I Vol. 39 Friday, Mardi 3, 1961 No. 35 Sun S tu d y in g . . . Set Next Week Dr. G. Homer Durham w ill be inaugurated the 10th president pf A SU Mar. 11, 9:30 a.m. in the M en’s Phy­ sical Education building. Dr. Durham, form er vice president of the U niversity of Utah and nationally noted political scientist, succeeds the late Dr, Grady Gammage. An inaugural banquet will be March 10, 6:30 p.m. in the Hotel Westward Ho. O. D. Miller, secretary of the Board of Regents, will be master of ceremonies. ,The banquet program will All stations have been man­ include greetings to Dr. Dur­ ham from Lynn M. Laney, ned for the fifth annual Me­ president of the Board of Re­ morial Union Birthday Party gents; Dr. Walter Becker, pres­ steering committee, it has been ident of the ASU Faculty As­ announced by John Sumners, sembly; James Creasman, rep­ activities vice president, gene­ resenting the staff of the Uni­ ral chairman. versity, and Karl Dennison, The party will be Mar. 18 president of 1the Associated from 8 to midnight for the Students. public; tl^m e is “San Fran­ Dr, O. M. Wilson, president cisco.” of the University of Minne­ Chairmen include Bob Frend, C ^fc^ ogpreciate th,e V alley sunshine and tr y absorbing some book material too. sota, will be the speaker at Golden Gate Bridge; Sue Raw-* A S U Ts one of those rare campuses where studying and relaxing can be minqled the inauguration. son, Chamber of Commerce; this w ay, and Palo Verde Hall residents are aware. (Photo by Jack G riffith) More than 100 American col­ Jim Holland, Palace of Fine lege and university presidents Arts; Wayne Cole, Fisherman’s and 150 representatives of Wharf; Jack Ong, Chinatown; learned societies have been in­ John Sumners, Hungry “i”; vited to attend. Dale Cheeley and Barbara De­ Dr. Louis M. Myers, head of fer, Red Garter; Steve Mont­ the ASU division of Language gomery, Top O’ the Mark; Jim and Literature, heads the fac­ Howard, Venetian Room; Ernie ASU is being considered as ulty committee in the planning Zumer, Maiden Lane; and Ron Approximately $11,000 worth Electronic Manufacturers As­ Schmietenknop, banquet rooms. the possible site for a model of the inauguration. The ASU Symphony Orch­ Frend is chairman on' the Constitutional C o n v e n t i o n , of new equipment has been sociation with which Beckman estra will present an inaugural Rally and Traditions board; seeking to amend Arizona’s 50- given to the ASU Electrical Instruments is affiliated, Engineering department by concert in the MU ballroom Miss Rawson chairman of the year-old top document. A purpose of the West Coast Thursday at 8:15 p.m. The Jan. 29 Board of Di­ Beckman Instruments of Cal­ MU Hostess committee; Cheeley Electronic Manufacturers As­ Guy Taylor, conductor and chairman of the Student-Fa­ rectors meeting of the Arizona ifornia. musical director of the Phoe­ culty Relations committee; Miss Junior Chamber of Commerce According ' to Dr. Lee P. sociation is to recommend elec­ nix Symphony Orchestra, will Defer chairman of the Calendar resulted in the decision to Thompson, Dean of the College tronic equipment gifts to up serve as guest conductor for a committee; and Howard chair­ launch the project iri late sum­ of Applied Arts and Sciences, it and coming western schools. mer. man of the Social committee. portion of the program. was “a very fortunate gift at The association also gives Regular conductor is Eugene They will be assisted by their The sole objective of the pro­ this time because it fulfilled our student scholarships to worthy P. Lombardi, assistant profes­ respective groups. ject would be to provide an needs in the lab courses in sor of Music. Ong, a member of the Social informational guide to the peo­ which equipment was badly persons. Arizona State offers the The inaugural concert will committee, will be assisted by ple of Arizona of what is con­ needed for increasing enroll­ mark tKe, group’s fourth pub­ the Cultural Affairs committee; tained in the document, and ments.” Bachelor of Science and Master lic appearance this year. the remaining chairmen will be what steps such a convention ASU was ■recommended for of Science degrees in Electrical assisted by volunteer "students. must go through. the gift by the West Coast Engineering. Chairmen L is te d A S Possible $11,000 Equipment Given Confab Site To Engineering Department Youth Will Lead Freedom One of the w orld’s fore­ m ost Semantics experts, Dr. S. I. Hayakawa, w rites on today’s . oral communication in “Be Our Guest!” on the Editoridl Page. By M ARY GORMAN I “Older people live in' the past “T h e o n l y encouraging era, that is, an era of twenty thought in tlje struggle against years ago when people were communism is that more and sadly misled about communism. more people across the nation They could not separate truth from fiction,” he stated. “This are waking up.” is the reasoning behind youth This statement was made by having to discover that some­ Herbert Philbrick, author of thing hasjto be done,” Philbrick “I Led Three Lives,” as he having to discover that some-: spoke to a group of students added. ■Wednesday morning in the MU Philbrick emphasized that this ballroom. is not a time of peace, but of Philbrick emphasized that this war. According to him we are that “youth across the nation in World War IIT right now, will lead the fight for freedom. and it is a waf where the en­ Youth demands America take emy expects to win. a firm position on commun­ “During the p a st, forty-four ism. years we have been losing the yrar against totalitarianism led authors are among the people by the communists. Oun loss in to campaign against commun­ Cuba proves this fact,” he ism. In Dallas high schools, a stated. course showing students the ef­ “Our only answer" to the fect communism has on our so­ threat of communism, is know-, ciety is a requirement for ledge,” said Phjilbrick. “Accur­ graduation. This is part of tpe ate information; accurate know­ education program Pliilbrick ledge, the truth, is our weapon earlier referred to. against communism. Philbrick cited the many “We are not losing this war authors who are leading the because the communists are fight for freedom. Books lie clever, but because we are stu­ includes on his list are “Advice pid.” According to Philbrick, and Consent” and “The Naked if we trained our people as Communist.” He also com­ the communists do, when emer­ mended Dean Shofstall’s* pam­ gencies arise, ■we would be phlet, “What Can I Do About prepared for them. Communism In The United In his address Philbrick States?” pointed out educators and (R e la te d S to r y , P a g e 2) Page 2 STATE PRESS Friday, March 3, 1961 Students Warned Of ‘Red’ Strategy “Just as capitalism buried The Captain challenged the feudalism, so shall we bury U.S. to “rise up and reclaim you.” American integrity and cour­ Captain E. R. Barnes quoted age.” Nikita Khruschev, above, in an Concluding, he stated, “if any address yesterday morning in other freedom fighters shout the men’s gym. The former na­ for help, we, cannot turn our val chaplain spoke in connec­ backs on them.” tion with the current anti­ communism school. at Phoenix this past week. O p e n i n g t h'e assembly, Barnes related the desire of the Cartaginians to try peaceful co-existence with the-Romans; Carthage realized' too late that Entries for the 5th annual Rome was using the co-exist­ contest in colloid and surface ence theory plus “uni-lateral chemistry must be submitted disarmament” to weaken Car^ thage. Because of the Cartha­ by,July 3, 1961. ginian weakness, Rome des­ The contest, sponsored by troyed them- without mercy. the Continental Oil Company of “’This lesson might ITe taken ! „ ' m Five A rm y ROTC cadet officers were appointed distinguished m ilitary students seriously by us.” stated Ramps Tuesday and are eligible for regular A rm y commissions. From left are, Charles Barnes. I Houston> Texas and Ponca A. Clause, Ivan J. Vucichevich , . Bernd Schwartz, James L. Shepard, and Scott T.he Methodist m i n i s t e r I City, Oklahoma, is open to all D. Foster. ■ < . stated' that Khruschev has is­ regular undergraduates. sued two choices to us: sur­ The contestants may enter render or defend. either a report on a research The Soviet change in tactics I Project conducted by themsince 1953 regarding peaceful selves, or an essay on the subToday — Buena Park Ele­ The City of Los Angeles — co-existence demonstrates -ihe jeet, “The role of colloid and mentary School District — civil engineers and administra­ theory which desires “to black­ surface chemistry in some as­ Kindergarten through eighth tive trainees. Copies ¡pf all Arizona news­ mail the free world into sub­ pect of petroleum technology.” grade, elementary home econ­ Social Security Administra­ papers |crtjid_ some out-of-state mission without Tiring a shot,” The best essay and the best omics and Industrial Arts Can­ tion — business administration papers are on file in the MU said Barnes. report will each receive prizes didates. and liberal arts; men and wo­ lower lounge. Recounting the communist of $500 and the second best - Touch, Ross, Bailey and men. Out-of-state papers include infiltration into China, Barnes, $200, plus honorable mention Smart — Accountants. Torrance Unified School Dis­ “The New York Time?,” “Times who worked with the late re­ prizes of $50. Sylvania — electrical engi­ of London,” “Chicago Daily nowned Dr. Thomas Dooley, Entry blanks may be ob­ neers and computer engineers. trict and Muroc Unified School News” and “Buffalo Evening District — Elementary, Junior stated fhat “as soon as they tained by writing Prof. K. J. Monday — Beckman instru­ News.” had gained control, slam! down Mysels, Chemistry Dept., Uni­ ments — electrical engineers, High and 1High school teacher candidates. * “Cities that are not send|ng came the curtain and the hard versity of Southern California, computer engineers and engi­ newspapers will be asked to do Tuesday — Cupertino Union core men came in.” Los Angeles 7, California. neering science majors. School District arid Union so upon students’ request, by School District — Kindergarten the MU information desk,” through eighth grade teachers. Mary Boots Hunt, receptionist, Campbell Union High School said. Chem Contest Entries Open P la cem en t In te rv ie w s (VaiieyArt Theat Hometown News Available In MU Proudly Presents| District — teachers majoring in most high' school subjects. College Life Insurance Com­ pany ----business administra­ tion and liberal arts ¡major. The U.S. ■Army Ordinance Missile Command — Electrical engineers, industrial engineers, Mechanical engineers, engi­ neering science, and math and physics majors, women also.. Federal Aviation Agency — Electrical engineers, Civil En­ gineers and Electronics majòrs. Insurance by North America — Industrial engineers, fi­ nance, general business, man­ agement marketing and hu­ manities majors. (No Sales ma­ jors). Care For A Dip? The swimming hole behind the Den patio is cute but it is also sort, of exciting at night when there is no light outside. . . . "Where do Y O U eat lunch? ! ! TRY I 11 I I ' È nPB Hl »I • C O M P LE T E C A R R Y O U T S E R V IC E • E F F IC IE N T GAR H O STESSES • C H E E R Y A TM O SPH ER E 503 E. 8th St. WO 7-0800 ‘Where the nickel is mighty* ■MM! discovered that using UNIVERSAL WINNER OF 3 B ES T PICTURE AWARDS Curtain Times VENICE FESTIVAL - S A N F R A N C IS C O FESTIVAL F ri.