0 Royalty Positions Sought Senator ^ fle e ts I , Arizona State U niversity s tu ­ dents w ill choose th e ir Hom e­ coming K ing and Queen n ex t - T hursday. ■Elections w ill tak e place from 8 a.m. "to 4 p.m. on the n o rth ­ east corner of College and O r­ ange. An activity ticket and a. m eans of identification m ust be presented before a student is. eligible to vote. Women s tu ­ dents will cast th eir ballots for th e King, and th e m en w ill elect th e Queen. Queen candidates include: Darleen A rthurs, junior, a m em ber o f K appa Delta so r­ ority, ' Panhellenic Council, president^ of Spurs, an d past president, of. A lpha Lam bda Delta. Kathy Burke, senior, Sigma Sigm a Sigma sorority president, - HOMECOMING . . . King and Q ueen candidates pose fo r pre-election picture. C o m ely fe m in in e opponents are (l to r) K a th y B u rke, M ary O lm stead, D arlene S tate Press staff m em ber, Pi A r th u rs, H elen Lee, L inda Donoho * Sharon M ickle (fr o n t ) and N ancy W eigle. D elta Epsilon, 'G am m a Alpha W y in g fo r th e k in g ’s crow n are (clo ckw ise) K arl K ie fe r, H arry H allickson, J. R. Chi »and N ew m an Club. S tep h e n s, Jo h n V m ic ê v ic h , M a rty K e n n y , and K e n t Ryan. N ot p ictured are Pat Lynda Donoho, junior, K ap (C o n tin u e d o n P a g e 9» ocratic Senator A. S. Monroney, of O klahom a w in oe interview ed n ex t T hursdal on a “B,reak the News” pro­ gram« at Arizona State U niver­ sity. The program is p art of ÁSU’s annual concert and lecture ser­ ies. The panel begins at 8:30 fp.rri. 'in the MU ballroom. • Ad­ mission is $1 or activity card. Sen. Monroney will be in terv iew ed 'b y W ashington news correspondents. John C. M et­ calfe, W ashington editor , of W orldwide Press' Service, w ill serve as panel m oderator. O ther panel m em bers are K enneth. G . Crawford, News­ week M agazine’s senior editor for national affairs, and Neil Stanford of the C hristian Sci­ ence Monitor. P anel membeEfcwiU-^yyestyjflL S e n .' M onroney about cu rrent national and international news.The audience will be ihvited to % N ûsh and M ik e T iffa n y , ress '( C o n tin u e d , o n P a g e *5) Dick Bell Named Chairman For ASU Diamond Jubilee ARIZONA’S OLDEST COLLEGIATE NEWSPAPER, ESTABLISHED 1903 Voi. 38, No. 15 TEMPE, ARIZONA Friday, November 6, 1959 Six A SU Associated Student Officers M ay Receive 66Jo Salary Increase Two senate bills (SB 129 and 130), w hich w ould raise th e salaries of six ASASU officers, iger'e introduced in Wednes-. «day’s student sen ate session/. Senate Bill 129 p ro p o ses, to raise the salaries of the ASASU presid en t,; first vice president, activities vice president and <‘secretary from th e ir p resent w age of $60 to' $100 a m onth. Salaries Would b e paid for th e nine-m onth school y ear and a re based, on a $1.25 hourly wage. The bill is sponsored by th e Finance com m ittee. P au l E llsw prth is . com m ittee ch air'm an. A sim ilar bill to raise these student officers’ salaries from $60 to $75 a m onth w as voted« fo r by the sehate late las.t spring. B ut the ASASU president a t th at" time, W arren Sum ners, vetoed the bill and w ith school R ichard H. Bell, -director of Arizona S tate U niversity’s ra ­ dio-television bureau, has been nam ed chairm an 'of the u n i­ versity’s D iam ond Jubile«, ob­ servance. ASU w ill begin a year-long celebration of 75-years of edu­ cational service to the state on Founders Day, M arch 12, I960. Bell said th a t the Jubilee ob­ servance .will have three ob­ jectives: 1. To achieve an intènsive and extensive self-evaluation of ASU in its 75th year. 2. To develop from this selfevalution and from a study of local and national needs a set of goals for the nex t 25 years. 3. To provide .the people pf Arizona w ith a m ore accurate image of ASU—its present sta­ tus, its m ethods and its objec­ tives. :Bell also announced a 17 ending, there w as insufficient at the session, calls for the tim e for another senate session establishm ent .of a perm anent and a possible revote w hich student, senate lib rary and a" w ould ovér-ride Sum ner's veto. safe deposit box for im portant T h at bill was based on a $ l-a n - papers. h our w age scale. ~ S enate Bill 132, introduced SB 129 has been referred to W ednesday, calls for a reo r­ the A thletic, S tudent Conduct ganization of the C ultural A f­ and M em orial Union senate fairs' Committee. The bill was' com m ittees for study. introduced b y senators L aw ­ Senate ' Bill 130 asks t h a t . rence W. Sm ith and Lyhn SteinAWS and AMS president’s ko of the C ultural A ffairs com­ _. — salafi.es be raised from the m ittee. .f. . p resent $30 to $45 a m onth. ■ S enate Bill 128, w hich calls The salaries, w hich would for a m inim um . $ l-a n d -h o u r. also be 'paid for the nine-m onth wage for students employed by school year, are not based on ASASU, was retained a fter its an hourly w age. This bill is second reading, because of a also sponsored by the Finance difference of senatorial opin­ ion on w hat the bill’s am end­ com m ittee. — T he bill w as tu rn ed over to m ents should be. the Education, A ctivities, and A t W ednesday’s session of the Publications - Public Relations Student Senate,' Senator L arry sehate com m ittees for th eir McCord, representing the IFC, perusal. m ade the following statem ent: Senate Bill 131, introduced I “I think the $5 fine for p a rk ­ j ing—violations in the visitor’s Tickets for the A SU -Texas lot is the m ost ridiculous thing W estern football game, to be I’ve ever heard of.” played Nov. 7’ in El PaSo, can S enator McCord’s statem ent be ordered ^if there is a de­ brought a quickly-passed m o­ mand, according to F r a n k tion by the Senate to ask the ford won second place and the Executive Council to investi­ Rispoli, graduate m anager. He . added th a t (there has. w om en’s division and D elbert gate the m atter for possible been no dem and for tickets Rogers w on^fcird in m en’s. fu tu re legislation. If this m at­ H eleh’ Sprung w as third ter goes through legal channels, but any students or group in­ place p i n n e r . in inform ative concluding w ith a bill passed terested in attending the gam.e speaking. F irst places in ex ­ by the Senate and signed by m ay contact his office, in the MU. tem poraneous speaking and' im ­ President Gammage, then w h at­ G u e s t, tickets for thé ASUp ro m p tu speaking w ere taken ever the proposed bill calls for UofA game are still on- sale ns would be law. by Bud B artlett. *. the M en’s Gym for $2.50 each.. Com peting in the m eet w ere Lim it .is one p er Student. U niversity of Arizona; W eber Campus parking stickers College, Ogden, U tah; Los A n­ Rispoli also announced th at will be honored only if they reserved seat tickets for the geles V alley College, Los A n­ are perm anently attached as geles, C alifornia; Phoenix Col­ decals in the proper place on A r i z o n a gam e are av ail­ lege; G rand Canyon College; car windows, according to able to students’ relatives and A rizona S tate College, F lag ­ Gayle Shum an, director of friends. Cost is $3.50 each. They w ill be sold on a first come, staff; T e x as) W estern 'College, campus security. first serve basis. E l Paso, Texas!; and ASU. m em ber comm ittee. They are D r. H. D; Richardson, academic vice president; G ilbert Cady, Vice president for business af­ fairs; E. J . Dpmson, executive director of the ASU F ounda­ tion; D r. Irv in g W . S to u t, dean of the G raduate College; Dr. H arry Wood, chairman, of the A rt departm ent. . Also, A rnold Bullock, profes­ sor of Music; Dr. M erle C. NuttJ asiocinte professor of Engineer­ ing; Dr. R obert JW. Ashe, pro­ fessor' of. Education; Dr. E rnest L. P arker, professor of A nim al H usbandry; Dr. John P. Vergis, associate professor of Educa­ tion; Dean Sm ith, director of • Publication. ,, O thers are Tom Hulen, presi- . dent of - Associated Students; Jam es W . , Creasman, 'alum ni secretary; Roland F e l t m a n , Scottsdale civic leader; M arvin El Paso Tickets Still Available For Saturday ASU Debaters Garner Victories At Autumn Speech Tournament Don Reilly a n d B ud B artlett, a debate team from ASUj w on first place in th e P hoenix Col­ lege A utum n Speech T ourna­ m ent last w eek ehd. They w ere undefeated in six rounds of debating. A1 M attox and C arlene S trand w on th ird place in the in ex ­ perienced debate division. In other speaking events, A rizona S tate students also placed. B ettie B oyer took first placed in persuasive speaking and second in in terp retativ e prose reading. In hum orous speaking events, M ary C raw - ¡gas / BELL Palm er, Casa G rande, president of the alum ni association; T ilm an Crance, com ptroller; and Dr. W. P„ Shofstaii, dean of students. . *, Seniors may make a p ­ pointm ents at the photo­ graphy lab, Ext, 391, for Sahuaro (yearbook) pictures between 8 a.m. and 4 p.m. ______21____ _________________ Friday, November 6, 1959 STATE PRESS Page Two Murder And Justice Throughout History, Campus Vehicles Show Theme Of Luncheon Talk By Dr. F. 0 . Cooke Sharp Increase In Decade priestly or legal code, which I n the . past ten 1 years the pared „to 7 in 1949. The U ni­ prescribes punishm ent try the num ber of ASU vehicles has versity has everything from m otor .scooters to a big Reo book; and the latter, m ore h u ­ increased from 10 to 92i m ane concept dF ’trial by a ju ry “U nfortunately,” said Andy 'w iecker, obtained from the of one’s peers. IVtills, head of the ASU garage Arizona S tate Surplus P roperty “We find all three concepts and transportation shop, .