■>%**:*: ARIZONA STATI UNIVERSITY S i Vol. 51, No. 43 Wednesday, December 11, 1968 Tempe, Arizona Durham interprets role o f MU board By JANE SIMS President Durham dis­ counted demands of the MU Advisory Board last week for equal representa­ tion and policy-advisory power over t|ie union bud­ get and staff. Settling a month-long c o n t r o v e r s y over the board’s role and member­ ship, Durham spelled out the powers of the MU board in a two-page letter to Dr. John E. Bell, chair­ man. He reaffirmed the board’s role as “advisory” and em­ phasized that the MU board doesn’t have the power to determine buget items or staffing. “As an all University in­ stitution, it is important that the board has repre­ sentation as presently con­ stituted — 11 faculty and staff, nine students and two alumni,” Durham said membership and functions would change next year. He just didn’t want to upset it now.” Another disputed portion of the .resolution concern­ ing the board’s role in MU budget matters was clari­ fied in Durham’s statement. His statement said, “H ie board does hpt have author­ ity to determine budget items or to dictate budget decisions.” Once a year, it continued, the d i r e c t o r could report on the broad aspects of the budget. If the MU board isn’t eventually granted policy­ making power and equal * representation, O l d h a m proposed that students vote to lower the student activ- V ât a«» PVtovo toy Dave G urzm kv ON AGAIN, OFF AGAIN — The fountain on the Mall was on temporarily Monday afternoon before being shut down again. Officials said that the fountain was being tested—for the second time. Shields seeks election reform ÎÉ s tof renwwf the ■ “I am truly ashamed by the lack of schools would be another step forward — faith of so many in the world of a created for them!” right to do our b est” (?) “What is wrong with our human race? “You have only to look and listen to Is there no decency left? . . . Instead of our the riots, rebellion, revolution and disre­ children talking Christmas this year, Editor’s Note: The following letter was sent to a gard for God and His book to see what the they’ll be asking ‘Mother and Dad, what University coed by a serviceman stationed in Vietnam; school system is doing for our children . . . is sex deviation?’ ” serves to remind us that not everyone is happy during God says the teaching of sex is the right “ . . . these professional educators need It this holiday season. of the parent. We are shirking our duty some treatments in a mental hospital Is when w e let some unknown person use up this what the Great Society stands for? our right We feel this is another wedge Don’t w e haive enough babies bom out of • The 14th of December is off, so is the 15th through the Godless Communists are using to sep­ wedlock on our welfare payroll? And how tiie 31st and the 1st through the 31st of January. I’m arate the fam ily unity.” about the rate of venereal disease?” “We guess the theory of these Com­ “This sex training that has suddenly leaving for Vietnam on or about the last of December. I munist perverts . . . is that if the youth become so im portant. . . is no more or less got the word last Monday, so there goes Christmas and have no morals, they w ill have no love of than the diabolical plans of Communism to New Year’s. I have serious doubts about toe whole sit­ God and country either . . . Let’s clean destroy our youth. It was planned years, uation. I was hoping I could avoid going for obvious rea­ house and get rid of this scum on the ago to be brought in where they got our sons, but now I have to appease my beliefs and take part school board before it’s too late . . .” country, parents and youth degenerated, -in a war in which w e are wrong. I have to give serious “I don’t even think w e need sex educa­ to a certain stage to receive it . . . God thought to thin tion in junior high or high school . . . if have mercy on us all when our schools be­ I have no idea when I w ill get home. I know it w ill w e endorse such a program, (we) are gin to put but graduated prostitutes.” not be before I go, so Merry Christmas and Happy New training our children to be prostitutes and “No, I do not think children should see Year. I can’t remember when I wanted to get home as homosexuals.” this kind of matter at their early age. In bad as thia The world is full of sick, sick