-Sat. 7:30-10:00 I N T E R N A T I O N A L F I L M C R I T I C S C IT A T I O N A ll Other Nights B E F O R E G E N E R A L R E L E A S E AND W IL L UN■ 7:00-9:30 Q U ES T IO N A B LY BE A CCO RD ED MANY MORE. S tu d e n and F a c u lt O n e Dol A t A ll T i TRAVEL is the next best thin g to striking gold in his back­ yard! H e has no aggra­ vation, plenty of free tim e and Saves money!! It’s so easy, too — No need calling 5 airlines — one call to UNIVER­ SAL TRAVEL wraps it up. For a trip to Los A n­ geles or Moscow—See your Tem pe Travel agent PAULINE 18 E. 5th St. WO 7-1673 f Friday, March 3, 1961 STATE PRESS Meteor Symposium To Be On Camp U S Six of the nation’s foremost authorities on meteroites will be on the ASU campus March 10 for a national symposium. The meteorite symposium, in \ connection with the inaugur­ ation of Dr. G. Homer Durham as tenth president of ASU, wilt include an investigation of the accomplishments and problems involved in meteoritic research; George A. Boyd, ASU coordi­ nator of research, in announc­ ing the meeting, said “meteor­ ites are the only material from outer space.from which we can get information on the com­ position of the universe, and also obtain knowledge on the re-entry problem of satellites.” Acco’rding to Boyd, approximatfely 20 scientists f r o m throughout the world have been invited to submit papers to be included in a special publica­ tion by the university. Speakers in addition to the visiting scientists will be Presi­ dent Durham,' Mr. Boyd and Dr. George M. Bateman, head of the ASU division of physical sciences. Dr. Bateman, chair­ man of the . symposium, will discuss the development of the meteorite program at ASU. Among t h o s e presenting papers at the symposium will be Dr. H. JI. Nininger, former owner of (the Meteorite Mu­ seum at Sfedona, Arizona. The Nininger meteorite collection, fourth largest in the world, was recently purchased by ASU with contributions .from the National Science Founda­ tion,: the ASU foundation, and a private donor. The collection will be inspected by symposium participants while on campus. France, Africa-Take Your Pick Documents Discovered From the Arizona Wildcat Tucson; Arizona Opportunities ranging from foreign study in France to teaching assignments in East Africa are now open to honors students. This was announced by Dr. Arnold Tilden, dean of College of Liberal Arts, in regard to the expansion of the Honors Program. KASN is the campus radio The program’s advantages station, feanow include: more personal in­ 0 turing g o o d struction; choice of curriculum music, sports not bound by usual patterns, » H i and news free auditing of classes; and ■ from three til access to courses open only to midnight a t honors sudents. 820 on your Acording to Dr. Ernest Stew­ radio dial. It’s really a swinging art, assistant dean of the Col­ station but there’s only one lege of Liberal Arts, and chair­ thing wrong. You qan’t hear the man of the Honors Council, darn thing! Try plugging it in there are now 22 students and fellas! six departments participating. Those registered in the Eng­ Good luck residents of East lish department are: Constance Hall! The ingenious irrigation Dennis, Patricia Fulks, Ralph Flores, Mike Peplow, Barbara system (running water out of P e c k , V e r n o n Ledgewood, the fire hydrant) could be un­ Charlene Kvapil, and Byron timely. Especially if East Hall Cleeland. burns down. In the Foreign Languages By the way, thanks for the are: Ulrich Muhr, Sharon Mc­ IMPlications that you have Ginnis, and Joyce Glazner. been sending in. Let’s keep Three in the History depart­ them coming! Just drop a note ment include: Roaberta Taylor, off at the State Press or the Marjorie Avery, .and Mary hut addressed to IMPlications. Avery. They don’t have to be signed Richard Smith is enrolled in either! Latin American Studies, and Barry Lerher and Harry Plumb are majoring in Philosophy. Those in Political Science are: Christopher Darling, and Andrea Ehrlich. Ina Abrahams and Drayton Swartz are in the Sociology Department.Students were selected on the basis of previous academic rec­ ords and test scores. They must CASH ON THE SPOT maintain a*high academic index 722 MILL AVENUE Daily I ( BRIT SMITH CAR CO.( in order to continue in the plan. New members of the Honors 1 Y J O 7-0271 1 #Tempe 802 Mill WO 7-33811 Council were also released by Dean Tilden. These faculty ad­ visors are: Dr. Gene Montague', of the English Department; Dr. Israel Goldiamond, Psychology; and Dr. Edwin Grobe, Foreign Languages. “In Quest of Quality”, a new A microfilm copy of the Archivos de Hidalgo del Parral has been acquired by the Uni­ versity Library. The 323 reels cover original documents of the period from 1631 to 1821, discovered in the Parral archives by Dr. Charles C. Di Peso, director of the Amerind Foundation, Dragoon, Ariz. He found the documents in connection with his excava­ tion of the ruins at Casas Grandes, Chihuahua. Di Peso has termed the ar­ chives “one of the greatest un­ tapped sources of information extant on northern Mexico.” The papers contain military descriptions of early pueblos, and numerous records of civil law suits invaluable to students of the slavery problem of the new world. Included also are many documents relating to mining and land claims, as well as will' and testimonials of val­ ue in establishing, a detailed picture of the material culture of the time. The University faculty mem­ bers participating in the acqui­ sition project are Dr. Re­ nato Rosaldo, head of the De­ partment of Romance Langu­ ages and Dr. Robert R. Ander­ son, assistant professor of Spanish. Both men are consid­ ered _expert paleographers. USED CARS NEEDED WO 7-5020 brochure explaining the Honors Program, has recently been is­ sued by the council. It is avail­ able at the Office of the Dean, College of Liberal Arts. Business Confab Here Tomorrow “Teaching Skills for the 60’s,” is the title of the third annual Business Education conference tomorrow at ASU. The conference is sponsoredby the ASU department of Of­ fice Administration and Busi­ ness Education and the Bureau of Business Services. The meeting will be in the executive seminar room in the BA building. Dr. Donald J. Tate, chairman of the ASU depart­ ment of Office Administration and Business Education, will preside at the 9:35 a.m. ses­ sion, featuring an address by Dr. Richard R. McCready en­ titled, “Research Highlights in Teaching Skills.” Student Prices 1 At Kiva Sunday Student rates have been set Stinday at the Kiva Theater, Scottsdale, f o r “Never on Sunday.” Iden­ tification cards are required for the special rate. Melina Mercouri, star of the movie, has been nominated for the b e s t a c t r e s s Academy Award for her performance, and won the Cannes Film Festival best actress aw'ard. Haveareal cigarette-havea CAMEL Conference Set H ere Tom orrow Jerry H. Glenn, the Presi­ dent of the State Bar of Ari­ zona, will preside Thursday- at the opening of the three-day Traffic Court Conference at ASU. The conference is designed to thwart the uprising loss of life and property damage due to traffic violations in the state. T & S te g B e t t e r ! Stop In . . . Find Out For Yourself!! TEMPE DAIRY QUEEN 950 M ILL A V E. — T EM P E Have you thought about YOUR FUTURE You may have one with COMMERCIAL CREDIT A REPRESENTATIVE w ill be on campus FRIDAY, MARCH 10 The best tobacco makes the best smoke! rem o m \o (» tg sm r sc*»**,»**»*:; B. J. Reynolds Tobacco Co., Winston-Salem, N. C. » See Placement Officer to schedule your interview Page 4 STATE PRESS E D IT O R -IN -C H IE F -JA C K Friday, March 3, 1961 ONG N e w s D e p a rtm e n t M A N A G IN G E D I T O R ___ N E W S E D IT O R S ______ C O P Y E D IT O R .... . .. .. ........ C H IE F P R O O F R E A D E R D IS P A T C H E R ......... . ¡S A S S IG N M E N T S E D IT O R __ P IC T U R E E D IT O R •___ C A R T O O N I S T _______________ ............................. T O M H IL T O N -J U D Y O L S O N , B IL L F L IC K A N D B IL L O V E R E N D —----------- W A R R E N J . F IE L D .............................D IC K D R A P E R --------- G E O R G E D E P A S S E ........................... ........S E L E R D E R ------------------- J A C K G R IF F IT H ------— M IK E R O K O F F d i t t o s Listener Alarmed By Dr. Thompson's Talk By T EFiR Y FLEJ|lilOR Soapboxes are precarious, but listeners are precious. Es­ pecially when the utterance is on a taiboo subject. Now there E D IT O R .............. A S S IS T A N T are almost as many taboos as there are list­ eners. I t’s not nice to laugh - V a n y o n e any more. He may r e p r e s ent a group. In fact, it’s almost not nice to laugh at all. s a r^ i/ « Is truth real‘1 ly all that serious? D y l a n Fleenor Thomas in “Under Milk Wood” gives us many aspects of truth, all of .them arrived a t through If th public em ^ployees ?to tak ec *the S S " « of acceleratingWUh reached? one whopanis not the forcbJof farce. Shakespeare i, e ' b ill, ,,req u irin gr all , v. statistics en- an enemv N° of mankind a oya y oath passes m the S ta te senate and becom es gineering progress and of the this fate upon the human race. had a drunken porter sum up law , how w ill it help th e people of A rizona? complex problem of production .. the truth about Macbeth. '"i"n . .. cither we are 'docile - and , T he purpose of the “loyalty o a th ”, as w e u n d e rsta n d an 18 ri u 10n' willing passengers on a steamQueen Victoria was famous it, is to obtain a statem en t from public em ployees as to This ProbIem> he implied, roller that is approaching the for saying “We are not th e ir political affiliations and if th ey advocate the*over- S r th r L T J ? 5 be solved by edg,e of world history or we are amused.” And ever since^ it has standing In Its path, and I say United Slates governm ent by force or that we are a ir finished if our not been proper to be amused Violence. other words, the technologist business culture is not rejected about serious subjects like truth, loyalty, morality, science If any person who w ishes to use force o r violence to is going to transform your life and dismantled. Dr. Thompson ended his and delinquency. A strait-jack­ ov erth ro w th e governm ent of th e U nited States, and is y o u " ^ r e S e m L ^ w b ^ r+ h f em ployed in a position w here h e w ould h av e to sign a world was like 50 years ago app™pnately’ Wlth the et of verbal and social taboos has been clamped on free and “lo y alty oath,” he w ould not h esitate to lie. He is com- you haven't seen anything S m ittin g a crim e and w ould lie ju st as quickly as a n It is nothing less than fright- of the solution?” This is to laughing discussion of subjects arm ed robber, if h e th o u g h t he could get aw ay w ith o u t eningto think-that Engineering announce that I choose to be a like college drinking, promis­ th e lie ’s being discovered. and Business students through- part of the technologist’s prob- cuity, and politics. The late Piihlic (.mnlmmne „n t v - v out the nation have been and lem as long as the technologist Queen is far from dead. It b e employees, almost ali of w hich w e w ouid say, are being indoctrinated with believes that the human indinave n o th in g to hide, and have no objection to signing this kind of thinking by socio- vidual, capable of dissent and' might be better if her lively a “loyalty oath,” except th a t it is a w aste of th e ir tim e, unenlightened specialists, and rebellion, will be the problem, predecessor Elizabeth were also the S ta te gov ern m en t’s tim e and th e ta x p a y e r’s m oney. that on toP this all of us have and as long as he believes the still as vividly among us. The “loyalty o ath ” w ill accom plish no th in g because it is been braihwashed and mani- solution will -be represented by What has all this to do withju st a signature on a piece of pap er th a t m eans no th in g t by th\ “ media *he de- hu1manized which zi ^ i , v .