S ta te P r e s s ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY-TEMPE W ednesday, O ctober 22, 1969 VoL 52, No. 20 First Place General Excellence Role of University in war issue debated T h e V ietn am w as a n d th e U ni- . T his change w ill p lace th re e stu m le is in in con­ ,ww j . s uxree siuv eirsitv rsify co com mm m uu nn ttv ity ’s ’s ro d e n ts each on th e A cadem ic A f f a ir tin u in g d e b a te o v e r th is issue w e re C om m ittee, th e S tu d e n t P olicy th e m a jo r topics o f discussion a t C om m ittee an d th e U n iv e rsity S e r­ th e F a c u lty S e n a te m ee tin g M on­ vice C om m ittee. d a y afternoon. The smaller committees such as A ctin g U n iv e rsity P re sid e n t H a r­ tbe Committee on Committees and ry K. N e w b u m , ad d ressin g th e S en­ the Honorary Degrees Committee a te , co m m en ted th a t h e w as pleas­ w ill add only two students. ed w ith th e reaso n ab len ess d is­ T his m ee tin g of th e F a c u lty S en­ p lay e d b y fa c u lty a n d stu d e n ts d u r­ a te w as opened to th e S ta te P ress in g la s t w e e k ’s V ietn am m o ra to ri­ b y a u nanim ous voice vote. P rio r u m a n d th e co n tro v ersy preceeding to th is th e S e n a te m eetin g s h ad th e B Y U football gam e. been closed to th e press. D r. N e w b u m ad d ed th a t th e ac­ tions o f th e p a rtic ip a n ts in both in ­ stances w e re a com p lim en t to th e U n iv ersity . T w o su b seq u e n t reso lu tio n s d eal­ in g w ith th e m o ra to riu m g e n e ra te d co n sid erab le d e b a te b e tw e en sen­ a to rs w ho fav o red th e m o ra to riu m a n d th o se w ho th o u g h t th a t th e m o ra to riu m d e p riv e d som e s tu ­ A cannon shooting golf b alls d e n ts of th e ir rig h t to a tte n d fro m th e ro o f o f a f ra te rn ity house classes. a t 606 A lp h a D riv e w a s re p o rte d A n a p p ro v ed reso lu tio n said: to C am pus S e c u rity S unday. “T h e F a c u lty S en ate, w h ich is on P o w d e r w as being used to shoot rec o rd o f b e in g e v e r m in d fu l o f th e th e am m u n itio n in th e d ire c tio n o f r ig h t o f th e n ecessity fo r fre e de­ a n o th e r fra te r n ity h ouse a n d M anb a te in o u r society, recognizes th e z a n ita H all. A M an zan ita coed s ta t­ V ie tn a m w a r as a m a jo r issue, a n d lo g etn ern ess as reflected a* O ct. 15 M oratorium D ay. e d sh e w as alm o st h it b y a b a ll fall­ th e c o n tin u in g d e b a te o f th e p ro ’s in g s w iftly enough to k n o ck a p e r­ a n d con’s o f th is m a tte r w ith in th e son dow n. fra m e w o rk of u n iv e rsify p rac tic e E ach tim e a p a tr o f u n it d ro v e h a s th e su p p o rt of th is legislative th ro u g h A lp h a D rive th e crow d body.” b ro k e Up. A ssista n t D ean R o b ert I n a n E x e c u tiv e C om m ittee re ­ C h am b erlain w as called to follow p o rt to th e S enate, S e n a te C h air­ u p th e situ a tio n w h e n th e p resi­ m an W allace A dam s ex p lain ed d e n t o f th e fra te rn ity could n o t be th a t he, D r. J a m e s C a rn e y a n d Dr. reached. W illiam E n g lish h a d acted o n ly as T h re e days e a rlie r th e sam e B y M ARCIE LY N N SM ITH c o u n t, 5,000 p eo p le a tte n d e d th e m ed iato rs in a d isp u te b etw een th e house w as involved w ith th re e o th ­ N e x t m o n th th e U n iv e rsity M or­ c a n d le lig h t m a rc h a n d re a d in g o f e d ito r of th e S ta te P re ss a n d m em ­ e rs in a w a te r b u c k e t fight. C ham ­ b e rs o f th e B oard o f S tu d e n t P u b ­ b e rla in w as also called th e n to a to riu m S te e rin g C om m ittee plann th e w a r d ead th a t evening. B e n o it com m ented, “T h e O ct. 15 lications. a tw o -d ay d e m o n stra tio n in con­ speak to th e p re sid e n t o f th e fo u r A dam s said th a t th e co m m ittee’s houses and advised the- m en to tin u e d p ro te s t o f th e V ie tn a m W ar. a c tio n is a sig n ifican t in d icatio n A ccording to co m m ittee spokes­ t h a t th e r e a r e th o u sa n d s o f A ri­ s tu d y fo u n d no m alice on e ith e r b rin g th e ir f ra te rn ity b ro th e rs in ­ m an H a n k B enoit, th e S tu d e n t Mo­ zonans w h o id e n tify th em selv es sid e o f th e dispute. H e ad d ed th a t side an d k eep th e m in. b ilizatio n C o m m ittee w ill call fo r W ith th e n a tio n a l e ffo rt to b rin g a b lu e rib b o n com m ittee h a d been A s th e p a tro l c a r w ith C ham bera g e n e ra l s tu d e n t “s trik e fo r peace” a n a i d to th e w a r b y d e m o n stra­ form ed to f u rth e r s tu d y th e situ a ­ la in drove dow n A lp h a D rive, ap­ o n th e 14th, a sk in g fo r p a rtic ip a ­ tin g p e a ce fu lly th e ir solem n oppo­ tion. p ro x im a te ly e ig h t to 10 boys th re w tio n fro m local h ig h school, ju n io r sition to th e c o n tin u atio n o f th e T h e S e n a te a p p ro v ed req u ests bu ck ets of w a te r lea d e d w ith fe r­ V ietn am w a r.” college a n d u n iv e rs ity chapters. fro m v a rio u s S e n a te com m ittees tiliz e r on th e p a tro l u n i t H e continued, “I t is e x tre m e ly ask in g fo r th e ad d itio n o/t stu d e n ts T h e c lim ax o f th e d a y w ill be a S ev eral v o lu n te e rs h e lp e d clean (Continned on page 8) to th e ir com m ittees. g ia n t p eace in a rc h in dow n to w n th e car. P h o en ix , possibly w ith co m m u n ity business a n d la b o r p eo p le jo in in g th e s tu d e n ts in th e pro test. /re c e iv e d b y fa c u lty a n d s ta ff m em b e rs in T h u rsd ay , Nov. 13, w ill b e d e ­ N ovem ber. A lth o u g h th is slack w ill occu r v o te d to m obilizing su p p o rt h e re o n ly once, S ta rs k y feels i t is serio u s enough f o r F rid a y ’s m arch. to w a r ra n t leg al action. I n addition, th e r e w ill b e a b rie f ..,Is.