No. 7 Thursday» August 3, 1967 \ Tempe, Arizona Greeks Gird for Rush ’ Fraternity rush w ill begin in earnest during thè next month as blazer-clad Greeks extend the “glad hand” to a record 700 potential pledges. The informal phase of the rushing program, generally consisting of pool parties, house tours and individual sales pitches, w ill continue until the regular rush week, Sept. finished early in January. The charter class w ill begin studies in Sep­ tember, using facilities at Matthews Center until their permanent home is completed. ■ fl ■ ■■ ■ Law Dean to Lecture Dr. Willard Pedrick, dean of the University’s new Law College, w ill speak on “The Study of Law and the Pursuit of Happiness” at the last lecture-luncheon of the summer at 12:15 pm . today in the MU Ballroom. Describing the pursuit of happiness as the right to live fruitful, pro­ ductive and satisfying lives, Pedrick w ill indicate that providing à frame­ work for this is one of the functions of the government. There are, however, individuals and groups who feel, with some reason, that they don’t have a decent opportunity to share in a highly productive economic sys­ tem, he said The study of the law is demanding, grueling, and hardly in itself the epitome of happiness. Yet, it lets young men and women enter a profession, the objective of which is to enable all members of soci­ ety to have a better chance to realize the American dream, according to Pedrick. In the lecture, he will discuss the new Law College, describ­ ing the faculty, enrollment and physical plant. He also will in­ dicate how the College can help enlarge the capacity of the state and country to provide trained professionals for counseling, ad­ vising and representing clients. THE INTER-fratemity Council sent out 3,600 rush booklets last week in an effort to encourage early registration of rushees, thereby expanding the informal part of the program. Rush week scheduling will be much the same as in recent years, with an orientation assembly, open houses, smokers and preference parties highlighting the weeks’ activities. The usual bevy of attractive coeds, scrubbed : Special fraternity houses, chapter scrap-books and casual banter will be in evidence as the Greeks vie to Report attract the best crop of pledges. A NEW RULING on minimum grade averages for rushees is expected to improve the academic quality of pledges, according to Barry McBan, IFC rush chairman. Entering freshmen must have a 2.5 average or have been in the upper half of their high school graduating class. Transfer students m ust have a 2.0 accumulative, a id continuing students must either h av e'a 2.0 for (he previous sem ester or a 2.0 accumulative. “The rule will cause the quality of men to improve in the near future,” McBan said. “There’s no question about that. Also, more men will be going active.” The 20 fraternities on campus offer a variety of progrems ranging from social activities to academics, community service and intram ural athletics. SOCIAL FUNCTIONS, the badebone of the Greek system, in­ clude boondockers, fraternity-sorority exchanges, Greek Week, Sig­ ma Chi’s Derby Day, T.G.I.F. parties and holiday formals. “Some people seem to think the Greeks spend more time drinking beer than studying,” McBan said. “That just isn’t so. Every house has study tables four or five nights each week for its pledges. The IFC grade average has always been higher than the all-mens average.” LAST SEMESTER the fraternities came closer than ever before to seeing that record tarnished. They hardy edged out the men’s index, 2.36 to 2.34. The greeks, however, did their diare of community service last year, climaxing their collective efforts by providing a recrea­ tion area for Guadelupe, an impoverished community south of Phoenix. Fraternities and sororities united to clear playgrounds, put up picnic benches and renovate battered facilities. The Coca Cola Coop, has given the IFC a $500 grant to continue the work next Spring. -------------------- Sean