tl19650219-000 "SAMMY RAYE Senate Allocates $27,268 For Budget Monetary affairs dominated 11lost of the S.G.A. Senate's t4rida Tuesday afternoon in `le first meeting of the cur-t rit semester as three im- :�rtant matters dealing with !lances were approved by the 'ocly. The Senate approved a /4 assessment of all stu-dents next September to Ovide funds for the pro-tram planned by the Cen-tennial Committee in ob-servance of Towson's Cen-tennial Year from June 1965 through June 1966. i2f current enrollment pro- .6.'tions are realized, the $10 t'*ssrnent will provide the k lIteonial Committee with 411:;e $30,000, since approxi-t, 71Y 3,000 students will be ted in the day program next 1:11t. As yet no provision has to 4 Made for a night student Ittribution. .;Mr- Donald Embinder, as- '4ont to the President,t, rtIke to the Senate in favor ; the motion which later liassed unanimously. More -etails will be made known 4e t a later date as to con-rrete Plans. k .. tiati, Treasurer Kathi vilt ,, it Presented a newly re- S,4 14 4 financial policy to the tlirjti k for its approval. The it l' (41, which was carried, 'Iltd 444 to clarify several items lit,5 i'� outline new monetary tile ettres- As will be recalled, lito ite has recently began tilellif4 laws which have been l'egt e hooks for a number of tt1;14:' necessitating the A"" in procedures. kpor revised budget was also kki.:111'"" bY the Senate for the Ilhiod 1 to �day,. 31 budget SISome objections were f7,,, kuse of the fact that 44 glineial committee was ItN to cut Rome organiza- N4*(1t1Mits due to a lack ' &Ma ahortage was due to an oversight on the part of the committee and an over-allocation of funds for the No-vember 1, 1964 to February 28, 1965 period. The total amount allocated was $27,268.20. A run down of individual budgets is as follows: *S.G.A. Executive Alpha Psi Omega Canterbury Assoc. Cheerleaders Circle K Class of 1965 Class of 1966 Class of 1967 Class of 1968 College Centre Board Debate Council Gamma Theta Upsilen Glen Players Hostess Club InterFaith Council I.R.C. Inter-Varsity (Continued on Page 4) $1,642.60* 2.50 27.00 10.00 89.50 1,970.00 180.00 190.00 490.00 2,808.00 590.00 105.00 5,350.00 35.00 55.00 210.00 42.50 WEEKLY Vol XVII, No. 15 February 19, 1965 Annual Sweetheart Weekend Features Dance, New Journeymen Towson's Annual Sweetheart Weekend festivities begin this evening at 6:30 with the Tow-son- Morgan sing sponsored by the College Centre Board in the Lida Lee Tall School. The sing, which is to feature talented performers from both campuses, will last until 9 o'clock. A new group, ""The Busters,"" will perform at the College Centre Board sponsored jam session tonight at 8:30. As usual, it will be held in the gym. As provided for in the social policy, girls with female guests, as well as men with other colleges with valid I-D cards, will be admitted to the affair. The focal point of the entire weekend will be tomorrow night's Sweetheart Dance in the Fifth Regiment Armory from 9-1. Music will be provided by Sammy Kaye and his orchestra. Tickets were to be available Wednesday, yesterday, and to-day in the North alcove of Stephens Hall. Sammy Kaye has been one of the top money earners in the band business for years, ap-pearing on TV and radio re-gularly, in addition to his per-sonal appearances, hotel and concert dates, etc. His top-sell-ing records and albums attest to the fact that his popularity has continued to grow with the years. W.U.S. Week Includes Slaves, Chinese, Songs, Fun Towson's traditional WUS Week will begin Monday, with an International Night Talent Show and a Chinese. Auction. The purpose of WUS Week is to raise money for students overseas by the Towson Chapter of WUS (World University Service). The money raised next week will be distributed by the General WUS Fund for university projects'all over the world. International Night on Mon-day, sponsored by the I.R.C., will be a program of inter-national talent in Van Bokkelen Auditorium. The Chinese Auc-tion in the College Centre Patio is I sale of services, such as shining shoes or ironing shirts, by the women students. A faculty auction will begin the fun on Wednesday, to be followed by a faculty-student basketball game. The Band plays its Winter Concert at 8:15 in