^le,University trying to make money on S ta rs k y said th a t p ro b ab ly n o t m a n y peo­ send-off r a lly f o r a ll local people ** sfacu lty and staff membersfe salaries? p le h a v e th o u g h t a b o u t it, b u t d u rin g t h a t p la n n in g to tra v e l to S a n F rancisco T h a t question h a s b e e n raised by D r. M or­ five-day slack a t changeover in p a y periods, to p a rtic ip a te in n a tio n a l action r is S ta rsk y , a ssista n t p ro fesso r of philosophy, th e U niversity is d ra w in g in te re s t an m oney th e r e o n S a tu rd a y , N ov. 15. in re g a rd to th e U n iv e rsity ’s re c e n t p a v w h ich does n o t belong to it. B en o it s a id buses h a v e b een schedule change. H e h a s re ta in e d an a tto rn e y to engage in c h a rte re d fo r th e tr ip to S a n F ra n ­ U n d e r th e old p a y schedule, th e la st check tm s legal action a n d is soliciting th e h elp o f cisco. m f?r l - ty a n d s ta ff w iU b e Oct. 31, w h ile o th e r fa c u lty a n d s ta ff m em b e rs to s h a re th e “T hose w ish in g to re s e rv e space th e f ir s t check u n d e r th e n e w ' schedule w ill leg al expenses a n d se rv e a s p la in tiff in a on th e b u ses w o u ld le a v e th e ir n o t b e receiv ed u n til Nov. 20. class action ag a in st th e U n iversity. n a m e s a t th e S tu d e n t M obilization T h is five-day slack, S ta rs k y said, is in di­ S ta rs k y sa id if h e doesn’t g e t enough s u p ­ C o m m ittee ta b le o n th e M all,” h e re c t v iolation o f S ection 23-351 o f th e A rip o rt before Nov. 20 th e civil a c tio n w ill thaw said. z r a a la w w h ich p ro h ib its th e U n iv e rsity becom e crim in a l a n d th e U n iv e rsity w ill be B en o it te rm e d la st W ednesday's fro m exceeding a 16-day p a y in te rv al. c h arg ed w ith a m isdem eanor, f o r w h ic h th e m o ra to riu m h e re a “h u g e success.” A s i t stan d s, o n ly one paycheck w ill b e U n iv e rsity w ill h a v e to a p p e a r in court. H e said th a t b y a c tu a l m o n ito r Campus police get call to quell flying golf balls Protest days Strike for peace' march planned for mid-November »««■Prof. Starsky Salaries misused^ W ednesday, O ct. 22 — Page 2 Hillel speaker Earth resembles meteorite? Black demands identity By ELEA N O R RATN ER ®° P31^ °f the establishment’s bloody Pie’ Black Liberation Organizational Committee member Cliff Hill at fl Hillel meeting Monday night As guest speaker, he said he was voicing his own opinion and not that of BLOC, which includes conservative and mil­ itant blacks. ® referring to BLOC’S promotion of a black culture, said that blacks have become disenchanted with “the man’s” promises. He said peace marches where a protester gets hit on the head with a brick for wanting to sit next to a white man were “just not worth it.” He said it is time for the black man to do his own thing. BLOC’s main focus is to bring alienated Macks back into the Negro community. The possible leaders - the men who do succeed - are brought up into the establishment by the whites where they become organization men and where they do nothing for the rest of the black community, Hill said. “We want to get away from the individualism where a successful black merely says ‘if I made it—you can do it’,” Hill added. “T^^se P®°Ple forget that they are Mack. They’ve got a black skin and a white mentality and are used by the whites as middlemen for perpetuating the system, with the rest — i t^e majority of the blacks — being kept on the bottom rung,” I Hill said. 1 Hill called the current education system corrupt because I blacks lose their identity. “We need teachers who can teach i in the framework of self-identity,” said Hill.. “Right now 8 the black isn’t being told who he is. History books don’t tell g what Negroes have done,” he said. 1 Hill compared the whites’ power to a cookie jar: i “Mr. White Man is holdin? a]] the goods and flic N jgrt If has none. No matter how long the Mack pleads" he’sTnot 1 going to get any cookies. He can march around 100 years 8 carrying a picket sign,” said Hill, “and it won’t do any I good. The white man will hold that long.” 1 “What the black says now is — “O.K., keep your cookies P (the goods and privileges of your society). I’ve given up try- i mg to get anything out of you. I’ll make my own.” ' 1 “THs ^seems a frightening solution to many whites,” 1 said Hill, “but tearing down society means little to the dels- 1 perate black who has nothing to lose.” 1 n By JOHN RUKKILA The moon is not the only heavenly body shrouded in my­ stery. Mother Earth has a few questions that need answering too. Dr. John Larimer, speaking at the geology colloquium, talk­ ed about the composition of the Earth as related to that of meteorites. Dr. Larimer has a hypothesis that the Earth, in terms of bulk composition, is like a a giant meteorite. If this is true, the interior composition of the Earth is similar to a meteorite. Since 1966, Dr. Larimer has been conducting research at the Enrico Fermi Institute, Univer­ sity of Chicago, regarding the abundances and distributions of elements in the Earth, the Agriculture group to hold barbecue moon and meteorites. Meteorites which come from the asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter contain about the same elements as detected by mass spectrograph analyses of the sun. This comparison means the Earth is probably of simi~ lar composition, Dr. Larimer said. Meteorites, when analyzed, show characteristic composi­ tions. Dr. Larimer said that when the meteroites were form­ ed “differences in temperature accounted for the abundance or lack of elements.” At different temperature levels during the cooling of the dust cloud, magnesium, cal­ cium and" aluminum silicates escaped into space. Later at a lower temperature some metals escaped or were depleted. At still lower temperatures small lumps called chondrules were formed. According to Dr. Alpha Zeta, ASU’s agricul­ ture honorary, will hold thefr annual barbecue Friday at the ASU farm. Western activities and demon­ strations will kick off the even­ ing f t 5 n.m. There will be drawings for door prizes. After dinner there will be a hay ride and a dance present­ ed by the Rodeo Club. The picnic is open to the pub­ lic. Tickets can be obtained from any Apha Zeta member. » 90 9 o t> lO o o /o e Hey! SUN DEVILS! CONTACT: Placement Office Money Pay Low— Psychic Income High! If you miss our campus representative—see placement