tl19641204-000 "The Towson State College Weekly Towson, Maryland Vol. XVII, No. 10 QUER IEHT New Registration To Simplify Processes A new procedure for registra-tion has been initiated at Tow- Son State for the coming semes-t r. One Advance Registration will combine both the pre-regis-tration and the final registra-ti� n. Mr. Moore and Mr. Trichel f,eel that this change will be an IroProvement over the previous 8Yatem, and will simplify regis-tration for the students. They are trying to arrive at an ac-cokable standard form which Will be used in the future. The Advance Registration will necessarily involve more than did the pre-registration, because the students will Complete all the forms at one time. Tuition fees are to be paid at the Business Office on the days listed in the schedule of courses book. If any student has not yet Obtained one of these books, they are now available at the Registrar's Office. The new policy has also dis-nsed with the use of numbers '13r departments. Instead, each ,4311rse name appears as an ab-eviation. For example, Eco- 4cntics is listed as Econ. instead 5I 30. All of the changes are tlearly explained in the schedule 'oek. Registration schedule is as lull Returns Prom Conference: Profited"" bean Gilbert M. Hill, Tow- ,lett's Dean of Instruction, is esently preparing a report to 11114.h/tit to President Hawkins on : recent attendance at a Cur-plum Conference at Bucknell h tliversity in Lewisburg, Pen- %1 nia. The report wil con-ist of three parts: (1) How ),` Worked at Bucknell, (2) the liation to Towson and (3) the tei,_Ileral inference in the United ;tes drawn by the conference. II & Welve college administrators, thtesidents, and deans attended bl,e experimental session headed ot Jeremiah Finch, Professor ki4,4glish at Princeton Univer-ti� Y. The Middle States Associa- 41, Towson's accrediting as- 41:elation, sponsored the session Id from Nov. 8 through the 11. tio'cirbis was the first educa-tt,. 4111 meeting that I have at-gded that everyone profited,"" , ItthIttkd Dean Hill. ""I took away 4 e feeling that Towson is doing 1,:erY big job with very little. 441'Wgon has as fine a reputation titIttlY college in the Mid-Atlan-tv, tea. In fact it has a better et'Ie image than many of the i lieges in the Association."" rk follows: Seniors�December 7 and 10 Juniors�December 11 and 14 Sophomores�Dec. 15 thru 17. Friday, December 18, from 8:30-12 noon, all Seniors, Juniors, and Sophomores who have not registered may do so at their scheduled times. Freshman�January 4 thru 7. Beginning freshman, trans-fer students and new stu-dents may register on Jan-uary 8, 11, and 12. December 4, 1964 JAMES L. MOORE Gym Too Small For '66; Dance Off-Campus ""Fireside Brilliance,"" the an- and would ruin the chance of nual Christmas dance presented any future dances off campus,"" by the Class of '66, will be held the Junior Class President con- December 11 from 9 to 12 p.m. tinued. Rather than being held at the Committee chairmen for gym as was previously done, the dance will take place in the Steelworker's Hall at 540 Dun-dalk Avenue. Eddie Stringer's nine piece Orchestra will pro-vide the entertainment for this semi-formal occasion. Al Hennemen, class presi-dent, states that reasons for AL HENNEMEN moving the dance off campus are to acquire better facili-ties than our gymnasium; to accomodate more Towson students; and to provide a more pleasing setting for the Christmas Dance. ""The main reason, of course, is to allow more Towson students to at-tend the Christmas Dance than were able to come to the Homecoming Dance,"" said Ilenneman. ""The student body is urgently requested to discourage the pre-sence of all alcholic beverages, as any illegal entry of alcohol would result in a hearing in front of Student Life Council this Junior Class Dance in-clude: Anne Whiteford� Band; Harriet Douthirt and Linda Miller�Refreshments; Diana Klopeke and Becky Otto�Letters to faculty; Jackie Ellis�Tickets; Betsy Snyder�Maps (directions to hall); Paul Peloquin�Decor-ations; Kathi Austin�Let-ters to Alumni; and Bonnie Schneider�Publicity. All tickets will be sold in pairs and only if the student presents an activity card. Guest tickets are available for $1.00. Ticket sales are scheduled for Wednes-day, Thursday, and Friday, De-cember 9, 10, 11 in Stephens Hall. Tickets wil also be sold at the door. All those attending the dance are requested to bring a gift to be put under the Christmas tree for crippled children. Tables and chairs will be provided for all those attending the dance, and free punch and cookies will be supplied by the Junior Class. Sunday --Symphony, Chorus Monday -- Bernstein Recital The Towson Community Chor-al Society will join with the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra, under the direction of Peter Herman Adler, in a program to be presented in Stephens Hall Auditorium at 8:15 p.i. Sunday evening. The Choral Society in-cludes students, faculty members, and persons from the Towson community at large. The choral group will perform the Polovetzian Dances of the Russian com-poser Borodine. The other works to be per-formed by the Symphony are: Prokofieff's Lieutenent Kiji Suite, the Glinkarouslave et Ludmilla Overture by Glinka, and Dvorak's Concerto for Cello and Orchestre featuring Mihaly Virizlay as soloist. The annual visit of the Symphony is sponsored by the Special Events Commit-tee of Towson State. Re- DORIS BERNSTEIN freshments will be served after the concert. Miss Doris Bernstein, a Tow-son music major, is scheduled to give her senior recital on Tues-day at 8:15 p.m., in the audi-torium of the Linda Lee Tall School. A pianist, Miss Bernstein will play selections from the works of DeBussy and Beeth-hoven. Assisting her will be another music major, George Gonderman. Gonderman, a baritone, will sing music from Mozart and Vaughn Williams; he will be ac-companied by his teacher, Mrs. Esther Coulange. Miss Bernstein has been an accompaniest for many of Tow-son's choral groups, and for the recitals of other music majors. Debaters, Fresh From Georget'n, Go To Temple Tomorrow, Towson State will be represented in the Temple Novice Debate Tournament, held annually by Temple University in Philadelphia. ""I expect that our teams will be meeting the strongest novice teams on the East Coast. This tournament should give some of our mem-bers a good deal of needed ex-perience. As I am really the only Towson debater who would not be considered technically a novice college debater, we an-ticipate attending several novice tournaments this year,"" com-mented Bob Friedenberg, De-bate Council President, who will accompany the teams as a judge at Temple. Towson will be represented on the affirmative of the national debate topic by freshmen Mike Ratliff, and Larry Hillman. Speaking on the negative will be sopho-more Jack Wilson, and fresh-men Pat Davis. Last week the Debate Council sent teams to the 17th Annual Invitational Tournament at Georgetown University. At Georgetown, Freshman Susan Miskelly, and Friedenberg (Continued on Page 4) Jt geti Cold and �Conely BOSTON (CPS)�Well, it looks like they're computerizing you-know-what. A caravan of blushing Boston University maidens, numbered one to 121, took an adventurous journey last week into the very heart of New Hampshire's In-dian country, each wondering what lay in store. At their destination in Hanover were a group of Dartmouth students, likewise numbered from one to 121 anxiously pawing the ground and scanning Route 10 for sighs of the B.U. bevy. These titillated males had each been paired with one of the female travelers through the use of a specially program-med electronic brain. The cybernetically inclined matchmaker behind this numeri-cal rendezous were a Dartmouth dorm social chairman in need of a gimmick and a contact at Boston University's Towers Dorm for women, Bonnie Bloom. Having heard of a similar experiment at Iowa State, the enterprising lad prepared a questionnaire which asked Wanover for physical statistics, major interests, favorite conversa-tional topics and academic grades. The information was fed to a computer which ""mated"" the pairs it found potentially the most compat-ible. According to Miss Bloom, the arrangement proved ""very suc-cessful."" The couples attended the Dartmouth-Brown game, a rock and roll dance, had dinner, and then went to private parties. It gets very cold and lonely in Hanover. "