ONE PLAN FOR MALL DEVELOPMENT College Mall Mud, Mess, Madness Turn to Landscaped Garden Setting B y C H R IS PO L L A C K T h e tre e th a t g rew in th e m id d le of C ollege A venue, la st w eek w as th e official beg in n in g of th e construction of th e college m all. A nd it is only th e begin n in g . T h e re is m u c h m o re to com e. W h at now ap p e ars to b e m ud, m ess a n d m adness is ac tu a lly p a rt o f a w ell organized p la n t h a t w ill ta k e tw o y e a rs to com plete, according, to J o h n Ellingson, directo r of th e P h y sical P l a n t M ore tre e s w ill b e sh ifted as soon as possible. “TO M OVE th e m now w o u ld block co nstruction of th e n e w lib ra ry ,” ex p lain ed E llingson, N ew sh ru b b e ry w ill b e p lan te d to c re a te a “lan d ­ scaped g a rd e n se ttin g .” , “W e call i t a free-flo w in g ty p e m all, E llingson said. T h e m all w ill h a v e c irc u la r step-dow n se atin g areas w ith raise d p la n te rs aro u n d th em . O th e r p la n te rs w ill hid e bicycle ra c k s a n d o th e r d istra c tin g fe a tu re s from view . TR E E M O V IN G — S u p e rv isin g s ta r t of construction on College A venue M all a re J o h n R. E llingson, d irecto r of physical p lan t, Vice P re sid e n t G ilb e rt C ady and G rounds F o rem an R o b ert Svob. T H E F IR S T section s tre tc h in g from O ange S tre e t to U n iv e rsity A v enue w ill b e com pleted in M ay to allow access to th e n e w lib ra ry f a r tra n s fe rrin g books. W h en th e n e w lib ra ry a n d College M all a re com­ p leted, th e old lib ra ry w ill b e ta k e n over by th e new law school. L o n g ran g e p lan s call fo r th e m all e v e n tu a lly to be e x te n d e d south to th e m en ’s d o rm ito ry a re a n o rth of A pache B oulevard. B u t b efo re th a t is done, th e M U w ill be do u b led in size a n d a n e w business ad m in istratio n b u ild in g w ill b e built. T his, how ever, w on’t b e fin ish ed fo r a n o th e r tw o years. So b e p re p a re d fo r tw o m o re y e a rs of m ud, m ess a n d m adness. Chain Letter ‘Con Game’ Says Duffy By TOM MORROW Senate Clears Big Workload B y BOB JO H N SO N T he S tu d e n t S e n a te w orked o v ertim e W ednesday — it introduced th re e bills, a s tu d e n t petition, an a m en d m en t to th e constitution, and h eld ex ten d ed discussion-pn th e election code. . A bill estab lish in g m inii h o u rly w ages fo r salaried students was introduced by In­ terfraternity Council Sen. I r a Friedman. Students who form­ of lower division students wasi erly earned $1 per hour mini­ introduced by Interfaith Council mum wage Would now earn $1.25 Sen. Tom Long. per hour beginning July 1. BA Sen. Steve Dana introduc­ Student senators will become Duffy explained that a student salaried at $10 per month under ed a constitutional amendment will receive a letter with a list a bill introduced by Junior Sen. to change the term of office of approximately five names oh Bruce Maxwell as long as they for AS officers, AMS and AWS officers, and justices of the AS it. The letter will instruct the fulfill their positions. Supreme Court from July 1— receiver to /send a $10 check ENGINEERING Sen. Ken June 30 to May 1—April 30. to the first name on the list. Wayman introduced a bill ask­ THE AMENDMENT will be The receiver then marks off ing for $800 of the unappropria­ the first name and adds his ted funds for the establishment considered by a committee of own at the bottom. He then is of an agriculture reading and faculty members and student senators appointed by President instructed to make up five study room. Durham before being sent back copies of the letter and mail A student petition directing to the senate and finally to the them out to other people. the Campus Affairs Board to student body for a vote. Supposedly, by the time your study the possibility of upper Vice President Sam Linder name gets to the top and if division students assisting fac­ has announced the appointment ulty advisers in the advisement everyone responds, one would of John Herrick, junior, political get back $320. science, as senate parliamentar­ “A person would be a fool to No Classes Tuesday; ian. go along with this,” said Duffy. In other action, senators dis­ Press Back Thursday “You can’t win on a ‘con game’ cussed the revised election code Classes will be dismissed and that’s just what this is.” so that it would go into effect on Tuesday, Washington’s Duffy checked with the U. S. for the spring elections Mon­ Birthday. Post' Office Department and day and decided to continue dis­ Most University offices, found that a “chain letter” is in cussion at a special meeting including the MU will be direct violation of the postal Friday afternoon at 3:15 in the closed. The State Press will lottery and fraud law. senate chambers. not publish Tuesday or Wed­ Duffy said that most of the The senators were also ad­ nesday, but will resume da­ names that appeared on the let­ dressed by two speakers from ily publication with the Feb. ters had Florida addresses. Duf­ Spiritual Exploration Week and 24 issue. fy urged that any student re­ paid a visit to the physical plant The library will be open ceiving one of these letters re­ where Director John Ellingson regular hours, 8 a.m. to. 10 port it to the department of se­ explained future plans for the p.m. Tuesday. curity immediately. campus. If you want to learn how to lose $10 real fast just keep reading. John B. Duffy, director of se­ curity, reports there is a “chain letter” being circulated around campus. The letter, called the “320 Club”, has already “taken” several students, said Duffy. Page 2 F rid a y , F e b ru a ry 18, 1966 ST A T E P R E SS WORLD BRIEFS- Deadline Nears For Scholarship House OKs Viet Nam Bill B y U n ited P re ss In te rn atio n a l WASHINGTON — A $4.8 bil­ S. military ground action is lion bill for military equipment needed in Viet Nam. He also for South Viet Nam was ap­ said that the present toop com­ proved yesterday by the House mitment of 205,000 is not suf­ Armed Services Committee. The ficient. committee also added about $50 million more for construction of VIET NAM - U. S. First Marine Corps facilities on Okin­ awa and Navy facilities in the Cavalry units were led to a Philippines. Thie bill is the North Vietnamese task force only part of President Johnson’s headquarters yesterday by a $12.3 billion Viet Nam request captured North Vietnamese bawhich has not been authorized. tallion commander. A spokes­ man in Saigon said U. S. cas­ * * * ualties were very light. WASHINGTON—General Max­ * * * well Taylor, former chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and NEW YOR K - Alfred Sloane, one-time ambassador to South past General Motors president Viet Nam, told the Senate For­ and chairman of the board, died eign Relations Committee yes­ of a heart attack in a hospital terday that more aggressive U. here yesterday. All expenses scholarships are being offered by AFROTC for students completing four semes­ ters of AFROTC this semester. Students applying for the ad­ vanced corps with a grade av­ erage of 2.5 are eligible. To join advanced corps, students need an index of 2.0, a score of 30 er more on the Air Fodce Of­ ficers Qualifying Test, a medi­ cal exam and a meeting with the Air Force selection board. SD S D E FIA N C E — Jo h n B. D uffy, d ire c to r of C am pus S ecurity, y e ste rd ay o rd ered a g ro u p of SD S re p re se n t­ atives to “cease a n d d esist” d istrib u tio n of lite ra tu re from th e ir d istrib u tio n p oint in fro n t of th e Social Sciences building. T h ey refu sed to follow th e o rd er a n d D uffy le ft p rom ising a d m in istrativ e, b u t n o t police, action. 18,607Now Enrolled Total on-campus enrollment of 18,607 students for the se­ mester was announced today by Alfred Thomas Jr., registrar and director of admissions. This compares with 16,325 during spring semester, 1965. The total includes 4,357 grad­ uate and 14,250 undergraduate students. Television and movie star Dick Van Dyke smiled his approval when he visited his double in a scene from “Mary Poppins” For Quality Watch Repairs which he unveiled recently on a visit to Scottsdale and the AMERICAN HERITAGE WAX MUSEUM S co tt Scottsdale Telephone 94V895S Turn Off Scottsdale Road at Fifth Avenue Ç e fiu e le n o 911 MILL AVE. Tem pe Shopping Center N ineteen other scenes — N early a hundred fig ure s Open 9:30 A .M .-10:30 P.M . Sun. 11 A .M ..9:30 P.M . Other qualifications for schol­ arship applicants are a score of 40 on the officer portion of the AFOQT and an index of 2.5 All paperwork must be complet­ ed by April 15. Students with no ROTC are reminded that they still may be eligible for the advanced corps with the Air Force two-year pro­ gram which includes a six-week summer camp. Students interested in either program should contact Sgts. Brown or Derrickson in Old Main after Monday. Although the total on-campus enrollment is 18,607, the num­ ber of students who are taking 12 or more semester hours of study is 12,326; nine to eleven hours, 1,029; six to eight hours, 1,484; and under six hours of study, 3,768. The Alumni Association has The full-time equivalent en­ rollment for the second semes­ made arrangements to seat stur ter is 15,585—12,901 undergrad­ dents, at no charge, to hear the Founder’s Day speech of Steve uate and 2,684 graduate. Allen Wednesday in the MU ball­ A full-time equivalent under­ room. graduate is defined as one who is e n r o l l e d for 15 semester Students who pick up tickets hours; a full-time equivalent at the Alumni House prior to graduate student is one who is the dinner will be seated at 9 enrolled for 10 semester hours. p.m. Students Invited To Allen Dinner WEDDING S P E C ENGINEERING OPPORTUNITIES for Seniors and Graduates in I m e c h a n ic a l, AERONAUTICAL, CHEMICAL, ELECTRICAL, and METALLURGICAL ENGINEERING ENGINEERING MECHANICS APPLIED MATHEMATICS PHYSICS and ENGINEERING PHYSICS CAMPUS INTERVIEWS A ^ C om plete W edding C overage ^ C om plete R eception C overage -A 40 to 60 C andids -A N a tu ra l Color -A F o rm al p o rtra it of B rid e T aken a t S tu d io M and a 5x7 G lossy fo r N ew spaper Li A ll T his A nd Q u ality Too! fo r O nly * # jq o ^w 4 MONDAY, FEB. 21 *. '■ . ^ •;#■.»* ■/ Appointments should be made in advance through your College Placement Office Pratt & W h itn e y Aircraft I U A (D IV IS IO N O P U N I T E O D A IIR R C R A FT CO RP. STUDIO " M " PORTRAITS OF EXCELLENCE Located in the P IO N E E R An Equal Opportunity Employer, M t F S P E C I A L I S T S IN P O W E R . . . P O W E R F O R P R O P U L S I O N - P O W E R F O R A U X I L I A R Y S Y S T E M S . C U R R E N T U T IL IZ A T IO N S IN C L U D E A IR C R A F T , M IS S IL E S , S P A C E V E H IC L E S , M A R IN E A N D IN D U S T R IA L A P P L IC A T IO N S . P hone 967-4662 T E M PE S H O PP IN G CEN TER Friday, February 18, 1966 STATE PRESS Page 3 Math Enthusiasts Spotlighted Bill Asks $40,000 By Student-Faculty Board From AS Funds By VALERIE JONES A graduate of Harvard, Wex­ Lecturing without notes or Mary Ann McGovern, sopho­ ler won’t admit how long he has text, Wexler goes into class with more mathematics major, and been on the faculty at ASU. just a vague outline of what Dr. Charles Wexler of the math­ “Many years,” he says. “I look to cover for the day. ematics department are spot­ forward, not backward.” “If you know your stuff, you lighted this week by the StudentHE ENJOYS teaching math don’t need notes,” he added. at all levels, although he be­ Faculty Relations Board. “I let questions from the Mary Ann describes Wexler, lieves the more advanced stu­ class trigger the direction of discussion,” he said. who was her calculus instruct­ dents are challenging. or, as “a brilliant professor.” She had tried to drop his course, but was unable to and said she began to enjoy the course. Active as representative of; off-campus women in the Stik dent Senate, Mary Ann. is also social vice president of Phrateres and recording secretary of the Catholic Students Asso­ ciation. IT’S SO important for a stu­ dent to have more than, just studies at school,” said Mary Ann. “It can make a complete difference in your personality.” Mary Ann believes a feeling of “alma mater” would be cre­ ated if more students were ac­ tive. “I . guess I’m a homemade movie nut,” she said. Her other favorite things include concerts, music, and drama. MUSIC AND bridge are the hobbies enjoyed by Dr. Wexler. “My partner says I’m a reck­ less bidder because I don’t trump her aces,” he chuckled. MARY ANN McGOVERN and DR. CHARLES WEXLER A S e n a te bill req u e stin g $40,000 fro m th e u nappro­ p ria ted b u d g e t fo r a s tu d e n t counseling service w ill be discussed a t a n open h e a rin g of th e S tu d e n t S e n a te Finance C om m ittee today a t :30 p.m. in th e MIT sen ate cham bers. The bill, introduced by Sens. ing the center, but for provid­ Pat Horn, Tom Long, Martha ing the necessary research spe­ Votjko, and Judith Haddad, cifically for ASU students.” would make funds available for Dr. Robert Heimann presently necessary research and capital heads the standing faculty com­ equipment as of July 1. mittee on counseling services. Interfaith Council Sen. Tom Long explained that at present there is no counseling service as such on campus, only a train­ ing service with limited serv­ ices. “No one who came in after March 1 for assistance this year could be accommodated;” said Long, “the center was just too busy with those who signed up before that.” At the present time the cen­ ter is located in the College of Education and can handle about 800 students a year, according A vailable Only to Long. Counseling is offered { To for occupational and educational j matters as well as for personal * ASU Students problems. ' The University has already i set up provisions in its budget for salaries for four full-time | psychological counselors and a Call 967-1673 director to begin in the fall. 18 E. 5th St. • T em pe We would like to appropriate these funds not only for equip- *331?f Round Trip JET New York To London & Paris UNIVERSAL TRAVEL FLY Falconaire • • • ARTIST & DRAFTING SUPPLIES Crafts - Picture Frames Decorating M aterial INSTRUCTION CHARTER RENTAL Good Deal on “ Block Rates” W est Hangar Falcon Field, Mesa Phone 969-1712 T em pe Center • WO 7-4482 O pen Mon. A Thurs. Nitee in < 6i O DO D < tr h SO N N E T . . . FRO M $ 1 0 0 ISO East Eighth St., tem p e 967-6917 1604 E . Camelback, Phoenix 274-7791. MEMBER AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY Campus and Career Fashions Ltd. F E A T U R I N G A VARI ETY OF WELL KNOWN B R A N D S : MISTY H A R B O R RAINWEAR, CA PEZIO . MR. T H O M P S O N . J O H N M E Y E R O F NORWICH, L A D Y G A N T & O T H E R S . CAM PUS & CAREER F A S H IO N S , LTD . 