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- Western Front - 1968 August 6
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- and balls-Archery supplies Architectural and engineering supplies Everything for art and all teclHloiogy classes Every required text book Thousands of non-required books Suggested supplemental reading books Stop in and see the largest selection of sweatshirts and t-shirts on the west coast. Good Lu
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1968_0806 ---------- Western Front - 1968 August 6 - Page 1 ---------- College means harder work, more freedom By LOIS CASKEY Copy Editor The average freshman iscompletely bewi Ide red when he first a
Show more1968_0806 ---------- Western Front - 1968 August 6 - Page 1 ---------- College means harder work, more freedom By LOIS CASKEY Copy Editor The average freshman iscompletely bewi Ide red when he first arrives on campus. He has been told to expect certain things incollege, but he is not quite sure he really knows what he is getting into. He can expect to crowd alifetime worth of learning into four years. He can expect to work harder than he ever has before, and,at the same time - at Western - he can expect greater freedom than ever before. Freshmen have littlechoice as to courses. The first year consists largely of general education courses intended to helpstudents discover Which SUbjects they are interested in. Competition for ~rades is much stiffer than inhigh school. Admissions statistics' show that 99 per cent of this fall's freshmen were in the upper halfof their high school graduating class and their average GPAwas 3.0. Transfer students generally findtheir GP changes little from the previous school. Freshman restrictions will be more liberal this fall thanever before. There are no hours for freshman women living in doro mitories. There are no required studyhaIls or dress requirements. As a result, freshmen may find themselves pressured to attend partiesor activities instead of studying or doing homework assignments. Students Who work fromassignment to assignment often find themselves hopelessly bogged down at midterm and finalstime. A good term paper cannot be written or a textbook adequately read in one night, except bya student with a genius IQ. Even then, the work is only for a grade. Crammed knowledge is quicklyforgotten. While students can and do get through college by cramming, they are not really getting aneducation. Freshmen can expect to find themselves faced with problems in areas other thanacademics, as well. The typical freshman will find he must decide what he will do about sex, liquorand drugs soon after he arrives. All are easily available at Western. And there is no one to slap hands orpat backs once the decisions have been made. Many freshmen will share a small room with anotherpero son for nine months. Living with a stranger this intimately is not as easy as many think. patienceunderstanding and sharing of hme as well as toothpaste and small change are all required forsuccess. It maybe necessary to adjust to a high noise level. Dorms are seldom quiet, even duringexams week. Work must be done in spite of it. But dorm life also has its advantages. For one thing, itis much easier to establish broad contacts and make friends in a dorm than it is off-campus. SpecialNew Students Issue the western front '.I, a d ~ I) Vol. LX No.7 Western Washington State College,Bellingham, Wash. 98225 Tues., August 6, 1968 An aerial view of the campus iooking east. For an earlier view of the campus see page 6. ~,~, (photo by oHley) ---------- Western Front - 1968 August 6 - Page 2 ---------- Western's basketball team is on a six week tour of Southeast Paul Hallgrimson, Whit Hemion, MikeClalvton, Neil Larson. Asia. Players (L to R): Ben Smith, Ron Caderette, Dave Kneeling are assistantcoach Marv Airls"or1th head coach Hemion, Jimmy Jones, John Reed, Gary Reiersgard, Ed Monk,Chuck Randall. (photo by offley) WELCOME FRESHMEN Hard hitting has been the forte of Emersonteams. Line coach Boyde Long has he lped produce some of the league's finest linemen includingDave Weedman, who signed with the Washington Redskins of the National Football League. Stan'drill sergeant' LeProtti one of the country's foremost leaders in physicalfitness keeps the players in topshape throughout the season with a grueling exercise pr~ram. Vikings Banditos ChililurgersGreen Salads Looking for a new eating treat? .•• Stop in at the top of Holly St. Emerson awaitsgridders anticipates winning year Fraser Scott, ex-western halfback and kick return specialist, haswon his first four fights since becoming a professional boxer this spring. Scott, played here in 1966Fraser Scott, ex- ViI lt; foofballer I winning pro boxing matches and has been fighting in Los Angelesas a middleweight, The red head was Northwest light • middleweight amateur champion for two yearsbefore turning pro. Viking football coach Fred Emerson is preparing to greet about 60 grid prospectswhowill hopefUlly produce his first winning team here, in his third season, Emerson has a 6-10-2record here after a highly successful high school career at Kent. Lack of depth has been the majorproblem, Although last year's team had an excellent rushing offense and defense, passing offense anddefense was poorest in the conference, . , 'he grea'es': T~os Burritos Mexi-Fr.it!s Taco BurgersShakes - Cold Drinks - Hot Drinks Open 'Til 12 Midnite 1 A.M. - Friday and Saturday E Taco IM homehill!: are the main attractions for all quarter. The program is geared to attract individuals as we11 asthose interested in team competition. Awards are given for both individual and team champions in sports such as wrestling, track and field, weightlifting or badminton. Leagues for team sports are broken upinto dorm and off campus leagues, with winners of each league playing for all. college championships.Off-eampus teams have a hard time staying intact for the entire year, so Highland Hall has been theperennial all sports champion, Information can be obtained in the intramural office of Carver Gym.Intramural program attracts all interests Intramurals at Western covers a wide array of both outdoorand indoor recreational activities, Flag football and the turkey trot, a race up and down Se- Noexperience is necessary and turnouts will begin this fall on Lake Whatcom. Exhibition races will beplanned when train. ing resumes in the spring. The college has ordered two 4-man and one 8-man boatand also expects a 8-man boat loan from the University of Wash. ington. Games are also played withSkagit Valley College and the Bellingham Soccer Club. The conference season lasts throughout fallquarter, with the first game scheduled for Oc· tober 12, Regulation soccer shoes are the onlyequipment players need to furnish. bccer, qne of the country'~_ ;test growing college sports :0 exists at Western with inco1legiat standing as a club. N'estern's team is in the West· ~ Washington SoccerConfer: e consisting of Seattle Pale College Seattle University, iversity of Washington and istern,~T. BAKER -ENDS TONIGHT- "THE FOX" 6:30· 10:15 BOX OFFICE ANNIVERSARY 8:30 OPENS6:15 NO ONE UNDER 18 ADM. HELD OVER AGAIN DOORS OPEN 6:30 ONE SHOWING OFFEATURES - WED.-THUR.-MON.-TUES. "GRilli BIRIIS" "CHUBASCO" AtB:50 Only At 7 P.M. OnlyGRLN lbIuTS s13"aOIfN - DAVID WAYNE dANSSEN RICHARD ECAN COMPANION - HITCHRISTOPHER JONES "CHUBA5CO" SUSAN STRASBERC IN In Technicolor ~FRIDAY'S SHOWINGS - ___ ~REEN BERETS' 5: 15-9:30 'CHUBASCO' 7:50 ~SATURDAY-SUNDAY~ "GREEN BERETS" J"CHUBASCO" 1:00-5: 15-9:35 3:30 and 7:50 Western's athletic program expanding along wi th thecamp-as varsity crew makes its pearance this fall. Coaching the team will be Al Jcker, captain of theUnivery of Washington crew in 19- and a member of the Lake lshington Rowing Club 4-man ew whichwent to the 1960 me Olympics. festern's soccer team nters conference in fall :rew is latest addition oathletic department Globetrotting, Western Wash19ton style, coach Chuck Ran. all's basketball teamis begining a six week tour of South1St Asia. Western opened their 24 game ammer schedule inTaipei, MonlY. They will also play games I Hong Kong, the Philippines, ustralia, New Zealand, andTaitL The 11 man team consists of: on Caderette, Mike Clayton, ml Hallgrimson, Dave and hitHemion, .Jimmy .Jones, Neil arson, Ed Monk, .Jolm Reed, lry Reiersgard and Ben Smith. MarvAinsworth coach of the pokane City League's 1968 lampion, University High :hool wi 1 assist Randall on Ie trip, He uses the same basic lense, slow and deliberate, M typifies recent Viking ams, FrankBrooks, of Brooks Lumr Company in Bellingham was contributor to the tour and losen to accompanythe team. ! donated his place so an elev. ,th player could make the trip. All the players except Paulillgrimson will return to play is winter. Hallgrimson was st year's second leading scor· fik dribblers ~nAsia tour ---------- Western Front - 1968 August 6 - Page 3 ---------- Dave Weedman, Western's NAIA all-American defensive end last season, has survi ved the first threecuts by the Washington Redskins of the Na. tional Football League. He has been switched from de·fensive end to strongside line· backer, and is currently on the number one kickoff receiving squad.Dave says his speed will help determine whether or not he makes the team. He was the fastest of alllinemen in the 40 yard dash, but he's also the lightest at 248 pounds. The Redskins played their firstexhibition game last Thursday against Houston in the Astrodome. That game should be one of thefinal determinants of this season's squad. Vik's Weedman • • r survIving pros Operating on abUdget of ala most $2,300 next year, player expenses will be few, except for the cost of providing one'sown shoes and practice clothing u (sweatshirts and shorts). a The club has two 15 man teams nentered in the Vancouver RUgby Union fall quarter, and two teams i~ will also play in the NorthwestIntercollegiate Conference win. ter quarter. The Intercollegiate confer. ence includes: University of Brit. ishColumbia, University of Ore. gon (1968 champion), Oregon State 'University, University of Victoria,University of Wash. ington, Western, and tentatively P Washington State University. h Spring quarter isreserved for c exhibition games and tourna. ments. Western is invited to f: both the Portland and Vancou. h: ver, B.C. Rugby tournaments in e: April. This year's highlight was a plane trip to Calgary, Alta.where Western beat Calgary's h top two all-star teams. The week. E end trip was financed by AS and nclub fund raising drives, which cut player costs to personal expenses only. Pint-sized athletes tear uprugby field Diamond squad starting early Many outstanding high school athletes cannot succeed in col. lege athletics because of physi. cal, academic or financial handi. caps. Western's Rugby team couldbe the answer for the talented athlete who is too small, or can't afford time away from studies and money to turn out for football before schoolstarts. A cross between American football and soccer, Rugby is anEnglish developed game which allows maximum body contact without the padding of football gear, andeverybody gets many chances to score. Rugby has club status atWest. ern and is open to all thoseinterested in competing in an intercollegiate contact sport with a casual atmosphere. Turnouts are two or three nights a week with games on weekends. The practices are only mandatory one or two nights asplayers are expected to keep themselves in shape. Pitching was the team's strong point, with an overallearned run average of only 2.54. The team's batting 'average of .191 showed little or no punch as manygames were lost by only one or two runs.. Baseball coach Connie Hamil· ton plans to begin his season when most other team end theirs. Turnouts will begin Sept. 25 at Civic Field for all those hor:. ing toplay in the spring. Ham. i lton will scout next season hopefuls in daily afternoon turnouts for twoweeks. Hitting was the weak point for last year's team Which fin. ished 8·16. Hamilton's first year club showed marked im. provement over the 1967 team which finished 1-19. DAVE SUMMER SPECIALSNOW SUSANNE a versatile guitar duo and - two locations - near the comer Haggen's Shopping Center of HoDy and Meridian and Lakeway '-S Cash and Carry for Discount Cleaning at the "CASINO" of theleopold Hot~' No Cover 9-2 Mon.-Sat. r~~ COUHTRY CLEANERS NOW SHOWING Returning aredistance ace Jim Shephard and the entire' mile relay team of Dave and Larry 'Anderson, LoydKuhlman,and Ron Jackman. Ulve Anderson holds school records in both the 100 and 220. Larry Anderson set the 440 mark this year. The broth. ers,a senior and junior respec. tively are from North Bend. VanderGriendis currently trying for a spot on the Olympic team at the Olympic training site of South Lake Tahoe,Calif. He was fourth at the trIals in Los Angeles, last month. Gone- are "jumpers John Hunt and DickPerfrement who also competed in national meets and miler Bill Cliff who set a school record in both themi Ie and two mile. Tuesday, AUQust 6.1968 ill ,. second to nationally prominent Central in the Districtmeet. Dave VanderGriend won the NAIA javelin title after setting a school and conference record witha toss 241 '5" in the Evergreen Conference Cham· pionships. a Young Mens Fashions o Sport Coats o Levis o Sport Shirts' o Dress Shirts [] Pajamas o Belts Billfolds o Records \ FOR THE COLLEGEWOMAN o Famous Brand o Suits o Jackets o Raincoats o Sweaters [] .Accessories o Shoes oFamous Brand Young Ladies' Fashions o Intimate AppareJ 0 Blouses o Dress Coats 0 Sweaters oRaincoats 0 Pants o Shoes . 0 Hosiery [J Jumpers 0 Jewelry Handbags o Skirts 0 Formals o Gloves0 Bridal Registry o Cosmetics 0 Bridal Shop o AccessorieS 0 Jackets o Dresses 0 Yardage Notionso Wigs. Chig!';\ons 0 Beauty Salon o After 5 Dres~s 0 Millinery o Records~l Save Time and TravelWith A One Stop Shopping I.ist At Your Local 80n Marche FOR COLLEGE MEN AND WOMEN oPleasant Restaurant Facil ities for Lunch, . Afternoon Refreshment, Friday Nite Dinner. o Umbrellas 0Cameras o Bedding 0 Razors o Stationery 0 Small Appliances o Typewriters 0 Luggage o TapeRecorders 0 Watches o Books 0 Lamps o Clocks 0 Radios (portable) o Records \ FOR THE COLLEGE MAN T~-",-;r- .. B~~ WelCODle WWSC .Students ''1M Ruggers bind tight and push hard in a setserum. Western's fine 'club team had a 12-12 record but wonseven of their last nine games spring quarter. western's track team set eight school records last spring and produced a NAIA javelin cham· piontoo. Coach Boyde Long sent nine competitors to the NAIA championships after placing a stFongTrackmen produce records, champion 14 Western Front ---------- Western Front - 1968 August 6 - Page 4 ---------- Bellingham port ;s gateway' for Northwest to entire world 1328 Cornwall J 1426 Cornwall Ave. daisiesfrom gree program will constitute 10 per cent of a total enrollment of an estimated 12,000 stUdents,While a doctor's degree program will constitute 2.5 per cent or 300 students. Cost estimates for theprograms are based on the present staff-to-student ratio of one to seven at the master's degreelevel and one to three at the doctoral level. "The most intensive impact upon the college, which haspermeated into almost every department, has been the bringing into being of the graduate degreeprogram," Ross said. "Within five years almost every major has been covered by a master's degreeprogram" he added. ' The most recently developed program under the Master ofEducation Degree is in Personnel Administration. Graduates of this ~rogram will find employment mcolleges and universities in student personnel services. The M. Ed. program also of~ ers. degrees in teachingspeciallZahons, school service personnel, psychological services and administration. ' 733-9300BinJon Optometrists The strength of the master of arts and master of science degree programs developed during the past five years by Western's Graduate School lead to hopes that there may be adoctor's degree program by 1971. Figures released from the office of the Dean of Graduate Schoolindicate that the largest number of graduate degrees are conferred in the field of education. In 1949,Western' graduated five persons with a Master of Education degree. Last year 95 graduated with an M.Ed. degree. J. Alan Ross, dean of Graduate School, said that if the 1969 s tat e legislatureapproves, "TWO or three years later Western will have developed a doctoral program. "We arelooking forward to 7%-8 million people in the state by then. It does not seem reasonable that there beonly one doctoral institution. "Washington would be like a town with only one high school," Ross said.Doctoral work will be in programs where library resources are relatively strong at present and where no large outlays for laboratory or other facilities will be required. The Graduate Council saidthat it does notwant to establish a set of weak doctoral programs in competition with strong and long establishedprograms ofthe same type. For that reason, the first doco toral programs WIll likely be in areas such asMathematics Educat~ on. or Reading Specialist. Wlthm a 20-year period it is estimated that themaster~s de- Tuesday, August 6, 1968 Western Front 13 Graduate School may add doctoral programby '7 , Planned improvements of north_ dock facilities include a new equipment and repair build~ ing,plus two modern warehouses. The South Terminal dock, not far from Uni:fl.ite Co., isn't slated forimprovements, Hill said. Automated handling of cargo is mainly dependent on adaptations pines arealso significant, HfiI said. Growth of the port in tonnage handled is evident from figures for differentyears: 1966- 339,855; 1965 - 189,989; 196266,892; 1960 - 35,918; and in 1952 only 3,161 tons ofcargo. Asked about further port growth, Hill thought it would not occur in existing prodUCts, bIt in"unknown manufacturing products that don't exist now." He said fabricated aluminum products andmarine protein coocentrate are possibilities. Pulp product growth, Hill said, is limited because thesaturation point of users is almust here. in ship design, Hill said. For example, he said, you can'texpect to use fork lifts and square pallets to store cargo in rounded, curved cargo holds. The menwho handle cargoes, longshoremen, are classified according to their level of skill. Fifty-five" A" men,experts on cargo handling, are the must numerous category. Next in skill are the "B" men, who haven'tbeen with the business long enough to learnall the ropes. There are now 22 of these with 15 more to beselected soon. "Extras," the last category, are the men just starting out in longshoring or men who useit as a mooolighting activity. "B" men and "extras" are hired 7:30 a.m. and 3 p.m. every day exceptSunday at the State St. Longshoremen's hall. All longshoremen are paid a basic hourly wage of $3.88per hour, but those doing especially hazardous or difficult jobs re. ceive more. Night and weekendwork pays time-and-a-half, $5.84 per hour. Art exhibits planned for coming year Our vantage pointoverlooking Bellingham Bay lets us see two of the main docks that are part of a $2 million a yearbusiness - cargo handling and storage. Exports make up the bulk of business. The three mnstimportant products Bellingham exports are canned salmon, logs and pulp, according to KennethHill, manager of Bellingham Stevedoring Company. other exports increasing in Importance are aluminumIngots, hides, waste paper, :frozen foods and lignisite. Two new- industries .are Increasing theimportance of Imports. Georgia Pacific's chemical plant imports salt. lntalco Aluminum Corporation inFerndale imports aluminaand cryolite. ShiIl9 from many parts of the world come to Bellingbam, Intalco and Blaine. Japan receives the bulk of local exports, especially logs. Exports to India, South America and the Philip. "YOU CAN SURE TELL HIS GROCERIES DON'T COME FROM ENNENS." ,~weisjields JEWELERS 1327 CORNWAll "Diamonds You Can Buy With Confidence" COMPLETEOPTOMETRIC SERVICE CONTACT LENSES - FASHION FRAMES Dr. leroy H. Freeman andAssociates reat Thoughts Bear Re-Thinking Such as: "Where am I going to dig up the cash for her ring?" Seek out the fallacy. In this case, "cash." Since a ring is a thing of the future, charge it to the future.•• at Weisfield's. See our big selection of bridal sets offers a guest speaker at one time during theyear. Open for the first time in the fall will be the new arts addition. The addition will be used primarilyfor sculpture and caramics work. Art exhibits are generally held in the Western Gallery located on the second floor of the art building. Individual students also may sponsor their own exhibits in downtownBellingham. ENNEN'S THRIFTWIY HIGH AND HOLLY "WHERE EVERY CUSTOMER IS IMPORTANT"During fall quarter, Walter Wegner, assistant professor of art, will present a one-man show in sculpture.Ruth Kelsey, associate professor, will present a painting exhibit. In addition, a large exhibit will beheld during winter quarter featuring 19th century landscape paintings borrowed from lead';' ing museumsthroughout the nation. The department also usually COMPLETE LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEAN INGFree Pickup : Delivery 734-4200 1Day Shirt Service The art department will feature exhibits indifferent art media this year. Parking fees upped for fall parking fees for the coming academic year willbe $8 per quarter for off-eampus students and $10 per quarter for residence hall boarders. Faculty and staff parking fees will be $36 for the year. Projected revenue of$13,770 000 generated from studentfee~ parking, and residence hall fee~ Will be used to finance the new student activities center south ofFairhaven, the VU parking ramp and Lakewood additions. Two housing facilities for 1970, each for 600students, and housing facilities for 700 married students on South Campus Drive will also be financedby the fees. t ---------- Western Front - 1968 August 6 - Page 5 ---------- t I I t t }: 11 ~ tivity this year will be tutor. ing of local Indian students. Last year the Western chap.ter was cited as the outstanding SWEA chapter in the state. It presented panels on overseasteaching, mock job interviews with a school district represent. ative and discussions of studentteaching experiences. SWEA was founded at West. ern in 1951. Since then, it has grown to 20chapters through. out the state. Western has sup. plied the state president for the last three years andtwo national vice presidents. This year two Western students hold state offices. Con. nie Swaffordis secretary·trea. surer and Karen Ike is regional coordinator. Both are juniors. Local officers for thisyear are Brunie Maass, president; Bill McDonald, vice president; Nancy Kelley, secretary; and CorrineHanson, treasurer. Neil Mullen, assistant professor of education, is adviser, SWEA meets at 4 P. m.the first Tuesday of the month. Meet· ings are scheduled for Oct. 8, Nov. 5 and Dec. 3. Members alsobelong to the National Education Associa. tion (NEA) and Washington Education Association (WEA).They receive four pUblications. the NEA "Journal,"theWEA ''Mag. azine( the stateSWEA's ','Over. view'and a local newsletter. WEA furnishes a$100,OOObodily injury liability policy to protect allmembers who student teach in Washington schools. Freshmen can become active by serving on one ofthe com. mittees Which are formed in the fall. Dues are $6.50 per year. Join the Front lines Do youwant to reach the public? earn some spending mono ey? and maybe even pick up a credit? Visit theWestern Front of. fice in the blsement of the VU and somebody can easily find something for you to doon the weekly school paper. Credit can be earned working on the staff, reporting, writing stories and headlines, with ' grades all the way from F to A-Or if you can sell, you can make a commission sellingad· vertising. William Hatch. director of financial aids and student advisement, described theGuaranteed Loans as a "very good program. .. The only draWback, he believes, is that loans are nothandled by the college. The school merely certifies that the student is registered with the college. Formore information about financial assistance see William Hatch in the Office of Fi. nancial AidS, OldMain 103. Loans available to all students The Guaranteed Loans program primarily makes loaninsurance available to any college student who wants to borrow. The program is designed for students from middle- or upperincome families who cannot qualify for student employment or loans.Repayment of most commercial loans is required while the students are in colle9;e. I' Eir~~{~rEt~f!I:iI·.;.~ (up~r income) Interest. If a student comes from a ~~~~l~s:~ ~5~~gs~e:ei~~~~: Ii., federalgovernment pays ap. proximately one-half the inter· :1J est. • SWEA offers education majors theopportunity to take part in programs concerning professional standards, negotiations, and newteaching practices. For example, one SWEA ac- TEDS GARAGE Parts and accessories for dunebuggies WWSC Art Film Series presents JULIETTE OF THE SPIRITS (Italy, 1965) "Another Fellinimilestone in the art of film" Lecture Hall 4 Thursday, August 8, 7:00 and 9:30 P.M. Admission: Adults$1.00, Students 65e Freshmen planning to major in education should be interested in the StudentWashington Education Association (SWEA), a professional organization for prospective teachers.SWEA involves ed majors in teaching 24 Hours a Day HOLLY STREET DOWNTOWN BELLINGHAMCongratulations on selecting Western and welcome to Bellingham. The HORSESHOE CAFE and.RANCH ROOM You are cordially invit~d to make Mt. Baker Mutual Savings Bank your savingsheadquarters. SERVING FINE FOOD Current interest rate 5% per annum payable qua-rterly on monthlybalances. Insured to $15,000 by the FDIC. MT. BAKER MUTUAL SAVINGS BANK MT. BAKERMUTUAL SAVINGS BANK, '1306 CORNWALL AVE. / 733-6290 II Western Front Tuesday, August 6,1968 _ Western tops colleges in grants Western ranks ahe.ad of all . Dr:' Paul D•. Woodring, dis-."granted $100,000 for project Journal of paleontology last other state colleges In the na- tingUlshed serVlce professor of Catch - Up, a summer program year. . tion in total grants for research the college,international au- for junior high school students Fairhaven College is funded and curricular development,Dr. thority on higher education and of American Indian and other by a ~44,000 grant from the HerbertTaylor, dean for ra- advisor to the Ford Foundation, minority descent-CarnegIe Foundation to Dr. searchand~rants,saidlastweek is also partly responsible for A half-million-dollar Ford Charles Harwood, professorof in an interVlew. the success of the research and grant for visual education psychology. The collegehas received a grants office. (Vicoed) runs out at the end Taylor said the grants cover total of $2,800,000in grants Finally. the geographic loca- of the summer, but the program "almost, but not quite, every drawnfrom several federal and tion of the college is commend- will be asborbed and continued department of thecollege. There private foundations such as the able for research in marine on a regular scale by the Indus-is a heavy concentration in the Ford, Rockefeller, carnegie and biology and pleistocene geology trial Artsdepartment. sciences and a dearth for art Esso foundations. (geology concerned with the last In the fieldof pure research, and music." Some of the money is to be period of the ice advance). a $31,000 grant was recently He said he would like to see spent within months, a year, l'd th t th awarded to Dr. RobertMeade, more money spent for human-or in some cases up to six Tayor Sal . a:. on e av- professor ofpsychology, to study ities and the arts. Usually, over-years. "We'll probably spend erage, two apphcabons are ap. leadership pattenrs in India. head money from other ra- $1 750 000 next year" Taylor proved foreveryone grant rea Grants are often awarded in searches and grants is given saId. ' , jected. "We are ~owapplying very specialized fields of study. to the arts. Foundation monies are not for 57 gran~s which wehave Dr. Merle Meyer, chairman of "We gave 20 grants outstand-spent for student financial aids not y~treceIved. We a~so have the psychology department for ing from our own funds to such or construction..Taylor pointed 16 WhICh we have re~,elVed ~ut example, received $4,20,) from projects," he said. out,but for student fellowships ha~e not y~t started, he Sald. the Department of Housing, Ed- Taylor makesthree or four and graduate and undergraduate 'There IS no. good ~ule ,for ucation, and Welfare to studytrips a year to New York and assistantships. how m?,ch we Wlll recelye, he operant osmatic regulation in Washington D.C. "to check on Taylor said the primary rea- says. About half the bme. we the octopus.who has the money.~' son for Western gettin~ somany are cut down. Some of the bme A research grantof $25 000 ''This is the most enjoyable grants is an outstanding facul- we ge.t What we ask fo~, and waSawarded to Dr. Charles part of my work," Taylor said. ty. "We can't get a government once In a very greatwhIle we Ross, associate professor of ''If a person has money he grant without a likely reason to get"more than what we ask geology, for the ~t~dy of the wishes to ~i~e away he is usual-produce in thefuture," he said. for. phylogeny of Fusuhmdea. From ly ver,,! Wllling to talk to you. I Second he cites thequality Grants for programs and re- his study he won an award for also find it fascinating to talk of thestudent body. Programs search cover a broad .range of the outstanding article in the with individualscientists." go to gifted and distinguished subject matter. For Instance, W stUdents. he said. the collegereceived about $220,- estern to open Close cooperation with Rep. 000 from the Office of Economic LloydMeeds (D-Wash.) is an- Opportunity for Project Over- h-other reason.for prolificgrants. come, acont.inuoussummerpro- BC teac Ing center "He does hIS homework thor- gram for high school students __ oughly" Taylor said ''I am in their junior and senior years . be f W st ' t de t amazed at how swi:r1:1ythese who are admitted to Western up. Western wi.ll open a r~sIdent the n~m r 0t e t el~n ssuntransactions are carried on completion. student teaching center In Van- teachI.ng cen.ers 0 • through."The Rockefeller Foundation couver, B.C., this fall, accord- SaVltch Sald t~at nof°wIwets~ern ing to Dr.Leonard Savitch, di- can offer a varIety oca Ions rector of student teaching. The to the 000 students whoplan to program has been endorsed by student teach next year. the state department of Washing- "Asthe student te~ching pro-ton. gram expands and If th~, need . . arises, we can even consIder the . Abou! 12 students Will part.I- possibility of moving into Alas- Clpate In the progr:am, which IS ka to establishresident cen-open to all educatIon ~tudent~. ters," Dr. Elden Bond. acting The number. of partiCIpants IS chairman of the education de-expected to Increase as more partment said people become familiar withthe " ". program Savitch said. Wester~ has prob~bly taken • the lead In Washmgton for Now residentcenters have establishing cooPerative relat-also been established in Belle- ionshipS with the publicschools vue, in Tacoma and on the by involving them in teacher Olympic Penisula. This bring~ trainingprograms," Bond said. ---------- Western Front - 1968 August 6 - Page 6 ---------- Tuesday, August 6, 1968 Western Front I. 1 Every student belongs to Associated Students Westernhas several sailboats at Lakewood. (Photo by Art Christensen)' posed of the president, vice· president, activities commis· sioner, legislative speaker, fig nance chairman, union-facilities chairman and aUnited States National Student Assoc. coordinator. The activities commission is composed of: theactivi ties com· missioner, a socialissues chair. man, a fine arts chairman, a SpeD cial eventschairman, a pUblicity chairman, a social chairman, a recreation chairman, and an evaluation andpersonnel chairman. The committee chairmen are appointed by the activities commissioner. Thejudicial branch consists of one student chief justice, two stu. dent jUdges. and one non-voting facultyadviser. All Western students who have paid the student activity fee are members of the AssociatedStudents of Western Washing. ton State College. Wives and husbinds of regularly enrolled stu. dentsshall receive a free SpeD cial activity ticket which shall entitle them free or reduced admission toactivities. The legislative branch is com· posed of 17 members; 14 student representatives elected at large, one representative elect. ed by the freshman class and two faculty members who shaH act asnon-voting advisors to the legislature. The freshman representative shall serve until the last day of spring quarter. The ,executive branch is com· Since the cabin is two miles from the road, it is recommend.ed that students be led up to it by competent guides who are familiar with the area, Sinclair Island'scabin is unique in that it can only be reached by boat. It is suitable for groups planning to remainovernight on the property. Reservations for the use ofthe cabins and other facilities must be obtained inadvance from the women's physical education department. ~ Lakewood is Western's special Fun Place,a place where things happen. The thing may be sailing or canoeing, a light show, a dance, a barbecuepicnic, swimming party or any of a vast variety of other recreational, educational and cultural activities. Some students go out there just to hide. Facilities include a lodge; a boathouse for sailboats, canoesand auxiliary equipment; a swimming dock with diving board; and a barbecue pit and picnic tables: Alarge multipurpose lodge, boathouse expansion and waterfront improvements are scheduled to becompleted by next spring. Long-range plans call for overnight and kitchen facilities, a dining area, ski dock and improved roads and parking. Although the college will foot the $310,614 bill for the Lakewooddevelopment, it will remain the property of the Associated Students. Western sailors take a deep six.College owns overnight cabins Lakewood-for fun Western owns and maintains property and cabins onMt. Baker, and on Sinclair Island, southwest of Lummi Island in the San Juans. Kulshan cabin islocated at the timberline near the mouth of Coleman Glacier on Mt. Baker. It is operated with thecoopera. tion of the Mt. Baker Climbing ClUb. Aids office lists jobs for students Students seekingemployment on campus can find a variety of opportunities thrOUgh the finan· cial aids office in OldMain 103. Most campus jobs are part time at the college minimum wage of $1.40 per hour. Mini. mumwage is expected to in. crease to $1.45 per hour in the fall. Hours are flexible so they can fit into classschedules. Jobs include part time secre· tarial work for the various de. partments, Saga food helpersfor the VU Coffee Shop and Viking Commons, custodial and maintenance work, and library helpamoog others. Some jobs, such as campus security patrol, of. fer longer hours and higher pay. Listingsfor off-campus jobs in the city can also be found in the financial aids office. If nothing else can be found,the "Western Front" will ala ways hire ad salesmen. Com. missioners are 10 and 15 per cent on everyad s?ld. r, •• " ... Lakewood provides facilities for swimming, boating, picnicking, volleyball,badminton, horseshoes and other out-door recreational games." (photo by fisher) !$e:x Students dig intoLake Whatcom ~ith fast paddles in a hot race. (photo by oHley) ~~~rants help some needy freshmen Ed u cat i on a I Opportun. their class during the preced. ,.... ity Grants is the smallest pro- ing academicyear. Wougram numerically for total fed- ~ ilboueral financing in aid to west. About 190 freshmen were on ern students the 2·year-old program through tly t Educational a p p 0 r tun. the academic year, whilean-sanity Grants is a program of dig oth~r 70 students have renewed sperect "grants" based on excep-theIr grants. lcorrtional finandal need andaca. William Hatch, director of demic or creative promise.financial aids and stUdent advise. ecoi The grants range from $200 ment, said that students on printo$800 per year. An additional grants come with "barely ad- thi$200 is given to those students missablegrade points up to 3.9 who were in the upper-half of , ~.p.a.'s.:', ' ---------- Western Front - 1968 August 6 - Page 7 ---------- The jumps are made from 2,80 feet. The sport involves some ex pense. The first jump costs $20 whichcovers plane, chute an instruction. The cost Per jum gradually falls, until one gra uates from the course,to $ per jump. A new parachute costs aboo $80, or can be rented for abou $1 per jump. The club hopes eventually participate in competitions an put on demonstrations for s cia1 events such as Homeco ing. The club was officially recog nized by the college last sPr" and will be active again year. thing goeswrong with the main rig. Second, most people think jumpers land hard. Fullerton says the impact for aperson of about 180 pounds is the same as jumping off a 3-foot-high table. The third mistaken - idea isthat the shock of the opening chute is hard. Today, sport parachutes are equipPed with a "Sleeve,"which lets the silk out slOWly, resulting in only a minor jerk. Training is provided by the club andinvolves a five or six hour class session, followed by the first jump. The student's first five jumps aremade on a static line, which automatically pulls the rip cord. They say the first time is the hardest. Butonce you're out of the plane, Seattle sophomore Jim Fullerton says, "it feels like floating. There's nosensation of falling whatsoever." Fullerton is one of a number of Western students who get their kicksby jumping out of airplanes. Sky diving is not a sport for everyone. But many who might find it enjoyable are kept away because of three major misconceptions, Fullerton says. The first is the notion that the parachute might not open. Fullerton says euqipment failure is not the Cause of accidents. For onething, jumpers carry a reserve chute, to use if some- If you're looking for an extra- bers provide training on short of a major glacier. It can curricular activity which is ex- practice trips. Athletic stamina reached by a well-graded tra' citing, unconventional and up in is not required; nor are large which takes about two tothre the air, look no further than the outlays of cash. hours to climb from the parkin Alpine Club. In fact,the only cost is one lot. Western's highly active moun- dollar per year for dues and a tain climbing clubtakes frequent split of gas expenses for trips. Coeds find the club just advantage of some of the best -Equipment is provided to novices attractive as the men. About 4 and most spectacular - terrain by theclub. per cent of the club is female for outdoor activity in the United The club offers a variety of The clubusually has 40 to 5 States. activities besides summit climb- active members, enough so tha ing,including specialty rock someone organizes a trip nearl The breathtaking North Cas- every weekend.cade Range, which includes one climbing, hiking, snowshoeing To learn more about the clUb . andcamping. tt of the largest unspoiled Wilder- One of the favorite areas for a end one of the regular meeness areas left in continental activity is lO,990-footMountBak- ings in SM 109 at 7'.30 p. America, beginsonly an hour's er, a perpetually snow-covered Thursdays. drive from campus. volcano located about 60miles Or contact club presiden You don't need to be an expert east of Bellingham. George Mustoe, 734-1140, 0 to join the Alpine Club. The Alpine Club owns and clUb adviser Dr. H. Willia Newcomers to thesport are maintains an overnight cabin Williams, professor of chemis encouraged. Skilled club mem- highon the mountain at the foot try. Skydiving is not for everyone chapters, and will be especially active inthis election year. New Conservatives is for students whose views are on the right, while the AmericanCivil Liberties Union, a national group which fights for constitutional liberties for individuals and has been active in such causes as civil rights, maintains a camlX1s chapter. On the left is the Students for aDemocratic Society, while members of Students for Peace in Vietnam embrace all viewpoints anddifferent candidates. Recreation clubs Western organizations ern. brace a wide range of physicalactivity. Besides the Alpine and Parachute clUbs, there are the Blue Barnacles, for girls interested insynchronized swimming, and the Outing Club, for skiers. Scuba divers might look into the VikingSounders, while the Viking Yacht Club provides boats, facilities and a coordinated program forstudents and faculty interested in sailing and canoeing. Women's Recreation Association embracesnot only synchronized swimming, but also dance, sports and outing activities. Rugby Club is forstudents who want to play one of the deadlier games around (see page 15), while "w" Club is open tomen who have earned letters in any of the five major sports. The Soccer Club schedules numerouscompetitions. Steve Erickson, draped with ropes and gear, climbs the lower slopes of Table Mountain.The Bagley Lakes are in the background. (photo by george mustoe) mh;4g,!:)ffiF);;n;n~; ..1[j·1.Rin@l1P_h gt;· ~ Alpine Club keeps your head in clouds ~ Tuesday, August 6, 1968 Phi BetaLambda-business education. Phi Alpha Theta-history. Phi Kappa Delta-forensics. Phi Mu Epsilon-math. Pi Sigma Alpha-political science. Sigma Tau Alpha-Rainbow Girls honorary. Theta Alpha Phi-theater. For more information about the honorary in your major department, contact thedepartmental secretary. Service clubs Service Clubs include Circle K, a Kiwanis-sponsoredorganization for men; Helmsmen, a coeducational club whose memQ. ers are chosen by invitation;alld valkrie, a club for women, who are elected on ttie basis of interest and participation in collegeaffairs. Special clubs A number of clubs are available to students interested in a particular area ofconcern. The Association for Childhood Education is of. interest to students who seek a betterunderstanding of the problems of children. Colhecon is for women interested in homemaking.Action for Conservation has worked for the Cascade National Park proposal and other conservationcauses. The Folk and Square Dance ClUb offers a change from hip. swinging rock, and the French,German and Spanish and Los Amigos clubs offer stUdy of foreign culture that goes beyond theclassroom to language majors. For physical arts enthusiasts, there is the Judo Club; and forcomputer brains, the Math Club. Dames Club promotes friendship among wives of married stUdents.The Tutorial Society offers qualified students the oPPOrtunity to tutor Lummi Indian children and,starting this fall, Western undergraduates. For the Bobby Fishers on campus, there is the Chess Club,which sponsors tournaments as well as regular play. VU Bridge ClUb sponsors games of contractbridge. Political groups There are organizations on campus for students of all views and degrees ofactivism. Young Republicans and Young Democrats both have campus There's nothing quite as deflating as a grounded parachute, 6 foot 7 Jim Fullerton seems to be saying. The tall freshman has been in the sport a year. (Photo by Eagle e.t.) Honoraries Honorary organizations exist to recognize outstandingstudents and provide incentive for high scholarship. Membership is usually restricted to studentsmajoring in a particular field, and often a certain grade average is required. Western's honorary groups are: Alpha Rho Tau-fine arts. Delta Phi Alpha-German. Epsilon Phi Tau-industrial arts. Gamma ThetaUpsilon-geography. Kappa Delta Phi_education. Clubs offer varied activities There is more to collegelife than classrooms and textbooks. Clubs offer fun-filled activity, an outlet for pent-up energy and anopportunity to get away from the academic aspect of college life long enough to clear some of thecobwebs from the brain. Western students are encouraged to participate in organized activity, andthere are enough clubs that virtually everyone can find at least one of interest. Clubs range fromscholastic honoraries to political action groups and outdoor sports organizations. Activity is bothmental and physical, usually a mixture of both, not infrequently highly unusual and exciting. A completelisting of Western clubs is in the Navigator. In. formation also may be obtained at the VU desk. Studentgovernment The most far-reaching and possibly most important organizations on campus are thegeneral student groups. Every Western stUdent is a member of Associated Students. AS maintainsan active student government which coordinates activities, sponsors mixers, and represents the studentinterest in dealing with the college administration and the city. The scope of AS's activity is .indicated by the fact that it spends more than $135,000 per year. There are always volunteer positions open on various committees and any full-time student with passing grades can seek student office inthe spring elections. All men belong to Associated Men Students, and all women to AssociatedWomen Students. In addition, all undergraduates are members of either the freshman, sophomore,junior, or senior class. 10 Western Front ---------- Western Front - 1968 August 6 - Page 8 ---------- r-;-~~-'-·-·-··' I ! i I i I i ! , L . I I . I. I. ";'-!¥/,.$,./ ... 91 / .h = H \B1 Campus 1896 - 1969Tuesday, August 6, 1968 No. lo 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 1~. 16. 17. 18.19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27. 28. 29. 30. 3lo 32. 33. 34. Western Front 9 Building OldMain Edens Hall Wilson Library P.E. Building No.1 Campus School Central Heating Plant Women'sResidence Hall Women's Residence Hall Arts Building Auditorium/Music Building Edens Hall, NorthHighland Hall No.1 Highland Hall No.2 Haggard Hall Viking Union The Bookstore Higginson Hall Viking Commons No.1 Carver Gymnasium No.2 Humanities Building Ridgeway, Phase 1 Ridgeway Commons Ridgeway, Phase 2 Ridgeway, Phase 3 Mathes Hall Nash Hall Garage Science-Math-ComputerCenter Arts Addition Ed-Psych Building Union Addition Commissary Central Maintenance BuildingFairhaven College Wilson Library Addition Auditorium/Music Bldg. Addition :Iuster college students aremore than numbers Two plays set for fall By MAUREEN PECARIC Reporter :estern's expected growthto iOO students by 1985 win 19 with it many benefits for college, but it also brings a (er. he danger isthe "multiver" effect, which reduces the vidual student to little more I an IBM number. :estern isfighting the multi· sity effect with one of the 'est and most exciting con· is in American higher edu·ion today: the cluster col. I :'cluster college is a small, I.contained liberal arts UnIt ded within the largercampThe small size insures that sonal contact between stu· Is and faculty can be main. ed, yet atthe same time 'rs students the superior reo rces of the much larger over· institution. The clustercollege is a style earning, teaching and mutual I _ support Which cannot be jeved any other way,"campplanning director Harold tz says. airhaven college, a cluster lege on Western s campus,designed to offer the stut the best of two worlds. tudents get both individual aUy tutoring and attendclas· ion Western's campus. lestern plans to make ample of the cluster college con· I with six suchcolleges plan· '.for the next 25 years. iairhaven exemplifies the inoive approach of Western'sninistration and faculty. iairhaven was started last It' with 13 students and a !-dozen teachers. rhis fall200 students (out of 400 applicants) will be en· rolled in the cluster college. Fairhaven will have 13 fac.ulty members this fall, of which six will be full time. Within four years the cluster college will have over 20 full time faculty members. Fairhaven will be' houseain one major building Which will contain academic,dining, social and recreational facilities ofthe college. Groundbreaking for the col· lege begins this fall.Fairhaven's new quarters are expected to be ready by fall of 1969. Twelve resident halls, each housing50 students are planned. They will be located in Hidden Valley, near the main campus. This fall students will live in Edens Hall, North and South. The resident halls will be as unique as the college itself. Theywill be the first apartment units on Western's campus. "Apartment living will give students a chance tolive their own individual style of life," Dean Charles Harwood, Dean of Fairhaven, said. "The mostoutstanding feafure of Fairhaven is its Ihdependent Studies Program, which allows for educationalachievement that is best done outside the class. room." "Our motto is to have our cake and eat it too."Dean Har· wood said. Fairhaven's unique curricul· um requirements will make up about one-half ofthe students time. A minimum equivelent to 30 credits will be done in individual studies. Thisprogram includes study and discussion with visiting scholars and artists. It also in· cludes independent study in the student's area of concentration, research, seminars and field trips. Students will also takereo quired courses as set up by Fairhaven, in regUlar Western classes. Fairhaven students will take an equivalent of 30 credits in the Humanities (Ancient World to 1492·15 credits; 1492 to 1814. 10 credits; 1914 to present.5 credits). An equivalent of 15 credits are required in science and mathematics.Seminars in behavioral sci. ence, philosophy and religion, and aesthetics (4 credit equiv. alent each) and a senior semin· ar will be taken by all students. A major and a minor, taken on Western's campus, will complete the students program. What kind of students apply at Fairhaven? "Students with a highgrade point average will be in the maj. ority at Fairhaven." Fairhaven students must meet admissionstandards for Westtern, but must also posess qual.. Hies of initiative and seIf-discipline needed forindependent study. "Although there is no grade point requirement, Fairhaven at. tracts a higherachieving student than larger colleges, like Western," Dean Harwood said. "However, Fairhaven is in· terested in students of different backgrounds, and some low achievers who show creativity areadmitted." Students will be more respon· sible for academic work at Fair.. haven and classes will meet less often. "Students are encour~ed to send in creative work alongwitb their application and over 100 of this fall's students ha.ve done so. Students write their own recommendation. as well as beingrecommended by their high school principal. and' come' fn for interviews with the faculty. Through theseinterviews student and faculty come to a decision as to whether the Fair. haven concept is bestsuited to the students needs and interests. " Fairhaven's administration and faculty thinks thatstudents can and should playa more reo sponsible role in the operation of the college. "Students run allactivities of the co'lege. They are on all committees and make decisions about their own cirriculum,faCUlty hiring and tenure andall other questions that concern the college. " Fairhaven will not operateunder the conventional quarter. hour credit system. Western's speech department will feature twostudent productions fall quarter. The first, set in ancient Greece, is, "Lysis Trata." It is the story ofwomen who grow tired and disgusted with the dismal way that men run the world. "Lion in Winter," the story of Henry II and hiS wife, will be presented in December. The speech department en· couragesany interested freshman to audition for the two plays. Tryouts for both produc. tions will be held Sept.30 through Oct. 2. A written summary and evaluation of the student's work is prepared each year bythe student's tutors. Upon graduation a final eval. uation is made. This can be equated to quarter-hour credit and grades, if necessary, for the students admission to graduate school or transfer to anothercollege. Students may also take a bachelor's degree in three years, rather than four. One work stUdyquarter off. campus is allowed. One summer quarter spent in credited travel and work offcampus andtwo summers Oft campus will be credited as one years study. Total construction cost of Fairhavencollege will be over four and one·half million, of Which over 300,O!00 will be for the resident halls.Funds are. provided by the state legislature and by private foundation and federal sources: Those who do not get parts may help in other areas, such as costuming, scenery and lighting. A new pr~ram of thespeech department is the touring children's theater, operated during winter quarter. Agroup of about adozen students attend classes regularly the first three days of each week, and tour schools throughoutthe area to present children's plays the rest of the week. During this time, the students take courses instagecraft, speech and acting, ---------- Western Front - 1968 August 6 - Page 9 ---------- 8 Western Front 67-8 69-2 69-5 69-6 69-7 69-9 69-11 69-13 69-15 69-16 Tuesday, August 6, 1968Referendum 19 Project Central Power Plant Addition Wilson library Addition, Phase II Swimming PoolNorthwest Environmental Studies Center Technical Theater Housing 1970 Student Activity CenterHousing 1972 Housing for Married Stutlents Renting? Here are some tips Beat high rent-buy a houseOne way students can beat have more respectfor something preciation are slim; on the other high rents is to buy a house. they own themselves, he said. hand, do not buy a lemon that While this might be difficult One Western student bought a will break you for maintenance. for individual stUdents, a group house forabout $4,000 ayear ago. 3. Fix up the house so that it of four or five could pool reo During the year he kept it, he is clean and attractive. The best sources and buy a house for a spent about :j)3,500 and a certainrental or sales market to appeal low down payment. amount of effort for maintenance to is older or married students, Monthly payments would be and improvements. who want something better than considerablyless than rent for He rented the upstairs unit the average student can afford. the same house, and if thestu. for $80 per month, which paid Much of the difference between dent owners kept up the property hismonthly payments. He sold an apartment that rents for $40 they could sell it after two or the house thisspring for $11,000, and one that rents for $90 is three years for a profit, Ellis earning a $3,500 profit afterappearance, given a sound house Massey, Bellingham realtor, living in his own home rent-free to beginwith. says. for a year. 4. Be mindful of the neighbor- For example, Massey said Not everybody canexpect to hood in which you buy. It should five students could put up $500 do this well, of course. This besuitable for small children each to pay $2,500 down on a particular student had exper- - in a quiet area,near schools, house. If they kept it two years, ience in real estate through his on a lightly-traveled street.they would split monthly pay. father's business. There are many ways to own ments of about $70 - ineffect, But he offers a few general a house - individually or co-paying rent of $14 per month suggestions,which, if followed, operatively, on a small or large plus utilities. give you some place to start scale, for oneyear or for 10 Massey said investment in and should keep you out of ser- years. real estate is worthwilebecause, ious trouble: Home ownership offers much by taking reasonable care of the 1. Key to successful home lower rent plus the opportunity house, students will at least get ownership is being able to rent forsubstantial profit. Oppor-their money back and could make one or more units for a good tunities forsuccessful student a substantial profit. return. Find a house big enough home ownership are excellentLong range maintainence, he for at least one more family. in Bellingham and gettingbetter. pointed out,depends on the stu- 2. Buy basically sound proper. But be sure of one thing be-dents. To be profitable,students ty which needs repairs. Do not fore you try it - know what you should attend to more than thebuy a house in perfect condition, are doing. As in any other busi-immediate needs and repairs of since itwill cost so much your ness enterprise, you can lose their house. They will likely chances of gainingcapital .ap. if you jump in blindly. Eating oft campus has advar:'~ages Parents tend to worry When ify forthe food.stamp program ~l1mlted supply of the food ser-their children move off campus that al1?wspurchasm~ of all Vlce. because they fear their sons grocery Items except CIgarettes L ke be f . t anddaughters won't be eating a and beer (wine), for only pen· t oc r h te 1St a f sur the wayho pe diet niesge enoug a ea or ose w 0 pro ~ . . want to buy in large quantities. Eatmg off-campus though ~an Women often neglect their A 250 pound side of beef costs be much che~per .than eatI~g meals at Saga,because of diets approximately $125 cut and .~ Saga especIally ~f those liv- but those who live offcampu; wrapped, with inexpensive mg a house PO?I theIr reso~.ces can buy their diet food and eat locker space near campus and bUy food m bulk quantItIes. . Students putting themselves whenever isconvenient. This will keep four healthy through SChOOl and who have a Many students, especially menguys eating we II for at least a limited income could easilyqual- enjoy hardy meals and miss the fullquarter. Many students renting off. campus housing for the first time encounter difficulty because theyare unaware of potential problems. To avoid some of this education by trial.and-error, the collegehousing office offers the following suggestions: 1. Look at and compare listings. Consider distance tocamp. us, since transporation may be an expensive item. Also consider exterior appearance andneighborhood before contacting the landlord. . 