GIFT FROM PUBLISHERS Ï..-L! 1D D f\ D V k P C rin Y SUMMER SESSION July 31, 1959 Women Deans Named No. 3 Films To Tell Real Story Inside Russia Dr. Catherine C. Nichols, as­ sociate dean of students at Ari­ zona State University, has an' nounced promotion of Mrs. An uncensored look behind miles alone in all parts of Rus­ Ruth Kilbourne* to the position the Iron Curtain will be pre­ sia, photographing collective of assistant dean. Mrs. Kilsented in the film “Russia and farms, city markets, industry, bourne has been on Dean Nich­ Its People,” to be shown Tues­ schools, sports events, and mus­ ols’ staff for the past three day, August 4, at 8 p.m. in thé eums. He was even able to film years. . Memorial Union Ballroom. the Kremlin leaders at a -state Dean Kilbourhe received her funeral in Red Square. Photographed by Raphael bachelor’s degree from Mount Green’s recent photographic Green, one of the first Ameri­ Union College, Alliance, Ohio, can cameramen permitted free jaunt through Russia came a f ­ . and her master’s degree in range inside the Soviet Union, ter two and one-half years of * guidance and counseling at this film shows the Russian planning and waiting for. a ASU. She was a teacher in Kent people-in many of their every­ Russian visa. He concentrated and Randolph, Ohio, public his filming on the people and day activities. schools %nd was engaged in their activities, and the result­ Green traveled thousands of guidance work both there and ing film is a contribution to in­ at Kent State University, Kent, ternational understanding. Ohio.. She served as graduate Raphael Green spent several assistant in testing at ASU years as a high school teacher . while studying for her master’s in Maine and three years in the degree. / -* > military service before he Mrs. Charlotte Lewis, form­ turned to the fields of travel erly, head resident of Gammage an dphotography. In 1946 he Hall at ASU, has been appoint­ was sent to the Far East ,and ed assistant to Dean Nichols. photographed the Russian-held DEAN . . . Catherine G. Nichols (left) is pictured . Mrs. Lewis earned her bache­ territory above the 38th paral-1 w ith new ly promoted Dean Ruth K ilboum e (cen­ lor’s' degree at Pacific Univer­ Dr. Paul Hubbard, associate lei in North Korea while on a ter), and Mrs. Charlotte Lewis. sity, Forest Grove, Ore., and professor of History at Arizona reparations survey. her master’s degree 3t Smith State University, is teaching College, Northampton, Mass. during an eight-week summer As director-cameraman on She has taught at Pacific session at Portland State Col­ the Audio-Visual Education University, at St. Paul’s Epis­ lege in Oregon, June 22 thru staff at the University of Min­ nesota, Green has had wide ex ­ copal School for Girls, Walla August 15. perience in producing educa­ Walla, Wash., and in the pub­ Taking his place during the lic school system in Mesa. She Arizona State University’s .director, has requested proper- two five-week summer ses­ tional films. has also worked with the USO housing office is setting up a ty owners with housing avail­ sions at ASU is Dr. Mitchell and Red Cross. directory of rooms and apart­ able at reasonable rates to reg­ Kerr, assistant professor of His­ Miss Margaret McCandless, ments in Phoenix, Scottsdale. ister with his office. tory at Portland State College. who has been dean' of girls at Tempe and Mesa, available as ASU is faced with a housing The two professors are ex­ the Principia School, St. Louis, housing for ASU students. shortage this year. “As of July changing both their homes and Mo., has been named head resi­ Edward M. Hickcox, housing 9, the student demand- exceed­ their jobs for the summer. dent of Palo Verde Hall, wom­ ed our supply of on-campus During the first ASU sum en’s residence at ASU. She will housing,” said Hickcox. The mer session, June 8 to July 11, succeed Miss Victoria Frederick, University, which last year had Dr. Kerr taught c o u r s e s in who has retired, to reside in a student body of over 10,000 history of the United States Sedona. can house 2,400 students on and American foreign rela­ Miss McCandless earned her A new editor was appoint­ campus. Homes are rented on s tions. Second session, July 15 bachelor’s degree at Washing­ ed and a loan services com­ first-come, first-serve basis, to A u g u s t 15, he is teaching ton University, St. Louis, and mittee formed at the execu­ with Arizona students taking American ' cultural history and her master’s degree in guidance tive meeting of the Pacific Arts precedence over those from out a seminar in American foreign and counseling from Columbia Association, according to the of state. relations. Unjyersity. president, Dr. Harry Wood, Many ASU students from For his, part, Dr. Hubbard Miss Jo Jo Craddock, Tempe, chairman of the Arizona State nearby areas commute to class­ is teaching Survey of United a graduate of ASU, has been University art