Na 1 Thursday, June 15, 1967 Tempe, Arizona Registration Goes Past 10,000 M ark Enrollment for the first Summer Session reached 9,858 at the close of the regular registration period Tues­ day night and is expected to exceed 10,200 when the final count is in. The record turnout surpasses the previous high of 9,625 set during the first term last summer. An expanded program of workshops, s p e c ia l_______ ______ FIRST THE LINES — 4,734 student» poured past die registration booths Saturday in die heaviest summ er turnout ever. Then, when class cards were com plete, some paused to pour a codling soft drink a t a stand provided by the F irst B aptist Church of Tempe. * Tom Wnt 'Warand Peace M ovie Tops M U Activity Sla te The movie classic “War and Peace,” starring Henry Fonda and Audrey Hepburn, w ill be shown tonight and tomorrow evening at 7:30 in the MU Ballroom as the first in a series of MU sponsored film s and tours. Based on the marathon epic by Russian novelist Leo Tolstoy, “War and Peace” depicts the lives and loves of individuals caught in the backlash of the Napoleonic Wars. A REGISTRATION receipt is required for admission to the showing which is open to students, staff, members of their families and guests. “The Misadventures of Merlin Jones,” a Walt Disney production, w ill be shown Monday evening. Rounding out the movie schedule for the first sum­ mer session w ill be “Sanctuary,” “Pepe,” “Me and the Colonel” and “Hans Christian Andersen.” Second session features are “Spy Who Came In From the Cold,” “The Old Dark House,” “The H ill,” “Oscar Wilde” and “Mysterious Island.” BUS TOURS to the Phoenix Art Museum, Mountain States Telephone Co., Taliesin West and the University Arts Center in Payson are also under MU sponsorship. The first tour w ill leave the MU on Tuesday at 2 p.m. for a junket to the Art Museum. Tickets are 75 cents and should be purchased at the Information Desk tw o days in advance, according to Mike Byron, MU program di­ rector. Construction projects totaling more than $25 million are either in progress or in late planning stages for the University’s sprawling campus. MAJOR PROJECTS IN the building boom are the new Law College Building and Manzanita Hall, a 15-story girls’ dormatory. Both projects are being contracted by Del Webb. The unique Law College Will feature a circular amphitheater court overlooking a jury box and judge’s stand. A separate library will house over 200,000 volumes. Currently under construction, the building will cost an estimated $1,677,000 and will be ready for use in December. MANZANITA HALL, located between the Palo Verde complex and Alpha Drive, will provide housing accommodations for 1,000 coeds. Hie hon­ eycombed structure has special recreation areas mm Early 'Coffee a n d .. Perks Wednesday Coffee, juice and past­ ries w ill be served each Wednesday morning of the summer session at a ‘Coffee and .’ between 8:40 and 10:30 in the Pa­ goda Room of the MU. Each item w ill cost 10 cents. interest classes and seminars have been instrumental in the soaring enrollment. A total of 4,002 students reg­ istered by mail and 4,734 were processed Saturday. “There were the usual l o n g lines,” said Registrar Alfred Thomas, Jr., “but I guess that’s a part of our way of life." In general he thought the registra­ tion went smoothly. Approximately 700 classes will be in session during the first term of toe summer sessions. “With each successive sum­ mer,” said Thomas, “more and more regularly - enrolled stu­ dents, graduates as well as un­ dergraduates, are remaining on campus to complete their ad­ vanced degrees or four - year baccalaureate programs ahead of schedule.” He also pointed out that the number of school teachers re­ turning to the University to complete advanced degrees and earn additional credits to qual­ ify for salary increases remains large. UCLA Educator Talks Business A prominent business educa­ tor from UCLA will be the first speaker in a series of guest lec­ turers beginning Tuesday and slated to continue through the summer sessions under spon­ sorship of the Department of Office Administration and Busi­ ness Education. Dr. S. J. Wanous, a noted textbook author, wUl talk on “Problems and Trends in Busi­ ness Education.” The lecture will be from 9:20 to 10:50 a.m. and will continue at 1:15 to 2:15 p.m. in BA 303. Tempe Continues Sales Tax Suit Hie City of Tempe continued its sales tax suit against toe University yesterday by filing a motion to set a date for a court hearing on the