“the Agency, source of m ost of th e of justice for m urderers side by num ber of garage personnel has ASU trucks. Mills has been in- the tra n s­ side in the great play s- of only increased from two to Greece, as well as in today’s fqur. These men do all the portation business all his life ‘A natom y of a M urder’. The m aintenance, including uphol­ and form erly operated a garage thing th a t concerns a m urderer stering .'a n d engine replace­ in his home tow n of Mesa. He has been in charge of tran sp o r­ today, he explains, is: Which m ent. kind of justice is he likely to “O ur biggest problem is th at tation at ASU since 1953 arid, be subjected too?” '[ w e have only so m any vehicles w ith a knock on wood, stated Review luncheon reservations and occasionally someone will th at “there has not been a s e r ­ Homecoming Calendar «jerrust be m ade before noon get aggravated w hen a car is ious accident to date.” ’ Monday: * W ednesday, at the MU infor­ not im m ediately available. Most ' F irst day of W estern W eek (W estern w ear required on campus m ation desk. More inform ation people are very cooperative A dance will be hbld this T u e sd a y “ concerning the event can be how ever,” said Mills. Tw elve o’clock late nighT ' ™ The first passenger car in the evening at Clancy’s, ' spon­ obtained by calling extension W ednesday: college garage was- a 1946 P ly ­ 561. sored by the Social Board. V eteran ’s Day — N q school . m outh, the only car available Music will be provided by F irs t day of Homecoming (them e -^ A m erican F o lk lo re). for staff use in th a t year. The popular- records. R efresh­ Tw elve o’clock late night second car w as a 1948 C hevro­ Thursday: " .—- — m ents will be sold at reduced let, assigned to. P resident G rady ■ 8 a.m. to 4 p .m .— Homecoming K ing and Queen elections on Gammage. This y ear there are rates. Dance tim e will be 8 corner of College and Orange \ 13 sedans and 5 station w agons to 11:30. . House decorating judging s< and Dr. Gam m age has pro­ Free games will be p ro ­ 5 to 6:30 p.m. — B arbeque on field next to MU (75c or Tiieal P rin tin g enthusiast A rth u r gressed to a 1958 Oldsmobile. vided in the gam es room. ticket) ASU now has 57 trucks* c b m -1 Joquel II, Arizona State grad­ 6:30 p.m. — Pep rally on volleyball courts next to the swimming uate student, won two firs t m ing pool places and a special aw ard in 7:30 p.m. — W estern street dance on volleyball courts, featuring the hobby section of this y ear’s The A m es-B rothers,. Homecoming Royalty announced, Arizona S ta te Fair. B eard judging and presentation of trophies- . The winning, exhibit w as an F rid a y : exam ple of m odern fine p rin t­ t i n t mi i 7 p.m. — A lum ni dance and buffet, Ram ada Inn, Phoenix •ftit ing. It included w ork of John S a tu rd a y : ' „ ' •• Beecher, instructor in ASU A ll day — Alum ni registration; corner of Orange and College A fternoon cX Intercolegiate Rodeo, Scottsdale Ju n io r Cham ber E nglish and Hum anities. of Commerce G rounds < Most of Joquel’s extensive 8 p.m. -*■=- A SU -Brigpam Young Homecoming football game, Sun collection of jjooks, m anuscripts, Devil Stadium • , • old newspapers, maps, and a n ­ * _FIRST in Laundry and Cleaning • LAST in the Phone Book 10 p.m. — .After game dance, MU tique playing card^ previously, Sunday: ~ .. l& feisSSj -r have been displayed in the A fternoon — Rodeo M emorial Union. Dr. F ra n k lin O. Cooke, as­ sociate professor of English at ASU, w ill open ttie season’s book review, luncheon series w ith “M urder Anatom ized from O restes to Jim m y S tew art,” n e x t T hùrsday in the MU b an ­ q u et rooms. The luncheon, , scheduled to begin at 12:30 p.m., w ill cost $1. S tu d en t m eal tickets w ill be honored. “M urder is one of the great them es of universal literature, Dr. Cooke said. “W hat kind of justice is to be given a m a n 'w h o kills an ­ other from thoroughly un d er­ standable and even adm irable motives? This problem has con­ cerned people from the days of the m edicine m a n to the current rage for m ystery shows. “Essentially, th ere are three Stages in this search for justice: the prim itive life-fo r-a-life idea of prim itive revenge; the ASU Hobbyist Wins Recognition At~Arizona Fair Instant C ar Service Tempe Center iv d drive- in LAUNDRY& Tempe Center I*** d b * ATO-2; 9. T « í.% &CtyT*’ P A, & <5 5 lÿ. ASU Dairy Cattle J in At Fair N4r % ► Arizona State's registered H olstein dairy entries [ in ..¿the A rizona S tate F air won ten ribbon aw ards. ./ The anim als, all from" ASU’s F arm , won two firsts, one second, two thirds, and five fourths. Jud g in g of the dairy stock was held Tuesday a fte r­ noon. The fair, runs through W ednesday at the State Fair grounds on W est McDowell E o ad m n Phoenix. One, of ^the first place rib ­ bons was taken by. ASU’s en­ try in the class of bulls be­ tw een two and three y ears-ofage.-The- other was won in a special class judging Produce of I>ara. «^ASU’.s calf herd .display won thh .second place prize*. Third ao place -ribbons w ent to a junior yearling h eifer and an entry in th e Ju n io r Get of Sire class. F ourth place ribbons w ere aw arded to a jun io r b u ll-c a tfr ju n io r yearling bull, senior bull calf, and a cow two years- fV of-age but under three. The oth er fourth place aw ard’, went to A rizona S tate’s yearling herd display. OF ARIZONA -Z- g *** 4 At O-2: gyrY -©H The West’s Most Western Store w ay to "Go Western BROADW AY PAVILION GENE W O 7-5673. iH T 0 -fc £ * $ d !f% && î f tt* e > 8 t i n r p h 1 7 ^ 6 3 ^ 0 ^ J f -2 -8 A TO ** T 05 ÜS / V Friday, November 6, 1959 STATE PRESS Page Three My World Pennsylvania Coed Explores W orld .(ACP) — J a n e t Boothm an \vrites this view of the" w orld in the HOLCAD, W estm inster Cgllege, New W ilm ington, Pa. Som ew here a t hom e on a n ear-fo rg o tten bookshelf lies a dusty copy of a sixth -g rad e geo­ g ra p h y book, K now Y o u r W orld. The purpose of the book w as to pound into th e heads of recalcitrant six th rg rad ers the m ysteries of w orld geography. I don’t know how m any of us from th a t long-disbanded group ever did m aster th e geo­ graphy of our sphere, b u t fo r me, a t least, th e book (o r its title) has tak en on a new m ean­ ing. “M y W orld” is no longer a collection o f Rapd-M cN ally engravings b u t ra th e r one of com plex activity th a t seems to defy being “know n”. I w alk and try not ' to step on the cracks. Crying is a thing I never learned how to do. Soli- ‘Beat’Not ‘Beatnik’ Says Campus Bard tude is m y dearest companion. I once looked up into two ovals of love and. saw a glim m er. I By GEORGE NEBLETT out feeling pain. He explain­ laughed- and I read and I “ mind of perceptions and ed, “Pain is à state of m ind.” screamed' a n d I kicked a t th e intelligence. . .thoughts and W ith an. IQ of 148, w hich pebbles and I tried to know. contem plations, of Death’s qualifies him as a genius, H alI still f ry to know . solemn sorrow . . .w ithout etky still feels th at m any stu-sorrow .” The hills an d the valleys and dents o v erem p h asize the im ­ U nusual w ords for a nuclear portance of t h i s intelligence the riv er beds and the longi­ engineering m ajor? m easure. tudes. Do Mr. Rand and Mr. “I w rite B eat poetry,” "were “IQ has to be coupled w ith McNally know m y w orld? Do the first" w ords. Philip Halet,ky ambition in order to do a good they know theirs? spoke w hen he entered the S tate Press office. He w rites poetry in the m od­ ern vein “because it’s in m y em otional m ake-up.” H is po.etfy is often w rit tenpin a strict rhym e and m eter pattern, but contains -modern, techniques m ade famous by T. S. Elliott and m any cu rren t “beat” poets such as Ginsberg, Ferlingetti, R exroth and B rother Antonius. U nlike some of these poets, H aletky tries to compress his thought and feeling into a short space. H aletky classifies his poetry as ‘beat,’ “m ainly because th a t’s w hat everyone calls it.” However, w hen asked if he con­ siders him self a B e a tn ik ^ he firm ly answers, “No! . . J don’t know w hat a Beatnik is, and I don’t care.” Besides