Arts, Architecture Get New Facilities Plans for the construction of a block-long Art and Architecture complex costing an estimated $2,056,000 were recently approved by the Board oflRegents. Comprised of two buildings, the complex w ill be locat­ ed on Forest Avenue betwéen 9th and 10th Streets, ac­ cording to John R. Ellingson, director of planning and construction. THE ART. building w ill include four levels and a full basement of classrooms, laboratories, studios and faculty and administrative offices, with provisions for the sub­ sequent addition of two floors. ? The Architecture building w ill be comprised of 16 studios, a library, exhibition and display areas as w ell as classrooms and offices. The facilities w ill be distributed throughout three levels ar d a basement. A COURTYARD arrangement w ill connect the build­ ings. The complex, slated for completion by July, 1969, was designed by the Phoenix architectural firm of Guirey, Smka and Arnold. J JOINT TENANTS — The College of Architecture, right and the Department of Art w ill occupy a block-long complex which is slated for completion by July, 1969. De­ signed by Guirey-, Srnka and Arnold of Phoenix, the buildings cover a total of 113 000 square feet. ’ Dean Dannenfeldt To Succeed Castle Dr. Karl H. Dannenfeldt, dean of the College of Liber­ al Arts, was appointed academic vice-president last week by University President G. Homer Durham. Thursday, July 27, 1967 Tempe, Arizona Dannenfeldt succeeds Dr. Gordon B. Castle who re­ cently asked to be relieved of his administrative duties for health reasons. Castle w ill return to teaching in the Zoo­ logy Department. D A N N E N F E L D T has been the dean of the Col­ lege of Liberal Arts, the t University’s 1a r g e st college, since 1963. Previously he had toon feature, “Alakazam the aska Earthquake of 1964," (see served here as a professor of G reat,” featuring die voices of story, col. 3) and “Degree ol history since 1956. Frankie Avalon, Didie Stevens Law and the Pursuit of Happi­ He taught at Elmira College, and Jonathan Winters. Hie ness,” by Dean Willard Ped- Elmira, N.Y., from 1948 to 1956, film is a winner of die Parent’s rick of the.new Law College, on as a faculty member in the de­ Magazine Family Medal Award. Thursday, Aug. 3. Each buffet partment of history, and from It will begin a t 7:30 p.m. in the costs $1.25. 1952 to 1956, as head of the divi­ MU Ballroom. A weekly “Coffee and . . .” sion of social sciences, before A tour to die facilities of the will be held in the Pagoda Room joining the Arizona State facul­ Moimtain States Telephone Com­ of the MU on Wednesday from tyDr. Dannenfeldt pany will leave die front of the 8:40 to 10:30 a.m. Dannenfeldt’s academic de­ MU a t 2:30 p.m. Tuesday. The grees include a bachelor of arts annual publication which is is­ ★ ★ ★ junket will include a look at re­ from Valparaiso University, a sued jointly with the German lay c o n n e c dons, television master of arts from Indiana Society for Reformation His­ phones and other technical as­ University, and a doctor of phil­ tory. pects : of the communications . osophy from the University of The new vice-president has system. The tour will be guided Chicago. conducted extensive research on by a phone company engineer. HE IS an immediate past- Leonhard Rauwolf, and his Cost will be 75 cents to cover president of the American Soci­ manuscript concerning the six­ Slides and a lecture on “Hie transportation expenses. G r e a t Alaska Earthquake of ety for Reformation Research teenth-century scientist has been Lecture-luncheons will include 1964” will be presented by Dr. and since 1963 has been Amer­ accepted for publication by the a talk today on “H ie G reat Al- Troy L. Pewe, chairman of the ican editor of the society’s semi- Harvard University Press. ° SUMMER SESSION No. 6 ARIZONA STATE UMVOSITY Fftns, Talks, Tour . . . MU Activities in High Gear Movies, lecture-luncheons, a tour and a coffee get-together will keep the MU bustling with activity this week. A motion picture, "H ie Old Dark House," starring Tom Poston, will be shown free of charge at 7:30 p.m. in the MU Ballroom tonight mid tomorrow. Hie movie is based on J. B. Priestly’s novel, and provides a mixture of comedy and mystery intrigue. Poston {days a car salesman who delivers a new auto to “the old dark house" and becomes involved in a murder plot. Robert Morley, Janette Scott and Joyce Gren­ fell are cast in supporting roles. MAinoo laofiiitA ^— *- On Monday evening, the MU will present a children’s car­ i.. b * • . TOTAL DESTRUCTION — Dr. Troy Pewe, head of the Geology Department, took this aerial photo the day after the great Alaska earthquake of 1964. This and other pic­ tures w ill be shown when he presents a talk today at the MU’s weekly lecture-luncheon. Expert to Discuss Alaska 'Quake' Geology Department, a t a lec­ ture-luncheon today at 12:15 in the MU Ballroom. Pewe, who was present at the time of die disaster, will des­ cribe the greatest change of the earth’s crust ever observed in an historic earthquake — about 75,000 square miles were uplift­ ed or depressed. * The quake was so intense that it