SUMMER SESSION June 19, 1959 No. 2 Guidance Is Topic Singer Joins Faculty A program based on using faculty members as advisers and counselors is recommended by two Arizona State Univer­ sity administrators to help Josephine Antoine, noted op­ in solving the guidance needs era singer, radio and TV per­ of, students as enrollment in­ former, will join the Arizona creases. State University faculty next The recqmmendation appears Ifall, as associate professor of in an article, “More Students— Voice. Better Guidance,” written by A coluratura soprano, Miss Dr. H. D. Richardson, academ­ Antoine made her debut at the ic vice president, and Dr. Rob­ Metropolitan Opera in 1935, ert F. Menke, director of singing the role -of Titania, in placement. “Mignon.” She is perhaps best The article appears in a known for her several-year stint current edition of the Educa­ as soloist on the Carnation tional Forum, published by Contented Hour, on radio. Kappa Delta Pi, national hon­ orary education society. In 1929, the year that she Dr. Richardson and Dr, was graduated from the Uni­ Menke cite the . faculty guid­ versity of Colorado, with a de­ ance and counseling prograjn gree in English literature, she at ASU as a means of insuring that the individual students do was a winner in the Atwater not get lost in the mass as the Kent National Radio Competi­ enrollment continues to in­ tions for young singers. She crease. MALL COUNCIL . . . Members were elected by summer residents of Gammage turned to the serious study of All normal college students Hall. They are, from left, Lorraine Lee, Doris Boyd, Erma Nelchee, Dorothy music, and was a pupil of Mar­ need some help some tim£. Bowman, Rose Marie Dixon, and Rosalind Begay. Guidance and counseling of nor­ cella Sembrich at the Juilliard mal students with normal edu­ Graduate School of Music in cational and vocational prob­ NEXT WEEK ^ New York City, from 1930 to lems^ can be done by faculty ’35. The University of ’Colo­ ^counselors, the role of faculty rado gave her an honorary advisers or counselors can be defined and limited. Faculty Taliesin West, one of the out­ cents per person from the Me- Iting room, and other areas bear Imaster of music degree in 1935. counselors can come to know standing buildings designed by morial Union information desk, the distinctive m a r k s of She' was with the !Metropol— their limitations, and use can The tour will begin at 4 p.m. i Wright’s genius. •itan Opera Association - from the late Frank Lloyd Wright, be made of more specialized Anyone able to take passen. 1935 to ’47. During those years will be visited Tuesday by in­ personnel, agencies and resour­ epr and the Chevrolet of the summer activities pro- Tatum Boulevard; and the jand 3 m° 1Ve showsgram for the past two years. Adelman, Boomer and Carson | Miss Antoine has been a soSince a limited number of tyfer-| homes. His influence is alsolloist with most of the nation’s sons can go on a tour, it has {evident in the Arizona Biltmore imajor symphony orchestras, sometimes been necessary to j Hotel and the Valley Ho Hotel, with the Chicago and San Franrepeat it by popular demand, j both of which were patterned cisco Opera companies. She after his use ' of geometric Ihas given concerts ’ coast-toThe c o l o r f u l , sprawling [Ishapes. Icoast and, in recent years, has structure which Wright called his “winter camp” is located The; apprentices who studied | made TV broadcasts from both near the mountains northeast under Wright at Taliesin West New York and Hollywood. of Scottsdale. Distinctive signs, and Taliesin North, near Spring Since f957, she has been a bearing the vermillion square Green, Wisconsin, not only major teacher of Voice at the which was Wright’s trademark, learned architecture but a way Eastman 'School of Music in point the way. to it in the Val­ of l i f e . Olgivanna Lloyd Rochester, N. Y., and from 1953 ley. to ’57, she taught at the Uni­ Wright, his wife, directed the versity of Texas, Austin. While there are half a dozen | aesthetic part of the program, Writht-designed homes in then She is a member of Sigma 1 Valley, only Taliesin is open which found expression in dra­ Alpha Iota, national music honto the public. There have been ma, dancing and other media. orarity