people, so I “It looks to me the Arizona education the last tw o years of high school or college. guess you’ll have to count m e out for the holidays. system at all levels should be cleaned up. (Maybe) But I’m 60 years old, and when In addition to that there are campus riots I married I knew very little about sex (at I wish to hell people would stop toying w ith my and rebellions. The proper way to handle 20) but God in Heaven gives us wisdom mind and person. AH I want to do is get back to school that is to fire the professors and teachers to do what comes naturally.” and start doing my own thing. It’s bad when you get and close the schools.” handled by people you don’t know, for things you don’t “We as parents w ill never permit this (hie mother called the American to re­ believe in, for objectives that are ambiguous. If I maH«. ugly way of teaching sex to reach our late that her sixth grade son, after pex plans for tomorrow, that would be pushing tilings . . . so children if w e can help it.” classes, demanded the right to go camping — later. “A ll children should be warned that in the mountains. “My sexual glands .are >“Can anything be more ridiculous than that a there are people who would harm them, acting up and I need outdoor relaxation man should have the right to kill me because he and never to let anyone talk dirty or han­ and exercise,” he explained. Another par­ lives on to e other side of toe water, and because dle them in any manner, this includes ent said at a school board meeting, ‘‘F ot his ruler has a quarrel w ith mine?” relatives.” all I know the teacher may be a homo­ Pascal " . . . after having an hour in sex edu­ sexual.” cation class every day, a child is not likely A ll this protest frustrated one admihisto spend the rest of the day concentrating trator so much that he complained: “Many on math etc. His young mind w ill dwell on people have asked us to warn the c|iilone tiling — sex.” dren of the dangers of venereal disease, “I feel this is a Communistic move to but how can w e do that without explain­ degrade and demoralize our American ing how you get it? It doesn’t leap out of i The London Times, perhaps foreseeing the criticisms children. I believe sex is one of the beau­ the walls at you.” Well, that’s one way to of supposed “subversive activities” at ASU, recently of­ tiful .things God intended for people if w e explain i t fered a foolproof formula for student revolt: use it in that way, but I fe d the people With Christmas vacation approaching, several thousand students of sociology and behind this program is (sic) m a k in g a fil­ readers should clip these excerpts and mix make them attend lectures in 8 hail that holds a hundred. thy, dirty mess out of i t ” them with holiday fruit punch or bake T ell them that even if they pass their examinations there “Let the teachers stick to twn*ing the them into a fruitcake. w ill probably be no jobs for them. Surround them with :S society that does not practice what it preaches and is S - ^ t i c a l P81^®8 Ütot do not represen t the atu- Christmas in Vietnam Formula for revolt “T e ll them to think about what fo wrong w ith aocf* Editor David Anderson Managing Editor Dave Gurzenski Weekend Editors- Campus Editor Edythe Edgar .Larry Roes Copy Editors. Terry Ross -Jerry Focus Editor. Editorial Assistant._____ Marde ftirift Asst Campus Editor. Ad Manager— -------------- Hal Hubele Asst Sports Editor. Mechanical Compositor___ Tom McCrea News Editor Atta Hardt Sports Editor Jackson Piloto Etitor Tom Wheeler -Elliott Ferritt MÿraaSevey George Thorne Jane Stans -Carri Blade Faculty Adviser Prof. Robert E. Lance bow to put it right A s soon as they become ac­ tively inteceated m toe subject -send in tiie police to beat them up. Then rtSnd weR clear o f the bang and affect an attitude of confused surprise” Robert Hutchins afrifrctine more suggestion: **Pay no attention to rearonaa||a(É|[uests quietly presented.” Id fg y aartremiste in (his area who screamed for President Durham’s hide after the laundry protests would compare student conduct here w ith that at S a n Francisco State College, they would find they have little to own* plain about * Whatever its failings, ASU*s administration isn ’t as dull-witted as tiie London Times’ theoretical administra­ tors who create the condition» for revolt. 