130 U N I V E R S I T Y O R ., T E M P E / P H O N E 966-1162* Friday, February 18, 1966 STATE PRESS Page 4 Student Senate Turns Serious My Mother — * T h e re w as no stopping th e senate a t its m ee tin g W ednesday afternoon — not a t th e re g u la r 5 p.m. en d in g tim e, not a t 5:15 p.m. w h e n a few sen ato rs began leaving fo r sup­ p e r, not a t 5:30 p.m. w h en m ore left, not u n til 5:45 w hen V ice P re sid e n t Sam L in­ d e r beg an to w o rry a b o u t having a quorum n ecessary to a d jo u rn the, m eeting. I t w as a d iffe re n t se n ate som ehow , from th e tim e com m ittee ch airm en rep o rted discussion on bills could begin, to a n u n ­ p rec e d e n te d w alk across th e stre e t to the p hysical p la n t to h e a r plan s fo r th e U ni­ v e rs ity ’s fu tu re developm ent. AN D ONLY a fte r th e in tro d u ctio n of th re e bills, a stu d e n t petitio n and a consti­ tu tio n a l am endm ent did th e sen ato rs’ h u n ­ g e r keep th e new election code from pass­ age. W hen th e tw o-hour session w asn’t long enough, th e sen ate voted to m ee t again in a special session F rid a y aftern o o n to pass th e election code so th a t th e sp rin g elec­ tio n s could be held u n d e r th e new revis­ ions. B attles on th e floor are certain to d e­ velop o v er th e m uch discussed u n ap p ro ­ ^ p ria ted balance if n o t ta k e n d ire c tly to th e stu d e n ts for a vote. ON T H E block now a re $15,000 fo r a carillon b ell system , $40,000 fo r a stu d e n t counseling service, $15,000 fo r lib ra ry fu r­ nishings, and $800 fo r a n a g ric u ltu re rea d ­ ing room. M ore bills a p p e a r ev e ry day. S till in com m ittee a re bills to rep e a l in ­ effective legislation, a stu d y in housing fo r g ra d u a te a n d m a rrie d stu d en ts, a re ­ vision of th e social a c tiv itie s com m ittee, and th e selection of W ho’s W ho rep re sen ta ­ tives, w h ich m ay n e v e r see th e li&ht of day th is sem ester. B ut m any sen ato rs a re still unsatisfied an d anxious to go on to o th e r a re a s of leg­ islation. L in d e r ask ed fo r q u a lity legisla­ tion a t th e beg in n in g of th e sem ester and now h e ’s g e ttin g it. A nd now, m ore th a n ever, se n ate com ­ m itte e s a re holding open h earin g s so th a t stu d e n ts can a ir th e ir view s. Of course th e reason could be th a t election tim e is ap­ proaching an d th e sen ato rs don’t w an t to m iss a chance. W ednesday th e se n ate saw th e in tro d u c­ tio n of a b ill to sa la ry sen ato rs a t ten dol­ lars a m onth, b u t a t th is rate , w ho cares? T hey’ll e a rn it. Susskind Respect Reciprocal D avid Suskind spoke at G am m age A udi­ show er of expletives, th e P hoenix m etro ­ to riu m M onday and sim ultaneously m ade p o litan area. It is ra re th a t ASU has a fo rtu n a te ex­ tw o points, one explicitly; th e o th e r im - ,j perience such as th e ap p earan ce of Mr. plicitly. T he first w as th a t politicians m ake j Suskind. T he know ledge h e displayed on poor television perform ers; th e second th a t th e spectrum of su b jects w hich he covered television perform ers m ake poor p o liti­ en title s him to a special d eg ree of a tte n ­ tion of college students. P e rh a p s sensitive cians. T he producer and m oderator of televis­ to th e T ren d ex ra tin g of zero w h ich he has in th is area, h e u n fo rtu n a te ly h eld no re ­ ion’s “O pen E nd,” Mr. Susskind attack ed ciprocal respect fo r his audience. conservative politics, B arry G oldw ater, Good-by, Mr. Susskind. D on’t h u rry ed u catio n al TV, and in one last glorious back. Letters to the Editor The Hell With Bells EDITOR: CARILLON BELLS!!! The hell ya say! Of greater need on this cam­ pus are drip pans below the State Press dispensers for slop­ py students who can’t take their issue without dropping two more on the ground! LOREN B. CONAWAY * *. * Editor: Some reasons for the senate’s appropriating money for fur­ nishing a counseling center as opposed to building a carillon bell system have already been pointed out. This is another. Arizona has a history of spend­ ing comparatively little money in the area of mental health. As almost anyone who has tak­ en a lower-division education or psychology c o u r s e at ASU knows, Arizona ranks 50th in amount spent per capita on mental health. The campus of one of its universities might be a good place to begin breaking the trend. A CONCERNED STUDENT * * * EDITOR: I would like to take this opportunity to congratu­ late this University on the out­ standing eternal fountain of worthwhile ideas which contin­ uous bubble within its reser­ voir. What greater idea has ever been proposed than the spending of $40,0000 on statues of Carl Hayden, a fantastic painting of the Grand Canyon and bells which can serenade wandering students. Even Lyndon Johnson must stand in awe of the outstanding creative spending idea§ which this University can devise. In fact, with another hike in tui­ tion, a raise in parking fees, the opening of another section of Campus Security which could double the amount of tickets is­ sued, they could afford to dup­ licate the Grand Canyon right here on campus — probably next to the library. RONNIE GANTMAN * * * On Banning Freshmen Editor: I am writing this letter to express my opinion concerning the “banning” offreshmen from the University. I realize, as does everyone else, that conditions are crowded on our campus. However, I do not feel that the exclusion of freshmen is the answer. The first year is undoubtedly the most important period in the student’s college life. Can it be denied that the average student has a much lower grade index his first year than in succeeding years? The freshman must make many adjustments and readjust­ ments before he becomes even partially accustomed to college life. Then he will have at least three years to bring up his grade average. A junior college doesn’t pose the same problems a univer­ sity does. If a student enters a university as a sophomore, he The University B y JO H N PO L IC H Managing Editor U n d e r p re se n t A S legislation covering election p ro ­ cedures, can d id ates a re p ro h ib ited fro m a d v e rtisin g in th e S ta te Press, a n a iv e d en ial of th e re a lity th a t th e am o u n t of m oney su n k in to a p erso n ’s cam paign h a s a lo t to do w ith his-success. U n d e r se v era l o th e r b its of A S S e n a te bills, th e S ta te P re ss is r a th e r a b ru p tly d ire c te d to p u b lish v a rio u s item s of govern m en tal in fo rm a tio n of th e so rt u su a lly found in th e paid “legal ad v e rtisin g ” colum ns of com m unity papers. W E’D PR O BA BLY b e in tro u b le if w e trie d to arg u e th e S e n a te ’s a u th o rity to te ll can d id ates w h a t to do. B u t by th e sam e logic, th e se n a te o u g h t to be in a lo t of tro u b le w h e n it presum es to te ll th e S ta te P ress w h a t to do. S ta te P re ss is th e official cam pus n ew sp ap er of A ri­ zona S ta te U n iversity, n o t ju s t of A ssociated S tu d en ts. S ta te P ress is a n e n tity u n d e r th e g e n e ra l gu id an ce of P re sid e n t D urham an d th e B oard of P u b licatio n s as re p ­ resen ted by a fa c u lty supervisor. T he n e w sp a p e r d raw s p e rso n n el su p p o rt a n d jo u rn a ­ listic guidelines from th e D e p a rtm e n t of M ass C om m un­ ications and m ost of its U n iv ersity -ap p ro v ed b u d g e t com es from a d v e rtisin g incom e. SO, TO C L A R IFY c e rta in alleged inconsistencies an d in ju stices found in th e p re se n t election code, A S held a hearin g last F rid a y to a ir proposed im provem ents. W e re a lly w e re n ’t too su rp rise d w hen, a t th e h e a r­ ing, stu d e n t g o v e rn m e n t proposed to te ll us th a t no can d id ate’s p h o to g rap h m ay a p p e a r in S ta te P re ss d u rin g th e cam paign unless au th o rized by th e E lection Board. T he b a n w ould cover a ll p ictu res, reg a rd le ss of th e new sw orthiness of th e action pictu red . A nd th e p e n a lty fo r o u r “vio latio n ” of th e d e c re e w ould b e disq u alifica­ tion of th e blam eless candidate. B u t w e th in k w e’v e solved th e problem . O n election m orning, w e ’ll ju s t p r in t photos of all th e candidates. W e m ig h t b e b e tte r off w ith e v e ry o n e d isqualified anyhow . will only have two years after that to recover from the first year shock. I feel that it would definitely be more sensible to “ban” the seniors. After all, they are cer­ tainly more stable than fresh­ men. SARA TABER * * * State Press Makes SDS Tiresome EDITOR: It seems, lately, that one can not pick up a copy of the State Press without con­ tinually, reading about the ac­ tivities of the now infamous SDS. I, for one, am getting quite tired of this. If one were to judge the enroachments on the free speech of the SDS by the amount of copy they have been receiving, one would have a hard time drawing the same conclusion as they do. Another local phenomena late­ ly are our two well-known dime store philosophers who have also been overparking on news space. It is now obvious to me that all the knowledge in the world is no substitute for com­ mon sense (perhaps some en­ lightened few will recognize where this sentence comes from.) In addition to these, we have been subjected to an outbreak of surrealistic trivia by some other second-league eggheads. In sum, the State Press is and could remain a good paper. Let’s keep it that way. I re­ main your dirty capitalistic ser­ vant. MICHAEL BUSSARD T H E STATE P R E S S Is the official campus newspaper of Arizona-State University. It is published Tuesday through Friday throughout the school year, excepting holidays, and is entered as second class matter at Tempe, Arizona 85282. Mik&À T H E ST A T E P R E S S is a member of the Arizona Newspapers Association, Associated Collegiate Press and National Advertising Service, Inc. Subscription price is $5 per school year. Editor-in-chief Managing editor _ Campus ed ito r.:__ A ssista n t,_ News editor Assistant Copy editors .......... Sports editor__ ___ Assistant .... Society editor_____ Assistant ..._ Chief photographer. Assistant__ Weekend Editor___ Chief Proofreader__ .................. -•................ .................. .................. .................. .................. M A R ------ — ,—.----------- :------------------- John E. Polich ------------------ — -------------- 1________ Paul Schatt -------------------------------------- -— ____ M aret Viksjo ----------- ----- 1— )gg||----------------- ..... Preston Long -------------------------- -------------------lerry Hofferber --------------- -— ... Didna Rosen, Kenny Neundorf -------------..------------% — \— ,— -------- Brian Tracy ------ ---------------------:— ------------- ---- John Sar -----------— -------------------- ------------_ _ P a t Hunter — ------ --------------*------------- --------------------------------------------------------l --------- — ---- — — ------ ------------------- Joe Bolender ---------|---------------------:--------------Toni Atmore ------ :---------- ------------ Bruce M . Spence ------- -------- — ------------------- ?