2. Make an appointment with the landlord to inspectthe house during the daytime. In furnished houses, carefully inspect mattress and springs, dresserdrawers and closets, kitchen equip. ment, and stove and refrigerator for cleanliness and proper op.eration. Ask about the monthly average cost for any utilities that are extra. 3. Take time to discussrental details thoroughly. Understand clearly what the mutual obligations are. Ask which utilities areinclUded in the rent, if there are restrictions on use of the house, if you may sublet. (If you intend tosublet, make an adequate business arrangement with your tenant, since. you are still responsible forrent.) 4. Make specific arrangements for the time and manner of payment of rent, date and length ofoccupancy, how many may occupy the unit, and the reo sponsibility of other tenants. Your right tooccupy the unit between school terms should be understood. When. rent is paid by the quarter, holidayperiods may be extra. 5. Understand completely your rental agreement. If changes or improvements tothe house are to be made, be sure you have this in writing. Be certain you get a copy of anything yousign. Any unusual arrangements should be in writing and signed by both Parties to preventmisunderstanding. ALWAYS GET A WRITTEN CONTRACT. A verbal contract leaves you with noprotection whatsoever. 6. Pay by check or get a dated receipt. This is a protective measure to provethe rent was paid. 7. The beginning date of your occupancy is very important in determining your totalresponsi. bility and in calculating when notice of intent to vacate must be given. A 30-day notice by thetenant or 20-day notice by the landlord is the accepted procedure in this state. If you wish to increasethe num. ber of residents in the house, clear this with the landlord. He has the right to control thenumber of persons living in the unit. 8. Most landlords ask for a cleaning and damage deposit. Themoney is refundable at the end of the contract, provided the unit is clean and there is no damage beyond normal wear and tear. Make a written inventory as to quantity and condition of furnishings. Make sureyou un. derstand the conditions under which the landlord can keep the deposit, since this is one of themore widespread areas of abuse in Bellingham. ---------- Western Front - 1968 August 6 - Page 10 ---------- Music department plans opera, special programs Western Front 7 9 a.m.-l 0 p.m. HOWARD'S CHARBROILER 1408 Cornwall WE'RE NOT EXPENSIVE ... We Just look That Way. mately $1.000 each.College Work-Study ranks a· head of NDSL in federal funding at some colleges, especially juniorcolleges. Hatch said, because the program is run on the campo us. 734-6262 • Open 11 a.m. daily,2 p.m. Sunday • Enchant your date and your friends and relatives by bringing them here during the graduation festivities. .• Beverages in the Tiki Room • Orders to go Open Every Day 206 W. HollySt. College Work-study a program of "employment", is second only to National Defense StudentLoans in federalfundine: for financial aids at Western, Wimam Hatch, director of financial aids andstudent advisement, said. StUdents, partiCUlarly those from low-mcome families, can earn moneythrough the College Work-Study program by working on-eampus or at approved offcamus agencies.Hatch said that this program is for students who demonstrate a real need. ''If they didn't get a job, theywouldn't be able to go to school," he said, This summer, 126 students are working under this program in off-campus, non-profit agencies in Whatcom andSkagit counties. They will earn -approxi- Tuesday,August 6, 1968 Work-Study ofters jobs * Groceries * Cold Beverages * Magazines and Gifts *Cosmetics * American Express Money Orders * Film Processing with Free Film * Complete VarietyDepartment Rawls' Superette and Sundries "The Bright Spot at the Top of Holly Street" PIG WAR byKeith Murray Best Sellers for Summer Reading: Married Men Make the Best Lovers Diary of CheGuevara Red-Dirt Marijuana by Terry Southern Friendly, prompt service for all your shopping needsAARDVARK BOOKS ARTS 213 E. Holly 734-4043 The finest in Chinese and American Food .Art• • • • • • • ••••••••••••••••••••• .Dc1vid F. Ma.rsh Biology•••••••••••••.••••••••••• Dr. A. CarterBroad Chemistry ••••••••••••••••••••• , • Dr.Andrew J. Frank Economics•••••••••••••••••••••• Dr. Erwin S. MayerEducation • • •••••••••••••••.' ••••••• Dr.Herbert Hite English • •••••••••••••••••••••••• Dr. Robert McDonnell Foreign Languages ••••••••••••••• Dr. Walter L. RobinsonGeography ••••••••••••••••••• Dr. Howard J. Critchfield Geology •••••••••••••••••••••• Dr. Don J.Easterbrook History •••.•••••••••••••••••• Dr.William A. B,ultmann Home Economics ..•••••••••••••••• Dr.Dorothy Ramsland Math••.••••••••••••••••••••••• Dr. JosephHashisaki Music ••••••••••••••••••••••••Dr. Charles M. North Philosophy • ••••••••••••••••••••• Dr. ~ey M. Daugert P.E., Health Ed., Rec••••••••••.•!Dr. WIllIam A. Tomaras Physics••••••••••••••••••••••• Dr. Raymond R.McLeod Political Science •••••••••••••••••• Dr. Dlvid E.Clarke Psychology •••••••••••••••••••••• Dr.Merle E. Meyer Sociology-Anthropology •••••••••••••• Dr. Donald J.Call Speech •••••••••••••••••••••••• Dr.Lawrence Brewster Technology••••••••••••••••••••••• Dr. Sam R. PorterDepartment Chairmen, '68 - '69 Flora 10 acl on alcohol policy President Charles Flora has. aln'eed topresent a request concerning the use of alConol on Western's campus to the state attorney-general,according to AS President Noel Bourasaw. Shopping may move to campus By DAN MEINS Of TheWestern Front Shopping facilities on campus or a mall near campus may be established to allowstudents greater convenience in shopo ping. Victor Grimson, city planning commissioner. saidrecently. Grimson said the college and city have been discussing rezoning the college area to bring commercial enterprises closer to campus. At present, most stores, laundromats and serviceestablishments are a mile or more from campus. Grimson outlined two alternatives the college andcity are considering: 1. Commercial facilities could be located on campus, in the vu extension orbetween the main campus and Fairhaven College, for example. Grimson said the college could rentspace to the highest bidder for such enterprises as a small grocery or a men's clothing shop. 2. An integrated shopping cen~ ter could be located off campus near South campus Drive. Grimson saidthe area between the proposed married students' housing units and the maintenance service facilitieswould be a likely place for a college mall. Grimson said he thinks the area south of campus wineventually be rezoned for commercial use. also. "Before it is rezoned, however, we would like tosee something built off campus," he said. The city planning commission can grant special requests for small shops north of campus, but proximity of the north side to the downtown area and the density ofsingle family dwellings there would prevent major commercial development in that area. BringMoney ($5) Bring Camera Bring Girl Friend and Paddle FLOATHAVEN Short paddle from LakewoodPhone 733-1223 First Flight Lesson sent a concert. in addition, student recitals are held everyThursday in the music audi~ torium. This will be the first year that opera is offered throughout the school year. An opera workshop will be held at the end of fall quarter. Students will do a series of scenesfrom three or four different operas. A major opera work will be given in spring quarter, another in thesummer session. Every music major is required to participate in at least one performing group.Nonmajors are encouraged to take part. Another aspect of the music department is the marchingband. It is active during football season. when it marches at games and performs during half-time.Interested students should contact the music department during the first week of school. Afacultymember will hear each individual to determine proper placement in a music group. Typewriter aDdAddiDg MachiDe Sales, Service aDd ReDtals We carryall makes of portables and used machines.BELLINGHAM BUSINESS MACHINES 1410 Commercial 734-3630 (Next to Bon Marchel By DIANNATIMM Managing Editor A proposed controversial change in college government is at a stalemate. Dr. A. Carter Broad. chairman of the biology department, heads a committee that proposed a reorganizationin Western's government. AIthougb the proposal was made at a May 16 Faculty Council meeting, thecouncil is still reluctant to accept or reject the proposal. Beneath the Board of Trustees in theprojected college hierarchy would be the Academic Senate. composed of the president and provost;dean of Graduate Studies; dean of Western; chairman of Faculty Council; vice-presidents for StudentAffairs. Research and Grants and Fiscal Affairs; Associated Students (AS) president; ninemembers from the faculty; one representative per 50 faculty members from associate col1ges; oneundergraduate and one graduate student elected by the AS. AS Legislature claims this is token student representation. At its May 9 meeting, the Legislature voted to remain independent of the proposedAcademic Senate. The plan the Faculty Council is debating would give students three out of 29 seats. The Legislature unanimously resolved to ask the Board of Trustees for no more and no less than one-third representation in the Senate. Dr. Broad, in a Front interview, said that the proposal I JWestern's music department is planning a very active fall program, according to Dr. Charles North,department chairman. This is an effortto give freshmen an opportunity to meet the faculty right at the beginning of the year. On Oct. 15. a new cello player and professor from Hungary, Arpad Szomoru.-will present a concert. Szomoru studied and appeared as solo cellist with several orchestras in paris.He also has given recitals and worlred with various chamber groups. From 1962 to the present tSzomoru served as solo cellist with the Quebec Symphony. Dr. Jacob Hamm, assistant professor ofvoice. will present a vocal conceit on Nov. 5. On Nov. 19. another Hungarian faculty member, BalaDetrekoy, will offer a violin recital. At the end of the quarter. Western's band. symphony orchestra tstring orchestra and various choral groups will pre- Academic Senate would alter college organizationwould be beneficial to students in that the AS Legislature would be officially recognized. Their powerwould equal the proposed faculty council. research council. fiscal affairs council and college servicescouncil. AI Thlan, AS legislator, says President Charles J. Flora already recognizes the AS on atleast equal grounds with the Faculty Council. "Theoretically the academic senate is to limit the hierarchy of administration and to restructure the college administration to include the entire academiccommunity," according to Bob Hicks, AS legislator. "The question now is what the concept ofrepresentation ingovernment actually is. What is an equitable proportion of student votes compared tofaculty votes on the Senate? "Certain members of the faculty seem to be worried about a student votingbloc. As far as the students are concerned, three votes is not a bloc. It's a triangle," Hicks said. ---------- Western Front - 1968 August 6 - Page 11 ---------- Classified ~lassifids rn for Z5 cents a 1iIIe, first tnle; 20 CeRts a IiIIe co.secltife re. ,eat. "Fo••~"an~ ..fr.... ds ra. witllout curce, ap to tllrH "s me. Deadline fer ads is 4 ,.11. TIIars~a, SHllit to WestertFrent office ill tlli VU use.e.t. Pa,.ent due ill a~lI.ce. We reserve tlte ricllt to refase ads wllich .a, lie illecal or ill H~ taste. The group included general literature. history of civilization and science. The coursecarried 27 credits, constituting more than half the work of the freshman year. The concept remains today in the general education program. Dr. Arthur Hicks, professor of English who knew Fisher weIlldescribed him as tall, broaa and dignified. He possessed a deep and resonant voice Which, with hisforceful command of language, was a powerful persuasive tool. Hicks said Fisher had a delightfUlsense of humor and kept current on events. He discussed controversial issues with a passion. One ofhis favorite maxims was, "Slumber not in the tents of your fathers; the world advances. Advance withit. " Contributions for the memorial fountain were received from 281 alumni, friends and relatives of Dr.Fisher, in amounts ranging from $1 to $1,000, and from 22 states and as far away as Iran. The totalfund was $5 mo. The fountain, dedicated May 25, is the only one on campus which was paid for byprivate sponsors. Dr. Fisher died in 1964. 33 Help Wanted Need money? Be a-sales r-ep for a Socio-Politico-Satirical new poster line. Ideal for individuals and organizations ~ri~e for complete poster prof: 1t kit-Gross National Product Box 427, Wayzata, Mn. 5539i Fisher Fountain is a favorite gathering place for students. (photo by art christensen) year A. B. degree in 1933 and achieved college status-and thenew name of Western Washington College of Education - in 1937. Between 1923 and 1932, teach.er certification requirements were changed from one year's preparation to three. Curricula developmentwas one of Dr. Fisher's special concerns. He organized a curriculum committee to study thecollege's course program and programs at other schools. Emphasis in 1926 was shifted fromSUbject mastery in individual, unrelated courses to a general education group, which was classified as '-'Introduction to Cone temporary Civilization." Memorial fountain honors Fisher Comfortable FashionAlways Who was Charles H. Fisher, after whom the fountain in the campus quad was named? CharlesH. Fisher was Western's fourth president, serving from 1923 to 1939. He began a long - rangedevelopment program which still influences college planning today. In 1923 Western was a normal school with fewer than 1,000 students and only two buildings -Old Main and Edens South. UnderFisher, a library was added in 1928 and a physical education building in 1935. E due a tion a Istandards changed greatly during Fisher's term as president. The Bellingham Normal School granted its first four- to the Good Luck-See you in the fall WELCOME FRESHMEN We furnish your completeschool supplies: CAMPUS STORE The home of friendly people P.E. clothing and gym shoes Tennisrackets and balls-Archery supplies Architectural and engineering supplies Everything for art and allteclHloiogy classes Every required text book Thousands of non-required books Suggested supplementalreading books Stop in and see the largest selection of sweatshirts and t-shirts on the west coast.Student's Co-op Store The Campus Hub No store more convenient A view of Western in 1899, when theschool was called New Whatcom State Normal School. Old Main serves as classrooms and theadministrative offices on campus. Western has "Normal" history Western began as the North- One marsh at - the north end T~e curriculum was based on west Normal School, Which op- wasconvertedintoapieturesque an e1ght-grade education. Coeds erated in Lynden, just north of lily and cattailpond. started at age 15 and boys at 16. Bellingham, from 1886 to 1892. There were few other build- Mostwere from out-of-state and The Normal School was pri- ings in the area. Pine street many wereimmigrants who vately owned. Without state sup- from Garden to High was a needed languageinterpreters. port, it was forced to close in steep path. Twenty-first was un- Off 0 campus housing was a1892. The building now serves der water. Sehome Hill was an problem in those days, too. as the LyndenOdd Fellows Hall. impenetrable jungle of logs and There were no Ridgeways, of The Normal School wasre- brush. course; students were scattered vived in 1893 when Gov. John The major cultural attraction allover town, many in rooms McGraw signed a bill provid- in Bellingham in those days was furnished onlywith a washstand, ing for one in New Whatcom a theater built on pilings in the table and bed.(Bellingham). Construction of Bay. Plays and Concerts were Five literary societies were Old Main beganin 1895 and the held there. organized before the college was first classes were held in 1899. The first year enrollment was a month old. A thespian club One of the duties of the first only 264. But the school wasalso was formed. For recre-faculty was to meet steamers inadequately equipped to accom- ation,students went on excur- Which brought students into Belle modate even that many. so Bell- sions to thehead of Lake What-ingham Bay from Seattle and oth- ingham residents donated furni- com and backaboard small er Puget Sound communities. ture to help furnish student steamers. There were hikesDonning high shoes to protect rooms. along the narrow steep trails that themselves from mud, faculty Alibrary was set up in a later were graded into Chucke members brought the students single room on thesecond floor anut Drive. A train took stu-from the docks at Old Town to With a part-time student librar-dents to climb mountains in the Sehome Hill. ian. It was three years before Mt. Baker area. There, in thepoorly heated a professional full-time librar-and badly lighted basement of ian was hired. Old Main,teacher training be- . She was Miss Mable Zoe Wi}- gan. son, after whom the present li- The campus was swampy and brary - affectionately dubbed covered with logs and stumps. ''Mable'' by students is named. ---------- Western Front - 1968 August 6 - Page 12 ---------- Western Front S The administration is usual. ,ly tolerant of unseemly activities, political orotherwise;for example, several students WhCl took over a bui lding to block military recruiting oncampus last spring were not disciplined. Involvement is an individual decision. Opportunities for con.tact with other people are great at Western, and a college edu. cation is not complete without abroadening of contacts. Many Western students choose not to take part. Student governmentelections seldom get higher than a 25 per cent turn. out. Other students are highly vocal, on issuesranging from Vietnam to greater student rep. resentative in administrative decision·making councils.Scholarship funds limited about any topic Under the sun. Pressure to conform is mitigated whenpossible. There are no social fraternities or sor· orities at Western. Students' freedom of behavior islimited only by civil law; there are no hours, no dress requirements, no required stUdy halls, Thephilosophy of in loco parentis is not accepted by Western administrators and faculty. Student leadersencourage in. volvement, A large number of organizations offer a wide variety of activities, Freshmencan work on student publica. tions, tutor, participate in intramural sports or any number of othercultural, social or recreational activity. Political organizations embrace all viewpoints, and will beespecially active this year. Tuesday, August 6, 1968 By LOIS CASKEY Copy Editor The distinctivecharacter of Western is important to you, since it will shape your educa· tion for the next four yearsand possibly your thinking for the rest of your life. . Western's outstanding feature is the emphasis thecollege places on the student's individuality. The emphasis is visible ev· erywhere - from the smallclass sizes and friendliness of other students to the exciting cluster college concept. Most facultymembers are receptive to students and feel interaction with them on a oneta- one basis is vital tohigher education. They offer their time to discuss academic problems, courses and majors, or just bythe faculty, who will not be number of full time Huxleyfacul-selected until funds for the col- ty and Western faculty members lege have been approved. who will serve Huxley as part Students who need financial"Huxley shall be a college time faculty members. assistance should not count on rather than a school ordepart- Huxley College's long range scholarshiPS, William T. Hatch, ment, it shall be free to fix its plansinclude adding a graduate director of financial aids, says. particular intellectual focus in studies program in the environ- Western's scholarship pro-the envircnment on all aspects mental sciences to it cirricul- gram accounts for only $12,000 of a baccalaureate degree pro- Urn. of the more than $670,000 dis-gram." Theestablishment of a second tributed to students every year. Huxley will be able to deter. cluster college onWestern's Most scholarships carry mine its own general education campus was first proposed by strictrequirements and are lim-requirements, as well as its own Western's Long Range Planning ited to only$200. requirements for major concen- Committee on December 6, 1966. Hatch says many students stilltratI'ons consider scholarships as the only Stud . The recommendation was· a"- ents m· the c1usterco11ege cepted and the cluster collegveo available financial aid. But "the hall b fr t II . real point offinancial aid is to s e ee 0 enro m cours- ha.s been in the plannI'ng stages eS of•~ered by Western'saca- smce then. help the student stay in school demic department, butshallhave regardless of hisfinancial the right to compliment these If approved by the state legis- needs," Hatch says. courses withothers offered ex- lature, Huxley College will no As a result, emphasis at West-elusively at Huxley. longerbe just a plan, but a ern is on government-supported The faculty will consist of a reality. loans and work-study programs. College stresses individual Huxley students will receive a bachelor of science degreewithout having fulfilled the present requirements of Western in general education or in ones majorconcentration. The Huxley College curriculum will be a new concept for Western. About 40 credits ofgeneral education courses, in Communications, the Natural Sciences, Social Sciences,Humanities,and Mathematics will be required. About 40 credits of seminars in the environmentalsciences, about 15 credits in research and a senior thesis, and 3 credits of physical education will alsobe required. A concentration of about 100 credits in the environmental sci. ences will satisfy a majorand a minor. A maj()r in population biology will require courses in zoology for botany (20 credits),genetics (five credils), psychology (10 credits), SOCIology (10 credits), Ecology (5 credits), Calculus(5 credits), Statistics (10 credIts), Chemistry (20 credits), and Physics (15 credits). Other major fieldsof concen. tration may be chosen. These include areas of environmental science now explored until now. Social Geoscience, Biocehmical Hydrology, Atmospheric Ecology, Economic Oceanography,Geological Population Economics, and Environmental QUality Law are but a few of the otherconcentrations in which a major may be obtained. The curriculum as stated is only a suggestedguideline for Huxley's faculty. The final curriculum for the cluster college will be set up New clustercollege named Huxley Western's second cluster col. lege, a college of environment. al studies, for which the name Huxley College has been proposed, is planned as a part of the Northwest EnvironmentalScience Studies Center. Huxley College, named for Thomas Huxley, the chief exponent of Darwinism, will be an administrative, academic and educational unit. The cluster college will be housed in theNorthwest Environmental Science Studies Center. Huxley will include an Insti. tute for Fresh WaterStudies, which is now a part ofthe biology department. "Surge Laboratories, another feature of thecollege, are un· planned laboratories to be used by any department which begins to develop progressin environmental studies," Harold Goltz, Director of Campus Planning, said. If building funds areapproved, Huxley College plans to enroll its first students in Sept., 1969. "Huxley will be anundergraduate college in which interdis. ciplinary concepts will be fos. tered," Dr. A. carter Broa~Chairman of the Huxley College Committee, said. Unlike Fairhaven College, Huxley will not have its own resident halls, students will live in Western's dormitories or ofY. campus. Also unlike Fairhaven, Hux.ley will offer courses in one general area, the environmental sciences. The cluster college class. roomswill be used by upper division students in the environ. mental sciences. Lower division students willcontinue to use Haggard Hall of Science. Northwestern Commercial Bank College Branch Office OPENFOR YOUR CONVENIENCE ON CAMPUS 445, HIGH STREET (Corner of High and Garden Terrace)We are pleased to announce the opening of our new Branch Office, to serve Western Wa'shington StateCollege and the surrounding area. Our Branch location at 445 High Streetfiill be open Monday throughFriday from 10:00 A. M. to 3:00P.M. Northwestern Commercial Bank Main Office Corner of Commercialand Macnolia Open Saturday 10:00 A.M. to 1:00 P.M. ---------- Western Front - 1968 August 6 - Page 13 ---------- ,. Western Front Schedule for fall Inauguration program planned Formal ceremonies commemoratingthe inauguration of Dr. Charles J. Flora as president of Western will be held during fall quarter. A facultycommittee working on the project is planning a twoday program to be held November 20 and 21. Inaddition to the actual ceremony, the inauguration will inclUde speakers and seminars. Central topicof the program Will. be "Man and His Changing E!1vIronment"; speakers will dISCUSS both Physicaland human enVironments. Western's President , Dr. Charles J. Flora (photo by oHley) lege with theabsurd notion that he is superior." . Among the demands were more courses in black culture, hiring ofmore nonwhite facul· ty members and admission of more nonwhite students. The BSU was active thissummer u n d e r the leadership of Carl Trotter. AS President Noel Bourasaw has activelyendorsed the group's goals, and the administration is pursuing programs along lines sought by the ESU, in many instances going beyond what the group wanted. The administration has been busy in otherareas, too. On April 9 the planning office revealed plans calling for construction of eight academicbuildings by 1985 at a cost of $30 million to accommodate an enrollment expected to leap to 15~000 bythat date. In addition~ plans are in the works for five "cluster" colleges besides the now-developa ingFairhaven to provide the personalized atmosphere of a smaller school on a campus with the advantagesof a large institution. On a smaller scale but of obvious importance to the students R the college isassisting the Associated Students in the $310ROOO development of the Lakewood recreational facilityat Lake Whatcom. Drugs, focus of attention not too long ago, appeared briefly as a problem at Westernafter the arrest in February of six men students who later pleaded guilty to smoking marihuana in aroom in Nash Hall. Some of these conflicts, problems and events spring from old ones. But mostrepresent a radically new role Western is fUlfilling in a Washington State beset by a burgeoningpopUlation and an increasing awareness of its nationa~ importance. Western is indeed differentdergraduate student may borrow this year. up to $1,000 each academic year. He has 10 years to repaythe loan at a three per cent interest rate. The repayment period and the interest do not begin until ninemonths after the student ends his studies. Those going into teaching can have up to half of the loanforgiven at the rate of 10 per cent for each year of teaching service. Students who teach in certainschools in primarily low-income areas, such as a slum district, may cancel their obligation at the rate of15 per cent per year. Repayment is also deferredup to three years while a borrower is in the ArmedServices, Peace Corps, or VISTA. !iundreds of Westernites marched through downtown BellInghamlast May to show they want peace. (Photo by TimHeitzman) Federal loans are largest in studentfinancial aids Western is helping more than one-sixth of the student body to finance their education with $670,000 from government pro-grams. . National Defense Studen t Loans (NrnL) are the mostpopularprogram, said William Hatch, director of financial aids and student advisement. Western hasapprOXimately $300,000 this year in National Defense Student Loans with a total of $1,100,000outstanding since the program began. They were started in 1958 to induce students to go into teaching. NDSL is a Program of "borrowing" and has become the model for other governmentsponsoredfinancial assistance programs. In the NrnL program, an un- 1967-68: Year of change Last year broughtchange to . lating college regulations in Western. emotion-charged public hearings Anew collegepresident mili- attended by hundreds of students. tant antiwar activity, the lise of The depth of the peacesenti-the Black Students Union and ment at Western was shown on unveiling of ambitious plan's for Mar14 When figures from the college expansion all made clear nahonwide Choice '68 collegiate Western israpidly entering a poll revealed 73 per cent of the new era of its history. 1,455 students who voted hereDr. Charles J. Flora was oppose the war. In the same poll named eighth president of the 40 per centfavored Eugene MC~ college on March 25 by the Board Carthy for President. of Trustees. , A peace vigilwhich has been Flora, who succeededDr Har- held in front ofthe Federal Build-vey C. Bunke and hadact"ed as ing between 3;30 and 4;30 p.m. interim president since last every Friday for 18 monthssummer, inherited an institu- now will continue through this tion he expects to see become summer and"until the war a university of 15 000 students ends." within two decade~. He has won N,oel Bourasawwon the As.- popularity with many faculty sOCiated Students presidency in members and students forhis the spring election. Noel wears dedication, competence and a beard, frequents anti-warprogressivism. events and has been instrumen- Student discontent over the tal in organizing a "free uni-Vietnam war came to the fore versity" to begin at Western this spring. On May 27 66 West. next fall, withclasses on sub-ern men publicly statedtheywilJ jects ranging from child-rear-refuse induction into thearmed l~g to Latin American revolu-forces. Some returned their sel- hons. ective service cards to their 10- Noel's election climaxed a cal boards; all said they expect spri.ng of s.tudentgovernmentre-to go to jail;none said he would ~~lIon WhIC~ saw student poli-flee to Canada. hClans seeking more autonomy OnApril 23 more than 350 from the administration and on stu?ents marched from the ~:)fie ~ccasiondemanding the res· Viking Union to the Federal 19nahon of the Dean of StUdents. Building downtown,where a 30- Later in the spring, the AS minute silent vigIl for peace passed a record bUdget of more washeld. Although the demon- than $135,000 for its activities strators met with mild hostil- next year. ity from some city residents As if the administration did there were no incidents. ' not have enough trOUbles, theSuch was not the case during Black Students Union on May the week of April 7 when 24 15 presented aseries of de-students were callect'before the mands to President Flora for college disciplinary committeegreater participation by black as a result of disruptive demon- students in admissions, curri-strationsagainst military re- culum and administration policy cruiters that culminated in a making. three-night sit-in in the Place- Although President Flora de-ment Office in Edens Hall. Nine nied the BSU's charge thatWest. students spent at least one night ern is a "racist" institution. he in the office and six spent all wassympathetic to the· de-three, fasting as "a symbol mands. of our resistence to the mili- The BSU based its charge on tary." the feeling that "the average All 24 'Y'ere acquit!e~ of vio- White student leaves thiscol- Nov. 11, and a four day Thanks~ giving holiday, beginning at noon on Wed., Nov. 27. School willresume again on Mon., IRc. 2. Last day of fall quarter classes is Fri., Dec. 13. Final exams will be givenIRc. prises Committee which consists of seven persons, including two students, as well as Harold Goltz, director of planning. The Coffee Shop prices are set each year but changes can be made. These changes have to be approved by the Director of Student Activities first before final actions are taken.Saga, whose main oftice IS in Menlo Park, Calif. and is one of ~he country's leading food servIces forinstItUtiOns, bUyS Its own food on a budget agreed upon by the college. The college supplies thefacilities, equipment and workers. The student workers are therefore paid according to the school'sset standards. Minimum wage rates are $1.60 an hour and the college is paying $1.40. A raise to $1.45is scheduled for fall, and the $1.60 minimum should be reached the following year. Convocationfor new freshman is Sun., Sept. 29, at 7;30 p.m. with registration for returning students on Tues., Oct. 1. Fall quarter classes will begin at Western on Wed., Oct. 2. Western students will enjoy a ti-ServiceCenter for fall quarter. Most were identified by members of the BSU as candidates for the program.In addition, paid tutors will help those with deficiencies The money will be drawn from the Western Fund ---------- Western Front - 1968 August 6 - Page 14 ---------- Tuesday, August 6, 1968 Western Front 3 Counseling helps cure hang-ups • • student co-op •films of Marilyn Monroe birds of Washington State garden design illustrated trees and shrubs of thePacific Northwest Origami off to college rhythms today creating with paper 36 children children'swriting family of man BOOKS MERIDIAN BRANCH 2625 Meridian 10 am. to 5:30 pm. FAIRHAVENBRANCH 1113 Harris 10 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. 1200 12th Street Lost students may contact the information desk located just inside the VU door. Offices of student government, student activities, finance,student publications, and the activities office are housed in the building. The main lounge serves asa facility for art eXhibits, concerts, guest speakers, dances, etc. ing, the center offers you a library of information on various occuIQtions and you may be invited to participate in a group discussion. Testscan be given on any subject from IQ to job aptitude. Personal problems is not the only area in whichcounseling might be helpful. Counselors can also help you choose a major or a career. The counselingcenter does not, however, offer program planning assistance. This service is provided by facultyacademic advisers. All counselors are young and eager to empathsize with students. They are: Dr. Frank Nugent, counseling center director and professor of psychology, received his Ph.D. from theUniversity of California at Berkeley. J. Dr. William MacKay, associate professor, Berkeley. Dr. James Wilkins, associate professor, Michigan State University. Dr. James Straughan, associateprofessor, Indiana University. Dr. Elvet Jones, associate professor, University of Minnesota. Dr.David Panek, assistant professor, Washington State University. Dr. Merle KUder, professor of education and psychology, Columbia University. Dr. Walter Lonner, University of Minnesota. Miss SandraLawson, M.A., Bowlingreen State University, Ohio. Mrs. llirothy Crowe, psychometrist -intakeinterviewer. \ Ii f; ~~-~. ;... "'-t'~~1-' ~~.~~ ~~~;PI ,~q ! *":t'c"'A'C'~1. L i: •. ,l- I . ,~ .. .~ • !r::~·; . !.-~ ;~1- ~';'-'--_'-U L.....: .•" _c-_ .,/'ritl'.·:i;~: :".~f7' _ _.·_:,-:_·~-c~:-5/ .~" .i.;-s.'~..J~)~~~... Artist's conception of what the new Viking Union will look like when it is completed inDecember. Action centers in Viking Union The Viking Union is West~ ern's center of student living andsocial activities" Here students will find service facilities such as the coffee shop, the confectionary shop and the lost and found center. Located in the basement is the recreation room, The Grotto. It containsbilliard tables, a shuffle board game, ping-pong, and various board games. There is also a TV room andmusic listening rooms" What can a lonely student do whp.n he gets hung up? Go to the counselingcenter, where Western maintains a staff of 10 psychologists who help students solve their personalproblems. Some students attach a stigma to the idea of receiving psychological counseling. You need not. Seeking help does not mean there is "something wrong with you;" Western's psychologists pointout· that college involves many difficult adjustments and decisions which you might be better preparedto cope with after you get professional advice. You may even find out your problems are not toodifferent from everyone else's! All counseling is voluntary, and you can withdraw at anytime. In additionto individual counsel- FRESHMEN and TRANSFER students are invited to take advantage of our fourconvenient locations to serve you. CORNWALL BRANCH 1605Comwal 8:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. MAINOFFICE Holy at Comwal 10:00 a.m. to 3p.m. Friday till 5:30 p.m. BEL.LJNGHAM. NATIONAL f3AN~lOW COST ECONOMY CHECKING ACCOUNT. "Western is located on salt water as well as near freshwater. Students in the Environmen Studies Center would also be near mountains. Urban and ruralsettings are within minutes of each other. Political units within range run from local to international,with Canada only minutes away. An anticipated part of the solutions to environment control will bepolitical. For example, plllutants do not respect international boundaries. Our water and fish mayoriginate in canada, thus salt water becomes an international issue. It is therefore best studied in aninternational setting. Western is located in such a setting." A number of other colleges anduniversities have engaged in similar efforts (such as the marine biol~y laboratories at the University ofSouthern California at La Jolla and Santa Barbara). However, no college is as well located for it asWestern. The center's total cost of $3,850,000 includes $470,000 for the off-campus marinelaboratory, and $3,380,000 for the campus structure. "At Western we feel we should be doing things,"Goltz said. Dr. Frank Nugent, Director of Counseling. (photo by offley) Veterans who wish to receiveeducational benefits under the G.I. bill should make formal ap. plicationto the Veterans Administration(VA) as soon as pnssible, since there is usually a two-month wait for the first check. Applicantsshould attach a copy of 00214 (separation papers) to the form, which is obtainable in the registrar'soffice. Those who apply for dependency benefits also must include photostats of marriage license and birth certificates. No payments will be made until mid-November, according to the VA. Benefitsmay be used anytime from date of separation or June, 1966, whichever is later, until eight years later. A credit load of 14 hours is required to be eligible for full benefits. Students carryinglighter academicloads can qualify for partial benefits. Sons and daughters of deceased veterans should also makeapplication for benefits as soon as possible. Some students are exempt from tuition under the bill. Forinformation on who qualifies, write the state superintendent of public instruction in Olympia. A lettercertifying exemption should be presented during registration. Transfer students who have beenreceiving benefits at another institution must file a change of schools notice with the VA district officeto insure continued payment. Applyearly for GI funds Environmental center unique in countryWestern may become the leading college in the United states for the study of environmental sciences, if plans to build the $3,850,000 Northwest Environa mental Science Studies Center on Western'scampus are ap" proved by the state legislature. The center will be unique in the Pacific Northwest. Theama bitious projects undertaken by the Center committee and the distinctive concepts embodied in theplans could make it a cen-ter without equal. The center will include Huxley cluster college, an institute for freshwater studies at Lake Whatcom and a marine laboratory on a salt-water site. The 1,000square foot building which will house the Center will include anauditorium, meeting rooms and projectrooms. The Center will be located in the center of the academic reserve area, south of the presentcampus. ''The long-range plan of the college is that this college should emphasize What it can do best,taking into account its geographic location and its strengths in faCUlty and curriculum," HaroldGoltz, director of campus planning, said, ---------- Western Front - 1968 August 6 - Page 15 ---------- Things freshmen should know navigator The Navigator is the official student reference manual. Itcontains information on college regulations, student activities, organizations, Associated Stu. dents,Associated Men Students, Associated Women Students, parIdng, health services, building hours andother things new students need to know. It may be obtained at the VU desk. ent record and can make it difficult to get into another college. study clinic daily bulletin The Daily Bulletin is required readingfor all students, It contains official notification of administrative actions as well as information on campusevents. Students are held responsible for the information in the BUlletin and the administrationassumes all students read it. Most Western students find it difficult to avoid red tape hangups ifthey ignore the Bulletin. F or example, the only notice on last dates for dropping classes is given in theBulletin, and a stUdent who did not read it and go through the proper proceQ dure for dropping receivesF. in which he has taken pass-fail courses, the department will be the "sole judge" of their ac..ceptability toward the major or minor. Instructors have a choice as to whether a "D" is a pass or failure.Normal letter grades will be kept by him but only the "P" or "F" will be submitted to the registrar.Students must decide to take a course on a pass.fail basis at registration; however, they may changewithin the first five days following registration if they pay the normal fee. Prerequisites for pass·failcourses are the same as for other courses. Since the council has previously approved experimentalpass· fail grading in once section of Math 151, "Introduction to Mathematics," and Education 301,"American Education and the Teacher," these courses are excluded from the 24-credit limitation onpass-fail electives. Council approved the continuation of the 24-hour elective pass· fail system forthree years. At that time a faculty-student com· mittee will review the program and makerecommendations. A reading and study clinic is offered for students who need help in improving theirreading and study skills. Watch the Dl.ily Bulletin (or information. Checking accounts arerecommended for students, to avoid the necessity of carrying large sums of money. Checks also arelegal receipts. There is a branch bank on campus. Students who wish to withdraw from one or morecourses must do so before the closing date or receive F. These failures become part of the perman.draft deferments catalog The 1968-69 catalog is the one students beginning this year will follow untilthey graduate. Later changes in degree requirements do not affect this year's freshmen. It is important to keep the catalog and plan courses accordingly. Departmental advisers will give information onchanges within major areas. withdrawal . Male students subject to the draft who do not wish to receivean unpleasant surprise in their mail must request a student deferment; deferments are not givenautomatically. Forms are available in the registrar's office and from Dean of men, Clyde MacDonald.MacDonald can ans wer any quesQ tions concerning deferment eligibility or other aspects of thedraft law. Pass-fail grading adopted on limited basis for fall By MIKE KOCH The Academic Council lastspring approved a pass-fail system which would allow students to take up to 24 quarter hours ofelective credits toward graduation beginning fall quarter. The council resolved the disagreementbetween the stUdents and faculty on the pass-fail committee in favor of the students' recommendationthat a fail in a pass-fail course not be counted in computing a student's g.p.a. Also, Springer said that afail would result in no credit for the course, and a student would have to take the same or anothercourse, getting a passing grade, to replace the credits he had lost. The purpose of a pass-fail system,Springer said, "is venturing into other areas ofstudy." To apply a fail in such a course to g.p.a., "woulddefeat the purpose," he said. Courses taken on a pass-fail basis can't be used to satisfyrequirements for general education, major, minor or supporting courses. Only one pass-fail course can be taken per quarter. If a student should change his major or minor ~o a subject check accountschurch buses Freshmen coming to camplm for the first time may be confused about many things.One of the biggest problems for new students is knowing where to go for information. Here are somesources: Arts, lectures set for fall The arts and lectures program work in two phases to bring culturalentertainment to western students. One brings lecturers to West.. ern. These are often noted people orexperts in special fields. There is generally one lecture symposium annually, at which panel· oflecturers offer speeches on a given topic. The second aspect of the program is arts. This includesdance, musical events, cinema, dramatics and galley exhibition. The program also presents the artfilm series each quarter. Fall quarter's schedule in· cludes "Tokyo Olympiad," "81h" "Die in Madrid"and "Electra." "The Barber of Seville," presented by the Canadian Opera Co., will be at Westernin December. Major highlights scheduled for winter and spring quarters include the San FranciscoBallet and "othello" by the National Shakespeare Company. A Broadway comedy, "You Know Ican't Hear You When the Water's Running," will play at Western in February. Students who wish toreceive their mail must include the name of the dormitory and room number. Joe Blow, WWSC,Bellingham, is not sufficient; the college will not be responsible for mail not addressed to specificrooms. Students should carry health insurance. The college offers a policy for $8 per quarter whichincludes free coverage for summer. Several local churches send buses to campus on Sundays to take students without their own transportation to church. Bus schedules will be an· nounced in September. There are many church activo ities for college students in the community and the Campus ChristianMinistry maintains an interdenominational house on Garden Street directly below the VU. healthinsurance mailing address ttU Tuesday, August 6, 1968 Dormitory closets are small, so clothes whichmight not be worn should be left at home. There are no dress rules. You can wear pants. Bikinis are not advisable in cold weather. Since there is only one fall formal dance, formals are best left at home.Plan to dress casually most of the time. The only real exception is . Sunday dinner, which is con·sidered d res soup. Church clothes are suitable. Remember, you have only a bed, dresser, small closetand a desk. Room is scarce. so don't bring the whole house. Things like stuffed animals get in the way, whereas posters and rugs don't take space and lend personality to your room. Attractive curtains arenice, too. Keep climate in mind when planning wardrobe Dine with us at the A favorite meeting place ofstudents for speakers and open forum is the bird sanctuary located opposite the Viking Union and in front of Old Main. (photo by offley) Z Western Front Entertainment nightly except Sunday Phone 734-5690208 E. Holly MEN: Style is an individual thing in gIrls' clothes, but some things are a must in the city by the bay. Bring a strong umbre lla. Also boots and a raincoat. You will use them often. Buy stoutshoes. You will do much walIdng, and light dress shoes simply don't stand up to the wear anddeteriorate quickly in wet weather and are uncomfortable for hard hiIdng. The college is set on a steephi 11. A scarf preserves hairdoes on Bellingham's frequent windy days. A light jacket or coat, andgloves, are advisable for fall wear. Most girls prefer sIdrts, sweaters and knits for classwear, as theyneedn't be pressed each time they are worn. We invite YOU, as members of AMS to come to ourmeetings, help us spend YOUR MONEY, and make these ideas and others become realities: AMSDAYS; Auto and Cycle Show, Playboy Play- ..mate on Campus, Sports Booths and Demonstrations;AWARD WINNING HOMECOMING FLOAT WITH AWS: SPEAKERS SERIES including MASCULINEETHICS, a nd SEX ON THE COLLEGE CAMPUS; A SMOKER WITH THE LEnERMEN'S CLUB; MEN'SART CONTEST; MISS WWSC BEAUn CONTEST; and THE HARVEST MOON BALL featu ri ng the "clnZU." AMS-Associated Men Students "First Love" and" Courtship" Diamonds Brand Name WatchesJewelry for fashion-minded people DePaul's Jewelry 135 E. Holly St. ---------- Western Front - 1968 August 6 - Page 16 ---------- 116 Western Front Tuesday, August 6, 1968 River riding gives Western students a refreshing break fromafternoon classes. Shooting the rapids of Nooksack Clre (I. to R): Steve Johnson; John Richardson (1967grad) Jerry Neswick and Pat Hughes. (Photo by Scott Finley) program is a success is the I' lationshipwhich develops tween the staff and the student and the dorm life which includ several different races.The program has a nine we course and just like other c lege stUdents, those in Project live in theRidgew dorms. Funds for the program are fu nished by the office ofEconom Opportunity (80 percent)and coJ1ege and commUllity (20 cent). Most of the communi he Ips through services, ca and other ways. Sy Schwartz, the director Project Overcome, had this say about the Project: "Wh ProjectOvercome is allabout doing educationally for one gro of students what we ought to doing for allstudents." Miss Theresa Wiaholoua, t assistant director, also hel by advising the students. UpwardBound, of Which Pro ect Overcome is a part, h approximately 250 nation-wi programs. One of the origin programs was started here Western. The national director of U ward Bound was the first dire tor of theprogram here. apy service is provided frel thus helping many childrE whose parents may not othel wiseafford help for the chill This reporter observed athel apy session between Marsti Harris, a Westernsenior, and' six-year old boy we shall ca Bob. Bob suffers from brain dan age. He is extremely active, :u he squirms and fidgets in chair. His attention rapid! strays from object to object. Miss Harris explainedlah that she sees one of her rna tasks with the boy as that of "environmental awareness, This meansthat he should leaJ to recognize and know the SOUI'I of more physical objects aJ sounds. One activity,in partiCUlar, designed to stimulate this awat ness. Miss Harris manipulateS toy that makes variousanimal sounds and the boy tries to idti tify the animal by each sOlln~ "Progress in speech ther is oftenvery slow, but one Ii bit of progress is very rewa ing to the therapist;" M' Youngquist said. "It has helpedme to rea understand children thrall close personal contact w them. I find the work very warding." Andlikewise, apparently, many other Western speech th apy majors. Project Overcome is a preP gram setup to help encourage more students to enter college by giving them the opporhm· ity ta experience abit of college life. There were 103 stUdents, plus 36 staff members involved in the project this pastsummer. These students are chosen by High School counselors and dif. ferent advisors. There are 2terms of the project. The first year students are usually juniors in high school and the second yearstudents are high school graduates. The high school graduates who participate in the program aregetting ready for college in the fall. By the end of the prOa gram most students are ready because theylmow a little about college life. The hard work. The students in Project Overcome at Western areselected from schools aU over the state. This year there are two stu· dents from the Job CorpsCenters from Washington. They are: Timothy Lee and Gibson Herferson. Both have received theirGED (equivelent to a High SchOOl diploma) and are going to enter college this fall. The most importantfactor in determining whether or not the Project Overcome coaxe new students to Wester By MIKEGROBE Contributor The coed arid the six-year old boy are alone in the small room. He squirms andglances around, while she tries to focus his attention upon a set of building blocks. During thesession the girl tries to teach the boy the meaning of the term "on" by having him place the blocks ontop of one another and repeating the word "on" as he does so. This is speech therapy, in which children with various kinds of speech and hearingproblems learn to communicate more effectively. Some ofthe 34 children in this summer's program can barely converse at their normal level. Others have lessserious prOblems, such as a nasal voice or a voice of the wrong pitch. Various possible causes ofdefective speech are a cleft palate, mongolism and mental retardation. At the source of most difficultiesis poor articulation, according to speech therapy major JoAnn Youngquist. This, in turn, may becaused by a poor home model, psychological problems or hereditary causes. Each child in theprogram is paired with a speech therapy major who learns the profession by helping.fhe child. Ther-Catch-up helps low achievers meet potential By MAUREEN PECARIC Reporter Project Catch.Up does for junior high school students what Head Start does for nursery school children and Overcome doesfor senior high school students. It helps socially disadvantaged students who show high potential butare low achievers to ,t catch up" academically, culturally and socially. Western has played host to 50catch-Up students from Whatcom and Skagit counties for the past three summers. The students areAmerican.. Mexican, Indian and Caucasian. They attend classes in mathematics, language arts,science and art during the six-week stay at Western. They also participate in cultural and recreational activities as part of their life in Omega dorm and receive individual and group counseling. ProjectCatch-Up was conceived by several Western faculty members who believe the junior high school years are a critical time in a student's education, especially for those who are disadvantaged. The major goalof the program is to decrease the rate of dropout among these students when they reach high school. Project Catch-Up is directed by Dr. Evelvn Mason. associate professor of psychology. . "The only kindthings I heard' were 'What's happening?' and 'How's your mind?' Everything else was bitching andbegging." Loye max be the hippies' philosophy, Flemmg said, but "drugs is what keeps them together. A lot of people are down on acid now. Yoga and meditation are the big things now. " Henry Pidou,University of Washington English teaching assistant, said that the hippies have taken the most logical next step. They've gone underground to keep attention from focusing on them. They were getting "toomuch like an 'Establishment'," Pidou said. "Look what the mass media have done to the word 'hippie',"he said. "Newspapers and magazines were the ones that told me what a hippie is. When Life started using the word I have to say I don't know what I am." ' Pidou said he believes the hippie revolution ispart of a revival of spiritual awareness that has been developing in the last 60 years. "Western religion isblending with Eastern philosophy· as a basis for a new religion. Such a religion will not repudiate theold but will bring in new fresh truths," Pidou said. , "Over a course of time truths become hollow andritualistic. Yoga and LSD are precursors, as is communal living. Old patterns have failed so new oneshave to be developed through collective individual efforts. J. L. Simmins says in "It's Happen~ ing" that the hippies "have probably integrated races, religions and sexes more than any other group has."They've taken up the chant "I am he as you are he'as you are me as we are all together." That's what is happening to the hippies. They've "dropped out" and we have assimilated them again. It's kitsch to liveZen, practice Yoga, smoke pot, and wear beads. Everyone has gone hip-while the real "diggers" havedropped out again. . By DanMeins Everyone h,as gone hip. We can now all turn on, thanks to MadisonAvenue and the mass media. But what has happened to the hard core flower children? "It's over," MontyWest, University of Washington associate professor of anthro-· pology, said in Seattle Magazine."We've already won. The hippies just aren't in the "U" District anymore. "They're Boeing engineers, real-estate salesmen, junior executives. Being a hippie means doing the thing that turns you on most, andthat can be working with computers as well as anything else." Bernie Fleming, Western senior, shearedoff his shoulder-length hair months ago because it isn't unique to have long hair anymore. "High schoolkids used to think I was 'God' when I had long hair. Anything I said was taken as wisdom," Fleming said. "In the beginning, hippies were different. You could always tell them, not by the way they talked, butby the way they looked. There were no fat hippies. Guys were lean, feminine-inclined in build. Thegeneral body types are gone. The school jocks-these guys are in it now," Fleming said, Chris Smith,Western senior, said that the "real ones are living in the communes now." Communal living "became big" with Rolemane at the Big Sur Institute in Southern California, she said. Fleming said there is a heavyturnover in the communes. "They are all idealists but it won't last. Not many of them are used toworking like that. They think they can live by growing grass. All the real diggers have gone." By allaecounts Haight-Ashbury is on the decay. Fleming said,"Haight is more of a slum now than it ever was. It is a center for kids and tourists to visit. " Pat Spark, Western junior, saidg "Haight-Ashbury isn't a place of love it's a place of hate. I walked down the streets of H3i~t and overheard the conversations.