officer and write: Chez Son 1555 Connecticut Ave., N.W., Washington, D.C. 20036 featuring M PP; COLOSSAL-BURGER CHEZ-BURGER SUNDAES SHAKES LUNCHEON ' A ' SUBMARINE HAM ON A BUN ★ CHEZ-BON SPECIALTY SPECIAL MAUI-BURGER SODAS. mí OPEN TO 2 A M . GAME NIGHTS V THIS COUPON PIUS If LEM ON W -------- E 50 CENTS GOOD FOR ONE SUBMARINE *’•” SANDWICH O ffer Good Until Oct. 25, 1969 Reg. your INTERNATIONAL VOLUNTARY SERVICES, INC. Restaurant \ 9 Education • Agriculture • Community Development GET THAT EXTRA "TOUCHDOWN" AT o O cto b er 23 Fields of Activity WIN - LOSE - OR - DRAW ASU CAM PUS ¿fc*- S T A T E P R E S S Is published by Arizona State U niversity a s the official cam pus new spaper every Tuesday threueh Frid a v dnrinq the school y e a r, except holidays and exam ination periods, and is entered a s second c la ss m atter at Tem pe, A rizona, I52S1. ON CAMPUS: DAILY Larimer, solar flare - ups or lightning discharges within the condensing dust cloud caused specific elements such as potas­ sium to escape as gas from the chondrules. Finally as the dust materials condensed and accumulated in large bodies more key Clements such as lead, Msmuth, indium, and thallium were lost as gases. Thus the meteorites have speci­ fic abundances and depletions in various elements. Dr. Larimer said evidence indicates the silicates content is low in both the Earth and meteorites. The earth is slight­ ly enriched in metals as are meteorites. Potassium is de­ pleted and the key dements lead, bismuth, indium and thal­ lium are deficient on Earth. These clues indicate that meteorites and the Earth were formed in the same way, rein­ forcing Dr. Larimer’s theory. * CHEZ A PA C H E BLVD. 1212 APACHE BLVD. EAST TEMPE. PH. 967-9192 1 ■ m P age 3 — W ednesday, O ct. 22 Tenants cite high prices as one reason Rental strikes planned 3 l strikes Strifcpc aagainst f fa in c f Tempe Raital apartments allegedly over­ charging tenants and discrimi­ nating against religious and ethnic groups are “inevitable if owners refuse to reason with us in the coming months,” the spokesman for a newly formed tenants union said yesterday. Mike Mathews, spokesman for the Student-Faculty Tenants As­ sociation, said the association is attempting to. mobilize more than 500 students “to bargain for change in Tempe apart­ ments.” Tempe apartment rental fees are 15 per cent above the na­ tional yearly .average increase of ten per cent, Mathews charg­ ed. He said students “interested in preventing rental overcharg­ es and protecting their rights” can participate in planning the -——- ™— ——•— movement' at 7 p.m. tomorrow in SS105. Charges leveled by the asso­ ciation, Mathews said, are not aimed at any particular apart­ ment. He said, the association will bargain with all Tempe apartment owners for rent re­ ductions and stress fair housing practices. The Student-Faculty Tenants Association was formed early this month, after receiving ap­ proval as a University organi­ zation. At tomorrow’s meeting, organizational committees will be formed and apartment rep­ resentatives selected. “If renters support us, the as­ sociation will go to the five or six owners of Sin City aparte mnts and discuss the prob­ lems,” said Mathews, a Junior business major. Players take 'Oedipus into 20th c T T n i V P r o i f t r P l o x T û r r . M OO University Players are trans forming the classic “Oedipus” legend into a 20th-century ex­ perience. Their version of “The Infernal Machine” will show the tragic character in a new light beginning Oct. 31 at the Lyceum. Dr. Daniel Witt, director, said thé four-act play is “relatively far-out,, but not clear out of sight. It is basically a comedy until the last act.” “The modem idiom relates the play with heores of the 1960s,” adds Witt, “and makes it a happening of today. Music ranges from acid rock to folk rock and costumes reflect both Greek and modem eras.” “The Infernal Machine” will run for three consecutive week­ ends in October. Curtain time is 8:30 pjn. Fridays and Sat­ urdays and 7:30 p.m. Sundays. Student tickets are $1 THE PRUDENTIAL INSURANCE COMPANY OF AMERICA P ro u d ly A nnounces The A p p o in tm en t of MEL L. SHULTZ — :— —,— —.——— — Have A Poor “Then if the owners don’t re­ placed sanctions on tenants for spond we will form a tenant particular forms of religious ex­ strike and possibly take it to pression. court.” (Mathews claimed, “Two guys In a tenant strike, renters were evicted from a Tempe pledge their support to the as­ apartment because they refus­ sociation a nd refuse to pay ed A noted publisher in Chicago to go to church.” ) reports there is a simple techtheir rent. m (& -------------------------- f t . . . ÖOÖ \fau M 'kfcteU r> E L . jf iîS É f ® * * « k t lew » 4 Yfcs a five £ «*W f(Vbliri t M a r y J p ic k u p [2 * * îS ô t e iS n Paul —is he or isn't he? F iv e g ra d u a te stu d e n ts sta n d in tu re o f th e B eatles. O nly M cC art­ fro n t o f a m irro r a t M ariposa H all n ey ’s back is tu rn e d a s th e o th ers You k n o w th a t w e ’r e a s close as c a n be, m an. W ell, h e re ’s a n o th e r looking a t a n alb u m cover upside face forw ard. : d u e fo r •'you- all. T h e w a lru s w as dow n. T h e b ro th e rs o f A lpha E p­ T h e fro n t cover rev e a ls a fu n e ra l P a u l.” silon P i m ak e ph o n e calls th a t lead scene. “B eatles” is w ritte n across A t th e v e ry en d o f th e song, “I to record com panies in H ollyw ood th e g rav e n e x t to a b ass g u ita r o f am a W alrus,” som eone says, “B u ry a n d London. flow ers. P a u l p lay ed bass. T he F o rty -fiv e r.p.m . rec o rd s a re be­ B eatles a re show n tw ice on th e cov­ roe, b u ry m y body. Is h e d ead?” In sid e th e album P a u l sits a t a in g p lay ed a t 33 r.p.m ., m agnify­ er, once in m o u rn in g a n d a g a in as desk in m ilita ry un iform . T h e nam<» in g glasses a re ta k e n to p ic tu re s a n d a band. W hy lonely h e a rts? p la te on th e desk say s in la rg e le t­ song ly ric s a re b e in g exam ined. te rs: “I W A S.” O .PJX T h e re su lt: a b iz a rre collection T h e album opens u p to a blow ­ B arefoot B urial o f evidence th a t indicates B eatle u p of th e fo u r B