_____ Bob Johnson \ F rid a y , F e b ru a ry 18, 1966 STA TE P R E SS Student Records Air Force 1 By SANDRA SMOLEN arrival in Los Angeles. “The According- to Pentagon ex­ only compromise in security,” perts it is impossible to pick up he said, ‘were the frequent po­ presidential jetliner Air Force 1. sition reports on the exact lo­ Ignorant of this fact, a student cation of Air Force 1.” These short-wave fan did just that. reports were given approximate­ JOE WASHBURN, a senior ly every 15 minutes. HE NOTIFIED The Arizona pre-med student, was trying to pick up radio Moscow and ra­ Republic and soon received calls dio Peking, Tuesday Feb. 8. He from the New York Herald Tri­ tuned in a little early that night bune, CBS-TV in New York and and accidently picked up Air Newsweek magazine. Force 1. Both the Tribune and News­ He found himself in the midst week wanted to do stories on of a conference call involving the incident and CBS wanted to Gen. Maxwell Taylor on the do a TV interview. Because of phone, Gen. William Westmore­ this, Washburn finally called the land (Hickam Field, Honolulu), White House Wednesday night. California Gov. Pat Brown (Sac­ The secret agent he spoke to ramento), Bill Moyers (presi­ told him to go ahead and dis­ dential press secretary) and Joe tribute the information and tape Ieighton (White House aide.) if the agent didn’t call back. He quickly responded by record­ Washburn was interviewed ing the conversation while Air by CBS. When asked why he Force 1 was 100 miles from didn’t clear with the White Honolulu and continued for an House first, he said he didn't hour and a half. think of it. I tried to get in Washburn said the recording touch with Goldwater to no mainly concerns the President’s avail.” P age 5 Sociology Training Program Aids Master Degree Candidate “Sociology is a constant learn­ ing thing,” s a y s Mary Trail, graduate assistant in sociology. “It seems you could never cease to know more about it.” Miss Trail is working toward her master's degree in sociolo­ gy and has taught SO 101 dis­ cussion groups for two years. “ AT FIRST I wanted to do guidance and counseling work, but I didn’t want to go through education classes,” she said. Since teaching on the college level does not require the edu­ cation courses, Miss Trail at first planned on junior college teaching, but now she is unde­ cided. “I have a Peace Corps ac­ ceptance lying on my desk that I don’t quite know what to do with,” she said. MISS TRAIL is involved in the training program offered by the department of sociology. It is a maximum two-year pro­ gram leading to the M.A. de­ gree for students planning ca­ reers as college teachers of so­ ciology. Phases of the program include t e a c h i n g experience in the team-taught introductory course in sociology, close consultation with senior faculty members and seminars in the university teaching of sociology. As all graduate assistants do, trainees must take from 8 to 10 hours of course work each semester. The full requirement for the M.A. degree is 30 hours. EACH TRAINEE may have from one to six hour-long dis­ cussion groups per week. The 20-hour per week duties include time for attending the lectures, preparation and grading, and one office hour for each section taught. I n c l u d e d i n t h e scheduled graduate courses is the seminar called “Sociology as an Aca­ demic Discipline.” It stresses orientation, discussion of prob­ lems that arise in the discus­ sion groups, evaluation of acti­ vities and research into prob­ lems of interest to the individual student. In the first semester, train­ ees prepare weekly reports on what happened in their discus­ sion groups. The reports accu­ mulate into a semester-long file. A copy that the trainee uses in preparing for his discussion group activity for the second semester. NOT ALL trainee work is carefully and neatly mapped out. A certain amount of sur­ prises are bound to come up in the trainee’s first year as a teacher. 32 FINE SHOPS AND STORES TO SERVE YOU MILL AVENUE ~fc — Éi wÊm'm iétm á üiainrfhiHlii - ". V . - . 8th to 10th Streets i á mi l â i i étàmÊm í* hÉ * É í .v X~ RAY'S ASU BARBER SHOP 9 More Price Reductions 4 Barbers Now 9 More Items Added Daily ANNIVERSARY SA LE F e b ru a ry 23 - 26 Largest Sales Event of Year At Your Service . . . WE WILL BE CLOSED FEB. 22 TO PREPARE FOR SALE 25c Shoeshine BONNIE SUE FASHIONS "Get-Acquainted" Special ( Americana Shop Ray's ASU Barber Shop Bonnie Sue Fashions Brickie's, Furniture Buddy's Coffee Shop Celia's Fashions El Rancho Market Erickson's Handcrafts 1st Federal Savings & Loan 1st National Bank GallenKamp's W. T Grant Happy House Shop Hill's Record A Book Shop O pen D aily 9:30 - 6, T hurs. 9:30 - 9 The Hogan Inland-Western Loan & Finance Jam's Restaurant King's Fashions Lee Optical Pioneer Camera Shop Rosamond's Beauty Standard Service Station State Farm Insurance TeePee of Toys 31 Flavors Ice Cream Tops Liquor Store University Sporting Goods Zzzona Laundry Ryan-Evans Drug Store Scott Jewelers Sewing Basket Sherwin-Williams Company S A H Green Stamp Center Friday, February 18, 1966 STATE PRESS Page 6 m rnm m am m m m Faculty Gives Finest Recital WESTERN AIRLIN ID EN TIFICA TtON CARD By CATHltYN GODDARD The Faculty Chamber Music Society presented its finest per­ formance of the year to one of its smallest audiences Wednes­ day, but the size of the audi­ ence did not diminish the ap­ preciation shown the perform­ ers. Debussy’s “Sonata in G Minor,” performed by Eugene Lom­ bardi and Patricia Keating, opened the concert. Although Mrs. Keating claimed the hon­ ors in interpretation and Lom­ bardi honors in technique, the two joined assets quite effec­ tively in the climaxes of each movement. In the first performance of Beethoven since the appearance of the Amadeus Quartet, the New Art String Quartet dis­ played its excellence w i t h “String Quartet, Opus 59, Num­ ber 3.” Frank Spinosa, for some reason other than lack of skill, seemed to lack confidence in his initial playing. As a result, the beginning of the quartet was rather hesitant. But as the se­ lection progressed, the confid­ ence was gained and by the JOHN WHYTE, JR on goo ooo ooi Just $3.00 gets you one of these SEATTLE* TACOMA A PORTLAND »GREAT FALLS HELENA» BUTTEi YELLOWSTONE» I IDAHO FALLS< / POCATELLO» Ik //| .BILLINGS „SHERIDAN, S A C R A M E N T < W - # ^ S A L T LAKE. SAN FRANCISCO RENO S ^ c lT Y OAKLAND MINNEAPOLIS >ST. PAUL PIERRE rSI0UX FALLS W I D CITY rCASPER . / »CHEYENNE •’DENVER LAS LOS ANGELES LONG BEACH ONTARIO'" VEGAS PALM SPRINGS' YAF, Unlike SDS, Has That Much-talked-about Charter 'PHOENIX SAN DIEGO so you can fly in the West for lkfare on Western Airlines If you’re 12 through 21, you can fly W estern for *4 th e J e t Coach fare to any city on the m ap above, when space is available a t tim e of departure! (We do have to le t our o ther passerigfers'and m ilitary “sta n d b y s” board first.) You can get your }4 fare tic k e t in advance a t any W estern Airlines office, airport tic k e t counter or Travel Agency. A nd we’ll honor eith er W estern’s own Youth F are “ I.D .” card or one issued by an o th er airline. J u s t present this application a t any W estern Airlines office w ith $3.00 and proof of age. Or if you wish, you can mail it. GlI WESTERN AIRLIN ES 6060 Avion Drive Los Angeles, California 90009 1. N A M E second movement re-entry of the refrain, the full effect of near-liltingness was gained. In the second movement, the underlying pulse of the cello was interpreted somewhat dif­ ferently by Takayori Atsumi. The range of dynamics was ex­ aggerated in the piano tones, somewhat distractingly at first, but highly effective with the contrast to the forte plucking. The extreme of interpretation proved excellent in terms of net effect. In the third and fourth move­ ments the audience was com­ pletely captivated by the surg­ ing interplay and superb unity of the group in a resounding and splendid conclusion. The challenge of following such a performance was met by Margo Smith, Judy Prochnow, Mervin Britton and Jeffrey Morse in their presentation of Bartok’s “Sonata for Two Pia­ nos and Percussion.” The selec­ tion was well executed in tim­ ing, technique, dynamics and interpretation, a major accom­ plishment in terms of the dif­ ficulty of this particular sonata. 2. D A T E O F B IR T H P lease print. Month Day By DIANE AYRAUD Young Americans for Free­ dom is a politically oriented group like Students for a Demo­ cratic Society, but unlike SDS, YAF has received a campus charter. Mark Nobel, a YAF officer, said he thinks SDS didn’t get a charter because the organiza­ tion started work on campus before getting permission. “The University is not limiting speech but the use of University fa­ cilities to organize and carry on activities,” he said. YAF received its charter Feb. 15, 1963, and since then has distributed literature and held meetings persuading students to agree with its side. One year later YAF had six members. Today it has 25. Officers of YAF say they be­ lieve they have little in com­ mon with SDS. Gail Peterson, YAF president, reports the main objective is “to make available conserva­ tive opinion on different sub­ jects so that the student may have a wider spectrum of thought before making political opinions.” One medium of presenting a wide range of conservative thought is the YAF book table, set up about twice a month, group spokesmen explain. Not all of the customers go away satisfied it seems. For instance one student, after buy­ ing a pamphlet, dramatically tore it lip in protest. Some just stand and argue. YAF officials report they are trying to get chapters started at other schools. There are four YAF groups operating outside four high school campuses, try­ ing to obtain permission to work legally on school grounds. Year 3. H O M E A D D R E S S Street C ity State 4. S C H O O L O R O C C U P A T IO N Zi p C ode ( C la s s of. ) 5. S C H O O L OR B U S I N E S S A D D R E S S Street State A d d re s s to w h ic h c a r d is to b e s e n t: □ H o m e Z ip Code □ S c h o o l o r B u s in e s s 6. P R O O F O F A G E . (A n y one of th o se sh o w n below .) Do not m a il docu m ent. J u s t lis t n u m b e r a n d sta te in w h ic h is s u e d . YOUNG MEN UNDER 25! Do you th in k y o u r ca r insurance rates are too high? D r iv e r’ s L ic e n s e : B ir t h C e rtific a te : N um ber State P a ssp o rt: State N um ber State D ra ft C a rd : Number O * P la c e o f Issue . Sfchool R e co rd : FE M A LE □ 10. EN CLO SE $3.00: S entry Insurance may save you up to $50 o r more. All you do is fill o u t a sim ple questionnaire to see if you qualify. You .have nothing to lose and a lot to gain. J u s t call th e S entry man nearest you for details. O th e r: ( S p e c ify ) Student C ard N um ber 7. M A L E D N um ber School 8. COLOR OF H A I R ______ □ Ch eck Bud Bailey 9. COLOR OF EYES . 959-2747 □ M oney O rder (not refun dab le. Do not send cash) 11. SIG N A T U R E I M ild * hrfM SENTRY. jJjN SU R A N C E Su b je ct to G overnm ent approval. Not v a lid between c itie s in C alifo rn ia, u n le ss co m b in e d w ith an out-of-state ticket; o r on these dates: A p ril 7, N ovem ber 23, N ovem ber 27, D e cem b er 15 th rou gh 24, 1966; Ja n u a ry 2 through 4, 1967. I H Hardware Mutuala Organization Friday, February 18, 1966 STATE PRESS Page 7 * ■ Sociology Mechanical Engineers Have New Plan Specialist Due Here By J im McGo v e r n Dr. Werner Stark, internation­ ally known author and educator, will teach a sociology course here during summer school. Dr. Stark, who will teach SO 498g pro-seminar, was de­ scribed by Dr. T. F. Hoult, chairman of the sociology de­ partment, as “ . . . perhaps the f best-known figure in the field of sociology of knowledge.” He will present a public lec­ ture entitled “Court Fools and Other Useful People” June 28 in the MU ballroom. DR. STARK has written ap­ proximately 50 articles, 12 books and 12 volumes of translations into Spanish, Italian, German and Japanese. His main work is “The Sociology of Know­ ledge,” which deals with the impact of society on the think­ ing processes. Other books include “Amer­ ica, Ideal and Reality,” “The Fundamental Forms of Social Thought” and “Social Theory and Christian Thought.” His articles include “Saint Simon as a Realist,” “Capital­ ism, Calvinism and the Rise of Modem Science” and “Peasant Society and the Origins of Ro­ mantic Love.” Born in Czechoslovakia in 1909, Dr. Stark studied at the Universities of Hamburg, Pra­ gue, Geneva and at the London School of Economics. He ac­ quired a doctorate of social sci­ ences at Hamburg in 1934 and a doctorate of laws at Prague in 1936. His M. A. degree was conferred on him, without ex­ amination, by the University of Edinburgh in 1947. HIS TEACHING career in­ cludes such positions as lectur­ er in social legislation in the Prague School of Political Sci­ ence, faculty lecturer in the de­ partment of economics and pol­ itics at the University of Cam­ bridge, lecturer in social theory at the University of Edinburgh, reader in the history of social sciences at the University of Manchester and visiting profes­ sor of sociology at Purdue Uni­ versity. Currently he is a professor of sociology at Fordham Univer­ sity in New York. He has served as a guest lec­ turer at the Universities of Heidelberg, Bonn, M u n s t e r , Mainz, Cologne, Zurich, Basle, Vienna, Harvard, Princeton, Yale, Notre Dame and Brown. Deadline Nears For Scholarship Deadline for applications for the $500 Delta Delta Delta Ser­ vice Projects Scholarship, offer­ ed to any woman student is March 1. . Applications, a v a i 1 a b 1 e in Dean Hoover’s office, must be accompanied by three letters of recommendation and a com­ plete official transcript of the applicant’s academic record. They may be sent to Tri Delta service projects chairman Dannene Hessler, Quad, Catherine Nichols, associate dean of stu­ dents, or Dr. Richart T. Wooton, director of