Connery Appears In MU Film, The Hill' Sean, Connery, the super-cool secret agent of James Bond fame, w ill step out of his stereotyped 007 role to star in a semi-art film , “The Hill,” at 7:30 tonight and tomor­ row evening in the MU Ballroom. The motion picture centers around the inhumane con­ ditions in a desert prison camp for British soldiers who have committed wartime discipline infractions. “The Hill” is a study in the mental reactions of men who are being driven beyond their physical capabilities. The movie is free to students, staff and faculty. Other MU activities this week w ill include a tour to Taliesin West, the home and workshop of the late archi­ tect, Frank Lloyd W right Wright designed tine Grady Gammage Auditorium and the Phi Delta Theta fraternity house on the University campus. The tour w ill leave the front of the MU in an airconditioned bus at 2:30 Tuesday afternoon. The weekly “Coffee a n d . . . ” get-together w ill be held as usual from 8:40 to 10:30 Wednesday morning in the MU’S Pagoda Room. Ü WHAT’S WITH HIM? — “No Time for Sergeants,” a rollicking comedy by Ira Levin, w ill be presented by the University Players on Aug. 11 and 12. Above, "nrs**!? (Kathy Hurley and Sybil Davis) chuckle as Private Will Stockdale (Charles Evans) salutes them and nearly everyone else he meets during induction process. Tickets are now on sale at the Lyceum box office, 966-3437, or may be obtained on nights of performances at Grady Gammage Auditorium. - SUMMER STATE PRESS T h u rsd ay , A u g u st 3, 1967 Progress — Education College Will Double Two construction projects, which will double the present facilities of the College of Education, are scheduled to begin in November, according to John R. Ellingson, director of planning and construction. The construction will include two new buildings and several covered walkways linking the College’s facilities. H ie largest of the new structures (below) will be located on Forest Avenue a t the west end of Orange Street, and will include classrooms, labs and offices. / The second of the proposed buildings (left) will be a 500-seat lecture hall, located a t the southwest cor­ ner of the present College of Education structure. The new buildings will cost an estim ated $1,838,000 and are slated for completion by November, 1968. Dr. Peek Named Dean O f liberal Arts College A maCDBHaEy-recognized sc h o la r w ho has serv ed as n ee h e re fo r th e p a st th re e y e a rs w ill, erection o f th e U n iv e rsity ’s la rg e st college on 1. Ete. George. A . P eek , J r., h a s b een ap p o in ted d ean of L ib e ra l A rts —------------------------------ ------fcçr Ehòein"igfj President G. than 1,000 students each semest­ er. DT. Karl K He also received a national « a s recently citation horn the American Bar vice-pres- Association for his National Edu­ B w u â t f after the cational Television series about of Gordon the Bill of Rights. A frequent contributor to pro­ fessional publications, Ik . Peek is also the author of “The Pol­ itical Writings of John Adams,” published in 1954. s ta f e 0 p r e a « Keating In, Leary Out at Gammage Radical Publisher To Talk Tuesday A Peek, Jr. Jks af tile Umverscienee to 1964, Dr. m instructor won two in teach[ directed in politienroiled more Picks hGMiAicheiy 5 Devils named s n spots on Women’s was anbjr the NaC s l l e g i a t e Archery in phywas named to position on the unprecedented She received her first the only to have AB-Amerarchers Swanlund (4), Gris Baud Susan i selection in colthe The corifroversial founder and former publisher of Ramparts magazine, Edward M. Keating, will lecture on “A Radical’s View of America,” at 8:15 p.m. Tuesday in Grady Gammage Auditorium. Keating is a graduate of Stan­ ford University and author of “The Scandal of Silence,” a book published in 1965 by Ran­ dom House. That same year he won the Beth Am Ethical Ac­ tions award as “an outstanding leader in the area of social jus­ tice, through action and the spoken and written