tl19620209-000 "Women: Make-Up Dem 7:00 Tuesday In Cafeteria TOWER LIGHT Vol. XIV, No. 15 State Teachers College. Towson 4, Maryland February 9, 1962 . _ .lilliMliiIIIIMIll Naturalists Club Feb. 15-8 p.m. SH Room 1 Mr. Bowers will Lecture on The Glacier National Park General Public Invited Wisthoff Awarded $3,000 Harvard Fellowship Sweetheart Dance Tomorrow Night At Armory Buddy Morrow Named Band terliT TRAIN LEADER � Trombonist Buddy Morrow will furnish t t music tomorrow night (Saturday) at the Fifth Regiment Armory ks the College's Annual Sweetheart Dance holds forth from 9:00 p.m. 14 1:00 a.m. IR( Sponsors Oiscussion Series This Semester , 14ternational Relations Club has �htl.tiotinced it will sponsor ""Great tZeisions--4932"" during the coming thester. Great Decisions"" is an annual ootionwide review of the most im-ttant decisions we face as a na-l. By taking part in the pro- ` 411 students will be able to dis-t,, crucial problems of the United tZtes foreign policy with instruc-p: from our campus and with esentatives of embassies and the .`, ted Nations. �I)if,:s of ""Great Decisions-1962"" Ita: ""Vietnam � win, lose or r,�,,'?""; 'Ted China�third greatest er?""; ""Brazil�which way half 'ontinent?""; ""Iran�Middle East """": ""Nigeria�democracy in a 17 . climate?""; ""Berlin � test of Idled Unity?""; ""United Nations� $14tellendent force?""; and ""United k1, -flew directions in foreign 'the IneVtingS will be held twice :11th at 7:30 p.m. in room 213 t4tePhens Hall. The dates and kttli ker3 for the topics will be (:/tIlloed at a later date. The biggest and most exciting social event of the year takes the scene tomorrow night (Saturday) when the college holds its annual Sweetheart Dance at Baltimore's Fifth Regiment Armory. Time for the dance will be from 9:00 p.m. to 1:00 a.m. Decorations for the event will consist of those remaining in the Armory from the recent Auto Show�tables covered by white tableclothes and lit by candles, and the traditional heart-shaped archway to pro-vide a background for the Sweetheart couple. Music for dancing will be pro-vided by the ""Night Train"" band of trombonist Buddy Morrow. Vocalist Carol Knight will accom-pany the band. Focal point of the night, of course, will be the crowning of 1962's Sweetheart Couple. Five couples are in the finals, but no one will know until tomorrow night who the top couple will be. Couples in the running are Pete Adams and Shirley Smith, George Henderson and Sue Parkhurst, Don McGhay and Ellen Dugan, Orlando Orsino (Continued on Page 4) Quorum Lack Nullifies Action By Senate On 'Integrity Code' By Lowell E. Sunderland Lack of a quorum nullified Senate action Tuesday on a proposed ""integrity code"" that if passed would formulate policy for a judicial board and the Student Life Com-mittee. Because the meeting broke up, discussion on the judicial board the code would regulate never even got to the floor. Some discussion did occur, however, before the quorum broke dawn. Both topics will be brought up again at the next Senate meeting, Tuesday, February 20. Drafted by the SGA's Judicial Committee, headed by Judy Max, the ""integrity code"" would not be a honor system, but an ""expression of acceptable behavior on the part of the Towson Student."" No such document exists at the college, Senate President John Tallman told the Senators as he introduced the code. He gave it his personal endorse-ment by saying, ""My personal feel-ing is that this is one of the finest thinp this Senate could do in any year."" Earlier this year, Tallman had chided the group as ""almost non-functional."" One section of the code ran into trouble immediately after Tallman had read the document to the Senate. � The section titled ""offenses against public laws"" was killed by a voice vote of the 'Senators. The section had read, ""Any person subject to this code is guilty of improper conduct if he violates any public laws or ordinances."" SGA Vice President Bob High- (Continued on Page 4) DATE BOOK February 9-17 9��Speetre of the Rose""�Alpito Pal Omega dim series�N- 1i Aud.