tl19621102-000 "Homecoming Pep Rally Tonight, 7:30 � 'Winter's Tale' Next Weekend SH Aud. Vol. XV, No. 6 State Teachers College, Towson 4, Maryland November 2, 1962 Girls, Floats, Music Spotlight Homecoming `The Winter's Tale' Fourth Rally, Fire In Amalthean Play Series 1 Open Weekend H T i ht ""The Winter's Tale,"" the cur-rent undertaking of the Glen Players, will be presented next Thursday, Friday, and Saturday, Nov. 8, 9, and 10, 8:15 p.m. in Stephens Hall Auditorium. Tickets will be on sale next week and at the door. Everyone must have a ticket for purposes of getting a house count. Tickets are free with an act-ivity card and $1 for outsiders. Student tickets will be punched to distinguish them from those sold for non-students. This play is the fourth in the Anialthean Series of the Players initiated last year. In this series, seven categories File For Loans Before Dec. 3 The Committee on Loans an-iletuiced this week that Dec. 3, is the deadline for receipt of ap-plications for federal aid from the National Defense Student Loan Program for the second ernester of the 1962-63 academic Year. Application forms may be secured from the Business Of-fice. After filling them out the student may send 'them to Miss Nina Hughes, chair-man of the Committee on Loans. Pull-time students in good aca-demic standing who satisfy all re-quirements of the standards and Aractices of the college are eligi-ble if real need for financial aid xists. Interest on the loan is three per cent, and it begins to aecure and repayment begins on ally outstanding balance of a loan one year after the borrower ceases to be a full-time college student. However, military service, for 40 longer than three years, will Prolong the beginning of repay-kent and interest accrual. A stu- 'lent borrower who later becomes 4 full time public elementary or r'eeondary school teacher may have ten percent of the principal of his loan forgiven for each year full-Urne service as a teacher tIP to a total of five years. are included, classic, medieval-renaissance, Shakespearian, neo-classical, romantic, foundations of modern drama, original, and oriental. ""The series is planned so that a student at Towson for the four year period will be introduced to seven great areas of the drama,"" Dr. C. Richard Gillespie, director, explained. These plays are not done in chronological order necessarily, and so far we have covered classical, and neo-classical, Dr. Gillespie said. At Christmas a medieval mor-ality play will be given, and next spring ""The Servant of Two Masters"" will be produced in the medieval-renaissance area, he continued. In the fall of '63 ""The Chalk Circle"" will be given, an oriental creation, and in the spring of -63 the ""Sea Gull"" under founda-tions of modern drama, he said. ""So you can see over a four year period a student has a chance to see a great variety of dramatic presentations,"" Dr. Gillespie concluded. Book Store Seam Tickets To Symphony Student tickets for the Lyric symphonies and civic operas are now available in the Book Store. Symphony tickets are 93e for each performance, and opera tic-kets are $2 apiece. Season tickets for the 16 sched-uled symphonies sell for $15, and are $6 for the three operas. The college has purchased $870 worth of tickets and will obtain more if there is enough response. These tickets are being handled by the Book Store without any profit and are carried solely as a service to the students. The college bus will be avail-able for each concert, taking stu-dents directly to the door of the Lyric at a nominal cost. THE WINNER? � Juniors Jackie Phillips, Shirley Smith, Margie Barrett, and Bob Chapman work industriously on their class float which will be one of several to contend for prizes in the Home-coming Parade tomorrow. IL Earns First Class Nod For Last Semester Tower Light is now a ""first class"" college weekly, according to the Associated Collegiate Press. The ACP, which rates college newspapers across the country each semester, voted Tower Light for the second semester 1961- 1962 ""first class honors,"" the highest ever achieved by the col-lege's newspaper from the Uni-versity of Minnesota rating system. Graded on a point system, which includes in such fields of criticism as photography, news and sports coverage, writing, ty-pography, and other professional aspects, Tower Light scored a total of 3220 points. This total was a slim 180 points from top honors of the ACP� All American status. Editor of the newspaper for last semester was Fawn Wilson. Managing editor was Lowell E. Date Book Week of Nov. 2-10 2-3-11ontecomIng Week-end. 3�Clanot of '03 dance�Wetde-feld Gymnnodum�a. 9 p.m. 12 p.m. Art Lecture stud coffee hour�Student Centre � II p.m. Senate�Sill 220-3:15 p.m. S-10-61en Pin, erm �The Winter'm Tnle��SII And.. --lit:15 p.m. Coffee hour at Internthodon. � Student Centre � :t p.m. - JD . . Sunderland, this year's editor-in-chief. Only four out of 26 weekly newspapers entered in the same class as Tower Light (colleges with enrollment between 1500 and mew, earned the All-American rating. Tower Light's rating for the three semesters prior to the last one judged had been second class, with the points accumulated rising each year. Ditto Machine Placed In SH For Students Free duplicating service is now available to students, daily, at the old elevator shaft on the lower level of Stephans Hall. Miss Dale Hickman will accept material, which students need to have duplicated as part of an assignment, between 2 and 2:50 p.m. The student is requested to supply ditto masters and paper, both of which may be purchased in the Book Store. All master sheets must have the written endorsement of the instructor for whose class the material is being prepared. ere on g A pep rally on the soccer field will officially launch Towson's Homecoming activities, tonight, at 7:30 p.m. At the rally, Towson cheerlea-ders will conduct students in a snake line around a bonfire and lead them in cheers as prepara-tion for tomorrow's soccer game with Loyola. Following the pep rally, a jam session will be held in the Stu-dent Centre at 9 p.m., with music by the Caravelles and further en-tertainment by the soccer team. Tomorrow's festivities will begin with the Queen's luncheon at noon, where Miss Nina Lit, this year's Home-coming Queen, and her court will be honored guests. At 1:30, a parade of students and floats will form on campus and proceed up York road to Towson, then gather on the men's athletic field. Here, Miss Lit will be crowned by Alumni Associa-tion president Quinton Thompson. After this, winners of the floats and dorm decorations will be an-nounced. Towson will meet Loyola in a soccer game at 2:45, for the main event of the afternoon. Sponsored by the Class of 1963, the Homecoming Dance in Wiedefeld Gymnasium at 9 p.m., will climax the week-end's activities. Music will be provided by Brayden Ride-nour and his Melalians. Singers Slate Poetry Recital Towson's Singers will give a recital of Shakespeare's lyrical poetry Tuesday, Nov. 6, in the Student Centre at 8:15 p.m. The event is sponsored by the college's department of music and English, and the Student Centre Board. The program will feature a lec-ture by Miss Aileen Mize on ""The Lyrical Presentation of Women in Shakespeare."" Miss Mize is the head of the department of speech and drama at Notre Dame College. (Continued on page 4) "