financial aid. S hould anyone w onder w h y M echanical E ngineer­ ing 102 sta rte d th is sem es­ te r w ith an o v e rtu re of gogo m usic an d w hy one of th e professors labeled it “go-go 102,” it’s a ll p a rt of a n e w plan. The plan, tried for the first time last semester, is a creative design project, worth a third of the final grade. Each student submits an idea for some worthwhile develop­ ment to an artificial company made up of mechanical engi­ neering faculty. This company, called IDEA (Invention Development Engi­ neers of Arizona), will carefully screen each proposal and choose about 20 of them. The 20 stu­ dents whose ideas were picked will be given the title of head engineer for his project. The remaining students will join the head engineers to form these 20 companies and will de­ velop the devices b e t w e e n March 2 and May 8. Top engineers practicing in the Valley will again be judges for final competition and win­ ners will be awarded cash prizes totaling $100 for the top three projects. The plan is designed to com­ bat low motivation and to keep young engineers interested in engineering, said Dr. Thornton W. Price, plan coordinator. Dr. Price, Dr. George C. Beakley and four other profes­ sors coordinate the project in­ volving 120 students this semes­ ter, and a total of 365 young engineers. They termed .the new experiment almost totally suc­ cessful. The project idea came about when an ASU professor and four students took part in a similar course at Dartmouth last summer. After that experience, a similar program was worked out by Dr. Price and Dr. Beakley for ASU. Seminar Openings Openings in the Small Busi­ ness Management seminar are still being offered by the Col­ lege of Business Administration. The seminar started Feb. 8 and runs through March 29. Sev­ en sessions remain for the class­ es held 7 to 9:30 p.m. Tuesdays. Edward E. Scanned, coordin­ ator of executive programs, ex­ plained the course is offered for owners and managers of small businesses. Its purpose is to dis­ cuss problems encountered in small businesses which need to be solved without the aid of the specialists available to execu­ tives in larger organizations. Reservations may be made by phoning Scanned at the Bureau of Business Research and Serv­ ices. If you’re looking for a nice comfy place towork aftergraduation, forget about General Electric. We don’t have any place where you can curl up and snooze away the next forty years of your career. There are no quiet little nooks in any p i General Electric’s 130 oper­ ating businesses in 19 countries round the world. B ut if you’re the w ide-aw ake type, G.E. can provide the excite- ment to keep you that way. Your first assignment may be helping us find applications for a whole new family of plastics recently devel­ oped by G.E. Or you may be work­ ing at Cape Kennedy on the Apollo moon program . O r you may be working on the marketing team for a new home appliance. One thing is certain: You’ll be working. You’d have plenty of re­ sponsibility. W hat you won’t have is a chance to doze off in the prime years of your career. Talk to the man from G.E. when he visits campus. Come to General Electric, where the young men are important men. ftogness k Our M ost Important ftorfuct G E N E R A L ^ ELECTRIC Friday, February 18, 1966 STATE PRESS Page 8 File for Grants Photographic Tour Offered This Summer in Europe Applicants for American Insti­ tute of Foreign Trade Scholar­ ships for the 1966-67 year must file with the Scholarship Office on or before April 15. These scholarships are avail­ able to male candidates who are between the ages of 25-32 and have or will have complet­ ed the senior year of college before fall of 1966. Men with training in business administration, accounting, en­ gineering and chemistry and a 3.0 minimum cumulative grade index are in demand.________ A five-week photographic tour of Europe will be conducted this summer by Dr. Joel A. Ben­ edict, professor of education and director of the Audiovisual Cen­ ter. The program, which is titled “Photographic Production Tour of Europe,” will run from July 18 to Aug. 20 and will feature London’s West End, Mt. Pilatus Peak in Lucerne, the Royal Pal­ ace at Versailles, Roman and Bavarian castles and the Amsterdam canals._____________ Seniors and graduate students participating can receive five hours of graduate credit for the tour. Non-students may partici­ pate without academic credit. $100.00 REWARD CLYDE MOHNEY By CHRIS POLLACK Wanted: Alive Only ASU STUDENT, FA CU LTY & EM PLO YEE ACCO UN TS Som eone from A SU opening a new account w ith o u r S outh T em pe O ffice in. F e b ru a ry w ill find th a t $100.00 has been added to th e ir bal­ ance. Com e in now and open y o u r account at DR. J. BENEDICT Reservations and further in­ queries can be made through thé office of the Dean of Summer Sessions Registration deadline is April 15. Aid Is Sought Japan Students’ Japanese students are need­ ed to help with the S o c i a l Board’s display on Japan for the MU Birthday party to be held March 12. Students wish­ ing to help should contact Di­ ane Powell at 966-2333. B ^A JS T JC 2020 R U RA L ROAD, T EM PE ROBERTS are sewn byhand" toflexon yonrfoot likea glove Placement Interviews Placement interviews schedul­ ed on campus next week are as follows: C O M M E R C IA L P L A C E M E N T M O N D A Y — Firestone; Pratt & Whitney; Salt R iver Profect; U.S. Navy Elec­ tronics- Lab.; F airchild Semiconductor; General Electric. W E D N E S D A Y — F airchild Semiconduc­ tor; Hughes A ircra ft; Motorola. T H U R S D A Y — Burroughs; Los Alamos Scientific Lab.; Texas Instruments; Donrey Media Group; Aeronutronic; The Trane Co.; Collins Radio Co. F R ID A Y — Los Alamos Scientific Lab.; Texas Instruments; Aeronutronic; Texas Eastman Co.; Lockheed Electronics; BurrBrown Research Corp. S A T U R D A Y — Salt R iver Proiect. E D U C A T IO N A L P L A C E M E N T M O N D A Y — San Gabriel (Calif.) School District. W E D N E S D A Y — Buena P ark (Calif). School District; Placentia (Cálif.) Unified School District; Redondo Beach (Calif.) City School District; Torrance (Calif.) Unified School District. T H U R SD A Y — Placentia United School District; Redondo Beach City School Dis­ trict; Centrada School District; Buena Park, Calif.; Torrance Unified School District; Los Alamos (N.M.) schools; Orange Glen School District, Escondido, Calif. F R ID A Y — Placentia Unified School District; Orange Glen School District; Coachella (Calif.) Valley Joint Union High School District; Grossmont (Calif.) Union High School District. T aking c a re o f th e busiest bu ild in g on cam pus is q u ite a job. MU M ain ten an ce S u­ p e rv iso r C lyde M ohney h as to b e custodian, rep a irm a n , su p erv iso r a n d p a rt-tim e social chairm an. Part of Mohney’s job is set­ ting up for special events in the MU — everything from dances to dinners. “These special events are picking up — usually four nights a week, sometimes more,” says Mohney. Special events can create spe­ cial problems and the biggest problem is being shorthanded, he explains. “But we have good men who often Offer to stay late and help.” Working under Mohney are eight custodians and one matron who takes care of the lounges and helps in the ballroom. Ac­ cording to Mohney, one of her hardest jobs is preventing some thoughtless students from mak­ ing a mess of the lounges. Most students, it seems, take the MU for granted, and don’t realize that its maintenance is a full-time job for 10 people. K e m te c o tti C om er '■Ük è * . The penny loafer's back to campus with a foam cushioned insole making Trujuns feel as good as they look. And look at all the ways they're up and coming: black cherry, black forest or Black cherry, palammo or black smooth. All leather lined. Roberts Trujuns $13.00 to $18.00. ‘ Handsewn fronts Wouldn't you like to be in our shoes? Most of America is. International Shoe Co., St. Louis, Mo. Sometí mes We Feel Like Prince Charming N ot th a t w e claim h is good looks, you u n d e rsta n d . B u t w e’r e in his lin e of w ork, w aking u p S leeping B eauties. T he P rin c e h ad i t p re tty easy, you m u st adm it, a n d polish­ ed off th e w hole jo b w ith one kiss. In our case, S leeping B eau ty is th a t w o n d erfu l w e a lth of copper th a t’s b een sn o rin g aw ay in A ri­ zona since tim e began, \y ith m oney, m o d em m ethods a n d m ir­ aculous m achinery, w e a ro u se it, p u t it on its f^et, and send it to do w ide-aw ake jo b s in all p a rts of th e w orld. If y o u bum p into P rin c e C harm ing, te ll him our S leep er is d o w n rig h t beau tifu l, too, in h e r ow n fashion. We w ill welcome job inquiries from S'enior Engineering Students. For information on rewarding careers: in mining, write to us at Hayden, Arizona. Available at these fine stores: C. R. Anthony Co., 1702 S. Scottsdale Rd., Scottsdale, Ariz. C. R. Anthony Co., Chandler, Ariz. Saba D ep t Store, Chandler, Ariz. f. Copper Corporation R a y M in es MI¡visio n An Equal Opportunity Emplpyor * Friday, February 18, 1966 Page 9 STATE PRESS TRI DELTS WIN BUTTON CONTEST Greek Week Activités Set Tri Delta sorority has alrea­ dy captured the first two points toward a Greek Week trophy by winning the Greek button de­ signing contest. Fraternities will have an op­ portunity to win a comparable two points based on participa­ tion at the Grecian Ball, the climax of Greek Week. LORI CHITTENDEN design­ ed the Greek button, incorpor­ ating the traditional slogan and this year’s theme, the British Isles. Purchasers of the button will be admitted, without cost, to all Greek Week activities ex­ cept big name talent and the Grecian Ball. The Greek Week steering com­ mittee has completed the final schedule for Greek Week pub­ licity chairman Jo Ann Fore­ man, announced yesterday. The scheduled activities be­ gin Monday, March 28, with convocation; tapping of n e w members of Archons and Arkesis, the Interfraternity Council and Panhellenic honoraries, and election of Diana and Apollo, queen and king of Greek Week. GREEK presidential dinner to be held Tuesday night is an ad­ dition to Greek Week activities. The speaker for the dinner has not been announced. The traditional Greek Sing in Gammage Auditorium will take place Wednesday night. Thursday night there will be progressive parties at the Sig­ ma Nu house. Theta Delta Chi house and Sigma Alpha Epsilon house, BIG NAME talent, featuring Glen Yarborough, will be at Gammage Auditorium Friday night. The annual Greek Games at Sun Devil Stadium Saturday af­ ternoon, and the Grecian Ball that night will climax the 1966 Greek Week. The setting for the ball has not been chosen. Kappa Sigs To Construct New House Kappa Sigma Chapter Presi­ dent Tom W i p e r announced plans yesterday for,a new $250, d00 fraternity house to be con­ structed by next fall. The house will be located on Alpha Drive next to the Delta Sigma Phi house. The chapter’s alumni corpora­ tion, in charge of the final plans, will select an architect by June 1, according to Wiper. Hie new fraternity will house approximately 50 men. “Funds are being appropriat­ ed through national backing and alumni donations,” said Wiper. The chapter has already ob­ tained some money for the new house by working for the Parada Del Sol this year. Various other fraternity projects are be­ ing planned to obtain funds. “We have outgrown our old house and need a new one,” Wiper said. “I hope the new structure will be completed for fall rush.” The Kappa Sigma house is presently located at 402 Adelphi Drive. publicity, Miss Foreman; pro- ard; trophies, Bunny Olmstead; gressive parties, Vic Cresto; booklet, Bobbie Jenkins and Bob Greek Games, Gutherie Pack- Mantano, Grecian ball. Honorary Celebrates Initiation 46th Year , Gamma Alpha Chi, national professional advertising frater­ nity for women, initiated 11 new members Sunday in ceremonies to mark the beginning of Ad­ vertising Recognition Week and the 46th anniversary of Gamma Alpha Chi (GAX). New members are: Susan Blair, Bunny Burns, G a y e Gravely, Baku Irani, S a n d i Ives, Mimi Marietta, Lili Mitch­ ell, Lynn Rurup, Janis Taylor, Nancy Vatteskey and Jane Wil­ liams. The group is sending chapter president Jan Allen to Houston tomorrow as a delegate to the joint Alpha Delta Sigma, nation­ al advertising honorary frater­ nity, Southwestern regional con­ vention. She will also attend ses­ sions of the Houston Ad Forum as a guest of the Houston Ad­ vertising Club. During the cérémonies Sun­ day, Jane Williams was award­ ed the Golden Badge of mem­ bership for being the outstand­ ing pledge. She was chosen by vote of her pledge class on the basis of scholarship and partici­ pation. BUTTON, BUTTON — T h e 1966 G reek W eek b u tto n looks like this. I t is th re e in ch es in d iam e te r w ith re d a n d blu e p rin tin g on a w h ite background. I t w as d e­ signed by L o ri C h itten d en , D e lta D elta D elta. Ford M otor Company is: recognition What does it take to gain recognition at Ford Motor Company? If you have skills that we can utilize, and if you’re ambitious as well as able, you can move ahead fast at Ford! Consider the career of Eric Mangelsen: ffpi « MWÜ¡¡¡¡¡i lilim Eric came to work at our Ypsilanti Plant in February, 1961. During the initial stage of his training program, he was