department. es. Affected by the housing States history, American for­ named head resident of the Arthur Matula, assistant pro­ shortage will be some 500 stu­ eign relations, and forces and freshman women’s residence, fessor of Journalism at ASU, dents living at the far ends of influences in American history Gammage Hall. Last year, while was appointed editor of the the state or out of state. in Oregon. Raphael Green studying for her master’s degree Pacific Arts Bulletin, a quar­ at Boston (Mass.) University, terly published at ASU. His she was a graduate resident as­ next issue, late this summer, sistant in Shelton Hall, a resi­ will concern the newly estab­ dence for 500 girls. She also lished loan services committee, Arizona State University- has Istitutions and other research served as an advisor to student headed by Frank Salmon, head accepted an invitation to be­ are: To establish, maintain and | organizations will be able to government at Boston Univer­ of the'art department at Wash­ come a charter member of the cooperate with one another, operate research programs and sity. ington High School. Associated R o c k y Mountain facilities in the Rocky Moun­ with the government of the Universities, Incorporated, it tain region for the improvement United Statear^tifiq^Sjireather was announced by George A. of educaton and scientific re­ o r g a n i Boyd, ASU coordinator of re­ search, with primary emphasis strength^ search. on new programs and facilities researj Comprised of 20 Rocky Moun­ RockjifMÇuntain region, for Re^J® \ MU Activities Director, Mrs. the game -room will be open tain universities and colleges not available except through searefi agd training programs in"“^ ... Jr Ellen Bell, said that the last with all games free. offering graduate degrees in such a regional organization. all b f les o¥ science. To constitute an agency square /dance of the summer The last summer school dance sciencej ARMU will coordinate To ¿tribute to the .advance^ session/will be held tonight in will be held in the MU Ball­ the cooperative efforts of these through Which educational inof sci .tiffa knowledge and, Jm i) Clancy’s from 8 to 11 p.m. room next Wednesday from 8 institutions to obtain national the qua1 of >higher educaftifitajp Henry Wasielewski will be to 11 p.m. help for scientific facilities and Academy award winner. through the caller for the dance» free The eight piece orchestra of projects. Joanne Woqdward, is fea­ Mountain r§Stc£j&/na£updF*iid to students and faculty mem­ Bud Estes will provide the A request for ASU member­ tured as the three-in-one vantages for research and train­ bers. Mr. Wasielewski is a music for the free dance for ship in the organization, made personality of “The Three ing in all branches of science. . well known square dance caller by President Grady Gammage, which “late-nite” permission wds approved by the board of Faces of Eve” Thursday at Dr. Gammage is a member in the Valley. 7:30 p.m., in Cosner A u d i­ Dance instructions will be has been granted to all dormi­ regents in Tucson. p , torium. of the organization’s board of given during the evening and tory residents. Purposes of the organization j directors. Dr. Hubbard In Summer Job-Trade Housing Office Listing Local Accommodations Arthur Matula Named As Editor Arizona State Joins Rocky Mountain Association Final Dances Planned In MU; Feature Noted Caller Band Leader , M * I* y Page Two SUMMER SESSION ED IT O R -IN -C H IE F REPO RTER S _ _« July 31, 1959 ----- — A ------ --------- .... PET EY OLMSTED ......... — .— \ .................. A RT JO QUEL DAVE BARNES DON CARLSON T h e STA TE PRESS is d istrib u te d by D ave P ilch er O fficial cfempus n ew sp ap er of A rizona S tate U ni­ versity. P u b lish ed each W ednesday an d F rid ay th ro u g h o u t th e school y e a r, ex cep tin g holidays, a n d e n te re d as second class m a tte r in th e P ost O ffice a t T em pe, A rizona, u n d e r th e A cts of M arch 3, 1879, an d A u g u st 24, 1912. S ubscription price, $3.00 p e r school y ear. M em ber: A rizona N ew spapers A ssociation, A ssociated C ollegiate-P ress, and N ational A d v ertisin g S ervice, Inc. — ,— Sedona Art Session Full D e ta ile d W ork Sixty-one students from 12 states are enrolled in Arizona State University’s summer art session at Sedona, according to Dr. Harry Wood, chairman of the ASU art department. Half of the enrollees are from Arizona and the rest are from California, Texas, Oklahoma,New Jersey, New York, Wash­ ington, Nevada, C o l o r a d o , Michigan, Pennsylvania and Alaska. Several on-the-spot scenes are shown here. Artists Capitalize On Nature Catalog Arizona State University moves into the Space' Age this fall, with a group of class offer­ ings in the engineering depart­ ment designed for rocketeers and astronauts (space travel­ ers). Mechanical engineering stu­ dents aiming for Cape Canav­ eral, White Sands, Vandenberg Air Force