eatles. O n th e le ft P a u l M cC artney m ay b e dead. T h e ir c u rre n t album , “A bbey N o one is s u re w h e n o r ex actly a rm of M cC artney’s u n ifo rm is a R o a d ,, m ain ta in s th e u n d e rc u rre n t how th e ru m o rs began. Som e re ­ p atch w ith th e in itia ls O.P.D., th e them e. T h e cover p ic tu re is o f th e p o rts say it s ta rte d w ith a D e tro it E nglish a b b rev iatio n fo r officially B e a tle s w a lk in g fro m a L ondon pronounced dead. disc jockey. cem etery. P a u l is th e only one T he n e x t production from th e w a lk in g shoeless. I n E n g la n d peo­ Story Snow balls D u rin g th e la s t 10 days, how ever, B eatles w as “M agical M y stery p le a re b u rie d w ith o u t shoes. th e M cC artney d e a th sto ry h a s T our,” a n hour-long b u s r i d e M cC artn ey h as a n o th e r distinc­ snow balled across th e len g th a n d th ro u g h E n g lan d p h o tographed b y tiv e look in th e p ictu re. H e’s hold­ b re a d th o f th e nation, • involving th e B eatles them selves. O n e of th e ing a cig arette, called “coffin n a il” rad io statio n s a n d n a tio n a l tele ­ songs from th e alb u m song tra c k in B rita in . vision, B eatle follow ers a n d casual is “I am a W alrus” in w h ich a w a l­ S h o eless p ic tu re s o f P a u l abound ru s, th e V iking sym bol o f d eath, o b serv ers o f th e m usic scene. th ro u g h o u t M agical M y ste ry Tour. A ll th is w eek, K A SN , th e cam ­ dies. A p ic tu re fro m th e in sid e booklet F o r C h ristm as 1968, th e B eatles show s th e fo u r i n w h ite tu x ed o s p u s radio statio n , is focusing on th e M cC artn ey ru m o rs a n d offerin g released a tw o-album re c o rd se t a n d r e d b o utonnieres—ex cept P a u l som e orig in al suppositions of its w h ich included th e verse, “I told w ho w e a rs a black flow er. ow n. you ab o u t th e w a lru s a n d m e, m an (Continued on page 5) A series o f odd, loosely k n it ref­ eren ces in B e a tle m a te ria l o v er th e la s t th re e y e a rs fit lik e puzzle pieces to fo rm a su rre a listic p ic tu re w ith u n b eliev ab le im plications. & H e re a re som e o f th e questions Editor a n d allegations w oven in to th e r u ­ m ors. Larry Ross A uto A ccident Managing Editor Campus Editor In 1966 B eatles H a rriso n a n d Mc­ Terry Ross Pam Stevenson C a rtn e y w e re in a c a r accident in News Editor E ngland. F o u r policem en involved Sports Editor Larry Nelson in th e accident a re said to b e am ong Bill Jackson th e few know ing P a u l M cC artney C a ry Editor» -M S » M cCley A ssistan t caw ing»,. M a rcia Sim ons did n o t s u rv iv e E d T a y le r A ssistan t Nears____ K a y Kipp B e a n e Je tt TTie B eatles changed m usic sty les PIM I« E d ita r_____ .R a y Wang A ssistan t S p an s---------------CkarW * M ack A u ista a t Je lin B arn ard in 1967 w h e n th e y cam e o u t w ith S t y Slaw It aparta r--------- M arcia Sm iik Faatara E d it a r.. -Ja n a Sim s Staff n a ia -------------- B anale B a rla k A s t is t a a t ___ “Sgt. P e p p e r’s L onely H e a rts C lub - Je ta i A ldap* O lean Hunter W M Mid E d ite r. -Jë n H annan B a n d .” C ould B illy S hears, in tro ­ A» S liiya d u ced in th e opening track , b e Mc­ Faculty Adviser Advertising Manager Mechanical Compositor C a rtn e y ’s h ire d im p erso n ato r? T h e Dr. Joe Milner Hai Hobele Tom McCrea b a c k co v e r o f th e album h a s a pic­ State Press Well, people, once again ASU has managed to screw up a really good __thing. Yjesr some of us . .sat, through an anguishing period of silence, sometimes cringing, sometimes remembering as familiar or not so familiar names of friends were read from a list of Arizona war dead. Dead. Killed in a senseless pursuit of an undefined ideal of selfdetermination. It was Vietnam Mora­ torium Day. A day set aside to discuss the war, remember the dead, and pro­ test the continuing slaughter of men, women and children. And boy did we protest! Dressed in our finest hippy garb, we marched a dozen times up and down the Mall, hoping our friends and others would see us with our black arm hands and obviously sincere feelings toward the war. We talked — about so and so’s hair or what’s his name’s clothes — while serious and thoughtful professors conducted workshops for sometimes as many as (wow!, far out!) thirty people. And we sat silent for, in some cases, as long as two minutes, and sang two real­ ly provocative songs to remember and mourn our Arizona war dead. And then we danced. In a matter of minutes, we had for gotten about the day’s meaning, the observance of a moratorium, a tima of - remembering the dead, and we, to real- ” Iy show our sincerity, began to dance. After all, those dead guys are gone — and it happened way over in Vietnam — and we’re alive and never gonna kill anybody, because we’re protestors of that, so let’s dance. Well, people, you did kill, a.id you will again. You killed the remembrance of those guys, who remained alive only in our memories, and seftt it off so you could dance and be in on the groovy, far out, hippy social scene. But worse than that, you killed the idea. The idea that everyone, on that Moratorium Day, could get together spiritually — in a recognition and rememberance of the senseless waste of death — and bring about an end to the war. It was easier, groovier and more fun to get together physically and so­ cially — in a recognition that we’re alive and they’re dead — in order to dance. Did you have fun? Was it worth it? I hope so. Because three of my friends were on that list. Their deaths are now even more senseless and wasted, be­ cause you -killed their memories and screwed up this moratorium. Hunk about it. Do better in Novem­ ber. Jim Ronsch LIBRA BY----------We’d like to congratulate the Hayden library on further extending its ser­ vices to the student body. In even the most remote comer of the library a student can now find companionship and conversation at any hour of the day. It is commendable that the Univer­ sity has provided an opportunity for social interaction in a traditionally solemn and quiet institution. The stu­ dent need not fear long