given the assignment to supervise the development, design and construction of special production calibrating and test equipment for auto­ Eric M angelsen. B .S ., Univ. o f Kentucky mobile voltage regulators. Later, he was assigned to processing and production of the transistor ignition amplifier system for our 1963 cars. He was responsible for introducing a new cleaning process for voltage regulator contact points, which substantially reduced costs. He was also instrumental in processing the refined transistorized regulator system used in our new 1966 automobiles. Now a member of management with broad responsibilities in a key Production Department, Eric Mangelsen has moved ahead rapidly with a company that believes in giving young men every opportunity to demonstrate their skill and ingenuity. Why not investigate? Talk to our representative when he visits your campus. You can go far with Ford. The American Road, Dearborn, Michigan An equal opportunity employer Friday, February 18, 1966 STATE PRESS Page 10 Hey Fella, You Ve Lookin9 Good Men’s Fashions Are Neat, Colorful for Spring Season FOR CLASS OR CASUAL We're a vigorous business in a booming fie ld — com m unica­ tions. Our choice of jobs is vast and varied. Each has particular re­ quirements for excellence. You owe it to yourself to find out what the Bell System can offer you! We need good people for man­ agement because of our policy of promoting from within. You move up at your own speed as demonstrated by your individual performance. Promotions naturally go to those who can successfully run their jobs with minimum assistance, deal effectively with people, handle tough and unfam iliar assignments — people who can produce. We want to meet those who have done well — top half of their class — and who expect to keep on doing well. You owe it to yourself to find out what kind of a rewarding business or engi­ neering career the Bell System can offer you. The Bell System companies — where people find solutions to exciting problems — are ‘ equal opportunity employers. The following Bell System Companies will be on the campus of M en on cam pus w ill be b e tte r dressed th a n e v e r th is spring. “C lothing sales show a h e a lth y in d icatio n th a t stu ­ d en ts a re in te re ste d in being b e tte r dressed,” said P e te r M eyer, co-ow ner of th e A m erican Shop. Spring will bring the advent only by the boys, but girls too, of permanent - pressed pants he said. in cotton and synthetic blends MOST OF THE interest and materials. The new per­ during spring will be in sport manent - pressed pants are just that — the pants are sewn, dip­ shirts. Tabledloth plaids are ped in a chemical, pressed and showing up big — in size and then baked for the no-iron fin­ popularity — in the clothing lines. ish. The tablecloth plaids are not AMONG OTHER t h i n g s , only bigger — but bolder and with the permanent - pressed pants coming into practical and brighter too. Bright orange and frequent wear, there are fewer red combinations that are color­ sales of denim pants, accord­ ful, but still classy, are on the ing to Meyer. Corduroy pants clothing racks. Bright green is are still being purchased, not showing up as another popular shade. MADRAS SHIRTS don't look like they’re going to be as big a fad this year. Part of the problem may be that the old bleeding madras was a pain to wash. Laundries charged extra and wives and mothers hated to wash them. Non-bleeding mad­ ras will still be popular. “We’ve experienced a slow­ down on madras bleeder shirts. Domestic non-bleeders haven’t had much of a s l o w d o w n though,” Meyer said. The paisley shirts are going to be coming into style for the season. “We don’t feel it will get to the fad point madras did,” Mey­ er commented. He added, men seem to be going for the paisley accessories in a big way though, so you’re sure to see some of the paisley shirts. We work in space ‘‘SO FAR AS WE are con­ cerned, bermudas do fit into good class wear,” Meyer con­ tinued. With the new patterned shirts, bermuda - wearers are return­ ing to solid colors. Domestic madras and regular plaid ber­ mudas are still popular, but, again, the bleeding madras sales are slowing down. Many of the fabrics, in both slacks and shirts, have a nubby or texfured look to them for and under the sea added surface interest. The final touch to men’s fash­ ions won’t change. If the men are better dressed, they’ll still finish their fashion wear with the old standard of tennies and loafers. Grubbies are bound to show up again and again on the fel­ low’s off days. NEW & USED CARS ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY M O U N T A IN ST A T E S T E L E P H O N E B E L L T E L E P H O N E LA B O R A T O R IE S FEBRUARY 28, 1966 and over the land . . . to provide the world’s finest communications Today’s SPECIAL A M E R IC A N T E L E P H O N E A N D T E L E G R A P H C O M P A N Y SA N D IA CO R PO R ATIO N SIGH UP FOR AN INTERVIEW TODAY! '64 CHEVELLE Malibu Super Sprint $ 2 19 4 Mountain States Telephone F u lly E quipped O n e Y ear G -W W a r r a n ty f B an k F in a n c in g B rit S mith CAR CO. 802 M ill • TEMPE • 967-3381 Friday, February 18, 1966 P age 11 STA TE P R E SS Sexy Fiber Is Fluffy, Resists H eat Greek to Me By CHRIS POLLACK Recent discoveries by Dr. James Economy, chief of chem­ ical research for Carborundum Co., Niagara Falls, N. Y., of a new fiber “so sexy it is said to make nylon seem like burlap and so heat resistant it comes through a molten steel bath un­ scathed” may prove fatal to the textile industry. The fluffy, downy-soft, white material is capable of w i t h ­ standing temperatures as high as 2,400 degrees Fahrenheit for an indefinitely long period. Pos­ sessing an excellent corrosion resistance, it is not even harm­ ed by a hot acid bath. The fiber is composed of bor­ on nitride and will not easily shatter, crack, splinter or break. With a fiber this indestructible, textile manufacturers must wor­ ry that once a fabric is man­ ufactured into clothing, sales will dwindle for lack of the ma­ terial wearing out. This is strangely reminiscent of the movie “The Man in the White Suit” starring Alec Guin­ eas. Guiness, as an inspired c h e m i s t , develops a strange soft, white fiber which is indestructable. A proto-type suit is made and tested revealing its amazing qualities. Before t h e end of the movie, Guiness is hunted as if he were a dastard­ ly villain. Manufacturers fear for their plants, merchants fear for their businesses, workers fear for their jobs. They all feel that if the new fiber is put into production, people will buy one suit of the miraculous threads and never buy another. In the end, Guiness is about to be pul­ verized by a howling crowd of near maniacs when the suit dis­ integrates, leaving him in BVDs before a startled, y e t amused, crowd. Let’s hope Dr. Economy with his new boron nitride fiber escapes a similar fate. Photo by Joe Bolender SO RO R ITY R U S H — .P re se n t a t th e W ednesday n ig h t ru s h p a rty fo r S igm a S igm a S igm a sorority w ere from left, E rin O rton, n a tio n a l vice p resid e n t; A nn S te rlin g a n d B onita H ix, rushees, an d M ary B arbee, n atio n al m em b ersh ip chairm an. T h e ru sh p a rty w as held in th e M U U p p er Lounge. P hi K appa Psi w ill observe its fo u n d er’s day a t the Sm okehouse R e stau ra n t today a t 6 p.m. P hi Psi alum ni are invited to atten d . T h e fra te rn ity is 114 years old th is m onth. * * * K appa A lpha T heta observed its fo u n d e r’s day w ith a banquet at th e A lpine V illage Inn, W ednesday. Theta, th e first w om en’s G reek le tte r organization, w as founded Ja n . 27, 1870. Since th a t d a te falls d u rin g sem ester break, th e b an q u et was held this week. ¥ * * NOM INATIONS FO R P anhellenic W om an of the Y ear should be su b m itted to P anhelfenic Council by M arch 14. Each so rority m ay subm it nam es of tw o ju n io r o r senior women. * * * As th e sem ester gets well u n d e r w ay, G reeks are busy rushing, pledging a n d in itia tin g new m em bers. S everal fra tern ities, in cluding A lpha T au Omega, Sigm a P h i Epsilon, K appa Sigm a and T h e ta D elta Chi, h a v e alread y conducted H elp W eek (th is is a m isnom er b u t use of a m ore descrip tiv e te rm w ould leave this a rtic le open to censorship and criticism ). NEW IN IT IA T E S a g re e it w as defin itely Help. T he ATO in itiates a re J e rr y W hitted, Don Bogner, Jo h n B rennem an, Lou DeRoon, Jo e Edm undson, Bruce H am m er, L a rry Jask u lsk i, Les Ju d d , Jo h n K irkpatrick a n d J e rr y Moore. Also, Neal O lshan, P h il O’Neil, Jim Robsop, Steve Rold, A1 Schlossler, B ill Shaw , Jim Sollenberger, Teddy S u d d e rth a n d D ennis S utton. * * * * NEW K A P P A S IG 'b ro th e rs a re J a y Johnson, Dick C lauer, Jim Da Costa, M arty P eterson, Neil Jacobson, S te v e T ully and G e rry Scott. Also, Dick Nye, J o h n O ’B rian, Doug B rinkerhoff, Bob H utzel, W arren L indsley, Em ory M ichel and D ennis Mortensen. Brides To Be You're In The News S h o w er a n d W edding In v ita tio n s 100 Invitation» — From $11.95 M onogram m ed N apkins a n d P a r ty S u p p lies — Q uick S ervice T h a n k Y ou a n d In fo rm a l N otes P ra c tic a l G ifts A ll B rid es W ill Love Tempe Center HAPPY HOUSE STORE Have You Tried "THE LARGER Certainly ... UNIVERSITY D R IV E « Just Across College Ave. from our Former Location and BETTER " ... campus drug Yet? We Hope YOUR Drugstore on Campus ì r i m - c » rw *>*i>« r '.•»(Ti * n n o f~ • .'jr_rr Friday, February 18, 1966 STATE PRESS COME ON OVER TO BEEFY MISTER FOR THE TASTE OF IT ____ s - .. ^ Pure Beef Hot Dogs with all the Trimmings and French Fries ♦ Mouth Watering Italian Beef Sandwiches + Delightfully Scrumptious Ham Rolls, SH M RM M M RBRIN G IN THIS AD FOR A FREE P E P S I« « !» » EXCLUSIVELY . *. ; ..ir» AT 624 APACHE BLVD. / ' (A C R O SS FROM THE SANDS MOTEL) Friday, February 18, 1966 P age 13 STATE PRESS Title on Line Western A.G. Cage Showdown As Devils Host BYU and Utah By BRIAN TRACY Sports Editor Something’s got to give one way or the other this weekend as Western Athletic Conference basketball rounds the turn and heads for home. Two teams from the state due north will swap turns testing the Devils in Sun Devil Gym as coach Ned Wulk and his group of athletes try to keep their heads above water in the frantic conference race to the wire. OCCUPYING THE visitors bench tonight will be the num­ with sweeps if they want any­ ber two team in the league, the thing to do with the conference Cougars of Brigham Young Uni­ crown. The big gun for the rampaging versity. Sporting a 3-2 record in WAC competition, BYU has Redskins is 64 center Jerry chalked up the most respectable Chambers who has been chim­ season tally of all the confer­ ing in with some 24.7 points a ence teams, winning 15 games game and is second in WAC scoring behind Nemelka. while dropping only three. The Utes as a team have One of the big reasons that the Cougars have been racking been averaging 98.4 points a up 98.6 points a game is a game and have clobbered their guard named Dick Nemelka. opponents by some 22 points per Picking up where last year’s victory. A TOTAL of five ’Skins are Cougar ace, John Fairchild, left off, Nemelka has sizzled hitting for ten or more points through the season scoring an a game and their rebound average of 25.6 points per game. strength is about the best in Backing up Nemelka on the the league. But those of you.who have outside is steady, dependable Jeff Congdon. Deft ball handling, read this far probably realize accurate passing and almost 15 that facts and figures on an op­ points a game by. Congdon, posing ball club don’t mean didalong with Nemelka’s scoring dly when the Devils take to the eye, has given the Cougars un­ home court. The one thing that does mean questionably one of the finest backcourt games in college ball. so much is that if Wulk’s crafty ON THE INSIDE, big Steve cagers want some part of that Kramer has been pumping 18.7 championship pie, this is the points per game through the weekend they have to make hoop to give BYU yet another their move. YOU HAVE to figure that they strong scoring punch. For the Devils, after tonight are just now reaching their pin­ it’s oiit of the proverbial frying nacle in mental attitude. They pan and into those flames as relaxed some with Hawaii, gath­ the Utah Redskins will be in ering confidence and some mo­ town tomorrow in an attempt mentum. True, they lost a heart breaker to undefeated Texas to sew up the league title. The ’Skins will be hosted by Western, but they looked excel­ BOWING OUT — S ix c a g ers w ill be s e e in g a ctio n fo r th e la s t tim e in th e c u rre n t the UofA in Tucson tonight, lent for the most part consider­ D evil hom e sta n d , b eg in n in g to n ig h t a g a in st BYU. P ic tu re d a re (k n eelin g ) F red d ie and the outcome of that game ing they were playing away L ew is; (second ro w , 1-r) J o h n M yers, R ich Coppola, (back row , 1-r) J im W hitehead, will have much bearing on the from home. But both BYU and Utah also game here tomorrow. D en n is H a m ilto n a n d P a u l M eany. UTAH IS 4-1 in WAC play, will be scrambling for every­ ★ ★ ★ ★ ■ leading the league by one game thing they can get. They will over BYU and