delving into m odern PHILLIP HALETKY poetry, H aletky, a past .member job. No m atter how, high your of the International B ro th er­ IQ, if you don’t read the text, hood of Magicians, is proficient, you w on’t know the m aterial. in hypnosis, fire-eating, es­ T h at’s the reason you have so capes, m anipulation and yoga. m any puesdo - sophisticates," By m eans of self-hypnosis he he said. can stick pins in his arm s w ith - Dr. Johnson turns another elegant phrase: For WKat? Box Office Needs Ticket'Sellers Morbid_,_ a b y s s u p o n th e peak, o f lif e . W ith lif e ’s , b lo o d e n s u in g f o r th i n •s t r e a m , ’ \ T h e s o u l^ e n g a g e d in b a r r e n s trife , S irig e c ^ a n d b u r n e d , a n d to r n i n H a d e s s tr e a m . . T h e C ultural A ffairs Box. O f­ F o r W hat^ th is lif e o f m in e o tio n a l; .f e a r - f e d , * in te lle c t, fice needs volunteer tickbt sell­ UE m p o n w h ic h f ilth y v u ltu r e s d in e , W h o se b e a k s w ith m o n s tro u s s tr e n g th ers v , ' " ... ■ d isse c t. O pportunity to m eet-people T o r m e n t, a g o n y ,, p a in -ra c k e d soul,. b le e d s w ith la v e , fro m e v e r y and to keep abreast of the cul­ T h a tv e in , tu ral affairs of Phoenix a r e . W itb lo v e ’s heat-—lik e a to n . o f c o a l, C o m fo rtin g : e la tio n , p ro d u c e d in p a in . u f th e assets o f the job. h y m u st. I b e f o r e v e r b u r n t b y lo v e ? If Was beeri suggested that W I c ra v e a te n d e r p e ac e — n o t h e a t; ,.v . fraternities and sororities aw ard M y h e a r t is lik e a g e n tle d o v e . points to pledges for this serv­ I t h a s n o feist, n o r g re e d y b e a t. H e a r t t h a t b e a ts w ith in - m y b r e a s t ice w ork. ' N o t w a v e r i n g 'y e t b y w ill to d ie , Those interested can sign up Y e t life —t h e - w ill' o f f r u itf u l q u e s t, y o n high< at the MU. Inform ation desk. Y e t ■d ie —th e. w' ill .1; ;p ra ~ —P h il H a le t k y Bobbie* f l o Sir, if it hasn t got it there, : it hasn t got it! Old Dr. Sam has done it again—brought' his dictionary up to date in terms of -modern Winston usage. Winston (wm'ston),n. A cigarette with Filter-Blend on one end and a wise man on the other; Taste (tfist), n. What decorators argue about and Winston smokers enjoy. Filter-Blend (fil'ter-bl£nd),n. A happy Carriage of art and science. Light, mild, flavorful tobaccos are artfully selected, then scientifically processed for filter smoking. Slogan (slo'gan), n. (e.g-., Winston . tastes good like a cigarette should). A „ statement of disputed grammar but un­ questioned fact. Front (frunt), n. (used in conjunction with the preposition “up”). The section of a filter cigarette where if it hasn’t got it, it hasn’t got it. Also, the section that counts, the section where exclusive Filter-Blend is to be found. Boswell (bbz'wSl). Nickname for a guy who is always hanging around to cadge Winstons from you. , e 2 0 H. 5 * WO 7-2972 r s S *- WO 7-4274 T “There isl nothing which hits yet been contrived by man by which so much happiness is produced . . . ” -V t v Rem em ber “H er” w ith a MUM on Homecoming ' - ^Boswell’s Life of u r , Johnson, Vol. 1, Page 620 R.j.REYNOLDS TOBACCOCO..WINSTON-S^LEM.N.C. WE ARE YOUR PRESCRIPTION PHARMACY Your prescription w ill bo promptly filled here In our sparkling c l e a n , modern pharmacy. Each prescription Is double - checked for accu­ racy. . In cate of any quaetlon we call your doctor. * Cold Remedies * Drugs • Baby Needs (■ rii 1 1 1 We Giva BAH Green J P Stampa H A R M A C Y 1 ? e « o £ £ IB B B E S B ar 601 Mill WO 7-2*21 Friday, November 6, 1959 STATE PRESS Page Four To The Editor E D IT O R -IN -C H IE F M A N A G IN G ED IT O R S... S P O R T S E D I T O R ____ j O R G A N IZ A T IO N S _______ C O PY E D IT O R ............ N E W S E D IT O R S ___ .___ To th e Editor: We would like to express o u r appreciation to the In depend­ ent m en w ho serenaded us Tuesday evening, Oct. 27. We have alw ays enjoyed b e­ ing serenaded o y F ra te rn ity men, but it does our h earts good to see some Independent sp irit on our campus. T hank you Independent m en. We hope to see m ore of ygu. Sincerely, . West H all Independents * # * - T p Lthe-E ditor: I find it pathetic th at on a cam pus as large- as A rizona State, in a' country as moderri as A m erica, san itary conditions are far from w h at they should be. Flies a re to .b e found in the Devil’s Den and in our MU cafeteria at nearly all tim es of the day. As one of our professors, Dr. Stahnke, points out, flies are the m ost dangerous an i­ m als in Arizona. Isn ’t th ere .an y th in g th a t can be done? Sincerely, Claudia McDo'nald O L M ST E D ...G O R D O N P E T E R S O N a n d M IK E B A R R E T T - , _ ; feO B L A IR S O N ..K A T H Y B U R K E ................A N N E L A R O C C A J A C K O N G a n d M IK E P E P L O W T h e S T A T E P R E S S Is d is tr ib u te d b y D a y e P H c h e r ' O ffic ia l c a m p u s n e w s p a p e r o f A riz o n a S ta te U n i­ v e rs ity . P u b lis h e d *»ach W e d n e s d a y .a n d F r id a y th r o u g h o u t th e sc h o o l y e a r , e x c e p tin g . h o lid a y s , a n d e n te r e d a s s e c o n d c la ss m a tte r 4 a th e P o s t O ffic e d ^ ^ T e m p e , A riz o n a , u n d e r tile A c ts of M arch- 3. 1879, a n d A u g u s t 24, 1912. S u b s c rip tio n j p ric e . S3.00 p e r s c h o o l y e a r. M e m b e r: A riz o n a N e w s p a p e rs A ss o c ia tio n , A s s o c ia te d C o lle g ia te P re s s, a n d N a tio n a l A d v e rtis in g S e rv ic e , Inc. On Other Campi w here he collected a thousand student signatures o p p o s i n g compulsory m ilitary training. He estim ated that half of the m en signing his petition w ere I L3 underclassm en, those compelled -A. I to take ROTC, reported the U niversity o f' San Francisco Foghorn, Oct. 21. Moore refused offers of help from various Organizations in ­ cluding the A m erican Friends, tne present*- Service Committee, .S tu d en t "academicall-v Civil Liberties Union arid -Act .RG hr sa tisfac terv i’’• reported, the for Peace. He said he did not want, any label attached to bis campaign based on personal .j, the, Editor: ian 'Sym pathizers,” just w h at m ilitant M ine-M ill union acUC Presjjdjbnt C lark K e rr’s principles against “preparation -University faculty commit It is w ith no sm all am ount kind of a -unioii they did have, tion. T he M exican-A m erican for w ar.” tele, formed ft pi weigh ROTC v al­ A fter ending his • hunger of interest th at I read Devon w hat they, w eie aim ing for, people involved in - the 1951 ues, is. expdjctfed to complete its trying to -accomplish. I w ould strik e w ere m en who. had “gone report by ¡next „M arch. Kerr. strike, Moore returned to his Show ley’s communication- to' im agine th a t he\ did none o f put,” a fte r a dem ocratic strike fh e S tate Press. w ith respect . said the com jnittee’s proposals home in Virginia. ' these things; if he had, I am vote, in an attem p t to secure would be adapted the follow ­ stu ent leaders have been to the role of In ternational quite certain th at he would not living and w orking conditions ing academ icj year. i; cam paigning for years to end Union of Mine, Mill arid Sm elt- have a rriv ed at the bigoted, on par w ith those of the Anglo e P ^ tr o l^ r s ia l Reserve O f- er W orkers in G rant County, flam boyant, a n d com pletely W orkers. A n injunction secu rThe resolution also • stated th at there- p lig h_t riot only „ b... ic e rs _rajning orps, program , New Mexico. Legally and m or- hysterical conclusions w h ich ' ed by the- com pany prohibited a change from compulsory to- re Por e ru m > -d . . 2.2. r ally, none should deny a m an ■are apparently held by him . them from picketing; nqgp and voluntary R pT C , but. also a California Governor Edm ond his rig h t to free speech; conThe tru th of the m atter is women both m ade the decision change , in i leaching - m ethods G. (P&t) B row n said last week sequently I am glad the Press -that the M ine-M ill union i s 'a w hich led to the wom en c a rry and procedure, . reported the he is opposed * “to, com pulsory printed his letter — an excel- highiy- m ilitan t and dem ocratic *n2 on the. strik e — packing B ruin. ., * .' ■ “ "j"'- ROTC at UC, reported the lent exam ple of a m ost am bi- organization of w orkingm en the signs to keep out no n Rea-son for the R egent’s a c - B ruinv Oct. 28. ■ . guous and totally groundless w hich h a s 'b e e n fighting since uni°h w orkers. A sk th e G ran t tion -was a 59-hour hunger G overnor Browni em phasized “charge. 1893 — against the .same kind Go. m iners, Mr. Show ley — s trik e .Oct. 19, 20 and 21 by an he was. speakijig personally and Mr. Showley asks me if I was of mind- represented by Mr', they’ll tell you. . 