tl19631004-000 "Soccer Towson vs. JHU Home, 3 p.m. Tomorrow Vol. XVI, No. 3 'Harvest Moon' Soph Dance Gym, 9-12 Tomorrow Night Towson State College, Baltimore, Maryland October 4, 1963 $1.15 Million Science Center Slated For '64 Architectural drawings have been approved for a $1.75 million science building at Tow- 8? n State College with construc-tion scheduled to start in early sPring, it was announced today. The new facility is being , erected to accomodate the School's expanding arts and se,,lenees program and will allow Lae college to offer a major in PhYsics. The three-story building will contain 21 laboratories, two seminar rooms and five research areas. Also provided will be a 200-seat air-con-ditioned auditorium, 74-seat and 48-seat lecture halls and a 50-seat planetarium. Dr. Richard C. McKee McKee To Speak At Leader Meet Dr. Richard C. McKee, Specia-list for Institutional Informa-aids for construction will be tion from the Division of Higher 'et Within four months, school Education, U.S. Office of Edu- �Ffieials said. cation, will address campus leaders at the College's annual Leadership Conference, Satur-day, Oct. 12. Conference Chairman Sue Mc- Donald invited the guest to speak on ""The Aims of Edu-cation and the New Towson."" Dr. McKee has replied that his tentative notes include general remarks on higher education and students and specific comments on the student's role in the chang-ing picture at Towson. The speaker also plans to suggest standards by which quality may be judged. Dr. McKee received his doc-torate in psychology froni the University of Denver, where he also served as Graduate Coun-selor. He has been a Director of Counseling and Dean of Stu-dents at Eastern New Mexico University, a professor at Ball State College, and a public school counselor. He belongs to many profes-sional organizations including the American Psychological As-sociation, and the National Education Association. t The science building will be he second major facility started ,(1,41iring the current fiscal year -`' the Towson campus. Recently graund was broken for a 400,000 residence hall for Wornen. Also scheduled to be start-ed in this fiscal year is a $500,000 dining-room -kitchen facility. Harvest Moon Offers Autumn Dance Bounty b An autumn atmosphere will 'etVade Towson's Weidefield �,�.41Yinasium tomorrow evening k6aturday) as the Class of '66 Ilbresents the ""Harvest Moon ailee,"" 9 p.m. to midnight. ,The Dellonaires will pro-vide music for the semi-for-al occasion. Refreshments Will be on sale throughout he evening. atklmission is free to Towson prisildents with activity cards. bi7se who have no cards or are til ing guests may purchase 'enets at the door are $1.50 per Person. k.1)1res1dent and Mrs. Haw- IN will head the receiving el'Ill�1114 the chaperones are 1,0""38 Advisor Dr. John C. liWis and Mrs. Lewis, Dr. and d lirewington, Mr. and Mrs. held la rew, Mr. and Mrs. Moore-kr. and Mrs. Prevost, Miss `aeSer and her escort. (Continued on Page 4) Campus YMCA Meets Monday The Towson campus YM-YWCA will hold its first general meeting on Monday, Oct. 7 at 7 p.m. in the Special Dining room. Charles Jorgenson, secretary of the Central Atlantic Area YMCA, will he the club's guest speaker. Those inter-ested in joining the activities are invited to attent the initial meeting. S C Displays Future Architecture Towson State College is pre-senting ""Visionary Architec-ture,"" an exhibition of twentieth-century projects considered too revolutionary to build, Oct. 3 through Oct. 24 in the Living Art Gallery of the Student Centre. The display is sponsored by Towson's art department and committee on Special Events and is circulated by The Museum of Modern Art, New York, with the aid of a grant from the CBS Foun-dation, Inc. Included in the exhibit are designs for underground cities, buildings that incorporate roads, roads that incorporate buildings, cities built in water, bridges, theatres, and a scheme to decor-ate and improve the Alps. Thirty architects contributed the 45 projects. Among the forms shown are great cone-shaped struc-tures, glass pyramids, con-crete bowls, mushroom-shaped houses, spirals and a building shaped like a flight of steps. They range in date from 1916 to the present. closing ""farms"" for the culti-vation of sea food. William Katavolos envisions buildings that would expand from chemicals and harden into a free-form architecture, also to be floated on water. To make use of river sites, James Fitz-gibbon and C. D. Sides suggest a Bridge City carrying tubular roads and large-scale apartment houses. Several schemes aim to-ward efficient control of the environment and patterns of movement, often conceiving the city as a single sculp-tural unit such as Jean- Claude Mazet's Ideal City is in the shape of an asym-metrical truncated cone en-circled by broad avenues at three sections, with airports and other facilities not di-rectly concerned with living and working in a vast sur-rounding park. Vincent Korda in the set for the film ""Things to Come"" by H. G. Wells, suggests that the ideal city could be underground, totally enclosed for perfectly adjusted climate and light. VISIONARY ARCHITECTURE�Jerry Shank views an artist's conception of a future house. The exhibit will be on display in the Student Centre until October 24. In addition, a historical intro-duction includes work by Leo-nardo da Vinci, Piranesi and other architects of the past, some of whose visions have proved prophetic. Particularly indicative of the architects' concern for social problems and land reform are farsighted recent schemes that face the problem of population expansion. The Japanese architect Kiyonori Kikutake proposes a Marine City of cylinders floating in the ocean and en- Paolo Soleri, believing that a city can guide men in purposeful activity, has planned a Bio-technic City on the Arizona Mesa, incorporating theological and university centers as well as administrative zones. Frederick Kiesler is repre-sented by his projects for a city in space, an endless Theatre, and an Endless House, the latter consisting of a continuously curved con-crete shell to make an interi-or uninterrupted by corners or intersections. Selections from Bruno Taut's book Alpine Architecture, which proposes the aesthetic improve-ment of natural sites, are also shown. Among other plans are Buck-minister Fuller's geodesic dome to shelter Manhattan Island from climatic conditions, La Corbusier's combined road and buildings for Rio de Janeiro and Algiers, Hans Poelzig's Festival Hall, and Aricultural City by Noriaki Kurokawa, a suspended house by Paul Nelson, a long-span concrete bridge by Paolo Soleri, and a Metro-Linear City by Reginald Malcolmson. Also included are a Metro-politan Cathedral of Christ the King by Clive Entwistle, sky-scrapers by Theo van Doesburg, (Continued on Page 4) Gumm To Give 'Events' Talk On Far East William C. Gumm, Jr., direc-tor of the Holiday Travel Bureau, will present a lecture on ""The Orient"" Monday, Oct. 7, at 8:15 p.m. in Van Bokkelen Auditorium. Gumm has just returned from a tour of the Far East and will illustrate his talk with slides of his trip. The lecture is part of the special events program offered by the College this year. IRC Explores US Image Seen Abroad Three foreign students will give their opinions on ""How racial strife in the U.S. has affected the opinions of other countries towards us"" at the International Relations Club Meeting, Wednesday, Oct. 9, in S-220, 7:30 p.m. The speakers will be Miss Mania Tason from Panama, Joel Bonuke from Kenya, and Bhuwan Pendey from India. After the speeches, the tropic will be open for a general discussion. "