society and an honor­ suggestions, since his death a Frank Lloyd Wright found ary member of Chi Omega, na­ few months ago, that it be des­ himself embroiled -in controver­ tional social sorority. ignated as a state monument. sy most of his life. His design Considered by many critics for a state capital building for as one of the finest examples Arizona, .which was first pubof the “organic” architecture licly revealed at a meeting at which. Wright championed, Arizona State University, was Taliesin was constructed by rejected, despite strong support apprentices over a period of from his admirers and stu­ years. The little theatre, draf- dents. Taliesin West On Tour Schedule Anne Frank’ Show Tickets AvajJahk^At $1 Tops Previous Records At 3.632 Summer Session Registration CHECKING . , . The telescope for-star-gazing un­ der the direction of Dr. Frank, Yale gets a prelim­ inary trial by ASU coed, Lorilee Kier. Students will attend the planet-viewing Wednesday night on the m en’s tennis courts. The first summer session enrollment at Arizona State University already has shat­ tered previous records. A total of 3,632 students have registered, according to Alfred Thomas Jr., registri and director of admissions. Hi said the sign-up this year ex­ ceeds that of 1958, when there were 3,310 enrolled at the end of late registrations. iQ^Mne ASU-sponS vy tomorrow evening at ero TheST# are avail^L to Mrsjs Sell, | f u r t h e r infdrmiiition, ^*at the J\^sjlm((frination desSfc^TransportgJtibn will be furnisheZFSirS® cents. m Page Two SUMMER SESSION June 19, 1959 tt$ $ E D IT O R -IN -C H IE F NEW S E D IT O R ,.... REPORTERS ......... ...... ...... .....................g .... - — B ........ PET EY OLM STED ------- ------------------- — ------ ...------- „---- JU L IE PA T T O N — £-------- :— ------ ----------------------U M ART JO Q U EL DAVE BA R N ES DON CARLSON T he STA TE PR E SS is d istrib u te d b y R ick B edolla O fficial cam pus n e w sp ap er of A rizona S ta te U n i­ v ersity . P u b lish ed each W ednesday a n d F rid a y th ro u g h o u t th e school y e a r, ex cep tin g h o lidays, an d e n te re d as second class m a tte r in th e P o st O ffice a t T em pe, A rizona, u n d e r th e A cts of M arch 3, 1879, a n d A u g u st 24, 1912. S u b scrip tio n price, $3.00 p e r school y ear. M em ber: A rizona N ew sp ap ers A ssociation, • A ssociated C ollegiate P re ss, an d N atio n al A d v ertisin g S ervice, Inc. Radio-TV Staffers Poll Local Stations Local news -occupies the major portion of most radio and television lïe\ys broadcasts presented in the Phoenix met­ ropolitan area. More than twice as much time is allocated to local news than international stories, and half again as much as national material. This is one Of the conclu­ sions of a survey released by Arizona State University’s ra­ dio-television bureau. T h e Alcohol Topic Of AS Seminar A seminar on Alcohol Edu­ cation in Public Schools, under joint sponsorship of the Mari­ copa County Citizens Commit­ tee on Alcoholism and Arizona State University, is planned Saturday, June 27 at Sahuaro Hall at Arizona State Univer­ sity. Registration is from 10 a.m. to 10:30 a.m. Topics include “Why Alcohol Education?” by Me. Clyde Gooderham, executive director of the. Utah State Commission on Alcohol and University of Utah School of Alcohol Studies, a panel oh “Modem Informa­ tion aabout Alcohol,” and a panel on adult education in the classroom. T h u rs d a y , J u n e 25, D r. F. O. C o o k e w ill d is c u s s A m e r ; ican m u sic a l c o m e d y a s a n e w a rt fo rm at a b o o k r e ­ v ie w lu n ch e o n . T ic k e ts fo r the lu n ch e o n m a y be p u r ch a se d at the M U in fo rm a ­ tio n d e sk f o r 90 cents before noon W e d n e sd a y . T h e r e ­ v ie w w ill be in room 218 M U, study was conducted during the second semester of 1958-59 by Donald M. Sherri'l, Phoenix, a senior radio-TV 'major. Sherill workèd in association 'with James Loper, ASU in­ structor in Mass Communica­ tions and assistant director of the bureau, who directed the study. REFRESHMENTS . . . Sum m er school-faculty and Navajo students were hon­ • The questionnaire was an­ ored Monday at a reception in Wilson Hall. Here, the refreshm ent table draws swered by all four television, an interested group. 