18-year-old ponscientous objec- not as p resid en t'o ft the Board in G rant County, in 1951 d u r - Showley — to b etter wages and Mr.* Show ley is indeed rig h t to r at UC, B erkeley, . ' o f-R eg en ts. However, he said m g th e ^trike' upon w hich ^ h e conditions of its m em bership, w hen he states “th a t “class F rederick L. Moore Jr., A A rr- if he ,h ad a Vote on the board m ovie,p“Salt of the E arth ,” is. and also to. fu rth e r the cguse h atred ” and the “d e stru c tiv e lington, Va., son of an A ir Force he agaTin.k. cqm pul- bhsed. I w as not there then; Qf “the .w hole' people” - in the fires of racial bias” w ere “for-" however, I have been in G rant deep and broad senses. Because m ented” i n ‘ G ra n t Co. T hey .colonel, had been refused a d - sor/ ROTC.. rriittance to the U niversity b e - - ' -Present types of litOTC drill County a good m any .tim ps in 0f this, it has* encountered th e w ere -— b u t not by M ine-M ill, cause he refused t o . enroll in are outm oded-and students are the last four years and krioW opposition levied by a business- The culprits, Mr,. Showley, w ere the ' compulsory twq years of forced to tak e tooi.^iuch tim e na°st of the principal persons oriented , society against an y - the people w ho’ in connection ROTC, reported the Bruin, Oct. f r o m studies, according to involved ip ^ th e dispute. F u r- thing or anyone deviating from w ith both the 1951 strik e and 22. , ■* Brown. \ ther, I knowpthe character and the “norm ” tow ard a b etter sort the “Salt of thè E a rth ” affair Moore ca rrie d -o n his cam -‘Tcjlike to see it m ade vol- nature ,of: JUM M ^SW .rr- bc?th of world. And this pppositidri' beat up union organizers and paign from -the fro n t, steps - of u n tary ,” th e G overnor \satd, dk, it functierrs in' G rant CouiJr has_ not . only included strik e - pickets, w ho scream ed “re d ” the adm inistration b u i l d i n g ported the B ruin. A n d 'Î have breaking “goon” squads j “com - 'from every housetop, who * — 0-----------——---- -—— -----■ ■■■-■ .' ------ ------------- * seen the M ine-M ill unio.n p er- gany unibns,” strik e-b reak in g burned the homes .o f union farm ing quite dem ocratically injunctions; framed--up: charges m embers, attacked union halls, EDITORIALLY SPEAKING .'an d com petently in a num ber against spokesmen and m em - - formed vigilante com m ittèes, J"8*1?*®'^-situations. G o o d bership, and the beating, k ill- '¿nd th re a te n e d . responsible la -éiîough, Mr. Showley?. ing, and deportation of pickets boriW people w ith the loss of Now , Mr, Showley tells Us and organizers, but has also life and lim b — all to keep a th at he was in G rant Cp. a t- encompassed the prim e techni- group! of w orkers, w ith a m in ­ / tending college when the strike que of .Hitler and M cCarthy .— ority national background,' “in iEW hat promises to be a volatile evening is slated for was in progress — so he knows, the “red scare.” The M ine-M ill th eir place.” Those w ere' the next Thursday, when U. S. Senator Mike M onroney (D- all about it. He was in college union, Mr. Showley, despite the real “subversives” of G rant Co. Okla.) appears in the MU ballroom before an ASU aud­ — fine — in a jschool w hich a contentions of M ach iav ellian .— the people who ap p arently great m any have felt to be critics is not “commie,” nor is forgrn — if indeed they h ad ience. * . 1f highly susceptible to the wishes it totalitarian in any sense of ever Knjgjv^— th a t th ere is su p Interview ing the long-time congressman will be ed­ of the mining corporations o f 't h e word. I am quite- certain posed to be -a F irst A m end-, itors of Newsweek, th e Christian Science Monitor, and the area; and w here most cer- th at any ran k -an d -fjle m em - S n e n t in the land and th at a ll ' the W orldwide Press Service. For ÂSU students, the fun ta inly such susceptibility is bers, includirig the staunch hum an beings are entitled tot should begin when the audience is invited to ask ques­ found in the case of radio sta - Catholic m iners of G rant Co., J iv e like people should and n o t tions and newspapers; and the Mormon m iners of U tah, hire inferior beings, tions. • w here préjudice and discrim i- and the rest of thé 140,000 m an - Ju st one m ore point M r Q thér events, th e annual ASU Homecoming w estern nation against organized labor m em bership would take issue Showleyr You say, w it'ro b v io u s io M ex ican -A m erican w ith you quite strongly. Ask reference to m yself “ . n e r. dance and barbecue, are planned for th e same evening. and the folk are traditionally very rife ’am Mr; Showley. hnne y . . J . naps someone is parroting a These have long been among the best-attended campus Letters To The Editor s Big Evening traditions. ' T h e c u ltu ra l le a d e r s f o r ASU m in d t h e g o a l o f . ' ■, B u t so m u c h l a t e to r e a r r a n g e in e m i e h t a t t e n d ta t • * . , The Grant Co. metal miners, Party line?” Your implication _ I w onder if Mri Showley ever Anglo br M exican-A m ericaq, is clear; I suggest you drop a n d s o c ia l c a l e n d a r p la n n e d b y , s t u d e n t vsjent out to the picket liné in w ere a folk who, in pre-union around to 521 W est 5th S treet i s a d m ir a b le — a n d c e r t a i n l y k e e p s in 1951 and asked those m iners, days, w ere ruthlessly exploited and ask m e th a t question to “ r o u n d i n g / o u t ” s t u d e n t s ’ p e r s o n a litie s . 2 ° ™ * ! “ s e s .“ 5y+.the concerns. In ad - m y face, and J shalj be happy ■ B being tools in a.global-struggle dipon, those of non-A nglo — very m uch s o _to give von “ r o u n d i n g ” in o n e e v e n in g ? I f i t is to o bein8 waged for a n d /o r by background had an even h a rd - an answer. t h e s e e v e n ts so t h a t aH, s tu d e n ts w is h - Russian socialism,“ -or th eir e r “row to hoe” owing to th e ir . b o th w e - é u e e e s t t t h a t - s tu d e n K l U n o n • spokesm en’ who he does not skin color. The prim e force-' > D , ’ J . s t u d e ^ t s r e s p o n - mention by name, but whom w hich has greatly bettered Jo h n R - Sajter, J r . ■feible for our cultural and social rounding out” plan TO- he slanders as being “card- every miner’s life G E T H E |l a f t e r th is . l U ^ ^ • in Grant carrying, com m unists and R us- Co. and elsew here — has been m West 5th Street Tempe, A rizona / Friday, November 6, 1959 STATE PRESS Navy Needs > Graduate Scientists G raduate and senior E ngin­ eering and Science students in ­ terested in N avy civilian em ­ ploym ent m ay be interview ed Tuesday in th e placem ent cen­ ter. ' ■Interview s w ill be for re ­ search and developm ent at th ree of .the top scientific cen­ ters iri the N avy’s new B ureau of Weapons. These civilian-m anned Navy laboratories are in southern California are for new w eapon and m issile research, develop­ m ent, and testing in areas from the depths of the ocean to outer space. J . E. Snearly, supervisory guided m issile design engineer of th e Naval O rdinance Test station, C hina Lake, Calif.; H. Sum m ers, general engineer at the station’s Pasadena facility and Law rence s j Riggs, su per­ visory electronic scientists bf the N aval O rdinance L abora­ tory, Corona, Cal., interview ers; •'THE WORM TURNS” ‘ Shakespeare said it this way ."The smallest worm wi turn, being trodden on.” But Miguel de Cervantes beat him to .it in "Don Quixote”, Part II, Book 3: Page Five Brubeck says: Classics Same Beat' By ANNE LAROCCA and GORDON PETERSON “The biggest difference be­ tw een jazz and classical xriusic is the prejudice of people list­ ening.” , • Dave B rubeck’s concise state­ m ent neatly jum ped the p u r­ ported chasm betw een jazz and the classics. B rubeck’s Q uartet played last night at the C ara­ van In n and leaves today for -.El Paso to participate in the Eil Paso Jazz Festival. “People forget Bach a n d Beethoven im provised alm ost as m uch as jazz m usicians,” B rubeck com m ented. The q u a r­ tet im provises about 90% of an evening’s perform ance from a basic fram ew ork. B rubeck feels th a t the essence of jazz is the freedom of the individual to pour him self into th a t fram e­ work. B rubeck found . college a u ­ diences good listeners w hile he w as still irTsch'O»! himself; an d w ith a group w hich couldn’t get night club bookings. His q u artet is still , touring colleges and at one tim e played at 65 schools in 65 nights, covering m ost of the More About —i U nited States in doing so. la tte r he em phasized by, Ju st .two w eeks back from a describing it as “about as low European tour, B rubeck feels as we can sink.” Rock and roll, that, w hile a t one tim e the he added, is insincere, w ritten European continent w as ahead for the money by insincere peo­ of the U nited States culturally, ple, perform ed by insincere a r­ the two places are “evening tists and played by insincere lip.” ‘‘The artists here are as D J ’s.