was felt over an area of more than a million square miles. Huge landslides and tidal waves over 200 feet high caused mil­ lions of dollars in property dam­ age and cost many lives. Pewe was the former head of the geology department at the University of Alaska before joining the faculty here in 1965. He spent a number of years studying arctic and antarctic phenomenal in the polar regions. Recently Pewe returned from field work in Central Alaska and was present a t the time of the second greatest recorded earth­ quake in the Fairbanks area which occurred June 21. The public is invited to the buffet. Cost will be $1.25. H ip e st H ip p ie G uru W ill D o H is T h in g ' Dr. Timothy Leary, self-proclaimed prophet of psy­ chedelia, w ill get a chance to “do his thing” for the Uni­ versity’s hippie colony via a film, “Turn On, Tune In, Drop Out,” which w ill begin a three-day run at Grady Gammage Auditorium next week. The middle-aged flower child, who dropped out of the Harvard faculty last year, advocates the mass use of hallucinogenic drugs such as LSD (lysergic acid diethy­ lamide) and STP (5-methoxy-NN-dimethyltryptamme). THE GAMMAGE showing w ill be the state’s premier of the motion picture which has been hailed by some as a message from a messiah. In a recent issue of Time Magazine, however, an article on the hippie movement stated, “Timothy Leary, a former Harvard psychologist who coined th? ‘Time In, Turn On, Drop Out’ slogan central to the hippie philosophy, was once a major guru (spiritual leader) but has lately fallen into disfavor with a large majority of hippies, who feel that he is trying too hard to ‘put his trip’ on everyone.” “Turn On, Tune In, Drop Out,” w ill be presented Aug. 2, 3 and 4, starting at 7:30 p.m. each evening. General admission tickets, priced at $2, are on sale at the Gam­ mage box office. P ag * 2 SUMMER STATE PRESS Thursday, July 27, 1967 Student Plans Rapid Raft Trip When most University students are recovering from final exams next month, one stalwart soul will be bouncing down 250 miles of Colorado River rapids in a 23-foot raft. And there’s still time for as many as 16 more interested, brave and slightly balmy students to sign up for the story-book adventure trip. ABOUT A MONTH ago, Everett K. Gibson, a graduate student in chemistry, got his first taste of Grand Canyon river water. Literally. He shot the famed Colorado rapids between Lee’s Ferry and Lake Mead with 25 other students and a sea­ soned river-runner. Now he wants to do it again. “If you like adventure, this trip is a great place for it,” Gibson says. “It’s really not a strenuous trip, but there’s enough rough water to get in your blood and make you want to go back and try it a second tim e.” THE GRAND CANYON — A rubber raft is dwarfed by the soaring, verticle walls of the canyon. In places, the cliffs reach heights of 7,000 feet above the Colorado rapids. sfafe0pre9s Classified For classified advertising submit ad in person to the State Press, M U 3# be­ tween 9 and 12 a.m., or call 966- 3656. Rate: 5c per word# 75c minimum per issue.. SERVICES T Y P IN G — 967-3036. 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 off research proposals, dissertations, and reports including statistical analysis of data. Write: Mr. F. L. Whitney, P.O. Box 3063, Scottsdale, Arizona 85237. Phone: 275-1462. Q U A L IF IE D 2448. typing. Near campus. 967- T Y P IN G , guaranteed, reasonable. IB M elite. 211 E. 14th St., Tempe. 966-7848. E X P E R IE N C E D — Term papers, thesis, general typing. Have electric IBM. Phone Mrs. Daniels, 969-0973. T Y P IN G : Neat and accurate. 946-1149. HOUSING C O L L E G E IN N —Opening Sept. 10. Fin­ est living facilities for University men. Excellent meals prepared by College Inn. M aid service# recreation rooms. Model room available for inspection at 401 E. Apache Blvd. $820 to $1#170 per year on yearly# semester or monthly basis. FOR SALE "B R O W S E R S W ELCO M ED, buyers adored." Complete selection off paper­ back books for all classes. H ill's Books & Records, Tempe Center,' 967-5243. SU N D E V IL S P E C IA L — Free car wash with every stereo tape purchased. $44.44 solid state 4-trac auto stereo. Use your Shell Oil or Valley National Bank credit card. Located in Thomas Road Car Wash, 4119 E. Tffiomas Rd. . S W IM S U IT & S K I S W E A T E R S A L E . G irl's French swim suits. Size 10 and 12. Aten's and g irls' Scandanavlan ski sweaters. A ll sizes. Salesm an's samples at cost. Shown by appointment. Call 9486186. INSTRUCTION IN D IV ID U A L tutoring in math, phys­ ics, chemistry and biological sciences. 