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RocUe&ie/i jjunian. College
JAYSEE ECHO
3LUME XXX
ROCHESTER, MINNESOTA, MONDAY, MARCH 25, 1963
NO. 11
few $500 Award Given by RJC Foundation
I
u
tlity
swei
iand
1,2
dges
arge
hoir, JC Players
ill Perform for
pring Assemblies
The first convocation of the
ring quarter will be held on
orch 28, in Coffman Hall. The
ogram will be the one act play,
ive in Judgement," by Douglas
ylor,' the adventure filled melo-
rjma which takes place in the
st bowl. At the time the action
gins, a young girl has been
soulted, and the cast members
e about to lynch someone.
"Five in Judgement" was orig-
lly a T.V. play on Four Star
safer and won an emmy.
The members of the cast are:
ry Delaney, Tom Bushee, Ed
Iwock, Tim Bothof, Larry Blum,
dy Packard, and David Blakely.
The choir will present the next
nvocation on April 5.
They will present Grieg's Psalms
Chorus. There will be four
loists: Wolf Rainer will sing,
low Fair is Thy Face/' the choir
is "The 4 Sharps" and Bill
ndke will sing, "God's Son
ith Set Me Free/' Mark Hough-
will be the soloist for, "Jesus
rist Our Lord is Risen/' and
ul Caflisch will be the soloist
Ih, "In Heaven Above."
Ihe choir will also do "We Sing
Rejoicing" from Easter Suite
Rirter. Soloists will be Paul
isch, tenor, and Ramona Mol-
i contralto. String instruments
ttsmpanying this will consist of
en Peterson, Penny Johnson,
wona Molde and Gretchen
in on violin; June Fiksdal on
ing bass and Pat Kaminski on
mo.
The choir will present this pro-
]rn at John Marshall later the
tie day.
3n April 25, there will be a
location panel discussion on
on the Campus" and the
rols of young adults. The
ne' will consist of a psychiatrist,
■minister, a parent, a student,
|d a teacher.
The biggest scholarship offered
to a JC student this spring will be
the new $500 award sponsored
by the Rochester Junior College
Foundation, according to Mrs.
Juliette Siem, chairman of the
Faculty Scholarship Committee.
Further information concerning
the scholarship is tentative and
awaits approval by the Foundation Board at a meeting this
month. Present awarding plans,
however, are as follows:
The $500 scholarship will be
offered for the first time this
spring, and will be given to a
different student annually thereafter. '
THE QUALIFICATIONS will include attendance at RJC for two
'years, residence in area around
Rochester, graduation in SLA or
Pre-Professional course, a "B" average or better, financial need,
character, age up to 26, and
plans to continue education.
The final selection of sopho-
Photo by Steve Matske
Science exhibits by Rochester public school students were on display in Coffman on
March 13, 14, 15. This was the fifth annual Science Fair.
153 Exhibits
High School Science Fair Held at JC
The fifth annual Science Fair
was held March 13, 14, 15 in
Coffman Hall. The chairman of
the Rochester area Science Fair
committee is James Wignes of
Rochester Junior College. Others
on the committee are Bob Cory.
Folwell School; Woody Nelson,
Washington School; Duane Dai-
ley, Central Junior High; Eli Hem-
enway, Kellogg Junior High; Ar-
den Welte, John Marshall Senior
High;, and Don Olsen, Rochester
Junior College.
The purpose of the Science Fair
is to encourage students to use
initiative and go beyond routine
classwork, to do independent and
creative work, to do their best to
understand some part of the
world around them and communicate affectively what they have
learned to other people.
Judging the exhibits were Dr.
Paul Zollman, Dr. John Ulrich,
and Clairmont Drube, from the
Mayo Foundation; V. W. Rud-
nickes, R. J. Krolak, J. M. Seehof,
R. A. Billings, R. E. Swanson, from
IBM; Ken Mackinen, Alice Endicott, Karl Dubbert, from Rochester
Junior College; and from John
Marchall High School: Merlin
Davey, Newell Smeby, Martin
Cordes, and Everett Walton.
Judging for junior and senior
high projects were based on: (1)
Scientific thinking shown in meeting the problems involved in the
project; (2) Creativity in the solution of problems and use of materials,- and (3) Presentation of the
project in the final exhibit.
There were 153 exhibits from
Rochester area elementary, junior
and senior high schools. The winners are eligible to exhibit their
projects at the Tenth Annual
Southeastern Minnesota Regional
(Cont. on page 6, col. 3)
more recipient will be made by
the Faculty Scholarship Committee.
The scholarship winner will be
selected from among the sophomores who apply. Applications
for the Foundation Scholarship
will probably be due, along with
all scholarship applications, on
April 5.
The sophomore winning the
scholarship will be presented with
certificate and letter at the Spring
Banquet, scheduled for May 15
this year.
THE $500 WILL be deposited
at the business office of fhe college or university where the student registers for the following
fall. The money will be used for
tuition fees and any remanider returned to the student.
Scholarship money will all be
applied to the junior year, and
the scholarship will not be renewed for the senior year.
Dean Charles Hill, Treasurer of
the Foundation, explained the
large amount and the awarding
to a sophomore by saying: "The
years of education away from JC
are by far the most expensive.
We feel $500 is an amount of real
significance when applied toward
those expenses."
"The scholarship is recognition
of a student who came to the
Junior College, proved highly successful, and will benefit from a
grant to help continue his education."
Coming
Radio
Programs
MARCH 31 - Mr. Walter Bateman — advice to high school
seniors on "Picking the Proper College"
APRIL 7 - Willard Johnson -
Music appreciation program
by JC choir and guest, Mr.
Orvis Ross.
APRIL 14 - Mr. Willard Johnson — Program of Easter
Music by JC music groups.
APRIL 21 — Mr. Joe Rockenbach — Spring Athletics.
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