hours of silence and isolation. Rather, he is treated to the latest bits of Greek gossip, football predictions, and everyone’s account of last week**d’s activities. Possibly a snack bar and T.V. room could be added on each floor to replace the now unecessary “quiet rooms.” In view of the new social function of the library, perhaps a different build­ ing could be found for books and study. Barry Tlckes Ed Shaver P a g e 5 — W ednesday, 22 *F y Oct. gw Law College recommended for approval Radio man examines upbeat'm edia KRIZ program director and and disc jockey Pat McMahon told radio - TV students yesterday thaK^entertainment and comRecorainendationforfiin ac- JlumcationL’ a r e . the two most crediation of the College of Law will be placed before the American Bar Association House of Delegates at its mid J\ winter meeting in Atlanta in (Continued Ifrom page 4) February, 1970. Another song off the album, The college, in its third year “Strawberry Fields,” offers of operation, was recommend­ faint background words, “I bur­ ed for full accreditation by both ied Paul.” uie Council and Section of Legal Accident emphasized Education and Admissions of From their Christmas double the ABA. album pack “Revolution 9” play­ Millard Ruud, consultant on ed backwards seems to depict a legal education to the ABA, re­ car crash, a chorus and some­ ported the action to College of one saying, “turn me on, dead Law Dean Willard H. Pedrick, man.” . this summer. Turning back to “A Day in The College of Law was the Life” from the “Pepper” al­ granted provisional accredita- bum, supposedly a day in the life of McCartney, a verse goes: «on last January by the ABA. “He blew his mind out in a Trie action was considered un-, usual as the process usually car. He didn’t notice the lights comes after a law school has had changed. A crowd of people stood and stared. They’d seen graduated its first class. his face before. Nobody was The college’s first law stu­ really sure if he was from the dents will receive their Juris House of Lords.” Doctor degrees in June of On thfe album “House of 1970. important facets of upbeat ra­ radio today. McMahon maintained that KRIZ permitted greater free­ dom of music aired and ~Plays »Hf top i«n 50 e plus selected album the cuts, rather than limiting our­ selves to the top 30.” He explained, through the use~oT comical dialogue, that ____ KRIZ announcers are enter­ tainers, not disc jockeys. “Peo­ ple don’t talk the way most of your rock_disc jockeys dor s» why force them on the public ” he asked. He said KRIZ an­ nouncers are a strange group, making it difficult to attribute a definite personality to the Phoenix rocker. Paul rumors snowball m a m Calendar TO D A Y Placem ent Interview s, O BA 109 C h as. P fize r Co. In c., County of Los b£?coeco ' R’ J’ jB o ta n y and M icrobiology Sem inar: Com parative Studies In the Genus P o r^ y rld lu m " by D r. M . r . som m erfeld. assistan t professor of Bo•*J y .-4 |3 0 p.m . PSCA-103. • VROtaBYv colloquium : -Dr.- They ti; E 2 J!2 i ■#!22?V-d«partm ent chairm anW ith Buttercups In th e ir M ouths," en a ccount of c a rca sse s of extinct ice-age an im als, 3:40 p m .. A s iso Outing Club, w eekly m eeting! ¿ S .' of future, events, open to ■II Interested. 6 p .m ., W P E leg. Anthropology undergraduates m eet i d discu ss Anthropology C hib and Publication, 3:30 p m T s S 23« A ffa irs Board film comm ittie 's " A N ight at the O pera," M arx B rothers, 3 p .m ., Ira D . Payne n 8 ll. Placem ent In terview s: U .S. A rm y Sp ecial S e rvice s, G en eral D ynam ics Pomona D lv ., pan A m erican Petrotfy m Corporation, Sen Fra n cisco B ay N aval Shipyard, O BA 109. Young D em ocrats, open m eeting to discu ss the Code of Conduct and the po ssib ility of drafting a B ill of Rights fo r Students, 7:30 p .m ., SS » « . . . Lords” is sung “House of Paul.’ Both Phoenix radio stations KRIZ and KRUX devoted time to a discussion of the McCart­ ney rumors. KRUX presented an hour-agd-a-half long show Sunday evening with Bob Hamil­ ton, editor of a radio periodical in Los Angeles. Hamilton put his show togeth­ er after receiving three phone calls Thursday from disc jock­ eys in New Orleans, Detroit and Buffalo all with the McCartney rumors. A high school student told Hamilton over the air he had Called Apple Records in Eng­ land, the Beatle production com­ pany, and talked to Paul Mc­ Cartney. He added the overseas operator said . McCartney was making long distance business calls all week. So Hamilton called Apple in London at 5 a.m. their time and talked with the night watch­ man who said the rumors from America were all a bunch of (lies), and that he sees McCart­ ney every day. The real McCartney? Who may have taken McCart­ ney’s place? Several years ago a McCartney look - alike con­ test was won by William Campbell, .who, Hamilton said, now cannot be located. Apparently only a few people, know if the series of neatly placed clues spread throughout Beatle albums over the last three years are coincidence or deliberately placed — if Mc­ Cartney is alive or rfpad There are a lot of questions, few answers and a great deal of speculation which nothing but full proof identification of Mc­ Cartney will calm. Promotions play a big part at KRIZ, McMahon said and ex­ plained that many have been rewarding since public res­ ponse, he said. A new promotion, begun Mon­ day, is the current big promo­ tion on KRIZ, said McMahon. ‘'Hickey High,” a division of, the KRIZ Little Theatre of Your Mind, will be aired three times a day and will feature a Hickey High reporter. “These are all vehicles of en­ tertainment—an aspect of ra- ■ dio that has been much neglect­ ed,” said McMahon. “We’re giving Phoenix a choice bet­ ween KRUX and KRIZ, the dif­ ference is that we’re trying to communicate and most impor­ tantly to entertain.” CUT ALONG THIS LINE BURGER CHEF FREE GRUB STUB Go down to school in a ship. FREE! ONE JUMBO SHEF This Spring or next Fall, take a full sem ester of accredited ■courses, while visiting ports from Italy to India. Find out all the facts: October 26 — 2:00 p.m. M O U N TA IN 8H A O O W 8 INN 6641 E A 8 T L IN C O L N 8 C O T T 8 D A L E - A R IZ O N A You’ll be able to talk to our representative and former students. Also, slides will be shown. Parents and friends cor­ dially invited. WORLD CAMPUS AFLOAT, ' -4. CHAPMAN CO LLEGE Orange, California 92666 WHEN YOU BUY ONE AT THE REGULAR PRICE OF 59c ONLY THRU OUR NEW DRIVE THRU WINDOW AFTER 3 PA». ( O F F E R E X P I R E 8 O C T . 