11 P ig e CALENDAR Good news for Sun Devils All (ln««tina notice# sh o u ld b e su b m itted th r e e d a y s p rio r to th e d a te e t publication to assu re th e ir ap p e a ra n c e in th e calen d ar. Today , Dr. Troy L. Pewe, geology professor will pre­ sent an Illustrated lecture on “Glacial Geology of South Victoria Landi Antarctica,” a t 3:30 this afternoon. Faculty Wives Newcomers will have a Christ­ m as decoration demonstration a t their 7:30 p.m. Alumni House meeting. Tomorrow Society for the Advancement of Management, tour of AiResearch a t 3 p.m. Pop-Up film, “Man-Made Man” and “Mystery of Life” a t 11:30 a jn . and 12:30 p.m. tat the MU lower lounge. Anthropology lecture by Richard Reger on “Evidence for a Late Pleistocene of Early Holo­ cene L ate Near Winona, Arizona” a t 3:30 p.m. in Ag 150. ' Symphonic Band concert a t Grady Ganunage Auditorium a t 8:30 p.m. ■ 4> n in e f o | Students try to guest useless device function Professor em eritus A. D. Moore of the University of Mich­ igan demonstrated to a group of University students last Friday that design is not merely desk work using paper and pencil, but a dynamic, creative process of hypothesis and testing. Using an absolutely useless de­ vice, because as he said, “I like useless things once in a while,” Dr. Moore tested the students by asking them to explain the de­ vice. Dr. Moore spoke to the students on behalf of the free educational service from the Dbtroft Edison G k,‘ A program ' m ...... to stim ulate interest in science wr„ I, f mm------x i vi* flHWre and engineering. In his lecture, he gave the students information to help person in Ms lectures ever them figure out how the device came dose to guessing bow the worked, including the fe d tin t device with dial and wires Arizona received statehood in worked. Moore, one of the tour men in 1912. After 45 minutes the students the world who has experimented stffl had not guessed correctly with the machine, which be how it worked, and Dr.. calls the world’s simplest elec­ Moore said, “It you feel lost tromechanical device,, also en­ and helpless that’s all right, be­ couraged tiie sudents to “get cause that’s going to. happen to into the a d ” with their own you all your life.” * hands and tools and m ate ap­ He explained that only one paratuses themselves. ¡ÉÉSlvÇil’èiT'I Whenever you're off and flying in Western America, Western Airlines offers you a way to save money. ~ Lots of it. If you haven’t reached your 22nd birthday and v hold an Airline Youth Identification Card (available from Western o r any other airline), you’re set for flying on a standby basis. It’s a rare flight where you’ll be left standing by, but you save 5 0 % . That’s one-half off the regular Coach fare. In other words, you can. fly round trip for the price of one way. ANCHORAGE So whenever you’re headed home or off to a KING KEÑAI^GOROOVA big game, go with Western. All over the map. 1SALMON''HOMER [KODIAK linrtE inux lexl YAKUTAT JUNEAU F o r in fo rm a tio n , c a ll o u r c a m p u s rep., J im G o o te e , a t 279-3688 a fte r 4:30 P .M . KETCHIKAN ÇALGARY/BANFF lori !VANCOUVER MINNEAP0LIS/ ST. PAUL I GREAT FALLS helénaL SEATTLÇ/TACOMA, PORTLAND! BUTTE ft W I N G S W. YELLOWSTONE W t IDAHO FALLS! SHERIDAN' POCATELLO/ -PIERRE.. "SIOUX FALLS CHEYENNE' SACRAMENTO SAN FRANCISCO f OAKLAND^ rDENVER JLAS VEGAS^ / LOS ANGELÉ os A NGELESuwflKJpALM SPRI1NGS LONG B ^sSfjjA R K K PH C PHOENIX SAN DIEGO Natural Shoulder Shop CRICKETEER GANT CORBIN “ LONOOFFQO a LEV» ; JANTZEN HARTOG JOCKEY OFEN: MON.-THU. 4 FRI. NIGHTS PALM BEACH Va n h e u s e n 417 JOHNSTON & MURPHY IM NDBREAKEtf v CANTERBURY > THANE A CACTUS CASUALS A-1 TAPERS W EST ER N A K U N E S THOMAS MALL 9S 84M 20 now more than ever— the only way to fly TUXEDO RENTALS INTERNATIONAL MEXICO .CITY ACAPULCO Wednesday, Dec. 11 — P*ge.