Munich. Germany, also a freshman. The dance will be held
at a new barn 3 and one-half miles east of Norman off Highway 9.
iesponse." he said "But even so.
I am convinced there is now com-
mon ground in the 1954 Geneva
agreements which both the North
Vietnamese and the United States
have said can be a basis for set-
tlement "
Brown formally presented to the T P I
assembly the six-point plan he dis- I AR F 70(1)11101)
closed at the Labor party meet 1 ■ ■VJIIIIICII
A tradition of almost 30 years
will be carried out Wednesday
night in the announcement of OU's
Top Ten Freshmen, both men and
women, at the Pe-et Pow Wow and
Mortar Board Walkout
Owl and Triangle Chapter of
CAF8 AND HEADDRESSES—Drasaed la traditional clothing far the eeremoates surroundlM Ike setoe-
Uon of the top ten freshmen men and women tonight at the Pe-et pow wow and the Mortar Board walk-
out are Kyle McCarter. Norman senior. Pe-et president; Sharon Gafford. Oklahoma City senior. Mortar
Board president; Bonney Baumann Claremore senior. Mortar Board vice-president, and Clark Musser.
I Oklahoma Chy senior. Pe-et treasurer
Mortar Board was founded in 1925
on the OU campus as the national
Senior woman's honorary com-
I posed of two local honoranes Owl
^and Triangle and Pi Alpha In ac-
cordance with its purpose, to ad-
vance the spirit of service and
fellowship among college women,
the organization began selecting
outstanding freshmen women soon
after its founding
THE IDEA of a walkout came
J from the way in which these fresh-
men were announced each year
C In the 1930's, a regular univer-
sity study hall was conducted,
■w much like freshman study hall to-
•» day. beginning at 7 p.m Mem-
000 of that being used for build-
ing and about $15,000 for actual
work.
Plans and specifications were
approved for the addition of a
'Turn to Page 21
ed for the preliminary tryouts.
Small props such as guns, brooms,
or a table are permitted if vital
to the act. Shorts will not be con-
sidered as a costume. Sketches of
^XVtroeSST S.e^nWJ?rOPKS ™Bo£« ‘‘’oTRegrotoVe^g
.rhlm Monday night in the office of
L,nd SOUn^ f’t^dent George L Cross I
arrangements should be presented The $13,600,000 Housing and
durina Revenue bonds of 1966 were pur-
chased by a syndicate headed by
John Neveen and Co. and White
Weld and Co. of Chicago at an
average interest rate of 4 91 per-
... . , cent. The bonds, totaling over 15
necessarily be members of the or- million. will cover the construc-
ganization presenting the act. pro- two costs of the new Towers <
vided the accompanists are not and cafeteria now under con-
visible to the audience Recorded
music may be used only for try-
outs If using a tape recorder. 572 shares of stock donated uTthe
“■'"K «*• , by Uw Naiwuai ruun
. . C0?y. °L th€ .s.c?pU wlth. c?m' dabon Life Insurance Co total-
the names of the music publisher
and writer must be turned into
the Union Activities office by Fri- cation
day Dec. 2. All music used in acts
should be a regular, published . _
copy Also a list including all per- ity golf course to accommodate a
sons in each act and their duties, large number of players, the re-
must be filed by 5 p m Dec 2. This gents approved preliminary plans
is the security list for the act and will cost over $190,000. with $175,-
’Turn to Page 2)
Deadline Near I
On Who's Who I
Applications for the 1966-67
roster of "Who's Who Among Stu-'
dents in American Universities and ft
Colleges'’ are circulating, but not 1
as rapidly as the deadline for filing
is moving up
Since signing opened Tuesday
morning, several blanks have been |
obtained from the Office of Deans
of Students. 303 Administration
Building, and two have been com-
pleted and returned The OU quota
is 36 applications
Students applying must be "able
to be active in campus and com-
munity projects and still do well
academically." said Mrs Cauda
Thomas, co-ordinator of student
activities The aspirant must also
be an undergraduate who will re-
ceive a bachelor’s degree in Janu-
ary. June, or August. 1967.
Completed applications will be
judged by a faculty-student com-
mittee at meetings early next week
Four faculty-staff members ap-
pointed by the office of President I
Cross and six students appointed by
the Student Senate will serve on the
selection committee.
The quickly advancing deadline I
for api lying for the Who's Whoj
honor is 5 pm . Friday. Oct. 14.
The lis of OU nominees must be
returne I to national headquarters
in Tua. a loos a, Ala. by Oct. 20.
Mrs Tl omaa said
Open House
i All students, faculty and Norman
THE REGENTS also accepted townspeople are invited to a Sun-
n .k._ ~r u—day afternoon open house to sec
the Oklahoma Daily's new offset
press in operation The open house
is planned as an observance of Na-
tional Newspaper Week Hours are
1:30 to 4 p.m. so visitors may be
For Production
By LINDA HAAG
Daily Staff Writer
Faceless but functioning is the
1967 Sooner Scandals executive
staff Faceless, in that no theme
has been chosen for the March
Scandals, but functioning since
staff members are already se-
lecting working committees from
early applications.
Sooner Scandals 1967 executive
staff includes: Steve Vargo. Mid-
west City senior, director, Butch
Perry, Tecumseh junior, pro-
duction manager; Robert Batt,
Omaha, Neb , freshman, lighting
and sound. Gary Hensier, Ada
junior, stage; Judy Mitchell. We-
woka junior, promotion; Mark Kel-
ly. Fletcher junior. Oklahoma City
publicity; Susan Waltz. Lawton
senior. Oklahoma Daily publicity
Jane Reed. Ft Sill junior. pro
gram ads and Bobbie Stout. Pase-
dena. Calif., junior, talent coordi-
nator.
SOPHOMORE STAFF members
are: Susan Hodges. Oklahoma
City, executive secretary Braden
Cross. Norman, house manager;
Carol Rodgers. Tulsa, traffic;
Betty Jane Storms, Duncan, se-
curity; Marilyn Matteson. Okla-
homa City, state publicity; Susan
, university by the National Fuun-
plete dialogue all Jyrics Including ing 1001 in a 11 The funds deriv
_• from the stock will go toward
scholarships aiding athletic edu-
—— through in time to watch the OU I
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Johnson, Linda. The Oklahoma Daily (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 53, No. 26, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 12, 1966, newspaper, October 12, 1966; Norman, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1828901/m1/1/: accessed July 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Carl Albert Congressional Research and Studies Center.