12 of the 13 AM, and one of the FM stations. As an aver­ age, the replying stations de­ vote the following percentages to various categories in their The unlimited horizons of Arthur Aden of Motorola, Inc., Dr. Lester S. Perril, chairman individual news programs: 16.4, Arizona and the free world will speak on “Ipipact of Solid of the department of Sociology international; 23.3, national; were considered this week by State on Electronics.” The and Anthropology, was one of 9.1, sports; 9.0, weather; 2.4, experts during, the Arizona 1:30 session will feature Mr. three ASU members of the con­ agriculture; and 39.8,. local a r­ State University Conference on John Waddell of the ASU Art ference. His topic was “Some ea news. department, with the topic Positives in a Changing Social “Horizons Unlimited.” The study indicates that World.” Sponsored by the Arizona “Sanity and Expression.” most independent radio stations Association of E l e m e n t a r y The nine sessions, held in “In order to make predic­ limit themselves' to newscasts Auditorium, have been tions, we must understand so­ of five minutes duration or School Administrators, the pro­ Cosner » less. However, four of the “in­ gram ends today with two ses­ headed by Dr. Muance S. cial processes,” Dr. Perril said. sions on electronics and the dependents” answering t h e Lewis, principal of Campus He also discussed what he call­ (juestionaires aired between arts, to which the public is Laboratory School. General ed “false gods—which make us one and three 15-minute news­ invited. discussion has followed the believe that the study of. rats or ants will help us understand casts per day. This morning at 9:30 Dr. specialists’ talks. human behavior.” Some of the other lectures included “A Trip Into the Underworld of Science” by Dr. ‘Friedrich W. Schwarz of U. S. Semiconductor Products, Inc., The work of 11 Arizonans is ASU student assistant; Louise ists living in the vast South­ and “Extrapolation in a chang­ represented in the seven-state Wolff, Tempe,, ASU graduate; western area.” States included ing World” by Dr. Clement KeSouthwestern Bienival Exhibi­ and Jimmie Komatsu, Glen­ are Arizona, southern Califor­ vane of the ASU Physics de­ tion of'artnnow on display at dale, former ASU student. nia, Colorado, Kansas, N e w partment. the Santa Fe Museum in San­ Other Arizona exhibitors in­ Mexico, Oklahoma, and Texas. Opening talk of the confer­ ta Fe, N. M. clude Roger Holt, Jerome; Mac The Biennial will be shown ence was by Mr. Ed Montgom­ . Of the 11, six are now or have Schweitzer, Tonalea; Jossey Bi­ in the main floor galleries of ery, of G. E. computer center at ASU. Pointing out that only been connected with Arizona lan, Scottsdale; Harold C. the museum through June 28. From nearly 400 works sub­ from 5 to 15 percent of the State University. These include Friedly Jr. and F l o r e n c e mitted, a three-man j u r y se­ computer potential is in use Tom Harter, professor of Art; Greening, both of Tucson. Purpose of the exhibition, lected 114 individual works to Art Jacobson, assistant pro­ today, he indicated the future according to Frederick Black, be shown. In addition to these fessor Of Art; Ursala Sanhuber director, is “to stimulate the juried works, invited works of intelligence, in handling ma­ Jacobson, faculty wife, all of creative energies of the im­ were sent by nine outstanding chines depends on people using Tempe; David Sharp, Phoenix, pressive community of fine art- painters of national reputation. them to iapply to their fields. \Horizons Unlimited' Themes Meeting Arizona Staters Show Art Work In New Mexico At Seven-State Southwestern Biennial Exhibition M i B f i a w g i g g Wm msÈ ïk te x m N A V A JO COEDS'TRYJ^QRM LIFE . . Erma Eriacho (1) and Lucy Zohaunnie check Gammage Hall scrapbook for peek into uni­ versity life. Center . . . Stella Phoenix (1), Phyllis Morris, and Angeline King (r) relax before television set after a busy day of orientation classes. Right . . . Rose Marie Benally (1) and Jean Nakaj find another part of dorm living fun, as they share a tune. The girls are part of a group here for orientation classes in prepara­ tion for college life in September.