6,904 E n ro ll F o r F irs t Session 3» * H U N * »TAT« D H I V I I I I T Y SUMMER SESSION Enrollment At Highest Level June 21, 1963 Helping Hand No. 1 Summer A ctivity Scheduled By MU A record 6,904 students enrolled for the first sem­ ester of summer school, it was announced yesterday by ASU Registrar Alfred Thomas. The number was short of the anticipated 7,000, but Thomas pointed out that additional students aré yet to sign-up for two special classes this session. Relocation of the fee col­ lection center in the gym and the addition of four cashiers helped speed re­ gistration, Thomas s a i d . More than 5,000 students had registered by noon Monday. Further streamlining of procedures are planned for the second session, Thomas also announced. By JA N ET BERGMAN A variety of activities including a planetarium visit, musical programs, lectures and horseback riding are planned for students by the Memorial Union staff for the rest of the month. Two lecture-demonstrations in the campus planetar­ ium will be given by Dr. Francis Yale, associate professor of room. The public is invited. science education, Monday at A TW O -HO U R early morning 1:30 and 7:30 p.m. horseback ride and ranch style Limited to 40 people, passes breakfast at Papago Park are for each showing may be* ob­ scheduled at 6 a.m. a week from tained from the information Saturday. desk. Those attending are ask­ Cost of the outing is $3. Re­ ed to meet at the desk 15 min­ utes before each lecture so they servations must be made by 4 Wednesday at the inform­ may go together to the plane­ p.m. ation desk. tarium. A YO U N G American soprano, -, Outstanding Music Camp stu­ Katherine Williams, will be dents will present a scholarship featured in the first Concert- recital June 30 at 3:30 in the AN O TH ER LIN E — A campus police officer assures four Lecture program Tuesday at 8 ballroom. The public is invited. summer^students that they’re heading for the right line to p.m. in the ballroom, v pay fees. Enrollment was accelerated by a reorganization of Miss Williams’ program, “It registration. Started With a Song,” will trace American musical h i s t o r y . Highlights will include “Greensleeves,” “Summertime” and" John B. Duffy, special agent “The Lass With the Delicate with the Phoenix office of the Air.” A reception in the upper Federal Bureau of Investigation lounge will follow the program. since 1950, has been named di­ President G. Homer Dur­ freshmen asseihbly, faculty con­ President’s bulletin also recom­ An opportunity to meet stu­ rector of campus security. TH E APPOINTM ENT of Duf­ ham has released a plan for ferences, the “State of the Uni­ mended the series be expanded dents and faculty members in­ utilization of the Grady versity” address, and and facul­ to attract supplementary box of­ formally will come Wednesday fy, who will retire July 1 from Gammage Memorial Audi- ty-student assemblies. fice support and eventually aid at a morning coffee, 9 to 10:30 the FBI after more than 21 years of service with the agency, is w torium w ith the music and 2. As a general classroom fa­ in cost of the maintenance of a.m. in the upper lounge. drama departments and special cility, “especially for the De­ the building. ASU Music Camp faculty effective July 2, according to lectures receiving most frequent partment of Music, but also 7. For Homecoming, other stu will present a special recital Gilbert L. Cady, ASU vice pre­ mention. that evening, open to the pub­ sident for business affairs. speech and drama and possibly dent and alumni events. According to Dr. Durham’s others.“ The large lecture halls 8. For general mass testing lic. John B. O’Leary, who has plan, University events would and other classrooms will be programs on special occasions ED U C A TIO N FO R gifted and been serving as director of always receive priority. regularly scheduled for any de­ each year, if the need develops handicapped pupils will be dis­ campus security for the past The Frank Lloyd Wright de­ partment needing, them. 9. For annual faculty research cussed by Dr. William F. Hall, year, will become assistant di­ signed structure being con­ 3. For presentations of the lectures, the proposed Carl Hay of Phoenix Elementary School rector, Cady said. structed on the Southwest cor­ music department for the Uni­ den lecture in American instl District, ht a lecture-luncheon D U FFY L E F T Arizona in 1942 ner of the campus is more than versity community and general tuitions, the Grady Gammage Thursday from 12:30 to 2 p.m. to join the FBI, and returned to in the banquet room. half buiilt, with completion public including band