Base, or any of the other missile, satellite, or 'deep-space take-off sites in this country can take almost a dozen courses in this field at ASU. Listed in the university’s new general catalog, just re­ leased this week, are such cour­ ses as “Rocket Propulsion and Rocketry,” which deals with rocket power plants, theory and application of propellants, per­ formance, and testing; and “Aero - Space Design” and CALENDAR A u g u st 3 T u e sd a y A u g u st 4 W e d n e sd a y A u g u st 5 T h u rsd a y A u g u st 6 F r id a y A u g u st 7 D A IL Y 7- 8 p.m. —✓ 'dance lessons, advanced Memorial Union Clancy’s 89 p.m. — dance lesson, beginning Memorial Union Clancy’s 8:00 p.m. — illustrated lecture, “Russia and Its People’’ ............. ....Memorial Union Ballroom 9 - 10:30 a.m. — coffee hour ....Faculty Dining Room Memorial Union 8- 11 p.m, — all school dance Memorial Union Ballroom 7:30 p.m. — movie, “The Three Faces of Eve” Cosner Auditorium, Payne Training School 6:30-7:30 p.m. — bridge lessons Senate Chamber, Memorial Union 7:30-11:00 p.m. — duplicate bridge game . Memorial Union, Lower Lounge 7:00-8:00 p.m. — dance lessons, advanced . Memorial Union Clancy’s 8:00-9:00 p.m. —r- dance lessons, beginning__ Memorial Union Clancy’s . 1:30-4:30 p.m. — crafts cen ter___ Memorial Union, Room 7 Open for your enjoyment. “Aero - Space Laboratory,” which will deal with aircraft and space vehicles. “Human Factors in S p a c e Travel” will deal with the crea­ tion of artificial environments for men who go into space, and how those environments may be controlled. The psycholo­ gical aspects of life in space­ ships and satellites will also be considered. . ,For the space navigator of tomorrow, “Mechanics of Or­ bits and Trajectories” will con­ cern itself with celestial mech­ anics, exterior ballistics of rockets, and both powered and space-flight trajectories and or­ bits. Related to tnese courses dir­ ectly concerned with rockets and space flight are others, such as “Electrical Networks,” “Feedback Conrtol Systems,” “Mechanics of Solids,” a n d “Heat Transfer.” “Mathemat­ ical for Engineering and Phy­ sics” is also a necessity. High-altitude flight by both rockets and jet aircraft is stud­ Dr. Robert F. Menke, dir­ ied in courses on fi“Gas Turb­ ector of the Arizona State Uni­ ines and Jet Propulsion,” which versity Placement Center, has is open to both undergraduate been elected vice-president of the National College Placement Council. The council is composed of eight regional associations, with a membership of both indust­ Arizona homemakers, home­ rial and educational represen­ tatives. Dr. Menke will serve making teachers and s o m e graduate students at Arizona a one-year term. Statef University are enrolled The placement center director in a clothing construction workhas just returned from N e w shopu-opfened Monday at ASU. York City, where he attended Workshop sessions are held a placement conference spon­ sored by • American Telegraph from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. five days and Telephone Co.. Western a week in the Home Econom­ Electric and Bell Telephone ics Building. The program will Laboratories. Conference head­ close Aug. 15. quarters were the Hotel St. Mrs. Madeline Minchin, who M o r i t z . Accompanying Dr. tedches clothing construction at Menke was Robert Hansen. Carl * Hgyden ' High School, Phoenix, college coordinator for Phoenix, : during thq, regular the Mountain States Telephone school year, is workshop lead­ and Telegraph Co. er. Dr. Menke Elected To Post Pottery Gets Final Touches Monday Adds Space Age Classes Clothing Subject Of Workshop .and graduate engineering stu­ dents, and “Reaction Engines” and “Gas Turbines” which take up the same subject on the graduate level. Several of the classes listed in the new catalog, which cov­ ers the 1959 - 60 and 1960-61. planning of ASU, will be offer­ ed in the coming fall semest­ er. Juveniles Topic Of Delinquency ' Control Meet Three college professors will conduct the final sessions of the fifth annual delinquency control institute at A r i z o n a State University. Dr. Sydney Smith, ASU pro­ fessor of Psychology and direc­ tor of the institute, discussed “Interviewing Techniques with Juveniles: The Sexual Deviant” this week at the meetings. ’’The Social Treatment As­ pect of Delinquency” will be considered by Morris Class, professor of Social Work at the University of Southern Calif­ ornia, in daily sessions from Aug. 3 through Aug. 7, Glass will devote major em­ phasis to the advantages and disadvantages, of existing so­ cial service programs, problems of social control, and types of problems behavior officers are likely to meet. Concluding sessions, from Aug. 10 through Aug. 14, will be conducted by Dan G. Pur­ suit, director of the delinquen­ cy control institute at the Uni­ versity of Southern California, who will discuss “Delinquen­ cy Preycotion Techniques,”