matter. City officials contend that the University is liable for the municipality’s 1 per cent sales tax on such transactions as events at Grady Gammage, campus bookstore sales and dormitory rentals. “WE HAVE TAKEN the position that ASU is liable for back taxes starting 15 months ago,” said David Merkel, assistant city attorney. “Hie outcome of the suit will be a precedent for die UofA, NAU and several private schools and jun­ ior colleges such as Prescott JC and Mesa Com­ and lounges, a patio area and provisions for the handicapped. An elevator workmen’s strike slow­ ed construction for nearly two months late last semester, but the $3,700,000 residence hall should still be ready for the fall term, according to John Ellingson, director of the Physical Plant. Slated for use next March is the new Business Administration Building, also contracted by Del Webb. The facility will feature classrooms de­ signed for team teaching. Although the structure will rise only four stories initially, it is designed for the addition of more floors in the future. THE CENTRAL HEATING mid Refrigeration Plant is undergoing a $1,750,000 revamping that will add space for 10,000 tons of refrigeration and a new steam boil«*. Hie additional equipment is needed to accommodate the mushrooming con­ munity College. It could have some far-reaching effects.” MERKEL FILED the suit with the Arizona Su­ preme Court early in the second semester after more than a year of negotiations proved fruitless. Hie Supreme Court, however, refused jurisdiction in the matter and suggested that suit for.de­ claratory judgment be filed in a lower court. Early this month Merkel filed the suit in the Superior Court. “We may get the hearing in nine months to a year,” Merkel said. “Hopefully, because a state school is involved, we can get squeezed on the docket early.” struction, EllingSon said. The expanded Physical Plant facilities will be adequate until about 1975. THE ARTS COMPLEX, scheduled for ground­ breaking in November, will be comprised of three buildings located on Forest Avenue between 9th and 10th Streets. The proposed $2,200,000 center will have studios, a library, exhibition areas and a 500-seat lecture hall. A newly approved Psychology and Anthropol­ ogy Building will probably be ready late in the Spring semester. The edifice will cost $3,250,011, second only to Manzanita Hall in proposed sii^le project expenditure. The MU will get its share of the construction budget starting in December, when die present facilities will be doubled. The building cost will be $2,785,000. Page 2 $„¿3jjO'.; SUMMER STATE PRESS Gentry, Æe/c/ Pace Devils Arizona State’s spirited baseball team convinc­ ingly trounced its first two opponents , in the Col­ legiate World Series in Omaha this week to bolster hopes for a second national title in three years. Last night, as this paper went to press, the Sun Devils were facing powerful Stanford, the top-rank­ ed team in the nation. Senior southpaw Jeff Pentland (14-5) started on the mound for ASU. Se Hurler Gary Gentry and right fielder Scott Reid provided the fireworks Monday night as the Devils dumped Oklahoma State’s Cowboys, 7-2. After a shakey start, Gentry settled down and re­ tired 17 straight batters in the game’s closing frames. The fireballing junior from Phoenix tied a collegiate series record by cutting down 16 Cowboys on strikes. It was Gentry’s 16th win against one loss. Reid, a switch-hitting Junior, clobbered two wrongfield homeruns and drove in four rbi’s. Tom Burgess shook off control problems in Tues­ day night’s game to pitch the Devils to an 8-1 win over Boston College. Burgess, a big righthander, knocked across three runs to help his own cause. Outfielder Larry Linville also wielded a hot bat, ¿collecting three hits in four trips to the plate. The Omaha Series is double-elimination competi­ tion. If the Devils won last night they will be con­ sidered tournament favorites. If the Stanford Indians won they will remain the series pace-setters. m Gary Gentry Scott Reid From Forensics to Taxation ^ Thursday, ^ I lj5, 1967 y ii» 3 V iiM TAT* Atwvfli Cadets Get Taste O f Viet Nam M ore th a n 120 advanced A rm y ROTC cadets w ill leave today fo r six w eeks of in ten sified m ilita ry tra in in g d u r­ ing th e a n n u a l su m m e r cam p a t F t. Lew is, W ash. “T h e s la n t o f th e tra in in g is to w a rd V iet N am ,” said C huck Sankey, fo rm e r C adet B rig ad e C om m ander. “T hey don’t te ll you th a t b u t i t ’s p re tty