-“The same kind of m usic good as any people in the is .done by sincere guys b e tte r w orld.” This, he added, m eant — by Count Basie, Joe W il­ artists in all fields of the arts. liams, Jim m y R ust.” . B rubeck’s new release is uIn this country, w e have the w orst and best available.” “Time O ut” w hich consists of Which an individual chooses is different tim e signatures :— a “m atter of exposure, and en­ 5/4, 9/8, 3/4 against 4/4. He is vironm ent.” B rubeck feels th a t striv in g Jo acquaint his audi­ cultural guidance can come ence w ith som ething different through the schools, radio and than 2/2, 4/4 jazz. He tries to TV. “T he goal of a comm uni-; alternate \his” album s betw een ty should be educational TV.”- fhe more fam iliar and th e ex ­ W hen such a station is estab­ perim ental or “far out.” lished, B rubeck continued, , Brubeck assured the rep o rt­ there is no reason for anyone ers th a t there w ould be m ore to 'be uneducated, “A com m un­ jazz artists in Phoenix. “We all ity should fight ,for culture.” h a v e .the pioneering spirit.” B rubeck’s exam ples o r the About the program he w ould w orst in A m erican culture ¡present last evening, he com w ere TV quiz shows, w hich lie ¡mented cryptically, “Depends called the “great A m erican bn the w eather — a n d ,thé aud­ Kbax,” and °rock and ro ilrT h e ience,” — - -- - Arizona! Mixer’ Comes From Milky Way Break The News ' 'Even a worm when trod upon, wilt turn again.' ASU’s farm is the .new home for an anim al th a t three m onths ago w asn’t for sale a t any participate in a question and price". answ er period w ith panel m em ­ L ast Jcily, -Arizona S tate’k bers a t th e conclusion of the program . ' • • A nim al H usbandry professors bought a half- interest in the Sen. M onroney is a form er registered H ereford bull, MW political w rite r Lor the O klaho­ Aricona M ixer, from the late m a News, O klahom a City» He A lan Feeney. Feeney, t h e n has been a U. S. senator since president o f . ^ t h e A m erican 1951. He served in the House Hereford Association, had the of R epresentatives fro m ; 1939 to bull a t his Milky W ay 'ra n c h 1951 and received Collier’s north of Scottsdale. M agazine aw ard for disting­ He sold ASU .the h a litih uished congressional service, in terest for $1,000. The bull was 1945. A reception in the MU upper to 1"be used jointly by Milky lounge w ill bd sponsored by the Way and ASU. A t th a t tim e C ultural A ffairs Board after the Feeney would n o t "sell full in ­ terest in the bull for any price; p ro g ram .' ...... , .* Several m onths ago. Feeney died of polio and a dispersal There WMI be ho ., State gale of his t stock w as-set. At Press "W ednesday, V eterans’ the sale, ASU purchased the Day, as th ere will' be no rem aining half interest for afischool! • ■\ ^ other- $1,000. Recently the a h i(Continued from £age 1) • m m "MUSIC HAS CHARMS" The 17th Century playwright, William Congreve, was the first to set down This classic metaphor concerning the powers of sound and rhythm. You'll find the whole quote in "The Mourning ' Bride",, Act I, Sc. 1: "Music hath charms to soothe the savage breast, To soften rocks, or bend a knotted o a k ." "RHYME OR REASON” Edmund Spenser, 16th Century poet/expected a pension. He didn't get it. So he wrote this rhyme: " I was promised on a time/To have reason _ for m y rhyme;/From that time unto this season,/ I received nor rhyme nor reason." dOCkCtf U n d e r we a r B RAN 0 Of all the kinds of underwear, only Jockey brand is espe­ cially tailored to feel better because if fits better. This superior comfort is assured by exclusive construction fea­ tures that no other underwear has duplicated. Tb enjoy real comfort, insist ort’Jockey brief—the world's first and finest. Look for Jockey at your campus store. fashioned by the house of s T T AT o p im m al’s sire was sold for $25,000. Two calves sired by MW Arizona M ixer h a v e 'b e e n b o m a t the Farm . A th ird is ex ­ pected any day. m .. . t h e tobácea th a t outsells all other imported tobaccos, combined! Try it and your very first puff will tell you why. There’s more pleasure in sm ooth-sm oking, even­ burning, long-lasting, mild AMPHORA. Popular priced, and more for your money, too —full 2 ounces in every pack! Blended iri Holland. In handy pouches and tins. Come in and try; it today 1 40c 2-OZi POUCH WE CARRY A COMPLETE LINE OF SNACKS & Your JOCKEY Dealer In Tempo. . . REFRESHMENTS F O R A SUCCESSFUL PARTY flo e S e£ £ e4 r 909 MILL AVE. - WO 7-5643 “The Place to go for Brands You Know” OPEN EVERY NITE INCLUDING SUNDAYS TILL 1:00 A M. jk X and Mill Pho. WO 7-4163 -, i A '“ Raney Foods and Snacks From All, P arts of the World Ala? a Fine Selection of Im ported Wines, Liquor and Beer a i M TRY A PIPEFUL A t THE DEALER NEAREST YOU Friday, November 6, Ì959 STATE PRESS Page ISix Expert On Instrumentation Now T ea ch in g A t ASU , An . international expert on strain guages and m easure­ ment, Mr. P eter K. Stein, now teaches at ASU. .tfiThis is the first opportunity to - tgach instrum entation thi ■Limit M ade For Appeals To Court BEHIND THE 8-BALL . I dn th e gam es room are th e h â w keye and- steady h a n d s of - J e f f R osenfeld, uiphomore. pre-lau\ The (mme room features pool, m ooker, pinball, p ip y pong | chess, checkers and o th­ er am usem ents. Hours are\ 8:30 a.m. to 9:30 p.m., . Mondcnj through Friday, and 11 a.m. to 5 p.m . S a t­ urday. .... .. - I . ' . , Teaching O pportu nities A vailable Through Placement Registration y Students w ishing to appeal ! traffic violation cases to the IA S A S U r Suprem e Court m ust jicontact Max Richards, ASASU, ¡first vice president, w ithin 48 I hours after the initial hearing | by the Traffic Appeals Board, ! according to Miss Jane W ag.ner, court clerk. A letter oi appeal m ust be Isubm itted. P ertinent dates, facts | of the case and the names and I addresses of all parties in­ volved in the citation, includ­ ing the arresting officer, should ; be a part of the letter, Miss [W agner said yesterday. All cases to appear on the court calendar m ust ’ ques­ tion thé laws involved, not facts of individual cases: Justices of the court m et Tuesday to determ ine proce­ dures for sessions and to estab­ lish the calendar. A pam phlet, explaining pro-, cedures and .other court m at­ ters, is available in the ASASU Secretary's office, MU 202, to all students holding activity cards. in Arizona and other states. ’“The best w a y 'to be inform ­ ed of available positions is to register for teacher placem ent,” Dr. R. F. Menke, director of placem ent said. Each year, hundreds of candidates, are served. However, only through p r o p e r registration can- the Placem ent Center expend its A tu rk ey shoot will be held ¥ull range of services to the in­ j j n the ASÜ rifle range next dividual. Last year, for example, the I Saturday and Sunday, Nov. 14 Placem ent . C e n t e r --received and 15. Sponsored by the Arm y and more than 6,880 teaching posi- j A ir Force ROTC rifle teams, the tions. A pproxim ately 81% ..of évent offers prizes of turkeys all new ASU teacher graduates a n d •ham s to' any shooter from and aluhini who registered were the ASU campus. An open- alerted tq opportunities and are sight .22 calibre rifle m ay be teaching, this year. A total 'of used, or contestants may 1bor­ 91 school districts interview ed row one from thé teams. A m ­ on campus —- 45 representing Arizona and 46 from' ¿-otner m unition is- supplied. -states. M -Sgt, John H. Booth, in For Jan u ary graduates, the' charge for the ¿Army ROTC, says' one out of every 20 shoot­ tirne to register for p 1atjerrferti ers will be a prize w inner. The ! is now. Forms and recomrneri- i range, in the west wall of Good­ dations should be on file by w in Stadium , will be open for Nov. 1st. Those students who com petition from 10 a.m. to 6 [ will -complete graduation re ­ p.m'. Saturday and from 12 quirements in May or during! . noon to 5 p.m. Sunday. E ntry the sum m er, sessions- should! I register no later than Feb. T, ’j fee is 50 cents. 1960. W ith each hew placem ent ■year; graduate.«; from A rizona S tate U niversity look forw ard to teaching opportunities both ROTC Sponsors Turkey Shoot a m 1 J. V Ia M AV >!