^ _ o people to. accept this as the knows only how to multiply campus life and campus com­ to U n p e o p le who w ouid a tte m p t to violently overth ro w happiest answer to the ques- and how to consume the m u l£ ment? Simply that for ques­ the government. tion, “What are we living for?” plied products of an i n h u m a n , tions about student drinking and party behavior, the serious, The technologists and the accelerating, machine - made, soapbox attitude is the only public relations people of our meaningless abundance, accepted one. You must have a j BE OUR GUEST! advertising age makeup the If man does not face reality rational answer to this highly fraternity that is welcoming now, it will face him and de- irrational problem. Or else you the sinister merger of technol- stroy him tomorrow. Today is get the soapbox pulled out from ■ ogy and d'ollar-worship as not tomorrow yet. We still have under you. You can’t, unless the only .possible “solution” to time. you .are as shrewd and accepted the human dilemma, a dilemma By Dr. S. I. H A YA K A W A Clement Droz a showman as Bob Hope, adopt that will ultimately witness the 5025 N. 71st Pi. As Told To Jim Bowman a laughing attitude, and expect seizure by the throat of that Scottsdale, Ariz. to find listeners on a Victorian English teachers should throw their little red, pen­ campus. cils away. They worry too much about editing, not The Victorian Age was noted enough about communication. Therefore, for most peo­ for its highly scientific attitude: ple the main results of their efforts in speaking English are accumulations of a lifelong fear of making errors. It was the age of Darwin, People think of English teachers as just things to point out Freud and Newman. It was an errors, not enough as persons who can help them say what they age of “follow the leader” in want to say. empire building, scentific dis­ covery and educational expan­ We must learn to distinguish between composition and sion. Today, we ' must learn editing before we can teach people to communicate. Spelling, how to inspire our leaders to punctuation is secondary; we make it primary, instead, we should be concerned more about how well students say what go in the way we want to go. they are trying to say. We must not cling to tradition • i the way fleas cling to a dog, Colleges and universities aren’t doing a very good job of taken blindly and helplessly teaching students to use words effectively. through a dog’s life. j College composition courses can be more effective with Granted, no fleas have yet njiore realistic teaching. For example, there is no correlation be­ forced a dog into a better life. tween being able to diagram a sentence and \yrite one, but But if we are to be considered many teachers have students diagram, and forget about the as not much better than writing. I trained fleas, amusing when we mount our little soapboxes, What we need in higher education is more inter-depart­ perhaps we -may still fool the mental cooperation. English departments should broaden their dogcatchers. If all of us fleas scope to include scientific terms, and various other depart­ bite' the dog hard enough and ments, including science, should learn to use the language of often enough until he goes into literature. Otherwise, we live in a confusing tangle of depart­ the direction we want, per­ haps even the most habit-ridden mental jargon with little communication that is meaningful. dog may acquire a new sense .O ur hope of learning to live together in this world hinges of direction. cn our ability to communicate effectively. After all, that’s what Anyone for another dish of this business of semantics is really about. Dash? E D IT O R .............. A S S IS T A N T nation with the highest stand-L IN D A R A N K IN ard of living, — C A R O L O SM A N S p o rts D e p a rtm e n t What astonishes me is the ---------- — B O B E G E R -D IC K " "B U R R O U G H S realization that- the people who The STATE P R E S S , A d is tr ib u te d , b y me regard material “progress” and c a m p u s c h a p te r o f S ig m a D e lta C h i u n d e r th e _ ----- --------------- ” d ire c tio n of C ir c u la tio n M anager C h a r le s abundance as the solution to fance H ilg e m a n , is th e o f fic ia l c a m p u s n e w s p a p e r o f , A r iz o n a S ta te U n iv e r s it y . I t is p u b lis h e d e ach a n d d i r e c t o r o f t h e « sch o o l o f o u r problem problem simply Simply cannot Cannot W e d n e s d a y an d F r id a y th ro u g h o u t th e sch o o l y e a r , a n C * a l r e c t o r 0 1 x n e s c n 0 0 1 01 . / e x c e p tin g h o lid a y s , an d is e n te re d a s seco n d Engineering as he gave a talk u n a ^r s t a n c l t i l a x 1X i s a matheI c la s s m a tte r a t th e T e m p e , A r iz o n a , P o st O ffic e as ne gave a laiK tj j c e r t a in t y t h a t t h is , _ | u n d e r th e A c ts o f M a rch 3, 1879, an d A u g u s t 24, e n t i t l e d “ T o d a v I«s T o m o r r o w ” i9 i2 ^ S u b s c r ip t io n p ric e ,^$3 p e r sch o o l y e a r . e n im e a J-oaay i s iomorrow, tion cannot" be , applied beyond T h e S T A T E P R E S S is a m e m b e r o f th e understand why the edrth’s capacity to assimiA r iz o n a N e w s p a p e rs A s s o c~ ia tio n , A s s o c ia te d- yoU would C o lle g ia te P re s s an d N a tio n a l A d v e r t is in g S e r v ic e . someone who is not associated late the teeming billions of the In c . with the university is writing oncoming generations. this letter to the editor of State Would they suggest that we Press, and you would give this forget about this and leave it outsider a chance to reply tofor. the last generation to worry Dr. Thompson in your columns. about> when the point of no The lecture was an attempt return w i l l h a v e b e e n S o c ie t y D e p a rtm e n t To the Editor: If you had been at the Phoenix Jewish Community Center Feb. 12 to hear Dr. Lee P. Thompson, Dean of the »ollege ” w of Applied Arts and Sciences Loyalty Oath An Insult More Than Books Needed LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS \ Friday, March 3, 1961 STATE PRESS Page 5 I C o v e r C o l l e g e A v e n ue Editor's Nobs: This poem was submitted for “ I Cover” as a typical phenomenon our campus presents. The author is a junior major­ ing in Elementary Educa­ tion. To the Editor: Twas but a few weeks before Spring, And on this campus right here heard many rum ori which filled us with fear; At first we didn’t listen, we hoped they weren’t true. Such a thing couldn’t happen here at ASU. . ' We all were so frightened we shook in our shoes, And it bothered us so that our sleep we did lose; We tore at our hair, we stutter' ed and stewed, And then at our fingernails all of us chewed. We hoped with our hearts these rumors were wrong; Soon we’d finda out; it’d be Spring before long. And those dirty bermudas are really so purty, really look rare, They’re tops at getting your We all were so worried, afraid It shows off their legs, leaves feet good and dirty; when Spring came,. them so bare; But none of us mind for who That our ASU men wouldn’t And also bermudas, let us com­ wants a male' be dressing the same. ment, please, Who has real clean feet, down “Our campus,’ we said, “just Show off so nicely those cute, wouldn’t look unique to the last toenail! knobby knees. No more shall we worry, nor If our fellas change wardrobes fret, nor stew, s,— apd try to be chic”; And some of the combos, we’re For we’re sure that some men We love their torn T-shirts, telling no lie, of ASU 1 two sizes too small, Are really worth wearing, they (We know that they have.some; Will faithfully don the things catch every eye. they wore them last Fall). mentioned before, The stripes and the plaids worn1 (They stuffed them last fall apart look so neat, in that top bureau drawer); B ut' put them together for a And we know we will win, sight you can’t beat. without a bat of the eye, And “up and down' stripes worn with “back and forth” The award “Best Dressed Men on Any Campi.” ones Is a combo from which nobody shuns; Editor’s Note: Thanks for And do they go barefoot? Why reminding me just look and. you’ll see That Spring is here. On their feet they wear . . . I look for my wardrobe ump! What can they be? This time every year. Oh! Now we remember, we read in the news, Must .pick up -these things Our 'men wear “without^ These are those things they And people are praising our beautiful, fail.” call shower shoes. comfortable, convenient, motor hotel I suppose I will find them across the street! MAKE RESERVATIONS (rates are reasonable, accommodations are These thongs (shower shoes) At a good rummage sale. i ? advance for YOUR people whether they come for overnight,- a special event, or a Season. Special. consideration given people who are your parents! "FRIENDS, BROTHERS, SISTERS . . LEND US YOUR EARS." P t v i e a t c axe Letters To The Editor Poor Policy? vc> c c tx WOODLAND 7-1611 PARTIES, DANCES, MEETINGS, of .11 kinds are guaranteed successful, fun, and less-costly in oiir specially-des^ned facilities which w ill hold up to 400 (w e like smaller groups too!). Plan your next event with us where there’s everything, including lots of free parking. Use our number; ask for N atalie Watson. • Ice Cream Bar — Soda Fountai • Special “ Budget Sunday Breakfasts” • Sociable Coffee Shop • Entertainment Bar — “ Beach­ comber” Scott Kincaide — 7:30 N it e ly E x c e p t S u n d a y To the Editor: As I enter Matthews Library an uneasy feeling overcomes me upon 'seeing the book dis­ play on the counter and the posters pasted on card index cases. The uneasy feelinggpjnes about by making a relationship with methods used on the otherside of the Iron Curtain. The wording I see here is different, but the intention is the same. I need not tell you that, the Soviet Union is not alone in using extreme methods of per­ suasion. If there is a differ­ ence other than the objectives desired to be obtained by thè two major powers it is that the Soviet propaganda is open­ ly state-sponsored, while here it is privately supported. The gist of the whole thing is that they both make use of the public domain, as is the case in our library, to disse­ minate their vitriol. I seriously doubt if the book on display, “You Can Trust the Communists” (to do exactly as they say), or posters that ask us,- “Will you be free to celebrate .Christmas in the fu­ ture?” are objective apprais­ als of Soviet