^ A t C o lo ra d o — Sports Gymnasts find success Arizona State’s gymnastics team got off to a fast, start last weekend by placing three men among the top five in a f ­ ferent events at the Rocky Mountain Open in Boulder, Colo. Seniors Darryl Bair and John Price took third places in the all-around comoetition and the still rings, respectively. Blair had a 47.90 in the allaround, competing despite an arthritic condition in his el­ bows. Price had a 9.0 out of a poss­ ible 10.0 score to capture his third place medal. The other Sun Devil finisher was freshman Dan Smith, who took a fifth place on the still rings with a score of 8.95- Smith also finished just out of the running in the all-around com­ petition with a score of 43.575. Robinson also said that he was real proud of his team ’s showing, as they were compet­ ing against 60 athletes in pvery event from all the WAC schools, some Big Eight schools,: plus top independents Denver Uni­ versity and the Air Force Actn demy. Classified P ar classified advertising submit ad In person to the State P ress, Old BA 301, two days In advance ef publication, from >:00 a.m . la 3:30 p.m „ call til-3057. Rata: Sc p ar «ford, 75c minimum. Photo by Larry Ross GYMNASTICS WINNERS — These three gymnasts (top to bottom), John Price, Dan Smith and Darryl Bair, topk medals at the Rocky Mountain Open gym­ nastics meet in Boulder, Colo., last weekend. Bair took honors on the still rings and all-around-, Price on the rings and Smith on the rings. Grapplers lose to Wyoming; beat Long Beach State, 3 5 - 0 Coach Ted Bredehoft’s grapplers “redeemed themselves a little” Monday night, beating Long Beach State, 35-0, a n d dropping a vlose 18-14 decision* to Wyoming in a double dual meet in Sun Devil Gym. Top performer for the Sun Devil wrestlers was Dick Thompson at 177 pounds. Thompson pinned Hans Albrecht of Long Beach in the second pe­ riod and came back a half hour later to put Gordon Cramer of Wyoming on his back in the third period. “An interesting thing about Cramer of Wyoming is that he wrestled heavyweight last year, and Curley Culp never pinned him. Thompson looked just great,” Bredehoft said. Bredehoft said the turning point in the Wyoming meet came when Dan Churchill lost to Gary Hill of the Cowboys in the 160-pound division on a 5-2 decision. “Dan should have neyer lost that match. With that win we could have won the m eet,” the coach continued. The only other Devil to win both his matches was heavy­ weight Rick CahiU, who decisioned Wyoming’s Dennis Alf 11-5 and won by forfeit over Long Beach, which didn’t have a man for that weight. The Devils’ next meet will be in Los Angeles at the UCLA In­ vitational Dec. 18-19. T h e strongest competition will come from UCLA, Oklahoma, Utah and college division NCAA de­ fending champions, Cal Poly of San Luis Obispo. J alem TALL SPECIALISTS in QUALITY CLOTHES FOR AND VNB C redit C ard . . . M eater C ard BIG MEN 1609 E. McDowell • Open Thurs. ’til 9 • 252-0163 • HEIP W ANTED CHRISTMAS MONEY — $50 to . $100 You can e arn $100 this Christmas helping the T em pe.JayceeS. Earn il in your own town, on your own time. Phoenix, Mesa, Tempe, Flegsteff, Springervilie, Yuma, Buckeye, Bisbee, Maricopa, Nogales, Tucson, Prescott, Winslow, Holbrook. Simply soli ad s In the Arizona Junior Miss Pageant Program . M ate or Fe­ male: 10 Percent commission. DETAILS: Placement Center, Old Business Building. OPENINGS — 6 men earn $64.50 per week — ca r required. Cell between 6-3 p.m. 967-5690. PERSONA! Secretary, Education Building would like to share transportation to and from Mesa. Call Dolores. 961-3087. Mother Groovy and the Eight Street Li­ b rary presents. Folk Artist Charlie Davis — This Wednesday Night — Why not drop Ini ■ ■; ./. Senor Capt. Grag: M uchas-Gracias. Phi Psis. "O.B." Thank you for a fantastic week­ end. Linda. REWARD OFFERED! Please return stereo stolen last Friday No. 120355 no questions asked. 272-9606. Barbara Shumway of the Arizona Re­ public would like to discuss classroom cheating with students for a future article. Names will remain anonymous. Phone 271-8241. THE MESSAGE OF SHALOM Dial 277-9272 SERVICES Wedding Photography is my specialty. Tom Jones — Photographer. 967-0821 Af­ ter 5 p.m. A NEW YEARS EVE PARTY without music? Bands for rent 266-2254. HYPNOSIS can help you to Increase learning and creative abilities, lose weight, calm nerves, stop smoking. 