25. O N E CO U PO N P E R C U 8 T O M E R ) GOOD ONLY IN TEMPE AT 106 E. UNIVERSITY DRIVE CUT ALONG. TH IS LINE „ Franchised Nationwide by Burger Chef System s, Indianapolis W ednesday, O c t 22 — P age 6 gas A R T IST S T R IA L S ... T he . w o rk s o f sc u lp to r Da­ v id H ayes a re re p re se n te d b y “B en d in g F ig u re No. 2” (above) a n d “S m all C a rn i­ v o re ” (below ). Photos by Ray Wong H AYES A T W O RK. ■'■vy'"'.-' Ë& ||■ £3.gS I |j¡ ' H □ 1 An untitletLgoior painting by David Hayes represents the p ressu res o f th e a rtis t against h is e n v iro n m e n t Photo by Ray Wong Hayes demonstrates much conflict in M atthews Center sculpture show By RANDY BAILEY flict in the show. His early work shows an almost strain­ “Sculpture should be the re­ sult of a reaction between the ed attempt to eliminate detail artist and environment,” says from subject and materials, awdrd-winning artist David giving an almost stampedfrom-the-mold appearance. Hayes. From this early period comes , If Hayes’ work, currently on d isp lay in th e Matthews Center - perhaps his strongest work and gallery, is a statement of his best of the show — “Bete reaction with his environment he has a severe case of tunnelART REVIEW vision. Hayes’ works in bronze and forged metal, particularly dur­ Noire, 1963” The massive, forg­ ing 1963-67, usually show a . ed steel sculpture is an almost single theme element. This does frightening humanoid looking not agree with his thought that figure at first distant glance, sculpture should show an envir­ but closer view shows the fea­ onmental influence—our envir­ tures to be almost kindly. onment is more than a single Hayes’ point was well made in cause-effect relationship. this work. There seems to be much con­ “Woman With Sheep No. 2” is perhaps the most disturbing figure in the display. The metal sculpture of a very maternal looking female is top­ ped by a thrashing body of a sheep. This is one some married men may really enjoy and un­ derstand.__ ;______ _________ Hayes’ has received numer­ ous awards for his work. As a 27-year-old, he was the young­ est artist to have his work in­ cluded in the inaugural exhibi­ tion at the Guggenheim Muse­ um in 1958. . The one man show includes paintmgs, drawings, sculpture, and ceramics. Thinking About Auto Insurance? COOK SUKIYAKI AT HOME? Ye*, We Are Specializing In ORIENTAL FOODS Imported from Japan, Korea, Taiwan and Hawaii V ery R easonable P rice. P lease Com e A nd S ee For Y ourself in t e r n a t io n a l f o o d c e n t e r Tel. 274-6146 • U N D ER A G E • M O TO R C YC LE8 • C A N C E L L E D OR R E J E C T E D ? • 8C O O TER S • 8R-22 F IL IN G S MADE IM M E D IA T E LY • M O N TH LY FIN AN C IN G A V A IL A B L E " Young Drivers Are Our Specialty” 267 - 0270 EMERSON INSURANCE AGENCY 4917 E. Holly, No. 3, Phoenix, Arizona 2802 fl -. J 6 t h ®t-> Phoenix (1 Block South of Thomae) Store Houra: 10-6 Tuesday thru Saturday » (Closed Sunday and Monday) BECAUSE of continued interest STUDENT GROUP MEDICAL INSURANCE deadline extended to October 31, 1969 PO N T WAIT! $34 Coven You Until 9/11 /70 South Hall - Rm. 221 965-3239 P iz z a In n BUY 1 G ET ' It’s warmer this way: a de­ gree plus a career. So check out our Cam pus Internship Program. Insurance counselling is a field without ceiling. It offers independence . . the oppor­ tunity to perform a highly use, ful service. And consider this: 2 2 % of this company’s top agents began learn in g and earning while still in college. So stop by or phone our office today. Remember—keep­ ing warm in that cold, aval world is more than a matter of degree. FREE! Good Today Only (October 22nd, 1969) Bring This Coupon P iz z a I nn 955 E. U n iversity D r. Vs Bk. E. o f hut tuill the sheepskin keep you Inarm enough? Scottsdale Rd. 4502 N . C entral A ve. Phoenix , A rizona Suit« 310 264-4334 P R O V ID E N T M U T U A L H W LIFE IN S U R A N C E C O M P A N Y O P m i l A O U M M P age 7 — W ednesday. Oct. 2? Not enough to promise a lifetime of security and expect you to buy it. Not enough to spoonfeed you our ideas and savor none of yours. Not enough to hire you and simply let you play it safe. An interview with us is straight talk. Mountain Bell Interview ing all m ajors at Arizona State University November 3 and 4, 1969 Mountain B e ll B e ll Telep h o n e Laboratories A m erican Telep h o n e & Telegraph Com pany S an d ia Corporation T h e W estern E le c tric Com p an y S IG N U P TO D A Y. C A L L YO U R P LA C EM EN T O F F IC E F O R T IM E A N D LO C A T IO N The companies of the B e ll System guarantee that all applicants will be considered for employment without regard to race, creed, color. sex, age, or national origin. W ednesday, O ct 22 — P age 8 Protest days (Continued from page 1) important for those who supported the October action to un­ derstand that if the national movement is really going to bring an end to the war soon, they must continue and intensify and grow in participation. “The purpose is not for coersion but m ore'an expression of the convictions of Americans,” Benoit concluded. On the national level, mora­ torium organizers have an­ nounced full support bf “all antiwar activities,” including the national moratorium Nov. 13 and 14 and the New Mobiliza­ tion Committee’s mass marches Golden Hearts pick members Eleven new members have been chosen for Golden Hearts, auxiliary of Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity. The new members are Sherri Brewer, Kathy Busch, Kathie Ham, Laura Huff, Keven Kelly, Sandy Knight, Marphy Lynch, Sue Neumiester, Jan Smuckler, Rosie Sullivan and Debbie Woodward. The Golden Hearts were tap­ ped Monday morning, Oct. 13r after a selection tea Sunday night. Veterans asked to inspect checks Veterans studying under the G.I. Bill are advised by Wayne Sanders to be sure that their checks are prompt and