Communism.,, Es­ pecially when the book is en­ dorsed by Billy Graham and Considering the paranoiac group directly responsible for the display. I do feel the Greater Phoenix School of Anti-Communism haa the perfect right to. distribute its literature, but I do not ap­ prove of the fact that a pub­ lic school library has become a center of propaganda. J. G. Hilbink STADIUM COFFEE SHOP & Delicatessen 1133 Normal Avenue “Across the Street From East Stadium T V & RADIO Open 7 Days Week Qoodlleolthis Priceless B it " We Give ACROSS FROM A.S.U. 8 4 H Green Stampe p h WE HELP YOU KEEP IT ! j ppf ■ L W R D i [PH A R M A CV I ,601 M ill Page 6 STATE PRESS Friday, March 3, 1961 Amidst Campus Scurry — Desert Contrasts Busy ASU Life by humans, the small desert in the center of the Life Sci­ ence building is totally selfsufficient. At first glance the area . seems barren and lifeless, caus­ ing one to worider why it is enclosed by a ,six foot brick wall and observable o n l y through the large windows of the Life Science Center. After a few moments observation, the answer becomes obvious. The area is teaming with desert denizens. J>' T h e s e inhabitants include various species of scorpions, fish, reptiles, rabbits, squirrels, gophers, bird's, rats, mice, toads, turtles, other amphibians and Beginning June 12, and con­ a gila monster. Also included tinuing until July 15, the, 1961 are numerous spiders and inMexico City Residence Study I sects. Program will offer courses in According to Dr. A. E. DamMexican art, history and Latin mann, assistant director of the > American politics. ’ ASU Poisonous Animals Re­ Registration fee is $100 search laboratory, the condi­ which includes all tuition ex­ tions existing in this minia­ penses. Housing may be ar­ ture desert duplicate those ranged in apartments with oth­ found in parts of the Southwest. er students, boarding houses, A pond, centrally located, is . hotels, or with a private fam­ designed to provide many dif­ ily. Transportation may be ar­ ferent environments for its in­ ranged with other students habitants and ranges in depth who plan to go by private cars, | from two inches to five feet. bus, train or airplane. Its water is regular city water, The minimum cost for the whose chlorine seems to eva­ entire program — housing, porate as the thirst-quenching A suggestion box* is b e i n g meals and tuition — is approx­ liquid passes down over the erected in the Business Admini­ imately ' $215. Transportation rocks to the pond. and incidental expenses are in This desert provides realis­ stration building by the newly addition to this figure. tic examples of the eternal formed Business Administration council. Further information can be fight for survival. These 11 organizations, Delta When a soft-shelled turtle obtained from Dr. John R. Sigma Pi; Pi Sigma Epsilon; decides it’s dinner time, it Martinez or Dr. Roy C. Rice. might wait for an unsuspecting Alpha Pi Epsilon; Gamma Al­ pigeon or dove to enter the wa­ pha Chi; Alpha Delta Sigma; Pi ter. The turtle submerges, grabs Omega Pi; Finance Club; In­ LET US the bird in his jaws, and drags surance Club; Accounting Club; his prey under. Now the turtle Marketing C,lub; Society for the must fight off others who have Advancement of Management, YOUR CAR come on the scene to help tear make up the Council. Suggestions placed in the box the victim apart-and devour it. E X P E R T MECHANICS — will go to the council that will Aside from offering tlje cas­ Q UALITY WORK serve as liason between the fac­ ual observer, a chance to see [ r e a s o n a b l e p r i c e s nature in action, the desert aids ulty of the college -of Business in various research projects jBRIT SMITH CAR CO. carried on by the staff and' [Tempe 802 Mill WO 7-3381 students at the Life Science Center. B y CAROL. OSMAN Sqrrjetimes one can’t see the sand ror the desert. With all the hustle and bustle of ASU’s campus, there is still one place where nature appears untouch­ ed and serene. ' Hidden behind brick and glass is a desert created for na­ ture by man; the only law be­ ing nature’s first rule — sur­ vival of the fittest. Undisturbed Tour Offers Mexico Trip Suggestion Box Built By New BA Council SERVICE R B and student organizations as well as individual students tak­ ing courses in the college. An­ other purpose of the council is to promote cooperation between member organizations and to coordinate their activities. The council also is currently drawing up an outline for an honorary fraternity for the top percentile of the BA college. • Current officers of the coun­ cil are: Bob Hopkins, president; Ken Freeman, vice president; Barbara Thurman, secretary. “B E A U TY .IN THE BATH ” A NEW COSMETIC OIL THAT EFFECTIVE­ LY COMBATS DRY SKIN, $1.50 and $2.50 Will pay cash for clean ’58 or '59. See Larry Nims, SS 324-J Daily or 1417 E. T a y ­ lor, Apt. B, Phoenix. Fred Elquest & Son Everything for the Art Student Art Supplies Picture Framing 703 N. 2nd St. Phoenix PHONE A L 8-2628 LE GREG OF CALIFORNIA Striped full-skirted THIS WEEKS BEAUTY DROPS * VOLKSWAGEN W A N T E D ~~tires& Subscribe Now at Halt Price * Vou can read this world-famous daily newspape- for the next six months for $5, just half the regular subscription rate. Get top news coverage. Enjoy special features. Clip for refer­ ence work. Send your order today. Enclose check or money order. Use cou- i pon below. The Christian Science Monitor P-CN One Norway St., Boston 15, Moss. Send your newspaper for the time checked. □ 6 months $5 □ 1 year $10 □ College Student □ Faculty Member Name Address C it y Zone State • T h is special offer available O N L Y to collegt students, faculty members, and college libraries. Celia-s Fashions Mesa Tempe Center. Friday, March 3, 1961 STATE PRESS Page Schools Need Teachers Form The Cornell Daily Sun, Ithaca, N. Y. Liberal arts graduates, in­ cluding those without degrees in education, are in great de­ mand as teachers in private schools across the country, ac­ cording to Mary Abell Watson, director of the Cooperative Bureau for Teachers. The typical beginning salar­ ies in private schools range from $3600-$4800, depending on the qualifications of the stu­ dent. Many schools offer main-tenance facilities and other netcessities for married as well as single faculty members. Ac­ cording to Miss Watson, private schools offer “a pleasant and gracious way of service in an attractive and interesting en­ vironment.” “Independent schools prefer teachers with a thorough lib­ eral arts background to those who have specialized in meth­ ods courses.” She added that, “Students who have not taken education courses can also find interest­ ing and rewarding positions in the teaching profession. Students interested in fur­ ther information regarding em­ ployment opportunities may write the Cooperative Bureau for Teachers at 22 East 42nd Street,. New York 17, New York. Where a personal inter­ view is not possible for inter­ ested applicants, arrangements may be made for interviews locally. The Cooperative. Bureau for Teachers is a non-profit recruitement and placement ag­ ency. Tfte Sun D evil band, under the direction of Ronald Holloway is seen for their annual formal concert, to be tonight and tomorrow 8 v m practicing Union High School Auditorium. Jmorrow, s p.m. at Tempe ROTC Student Fails Picketing In Uniform f BERKELEY — A student at the University of California, Jim Creighton who led picket­ ing of Army ROTC drill ljf?t December, has failed military science. tion of federal regulations. Creighton’s “improper conduct” was grounds for expulsion from the university, Malloy added. . Creighton has petitioned the Academic Senate to award him Creighton said he “had rea­ the grade he “deserves” for the son to expect a ‘B’,” course, charging that the failing Creighton wore his ROTC grade was not based on per­ uniform while picketing des­ formance. pite an army regulation ban­ ning the use of ROTC uniforms in actions contrary to the ob­ jectives of the army. “If I am guilty under mili­ tary law, I should have been punished militarily,” Creighton -There’s a burglar in Tucson said. But an academia tool _a who has a way with sorority grade — should not-be used as girls, reports the “Arizona a punitive measure, he added. Wildcat.” The chairman of the military A prowler broke into the science department, Col. John Alpha Chi Omega sorority Malloy, stated that Creighton’s picketing was only part of the house at 2 a.m. Monday, talked reason for the failing grade. with one of the girls, and He said that Creighton “failed walked out with about $109. to fulfill the requirements of While he was ransacking one the course,” but refused to-be of the rooms, a girl awoke a'nd more specific. asked him what he was doing Col. Malloy said during an in the' house. interv i e w , t h a t Creighton “It’s all right, go back *to should consider himself lucky not to have been arrested by sleep,” the prowler whispered. military authorities for violaShe did. Tucson Burglar Is R eal Don Juan The farther smoke travels Air-Softened, the milder, the coolery the smoother it tastes THIS ONE’S THE SATISFIES Three G roups , G ran ted O.K. K IN G \r Give yourself all the breaks. Try Chesterfield King your next coffee break. Every satisfying puff is Air-Softened to enrich the flavor and make it mild. Special porous paper lets you draw fresh, air into the full king length of straight Grade-A, top-tobacco. Join the swing to Three organizations recently granted University approval and not included in the 1961 Organizations Directory are: The Agrarians, The Flying De­ vils and The Little Sisters of Minerva. Respective presidents are Dan Morris, Joseph N. Farley and Suzi Gerber. “The hardest tumble a man can make is to fall over his own bluff. SCHOOL OF SPANISH LANGUAGE Qualified Instructor for classes and coaching. Advanced and beginners. Tel. WI 3-5145 B ox 973, Scottsdale . She’ll Be So Glad You Remembered . . Bobbies Flowers 20 E. 5th St. Liggett &Myers Tobacco Cow WO 7-2972 — w o 7-4274 1 Page 8 STATE PRESS Friday, March 3, 1961 TEMP S H O P P I N G In The Heart o f Tempe On Mill Avenue . . . 