Page 41 - TheGoldBug1969-70
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The Gold Bug DECEMRF.R 12, 1969 SLC AC'ts On WRC Points; Awaits Ensor's Approval The Student Life Counell en- The petition was presented for the Dean told Women's Council dorsed three of four major points In the Women's Rights Committee discussion at the November 24th representatives that she had mflrle but was continuing progress I petition in a meeting on December meeting of Women's Council. The little work on the proposals. She Council approved the petition point to I 10. The points were presented by for point, changing only curfew recommended that four student the Women' 5 Council as official Sunday through Thursday to 11:30 representatives join ner tn a meet- women's council proposals. p.m. Instead of the proposed 12:00 Ing with Dr. Ensor. She selected The SLC recommendations will be sent to Dr. Ensor. If he ~~~dl~:e t~:in;~l~:ri::e;:ytoi~~: :~t~l:n~om~~un~~ theP:~~~~~!; approves, the recommendations prestdents, wlll become official colJege policy. form of official Women's Council residence hall Carol Hoerlchs, Pam proposals. and Zappardino, TheDeansaidshewould Ruthle Thomas, Women's Coun- have an answer regarding the pro- Donna nactar , cil President; Tracey Beglin, Wo- Council voted un- The Women's man's Council Vice-President; and po sats at the next Women's Coun- anlmously to submit the proposals which was set meeting, ctt for Pan Zappardlno,' Whiteford Hall December eui. to the Student Life Council at their President, presented the proposals Gregory IGhn, young folksinger, entertains at Western Maryland on point by point. At the December 8th meeting, December 10th meeting. December 18th. See story on page 4. The official Woman's Council with Policy Changes In Campus Seventy Per Cent Of Student Body proposals corresponded point by point with the WRC Petition, one change, curfewSunday-Thurs- To Participate In January Term day 11:30 12 a.m. instead of the pro- Plant Suggested By SLC p.m, The other posed points covered unlimited curfew, over- The upcoming January Term Bay on a sandspn, A boat will be night sign-out system, and open The Student Life Council passed SLC by Dr. Theodore Whitlield and promises to be an interesting ex- used for dredging and coJlecting house policy. recommendations involving cam- Raymond Brown. The SLC voted periment for nearly 725 students specimens. Formal classes will The Student Life Council pus butldtngs and activities. The to tentatively endorse the lIbrary from a College enrollment of not be held; instead, there will be approved unlimited curfew, sealed library, Memorial Hall, and cocrd- committee proposal. sUghtly over 1,000. This constt- Individual projects. envelope system, and extended .raanon of artistic functions were SLC also voted to recommend tUtes ~eventy per cent of the The Weimar Culture Course curfew, with some revision. The matters of discussion. that the Hbrar-y shculd be open dur , college. Participating in twenty- concerns a most important time In major change is that SLC wlll The major change in library lng chapel hours. ThIs recommend- nine courses 'ane fifteen special the politics, art and architecture of recommend that only women with policy will be a new system of atlon w1l1 be sent to President .orojecee. many of the students will Germany. The Culture exerted a unlimited overnight permission check out. Because of the loss of Ensor for his approval. live· on campus for the three week worldwide influence during the will be permitted to use the sealed $20,000 a year In books, students The Council discussed the prob- Instruction period, extending from 1920's. During the January Term, envelope system. Unlimited cur- leaving the library will be checked lem of vandalism in Memorial January 19 to February 6. A fifty a major part of the course wUl be few and extended curfew wlll be for illegal take-out of periodicals Hall. President Ensor's proposal dollar board fee is being changed, a~ exhibit nf Gez-rnan expr-esstontst recommended as proposed. and books. A rack will be pro- to lock Memorial at night except and there Is no tuition fee. paintings from the LessfngRosen- Discussion of the fourth point, vided at the library entrance for when a faculty member Is con- Initial registration shows that wald Collection of the Alverthorpe open house policy, was postponed students who object to the check ducting a seminar was rejected by seventy percent of the junior and Gallery. by SLC until their next meeting. out and would rather not have their the Council. They voted to support senior classes will participate In Conducting the Physics course in SLC requested that _the proposal briefcases or other belongIngs leaving Memorial open at night. the program and sixty per cent of Automative Engineering is Mr. be rewritten for a new open house