2740986. MADAM RAY PALMISTRY READERS A ADVISOR. She'll tell you your past, present & future A love - affairs. Open 8:00 a.m . to 10:00 p.m. Holiday special SI .Oa 719 S. Hayden Rd. Corner of Uni­ versity. Look for the Palm sign. 967-9801. XEROX COPIES — 7%c each DIVERSIFIED SERVICES, INC. 1016 South 23rd Street Phoenix, Arizona The Ferrari people are pretty fussy about what goes into their race cars. Give a NEW you for Christmas. Men and women, *10.00 per month, 525.00 for 3 month's. Tempo Health Studio, 516 Mill Ave. 966-4111. WANTED That's why they've chosen world famous KO NI shock absorbers for the past eight years. Male, m ust be neat, to share one-bed­ room apartm ent, rent $70 a month. Ter­ race Rd. Apts, call 967-0748. VENISON — before December evenings {PAULA) 967-3050. Isn't th at« good reason to choose adjustable KO NI shock ab­ sorbers for your car? 12th. Cell GIRL 22 — Looking to sh ire an apart­ ment with same, in ASU a:ea. Rent $130 month. Call 279-9619. MALE roommate (Or a two bedroom, 2 bath apartmen). Villa Capri. West. Call: 966-7050 or 966-6023. KONI DEALERS IN THE VALLEY • A R IZ O N A P A R T S IN T E R N A T IO N A L 1938 E. Washington 258-6471 • B IL L P O R T E R A U T O 8RVC. 4013 N. 7th 8treet 277-2947 • B IL L WAJ •-, • MOTORCYCLES "/Models needed for fife classes; reput- ■ 1966 Honda '50. Perfect Running Condi­ able Scottsdale Art School. Male or Fe­ tion $60.00 or Best Offer. 961-4514. Low male. Call Mrs. Holt at 945-0941. Mileage. Must Sell. T Y P IN G TYPING 946-1149. TYPING — 967-3036. '64 Ducati Monza, 250cc 24 H.P. Runs and looks good. - 276-6701. '66 BULTACO. 200 c.c. 3:30-7:00. 966-9746. Good buy, call 1966 SUZUKI : 120, excellent condition — reasonable. Contact- Bill Coffer, Financial Aids Office, Phone 961-3355. '60 HONDA S65 Black - 4 speed • Ex­ cellent condition — 600 miles. 949-1120. CUSTOMIZED Honda 450. This 1967 powerhouse sports a fiberglass gas tank. Shorter Pipes and a custom paint lob, by Tweety. This bike Is In S ;U P E R E X C E L L E N T Condition and can be yours for only $750. Call 275-8*75 and ask for Ron. LAMBRETTA ' Scooter 150 Cc., 4 speed, good condition. Call 966-9230 after 5:30 p.m. • AUTOMOBILES 196* 442 Olds fully Save. equipped 274-7632 1962 Sprite. Rebuilt engine, transmission, and rear end. Excellent shape. $500.00. 944-3076. 1962 Ford Country Squire — 9 - passen­ ger — air conditioning — radio — auto­ m atic transmission — good tires. $495 246 N. Pioneer, Mesa. ‘59 Austin Healey Sprite, top condition, new tires, radio & heater, a steal at 1375, 967-0107. '62 FORD. Excellent condition, 5500 or $500 w/custom wheels. 966-7748. TORONADO '66 OLDS — very clean — r»dlo — stereo tape deck — air condi­ tioned — 967-7507, o r after 6 p.m. 9676110 — *2,475. ISO-RIvolta 54,500. — 1010 E. Orange No. 14 — 967-0606. 1964 Plymouth Belvedere, $600. Call 9465272 after 4:00 p.m. GREAT BUY 1 I 1 '6* Bulck Skylark. Air, Radio, Power! Luxury. Call after 6 p.m. 967-6955. FOR SALE Citizens Band Radio — 7 channel Trans­ m it 23 receive, converted 12 or 110 volt. Antenna. 961-4514. PLAYBOY MAGAZINE COLLECTION 1962-1967, $60, no edition or year sold separate, Bruce, 967-764*. CHRISTMAS GIFT SPECIAL — 4 o f * track c e r stereo, S39.9S w /2 speakers, A-45 w/speakers $49.95, C-100 w/speaker$ $59.95, A-60 w /speakers $69.95. S track factory Christm as tape $4.50. Our 4 track tapes $3.50, S trade $4.00. CAR STEREO, 131 S. Rural Rd., 966-8213. BLUE SPRUCE A WHITE PINE^CHRISt T TREES tor sale by ASU students. SKIP A JIM 'S TREES. N.W. Comer — 44th St. A McDowell. m as HUGE CABIN — Payson — In pines — fully furnished — modern kitchen — shower — sleeps i to to — fireplace — air conditioned. Bargain a t $5,400, 96775*7 o r after 6 p.m. 967-6110. 4 place bedroom set. Good condition. SMO. Call 946-5272 after 4:00 p.m .------ • INSTRUCTION WOMEN — Body Dynamics classes. Ha­ ttie Yoga. Mornings A Evenings. 945-6505 or 959-1651. $,dSbM L~ I l sm 6 Page T — Wednesday, Dee. t l s office offers more than students realize By KATHY« MURPHY brings to light another area in Dean Chamberlin .says al­ changing officers every six to many grade school and which we can help a person,” though he does handle some in­ months, maintaining continuity said Dr. Shell. dividual counseling, the major­ can be difficult. Each fraternity high school students, a visit to; Working to set up a coordin­ ity of his tim e is taken up work­ pays approximately a quarter the principal or dean’s office means discipline of some sort. ated judicial system for the ing with the fraternities. Main­ of a million dollars a year to Some students carry this idea men’s residence halls is anoth­ taining continuity there is the the University for rent and ser­ vices which is handled by this with them to college and en* er project of Dr. Shell’s office. hardest part of his job. “With most of the fraternities office,” said