tl19661202-000 "Vol. XIX, No. 10 TOWSON STATE COLLEGE, BALTIMORE, MARYLAND December 2, 1966 C&P Officials Present Photo Engineers Hired To Investigate Parking Chesapeake and Potomac Tele- Phone Co. officials visited the campus of Towson on Monday, November 21, to unveil the Photograph featured on the Cover of the new telephone di-rectory. The picture, suitably fram-ed, was presented to Earle T. Hawkins, college presi-dent, by T. W. Libby, general marketing manager, and John B. Gordon, general di-rectory manager, in the president's room at 9 A.M. The photograph, a color shot of Stephens Hall, campus ad- Ministration building, had been a jealously guarded secret for Months, C & P spokesmen said. It will be displayed on the Covers of more than a million telephone books to be distributed iCi the Baltimore area before becember 14. Telephone company spokes-flan said the new directory contains the equivalent of 184 miles of cheesecloth binding, 1,977 tons of paper, 152 barrels of ink and glue, and 288,542 miles of printed pages, enough to circle the globe a dozen times. About 610,000 copies of the Baltimore city edition will be delivered between November 22 and December 1, and 472,000 Baltimore suburban editions will be distributed from Decem-ber 1 to December 14, the com-pany said. Cagers To Take On B.U. At Civic Center 4.1 College basketball comes to Lne Civic Center December 8 in the first of five doubleheaders 13,1.esented by Championship '130rts, Inc., and to the Enoch Pl'att Library this week. Admission to the Civic Cen-t: 14 'ranges from $1-$3, but the 'noch Pratt Library is free to 4�1,1 sPectators who pass the L'Indow on Cathedral and Mul-urry Streets. Pl'oviding the ""Joe College"" .itslric:'sPhere are pennants from th colleges participating in the Civic Center twin bills on De-cember 8 and 15, January 5, February 2 and 16, such as Loyola, Towson State, Balti-more University, Mt. St. Mary's, Morgan State, Washington Col-lege, and Western Maryland. Since the library could not find any cagers small enough to fit in one of their display win-dows they have substituted books and brochures on basket-ball and added certificates pre-sented to Championship Sports, Inc. during the past two years Registrar's Office Announces Unclaimed Student LD. Cards 211e Registrar's Office cur- 'Iltl ta Y has ninety-three I.D. (.1 m 8 which have not been ,-4nted. Those who have failed :, Pick theirs up are requested n""u ket them from the Registrar's CO. These include: Bonnie ethey, Milton Baxley, Jr., C. e:icier, J. P. Benson, Ron 1C41e, Jeanette Brosius, R. tonstein, Marcy Calvin, V. e:In panella, Alice Cann, Larry 1( . Cimino, -Ple E F K. L. Cook, il , F. P. Cooney, Glenn Cunning-el, Glenice Custy and William 41.,. Also, John Dietrich, Sharon N11 . -On, John Donovan, G. Dunn, 4,1.. t hrhardt, Vincent Elliott, ll� t ngelmeyer, P. A. Flock, i &)ritn. Garrett, Jr., Fonna Gib- ? A. L. Gieseman, Bartholo- Cv Grap, Nancy Grawe, John li ftray, Patricia Greene, R. J. J. Hamilton, Stuart Ilt,'Ils�n, Linda Helf, Kathy ""v1g, immy Hickman, S. T. Horne, T. Hutchins, Paul Joyce, Georoge Kasin, F. Keneman, Rochelle Klein, Daniel Kooken, Kenneth Kriewald, Stella rug, Susan Libowitz, Michael Lind. Also, Nancy Lombardo, Rad-mila Lomsky, Jean M. Long, Edward F. Lynch, M. Lynch, Joseph McCauley, G. McNew, Victor McVicker, Eugene Mack-lear, B. R. Martin, Dale E. Meyer, Bruce C. Miller, Kybda L. Milloff, Howard Mindel, E. Mirchell, M. Moores, L. Mor-rison, Joseph Pie, Jeff Polovoy, Judith Roberts, G. Rochester, M. L. Rullman, D. Saneman, David Schaeffer, Dorothy Scott, Sharon Setzer, A. D. Shanks, Van Sharp, P. A. Small, P. A. Smith, R. Spera, Arlene Sraver, And, L. J. Stoll, Mary Thomas, Patricia Tregoe, Roger Van Dyke, Mary \Taught, Rich-ard Vogt, Peter Westiver, Ray-mond Windisch, K. Wynder and Lynn Zeichner. that college double-bills have been held in the downtown arena. Towson State College takes on the University of Baltimore on December 8, 1966. It's a game the sports fan won't want to miss. N.Y. Times To Address Howard Taubman, a top New York critic of the performing Arts, will speak at Towson De-cember 5. The subject of Mr. Taubman's