concerts lecture in problems of American Dr. Hall will tell of present the state in 1945, serving with scheduled for March, 1964. symphonies, concert choir and education and others. and proposed special educa­ the Flagstaff office until 1950 The 'modernistic multi-pur­ instrumental group performan 10. To anticipate providing a tional programs in Arizona when he came to Phoenix. pose auditorium will be 305 feet ces. home for a Phoenix Symphony schools. During the past five years, he long, 235 feet wide and 80 feet 4. For presentations of the orchestra series in the auditor­ has worked closely with the ■ Advance reservations for the high, with a seating capacity speech and drama department ium, under arrangements made luncheon must be made at the Arizona Law Enforcement Com­ of 3,000. with the Symphony board of di information desk by noon Wed­ mittee on Training in the estab­ including Orchesis. t iDr. Durham’s proposed plan 5. For joint .undertakings of rectors. nesday. Cost is $1. lishment of law enforcement In addition, the auditorium lists the following needs and the music and drama depart­ A solo recital featuring Mu­ schools at ASU, serving as a co­ purposes that the auditorium is ments in the field of opera, light may possibly be available on a sic Camp students, will be Fri­ ordinator and a classroom in­ designed to serve the Univer­ opera, musical comedy and bai rental basis ns a general facility day at 8:30 p.m. in the ball- structor. sity: for cultural enrichment of the let. theater. 1. As an official meeting place 6. To facilitate the University area, after meeting ASU needs, for University convocations, the Concert and Lecture series. The the report indicated. Charitable organizations using the auditorium will have to pay for parking facilities, electricity, normal depreciation wear, uish Arizona State. University’s ter to the ASU president, stated: ering services, custodial care and Leaders from business, edu- cil for Small business Manage­ cleanihg under a schedule of College of Education has been “As in all other programs, how­ 1cation and the government will ment Development. fees to be determined by the reaccredited for ten years, from ever, there is certain to be room present keynote addresses at Keynote speakers are Dr. J. business manager. 1961 to 1971, by the National the 1963 annual conference of Leroy Thompson, director of Council for Accreditation of for improvement. the National Council for Small the educational service bureau Teacher Education, Washington, “The Council has confidence Business Management develop­ of Dow Jones & Company, New that the present leadership will D.C ment on campus next week. York; Dr. Charles T. Clark, ASU senior Carol Hopkins has Dr. G. Homer Durham, ASU continue to make such improve­ The four-day conference at chairman of the department of been named to athe All Amer­ president, said “The Council ments as existing research and ASU will center on the theme general business, University of ican Women’s * Intercollegiate granted full reaccreditation for hard thinking indicate are de­ “Management Development Texas, Austin; and Dr. Wilford Archery team by the National the program for elementary sirable. A Look Ahead.” Collegiate Archery Coaches’ teachers, secondary teachers “It is especially recommend­ Dr. Ralph C. Rook Jr., di­ L. White, director of office Association. km and school service personnel ed that attention continue to be management and research as­ rector of ASU’s Bureau of Miss Hopkins qualified with with the Doctor’s degree as the given to the quality of students Business Services, is current sistance, Small Business Ad­ scores of 552, 570 and 575 on highest degree approved.” who are admitted to teacher edpresident of the national coun- ministration,'Washington, D.C. Columbia Rounds. W. Earl Armstrong, in a let­ uoaion at all levels. President Releases Proposal For Operation Of Auditorium New Security Director Named ASU Education College Reàccredited Until 1971 Sm all Business Meet Slated A ll-American Page Two SUMMER SESSION & E D IT O R -IN - C H IE F -JE R R Y R E IL L Y M A N A G IN G E D IT O R ____ ___________ r_ _______________________________ _ _ R O S S * l n S H A S S IG N M E N T S E D IT O R ..