8th Street to 10th Street ONLY ONE BLOCK FROM CAMPUS for your v***********************************. I One - Stop Shopping Center | * t i . Join The I X #■ Growing Number Î for All Your Shopping Needs | WHO ARE NO EXTRA CITY SALES TAX PLENTY OF FREE PARKING COURTEOUS AND EFFICIENT SERVICE COMPLETE MERCHANDISE STOCKS Americana Shop M en’s Apparel Bonnie Sue Fashions W om en’s & Children’s Apparel Celia's Fashions W om en’s Apparel Center Hardware First National Bank D rive - In Facilities Happy House Shop Groceries — Produce Erickson's Handcrafts House of Pancakes Breakfast — Lunch — Dinner Jam's Restaurant9 Table Service King's Fashions W om en’s Apparel First Federal Savings Savings & Loan Service Pioneer Camera Shop Departm ent Store B eauty Shop Ryan Evans Drug Sherwin Willianjs Co. Records - TV - Radios - Stereos Little Travelers W. T. Grant Co. Rosamond's Hill's Record Shop Infants’ and Children’s Wegr Fam ily Shoe Store TEMPE CENTER Prescriptions — Cosmetics Art & Craft Supplies GallenKamps THE G ifts — Candy — Cards Hardware Supplies El Rancho Marjcet DISCOVERING Paints — W allpaper Sewing Basket Fabrics S&H Redemption Center Green Stamp Store Sun Devil Hop-In D r iv é - I n Service Tee Pee of Toys Toys — Juvenile Furniture Top's- Cameras — Photo Finishing Beverages — Snacks Porters Union Furniture W om en’s and M en’s Wear Furniture and TV Ray's ASU Barber Shop Zzzona Laundry & Dry Cl. M en’s Barber Shop Coin Operated — Open 24 Hours Friday, March 3, 196J STATE PRESS Report Reveals ‘Pop Pay s More Involved ■Teaching’Done In Earlier Days Page 9 $2.5 Million Loan Okayed By Regents The Board of Regents laslF west corner of 8th St. ai}d Ru­ Think you can meet these Tuesday approved a $2.5 mil­ ral Rd. ijl-" teacher requirements of the lion loan agreement between The 11 units of the project earlier<>ears-ef American edu- ASU and the Federal Housing ucation? * will provide housing and din­ and Home Finance Agency. ing facilities for 582 men.' “Teachers each day will fill The loan is for a small group The regents also authorized lamps, clean chimneys and trim housing project at the northASU to revise its fire insur­ wicks. Each teacher will bring ance program in accordance a bucket of water and scuttle of with the recommendations of coal for the day’s s e s s i o n s . the Arizona Fire Rating Bu­ Make your pens carefully, you may .whittle nibs to the indi­ Entries for the third annual reau. The revision will result vidual tastes of the pupil. Arizona Art Exhibit at the in an annual savings of approx­ Two out of ten students earn­ The report on "How People Phoenix Art Museum may be imately $6,000 or a 30 per cent Men teachers may take one ing part of their expenses make Pay for College” (160pp., $3) submitted not later than March decrease in the present cost. evening each week for courting less than $500. Three out of is the result of a sampling of Dr. G. Homer Durham, ASU 9. The exhibit will be April 4ten earn between $500 and purposes, or two evenings a 2,700 families whose children president, reported at the meet­ April 30. week if they go to church reg$1,500. Three out of four stu­ attended college in 1959-60. Cash prizes .and awards will ing that a total of 12,291 stu­ dents get* no scholarship sup­ larly. After 10 hours of school, The survey shows that the dents are enrolled in second port “of any consequence.” , the teacher should spend the be given for top works in the semester courses at ASU. Of remaining time reading the fields of painting, graphics and In the past five years half Bible or other good books. sculpture by Arizona artists the total, 10,324 students are of the families used money sav­ Women, teachers who marry and regular winter visitors. enrolled in on-campus courses, ed especially for that" purpose. or engage in unseemly conduct Works entered must have been and 1,967 are taking correspon­ In one out of five families, the When Dr. G. Homer Dur­ mother worked to help pay will be dismissed. Every teach­ executed within the last two dence and extension courses. The—Board of Regents also er should lay aside from each years and not previously ex­ ham is inaugurated March 11, college expénses. approved sabbatical leaves for pay a goodly sum of his earn­ hibited in Arizona. educators from several west­ Comparison of families in Dr. Willard Abraham, profesern states will take part in different' income groups shows | ings for his benefit during his Entry blanks may be obtain­ fsor of Education and Frank declining years, so that he will honoring ASU. ed at the Art Museum and art -Stalzer, associate professor of a correlation between income “The Impact of World Events and desire for college educa­ not become a burden on society. stores. Music and leaves without pay on the Economy and Culture of tion. In the $10,000 and^bove “Any teacher who smokes, for Richard I. Asai, assistant the Western States” will be income group, 95 per cent of the uses liquor in any form, fre­ professor of Chemistry and1 discussed in connection with families paving children under quents pool or public halls, or John Waddell, associate pro­ the inauguration of President ten expect their children to at­ gets shaved in a barber shop fessor of Art Education. Five Army ROTC cadets Homer Durham. will give good reason to suspect tend college. his worth, intentions, integrity, were appointed distinguished military students yesterday at and honesty. a parade in their honor. The The teacher who performs his • labors faithfully afid without five are eligible for regular fault for five y e a r s will be Army commissions, rather than Lambda Delta Sigma sorority given an increase of 25 cents the usual reserve Army com­ recently elected new • Inter­ per week in his pay, providing missions tendered upon gradu­ chapter officers at the LDS the board of education ap­ ation. Institute of Religion. W ED D IN G S AND j ^ \ proves.” New officers are Carole Appointed 'were, Charles A. G RA D U A TIO N S COMING UP Clouse, Education Sr., Ivan J. Hendrickson, president; Yvonne Vucichevich, Applied Arts Sr., Tarwater, vice president; Dianna Fallout Complete Line of "•' M Ring around the rosie, Bernd Schwarz, Business Sr., Brisco, secretary; Jean Skinner, G ifts ! Pocket full of posie. James . L. Shepard, Business treasurer; Fredi Schweitzer, H A PP Y HOUSE • T E M P E C E N T E R Ashes, ashes all fall down. Sr., and Scott D. Foster, Edu­ social chairman; and Claudia Right on the Den patio! cation Sr. I Chapman, publicity chairman. How much of your college expenses did you earn last year? How much did your par­ ents contribute? The University of Michigan released a study indicating the various ways students obtain money for college expenses. The report was compiled by the Research Center of the university for the United States Office of Education. average unmarried undergrad­ uate student’s, expenses amount to $1,550 annually. The stu­ dent earns only $360 of this amount. Scholarships account for $130, other sources $110, leaving $950 for parents to pay. A further breakdown shows 13 per cent of the parents pay less than $50 annually while 2 percent pay moré than $3,000. Art Exhibit Set In au gu ral P u lls N oted Teachers Cadets H onored | LDS S o ro rity Elects O fficers A tte n tio n ! GREEKS / V, THIS IS YODR LIFE in % s i ® W hatever you look for in slacks is included in our col­ lection. P leatless traditionals, continental tapered, beltless waistbands . . . a w ide selec­ tion of fabrics and colors, choose yours today! W ashable polished cotton, bedford or baby cord from $ 5.00 Autom atic w ash n’ w ear acrilon or blends from $8.95 Worsted flannels, dacron and worsted tropicals from $ 13.95 Open Thursday Nite ’til 9:00 p.m. SHOP Quality Men's Apparel TEMPE SHOPPING CENTER WO 7-5457 Page ÍO STATE PRESS The World Outside — Books, Movie, Entertaining One of college students’ far vorite ways to spend leisure time — whenever they have some — is settling back some­ where and reading a good book. Preferred topics range from politics, romance and war stor­ ies, to mysteries and westerns. O t i O A ^ A A 11 û r f û rtf n í o In the idiom an'd bawdy ver­ nacular of the barracks, Jere Peacock,, in “Valhalla,” weaves a tale of the doings of a group of Marine combat veterans (Horrible Hog Co.,) relegated to a. r*st camp near Mt. Fuji, Japan. Action revolves around two main characters, Hugh Thorn-, ton, a self-oriented gunnery sargeant who manipulates all those near him for his own be the West. This narrative follows Yancey (Glenn Ford in the'M-G-M color spectacu­ lar) and Sabra Gravat (Maria f T ì 1 gain; and Giff Bohane, a cor­ poral, Silver Star winner, whose disregard for regulations nets him a bust, then a court-mar­ tial. “Valhalla” moves rapidly through love and violent action as the company is keyed up for an expected resumption of hostilities and culminating in embarkation for Indo-Chirta. The book anti-climatically withdraws when an agreement is reached before the Marines are landed from their trans­ ports. Another book, the movie form of which is taking the Valley by storm, is Edna Ferbei’s “Cimarron,” the story of the establishment of a civilization in the wilderness that used to Schell), and their young son, Cimarron, out of staid and stale Wichita into the wide College Sponsors Sum m er Course ASU’s College of. Education is sponsoring a new summer study travel course starting Jane 12 on campus. The education workshop in­ cludes tours to part of North­ western United States and Ca­ nada. . Applications for reservations will be open today with pre­ registration necessary. Reser­ vations close when the course is- filled, or at the latest, May 1. An education workshop teaching elementary school sci­ ence, will be included. The course offers six semester hours of credit^ and deals with organ­ ization and presentation of sci- Coeds Compete In Three Feats The 6th annual archery, bad­ minton and golf tournament for Arizona high school coeds will be Friday and Saturday at ASU. “This is the only state-wide tournament for high school girls in these three’ sports,” said Dr. Dorothy Gillanders, professor of Physical Educa­ tion. WELDON'S RIDING STABLE ★ HAYRIDES ★ p a r t ie s Nice Horses & Courteous Service “Same Location For 27 Years” 5400 E. Van Buren Phone BR 5-2421 ence for first through sixth grades. Stressing selection of materials fo r, content and en­ richment, classes will meet on campus for the first three and. one-half weeks of the first sum­ mer session. For nine days,.the education group will tour, study and apply principles of earth science at Banff, Lake Louise, Jasper and nearby points in Canada, and tour Glacier Na­ tional Park in the ¡United States. . 'open, promise of Oklahoma, where Yancey plans to set up a newspaper. The people in “ Cimarron” are quite human, a-nd their e x ­ periences, carefully described by Miss Ferber, are moving. It has pleased readers for 30 years, since its first date of publication. “Jazz on a Summer’s Day” is one of the most colorful “musicals” we’ve witnessed in a long time. There’s music from start to finish, filmed and recorded at the Newport Jazz Festival, held annually at Rhode Island. Jazz artists appearing include Chico Hamilton, who presented a concert at ASH two Sundays ago, Mahalia Jackson, George Shearing, who was here last year and in Phoenix February 17, Louis Armstrong and Dinah Washington. Friday, March 3, 1961 Latin American Institute To Be A t V ’This “Study of the cultures and From the Arizona Wildcat, Tucson, Arizona A pioneer effort to assist teachers in gaining increased understanding of significant world areas will be inaugurat­ ed by the University this sum­ mer. A June 12-July 15 summer institute will focus on Latin America. Sponsored by the College of Education, the LatV in American institute will of­ fer teacher participants six college credits, said Dr. Hollis A. Moore, dean of the college. ASU Rodeo Club Hears Photo Talk A New York City photo­ grapher showed and told the Rodeo Club this week about her photography of horses in other countries. Elaine Warner showed' pic­ tures of horses in Ireland, and commented that there “every­ one can ride.” She related her experiences at the piympics, where three of her pictures were displayed. Each country is allowed to ex­ hibit ten pictures, she explain“Brigitte Bardot or Ingmar ed. She is a member of the Peo­ Bergman?” will be the discus­ ple to People Sportsman’s com­ sion topic Sunday in the MU mittee. lower lounge. Bardot-Bergman To be Discussed Sunday By Critic George Packer, film critic and manager of the Valley Arts Theater, Tempe, will be discus­ sion leader. The discussion will compare the “poor European films of the Bardot type with the Ing­ mar Bergman type picture,” according to Ron Horner, mem­ ber of the sponsoring Cultural Affairs committee. Packer will also give a cri­ tique of the film “Birth of a Nation” which will be shown in Cosner Auditorium later this month; Cost of the tour is approxi­ mately $471. This includes re­ gistration, instruction, a ir transportation from Phoenix to Calgary and return, bus trans­ portation to visited points, ho­ tels and meals for the nine days away from ASU. Dr. Guy D. McGrath, dean of the College of Education, will conduct the tour. Applications and details for He has managed theatres in the course may be obtained from Dean McGrath or Dr. Roy Denver, Chicago, Cleveland and C. Rice, director of ASU sum­ Memphis, and reviewed films mer sessions. for 20 years. " economies of our southern neighbors is the objective of this first in a series of insti­ tutes,” Moore said. “Many teachers,” Moore ad­ ded, “feel they are not ade­ quately prepared to inform their students concerning mo­ dern Latin America,1 a large, interesting and, complex reg­ ion of the world. The goal of this first summer institute is to fill that gap for such' teach­ ers.” Among professors who will conduct the' institute are: Dr. Russell Ewing, head of the history department; David Henderson, assistant professor of business administration; Dr. ’ Roendo Gomez, associate pro­ fessor of government; Dr. Ed­ ward Spicer, professor of an­ thropology and anthropolgist in the Bureau of Ethnic Re­ search; Dr. Renato Rosaldo, head of the Department of Ro­ mance Languages; Dr. .Victor H. Kelley, professor of educa­ tion; Dr. Jimmye S. Hillman, professor of agricultural eco­ nomics; and Dr. Donald R. Thomas, associate professor of education and coordinator of the 1961 institute. Other announcements aré pending confirmation. g in n ro o o s t o a o o o a m n n ra a a tn n n n ro o 6 in n n r y y r a 1m n n n n p THE FEDERAL AVIATION AGENCY (FORMERLY C. A. A.) y WILL BE INTERVIEWING CIVIL AND ELECTRONIC ENGINEERS For Positions in the FEDERAL CAREER SERVICE In Placement Office on Tuesday, March 7, 1961 HOP O-O-P-P-fl B P P.P.PJfJULU 8001) 99,.,0.0.Q..PJUUL&JLB.P 0 o o o o o o on ° We all You're Not Seeing Double ... We just want to make sure the SENIORS don't forget to order their CLASS RINGS UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE make mistakes... ERASE WITHOUT A TRACE ON EATON’S CORRASABLE BOND ' Typing errors never show on Corrasable. The special surface of this paper makes it possible to erase without a trace—with just an ordinary pencil eraser. Results: clean­ looking, perfectly typed papers. Next time you sit down at the keyboard, make no mistake —type on Corrasable! Your choice of Corrasable in light, medium, heavy weights and O nion Skin. In handy 100sheet packets and 500-sheet boxes. Only Eaton makes Corrasable. A Berkshire Typewriter Paper EATON PA PE R CORPORATION ( g ) P IT T S F IE L D , MASS. Friday, March 3, 1961 STATE PRESS Im proper.Posters Cited By Council ASU ■ Executive Manager, Dick Finley, reported to the Executive Council last Monday and said that many ASU orga­ nizations do not apply for sales franchise cards and poster numbers for selling on campus. Any organization or individ­ ual selling and/or campaign­ ing on campus must apply for a sales franchise card and/or (when posters are involved) a Harvard Seniors Get Africa Posts CAMBRIDGE — Between 10 and 15 seniors of Harvard Uni­ versity will definitely teach in an African country next year, officials have announced. Although many problems re­ main unsolved, including the source of the financing f ort he project and the country to which the students will go, the administration has determined the general scope oj the plan. Applicants will be screened this term, and those selected will take a comprehensive sehainar for the remainder of this spring. poster number. This poster number is to be on the poster which must be displayed ac­ cording to the ASU sales, franchise arid advertising poli­ cies. This policy was specifically designed to: “Protect students from ex­ ploitation by unscrupulous in­ dividual?; to protect the health and safety of students; to main­ tain the good appearance of the campus; to provide priority of sales for traditional items; to provide students an opportuni­ ty to buy or sell items not otherwise readily available to them; and to insure that sales and advertising to students do not become excessive in certain areas pr on specific item's.” To apply for these cards and numbers, the individuals wish­ ing to sell on campus are re­ quired to send a letter to the Executive M a b a g e r stating what is to be sold, the list of salesmen, date(s)' of sale, the type of license request? d, and what profits are to be u id for. . This letter is, to be se*j&t one week previous to the sale^.* Page I I StudyShows Faculty Facts A g Students “Patterns of Personal Prob­ Ifinance, interests and activilems of Adolescent Girls,” an | ties. Also school life, heredity, artjele by Dr. Richard E. planning for the future, menStick It Out Three out of four fÀSU ag­ Schütz, director of ASU’s Test­ riculture graduates are now serving in the agriculture in­ dustry. This fact was revealed by a survey of 362 Arizona State graduates from 1950 through 1960. The ASU agriculture di­ vision conducted the survey in an çffort to determine what jobs the graduates now hold and how the division could im­ prove the curriculum. Answers were received from all over the nation and several foreign countries. A summary of the survey shows the follow­ ing distribution of employ­ ment: Farming apd ranching, 30 per cent; agriculture indus­ tries, ¿0 percent; state and fed­ eral agricultural agencies, 12 percent; graduate study and re­ search, nine percent: teaching seven percent; military service, four percent; non-agricultural employment, 16 percent. Do You Know? Arizona State’s varsity bask­ etball team is currently scoring ahead of the pace that placed it Sixth in’ the nation in scoring last year. ing Service, appears in the re­ cently published “Readings in Child and Adolescent Psychol­ ogy.” Dr. Schütz based the article on a dissertation prepared for his doctoral degree require­ ments at Columbia University. Areas in which analysis falls inclu'de physical health and safety, getting along with others, boy-girl relationships, home and family life, personal tal-emotional health and fit­ ness, morality and religion. * sj: Dr. John N. Aronson, assist­ ant professor of Chemistry, will discuss “Biochemistry and Nutrition” at 7:30 next Monday at Papago Elementary School. The lecture, which is open to the public, will cover the struc­ ture of the body; enzymes, and vitamins; the biochemical basis of nutrition; current food fads and their dangers. * * * Dr. Lee P. Thompson, dean of Applied Arts and Sciences, will take part in a panel dis­ cussion - at the 13th annual Southwestern Institute of Ra­ One hundred fifty high dio Engineers Conference and school ROTC cadets will vjie Electronics Show. for honors in the 10th Pershihg The conference will take Rifles Regimental invitational place April 19-21 in Dallas,, meet on campus, 7 p.m. tonight. Texas. Competition in Goodwin Sta­ * * * dium will include inspection, Four ASU faculty members drill and exhibition drill. The will participate in the Indus­ team scoring highest will re­ trial Development Institute of ceive tickets to the ASU mili­ Arizona today and tomorrow at tary ball. the University of Arizona. Cadet George Shoemaker is They are Dr. William T. in charge of the meet. Greenwood, associate professor of Management; Dr. William S. Peters, professor of General Business; Robert 'C. Cauthorn, assistant professor of Econ­ omics; and Dr. L. Lloyd Haring, chairman of the Geography de­ partment. Anthony Ellner Jr., ASU as­ sociate professor of Architec­ ture, is one of four men ap­ pointed to work at the ■nation­ al level on recommending new procedures and requirements for architectural internship. Purpose of the committee is to study the three-year mini­ mum apprenticeship training which is required in each state of graduates who have complet­ ed the five-year degree require­ ments. Ellner will represent the Association of Collegiate Schools of Architecture on the four-man national committee. * * * “The English Language at ASU” is the title of an article written by Dr. L. M. Myers. Prepsters To Vie In ROTC Meet Tarevton delivers the flavor... FLIGHT INSTRUCTION At Special Rates For College People A Private'License is a Must in Modern Business AMOS FLIGHT OPERATORS Don Amos - - Class of '56 Ph. BR 5-7291 - Sky Harbor une IA J a tcli H ere’s one filter cigarette that’s really different! The difference is this: Tareyton’s Dual Filter gives you a unique inner filter of ACTIVATED CHARCOAL, definitely proved to make the taste of a cigarette m ild and smooth. It works together with a pure white outer filter—to balance the flavor elements in the smoke. oppe Where Discounts Tareyton delivers—and you enjoy—the best taste of the best tobaccos. D U AL F IL T E R Tareyton L Are Real Product of xj/meAiean it Mir mitdU Mnf* Phone WO 7-3221 609 MILL — TEMPE Page 12 STATE PRESS F rid a y , M arch 3, 1961 LITTLE EATALOT... AT CHICO'S RESTAURANT FINE MEXICAN FOOD Lynn Anderson Richard Wulbreecht, Ken Goto, Gail Gustafson and .r~ ' er , / r o m left, K aydettes and A rm y cadeis, work om decorations for the M ilitary Ball, March 17 in the M ens Gym. Door prizes and the coronation.of the Milba Queen w ill .highlight the dance.