evident. T h e m en w ill g e t in stru ctio n in lea d e rsh ip tra in in g arid techniques, how to w ork a s a u n it a n d ta c tic a l tra in in g . T hey w ill be liv in g th e m ilita ry fo r six w eeks as so rt o f ‘glorified p r i­ v a te s’.” T H E 1,500 M EN a t th e ca m p w ill re p re s e n t colleges a n d un iv ersities from a ll o v e r th e nation. D em onstrations a r e scheduled in th e u se of a rtille ry , chem ical w arfare, a rm o r a n d napalm . T h e cadets w ill also p a rtic ip a te in w a r gam es, im p lem e n tin g m ilita ry th e ­ o ry a n d e q u ip m e n t in th e field. M O D EL V IE T N A M E SE -T Y PE villages a re set u p fo r cordon an d search m an eu v ers. I n th e m ock operatio n a c a d et u n it su rro u n d s th e village, th e n h a lf of th e m en conduct a house-to-house se arc h w h ile th e o th e r h a lf rem a in s in a se cu rity ring, o r cordon, a ro u n d th e area. “O ne of th e m ost im p ressiv e th in g s w ill b e th e n a ­ p alm d e m o n stratio n ,” said S ankey, a g ra d u a te o f last y e a r’s cam p. “J e ts com ing fly in g in as slow as h e ll an d d ro p th e riapalm . W e w e re half-a-m ile a w a y a n d w e could still feel th e h e a t.” “T H E M EN W IL L h a v e an o p p o rtu n ity fo r p rac tic a l application of classroom e ffo rt h e re a t th e U n iv e rsity ,” Col. Coy C urtis, p ro fesso r of m ilita ry science. The f u tu re officers w ill also receiv e social in stru c tio n a t a m ilita ry balL T h irty -fiv e o th e r c a d ets le f t la st w eek en d fo r special boot cam p tra in in g a t F t. B enning, Ga. T h e m en a re s tu d e n ts w ho, fo r v a rio u s reasons, h a v e n o t com pleted th e basic course. T hey w ill u n d e rg o a vigorous six-w eek p ro g ram to p re p a re th em fo r th e advanced course n e x t year. Potpourri of Workshops Start ■ Forensics anyone? Or maybe taxation tute­ lage? Special instruction and smatterings of gradu­ ate class credit can be gained from a potpourri of workshops being offered here this summer. A number of the sessions are already in progress. THE 14th ANNUAL Workshop on the Excep­ tional Child which started Monday offers indivi­ dual and group study for handicapped, retarded, gifted and disadvantaged children. Lectures, mo­ tion pictures and field trips will supplement the students’ regularly assigned projects. The pro­ gram will extend through July 15 and offers six semester hours credit for persons who have an interest in obtaining basic understanding of. prob­ lems involved in teaching exceptional children. A seminar comprised of five separate work­ shops on “Tax Planning for the Executive-Invest­ or” got under way Tuesday and will run for an­ other four weeks. The sessions will cover deferred compensation arrangements, life insurance, cor­ porate accumulation and distributions, lax op­ tion corporations and tax traps and tax benefits for the executive-investor. A MODERN DANCE workshop will conclude tomorrow after a week of instruction in technique, improvisation and composition. The class featured a lecture, “New Trends and Development in the Arts,” and will net students one hour of gradu­ ate credit. A typewriter workshop for elementary and jun­ ior high school teachers is scheduled for July 14. Areas covered will include methods, operation, writing skills and language arts related to type­ writer use. The course offers graduate credit. The Music Department is offering a number of workshop programs throughout the summer. The first, already started, is designed for general classroom teachers in the elementary and junior high schools as well as music specialists. The ses­ sions are geared for teachers who seek to develop new approaches to the creative talents of children in an age of technology. OTHER MUSIC-SPONSORED workshops in­ clude humanities and the comparative arts, June 12-July 14; music theater June 12-July 14; con­ ducting and band rehearsal techniques, July 17Aug. 4; and percussion materials and repertoire, July 17-Aug. 4. Both students and teachers will get a chance to participate in a forensic workshop slated to be­ gin June 25 and extend through July 8. For the instructors, a pro-seminar outlining the philoso­ phy, methods and problems of directing a foren­ sic program will be offered. The high school stu­ dents who enroll in (he sessions will be exposed to the fundamental principles and methods of de­ bate through lectures, discussion and laboratory sessions. THREE WORKSHOPS on team teaching and flexible scheduling begin Monday and last through July 28. The sessions will cover methods, organi­ zation, evaluation, literature and development of teaching resource units. Students receive two graduate semester hours credit for each work­ shop. A two-week junior college workshop emphasiz­ ing counseling, guidance, testing and student ser­ vices will also begin Monday. The program will provide current and prospective JC personnel with an opportunity for directed study on community college-oriented themes. 