_m 3 N s [t 0 A ou 0 py A jy V 3 0 0 1 AZ o m 71a aa 1 11 a 3 0 MNJV ea j T \ 0 N V U V]w M n SiV 21 a .43 E ri d ■ JL 3 I1 Nn H V V a jpSI 1 3 A 3 a B AV 3 w m Nm i n 1 V T T10 i E V 3 Sì S ’o d dj1 a i z m V0 s 1 Hi 1! M UHL O L M O nO N l • u fr m n o A s n m . l Ö3MSNV 1GDR ' ’S * - i Tri-City Drug Bayless Shopping Center WO 7-3281 w ay I feet It should be tau g h t”, Mr. Stein said of teaching here: He is a m em ber of Sigma Xi, Tau Beta Pi, Pi Tau Sigma, and trained at A urora U niver­ sity, Shanghai, China, and at the M assachusetts- In stitute of Technology w here he taught for five years. Mr. Stein has contributed to the literatu re field through a num ber of papers w hich have been published in such jo u r­ nals as “Instrum ent Society of Am erican . Jo u rn al,” “Product Engineering,” a n d “Instrum ents and A utom ation”. He co -au th ­ ored the book, “S train Guage Technigues,” and is listed in the 1959 “W ho’s Who In E n­ gineering and W ho’s Who In ■The W est.” Mr, Stein operates Stein E n­ gineering Services and also acts as editor of S train Guage R ead­ ings, for w hich he compiles and w rites m uch of the ma-*~ ferial. The laboratory in w hich Mr. Stein instructs contains m uch of his. own 'equipm ent. M eas­ urem ents arp necessary to be algle to predict w here a p art w in break and un d er w hat load. This is essential in ,a ir­ planes and other m odes ' of travel. M r. Stein holds th ree de­ grees from M IT in the fields of . M echanical . Engineering a n d Business A dm inistration. His career to date has been equally divided betw een teaching and industry. Tom orrow is the last day to obtain Itickets to “ Death of a Salesm an” by A rthur Miller, presented by the Scottkdale Players at the Scottsdale Sagebrush T h e ­ ater. Married Students’ Home Soon To Be Only Memory Victory Village,-home of ASU m arried students since 1949, soon will be only a .memory. Four of the sixtèen units in this housing project have al­ ready been auctioned off and moyed from the campu^, ac­ cording to John Ellingson, D i­ recto r ' of the Physical P lant. Two m ore units will- be moved this m onth, and the rem aining buildings-'will be m oved some­ tim e nex t year. Arizona S tate U niversity does not plan to provide any m a r­ ried student housing to replacethe Village, Ellingson said. T he land-occupied by the Vil­ lage w ill be used as p arking space for thq, present. It is the site of th e proposed Fine A rts Center. The buildings are considered beyond re p a ir and do n o t com ­ ply w ith th e City of Tem pe building codes, Ellingson added. KQDL KROSSWORD ACROSS •1. B ig laugh 5. I t ’s very con- • s trid in g * 8. B erries in N B ronx? 12. R epulsive ty p e 13. Fail w ithout th e “ F ” 14- S u n d ry assort­ m ent 15. Malke ii dill-y and it’s a Swedish 17. No? a w om an " a u th o r 18. N u t who sounds bu*gy 19. Odd* hails a r e . 21. Current 23. Star* huntin g 2i:. kroflih 50. I t ’s'b a ck w a rd in fra te rn ity 51. W atch over DOWN 1 12 2 3 H 1. A tom ic dr 15 aerosol 2. E xclam atory molding" 18 3. Sm all boys’ ’ club 4. F estival 5. Sheepish ’ a p IE VC>U K □Dl I expression 6. T e x a s’ m oney Er JOUC S H T O 1 7. _,“ C om e u p , __________ KP 1ACK T H I s ? * | :__ _ up to Kopls” 8. Lollabrigidian 9. H e’s in balance 10. M onroe-like kiss feeling 11. A rea o f defense 16. Tell all 20. R utgers’ routine 22. Koot is A m erica’s m ost 35 36 37 38 1i f U'/kr-hui!T/oat It 34. ‘B ony-tail ternptauon'v . 35. M enthol M agic m akes KooUf ” .taste 1 i. 40. Describing bathroom s 43. Feel aeepy? H ave a little, snoozy "V 44. U nbalanced uppish 46. Subject of M exican bull session 47. Heel’s alter ego 48. Snicker_•__ —49. Old card gam e; go aw ay 25. “ I z ____ so?” 26. S nooty L ondon stre et 27. T h e 50 best 23. H um or’s black sheep 30. Goofieat 31. N o t a pro* 32. N um bers’ ra c k et 35.. B aby beds 36. Kool, from the w rong end, see 37. P ound of poetry 38. Shaw ’s. S t. Law sence 39. C heer from the b ottom up 41. N o t a b it odd 42. C olored fatally? 45. T y p e of green 9 * 13 I refre sh in g . fv . No. 8 43 46 49 J 4 I 10 11 9 Frid'àÿ, Nòvember 6, 1959 STATE PRESS Page Seven Blue Ribbon Arizona State Personnel Active A t Arizona State Fair By GEORGE NEBLETT ASU has contributed to this y e a r’s Arizona S tate F a ir in m any ways, b u t th ree ASU m om entoes stand out; Ted M il­ le r’s Mural,' Ben Goo’s “The B at”, and th e A rnold A ir Society booth. " • Located in the agriculture building at the State Fair* is Ted M iller’s 160 square-foot m ural on the history of cotton in Arizona since pre-historic times. «Ted can be seen w orking on the m ural from 2 p.rh. to 3:30 p.m. and from 6 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. every day „until the fair ends W ednesday. | | - “I hope -to finish it by the end of the fair,” he m anaged to say betw een brushstrokes. The m ural is in three panels. The firstV-depicts the history of cotton up To the presentv the second "shows its cu rrent state, and the third is a prediction of w hat is to come, “The Bat,” Ben Goo’s w eldedsteel w ork took first place in the sculpture division. Mr. Goo, assistant professor of A rt, said this was an attem pt to tra n s-" m it to m etal the repulsive feel­ ing man holds for the bat. This was accomplished by elim in­ ating all smooth surfaces and using only sharp jagged forms, w rought iron broken glass and finished in a rough black. M embers of the A rnold Air Society, AFROTC honorary, are operating a refreshm ent stand at the north end of the m id­ w ay to raise money for the Sunshine —A c r e s C hildren’s Home. Aided by the AngSti Flighty the Arnold A ir'S o ciety is also planning to help the children’s home at Christm as by collect­ ing to y s-an d clothing for the children. - \ "THE BAT" . . . scu lp tu red b y B en Goo, associate professor of A r t at A S U , w on first place honors at th e S ta te Fair. Goofs crea­ tion' ivas constructed of sharp and jagged iron to convey th e idea of th e “repulsivesiess’ of th e c r e a t u r e — *• „ “Time Works For You - With The Right Life Insurance Planning.” Now m uch tim e do you UNIVERSITY %sAngd , have to reach 'y o u r fi­ nancial knew, goals?- If th e re’d problem! "be you no B ut since you don’t know, th e re’s only te M one w ay to be sure of reaching those objectiv­ es; life insurance p lan­ ned to m ake tim e w ork for you and not against you. W hen you get th e facts from CONTEMPLATING . . . Iiis n e x t strokes, T ed M il - , a .skilled M utual ! Benefit life ler ta ke s on his S ta te Fair project, and 8x20 m u ra l depicting history^of K in g Cotton. Edw ard E. m an ..like Crane of Phodbix you w ill be sur­ prised at -jh.pw little ... “tim e” protection really Celia’s Fashions I costs you. TEMPE SHOPPING CENTER S ee Us For ' ' SWEATERS A; SKIRTS - BLOUSES DRESSES AND LINGERIE " \ CHARITY . . . is being k e p t in m in d by m em bers o f A rn o ld A ir and A n g el F light, A S U honorary seg­ m e n ts of A F R O T C , as th e y s e ll d rin k s and eats on th e m id w a y ., . FOR YOUR HOMECOMING DECORATIONS FLORAL SHEETING FRINGE FESTOONING TINSELS PAINTS CORRUGATED PAPERS 107" WIDE KlO SEAM PAPER CUT OUT LETTERS CREPE PAPERS MAT BOARD BUNCH'S -^ENGRAVING * TROPHIES * WATCH E verything to m ake your^Decorations a com plete success. REPAIR A |so com plete line of C hristm as Decorations THE LLOYD R. CADY DISPLAYS PHOENIX 2818 N. 16th Street Phone AM 5-1701 WO 7-3221 609 Mill — Tempe EDWARD E. CRANE . j . providing capable service in. all fields of life insutapcé. Mutual feenefit Life Insurance Co. 342 W. McDowell Rd. - Phone ÀL 8-6193 Phoenix, Arizona - A - Friday, November 8, 1959 STATE PRESS Pase Eight E n tries In crea se F or R od eo E ven t Seven colleges and universi­ ties w ill com pete in the annual, ASU Intercollegiate Rodeo at 1 p.m. on Nov. 14 and 15 in the Scottsdale A rena. Com peting team s w ill re p re ­ sent the two C alifqrnia Poly-, technical Institutes, Pierce Ju n -i ior College, Fresno S tate Col­ lege, U niversity of Nevada, U niversity of A rizona and A ri­ zona S tate .University. Rodec* events w ill include bronc riding and bull riding; team calf and steer roping; a fraternity-sorority, bulldogging event; and w om en’s b arrel ra c ­ ing and calf tying. '' ASU team m em bers are: Ed H ubbard, Tom H arsh, Ju nior Am auisca, G ary Lee, C lark C ol- H A N D S . . .A S U Rodeo Club m e m b ers (l to r) Carol T rum an, N a n c y Bain, D ean H ill and Bob M iln er w ill com pete in th e inter-collegiate rodeo to be h eld here Nov. 14-15. M isses T ru m a n and B a in w ill participate in. barrel-races; H ill and M ilner are ropers. t ------ ------ —. Campus Currentst . . . Greek To Me Delta Chi Gives Names Of New Pledges Sigma Nu and D elta'G am m a taken along as a captive. Pledges w ere “allow ed” to tear pledges surprised th eir actives the new spapers for the soror­ w ith a successful w alk -o u t Several foreign teachers w ill ity Homecoming decorations as Monday, discuss teaching-in th eir native' Si * # a -resu lt of the w alk-out.