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- Western Front - 1968 July 16
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- 1968_0716 ---------- Western Front - 1968 July 16 - Page 1 ---------- 101. LX No.4 Western Washington State College, Bellingham, Wash. 98225 Tues., July 16, 1968 1QcTour Mt. Baker Plywood Company this afternoon from 2 to 4 p.m. Transportation provided from the VU.(For more activiti_es, see page 4.)&
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1968_0716 ---------- Western Front - 1968 July 16 - Page 1 ---------- 101. LX No.4 Western Washington State College, Bellingham, Wash. 98225 Tues., July 16, 1968 1QcTour Mt. Baker Plywood Company this
Show more1968_0716 ---------- Western Front - 1968 July 16 - Page 1 ---------- 101. LX No.4 Western Washington State College, Bellingham, Wash. 98225 Tues., July 16, 1968 1QcTour Mt. Baker Plywood Company this afternoon from 2 to 4 p.m. Transportation provided from the VU.(For more activiti_es, see page 4.)· caPital improvements are funds for grounds improvements, aswimming pool, a technical theater, and a supplemental appropriation for referendum 19 projects.Ramon Heller, public information director, said the final figure is up $748,000 from the one submitted in January because by 1977 the college will already have reached the 12,000 student enrollmentprojected for 1980. Items boosting the total are an additional $160,000 for land acquisition in the formof vacated streets and alleys, $52,000 more for the heating plant project which will lay thegroundwork for extending into Fairhaven, and an additional $76,500 for the library addition housingequipment for technical library services. Also added was $130,000 for brick facing and upper gym floorreplacement in Garver Gym, and $30,000 to remodel and expand the chemistry department in HaggardHall. parking fees for the academic year were set by the Board of Trustees last Thursd~y at $8 perquarter for off-campus students and $10 per quarter for residence hall boarders. Faculty and staffparking fees were set at $36 for the year. The Board also called for bids on the sale of $3,900,000 inbonds to finance Fairhaven College residence halls and a dining system. Projected revenueof$13,770,000 generated from student fees, parking, and residence hall fees were approved to financethe new Funds for a Northwest Environmental Science Studies Center which includes Huxley clustercollege were approved by the Board of Trustees last Thursday. Funds for the $3,850,000 center, part of a $12,998,550 total capital improvements request, must now be approved by the state legislature inits coming session. The Northwest Environmental Science Study Center will bring together theenvironmental sciences, such as biology, geo-, graphy, and geology, and will include an off-campusmarine lab on salt water and a fresh water stUdy. Huxley College will be located in the on-campus partof the center, to be built in the Academic Reserve area, south of the present campus. f AlthOUghHuxley will have its own academic structure, the cluster college will not have its own residence halls.Included in the $12,988,550 package of budget requests for Trustees approve Huxley Center River riding gives Western students a refreshing break from afternoon classes. Shooting the rapids of Nooksack are(L to R): Steve Johnson, John Richardson (1967 grad) Jerry Nes-wick and Pat Hughes. (Photo by ScottFinley) Parking fees increase student activities center south of Fairhaven, the VU parking ramp andLakewood additions. Two housing facilities for 1970, each for 600 students, and housing facilities for700 married students on South Campus Drive will also be financed by the fees. The trustees approved three appointments tothefaculty. They are Paul A. Tholfsen, lecturer in physics; Richard A. Vawt~ r,assistant professor of physICS and Darlene Nelson, lecturer in humanities. Free materials onpeace corps available Free materials on the Peace Corps are available for teachers in the placementoffice, in the basement of Edens Hall, according to Richard Rankin, director of placement-arts sciences. These materials could be helpful in teaching social studies, Rankin said. The PeaceCorps reader contains articles written by Peace Corps VOlunteers, now serving all over the world.There· is an article by James A. Michener describing Micronesia for Americans. Teachers may file a Peace Corps action card which will enable them to recei ve current information on the Peace Corps,Rankin said. Off-campus housing Nevvs in brief is investigated this week by The Western Front. For the story on what's wrong with housing and what you can do about it, see pages 5, 6, 7 and 8.Graduating seniors A list of August baccalaureate degree candidates is posted on the bulletin boardoutside the registrar's office. Prospective December graduates who have not had their final evaluationapproval should make an appointment with Mrs. Flake in the registrar's office before tomorrow. Majorsand minors must be approved in the bluebook before evaluation, except for students Whoseconcentration or minor is elementary education. Aides needed Student aides to faculty advisors areneeded for freshman orientation, Aug. 5 and 6. Pay is $25. For information, contact the admissionsoffice. the number of Western's student teaching centers to 10. Savitch said that now western can offera variety of locations to the 900 students who plan to student teach next year. "As the student teachingprogram expands and if the need arises, we can even consicterthe possibility of moving into Alaska to establish resident centers," Dr. Elden Bondt acting chairman of the educa!on department, s.aid. "Western has probably taken the lead in Washington for establishing cooperative relationshipS withthe public schools by involving them in teacher training programs," Bond said. dance forms, did anexcellent imitation of the female dance styles as well. For example his imitation of the Japanesewoman's flirtation attempts especially pleased the audience. His sense of humor was evi. dentseveral times during the classical dancer's recital, especially in the Tel Chum O'he Mask Dance). Hewore a red Chibari mask to represent strength and wildness. It had a stiff .mustache, glaring eyes, anda tightly closed mouth. The grotesque and humorous dance caused much laughter in the audience,especially with the children. "Thorn is being: harrassed by his (the UW) administration now because ofhis novel inauguration this spring and under the terms of our pact, such situations require that we keep alert to come to each other's aid on a moment's notice," Bourasaw said. (Gunn was subjected todisciplinary action by the University because of student disorders resulting from his inauguralactivities, which he labelled "World War III.") "Above all, "Bourasaw said," we mean to keep an evenkeeI." Both Gunn and Bourasaw hope to help their respective student constitutencies learn how theycan become active and shaPe their own destinies instead of accepting what others plan for them.Western to open B.C. teaching center thewestern front Western will open a resident rtudent teachingcenter in Van~ ouver, B.C., this fall, accord~ to Dr. Leonard Savitch, dig rector of student teaching.The ~r~ram has been endorsed by ilie state department of Washing100. About 12 students willpartijpate in the program, which is 'J)en to all education students. rhe number of participants islpected to increase as more ~ople become familiar with the ~~ram. Savitch said. Now resident centershave llso been established in Belleme, in Tacoma and on the Olympic Penisula. This brings Koreandancer performs for enraptured audience By LOIS CASKEY Contributor Won Kyung Cho, Korean dance lI'tist, entertained more than 350 !acuIty members and students nth an interesting performanceWednesday night. . He demonstrated the JaplIlese, Chinese, and Korean lorms of dance and drewcom; arisons between these orienIal forms which had influenced lach other. The former dance1l'ofessor showed how the ways ~ using gait, bOWS, the sword, ilia fan and scarf are used in !aCh ofthese countries. The graceful performer, not nmiting himself to the male Bourasaw, Gunn sign mutualdefense pact As Prfsident Noel Bourasaw signed a defense alliance pact with University of Washingtonstudent body president Thorn Gunn to protect each other's student government and help each other withmutual concerns. "Thorn is a good boy and loves nis mother," Bourasaw said. "Because of this, we aresure we can help each other lobby at the state legislature and aid each other in programmingentertainment and scheduling sPeakers." Bourasaw said ~ one of their first joint ventures will be tostage an intercollegiate Beauty Contest this November. "This will be an extravaganza of the first rank,"Bourasaw said, "and will be conducted with !he decorum and good taste we Ire famous for." ---------- Western Front - 1968 July 16 - Page 2 ---------- 208 E. Holly nn NDS TONIGHT "BANDELERO" 6:30 and 10: 10 "THE INCIDEIT" FOR GROWN UPPEOPLEI COLOR BY DELUXE B$11 STARTS WEDNESDAY ACONTROVERSIAL MOTION PICTURE Screenplay by LEWIS JOHN CARLINO and 'HOWARD KOCH. Produced by RAYMOND STRess·Diret:ted by MARK RYDEll COMPUION FUTURE Color by Delu,e . From CLARIDGE PICTURESFEATURE TIMES WED.-THUR•.fRI.-MON.-TUES. "THE FOX" 6:30-10: 10 "ANNIVERSARY" 8:30 Only • SATURDAV'S SCHEDULE-- "FOX" 2:35 - 6:20 - 10 "ANNIVERSARY" 1 - 4:40 - 8:20 •SUNDAV'S SCHEDULE .... "FOX" 1:30 - 5:15 - 9 P.M. "ANNIVERSARY" 3:30 -7:15 Dine with us at theremodeled MT. BAKER BOX OFFICE OPENS 6: 15 TONIGHT Phone 734-5690 Ten years ago, thismotion-picture could nol possibly have been made. Even ayear ago,THE FOX could nol have beenmade... nOlquile Ihis way. I "Despite the controversial story ••• an engrossing film •••Although the kissing scenes of Anne and Sandy, and the torrid, nude love scene of Dullea and Annehave been highly publicized, they are so natural you just accept them • • ." . a___--SANDYDENNIS, KEIR DL~LEA ANNE HEy\VOODASl1JIN MARCil 1 13dW~€~l o.nd~ e.a-t'Y\Q, 'Po.u..Q,... Dave VanderGriend, one ofthe nation's top ranking javelin throwers, has joined other OlympicGamehopefuls in high altitude training at South Lake Tahoe. NAJA champion and a fourth place finisherat the Olympic trials in Los Angeles, VanderGriend must improve more than 10' from his best toss of241'5" to qualify for the Mexico City games in October. The Western senior will return from thetraining camp in two weeks to marry on Aug. 10 Patricia Sullivan, a spring graduate from Western. He will return to training at the Olympic camp where the final team will be selected between Sept. 9to17.Committees have been formed to arrange transportation and housing, organizers say. One organizer,Roger Black, editor of the umversity of Chicago student newspaper, described the movement as"moderate." ''This is a popular Democratic movement within the regular party," he said. "We want to express our feeling that the Democratic party really must be democratic." Organizers emphasizetheir activities are distinct from demonstrations planned by New Left and antiwar groups. of any setand how to build them for strength, endurance and economy. Under the direction of stage managers,they measure, cut and assemble lumber to form the necessary part of a set. The class, taught byDennis Catrell, s pee c h instructor, meets for three hours twice each week. This meeting consists ofone hour of lecture and two hours of lab. In addition to building sets in the lab, each student Plts in 30additional hours. Working backstage at one of the productions given by the SPeech department during the quarter. The class is open both to women and men students. Tuesday, July 16, 1968 Western Front II Free University to open in fall Wh t d th rt f al far eastern philosophy, mixed dinary townspeople(housewives, a 0 .e a 0 sexu media and communications, the businessmen) and Bellingham ~ove, logai3 ~J1~ and ~er-~a!C" Bahai Faith, Lummi Indians.. high school students in the cour- ~ng, en. u. sm,. ecnSlS Also listed are' the thoughts of ses as well as Western stu-m Am~rlC~ film-m~king, group Albertcamus, the genetic prob- dents and faculty, who make up ~amhcs,. llim:~~lllll1~~ ph?- lerns of humanpopulation, non- the bulk of the Free U. mem- ~rap y?m e save m violent action, the theater of thebership; . common. absurd--and many others "One of the aims of the Free Answer: They are t~e most . _ Regi~tration is being conduct- U.," said Dr. Weiner, "is to popular course~ for. WhICh stu- ~ at a boothoutside the Viking have fun with with education _ dents are regIstenng for !he Union by Allison Andressecre- to get away from the traditional No~thwest Free University fary-treasurer of the Free u. concept ofeducation where a WhICh opens fall qua~te.r. ' Information can also be obtain- teacher comes into aclassroom . The free V·, as IttS called. ed by contacting . the AS of- as a god and lectures the stu- ISthe brainchild of several fice in the Viking union. . dents as if they are brainless Western students andfaculty Miss Andres says about 135 children." members - among them Noel . ts h' i t d f - Bourasaw (ASpresident), Dave studen a~e reg s ere or "In the Free U., everyone will Cunningham (former Speaker ofcourses durmg the fall quar- share in the teaching and learn- AS legislature), Al Doan (legis- ter. Nearly 20 Western facul- ing process. It will be as relaxed, lator), Dr. Bernard Weiner (for- ~ tm~mbers I ~dse~~rak:tr infox:mal" and spontaneous as mer assistant professor of pol- n save vo un eere o. c poSSIble. itical science) and others "Anyone can organ\~e a The Free U. is now in the . The Free U probably willof- co~rse for the. Fre~ U., Dr. process of searching for a per-fer 15 to 20' courses this fall Wemeremphaslze~ Just r?und manent off-campus office, either Dr. Weiner coordinator of th~ up somfe peO!?I':m t s~bJect- in a house or office-building Northwest 'Free University area 0 your meres an com-downtown. . , petence, or come see us about an . . Said. . idea you have and we'll try to Classes WIll beoffered there, othe.r popular courses st.lll get the class ~rganized " in private homes and apart-openmclude: modern. m.uslc, The NFU Board of Trustees ments and in various church-pop, folk, r?ck,ele~tromc, Jazz, (Doan Bourasaw Larry West) affiliated buildings around the rmeoh~eg.lronuscthhllodu-grehatr-meagstm ethwoedsst,, .; v.0_ted_'t0 attempt 'to involve or- campus. .. Jacobians and Farragoestied vin's killers respectively. The Champs and' Killers each have 1-1 records. The seven team league isplayA ing a 21 game round-robin tournamenf lasting toJuiy 25. Teams Will play six games apiece, onfields in back of the gym. Weedman, a physical education major, was a three year letterman atWestern and three times all-Evergreen Conference at defensive end. He was a key figure on Western'sdefensh:e line, which led the league ill rushing defense last year. Western athletes keep busy Earlyleaders in the summer intramural slow pitch league are the Farragoes and Jacobians, each with 2-0records, before last night's games. Tonight, both hope to keep their perfect records, playing thedefending Champs and Keg CmCAGO (CPS) - A march on the Democratic National Convention inChicago next month is being organized by a student group which seeks to deny the party's presidentialnomination to Vice President Hubert Humphrey. Although the movement is not in support of anyspecific candidate, many participants are expected to be backers of Sen. Eugene Mccarthy.Regional committees are being formed in some parts of the country to contact students and otherpotential participants. Drafted twelfth by the Redskins, of the National Football League, the 6'5", 2~0-lb. N~A all-American defensIve end WIll tryout for a defensiy~ end or corner linebacker pOSItion.Students to march on Democratic convention Western's first pro football draftee Dave Weedman is at the Washington Redskin's training camp in Washington, D.C. By MAUREEN PECARIC Reporter Howmany stUdents who sign up for Speech 236 realize that they are entering a class of amateur carPentry? The college catalogue lists the Class as stagecraft, which may have ambiguous meanings for somestudents. For those expecting a course in beginning actmg saws, hammers, nails and other equipmentsoon make it apparent that they are in the wrong class. The course is designed to give a basicknowledge of stage conA struction and structure. The student actually helps to build sets. Studentslearn the basic parts Take speech, learn carpentry Dr. Bernard Weiner and Allison Andres sign up BrettJarrett for Northwest Free University. (photo by oHley) Dr. Adams returns Irom England Dr. HenryAdams, professor af psychology, is back at Western Ibis summer after spending a fear in Englandstudying psy.c~ological problems and the BritISh educational system. He tested both American andBritish students for comparison. Dr. Adams said efforts have heen made to educate everyone in England during recent years. The British class system is ~hanging and comprehensive !chools (high schools forall !Deial classes) are gradually replacing grammar schools ~igh schools primarily for up. ~rclassstudents), he said. He added that the British edu~ ators look to American school systems forguidance in their lttempt to educate the masses. IA students teach youths Practice is necessarytolearn I skill. Students in Technology 193, the teaching of Industrial Irts, are learning to teach by !oingjust that. Student-teachers, under the !irection of course instructor Harry Warren of Renton High School, teach power mechanics 10 25 volunteer students of junior nigh school age. Warren is at Western for the summer. Power mechanics deals with laSoline engines. Overhauling of small gasoline engines is theletual work done. Each of the student-teachers in Ihe course presents to the class I 15 minutedemonstration, which is graded by Warren. The course in Power mechmics is offered free to thestudents, and no grade or credit .~ given. The student minimum wage has gone up to $1.40 everywhereon campus. The new pay hike, which went into effect July 1, is a lO-cent increase over the previousstudent wage of $1.30 per hour. Robert Hatch, director of financial aid and student advisement,said there is a possibility that student wages will be increased to $1.45 in the fall. Although theminimum student wage increased 10 cents, other student pay rates did not correspondingly increase.The national minimum wage is $1.60 but the college has the right to set its own pay scale because itis state ProPerty. Hatch said that he believes the wage hike was fully justified and long overdue. Wages up to $1.40 ---------- Western Front - 1968 July 16 - Page 3 ---------- The stately Campus Christian Ministry house for Western students on Garden Street. (photo by fisher) ,I· II II view, I asked what rankthisparticular instructor held. At this point, Dr. McDonnell explainedWestern's system of ranking instructors. HoW many times have you started to address an instruc·tor, then stopped, falteredt and stuttered because you dia not know how to address him? According toDr. McDonnell there are five ranks at West· ern - teaching assistant, instructor, assistant, associate and full professors. The lowest categories are the teaching assistant and instructor, who may be agraduate student working on a master's or a doctor's degree. This person should be aqdressed asMister, Miss or Mrs. If an instructor has his doc. torate, he may be addressed as doctor. Assistant,associate and full professors are referred to as Mister. If they have their doetorates, they areaddressed as doctor. Only those teachers in these three higher categories may 00 addressed asProfessor. How do you find out what de. grees a partiCUlar professor holds? Check in the college,catalogue. Typewriler and Adding Machine· Sales, Service and Renlals We carryall makes ofportables and used machines. BELLINGHAM BUSINESS MACHINES 1410 Commercial 734-3630(Next to Bon Marche) bergs bought the iJl~v~. Engberg was a prOmllleu,· druggist, whose businesswas located at the corner of state and Holly streets. Mrs. Engberg, a violinist, organized theBellingham Symphony arches. tra, Mrs. Jones said. The house was again sold, this time to the Kraftfamily. "Mrs. Kraft gave the house its real character," Mrs. Jones said. Mrs. Kraft transformed theoriginal front porch into a balcony and changed the side en. trance into the main entry. She replacedthe heavy, interior staircase with a circular one, added a kitchen, and trimmed the exterior with irongrillwork, which she had collected on her travels. After she died, Mrs. Betty Cox, her daughter, inherited the house. She, in turn, gave it to her sons. The Campus Christian Ministry acquired the house fromthem. Reporter learns about professorial ranking Ce.,., wu.....ut:u Mreet. by 11:1151 the college wasmaking longrange plans to remove the house for the ramp. "In 1964 and 1965 we publiclyannounced this and the United Campus Christian Foundation knew this. We acquired land acquisitionmoney from the state legislature and notified the Board that we were buying the property. " TheWhatcom County Historical Society is interested in saving the house as an historic site and haspresented a petition with 300 signatures of prominent citizens to the Board of Trustees. All threemajor interests believe that the house is too unstable to be moved and that finding anothersuitable location would be impossible aesthetically. Mrs. Roger Jones, vice-president of thehistorical society, said that the house. a contem- ByMAUREENPECARIC Contributor I recently had anappointment for an ordinary, what's-new-inyour- departmenf=type interview with Dr. Robert McDonnellchairman of Western's Englis~ department. I began by asking standard questions, but between the twoof us, we could uncover very little. This phase of my interview lasted five minutes. But the next 30minutes were spent with Dr. McDonnell questioning and "educating" me. As a regUlar student atWashington State University, I was very impressed with the more personal, informal atmosphere hereas he patiently briefed me on a pertinent educational and social problem confronting Western. As he mentioned an interesting instructor that I might inter= Special OHer Reg. $7.00 Only $2.10 Campus-Pac An assortment of fine nationally advertised products Maclean Toothpaste, Absorbine Jr.,Brylcream, Old Spice After Shave Lotion, etc., etc. Before the current Vietnam conflict, about 60 percent of the women students at the American Institute for Foreign Trade (AI FT) managed to get overseas bythe matrimonial route. The times they are achangin! A larger percentage now find interesting, non-secretarial positions. Such companies as American Express, Gillette, Uniroyal, Philip MorrisInternational, Arthur D. Little, Inc., Saks Co., Seligman and Latz, Inc., Port of New York Authorityand Chase Manhattan Bank need female employees. According to Dr. Robert L. Gulick, AIFT'sDean of Admissions, this year marks the first real breakthrough for women seeking internationalcareers in world trade. Special offer iust for college students! CLAIROL COLLEGE SAMPLER SpecialPrice 43~ Student's Co-op The Campus Hub P.S.: We can personalize your stationery .. ningdirecLlI., lege has to get parlong iLL ...~ northern end of the campus. Now, he said, the area canaccommodate only a small number of cars. After the house is moved. there will be space for 100cars. . Goltz said that a parking ramp IS planned later for the site which will lead to 300 parking spacesusing Pine street, which runs between Mathes Hall and where the CCM House is located, as theentrance. Beside parking, the VU extension will provide service facilities and shops. Dr. LeibAlexander chairman of the board of directors of CCM House, said that the house serves as a culturalcenter for the campus. Although the college could apo praise accurately the land value, Alexandersaid, the value of the central location and the atmosphere of the ministry would be irreplaceable. Thecollege knows the value Women employees sought abroad Tuesday, July 16, 196 Any student whohas NOT preregistered for Fall Quarter may do so on Wednesday, July 17 in the Registration Center,ground floor of Edens Hall. FALL QUARTER 1968 PRE-REGISTRATION ANNOUNCEMENT 2.GRADUATES-Obtain materials from Graduate Office and secure program approval from graduateprogram adviser, and Dean of Graduate Studies. 3. REPORT with your blue book to the RegistrationCenter, ground floor of Edens Hall on Wednesday, July 17. The Registration Center will be open 8:30-11 :30 and 1:00-4:00. PAYMEN' OF FEES ALL STUDENTS-Pay as you Pre-Register or Pay by mail by Monday, September 16 PROCEDURE: 1. ALL UNDERGRADUATES-Bring your blue book up to dote,including your approved schedule for Fall Quarter. Dr. Lyle Sellards (left) discusses CCM plans withanother minister. (photo by fisher) • 0 Western Front ---------- Western Front - 1968 July 16 - Page 4 ---------- esday, July 16, 1968 Western Front 9 l~ .'e lt;"eotothe harn CU,t "uwe. _"..Ulen? "It's over," MontyWest, University of ! Washington associate professor of anthro, pology, said in Seattle Magazine."We've Ialready won. The hippies just aren'.t in the "U" District anymore. "They're Boeing engineers, real-estate s?le~men, junior executives. Being a hippIe means domg the thing that turns you on most, andthat can be working with computers as well as anything else." Bernie Fleming, Western senior shearedoff his shoulder-length hai; months ago because it isn't unique to have ~ long hair anymore. "High school kids used to think I was 'G?d' when I had long hair. Anything I saId was taken as wisdom," Fleming said. "In the beginning, hippies were different. You could always tell them, not by the way they talked, butby the way they looked. There were no fat hippies. Guys were lean, feminine-inclined in build. Thegeneral body types are gone. The school jocks-these guys are in it now," Fleming said. Chris Smith,Western senior, said that the "real ones are living in the communes n~w. " Communal living "becamebig" wIth Rolemane at the Big Sur Institute in Southern California, she said. Fleming said there is aheavy turnover in the communes. "They are all idealists but it won't last. Not many of them are used to working like that. They think they can live by growing grass. All , the real diggers have gone." By allaccounts Haight-Ashbury is on the decay. Fleming said,"Haight is more of a slum now than it ever was. It is a center for kids and tourists to visit. " Pat Spark, Western junior, sai~ "Haight-Ashbury isn't a placeof love it's a place of hate. I walked down the streets of Haight and overheard the conversations. . "'"v me hIppies' philosophy F'lemmg said, but "drugs is what keeps them ~ogether. A lot of people aredown on aCId now. Yoga and meditation are the big things now. " Henr~ Pidou, University ofWashington ~ng~Ish teaching assistant, said that the hIppIes have taken the most logical next step.~hey've gone underground to keep attentIOn from focusing on them. They were getting "too much like an 'Establishment' ," Pidou said. "Look what the mass media have done to the word 'hippie'," he said."Newspapers and magazines were the ones that told me what a hippie is. When Life started usingthe word I have to say I don't know what I am." ~idol;l said he believes the hippie revolutIOn IS part of a revival of spiritual awareness that has been developing in the last 60 years. "Western religion is blending with Eastern philosophy as a basis for a new religion. Such a religion will not repudiate the old but will bring in new fresh truths," Pidou said. "Over a course of time truths become hollow and ritualistic. Yogaand LSD are precursors, as is communal living. Old patterns have failed so new ones have to bedeveloped through collective individual efforts. . ~; L. Simmi!1s ~ays in "It's Happenmg that thehIppIes "have probably integrated races, religions and sexes more than any other group has. " They'vetaken up the chant' 'I am he as you are he as you are me as we are all together." That's what ishappening to the hippies. They've "dropped out" and we have assimilated them again. It's kitsch to liveZen, practice Yoga, smoke pot, and wear beads. Everyone has gone hip-while the real "diggers" havedropped out again. Jay Lemmon at the A.S. nominating convention. (photo by Lydia) Hippies in theSeattle "u" district dress the way they feel. ( photo by fisher) ---------- Western Front - 1968 July 16 - Page 5 ---------- 8 Western Front Tuesday, July 16, 1968 These houses are rented by students These palaces on Statestreet are $65 per month plus utilities. (photo by offley) This is the doorway to a $70 dream house.Renters also pay for the utilities. (photo by offley) (photo by oHley) Male students want co-ed cook fallquarter. No pay, except free food. l?hone 733.2388. 33 Help Wanted 21 Room and Board Trouble WithTurkish puzzle need· help - Call Mathes 418, PAT 18 'Inonals Classified ,. " Need money? Be a sales rep for a socio-politico-satrical. new poster line. Ideal for individuals and organizations. Write forcomplete poster profit kit. Gross National Product, BOX 427, Wayzata, Mn., 55391 1t ..... ~. Is yourIQ 98th percentile? If so, join Mensa·and help create Mensa University. J. P. Riepe, 1111 Key street,Bellingham. ·1966 MGB·· British - .Racing Green, hardtop and cloth top, Wire whee1st, like newconditioo, $2095. Call '/34.8393. This house rents for $65 per month plus utilities. Once again it is timefor Book of the Quarter suggestion for fall. May we hear from you? Student#CO-Op Book News For this bay view home on State street you pay $75, without utilities. (photo by oHley) This week we can offer you some different titles: Seashore Life of Our Pacific Coast by Vessel; Birds of Washington State byJewett et. al.; Sense of the 60's by Quinn; First Things First by McCarthy; Open and Closed Mind byRokeach; American Art Since 1900 by Rose; and Food in the Wilderness. The finest in Chinese andA.erican Food 734-6262 - Open 11 a.m. daily, 2 p.m. Sunday - Enchant your date and your friends and relatives by bring, ing them here during the graduation festivities. ,-Beverages in the TikiRoom .-Orders to go 206 W. Holly St. Best Sellers for Summer Reading: Married Men Make the Best LoversThe Fox by D. H. Lawrence The Graduate The Conan Series Also McCarthy Buttons and StickersAARDVARK BOOKS ARTS 213 E. Doily 734-4043 . ---------- Western Front - 1968 July 16 - Page 6 ---------- Tuesday, July 16, 1968 Western Front 7 Off-campus housing: A plan for action COUNTY HEALTHDEPARTMENT investigates complaints of unsanitary or unhealthful conditions. Phone 733-9520.CHAMBER of COMMERCE provides students with link to the private business community. CITYPLANNING COMMISSION provides students with link to City Council on matters affecting housingordinances, etc. Phone 733-5680. )t.. I CITY HOUSING INSPECTOR investigates complaints of code violations. 1 Small Claims Court Students can sue landlords for breach of contract, to get refundof damage deposits, etc. for filing fee of S1. HOUSING COMMITTEE John Moore, chairman. 733-6441. ASSOCIATED STUDENTS Pays Tenant Union director and operating expenses, coordinatesorganization. f Legal Aid offers free legal advice to indigent students every Thursday at CountyCourthouse. Co-Op Housing owned by students, maintained by student renters, rented to studentsat reasonable rates. TENANT UNION Organization of all students who rent off-campus housing,headed by director paid by AS. DIRECTOR MEDIATION COUNCIL to mediate disputes betweenstudent renters and landlords. LANDLORDS Anyone who rents housing to any Western student. ..----------.------t to direct administration t------.----------.. of Tenant Union; paid by AS. . \ I.--COMPLAINT BUREAU to accept complaints from student renters and landlords and direct these to the Tenant Union, college or public agency for action. RENT FUND to hold rent in trust in cases wherelandlords have refused to maintain units according to contract, etc. SOCIAL BUREAU to organizesocial functions to stimulate participation. , RESEARCH BUREAU to inform students which landlordsdo not rent at reasonable rates, do not provide adequate space, do not redeem damage deposits, do not keep up facilities, etc. INFORMATION SERVICE to advise students of their rights and where to go forhelp. ---------- Western Front - 1968 July 16 - Page 7 ---------- 6 Western Front Tuesday, July 16, 1968 'housing: an appraisal -Bob Frank Senior, economics Whatlandlords should do What AS is doing Three weeks ago, editor-in-chief Don B. Wittenberger noted that ... rising prices for housing result from a supply and demand situation. This means that with a givensupply of housing, an increase in demand will force up rents. -John Moore I Housing CommitteeChairman Housing in Bellingham is at the point where a serious reappraisal must be made by students,college administrators and landlords. Today there are no rigid standards for housing (except forinspected underclassman off-campus units) imposed either by the college or the city. -. .. In a .r~centissue, Don B. Wittenberger noted that rIsmg prIces for housing result from a supply and demandsituation. This means that with a given supply of housing, an increase in demand will force up rents. Thisonly approximates the situation at Western. For the most part, costs to the owner are sunken costs; that is, the house has been paid for and the landlord's only costs are lor repairs and maintenance. In thosecases costs are negligible. _' Thus, supply-demand relationships are not a cause, but rather an excuse,for the exploitation of students, especially those with low incomes. As a case in point, six Western girlscontracted for four rooms in a Garden Street house. Each paid $120 per quarter, for room only. Thismeans the owner receives $720 for four rooms for three months. Concern over rental rates is a centralissue for those looking for housing. Freshmen and transfer students face the biggest problem, since theyare ignorant of the area and people here. As a result, they place pressure on limited dormitory space.Why? Because of the relative cost of off- and on-campus housing. Room and board in a dorm works outto about $88 per month; if we assume food, water electricity, etc. costs about $10 per week, any off-campus facility costing more than $48 per month would cost the student more. Yet off-campus housingequal in quality to dormitory housing is very rare at $48. Cases such as that of the six girls-which arecommon in Bellingham-NEED NOT OCCUR. Asolution might require an arbitrary ceiling on rents,imposed either by each owner individually or by landlords as a group. The basis for the ceiling would bederived from appraisal according to a uniform standard. That is to say, rent would be based on floorspace general quality, utilities costs and other costs WITHOUT REGARD TO PROXIMITY TO CAMPUS. This solution would offer landlords greater freedom in rent structuring. Generally speaking, any degree ofoutside control infringes on the rights of people to engage in free enterprise. For this reason, landlordsmight find the above solution preferable to some other alternatives that might be offered. Should thelandlords refuse to regulate themselves, they could be subject to rent ceilings lower than those theywould impose upon themselves, stricter regulation by the community or other unpleasant reactions fromthe student body. The Associated Students Legislature, in response to a growing number of complaintsby students about offcampus housing, has formed a housing committee to investigate the situation.Its efforts to date have been directed to enlisting support in the community (Le., Chamber of CommerceCouncil of Churches) to sound out the problem as seen by landlords and citizens. ' The housingcommittee also is working for a student Tenant Union, which would offer student renters a means tocombat landlords who take advantage of students. In conjunction with the Tenant Union would be formeda mediation council, consisting of students and interested citizens, to reestablish the now-broken lines ofcommunication between landlords and students involved in disputes. The greatest difficulty thehousing committee faces lies not in the community, but in student apathy. The total support of all off-campus students is essential if the - Don B. Wittenberger Tenant Union is to be effective. Daniel MeinsPat Hughes Dianna Timm Bernard Offley We agree with Bob Frank that the housing situation must bereappraised. We cannot agree that self-regulation by landlords is a realistic solution to housing problems. Those landlords interested solely in extracting as much profit as possible from students will notwillingly accept regula-' tion, whether by themselves or anyone else. - - The housing situation will notimprove until offcampus students organize into an effective pressure group' capable of offsetting theeconomic power now enjoyed by the landlord group. On the facing page we have outlined a framework for student organization which, by imposing sanctions on recalcitrant landlords and cooperating with city and college officials, we feel can achieve a significant improvement in student off-campus housing conditions. We agree with John Moore that broad student participation is necessary if any such effort is tosucceed. Many existing abuses occur only because students either encourage or tolerate them. Forexample, verbal agreements nearly always work to the landlord's substantial advantage, but fewstudents insist upon a written contract,as they should. -We do not support such ideas as mass boycotts or rent strikes; we favor constructive solutions to the housing problem which entail cooperation betweenstudent renters, concerned public officials and landlords alike. To this end, we offer the followingspecific proposals: 1. The Associated Students Legislature should form a Tenant Union for students whorent off-campus, with a paid student staff, to provide student renters with a variety of services and act asa voice for their interests. 2. Students who rent off-campus housing should ,insist that adequatestandards be maintained and should not tolerate landlords who violate agreements. No renter shouldtolerate a landlord who takes two months to fix a leaky faucet of broken window. (See point 5. ) 3.Studenfs should not allow landlords to specify the number of persons to live in a unit. Rather, the landlord should be allowed only to specify the total rent for the entire house, with the renters to decide how manystudents will live in the house. In some instances, landlords receive as much as $300 per mo"nth for a two-bedroom house by placing six students in the house at $50 each. . 4. Renters should insist on awritten contract specif~ mg the a~ount of rent, payment dates, who is respon~ lble !or mamtenance, terms under which damage deposIts WIll not be refunded and causes for which renters can be evicted. A verbal agreement leaves the renter defenseless against arbitrary acts of the landlord. Contractsshould specify that rent will not be raised during the term of the lease. 5. Students whose landlords haveviolated contracts should make immediate and full use of the free legal services provided iI! the county.Only when students exercise their rights will those rights be respected. 6. Students whose landlords donot maintain the premises should ask for investigation and action by the city housing inspector. 7. TheAS should lobby for passage by the city council of ordinances designed to upgrade housing standardsand prevent overcrowding and other abuses. The present zoning of the college area for multiple familydwellings should be maintained to allow apartment construction. However, the ordinance which limitsthe number of unrelCi.ted persons who may occupy a single-family dwellin~, should be extended to cover all singlefamily residences regardless of zoning. Now, the orCHnance applies to areas zoned single-family residence only and therefore does not apply to most housing rented to students. The maximumnumber of unrelated people living in one unit SholIldbe set at four. This would prevent overcrowdingcaused either arbitrarily by landlords or willingly by students. The city planning commission has indicated it will support such an ordinance. 8. Students should pay rent on time and in other ways cooperate withlandlords, to eliminate landlords' excuses for arbitrary and unjust actions. We feel that while the majorityof student off-campus houses provide adeQuate, albeit not lavish, housing, under the existing situation,rents are too high, landlords act too arbitrarily and unreasonably in many instances,' and there are asufficient number of students living in substandard facilities to warrant serious concern on the part ofthe students. We feel that the only solution to the off-campus housing problem is through studentorganization and cooperation with public officials, the college and the landlords themselves. ---------- Western Front - 1968 July 16 - Page 8 ---------- Poor housing conditions is serious problem here Western Front 5 WWSC Art Film Series presentsAdmission: Adu.lts $1. Students 65t A FESTIVAL OF PRIZE-WINNING FilMS One and three-quartershours of variety and creativity in contemporary short film making lecture Hall 4 Thursday, July 18 7 and9:30 p.m. Tune in, turn on, and drop out. Tune in to the sum of $360 per quarter; turn on through a broken socket; and then drop out through the bathroom floor. (photos by oHley) Tuesday, July 16, 1968 -service calls made -parts and accessories for dune buggies but when they want the landlord to fix something, he becomes a non-person. Students often pay ridiculously high rent. Four students who pay $50 permonth each to live in an old, uncomfortable house could easily find an , attractive apartment in a city likeSeattle for the same money. This is not to say all landlords are bad. There are some good ones around - but nowhere near enough to go around. On the other hand, students often invite much of the abuse they suffer. One of the riskiest yet ma;t widespread practices is that of renting without a written contract.This leaves him without protection against SUdden increases in rent, eviction on 24 hours' notice or otherpractices which are by no means rare in Bellingham. Another way in which some students invite troubleis by failing to respect the landlord's property. 'Finally, many students are apathetic. They don't insist ontheir rights; and by allowing landlords to get away with contract violations, substandard conditionsand lax maintenance, they only invite more of the same not only for themselves but for those whofollow. What is needed is a clearer understanding and greater cooperation between student tenants andlandlords. For one way to achieve it, turn to page 6. get the bugs out of your Beetle lED'S GARAGE2215%C rnw II 733-9501 217 W. HOllY Paintings, Sculptures, Pottery, Jewelry Gallery 217 Westernstudents cannot escape off-campus housing. While nothing prevents any student from living in adormitory for four years if he wishes, few students do. Most, sooner or later, move offcampus. Off-campus housing offers the student freedom from college regulations which he might find restrictive ashe grows older and his living patterns change. To the college, off-campus housing represents a solutionto an otherwise unsolvable housing problem. Western has dormitory space for about 2,000 students,fewer than one third of the total enrollment, and is limited in how fast it can add new living units. But thestudent who decides to move off-camrus is no longer protected by college standards. He places himselfat the mercy of the marketplace. Any student who has lived off-campus is familiar with electrical circuitsthat give off psychedelic flashes, eternally leaky plumbing, broken windows that never get fixed, waterheaters thatdon'twork. These are small irritations. More serious are such problems as rent gouging,arbitrary evictions, forced overcrowding and unsafe living conditions. For example, in an old woodenhouse faulty wiring can kill six sleeping people in five minutes. Students usually never meet theirlandlords. They simply put money in an envelope and mail it once a month. Somehow their checks getcal3~ed; .---------------.. Northwestern Commercial Bank College Branch Office IS NOW OPEN FORYOUR ICONVENIENCE 445, HIGH STREET (Corner of High and Garden Terrace) 'We are pleased toannounce the opening of our new Branch Office, to serve Western Wa'shington State College and thesurrounding area. Our Branch location at 445 High Street will ,be open Monday through Friday fromlO:OOA. M. to 3:00 P.M. Northwestern Commercial Bank Mal.. Office Corae,ofCommercial anti Macnona Open Sam,..,'.IMO··A.M••·!:oo P...· Member', Of -Feq,rarD~tlnSor;nceCo¥. :"-7'-0::-;·'·_·-:"'··'"; ... , . .,.. ---------- Western Front - 1968 July 16 - Page 9 ---------- ;1K~rwesterllfrollt official weekly newspaper of Western Washington State College second class postagepaid at Bellingham, Wash. 98225 phone,734-8800 editorial, ext. 2277 . advertising, ext. 2276 Don B.Wittenberger, editor-in-chief . Genon Miller, advisor Dianna Timm, managing editor Dan Meins, businessmanager and cartoonist Pat Hughes, ad manager and sports editor Jim Fisher, photography editorPhotographers: Bernard OHley, Lydia Christensen Reporters: Lois Caskey, Michael Grobe, MaureenPecaric, Janet Peischel Contributors: Angela Martinez, Gibson Hendenon Deadlines: Noon Th~,rsday -news copy, letters to the editor, display ad reservation, classified ads, display and copy. Represented by NEAS, 360 Lexington Ave., New York, N.Y., 10017 Price per copy. 10 cents. Subscription, $3.50 a year, $1.50 a quarter. Member U.S. Student Press Association, College Press Service, Associated College.Press and Intercollegiate Press Servi.ce Ethics researched Dr. Phillip Montague, assit. ant professor ofphilosophy, is working this summer on are• search grant from Western on the problem of ethics.mainly dependent on adaptations in ship design, Hill said. For example, he said, you can't ex. pect touse fork lifts and square pallets to store crago in rounded, curved cargo holds. The men who handlecargoes, longshoremen, are classified according to their level of skill. Fifty-five" A" men, experts oncargo handling, are the must numerous category. Next in skill are the "B" men, who haven't been withthe business long enough to learn all the ropes. There are now 22 of these with 15 more tobeselectedsoon. "Extras," the last category, are the men just starting out in longshoring or men who use it as amoonlighting activity. "B" men and "extras" are hired 7:30 a.m. and 3 p.m. every day except Sunday atthe State St. Longshoremen's hall. All longshoremen are paid a basic hourly wage of $3.88 per hour,but those doing especially hazardous or difficult jobs reo ceive more. Night and weekend work paystime-and-a-half, $5.84 per hour. Although credit is given by Western, classes are held in Everett. Young to read paper Dr. Raymond A. Young, as· sociate professor of foreign language, will read a paper onRuben Dirio at the third world congress of the International Assn. of Hispanists, to be held in Mexico City Aug. 26 to 31. Dr. Young will visit Mexico City after the summer session ends. He will do research inMexico City following the conference. Teacher evaluations The Testing Center is scheduling teacherevaluations for summer quarter. . Requests should be made im· mediately, so none need by givenduring finals weeks of either the six or nine week sessions. handled is evident from figures for differentyears: 1!;l66- 339,855; 1965 - 189,989; 196266,892; 1960 - 35,918; and in 1952 only 3,161 tons ofcargo. Asked about further port growth, Hill thought it would not occur in existing prodUCts, but in"unknown manufacturing prodUCts that don't exist now." He said fabricated aluminum products andmarine protein cmcentrate are possibilities. Pulp product growth, Hill said, is limited because thesaturation point of users is alma;t here. Logs will have a dim export future if the North Cascades Park is authorized or if quotas on logs exports are lobbied into existence by lumber-making interests, Hillsaid. Planned improvements of north dock facilities include a new equipment and repair building, plustwo modern warehouses. The South Terminal dock, not far from Uniflite Co., isn't slated forimprovements, Hill said. Automated handling of cargo is Williams and Cynthia Lockhart. Other castmembers are Marion Leibold, Susan Erickson, Donald Ricnter, Robert Ellsworth David Cook, DavidLittle, Sfnrley Hatch, Eileen Dickson, Mitzie Balko, Susan Pedersen and Mark Short. Dr.Thomas Osborn, associate professor of music, will direct the production. Two to read papers Twomembers of Western's phila;ophy departlllent will read papers in early September follOWing the closeof summer session. Dr. Stanley Daugert, department chairman, will read a paper at the International Congress of Philosophy meeting in Vienna. Dr. Richard Purtill will read a paper at the Western DivisionAmerican Philosophical Associa tion meeting in Hawaii. 3M demonstration There will be a demonstration of home economics teaching materials tomorrow at 3 p.m. in OMlOl. . The demonstration willbepresented by the 3M Company (Minnesota Mining and Manufacturing Co.), St. Paul, Minn. Ourvantage point overlooking Bellingham Bay lets us see two of the main docks that are part of a $2million a year business - cargo handling and storage. Exports make up the bulk of business. Thethree most important products Bellingham exports are canned salmon, logs and pulp, according toKenneth Hill, manager of Bellingham Stevedoring Company. Other exports increasing in importance arealuminum ingots, hides, waste paper, frozen foods and lignisite. Two new industries are increasingthe importance of imports. Georgia Pacific's chemical plant imports salt. Intalco Aluminum Corporationin Ferndale imports aluminaand cryolite. Ships from many parts of the world come to Bellingham,Intalco and Blaine. Japan receives the bulk of local exports, expecially logs. Exports to India, South America and the Philip. pines are also significant, Hill said. Growth of the port in tonnage Fallpreregistration Students who have-not yet preregistered for all fall quarter may do so tomorrow in theregistratim center in Edens Hall. Departmental approval must be obtained for any course in chemistry.Sign up for cleanup Students interested in working on summer cleanupfromAtIg.19 to 30 should contactDouglas Bird in the Terrace Annex. Math tests set A mathematics retest and placement test will begiven students who failed to meet math entrance requirements and transfer students who have not yet cleared the requirement by means of test or course work. Math deficiencies must be met before thestudent registers for a fourth quarter. The test will be given at 2p.m. tomorrow in L 4. Students mustpreseJl,t ~. I. D. cards and bring a No.2 pencil. Bellingham port ;s gateway for Northwest to entire world Campus news briefs One man show Natural history Gene Vike, associate pro- This quarter Westernoffers fessor of art, will present a a program of three extension one.man show ofpaintings and art Operaworkshop courses called Natural History work of other media in the West. of the Northwest. ern ArtGallery in the Arts Build. "Albert Herring" an opera Meant primarily for elemen- ing. by Eric Cozier.. widbe present- tary teachers the program con- The exhibit will open tomorrow ed by the Western OperaWork- sists of one geology and two and continue until Saturday, Aug. shop at 8 p.m. July 26-27 in thebiology courses. ust 10, between the hours of 8 Auditorium. The program is administered by William G.Orme, assistant a.m. to 5 p.m. and 7 p.m. to 9 ~a.ding .singers are ,WUli~JIl".lliree.tor'of Oootinuing.studies;···ll•.!p., , , , .. Notify your board Summer students who wish to have their selectiveservice boards notified of their enrollment must make a request in the registrar's office, OM 113. ......~ ~ \f','i fR~".~ I P'"~~ SfAI1f'11'lf ?MA.* ~':'~l)It lt;k2I.'I11 Tuesday, July 16, 1968 .. LIl~~'"A~'4~iolINCf ~;'Sf . ~1'AM~D ON I'f ~~~e ~ 1l'~'J' If IN 1"H£ BIN!'? The Post OHice announced lastweek Saturday mail delivery will be eliminated by Sept. 1 and Saturday pickup and window servicewill be severely curtailed. In addition, 347 fourth-class post offices will be closed by Aug. 30 as aneconomy move resulting from Congressional cutbacks, campus calendar TODAY-BOQ panel, VUlounge, 7 p.m. Indian slides, L-4, 7-8:30 p.m. WEDNESDAY-Bridge, VU 209, 6-10 p.m. NDEAGeography Institute, M-30, 7 p.m. THURSDAY-Art films, "Cannon", "Overture", "Time Is," "The TenderGame"~ "The American Way", "A Ballad of Love", L-4, 7-9:30 p.m. Upward Bound speaker, L-4, 3-4 p.m. FRIDAY-Play, "Mistress of the Inn", L-1, 8:30 p.m. SATURDAY- "Mistress of the Inn" SUNDAY-"Mistress of the Inn" Project Catch-up Film, CS 214,7-9 p.m. recreation schedule TODAY-Guided Tour,Mt. Baker Plywood Co., 2-4 p.m. Plywood produced in Bellingham is distributed throughout the world;one of the Northwest's larger cooperative plywood operations. THURSDAY-Salmon barbecue atLakewood, 5: 30-7 p.m. Salmon barbecued by experts; Recreational activities will be available. Smallgroups will be taken from the dock at Lakewood for 20-30 minute excursions on the Institute forFreshwater Studies research boat. SATURDAY-Seattle City Light "Skagit Tour;" all day. Trip to theSeattle City Light installations on the Upper Skagit River, including Diablo and Ross Dams, provides alook at some of the most scenic areas in in Northwest Washington. Tour includes bus ride fromBellingham, plus a boat trip on Ross Lake, with the evening meal furnished. Cost: $6. Hike to KulshanCabin Opportunity to see Mt. Baker; located at the 5,000foot level near the mouth of Roosevelt Glacier. Cruise through San Juan Islands All day cruise to Lummi, Sinclair, Orcas, Sucia and others. Cost:$2.50. Bus trip to Vancouver, B.C. Sightseeing and shopping, areas to visit include Stanley Park, theZoo. Cost: $2. editorial we'goofed The editor is slinking around campus with a red face this week. Itseems last week's front-page picture of Dr. Byron Sigler directing "Between Two Thieves" wasn't Dr.Sigler. It was Tony Maroz, one of the actors. That isn't all that was wrong with last week's issue. So were the story and editorial on spring grade honors. The frosh were chp.ated by the registrar's computer, while the seniors benefitted from double-counting. That is, students were ranked according to the class theywill belong to next quarter, so most freshmen were counted as sophomores, sophomores as juniors, etc.This gave figures for students who earned 3.5 or above as: freshmen, 7; sophomores, 98; juniors, 104;seniors, 236. By counting according to students' class ranking as of spring quarter, the registrar nowgets: freshmen, 95; sophomores, 79; juniors, 117; seniors, 154. • Western Front ---------- Western Front - 1968 July 16 - Page 10 ---------- Western Fro.nt 3 733·9907 Friday - Saturday 9:30· 1:30 Carl Cozier Elementary and Lummi IndianReservation. The office of research and grants pledged $500 to the Tu. torial Society for next yealj"probably fro m the Ford Foundation or from Federal Work - Study Funds," Harvey said. Harvey urgedanyone who would be willing to commit three hours a week this summer or starting next fall to join theTutorial Society in room 207 of the Viking Union. Transpor. tation is a major difficulty and students withcars are especial. ly needed, Harvey said. Wednesday 7:30.9:30 137 West Holly St. JOIN THE "UP"CROWD Monday 5: 30 • 6: 30 Wednesday. Thursday 9:30 - 12:30 Tuesday, July 16, 1968 THE"UP" HAPPY HOURS Tutor society to help undergrads this fall Stereo tape system Raymond Mustoecools off while reading a book in the Fisher Fountain. . . (photo by offley) Starting fall quarter West. ern'sTutorial Society will tutor on the college level, George Harvey, summer coordinator for tutoring, said lastweek. Undergraduates, especially freshmen taking humanities, sci. ence and general education cours es, can be tutored by other students in the volunteer organ. ization. Harvey said at least 100 col. legestUdents tutored approxi. mately 150 children last spring quarter. The volunteers tutored at BellinghamHigh School, SeQ home High School, Assumption, Cash and carry for discount savings 1i28 Cornwall at Oberlin College, and received his M.A. from Yale. He has taught "payroll Eng. lish" to disadvantagedPeople in Washington, D.C. He is now a supervisor and instructor .of Burmese, Viet. namese,Japanese, German and French. He is sponsored by the Experimental Teacher's Fellowship Program,a joint effort of the English and Education de. partments. Draft to hit students harder WASHINGTON,D.C. (CPS)Draft calls will increase sharp. ly beginning in January. with college students providingmuch of the additional manpower, a Washington, D.C. research firm predicts. The firm, ScientificManpower Commission, said that the 18month cycle of draft calls will begin to peak during the earlypart of next year, unless, there is a major cutback in armed services manpower needs before then.Meanwhile. the Defense De. partment predicts that of the 240,000 men it expects will be inducted during fiscal 1969, more than 62.5 per cent will be college students, compared to 3.8 per cent during the lasttwo years. At the same time, the number of cases involving violations of selective service laws is risingrapidly. With still a month to go in fiscal 1968, cases num. bered 1,655, compared to 1,424 in 1967 and642 in 1966. tain cottages on the school grounds for single teachers. Miss Crial paid $5 per month plusutilities for a three-bed. room house, which she shared with five other teachers. The district is trying tophase out this housing, and rent will go up to $12 next year, she said. Miss Crial said she found herstudents' families very hospi. table. She often was invited to homes for dinner parties. Con. sequently,parents usually do not consider it necessary to go to the school for parent-teacher conferences. Theysimply wait to ask about their children until the teacher comes to their house. Tanned Miss Crial, wholikes to wear shifts, finds it hard to get used to Bellingham's colder . climate again. She says she lovesHawaii and is anxious to return. TOWN and COUNTRY CLEANERS 6 Announcing! the opening ofnear the corner of Holly and Lakeway Bin,on Optometrists 733-9300 COMPLETE OPTOMETRICSERVICE CONTACT LENSES - FASHION FRAMES Dr. Leroy H. Freeman and Associates ForeignService linguist to speak James Bostain, a Foreign Service Institute linguist from Washington, D.C., willspeak on English at the Campus School auditorium at 9 a.m., Friday. He has edited and produced aneducational TV show, "English: Fact and Fancy." The Aca. demy of TV Arts and Sciences awardedhim an emmy for the best educational TV show of 1967. Bostain was a Phi Beta Kappa is a seriouscause of racial and regional prejudices. We want to create a new and very per. sonal channel ofcommunication among people of different ages and backgrounds," Strauss said. FOCUS plans totransfer about 100 students this year to 25 participating colleges. Doan and other Western students tobring his house up to city housing code standards, will vis. it with BOC members Thurs. day. A boothwill be set up to col. lect dead fish for the DickGreg. ory stink-in. The project is not officially endorsed by the BOC. Jack Tanner, Gregory's at. torney and candidate for gov. ernor, will speak in the VU lounge at 1 p.m. July 24. recorders, record players and duplicating machines. Classes meet from 8 a.m. to 2p.m., with only 15 minutes for lunch. Teachers eat with their children. The informality of island lifereaches into the classroom. Boys wear jeans and girls. dre_s. ses; all go barefoot. Nearlyevery daythey brOUght Miss Crial a fresh flower lei. One of the biggest adjustments she had to make fromstateside life was learning pidgin English that the Hawaiians speak, For example, one day one studentran to her crying, ..A kind said da kind about me." She finally dis· covered this meant one of the otherchildren had said some. thing to the boy that he didn't like. All rural.area schools main. Teaching poor is different daisies for your room from HOWARD'S CHAR BROILER 1408 Cornwall WE'RE NOTEXPENSIVE .. We Just look That Way. )romising disadvantaged students liven chance for collegeeducation BOC distributes forms to evaluate courses Course critique forms will be istributed amongsummer stu. !nts this week, the Board of :ontrol decided Thursday. Students may use the critique heets to evaluate courses and eachers. Results will be avail. ble for students who are regis, ring for winterQuarter. Bobby Burns, 68·year.old South eIIingham reSIdent Who has een spared eviction from hisorne through the efforts of Al SAN FRANCISCO (CPS) - A lew program to extend the op. lortunity toacquire a college !ducation to promising disad. rantaged students will operate n23 states in the Southand ~est this summer. Entering freshmen will be ransferred from the federally. iponsored Upward Bound pro; rams in one re gion to colleges nanother with assistance from ne Fellowship ofConcernedUni.usity Students (FOCUS), a rivate organization directed ~d staffed by students. FOCUS hopes to helptransfer ilacks, Mexican-Americans and ndians for one or two years. ihe students would live in pri. ltehomes, with their basic lYing expenses borne by the ponsoring families. The goal of FOCUS is toromote fresh social and lcial attitudes through com. JUDity involvement in the proram, William A.Strauss, xecutive director and a Har. lrd senior, says. "We feel that social isolation 11 By LOISCASKEY of the Western Front 1 What is it like to teach in a iwter ya?rea. Miss Elizabeth Crial, a 1966 estern graduate, has been • !aching fourth grade at Wai. lae, Oahu, Hawaii, for the last 10 years inan area where three I every four families are on !lief. There are four elementary Ihools, each with anenrollment I more than 1,000, in the 16tile area that is Waianae. Clas. IS average 30 to 35 studentsIthe primary grades; this year, liss Crial taught 27. This is msidered a serious overload. Since Waianaeis so poor, the ihools get some federal as· stance. At Maili Elementary Ihool, where she taught, teach. is have access to overhead proletors, television .sets, tape . 1426 CornwalfAve. ---------- Western Front - 1968 July 16 - Page 11 ---------- ~ rn g e V 1200 Commercial PARTS FOR IMPORTED CARS FOREIGN AUTO PARTS 1DayShirt Service COMPLETE LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEAN ING Free Pickup Delivery 734·4200 BSU'sconnection with student government. AlthOUgh BSU is not officially recognized by the col. lege or AS,he said, the AS legislature has sponsored some of the BSU's campus activities and Bourasaw and other memo bers of student government are sympathetic with the BSU's aims. Strickland heads localQuaker service unit Grant T. Strickland, a WWSC senior, is an assistant leader of an American FriendsService Committee (AFSC) institutional service unit this summer at the Wyoming State Hospital. Theproject began June 28 and will run until August 16. In the summer of 1967thehos. pital established acamp for its patients in the Unita Mountaim. Strickland helps supervise 12 high school volunteers. Thevol. unteers are assisting in recrea· tion programs for the patients. Econ workshop held A workshop ineconomics education was conducted by Dr. Mich. ael Mischaikow, professor of economics, thissummer at the University of Washington. The 3-week workshop for public school teachers andclergymen began June 17 and endedlastFri. day. The program consisted of two lectures daily, followedby several work sessions. The goal of the program was to improve the economic under. standing ofsocial studies teachers. ed interviews Teacher interviews for this 1 week are: ' I Today: Washougal,Wash. 1 South Bend, Wash. \ Friday: Cathlamet, Wash. 1 s iously consider students' recom.mendations and actively try to recruit the professors they want. Five departments have shown greatinterest in the idea. Keith Murray, professor of history, I this year offered to give a stu. dent a voting seaton that depart. ment's executive committee. We need people who think enough of education at Western to volunteer their services to enable our school to take this first step toward a better educa. tion. If youcan help us, please let me know. ques to be used in their own respective countries. Dr. Meade is now working on a project here which involves cross-cultural problems of conformity and motivation. He will meet with his partner again in 1970 to pool information and develop further procedures forresearch. Material from his study will be used in a new course in cross-eultural research problems tobe presented next year. The Hawaiian conference was sponsored by the East-West Center's Instituteof Advanced Projects, in cooperation with the office of Naval Research and National Institute ofChild Health and Development. The Center, a division of the I University of Hawaii, was established by John F. Kennedy to bring together Asian and American students to further crossculturalunderstanding. It is funded by the State Department. ference this summer a plan for a NationalRecruiting Bureau for College Professors. Under this proposal, each NSA college would send listingsand resumes of professors who are either being forced to leave their present campuses or who want tobe listed in a central bureau. A bulleting would be issued periodically to member schools with the names of these professors, their areas of emphasis and explanations of how students may obtain resumesand help recruit them to their campus. We hope that at Western, at least, all departments wouldser-exPlained what they hope to accomplish when they become freshmen this fall. All four are attendingclasses this summer and are confident that they can communicate enough with other Western studentsso that others will understand their grievances. Their complaints range from discrimination in housingto harassment by townspeople and other students when they walk anywhere after dark to politicianswho "create civil rights bills to quiet people who complain." Noel Bourasaw, Associated Studentspresident, described Dr. Robert D. Meade, professor of psychology, has returned from a two-weekconference at the East-Wesll. Center in Honolulu with insights from the first meeting in Which Asianand American scholars pooled ideas in cross-cultural research in behavorial science. Dr. Meade wasone of 23 social scientists from the United states and seven Asian and Pa.cific nations who attendedthe Center to develop ways oflearning about cultures other than their own from the point of view of thepeople under study. Many researchers feel projects tend too much to collect data without consultingnative professionals. Conference participants were each teamed with an Asian whose research interests paralleled their own. The teams then jointly developed research techni- "Now that this has happened,aren't you glad you shop at Ennen's Thriftway." ENNEN'S THRIFTWAY HIGH AND HOLLY "WHEREEVERY CUSTOMER IS IMPORTANT'. Representatives of the Western Black Students Union (BSU)and student government ap. peared on local television Sunday night to explain nonwhite involvement in education. Carl Trotter, summer coordg inator of the BSU, discussed demands his group presented tocollege president Charles J. Flora this spring and praised steps that have been taken to help nonwhitestudents on a program on KVOS-TV. Three representatives from the second year of ProjectOvercome at Western also took part. The three, Stanley George, Ken Madison and Eugene Smith,BSU on TV explain black education Dr. Meade attends East-West meeting Bourasaw asks help tobetter educatio By NOEL BOURASAW AS President There is now a way for you to help improve thedepartment of your major. All it will take is a little of your time to sit down with your fellow students toreview faculty, curricula and practices of your department. Student government will offer severalsessions at the beginning of next school year explaining how you can actively take part in departmentalaffairs. Also, we will take to the National Students Association con- Tuesday, July 16, 1968 1327corn-~~IY.Ave'l 733-7081 , ;eisfields JEWELERS alized that the college needed some program tobalance the efforts for the disadvantaged, Something special was needed for the bright high schoolstUdent," he said, The college hopes to attract some of these students to West. ern as regular students after high school graduation. From the 1964 program, 18 students came to Western. "This is a highproportion considering that students of this capacity usually attend more prestigious schools,"Hildebrand said. The students stayed at Ridgeway Kappa. They created and planned their own socialactivities. The first outings were a hike and a picnic at Lakewood, According to resident aides Leyland Whittaker andJerriSugarbaker, the students' interests extended far beyond their studies. Speakerswere invited to talk on such topics as Vietnam and the presidential elections and manyreguIarlyattendedarte films and coocerts on campus. The lounge at Kappa where the group stayedwasboislerous with laughter in the evenings. study was often mixed with fun, as in a search for the mostprime numbers for the computer programming class. A mock.wedding was held one evening. About half of the students had musical skills. Two even played the ~pipes. Seri indians of Mexico subject of slide lecture by Otis Chichester raids against them and epidemics took their toll. In 1908, only 150remained. The Indians today move from place to place, gathering cactus fruit and capturing fish, clams,iguanas and small game food. They live in simple shelters, roaming about a central base camp.Chidester, former president of the Arizona Archeological Society and member of the Society's board of directors, has been visiting the Seri since 1935, taking extensive notes and numerous photographs ofthe small tribe. .. vveSTern rronT By MICHAEL GROBE Contributor This summer at Western a groupof academically superior high school students had their :first genuine glimpse of cola lege life. Many, atthe same time, experienced the first in. tellectual challenge of thier lives. Seventy-five of the brightest of last year's crop ofhigh school juniors enrolled in the Summer Institute for Exceptional High SchoolJuniors. The program} directed by Dr. James L. Hil· debrand ended Julr 12, except for those in speCialresearch projects. The students took sophomore level courses. Introductory sociology- anthropologyandcomputer programming were mandatory. The students chose two other courses from physics,biD ology, chemistry, math andRussian. Most of the students attained nearly a 4.0 g.p.a. in their high school years. The group's av· erage score on Western's Graduate Record Examination was veryfavorable compared to that of entering graduate students. Funds for the program were provided by theCollege. The main benefit of the program to Western, according to Hildebrand is gained through "wordof mouth" publicity spread by the participants themselves. "Many people at Western re- Where Pride ofPOSC('SSIOP Is Pad of Your Purchase Top high school sfudenfs offend summer program SMALL TALK: Mistress of Machia...ellian Mischief ~ Why doesa little thing, such as a ring, some-times cause somuch concern? Cash? Don't be naive, dearie. Learn ... then earn. Weisfield's has a credit plan forstudents of promise. See our big selection of bridal sets. Mexico's Seri Indians, one of . the mostprimitive peoples in the Western Hemisphere, will be the subject of a slide lecture by Otis Chidester at 7 p.m. tonight in L 4. The Seri are a nomadic tribe whose numbers have dwindled steadily since theirfirst contact with Western civilization 333 years ago. The Seri were driven from their traditional homenear Hermosillo, Mexico, after 1800 by the Mexican government to the desolate island of Tiburon.There, they lived off the sea and desert as best they could, but ---------- Western Front - 1968 July 16 - Page 12 ---------- 12 Western Front Tuesday, July 16, 1968 bumpy ride with one or two portages past fallen trees. For aquieter ride, start about 10 miles outside the city. The stretch where the North and South forks join has a few swift stretches which keep your clothes wet, but for the most part it is docile. Where the river flowsthrough the Nooksack Indian Reservation, gill nets may be strung acrQSS it. It is not wise to molestthem unless you are prePared to duck flying stones or possibly lead. Two cars are desirable for rivertrips. One should be park. ed at the termination point so time isn't wasted getting home. For equipment,surplus rafts are the best bUy if you can find a good one. Truck innertubes are most comfortable, butyou can use an auto innertube if you like dunkings. And, of course, no equipment list is completewithout a pretty coed or two, a camera, a bot. tle of suntan lotion and a jug of brew. Linda Olson and aGrays Harbor College student pause for food and drink in the shade of their car. Food should be eat. enquickly and beer should be brought in cans if travel is to be in swift water. ( Photo by Jay Castle» ByPAT lIDGHES of The Western Front Looking for something different, wild, fun to do on a lazy summer afternoon? Then join a small group of Westernites who have discover· ed that riding through whitewat· er rapids on a rubber innertuoo or raft is one of the most exotic and thrilling sports around. Theactivity requires no out. lay for expensive equipment or long drives to a good river. You can pick up aninnertuoo almost anywhere for a couple bucks; and as for good rivers, some of the best are right inWestern's back· yard. The Nooksack, which flows right through Bellingham, provides all kinds ofwater for all kinds of sport. For those who de· sire a fast, splashy ride with tmpredictable dunkings, theUp. per Nooksack near Glacier provides excellent rapids and easy access by road. Starting point isGlacier Creek. which offers a quick Rafting-wet 'n' wild Joe Pence, Steve Johnson, John Richardson(9rad '67) and Jerry Neswick shoot Nooksack River rapids sideways, hooked together in a chain. Trucktires keep most of the body dry, except in white water. (Photo by Scott Finley) ",;" ,;;" Western wrestlerHarry Smith hoists his 4-man rubber raft off a car. Harry was lucky to buy the second hand raft cheapfrom a Bellingham neighbor this spring. (Photo by Jay Castle) Calm waters attract girls who can relax and soak up some sun as Ann Stewart lounges in raft, while Harry Smith and Linda Olson prepare to pushoff. r Photo by Jay Castle~ Truck tires are the ideal way to go down Glacier Creek and the upperNooksack. Pat Hughes, left, and Jerry Neswick use air hose at Glacier while John Richardson, right,watches Scott Finley shut off valve on his tube. (Photo by Steve Johnson)
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- Western Front - 1968 July 2
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- 1968_0702 ---------- Western Front - 1968 July 2 - Page 1 ---------- VVestern receives more money for research than any other state college in the nation. For story seepage 5. dramatic reading at 8 p.m. next Tuesday, July 9, in L-3. At 10 a.m. Wednesday, July 10, he will have a lecture class in Gym
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1968_0702 ---------- Western Front - 1968 July 2 - Page 1 ---------- VVestern receives more money for research than any other state college in the nation. For story seepage 5. dramatic reading at 8 p.