two games over be way “up” for the games, as SIX IN FINAL HOM E STAND everybody else. Thus, the Utes it probably will mean all the need to at least split their two marbles for somebody. Something’s got to give — game series in Arizona to stay and full houses in Sun Devil healthy. Same with BYU. But both the Devils and the Gym both tonight and tomorrow Wildcats have their, backs to night will witness just what F ro m th e o th e r e n d of th e co u n try , H am ­ the wall, and must come up does give. By JO H N SA R -S ix g ra d u a tin g sen io r m em b ers of th e ilto n w a n d e red in. T h e 6-7 “Booney,” w ho Sun D evil b a sk e tb a ll te a m a re p re p a rin g is o fte n re fe rre d to as th e biggest little for th e la st fiv e gam es of th e ir collegiate k id in th e w orld, claim s H u n tin g to n Beach, Calif., as h is hom e. careers th is w eek. Senior Cagers Bow Out T h e six w h o a re leav in g th e ra n k s of ASU b a sk etb a ll a re F re d d ie L ew is, D ennis H am ilton, J o h n M yers, R ich Coppola, Jim W hitehead, a n d P a u l M eany. A L L S IX h a v e h e lp e d to add a n ew di­ m ension to S im D evil b a sk etb a ll th is year. In d escribing th e to u g h season, H am ilton says, “You w in a few , you lose a few , b u t y o u d ress fo r th em all.” H A M ILTO N ’S ro o m m ate is a n o th e r S u n D evil sta rte r, J o h n M yers. M yers hails fro m S tru th e rs, Ohio, a n d goes by th e n a m e of “S q u in t.” T h a t dim en sio n is th e rep la ce m e n t of th e ’ R ich Coppola is a n o th e r S tru th e rs boy su p e r-sta rs in th e C aldw ell-A rm strong tra d itio n w ith w ell-ro u n d ed a th le te s w ho w h o cam e to ASU w ith M yers a fte r th ey w o rk to g e th e r as a synchronized m achine. p lay ed to g eth e r in high school. C oppola’s p lay-m aking abilities a re w ell know n T h e six m en w ho h a v e lived from day th ro u g h o u t th e conference. to day on a ste a d y d ie t of b ask etb all have J im “T oots” W h itehead played w ith com e to A S U fro m th ro u g h o u t th e country. L ew is in h ig h school a t M cK eesport, Pa. H e L E W IS CA M E to A SU tw o y ears ago has tw o m ain a ttrib u tes: a good shooting a fte r p la y in g ju n io r college ball. His hom e­ e y e an d a lot of spirit. to w n is W ashington, D. C., b u t h e a tte n d e d T h e s ix th g ra d u a te is P a u l M eany. M ea­ h ig h school in M cK eesport, P a., w ith te a m ­ n y is th e old m an of th e g ro u p a t 22, b u t m a te J im W hitehead. L ^w is w on th e age h a sn ’t h am p ered h is perfo rm an ce as “sp a rk p lu g ” a w a rd a t A S U la st y e a r a n d h e co n tin u ally sees m o re action each gam e. is p re se n tly lead in g a ll S im D evil scorers. Soccermen Seek Big Time In Shot at ’Cats Tomorrow In perhaps their biggest game of the year, even though it is not a league encounter, the Sun Devil soccer team travels to Tucson tomorrow to face the powerful University of Arizona. The soccer club, seeking Uni­ versity recognition of soccer as an official sport, considers this its most important game since the UofA is now an NCAA-re­ cognized soccer team. VICTORY, OR even a good showing against the Wildcats, along with their current tie for first place in the Phoenix Soc­ cer League, would probably re­ ward the soccermen some ser­ ious consideration for inter­ collegiate sport status by the Athletic Department. Pacing the Devils will be highscoring Frank Linnartz, play­ maker Bill Allen and hustling Pete Versteegen. Also figuring to be prominent in the Devil attack are Tony Figueras, Joao Todorov, Steve Swai, Volker Sonntag and Frank Scarsella. BOTH THE soccer club and Phoenix Soccer League offic­ ials have decided to let the re­ sults of last week’s disputed game between the Devils and the Yanks of Williams Air Force Base stand. The Yanks upset the locals, 4-2, but a rule infraction brought about the possibility of all the games played to date by the airmen being forfeited. For the good of the league, the De­ vils withdrew their protest and the situation causing the dis­ pute, player registration,'is ap­ parently being rectified by lea­ gue president Alexander Ellis. / Utah and Host Gymnasts event, is Richard Impson who gave USC’s outstanding Micky Sakamoto one of the best bat­ tles of the year before dropping the blue ribbon to his opponent in the finale. Devil side horse expert, Norm Witham, gained a ranking of ninth on the side horse in the latest national poll and Skip Johnson is sixth on the parallel bars and seventh on still rings. This weekend the gymnastics team of coach Norris Steverson travels north to Utah for match­ es with Brigham Young and Utah. The squad left Tempe yester­ day and tonight they undertake the task of trying to set BYU flatly on its heels in the same manner they handled USC and New Mexico last weekend in Tempe. Tomorrow the Devils f a c e Utah in their third conference meet of the season. Following t h e i r impressive victories over USC and New Mexico, many members of the squad gained or improved na­ tional ranking. Les Christianson, the Devil phenomenon who slides through his movements on the still rings, gained a third place national ranking following his outstand­ ing 9.8 performance last week. Third ranked in the decathalon of gymnastics, the all-round Coif Squad In Qualifications The Sun Devil golf team, un­ der the direction of coacn Bill Mann, is currently conducting qualification rounds for place­ ment on the varsity squad. Trading the qualifiers to dat<~ is Joe Porter with rounds of 73 and 75. Behind Porter are George Boutell, Bruce Balcom, Mike Morley, Wayne Balmer and Rick Talt. Pete Null's TEMPE BODY SHOP H E . 4th St. Day Ph. 967-1601 - N ite 967-4067 24 HOUR TOW SERVICE # Auto Body & Fender Repairing * Auto Painting • Wheel Aligning & Balancing ENGINEERS, SCIENTISTS & COMPUTER PROFESSIONALS w,ith PhD., M.S. or B.S. degrees PHOENIX INTERVIEWS NEXT WEEK ONLY FEBRUARY 22-26 Phone Today (602) 275-6271 Ask for Mr. Paul Granger E mployers from all over th e country a re sending th e ir top technical staffs to Phoenix for a n o th e r C a re er C enter Interview Session. You can still r e g ­ ister in advance by calling today to assure earliest consideration by sponsoring employers. If inc on­ venient to call, please send y our resum e to: C a re er Center, Inc., Dept. X-7, Ram ada Inn, 3825 East Van Buren Street, P hoenix, Arizona. One word abo u t to d a y ’s job m arket: It has never been better. P rojects like th e C-5A plus a broader base of com mercial program s have created more ■stable and better opportunities th a n at any tim e since 1963. During th e C a re er Center, in a day or tw o, you can get a national picture of opportunity which would otherw ise ta k e w e e k s of travel. All em ployers screen y o u r qualification (m in u s yo u r n am e). You reveal y o u r identity only to those in whom you a re interested. Of course, th e re are no fees w h a t ­ soever fo r this service. " P a rtia l L is t o f C are er Ce nte r E m p lo y e rs" • • • • • • Friday, February 18, 1966 STATE PRESS Page 14 E astm an K odak Douglas A irc ra ft B u rro u g h s Corp. United A irc ra ft McDonnell A irc ra ft G eneral D ynam ics • • • • • • J e t Propulsion Labs AC Electronics Delco Radio Univac Bendix Corp. Douglas MS8D CAREER CENTER Equal O ppo rtu n ity E mployers T //jm m m w //Æ Ê m m Ê Ê m r//A Breijehoft Equals Spirit ympic Wrestling Committee; he holds the office of vice president in the Tempe Boys Club; and he is chairman of Little League wrestling in Arizona. In addition, Bredehoft has published a book, “Wrestling in Physical Education,” and has pro­ duced and directed a film on “Advanced Tech­ niques of Wrestling.” LOOKING TO the future, Bredehoft predicted that “to retain the WAC title will require a real team effort.” He cited lack of depth as the main stumbling block. “If the boys continue to improve, we could be rated as a darkhorse, behind BYU and Wyom­ ing.” However, if his coaching philosophy holds true, Bredehoft’s boys could provide more than a darkhorse. By BILL THOMAS Nice guys aren’t supposed to win. A-State wrestling coach Ted Bredehoft either hasn’t heard that adage, or just doesn’t agree with it. IN A SCANT four years he has taken the Sun Devil squad from a club basis to first place in the Western Athletic Conference. This season the little mentor is continuing his winning ways. His grapplers have rolled up 136 individual wins while losing only 66 and tying 4 matches. And Ted Bredehoft is a nice guy. “If you deserve to be a champion, you’re going to be a champion,” he says. “You’ve got to want to win.” BREDEHOFT has extended this coaching phil­ osophy to many other fields. He was recently sel­ ected for membership on the exclusive U. S. 01- McMinn Nears Record Wrestler Glenn McMinn is ex­ pected to break the all-time school record for tournament championships when the Sun Devil squad defends its title Saturday in the Phoenix College Invitational. McMinn, a 123-pounder, tied the existing record of 18 champ­ ionships, held by Buzz Hays, 1962-65, during competition last weekend. He is undefeated in tourney action this year with a 9-0-0 record. Three other ASU grapplers hoping to retain their meet crowns are Tony Russo (145), Pete Russo (130) and heavy­ weight Curley Culp. However, lack of depth will continue to handicap the Devil wrestling team, according to Coach Ted Bredehoft. The seven teams scheduled to compete are New Mexico State, Mesa College of Colorado, Phoe­ nix College, Arizona Western, University of Arizona, Northern Arizona University and ASU. The tournament is generally called the “S t a t e Collegiate W r e s t ling Championships,” since all Arizona college and un­ iversities mat squads are rep­ resented. Preliminaries begin at 9 a.m. — We W rite A ll — INSURANCE S tu d en ts U nder 25 S -R 22’s • Auto • Motorcycle • T ra ile r • Fire • T h e ft RALPH PACKER 26 E. 8th St. Tempe U P IN ARMS — Typical of the fiery drive and desire that mark him as a great coach, Ted Bredehoft (left) leaps for joy as one of his grapplers pins an opponent. s t a t e 0 p r e s s Classified For dassifiMl advertising submit ad in person to the State Press, MU 3, between a.m. and 4 p.m., or call tM-34657. Rate: 5c per word, 75c minimum per issue. FOR SALE 1964 Cushman Eagle Motor Scooter. White very little mileage, many extras. $225.00. Phone 963-6343. T R IU M PH , TR2. TR4 A engine, re­ overhaul, new tires, battery, unholstonneau cover. Call 945-7309 after 4 or on weekends. Thompson’s ACEROLA - C FIGHT Colds & Fatigue Limited T im e Offer T Y P IN G — Have had experience in all fields. Phone: 966-6429. LOST LOST — W allet in Library, contained no money. Please return all cards — 323 E. Catalina Dr., Phoenix. 266-0757. 1963 T R IU M P H 225 CC. Call 959-1281. Must sell by M arch 1st. S A L E : J E N N IE 'S S A M P L E FASHIONS. B ELO W W H O L E S A L E PRICES. NATION­ A L L Y A D V E R T IS E D ^RANDS. DRESSES, SPO R TSW EAR A N D A F T E R F IV E D R ESSES. 1024 McClintock Dr. (Hayden Rd.) North of Apache Blvd., Tempe. 50 cc. HONDA S C R A M B L E R . Excellent condition, rear rack, candy green. Call Louis Thiele at 966-1676. RUBBER STAMPS F IR S T and last name with middle Initial — 75c; with pad $1.50. Phone A rt Bilodeau (after 5:30 p.m.) 966-7077.______________ # INSTRUCTION lc SALE W ANTED 1963 HONDA. V ery good condition. $150. Call 967-6664 1955 cent tery, p.m. IN D IV ID U AL tutoring in math, chemis­ try, physics and biological sciences. Phone 967-7924. RIDERS P A S S E N G E R S needed from northwest Phoenix to ASU (or points in between) W M F arr.„ 7:40 — leave 2:30. Phone: 265-2749. SERVICES 1:30 RENT JIM 'S Union Service, 422 Apache Blvd., rents 50 cc Hondas, $1.50 per hour. N IC E one bedroom turn., quiet, private apartment. Heated pool, carport, $80. 325 Hardy D r „ Tempe. Phone: 967-6317. • HELP W ANTED M A T U R E CO ED , other intelligent young woman, earn $5/hour interviewing con­ sumers. Professor's research. Details, 9663729 M W F business hours only. 2 ASU students want someone to prepare evening meal in exchange for sharing meal. Phone 966-1543, ask for B arry or Steve. S IN G LE or m arried students who are in­ terested in making extra money. Call af­ ter five, 967-7453. TYPING S E N I O R S ! SECU RE YOUR FU TU R E. Professional fob resume. Phone: 265-3630. PERSONAL Orv: Why don't you quit kicking the bait' around and come on over and see me. Even If you're odd you're In. 100 tabs 100 mg C + B io b la vo n o id s Reg. $1.35, e x t r a bottle for 1c 250 tabs. Reg. $3; 2nd bot. 1c Call 946-5111 for fre e d e ­ livery Special gift fo r ASU stude nts EIK’S JUICE BAR Papago P la za— 40 N. 1st A v e., P hx. M a il O rd ers P ro m p tly F ille d T E M P E , M E S A students — bring your in­ come tax problems to us. Complete stan­ dard itemized forms. $7.50, no more. Six­ teen years same location. A D A IR T A X SE R V IC E . 