subjected to search. Improvements suggested-on the the -freshmen. With the largest Edmund Makosky. Women are en- pollcy Instead of the proposed list Other feasible alternatives to problem Included possiblllties of enrcltment for the program, the rolled In the course which features of changes In the existing policy. the problem Included continuation hiring a night janitor and the publi- sophomores have seventy per cent visits to a plant in Baltimore. Until Wednesday night, progress of the present policy or locking up cation of conditions under which participation. Initial regts- For one and a half weeks,under of the petition In the past three the stacks. Memorial may be used, with stu- tratlon also revealed that about the direction of Mr. William weeks had been limited. The peti- The check out system was ortgt , dents being responsibte for keeping eight-five per cent will receive Tribby, students will be able to tion had made Ilttle headway nally proposed by the Libr-ar-y rooms clean, turn1ngofflights, and their first choIce courses. study plays, personalities and through official channels. Committee and was presented to closing windows. "EnvisIoned as a time of solitary theaters on Off-Off Broadway in study and reflection, a time for Greenwich VlUage. For the re- Shultz Takes 'Gold Bug' Editorship; creative work, a time for experi- maining time, the students will be ment, a time for InterdisciplInary back on campus. dialogue, a time to explore art Perhaps the greatest expe rt- Will Reorganize Staff Positions gallerIes, museums and libraries ments being attempted are the trips In the area, a time to engage In to France and Germany. Students special projects, and/or a time to win fly over for bot~ trips. The Mike Shultz wlU be editor-In Simplification and coordination. News editor wfll be Susan Baker, cultivate special interests In students bound for France will chief of the GOLD BUG for the Other staff positions Include news a sophomore who has served as depth," the January Term offers spend ten days in Paris, living In next two semesters. JerryHopple, editor, sports editor, photography lront page editor tor the past year. a diversified schedule. Some of LaUn quarter.near Torbonne, the outgoing editor, commented that he editor, entertainment editor, art The newly created entertainment the more Interesting courses are visiting exhibits and mohumants.A appointed Shultz because of his editor, business manager, adver- sectIon will be edited by "sophc-. 8, the Marine Biology trip Involving Side trip will be taken to Versailles "experience, creativity and tising manager, typing editor, and more Chris Bothe. Greg Barnes twenty students, the Weimar cut- :'WId the chateaux of the Loire ability." According to Hopple, Circulation and exchange editor. ture course Involving twenty-tour Valley. They wm then go to ·"Mlke has had a tremendous students, concepts in Automatlve Southern France, staying in Avig-. amount of experience In journalism Engineering with twenty enrolled, non to study the remnants of Ro- and is ramntar with most aspects Experiments in Contemporary man ctvntzanon. of the paper. I'm sure that he'll Theater-r Off-Off Broadway for fif- The trip to Germanywill be made improve the GOLD BUG, making teen students, and the French and vIa Luxembourg, Cologne, and it an even more Important part 01 Jerman tripsabroadlnvolvingnine Dusseldorf. Then the students par- campus life." and fifteen students respectively. ticlpating will take the Rhine Shultz Is a junIor Engltsh major English 104, Introduction to Liter- steamer to Rudeshelm, and con- Irom Berlin, Maryland.As afresh- ature, Is being offered as an ex~ Unue to Frankfurt,Heidelburg,and man, he served as photography perlmentallecture course to 102 the Black Forest. In Garmlcsch, editor. For the past two semesters, treshmen. they will go mountain climbing. he has been edUorlal page editor. The University of South Florida Passing throught Vienna, Austria, Shultz is also editor of CONTRAST , Marine Science Center In St. Pet- they will reach East and West Ber- the college literary magazine. ersourg, Florida, will _be the lin, a major feature of the trip. The Assisting Shultz will be Richard location for the MarIne Biology stUdents wfll use a Eura11pas to Anderson, the new associate Trip fortwoweeks.Superv1slngthe trave.l through Europe,-andwlil see editor. Also a junior, Anderson is students w1l1 be Dr. Alspach and scene:~y, operas, and museums. an economics major. He has been Dr. Sturdivant. Ecology and phy_ Mr. Derasse and Mr. Buttner will features editor lor the past year. siolo£}' w1l1 be the main points of conduct the two trips abroad. Staff positions have been re- tocus at the lab built into Tampa organized In order to provIde more Mike S·hultz and Richard Anderson
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