Show more1968_0702 ---------- Western Front - 1968 July 2 - Page 1 ---------- VVestern receives more money for research than any other state college in the nation. For story seepage 5. dramatic reading at 8 p.m. next Tuesday, July 9, in L-3. At 10 a.m. Wednesday, July 10, he will have a lecture class in Gym D on Korean-Japanese dances for children. At 11 a.m. that day, also inGym D, will be a master dance class. The highlight of his stay will be a dance concert that evening at 8p.m. in the Music-AUditorium. Thursday, July 11, at 11 a.m., will be another master dance class, acontinuation of the July 10 class, also in Gym D. Then at 1 p.m., Thursday, a lecture will concernKorean poetry, Chine, se and Japanese theatre, color slIdes of Japan and Taiwan and Korean music in L-4. He has given dance recitals at Carnegie Hall and the Seattle World's Fair, and has appeared atcolleges, museums and 01 television throughout the United States and Europe. Wasko's programdirector, Al Litwiller, will be assistant director of student activities at the University of Wisconsin atPlatteville this year. a senior crew of custodians, streamlined the quarterly reports on student activities with scheduling forms and helped to promote the new master of education degree in persooneladministration. Another proposition raised by Doan was installing a free or non-profit laundromat in theVU to assist off-campus students. The BOC unanimously approved a $150 travel allowance for AaronDumas and the Black Repertory Theatre, which will come to Western July 16 and 17, as part of theProject overcome program. Dumas is a noted black playwriter and poet. Jack Tanner a candidate forgovernor and altorney for comedian Dick Gregory in the Indian fishing rights case was selected as apossible campus speaker this summer. Dianna Timm was appointed to the board to replace ScottWilliams, who resigned because of a conflicting schedule. Douglas Wasko, departing student activitiesdirector, chats at a reception held in his honor. He is being replaced by Chris Carp.-Photo by Fisher.Yonsei University. For the next five years he was assistant professor and visiting lecturer on Koreanliterature and dance at Yonsei, Ewha Women's University and other colleges in Seoul. He danced atthe National Theatre and at the City Hall Theatre, and conducted his own dance stUdio in Seoul,where he also served as dance critic for four of Korea's leading newspapers. He came to the U.S. in1960 and studied at the Julliard School of Music and the Martha Graham School of ContemporaryDance. He was awarded the Doctor of Fine Arts Degree from Mon-mouth Colle ,e in 1963. _ Dr. Choreceived the Silver Bowl Award for the best performance at the International Platform Associationconvention in 1966. While on campus, he will perform a 30-minute. one-act play, "Secret Yearning,"and have a Wasko to leave VU' for Minnesota post The administration, Doan Said, is Willing to makechanges if the students desire to change the policy, but the students have to make it known through the BOC and other students. Relaxing the laws to permit people, 21 years or more, to drink at LakeWOOd,Western's Lake Whatcom resort, is Doan's immediate interest. Ultimately alcohol could be al. lowed inthe dormitories and even served on campus as at the University of British Columbia. The BOC willmeet today at 4 p.m. to discover a consensus opinion of what measures the board wishes to discusswith President Charles J. Flora. aPPear on campus July 9, 10 and 11. He received his M.A. from "Thepremise of the school's policy regarding alcoholic beverages is based on non-existing state laws."Legislator Al Doan, speaking at Thursday's Board of Control (BOC) meeting was referring to the collegepolicy on the use of intoxicants. The Navigator contains a statement that the school is complying withstate laws. These laws do not allow consumption or possession of intoxicants on campus, incollege residence halls or college approved housing, at college functions, or on college property.Doan says the college policy is contradicting itself because such state laws no longer exist. He alsosaid the school attorney's opinion on the issue was unavailable. College should ease rules on liquor,Doan tells BOC Dr. Won-Kyung Cho, Korean dance artist. thewestern front Vol. LX No.2 WesternWashington State College, Bellingham, Wash. 98225 Smoking pot is dangerous, AMAwarns SANFRANCISCO (CPS)-Two emphasize the potential hazards influential medical and scien- of marihuanasmoking. tific organizations have issued a The report says the argument joint report which contends thatsmoking pot is more harm-marijuana "is a dangerous ful, or less harmful, than drink-drug" and thatelirnination of ing 3.lcoholic beverages is scien-controls over it "would create a tifically unjustified. Dr.James serious abuse problem." L. Goddard, who recently resigned as head of the Food and Drug Thereport was prepared by Administration, was once quoted committees of the American as making thisargument, but he Medical Association and the Na- 'later denied it. Dr. Goddard, tional Research Council,an however, has said he has his agency of the National Academy dOUbts about the harmfulness of ofSciences, which is supported marihuana, and he thinks exist-by the federal government. The ing penalties for users are too rePort has been endorsed by the severe. parent organizations ofboth com- The twoorganizations endors-mittees. ing the report conceded that the The report is a serious setback penaltiesfor possession of mari-to individuals and organizations huana often are unrealistic and which have saidmarihuana IS' too pun1'tive. The report'sadl Douglas Wasko, director of no more dangerous than alcoholfI·rst 0f"lenders s.hould not be student activities and the stu-and should be legalized. treated ascn.m.mals , but 1·t says dent union, has accepted a new the penalties should become post as directorof student acti- AlthOUgh the report uses more severe with additional of- ties at Augsburg College instrong language in talking about fenses. It calls for strict penal- M~nneapolis, Minn. the dangers ofmarihuana, it ties for persons convicted of Wasko will be replaced by concedes that additional re- sellingmarihuana. Chris Carp, former assistant search is needed to determine Under present laws, posses-director of student activities at the long-term effects of smoking sion of marihuana is a felony, theUniversity of Oregon in pot. In the meantime, it says, punishable by up to 10 years in Eugene.educational programs should be prison and a $20,000 fine for a DIring his year at Western, made available to students to first offense. Wasko enlarged the VU staff with Korean dance artist to perform here Dr.Won-Kyung Cho, one of Korea's foremost artists, scholars and dance critics, will .2 . 3 . 3 .4 .4 .5 .7 News brief Inside Iducational media .. ACLU on campus riots . Ipock trial interpreted . ldilorials .~tters . IDS convention. ",Iendar..... Kathy Krushas enjoying her early morning meal at Saga is part ofthe new look on Western's campus this summer, as many parents return to school.-Photo by Fisher.'anderGr.end places Western's javelin star Dave landerGriend placed fourth at be Olympic Track andField !rials in Los Angeles Saturday. VanderGriend threw the spear 141', the second best toss of liscareer. The winner was 1rank Covelli of the Pacific ~oast track club with a toss of 157'9"• Thewinners and up to nine Ilher competitors in each event Iill be selected for high altitude Iraining inpreparation for the ~exico City Olympics in Octo~ r. With his fourth place finish, landerGriend shouldbe selected ~ tryout at the South Lake Tahoe Iraining camp September 9-17 mere the final Olympicteam !elections will be made. lew copier installed A new Xerox 2400 copy rna~ bine has recentlybeen installed in the education placement ofIce. This machine makes 30 ropies in one minute. .Nowall requests for credenlals will be mailed within 24 ~urs of the time they are re~ ived, according toFrank Pundles, education placement dimetor. .The rental cost ($3,300 per rearl of the machine isborn by ~ Alumni Association. Ia"iew triumphs again BaYView, women's cooper.ative lou s e, won theAssociated Women Students interdorm point competition for the third consewtive quarter this spring.Bayview received the honor br being the most active offlampus women's house, socially mdacademically. Hate of campus speech maHended, cancelled A "state of the Campus" gt;peechplanned for last Tuesiay by Associated Student President Noel Bourasaw was called ~!ffor"nonparticipation." Bourasaw said when he apleared in Red Square to give ilie speech at theannounced arne of 4 p.m., only 20 persons lere present. That, plus threatming weather, induced himto !all off the event, he said. •In ---------- Western Front - 1968 July 2 - Page 2 ---------- ADMISSIONS: Students with theatre discount cards. . . . . s 1.25 General 51.50 Children (under 12)• 50' Thursday, Goltz said, He indicated some issues arose at Saturday's meeting which cannotbe resolved until all the Trust. ees have considered the bUdget proposal.. Classified 1i Oln .14 O,ele. '20TH CENTURY-FOX PRESENTS CHARLTON HESTON In an ARTHUR P. JACOBS productIOn ~Er~[APE5 RODDY McDOWALL, MAURICE EVANS KIM HUNTER, JAMES WHITMORE JAMES DALY·liNDA' HARRISON::" APJ'AC'PROOUCTiONS· MORTABRAHAMS F'RANKUN J SCHAFFNER -MICHAEi\¥ilSON ROD SERUNG MI. BAKER HELD OVER ••·PLAIET OF THE IPES' IS IBLOCKBUSTER. FISCIIIIIIOI" -liz Smith, Cosmopolitan Day care for toddlers, college vicinity, licensedhome. Call Mrs. Mayer 733-6150. Co-Hit '64 250 cc Yamaha, YD-3, $200. 1012lf2 Jersey. Eve., 733-5002. 40 Senices ";5'" BY 'l"S~OON" ",OYE( B'· .• JURY GOlDSMiTH f'i.RI'f ~LLE PANAVI~IOIf"COlDR BY DEWXE Classifieds run for 25 cents a line, first time; 20 cents a line consecutive reo peat."Found" and "free" ads run without charge, up to three lines once. Deadline for ads is 4 p.m. Thursday.Submit to Western Front office in the VU basement. Payment due in advance. We reserve the right torefuse ads which may be illegal or in bad taste. Fraser Scott wins fight debut Fraser Scott, ex-Vikingfootball player, scored a unanimoos 4-round decision in his professional fighting debut Thursdaynight in Los Angeles, Calit The redheaded middleweight (157 lbs.) defeated Ron Johnson, the BajaPeninsula middleweight champ, bloodying his taller op. ponent's nose in the third round. Scott, fromLake Washington H.S. in Kirkland, played one season of football in 1966 as a halfback, and kick returnspecialist. He has a 45-6-1 amateur record and was Northwest lightmiddleweight champ for twoyears before turning pro this spring. Training out of Seattle, henow attends Seattle University and ismajoring in art. 1327 Cornwall Ave. Open Till 9 Fri. Nites ~eis/ields JEWELERS ic reserve and rearcampus area. It is presently blocked off. In an afternoon meeting attended by only three of the fiveTrustees, Goltz presented a capital expenditures request budget for the next biennium totaling morethan $12 million. It will be presented in final form to the next legislative session if approved by theTrustees. Included in the bUdget is more than $1 million for land acquisition and more than $21hmillion for utility and heating plant expansion. Much of these funds are connected with the academic reserve development area. The balance was largely for academic facilities. The budget will be morefully con sid ere d when the Trustees· meet again next week IDEALISM: Campus calendar TODAY-Christian Science Organization, 6 p,m., Dean Powers, AM 23. . -"Between Two Thieves" rehearsal, 7p.m., Dr. Slg-ler, Ll. WEDNESDAY-Bridge, 6-10 p.m., VU 209. NDEA Geography Institute Meeting, 7p.m., Dr. Critchfield, M30. -Viking Yacht Club Meeting, 7 p,m., Signe Thorsen, SM 105, -"Between TwoThieves" rehearsal, 7 p.m., Dr. Sigler, L l. THURSDAY-SCHOOL HOLIDAY _ "Between Two Thieves"rehearsal, 7 p,m., Dr. Sigler, L l. FRIDAY-SCHOOL HOLIDAY _ "Betwee'1 Two Thieves" rehearsal, 7p.m., Dr, Sigler, L l. SATURDAY-No Events, SUNDAY~"Between Two Thieves" rehearsal, 2 p.m" Dr.Sigler, L l. Recreation schedule TODAY-Bellingham Cold Storage tour, 2:30-4:15 p.m. Tour one ofBellingham's fastest growing enterprises, food processing and seafood preparation. This industry isfamous for its preparation of Alaska King Crab. THURSDAY-SUNDAY (July 4-7) - Lakewood facilities willbe open. Information on trips for families and small groups can be obtained at the Recreation office,M216. NEXT TUESDAY-United Boatbuilders (Uniflite) tour, 2:30-4:00 p,m, See the nationally famousboatbuilders working on pleasure craft and United States Navy boats, those being used on rivers inVietnam. A land swap between the college and the city was worked out in detail by the Board ofTrustees and city representatives at a brief meeting Saturday morning. The trade gives the city land on Sehome hill in return for a parcel at the future site of Fairhaven College and an access road thatclimbs the college side of the hill. Involved was about 29 acres. A difference of one acre will be madeup by a cash payment from the college to the city. The amount will be determined by assessors,campus planner Harold Goltz said, Goltz said the college wanted to acquire the road to insure that itwould not be used to keep traffic out of the academ- Where Pride of Possession Is Part of Your Purchase Prejudice Against Imperfection ~ Admire, if you must, the man with his feet well planted who can paycash. But when does romance wait for cash? Let Weisfield's do it. We have credit plans for students ofpromise. Tuesday, July 2, 1968 Western Front 7 College, city trade Sehorne land for Fairhaven sites the Bellingham Citizens for Peace Committee, is seeking more participants in this weekly vigil. Ademonstration is scheduled for TueSday, July 16 in Everett, at 2:30 p.m. on behalf of Scott Wicklund, asenior active in resistance projects, who will be inducted into the service. Another demonstration may also be held in sympathy of Dr. Benjamin Spock, who will be sentenced today. Some members of thegroop are planning a peace vigilance at the Peace Arch in Blaine on Thursday, July 4. The group als0plans to enlarge its activities from the college campus to the city. !Ale to a shortage of funds, the groupwill contact faculty members for donations. Other money-raising projects are being planned. Thiscommittee at Western is sponsored by the American Friends Service Committee. active members areon campus this summer. President is Mrs. Signe Thorson. Meetings are held at 7 p.m. Wednesdaysat a place designated in the Daily Bulletin. For those students who shun cold water (sailboatssometimes capsize), the Bridge Club offers evening fun and socializing of a more sedentary nature. Theclub concentrates on duplicate bridge, the game form most often used in competition. The firstmasterpoint night of the quarter was held last week and will be held on every fourth Wednesday duringthe summer. Club director is Mrs. Sallie Wilcox. Meetings are held at 6 p.m. Wednesdays in VU 209.For more adventuresome students, who want to use their legs but don't like cold water, the AlpineClub offers weekend climbs and hikes in the beautiful North Cascades, one of the best mountainclimbing areas in the United States. Beginners are taught the fine arts of climbing, hiking andbackpacking, and trips are organized for both beginners and pros. Past expeditions have visitedMount Baker, Twin Sisters Peaks, Mt. Erie, Mount Shuksan, Hannegan Peak and Mount Pilchuck.President is George Mustoe. The clUb meets at 7:30 p.m. Thursdays in SM 109. Summer counselingplans and demonstration dates were made at the organizational meeting of lhe Draft Resistance,Bellingnam, last week in the Viking Union. Chairman Ian Trivett conducted the meeting, attendedby ap. proximately 40 interested persons. An office of peace counselors, sponsored by the group, was opened recently in Room 9, Clover building, 203 W. HollySt. The counselors will advise on tlIe rights ofthe individual c~ncerning the draft and peace ISsues. Members of the committee plan to personallycontact men who are classified I-A in the draft to talk to them about their role in the Vietnam war. Trivett urged all members to join the vigil for peace on Fridays from 3:30 to 4:30 in front of the Federalbuilding. Dr. Howard Harris, associate professor of anthropology and leader of Special Turtle NeckShirts it: yellow, gold, blue, white 11{ - f $2.84 ea. or 2/$5.35 ' Student's Co-op Get. hoppin' /" ~;ntf 990 Textbook Sale Some new - Some used By GIBSON HENDERSON Contributor Clubs offer a variety ofrecreational activity to students attending Western, ranging from rugged backpacking trips to quietcard games. Three clubs especially active this summer are the Viking Yacht Club, Bridge Club, andAlpine Club. The Yacht Club is open to anyone interested in sailing, beginners and experts alike.Eight sailboats are kept at Lakewood, Western's Lake Whatcom resort, for members' use. Clubmembers teach novice sailors how it's done. The club participates in regattas and races, and thisspring sent four members to the national sailboat racing finals at Yale University in Connecticut afterdefeating the University ofWashington, Seattle University, University of British Columbia, University of Puget Sound and other Northwest area schools for the district title. Club members also makefrequent use of canoes at Lakewood. In addition to its boatingactivities, the group sponsors socialfunctions, film shows and discussion meetings. Trip expenses are paid for members traveling incompetition; locally, the opportunities for short sailing "voyages" are virtually numberless. Eight ofthe club's 40 Draft resisters meet 'Summer clubs provide recreation for all sorts ---------- Western Front - 1968 July 2 - Page 3 ---------- Or write Bellingham Student Action Committee P. O. Box 53 J Bellingham, Washington 98225 Drew D.Pettus 3002 Lakeway 733-4266 More keys were found scat. tered throughout the campus. The youthsevidently left a trail of them, not wanting to be caught with master sets in their possession, Frick said. The boys told Frick they left the VU when an ice cream machine t urn e d on and frightened them.The youths were taken to city jail by Gunner Joern, camp!s investigator. Two were released to theirparents, but an older boy was detained. No court hearing has yet been scheduled. Free University toopen this fall Western's neWly-formed Fre0 Uni versity, opening this faE, wiU offer between 15 and 20classes, according to the Free University board of trustees. The courses offered are non. credit and areplanned to give townspeople, students and professors an informal chance to share knOWledge on aparticu. lar subject. Some courses tentatively being offered include Zen Buddhism, lOW-budgetcooking, social values and sexual love Other courses in various area~ of interest to students who have already registered for the program are being planned. SecretarYQtreasurer of the or· ganization isAllison Andres who is now taking registratio~ for the fall. She plans to have a booth in the bird sanctuary from 10 a.m. until 3 a.m. every Wednesday. Dave Cunningham will serve as president for the FreeUniversity. English master's elam set Candidates for the master's degree in English are urged tocontact Mrs. Ruth Miller, the departmental secretary, immediately if they wish to take the master'sexam this summer. The test will be given on Fri. day, JUly 19, from 8 a.m. to noon in the TestingBureau, OM 255. Mrs. Miller, HU 327, can supply further details. 'he finest in Chinese anel AmericanFooel • Open 11 a.m. daily, 2 p.m. Sunday • Enchant your date and your friends and relatives bybringing them here during the graduation festivities. • Beverages in the Tiki Room • Orders to go Three youths accused of breaking into VU building Psych graduates project aims at learning problemThe psychology department is conducting a summer project to help junior high school students withbehavioral problems. Graduate students in psychology, working with the students and parents, try topinpoint the student's learning problems. By giving attention to and rewarding only desired behavior,less adaptive patterns can often be eliminated, Dr. Tyler, associate professor of psychology, said.Similar projects have been· tried in other areas, including nursery schools and hospitals, with muchsuccess, Dr. Tyler noted. Any parents who have children in junior high school with school or homebehavioral problems and who wish to have their children take part in the project should contact thepsychology department office. Three high school youths were apprehended by campus security officersafter breaking into the Viking Union on Sunday night of last week. Stolen articles which wererecovered included three jackets, keys, locks and food from the coffee shop. The youths were caughtwhen they were seen trying to enter a car parked in the lot north of Higginson Hall by Tim Houghtaling, of the security patrol. The breakin was discovered when a security officer found a window open to a VUoffice at about 10:30 p.m. He found the office door inside unlocked and locked it, but later found itunlocked again. The youths had 50 to 60 keys in their possession when they were apprehended, whichthey had used to enter various parts of the VU building. The boys told campus marshal Bob Frick theyoriginally gained entry through a basement window which had been left open. J~t~ '- l~tlt\~... ,,,,/'\I,,jLegislator AI Doan recruiting for presidential write-in candidate Dick Gregory in VU foyer. The stand isonly one of such tables provided to give information on issues ranging from Vietnam to conservation.-Photo by Jim Fisher. i olq gt;;i cal drives during the . child's learning period, he said. Aggression is aparticularly explosive problem, since sligoht adjustments in the "thera mostat" of parental attitudeproduce significant changes- in the child's behavior, Dr. Knowles said. He warned that children "readilyimitate models of aggression," which they too often find in their own parents. While punishmentdoesn't have a lasting effect in teaching the child good from bad, a loveoriented approach often results in gui It feelings. Nonetheless, love-orientation "is one of our only hopes" in the problem ofteachingchildren right from wrong. The answer, he said, is to develop the child's moral character as a strength ofwill and an ability to delay gratification of desires. In commenting briefly on the role of the family, Dr.Knowles said the family remains the focal point of a child's development, and therefore the childshould place his greatest confidence in the family. vides the incentives for success, .he said parentsshould encourage their child's capacities and help him build his self-identity. Knowles said a greatdeal remains to be learned about children's anxiety, but it is clear that "dependency patterns areestablished early." lfthe child's trust in his parents' love is una dermined, his dependency on themincreases greatly, he said. Research shows girls tend to be more dependent on parents than boys,and that anxiety in any case is related to phys- (PAID ADVERTISEMENT) ARE YOU COMMITTED?Bellingham may be far removed from Chicago or Miami, but the involvement politics of 1968 must not beignored anywhere. Just because it is a time of year for relaxation we must not forget the pressing issuesof our time. We have seen on a nationwide and even worldwide level recently that this is a year of student activism, a year in which student commitment has produced stunning results. Let us here and nowcarryon that commitment by resolving to further exercise student power on national, state, and even local levels. The Bellingham Student Action Committee challenges you to ioin in the search for means ofinvolvement. O.K., it is summertime and we are in the northwest corner of Washington but we have a duty to carryon the activism on 1968. The Committee plans its first session on Sunday afternoon, July 7th.During the summer there will be more meetings, plus parties and sessions with public figures andcandidates for office. This first meeting is of great importance, though, for it will allow us to orientourselves and decide what course to f~lIow-in the future. Transportation will be provided. We invite you tophone either of the two persons listed below for further information. " you get lost in the woods you oughtto hOlfe Food in the Wilderness-$1.50 Penguin Book of Comics-$2.95 Light reading suggestions: Lisaand David Rosemary's Baby Jordi Levin also McCarthy buttons and stickers at 6 Western FrontTuesday, July 2, 1968 Knowles explains child growth needs love, parental influence AARDVARKBOOKS ARTS 213 E. Holly 734-4043 "Kick off your chains and get out of your ruts," Dr. ElmerKnowles, child development ex~ pert, admonished parents in a lecture here Thursday. The BrighamYoung univer~ sity sociolq gt;;ist went on to describe recent research findings on child behavior asrelated to achievement, anxiety and aggression and where the parents fit into the sociological picture. parents strongly influence their child's motivation -or lack of motivation - toachieve, he said. While theculture pro- Joel R. Connelly 429 N. Forest 734-7614 206 W. Holly St. 734-6262 ---------- Western Front - 1968 July 2 - Page 4 ---------- Western Front 5 are cut down. Some of the time we get what we ask for, and once in a very great whilewe get more than what we ask for " Grants for programs and rea search cover a broad range of subjectmatter. For instancep the college received about $220,· 000 from the Office of Economic Opportunityfor Project Over· corne, a continuous summer program for high school students in their junior andsenior years who are admitted to Western up.. on completion. The Rockefeller Foundation granted$100,000 for Project Catch - UP, a summer program for junior high school students of American Indianand other minority descent. A half-million-dollar Ford grant for visual education (Vicoed) runs out at theend of the summerp but the program will be asborbed and continued on a regular scale by theIndustrial Arts department. In the field of pure research a $31,000 grant was recently awarded to Dr.Robert Meade, professor of psychology, to study leadership pattenrs in India. Grants are often awardedin very specialized fields of study. Dr. Merle Meyer, chairman of the psychology departmentz forexample, received $4,200 trom the Department of Housing, Education and Welfare to study operantosmatic regUlation in the octopus. A research grant of $25,000 was awarded to Dr. Charles Ross,associate professor of geology, for the stUdy of the phylogeny of Fusulinidea. From his study he won anaward for the outstanding article in the Journal of paleontology last year, Fairhaven College is funded by a $44,000 grant from the CarnegIe Foundation to Dr. Charles Harwood, professor of psychology. Taylorsaid the grants cover "almost, but not quite, every department of the college. There is a heavyconcentration in the sciences and a dearth for art and music." He said he would like to see more money spent for human· ities and the arts. Usually, overhead money from other rea searches and grants isgiven to the arts, "We gave 20 grants outstanding from our own funds to such projects," he said.Taylor makes three or four trips a year to New York and Washington D. C. "to check on who has themoney. H "This is the most enjoyable part of my work," Taylor said. ''If a person has money he wishesto give away, he is usual. ly very willing to talk to you, I also find it fascinating to talk with individualscientists." Dean of research and grants Herbert Taylor surveys lists of grants awarded to Westernfaculty. -Photos by Barnard OHley Tuesday, July 2, 1968 Dr. Charles A. Ross, associate professor ofGeology, working with a microscopic specimen has a $25,000 grant for the study of the phylogeny ofFusulinidea. out, but for student fellowships the college, international au-and graduate and undergraduatethority on higher education and assistantships. advisor to the Ford Foundation, Taylor said the primaryrea. is also ,'artly responsible for son for Western getting somany the success of the research and grants is an outstanding facul. grants office. ty. "We can't get a government Finally, the geographic loca-grantwithout a likely reason to tion of the college is commend-produce in the future," he said. able for researchin marine Second he cites the quality biology and pleistocene geology of the student body. Programs(geology concerned with the last go to gifted and distinguished period of the ice advance). stUdents, hesaid. Taylor said that on the av. Close cooperation with Rep. erage, two applications are ap.. LloydMeeds (D-Wash.) is an· proved for everyone grant rea other reason for prolific grants. jected. "We arenow applying ''He does his homework thor- for 57 grants which we have oughly," Taylor said. ''I am not yet received. We also have amazed at how wiftly these 16 Which we have received but transactions arecarried have not yet started," he said. through." "There is no good rule for Dr. Paul D. Woodring, dis. howmuch we will receive" he tinguished service professor of says. "About half the tim'e we Factionalismundermines solidarity of Students For Democratic Society EAST LANSING Mich. (CPS) ization whichcould impose ide. Media representatives attend- -Arriving delegates of the stu. ology from above while theed in substantial numbers, iden. dents for a Democratic Society PLP, a tightly-dis~iplined Pe- tified by big gold cards that (SDS) were handed a flyer. king-oriented group Which uses said "Mass Media" and by an It read, "Michigan State Uni. SDS to recruit new members apparent nervousness atthe idea versity isunique in that it is opposed any structural change: of being thrown in With so many the horne of thelargest police young radicals. The delegates administration school in the The convention was charact·assumed, also, that FBI agents country. It was no accident that erized by factional disputes, cul- andcampus police officials had they were chosen to set up the minating in the demand by infiltrated thegroup. Yet, dis. cops for Diem in Vietnam. THEY one delegate to oust the PLP cussion was unrestrained. ARE THE BEST AND SHOULD because of its obstructionist tac- Some workshops - such as NOT BEUNDERESTIMATED." tics. A lengthy, meaningless the one on G.I. organizing - Thus began the SDS'sannual debate ensued. were closed to reporters. Most, convention, held this month at In spite of thewarning given however, voted in any reporter MSU. who wasn't clearly identifiable Just a week before thecamp.. in the flyer, SDS members at as an enemy of the organization. us cops dragged out 8DS picket.the convention were not both- In plenary sessions, even when ers sitting in the administra- ered byauthorities, although in factional disputes threatened to tion building to protest a drug some casesdelegates were stop.. erupt into fistfights, no effort raid. The cops were in no ped on their way to campus.was made to force out the press mood to play garnes, the flyer or nonmember observers. said, anddelegates should take Ch."ldren's rec The relative openness of the care not to provoke them. conventionwas in the tradition SOS is a loose confederation of the New Left, Which holds that of radical left-wingactivist program set secrecy and discipline implies campus organizations. Tradi- fear of one's enemies.The ab-tionally, says one member. it A summer recreation pro- sence of disciplined cadres "is a nationalorganization only gram for children of students makes SDS less vulnerable to at~ when the nationalconvention or faculty is being sponsored by tack because authorities are un~ meets." the summer special projects on able to identify and isolate the This year's convention, how- campus. Sherry Weatherby, se-leadership. ever, was expected to be dif- nior physical education major, This style is action-oriented,ferent. It was the first national is director. rather than directed toward or-meeting since the revolt at Col-The children, ranging from ganization. SOS chapters at umbia university, the most suc- 6 to 14 years ofage, meet from schools where radical politics cessful action ever led by an 9 to 11 a.m. Monday throughare common tendtobefragment- SDS group. Thursday. They assemble at the ed but when there is a callfor Many SDS leaders feel Colum- tennis crorts and then engage in action, the differing factions usu· bia and other incidents indicate hiking, swimming, garnes, track ally ignore ideological disputes thebeginning of a "pre-revolu- meets, treasure hunts and crafts. to work toward a common goal. tionaryperiod" to which SDS They are planning a trip to a Despite the infighting evident will have to adapt. Somepro- park later in the summer. at the convention, observers feel posed making SDS into a revol- Thechildren are not required the radicals may find a middle utionary New Left party to diG to meet every day.Approximate- ground between the openness reet energies of student acti- ly 40 children participate in theand spontaneity of the New Left vists into revolution. program, but new children are movement and thePLP-type ap- They proposed strengthening welcome to attend. proach to politics. the national characterof the The only cost for the program The convention offered no organization. The proposal was is a weeklyfee of 15 cents for clues as to whether this is like. defeated by two factions, the crafts. ly to happen, but it seemed to anarchists and Progressive La- The children are welcome to demonstrate that the SDS lead-bor Party. swim in the college pool on ers.h~p is in search of a .n~w The anarchists opposed anyTuesdays and Thursdays from pollhcal style for the actIVIst effort to set up a national organ. 4 to 5 p.m,Left. Western ranks ahead of all other state colleges in the na~ tion in total grants for research andcurricular development, Dr. Herbert Taylorp dean for research and grants, said last week in aninterview. The college has received a total of $2,800,000 in grants drawn from several federal and privatefoundations such as the Ford, Rockefeller, Carnegie and Esso foundations. Some of the money is to be spent within monthsp a year, or in some cases up to six years. "We'll probably spend $1,750,000 nextyear," Taylor saId. Foundation monies are not spent for student financial aids or construction, Taylorpointed Western tops colleges in grants Opera workshop presents comic "Albert Herring" The Western Opera Workshop will present "Albert Herring," a three-act cornie opera by Eric Cozier on Friday, JUly26 and saturday, July 27, at 8 p.m. in the AudItorium• Dr. Thomas Osborn, associate professor ofmusic, is directing the production. Dr. Osborn has been on leave this past year, working in the operadepartment at the Univer· sity of Southern california (USC). He will return to USC in the fall as stagedirector of opera and assistant conductor of the symphony orchestra for one year. The Opera Workshop is a relatively new program at Western. English, history teachers here for Institutes Atotal of 38elementary teachers, principals and curriculum supervisors from 13 states are on campus thissummer participating in the NDEA Institute for Advanced Study in English. All participants are required 10 enroll in four courses: English Linguistics, The Nature of Fiction, The Nature of Poetry, and aSeminar in Special Problems of Elementary Education. These courses are all worth three credits andparticipants may receive 12 hours of graduate credit for the summer's work. Enrollment for credit isnot required, however. Participants from Washington number 17, while the remaining 21 members arefrom Ariz., Calif., Hawaii, Ill., Mass., Mich., Minn., Ohio, PeIm., R.I., Wis. and Wyo. All those enrolledin the program receive a stipend of $75 per week, plus an allowance of $15 a week for eachdependent. There is no charge for tuition or fees. However, participants must pay for their ownbooks, supplies, travel and room and board. The institute's staff are all regular members of Western'sEnglish department. Dr. Nell C. Thompson, associate professor of English and education, is directingthe program. Dr. Robert McDonnell, chairman of the English department, is codirector. Dr. Elizabeth Bowman will teach the course on linguistics; Robert Huff, poetry and Annis llovde, the fiction section.All are associate professors. The program, which began Monday, June 24, willendAugust 16. , 1 1 11 h r gd a'- I YI .g ,n : gt;t, a ttl re 11, LS g: y 1. ~d . to 1d 10 ed. s, m Ile ;a SSdy en ed ne d. g-a lC· lte J. Forty-two teachers are participating in the N.D.E.A. NonWestern History Institute. They teach grades three .thrrogh seven and come from as It? far away as the CarolineIslands at, in the South Pacific and Okinawa. llalf of them are from the northwestern United States, Dr. James McAree, associate professor of history and institute director, said. The participants wereselected from 500 applications. They meet daily from 8 a.m. to 3:30 p,m. and receive six collegecredits for their work in the institute. The group meets for a two hour lecture in the morning. They divideinto media transfer sections and seminar sessions in the afternoon. Each participatnt prepares a unit on sub-Saharan Africa, India and Pakistan or China and Japan during the institute. He can thenexchange units ffi- - with other members, thereby he collecting several units for use w- in his ownclassrooms in the he fall. er Ie· m! s. mOO lis. nct. es.. Ike ion the see of 16. lent are86 a ---------- Western Front - 1968 July 2 - Page 5 ---------- editorials .. Western Front Tuesday, July 2, 1968 Letters to the Editor On other calDp"Uses tb,ewestern front official weekly newspaper of Western Washington State College second class postage paid at Bellingham, Wash. 98225 phone,734·8800 editorial, ext. 2277 advertising, ext. 2276 Don B.Wittenberger Gerson Miiler, advisor Editor-in-Chief Diana Timm, managing editor Jim Fisher, photography editor Angela Martinez, contributor Dan Meins, business manager and cartoonist Pat Hughes, admanager and sports editor Photographers: Barnard OOley, Lydia Christensen Deadlines: NoonThursday"':"'news copy, letters to the editor, display ad reservation, classified ads, display ad copy.Represented by NEAS Price per copy, 10 cents. Subscription, $3.50 a year, $1.50 a quarter. Membe~U.S. Student Press Association, College Press Service, AssOCiated College Press and IntercollegiatePress Service other society, in any historical epoch. We are militarist, eth. nocentristic, violent; we killand we make heroes out of thosewho kill (and our art forms merely reflect this violent reality.) Takeaway all the private guns, outlaw Bonnie and Clyde from the silver screen, remove violence from thetelevision screen - none of this will work until we get rid of the vicious parochial mind that America is.Joseph Prunier Sophomore, English Watchin' the U.S. go bJ Editor: . Sometimes when I'm really hredof hassling it, I just sit back in my great big rocking chair on the front porch and watch the United States go by. It's simply hilarious. My favor. ite thing is probaby the hysteria following the tragic slayings. Thefirst Kennedy assassina. tion was sort of a bummer, I can't remember any unusually wild legislation - ormaybe I was just caught up in enjoying my three-day weekend. It's hardly worth it to mention Malcom X, since his autobiography hadn't been published yet, and the Blackman was still a Communistconspiracy. Martin Luther King's death was something else again. We radicals foamed at the mouth,while the liberals said it was tragic, and then somebody sug. gested the honkies say sorry with a tokencivil rights bill. And so they drew one up, filled it full of "anti-riot" laws, to nullify any good it might do, and slid it through both houses no sweat. But Bobby's aftermath was, and still is, the funniest of them all.01' LBJ and the rest of the country saying no more guns is a scream alright, but putting SS men aroundGeorge, who already has a small army of strongmen keeping their eye-balls peeled for meanies ,almostknocked me out of my chair. More sanity, Mr. President? YesI Sir! Getting right on that, Sir!Sophomore, Pre-Med. Marc Mercer Sophomore, Pre-Med. Summer enrollment shows heavy loadsWestern summer quarter reg. istration of over 3,300 is a hard core class enrollment ac. cording to Deanof Graduate Studies and Summer Session J. Allen Ross. The average class load per student is 10hours with one. third of the student body en. rolled in 400 level courses. Half of the students are en.rolled in either 400 or 500 level courses. Ross also said that this sum. ' mer's enrollment is about the:'lame as fall quarter, 1962, showmg the rapid growth of the campus. Teacher inteniews Today,Central Kitsap, Quin. ault, Darrington andElma school districts are interviewing prospective teachers at the educa. tion placement office. Lakewood school district will be interviewing tomorrow. Newhall,Calif., school dis. trict will interview for secondo ary teachers only next Tuesday. Students are askedto make appointments at the education placement office now. Questions on draft? Men with questionsabout the selective service should see Dean McDonald in the Dean of Men's office, Old Main 216. Inorder to retain a student deferrment, 36 credits are needed to be a sophomore, 86 for a junior and 135 for a senior. Letters to the editor should be typewritten on a 6O·space line, less than 250 words, notpoetry and not tibelous. They . must be signed with the student's name, class and major, although thisinformation may be withheld upon request. Faculty members will be identified with their rank anddepartment. Deadline for letters is 5 p.m. Thursday. Letters not meeting these standards may berejected or cut. Publishing of letters is subject to space fimitations. you to kill someone with a gun." The kids get the message: killing is sanctioned and respectable, a national pastime, our national sport.Actually when you think about it in those terms, the lone assassin takes on the porportions of anexistential hero: at least he thOUght, and made a conscious choice to slay another man, whereas the army draftee merely kills because someone else tells him to kill. Come on, Dr. Hicks, our society isno different from any BURNABY - Burnaby's version of the Berlin Wall came down June 12. A group ofabout two dozen students and faculty members who felt undergraduates should not be excluded from thefaculty lounge took matters into their own hands, and tore out a partition erected to block free access tothe lounge and funnel people to a checkpoint where a doorman was posted to check tD.s. Other facultymembers called the action irresponsible, pointing out that the faculty probably would have voted to allowthe students access to the lounge if they had asked. UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON - ASUWPresident Thom Gunn faces disciplinary action as a result of his presidential inaugural activities thisspring, which he called "World War III." Gunn was charged with failing to pay parking fees during theevent and instigating damage to the campus. He was also charged with a microphone violation. He wasplaced on deferred probation for one year, which means he could lose office if disciplined for violating anyUniversity regulation, He also was fined $53.20 and a formal reprimand was entered on his official record. Gunn termed the action "heavy-handed intimidation." He said students, not he, caused the damage. Heanswered the microphone charge by saying he planned to hold the activity in a theater, but when it wasfound an electrical cord had been cut, crowds returned to the Husky Union and got out of control before he arrived there. Gunn said he will challenge the disciplinary action. Replies to Hicks Editor: Certainly noreasonable man can object to the arguments presented by Prof. Hicks in his call last week for strictergun-controllaws. But he, like those who rant and tear their hair over the subject of guns, see only asfar as the end of their collective nose. ls there not a touch of the absurd when President Johnson goessanctimoniously on TV decrying the use of violence and guns, and then the same daypins medals onmen who are celebrated for killing with guns, and sends several thousand more over to Vietnam to domore of the same? You can't draw a line and say to impressionable children: "It's bad to kill someonewith a gun, but it's glorious to kill someone with a gun when the President and or Congress tells Give astudent a lift Not all campus hitchhikers are as pretty as the one our photographer passed the other day.But all share a common problem: How do you get downtown if you don't have a car? The outthrust thumb is a time-honored method which sooner or later gets results. Most student drivers, at least, will stop toaid a fellow student. (The editor never fails to assist pretty girls in distress.) Thumbing has itsdisadvantages, however. For one thing a lot of pretty girls consider it beneath their dignity, and while they really would like a ride, they'd sooner walk than thumb. Then, too, thumbing is hard work, holding upyour arm like that. Technically, it is illegal, and you could get pinched. And what do you do if it rains?The answer, of course, is to eliminate the necessity of using the thumb to get a ride. With a littleimagination and even less work, the operation could be made more efficient and comfortable, as well. All that is needed is a bench set along the curb across from the VU, bearing a large sign: "Please Give MeA Ride Downtown." Drivers would know immediately who and how many want a ride. Ride-seekers could sit in comfort, lazy-like; and nobody can arrest you for sitting on a bench. And certainly no pretty girlwould consider quietly contemplating passing cars as beneath her dignity. A roof would keep outweather. At the other end, it probably could be arranged with the city to place a similar sanctuary at aconvenient spot downtown - maybe even some customer - conscious businessman would provide space. The Associated Students legislature could easily find a few bucks for such a worthy project. All it takesis somebody to get the ball rolling. How about it, Associated Students legislature? -Don B. Wittenberger Ah, summer school What is it that makes summer school so different from the other quarters? Haveyou noticed the variety of people who are rushing to classes? We actually have a microcosm right hereon our own campus. First, there are the experienced teachers returning to college for "refresher courses"who are really already settled in their methods. What they really want to do is convince their professorsthat experience is the best teacher. Then. there are the returning teachers working on their fifth year oftheir master's degrees just because they have to. The nuns, too, are here with their happy faces,obviously enjoying their interaction with the inhabitants of the "real" world again. Transient studentswanting to get a view of college life on another campus are here observing and comparing our classesand professors to theirs. College kids who don't want to work come to summer school to have fun, takingas few hours as possible so they can spend their afternoons at the beach. Our profs are here trying toearn some extra money during their vacation. Now is the time for our hippiecult to appear in full glory,as they can really stand out with only 3,300 people on campus. We really can't forget the project kids,who are here to see what college is REALLY like. What a surprise is in store for them when they returnin September! -Lois Caskey ---------- Western Front - 1968 July 2 - Page 6 ---------- -service calls made -parts and accessories for dune buggies Western Front 3 HOWARD'S CHARBROILER 1408 Cornwall WE'RE NOT EXPENSIVE .. We Just Look That Way. institutions barringrecruiters from the Department of Defense. However, Higher E ---------- Western Front - 1968 July 2 - Page 7 ---------- advancement is excellent,- Dr, Riehle said. He suggested that astudentget his bachelor of arts degree in speech, vicoed, education or a similar field. He could then get I his master of arts degree in audiovisualeducational media to qualify for a specialist position. Dr. Riehle said that before ' Western can have asuccessM educational media center, i! ' must have a team of progressive, imaginative producers and di.rectors. At this time the center is limited in staff and unable to operate at capacity. Beside his campusresponsi. bilities, Dr. Riehle has a con. tract with the Imperial Film Company for making film strip;. Hedoes the photography and script writing himself, then turns his work over to the com. pany for editing.These films are made avail. able to schools and organiza. tions. He has made films on Peru, Portugal,Italy and Puertol Rico, and is making four educa. tional strips on paper, lumber, wheat and seafOOd.Before coming to Western, Dr. Riehle taught at Florida Atlantic University at Boca Raton, Fla" a state-supported university for uPPer division students only. He was a professor of educationand director of thelearning lab. Dr. Riehle received his B.S. from Central Michigan Univer. sity, his M.A. from the Univer.sity of Florida and his Ph.D. from University of Wisconsin, Western has not yet hired his successor.tape editor machine to cut and splice parts of tapes together to make meaningful, educational films. Allequipment is color compatible. However, since color production costs four times as much as blackand white, all of Western's work is in black and white production at this time. Educational mediaequipment is now being used at several locations on campus. The equip. ment is available in anybuilding. The center hires students to operate the equipment. There are 15 student operators now, andthe number is eXPected to increase. The v1deo tape machines have been used in education 420classes to prepare students for teaching. Dr. Riehle believes every student should have theopportunity to see himself on TV before he graduates. Videotaping is being used in the speech andpsychology de. partments. Additional uses and benefits from videotaping are anticipated. Dr. Riehleteaches an audiovisual course which prepares students to evaluate and select films and oPerate theequip. ment. He said 65 to 80 Per cent of all teachers wish they had taken a class in audiovisual aidsbefore they began teaching. There is considerable demand for audiovisual specialists in the UnitedStates now. Hundreds of positions are vacant every year due to a lack of qualified applicants. Salaries in this field are high and the opportunity for 9.2 Mon.-Sal. at the "Casino" of the Leopold Hotel The wittycomedy of Harry Howard plus one lOW PLAYIIlIi No coyer by the U.S. Student Press Association of my action, or of any such actions by anyone at any time or place." In explaining his decision, he said,"I have made every possible and reasonable effort to cooperate With my draft board in Atlanta, Ga. Inresponse they have harassed me at everyopportunity. For almost two years they have dealt with mycase arbitrarily and capriciously at every hand, failing even to maintain a board-appointed appealagent to assist me, as required by law." He added, "All this has been in spite of every reasonablerepresentation on my part to them, and on the part of many friends and colleagues, of my situation.Under the circumstances, they leave me no recourse other than to refuse to be inducted throughsuch arrogant, medieval procedures, and to seek a full and hopefully fair hearing in the courts. "WASHINGTON (CPS) - Robert Johnston. executive director of the U. S. Student Press Association, has refused to be inducted into the armed forces. Johnston, a former editor of the Michigan Daily at theUniversity of Michigan, said his decision to resist the draft "is a personal decision, and does notconstitute in any wayan endorsement explicit or implied - Tuesday, July 2, 1968 Dr. Hal F. Riehle willleave Western this fall to join the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn. -Photos by Lydia Christensen Dr.Riehle to head media at Mayo Clinic Dr. Hal F. Riehle, director Dr. Riehle came to Western in ofeducational media and profes- the fall of 1967 and was instru-sor of education, will leave West- mental inorganizing the educa-ern this fall to accept a position tional media center in the with the Mayo Clinic inRoches- Campus School. ter, Mino. The center specializes in non- Dr. Riehle will be director of liveeducational resources, such bio-medical communication at as movies and videotaPeS. The the fameddiagnostic clinic, program is supported by both which employs 6,000 people of state and federal funds.800 different professions. The center is buying a $12,000 Student editor refuses induction This is whathappens when you don't shop at Ennen's Thriftway. EIIIIEIL'S THRIFTWAY HIGH AND HOllY "WHEREEVERY CUSTOMER IS IMPORTANT" ;Z Western Front Dr. Ross wins national award for fossil studyDr. Charles Ross, professor of geology, won anabonalaward for a paper published in an internationaljournal. His 15-page paper, published in the "Journal of Paieont01ogy," was one of a series 1n agroup. His award was for, "The Development of Fusulinid g lt;;oraminiferida faunal realms) " theoutstanding paper of 1967. It concerns the evolution and distribution of the Foraminiferida, a shelledmarine animal belonging to the Protozoans. Ala though the Fusulinid became extinct 200 millionyears ago, the remains can still be found in old sediments. Dr. Ross's research is of particular value topetroleum companies. daisies for your room from 1426 Cornwall Ave.1 Ed grads lack contracts Twohundred·ninetyl968 teacher education graduates have yet to sign teaching contracts according toFrank punches, education placement director. English and history majors lead the unplaced list with45 candidates each. Junior high social studies has 22. There are no unplaced candidates in library, chemistry or special education. However, 500 candidates have placed this year and an expected one-third of the graduates do not plan to teach immediately after graduation due to marriage, grad school orother reasons," Punches said. ---------- Western Front - 1968 July 2 - Page 8 ---------- 8 Western Front Tuesday, July 2, 1968 . and the dorm life which includes several different races. Theprogram has a nine week course and just like other col. lege stUdents, those in the Project live in theRidgeway dorms. Funds for the program are furnished by the office of Economic Opportunity (80 percent)andthe college and community (20 per cent). Most of the community helps through servicesll cashand other ways. Mr. Sy Schwartz, the director of Project Overcome, had this to say about the Project:"What Project Overcome is all about is doing educationally for one group of students what we ought tobe doing for all students." Miss Theresa Wiaholoua the assistant director, is also' doing her part inthe Project by helpi.ng the students in any way pOSSIble such as advising getting bus tickets hornefo'r the studentsll finditlg' wavs for a student to corne to the Project if t~ey so w~h. In this way shehelps to make this a more successf~ l progr~m. Upward Bound, of WhICh Project Overcome is a partof, has approximately 250 nation-wide programs. One ofthe original programs was started here atWWSC. The national director of Upward Bound was the first director of the program here atWWSC. Randy Wesley practices some afternoon ball at Carver Gym on a Project Overcome break. -Photo by Jim Fisher. Projects Catch-Up and Overcome enjoy a Saga lunch. -Photo by Jim FisherProject Overcome Project Overcome is a program set up to help encourage more students to entercollege by giving them the opportunity to experience a bit of college life. There are 103 students, plus 36 staff members involved in the project. These students are chosen by High School counselors anddifferent advisors. There are 2 terms ofthe project. The first year students are usually juniors in highschool and the second year students are high school graduates. The high schooIgraduates whoparticipate in the program are getting ready for college in the fall. By the end of the program moststudents are ready because they know a little about college life. The hard work. The students in ProjectOvercome here at Western are selected from schools all over the state. This year we have twostudents from the Job Corps Centers from Washington. They are: Timothy Lee and GibsonHerferson.Both have received their GED (equivelent to a High School diploma) and are going to enter college thisfall. The most important factor in determining whether or not the program is a success is therelationship which deve lops between the staff and the students, Project Overcome students,Tuootie Eriksen and John Gilcrease rest in front of Ridgeway Alpha.-Photo by Jim Fisher A student takes time out from the busy Project Overcome schedule to play pool in the VU Grotto.-Photo by Jim Fisher.