-41t30 Basketball vs. Gallnutiet� away 10�Sweetheart Donee � Fifth Regiment Armory-0:00-1:00 13�einto� meetings�Freshmen. sill Aud.: Sophomores, S11 =01 Juniors. SH 2131 Sen-iors. Forum-3:30 It�Basketball N. Bridgewater �home�St00 Id�Basketball vs. Washington College�home�MHO/ John L. Wisthoff Religion Emphasized Feb. 19-22 Towson's YM-YWCA and Inter- , faith Council are sponsoring a Re-ligious Emphasis Week February 19 to 22. Four choirs will present choral music characteristic. of their faiths on February 19 at 8:15 pm.. in the Stephens Hall Auditorium. Par-ticipatirg in this program are a choir from the Jewish Community Center under the direction of Mr. Saul Lilienstein; a choir from the' St. Nicholas Greek 0 rt h od ox Church, directed by Mrs. Georgia Tangires; a choir from St. Mary's Seminary, under the direction of Father James M. Burns; and the Student Christian Association Choir of State Teachers College at Tow-son, directed by Miss Hazel Mac- Donald. A panel will answer questions suggested by Towson students Tuesdcy, February 20, at 8:15 p.m. in the Van Bokkelen Auditorium. Members of the panel are Rabbi Jacob S. Green, spiritual leader of the Rogers Avenue Synagogue; Father George P. Gallas, pastor of the Church of the Annunciation (Greek Orthodox); Rev. L Ralph Tabor, pastor of the First Lutheran Church; Father Manuel R. Roman, assistant pastor of the new Catholic Cathedral; and Rev. Harry W. Mason, Jr., pastor of the Woolford Memorial Baptist Church. Mr. Edward Rubendall of the Science Department of the college will be moderator of this panel dis-cussion. Students are urged to submit their questions for the panel in a box on first floor Stephens Hall. ""Cry the Beloved Country,"" a film based on a best-selling novel and later a hit play, will be shown February 21 at 8:15 P.M. in the Van Bokkelen Auditorium. Photographed in South Africa, this film is centered around a coun-try priest who is drawn to the city of Johannesburg in search of his (Continued on Page 4) STC Math Major Seeks Masters John L. Wisthoff, a mathematics major, learned this week that he is one of two persons from 90 colleges in the country to earn a 83,000 fellowship to study for his master's degree at Harvard University. a -big surprise,"" because the date He � said he found out registration of announcing winners had passed. day that he had been selected. Harvard this fall, majoring of course in mathematics education. Wisthoff said the award came as Ile will begin his studies at The 21-year old senior came to Towson from Baltimore Poly-technic Institute, where he grad-uated in the ""A"" course. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. John L. Wisthoff of 616 Annabel Baltimore. Majoring in math and minor-ing in science, Wisthoff ack-knowledged sheepishly that he had bee avenue, Dean's List n on all but one ot his semesters at the college. and that his cumulative average is ""roughly 3.4, 1 think."" Wisthoff has been a member of the college s tennis team, and said he plans to play again this spring. He explained that he found about the fellowship ""about November"" and took a qualifying test given at the Johns Hopkins University. The next word he heard about the fellows.hip was that he was one winners. Wisthoff said he plans to enter-college teaching ""as soon as pos-sible."" Frosh Class To View Sights Of Baltimore ; The sights of Baltimore will be object of a bus tour for freshmen and 1ei.r. guests Saturday, Feb- . ruary 7 Busses will leave the college at 10:00 a.m. and return abcut 4:30 p.m. from the tour, which will in-clude Ft. McHenry, the Flag House, the Shot Tower. the Baltimore Mu-seum of Art, the Walters Art Gal-lery, the Francis Scott Key Mu-seum, and many of the city's nu-merous monuments and beautiful homes. The tour ordinarily costs S6,50, but Towson frosh will have to pay only $125. Their guests and Tow-son upperclassmen will be charge:I $1.75. Deadline for pa2.-ing is Wednes-day, February 12. Fayla Lancaster, Della Cord and Shirley Fultz, all members of the Freshman Advisory Council, planned the tour for the FAC. "