for the right amount. Sanders, manager of Ari­ zona’s Regional Office of Veter­ ans Administration, said veter­ ans should have turned their certificate of eligibility into the college registrar upon registra­ tion and should see to it that the school mails it to the VA promptly. If a change in college or course of study occurs, Sand­ ers said the veteran should apply immediately for a new certificate of eligibility. Changes of address or de­ pendency due to maniage, di­ vorce, births or deaths should also be reported to the VA as soon as possible, he said. >600 Maternity Benefit Now Available To Mamed Students of ASU C A L L OR 8TO P B Y Lyle Hitter Agency 1411 North Control Phoenix, Arizona Phone — 252-5574 R iPR ISlN IIN G Mutua|/T\ « O n a h iH / n e l'm piwortUpen lif e lin u r jflc r A ffilia te : U nited o f Om aha MUUMI <* tm«M MUa*Ml MJMPAMV w a u *jmw i *m a im NietAKA on Washington and San Francisco Nov. 15. At last count, there are three organizations involved on the national level — The Student Mobilization Committee, the Vietnam Moratorium Committee and the New Mobilization Com­ mittee. Spurs sell mums Spurs, sophomore womens’ honorary, is selling homecom­ ing chrysanthemums this week, with all profits going to Valley charities. The honorary will be taking orders for the schoolcolored mums at six booths around campus. Hie flowers can then be pick­ ed up the morning of Nov. 1. The annual sale is Spurs’ big­ gest charitable project of the year. Scholarships will be open for minority graduates F o rd F ou n d atio n d o cto ral scholarships a re now av ail­ a b le fo r N egro, M exican-A m erican, P u e rto R ican and A m erican In d ia n stu d e n ts e n te rin g g ra d u a te school in S cholarships a re f o r s tud e n ts w ho plan to onroll .m. f u l l t i m e g ra d u a te study, m ajo rin g in th e h u m a n itie s o r social sciences, o r s tu d e n ts p la n n in g to e a rn a Ph.D . or, becom e teachers. In itia l scholarships a re fo r one y ear. T h e y w ill be ren e w ed u p to fo u r m ore y e a rs if aw ard ees m a in ta in s a t­ isfacto ry p ro g ress to w a rd a Ph.D . M inority g roup stu d e n ts w ho received th e ir b ach elo r deg rees in 1967-69, o r w ho a n tic ip a te rec e iv in g degrees b y S e p t 1, 1970, a re eligible. F a c u lty selection com m ittees w ill rev ie w each ap p li­ c a n t’s seriousness o f purpose, u n d e rg ra d u a te academ ic record, a n d scores on th e G ra d u a te R ecord E x a m in a tio n s (G R E ). These c rite ria , a n d recom m endations b y th re e fa c u lty m em bers, a re g ro u n d s fo r selection. T h e F o rd F o u n d atio n w ill p a y fu ll tu itio n a n d fees, book a n d su p p ly costs, an d a m o n th ly su b sisten ce allo t­ m ent. S ch o larsh ip am o u n ts w ill v a ry w ith th e n e e d s of ind iv id u al students. I’ve got my interview set between computer lab and econ hurry up bus I’ll be late for class wonder if Alcoa’s doing anything about traffic jams I read somewhere they’re solving rapid transit prQblems and helping explore the seas and outer space and working with packaging and automotive applications So when I go in I’ll tell it like it is—for me land they’ll tell it like it is— s’ for them Change for the better with Alcoa Phoenix MAYOR • Driggs • Graham • Burns • Shumway Today 3:30 ISC 191 Sponsored by A SU Y oung R epublicans Straight questions—straight answers and they won’t care if the bus is a little late Get together with Alcoa: ^Novem ber 6, 1969 An Equal Opportunity Employer A Plane for Progress-Company: • - A LC O A P age 9 — W ednesday, O ct. 22 Pebbles finds the smoother road Dog enjoys w hite collar job H er n r v m y n n a m T By D E X DUGG AN I t ’s a rocky ro a d ----- ev e n for- a dog — w h e n h is m istress is a college stu d en t. P ebbles, a frisk y w h ite dog belong­ in g to D iane W renn, 19, a political science sophom ore, is fin d in g th e college e x p e r­ ien ce a little e a sie r th a n m ost o th e r d o g i The_pooch is o fte n a g uest a t m eetings o f th e R esidence H all A ssociation (R H A ), o f w h ic h D iane is se cre ta ry . “T h e f irs t tim e I b ro u g h t h e r to a m eetin g , I told th e group I d id n t h a v e a n y p lac e to keep her. S o she ju s t la y on th e d esk th e w hole tim e a n d a g irl s ta rte d calling h e r o u r m ascot,” D iane said. P e b b les lives a t th e a p a rtm e n t of Di­ a n e s b o y frien d a n d is le ft alone w h e n he a n d h is ro o m m ate a tte n d classes. “W h en w e can, w e tr y to k eep h e r w ith u s as m u ch as possible,” D iane said. “W e ta k e h e r to d riv e-in s a n d to look a t n ew c a rs in th e salesroom s. S h e goes shopping • w ith u s a n d once w e ev en took h e r to th e d e n tist,” sh e added. ' S ev eral tim es a w eek P eb b les sta y s a t th e R H A office on th e second floor of S o u th H a ll w h e n D ian e does ty p in g and filing. W h at one s tu d e n t described as “a w on­ d e rfu l p erso n a lity tr a it of a p u p p y dog,” caused a n e m b a rra ssm e n t la s t w eek. H aving k e p t P eb b les in th e office fo r e x te n d e d p eriod o f tim e, D iane decided th a t th e p u p n eeded to v isit th e high grass. B u t as D iane passed th e s tu d e n t coun­ seling office in S o u th H all, the, w o rk ers th ere , a ttra c te d b y th e frie n d ly b u n d le of fu r, stopped D iane an d h a d h e r p u t th e p u p on th e floor so th e y could p e t her. U n able to go outside, P e b b les le t h e r fru stra tio n s escape. “N ow ,” D iane m used, 1th e counseling office h a s b een * ch ris­ ten ed .” Drinking law A.M. 8:00 Yoga F o r Health gets tougher Drunken drivers win have a tougher time beating a convic­ tion after Nov. I when a new implied consent law goes into effect in Arizona. More than 70 city magistrates will receive instruction on-the law in the Armstrong CoUege of Law building Oct. 30 and 31. Joe Collier, Phoenix city chem­ ist, wiU discuss chemical tests connected with the law. Laws which apply to opera­ tion of a traffic court will also be discussed. Hearings of the Highway Department and Sup­ erior Court to review proced- 