- * % . lands tonight at the ASU Fac-„ Kappa Deltas are keeping ulty Club m eeting in MU 218. Receiving aw ards at the re ­ th eir fingers crossed today — M em bers are urged to bring cent Alpha Delta Pi initiation hoping for clear w eather so one new person or couple tQ banquet w ere new actives, they can m ake a second afterftpt the m eeting, w hich begins at n ■ M a r t h a Peck, outstanding at having th eir an n u al hay ride 8:00 p.m. -♦ * ❖ , Dr. Robert Freem an, assist­ pledge; Ja n e Wolcott, highest tonight. Dr. Boyden, L. Crouch, Phoe­ an t professor of A nim al Hus-; scholarship; Carolyn McDonald, One of the deer brought back nix physician, w ill present the bandry, was initiated into A l­ best notebook; Carol Amy King, pha Gamma Rho M onday eye- best goedie box; Nancy Blair, from a hunting trip last w eek pros and cons, and give demon­ rning. Dr. Freem an is the new. big-little Sistdr scholarship; Su­ end by Phi Delta Theta, P at strations of hyponsis as an ane­ zanne Ledbeter, highest pledge Nash, w ill be the m ain a ttra c ­ sth etic a t the pre-m edical and advisor to the fratern ity . points; Jan e Taylor, best theme. tion at a Phi D elt-G am m a Phi p re -dental students m eeting on Beta barn dance exchange Tuesday a t 7 p.m. in room 379 Pledge of the w eek selected Tuesday a t ’P ete D uham e’s of the Life! Science C enter. The by. Kappa Kappa Gamma is Lei The, Delta Gamma -pledge home. public m ay attend. , L ani Lee. class ear-w ash w ill. not take * * * M embers of th e Chi ‘om ega place tom orrow as .announced A S tudent Personnel m eeting Lambda Chi A lpha pledges pledge class held a g et-acis scheduled for. M onday a fte r­ are treating the actives to a: in Wedriesday-’s STATE PRESS. quainted w alk -o u t a t the W est­ ern Saddle Club, M onday eye- I It w as held yesterday. Tres steak dinner F rid ay evening.1 noon at 2:30 in MU 209. ning. Active Carole Beley was sorry! \ . “Law and Social Class” will Actives and pledges of Tau Kappa Epsilon- w ill m eet w ith be the topic _of a talk by Dr. TEKE alum ni from throughout L ester P e rril^ chairm an of the the state Sunday to discuss d epartm ent of sociology and an ­ final, preparations fbr the new thropology, a t the Sociology addition to and rem odeling of Club T hursday at 3:30 p.m. in MU 209. Several m em bers, of Newman ! w ill be held Sunday at 9 a.m. th eir fratern ity house, Refresh^ m ents and a get acquainted ’ ses-" Club w ill give a talent show i in St. Augustine- Episcopal sibn will fo.llow the m eeting at for the club’s m eeting T ues­ ¡C hurch, 1735 College Ave., in the house. - Tempe. day night. Admission will be I Carol Olson is new ly -ap ­ W È free to member?; 25c for non- . C anterbury m em bers w ill a t- pointed chapter treasu rer of m em bers. The public is in v it­ j tend '■the S ta te F air together Sigma Sigma Sigma. Sharon ed. •- , I Sunday evening. Law rehce is ru sh chairm an. By KATHY BURKE L D elta'C hi has annuqnced the pledging of W esley Bolin, L a r­ ry Chebowski, T erry Greene, Leo G utierrez, R ichard M ayf i e ^ Don Mungai, Benny P e­ rez, K ent Sm ith, R ichard Neveln, R aul V argas’ and Dave Sutherland. - N ew ly-elected officers 'of the B ap tist S tudent U n i o n are: M arilyn Mosby, p r e s i d e n t ; Chaille Crews, first vice presi­ dent; W ayne Cox, second vice president; Ju d y Padfield, third vice president; Phyllis S prad­ lin, secretary; Ed Buell, tre a ­ surer. ; “C anterbury Sunday,” a wor-! ship service presen ted by the ASU C an terb u ry .. Association, JUST IN . # . Conversation Pieces JAYMAR Swedter . , . for your Date Dress. . . In Orion . . . $12.95 SEE OUR SPECIAL PROMOTION ON SIZE II PASTEL JERSIE& OPEN THURSDAY TILL 9 Tim OUT F L O W E R S c o r sa g e s farge FLO W E R S 722 Mill Ave. D A IL Y E V E N IN G S WO 7-6663 WO 7-602Q mm p D JN G $ H O P3 A lovely selection of FORMALS Sem i-form al or form al B allerina Or floor length Fabrics, laces o r tulles. BRIDAL GOWNS PRICED FOR EVERY BUDGET- Everything for the Art Student 1 Art Supplies • ' Picture Framing PHONE AL 8-2628 L iberal Religious Students, a U nitarian-sponsored c a m p u s organization, w ill hold a series of bi-w eekly lecture-discussion m eetings on w orld religions b e­ ginning ...giunday evening. The first session^is-iWQjtelam. H indu­ ism w ill be discussed-N ov. 15, and B uddhism on Dec. 6. . A Moslem professor from P akistan. M ohammad Abd u r Razzaque, w i l 1 be principal speaker at the opening session. Also speaking w ill be M ahm oud Sadoogh Abbas V afai of Iran , and Ahm ed M ustafa of Egypt. The m eeting is set for 7 p.m . in MU 218. ' ? _ — N ative educators from India and B urm a 'w ill speak a t the succeeding program s. A ll are open to the public. F orm al or inform al Short, floor or tra in Laces, tulles or fabrics Fred Elquest & Son 703 N. 2nd St. Phoenix Religious Talks Are Scheduled V V P r o u jL Poodles Run Rampant Across the New 4 lins, Dick Collins; Bill .K iefer and D arrel M iller. E n try blan k s m ay be obtained from J u d y Skinner, M cClintock B. A rodeo dance, sponsored b y ASU Rodeo Club, w ill be held Nov. l i , 9 to 1 a.m., a t R iver­ side, Ballroom. Music w ill be provided by the B uster F ite Band. Admission is $1.50. OPEN MONDAYS AND THURSDAYS TILL NINE WH 5-6282 — 29 Pima Plaza SCOTTSDALE BRIDAL CONSULTANTS 307 EAST CAMELBACK AM 6 8415 Friday, November 6, 1959 A * STATE PRESS Page Nine Hear The Devils Win Over Radio & M ake i t A Party with Our . . . DELICIOUS MEXICAN FOOD Now Serving MENUDO We're Open Till Midnite CHICO'S MR. PREFERRED . . .w ill be chosen from, te n candidates th e A W S S ta r Formal. N om inees pictured are (l~ to r) T o m th o n y, E d L aw rence, W es Tranter, H arry H allickson, J o h n F rank Schaum burg. N ot pictu red are R oy G ustafson and Ed tom orrow n ig h t at H ughes, S te v e A n ­ Riggs, J im Davis, K ing. DRIVE-IN 1120 East Apache Blvd. ■— Tempe ( C o n tin u e d fr o m £-age 1) pa K appa G am m a sorority;, at Phoenix College, Associated Women S tudents’ president, H onor Board, and pom -pon girl. Helen Lee, senior, m em ber of KappäSääripha Theta -Panhellenic Council, ial Union and Education Boards, and C alendar Committee. Sharon Mickle, sènior, G am ­ m a P h i B eta sorority, P om ­ pon girl, ASU 1959 Maid of Cotton. ' Mary O lm stead, junior, m gm ■ ber of Chi Omega sorority, Associated W omen Students1 secretary, and Rallies and T ra ­ ditions Board secretary, and . 1J59 M ilitary Queen. ■ Nancy Weigle, junior, p resi­ dent o f Delta. G am m a sorority, Spurs, P a n hellenic Council, and A sso ciated ^’"Women-”' S tudents’’ Council. K ing candidates are: H arry Hallickson, senior, president of P hi Sigma K appa fratern ity , R|ig B rother C h air­ man-19§9, S tu d en t Society of 1 In d u strial E n g i n e e r s , and ' P ershing Rifles. Marty Kenny, junior, L am b­ da Chi A lpha fratern ity vicepresident, p ast house m anager, and recipient o f Blue Key and R otary Club scholarships. Karl Kiefer', senior, Sun D ev­ il football team co-captain, and tw o y ear letterm an. Pat Nash,- senior, past prCsi-» ' dent of P hi D elia Theta fra te r­ nity, Suprem e C oprt Justice, vice-p resid en t and assistant h ead -resid en t o f Hayden1 Hall, ,.and In te r-F ra te rn ity Council. Kent Ryan, junior, vicepresident of Sigma Nu fra te r­ nity, an d S un Devil M arching B a n d .........V-..................... y J. R. Stephens, junior, Sigma Chi Sigma 'fratern ity mem ber, an d Social B oard. Mike T iffany, junior, m em ­ b er of D elta Sigma Phi f r a ­ tern ity , sophom ore class presi­ d e n t, . and freshm an football (team. . John Vucuchevich, junior, A l­ p h a Tau... .Omega fratern ity (member, and Sun Devil foot­ b a ll team . v The Hom ecom ing Royalty Will be announced at the S treet Dance this T hursday night. They w ill be crow ned by Dr. ^ G ra d y G a m m a g e during half-i ^ i m e j of th e A SU -B righam 1 Young U niversity football gam e n ex t S a tu rd a y ’ evening..^ ’ A lum ni events will include a dance and buffet a t 7. p.m.! n e x t F riday in th e Ramadd In n , Phoenix. T he function is being sponsored by the Phoenix ASU A lum ni chapter. Y o u can light e ith er end! Get satisfying flavor...so friendly to your taste! NO FLA T F IL T E R E D - O U T FLA V O R ! See how Pall Mall’s famous length of fine, richtasting tobacco travels and gentles the smokemakes it mild—but does not filter out that satisfying flavor!. NO D R Y , S M O K ED -Ó U T TASTE! HERE’S WHY SMOKE *TRAVEUED* THROUGH FINE TOBACCO TA STES BEST O u t s t a n d i n g ... and th ey are M i l d ! 