26—The Daily Collegian Wednesday, Aug. 29, 1984 ' Residents of the town in Capote's "In Cold Blood" saw him as both a charming individual and a very demanding author HOLCOMB, Kan. (AP) Author Truman Capote was charming but also could be overbearing as he dashed around town in his sporty Jaguar and strange clothes, gather ing details that led to his book “In Cold Blood” about the murder of a farm family, say folks in this prairie community. “He was hard to forget,” said Bill Brown, then a newspaper editor in nearby Garden City. “His personality and appearance were foreign to west ern Kansas.” “After I knew him about a week I decided I liked him,” said 81-year-old Myrtle Clare, who was the town’s postmistress when Capote spent the early 1960 s gathering information for his best-selling book. “He was awful ly friendly.” Brown recalls that Capote, who died Saturday in Los Angeles, would strut jauntily into the newsroom of the Garden City Tglegram and expect immediate attention. Brown says he never thought much of Capote’s ways, and vice versa. “He’d come in right before dead line and think I could drop every thing,” said Brown, who was editor of the newspaper 25 years ago when two men murdered Herb Clutter, his wife and two of their children Nancy and Kenyon in their farm home at Holcomb, a few miles west of Garden City. “He had this celebrity air,” Brown said. “He thought he deserved imme diate and undivided attention.” Capote arrived a few weeks after the slayings on Nov. 15,1959, and the frail writer with a droning voice did not go unnoticed long. By the first of the year, he was a guest in several homes. The town had a celebrity in its midst. Parties were given for him, and he gave parties in return. “He was an interesting fellow,” said Duane West, former county at torney for Finney County. “It’s my impression that, in Gar den City, Capote made an effort to accentuate his eccentricities,” said West. “(Capote) went out of his way to appear more of a character than he History repeats itself ’cause no one listens the first time was, wearing that huge, sheep lined “I’m sure he was accurate, but he coat and an army pillbox cap.” came in way too soon, and stirred up West said that in 1964 he and his a lot of things people were trying to wife visited New York City and called forget,” said Rupp. He said he was Capote, who had told them to phone if interviewed by Capote over .several ever they were in town.He said Ca- afternoons, and now regrets giving pote and his friend and fellow author him permission to use his name in the Harper Lee took them to “Hello, book. Dolly,” which had just opened on Rupp said he never read Capote’s Broadway. book or saw the film that was based “In the New York setting, he was on it. “I never had the desire to,” he much less eccentric,” West said. said. - Bob Rupp, 41, who was Nancy Clut- “I can’t see that anything worth ter’s boyfriend, said his memory of while came out of the book except to Capote is stained by the fact that the generate sympathy for a couple of author made millions writing about cold-blooded killers who deserved something that shopk a community so none,” West said. ' , terribly. ' > “In Cold Blood” was published in Friends remember Capote as a creative writer By 808 THOMAS Associated Press Writer LOS ANGELES (AP) Author Truman Capote “took giant steps in the clouds and he walked among, the stars,” actor Robert Blake told about 250 mourners gathered Tuesday at a memorial service for the writer. The service for Capote, who loved publicity and celebrity friends, was filled with readings of his works, playings of his favorite songs, and eulogies from bandleader Artie Shaw, Joanne Carson and author Christopher Isherwood. Recordings by Frank Sinatra and Ella Fitzgerald filled the Westwood Village Mortuary chapel, located in the cemetery that contains the tomb of Marilyn Monroe, about whom Ca pote wrote in his last published book, “Music for Chameleons.” A mahogany casket with a spray of pink roses on top dominated the tiny chapel.-The services were non-reli gious but several speakers referred to the author’s belief in God. Blake, who played one of the killers in the movie version of Capote’s “In Cold Blood,” told of meeting the writer on the film location. “He taught me more about life and acting out there in Kansas than any- ‘One almost started laughing before he told the jokes.’ one else in my life,” Blake said. “In Cold Blood,” acclaimed as the first “non-fiction novel,” detailed the murder of four members of a' family outside Garden City, Kan. “He had the excitement and amusement of a nursery, he was so childlike,” Isherwood said. “One al most started laughing before-he told the jokes.” Others referred to the .sorrows of Capote’s life. His attorney, Allen Schwartz, confimented on “the terri ble price he paid for his talent and his savage wit.” Schwartz said Capote had lost seve ral longtime friends with publication of “La Cote Basque,” a short story which had acidic portraits of New York notables. Schwartz said that Capote snapped, “Wtiat did they think they had around them a court jester? They had a writer! ” Mrs. Carson, the divorced second wife of “Tonight Show” host Johnny Carson, sobbed through a reading of 1966, after the murderers Richard Hickock and Perry Smith were hanged.ln the years before the execu tion, Capote was in constant contact with Smith and Hickock. He visited them, on death row, sent them money for necessities and wrote to them. Cliff Hope, who was Herb Clutter’s attorney, said Capote was “gracious, businesslike and intelligent.” ' But he regrets having helped him with the book. “I’m sorry it was ever written,” he said. “It brought fame and fortune to. Capote, but you might say it didn’t do anyone any particular good, least of all Capote. He wrote very little of consequence after that.” Christopher Isherwood the last paragraph of Capote’s “A Christmas Memory,” which told of the abrupt end to Capote’s childhood. Shaw read at length from Capote’s works and mused on the speculation about the cause of his death. Capote, said Shaw, “died of living; it was the deep and rich and full life that killed him.” Shaw added: “I met him a few times in recent years and he seemed to have lost his avidity for life. He was ready to go.” During the services, recordings were played of Capote’s favorite songs: “In the Wee Small Hours of the Morning” sung by Frank Sinatra; “It Never Entered My Mind” sung by Ella Fitzgerald; “Moon River,” from the film “Breakfast at Tiffany’s,” which was based on a Capote novel; and selections from the score of his Broadway show, “House of Flow ers.” Capote’s body will be cremated and sent to New York. Broadway honors Burton By MICHAEL KUCHWARA AP Drama Writer NEW YORK (AP) - On a stage decorated with a Welsh flag and a large earthenware vase filled with red roses, Broadway shared its mem ories Tuesday of actor Richard Bur ton with an appreciative audience. Richard Harris told a favorite Bur ton joke, Shirley Knight softly sang a hymn, Robert Merrill boomed out a Neapolitan folk song, and Lauren Bacall, Roscoe'.Lee Browne and Sir' Richard Attenborough recited some of the Welsh'actor’s favorite poetry. “Many of us who were'his friends and many of us who just knew of him are gathered here to recall some personal things, some warm things and his generosity,” said producer Mike Merrick, who brought Burton back to New York in 1980 in a revival of “Camelot.” Merrick organized the tribute, which was held at the Lunt-Fontanne Theater. All of those appearing, including Dick Cavett, Shirlee Fonda, Alfred Drake and director Sidney Lumet, had special remembrances of Burton, who died Aug. 5 in Geneva, Switzer land, of a brain hemorrhage. For Kathryn Walker it was the five performances she acted opposite Burton in Noel Coward’s “Private Lives,” when his co-star and ex-wife Elizabeth Taylor became ill. “It was undoubtedly among the most exciting and joyful times I have ever had in the theater,” she said. For Browne, it was Burton’s help in guiding Browne through his first film, “The Comedians.” But Burton warned him, ‘“Don’t take my word for it. Everybody knows I can’t act on film.’ Of course, we all knew that not to be true at all,” Browne said with a laugh. For Miss Knight, it was Burton’s assistance in overcoming her flat Kansas accent in her first movie, “Ice Palace.” “Mr. Burton took the time to take this naive, 20-year-old girl from Kan sas and teach her how to speak,” she said. ' Sally Hay, Burton’s fourth wife, attended the memorial, as did his daughter, Kate, and some of his rela tives from Wales who burst into spir ited Welsh hymns near the end of the program. It was at the Lunt-Fontanne that Burton made his last New York stage appearance, the 1983 revival of “Pri vate Lives.” Burton also appeared at the theater in 1964 in “Hamlet,” di rected by Sir John Gielgud. Another tribute to Burton will be held Thursday at the Academy of St. Martin in the Fields Church in Lon don. Richard Burton PENN STATE STUDENT ORGANIZATION DIRECTORY 1984-1985 Keep this directory for future reference EXECUTIVE & GOVERNMENT ORGAN IZATIONS Students are involved in decision making at the Universi ty in several ways and in matters as important as teaching assignments, curricular evaluation and design, and prospective faculty considerations. Besides the governing groups listed here, students are involved at levels all the way up to the Board of Trustees. Students constitute 10 percent of the membership of the Universi ty Faculty Senate; four students are included in the twelve-member University Council, an advisory body to the President, which also includes faculty and adminis- GREEK ORGANIZATIONS Penn State has 51 active fraternities, most of which have houses in State College or on campus. The University’s twenty sororities have floors and suites in the residence halls on campus. Each chapter is distinct from the others, though a certain philosophy is shared by all: a philosophy involving goals of friendship, academic achievement, social enjoyment, athletic endeavor, and an interest in the welfare of others. Penn State's fraternities and sororities are known for ,their charitable and philanthropic projects. These range from fund-raising drives for various charities to active volunteer work in community groups. In addition to individual chapter activities, the Greeks as a whole sponsor special events which benefit the entire commu nity. Two of these are Homecoming (the Greeks brought back the Homecoming parade, a tradition which had been discontinued) and the Dance Marathon (the pro ceeds go to charity). When groups select members, each uses its own criteria. Some look for students majoring in specific fields, having certain career interests, or engaging in particular extracurricular activities. Other groups seek diversity in members' backgrounds and goals. But members of all groups experience the sense of brotherhood and sisterhood through sharing common concerns over grades, studies, and social interests. Through their membership in fraternities and sororities, most Greeks develop lifelong friendships and associa tions. FURTHER INFORMATION Want to know more? More information can be obtained on up to 3 of these organizations by completing the accompanying form and returning it to the HUB desk. A copy of your selection sheet will be forwarded to each organization you have listed. The organization then will personally contact you trators; one student is appointed by the Governor of Pennsylvania to serve on the University’s Board of Trustees; and students participate in many college and departmental committees. Also, there is the Student advisory Board, which meets regularly with President Jordan to discuss campus issues and other student-related matters. The Board is composed of seventeen student leaders from the follow ing governmental groups plus representatives from the student governments at the Commonwealth Campuses, the University Council, and the International Student Council. ASSOCIATION OF RESIDENCE HALL STUDENTS (ARHS) (1) is a link between students living in resi dence halls and administrators in Student Affairs and Housing and Food Service, striving to maintain and improve the quality of life in the residence halls. The main office is in 101 C HUB. BLACK CAUCUS (2) coordinates all Black organiza tions on campus, helping to set priorities and direc tion. Its membership is open to all students, faculty, and staff. The Black Caucus aims to promote the positive and successful growth and development of Black students at Penn State. Its office is in 101 E . HUB. GRADUATE STUDENT ASSOCIATION (GSA) (3) is the representative student government for approximately 6,000 graduate students. It provides programming, services, and activities for graduate students and the University community. Office 305 Kern Graduate Building. SOCIAL FRATERNITIES (9) Fraternity ACACIA ALPHA CHI RHO (Crow House) ...... . ALPHA CHI SIGMA (Axe) ALPHA EPSILON PI (A E Pi) ALPHA GAMMA RHO (AGR) ALPHA KAPPA LAMBDA (AKL) ALPHA PHI ALPHA (Alphas) ALPHA PHI DELTA (A.P.D.) ALPHA RHO CHI (Archi) ALPHA SIGMA PHI (Alpha 5ig)....... ALPHA ZETA (A.Z.) BETA SIGMA BETA (Beta Sig) BETA THETA