964-9483. M.Sc. and Ph.D. D E G R E E S IN N U C L E A R E N G IN E E R IN G : Financial aid available for engineering and science maiors for study In Nuclear Engineering. Fellowships (N D E A , University), traineeships (NASA, A E C ), and research assistantships avail able. For information and applications write to Chairman, Department of Nu clear Engineering, the University of V ir ginia, Charlottesville, Virginia. Call 966-3656 966-3657 submit State Press Office MU-3 Friday, February 18, 1966 P age 15 STA TE PR E SS Sports-Whys B y ORV FR E E B ISH Funniest thing — the resting on one’s laurels period is over. Would you believe that it’s already time for the Sun Devil baseballers to hit the trail again after another NCAA championship? It seems like just a few short months ago that a certain Bobby Winkles and a certain group of gifted athletes brought home the 1965 national championship from Omaha. AS IN JUST about anything in life, once you get something really great, somebody else tries to take it away from you. That’s the reason why there’s probably a little voice in Coach Winkles’ head saying over and over again, “Uh-oh!” What he had T he 1966 e d itio n of D evil baseball gets u n d e r w ay to m o rro w w ith th e a n n u a l v a rsity -a lu m n i gam e a t 1 p.m. o n S u n D evil F ield. T op s ta rs of la s t y e a r’s NCAA cham ­ pionship te a m w ill pace th e a lu m s ag a in st th is y e a r’s h o rseh id ers o f B obby W inkles. A dm ission to th e gam e is free. so good that a lot of other people wanted was eight outstanding ball players. The sad thing for Winkles is that the other people got ’em. Major league ball clubs got that required signature at the bottom of contracts from eight members of last year’s championship team. THAT TEAM WITH the mule and the 10,000-to-l odds of win­ ning the American League pennant, Kansas City, claimed Rick Monday and Sal Bando. Everybody’s favorite losers and the darlings of the National League, the New York Mets, collared Ray Stadler and Alan Schmelz. With talent like that in their organizations, neither team will be losers much longer. A CLASS TEAM, the Minnesota Twins, added yet more class to their roster, inking Luis Lagunas, Jim Merrick and Ron Lea. Strong contender to the Twins’ pennant flag, the Chicago White Sox, added hustling Tony Alesci to their organization. So where has all this left Winkles? Probably biting his finger­ nails and pacing up and down a lot. BUT HE STILL' has a solid nucleus to start with as eight lettermen are back. Chief cause of frazzled nerves is an acute lack of depth. When practice started, more sophomores than jun­ iors and seniors combined reported for action. If the varsity fares well against the alumni in tomorrow’s “classic,” it should be a pretty good indication of a successful year for the horsehiders. The alums will be staffed by nearly all the aforementioned signees, plus a cast of many other impressive pros. It should be an interesting season. The pressure is on from the first pitch of the first game, and it will stay on until the last out of the last game way next May. Conditioning Drills Faced By Gridders Biff, pow, sock, crack, wham. It sounds like the beginning of another Batman show, but in reality it’s only a warm spring day in Sun Devil Stadium. Monday was the beginning, and some thirty days hence 6070 athletes will see thé end of annual spring football practice. SPRING FOOTBALL, f o r those who never quite under­ stood the logic in it, is merely another training pteriod devot­ ed basically to freshmen at­ tempting to move up to the var­ sity ranks. .Everyone is always fighting for a position, but for the most part practices are good, spirited affairs designed to give the coaches an insight to the tal­ ent working for them next year. Spring practice is limited by NCAA rules to a maximum of 20 sessions completed within thirty days, not including Sun­ days. COACH KUSH is conducting his practices four days a week, Monday, Wednesday, Friday, and Saturday. Spring ball is climaxed by a maroon vs. gold football game which gives the coaches an add­ ed picture of their team’s weak­ nesses and strengths. A ten-day, all-expenses-paid “tour of duty” at the Payson training camp in August awaits those who survive the rigors of the spring drills. Photo by John Sar FU N D A M EN TA LS — T ackle J o e Y oung (left) lead s a g ro u p of linem en th ro u g h a basic speed a n d agility d rill in sp rin g football practice. T h e D evil g rid d e rs a re c u r­ re n tly p repping fo u r tim es w eekly in S u n D evil S ta d i­ um . HONDA — Number One In Transportation Service - Sales - Rentals - Parts APACHE HONDA 2311 West Main - Mesa - LAZY PEOPLE . . . O rd e r F ro m U s . . . W e’r e L azy Too. So P lease O rd e r 15 o r M ore for F R E E D ELIV ER Y BIGBURGER 1737 S. M ill T em pe • 966-1661 — 1324 N. S cottsdale Rd. S cottsdale • 945-7341 TENNIS BALL HEADQUARTERS * Wilson * Dunlop * Spalding * Pennsylvania Coming: March 4, 1966 HUGHES announces campus interviews for Electronics Engineers and Physicists receiving B.S., M.S., or Ph.D. degrees. Contact your Placement Office immediately to arrange an interview appointment. Or write: Mr. A. J. Simone Hughes Field Service & Support P.O. Box 90515 Los Angeles, California 90009 Creating a new world with electronics Championship Grade — Reg. $2.50 $1.98 For Can of Three UNIVERSITY SPORTING G O O D S ________ Tempe Center_______ _________ 969-7375 2 /z Miles East of the Campus on Tem pe-M esa Highway j H U G H E S j I______ __________________________I H U G H E S AI R CR AF T COMPANY U . S . C IT IZ E N S H IP R E Q U IR E D An equal opportunity employer. Page 16 Friday, February 18, 1966 STATE PRESS To any kid who’d like to go somewhere: We'll pay half your fare. The idea’s not as crazy as it may seem. Anytime we take a jet up, there are almost always leftover seats. So it occurred to us that we might be able to, fill a few of them, if we gave the young people a break on the fare, and a chance to see the country. The American Youth Plan* We call the idea the American Youth Plan, and what it means is this: American will pay half the jet coach fare for anybody 12 through 21. It’s that simple. All you have to do is prove your age (a birth certificate or any other legal document will do) and buy a $3 identification card. We date and stamp the card, and this en­ titles you to a half-fare ticket at any American Airlines counter. The only catch is that you might have to wait before you get aboard; the fare is on a standby basis. “ Standby” simply means that the pas­ sengers with reservations and the servicemen get on before you do. Then the plane’s yours. The American Youth Plan is good year round except for a few days before and after the Easter, Thanksgiving and Christmas rushes. If you can’t think of any places you’d like to go offhand, you might see a travel agent for a few suggestions. We can’t add anything else. Other than it’s a marvelous opportunity to just take off. Complete this coupon—include your $3. (Do not send proof of age—it is not needed until you have your ID validated.) In addition to your ID card, we’ll also send you a free copy of AA’s Go Go American with $50 worth of discount coupons. American Airlines Youth Plan 633 Third Avenue New York, N.Y. 10017 Name Address C ity S tatp R irth d a te S ig n atu re Color of hair________ Color of eyes______ CN American Airlines $ 'DOES NOT APPLY IN CANADA AND MEXICO. Zip By BONNIE JAMES The cast of “archy and mehitabel,” which opened at Cosner Auditorium last night and will again be presented tonight and tomorrow evening, will be onstage for a total of three hours for the three performances The hours put into producing the play number almost 1900. Stage and dance rehearsals, preparations for musical numbers, and making and painting sets were all necessary before the Lyrica Opera Theater could put on what they hoped would be a flawless production. The cast and backstage workers consider the hours put |in to the play worth it, according to Mary Parkey, the play’s director. “What we’re trying to do is give these people actual performance experience,” said Miss Parkey. (Continued on page 3-B) MBOMB fer JOHN TRUJILLO Page 2-B Friday, February 18, 1966 STATE PRESS WEEKEND Classes Go to the Lectures Given in '*A lley9 v » Photo by Toni Atmore REIN CARNA TED POET — archy, play ed by A lan G rier, pounds out philosophy and w itticism s as a re ­ in carn ated poet. STUDY I I AIDS • Dictionaries • Encyclopedias • Thesaurus Gramm ar • Synonyms and Antonyms • Correct Letter Writing • • Thesis Writing PAPER BACK BOOKSl HILLS Books & Records OPEN M ON. & THURS. NITE TILL 9 P.M. T em p e Phone C en ter 967-5243 By DIANE BLIED If you have a class in Cosner, you may have found it difficult to pay attention to lectures the last few weeks, especially if a dull professor dragged on with his wonderful words of wisdom. The distraction for many stu­ dents is the different, comical scenery that adorns the stage for the Lyric Opera’s produc­ tion, “archy and mehitabel.” THIS “BACK alley opera” is just that — the scene depicts an alley that isn’t exactly typi­ cal. An original cartoon-style design of scene director Bob Benes, the stage is covered with crates, trash cans, oversized matchboxes and a tuna can. Be­ hind a huge picket fence and back entrance to a factory looms the abstract skyline of a metropolis. The main character, archy, a cockroach “cracker barrel philosopher,” jumps all over the typewriter keys, tapping out his ideas. The typewriter is in the corner of a, newspaper of­ fice, and archy is typing out the story of mehitabel, a cat, to a newspaperman. After he types, the scene shifts to the stage of mehitabel, who changes from an alley cat to a domesticated one. SCENERY DESIGNER Benes explained that designing for the opera had limitations. “We wanted to make the scenery ex­ citing, but not enough to over­ power. the play.” “This type of scenery has never been used on campus before,” a d d e d Benes. BENES EXPLAINED that thé set painting was more difficult than the building and design- ing. Colors used were grays, offwhites and off-blacks; medium colors were avoided. Benes en­ joyed experimenting with the scenery and believes a func­ tional, pleasing set was the final result. You may judge for yourself. The amusing hour-long satire on human nature acted by a cockroach and a cat can be seen tonight at 7:30 and Friday and Saturday nights at 8:30 in Cosner. Tickets are on sale in Ly­ ceum for $1 and 75 cents. ^WEEKEND BOOKCASE ¡¡Suffering Becomes Comedy! The Comedians, Graham Greene, Viking, 309 pages. By BILL WHITEHEAD G reen e’s -latest novel, The Comedians, is m o re in te r­ esting as thesis th a n his e a rlie r novels b u t less in te re stin g as story. It is set in H aiti u n d e r th e d icta to rsh ip of D uvalier, b u t th e em phasis is on th e c h aracters, n o t on th e situation. IN THIS NOVEL suffering re­ except to go on living.” mains but it is seen as comedy MR. & MRS. SMITH are com­ instead of tragedy. The char­ mitted, but their commitment acters do not search and they is absurd. He has been a presi­ cry not for humanity but for dential candidate on a platform themselves. They do not involve of vegetarianism. us with their lives but they do They come to Haiti to estab­ force us to think about what lish a center for vegetarianism their lives mean. because they believe eating Brown, the narrator of the meat causes acidity and acid­ story, is a hotel owner. He re­ ity causes violence. They leave turns to the terror of Haiti un­ because Haiti under Duvalier der Duvalier because the only isn’t ready for vegetarianism roots he has, his property, are yet. there. Dr. Magiot, the communist, He is one of the uncommitted is the only character whose — no linger a Catholic, not a commitment is not laughable, patriot — but he decides to­ and he is ineffectual. ward the end of the novel that, The Comedians is in radical “we (the faithless) find our­ contrast to Green’s earlier no­ selves the only truly committed vels thematically. In the Catho­ — committed to the whole lic novels he believed in a sup­ world of evil and of good, to ernatural answer to human suf­ the wise and to the foolish, to fering. the indifferent and to the mis­ In earlier post-Catholic novels taken. We have chosen nothing (The Quiet American, The Burnt-out Case) he rejected the supernatural, returned to the theatre of man, believed that flu e Family Billiards searching and commitment were 612 e a s t m c d o w e l l r o a d • p h o e n i x the keys to the kingdom. Next To — “ Brookshire R e sta u ra n t” IN THIS latest novel he makes commitment absurd, too, and WIN “Social S ecurity” JACKPOT! T man ineffectual. The result is Every day a new n u m b e r is chosen. Y our Social ' ironic comedy. Security n u m b e r may win you up to $200.00 Greene’s thesis is the ambas­ HOURLY RATES SPE C IA L DEA L sador’s speech: “We mustn’t complain too much of being 1 P la y er . $ .70 M onday, Tues., & W ed. comedians. It’s an honorable 1.25 2 P layers profession.” M ale Escort __ $ .70 1.50 3 P layers The Comedians is an indif­ NO CHG. 1.50 G irl F rie n d 4 P lay ers ferent novel, its thesis abstract 5 P layers 1.50 $ .70 H r. F or B oth but interesting, its story life­ less. S THOMAS B. QUILLEN PRODUCTION WHO'S AFRAID OF VIRGINIA WOLFE by Edward Albee p resen ted by The Arizona Repertory Theatre at the Phoenix Theatre Center (M cDowell & C entral) BLACKSMITH SHOP Presents: Feb. 2 2 -2 7 NORM HEARD Mar. 1-6 $ $ 1.00 2.00 S porting 309 N. 6th AVE. PHOENIX, ARIZONA A L 4-4779 F o r Tues., W ed., T hurs. — A vailable ONLY at U n iv ersity . . Balladier R egular Prices on Sat. & Sun. Special S tu d e n t & F acu lty R ates Goods, Tem