____________ (Phot° hV Jacfc G riffith) ASU To Sponsor Phoenix Quartet Greeks Initiate Pledges Several ASU Greek organi- include: ASU will host the Phoenix zations will initiate new mem Phi Delta Theta with new String Quartet in a concert bers in ceremoniés this, week­ actives, A. D. Jacobson, Pete end. Sunday. McClennen, Chuck Gercke, Fourteen girls will be wear­ Gary Shipley, Lynn Sparks, The quartet, comprised of first chair players« of the Phoe- ing the Kappa, Alpha Theta Tow Grablick, Ron Sheridan . nix Symphony Orchestra, will active pin following ceremon- and Buck Betak. present the second in a series I ies Sunday. They are: Sue Phi Kappa Tau initiated their of four chamber music concerts Peterson, Linda Henderson, members at U.S.C. Feb. 25. i Nancy Smith, Beverly Johnson, New actives are: Jack Eldean, at 8:30 p.m; in the MU. (Terry Williams, Jo Ann Gun­ Henry Clark, John Shultz and Mozart’s “Quartet in D Min­ or, Opus 13” and Beethoven’s derson, Sherry Wheeler, Tarlei Stanley Pettersen. “Quartet No. 1, Opus 18” are Beall, Janet Henry, Lynn Reed, New Sigma Chis are Don1 a few of the number on the Sarah Dickinson, Susan Sloan Davis, George Lee, Len Mark, and Nancy Caldwell. The girls Prank Wishum, Bill Luke Jr., program. The senes of concerts is be­ will be honored at a banquet Bill Price, Mike Karr, Ken Du­ ing presented under the spon­ Sunday evening at the Tempe val, Phil Smith, Graham Dorland, Rich Ferguson, George sorship of the Long grant, pro­ Sands. Those who will be wearing Waldman, Bob Hobbs and Mike vided by Mr, and Mrs. Hugh the Alpha Delta Pi diamond Craig. Long, of Westfield, N. J. gfter initiation tonight are New Delta Chi actives are; . Members of the quartet are Gayle Fuller, Mary Leigh Frank Keatley, Dick Cawley, Dr. Andrew Galos, violin, conBurns, Nora McGrew, Marilyn Dick Conrad and Mike Moon. certmaster of the Phoenix Vihel, Marilyn Whitney, Nancy Wearing new Kappa Keys Symphony orchestra; Sharon Venning, Bonnie Temple, Cindi are new Kappa Kappa Gamma Harkey Fry, violin; William Bagwell, viola; and Frederick Buchanan, Barrie Kiesel, Maris actives: Sharon Austin, Martha Thomas, Pat Pansini, Nancy Dillner, Meda Edwards, Marcia Donnelly, violoncello. Day, Beverly Richardson, Kar-, Frost, Marianne Harismendy, en Naumann, Sherry Fullerj Jean Ison, Nan Lutfy, Kay Susan Poe, and Elsa Spencer. Reid, Rita Utz, SUsan ’ WeySaturday afternoon a banquet fough, Rosina Yanez and Patsy will be at the Islands to an­ Zahn. nounce the outstanding girls in Initiated into Alpha Sigma Mrs. Grady Gammage, presi­ the pledge class. Alpha Feb. 24 were: Linda Cardent of the Arizona State divi­ Delta Gamma initiation cere­ nowski, Margaret Holstein, sion of the American Associa­ monies this weekend will have Brenda Paschall and Becky tion of University Women, will speak in Bisbee and Douglas nineteen girls wearing the an­ Reedel. • chor. They are: Di Ann PassSigma Pi’s initiates Sunday today and tomorrow. more, Marilyn Woods, Peggy at the fraternity’s Founders Day Assistant to the registrar and Farone, Kathi Bunch, Judy director of admissions at ASU, Smith, Monnle Tiffany, Ron­ Banquet were Chester Arey, Mrs. Gammage has been ap nie Fitch, Pam Frazier, Kaye Dennis Dorin, John Towler and Theron Witter. Dennis Dorin pointed by the national prepi Smith, Barbara Fuller, Gail was presented the “James” dent of AAUW to help plan the meeting of state presidents in Chiha, Carolyn MeCusker, Kar­ Thompson Kingsburry Award Washington, D.C., in June. • en Wahl, Jane Tiffany, Mary for outstanding scholarship and Ann Black, - Carol Roosevelt, service. , Evie Miller, Jackie Carter and Alpha Epsilon Pi recently in­ Linda Light. itiated Joe Gross, Harry Green, Several Greek organizations Sheldon Miller, Marty Pavell, A car wash at Pitts Mobil Station, 8th St. and Mill Ave., on campus have already ini­ Howard Newman and Alvin will be sponsored by the Can­ tiated their new actives. These Bender. terbury Association tomorrow, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday, the group will meet , at the Student Center, 1735 College Ave., at 7 p.m., open to ASU students. 1120 East Apache Blvd. — Tempe Air conditioned of course MEN ■ Mrs. Gammage H elps AATJW Car Wash Set DANCE Every Friday & Sunday QUALITY USED CARS and New Chévrolets CARS - TRUCKS V G om pJet* Se m tic* fy a c¿l¿tie ¿ BRIT SMITH CAR CO. 802 MILL WO 7-3381 Here’s deodorant protection YOU CAN TRUST Old Spice Stick Deodordnt. . . fastest, neatest way to alb day, every day protection! It’s the active deodorant for active m en. . . absolutely dependable. Glides on smoothly, speedily...dries in record time. Old Spice Stick Deodorant —most convenient, most economical deodorant money can buy. 1.00 plus tax. , lice s S T IC K DEODORANt M U l_ m O N We Give S&H Green Stamps 9 till? Duke Draper & His Knights FEATURING BIG BILL S P E C IA L R A T ES FO R ASU STU D EN TS —* 75c Stag — $1,25 Couples — 9 till 11 — Reg. Prices After 11 DRUG S T O R E S Mirador Ballroom 3830 NORTH CENTRAL — PHOENIX * Tempe Shopping Center . . . . W Open 8 A.M. to 10 P.M. Every * Friday, March 3, 1961 STATE PRESS. New Officers Elected For Two Semesters As the spring, semester moves Newly elected Kappa Alpha oh, more sororities and fraterni­ Theta officers are: Linda Beck, ties are electing new officers. president; Nan Baechlin, schol­ Heading Alpha Sigma Alpha arship chairman; Nancy Moore, will be Kathy Lund as presi­ dent; Margaret Halstein, *vice pledge trainer; Mary Dangerpresident; Sandy Johnson, re­ field, panhellenic; Janet Henry, cording secretary; Brenda Pas-* ^editor; Dee Stauffer, social chall, corresponding secretary; chairman; Gretchen Walsh, re­ Becky Reeder, treasurer; Don- cording secretary; Nancy Stim. na Poston, membership direc­ tor; Linda Ban, rush chairman; son, corresponding secretary; Linda Carnowski, editor; Nor­ Linda Allison, house manager; ma Butler, chaplin; and Sandy Kathy Mangano, rush chair­ Johnson, scholarship. man; Tarlei Beall, treasurer Kappa Kappa Gamma’s new­ and Roxy Martin, chaplin. ly elected officers are: Ann Heading the Delta Gammas Dornsbach, president; Binky will be Sue Becker, president; Buck,» vice president; Linda Dedrick, recording secretary; Jan Werner, first vice presi­ Kay Reid, treasurer; Paula Lux, dent; Jan Kirk, second vice 'registrar; Jean Visel,-marshall; president; Donnie Coombs, Cor­ Lynn Taylor, pledge trainer; responding secretary; Sally Doris Parisek, scholarship; Jean Calfee, recording secretary; Bell, house chairman; Sharon Anne Robinson, treasurer; Mar­ Austin, panhellenic; Mariann ianna Roca, rush chairman; Harismendy,; social- chairman; Monnie Tiffney, social chair­ Mary Ann Rex, rush chairman; man; Jane Tiffney, panhellenic; Martha Dillner, public rela­ Kaye Smith, public relations; tions; Rita Utz, efficiency chair­ Carol Roosevelt, scholarship man; Sarati Frost, correspond­ chairman; and Kathy Konkaing secretary; Nan Lufty, ac­ historian. Alpha Tau Omega new lead­ tivities chairman; and Jean ers are: Steve Swofford, presi­ Ison, music chairman. dent; Harry Mitchell, vice president; R i c k McDonald, treasurer; Jack LaSota, secre­ tary; Charlie Antone, rusher; Bob Buzzard, sentinel; Kit CarProfessor T. A. Votchenco, Son, public relations and Gor­ assistant professor of Philoso­ don Watson, historian. phy and Wilson G. Baroody, Newly elected Phi Sigma ASU English intsructor, will Kappa, officers are: Fred' Ayers, speak on “Philosophy and Re­ president; Walt Gifford, vice ligion: Approaches to God” at president; Jim Zampetti secre­ an open discussion meeting of tary; Bob Garcia, treasurer; the Liberal Religious Students, Dick Parnell, inductor and Sunday at 7:30 p.m. in MU 209. Sunny Peterson, sentinel. R elig io n T opic F or S u n d a y GO O D M AN 'S 5 MINUTE CAR WASH 916 East Apache,, Tempo Open ON" $ 1 .5 0 the Finest in the Valley... VALLEY SPRING G R EEK TO ME S I» Greek Week In Spotlight B y Linda Rankin Greek Week, Greek Week, Sigma Chi men are busy pre­ Greek Week . . . This is thè paring for their Roman .¿arty D ix Price, executive sec­ retary of the Arizona Education Association, w ill speak on “Laws and Lobbying Affecting Ed­ ucation” and the Loyal­ ty Oath at an open m eeting of th e Student N a t i qnal Educational Association, 3 p.m. W ed­ nesday in the MU. Barbershop Petition D ue March 10 Applications for the ninth annual ASU Sigma Pi Barber­ shop Quartet Contest are due March 10. The contest will be at Cosner Auditorium, April 17, at 7:30 p.m. “This highlight, of campus life offers ASU groups a chance to win trophies, gain recogni­ tion and have a ball to boot,” said Tom Weekes, Sigma Pi vice president, and chairman of the contest. Judging for the contest will be based on i costumes, singing and audiencq applause. An ap­ plause meteir will be used. Judges will be members of the SPEBQSA (Society for the Preservation and Encourage­ ment "of Barbershop Quartet Singing in America.) A fee of $6 will be charged alf groups for the cost of pitchpipes and coaches for the quar­ tet. Coaches will help the groups obtain and arrange mu­ sic, costumes and singing. Groups mafy coritact Tom Weekes, WO 7-9753, or 826 Mc­ Allister, Tempe. u At Bayless And El Rancho IN T E M P E , Phone W0 7-3141 for the GINGER ALE - CLUB - LEMON - UP COLA - GRAPEFRUIT - PUNCH AND SIX DELICIOUS FRUIT FLAVORS center of conversation on, cam­ pus. This week, consisting, of games, progressive parties, elec­ tion of king and queen, Lambda Chi toad hop, sing, Grecian Ball, and the philanthropic pro­ ject, is set for March 18-25. tonight. They also had aa ex­ change with the Gamm« Phi Betas Wednesday night with the theme “Hospital.” More pinnings and engage­ ments. ... . Kappa Alpha Theta Carolyn Copper revealed her Interesting Items . . . Sigma engagement to Clarkson Col­ Nu men are completing plans lins. Alpha Delta PI, Laura El­ for their Payson Leadership Workshop, March 24-26. Dean Shofstall, Dean Anderson and fraternity presidents are in­ vited. Tau Kappa Epsilon was fort­ unate to initiate Dr. tyilliam Huizingh, assistant Dean of the College of Business Administra­ tion into active membership. Alpha Phis Bonnie France and Gloria Leitterman were named active and pledge of the week respectively. Kappa Alpha Thetas had a trying time last Sunday when their chapter, trophies and crest were “borrowed.” liott, surprised her sisters with her pinning to te rry Wallace, Phi Alpha. Another Phi Alpha, Sam Hardy is pinned to Alice Hopman, Gamma Phi Beta. Sigma Sigma: Sigmas Sharon Bassett, , Shawn Davis and Freda Sarten recently announc­ ed their engagements to Gerald Farr, Joel Singleton and Jack Warper, respectively. Tina De Fabio, Alpha Sigma Alpha, and Paul Bfehm, Tau Kappa Epsi­ lon are engaged. Theta Chi, Bill Krause and Nancy Bates» McClintock H a l l , announced their pinning. And its all Greek To Me. . . IOld Films Set For Clancy’s Tonight | Eight silent films will be shown in Clancy’s tonight at 8 p.m., accompanied by appro­ priate piano music. Sponsored by the Social committee, the series of old movies is slapstick in theme displaying pioneer filming me- thpds. Movies include Laurel and Hardy in “Do Detectives Think?”; “Twenty Legs Under the Sea,” a bathing beauty co­ medy; “The Wild Wild West,” starring Glenn Tryon and Charlotte Merriam; Mack Sennett in “A. Campus Romeo;” .