Dean Chamber­ He also is doing research on the Inner City Student at the lin. college and how the problems Continuity must also be main­ can be solved. tained in other areas. Dean At present, he is helping to Chamberlin believes one draw­ coordinate the University par­ back of a growing university is ticipation in Christmas Out of when the quick pace of the ex­ the Fox Hole. ASU Kaydettes pansion causes an impersonal and Angel Flight members help relation with the students. welcome 60 service men from “When we have too much pap­ Vietnam, who spend part of the er work we lose contact with the Christmas holidays at Camelstudents. We are here to meet back Inn, all expenses paid. their needs, and it is when the Helping Dr. Shell in the area University increases its staff as of discipline is Sandy Chamber­ it" increases its student popula­ lin. He coordinates the frater­ tion that these needs are ade­ nity program and acts as ad­ quately taken care of,” he said. viser to leadership board, the “Our biggest job and biggest student conduct committee, homecoming, Greek Week and headache, is keeping the chan­ Dr. Leon Shelf ASU Day committees._________ ■ ’la«.. E. Cole. nels of communication deavor to graduate without ever visiting the office of die Dean of Students. “Students aren’t always aware of the real function of the office,” said Dr. Leon Shell, assistant 4ean, “many have the misconception that it is strictly for discipline and don’t realize the many services its staff performs.” Five departments of imnortance to University students come under the direct super­ vision of the dean’s office. The Student Counseling Service, Fin­ ancial Aids., Residence Hall programs? student Health Ser­ vice and Student Activities re­ port directly to the Dean of Students, Dr. George F. Hamm. The MU also works closely with the office The Associate Dean of Stu­ dents and three assistant deans aid Dr. Hamm in working with students. Associate Dean Catherine G. Nichols handles women’s af­ fairs, foreign student and re­ ligious coordination » and staff supervision of the student health services. Sororities, AWS and other women’s organizations are re­ sponsible to her office. Their philosophies, purposes and goals are constantly evaluated by the Dean and her staff. The discipline aspect, which, according to Dean Hamm, tak­ es less than ten percent of the tim e spent working with stu­ dents, is under the jurisdiction of Dr. Shell. He works closely with the Student Counseling NEED NOT AP Service in solving problems that Thanks, but they're just not our type. Does this responsibility stir your imaginaarise and attem pts to prevent Young engineers who joinus are expected tionr Then you probably should be with their occurance. to move in on some rather formidable Us. There’s ample opportunity for innova­ “Our prim ary contact is a p ro gram s. . . with alacrity and lots of tion in: aerodynamics • human factors preventative one, we often give gusto. And a willingness to assume early engineering • autom atic controls • advisement and information to responsibilities on dem anding a ssig n ­ structures engineering • weight predic­ students who come to us for ments is an attribute which we welcome tion • system s analysis • operations entirely different reasons. Some­ warmly. It's the kind of engineering ag­ research • reliability/m aintainability times the need for discipline gressiveness that has brought Sikorsky Aircraft to dominant stature in a new world of advanced VTOL aircraft systems. Phoenix— London Juno 13' London— Phoenix Sept. 3 Roundtrip by Jet *2 9 8 ° ° application* now being accepted Write: C H A R T E R F L IG H T A S U Mall Room Box 68 Tem perAria. 86281 or call: 946-7366 Eve*. ifnur criterik parallel your outlook, you'll, find an excellent career environment with 'us. You would enjoy working (with a select group) on exciting, full-spectrum systems development And you can watch your talent and imagination assum e reality in such diverse forms as HeavyLift Skycranes— Tilt Rotor Transports— High-Speed VTOL Commercial Trans­ ports— and much more for tomorrow. engineering • autonavigation systems • computer technology • manufactur­ ing engineering • information systems • marketing.. . and more. And your career advancement can materially assisted through our corporationfinanced Graduate Study Program— avail­ able