PI (Beta) CHI PHI ..... DELTA CHI DELTA KAPPA PHI (D.K.Phi) DELTA SIGMA PHI (Pink Elph.) DELTA TAU DELTA (Delts) DELTA THETA SIGMA (D.T.S.) DELTA UPSILON (D.U.) KAPPA ALPHA PSI (Kappa) KAPPA DELTA RHO (KDR) KAPPA SIGMA (Kappa Sig) LAMBDA CHI ALPHA (Lambda Chi) OMEGA PSI PHI PHI DELTA THETA (Phi Delt)! PHI GAMMA DELTA (Fiji) PHI KAPPA PSI (Phi Psi) PHI KAPPA SIGMA (Skull House).... PHI KAPPA TAU (Phi Tau) PHI KAPPA THETA (Phi Who) PHI MU DELTA (Phi Mud) PHI SIGMA KAPPA (Phi Sig) PI KAPPA ALPHA (Pika) PI KAPPA PHI (Pi Kapp) PI LAMBDA PHI (Pi Lam) SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON (SAE)' SIGMA ALPHA MU SIGMA CHI .ddress Please fill in organization and code number. Address 234 Locust Lane... 425 Locust Lane.... 406 S. Pugh Street. 321 E. Fairmont 322 Fraternity Row 339 Fraternity Row 2038 HUB 134 W. Fairmount Avenue .. No House .. 328 E. Fairmount Avenue .j 360 N. Burrowes Road .... .. 255 E. Fairmount Avenue .. 220 N. Burrowes Road .... .. 360 E. Hamilton Avenue.. . 424 E. Fairmount Avenue . 240 Prospect Avenue . 508 Locust Lane . 429 E. Hamilton Avenue.. . 101 N. Patterson Street... . 229 Locust Lane . 320 S. Fraser Street .. 420 E. Prospect Avenue.. .. 255 Highland Avenue .. 351 E. Fairmount Avenue .. No House/2038 HUB .. 240 N. Burrowes Road .... .. 319 N. Burrowes Road .... .. 403 Locust Lane .. 234 E. Beaver Avenue ~ 408 E. Fairmount Avenue .. 338 E. Fairmount Avenue .. 500 S. Allen Street „ 501 S. Allen Street ~ 417 E. Prospect Avenue.. . 409 E. Fairmount Avenue . 622 W. College Avenue... . 200 E. Beaver Avenue . 232 E. Nittany Ave . 400 E. Prospect Avenue.. And we bet you didn’t know Penn State offered over 300 activities ... Don’t overlook a tremendous resource you have at University Park; the opportunity to participate in any of more than 300 student organizations. The effort you make has a gc/od chance of rewarding both your academic life and your sense of personal accomplishment. Student organizations provide a good means of enriching your time, be it a fund drive, field trip, or sports marathon, the activity you are involved in will supplement the time you spend immersed in a textbook, library carrel, or language lab. You may want to stay within your major by selecting a professional student organization in your field. Then again, you might take the opportunity to explore something entirely different: another culture, a new game, or the out of-doors. Involvement in a student organization is the time spent on yourself, reflecting your personal interests. Also, planning and conducting projects with your peers provides a valuable experience for "real world” activities. INTERFRATERNITY COUNCIL (IFC) (4) includes the presidents of the 50 social fraternities at University Park. IFC coordinates the efforts of the fraternity system and provides services for individual chapters. You can call the IFC office (865-3455) or stop by (2038 HUB) if you have questions about the fraternity system. ORGANIZATION FOR TOWN INDEPENDENT STUDENTS (OTIS) (5) was established to "serve, protect, and promote the rights and responsibilities of students," particularly in their relationships with the municipali ty of State College. OTIS's services are many: tips on apartment living in Foundations (publication avail able at the OTIS office in 101 B HUB); information on checking and savings account policies of local banks and savings and loan institutions; a housing list and advice for apartment hunters; consumer information; and lease reading and complaint resolution services. THE PANHELLENIC COUNCIL (6) represents the nine teen sororities on campus. Panhel tries to help individual sororities achieve their own goals by providing centralized services, arid it coordinates community service projects and University-wide so cial functions. Questions about the sorority system can be answered in the Panhellenic Council office in 2038 HUB (865-3701). UNDERGRADUATE STUDENT GOVERNMENT (USG) ( (7) is the primary student governing body at the University Park campus, with offices in Rooms 203, 203 A, and 213 HUB. USG is divided into three branches: executive, legislative, and judicial. The executive branch consists of a president and vice 238-3083 237-9926 237-3118 234-9617 237- 238- 237- 238- 237- 238- 237- 238- 238-9719 . 