Lida Lee Tall Auditorium Thursday even-ing. The same evening there will be a slave sale, which is an auction of male students. Buy-ers will have the slaves at their command for one hdur during Saturday's jam session. The College Centre Board sponsors a Carnival-Hooten-anny in Van Bokkelen Audi-torium Friday, with booths sponsored by various organiza-tions. Brad Johnson, NSA co-ordin-ator is chairman of WUS week, with Nancy Walker as his co-chairman. The versatility of the band-leader, who is also a top-flight songwriter, instrumentalist, and personality in his own right, has been amply demonstrated again and again. His superb musical talent has remained evident in his choice of im-aginative arrangements which has made his orchestra famous and kept them on top. Sammy Kaye and his company include the Kaydets, the Kaye Choir, and the Dixieland Band plus the great audience-catcher, ""So You Want to Lead a Band?"" Results of last week's Sweet-heart Elections find Pam Dun-can and Ed Shirley, Betty Huster and Sherry Lucas, Alice Perry and Dick Wiseman, Esther Raley and Tom Redman, and Sue Roberts and Mike Murphy in the 5 couple Sweet-heart court. The sweetheart couple's identity will be revealed at the dance. Sharon Mulgrew, S.G.A. so-cial chairman and Sweetheart Dance Chairman, the adminis-tration, the S.G.A. executive comittee, and student commit-teemen remind those who attend the dance that, since this is a college sponsored event, abso- Nay no alcoholic beverages will be tolorated anywhere at the dance. Anyone bringing alco-hol to the dance or who is suspected of having had any, will be asked to leave. As one member of the S.G.A. exec put it, ""Leave it home."" Sweetheart Weekend comes to a close Sunday afternoon when ""The New Journeymen"" enter-tain in concert in Stephens Hall Auditorium and, if necessary, by closed circuit TV in Van Bokkelen. The College Centre Board sponsored concert will begin at 2:30. This group, ""The New Jour-neymen,"" is remarkable for the engaging good looks of two of its members, John Phillips and Marshall Brickman, and for the electrifying lovliness of the third, Michelle Gilliam. A concert by ""The New Journeymen"" is said to be a genuine emotional experience. Chances are you won't hear a single one of the tired folk wheelhorses, the songs perform-ed mechanically whenever folk artists find themselves before an audience. What you will hear are ori-ginal arrangements�by the only folk group that does its own arrangements�of songs chosen solely because they are valid art and entertainment. Old songs seldom performed, like the hymn ""Amazing Grace."" ""The New Journeymen"" in-sist that a performance must entertain- If the audience is bored, the artist has failed in his art. At a ""New Journeymen"" concert, the first thing you'll notice is that the audience is having a delightful time, and so are the performers. As with tickets for the Sweet-heart Dance, tickets for the Sunday concert were to be avail-able Wednesday, yesterday and today in Stephens Hall. Sweetheart Weekend is and will continue to be a sentimental Towson traditon every Febru-ary. Tower Light, in extending best wishes to all, hopes that all who participate will have a very pleasant weekend. U.N.VoteProblem Called Chicken &EggConundrum UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (CPS)�The president of the General Assembly told 200 col-lege editors recently that the United Nations' problem of members with unpaid assess-ments is like ""the chicken or the egg conundrum."" Alex Quaison-Sackey told the students that while the United States says that countries must pay overdue assessments for peacekeeping operations before being allowed to vote in the Assembly, the Soviet Union, one of the delinquent members, says that these countries must be allowed to vote before they will make their payments. The General Assembly, which began its present session on December 1 after several postponements over the assessments question, has not taken any votes so far. Article 19 of the UN Charter provides that countries two years behind in payments ""shall have no vote"" in the Assembly. The Soviet Union maintains that the assessments levied by the Assembly for peacekeeping operations are illegal. (Coatinsied out Pans Al "