at many outstanding schools within our area. Consult your Gollege Placement Office for campus interview dates— or— for further information, write to Mr. Leo J. Shalvoy, Professional and Technical Employment. between the students and the administration,” believes Law­ rence Cole, administrative as­ sistant to the dean. Cede works with student or­ ganizations on campus,, using the philosophy that it is best to help students help themselves. He does more advising than individual counseling. As a member of the Adminissions and Standards Commit­ tee and adviser to the Organ­ izations Board, Cole said the of­ fice is trying to cut down the number of ¡daces necessary to visit when making a request. The long range goal is to es­ tablish a ¡dace, perhaps an ac­ tivity center, where everything can be done at mice. The Dean’s office is repre­ sented an all m ajor committees t) i Wednesday, Efec. 11 Pagje $ J Dean of Students (Continned from Page 7) dealing with student affairs or activities. These student activities need a great deal of coordination to Dr. George Hamm ÖW. ,||| || College Life told Americans should enjoy life adviser to both of these, also being responsible fen* the Uni­ versity insurance program, SaBy JIM SCHULTZ huaro yearbook, Student Hand­ Williams added, “Where there is an over book, activity cards, election abundance, we often find hollowness of people.” Jim Williams, Southwest regional director of poster perm its and the men’s Campus Crusade fra* Christ International, told the intramural program. In his own life, Williams said he tried to fill College Life meeting Friday night that America It states in the Student Hand­ today is living in a “come alive” generation. the hollowness by excelling in college and en­ book: “A major function of the tertaining in night clubs: Office of the Dean of Students Williams, a former night club entertainer and is to make available valid stu­ “But even with this success, I still found no dent reactions through proper radio-television singer, said that in trying so hard channels to those who formu­ to “come alive,” death often occurs before peo­ solutions to my problems,” he said. late educational policy at the ple have* time to enjoy life. University; and to interpret this As a senior a t Southern Methodist University, policy to the students.” He said Americans should be enjoying life Williams said he m et a Christian who had solu­ Formally, this described the more than any other people. tions to the same problems he encountered. goal of the University, but Dean Hamm and his staff work to “Yet, many of those who experience an He said he found the Christian life was not break down the concept sur­ abundance of m aterialism in America are unfull of do’s and don’ts, but what God could do for rounding the Dean’s office and happy and even try suicide,” he said. him, “not what I can do for God.” promote the student relations so important to university growth. He pointed out that this goal is often blurred by ^social, eco­ nomic or personal problems and added, “Unfortunately th ere' simply aren’t enough hours in a day to get to know all stu­ dents as well as we’d like. How­ ever, there is always someone in the office to assist you, re­ gardless of the problem.” Students and Faculty prevent difficulties or misun­ derstandings from arising. Dudley Melichar. coordinator of student acitivités and executive manager of the Associated Stu­ dents, is responsible for this. Melichar coordinates many of the activities with the help of Keith Jacobson, who works with the Administrative Coordinatimi D a n ce to n ig h t Council, and Alan Frazier, who Manzanita Hall and Phi Mu works with the Activities Co­ Alpha, the men’s music frater­ ordination Council. nity, will co-sponsor a Christ­ Melichar also meets weekly mas dance tonight from 8 to with the Executive Board of 10:30 p.m. in the dorm’s cafe­ ASASU and the Board of Fi­ teria. nancial Control. He serves as Admission is 25 cents. Mak TEM PE CENTER Your 1-Stop Holiday Shopping Headquarters 33 Stores & Businesses OPEN EVENINGS TILL 9 P.M. GET YOURS FOR CHRISTMAS , Slacks B y Harris Haggar, L Farahand Cactus Casuals Tattersalls Plaids - S Permanent Press From £ 9 5 I f l OUR G ift Certificates Guarantees the Perfect Gift (and the. perfect fit) AMERICANA SHOP [tu x R e n t a is l Open Nightly Till 9:00 TEMPE CENTER 9 ^ 1