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- one on campus 1926, emphasis was shifted from which was paid for by private SUbject masteryin individual sponsors. unrelated courses to a generai Dr. Fisher died in 1964. English curriculum lecturetopic English Curriculum will be teachin~ of English and English the. SUbject of a talk by Dr. curriCU
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one on campus 1926, emphasis was shifted from which was paid for by private SUbject masteryin individual sponsors. unrelated courses to a generai Dr. Fisher died in 1964. English curriculum lectureto
Show more one on campus 1926, emphasis was shifted from which was paid for by private SUbject masteryin individual sponsors. unrelated courses to a generai Dr. Fisher died in 1964. English curriculum lecturetopic English Curriculum will be teachin~ of English and English the. SUbject of a talk by Dr. curriCUlum, is the author of DwIght Burton, of Florida State several texts used at Western. University, at 9 a
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- 1968_0730 ---------- Western Front - 1968 July 30 - Page 1 ---------- course critique Questionnaire forms for the AS course critique will be distributed tomorrow through nextweek. Forms will be distributed in nine-week classes that will be repeated this fall, or may beobtained at the VU desk. Boxes
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1968_0730 ---------- Western Front - 1968 July 30 - Page 1 ---------- course critique Questionnaire forms for the AS course critique will be distributed tomorrow through nextweek. Forms will be distri
Show more1968_0730 ---------- Western Front - 1968 July 30 - Page 1 ---------- course critique Questionnaire forms for the AS course critique will be distributed tomorrow through nextweek. Forms will be distributed in nine-week classes that will be repeated this fall, or may beobtained at the VU desk. Boxes will be set up for the completed forms. Vol. LX No.6 WesternWashington State College, Bellingham, Wash. 98225 Tues., July 30, 1968 lOc Inside This is the lastissue of The Western Front until Sept. 30. parking 2 teach-in 3 editorials . . . . . 4 housing 5 Courtdecision blocks Sehome Manor addition Freshman hours abolished to that country to help starvingvietuils of tbe war. In other business, John Moore was appointed to the BOC. He replaces MaggieWilliams, Who resigned. Jim Thomas was assigned to head the committee. AS President NoelBourasaw said there will be four seats open on the AS LegiSlature this fall. He said they will be filled atthe Oct. 4 meeting. The Free University is no longer accepting pre-registration applications, Free U.secretary • treasurer Allisoo Andres told the BOC. Students .may still register, however, inclasses that remain open. Gary McManus attended the meeti~ . to r e'c l' u it volunteers .for freshmanorientation tours Aug. 5 and 6. About 700 freshmen will be on campus each day. There will be twoone-hour tours each day. Volunteers are asked to leave their names at the VU desk. Several alternatives were suggested to BOC members for offcampus laundry facilities. 4. As many as seven facultymembers and possibly one administrator from ethnic minority groups will be hired by the college thiscoming year. 5. A number of courses Which may have "tremendously valuable fallout effects" onWestern's teacher and general education programs will be added to the curriculum this fall, Thecourses, in general, deal with the culture and heritage of American e t h n i c minority groups. Inaddition, changes win be made in the freshman humanities course to include more Afro-Asia history.A curriculum committee also will investigate the possibility of making temporarily federallyfinancedprojects for disadvantaged students part of Western's permanent curricular offerings. Included amongthe projects are Upward Bound and Project overcome, which present~ ly are being held at Westernfor the third summer under federal financial assistance. College officials say they Will announce detailsof progress on the five programs this fall. The empty shell of a 60-unit addition to Sehome Manor is freefrom the noise of equipment and hammers this week, after a Superior Court decision last week stoppedconstruction. (photo by oHley) hire western students in their place after pressure from AS JimThomas, chairman of an AS commisslOn on Saga,. told the BOC. . Saga is supposed to give firstconsideration to residence hall students, then hire off-campus students and finally hire noncollegepersons only if college students aren't available to work, Thomas said. Saga has been criticized for itshiring practices this summer by Thomas' commission. To strengthen the policy, Noel Bourasawmoved the BOC ask Saga to adopt a firm rule that applicants for employment Who are not Westernstudents not be hired until after all campus applications have been considered. John Bent, Westernlecturer, spoke to BOC members about the current civil war raging in Biafra,a seccessionist state ofNigeria in Africa. Bent has set up a booth in the VU foyer to solicite for the Biafra Relief Fund, a fund tobe sent with 'UNESCO supplies FOCUS, a Harvard Uni versity~ based group. seeks to placedisadvantaged students in colleges in different regions than their own. Twenty-five colleges, includ-ing Western, and about 100 students will participate this year. All three of the students are from theSouth, 3. The college will admit about 24 disadvantaged students recruited through the SeattleMultioService center for fall quarter. Most were identified by members of the BSU as candidatesfor the program. Western will give financial assistance to many of them William T. Hatch, director offinancial aids, saia. With regard to the above three programs, normal admissions procedures havebeen waived for many of the disadvantaged students. In addition, paid tutors will help those withdeficiencies. The ' money will be drawn from the· Western Fund for Academic Opportunity, which issupported by faculty contributions. conditional use permit, so the commission did not have authorityto authorize the project. Third, the rezoning was not for the benefit of the public, but rather benefited oneindiVidual. Therefore, the rezoning act is "arbitrary" and thus void. The suit against the city was broughtby six neighbors of Sehome Manor and the Fifth Ward CitiZens' League. The attorney for the two groups is expected to ask Judge Hardin to sign a court decree which woold be the basis of any appeal on thedecision. The coort decision is expected to go to. the state Supreme Court. BOC discusses race,housing Western is making substantial progress on a program de~ signed "to meet its educationalresponsibilities to the disadvantaged," a top college administrator said this week. The administratoroutlined a. five-point progra.m Which the college hopes will offer disadvantaged persons moreopportunity to attend Western and provide Western students and faculty with greater contact withdisadvantaged elements of society. The program is regarded by many persons at Western as aresponse to the request for greater recognition of minority- group interests presented to PresidentCharles J. Flora bf the Black Students Union (BSU) May 14. The five points are: .1. The college isworking with stude·nt groups - both on and off campus - to recruit disadvantaged students andencourage them to attend Western. 2. Western has arranged with the Fellowship of ConcernedUniversity Students (FOCUS) to accept three disadvantaged students for fall quarter. TheAssociated Students (AS) will pursue a policy of enc6ur;' aging non-discrimination in racial matters,AS President Noel Bourasaw told the Board of Cantrol Thursday. Bourasaw said he will meet with the state board against discrimination. He expressed disappointment at some negative responses toa recent KVOS-TV program on Which he appeared with four members of Western's Black StudentsUnion (BSU). Bourasaw and KVoS-TV's F. Duayne Trecker both agree the show "was informative,welldone and in good taste." BSU members who appeared wi th Bourasaw were Stanley George.Eugene SmHh..... Ken Mad· ison and Carl Trotter. John Moore, chairman of the AS housingcommittee, said the biggest hurdle to obtaining effective action with respectto offcampus housingproblems is student apathy. Moore said students must become involved and give their support toAS if they want to accomplish improved housing conditions. Saga Food Service has fired severalhigh school students to College outlines program to help disadvantaged ton, Whit Hemion and NeilLarson alternating with Jimmy Jones in back court. The second five will consist of Ed Monk, DaveHemion, Ben Smith, Ron Caderette, and Paul Hallgrimson, a graduate. Others making the trip are Mrs.Chuck Randall, Marv Ainsworth, assistant coach, and Blaine Johnson who will handle publicity.Construction of a 60-unit addi. tion to Sehome Manor to house 240 stUdents was stopped Friday by acourt decision which declared the city's rezoning of the site to allow construction unconstitutional.Superior Court Judge Boooe Hardin ruled the city's "spot rezoning" of the site is invalid for three reasons. First, Hardin said, the rezoning is contrary to the city's comprehensive plan, and where such aconnict exists the comprehensive plan must prevail. Second, he said, the city planning commissiondoes not possess legal power to grant a houses. In those cases, house mothers will still set thehours. As in the Past, dorms will close at midnight on weekdays and 2 a.m. on Friday and Saturdaynights for security reasons. Upperclass girls and resident directors who were asked for their opinions onhours generally favored abolition, Dean of Women Lorraine Powers said. Is it a martian landscape?No, it is one of several metal sculptures which grace the Western campus. This one is beside the library. (photo by fisher) Coach Chuck Randall's basketball team is out to win games, even if they have totravel half way around the world to play. Turning out twice a day this week, Randall is gettin~ his squadin shape, and acquamting them with some new rules they will face on their six-week tour. They leaveAugust 3, from Seattle for Tokyo, and Play their first game August 5 in Taipei. Randall said they mustwin on the trip and that he will be using his basic,slow,deliberate style. "We fooled around in the spring with other offenses," he said, "bUt, if we are going to win. we have to use what we do best." The Vikswill be faced with wider foul lanes, Which handi~ caps the taller player, and a 30second time limit forshooting. There is no 10-second rule for getting the ball into front court however, so a pressing defenseis also at a disadvantage. A different rule for foul shooting is alsoininternational rules. The only shotsawarded are for act-of-shooting fouls. Western's first unit will be: John Reed and Gary Reiersgard at thepost positions, Mike Clay- Vik hoop squad leaves for Asian goodwill tour Hours for freshman womenliving in residence halls have been abolished by action of the Board of Trustees. The Trustees voted togive dormitory keys to freshmen girls as well as upperclassmen, who have had the privilege since lastfall. The ruling does not affect girls who live in approved off-camP\lS ---------- Western Front - 1968 July 30 - Page 1 ---------- Tuesday, July 30, 1968 Western Front S Beat high rent-buy a house Project Overcome students willmodel back-to-school fashions from Town and Country at 2 p.m. Friday in the VU lounge. Giving a sneakpreview are Trudi Manzer, left, in an exotic sari, and Ruby Jones, right, in an interesting sheath. (photosby jarboe) preciation are slim; on the other hand, do not buy a lemon that will break you formaintenance. 3. Fix up the house so that it is clean and attractive. The best rental or sales market toaPPeal to is older or married students, who want something better than the average student can afford.Much of the difference between an apartment that rents for $40 and one that rents for $90 is appearance, given a sound house to begin with. 4. Be mindful of the neighbor. hooo in which you buy. It should besuitable for small children - in a quiet area, near schools, on a lightly-traveled street. There are manyways to own a house - individually or cooperatively, on a small or large scale, for one year or for 10years. Home ownership offers much lower rent plus the opportunity for substantial profit. Opportunities for successful student home ownership are excellent in Bellingham and gettingbetter. , But be sure ofone thing before you ,try it - know what you are doing. As in any other business enterprise, you canlose if you jump in blindly. ing at Western. Examples of the approach inclUde; Give a piece of rope,such as jump rope, to a child and ask him to step across it without touch· ing it. This will lead to rope. jumping skill, Dr. Aiken says. Thus the child, must find his own solution to a problem. The teacher isthere to help but each «hild is allowed to develop at his own pace. Miss Evelyn Wiseman,workshop director, is working on her master's degree in physical education at Western. have morerespect for something they own themselves, he said. One Western student bOUght a house forabout$4,000ayearago. During the year he kept it, he spent aboot :ji3,500 and a certain amount of effortfor maintenance and improvements. He rented the upstairs unit for $80 per month, which paid hismonthly payments. He sold the house this spring for $11,000, earning a $3,500 profit after living in hisown home rent-free for a year. Not everybody can expect to do this well, of course. This particularstudent had experience in real estate through his father's business. But he offers a few generalsuggestions, which, if followed, give you some place to start and should keep you out of serioustrouble: 1. Key to successful home ownership Is being able to rent one or more units for a good return.Find a house big enough for at least one more family. 2. Buy basically sound property which needsrepairs. Do not buy a house in perfect conditioo., since it will cost so much your chances of ~ingcapital_ap. English me,thods studied Forty elementary teachers studied problem· solving in a one-week elementary physical education workshop which ended Friday. participants earned two col. legecredits towar{j specialization in elementary physical education, a neWly - developing field, Dr.Margaret Aiken, associate professor and depart. ment chairman of women's physical education,said. This was the first workshop using English methods of teach- Other colleges act to aiddisadvantaged to double the number of students who may be admitted on the basis of "discretion." TheSchool of Education is working with the Oakland public schools in a "pioneering program."UNIVERSITY OF MIAMI, Coral Gables, Fla. - Fifty tui. tion scholarships have been established forfreshmen of disadvantaged minority groups. A continuing teacher corps program prepares teachers for work in urban slum schools and a special program to recruit and train male elementary school teachersfor schools in disadvantaged areas are maintained. There are special programs for retraining of Cubanrefugee teachers and to enable children of migrant workers to obtain high school diplomas. SALEMSTATE COLLEGE, Salem, Mass. - The college announced in May it will seek 50 qualified blackstudents from the Boston Roxbury area or other ghetto area. The college is searching for candidateswho, while they may not meet normal entrance rea quirements, have the capacity to succeed in college. The students will be provided with financial aid, tutorial help and individualized programs. UNIVERSITYOF ROCHESTER, Rochester, N. Y. - The admissions office has a fulltime admissions counselor to recruit disadvantaged students and coordinate the program for , the students. Students admitted underthe special program are provided with a faculty advisor who ob. tains tutors for those who need help.The alumni admissions committees throughout the country a~sist !,n recruitillg ot p,romis. lngdisadvantaged students. What is being done on other campuses to help disadvantaged students obtaina college educa. tion? A special report from the American Association of Col. leges for TeacherEducation out. lines approaches being followed by some of its member schools: MARYWOOD COLLEG E, Scranton, Pa. - Administrators and students work with high school counselors to recruit ablestudents from poverty areas. The local youth employment service counsels potential high schooldropouts on financial aid available to them for college and encourages college-capable per· sonsdissatisfied with their jobs to enroll. The college has instituted a modified studies program consistingof summer courses to enable disadvantaged students to overcome academic deficien. cies. SANFERNANDO VALLEY STATE COLLEGE, Northbridge, Calif. - The Black Students Union and otherstudent groups have assumed major responsibility for recruiting promising disadvantaged studentswho fail to meet entrance requirements. A $66,000 federal grant sup. ports a summer pre-enrollmentpreparatory workshop for the students. The Associated Students have raised student fees by $1 peryear to help provide financial assistance.- COLLEGE OF MOUNT ST. JOSEPH ON THE OHIO, MountSt. Joseph, Ohio - A course in "teaching the disadvantaged" offers secondary education majors theopportunity to tutor chil. dren on a one-to-one basis in target schools. UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, Berkeley, Calif. - Admis· sions policies hav.ebeen-changetl ' One way students can beat high rents Isto buy a house. While this might be difficult for individual students, a group of four or five could pool reaSOurces and buy a house for a low down payment. Monthly payments would be considerably less thanrent for the same house, and if the stu. dent owners kept up the proper!}' , they could sell it after two orthree years for a profit, Ellis Massey, Bellingham realtor, says. For example, Massey said1 five students could PUt up $50u each to Pay $2,500 down on a house. If they kept it two years, they would splitmonthly payments of about $70 - in effect, paying rent of $14 per month plus utilities. Massey saidinvestment in real estate is worthwile because, by taking reasonable care of the house, students will atleast get their money back and could make a substantial profit. Long range maintainence, he pointedout, depends on the students. To be profitable, students should attend to more than the immediateneeds and repairs of their house. They will likely Those freshmen Who can't make it to Bellingham nextweek will be registered by mail. These procedures make the entering class easier to program andalelows more time for orientation, beginning september 29. They Will be introduced to the collegegovernmental system, and tour the dorms. SAGA can expect an overload for lunch, with 600 moremouths each day. Speech screening tests are ale so scheduled, as a guide to de. termine those whowill take speech exemption tests in the fall. still responsible for rent.) 4. Make specific arrange· ments for the time and manner of payment of rent, date and length of occupancy, how many may occupy theunit, and the rea sponsibility of other tenants. Your right to occupy the unit between school terms should be understood. When rent is paid by the quarter, holiday periods may be extra. 5. Understandcompletely your rental agreement. If changes or improvements to the house are to be made, be sure you have this in writing. Be certain you get a copy of anything you sign. Any unusual arrangements shouldbe in writing and signed by both Parties to prevent mise understanding. ALWAYS GET A WRITTENCONTRACT. A verbal contract leaves you with no protection whatsoever. 6. Pay by check or get adated receiPt. This is a protective measure to prove the rent was paid. 7. The beginning date of youroccupancy is very important in determining your total responsi. bility and in calculating when notice ofintent to vacate must be given. Western's campus facesatwo day invasion of entering fresh· menAugust 5 and 6. The majority of next fall's freshman class, 1350 of 1800, are expected to be on campus Monday and Tuesday to regis. ter and get a preliminary idea of college life. the group will be split in halffor each of the days. Both days, the colle~ new. comers will be divided lOto advisory groups based ontheir preferred field of study or in. terestsii to plan their schedUles. Anot er objective of the visit, ~sidesregistration, is to acquaint the freshmen with out of class life. Western campus braces for freshmaninvasion Many students renting off~ ampus housing for the first time mcounter difficulty because theyIre unaware of potential problems. To avoid some of this educalion by trial-and-error, the collegehousing office offers the lollowing suggestions: 1. Look at and compare listings. Consider distance tocamp. us, since transporation may be In expensive item. Also consider exterior appearance and neigh.Iorhood before contacting_ the landlord. 2. Make an appointment with !he landlord to inspect the houseduring the daytime. In furnished louses, carefully inspect mattress and springs, dresser draw. ers andclQSets, kitchen equip. ment, and stove and refrigerator lor cleanliness and proper op. eration. Askabout the moothly Iverage coot for any utilities that Ire extra. 3. Take time to discuss rental detailsthoroughly. Understand clearly what the mutual obliga. lions are. Ask which utilities Ire included in therent, if there Ire restrictions on use of the ~ouse, if you may sublet. (If you intend to sublet, make anIdequate business arrangement with your tenant, since you are Renting? Here are some tips A 3Q.daynotice by the tenant or 20-day notice by the landlord is the accepted procedure in this state. If you wish to increase the num. ber of residents in the house, clear this with the landlord. He has the right tocontrol the number of persons living in the unit. 8. Most landlords ask for a cleaning and damagedepooit. The mooey is refundable at the end of the contract, provided the unit is clean and there is nodamage beyond normal wear and tear. Make a written inventory as to quantity and condition offurnishings. Make sure you understand the conditions under which the landlord can keep the depooit,since this is one of the more widespread areas of abuse in Bellingham. ---------- Western Front - 1968 July 30 - Page 2 ---------- -DOll B. Wittenberger recreation schedule c e a 1 Menlo Park, Calif. and is one of the country'sleading food services for institutions, bUys its own food on a budget agreed upon by the college. Thecollege supplies the fa. cilities, equipme ---------- Western Front - 1968 July 30 - Page 3 ---------- Speech therapist teaches children with speech defects to communicate By MIKE GROBE ContrlbutorThe coed and the six-year old boy are alone in the small room. He squirms and glances around, whileshe tries to focus his attention upon a set of buildingblocks. IMring the session the girl tries to teachthe boy the meaning of the term "on" by having him place the blocks on top of one another andrePeating the word "on" as he does so. This is speech therapy, in which children with various kinds ofspeech and hearing problems learn to communicate more effectively. Some of the 34 children in thissummer's program can barely converse at their normal level. Others have less serious prOblems, suchas a nasal voice or a voice of the wrong pitch. Various possible causes of de~ective SPeech are a cleftTuesday, July 30,1968 palate, mongolism and mental retardatlon. At the source of most difficulties ispoor articulation, according to sPeech therapy major JoAnn Youngquist. This, in turn, may becaused by a poor home model, psychological problems or hereditary causes. Each child in theprogram is paired with a speech therapy major who learns the profession by helping the child.Therapy service is provided free, thus helping many children whose parents may not otherwiseafford help for the child. This reporter observed a therapy session between Marsha Harris, a Westernsenior, and a s ix-year old boy we shall call Bob. Bob suffers from brain damage. He is extremelyactive, and he squirms and fidgets in a chair. His attention rapidly strays from object to object. Western Front 3 Miss Harris explained later that she sees one of her main tasks with the boy as that of of "environmental awareness." This means that he should learn to recognize and know the source of morephysical objects and sounds. One activity, in particular, is designed to stimulate this awareness.Miss Harris maniImlates a ,toy that makes various animal's sounds and the boy tries to identify theanimal by each sound. "Progress in sPeech therapy is often very slow, but one little bit of progress isvery reward. ing to the therapist," Miss Youngquist said. "It has helped me to really understand childrenthrough close Personal contact with them. I find the work very rewarding." And likewise, apparently, do many other Western sPeech therapy majors. presents un from " - 4C, daisies for your roomSponsors are' Students for Peace in Vietnam and the Draft Resisters' League. A teach-inconcerning"education on the war and the draft" will be held on the lawn at the south end of the birdsanctuary at 11 a.ffi. Thursday. Featured will be the Dlvid Schoenbrum films, "Vietnam: How Did WeGet In? How Can We Get Out?" and "Time of the _Locust." The state department's side will bepresented in "Why Viet-nam?" • A taPe from David Harris, , Stanford University student government president who refused induction last February, will be played and several faculty members arescheduled to sPeak. A light show also is sched. uled and peace literature will be offered. Dine with usat the. Teach-in on war to be held Entertainment nightly except Sunday Phone 734-5690 208 E. Holly734.6262- Read the-Classifieds · Two get HEW assistantships Western graduates will fill two ofthe 15 openings available nationally in a Department of Health, Education and Welfare (HEW) internprogram next year, Richard Rankin, director of arts and sciences placement. said. Robert A. Carlisle,Mount Vernon, a June political science graduate, and Robert M. Frank, Tacoma, an August economicsdegree candidate, were selected to work in the assistant attorney general comptroller's office ofthe HEW. Frank and Carlisle will study at the University of Pittsburgh Graduate School of PublicAdministration this fall in a oneyear master's degree pr~ram. HEW will pay a full begmning salary,plus cost of books and tuition, Rankin said. After receiving their degrees. they will get on-tha-job training at HEW, then take permanent assignments with an HEW agency. Ihe fines. in Chinese anel A.erlcan Fooel • Open 11 a.m. daily, 2 p.m. Sunday • Encl1ant your date and your friends and relatives by bringing them here during the graduation festivities. 0 -,·Bever~ges in the Tiki Room • Orders togo WWSC Art Film Series (France, 1965) "A top notch thriller-French version of the Maltese Falcongenre." Lecture Hall 4 Thursday, August 1 7:00 and 9:30 P.M. Admission: Adults $1.00, students 65~THE SLEEPIIlIi CAR IURDER complex life force, wholeness. Black must be more than a color or afamily. It's a country that's been a long time comin~. It must make history and qUlt being made historyof. The Black Repertory Theater presented the play "Witchita" Thursday night. (photo by fisher) Black.theater performs Typewriter aad Addiag Machiae Sales, Service aad Reatals We carryall makes ofportables and used machines. K. Curtis Lyle's "Witchita" portrayed Black, a country where the sordid mingles with the pure) in a performance of the Black Repertory Theater here Thursday night. Black is acountry like any other, only it's a new country. It makes mistakeS, too. It has conflicts. The blackmanis chilize lt;;l. He . does things for himself. He defines things for himself. There is a nobility in theblack man, who understands simple acts that are real, but doesn't understand rhetoric. To insure hisnobility, he must continue to fight; tnere must be struggle. The black man must be many things; both an element and a BELLIIGIWI BUSIlESS NAClllNES 1410 Commercial 734-3630 (Next to Bon Marche) ---------- Western Front - 1968 July 30 - Page 4 ---------- 2 Western Front Tuesday, July 30, 1968 21st St• ......_------_._-_.-........-- ,- \,---- L-·,_· ._-~--~Highland Dr. Tickets add 'nuisance' to list of parking woes. in August at all netlJ$statids now McCall'sA definitive report on a twoyear study by a major university. Vance Packard describes therevolution in sex attitudes and behavior of college students here and abroad. Just how far studentshave come-and will go-with sex. His documented findings, based on thousands of questionnairesdistributed throughout the world are revealed in an authoritative look at what the"now" generation thinks,feels and does about sex. Don't miss this challenging, direct and important feature "SEX On'rheCam...." CAMPUS SEX-an Important eNew 'Report earned by studying abroad or working in agovernment office. Students can shift to a more traditional - but still free program at any time. Dukeprofessor Robert Krueger, who was instrumental in making the curriculum review study for the faculty,said the new pr~ram is based on the concept of 'learning experience." Students will participate insmall tutorial or seminar sessions and will bear major responsibility for their own educationaldecisions, Krueger said. The plan, approved by Duke's undergraduate faculty council will go into effect in fall of 1969 and the last vestiges of prescribed curriculum are scheduled to disappear in 1!173. . I Duke to experiment with open curriculum DURHAM, N. C. (CPS) -Duke Uni versity announced last week it is scrapping its present curriculum in favor of a new program which will offer each student what isclose to a tailormade education. Under the new program, a student theoretically could. o~ tain adegree without ever attending a class. Semester hours have been abolished and so will be most ofthe universal degree require- , ments. Instead, students will enjoy almost complete freedom in planningtheir own curriculum. Students will earn their degrees through a wide variety of studies and activities -for example, a year's credit could be Hershey orders physicals. suspended until October The move. in effect, will limit : draft calls between now and October to persons who have already passed physicals orreceived notices to take them. An expert on the draft said Hershey's new order bears both good andbad implications for college students. WASHINGTON, D.C. (CP~ . Selective Service Director Gen.Lewis B. Hershey has ordered all local boards to schedule no more pre-induction physicalexaminations for August or Sep. tember dUe to financial problems. '... Admission: adults $1,students 65e "Another Fellini milestone in the art of film" PIG WAR by Keith Murray Best Sellers forSummer Reading: Married Men Make the Best Lovers The Fox by D. H. Lawrence Diary of Che Guevara .Red-Dirt Marijuana by Terry Southern WWSC Art Film Series Presents i . I JULIETTE OF THESPIRITS (Italy, 1965) Thursday, August 8 7 and 9:30 p.m. Lecture Hall 4 AARDVARK BOOKS ARTS 213 E. Holly 734-4043 PARKING SYMBOLS A. Faculty-Staff permit, all hours. \. . B. Faculty-Staffpermit, 7:30 a.m.·S,OO p.m., . General' or Evening permit, 5:00 p.m.w 7:30 a.m} C. General Parkmg(Student permit), 7 30( a.m. 5:00lp m., free parking evenings. D. Resident Student permrt, all hours. E.Motorcycle permit (bicycles - no permit) I F. Visitor - courtesy permit. G. Motor Pool. J H. proposed newlots~ "The average number of tick.. ets written during a school year is approximately 11,000," he said.Parking will improve, but not this fall. Fifty additional spaces will be added to the lot west of theAUditorium. Three additional general park.. ing lots are planned for students. These proposed lots willinclude a block-long, half-block.. wide parking lot south of Garden St., between Ivy and Oakstreets.Another large general parking lot is planned for the area north of Garden Street, where the CampusChristian Ministry now stands. Asmall lot is planned south of Nash Hall's resident parkinglot. Thecollege planning department's projections for future campus parking areas will Provide 7,000 parking spaces for an anticipated student body of 15,000, Maconaghie said. The reason is graduate students, acting Chief SecurityOfficer D. Maconaghie said. lliring the summer many teachers return to school.They do not find the transition from teacher to student an easy one, at least where parking their cars isconcerned, he said. "Instinctively they park in the faculty lot, and it seems to take about two to threeweeks to change these habits," Maconaghie said. Returning teachers who become students for the summer usually say, "I did not give it a second thought, I just pulled into the faculty parking lot." Thesecurity office understands this problem and much leniency is shown during the first weeks of summer quarter. "About 75 per cent ofthe tick.. ets are forgiven during the first week," Maconaghie said.Approximately 1,000 tickets were written during the six week summer quarter, according to IMaconaghie. Ever have difficulty finding a place to park on campus without ' walking a mile to that firstmorning class? If you do not live in a dorm or within walking distance of campus, you probably do.Especially if you are almost late for an 8 a.m. class in Old Main and want to park in the east generalparking lot. For those who do not know that there is a west parking lot,. get up early enough to driveacross campus to get there before class. There are usually many parking spaces. parking permits forfall will 1?e." $~- ($2 more than they have been summer quarter). Those who do not purchase a permit !have the alternative of parking) • on the street. Failure to purchase a permit could mean finding a $2parking ticket 00 your car. Why are a large number of tickets written in the first two Or three weeks ofsummer semester? THREE lORE' WEEIS! OF SCHOOL THANK YOU FOR YOUR PATRONAGESALE ITEMS SPECIAL 2.43 VALUE FOR $2.25 I-"TUFFIDE" 3Ring Binder I-Pkg.lndex Dividers and 100 Filler Paper I-Stapler and Staples MAlE UP IITS - BUCH BAGS :=~ CAMPUS PAIS - RECORDS T-SHIRTS - TURTLE IIECI SHIRTS SWUT SHIRTS - GYM SHOES) REMEMBRANCE ITEMS IN POTTERY STUDENTS CO-OP THE CAMPUS,H~II, '- ---------- Western Front - 1968 July 30 - Page 5 ---------- 8 Western Front Tuesday, July 30, 1968 The Front goes out with a bang Our editor - editor-in-chiefwhose highly effective management methods are emulated by such eminent pub!' cations as Pravda andthe Daily Worker; and Dan Meins, business manager-cartoonist.report who works harder than anyoneelse when he isn't busy being a hippie. In the left foregroun one of our best friends. Not shown arephotographer Mike Jarboe and contributors Ange Martinez, Lois Caskey, Michael Grobe, Gib Henderson,Maureen Pecaric and Janet Peischel an secretary Becky Ensley, who were rubbed out by the goon squad after they dropped the keg off cliff. Who says we're all wet? (photo by marti Although Front staHmembers are enormously talented and magnificently inspired, they occasionally forget small details-likethe tide, f'rinstance. Managing editor Dianna Timm and photographer Bernard OHley salvage the oHicialstaH vehicle ,from the site of the annual bash (left background, submerged), while business manager DanMeins and ad manager Pat Hughes man the lifeboat (keg first, women and children second, please).(photos by fisher) Another exciting summer comes to an end, and the usual gang of outlaws, beach rats,mercenaries and misfits who comprise the Western Front staff gathers for its last big bash. From right toleft are Bernard Offley, our veteran of the Panama riots who shoots with a camera almost as well as hedoes with a .30-.30; Jim Fisher, All-American c1amdigger who appears to be on the wrong end of things;Nora Williams, an efficient secretary who keeps our business office honed to a sharp edge; Pat Hughes,ad manager and sports editor, who will sportingly give Fisher a three-step head start; Dianna Timm,managing editor, who races bikes when she isn't busy managing the editor; Lydia Christensen, a sexycomplement to our No. 3 photoenlarger; Don B. Wittenberger, ---------- Western Front - 1968 July 30 - Page 6 ---------- ONE SHOWING OF FEATURES - WED.-THUR.-MON.-TUES. "GROll BERnS" ',. "CHUBASCO" - At ':50 Only -- - - -, . Af7 P.M. Onl;' Students dig into Lake Whatcom with fast paddles in a hot race that is allpart of the fun of Western's canoeing and sailing course. (photo by offley) western Fi-ont '7 ENDSTONIGHT "THE FOX" 6:30 - 10:15 AIIIIVERSARY :30 NO ONE UNDER 18 ADM. Lectll'e HaR 4Admission complmentary Sponsored by ART DEPAR'DDT-W.-ARTS LEm.s-PROICT OVERCM: :00p.m. by Stan Van Der Beek "UNDERGROUND FILM MAKER" August 2, 196 WESTERNWASHINGTON STATE COLLEGE presents LECTURE AND FILM PROGRAM MT.BAKER BOXOFFICE OPENS 6:15 51ARIING WEDNESDAY DooRS'OPEN 6:30 ------COMPANION- HIT-----.......RICHARD EGAII 1 • CHRISTOPHER.S i"CHUBASCO" SUSAII STRASaElG • i In Technicolor -THE [~U!l!N limUTS S~DHN DAVID WAYNE dANSSIN Dr. Kelly to head new ed program Dr. Samuelp. Kelly, associate professor of education, has been named director of a center for the development of teachers for junior and community colleges to be established this fall. The program, called theCen· ter for Higher Education, also, will prepare administrators for junior colleges and coordinateresearch in, improvement of college teaching, evaluate ongoing programs and assist in developinginterdisciplinary grant requests. The Center is an outgrowth of a committee appointed by PresidentCharles J. Flora to consider training, of college teachers. The Center will be supervis-ea'by the -GraduateCouncil. At the outset, personnel will be part-time. Canoeing class is wei-and fun Race acanoe _ as a class requirement? That is what students in P.E. ~~~~~~m~~~~.:~ retreat and ftmcenter. ' The 25 students enrolled in the offbeat courSe learned how to handle themselves in bothcanoes and sailboats, working individually and in pairs. They met Mondays and Wednesdays duringthe six-weeksession for sessions on rigging, launching, sailing and landing small crafts. Instructorsexpect them to develop respect for the boats. Miss Monica Gutchow, assistant professor ofphysiealeducation, teaches canoeing. Qualified members of the Viking Yacht ClUb teach the sailing section.The two-hour class periods are divided evenly between the two topics. This is the secondsummer thecourse was offered. Gallery 217 New poli sci faculty Dr. Everett W. Chard and Orest M. Kruhlak willjoin the political science department faculty as lecturers this fall "estern student Denny Bailey coachesGil Brackinreed on the ~ne art of hitting while catcher Chris Hollingsworth waits i/or the action to start ata Bellingham recreational field. 'Many Western students worked with youngsters in city programs thissummer. (photo by offley) Western students boost I city recreation, for kids Bellingham's park and Ree-'00 duty each -day that the Stm reation program received a comes out. Bob Plotts, a West- OOst through the federal gov- ern grad student, is head lite- II'Ilment this summer via West- guard. !I'll students. 'Besides those working tmder The Work-Study program, sub- work-~udy, 16 qther ~este:n ~dized bY thelederal govern- students are help1Og, m3.1nly 10 nent gives the Park and Ree the baseball program.Il'~:am 26 fullotime, 40-hour- Almost 11000 boys ranging ,er-week employees. :trom 8-to-lll-years-old arein- Gary Karlberg head of the volved in the program. IUmmer baseball phase and a The philosophy behind the 1961 Western graduate, says baseball program is "every kid ~ program is now able to get plays."There are 67 teams in more qualified college people five leagues and the farthest a 10 supervise variousactivi~es. ¥,oungster ~as to walk to a field A broadening of the entire IS a halt mile. . . l1'~ram is whatmakes Bell- More coaching IS avallablees- Dgham Recreation Commission pecially for the 8-and-9 year-frector Frank Geri hOr the old Tiny Tads, who practice rork-study system wil last and play, weekdaymornings and ~om year to year. afternoons. He said parks and recreation Western students act ascoach- ~ilities are now open Stmday, es, umpires, field supervisors Deluding a lifeguard at Bloedel- andhelp with field maintenance. lbIlovan Park on Lake What- Hikes, crafts songfeststbon- 10m. fires, andping pong and ennis Water safety instructors are tournaments are only a few of /~\ pportun"· y ImO(''-",S tphaerkasctainvditipelsayagtrBouelnldinsg. ham's 16 Two young entrepreneurs res- Supervised facilitiesare ned thirsty students last week available every day from 10 , setting up a portable es- a.m. to 4:30P.m., with some iblishment (a cardboard box) parks supervised tmUI 9 p.m. nRed Square to sell iceddriIlks. Parks and plargrotmd direc- The aggressive 'but friendly tor is Barb Robmson, a West- ~ungsalesmen offered their ern senior. Information on ac- Iroduct for three cents a glass tivities are available atthe Dean Dstudents and faculty passing of Men's office, the Chamber etween classes after a dry ofCommerce, and Whatcom Mid- Icture or test. die School. SUMMER SPECIALS NOW Top RecordingArtists the PEPPERIINT TROLLEY "CHUBASCO" 3:30 and 7:50 ~SATURDAY-SUNDAY~ "GREENBERETS" I 1:00-5:15-9:35 I ~FRIDAyrs SHOWINGS~' GREEN BERETS' 5: 15-9:30 'CHUBASCO'7:50 No cower. Paintings, Sculptures, Pottery, Jewelry 217 W. HOLLY affhe "Casino" of the LeopoldHotel Return to Bellingham after Hawaiian stay and MIKE BRIAN Now Appearing Saturday, August 39-12 p.m. t~COUHnY CLEANERS Pat O'Day and Associates present at Birch Bays VILLAGE WEST- two locations - near the comer Haggen's Shopping Center of Holly and ' Meridian and Lakeway IlinoisCash and Carry for Discount Cleaning ~ . ---------- Western Front - 1968 July 30 - Page 7 ---------- Classified 11 Cars and Cycles dramatic improvision, poetry reading or script reading in the classroom,he said. Students wan t immediate goals, he said, and not ones which help them "next year" or "whenyou get to college." "I'm not sure all children in school should study any grammar," he said. «Allchildren don't have to take math every year." "Traditional grammar is an invalid description of thesentence," he said. "New grammar? Teaching too much, too soon." Whether or not grammar isthe most important part of English study can only be determined by individual schools and teachers, the English education professor said. However, many schools are moving away from the grammaremphasis, he said. The English class used to be a mixing bowl because it was a required course, hesaid. Topics such as telephone etiquette and career study have been replaced with phonetics, history ofthe English language, lexicography, semantics, dialects, and new grammar, Burton said. Is your IQ98th percentile? If so, join MENSA and help 'create Mensa University. J. p. Riepe, 1111 Key Street,Belling. ham. 150 cc Honda in excellent condition. Low mileage. Helmet. Good rubber. 235 or bestoffer. 2-be~room apt: fireplace, rugs, applIances. 2 blocks from coll~ ge. Adults only. 734"()236,evemngs. 20 For Rent 31 Rides, Riden Rider wanted for trip to East Coast after 9 week session must want to return for fall lt;!uarter. Call 734-4365 evenings. 33 Help Wanted . Need money? Be' a- saiesrep for a socio-politico-satirical new poster line. Ideal for individuals and organizations. Write forcomple.te poster profit kit. Gross National Product Box 426, Wayzata, Mn 55391. ' Departmentalassistants needed for fall quarter for Math 3 151, 240 and 481. Pay is $24' per quarter. AWly now atMathematics office, room 202 Bond Hall. ' . sa 'emu'" 733-950 I! Ken Erikson throws a friend in'Fisher Fountain to celebrate the last day of the six-week finals. (photo by oHley) Expert suggestschanges in English curriculum By LOIS CASKEY Contributor . We :should "convert the EnglIshlIterature program (in the secondary schools) from pink lemonade to stout ale," Dr Dwigbt Burton told acapacity crowd of about 200 faculty and students last week in the Campus School auditorium. Englishteachers are figbting taboos on teaching any literature which mentions earthy subjects or uses earthylanguage because the parents don't want their children exposed to them, Burlton, a visiting professor,said. "But their kids are seeing lt;The Graduate' three times," he added. The Florida State Universityprofessor thinks publishers de. termine what should be studied in English, "I don't have a set of my owncoming out, by the way," he noted. There should be more empha. sis on oral composition such asTEDS GARAGE Parts and accessories for dune buggies The feature of the week is a book written by aformer house-mother at Highland Hall, Mrs. Rae Pritchard who wrote Rocks in the Washer." STUDENTCOOP BOOK NEWS Friends For Three Hundred Years by Brinton has been re-stocked. The Fox byLawrence, The Leather Boys by Freeman, Too Many Americans by Lincoln and Day, Is Anyone There? by Asimov Unity, Freedom and Peace by Rocke: feller, At Ease by Eisenhower, A DocumentaryHistory of Negro .People in the U.S. by Aptheker, The Diary of Che Guevara and Stranger at the Gatesby Sugarman are in stock. 2215 Y2 Cornwall er education must score well on qualifying exams andreceive a government grant before they can be accepted by any col. lege. British children enter infantschool at the age of 4 junior school at 7 and senio: school at 12, Those who intend to work attend senior school for four years; those who will go on to college attend for six. There are three differentclasses at senior schools: secondary, grammar and high school. They are essentially equivalent, except grammar and high school offer more foreign language and are geared to the brighter students, As each student enters senior school, he receives a number rating describing his school year andability. Thus, a I-A student would be in his first year and have potential to do A work. These ratings arecalled streams. During his first three years in senior school, the student is grouped according to hisstream classification. Ideally, he competes only with others of the same general ability.Specialization begins after the third year, at which time students are grouped without regard toindividual ability. One obvious difference between English and American ~ie:h schools. Miss Burrellsays, IS transportation. i High school students do not drive to school, since they may not obtain drivers' licenses until they are 18. Since there are no school buses, students get to school on publictransport or on bycycles. . English students enjoy only SIX weeks of summer vacation. They also getthree weeks at Christmas and Easter. Miss Burrell believes the major weakness of America'seducational system is laxness due to a lack of respect for teachers. In England, students are taught respect immediately. Teachers demand it- sometimes with the help of the traditional cane. 1328Cornwall 1327 Cornwall Ave.. / 733-7081 I WE'RE NOT EXPENSIVE .. We Just look That Way.HOWARD'S CHAR BROILER 1408 Cornwall Hillary Burrell (photo by fisher) thorough andindividualized, she said. Instructors make sure students understand each point before proceeding to thenext. She also attributes the superiority of the English system . to a more serious,scholarshiporiented attitude that prevailS there. College attendance in Britain is limIted to the beststudents and ~ompeition to get in is keen~ English students who want high- ..\ Il' lJeisfields JI:WJi;I$RS tlj ..% ~75.00 I 733.9300 1Day I Shirt Service i COMPLETE LAUNDRY II AND DRY CLEANING, Free Pickup Deliveryi 734-4200 Foolish Radicals Hushand Air Plants An urge to be different can becreative but ~he'll.expect the traditional ring. Paying 'cash IS an Ideal way.How~v~r, cre~it.is perfectlyacceptable. And at Welsfleld's It IS especially so for students of promise. ' See our big'select;mt 01br;clal seU. BinJon Optometrists COMPLETE OPTOMETRIC SERVICE CONTACT LENSES - FASHION FRAMES Dr. leroy H. Freeman and Associates By JANET PEISCHEL Contributor A distinctive Britishaccent ~~ an avid liking for strong, pipmg hot tea, point to Western sophomore Hillary Burrell'sbackground. Mi?s Bur~ell 18, who majors m physIcal education has lived in the United State~ fornearly three years. She was born in Scarborough and lived in Yorkshire, England for 15 years. Althoughshe enjoys life in the l!nited States, she feels the English school system is superior to the American.For example, when she came to the Uni ted States as a high school sophomore, she skipped more than one entire grade level. This is because, she says English schools are a year and a half ahead ofAmerican schools. In England, teaching is more 6 Western Front Tuesday, July 30, 1968 Englishschools better, coed says
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- 1968_0709 ---------- Western Front - 1968 July 9 - Page 1 ---------- News I•n brief Did your check bounce? Students who owe the book~ store money for insufficientfunds or closed account checks must pay before July 26 or be SUbject to a collecting agency fee.Register for
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1968_0709 ---------- Western Front - 1968 July 9 - Page 1 ---------- News I•n brief Did your check bounce? Students who owe the book~ store money for insufficientfunds or