__________ r_____________________________ J A N E T B E R G M A N A S S IS T A N T S ____________ - S H IR L E Y D e M A R K E , F R A N K D U C C E S C H I A S S IS T A N T ___________|___________________ ___ ___ ¿ È __________ ...B IL L D O O L E Y Space Study A ERO -SPA CE Education Workshop was one of several short courses offered during ASU’s summer pre-session. The study series was designed to provide enrollees with a background and understanding of general aviation and the space age. Dr. Brett R. Stuart, education lecturer, was director of the workshop. National Science Foundation Instructors And Students Participate In Institutes More than 250 high school and college instructors and ad­ vanced secondary students from 43 states, India and Pakistan are participating this summer in six National Science Founda­ tion institutes on campus. Supported by NSF grants to­ taling nearly $500,000, the in­ stitutes are designed to increase the knowledge, and teaching competency of the participating student-instructors. ONE IN S T IT U T E , a summer extension of an academic-year program for secondary teachers of science and mathematics, be­ gan June 12 and ended yester­ day. The remainder will begin June 24 and last from six to eight weeks. The academic-yeàr institute which resumed June 12, sup­ ported by a grant of $278,800, was conducted by Dr. Alan T. Wager, professor of physics. Dr. Ernest E. Snyder, jr., associate professor of science education, is associate director of the pro­ gram involving 38 participants. Dr. Wager is also director of the institute for senior and jun­ ior high school teachers of chemistry and physics. Fortyeight participants have enrolled Architect Conducts Silt No.3 For Out Of State Students Arizona’s sun and sand have brought 33 out-of-state stu­ dents to ASU this summer. The undergraduate and grad­ uate students from colleges and universities in the Ü.S. and Canada were accepted to a five week summer workshop entitl­ ed Silt No. 3. Classes are being held in the open-air studio of director Paolo Soleri, ASU faculty as­ sociate in architecture. Students are employing a wash-away silt technique in which a mixture of fine sand and clay from the Salt- River bed is packed into hard homo­ genous forms that can be carv­ ed like soft sandstone. The silt is applied in wet, runny form, making it simple to build up and patch. Once the object is defined, it can be sprayed and invested in plaster. Bowlers Form Summer Leagues University bowling leagues for the summer months are now being organized according to Bill Gorman, games room manager. Faculty and staff, mixed dou­ bles, student-faculty couples and other five-man teams will bowl on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday evenings through both summer sessions. Arrange­ ments will be made for bowlers attending only one summer ses­ sion to participate. The leagues will follow American Bowling Congress rules.' Anyone interested in joining one of the summer bowling leagues may sign up now at the games room desk or call exten-. sion 440. The games room will also be open during the following hours for pen bowling: Mpnday-Friday—10:00 am . to 10:00 p.m. Saturdays—9:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. Sundays—Closed. SO LER I The next step involves wash­ ing away the silt, leaving the thin shell of plaster, which may be further refined inside and out. The plaster shell may be the final products, or a “positive” casting may be done within it, after which1the shell is flaked off. Students have, in the silt, a unique material for research and expression, Soleri said. The first week will be spent familiarinzing workshop par­ ticipants with materials and procedures. The f o l l o w i n g weeks will be devoted to var­ ious projects. Some students will alternate between design and three-di­ mensional interpretations. Oth­ ers will make specific objects such as vases, seats, bowls or planters. Some will experiment in the sculpture field. The silt lends itself to such a workshop for many reasons. It is reusable and inexpensive, has sufficient strength and co­ hesion to allow for sharp and delicate detail, has structural strength and can be washed away after investment in plast­ er. M anagement Conference Expected To D raw 750 Approximately 750 Phoenixarea businessmen will partic­ ipate on campus today in an invitational conference on ad­ vanced management. “An Invitation to Problem Solving” themes the conference sponsored by thé International Business Machines Corporation in cooperation with the ASU College of Business Administra­ tion. The one-day meeting will in­ clude seven „seminars covering major application areas which June 21,1963 have developed fiS recent years in the field of data processing. The sessions are designed to provide an answer to the com­ mon problem faced by con­ temporary business of how to cope with the great quantities of information on new methods. Subjects t o . be covered are simulation, tele-processing, in­ formation