967-7924. ON THE FIRST trip, eight of the adventurers were girls, one a 55-year-old woman. The initial phase of the watery junket will be­ gin at Lee’s Ferry on August 21 and conclude (hopefully) at Phantom Ranch in the bottom of the Grand Canyon three days later. The second part of the trip will begin at the ranch and « id ' ten days later at Lake Mead. Along the way, adventurers will see such cur­ iosities as dinosaur tracks, human skeletons, abandoned boats and mines and, of course, the spectacular Grand Canyon from the bottom up. They will sleep « 1 sandbars a t night and shoot some of America’s toughest white water during the day. “THE COLORADO is one of file most difficult rivers to run,” Gibson says. “Rapids are rated on a scale of 1 to 10 and this stretch of the river has between 12 and 15 rapids in the 9 to 10 cate- gory. On the last trip, we hit a rock and lost power in the raft’s motor. We had no way of maneuvering and had to go through one rapid backwards.” The group will join up with an equal number of people from Utah and together will fill about three or four 28-33 foot rafts. The entire conting­ ent will be under the guidence of John Cross, one of the ten approved river-runners on the Col­ orado. Cross has die reputation of being the only one never to have overturned a raft in 17 years of shooting the rapids. He has run most of die major rivers in North America. GIBSON SAYS that Cross is offering special student rates for the trip. The cost for the first part of the run is $100. The journey from Phan tom Ranch to Lake Mead is $150. The entire trip from Lee’s Ferry to Lake Mead, including all meals on the river, is $250. Interested individuals must provide their own transportation to the point of disembarkation in the rafts. The only equipment needed is regular camping gear, according to Gibson. A meeting will be held before the group leaves. Movies will be shown of the previous trip and the fledgling adventurers will be told what to take and what to expect. For further information, con­ tact Gibson in PS C-143 or C-160, or call 966-7337. Piano Recital, Lecture Close Festival Arizona Dr. Donald Isaak, University pianist and associate professor of music, w ill be presented in a Festival Arizona program at 8:15 p.m. on Tuesday in the MU Ballroom. The performance w ill include a Beethoven sonata, a g ro u p o f M endelssohn’s “S ongs W ith o u t W ords,” tw o in term ezzo s a n d a rhapsody by Brahms, “Reflec- UNEXPECTED SHOWER — Members of Gibson’s first tions in the Water” and “Gard­ excursion are drenched by the pounding Colorado River rapids. Seconds after this picture was taken, Gibson’s ens in the Rain” by Debussy. . Isaak will conclude the pro- camera was smashed by a roaring deluge of water. The H H H |k gram with a group of works by film, however, remained intact. J Chopin, including two etudes, a nocturne and a scherzo. The program is free to the public. Next week, Edward M. Keatcontroversial founder and \ % former publisher of Ramparts < ® i '• * <'? H Magazine, will lecture on “A Several student service offices have moved into the old HI gH Radical’s View of America.” . y M The nationally known critic Matthews Library building in order to accomodate ad; |C '' M and lecturer, who is author of a minimtrative expansion and still keep the offices in the jjy P L •' book entitled “The Scandal of same general area. F in a n cia l A ids, D ean of silence,” will talk in Grady S tu d en ts, a n d A ssociate million dollar complex around Dr. Isaak Gammage Auditorium. Dean of Students offices have the start of the second semester already been moved. Counsell­ next year. ing services will be relocated During the last few months in Matthews when the Law Col­ Matthews, now officially “Mat­ lege moves into its new multi- thews Cent«-,” has been the home of the Law College library Thursday -Lecture-luncheon, “The Great Alaska Earthand a collection of skeletons July 27 quake of 1964,” featuring Dr. Troy Pewe at belonging to the Anthropology 12:15 p.m. in the MU Ballroom. Department. Movie, “The Old Dark House,” starring Tom Mrs. Cecelia Scoular, director Poston at 7:30 p.m. in the MU Ballroom. of the MU, will move her office Friday —Movie, “The Old Dark House,” starring Tom About 1,800 freshmen and into the space vacated by the Poston at 7:30 p.m. in the MU Ballroom. transfer students are expected Associate Dean of Students. D r.. Monday —Movie, “Alakazam the Great,” a cartoon feature to register this morning for the Roy Rice, dean of the summer at 7:30 p.m. in the MU Ballroom. fall term during the last special session, will move into the of­ Tuesday —Tour to Mountain States Telephone Company fices formerly occupied by the summer enrollment program. August 1 leaves front of the MU a t 2:30 p.m. Dean of Students. More than 600 students took Pi Lambda Theta luncheon at 12:30 p.m. in advantage of the first sign up Pagoda Room of the MU. SIMÌAMBR session on June 29. Faculty piano recital featuring Dr. Donald Isaak All new freshmen are requir­ 8 t a t e 0 p n e a e at 8:15 p.m. in the MU Ballroom. ed to have a chest X-ray if they Arizona Stalo U nlvarsity, Tampa, A ria n a Wednesday—Film, “Turn On, Time In, Drop Out,” at 7:30 intend to register for more than p.m. in Grady Gammage Auditorium. Editar W IL L IA M S. THOMAS six hours. This can be complet­ "Coffee and . . .” at 8:40 to 10:30 a.m. in Tha Sommar stata Frate la puMMiad ed today, without cost, from 11 Pagoda Room of the MU. tha auspica* et ttw Sommar Sas­ a.m. to 4 p.m. at the Student andar sion and Extansian Dlvitian, haadad by Daan R a t C. Elea. Health Service. Student Service Offices Relocate into Matthews CALENDAR 7,800 Frosh Will Register