word.” He also was the 1964 recipient of the Penisula Council of B’nai B’riths Brotherhood Award for “outstanding contribution to the cause of brotherhood of peoples of all faiths and creeds.” No seats will be reserved for tiie lecture, but general admis­ sion tickets, priced at $1, will be cm sale at the Gammage Au­ ditorium box office. Indian Newsmen Plan Pow-wow A journalism workshop for In­ dians will be sponsored by the University’s Indian Community Action Project on Aug. 22 and 23 in Albuquerque, N.M. Pueblo, Apache and Navajo editors in New Mexico will meet a t the University of New Mexico for the two-day training period. The program is a follow-up for the journalism workshop held here last winter. — . Edward M. Keating SU M M ER Arizona state UnlvarxHy, Tum pt, Arizona Editor W IL L IA M S. T H O M A S Tbu Sum m er State Prose to published under the auspices e l tbu Som m er Ses­ sion and Extension D ivisio n , headed by Dean R a y C. Rica. Arts Board Nixes 'Drop Out7 Movie The Dr. Timothy Leary film Qpnceming experiments w i t h LSD, “Turn On, Tune In, Drop Out,” has been cancelled, ac­ cording to David Scoular, chair­ man of the University perform­ ing arts board. The film performances h a d been scheduled for 7:30 p.m. Aug. 2 through Aug. 4 a t the Grady Gammage Memorial Au­ ditorium. After viewing the film, mem­ bers of the performing a r t s board who are on campus dur­ ing the summer concluded that “it is not the kind of entertain­ ment normally presented in a center for* the performing arts, such as Gammage Auditorium.” The committee also felt that the film “has certain clinical implications, and its showing should be presented with clin­ ical observations and discus­ sions by qualified commenta- CALEN DAR j | Thursday —Movie, “The Hill,” starring Sean Connery, at !| August 3 7:30 p.m. in MU Ballroom. Lecture-luncheon, “The Study of Law and the Pursuit of Happiness,” featuring Dr. Willard Pedrick, at 12:15 p.m. in the MU Ballroom. I Friday —Movie, “The Hill,” starring Sean Connery, at 7:30 p.m. in MU Ballroom. i Tuesday —Tour to Taliesin West leaves the front of the 1 MU a t 2:30 p.m. Lecture, “The Scandal of Silence,” featuring Edward Keating, at 8:15 p.m. in Grady Gam­ mage Auditorium. I Wednesday—“Coffee and . . from 8:40 to 10:30 a.m. in Pagoda Room of the MU. 1 Classified F o r c la n iflo d advertisin g subm it M In parson to tlw Stata Prosa, M U 1, be­ tween a and 12 a .m „ o r ca ll w m R ata: Sc par w ord, 75c m inim um pur Issue.. • SERV IC ES T Y P IN G — 967-3036. P A L M IS T R Y R E A D IN G and a d visin g?*»*' Love, m arriage and business. $1.00 per reodlng with this ad. 964-9807. M rs. Romona. Located on Highw ay 60-70, Mesa. 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 0 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. - W rite: M r. p. L. W hitney, 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 IB M . Phone M rs. Danlals, 969-0973. T Y P IN G : Neat and accurate. 946-1149. IN D IV ID U A L tutoring in math, phys­ ics, chem istry and biological sciences. 967-7924. • H O U S IN G C O L L E G E IN N — Opening Sept. 10. Fin ­ est livin g facilities for University men. Excellent m eals prepared by College Inn. M aid service, recreation rooms. Model room available tar inspection at 401 E. Apache Blvd. $820 to $1,170 per year on yearly, sem ester or monthly basis. W A N T E D M ale roommate to share large, com fortable apartm ent this fall. Serious student desired. C all Ren, 967-9367. • HELP W A N T E D M O N E Y M A K IN G opportunity In your spare time. Age 21 end over. 947-6448. • FOR SALE "B R O W S E R S W ELCO M ED, buyers ad o red." Com plete selection of paper­ back books fo r a ll classes. H IH 's Bocks l< Records, Tem ps Cantor, 967-5243. S W IM S U IT & S K I S W E A T E R S A L E . G ir l's French sw im suite. Size 10 and 12. M e n 's and g ir ls ' Scandanavlan ski sw eaters. A H sixes. Sale sm an 's sam ples a t coat. Shown by appointm ent. C a ll 9486186. .moewi isDoafi^i g UM '