Show more1968_0709 ---------- Western Front - 1968 July 9 - Page 1 ---------- News I•n brief Did your check bounce? Students who owe the book~ store money for insufficientfunds or closed account checks must pay before July 26 or be SUbject to a collecting agency fee.Register for art fair Artists who plan to enter the Pacific Northwest Arts and Crafts Fair in Bellevue July2628 must register by July 13, fair officials said. All work must be original, not mor~ than two yearsold and for sale. Work may be entered in professional, nonprofessional and junior (13-17) divisions tocompete for more than $2,000 in awards. The nonprofit fair is largest of its kind in America and hasattracted more than 162,000persons in previous years, its sponsors say. For information, write thePacific Northwest Arts and Crafts Fair, Bellevue, Wn. 98004. Pool hours changed Recreationalswimming hours in the Carver Gym pool have been changed due to heavy demand. A group of 30 menand 30 women will be admitted from 4-4:45 p.m. and a second group from 4:45-5:30 p.mo , Mondaythrough Friday. Physics institute held A Physics Institute is being held this summer for 30 high schoolteachers. The fifth program of its kind, it is funded by the National Science and Ford foundations.Participating teachers are from throughout the United States, and one is from Nigeria. Republican tospeak Art Fletcher, Republican candidate for lieutenant governor, will speak on campus on July 18.He will hold a press conference in VU 208 at 2:30 p.m., visit with Upward Bound project participants in L 3 at 3 p.m. and attend an open coffee hour in Saga 2425 at 4 p.m. Lecture on Seri set A slideprogram on Mexico's Seri Indians, a twentieth-century tribe still living in the stone age, will bepresented at 7 p.m. next Tuesday by Otis Chidester, of Tucson, Arizona. Chidester, who did some ofthe photographic work for a Disney television program on the Seri, has been stUdying the primitivepeople since 1935. A skier takes an icy plunge into a lake of slush at Mt. Baker's an~~a.1 S~ush .Cup,July 4. The event is only one of many actiVities In thiS area.-Photo by Lydia Christiansen gia. The votingage is 19 in Alaska and 20 in Hawaii. In most of the other 46 states, proposals to lower the voting age have been introduced, but either never reached the ballot or failed in the legislature. Many of thearguments in favor of enfranchising the young were recapitulated by President Johnson in hisendorsement. He said, "Young people have been called upon by the age of 18 to shoulder familyresponsibilities and civic duties identical with their elders. At the age of 18, young Americans arecalled upon to bear arms and are treated as adults before many courts of law and are held responsiblefor their acts, "The age of 18, far more than the age of 21, has been and is the age of maturity inAmerica - and never more than now." Students receive $700,000 in aid The question to be discussedis: "Civil rights or civil disorders? Housing, law enforcement and government." By DAN MEINSWestern Front Staff Government loans, grants and work-study programs now account for morefinancial aid to students than scholarships do, William Hatch, director offinancial aid and studentadvisement, said last week in an interview. Western is helping more than one-sixth of the student bodyto finance their education with $670,000 from government programs and only $12,000 from thecollege's scholarship fund. Virtually anyone on camp!S can receive financial assistance, Hatch said,through such programs as the National Defense Student Loans, College WorkStudy program,Educational Opportunity Grants, Guaranteed Loans and Western's scholarship funds and short-term loans. National Defense Student Loans (NDSL), by far the most popular program, was started in 1958as an inducement for students to go into teaching, Hatch saido NDSL is a program of "borrowing"and has become the backbone for other governments pons ored financial assistance programs. Under NDSL an undergraduate student may borrow up to $1,000 each academic year with 10 years to repaythe loan at a threeper cent interest rate. The repayment period and the interest do not begin until nine months after the student ends his studies. Those going into teaching have as much as half of the loanforgiven at the rate of 10 per cent for each year of teaching service. Furthermore, students who teachin certain schools in primarily low-income areas, such as a slum district, may cancel their entireobligation at the rate of 15 per cent per year. Hatch said that Western has aPProximately $300,000 this year in National Defense Student Loans with a total of $1,100,000 outstanding since the programbegallo College Work - StUdy, a program of "employment," ranks ahead of NDSL in federal fundingat some colleges, especially junior colleges, because the program is run on the campus, Hatch said.Students, particularly those from low-income families, who need a job to help pay for collegeexpenses can find employment under the College WorkStUdy program in on-camp!s work orapproved off-campus agencies. This summer 126 students are working under this program in off-campus, non-profit agencies in Whatcom and Skagit counties. They will make approximately $1,000apiece. Educational 0 p p 0 r tunity Grants, the smallest numerically in total financing, is a program of direct "grants," based on exceptional financial need and academic or creative promise. Educational 0 p p 0 r t u nity Grants range from $200 to $800 per year with an additional $200 given to thosestudents who were in the upper-half of their class during the preceding academic year. TheGuaranteed Loans program primarily makes loan insurance available to any college student whowants to borrow. The program is designed for students from middle- or upperincome families whocannot qualify for student employment or loans. Under this program, an undergraduate can borrowas much as $1,000 per year at a three per cent (middle income) or six per (Continued on page 2) Civildisorders BOQ topic The first of two panel discus- Participating will be Belling-sions of the summer Bookof ham police chief Cecil Klein; the Quarter "Report of the Ellis Massey, a local realtor; National Adv'isory Commission Dr. John J. Hebal, associate on Civil Disorders" will be held professor of political science; at 7:30 p.m. tonight in the VU and Miss Anna Muldrow and lounge. Gibson Henderson, Pro j e c tOvercome. William H. O. Scott, circulation librarian and Book\of the Quarter chairman, willmoderate. thewestern front Vol. LX No.3 Western WClshiington State College, Bellin~;Jh(lm,Wash.98225 sHion in both Congress and the states. Opponents of the 18-year-old vote proposal advance twomajor arguments: First, the recent wave of student demonstrations indicates, to them, that youngpeople lack maturity and are not ready to participate in the political process. During Senate hearingsopponents said, "Young people are prone to take an extreme point of view and push their ideas to theexclusion of all others." Second, they argue that states should retain the power to set the, voting age.Opponents seem to fear too, that they may lose office if millions of young people can vote. At present18-year-olds can vote only in Kentucky and Geor- The indictment charges Jesus with being subversive in religion and politics. The first part ends with a general indictment of man: "We are all guilty." In thesecond part, as the ver· dict is about to be given, a Catholic priest, agnostic, prosti. tute and anti-Semite interrupt. Dr. Byron Sigler directs. Tickets may be obtained at the VU desk or theater box office.22 3 .4 Inside Hitchhike bench . Spring honors. . . Board of Control . Editorials . . . . . 18-year-oldvote faces obstacles; passage seen as unlikely before 197 I Western players present "Between TwoThieves" case is argued by, above, left to right, Joseph Grant, Susan Parker, Donald Krag and DavidWebb in "Between Two Thieves," to be presented by Western Players this week. Dr. Byron Sigler, below, directs. -Photos by Lydia Christensen WASHINGTON, D.C. (CPS)It appears unlikely theConstitution will be amended to allow 18-year-olds to vote before 1971, despite PresidentJohnson's support. The proposal is sponsored by 44 senators. But many observers doubt Congresswill approve a constitutional amendment this year . To pass, the amendment must be approved by atwo-thirds majority of each house of Congress, then be ratified by at least 39 states. If Congress does not approve the amendment this year, in time for state biennial legislative sessions beginning nextspring, many states will not have a chance to consider it until they n:eet again in 1971. In addition tothese obstacles, the amendment may face oppo- "Between Two Thieves," a Irama of the guilt orinnocence 1l Christ, will be presented by ~e Western Players at 8:30 ',m. Thursday through Saturday in Old Main theater. The play, written by the Italian Diego Fabbri, is the story of a family group of playerswho act as judges, prosecutor and coun! els to determine from a conlemporary view whether Christwas guilty under Roman and Judaic law. ludes Up. ,rece at ~furornic Idthe I per unity cashweek coIl the ~way , the ) do~ t by . way get: the stu_ 'oject y she suelUnd, is a 250lfthe Lrted ~ctor this What mtis :roup to be ---------- Western Front - 1968 July 9 - Page 2 ---------- Western Front 3 1327 Cornwall Ave. Open Till 9 Fri. Nites accept white students' participa. tion. Also,some grew impatient with the seeming lack of organD ization. "They were looking for too muchdirection," he said. The University, like the Poor People's Campaign, is not com. pletely shut down.Connelly hopes to mobilize students to go to the capital throughout the summer to demonstrate on be· half of jailed campaigners, and more workshops are planned. :Jeis/ields Jf;WELEIIS 1'\'1 R~ASO~ rJR. rIS~I~~ IS QlJl1'"~ lINCOKf'L.I£.I\"1tO .. Sale of Records The Latest Styles and Colors ~ TurtleNeck T-Shirts Sweat Shirts Wind Breakers EVERYBODY'S TALKING ABOUT IT APHORISTS: OftenBooed by Againsterist$ ~ "Never a lender or aborrower be?" Abit old.. fashioned, don't you think. There'sa time and place for everything. That's why Weisfield's has credit plans for students of promise. Connelly said those who at. tended solidified and focused their idealism. "We felt a need to turn StuD dents on,to community action ?rganizing, involvment in th~ Issues on campuses in suburbia, inner cities, all~ver " Con. nelly said, adding, "I don't think we failed." Connelly said interracial diaD logue was strainedat times, be· cause some blacks would not Tuesday, July 9, 1968 Potential attendance was esti.mated at as high as 15,000. But due to the campaign's late start, fewer than 500 attended sem. inarsdealing with poverty and related topics. 'Poor U' arouses mild student interest COLOR by DelUXEENNEN'S THRIFTWAY HIGH AND HOLLY "WHERE EVERY CUSTOMER IS IMPORTANT"PANAVISION'·, DOC, it's like this. I can't get past Ennen's Thriftway without shopping. The buys arefabulous! "THE DAY THE FISH CAME OUT" AN OFF BEAT COMEDY DRAMA! MY_ BAKER DOORSOPEN 6:45 TONIGHT _---- COMPANION FEATURE -----.. After "ZORBA THE GREEK" - THE NEWCACOYANNIS FILM - STARRING TOM COURTENAY - CANDICE BERGEN ---STARTS WEDNESDAY-..... _ SHAll DEAII MARIDI RAIIDB. WBCII GEORGE IBIDJJ 20th Century-Fox BAlDOlBIl' Presents ~ .poor turnout for the June 28 event. Groups sponsoring dan. ces now must give seven days advancenotice and advertise in the Front the week before. The BOC voted to support a stink.in on behalf of DickGreg. ory. Dead fish will be mailed to Olympia to protest Gregory's jail sentence for illegal fishing. TheBoard will sponsor a course critique. Students will grade their courses and profes. sors onquestionnaires to be cir. culated starting the fifth week of summer quarter. The results will be availablein time for fall quarter prereg. istration. daisies for your room from Typewriter and Adding MachineSales, Service and Rentals We carryall makes of portables and used machines. 1426 Cornwall Ave,BELLINGHAM BUSINESS MACHINES 1410 Commercial 734-3630 (Next to Bon Marchel The Board ofControl decided rues day to poll students this IUmmer and again in fall for Ibeir opinions on the college,~Dlicy on alcoholic beverages. The Board also voted to submit ne following statement to Presi. ~ntCharles J. Flora: "The iUmmer BOC is anxious to se· (ure for students a change in illStitutional rulesconcerning l1coholic rules on campus." A propooal to install a wash. !r and dryer for free student Ise inthe VU basement was Iurned over to the student weI. fare committee. The BOC set up a new policy!DVerning dances because of the WASHINGTON, D.C. (CPS)In terms of actual enrollment, the PoorPeople's University was less than a success. But measured in terms of impact on those who didparticipate in this phase of the Poor People's Campaign, it was far from a failure. Inst -I tUte StUd-lesSoUth As-la CoTnhnaetllyis, tahsesiasstsaenststmoetnhet odfiRreocots. d' t . Dr Deb th M k or of student and campus activi. .A National Defense E?uc~. hlr~c or GIS t' 1 tuna O~th· ties of the SouthernChristian [on Act (NDEA) summer InstI. er]e~. ues. ec r~rs WI Leadership Conference (SCLS) Iut~ foradvanceG ~tudY ,of South tea.chIng expenence In South and coordinator of the university ,Islangeography 15 being held AsIa s~pplemen~ the program. project It Western thIS summer. PartIcIpants Inthe program • the .. broil objective of the receive $75 per week plus an The project was conceived asinstitute is to improve teachers' allowance of $15 per we~k for a "freedom school" to establish mowledgeof South Asia. Tech. each depende~t: There IS no new priorities and "redirect niques of organizing andpre. charge for, tUltIon or fees, but the energies of the campus com. senting the subject at junior andeach pays hIS own costs oftravel, mUnity into an action commit. senior high school levels also ro.om andboard, books and sup. ment." Ire being stUdied. phes. ., .. The institute program incorp. Forty JUnIor and semor hIgh orates formal lectures discus. school teachers of geography sion periods, a methods and~nd other socia:l ~tud,ies inWash. materials lab and library study. Ington a~e partIcIpating. Lectures bystaff specialists are The elght-we~k program began followed by seminars. June 17 and WIll end Aug. 8.Five 3.credit courses are o~ ~ .... !ered on the subjects of geography, methods and materials, history, peoples and social in. stitutions and government and politics of South Asia. The institute is directed byDr. Howard Critchfield, profes. sor and chairman of the geography department. Associate interviewsTODAY - Kelso, Highline, Newhall, Calif. school districts; lor teachers; education place. ment office.TOMORROW- Eatonville, Ed. monds, Pajaro Valley, Calif., school districts. THURSDAY - QuillayuteVal. ley school district. NEXT TUESDAY - Washugal, South Bend school districts. Appointments for allinter. views should be made at the placement office. BOC to poll students on college alcohol policy ---------- Western Front - 1968 July 9 - Page 3 ---------- eut f 'I s tl P tl d s c il a c I 1Day Shirt Service COMPLETE LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANINGFree Pickup Delivery 734-4200 Donna Shultz, James Ryan, Judith Warwick, Janet Westerlund andCynthia Zwart. JUNIORS: Donald Carlson, Nancy Dimond, David Groos, Michael Marines, Dennis Mc.Cleerey, Douglas McKeever, Clayton Philbrick, Dale Scott, John Ward and Gerald Woodard. SENIORS:Charles Adams,Robert Arseneault, James Bailey, Timothy Barr, Michael Bobbink, HaroldBockemuehl, Delbert Brodie, William Brookerson, Raymond Burke; Donald Capstock, Patricia Christie,Ralph Clark, Patricia Cunningham, Jimmy Diehl, Edna Doolittle, Steven Ellis, Kathleen Endrizzi, KarenHanson; Dale Henley, Marcia Higgins, Thomas Jepsen, Kathleen Johnson, Linda Johnson, TimothyJohnston, Gregory Jones, James LaMont, Michael Lucas; Michael Neely, Janis Nelson, Larry Nelson,Timothy Novak, Terry Osborn, Nancy Sampson, Lois Smith, Patricia Smith, Douglas Sonju; ErnestStahl, Ian Trivett, Lois Trueblood, Karen Van Hood, Barbara Walden, Roberta Wiecking, Don B.Wittenberger, Stephen Wiitala and Ernest Wycoff. Writers' workshops The Pacific NorthwestWritersConference will meet at Western for 18 workshop sessions July 25-27. Featured will be award-winning author Agnes Newton and television writer Walt Morey ("Gentle Ben"). Workshops will cover mootasPects of writing, from short stories and novels to poetry, magazine articles, plays and televisionscripts. Experts in various fields of professional writing will assist beginners, juveniles, amateur adultsand professional writers. For information, contact the office of continuing studies. 734-6262 Seniorsmonopolized grade honors for spring quarter, while freshmen, although numerically superior inenrollment, were shoved far to the bottom of the grade totem. Of the 445 students who earned 3.5 orhigher for 14 or more credits, a majority, 236, were seniors. The President's List also included 104juniors, 98 sophomores and seven freshmen. Straight A or 4.0 averages were earned by 72 studentsout of a total enrollment of more than 6,000. Of these, 45 were seniors, 10 juniors and 16 sophomores. Kathleeen A. Bienz, of Bellevue, was the only freshman to make the highest list. Of this group, boysoutnumbered girls 46 to 26. (Four of the six members of Western Front's spring editorial staff were onthe President's List. Those who received 3.5 or higher included editor Jeanne Doering, managing editorMike Koch and news editor Steve Lampe. Spring copy editor and summer editor Don B. Wittenberger was on the 4.0 list.) The 72 students who earned 4.0 were: FRESHMEN: Kathleen Bienz.SOPHOMORES: Beleta Belding, J ames Blizard, Herman Bouma, Paul Burr, Kayla Holeman,Calvin Jackson, Max Knittel, Ernest Leenders, Pamela Morris, Edward Shaffer, Joan Sharp; Seniorstake lion's share of spring grade honors Ihe finest in Chinese and American Food • Open 11 a.m.daily, 2 p.m. Sunday • Enchant your date and your friends and relatives by bringing them hereduring the graduation festivities. • Beverages in the Tiki Room • Orders'to go 9-2 Mon.-Sal. Mullen HOWirard and The witty comedy of at the "Casino" of the Leopold Hotel STILL APPEARING Nocower 206 W. Holly St. Best Sellers for Summer Reading: Married Men Make the Best Lovers The Foxby D. H. Lawrence The Graduate The Conan Series Also McCarthy Buttons and Stickers AARDVARKBOOKS ARTS 213 E. Holly 734-4043 AS will install hitchhiking bench Student hitchhikers probablywill get a bench, as suggested in a Front editorial last week, although it may not be before fall quarter, AS President Noel Bourasaw said. He said he thinks the idea of such a facility is excellent, andadded, "I don't think we will have any trouble at all" getting the proposal passed in the AS Legislature.But the summer Board of Control does not have power to appropriate money, so the project may not get underway until September, he said. Bourasaw said he will discuss this problem with the ASfinance officer, and will bring up the proposal at Thursday's meeting. 1328 Cornwall FALL QUARTER1968 PRE-REGISTRATION ANNOUNCEMENT Any student who has NOT preregistered for FallQuarter may do so on Wednesday, July 17 in the Registration Center, ground floor of Edens Hall.BinJon Optometrists PAYMEllI OF FEES ALL STUDENTS-Pay as you Pre-Register or Pay by mail byMonday, ~tember 16 3. REPORT with your blue book to the Registration Center, ground floor of EdensHall on Wednesday, July 17. The Registration Center will be open 8:30-11 :30 and 1:00-4:00. 2.GRADUATES-Obtain materials from Graduate Office and secure program approval from graduateprogram adviser, and Dean of Graduate Studies. 733-9300 COMPLETE OPTOMETRIC SERVICECONTACT LENSES - FASHION FRAMES Dr. leroy H. Freeman and Associates PROCEDURE: 1. ALLUNDERGRADUATES-Bring your blue book up to date, including your approved schedule for Fall Quarter. 2 Western Front Tuesday, July 9, 1968 Creative writing teacher joins English department Dr. EugeneGarber, who joiIlcgraduate students in writing ed Western's English depart- classes and to teachliterature. ment this summer, will teach When asked how he grades creative fiction writing. creativewriting, Garber ex- Garber taught at the Univer- plained that any student in his sity of Iowa for 11 years,and class who does all the assigned has been acting director of the work receives a C, a studentnationally-known Iowa Writer's who shows marked improve- Workshop since 1966. ment gets B and astudent of Bellingham's physical attrac- exceptional ability gets an A. tions and Western's reputation Dr.Garber said he believes as a fine liberal arts college fewer than 100 Americans today brought Dr. Garberhere, he make their living by writing says. fiction. Creative writing is more He also was delighted with thea "work of love" and its rewards opportunity Western offered to are more personal than mone-teachundergraduate as well as tary, he said. $700,000 aid available, but scholarships are nil (Continued frompage 1) of an award. Of those who do a better short-term loan pro-cent "(upper income) interest. not, thelargest percentage do gram. , "The colleg.e l?an pr?- If a student comes from afam- not qualify for somereason, gram IS the same SIze It was In ily with an adjusted income of for example, need," Hatch said.the 1950's and 1960's. This was less than $15 000 a year the Hatch pointed out that many quite adequate at one time but it federal governinent pays approx- people still think of scholarships is not now," he said.imately one-half the interest. as the only financial aid avail. Under the present system, Hatch describedthe Guaran- able when actually it is only a students cannot draw more than teed Loans as a "very goodsmall part of a larger set of ~hree loans per year at a max· program," with the only draw- programs.Imum of $150 per loan. . back that it is not managed by "The real point of financial "If a student, nee~money In the college. The school mere- aids," he said, "is to help the a hurry and can t waltfor a NllSL lycertifies that the student is student stay in school whatever loan to come through, he should registeredwith the college. his dollar needs." be able to borrow on a sho~t. - ",- , h t' t basis. It may make all the dIf. By far the smallest fInanCIal A scholarship as s rIC re- ference in the world" Hatch aids program, Hatchs.aid, is quirements tied to it and may said. ' the college's scholarshIp fund only pay $200, he said.Unless a Hatch said he would like to of $12,000. student qualifies for the exact see the AssociatedStudents conamount he needs, he should con- "Roughly one-half of the fresh- sider other financialavenues. tribute funds for such a p~o-men who apply get some kind Hatch said that Western needs gram. If the students could r~Ise , :$2,500 a year through a drIve, he said, they would get it back plus interestand at the same time help themselves. ---------- Western Front - 1968 July 9 - Page 4 ---------- Lecture Hall 4 Herald Building Sunning in the grass with their lovelies. Where were the frosh while theseniors reviewed their class notes for the umptyzillionth time (with nary a day's notes missing) ? Atthe beach. This is just conjecture, of course. However, there are some other notable differences between freshmen and seniors which might help account for these results. First, by the time you've beenthrough foui' years of the mill, you can't help but have learned how to study, if you are inclined towardthat sort of thing. Second, by the time you are a senior you have begun to worry about some of life'smore pragmatic concerns, like how to get into this graduate school or land thatjob, or otherwise avoid the draft. And it is a fact that the last year's grades generally count for more than the first three years puttogether. Finally, by the time you're seniors, all you frosh, maybe you'll be tired of lying out in the grasspicking up mosquito bites and sunburn, too. -Don B. Wittenberger next to the Herald Building on StateStreet (wherever that's at), and pick up one of their excellent city maps. The maps index streets byname, and cost you only a dime. This is much better, we think, than standing on a street corner cussing out the city planners. After all, Bellingham wasn't planned. It just sort of happened. The StudentsChoice I~ \!J. . I :r 1153 State St. • SAVE TODAY • FREE DELIVERY • 734-4902 7 and 9:30 p.m. WWSC Art Film Series presents HERALD PHARMACY the western front Thursday, July 11THE MALTESE FALCON (USA 1941) "A Bogart pacesetter for international spy stories." Adm;ss;on:adults 51, students 65 lt; • OPEN 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. official weekly newspaper of Western WashingtonState College second class postage paid at Bellingham, Wash. 98225 phone, 734-8800 editorial, ext.2277 advertising, ext. 2276 Don B. Wittenberger Gerson Miller, advisor Editor-in-Chief Dianna Timm,managing editor Jim Fisher, photography editor .. Dan Meins, business manager and cartoonist PatHughes, ad manaaer and sports editor Photographers: Bernard OHley, Lydia Christensen Reporters: Lois Caskey, Michael Grobe, Maureen Pecaric Janet Reischel Contributors: Angela Martinez, GibsonHenderson ' Deadlines: Noon Thursday-news copy, letters to the editor, display ad reservation, classifiedads, display ad copy. Represented by NEAS Price per copy, 10 cents. Subscription, $3.50 a year, $1.50 a quarter. Member. U.S. Student Press Association, College Press Service, ASSOCIated Cl)lIege Press and Intercollegiate Press Service -service calls made -parts and accessories for dune buggies Cashand carry discounts editorials okay, you-frosh ... Summer students new to Bellingham by nowprobably have gone h~lf-crazy trying to find anything in this town. That's because the first thing youdiscovered is that the streets here run every which way, and no logical person can even figure outwhere he's at, much less determine where he is going. If you share this problem, we suggest you stop by the Chamber of Commerce lost? Okay, you frosh, you loused up. We counted only seven of you onthe list of spring quarter honor students, and only one of you made a four-point. By contrast, 236 seniors earned a berth on the President's List, of whom 45 got straight-A. What is the cause of this grossdiscrepancy? The editor considered delivering a lengthy sermon for the benefit of those frosh whomight still be around (Le., the survivors), but then he got to thinking back to his own freshman days. Andwhile he can't speak for anyone besides himself, a few suspicions come to mind. Like, where were thefreshmen while he and many other seniors hunched over mountains of books and papers, burning theproverbial midnight oil, up in their dingy off-campus garrets? At dances and parties. Where were thefrosh while the seniors prowled through long dark stacks of dusty books and periodicals in the library,hunting down the one vital term paper source that is never there when needed? lED'S GARAGE 733-9501 by the corner of Holly and Lakeway From time to time we have hard - back books that have been ordered under unusual circumstances. At this time we are suggesting a few titles. Among them are:Private Dowding by Pole, Collected Poems of W. B. Yeats, Israel by Berman, A Wom~ n DoctorLooks at Love and Life by Hilhard, The City Is The Frontier by Abrams, Poems of a Jew by Shapiro,Eminent Dom. ain by Ellman, Writers and Partisans by GIlbert, Autobiography of a Yogi byYoganandi, Man in the Glass Booth by Shaw Happiness Is a Stock That Doubles In A Year byCobleigh and Pulse Technology by Stanton. Student Co-Op Book News Tuesday, July 9, 1968 get the bugs out of your Beetle 2215% Announcing! the reopening of TOWNandCOUNTRY CLEANERSWE'RE NOT EXPENSIVE ... We Just Look That Way. HOWARD'S CHAR BROILER 1408 CornwallPARTS FOR IMPORTED CARS FOREIIiN AUTO PARTS 1200 Commercial '64 250 cc Yamaha, YD-3, $200. 1012!j2 Jersey. Eve., 733·5002. Letter Are assassins heroes? Editor: I am aghast at thedefense of assassins as existential heroes by a student of Western. Do premeditation and con·scious choice by the individual justify or mitigate the crime of murder? Such an act may be the practicaloutcome of J ean.Paul Sartre's philosophy of despera. tion, but it is contrary to the principles of theEnglish Com. mon Law that are in force inour courts today. If Mr. Prunier thinks that my opinion aboutthe men who killed John and Robert Kennedy, Abra. ham Lincoln, James H. Garfield, William McKinleyand Martin Luther King is merely another manifestation of the "vicious parochial mind" of America, lethim make the most of it. Arthur C. Hicks Professor of English Classified Campus calendar TODAY-Christian Science Organization, AM 23, 6 p.m. Project Overcome movie, L-4, 7 p.m. Book of the Quarter, VU lounge, 7 p.m. WEDNESDAY-Dr. Won-Kyong Cho's dance performance, Mus Aud, 8p.m. Bridge, VU 209, 6-10 p.m. Viking Yacht Club, Syne Thorsen, SM 105,7 p.m. THURSDAY-Board of Control, VU208, 4 p. m. Miller Anologies Test, L-4, 4-5:30 p.m. Alpine Club meeting, George Mustoe, SM 109,7 p.m. Film "The Maltese Falcon," L-4, 7 and 9:30 p.m. Play "Between Two Thieves," L-l, 8:30 p.m. FRIDAY-Play "Between Two Thieves," L-l, 8:30 p.m. SATURDAY-Grad Tests, L-4, 8 a.m.-5 p.m. English Master'sExam, CS Aud, 9-11 a.m. Play "Between Two Thieves," L-l, 8:30 p.m. MONDAY-SCAT Test, M 227, 2-7p.m. Recreation schedule TODAY-United Boatbuilders Tour, 2: 30-4 p.m. See the building of boats byone of the largest fiberglass boat builders in the nation, where the famous Uniflite line and U.S. Navyriver patrol boats for Viet- , nam are made. Individual transportation. THURSDAY-Steak Fry, Lakewood, 5: 30-7 p.m. Try your hand at char-broiling a steak. Food furnished; just bring your appetite, the kids anda knack for having fun. SATURDAY-Victoria, B.C. Boat Trip, all day. Visit provincial capital of BritishColumbia, shop and sightsee on Vancouver Island and at Butchart's Gardens. SATURDAY-Hike to LakeAnn, all day. Short trail trip from Austin Pass to Lake Ann at foot of majestic Mt. Shuksan; aphotographer's paradise. NEXT TUESDAY-Mt. Baker Plywood Tour, 2-4 p.m. One of the Northwest'slargest cooperative plywood operations. 4 Western Front
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- 1968_0625 ---------- Western Front - 1968 June 25 - Page 1 ---------- thewestern front It was his third consecutive trip to the national meet since transferring to Western as asophomore from Washington State. He placed second last year and fourth the year before. At theEveregreen Conference champion
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1968_0625 ---------- Western Front - 1968 June 25 - Page 1 ---------- thewestern front It was his third consecutive trip to the national meet since transferring to Western as asophomore from Washingto
Show more1968_0625 ---------- Western Front - 1968 June 25 - Page 1 ---------- thewestern front It was his third consecutive trip to the national meet since transferring to Western as asophomore from Washington State. He placed second last year and fourth the year before. At theEveregreen Conference championships in Cheney in May, he set a neW conference and school record of 241'5", 112" short of the top NAIA mark of the seasoo. Dave dropped the Districttitle here to Central'sFred Andrew who placed fourth in Albuquerque, and fifth in the" NCAA meet. Dave's only looses of the year were to Andrew, both in Bellingham. Had he continued at WSU, VanderGriend, a Lynden native,would have competed with Carl 0'Donnel and Foss Miller. O'Donnel won the NCAA title this year, Millerwas sixth and both will be at the Olympic trails. Bonds and fees finance parking The office of campusplanning plans 5,100 parking spaces for an eventual enrollmentof12,000. The sale of 30 to 40 year bonds has been proposed to meet construction costs. To develop bond revenue, the college committee onparking has proposed fees of $36 per year for faculty and staff, $8 per quarter for general parking and $10 per quarter for residence halls students. Although the proposed program offers greater flexibility,emphasis on the competence of the individual and more parti· cipation by school districts, it is still"very vague," Ferris admitted. "With competence as the goal," he said, "we are a long way frommeasuring competency. There is no one way to teach. We can measure output at the end of anassembly line, but how do you measure on the spot a youngster's growth and learning?" Sinceprofessional teacher organizations will assume a major part of the responsibility for the fifth-yearprogram, there is question as to which associations will take part, Ferris said. "Certainly theWashington Educational Association- but what about the AFT?" he asked. "When it comes to givingmore responsibility to the public school people," he said, "teachers question whether the individualschool districts will have different requirements from colleges and other school districts. " Ferrissaid new teacher certification programs for graduate students fit into the new flexible approach tocertifica. tion. Under this program, individually- tailored fifth year study programs for graduates in artsand sciences are combined with teaching preparation normally given in undergraduate stUdy. Althoughthe new teacher certification program is still developing, Punches said, "the present system ofteacher certification has seen its day in this state. The new one is more in line with current needs."For another story on teaching, see p. 3. Inside Housing crisis . . . . . . . .. 3 Editorials .. . . . . . . . . . 4Year in review .. ' 5 Student government. . . . . 6 Activities schedule . . . . . . 7 that by 1969 or 1970 anunder. graduate program will be developed. Students in the current teacher ed program probably willnot be affected by the changes until their fifth year, he said. Under consideration are four types ofteacher certificates instead of the present provisional and standard certificates. A "preparatory"certificate would correspond with student teaching and put "tl)e student a little more legally in charge,"Ferris said. "Initial" and "continuing" certificates would correspond with provisional and standardcertificates respectively. A "consultive" certificate could be earned by persons in supervisory roles.Teachers in joint appointments, such as teaching team leaders and supervisors, though notadministrators might be required to have this certificate. A consultive certificate would mean greaterrecognition of a person's abilities through higher pay, Ferris said. Under the present program ateacher has up to six years after receiving the provisional certificate to earn 45 additionalcredits - anentir e fifth year of study. The renewable standard certificate is issued after completion of the fifthyear and at least two years of successful teaching experience. "The problem," Frank Punches,director of educational placement said, "is that we have few ways to determine how competent a teacher is." "Two years of successful teaching experience" in some cases merely means not getting fired, hesaid. Tuesday, June 25, 1968 lOe javelin title at the small college championships in Albuquerque, NewMexico June 1 with a toos of 238'4". He scored Western's only 10 points in the meet won by PrairieView College of Texas• . Western's NAIA javelin champ Dave VanderGriend. Vol. LXI No.1 Noeladdresses students today A "State of the Campus" message will be delivered by Associated StudentsPresident Noel Bourasaw at 4 p.m. today in Red Square. Bourasaw will explain student government,discuss AS summer plans, suggest activities for students in the city and county and introduce new student government officers. Javelin champion VanderGriend of summer Olympic frials in L.A. menthas beEm centered on elementary and secondary schools, most of them in the South. D a v eVanderGriend, Western's NAIA javelin champion competes in the 1968 Mexico City Olympics trialsthis week.end in Loo Angeles, California. The 6'5" senior won the NAIA By DAN MEINS of theWestern Front The state Board of Education is revamping the teacher certification program to turn out more competent teachers and give public schools and professional teacher organizations a biggerrole in determining cer· tification. Donald A. Ferris, Western's director of teacher education advisement and certification, said the emphasis is moving from credits and degrees to teaching competency. Ferris said he hopes the program will be adopted this fall SO State board to change teacher certificationSummer registration pushed nast 3, 000 5hursday with final registration projected at 3;300. Thisrepresents an 8 to 10 per cent increase over last summer, when 3,000 students attended Western,Registrar William O'Neill said. 3,3000 students up registration 10% for summer visions for a free pressinclude the right of a reporter to withhold the identity of confidential news sources. The statemaintained that her refusal to reveal the names constituted withholdo ing information necessary forthe arrest and prosecution of drug users. At present 13 states present newsmen to refuse to revealconfidential sources, as doctors, lawyers and mimsters are alo lowed to do. bean BroWn said hedoes not expect the HEW officials to find any irregUlarities at Western. Agreements made with theBlack Students Union this spring were carefully checked by the college's legal counsel andWestern maintains a firm policy of nondiscrimination, he said. Federal officials so far have intervenedonly once when they found an agreement between black protesters and college administratorsinconsistent with civil rights laws. The case involved Northwestern Univer~ sity, which acceded toblack demands for separate living units for black students. Civil rights officials alsoplan to investigatefraternities and sororities. HEW officials will review policies of Greek chap. ters Which occupy buildingsleas- . ed from colleges, a spokesman said. If all-white Greeks occupy university property theinstitutions could be violating the 1964 Civil Rights Act, he said. The current investigations are the first of colleges and universities. The HEW previously has required institutions receiving federal moneyto give written assurance that they do not discriminate, but actual enforce- Western Washington State College, Bellingham, Wash. 98225 From Combined Sources Federal officials will visit iVestern thisweek to make sure !he college is not violating civil rights legislation passed by Congress, according to Academic Dean R. D. Borwn. Close watch is being kept on how college administrators across thecountry react to demands of protesting black students by the U.S. Office for Civil Rights, aDepartment of Health, Education and Welfare (HEW)agency, Civil rights officials want to Insure thatadministrators do not bow to black students' demands if by doing so they violate tivil rights laws. Atthe same !me, they are stepping up in! estigations of white colleges 10 prevent discriminationalainst black students in housing, recruitment, financial aid and athletic programs. Colleges foundguilty of violating the laws can be denied federal financial assistance, Western may be among the first of more than 100 camp. uses to be investigated by the end of the year because it receives substantial sums of federal money, Brown suggested. High court upholds editor's conviction In r.efusinl1: toreview the case, the Supreme Court upheld Mrs. Conard's conviction, sustaining a Januaryr..ullng by theOregon itipMmlJ; i'eert Canoe dumping is wet but fun at Western's Lakewood. (For more see page 8.)Federal officials investigate .college civil rights policy In her I1Mefise;-Mrs. Conard ,,argued thatConstitutional pro- , WASlllNGTON (Cps) - The U.S. Supreme Court has refused 10 review the contempt citation of I former student editor who would not reveal the names of seven student marihuana usersshe interviewed. The stUdent, Mrs. Annette Buchanan Conard, interviewed the users for a story whichap. peared in the May 24, 1966 edition of the University of Oregon Daily Emerald, of which she was managing editor, After the story appeared, Mrs. Conard was subpoenaed by Eugene, Ore. DistrictJudge William Frye, but she refused to reveal the names to agrand jury despite a court order demandingshe do so. She was fined $300. s ---------- Western Front - 1968 June 25 - Page 2 ---------- NDEA Institute for grad credit Western Front 7 ADMISSIONS: Students with theatre discount cards51.25 General . . . . . • • 51.50 Children (under 12) • SOc 20TH CENTURY-FOX PRESENTSCHARITON HESTON in an ARTHUR P. JACOBS production PlANEr ,.R gt;[apES RODDYMcDOWAll· MAURICE EVANS KIM HUNTER·JAMES WHITMORE JAMES DAlY· UNDAHARRISON:~' APJAC'PRODUCTtoNS .MORTAa'iAHAMS fRANKUN J. SCHAFfNER .MiCHAEt\WSONRoD SERUNG ~;~8ASQ(M:Ul e'MMYisioIr . COlDIIY DEWI£ . .- Co-Hit MT. BAKER lOW SHOWIIiG••'PUIET OF THE IPES' lSI ILOCllumR. FISCIII'IISI" -liz Smith, Cosmopolitan OPEN LONGERTHURSDAY-Board of Control Meeting-AS, 4 p.m., Noel Bourasaw,VU208. -Viking Yacht Club Meeting,7 p.m., Signe Thorsen, SM 105. -Soc/Anthro 201 Discussion, 7 p.m., Dr. Anastasio, M-B. M-K, M 26,M30. -All Speaker Dr. Knowles, Ed. Home Ec., 8 p.m., Dr. Feringer, l2. -Alpine Club Meeting, 7 p.m.,George Mustoe, SM 109. -Art Film "The Umbrellas of CherbOurg," 7 and 9 p.m., l4. TODAY-Georgia-Pacific, 2: 30-4: 30 p.m. Tour one of the largest pulp and paper mills in the world to see how logs aremade into paper. Tour also available for children 12 and older. THURSDAY-Steak Fry, 5:30-7p.m. Enjoya full meal, boating, fishing and swimming at Lakewood. Adults, $1.75; under 10, $1; meal ticket holders, 90 cents. SATURDAY-Hike to Twin Lakes. .. . , The short rugged trail to Twin Lakes offers excellentviews of Canadian mountains and Mount Baker. A trip for casual as well as determined hikers.SATURDAY-San Juan Island Cruise, 10 a.m.-8 p.m. Cruise through Lummi, Sinclair, Orcas, Sucia andother of our beautiful islands. $2.50. SUNDAY-San Juan Cruise, repeat NEXT TUESDAY - BellinghamCold Storage, 2:304: 15p.m. See preparation of Alaska King Crab, other seafoods in one ofNorthwest's major industries. INFORMATION and tickets available at VU desk. Recreation scheduleTUESDAY-Grad Council, 4 p.m., Dean Ross, M-K. -Entrance Exam-Grad student, 4-5:30 p.m., Dr. Bond,l-2. -Christian Science Organization, 6 p.m., Dean Powers, AM 23. -library Orientation (Skills for Summer Students), 7:30-8:30, Mrs. RahmesfMr. Hearsey, l4. WEDNESDAY-Geography Club Meeting, 3-4 p.m.,AI Holborn, VU 209. -Personnel Committee Meeting, 7:30 p.m., Mrs. Nial, M-K. -NDEA GeographyInstitute Meeting, 7 p.m., Dr. Critchfield, M30. FRIDAY-No events. SATURDAY-Power Outage, All day,Campus School, Ed/Psy Bldg., l2, l3, l4, Hu Bldg. -Bahai Workshop, 8 a.m.-5:30 p.m., Jack TIngstad,Viking Commons. Campus calendar Tuesday, June 25, 1968 Satanlays . 10:00 UI.·I:OO P.M. Week Daysl 8:30 A.M.·5:00 P.M. Fridays till 5:30 P.M. Northwestern Commercial Bank w. Magnolia Commercial Drive- in Window : Opens 8 A.M. Week Days Member: . FD.LC. The first issue of"Concern. ing Poetry," a new journal of critical interpretation and poet. ry, sponsored by the departmentof English, has just been ~b. lished. Poetry journal now on sale at bookstore Copies are on sale in theup. stairs section of the Student Co-op bookstore; or subscrip. tions may be ordered from the editor,English department. The lou-rnal will be published twice a year. The first issue contains severalarticles, inclUding one on the function of criticism byMurray Krieger, author of "The New Apologists for Poetry," and other books; and poems by William Stafford, James Tate, James DenBoer and X. J.Kennedy. The journal prints interpretive articles on particular poems or groups of poems; short notes;reviews of poetry books or books about poetry; and original poems. Its primary aim is to help the"common" reader as well as teachers in reading specific poems. The second issue will contain articleson African poetry and on some Yeats poems. Fall baseball in Hamilton's optimistic plans ConnieHamilton, Western baseball coach who was recent. ly named an honorary member of the sports TrailCentury Club, is already making baseball plans for next fall Awarded the honor for his 131 baseballvictories in six years of coaching before coming to Western, Hamilton wants to start early on improvingthe Viks' 816 record of last spring. During the first weeks of oc· tober, Hamilton plans to haveplayers work out and play intra. squad games. Atentative trip to San Rafael, Cali!., during spring vacation for a series of games is also scheduled to give the team experience playing in dry, sunny weather.Hamilton says he has a bright outlook for next year. He plans on junior colIege talent from California andWashington for a hitting boost. 9 a.m.-l 0 p.m. Arllla music appointee Miss Mitsuko ArugaofMatsumoto, Japan, has been appointed arts·music associate in West· ern's music department.Miss Aruga is a student ofDr. Shinichi Suzuki, Japanese music educator whose methods of in. structing very young children are gaining world·wide recognition. Miss Aruga will be involved in a researchproject developing methods of teaching violin to young children. "Research in the Teaching of English. " Additional information and application forms are available from Dr. Nell C. Thompson of the EducationDepartment. The COO filed suit against the University charging its Constitutional rights of free speechand assembly were violated, but Judge William T. Sweigert up. held the administration. The COOdecided to hold the ceremony anyway, on the steps of Sproul Hall. Gov. Ronald Reagan had de·manded the "commencement" not be held and that participat. ing students and faculty be ex· pelled.Such a ceremony, he said, "would be so indecent as to border on the obscene." A representative fromBrooks Lumber Co. of Bellingham, a donator to the tour was also chosen to go on the trip. Playersmaking the trip are: Paul Hallgrimso~l Gary Reiersgard, Mike Clayton, Neil Lar. son, Ed Monk, WhitHemion, Dave Hemion, John Reed, Ben Smith, and Jimmy Jones, Ron Caderette a transfer from ClarkCollege is the alternate. tatively has another game with the Canadians here, the last week of July, as aprimer. The 24 game series, from August 1 to September 10 includes stops in Japan, Korea, HongKong Taipei, the Philip. pines, Australia, New Zealand and Tahitl: - Open Every Day BERKELEY (CPS)- A"Vietnam Commencment" honoring persons who have refused to comply with the draft was held · at the University of California last month despite an adverse court ruling. More than 6,000 persons at.tended. The sponsoring group, Camp. us Draft Opposition (COO). had received permission from a vicechancellor to use campus facilities, but the Board of Re. gents banned the ceremony from the camlXlS,saying that -it woUld violate selective service laws. PIO to print newsletter The Public Information Of·fice will distribute weekly newsletter every Monday during the summer containing a calendar of eventsand campus announcements. Material must be submitted to CS 100 no later than 3:30 p.m. theFriday before publication. Twelve quarter hours ofgraduate credit may be earned dura ing theeight.week session ofthe - NDEA Institute for Advanced study in English. The session began yesterday. Teachers accepted as partici. pants in the program must hold a bachelor's degree from an accreditedinstitution. participants may enroll in four sections of English 598- j Both BYU and the Huskies : camehome with fine·won loss , records, and Randall's team is out to prove a small school can be just assuccessful. During the last week of May the Viks dropped a Canadian ·Olvmpic team. twice but theplay was ragged in Randall's ,two platoOn set up. Randall ten. IVik hoop lour I;n nalion's eyes ~.' Viking basketball coach Chuc-k ~Randall is facing almost a 12 ~month season and has to worry ~ aboutupholding national pres' ltige too. lt;f " His team follows in the wake lof Brigham Young and theUni· jversity of Washington, the two ~previous teams involved in the. 'I People to People program's Far1East basketball tour. * Groceries * Cold Beverages * Magazines and Gifts * Cosmetics * AmericanExpress Money Orders * Film Processing with Free Film * Complete Variety Department Rawls'Superette and Sundries "The Bright Spot at the Top of Holly Street" ·Anti-draft rally attended by 6,000at Berkeley Friendly, prompt service for all your shopping needs ---------- Western Front - 1968 June 25 - Page 3 ---------- Five BOe spots filled for summer Bourasaw is this week asking for volunteers to speak on or explainsuch issues as central area schools, suburban schools, drop-outs, de-facto segregation, and Whychildren fail. "These features could serve as the backbone to our sum. mer offerings in speakers," hesuggested, Three different committees of the board of control are now pr(.f;ramming recreation anden.tertainment. ASeattle big band has already been contacted for doing a large dance. Club 515 anunusual offering originated last year by the Activities Commission, is also be. ing pr(.f;rammed for thissum· mer. _ ' "We are also working this summer on the pilot project of a Course critique we hope tooffer this year," Bourasaw said, "We will pass out question. naires to students in classes that areoffered during the reg· ular year, work with other sim· ilar groups. and generally pol. ish up thecritique." Marcia McKaig, another memo ber of the actiVIties commission during the year, is alsoplanning social events. She is recruiting people now and anyone interested can leave messages at the Viking Union desk, Five students were given appointments to the Summer Board of Control lastThursday during the Board's first meeting of the quarter. The new members are Stanley George, Claudia Hegdahl, Ken Madison, Eugene Smith and Maggie WillIams. Nine other appli. cations wereconsidered. Other members of the Board are Al Doan, Scott Williams, Jim Thomas and Noel Boura·saw, chairman. A review of the summer budget also took place at the meet. ing and appointments tothree committees were made. Chosen for the Club 515 com. mittee were Heather Highmiller, StanleyGeorge and Eugene SmIth, chairman. Madison, George and Thomas were selected for the Big NameEntertainmentc 0 m mit tee, Which will be chaired by Thorn. as. Members selected for the Speakersand Exhibits com· mittee are George Harvey{. Thomas. Al Doan and Miss Wi liams, chairman.Hans Lorentzen, president of the Alumni Association, was a guest at the meeting. He pro. posed asailing contest between students and alumni, for maintaining much of the correspondence with otherschools and he researches student problems for the board of control. Bourasaw feels that studentgovernment at Western during the summer should have as 'its primary goal the lessening of thegeneration gap. "Since most of the students here fall into the age group of over 30 or under 20, we needto offer them a common arena to talk in," he explained. One of the things his staff intends to do is tostage panels, lect).lres and discussions on ed. ucatIon. "The one thing in common almost everyone has here in the summer is a recent encounter with public elementary and sec. ondary education. "We haveUpward Bound stlJa dents. returning teachers, ed. ucation majors, and new stu dents straight from thehigh schools," he said, WELCOME SUMMER STUDENTS ,TACO and 1O~ [Kink Only 2S~ IACOI• ECoupon good Tuesday-Wednesday Jllle 25-26 Watch for next week's specialty ---------, ClipCoupon I Taco and 100 Drink I 25' I I June 25-26 Only I 707 Holly I AARDVARK BOOKS ARTS 213E. Holly 734-4043 Noel Bourasaw (center, 'beard) presides over summer Board of Control. if you get lostin the woods you ought to have Food in the Wilderness - $1.50 The Penguin Book of Comics $4.50 now$2.95 McCarthy Buttons and Stickers at The Board of Control programs Summer activities andprovides student welfare during Summer quarter. The board is chaired by student President NoelBourasaw and includes as advisors the Activities Commissioner and the Union Facilities Chairman.Phyllis Edwards, Activities Commissioner, also recruits speakers durmg the regular year. During thesummer, she organizes dances, features mov. ies, arranges exhibits, and brings speaker to campus.Mike Romey, Union Facilities Director, is responsible for the Grotto, the Current Affairs Briefing Center,Lakewood and other agencies offering recreational and entertainment for students, Bob partlow,administrative assistant to the student president, does many of the vicepresident's usual dutiesduring the summer. He is responsible Bourasaw summer BOC head; ,programs activities, welfare -service calls made -parts and accessories for dune buggies Dr. Thomas Osborn. associateprofessor of music. will be opera stage director and symphony orchestra assistant conductor for the school of music, University of Southern California. in Los Angeles. His appointment follows theannouncement that Dr. WaIter Ducloux will become opera and symphony orchestra director at theUniversity of Texas in Austin. Osborn has been at USC while on leave of absence from Western. Heplans to return after the 1968-1969 academic year to develop a full opera program at Western. Thissummer Dr. Osborn will direct western's production of the three-act comic opera "Albert Herring," byBenjamin Britten. Auditions are bei~held and two performances Will be given at the end of the six weeksession, on July 26 and 27, Tuesday, June 25/ 1968 USC takes Osborn in fall 'he finesl in Chinese and A.erican Food 734-6262 • Open 11 a.m. daily, 2 p.m. Sunday • Enchant your date and yourfriends and relatives by bringing them here during the graduation festivities. • Beverages in the TikiRoom • Orders to go TED'S GARAGE 733-9501 '1"7":-:- "l \ . 221 1 206 W. Holly St. Classifita 6Western Front get the bugs out of your Beetle -CfassifiedsrllnforIS cents a line;first'l time; 20 cents aline consecutive reo) peat. "Found" and "free" ads runi without charge, up to three lines once.·rlIeadline for ads is 4 p.m. ThursdaY'j Submit to Western Front office in the VU basement. Payment duein adnnce:j We resene the right to refuse ads which may be illegal or inhdtaste'j Ignorance is Only aMatter of Degree , •• and is relative to time. So is affluence. For instance, it may be time for a ring,but too soon for cash. This is an anachronistic dilemma Weisfield's can do something about. We have.credit plans for students of promise. See our big selection of bridal sets 1I \\\'\w\0 I" ·..£. .lJ' I,WetsJtettiS ~~ JEWELERS I I 1327 Cornwall Ave. O~n Till 9 Fri. Nites Ad salesmen and reporters for"the Western Front" needed. 10 per cent and 15 per cent commission on ads. Contact the "Front"office, VU basement. 40 Services Day care for toddlers, college vicinity, licensed home. Call Mrs.Mayer, 733-61 So. '64 250 CC Yamaha. Yn-3,$200 1012% Jersey. Eves. 733-5"002. '65 Mustang, 6, 4-speed, red. $1,300. See Front editor. VU.s. -33 HelpWute', ---------- Western Front - 1968 June 25 - Page 4 ---------- Tuesday, June 25, 1968 Western Front 5 319 LAKEWAY 734-5140 8" 10" 11"1 .95 1.47 1.891 1.051.57 1.19 1.')'; 1.57 1.191 1.\lS 1.57 1.191 1.05 1.57 1.19\ 1.15 1.77 1.49 1.15 1.97 1.69 1 1.35 1.071.891 President Charles J. Flora We deli"er to Four lIome and fhe dormsF.EE. 734-5140 ~. Cheese ... Pepperoni. Mushroom. Sausage .....•. Olive . Combination of 1 Combination of 3 . . Pizza Delight. . . . . MON. - THURS. 4.11 P.M. FRIDAY 4 P.M.-MIDNIGHT SAT. NOON·MIDNIGHT SUNDAY HOLIDAYS as a problem at Western after the arrest in February of six men students who later pleadedgui Ity to smoking marihuana in a room in Nash Hall. Some of these conflicts, problems and eventsspring from old ones. But most represent a radically new role Western is fUlfilling in a Washington State beset by a burgeoning population and an increasing awareness of its national importance. Western is indeed different this year. PIZZA Hundreds of Westernites marched through downtown Bellinghamlast month to show they want peace. BUCKETS 12-pc. . . • • • . . 3.19 2.4-pc.. . ....• 6.34 16-pc. . . . • . . • 4.24 36-pc. . . . . . . . 9.54 20-pc....••.. 5.20 CHICKEN, SHRIMP, FISH S1 55DELIGHT DINNERS. • • • . . . • . • CHICKEN, SHRIMP, FISH 1 10 DELIGHT SNACKS •.• • . . . . . . ... • RIB DELIGHT DINNER•.•.••.•......... 