retrieval, manage­ ment operating systems, critical path scheduling, design auto­ mation and control systems. for this institute supported by a grant of $65,089. UNDER THE direction of Dr. Robert L. Burgess, assistant professor of botany, 41 partici­ pants have enrolled in the insti­ tute in desert biology for college teachers of biological sciences to study plants and animals of the southwestern deserts. As­ sociate director of the program, for which a $39,300 grant has been awarded, is Dr. A. E. Dammann, associate professor of zoology. Dr. Lehi T. Smith, assistant professor of mathematics, is di­ rector of an institute for senior and junior high school teachers of mathematics. Thirty-nine teachers will participate in the session supported by a $44,610 grant. FORTY-TWO junior and sen­ ior high school teachers will have an [opportunity to obtain a basic understanding of chemis­ try as it applies to biological systems, under the direction of Dr. George M. Bateman, pro­ fessor of chemistry. Dr. Chester R. Leathers, as­ sociate professor of botany, is associate director of the institute which was granted $52,600. A grant of $17,440 will en­ able 49 advanced high school students to participate in an institute on chemistry, plant physiology, psychology and so­ ciology, under the direction of Dr. Howard G. Applegate, as­ sistant professor of botany. State High School Music Festival Will Start Sunday The 18th annual Arizona All-State High School Mu­ sic Camp w ill open June 23 at ASU with registration from 1 to 4 p.m. Sunday. Nearly 400 students from Arizona and 15 other states have been accepted for the csamp which w ill be in ses- sion until July 13. The three-week camp, directed by Mr. and Mrs. Miles A. Dresskell, of the ASU music faculty, will offer intensive study in voice, instrument or dance, as well as music theory and appre­ ciation, crafts, art appreciation, ceramics, painting and drawing, and baton twirling. Campers will be given the op­ portunity to appear in solo re­ citals, ensemble programs, dance programs, and concerts by band, orchestra and chorus. Their art work will be placed on ex­ hibition. Students may sign up for six free private lessons on an in­ strument or invoice or dance. Those who have already paid their fees may report directly to Sahuaro Hall, where campers will be housed. Others should go to the Music Camp office in the Fine Arts building. Starting each morning with 7:30 a.m. classes, the students’ schedules are planned to pro­ vide a full program, including study, recreational activities, so­ cial events, and musical pro­ grams. Total fee for the three weeks, including room, board, classes and six private lessons, is $80. Further information may be ob­ tained by contacting the Music The first of a weekly series Camp office. of Christian fellowship pro­ grams, “An Introduction to Die­ trich Bonhoeffer,” will be pre­ sented Sunday at 6:30 p.m. at the Lutheran Student Center, Graduate student R o n a l d 1414 S. McAllister Avenue. Crews and ASU were each re­ All students attending sum­ cently awarded $500 by the mer school are invited to at­ National Office Management tend the programs which will be Association as first prize in the jointly sponsored b y the Ameri­ annual contest for the best re­ can Baptists, tbe-Lutberan Stu­ search paper written by a stu­ dent Association, the Vwesley dent in a college or university Foundation and the Westmins­ school of business administra­ ter Foundation. The Baptist Stu­ tion. dent group will sponsor Sunday’s Crews graduated from ASU program. with a bachelor of science de­ The follow ing programs are gree in accounting June 4. scheduled for the summer: Crews’ paper, “The Impact June 30—Dietrich Bonhoeffer, of Office Automation on Em­ ployment,” was judged on con­ Wesley Foundation. July 7—Relaxtion Lutheran ciseness, thoroughness,, clear­ Style, 7:00 p.m. a t thé Lutheran ness, appearance and its contri­ bution. Student Center. The money awarded to ASU July 14—Modern Art and the Christian Faith* Baptist Student is earmarked for educational equipment. Movement. July 21—Sahuaro Lake Party MU lobby, 1:30 pm . Westminster Constitution Exam s Foundation. The examinations on the U.S. July 28—Film, Wesley Foun­ Constitution and the „Arizona dation. Constitutions, required of 11 August 4—Karl Barth, an In­ public school teachers in Ari­ troduction, Lutheran Student zona, will be given June 29 at Association. Arizona State University in August 11—Karl Barth, Bap­ room 108 of the social science tist Student Movement building a t 9 ajn. Summer Series Starts Sunday , Student School Receive Awards %