“The Cloud Hopper,” with Lar­ ry Seman; “Betnween Show­ ers,” featuring Charlie Chap­ lin; “A Sea Dog’s Tale,” with ASU is hosting the National Oliver Hardy; and “Spies and Shade Tree conference in the Gal§,” starring Wallace Beery. MU ballroom beginning at 8 a.m. today. Nine major talks and a panel discussion are scheduled for the conference beginning ,with a welcoming address by Gilbert Cady, ASU vice president of La Liga Panamericana, Span­ ish club» confirmed plans for business affairs. A $2 fee will cover both reg­ National Foreign Language istration., and. a noon, luncheon. Week, set March 19-<25. The cliib will sponsor a “TarAdditional information about the conference may be obtained deada” an afternoon party, from Bob Svob, general chair­ March 19 at 4 p.m. to initiate man of the meeting and fore­ the week. The group elected new of­ man of the ASU groundsmen. ficers recently. They are: Alex A SU yW ill H ost Tree Confab~ Language Week Set By Croups tp 'U à ^ im m y ■i\obinôon FULL 32 OZ. QUART MIXES & FLAVORS F u ll . Qt. B ottles Page 13 nî versify U rive I SMILEY-BERGE FORD ★ Campus Special ★ 1957 OLDS HOLIDAY Hardtop — Real Nice In $99800 FASTEST CARRYOUT Service in Tempe Corner Apache & Rural • TEMPE 5 Minutes after* your call your order w ill he ready at one of our curb stands A -l W arranty In W riting • . WO '7-2063 » iwr • . ■ • Golii* OLD GOLD 9 iz G j: P I «4S4? SPIN FILTERS KENT >.v.l M K IN G 'S IZ E . u J h is part of the country is a natural for early spring baseball and it is rapidly being recognized as the college baseball capitol of the nation. For years the U niversity o f Arizona has been one o f. the country s baseball powers and last year Arizona State joined them inside the select top ten for the first tim e. .... This year the Sun Devils are eligible for the NCAA championship and they w ill be shooting for the right to represent this district in the national playoffs. _ They have a long road ahead of them and w aiting fiz -1 j 6 the road’ 43 gam es from now, w ill be the Wildcats. The team s m eet tw ice in Tucson on April 29 and tw ice here on M ay sixth. B efore they get to the W ildcats, th e Sun D evils w ill have com e up against W isconsin eight tim es, pow erful Dos A ngeles State four dim es and M ichigan three tim es among others. ’ It w on’t be an easy spring for W inkles and his char­ ges but is should be an interesting and excitin g one for Sun D evil fans. And they’ll be v ie w in g .ASU’s home games under more baseball-like su/roundings this season. The addi­ tion of canvas material to the rigfit field fence and down the foul lines makes the diamond look more like a ball park. A ttendance last year w asn’t bad for college baseball and this year it should be improved even though ad­ m ission w ill be charged to non-students. A ll the ingredients for a teriffic season are present. L et’s all be there tomorrow w h en it unfolds. SMALL THINGS . . . O llie Payne, one of the big reasons for the success of this year’s Sun D evil basket­ ball team , w as voted honorable m ention A ll Am erican honors by U nited Press this week. George K nighton of N ew M exico S tate w as the only other Border Conference played named. . . . The basketballers w ill be out for several re­ cords w hen they play Regis and the A ir Force this-week­ end. ■ The team needs only 123 points in the two games to top the all time scoring record of 2062 set in 26 games in 1958-59. Larry Arm strong can top A l N ealey’s single season scoring mark w ith 17 points in the two games. He has 446 points — N ealy had 462 in the 58-59 season. Arm ­ strong needs only fiv e field goals to surpass N ealey’s 181, also set during 58-59. ' Tony Cerkvenik, if he m aintains his .524 field goal percentage, can be the all-tim e best in that department. N ealey hit .513 last year for a new school record. . . . A rchie Moore, scheduled to be th e guest colum ­ nist on today’s editorial page, w as unable to do so be­ cause of arrangem ents h e’s m aking for a trip abroad prior to his title defense. r PRODUCTS OF P. LORILLARD COMPANY First with the Finest Cigarettes Through Lorlllarfl Research 8 W E É P S T A K E S EN T R Y B O X E S LO C A T ED A T C O L L E G E B O O K ST O R E. V A R S IT Y INN, E L RANCHO, B A Y L E S S , AND S A F E W A Y M A R K ET S TEMPE DRUG 6th & MILL ★ ★ FOUNTAIN * * SIDE ENTRANCE & ANGLE PARKING ON SIXTH STREET Friday, March 3, 1961 STATE PRESS Page 15 Opens Tomorrow In tram u rals 3| Barnson, Slaughter Slated To Pitch In Double Header John Harrington, an inde­ pendent, took first place in the Intramurals Table Tennis Tour­ nament completed on February 21 . By D IC K BURROUGHS Placing - second was Jack Duffy, also an independent. Third and fourth finishers, re­ spectively, were Wally Kendig of Sigma Chi and Mike Kreutz of Alpha Tau Omega. A N U N PA ID TE ST IM O N IA L Richard the Lion-Hearted says: 1 mould mtv have smtnAmd ¡England ...if I’d had Jockeu ® BHANO 0 support C’mon, Dick! You’re rationaliz­ ing. Jockey support1might never have secured you against jfhe Emperor2. But it certainly would have provided snug protection against the physical stresses and strains of your active life. Your armorer never tailored a coat of mail more knowingly than Jockey tailors a brief—from 13 separate, body-conforming pieces. 1. Other *'imitation” briefs (copies of the Original Jockey brand) have no more Jockey support than a limp loin cloth. 2. Richard the Lion-Hearted, 1157-99, Surrendered England and a huge ransom to secure his release from Henry V I. Get the real thing. Look for the name Jocketf on the waist band Roger Barnson w ill be on the mound tomorrow af­ ternoon at 1:00-p.m. w hen the 1961 Sun D evil baseball team opens its schedule against the U n iversity.of N ew Mexico. Following Barnson to the hill for the, second half of the twin bill will be sophomore hurler, Sterling Slaughter. Slaughter, like Barnson has a fine fastball and a sharp breaking curve. Bobby Winkles’ baseballers are still being plagued by in­ juries with Bob Lefebre the newest man on the disabled Several of the top performers list. He pulled a groin mus­ in last Saturday’s Arizona Re­ cle earlier this week and will lay meet will travel to Los be out of action against the Angeles to compete in the Sou­ Lobos. thern Pacific AAU track and Lefebre’s injury puts him on field_ meet tomorrow. Headlining the ASU entries the shelf along .with catcher G a ry ■Linthicum and his brok­ is the mile relay team, being en foot, l^ario Ramirez and billed by West Coast news­ his dislocated shoulder, and the papers as one of the main at­ sore armed twosome of Gary tractions of the meet in which more than 1,000 athletes- will Graham and Paul Runge. Roger Bamson w ill be the starting pitcher for compete. Winkles said, “Our pitchers Arizona State when it opens its 1961 baseball season The ASU mile foursome, Karl are going to have to pitch here tomorrow at 1 p.m. Schreiner, Mike Barrick, Mai shutouts unless our hitters and Mel Spence, hold the meet start sticking the ba)l better *% than they have been during the record of 3:11.6. After run­ ning a warmup 3:16 last week, past few days.” the team is ready to go all out Bob Kavgian, who has been in an effort to better its mark. mentioned earlier by Winkles ASU will also enter strong as a pitcher-first baseman has teams in the 440 and' 880 re­ been shifted to the outfield "and lays. They won both of those draws the starting role at the events last week. leftfield slot. The 440 relay team will con­ According to the ASU men­ sist of Jesse Bradford, A4 Coletor, Kavgian has been hitting burn, Gaston Green and Hubie the ball better than anyone on Watson. Running in the 880 re­ the squad and is therefore de­ lay are Green, Ron Freeman^ serving of the spot. He ripped Schreiner and Watson. the horsehide at a .410 clip Green will also compete in last spring to rate as the Dev­ the open high hurdles, an event SHOES FREE ils’ top pinchxhitter. he -won Saturday. Winkles, has listed Mike T a t­ Wayne McDonnell and Bob WITH ACTIVITY CARD um, Larry Smith, and Sam Barkas, 1-2 finishers, in the Cook as his top relief pitchers javelin here in the Arizona for tomorrow’s affair. Tatum Relays, will enter that event. led last spring’s mound corps Don Jeisy and John Rose will in wins with 9 and strikeouts compete in the pole vault with with 74. hopes to improve on their 14-2 The second game will start vaults of last week. Pete Anselmo will compete in approximately 20 minutes after the shot put and Joe Caldwell, the conclusion of the first. The starting lineup for to making his first appearance of morrow afternoon’s double the season, will enter the high header against the Lobos is as jump. follows: Tracksters In SPAAU Tomorrow Bowling Special fc, SATURDAY & SUNDAY C* 30c a Line Scotch Doubles (MIXED) Tournament 1 P.M. SATURDAY ONE TROPHY F°R EVERY 6 ENTRIES ^ J o c k e tf B R IE F S STUDENTS, FACULTY AND STAFF WELCOME Your Jockey Joe Selleh 7th & Mill - Tempe cf Ed Littleton rf Roger Tomlinson ss Bob Kavgian c Mike Matsik lb Steve Ogbome Larry Brion Roger Barnson . 3b Memorial Union Bowling Lanes NEED Transportation Car? A L L KIN D S 2b BRIT SMITH CAR CO.( p Tempe 802 Mill WO 7-33811 PAPAG 0 C O O P E R ' S , INC. . K EN O SH A , W IS . Dealer In Tempe Danny Ikeda LANES Billiard Room NOW OPEN Pocket Billiard Leagues Now Being Formed Contact Stan Hruby for information FREE INSTRUCTION BY EVERETT CUTLER 1340 S. Scottsdale Rd., Scottsdale Phone WH 5-4548 li Pagé 16 STATE PRESS Friday, March 3, 1961 Topight, Tomorrow — Cagers Finish Season Arizona State’s varsity basketballers take to the road to conclude regular season play against Regis College tonight and the Air Force Academy tomorrow.....g They defeated Regis 80-27 here earlier in the season and dropped the Air Force 78-71 in their only meeting last year. A pair of wins would set their season mark at 20-5. \ The Devils will be keeping an eye on the results, of New Mexico State’s game against West Texas State tomorrow. If West Texas upsets the Aggies or if Hardin-Simmons turns the trick Monday, ASU would UC undisputed Border Confer­ be ee champ. S| - If the Aggies win both games, a playoff will take place late next week at an un­ determined site, to determine the BC’s representative in the NCAA national tournament. The fact that both of New Mexico State’s remaining games are on the road makes their chances of getting knocked off better. Arizona State Sports Shorts MEN’S TENNIS GAMES TOURNEY Arizona State’s men’s tennis Arizona State University de- * Hardin-Simmons, especially, team will depart tomorrow for feated the University of Ari­ has been able to beat the Aggies its opening match of the sea­ zona at Tucson last Saturday in social board sponsored bowl­ in the past few years when the son at Fort Huachuca. ing, billiards and table tennis, games are in Abilene. Members of the team, in­ tournaments. The games against Regis and cluding returning iettermen. A traveling trophy will ar­ the Air Forcé won’t effect the Brian. Heming and Dick Drap­ rive here in April for a stay Sun Devils’ position in regard er, are George Emmons, Edd of at least a year. to the Border Conference, ASU Lednard, Wally Kendig, Sam Barbara Rood led women has already completed its con­ Schulz, Joe Johns, Cecil Stair bowlers with a 285 high game ference schedule with a 9-1 and Earnie Hegi. and a 603 series. Dave Doench record. “We have a much stronger topped the males with a 195 Probable starters for the all-around team than last year,” average.for nine lines. Gene Smalley took first in Sun Devils on the road are -said Coach Marlowe Keith, Tony Cerkvenik, Gerry Hahn, “and we expect to move up a pockety three cushion a n d Ollie Payne, Larry Armstrong notch or two in the Border straight rail billiards. Barbara Brown led the girls to a sweep and Raul Disarufino. Conference.” in table tennis. This Is the most important seat in the Tom here, is discovering the atom. But the most exciting discove^ in the classroom could well be Tom himself. For he’s the owner o f a bright, -inquiring mind— arid possible seeds o f greatness. His and other keen minds should be given the chance to develop their capabilities to the fullest. . . for the nation’s very existence depends on their growth. Today, industry and education are uniting to help provide this chance. For its part, Standard is investing $1,300,000 this year in scholarships, research grants, fellowships, direct aid to colleges and universities, teaching aids, educational broadcasts. Industry s investment, we believe, will be returned many times over in enriched minds and improved technology. ¡ÿW gfaajoj; mPH planning ahead to serve you better STANDARD .OIL COMPANY OF CALIFORNIA 5