1 You get Pall Mall's . famous length of the finest tobaccos mopey can buy. Pall Mall's famous length travels and gentles the smoke naturally.. . Travels it over, under;around and through Pall Mall’s fine tobaccos . . . and makes it mild! Product o f VO 7-2690 ©1939, Drown&WilliamsonTobaccoCorp. I : 1 ¡¡|p 1 i ■ jS ■J jg 1 1 ■ Friday, November 6, 1959 STATE PRESS ASH Basketball Team Aided By PC Transfer Armstrong By BOB EGER E xpected to be a sparkplug on coach Ned W ulk’s Sun D evil cagers this' y ear is dim inutive g u ard L arry A rm strong who b ro k e nearly every record in th e book a t Phoenix College la st y ear w hile w inning N ation­ a l acclaim. A rm strong stands only 5’ 8% ” although th ere is a common m isaprehension th a t Tie is clos- — — NEW— Continental Styling b y the Style Leader ; - if . er to 5’KF’. His speed and v er­ satility m ake up for his lack of he'ight how ever and_ he is expected to be. one of the big guns for the Devil five this year. A t Phoenix College last year A rm strong averaged 21.7 points per gamë as the Bears compil­ ed a 26-3 record in 29 games. This is quite a feat considering the fact th a t he plays out b e­ hind the keyhole m ost of the tim e in his guàrd position. H itting nearly 50 percent of his field goal attem pts and 85 percent from the foul line, A rm ­ strong was one of the top JC scorers in the nation- percent­ age-w ise ;as w ell as in total points. D uring "the-last ten B ear games he w as successful on 74 of 77 free throw s attem pts in game com petition.' A rm strong w as bom in El Centro, California in 1938- and attended grade school in B ak ­ ersfield, Calf. He ;was an A llS tate selection for th ree yéars as a high school player a t South M ountain High in Phoenix. A ft­ e r graduation from high school, he spent ,a year in th e -A rm y and played service ball. " A ttending ASU on a bask et­ ball scholarship, the sophomore guard, is m ajoring in physical education. ' A rm strong believes, the fu ­ tu re looks good for the Sun Devil cagers and says, “I hope I - can help the club out.. - v ; Page Eleven Is Invade TWC; Seek Third BC Win By BOB LAIRSON ' The Sun Devil pass defense w ill receive another challenge tom orrow 'night w hen th e D em ­ ons tak e on T exas W estern Col­ lege a t El Paso, Texas. The M iners from TWC have taken to the aerial lanes for 50 per cent of th eir "scrimmage plays. The M iners have changed th e ir; offense to provide m ore passing opportunities, and this move has m et w ith success as they have scored more than two touchdowns in th eir last 4 games. • The big m an in the TWC passing attack is quarterback Johnny F urm an, a 6 foot 3 inch, 190 pound sophomore, who has completed 54 of 115 passes this year for .667. yards and 6 touchdowns. Arizona S tate w ill be look­ ing for their third B order Con­ ference victory tom orrow night, but the odds are stacked against the Devils as the M iners have a hoirte stadium ad v an t­ age, and also dum ped New Mexico State U niversity 20-15 two weeks ago. The M iners lost to H ard in Simmons last Saturday 14-26, but Texas W estern led at h alf­ tim e 14-13. This leaves ,TWC w ith a 2-1 record in confer­ ence play and a 3-4 overall record for the 1959 season. A loss to ASU tom orrow will erase M iner hopes for the B or­ der Conference crown. Texas W estern has two good halfbacks in L arry W eeks and Gene W illiams, b u t th eir big ground gainer is fullback C h ar­ les Bradshaw." B radshaw is a m id g e t-in college football at 160 pounds, b u t he uses his blockers to full advantage; and fights ' for every extra yard. OTHER H A L F . . . of A rizona S ta te ’s cldssy bhckcourt com bina­ tio n is sophom ore L ar­ ry A rm strong. . A r m ­ strong w ill tea m w ith P auljH ow ard to provide outstanding - dribbling and i ballhandlihg in S u n I D evil basketball gam es th is year. WATCH ¿OR G ra n d O p en in g M IS T E R Shops “The Store for Men and Young Men” The ASU football team will arrive at Sky H arbor A irport at 1:50 p.m. on S u n ­ day. A large student turnout is urged by the State Press staff. Win or loose, lets" show the players th a t we are real­ ly behind them . _ . IN The New Papago Plaza "AT THE CROSSROADS" Corner Scottsdale and«McDowell Bradshaw , w ho’s main asset is his spirited defensive play, has carried the pigskin 80’ tim es this season for a net gain of 391 yards and a 4.9 average. - Coach F ran k K ush has d i­ vided his , squad into 3 units, the Devils are the starting team , followed b y the Demons, and a, th ird strin g which w ill substi­ tu te individually on eith er team . This experim ent w orked well last weekend as the Sun Devils played' their best gam e of the season against New Mexico State. The spirit displayed by ■the victorious ASU eleven last week is due pertly to th e re ­ tu rn of halfback Allen B ene­ dict and guard Mike B artholo­ mew from the injured list. Benedict rested Nolan Jones for several plays in the Aggie contest, an d ripped off several nice gáins in the process. B en­ edict has been pushing Jones for the starting a s s ig n m e n tjn practice the past week, and should see more action, tom or­ row. C ontinuing the backfield shuffle, ■F ran U rban Has w on back his starting role at q u a r­ terback from sophomore Joe Zuger, and Charlie Jones w ill sta rt a t fullback for the second straight week. Freshm an Ray Young has moved into the sec­ ond-string right-halfback slot behjnd John McFalls. In consenting on last w eek’s gam e K ush stated “ASU’s A l­ len Benedict and F ran U rban, w ith th eir outstanding play, /•nadé the difference against New Mexico State.” F or the first tim e this season, ASU w ill play a team lighter th an them ­ selves, as the M iner line a v e r­ ages about 190 lbs." per m an, and the backfield is a com para­ tively sm all 170 pound av er­ age. the Capri's Pick Of The Week F u i taking their placa alongside the campus favorite— A-l Tapers ■lacks. Slimlined lags, axteneloa waistband w ith adjustable sida labs, and smart cross-top pockets. Only A-l Lecontes give yon the trae new Continental look. San« iorlsed. lóng-wearing cotton In favored colors and a full range of sizes. $8.95, L O O K ! PLAYBOY ü f your favorite campus shop Your A - l Dealer In Tempe 7 • men’s shop Does stuflylpg for exam s, malte you want to zzz-zz-zz? Let safe NôDôz® alert you through study and exam s! If hitting the books ever makes you,drowsy, NoDoz is the fast wakerupper you need. NoDoz Stay Awake Tablets deliver an accurate amount of safe stimulation to kee^your mind and body alert during study and exams. How? With, caffeine—the same pleasant stimlilant in coffee. But non-habit-forming NoDoz is faster, handier, more reliable. Buy some— and be in good company- Millions of times a year safe NoDoz helps busy people keep alert and awake. For Men And Y ounqM eh . . . P.S. When you need NoDoz. it*ll probably Me date. P la y safe. Keep a supply handy, 603'Mill Ave. WÔ 7-2960 Open T hurs. Night Til 9 p.rp. NoDoz, t he safe stay a w a k a ta bl a t a v a i I a b le everywhere' A S U - 24 Miners - 18 Right or Wrong You Can't Miss _ With Our P IZ Z A 'S 1 Friday November 6, 1959 STATE PRESS Page Twelve Hoop Frosh Try Varsity Today Cham pionship finals w ill be held today in ' the in tram u ral1 volley ball program . Vicing for th e title- w ill be A lpha Tau Omega and P hi Sigm a K appa. League play ended this week and th e 1w inners of th e ‘four in ­ tra m u ra l leagues have been an ­ nounced. Saguaro H all took first place in th e Arizona League and Lam bda. Delta Sigma was second. Delta Sigma P h i’s No. 1 team won the S tate League com petition ;and the Off Cam - \ pus Men placed second. In the college loop Phi Sigma Kappa | w as first and Sigma Nh seco n d .! A lpha Tau. Omega won the [ Tetnpe League play and Delta 1 Sigma P h i’s No. two team fin - I ished behind them. Sigma N h has already nail- j ed down fourth p la c e -in the | cham pionship finals L a m b d a ; Delta Sigmif; is in the fifth j spot. The DeTta Sig, ATO and i KIEFER SCORES . . . an A rizona S ta te to u ch d o w n in 1958 action against th e P h i Sig gamjfs today will be i T exas W estern M iners. T he s ix p o in ter helped th e S u n D evil cause as th e y -tu m ­ for first, scbc-yjW and third j bled T W C 27-0 in S u n D evil S ta d iu m last year. K ie fe r w ill be on hand to m o rro w places. n \g h t w h en A S U jo u rn e y s to El Paso, T exas fo r th e B order Ç ônference gam e. f WHERE U H Y . -E R . - W Arizona S tate’s inexperienced freshm an basketball quintet will scrim m age w ith the v arsity to d a y a t 4:15 pan. in Sun D evil' gym. T he Im ps have b e e n stressing fundam entals in p rac­ tice and ha#®-also been w o rk ­ ing w ith the varsity. ,, Today’s scrim m age will test the squad’s potential. Coach Fanny M arkham said the te a m w ill h a v e to re ly on m ore h u st­ le. and speed throughout the season, to m ake up' for a height deficit.' “In no w ay is th ere any starting lineup, and all boys showing desire to im prove w ill see a lot of action,” he, stated. Forw ards Bill B urget and Lee Engbrittson have been doing a good job of rebounding against th e- varsity in practice, M ark­ ham commented. Three guards, M ike M atsik, G ilbert M artinez and J o h n Brooking have displayed h u st­ le and desire on the courts. E I L .. [ TODAYS FRIDAY *1>A ( è 7* AND I DONT WANTA* M ISS Q & r THINK Ç01N6, \ A fc * 9PM fb i/ÌL $È m m w& wmmi fm - ms§t K :Ù> m m ■ M I #K» ® H p n |S H | t ■-.»■. . .•-; • ,* ,V * : J s s f ir o M H i li lìÌMMWifliM Ä lfij