2.25 Military recruiters atWestern won attention from an active student antiwar group this spring. greater participation by blackstudents in admissions, curriculum and administration policy making. Although President Floradenied the BSU's charge that West. ern is a "racist" institution, he was sympathetic to the de.mands. The BSU based its charge on the feeling that "the average white student leaves this collegewith the absurd notion that he is superior." Among the demands were more courses in black culture,hiring of more nonwhite faculty members and admission of more nonwhite students. The BSU willremain active this summer under the leadership of Carl Trotter. AS President Noel Bourasaw hasactively endorsed the group's goals, and the administration is pursuing programs along lines soughtby the BSU, in many instances going beyond what the group wanted. The administration has beenbusy in other areas, too. On April 9 the planning office revealed plans calling for construction of eight academic buildings by 1985 at a cost of $30 million to accommodate an enrollment expected to leap to 15)000 by that date. . In addition~ plans are m the works for five "cluster" colleges besides the now-developing Fairhaven to provide the personalized atmosphere of a smaller school on a campus withthe advantages of a large institution. On a smaller scale but of obvious importance to the students,the college is assisting the Associated students in the $310,000 development of the Lakewoodrecreational facility at Lake Whatcom. Drugs, focus of attention not too long ago, appeared brieflyENNEN'S THRIFTWAY crHiters that culminated in a three-night sit-in in the Placement Office inEdens Hall. Nine students spent at least one night in the office and six spent all three, fasting as "asymbol of our resistence to the military." All 24 were acquitted of violating college regulations inemotion-charged public hearings attended by hundreds of students. The depth of the peace sentimentat Western was shown on May 14 when figures from the nationwide Choice '68 collegiate poll revealed73 per cent of the 1,455 students who voted here oppose the war. In the same poll, 40 per cent favoredEugene McCarthy for President. A peace vigil which has been held in front ofthe Federal Buildingbetween 3:30 and 4:30 p.m. every Friday for 18 months now will continue through this summer and "until the war ends. " Noel Bourasaw won the As lt;sociated Students presidency in the spring election.Noel wears a beard, frequents .anti-war events and has been instrumental in organizing a "freeuniversity" to begin at Western next fall, with classes on subjects ranging from child-rearing toLatin American revolutions. Noel's election climaxed a spring of student government rebellion whichsaw student politicians seekinr; more autonomy from the admmistration and on one occasiondemanding the res. ignation of the Dean of Students. Later in the spring, the AS passed a record bUdget of more than $135,000 for its activities next year. As if the administration did not have enoughtrOUbles, the Black Students Union on May 15 presented a series of demands to President Flora forHIGH AND HOLLY "WHERE EVERY CUSTOMER IS IMPORTANT" Get a big basket-you know wealways get carried away at Ennens. It looks like a fistfight, but all games for Western's popular rugbyteam look like this. 1967-68: Year of change-at Western BELLINGHAM BUSINESS MACHINES 1410Commercial 734-3630 (Next to Bon Marche) Typewriter and Adding Machine Sales, Service andRentals We carryall makes of portables and used machines. Peace group meets tonight Summeranti-war and anti. draft activities will be organized at 7 p.m. tonight in vu 209. Sponsors are Studentsfor Peace in Vietnam. An American Friends Service Committee representative, Ian Trivett, will informinterested persons of their rights regarding the draft, but will not recruit draft resisters! at 203 WestHolly st., Office \:I. Last year brought change to Western. Anew college president, militant antiwaractivity, the rise of the Black Students Union, and IIDveiling of ambitious plans for college expansion allmade clear • Western is rapidly entering a new era of its history. Dr. Charles J. Flora was namedeighth president of the college on March 25 by the Board of Trustees. Flora, woo succeeded Dr. Har-• vey C. Bunke and had acted as interim president since last summer, inherited an institution heexpects to see become a university of 15,000 students within two decades. He has won popularity withmany facuIty members and students for his dedication, competence and -progressivism. studentdiscontent over the Vietnam war came to the fore this spring. On May 27, 66West· ern men publiclystated they will refuse induction into the armed forces. Some returned their selective service cards totheir local boards; all said they expect to go to jail; none said he would ,nee to Canada. On April 23,more than 350 students marched from the Viking Union to the Federal Building downtown, where a30minute silent vigIl for peace was held. Although the demonstrators met with mild hostility fromsome city residents, there were no incidents. Such was not the case during the week of April 7, When24 students were called before the college disciplinary committee as a result of disruptivedemonstrations against military re- ---------- Western Front - 1968 June 25 - Page 5 ---------- .. . or help someone ... ,:tl\e1western front Letters to the editor should be type,rM· ten on a IO-spaceline, less than 250 words, not poetry and not libelous. The, -Blust lie signed with the student's nile, class and major, although this infor••• tion maJ lie withheld upon request. FacultJ members wiD beidentified ,Mh their rank and department. Dea41i1e for letters is 5 p.m. ThursdaJ. Letters not meetingthese standards .ay he rejected or cut. PubHshing of letters is subject to space limitations. still remains - its successful MAINTENANCE against a for. midable internal attempt to over· throw it. It is now forthem to demonstrate to the world that those who can fairly carry an election can also suppress arebellion; that ballots are the rightful and peaceful successors to bullets; and that when ballots have fairly and constitutionally decided, there can be no successful appeal back to bullets; that there can be nosuccessful appeal except to ballots them. selves, at succeeding elections. " Since Lincoln utteredthooe words, four Presidents have died of wounds inflicted by bul. lets shot from guns. After the death of Senator Kennedy, surely the great majority in Congress must be aroused and determined that theshooting of men in high public office must not be allowed. to go on, no matter how power. ful and vocalmay be the lobby of the National Rifle Association. Arthur C. Hicks Professor of English Art works ondispla, Western art faculty memoors wi II display new works in an exhi· bition in the Art Buildinggallery, The exhibition will open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m. Monday through Friday un. til July 12, Grad tests scheduled The Graduate Record Examination will be given July 20 andthe MillerAnalogies Test on July 111 both at 4 p.m. in LA. Apply a Graduate Office, M129. Wind quintet comingThe Westwood Wind Quintet. one of the leading wind groups . in the country, will present a concert at8:30 p.m. Monday in the Music Auditorium. The Quintet has given perfor. mances at major colleges andun· iversities throughout the United States as well as on the music series of prominent concert as.sociations. In addition to its recordings and formal concert work, the Quintet also has been on radio and television many times. Ubrary lecture tonight An audiovisual orientation lee· ture on the use of WilsonLi· brary will be given at 7:30 tonight in IA. Ballots, not bullets Editor: I am addressing this plea toSenators Jackson and Magnuson and Congressman Meeds for a strict gun control law in the form of anopen letter to The Western Front. Before me as I write is a cartoon by Conrad featuring a pair of scales.On one of the balances is a single bullet, which is represented as outweighing and tipping up theopposite balance holding" one and one-half million primary votes for Kennedy." On June 5 a gun inthe hand of one man was used to interfere with the American democratic process, and I for one amoverwhelmed with a feeling of outrage that one of the five leading contenders for the Presidency is nolonger a live option for the millions of voters that will go to the polls on Nov. 4. The principle at stake here is simply basic to our democratic way of life. No one has stated it more graphically and forcefullythan Abraham Lincoln in his Message to Congress on Independence Day in the fateful year 1861: "Ourpopular government has often been called an experiment. Two points in it our people have already settled - the successful ESTABLISHING and the successful ADMINSTERING of it. One "What acoincidence-I had him for that course too!" Swim schedule set Recreational swimming willbe held from 4to 5 p.m. weekdays in Carver Gym. Coeducational students swimming will take place on Mondays,Wednesdays and Fridays; faCUlty, staff and family swimming will be on Tuesdays and Thursdays.Letter to the Editor Former Westernite Tom Edd Mack, 21, is working for VISTA in Oakland, Calif. GI bill rep here A Veterans Administration representative will be in M-205 at 10 a.m. and 1 p.m. tomorrow toassist students attending Western under the G.I. bill. Mack in Vista Compus news briefs Reading edconference Specialists in reading education from throughout the nation will meet at Western Aug.1216 in a conference for elementary, junior high and high school teachers who wish to learn moreabout improving reading skill~ in subject-matter areas. Keynote speaker will be Dr. William D. Sheldon,director of the Reading and Language Arts Center at Syracuse University. Enrollment is limited to 150 persons. Reservations should be made with Dr. Wayne D. Lee, Department of Education. I' 75 makeStraight A in spring quarter High grade honors for spring quarter were received by 445 stUdents,including 75 who got 4.0 according to Mrs. Shirley Flake of the registrar's office. only seven freshmenmade the 3.5 or better list, compared to 98 sophomores, 104 juniors and 236 seniors. Names of the 75students will be announced later. .. . but be involved ed to help Burns bring his house up to code. Sincethen, they have installed underground water pipes, indoor plumbing, a gas heater and stove, linoleumflooring, plasterboard walls and have painted the entire exterior. Burns will stay. This is not a projectfor everyone. Nor can anyone give unlimited time and effort to it. And your contribution is notguaranteed to make a serious dent in the poverty problem. But if you want to carry your educationbeyond the textbook, spend a few hours helping to fix somebody's house and consider it a seminar inhow to become the human being you might feel you cannot be in our highly impersonal society. You can contact project coordinator Al Doan through Noel Bourasaw in the Associated StUdents president'soffice in VU 209. But even when we're wrong, nobody seems to care much. So what, really, is our roleat Western? Well, for one thing, we feel part of our job is to help, in our small way, to make Westernthe kind of experience we feel it should be. ~oo many people start college nowadays who can't seebeyond the salary they hope to get. And a large number somehow manages to graduate without evergetting what education is all about. The story on the opposite page asserts that Western is changing,but does not say why-that is the function of this column. Western is changing because the world ischanging. Greater technical capability, while it might be nice, is not the crying need of humanity in thiscentury. Rather, the need is for greater understanding between people. This understanding can comeabout only through a determined effort to communicate. Cultural assimilation does not just happen; itmust be made to happen. As, for example, the Black Students Union is well aware. It is made to happen by people getting together. We want people to participate in the activities the college offers. Our reasonis purely selfish. If you gain the kind of experience you can find at Western and which we ourselves seek, then we here in the VU will be substantially closer to living in the kind of world in which we want to live. -Don B. Wittenberger expostulate on something like, there is more to education than textbooks, or pointout the hard work put into these affairs by people such as open house coordinator Marcia Limbaugh; butthe editor thinks this girl's dancing style (and that of many others on campus) is a more appealingselling point. There will be more dances, and the editor suspects he will attend. So, too, he hopes, willDean Mac. • For those whose joints are a shade too Establishment for this kind of activism: there areother happenings such as art exhibitions, picnics, hikes, films, clubs, concerts, sports, plays, peacevigils. The Front will try to keep you informed of them all. (See page 7.) Let yourself go. Groove with thecampus activists. Stray a little. Tuesday, June 25,1968 oHicial weekly newspaper of WesternWashington State College second class postage paid at Bellingham, Wash. 98225 phone,734-8800editorial, ext. 2277 advertising, ext. 2276 Don B. Wittenberger Gerson Miller, adviser Editor-in-Chief .'Mark HoHmann, copy editor Jim Fisher, photography editor Diana Timm, news editor Dan Meins,business manager and cartoonist Pat Hughes, ad manager and sports editor Angela Martinez,contributor Deadlines: Noon Thursday-news copy, letters to the editor, display ad reservation, classifiedads, display ad copy. Price per copy, 10 cents. Subscription, $3.50 a year, $1.50 a quarter. Member ---------- Western Front - 1968 June 25 - Page 6 ---------- Tuesday, June 25, 1968 Western Front 3 College averts housing crisis, but sees permanent shortagedent housing outside the imme· diate campus area is producing "substantial" results, Brock said. Butsuch solutions are strictly temporary. The long-term answer seems to lie in new construction,both college andprivate. But the prospects for rapid growth seem dim. Dorms cannot be builtWithout raising fees, since all construction is paid for out of income from existing facilities. Thepresent rate of fee increase a minimum of $25 per year -is considered by the administration to beclose to the maximum many students can bear. Privately, interest rates Which President Johnson hassaid may reach 10 per cent seem certain to dampen investors' enthusiasm for new construction oflow-cost housing. Even without these problems, new. construction tends simply to mcrease enrollmentswith. out easing housing pressure, Brock said. Rapid growth in housing availability could in. creaseenrollments beyond What teachers and classrooms could handle, The temporary measures, plus theexpected construction of a Fairhaven facility for 600, should at least prevent a serious crisis during the next two years, Brock says. But over the years the college cannot escape gearffi.g growth in housing to growth In educational facilities. Since the college maintains a policy of accepting all applicantsqualified for admission possible, the pressure on housing is likely to be permanent. To the stUdent,this translates directly into a search for livable quarters at reasonable prices that often provesfrustrating. (France, 1964) WWSC Art Film Series presents LECTURE HALL 4 Thursday, June 27,7 9p.m. Admission: Adults $1; students 65c "An unusually delightful French version of the Americanmusical style." THE UMBRELLAS OF CHERBOURG at 6,500 to 6 j 700, compared to about 6,lDO astyear. The 2 300 dorm spaces have already been assigned and the May waiting list approached1,000, housing director Gerald Brock said. The college is proceeding with plans to install 42 to 50mobile homes on campus to house as many as 200 girls, despite opposition from some city resi.dents. Also, a city Chamber of Commerce effort to find more stu-of an estimated 12,000 students,While a doctor's degree program will constitute 2.5 per cent or 300 students. Cost estimates for theprograms are based on the present staff-to-student ratio of one to seven at the master's degreelevel and one to three at the doctoral level. "The most intensive impact upon the college, which haspermeated into almost every department, has been the bringing into being of the graduate degreeprogram," Ross said. "Within five years almost every major has been covered by a master's degreeprogram," he added. Now under consideration by the Graduate Council are Master of Arts Degreeprograms in Music and in Sociology. The most recently developed program under the MasterofEducation Degree is in Personnel Administration. Graduates of this program will find employmentin colleges and universities in student personnel services. The M. Ed, program also offers degrees inteaching specializations, school service personnel, psychological services, and administration. ByDon B. Wittenberger Editor-in-chef A crisis in housing for fall quarter is being averted by stopgapmeasures, but prospects are the long-term housing situation will remain tight. This means students face space shortages for the foreseeable future. Rents, already high, are expected to soar due topressures of supply versus demand. Fall enrollment is projected Graduate School to add doctoralprogram by '71 Within the last five years Western's Graduate School has developed strong Master ofArts and Master of Science degree programs and will embark upon a doctor's degree program by 1971. Figures released from the office of the Dean of Graduate . School indicate, however, that the largestnumber of graduate degrees are conferred in the field of education. In 1949, Western graduated fivepersons with a Master of Education degree. Last year 95 graduated with a M. Ed. degree. J. AlanRoss dean of Graduate School, said that if the 1969 s tat e legislature approves, "Two or three yearslater Western will have developed a doctoral program. "We are looking forward to 7%-8 millionpeople in the state by then. It does not seem reasonable that there be only one doctoral institution."Washington would be like a town with only one high school," Ross said. Doctoral work will be inprograms where library resources are relatively strong at present and Where no large outlays forlaboratory or other facilities will be required. The Graduate Council said that it does not want to establish a set of weak doctoral programs in competition with strong and long established programs ofthe sametype. For that reason, the first doctoral programs wIll likely be in areas such as MathematicsEducation or Reading Specialist. Within a 20-year period it is estimated that the master~s degreeprogram will constitute 10 per cent of a total enrollment GIGANTIC RECORD SALE NEA announce lt;lthis week that it will pressure Congress to aI)o prove a bold $6 billion "urgent needs" education program.At least half of the $6 billion, according to NEA officials, would be tagged for increasingteachersalaries and attracting additional qualified persons into teaching. In addition to providing higlloo erpay for teachers, the NEA program is "aimed at curbing a national teacher revolt and providing acomprehensive education program to stem the tide of summer riots." ~SA group wants youth lor"poor" movement WASillNGTON (CPS) - A group of student leaders repre-, enting a variety of campusorganizations and causes has isood a call for "a new youth committment" to meeting the demands Ithe nation's poor, beginning with "massive" participation in the nobilization for the Poor People'scampaign. The group, coordinated by the National Students Association, isted several reasons which itsaid make it "clear to us that efforts oachieve change in this country have reached a critical stage." Theycited "widespread indifference to the proposals of the 'resident's riot commission report; Congressionalintrasigence to neeting the needs of the poor; cries for law and order without :orresponding demands forjustice and equality." The statement urged that "we must make it clear that politilians at every level ofgovernment who oppose new programs for the IOOr will feel the full brunt of student power against themthis sumner and next fall as they seek election." WASillNGfON (CPS) - Offiials of the NationalEducation lssociation are concerned belause many of today's top college students are not enteringbe teaching profession. And they think it is time for ilie federal government to step In and start doingsomething ,bout it. The government's role, lCcording to NEA's 1968legislauve program, is to providethe l'unds to make it possible for local school systems to offer lltractive salaries to top stulents. 'Wewould want to get every test studentontoday'scampuses io come into teaching, and the my way we cando it is to proride adequate salaries," according to NEA president Braulio .\\onso, principal of KingHigh ~chool in Tampa, Fla, e ., NEA proposes federal aid .for promising teachers WE'RE NOTEXPENSIVE ... We Just Look That Way. SAVE UP TO $3-$4 FROM LIST PRICE! STUDENT CO-OPBOOK NEWS HOWARD'S CHAR BROILER 1408 Cornwall daisies for your room from JUSTARRIVED Popular - Jazz - Classical HUNDREDS OF ARTISTS ON MANY MAJOR LABELS-IAIIIS IPIPIS. THE DlllLS. SOllY I CHER, STAll GElZ, DUll MARTIII STUDENT'S CO-OP "NO SHOP MORECONVENIENT" The Report of the National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders is the Book of theQuarter. We have many copies. Other related titles that are availalbe include: Home by Jones, OurChildren are Dying by Hentoff, Poverty by Hunter, Negro in America by Rose, The Airtight Cage byLyford, Crisis in Black and White by Silberman, The Negro and the City by Time-Life Books and WhereDo We Go From Here? by King. Asian Drama by Myrdahl is in. New titles in science include: TrackingDown Particles by Hill, Problems in Spectroscopy by Trost and Current Algebras by Adler and Dashen. ---------- Western Front - 1968 June 25 - Page 7 ---------- Bacle. the paper -stoff "Front" lli you want to sway the PIblic? slant the news? earn some beermoney? or maybe even pick up a credit? Tuesday, June 25, 1968 Visit the Western Front office in the basement of the VU and somebody can easily find something for you to do that will might help improvethe school paper. Credit can be earned work~ ng on th.e stafft reporting, writ109 storIes anaheadlines, with grades all the way from F to A. If yoil can sell a good bill of goods, you can make acommission selling advertising. It will be worth your time just listening to the editor straining hislungs to obtainthe vicious growl he uses to make you write more. Academic Dean R. D. Brown will runWestern this summer during President Charles Flora's absence. 59 faculty visit campus for summerGuest faculty members for the summer session come from var. ied places, ranging from 16 states in the U.S. to Canada, Australia and India. There are 59 visiting faculty, 24 of whom are in educatioo, three inmusic, four in physical ed~cation, five in geography, two in English, ten in history, ooe in physics, two in library sci. ence, one in mathematics, two in home economics, two in sociology • anthropology,one in technology and one emeritus. Senate sanctions barring recruiters WASIDNGTON (CPS) - TheU.S. Senate voted to deny National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) grants to anycollege or university barring armed services recruiters from camPIs. Most observers think the mea.sure will face little opposition in the House, which early last month overWhelmingly approvedamendments designed to deny federal financial assistance to students who participate in campusdisturbances or riots. Sen. Carl T. Curtis (R-Neb.) Who introduced the amendment ,to a NASAappropriations bil~ said it applies only to cases Where college officials bar recruiters, and not tocolleges Where students resist recuiting. 1200 Commercial PARTS FOR IMPORTED CARS FOREIIiN AUTO PARTS Western has received $283 193 for student financial assistance for this summerand next year from the Federal Government. According to William Hatch financial aids director,$167,140 will apply to the educational opportunity grant program. The remaining $116,053 will gotoward the collegework.studyprogram during summer quarter. Students assist Gregory in jailStudents at Western have collected $50 for Dick Gregory, independent candidate for President, fordistilled water and legal aid. Gregory is serving a 9O-day jail sentence for fishing with Indians in theNisqually River. He is fasting for this time. Gov. Daniel J. Evans denied Gregory a pardon despite a Peti. tion for his release. Atable will be set up at West. ern offering books, buttons and literature, and amotorcade in his support is being formed. Ed opportunity, work study supported by government About400 students can get grants while 180 can qualify for the work-study program, Hatch said. Collegegrants are allocated in two ways, he said. The first is the initial-year grant. These go to studentsreceiving grants for the firsttime. I The second is the renewal grant. "Once we start with astUdent, iffunds are available, we want to continue helping him if there is a real need," Hatch said, Westernoriginally asked for $200,000 for the grant pr~ram. About $93{400 was received for the initia grantprogram and $73,200 for the re~newal grants. Hatch said a request for $33,. 400 for scholarships wasturned down by the government. SPRING FASHION Many ofour famous makes nationally advertisedbrands included at 300/0-400/0-500/0 savings Sails ••• 4967 -7467 - 9967 Jeans ••• 367Casaal Slacks ••• 467 Slacks ••• 1567 Shirls ••• 367 Mock Tarlles •••4~7 Knils ••• 467 Sporls Coals ••• 4967 - 2967 Swealers ••• 1567 - 767 BinJonOptometrists COMPLETE OPTOMETRIC SERVICE CONTACT LENSES - FASHION FRAMES Dr. leroy H. Freeman and Associates o~s 167 Ends SShwirtesat167 733-9300 1328 Cornwall Cornwall atMagnolia shop 'til 9:00 Fridays • SAVE TODAY • FREE DELIVERY • 734-4902 The-StudentsChoice r' . HEULD PHARIACY Herc:Jld Building men ben's shop ---------- Western Front - 1968 June 25 - Page 8 ---------- • Western Front Tuesday, June 25, 1968 B~\les T0[F' LAKEWOOD Lakewood's dock for Sunning,Sailing and Swimming. AUr~~o~byJim Fisher. Tiny Tony, Seattle rock performer enjoying a pleasantpaddle on Lake Whatcom. . 3 c1uded are picnic spots and a beach for swimming and sunbathing. TheUnion Facilities director for the summer also plans to have sport equipment including baseball andvolleyball ready for your enjoyment. Watch the bulletin for the coming events and get together with yourfamily and friends to enjoy the facilities and fun available this summer at lakewood. By Jim Fisher, Photo Editor Lakewood-a place for fun Darrell Phare of Western found a friend while wading in the water ...Barbeque, music and dancing is the happening at Lakewood. lakewood resort on lake Whatcom isavailable to all Western students. On week days, keys may be checked out at the VU desk for two daysat· a time, for the boathouse and cabin on the property. No keys are necessary on weekends whenthe two persons employed by the AS are there and can check out canoes. Sailboats at lakewood areYacht Club property, which students use through the club. Other facilities in-
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- 1970_0414 ---------- Western Front - 1970 April 14 - Page 1 ---------- the western front Vol. LXII no. 28 Western Washington State College Bellingham, Washington 98225Tuesday, Apri 114, 1970 10c Moratorium Peace march set John Stoipe managing editor A large number ot students here is expected to ski
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1970_0414 ---------- Western Front - 1970 April 14 - Page 1 ---------- the western front Vol. LXII no. 28 Western Washington State College Bellingham, Washington 98225Tuesday, Apri 114, 1970 10c Morat
Show more1970_0414 ---------- Western Front - 1970 April 14 - Page 1 ---------- the western front Vol. LXII no. 28 Western Washington State College Bellingham, Washington 98225Tuesday, Apri 114, 1970 10c Moratorium Peace march set John Stoipe managing editor A large number ot students here is expected to skip classes tomorrow to participate in the t h i r d major Moratoriumdemonstration, against the Vietnam war. The mass protest will begin at 10:30 a.m. with a peace marchfrom the campus to the Federal Building downtown via two routes—only one has been approved by cityofficials. The parade is legally permitted to march down Indian Street to Magnolia Street, then turn leftdown to the Federal Building. The local Moratorium Committee had requested the use of Holly Street,but it was turned down by the Board of Public Works. Bernie Weiner, a Moratorium spokesman, saidSunday that persons wishing to march down Holly Street would be defended by the American CivilLiberties Union if they are arrested by police. "Fifteen groups have been permitted to use Holly Street for parades over the past two years," Weiner said. "By marching down Holly Street we Trustees to hearpub proposal Jackie Lawson Western Front staff The faculty-student pub proposal will be presented tothe Board of Trustees Thursday, according to Greg Baker, AS president. A committee appointed by Ba k e r was given the responsibility of preparing a comprehensive proposal for a n o n - p r o f i t on-campus restaurant-tavern:-" The committee, under the direction of Al Doan, consists of AS cabinetmembers Steve Cooper, John Engstrom and John Stoipe, and advisors Cliff Holt and Dean of StudentsC.W. McDonald. Space allocation, operational p r o c e d u r e s , method of financing, incomeanalysis, facility design and proper licenses required were some of the main issues which were critically analyzed and resolved by the committee. The pub will provide an adequate solution for two pressingissues on campus: the need for additional dining facilities in the Viking Union, and the desire* of thecollege community to have a tavern facility on the campus. Decor and design will be under thearchitectural services of Ralph D. Anderson and Partners, the architects who designed the recentlycompleted . Viking Union addition. The general decor of the room will follow a rugged, masculinepattern. Tentative plans call for wooden tables, booths and large club emblems on the walls. A smalldance floor accommodating 30 to 50, which could be expanded by removing tables, is also desired. Inaddition, plans call for a three-foot raised stage which would accommodate a five- to seven-piece band.A custom-designed bar with brass rail will allow people to stand at the bar to drink. Committee reportson campus violence Teachers and students who are' found responsible for campus violence should befired or expelled if necessary, two state legislative committees suggested last week. The jointCommittee on Higher Education and the Legislative Budget Committee w i l l make f o r m alrecommendations to the next state legislature session. The interim committees' report was releasedafter an all-day meeting at Richland and was made public by State Sen. Gordon Sandison (D-PortAngeles). He claimed that legislators on the two powerful committees feel that even teachers withtenure who don't "lead lives of decency and refrain from violence" should be fired summarily. The reportalso suggested to the state's colleges and universities that students who are involved in campus riots -should be expelled, if necessary, to maintain peaceful campuses. The committees also declared thatschools should not hire "advocates of violence or those who have encouraged unlawful d i s r u p t i o n s at other institutions." The committees' report was partially based on hearings conducted in SeattleMarch 26 where the legislators discusses recent disruptions by radical factions at the University ofWashington. At that meeting, some of the legislators charged that Michael Lerner, an acting assistantphilosophy professor at the UW, was a known activist in California prior to coming to Seattle. Lerner is a leader of the radical Seattle Liberation Front. would force Bellingham's parade ordinance into thecourts." He s t r e s s e d that tomorrow's march would emphasize a "peaceful and non-violent nature."He added: "Local ACLU officials are urging those considering to use Holly Street to conduct themselves in a proper manner so that any arrests that do occur come solely as a result of the parade ordinance,not obscenity, resisting arrest or violence." The march will culminate with a rally outside the FederalBuilding at the corner of Cornwall Avenue and Magnolia Street. The featured speaker will be Carl Maxey,a Spokane attorney who is seeking to unseat Henry Jackson from the Senate. Maxey's appearancehere will kick off his campaign in the Bellingham area. The day's demonstration here will coincide withIncome Tax Day protests across the nation; Seattle's protest will include David Dellinger of the ChicagoSeven as featured speaker. The Moratorium Committee is urging an end to "business as usual"tomorrow along with a class boycott to enable faculty, staff and students to participate in thedemonstration. Photo by Curt Rowell Moratorium Committee workers prepare posters for tomorrow'speace march. Schedule of tomorrow's activities are: —9:30 a .m.: film, People's War, VU lounge.—10:30 a.m.: Gathering for March, decision on route. —11 a.m.: Begin peace march. —noon: Rally at Federal Building; Carl Maxey talk. Flora faces faculty The Faculty Council will meet with PresidentCharles Flora again tomorrow afternoon to discuss its declaration that it is "no longer an effectiveelement of the college governance." Flora met with the council last Thursday to answer its executivecommittee statement which charges that the college • a d m i n i s t r a t i o n has not sufficientlyincluded the council in the decision-making process of the college. The president cited the general over-all need for a new form of college government and said that it was not possible for the administration tochannel everything through the council. After lengthy debate and a closed session, the council wasrecessed . until tomorrow. Chairman Howard Mitchell said that no solutions to the situation have beenadopted, although several have been proposed. In supporting documents, the council's declarationexplained that the administration had not formally consulted the faculty in previous policy matters. Thereport specifically mentioned recent decisions involving enrollment limitations and parking policies.. - AS President Greg Baker, who attended Thursday's meeting along with several AS cabinet members, toldthe council that the Associated Students was in "sympathy" with the council's declaration. He addedthat the students have "similar gripes." The executive committee's four charges include: 1. PresidentFlora has not attended council meetings, except at its urgent request. 2. The president has broughtonly one item to the council for discussion since the beginning of Fall quarter. 3. On a number of issuesof concern to the faculty, policy has not been generated by or referred to the council, but rather it hasbeen generated by the administration unilaterally, or by committees including both administration andfaculty members. 4. The administration, has ignored substantive objections made by the council to itspolicies. Negotiation on these issues has been consistently unfruitful. Dr. Mitchell told the WesternFront yesterday that he hopes that an understanding can be developed for working out an operationalformula for policy-making on campus. AS convention runs May 5-7 The Spring AS convention signalingthe beginning of the campaign for AS offices will run Tuesday, May 5 through Thursday, May 7.Elections Board Chairman John Engstrom said that he believes the two main issues of the convention,other than the nomination of candidates for office, will be academic reform and how the AS governmentcan more effectively represent the student body. Engstrom added that for the first time the faculty andstaff at Western will be represented along with the students. There will be 22 faculty delegates ,attending. Each delegate will represent 20 students. Delegations will represent students from both onand off campus. Each dorm delegation will be able to introduce a maximum of two bills. The delegationrepresenting the students living off-campus will have a limit of 15 The convention will begin with thekeynote address, being delivered by Noel Bourasaw, last year's AS president. The first day's businesswill be devoted mainly to voting on the rules of the convention and the nomination of candidates foroffices. Delegates will meet in caucuses the following day to discuss the issues and candidates.Nominees for AS offices will be elected on the last day of the convention. Also, any legislation that hasbeen introduced by that time will be considered. All candidates selected at the convention will be eligible to ru in a college-wide election to be held later. ---------- Western Front - 1970 April 14 - Page 2 ---------- Western Front Tuesday, April 14, 1970 BILL 95 Whereas the current editor of the Western Front was notselected by students, and Whereas it is mandatory that students make all decisions concerning policyand operations of the Western Front, including selection of the editor: Be it resolved that AS legislature1. declare that AS legislature does not recognize the position of editor of Western Front as currently being validly filled. 2. declare the position of editor of the Western Front as vacant and immediately begintaking applications for that position. 3. at its next regular meeting, select an interim editor to serve untilpermanent procedures guaranteeing student responsibility for the Western Front are established byAssociated Students. AS Cabinet Greg Baker AS president Western Front Photo by Todd WesternFront photo by Todd Bob Burnett editor-in-chief Western Front AS claims Front editor Invalid' AdeleSaltztnan assistant to the editor The Associated Students legislature passed Bill 95 (above) with a voteof seven for, none against and two abstentions, last Tuesday. As the bill states, the legislature does not approve of the methods used in the selection of the current editor of the Western Front, Bob Burnett.Burnett was appointed by the Committee on Student Publications at the end of last quarter to serveduring Spring quarter. Six students applied for the position of editor at that time. The publicationscommittee consists of five faculty-staff members appointed by college President Charles J. Flora andthree student members were appointed by the AS president and approved by the Legislature. In theNavigator, the student activities handbook, the Western Front is categorized under college-sponsoredorganizations a n d s u b - l i s t e d under organizations created by the Associated Students.According to Gail Denton, speaker of the legislature, the Navigator listing for the Western Front is one ofthe reasons behind the student government argument that students should have the right to choose their own editor. "If the Front is indeed a student newspaper, then we have a right, and the right to exercisethe right of choosing, the editor of the newspaper," Miss Denton said in an interview last week."Theoretically any time, and, in reality, at this time, none of the students (on the publications committee) voted for the present editor," according to Miss Denton. (The voting was done by secret ballot.) Whenasked about the reasoning of passing Bill 95 after the quarter had started and after the Front staff hadalready been organized, Miss Denton stated that "when things come to a head, people seem to act."This (the selection of the editor) was one in a series of incidents which tended to bring problemsbetween the Associated Students and the administration-faculty to.a head. But that does not detractfrom the seriousness of the problem," Miss Denton explained. Student government felt that the primaryway to eliminate this problem was through the power we supposedly have over the Western FrontJfAissDenton said. AS government currently subsidizes the Western Front by financing four pages each week. One sanction the Associated Students has over the Front would be to .withdraw this subsidy. Asstated in Bill 95, the AS l e g i s l a t u r e is accepting applications for the position of interim editor ofthe Western Front, and will appoint the interim editor at their regular meeting at 4 p.m. today in VU 241. "I have received my charge from the legislature and if all attempts to solve the problem fail, when itcomes time to appoint the interim editor I will fulfill my duties as speaker of the legislature," Miss Denton said. " I believe that the publications committee should consist of at least an equal number of students and faculty-staff members, if not a majority of students," Dean of Students C. W. McDonald said in an-interview last week. "I question the method of selection used now, but if the students were dissatisfied, it should have been an issue before the editorial appointment," the dean said. When interviewed,President Flora said that he believes "the policy (of the publication committee) is not inscribed in stone; no policy is." "We can look at the policy, revise it and make it effective for the appointment of the nexteditor." Flora does not believe that the steps being used now are an acceptable solution. The bill ispunitive, it's retroactive—I think we should avoid it, he said. "I regard the Western Front. as the collegenewspaper—not a faculty, staff, administration or student newspaper, but a college newspaper. And, Iaccept Bob Burnett as the editor of the college newspaper because of the procedures by which he wasappointed." For an example, Flora pointed out that the Western Front's masthead on page four clearlystates: The Western Front, the official weekly newspaper of Western Washington State College.Cabinet states intentions The present conflict concerning the Publications Board and all studentpublications is neither new nor simple.-At stake is one of our basic guarantees, freedom of the press.Problems exist around a whole series of inconsistencies involving student publications. A description ofsome of these discrepancies follows. While the college maintains that the Western Front is a collegenewspaper for students, faculty and staff, students support the paper through their $13 activities fee andstudent solicited advertising. The faculty and staff contribute nothing. At the same time the collegefunds separately a faculty staff newspaper called FAST indicating that in reality and in budget theWestern Front is a student publication. Student publications are funded, produced and read almostexclusively by students, yet authority per existing publications policy, for controlling all content andeditorial policy rests with the faculty advisor appointed by the college president. The present publications policy shows clearly the degree of control the faculty advisor can exercise: "The advisor will make clearto the editorial staff his regulations on content. His rulings will prevail whenever disagreement betweenhim and the editor or any other staff member occurs." This policy is in direct violation of the USSPACode of Ethics which the Western Front has adopted. Questions also surround the attachment of theWestern Front to an academic department. In a letter dated November 14,1969, the USSPA stated thatfull participation on student publications should not be denied to any full-time student. "The imposition of artificial r e q u i r e m e n t s such as maintenance of a special grade point and/or participation in aspecified class are a clear and dangerous violation of this vital principle. Such requirements constitute an unconscionable potential threat to the independence of the Western Front. Currently, to serve on thesix major editorial positions, a student must be enrolled in journalism and have a 2.5 gpa. The letter said these requirements were "practically unheard of today among student newspapers." Further, a proposal for a journalism major that is currently pending is likely to increase the number of students who servepublications because they are required by their major to participate for credit and grade. Moreinconsistencies exist regarding the membership of the current Publications Board. With threepresidentially appointed faculty, one administrator (Director of Student Activities) and three students,students clearly do not have the responsibility for publications. The most recent example of this problem was the selection of the editor of the Western Front for Spring quarter. Although the minutes do notshow it, investigation revealed that the four to three vote to be 3 faculty and one administrator to threestudent representatives, obviously a non-student decision. Bill 95 passed by AS Legislature JastTuesday is leveled directly at this inconsistency. Associated Students hopes that with Bill 95 andfurther legislation to solve the urgent problem of an editor selected through unfair practices and presentinconsistencies within the student publication. Most importantly, AS is attempting to solve the biggerproblem of restructuring a Publications Board currently not maximizing freedom of the press. The resultwill hopefully be a structure that will have not forced loyalties to Associated Students, the Faculty or the college administration, rather a loyalty to the entire student body arid to an uncensored press. Somequestion has been raised about Associated Students' involving itself in this matter; it seems clear thatAS Legislature has a long standing historical responsibility for Student Publications. On November 11,1968, AS Legislature passed Bill 116 establishing the current Publications Board structure. On March11, 1969, AS Legislature created the position of Administrative Assistant to the editor of the WesternFront with Bill 84. Part of that bill reads, "It is recognized that the AS Legislature has an obligation to i n s u r e the continuing publication of a student newspaper qf the highest possible quality." Although thebill calls for the approval of the Administrative Assistant by Legislature,., they apparently decided not tointerfere in the decision of the editor. In the same bill the editor's salary was raised from $2.50 to $3.00per page. Bill 69, initiating the incorporation of the Western Front, again demonstrates the Legislature'sobligation to student publications. Associated Students feels a strong obligation to encourage and aid in the establishment of a student publications structure free from ties to any of the interest groupsfunctioning on campus including Associated Students. Many of the above problems have plagued themembers of the Pub Board for a long while. A . sub-committee with two students and the Director ofStudent Activities as members has been struggling with the revision, but over a six month period havebeen unable to reach consensus on a course of action. Because the current structure is apparently notfunctioning, AS is obligated to act. Several of the Publications Board members themselves have saidthey were glad Associated Students is attempting to force change. Associated Students hopes thatstudents share their interest in having student publications free from student government, faculty oradministrative control. Greg Baker Associated Students Cabinet ---------- Western Front - 1970 April 14 - Page 3 ---------- Tuesday, April 14, 1970 Western Front 3 Campus security Recruiter discusses war investigates theftsJim Austin .Western Front staff Security has investigated 195 cases of repqrted thefts on campus in the last 17 months, supervisor R.G.Peterson said last week. '"..'•• ' Peterson has assessed a totalvalue of $13,048.63 in stolen property, including $7,036.89 from academic buildings and' $6,011.74 fromresidence halls and the Viking Union. "This is not a -complete picture," he said. "For every theftreported, probably five go unreported." Among reasons given for failure to report a theft, are inadequateinventory and a feeling of foolishness for leaving a room unlocked, he said. Reported thefts from theresidence halls include money, clothes and tape recorders and tapes. Most, if not all, of the thefts could have been prevented if proper safeguards had been taken, Peterson said. "Only one case involvedactual breaking and entering." The other 194 incidents involved rooms which were left unlocked in theabsence of the resident. The breaking and entering case occurred last quarter at. Lake wood, thestudertt-owned recreation area at Lake Whatcom, he said. Three canoes and eight paddles were stolenafter the boathouse was broken into. The canoes and paddles were valued at $600, Peterson said. P e t e r s o n gave several YD's to hold first meeting Western's Young Democrat (YD) chapter, will hold itsfirst meeting of Spring quarter at 7:30 p.m. tonight in VU 364, Acting President Charlene Miller said lastweek. The featured speaker will be newly-elected State President Mike Lowry, Miss Miller said. Lowryis aide to Sen. Martin Durkan (D-Issaquah) and is co-chairman of the 19-year-old vote in Washingtonmove, she said. Among the topics expected to be discussed are the pre-primary endorsementconvention and the platform adopted by the state convention in February. The endorsement conventionwill be held at the Seattle Center May 15 and 16, Miss Miller said. The platform calls for the withdrawalof American troops from Vietnam within six months, Miss Miller said. ranch sandwiches for orders togo 734-1154 1306 Railroad Ave suggestions for preventing thefts or aiding in recovering property: - 1.Keep doors locked.when , room is unoccupied"; 2. Report all thefts as soon as they are discovered; and\ 3.- Keep a record of serial numbers to valuable items. "We have returned a number of stolen itemsthrough a check of serial numbers," campus investigator Ted Donovan said. Campus security turnsthese numbers over to civil authorities who make a check of pawn shops to see if stolen property hasbeen sold, he said. Suspected thefts should be reported to either the resident director of the dormitory or directly to security, Peterson said. VU- Director Chris Karp said that the Viking Union has been hit formore than $1,000. "Recently we lost a $300 upholstered bench from the lounge," he said. Other itemsstolen include earphones from the music room, rugs, furniture and. a $90 trash receptacle, he added.Almost 1,000 china cups were stolen from the coffee shop Fall and Winter quarters, he said. Books have been taken from the VU circulating library and articles also have been stolen from the art gallery, Karpsaid. "Unless we can show some adequate security for the gallery, we will not be able to get the highquality art work we would like," he said. Continued thefts may result in discontinuance of the libraryservice. . Karp emphasized that these thefts hurt students most. Don DeMarco Western Front staffParticipatory democracy was witnessed. here last .week in a '' jam-packed, standing-room only VUlounge by a small segment of ' Western's near-7,800 gt;. student '.' Spring enrollment. -. The occasionwas a one-hour -question and answer forum between members of the . academic community and a U.S. Army recruiting officer who wanted to come on campus to interview Officer Candidate School applicants. The forum was a result of AS Bill No. 76, which requires any organization desiring to use campusfacilities to interview students for jobs must, if a petition with 20 or more signatures is presented to them, provide information about that organization . in a period of public questioning. Capt. Michael A.Makulski, who said he was a Vietnam combat veteran with 67 days left in the Army, was sent to talk tothe students. Approaching the crowd in a humble, soft-spoken manner, Makulski first made a briefstatement indicating that he was speaking for himself and not for the Department of the Army. Many of-the questions that followed his opening remarks were thoughtful and penetrating; some were designed to harass; a few were not relevant to either the military or Makulski personally. One student said hewanted the U.S. to get out of Vietnam now and asked Makulski why he supported the war. "I'm notsaying that we should or should not be in in Vietnarh. I don't make policy BRITISH COLUMBIA JUNE 14 TO JULY 7 9 hrs. credit in anthropology, sociology, art or other area of student's choice. For detailswrite MARYLHURST COLLEGE Marylhurst, Oregon 97036 INDIAN FIELD TRIP LAHGl VOLKSWAGEN 112 Samish Way 734-5230 Sales: New and used Volkswagens. Service: We will provide transportationfor customers to and from the campus while your car is being serviced. Open 8 a.m. to 6 p.m.Monday — Saturday Aardvark loves bookworms The Sick Humor plus two Naked Came the Stranger, amore books by Lenny Bruce are sexy satire by Penelope Ashe, is now available. now in stock. We alsohave The Ladders of Need some help understand- Fire, Children of the Albatross m g a novel or play?AllMonarch and three more titles by Anais Notes are now half price. Nin. Come in and browse, we lovecompany. THREE DOORS SOUTH OF SHAKEY'S ON N. STATE ST. Open week nights till 9 p.m.AARDVARK Books Arts Capt. Michael A. Makulski , photo by Todd for- the entire United States,"replied the captain. Another student accused Makulski of being part of the ' "system.". The captainagreed he was, and the student asked him to remove his uniform, Makulski declined, saying, "I'd lookkind-of silly standing here nude." After being asked by one member of the audience why he should notbe thrown bodily out into the street, Makulski countered with a proposal to take a democratic vote. "You can raise .your hands and we'll leave, if it's the majority," the captain said. the proposal was greeted by . some applause, but there did not appear to be anyone ready to lead the vote. Bert Halprin —senior,philosophy—cited the recent murder of a prisoner of war by an American military officer that had beenreported in the . newspapers. Halprin asked the captain if he had murdered any prisoners or if there were any standing orders to kill captured enemy soldiers. Makulski said that he had not been given anyorders to murder prisoners, and that although he had had opportunities to do this, " . . . I chose not to,"he said. At this point, a student accused Makulski -.of being a . ' ' . s u p e r s o l d i e r , " not•representative of what soldiers are really' like, and also asked that a democratic vote bfe taken • to oust the captain. * Frank, Spracklin—senior, political science—said he did not think a democraticvote was possible., ••'.'