237-4332 , 238-9944 , 237-9923 ,'238-9940 , 238-9807 237-2651 237- 238- 237- 238- 234-9923 237- 238- 234-5555 238-9849 234-9997 238-9957 238-2473 237- 238- 237- 238- 237-4923 237- 238- STUDENT ORGANIZATION SELECTION SHEET SIGMA NU. SIGMA PHI EPSILON (Sig Ep) SIGMA PI SIGMA TAU GAMMA (STG) TAU EPSILON PHI (TEP) TAU KAPPA EPSILON (Teke).. TAU PHI DELTA (Tree House). THETA CHI THETA DELTA CHI THETA XI TRIANGLE 2ETA PSI (Z Harp) SOCIAL SORORITIES (10) Sorority ALPHA CHI OMEGA (Alpha Chi) 101-S Hibbs Hall ALPHA GAMMA DELTA (AGD) 5 Ritner Hall ALPHA KAPPA ALPHA (AKA) 2038 HUB ALPHA OMICRON PI (AOPI) 15 Hiester ALPHA PHI 1 Wolf Hall ALPHA SIGMA ALPHA (ASA) 101-S Cooper Hall ALPHA XI DELTA (AZD) CHI OMEGA (Chi O) 101-S Haller Hall DELTA DELTA DELTA (Tri Delt) . 108-S Cross Hall DELTA GAMMA (DG) i 10 Shulze Ha 11.... DELTA SIGMA THETA (Delts) 108-S Hibbs Hall GAMMA PHI BETA (Gamma Phi) 108-S Haller Hall KAPPA ALPHA THETA (Thetas) 10 Wolf Hall KAPPA DELTA (KD’s) ;. 101-S Cross Hall. KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA (Kappa's)...... 108-S Cooper Hall PHI MU PI BETA PHI (Pi Phi) SIGMA DELTA TAU ZETA PHI BETA ZETA TAU ALPHA (ZTA) Stop by the Panhel-IFC Office (2038 HUB) to learn more about Penn State’s fraternities and sororities. You may sign up for rush at registration any semester. Semester The Daily Collegian Wednesday, Aug. 29,1984 —2' And don’t think that as a newcomer you aren’t invited! Each of the organizations listed below extends an enthusiastic welcome to all students. They need your support. Student Organizations and Program Development, 218 HUB, 863-4624 Literally hundreds of student activities are available at Penn State. Support services and coordination of these activities is provided by offices in the Division of Student Programs The staff in the Office of Student Organizations and Program Development are prepared to provide information which supplements that which appears in this summary .If you want to join one of the organizations or even form a new group, visit the Office of Student Organizations and Program Development. Available to enhance the organizations’ performance is a number of brochures, including a Publicity Manual for . Student Organizations, Leadership Manual, and the Student Organization Directory. At the request of student groups, staff members will provide leadership training in communication skills, decision-making, program planning, goal setting, and financial management. president, elected by the student body every Spring Semester, and the executive council, which includes the presidents of the governing groups described herein. Executive departments have been created to provide various services to students. Areas covered are political affairs, student welfare, legal affairs, aca demic affairs, and Commonwealth Campuses. The legislative branch Is bicameral, with a Student Senate and an Academic Assembly. The USG Academic Assembly is composed of three members from each of the ten college student councils and is concerned with social matters such as consumer protection and legal aid. The USG student senate consists of 35 elected members representing dormitory, town, and fraterni ty students. Ad hoc committees investigate various University policies and services. The judicial branch includes a Supreme Court and several other courts, such as the Elections Court and Traffic Court. The Supreme Court consists of a chief justice appointed by the USG president and eight associate justices appointed by the executive coun cil, all nine of whom must be approved by the Student Senate. PENN STATE UNIVERSITY VETERANS ORGANIZATION (8) is concerned with the social and intellectual growth of its members, all of whom are veterans' of the armed forces. It also is interested in “mutual aid" and “preservation of the common interests” of its members, according to the group’s constitution. Its office is in 212 HUB. . 340 Burrowes Road 524 Locust Lane 303 Fraternity Row 329 E. Beaver Avenue 328 E. Foster Avenue 346 E. Prospect Avenue., 427 E. Fairmount Avenue 523 S. Allen Street 305 E. Prospect Avenue.. 251 S. Pugh St 226 E. Beaver Avenue 225 E. Foster Ave Address 13 Wolf Hall 2 Hiester Hall 5 Hiester Hall 1 Shulze Hall.. 13 Shulze Hall 2 Ritner Ha 11... 238-9394 237- 238- 237-1454 234-9936 237-4444 237-2207 237-2592 237-4402 237-9436 237- 238- Phone 865-2822 865-2141 865-3701 965-7863 865-5922 865-9741 865-7361 865-2241 865-2671 865-6293 865-8396 865-4011 865-2742 865-2462 865-2721 865-5562 865-6912 865-5701 865-5852 865-7413