8:30 9:00 9:30 J0:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 " E x e rc ise the Yoga W ay" T V High School "G ram m ar" R e turn to N ursing "Post-O perative C a re " SP-101 Elem en tary Spanish Pocketful of -Fu n --------O nce Upon a D ay "C h ild ren 's M usic Appreciation" SP-102 Elem en tary Spanish W onderful W orld of Bro. Buzz (C ) "T h e R ealm of R ep tiles" ures of the new law are another topic of discussion. Under the implied consent law every person suspected of drunken driving must take a chemical test for intoxication analysis or have his license suspended for six months. The law is already in effect in 44 states. RHA M A SCO T. . . P eb b les does her b est to h e lp h e r h u m an frie n d s in w h a te v e r m a n n e r possible. Photo by Sue Bods ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY KAET, Channel 8 PJW. 12:00 W hat's New? "Com m unications" 12:30 M isterogers Neighborhood 1:00 The Frie n d ly G iant "W hen It Rained C ats & Dogs" 1:15 A rt Studio "M a te ria ls" j C a nr lnn de to B u m ________ .__ _ "M exlcan-A m erlcan D ram a" 2:00 M odern Suoervisory Techniques (C ) "H ow To H andle D iscip lin e" 2:30 W onderful W orld of Bro. B uzz (C ) "T h e Realm of R ep tiles" 3:00 Pocketful of Fu n - I JO 3:30 O nce Upon a D ay "C h ild ren 's M usic A ppreciation" 4:00 W hat's New? "Com m unications" 4:30 T h e Frien d ly G ian t 4:45 A rt Studio 5:00 M isterogers Neighborhood 5:30 SP -101 E lem enta ry Spanish 4:00 SP-102 Elem en tary Spanish 6:30 Return to Nursing 7:00 T V High School 7 JO Canción d e la Raza 8:00 N E T Sp ecial (C ) 9:00 The P resid ent's M en (C ) 9:30 Book B eat (C l 10:00 A g ricu lture T h is Weak TEMPE HEALTH STUDIO 399 M ILL AVE. 966-4111 U N LIM IT E D U SE O F A L L F A C IL IT IE S • Body Building • Lose or Gain Weight • Sauna A Steam • Personalized Programs Qualified M e n d Women Instructors 3 m o. — $30 F ree Trial V isit 6 m o. — $50 9 m o. — $70 N o Contracts SniMNTS AMD ALUMNI NOW IS THE TIME TO ORDER TOUR RING I0K GOLD WfTH CHCHCE Of 12 IIRTHSTONES BINGS A1SO AVAILMLI FOB UefA AND NJUL DKSIONCD AND S Y TND Compare our pricoe L. G. BALFOUR CO. • P aul Johnson 130 E . Unlv. Dr.— Tempo Standard Insurance Company is pleased to introduce. . . drop-in! You’re w elcom e 2 4 h o u rs a d ay a t 711 E. Broadway 52 tasty varieties of donuts. Made fresh every four hours. 'If that doesn't give you enough reason to drop, in, we also make the world’s finest coffee. Brewed fresh every 18 minutes. 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, you're welcome at Dunkin’Donuts. A lbert L K ahn A lb e rt h a s com pleted a sum m er-long p e rio d o f special tra in in g u n d e r S ta n d a rd ’s C ollege I n te rn P ro g ram . H e is fu lly q u a lifie d to h e lp you p lan a life a n d h e a lth in su ra n c e p ro g ram to f it y o u r needs n o w — w ith v a lu a b le op tio n s y o u m ay eercise a fte r graduation. A lbert L. (A l) K uhn 3003 N . C entral, S u ite 707 Phoenix, A rizona 85012 264-4843 STANDARD INSURANCE COMPANY 966-9781 E stablished 1906 — H om e O ffice: Portland, O regon W ednesday, O c t 22 — P age 10 New program set for Homecoming A fo rm e r associate o f D r. T roy P e w e exam ines th e re ­ m ains of an e x tin c t superbisonr 'n e a r F airb an k s, Air aska. SUPER BISON... Superbison bites the ice They didn’t die with their boots on, but they did expire .... .with a mouthful of buttercups. A 31,400 year-old extinct sup­ erbison, preserved in the froz­ en ground of the Arctic, will be among exhibits to be display­ ed during a public lecture to­ day. —“With Buttercups in— Their Mouths” will be given by Dr. Troy L. Pewe, chairman of the Geology Department, at 3:40 p.m. today in AG 150. The scientist will discuss the conditions surrounding the death of the extinct ice-age animal. He will comment on a major question facing this study: were the animals en­ gulfed in crevasses and frozen, or did they die from natural causes? Dr. Pewe recently returned from Siberia where he was hunting and researching the re­ mains of the frozen animals. His major finds came while he was serving, on the University of Alaska faculty in the early 1950’s. His arctic finds have provid­ ed scientists with several hints as to what life was like in the ice-age. Vegetation of that per­ iod is still identifiable in the teeth and stomach of animals of that period. Other exhibits, with which Dr. Pewe will illustrate his talk, include portions of 20,000 and 15,000 year-old animal car­ casses preserved in “nature’s deep-freeze.” I- A R IT M LISTIAK I T G T T A ir By LOREN A new program for Homecom­ ing Week called “Gentle Thurs­ day” was approved at the ASASU Board of Financial Control meeting M o n d a y _______ Slated for “Gentle Thursday” are five contemporary bands and a light show. The bands are scheduled to play soul mu­ sic, jazz, acid rock, blues and folk music. Later at the ASASU Executive Council meeting, Bill Phillips, ASASU activities vice president, said 15,000 tickets were avail­ able for the Gary Puckett con­ cert. Student tickets cost $1.50. Phillips also announced that the Rally and Traditions Board will give free shakers for the Homecoming game. Janet Frasier, administrative vice president, also announced that next week AWS will com­ plete their poll on the effective­ ness of the Vietnam war mora­ torium held Oct. 15. Dudley Melichar, executive _____ Aof OAOTT manager ASASU,•j said that a bill is now up for Senate ap­ proval to establish a contingen­ cy fund for a social board. John Holman, ASASU presi­ dent,introduced—two^petitions. One calls for the abolishment of the E grade and the other R v Cards on New & Service RHONE 969-7375 PART TIME Now — possibly full, tim e next sum m er after graduation. Call 24 hrs. for record­ ed message, 956-6698. about your future? Here's a once in a lifetime opportunity for adventure and challenge. OCTOBER 23 AND 24, 1969 A T T H E P L A C E M E N T S E R V IC E O F F IC E Pan American P etroleum Corporation Al» ffcM t 0P P M IIM 1» l* * L O T U A civilian career with the Army Recreation or Library Program in Europe or the Far East. 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