lecture which will be presented in Stephens Audi-torium at 8:15 p.m., is ""The Fate of the Theatre Today."" Mr. Taubman was recent-ly appointed Critic at Large for the New York Times and had served as Drama Critic from 1960-65. Also, as Music Editor and Music Critic of the Times, Mr. Taubman had expanded his fame as a critic and journalist to the rest of the United States and over-seas. The parking and campus traf-fic situation will he put in pro-fessional hands when the firm of Rummel, Klepper and Kahl, consulting engineers, conduct a survey to pinpoint the exact problem of the students, faculty and staff. On December 5 questionaires will be mailed out to the stu-dents, faculty, administration and staff asking such informa-tion as when the person comes on campus, if they leave for any time and the time that they leave. Aerial photographs of the campus will be taken on two schools days that week to vali-date and supplement the survey. The study was begun in the summer when questionnaires were distributed during summer classes. This data has been key-punched and catalogued and will influence the final report. The resultt of the fall survey will be ready about March or April in the form of a prelimi-nary report. The entire survey is sponsored by the Department of Public Improvements and the information from the final re-port about three months after the preliminary report will be made public information. The firm's study is for recom-mendations and advising only. Drama Critic Students Having served as an Army Correspondent in the World War, Mr. Taubman was one of three American correspondents who witnessed and reported the surrender of the German Arm-ies in Italy. He has also spent time in the Soviet Union, Latin America and at the 1965 World's Fair in Brussels, cover-ing worthwhile enterprises and art circles in these countries. ""The Fate of the Theatre To-day"" is presented under the aus-pices of Towson's Special E-vents Committee. The public is invited; there will be no admis-sion charge. � Howard Taubman Is slated icr talk here. Graduation Requirement Students who complete the programs or certification in Early Childhood Education and Elementary Education should direct any questions to Dr. Schroeder, Stephens Hall 104. Any submitted plans will remain for the Department of Public Improvements and other agen-cies of the state and college. The plans are being made with the projection date of 1975 and a campus of 15,000 stu-dents. The building expansion will be taken into consideration on the basis of the building plan like the scale model in Stephens Hall. Rummel, Klepper, and Kahl have experience with other campuses with similar problems throughout the campus. The firm has recently done a study for the Baltimore campus of the University of Maryland. Mr. Dominick Provini, repre-sentative of the firm, was on campus last week consulting with Dr. Hawkins, said, ""Dr. Hawkins has fully endorsed the survey and will include a letter in the survey, recommending prompt return of the question-naires."" There will be a poster campaign to further advertise the questionnaires and encour-age a full return. German Student Discusses U. S. Impressions Here At the invitation of an in-structor, Professor Dr. G. Kranzier, an Introductory So-ciology class had the privilege of listening to an informal dis-cussion of the national culture pattern of Germany by a young German lady, who was in the U. S. for the past half year as an exchange student. Miss Boehm, from Hamburg, W. Germany, gave us her im-pression of American culture, of the differences in the attitudes of German and American youth, and their underlying values. In the informal question and an-swer discussion she stressed the serious searching of .the Ger-man academic youth for new values, after the collapse of the Germany of old. She also expressed her appreciation of the hospitality and spirit of friendship with which she met everywhere. Miss Boehm visited with a member of the class. Miss Kitty Devlin, with whom she had worked in a Salvation Army camp during the summer. Balti-more was the last stop of her journey, and she is now return-ing to Germany. "