'W hat's New at A SU Luncheon Lecture L ecture luncheons fea tu rin g a v a rie ty of speakers h av e been scheduled fo r th e sum m er sessions by MU program directo r M ike B yron. The first sp eak er w ill be vice-president G ilb ert Cady w ho w ill talk ab o u t “W hat’s N ew a t A SU .” T he bu ffet w ill be held T h u rsd ay afternoon, a t 12:15 in th e MU B all­ room . TED D E G R A ZIA , in te rn atio n a lly know n A rizona a rtist, w ill preserit a film a n d com m entary a t a luncheon on J u n e 22. In th e second session, P rof. T roy P ew e, ch a irm a n of ' th e G eology D ep artm en t, w ill give a lectu re a n d show a film on “T h e G re a t A laska E a rth q u a k e of 1964” on Ju ly 27. P e w e conducted ex ten siv e rese a rc h a fte r th e disaster a n d produced th e m ovie him self. H e is th e fa rm e r head of th e G eology D e p a rtm en t a t th e U n iv ersity of Alaska. “T H E STU DY O F LA W a n d th e P u rs u it o f H appi­ ness” is th e title of a lectu re to b e given by D r. W illard H. P edrick, d ean of th e n ew C ollege of L aw , Aug. 3. Professor from Purdue Appointed Industrial Engineering Chairman D r. H e w itt H. Y oung, a ssista n t h e a d of th e school of in d u stria l en g in e e rin g a t P u rd u e U n iv ersity , L a fay e tte , Ind., h as been n am ed c h a irm a n of th e in d u stria l en g i­ n e e rin g fa c u lty h e re effe c tiv e in A ugust. Y oung, p rofessor of in d u stria l en g in e e rin g a t P u rd u e , I receiv ed h is Ph.D . h e re in 1966 a fte r s tu d y in g as a F ord F o u n d atio n F e llo w in 1964-65. He will succeed Dr. C. B. Gambrell who has accepted the first vice-presidency of aca­ T w o internationally ranked demic affairs at Florida Tech­ t e n n i s players from Sweden nological University, Orlando, ? have signed letters of intent to Fla. enroll at Arizona State in the Gambrell recently termed his fall. successor “one of the top three Bjorn Alven and Hans-Fredrik industrial engineering educa­ Nordstrom, b o t h members of tors today.” their country’s Junior Wimble­ don team, should make coach £ i f ¿ i f <> 0 p r e i i i i Ted Bredehoft’s net squad a strong contender for the West­ ern Athletic Conference title Netters Swedish Duo Classified MmmmmmmmmmnmmmmmmmMmmmmmti CALENDAR ÜÜ i 1 1 S 1 § §j i NEXT WEEK 1 Monday June 19 Tuesday Movie “Misadventures of Merlin Jones” at 7:30 in the MU Ballroom. Tour of the Phoenix Art Museum leaves MU at If j 8 June 20 2:30 p.m. Gammage Wind Quintet in a program of contemporary American and European music. MU Ballroom, 8:15 p.m. 8 1 ! fi 1 1 Thurs. June 15 Movie “War and Peace” at 7:30 in the MU Ballroom. Friday June 16 Movie “War and Peace” at 7:30 in the MU Ballroom. Wed’sday “Coffee and . . at 8:40-10:30 in the Pagoda June 21 Room of the MU. Joint recital by Arnold Bullock, pianist, and Takayori Atsumi, cellist, in the MU Ballroom at 8:15 p.m. 1 Net F o r classified advertising subm it ac in person to the State Press, M U 3, be­ tween 9 and 12 a.m., or call tU -J fit. Rate: Sc per word, 75c m inim um per Issue.._________________ ^____________ ___ • 1 1 1 1 SERVICES C A L O R Y G A L L E R Y — where cooking is the art that pleases the palate. Home­ like atmosphere. Jim and Juanita wel­ come you. Open. weekdays 7 a.m. to B p m. Closed Sunday. Corner 6th St. and M ill Ave. P R O F E S S IO N A L aid in preparation of research proposals, dissertations, and reports including statistical analysis of data. Write: Ahr. F. L. Whitney, P.O. Box 3063, Scottsdale, Arizona 85237. Phone: 2754462. SU M M E R »tate0press A risana stata University, Tampa, Artsana The Summer State F ra n Is published at A ri sana state University, Tampa, A ri­ sona, tour tim es during each summer session. Publication dates a rt every Thursday, except final exam wash«. Editar W IL L IA M S. THO M AS The Summer Stale F ra n la published andar the auspices at the Summer Saw slan and Extensien D ivisian, handed by Dean E a r & Rica.