pe C enter. ■ J — . Phone: 258-9452 N ew est and Most U nique N itery in P h o en ix Larry Rummell, PHOENIX GAZETTE ” ” ’ Friday, February 18, 1966 STATE PRESS WEEKEND R AY ICELY------------------------------------------- MORE ABOUT - 'archy and But, Students Didn’t Come From an entertaining and cultural point of view this past week has proven interesting, encouraging and disap­ pointing. ■" Last Friday night, the Metropolitan Opera’s traveling company appeared in Gammage Auditorium and perform­ ed “Carmen” in English. Unfortunately the group was not all that might have been ex­ pected from so revered a name as the Met, but, nevertheless, the auditorium was packed. . . the balconies having been sold out weeks ahead of time and the highest priced seats ($5.50) gone several days before the first performance. THIS WAS TRULY encourag­ ing. But at the performance it­ self, percentage-wise, t h e r e were very few students. T h e high cost of tickets may have discouraged a few, but when one considers the expense of taking a date to a hooch house, this argument is pretty insignif­ icant. The disinterest in cultural en­ tertainment was sharply ap­ parent Monday night, again in Gammage, when less than 75 people showed up to see and hear David Susskind. Of these, less than 15 were students. With tickets selling for $4.50 less than “Carmen,” why weren’t more students in attendance, especial­ ly considering the advance pub­ licity? UNFORTUNATELY the an­ swer is crystal clear. Students at ASU just aren’t concerned. The point is this. Entertain­ ment is not necessarily frivo­ lous — it can be “educational,” although I hesitate to use the word for fear of alienating read­ ers. Some of the “educational” material can be funnier or more entertaining than the run-of-themill nightclub act. FOR A STUDENT body so concerned with the academic failures of the faculty, it seems time to take a good long look at ourselves. How many attend Phoenix or ASU Symphony per­ formances, plays by the drama department, lectures by visiting dignitaries, gymnastics meets and even the student recitals given by music department stu­ dents? We wait for hours for tickets to basketball games but don’t cross the street for something a little different. Try any of these events next week: Sun­ day, violin concert; Monday, Phoenix Symphony; Wednesday, Page 3-B (Continued from page 1-B) The “back alley opera” with a jazz theme concerns cockroach archy’s admiration for playgirl alley cat mehitabel. Throughout the play archy types mehitabel’s biography on his newspaperman friend’s type­ writer. archy, played by Alan Grier, wants mehitabel, played by Bet­ ty Barton, to settle down, be­ come a house cat and stop run- student recitals in Gammage; Thursday, “Hie Doctor in Spite of Himself” in Cosner Audito­ rium; and Friday, the Broad­ way play, “Barefoot in the Park” in Gammage. THEN, let’s complain about academic sloppiness. Spy Movie Lacks James Bond Style ‘The Spy Who Came in From years old, looks about 18. the Cold” is an honest but com­ The story concerns itself with plicated movie about an em­ 0 * brutality and immorality bittered British spy. (not the sexual kind) of spying Richard Burton, who plays and the anguish that goes along the spy, is at his very best in with it. It isn’t really the girls this film — perhaps because and super-gadget w o r l d of his wife, Elizabeth Taylor, isn’t James Bond, but a bitter, ruth­ in it to distract him. At any less, cold-blooded job to be done rate, Burton is completely con­ but not enjoyed. vincing in his role. The directing is slickly pro­ Acting s t u d e n t s would fessional without odd-ball an­ particularly enjoy - this movie, gles, camera tricks or unusual since Burton’s performance is techniques. It’s just straightfor­ just the first in a series of top- ward and honest. notch acting jobs. “The Spy Who Came in From Oskar Werner, who reportedly is up for an Academy Award different kind of spy film — for “Ship of Fools,” is excellent something like you’ve never as a Jewish communist agent. seen before. For that reason, Claire Bloom is a librarian and and to see some great acting, a member of the British Com- it’s worth seeing. munisty party. Miss Bloom, 35 BOB GOLDEN ning around with cats like Hor­ ace, an old theater cat and a tough tom cat named Bill. Yeo as the moth; and Bob Benes as the newspaperman. EXCEPT FOR Dr Seipp, “archy and mehitabel” is put on en­ tirely by students. mehitabel insists that in spite of her running around she’s al­ ways a lady and “To hell with anything unrefined is my mot­ to.” Directors and backstage work­ ers are Miss Parkey, director; Shirley Phillip, assistant direc­ tor; JoAnn Yeo, choreographer; Lyn Dutson, costumes; Carol Carpenter, wardrobe mistress; O. B. Lewis, stage manager: Mary Lou McNatt and Bob Capri, makeup; Dr. Seipp, or­ chestration; Jerri Fagan, piano; and Bob Benes, Dick Elmer and Straton Powell, set designers and constructors. However, after asking archy “Why does life have to be one litter after another?,” she fi­ nally decides to become a re­ spectable house cat. BETWEEN archy’s descrip­ tions of mehitabel’s experiences, he also writes his philosophies of life. At one time during the play, he is unhappy because he’s ugly. “Beauty always gets the best of it,” the cockroach tells his ■friend. He also tells of his ob­ servations of a firefly and a moth. The thirteen costumes needed for the production were made by drama department students and staff. The production, co-produced by Dr. Kenneth Seipp and the Lyric Opera Theater, also fea­ tures Ed Humphrey, G r e g Stump, Carl Samuels and John Doherty as tom cats; Norma Yeary, Barb Gephart, Sharon Iaquinto and Penny Jordan as kittens; Bill English as Horace; Bob Capri as the firefly; JoAnn r STATE PRESS W eekend EDITOR Bruce M . Spence W E E K E N D is published every Friday as the W E E K E N D magazine of the daily State Press. FRIDAY NIGHT AT 7:00 U.S. PREMIERE jáBjlp In SNEAK PREVIEW BEGINNER’S PACKAGE S k is B o o ts B in d in g s ù* P oles is ' Stretch P an ts P arka * n p ow erful nn OArt-h - t h e . i/U J E R E k R OPi b i s JD-3C-1 (A F T E R S T A U g e i * c c u c a tf) THE RATES THE CARS • WEEKEND DAYS $6.00 a day plus li e a mile • FORD M USTANG • ENTIRE WEEKEND, $15.00 plus 11c a mile • FORD GALAXIE • CHEVROLET IMPALA T ç m E v in .B u m v PO ETRY R C A O iU G S m m m J j 0 S o ffla x u m . • 1 FULL WEEK $55.00 plus l l c a mile • DODGE • 1 FULL WEEK $99.00, N o mileage charge Call 967-9362 • PLYMOUTH LOU OSMAN Campus Representative Call 967-8161 To Be Assured of the Car You W ant Make Reservations 24 Hours In Advance Page 4-B STATE PRESS WEEKEND Capote Would Improve With Children’s Novels In Cold Blood, Truman Capote, Random House, 1965, 343 pages. By ROWE PORTES Truman Capote’s reputation for some reason mush­ roomed after he published the non-classic Other Voices, Other Rooms years ago. His new “non-fiction” novel, the story of two real-life criminals who murder a Kansas family, is close enough to the first novel to be a sequel. THAT IS, it concerns children, has a number of gothic inci­ dents and lacks style except w h e r e the “poetry” shows through. Then, In Cold Blood tends to lag into maudlin silli­ ness — “He looked at his fing­ ers, which were stained with ink and paint, for he’d spent his final three years on Death Row painting self-portraits and pictures of children. . .” When the writing is not this bad it is enough like the style of a Time report on, say, her­ oin, to justify investigation by the legal department of that magazine. Capote probably can­ not be sued for plagiarizing a group project such as this, but it might be entertaining to watch someone try. The murderers (who com­ mit a “psychological accident” ) are the punks you expect to see picking on third-graders in any school. The elder is a paedophiliac, and the younger is a frustrated artist and poet — a very sensitive soul, murderer and thief. They are presented from thenown reports and in their own language, with their innate abil­ ity always to rationalize what they do. Rationalization usually results in inferior fiction, and here especially it is dangerous. THE MURDERED Clutters betray more cardboard than do the killers themselves. They ne­ ver live for the reader and thus cannot be convincingly murder- «— Weekend Roundup «—a TODAY Basketball, ASU vs Brigham Young, 8 p.m. Junior Piano Recital, Doris Stevenson, Gammage Recital Hall 301, 8:15 p.m. Stan Getz Jazz Quartet, Gammage Auditorium, 8:15 p.m. “archy and mehitabel,” Cosner auditorium, 8:30 p.m. KAET, Great Decision, “Israel and the Arab World”, 8:30 p.m.; The Arts at ASU, “Speech Pathology”, 9 p.m.; Festival of Arts, “Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra and Warsaw Philharmonic”, 9:30 p.m. SATURDAY Basketball, ASU vs ,Utah, 8 p.m. Star Theatre, “Unsinkable Molly Brown,’* 8:30 p.m. “ archy and mehitabel,” Cosner auditorium, 8:30 p.m. After Game Dance, MU ballroom, 10 p.m. SUNDAY Senior Bassoon Recital, Barre Griffith, MU ballroom, 8:15 p.m. Violin Concert, Madame Scholnikova, Gammage Auditorium 8:15 p.m. KAET Offers Large Fare KAET, Channel 8, offers a wide selection of programs for ASU students. Three of the pro­ grams being aired next week ed. The blood is never real and are: is colder than mere cold. “MUSICAL THEATRE: 20 We suggest that Capote con­ Years on Broadway,” Monday tinue writing children’s stories, at 10 p.m. This program fea­ though. It is good for the soul. tures the musical reminiscences The first suggestion is to take of the author-lyricists Betty over A. A. Milne’s characters. Comden and Adolph Green, who The fourth chapter of his next examine musical theatre in the novel ought to. concern how United States in the last 20 Christopher Robin carves up years. Winnie-the-Pooh. Eeyor w i l l The program features Com­ serve for the fifth. den and Green singing their own Culture Not So Bad By BOB GOLDEN As a fairly typical college student living out in the boondocks in Arizona, I had never seen anything as arty or cul­ tural as the Metropolitan Opera. Then along it came with “Madame Butterfly” and I de­ cided it was time to activate the deteriorating cultural mat­ ter in my head. SO I GOT a date (I figured it would be unbearable without one) and went. Gammage was packed — with everyone from punky little k i d s running around to the coat-tail gentry. Then it began. The only thing I knew about it up to this point was that the story was told completely with songs and mu­ sic. What I didn’t know was that it was all in Italian! I guess I was expected to know that. As a result, I didn’t know what the heck was going on, and could barely see, since sit­ ting in the last row in the top 6alcony is like watching micro­ scopic bacteria without a micro­ scope. AFTER THE second act (there were th ree,— think) I went down to the lobby (a jour­ ney reminiscent of my PE days) and bought a program to read about what I had missed and to see how the thing ended. Believe it or not, I enjoyed it.' The music was undoubtedly beautiful and a pleasant with­ drawal from my usual diet of rock ’n roll. If the Met comes back, I’ll probably go again. At least I’ll buy a program in ad­ vance and bring a pair of bino­ culars. The opera is something every­ one should see at least once — if for no other reason than to unsettle the dust in your head or to impress a date. • Reducing Ü • Conditioning • Sauna • Steam Bath Hours: 10 to 10 Daily Charter Memberships $6oo Per Month Uniueróity, J 4 e a (tli IN TEMPE 1018 N. Scottsdale Rd. Ph. 967-7461 IN PHOENIX 3147 W. Ind. Sch. Rd. Pk. 266-6798 Bring Your Favorite "MUCHACHA on A N Y D A Y! « 4 CHICO'S HOME OF THE WE OFFER INDIVIDUAL COURSES & PERSONAL INSTRUCTION FOR: • Body Building show tunes such as “New York, New York,” “Just in Time” and “The Party’s Over.” These selections will also be discussed in the context of the shows for which they were written. “SCAPIN,” a play by Moliere, Tuesday at 10 p.m. and re­ peats Friday at 9:30 p.m. This critically acclaimed presenta­ tion of the Moliere farce was produced by the Association of Producing Artists as a part of its 1964 repertory at New York’s Phoenix Theatre. The three-act play deals with the illusory and d e c e.p t i v e schemes that Scapin, a diabol­ ically clever and comic serv­ ant, uses to outwit two elderly gentlemen, their sons and their sons’ sweethearts with unfailing regularity. “FOLKWAYS, Festivals, and Free Theatre,” . Wednesday at 10 p.m. This program concen­ trates on the varied theatre audiences in the United States and the diverse theatrical fares available to them. The program visits the Cohasset Music Tent, Mass., the Westport Country Playhouse, Conn:, the University of Min­ nesota Centennial Showboat, various Shakespeare Festivals, the Free Southern Theatre and the San Francisco Mime Troupe to find out what happens when the theatre goes to its audience. ANN MULLEN to CHICO’S c m Now! Friday, February 18, 1966 R E S T A U R A N T ’’ FINE MEXICAN FOOD 1120 East Apache Blvd. — Tempe •A ir Conditioned o f course (All Meat W iener) 1037 Rural Rd. § Tempe THE PITCHER HOUSE 6 0 GO OFFERS YO U DANCING TO ★ THE WED., THURS., FRI. and SAT. NITES . . . . . . . . * 9 to ] p.m. BIG FRIDAY AFTERNOON DANCE . . . . . . 3 TUESDAYS 8 P.M. to 1 A .M . 406 MILL AVE. PRODIGIES JAZZ TEMPE to £ p.m. HALF PRICES FREE POPCORN 967-9974 n