•' ° ': . Mike Pinch—sophomore, speech-said that' if a vote was ' taken it would be the first step in excluding individuals or groups from being.able to voice their opinions inpublic.. "If we vote on this issue today7" we aren't voting on whether we support the Army, we are voting on whether we support freedom of speech," Pinch .said. An emotional burst of applause for Pinch'simpassioned speech followed." No vote was taken. Throughout the discussion, individuals representingattitudes and philosophies covering a wide spectrum of-political beliefs and ideologies had an opportunity to speak. A- Black gubernatorial candidate from California arid a White Washington congressionalcandidate, both members of the Socialist Workers Party, made "several comments. Dean of studentsC.W. MacDonald, interviewed after the forum, said, "I thought good points were made on, both sides."Greg Baker, AS President, commented that although the spirit of Bill 76 was met, he did not feel thatMakulski represented the Army or the views of the Army. , When it was all over, Makulski went to theplacement office and did what he came to do. Recruit. When you can't stamp out love any longer, pullyour heart together and bring her down to Weisfleld's to pick the diamond and the day. j We give creditto students of promise, and that means to you! weisfields JEWELERS -°- gt;--^=»=—« ---------- Western Front - 1970 April 14 - Page 4 ---------- Western Front Tuesday, April 14, 1970 between the lines Bottoms need spanking, not kissing Theoriginal intent of Bill No. 95 was obviously an attempt to attack the selection by the Committee onStudent Publications of this quarter's editor. The selection was challenged on the grounds that theCommittee's membership was dominated by faculty. But a much more important issue has also beenraised by the wording and possible action as a result of Bill No. 95. Can the freedom of the press on this campus be guaranteed? Can the Western Front, or any other publication designed to reach everymember of the college community, remain free from pressures applied by any faction of theadministration, student or student government for its special interest? If the AS Government had used the existing procedures instead of suddenly asserting authority which they do not legally have, and if theyhad attacked the source of the problem rather than attacking the duly appointed editor, the other issuescould have been avoided. Instead, it has chosen a half-baked and reckless course which threatens thevery foundation of a free press. A person would have to have an awful lot of faith in our studentgovernment to believe that the real issue is not that Bill No. 95 is an attempt to dominate the press. Canthe AS Government dictate or control the press by appointing its own editor? What if an interim editorbelieves in the freedom of the press as we do? Will the Front then have a new editor every other weekuntil the government finds one who will kiss their royal bottoms? Will the Front become a mouthpiece forthe present government and its candidate during the upcoming elections? Not as long as this editor'sterm of appointment continues: After all the arguing is over and the smoke has cleared, the only issue is this: Freedom of the press from the AS Government. We feel that the sincere and mature elements ofstudent government should sit down and talk with the publications advisors and the sub-committee which is currently in the process of revising the publications committee's policies, airing their gripes and giving the other side a chance to answer them, and come up with a thought-out compromise which can beagreed to by all. It will be decided this week whether or not Western will have a journalism major Fallquarter. We feel that Western is large enough to accommodate both a twice-weekly newspaper and ajournalism major. We feel that there are too many important things going on in this world today such asthe Moratorium march tomorrow and the Environmental Teach-in next week to waste our time and efforts through adolescent actions, and that as long as the AS Government is busying itself in this newspaper's affairs, it ought to clean up its own messes. - -Bob Burnett ' ' • ^ ' , , * gt; Apathy no longer aproblem ? In the 1950's, college was where the student studied the woes of the world and did little ornothing about them. Apathy was the key to the state of the campus mind. But we are different; or arewe? The crowd today doesn't conform to the short haircuts of the fifties. We are individuals and grow ourlocks as long and bushy as we can. Conform? NEVER! We are out to save the world from burying itselfin a mound of garbage. But you wouldn't know it walking up High Street to the campus. Wear thick solesor those smashed six packs will cut your feet to ribbons. We reject the "establishment" because it only pays lip service to freedom and democracy. To us it is two-faced and phony. Yet, a large segment ofour generation turns on with drugs, the epitome of the worst kind of phoniness: being false to oneself.They turn on with drugs and tune out reality. Shortly, 19-year-olds may have the right to vote Theyounger generation will be given a larger voice in the affairs of this country than any group of people theirage has ever had in the history of the United States The time has come for the "Pepsi Generation" tostop dealing in absolutes. To realize all police are not "pigs" and all judges are not like "Julie" Hoffman.We must learn to work within the established political structure and learn the meaning of the wordstolerance and compromise. We should learn that there is a difference between being peculiar and beingan individual. As the war goes on in Vietnam, the population grows, and pollution continues to plagueus, the 1970's must be the time of the intellectual individual, not of the conforming non-conformist. , —-Bill Johnston staff commentary Opinions expressed in this column are not necessarily those of theeditor or other staff members. Ex post facto legislation' Jim Bromley copy editor It appears that the ASlegislature has really jumped the gun this time. Bill No. 95, passed by the legislature a week ago, is both unconstitutional and discriminatory. According to Article III, Section lc of the AS Constitution (Navigator,p. 6), "Ex post facto legislation shall not be considered as valid and binding under the terms of thisconstitution." The bill, which states that "AS legislature does not recognize the position of editor ofWestern Front as currently being validly filled," is retrospective, thus making it "after the fact." In addition, the bill states, "Whereas it is mandatory that students make all decisions concerning policy andoperations of the Western Front, including selection of the editor . . . " (emphasis mine). Responsibilityfor the college paper is vested in the publications committee, made up of both faculty and students, andappointed Fall qusrter with the joint approval of the college administration and AS government. Althoughthe legislature has the authority to withhold the paper's operating budget, it cannot legally transfer thatmoney to any other budget. The punitive nature of Bill 95 is obviously discriminative toward Bob Burnett,editor. If the issue of the bill is the selection procedure of the publications committee, why had Burnettbeen singled out at the exclusion of the Klipsun and Jeopardy editors, also appointed by the samecommittee. Such discrimination cannot be anything but juvenile irresponsibility. If the manner of selecting an editor is stacked against the students, and I agree that it is, such an inequity can best be alleviatedby responsible negotiations for better student representation is that selection. Nothing constructive cancome from the clandestine, reckless posture which AS President Greg Baker and the legislature haveassumed. Political control of the Western Front can only lead to the suppression of the free exchange ofideas. Therefore I appeal to AS legislature to withdraw Bill 95. Activities calendar 'beautiful' Mike PinchWestern Front staff In refute of last week's commentary by Jim Bromley concerning the Spring quarteractivities calendar I would like to say that I and all the people I asked about it thought that it was truly apiece of beautiful art. Mr. Bromley wrote, "Even I was not as shocked by it as I might have been at amore tender age." Mr. Bromley, you probably would not have been shocked at all if you were not soprotected from the human body at a more tender age. Those who live in societies in which they areaccustomed to seeing people with little or nothing on are not ordinarily aroused sexually by the sight ofthe bodies of persons of the opposite sex. Mr. Bromley also wrote, "Pornography has even become arespectable art form." - The body has been a respectable art form for quite some time. Even Michelangelo did studies of the human body and he worked for the church. Pornography has never been a respectableart form. It still isn't. I fail to see the connection between pronography and a picture of a naked man anda naked woman standing next to each other on our activities calendar. My compliments go out toActivities Commissioner George Hart well and company for an interesting and beautiful activitiescalendart fhor eSpwring qeuarstert. ern front official weekly newspaper of Western Washington StateCollege second class postage paid at Bellingham, Wash. 9822S phone, 734-8800 editorial, ext. 2277advertising, ext. 2276 Bob Burnett John Stolpe Adele Saltzman Jim Bromley editor-in-chief managingeditor assistant to the editor copy editor Bob Taylor sports editor Lynn Watts feature editor BillWoodland business manager R.E. Stannard Jr. advisor DanShoblom Jerry King Bill Todd MikeErickson photo editor head photographer assistant photographer cartoonist leporters: Chris Anderson, ForrestAnderson, Jim Austin, Jim Baker, Ted Bestor, Deb Coleman, Robin Courtwright, Don DeMarcb, JimDiedrick, Barbara Dinner, Dave Haeck, Billie Hargadine, Gary Harrod, Mickey Hull, Diane Jacobs, BillJohnston, Tim Knopf, Jay Long, Jackie Lawson, Julie McCalib, Bob McLauchlan, Paul Madison, MaryPeebles, Mike Pinch, Stan Shawn, Jill Stephenson, Margaret Thornton, Rob Turner, Doug Van Boven.Deadlines: 5 p.m. Tuesday-display ad reservations 4 pjn. Thursday-news copy, letters to the editor,classified ads display ad copy. Represented by NEAS, 360 Lexington Ave., New York, N.Y. 10017 Price per copy, 10 cents. Subscription, $3.50 a year, $1.50 a quarter. Member: U.S. Student PressAssociation, College Press Service, Associated College Press, Intercollegiate Press Service andLiberation News Service. L ---------- Western Front - 1970 April 14 - Page 5 ---------- feedbackfeedbackfeedbackfee f Tuesday, April 14, 1970 Western Front NEEDS AUTONOMY FROMPRESSURE Editor: There are some students involved in student government that act as demagogues,employing logic chopping instead of logic, and the indifference passes unnoticed by the studentaudience. Last Tuesday, the AS legislature passed a bill calling for the re-opening of editorship of theWestern Front. The reasoning was "that the current editor of the Western Front was not selected bystudents." The issue at hand here is the publication board. However, the cynically manipulative few inAssociated Students have once again taken the outcome of the problem and blown it out of proportionwithout really deciding what to do about the origin of the problem. The facts are both the status of theFront as an "activity," and the selecting procedures for the editor, not the editorship itself nor authority of selecting a new one with the threat of withdrawing funds from the paper. Emphasis should be placed on the newspaper being an academic laboratory rather than a student activity. There is nothing in thecurrent publication committee's policy which states that the editor must be enrolled in journalismclasses. When the level of importance i s s h i f t e d from an extra-curricular activity to getting a grade,the quality of the paper will be determined by the advisor. As the. paper becomes more academic, thebalance of power swings over to the professor-advisor, rather than the editor. The Front should remainautonomous from all factions and be immune to pressures from any area. S t u d e n t governmentdemagogues, entangled by their egos, have constantly caused a deterioration of good will and faithbetween students. They cite facts that are not factual and omit facts that are facts and the studentaudience again does not notice. Another area of lack of consideration has been the process in whichthe selection of the editor is picked: the publications board. If student government feels that the boarddoes not represent the policies of a "student paper," then they should attack it and not the editor theyselected; for was it not the AS who approved that board less than one year ago and not theadministration or the faculty? Little wonder then that many students are ready dupes of studentdemagogues. Little wonder that meetings and protests are Towers of Babel. John Engstrom juniorpolitical science AS Elections Board Chairman SKEPTICAL OF MORAL IMPERATIVES Editor: This is written in response to Jim Bromley's commentary dated 4/7/70, regarding his concern over the "moraldegradation" which seems increasingly apparent to us. (Mr. Bromley seems to see the fall ofcivilizations implicit in the "obscene bit of paraphernalia" displayed on the activities calendar.) Mr.Bromley states that his argument is "not against nudity per se." If it is not, then there must be timeswhen nudity itself is acceptable. If such is the case, what are we to think of those so-called "commonstandards of decency which are universal and unchanging" when juxtaposed with those instances inwhich nudity is acceptable and those in which it is not. I have been skeptical of universal moralimperatives because whenever someone comes up with them, someone else comes along and revisesthem. The variable obscenity ruling given by the Supreme Court denies the unflexible, unchangingstandards which Mr. Bromley advocates. One must be careful not to impose false universal moralimperatives simply because they are or seem to be missing. Vic Aquino junior English J bring thiscoupon and • $ 3 to VU. 311 for your 1970 klipsun t t STOLPE MISSED THE FACTS Editor: Iwould like to kick my friend and walking partner, John Stolpe, right in his literary gluteus maximus* Inhis article on firearms in the bookstore, somewhere between the "in jokes" and sensationalism, heshould have stated a few facts. Mr. Baker and the security officers are in agreement on the issue. Thesecurity people have the qualified manpower and the desire to maintain order in the bookstore duringtheir peak hours of operation. Not only does Mr. Baker not want firearms on campus, but DeanMcDonald has said that he would leave the campus if firearms were carried by security. AlDoan senior soc/anthro 1 10' X 22 REPEAT: Feet — super size, super fun Decorate a room or two or three. Firsttime in Bellingham. Surplus billboard posters seen in national advertising campaigns around Bellinghampast two years. Automobiles, soft drinks, appliances, beers. 4-color, lithographed. First Come, FirstServed - $9.95 Northwest Liquidators Magnolia Railroad open 7 days BESSIE JONES tlie GeorgeSea Island Singers and Dancers Wednesday-April 15 8pm-VULounge |students-$l public$1.50 J ---------- Western Front - 1970 April 14 - Page 6 ---------- 6 Western Front Tuesday, April 14, 1970 Brighten your room with DAISIES pink, yellow, blue, whitefrom I. V . Wilson Florists 1426 Cornwall Ave. 733-7630 morefeedbackmorefeedbackm WE'VE MOVED! WIZTRONICS , INC. -j—r— Electronic Repair WIZTRONICS has moved to a new location at 2500Cornwall (corner of Cornwall and Alabama). Our phone number is 733-5191. We hope that all our oldfriends will come see us. Wiztronics . . . Outstanding Service for Automobile Radios Tape RecordersAmplifiers Kits you put together HONEST! Free Delivery Wife wants to go out for dinner? Compromise.Shakey's pizza patrol delivers your favorite piping hot pizza to your door. Bend a little. Phone 733-3020BDBm WARNS TRAVELERS OF DRUG POLICIES ABROAD Editor: I have just received a letter fromthe State Department in conjunction with my position as National Student Association director onWestern's campus. This letter is not meant to be a scare tactic or to condone or condemn the use ofdrugs, but a method of informing Western travelers about the consequences of possession of drugsoverseas. The penalties for narcotics violations in most countries are severe. For example: a 2 0 - y e ar - o l d American studying abroad was arrested in Europe and held without bail for carrying a smallamount of hashish for a friend. In spite of the fact that she had no previous record, the court ruled shewas guilty of trafficking in drugs. She was forced to serve a stiff prison term. Americans traveling abroad are subject to the laws of the country they are visiting; they Campus security protects students "I feelthis department is superior to any police department on any campus," R.G. Peterson, campus directorof safety and security, said. "We're not a police force, as many students think. We safeguard thecampus and the students by talking and reasoning, rather than using force." P e t e r s o n ' sdepartment employs 42 students and nine "classified" people, including himself, two security officers,five marshals and one clerk-typist. "Student patrolmen are limited in making decisions, and act as eyes and ears. Their main duty is to act as a fire watch and to check for the physical security of buildings."Two security officers handle complaints and investigations on campus, while the five marshals aredeputized by the city of Bellingham to issue parking violations only, he added. About 70 vehicles areimpounded monthly for parking violations, Peterson estimated. "We get very little feed-back on impounds since the majority have four or five warnings." Impound charges are $7.50 plus $1 per day for storage.Whenever possible, campus problems concerning members of Western's community are handled by the Student Intermediate Judiciary Board. One exception, Peterson explained, came recently with thearrest of four Western students by Bellingham police for stealing chairs from Edens Hall. Uponquestioning by a campus marshal "the students denied they belonged to the Western community andhad to be handled as intruders." Peterson credits much of the success of the safety and securitydepartment to the employment "of students to p r o t e c t students from students." If the departmentever changes to a police system like the University of Washington, he predicts, "it will be the beginningof the end." are not protected by U.S. laws. Prison conditions are primitive in some countries and pre-trial confinement for those charged is usually long, sometimes up to a year. More students are beingarrested for drug violations today than ever before. There were 142 Americans under detention on drugcharges in 20 foreign countries in February, 1969. Last month there were 404. I hope this little bit ofinformation will be helpful to all those who plan to travel this summer or study a broad. Have a good trip.Wally Sigmar NSA coordinator Western Washington State College APPLAUDS BROMLEY'SCALENDAR COMMENT Editor: Regarding the article written by staff member Jim Bromley in theTuesday, April 7 issue of the Western Front, concerning the Spring quarter activities calendar:BRAVO!!!! Elizabeth Duronso Viking Union staff Letters to the editor should be short and to the point,including the writer's name, class and major. Telephone numbers should be included if possible.Members of the academic community are also welcome to contribute articles, features, guestcommentaries and other material of interest to the community. ZPG expands efforts to halt populationcrisis The Bellingham chapter of Zero Population Growth (ZPG) will assemble in front of the FederalBuilding Saturday at 10 p.m. to hand out literature, sell buttons, and inform the people of Bellingham ofthe "population crisis" in America. At a ZPG meeting last Thursday night, local chairman ElaineMcRorie talked with high school representatives from Bellingham about their involvement April 22 in"Earth Day." Speakers from Western and ZPG will visit Bellingham area high schools on "Earth Day" to discuss the population explosion. ZPG will also have a booth - set up in the VU lounge that same daywith literature explaining its position. Led nationally by biologist Paul Ehrlich, ZPG is a political actionorganization whose goal is stabilization of the United States population. Ehrlich, author of ThePopulation Bomb, has urged such measures as voluntary sterilization to halt the burgeoning population. We Want You To Join Our Church As An Ordained Minister And Have The Rank Of Doctor of DivinityWe are a non-structured faith, undenominational, with no traditional doctrine or dogma. Our fast growingchurch is actively seeking new ministers who believe what we believe; All men are entitled to their ownconvictions; To seek truth their own way, whatever it may be, no questions asked. As a minister of thechurch, you may: 1. Start your own church and apply for exemption from property and other taxes. 2.Perform marriages, baptism, funerals and all other ministerial functions. 3. Enjoy reduced rates fromsome modes of transportation, some theaters, stores, hotels, etc. 4. Seek draft exemption as one of our working missionaries. We will tell you how. Enclose a free will donation for the Minister's credentialsand license. We also issue Doctor of Divinity Degrees. We are State Chartered and your ordination isrecognized in all 50 states and most foreign countries. FREE LIFE CHURCH-BOX 4039, HOLLYWOOD,FLORIDA 33023. ' '• " ---------- Western Front - 1970 April 14 - Page 7 ---------- Coming events: Tuesday, April 14, 1970 Western Front TODAY-All day: "Happy Days." Noon: Film,Revolution Now, VU lounge. 4 p.m.: Dr. George Flynn, "Lasers: Some General Applications ofChemistry," Haggard Hall 268. 7 p.m.: Alan Schmidt, "Bible Prophesy," coffee den. 7:30 p.m.: Dr.Edward Ullman, "Space-Time Interrelations in the Use of the Earth," Bond Hall 109. 7:30 p.m.: YoungDemocrats meeting, VU 364. 8:15 p.m.: Barton Frank, faculty cello recital, music auditorium.TOMORROW-All day: "Happy Days." 11 a.m.: Vietnam Moratorium anti-war march. Noon: Film,Revolution Now, VU lounge. 3 p .m.: Larry Blake, VU lounge. 4 p.m.: Dr. George Flynn, "MolecularEnergy Transfer Using Induced Fluorescent Techniques," Haggard Hall 268. 8 p.m.:, Bessie Jonesconcert, VU lounge. THURSDAY, APRIL 16- All day: "Happy Days." Noon: Film, Revolution at Berkeley, VU lounge. Len Erickson, "Small Groups," VU 10. Dovetail Band jam session, VU lounge. MarilynPearson, "An Evening of Soul and Faith," VU Noon: 3 p.m.: 7 p.m.: lounge. 7 p.m.: posters* candlesmugs • incense gifts • stuff bright new ideas on our lower floor a few steps down a little fan out 1 2 5 W. Holly OCIC to hold election Arthur Hicks, "The Elements of Film Drama," L-4. FRIDAY, APRIL 17- 6,8 and 10 p.m.: Documentary, The Salesman, L-4. SATURDAY, APRIL 18- 9 p.m.: Bunny club, VikingCommons. 9 p.m.: Mama Sunday's, coffee den. MONDAY, APRIL 20- Environmental Teach-In Week.See Western Front for details and schedule. 7:30 p.m.: Talent Education concert, music auditorium.Teach-ln to feature exhibits, films, skits Congressman Morris Udall will keynote the EnvironmentalTeach-ln Week Monday at 8 p.m. in the VU lounge. Udall, Democratic Representative from Arizona, willspeak on "Man as an Endangered Species." Other events on Monday will include: 9 a.m.: Environmental Art Exhibit, featuring pictures of wilderness and pollution, VU Gallery. 4 p.m.: Dr. Robert Meade,professor of psychology "The Psychologist's Role in Population Limitation Actions," VU lounge. 5 p.m.:Rally in Red Square, featuring "Future's End," an improvisational branch of the Western Players, and TedBoss of the Environmental Quality Council. 7 p.m.: Films, Population Ecology, The Squeeze, HaggardHall 268. "Future's End" will present a skit on some aspect of the pollution problem in Whatcom County. Ted Boss will outline the week's events. The full schedule of next week's events will be printed in the next Western Front. Off-Campus Interhouse Community (OCIC) will elect a new president next Tuesday.Nominations for the office • will be accepted at tonight's OCIC meeting beginning at 7:30 in VU 354.At last week's meeting plans were made to hold a motorcycle motocross during the Multi-Arts Festival.Cyclists will meet in Red Square on Friday, May 22, then leave for a couple of hours on a ruggedscramble course that will Work-Study Program offers jobs An orientation meeting for studentsinterested in summer jobs in the College Work Study Program will be held at 7 p.m. Thursday in L-2. At this meeting students will be given an opportunity to sign up for the program and will receive a listing ofemploying agencies and job descriptions. To qualify for jobs in the work study program, students mustfirst have an application with Parent's Confidential Statement on file in the financial aids office. AWS toplan abortion action An AWS-sponsored open discussion on what students can do to help campaign for abortion reform is scheduled for 3 p.m. tomorrow in VU 10. "We need volunteers, ideas and funds," BillPope, volunteer organizer,said. "We want to get a head start and a firm foundation before nextNovember when abortion referendum is voted on." ( °ty*n ge blossom dizznomdrlncm SIMPLICITY from $175 up Everything new! everything brilliant! .. . everything per-, feet! Your future begins with theseventies. Begin the wedding vows with a vow to select her diamond from Milton Terry, Jeweler. A per-, feet beginning to a perfect future. Milton E. Terry Jeweler "WHERE JEWELRY IS OUR BUSINESS"1326 Cornwall 733-2030 eventually lead back to the square. A special meeting open to all interestedstudents to plan the event will be held at 4 p.m. tomorrow in VU 354. Those who can't make the meeting are requested to contact Bruce Merrick or Jim Dickinson in the housing commission office (VU 227).Folk dancing and a fencing exhibition will be held while waiting for the return of the scramblers. OCICwill have the job of inspecting off-campus houses for the AS housing commission beginning thissummer. Files will be kept on the conditions of off-campus houses for students' convenience. Planswere announced concerning the OCIC anti-litter campaign to be held Saturday, May 2 in cooperationwith the Environmental Quality Council's environmental week. Interested people will gather in RedSquare to clean up streets and areas around the college. FRANZ GABL'S Specialty Shop KyaksBackpacking Camping Cornielhy Waterskis SPECMl Nylon Pack With Aluminum Frame $14.95 DownFilled Sleeping Bags $34.95 Toni Sailer Skis % Price 1515 Cornwall Ave across from Safeway Store733-5888 open 'til 9 weekdays 'til 6 Sat. NOWOPEN-BEL- LYN PAR 3 GOLF sharpen up your irongame great for beginners rental equipment available reasonable fees ideal for your date OPEN 7DAYS A WEEK BEL-LYN PAR 3 GOLF Just 3Vi miles north of Bellingham on the Guide Meridian ---------- Western Front - 1970 April 14 - Page 8 ---------- 8 Western Front Tuesday, April 14, 1970 Festival needs publicity Art exhibit labeled 'small' The Multi-Arts Festival, in conjunction with the Blossom Time Festival, will encompass all areas of Bellingham in aliving art experience, May 17-24. The Off-Campus Interhouse Community will sponsor a motorcyclescramble starting in Red Square, "street works" will be displayed by local artists and students. Childrenfrom the Metropolitan Free School, Portland, will display their art work. A trade fair, dance and theaterworkshops, a street d a n c e , films, Frisbee tournament, plays, rock bands, a Great Northwest Poetryreading and automobiles dancing in the parking lot will be among the many activities scheduled. PaulDoorpat, coordinator of the festival, hopes that people from all parts of the state will gather to bothparticipate and observe the festival. Enthusiasm and awareness of this undertaking is important tofacilitate it's success, according to Doorpat. This is the time for all persons who really want to tellpeople what's going to happen, should travel through Washington and Oregon to publicize the events.People who are interested in traveling from Friday to next Tuesday should contact Leslie W i c k l u n d , VU 0 0 7. Transportation may be provided. Wills to teach folk dance Mrs. Clarice Wills, associateprofessor of education, will teach a Tolk dance group at 7:45 p.m. Thursday at the Sacred Heart ParishHall, 14th at Knox. Mrs. Wills, whose hobby is folk dancing, is experienced in the area, having dancedall over the world in countries such as Norway, Sweden, France and England. The group is a non-profitorganization which is open to beginning and advanced folk dancers. For further . information, interestedpersons may contact Dr. Wills, 734-4624. • Children talents to hold concert The Talent EducationSociety at Western will present a talent education concert at 7:30 p.m. Monday in the musicauditorium, featuring child performers aged 3 to 14. Talent education is a new NTS FILMS A Division ofNational Talent Service, Inc. Proudly Presents THE MAYSLES BROTHERS' NEW FILM SALBSAIANThe Most Highly Acclaimed Film Of The Year! "Hard-hitting, anti-establishment stuff."—Judith Crist / "Iwas spellbound. I've seen SALESMAN three times and each time I've been more impressed.Fascinating, very funny, unforgettable."—Vincent Canby, New York Times I "Probably the mostimportant film you will see this year."—Joseph Gelmis, Newsday I "Impossible to over-estimate. Thereis no doubt that we shall seeSALES-MAN- as a turning point in the history of film."—Film SocietyReview / "An extraordinary film no one dares miss."—New York Magazine / "An experience that sticksin the memory. The suspense becomes unbearable. As dramatic as any human drama I've everseen in any medium. Ten times more fascinating than the big budget hokum turned out by Hollywood. Itis total realism."— Rex Reed Friday April 17th 6 - 8 -10 p.m., L-4 Students .75 general 1.25approach to education. Children are endowed with great potential and ability to learn, according to theTalent Education Society. Talent education is still in its infancy and needs support which will encouragethe children. "We would greatly appreciate your presence so go active and show concern," a member ofthe society said. Forrest Anderson Western Front staff The Senior Student Exhibition, which openedTuesday, March 31 in the W e s t e r n G a l l e r y , is disappointingly small. Lawrence Hanson, gallery d i r e c t o r , estimated that three-fourths of the works submitted were used in the show. "Some sayit's a high quality show, and some say it's high quality but conservative," he said. The show, as a whole, is impressive because it shows off the technical knowledge of the artists. However, no one exhibitedanything outrageously "farout" or unusual. The most unique thing in the show is a king-size jigsawpuzzle by Lawrence West, complete with interlocking, movable masonite parts. Unfortunately, mostviewers are too timid to rearrange the puzzle. Entries for sculpture, drawing exhibit due Tomorrow is the due date for all entries, fees and entry forms for the 7th Annual Small S c u l p t u r e and DrawingExhibition.. The show will open Monday, April 27 with a preview and reception, and will continue through Friday, May 15 in the Western Gallery, located in room 201 of the art buildng. The contest is open to all artists living in the United States except Western's faculty. Student entries may be entered and theyhave been accepted in the past, Lawrence Hanson, gallery director, said. Artists may submit threesculptures, or three drawings, or a total of three in combination. More than $1,000 will be available forpurchase awards. Each sculpture should not weigh more than 100 lbs. and should not exceed 24 inches in its largest dimension. Drawings have no limitations as to color, media, or technique. Each drawingshould be matted and backed, not to exceed 40" in its largest dimension. Entry forms and moreinformation may be obtained at the art office. Judging and selection of awards will occur on Thursday,April 23 by George Rickey. Rickey will give a lecture on "Kinetic Art" at 7:30 that night in L-4. The nextday Rickey's exhibition will open at the Whatcom Museum of History and Art, co-sponsored by arts and lectures and the Western Gallery. Dorms hold Bunny Club Nash, Sigma and Omega are sponsoring aBunny Club and dance from 9 p.m. to midnight this Saturday in the Viking Commons. Music will beprovided by the Spoon River Anthology. Eighteen girls from Sigma and Omega will serve as hostessesfor the Bunny Club from 9:30 p.m. to 1 a.m. in the Nash lounge. ATTENTION SENIORS ORDER YOUR CLASS RING CHOICE OF STONES - $13 DEPOSIT BALANCE DUE ON DELIVERY 5 WEEKDELIVERY GRADUATION ANNOUNCEMENTS 2/35* or 1.75/pkg. Deadline April 30 for ordering CAPS GOWNS AVOID THE RUSH - COME NOW STUDENTS ,Ar¥ STORE JO 9TOMM MOMMOOKfmitMKT Mary May receives my vote for the artsy, craftsy award. She exhibits the only wallhanging, and a wood and resin box. Both pieces are nicely designed and executed. "Calm Dissection,"a batik by Pat Spark, uses the media to its full potential. The abstract design explodes with warmcolors and nice crackling effects. Kathy Lang's two acrylic paintings interpret the human figure with flatplanes and lines of color that are controlled, but loose enough to occasionally dribble. Erich Storchblended his strokes in another interesting composition, interpreting the human figure in his untitledacrylic painting. "The Dissenter" and "The Checker Players," two acrylics by Don Ensign, combinealmost every color of the rainbow. Susan Henry, Clayton Sallade and Bruce Anderson all entered smalloil-on-paper abstract paintings. "Dan," an oil pastel by Vicki Culver, impressed me with its color,composition and freedom, as did her untitled craypas work. Steve Wilson got four lithographs in theshow, which must show ability. "Sweet 7" was my favorite of the four, because of its design. JohnMichael Smith exhibits a colorful piece called "4 monoprints," and a dark intaglio entitled "Sotto in Su."Linda Morrell shows a free black and white lithograph entitled "No. 4," and Norman Gustavson adds color to his "Aid" lithograph, in a powerful suggestion of what could be construed to" be two clouds and atriangular mountain. John Lord exhibits a lion-like etching. My favorite corner of the show includes thefew small pieces of sculpture and McCormick-like ceramic pieces. Martin Potts, John Browne andMargaret Giske all constructed very impressive, pleasant pieces with stoneware. Potts also has a freeoil-on-paper painting in the show. Michael F. Ness showed his sense of humor with "But She Doesn'tHave a Lot to Say," a bronze (plumber's pipe) sculpture. He also proves he knows the technique oftransfer and embossment with his piece entitled "Does Someone Hear." The Western Gallery, locatedin room 201 of the art building, is open 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. and 7 to 10 p.m., Monday through Friday. 1Day Shirt Service COMPLETE LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANING Free Pickup Delivery . 734-4200PROSKCT ---------- Western Front - 1970 April 14 - Page 9 ---------- Tuesday, Apri 114, 1970 Western Front 9 Central's cagers choose Clayton Mike Clayton (14), Western's honorable mention All-American, was named to Central's all-opponent team last week. In four seasons at Western, the Port Angeles Senior pumped in 1,093 points, to become the leading scorer in Vik history.Western Front photo by Shoblem Bob Taylor sports editor Mike Clayton, Western's honorable mentionAllrAmerican hoopster, picked up possibly the greatest honor of his athletic career last week, when hewas named to Central's all-opponent team. At first such an honor may not seem like much, but firstconsider the schedule Central played. The Wildcats, " who placed second in the NAIA finals, played thetoughest small college teams the nation had to offer. In the picking of Clayton, who pumped in morepoints than any other eager in Vik history (1,093 to be exact), the Wildcats couldn't have paid Clayton a higher.tribute. - Central showed how much they really respected the play of Clayton, as the PortAngeles senior was the only Evergreen Conference (Evco) player picked on the Wildcats' opponentteam. This past season, Clayton was a nemesis to the Wildcats, almost leading the Viks to an upsetwin at home over Central. Other players picked on Central's all-foe team were: Elmore Smith, a 7-footgiant from Kentucky State; Travis Grant, a talented 6-7 forward from Kentucky State; Greg Hyder,Eastern New Mexico's 6-6 great; and Cornell Warner, a 6-8 player from Jackson State. Earlier thisSpring, Clayton was named to the All-Evco five and the District I team. Women spikers to begin season Western's women's track and field team will run in an invitational meet this Saturday at the University of Washington in Seattle. Hilliary Burrell, Penny Robertson, Toni Vandenhaak, Karen Young, Chris Carder Debbi Ackley, Patti De Neui, Kathy Knutzen, Barbara Brewster, Alicia Hammer, Nancy Jones andRoberta Rounds will attend the meet. Saturday, May 9, the team will host the Northwest CollegeWomen's Track and Field meet here at Civic Field. Forty-eight colleges and junior colleges have beeninvited to the meet. Also, thev hone to attend a pentathlon meet at Central" Washington State Collegeon May 16. This will be the first time that this type of meet will be in the area. fiffll SPACE OUT YOURENTERTAINMENT DOLLAR START BUYING YOUR RECORDS TAPES FROM JOE COCKER! •JM Cocker. Dear Landlord; Bird On The Wire; Lawdy Miss Clawdy; She Came In Through The BathroomWindow; Hitchcock Railway; That's Your Business Now; Something; Delta Lady; Hello Utile Friend;Darling Be Home Soon. SP4224 BurtBacharach BOTCHCASSOfANO TH£SUNOANCeKK gt;BUTCH CASSIDY AND THE SUNDANCE KID • Burt Bacharach. The Sundance Kid; Raindrops KeepFallin' On My Head; Not Goin' Home Anymore; South American Getaway; On A Bicycle Built for Joy;Come Touch The Sun: The Old Fun City. SP 4227 WITH A LITHE HELP FROM MV FRIENDS • JetCocfcar. Feeling Alright; Bye Bye Blackbird! Sandpaper Cadillac: Don't Let Me Bt Misunderstood;With A Little tHrip From My Friends; I Shall Be Released. ^ S r 4 in LIE MICHAELS • Is* Mlsaaell,Tail Me How Do You Feel; (Don't Waal No) Woman: My Friends; Frettfe; Think I'll 60 Back; StormyMondays Who Could Want Mor#; Wgrt JQ Baby; Heighty_Hi. S»41tt ORDERNO. TITLE ARTISTRETAIL PRICE 1. Morrison Hotel - Doors |5«i 2. Spirit In The Sky - Greenbaum • fT'oa 3.Moondance- Van Morrison . . ff'Is 4. Let It Bleed - Stones . . . $5•»«* 5. Hey Jude - Beatles • ~||"21 6. Abbey Road - Beatles ..... = |5„S 7 Live Peace In Toronto - Plastic Ono ? -9 8. Bridge OverTroubled Waters - Simon Garfunkel . $5.98 9. Willy And The Poor Boys - Creedance ff ? i 10. Deja Vu - Crosby. Stills, Nash, Young : . | 5 - 9° 11. I Want You Back - Jackson 5 $•'*98 12. Completely Well- B.B.King *7 o i 13. Santana - • • • • • •-5T«O 14. Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere -Neil Young . . | 4 - 9 | 15. Crosby, Stills. Nash • • • " • f f - ff 16. The Band . . .*• gt;•;«{ 17. 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Psychedelic Shack - Temptations . . . . . . . . . . . . $4.98 42. HeAin't Heavy, He's My Brother - Hollies -f4 - 98 43. Cold Blood :f l «2 44. It's A Beautiful Day - ••• - f * - f f 45. Butch Cassidy Sound Track • -fT-9** 46. Turning Point - John Mayall • • • , ' .• • .$4.98 47. Memphis To Vegas - Elvis .-...-. $9,98 (Tw. Jape) 48. Nashville Skyline - Bob Dylan .• -J5 - 9 , 8, 49. Frigid Pink . • • - f 4 / ? ,! 50. Take A Giant Step - Taj Mahal • • • - J 5 /9 " 51. Smash Hit - Jimi Hendrix $5.98 52. Green River - Creedance ^ *5i"SS 53. Johnny Cash At SanQuentin • •$4.98 54. Creedance Clearwater Revival ff „£ 55. Switched - On-Bech - Walter Carlos $5.98 56. The Sons • • • • f4.98 57. In A Gadda Oa Vita - Iron Butterfly $4.98 58. Easy RiderSoundtrack f »•»» 59. Three Dog Night Live At The Forum $4.98 60. A Step Further - SavoyBrown X? «o 61. Kozmlc Blues - Janls Joplin -90.99 62. Memphis Underground - Herbie Mann ••$j gt;.9B 63. Midnight Cowboy - Soundtrack r • • -fo-9? 64. Stand Up - Jethro Toll XT „ f 66.Greatest Hits' - Country Joe The Fish . . . . . . . . -$4-98 66. Live Dead - Grateful Dead $9.98 (Tw. Jape)67. Sshl - Ten Years After $4-98 68. Monster - Steppenwolf S*2o 69. Hot Buttered Soul - Isaac HayesZZ'TZ 70. Grazin' In The Grass - Friends of Distinction $4.98 71. Games Guitars Play - Harvey Mandel . .. . . , . . • • $4»8 72; Chicago Transit Authority $698 (Tw. Jape) 73. Tom Jones Lives In Vegas • - J 4 - ' " 74. New York Tendaberry - Laura Nyro . . . . . t $5.98 75. You've Made Me So Very Happy - Lou Rawls $4.98 76. Through The Past Darkly - Stones • • . -$5-98 77. With A Little Help - Joe Cocker-$4.98 78. Clouds - Joni Mitchell JL'.:.' " ' "Z2 «2 79. Who Knows Where The Time Goes - Judy Collins . . $4.98 80. Lee Michaels " • • •• -$4.98 THE MAILBOX This is not a sale, but a new volumediscount concept in marketing records tapes. Nowhere ejse can you find such a complete selectionand enjoy such great savings too!! Here's how it works. The accompanying list contains the titles, artistsand retail list price of today's hottest selling albums tapes. Make your selection and apply the retail list price to the Mailbox Code shown below. Add twenty-five cents per total order for mailing and handling.Use the coupon below to make your orders and mail at once to THE MAILBOX. All records tapes areguaranteed and you can always count on the speediest delivery from THE MAILBOX!! PLUS!! You arenot limited to our list. Take advantage of our prices on any record or tape ever made—just find the title,label and artist-then apply the regular list price to the MAlLBOX CODE-that'sall you pay!! The current listwill be changed weekly and'will include the hottest selling Soul, Blues, Country-Western, and Jazzrecordings, but don't wait—If you don't see it on the list, order itanyway-WE HAVE IT!! THE MAILBOXCODE L.P.'S 4.98 5.98 6.98 7.98 9.98 11.98 .2.99 .3.59 .4.29 .4.99 .6.49 .7.49 TAPES L O WE S T TAPE PRICES ANYWHERE! ANY SELECTION ON LIST 4.89 (8 TR OR CASSETTE) TWINS6.89. THESE PRICES APPLY TO " ALL OTHER TAPES AS WELL Fill in boxes with order numbersdesired Send cash, check or money order to THE MAILBOX P.O. Box 2417, Sen Francisco • 94126.Part , Payments or COD's will not be accepted. Indicate your choice by circling LP 8 TR TAPESCASSETTES List additional choices by title, artist label NAME ADDRESS CITY, STATE, ZIP Totalamount enclosed $, ---------- Western Front - 1970 April 14 - Page 10 ---------- 10 Western Front Tuesday, April 14, 1970 Viking spike team bows to Eastern Eastern defeatedWestern's track and field squad 80-65 in a meet last Saturday at Cheney. Freshman.miler Scott Taylorand two-miler Larry Nielson, a senior, both won their specialties. The two are undefeated in four dualmeets this spring. Taylor was timed in 4:23.3 and Nielson in 9:51.6. All times and distances werehampered by extremely adverse weather conditions. The temperature hovered around 34 degrees withrain and snow falling. Jim Schmidt was the only Viking to take a first in the field events. The PortOrchard senior won- the javelin with a throw- of 175*1 K - •'••/•• ''-../. •. '• OtherWestern, firsts" were, turned' in.by Jeff May in the 440' (51.4) and Tom Frank in the 220 (22.8). LyleWilson tied for first in the high jump at six feet, but lost due to more misses. .. This Saturday Whitworth comes to Bellingham's Civic Stadium to do battle with the Viking thinclads. Starting time is 1:00 p.m.SteverDoerrer, Western's number one singles player, moves into his ready position, after returning asmash from his Eastern opponent. Western Front photo by King Viking racketmen bounce EasternWestern's tennis team, sweeping all three doubles matches, picked up their first win of the season,defeating Eastern, 6-3, here last Saturday. The meet was tied at 3-3 going into the doubles whenWestern's racketmen responded with three straight wins. The win evened the Viks' record at 1 -1. JimSolberg, Steve Adelstein and Frank Williams picked up their first wins of the season in singles play.This Friday, Western plays against the University of Puget Sound in Tacoma. On Saturday, the Viknetmen host defending Evergreen Summary: Singles: 1) Steve Doerrer (W) lost to Terry Marden, 5-7,4-6. 2) Jim Solberg (W) over Scott green, 6-4, 6-1. 3) Steve Adelstein (W) over Rick Rias, 6-0,6-1. 4)Arne Larson (W) lost to Dennis Wilson ,3-6,6-3,1-6. 5) Dan Flinn (W) lost to Walt Tobey, 10-8,1-6,2-6.6) Frank Williams (W) over Keith Watson, 6-4, 7-5. Doubles: 1) Doerrer-Solberg (W) over Mar den-Wilson, 6-2, 6-3. 2) Adelstein-Larson (W) over Green-Rias, 6-1, 6-1. 3) Flinn-Williams (W) over Tobey-Watson, 6-3, 6-4. Western divoters to host Seattle U Today, Western's golf team plays against theUniversity of Puget Sound in Tacoma. On Thursday, the Vik linksmen host a meet against SeattleUniversity. Dr. James Lounsberry's golfers were 1-1 going into yesterday's three-way meet in Portland,against Portland State and the University of Portland. TRANSCENDENTAL MEDITATION transcendental meditation is a natural spontaneous technique which allows each individual to expand his mind and improve his life. Second Lecture Miller HalH 10 Lady netters to begin play Western's intercollegiatewomen's tennis team is getting ready for this year's matches. Matches are being scheduled with variouscolleges and junior colleges throughout the state including Everett Junior College, Skagit Valley JuniorCollege, Highline Junior College, and Central Washington State College. The biggest event of the yearwill be the Northwest Collegiate W o m e n ' s E x t r a m u r a l - Association Tennis Tournament to beheld May 14,15 and 16 at Washington State University. Teams from Washington and Oregon areexpected to attend. Seventeen girls have turned out for tennis this year, Andrea Boucher, tennis coachand graduate assistant, said. Softball to start in intramurals Sign-up sheets for this year's men'sintramural softball (slow pitch) are available in the intramural office in Carver Gym. The individual mayeither sign-up on a team needing members, or he can form a team. In the latter, he must submit thename of the team and the team captain or manager. Ten men on a team can play at a time. No spikesor mits may be used. A meeting of all captains will be held at 4 p.m. Friday, April 24 in CV 110.Competition will start the following week. r * \ April 16 8 p.m. as taught by MAHARISHI MAHESHYOGI Typewriters and Adding Machines Sato;, S«rvk« and R«ntab Special Student (Unlal Ratts fa A DELLIMCHIM DVSMESS MACHINES (N«x»tolonMord») UUCi—IITM 734-3S3I .y ---------- Western Front - 1970 April 14 - Page 11 ---------- Vik mitmen split; host UPS , Central Paul Madison Western Front staff Western's baseball Vikingssplit a double-header with Eastern last Saturday at Cheney, dropping the opener 1-0, but taking thenightcap 3-2. It was the opening of Evergreen conference (Evco) action for both clubs. Jeff Clark, a junior from Vancouver, pitched masterfully for the Vikings in the opener allowing one unearned run and onehit. The right-hander struck' out 12 and walked only two. Eastern's pitcher Dick Rousseau, in shuttingout the Vikings, spaced out five hits. It was Rousseau who got the Savage's only hit and run. He got onvia a swinging bunt, advanced to second on a fielder's choice and scored on a throwing J \ ClassifiedAdvertising \ , JT 11 CARS CYCLES For Sale: 1969 GTO 400 cubic inch engine, vinyl top, airconditioning, in excellent condition. Contact Barry, 734-0370. 30 ROOMMATE WANTED 2 roommateswanted for surhmei quarter. Also two for month of August. Contact Barry at 617 N. Forest or call 734-0370. 50 PERSONALS Read today's newspaper today. Subscribe to the Seattle Times. Rates by the quarter. Call Bob: 733-1090. The person who lost an earring at OCIC's Finals Fling last quarter mayclaim it by caUing Bob at 733-1090. CAR INSURANCE-If you need help in solving your car insuranceneeds, talk to Bob Wallin at Bellingham Mall. Bob can tailor a plan to fit your needs today. Phone 734-5204 and tell them you read their Western Front ad. 60 NOTICES Jewish students who would like toparticipate in an informal Passover Seder April 25 should contact Adele Saltzman, 734-8030. error byClark on another bunt. Western attempted a rally in the final inning when with two out Neil Crawfordsingled and Steve Anderson doubled. But Rousseau retired the next batter for the win. In the secondcontest Western's Clark Babbitt went all the way for the victory. The spunky right-hander from PortAngeles held Eastern, to five hits and two runs, one of those coming on a passed ball. Babbitt drove inwhat proved to be the winning run in the sixth with a single. Viking outfielder Jess Chavez figured in thetwo other tallies. The 1969 All-Evco performer doubled in Western's first run in the fourth and scored on a fielder's choice in the fifth. Tonight coach Conrad Hamilton's squad will take on the University of PugetSound in Western's first home game of the season. The Vikings, currently 5-6 on the year, will host theLoggers at Bellingham's Civic Field. Game time is 6:30 p.m. Thursday afternoon Western will be inSeattle to take on the Chieftains of Seattle University. On Saturday Central will be here for a crucialdouble-header that will have much bearing on this season's Evco championship. Action begins at 12:30p.m. Yacht club elects Foltz commodore The Viking Yacht Club elected Jeffrey Foltz as Commodoreand Cheryl Baldridge as Vice-Commodore last Thursday night. Bob Franks was given r e s p o n s i b i l i t y for the maintenance of the boats as Rear-Commodore, while Dar H o y t was e l e c t edSecretary-Treasurer for the coming year. Sailing lessons are offered Saturdays while most Sundays aredevoted to racing, Foltz said. Lectures Dull? Blackboard Bleary? 1328 CORNWALL Come See Us B IN Y O N 0ptin8trist$ 733-9300 The lectures may still be dull, but at least you'll see the blackboardCONTACT LENSES — FASHION FRAMES Dr. Lcroy-H. f w M I ***- associates Soccer club getsvictory Western's soccer club, led by the fantastic scoring of Dave Asher, downed * the Royal Rhodes,4-1 last Saturday on the Shuksan Middle School field. Asher pumped in three goals past the porousRoyal Rhodes defense. Manfred Kuerstan added the Viks' fourth goal. The win for the Vik booters wasthe second of the year over the Canadian military school from Victoria, B.C. Earlier this Spring, the Viksdefeated the Royal Rhodes, 2-0 in the Royal Rhodes Invitational. Tuesday, April 14, 1970 Western Front11 Western rowers pull to third place Western's crew team, battling strong opposition, finished third ina four-way varsity race on American Lake in Tacoma last Saturday. The University of Oregon won therace with a time of 6:30.5, just nosing out Pacific Lutheran University (PLU) which finished at 6:37.0 andthe Vik rowers who completed the 2,000 meter course in 6:37.5. The University of Puget Sound (UPS)finished fourth at 6:42.0. Bells tickets available now Western students and faculty who will be here thisSummer are reminded that Bellingham Bells baseball will again be in swing from June through August.The Bells, a semi-pro ballclub, are made up of collegiate stars from throughout the country. Familyseason tickets are available for $25. A ticket allows the holder and his family or date admittance to all 28 Bells home games. For ticket information contact Paul Madison in the men's physical educationdepartment (Carver gym) or call ext. 1346. P. W. FRAMES CUSTOM FRAMING Molding sold by thefoot Frames cost /ess atP W 203 W. Holly - 733-9175 f Complete Menu Service Alas Pizza BroutedChicken Hamburgers Prawns ^bSand CT-vern card room „ T$3SSfrEAK. t Broasced potato andtoast T. BAKER 106 N. COMMERCIAL 734-4950 doors open 4 p.m. today —Ends T o n i g h t—"ALASKA, AMERICA'S LAST FRONTIER" 4:30-7-9 STARTING WEDNESDA Y ACADEMY AWARDWINNER! JOHN WAYNE BEST ACTOR OF THE YEAR! in Technicolor with Glenn Campbell andKim Darby —And This Big Co-Feature—- ACADEMY AWARD NOMINEE Liza Minnelli in CuckooWed, Thur, Mon, Tues. True Grit 6 and 10:15 Sterile Cuckoo 8:20 Saturday's Schedule True Grit 6:30 -10:45 Sterile Cuckoq gt;4:30 - 8:45 Friday True Grit 6 : 3 0 - 10:40 Sterile Cuckoo 8:50 Sunday'sSchedule True Grit 1 : 3 0 - 5 : 4 5 - 10 Cuckoo 3:50 and 8 The Vik JV's also raced finishing fourth outof five schools, with a time of 7:05.0 The Oregon freshmen took the race in 6:38.0, beating out theirfellow classmates, the Oregon JV's who placed second at 6:43.0. Seattle U. finished third at 6:49.0 and UPS finished fifth in 7:17.0. In a feature race, the Western varsity again came in third (6:42.0), finishingbehind the strong University of Washington lightweights (6:36.6) and PLU (6:38.5). This Saturdaymorning, the Viking crew hosts PLU on Lake Samish. There will be two races, with four-manned crewsracing first, then the eight-manned crews. "The year's best v, comedy? -SATURDAY REVIEW AFRANKOVICH PRODUCTION FOR COLUMBIA RELEASE Restricted also$ i(ft Burt Lancaster CastleKeep ---------- Western Front - 1970 April 14 - Page 12 ---------- 12 Western Front Tuesday, Apri 114, 1970 • • • • n n . L i !••• gt;•• i . . i . f n n A . i . L L k m u i u u ja DAVID AND JULIE ARE NOT featured in the 1970 edition of JEOPARDY t BUT:RICHARD BRAUTIGAN CHARLES BUKOWSKI DIANE WAKOSKI CURT JOHNSON WILLIAMSTAFFORD LOUIS GINSCERG THE MARVEL COMICS GROUP plus writers, artists and photographers from Western's community, and more ARE YOU CAN BUY JEOPARDY IN FRONT OF THE V.U., INROOM 350 OF. THE HUMANITIES BUILDING AND IN THE BOOKSTORE FOR $1 - NOW JEOPARDYA MAGAZINE OF THE CREATIVE ARTS . , , , . ^ , . . . • « . . . • _ . . . • •..L ;n», ^»••.n. c . i L -. • » uLIn. L L» ^*^^ ^^^^^^^•-•-^^^1x^^x^^^v.^^^^1I1^^^^^i1 t».^f.w:v^^vvvif. gt;, gt;^,»^vi^ya ,t" gt;«M C L I P H E R E - INVITES YOU TO VISIT THE MOSTHAPPENING TAVERN IN BEAUTIFUL, RAVISHING DOWNTOWN BHAM . . . ON US!! r BRING THISAD WITH YOU ON TUESDAY, ANY TUESDAY IN THE MONTH OF APRIL, AND YOU ARE ADMITTEDFREE OF CHARGE WE FEATURE TOP NORTHWEST ENTERTAINMENT 7 NIGHTS A WEEK. IN THENEAR FUTURE WATCH FOR SUCH GROUPS AS FLOATING BRIDGE, CITY ZU Open 11:00 am - 2am Mon. - Sat. 2 pm - 10 pm Sun. BULLDOG AND THE BROTHERHOOD lt;ismmamaan£ maastt8llM\MMlto\UI!ltl
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- 1970_0421 ---------- Western Front - 1970 April 21 - Page 1 ---------- Peace marchers may be charged Bellingham police might file charges against some of the protestors in last week's Moratorium peace march. Police Chief Cecil B. Klein said that most of the marchers defieda city parade permit b
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1970_0421 ---------- Western Front - 1970 April 21 - Page 1 ---------- Peace marchers may be charged Bellingham police might file charges against some of the protestors in last week's Moratorium
Show more1970_0421 ---------- Western Front - 1970 April 21 - Page 1 ---------- Peace marchers may be charged Bellingham police might file charges against some of the protestors in last week's Moratorium peace march. Police Chief Cecil B. Klein said that most of the marchers defieda city parade permit by walking down Holly Street to the Federal Building rally instead of the approvedroute down Magnolia Street. Police plainsclothesmen took movies and photographs of many of the High Street demonstrators. Inspector Bill Tooker said that positive identification of protestors photographedin the anti-war march will be made before any determination of charges will be made. The WhatcomCounty Chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) has voted to arrange defense forMoratorium Committee members should they face court action. Dr. Dan Larner, president, announcedlast week that two a t t o r n e y s have recently volunteered their services for local ACLU court cases.Dr. Robert Keller, state board member and local chapter participant, said ACLU should send a letter tothe Bellingham Police Department commending them for their actions during the peace march lastWednesday. Roughly 1,000 persons protesting the war in Vietnam begin the marchi tothe FederalBuilding to hold a noon rally. A majority of the participants used Holly Street in violation of a cityordinance. More photos and story, page 3. Western Front photo by Shoblom the western front Vol. LXIIno. 29 Western Washington State College Bellingham, Washington 98225 Tuesday, April 21, 1970 10cCounty restricts rock festivals To reconsider next month Pub revision asked A county ordinanceseverely restricting rock festivals in the unincorporated areas of Whatcom County was passed lastweek. Before an audience of about 75, the County Commissioners enacted the ordinance that wascalled unconstitutional by the great majority of those testifying. Edmund Wood, staff council of theWashington American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), testified that the ordinance violated the 1st, 5th and14th Amendments of the U.S. Constitution by denying freedom of assembly, due process of law andequal protection under the law. In response to questioning, James Thompson, Whatcom Countyprosecuting attorney, who drew up the ordinance, admitted that he did have some r e s e r v a t i o n sabout its constitutionality. Many of the 30 persons testifying charged that the ordinance was aimedsolely at quelling a sub-culture alien to the commissoners' viewpoint. They pointed out the hypocrisy ofenacting this ordinance against the youth while other boisterous and illegal activities were allowed tocontinue at gatherings like the Deming Loggers' Jubilee. Half a dozen citizens spoke for the ordinance,warning of the dangers of drugs and undesirable elements, citing as examples the Woodstock andAltamont rock festivals of the past year. After an hour and a half of h e a t e d testimony, theCommissioners adjourned to make their decision. When they returned, Frank R o b e r t s , c h a i r m a n, re-emphasized that the ordinance was aimed at rock festivals only, but that its intent was to regulate rather than ban them. I n d e f e n d i n g its constitutionality, Roberts said, "We have it from the bestlegal minds in Whatcom County that this measure is constitutional." Wood responded that the ACLUwould challenge the ordinance. Jackie Lawson Western Front staff , The Board of Trustees ruled lastThursday to send the faculty-student pub proposal back to committee until next month for revisions andrechecking of figures. The proposal was reviewed by the Trustees and found to be "discriminatory"because the facility's potential would involve only 25 per cent of the college community. It was alsodiscovered that if the pub were to be built and operated according to present plans there would be adeficit in excess of $25,000 per year with no interest. The Trustees decided that the economic feasibility of the restaurant-tavern was negative because the pub committee figures and estimates did not includebartender salaries, food preparation costs and industrial insurance costs. "The estimated income isbased on a survey taken through the premises locally" Pub Committee Chairman Al Doan said. Allfactions on campus were approached by the pub committee and asked if they were in favor of theproposed restaurant-tavern. All agreed with the exception of the staff-employees council, which decidedagainst the proposal by a 6 to 4 vote. The major change in the presentation was the revision of theproposal to include a restaurant facility, making the pub available to a greater majority of the collegecommunity, according to Greg Baker, AS president. Present food facilities on campus, such as thecoffee shops, are heavily overworked a n d the p r o p o s ed restaurant-tavern would help alleviate theoverflow. Proposed operation hours are from 9 a.m."to 2 p.m. and from 2 p.m. until closing time. Beerand wine would be served only between 2 p.m. and closing time. Financing would be handled throughthe college housing and dining system and through independent financiers such as the Seattle FirstNational Bank. The pub will not be a profit making operation, but will be built to' offer services to thecommunity, according to Baker.. "Time marches on and hopefully at the completion of four years atWestern students will have turned 21, making them eligible to enjoy the facilities of the proposed pub."This will be one way to hold our students," Ray Romine, dean of men, said. Disgusting isn't it. Any of itbelong to you? photo by Harold Monsen. Teach-in schedule TODAY-All day: Trash-in, Ennen's Thriftwayparking lot. 3 pjn.: Eddison Fisk, Survival Party candidate for U.S. Senate, "The Population Explosion,"VU lounge. 4 p.m.: Panel, "Life in Whatcom County in the Future," L-3. 7:30 p.m.: Panel, "Industry'sFuture in Whatcom County," L-3. TOMORROW-All day: Environmental exhibits, VU gallery. Noon: State Rep. David Sprague, remarks on the bill to ban the internal combustion engine by 1980, musicauditorium. 1:30 p.m.: State Sen. Pete Francis, remarks on "Population Stability for the State ofWashington," music auditorium. 3 pjn.: Film, A Plague on Your Children, a study of chemical andbiological warfare, L-4. 4 p.m.: Book of the Quarter panel, "Promoting the General Welfare," VU lounge.7:30 p.m.: Films, The Redwoods and Brazil: The Gathering Millions, Haggard Hall 368. THURSDAY,APRIL 2 3 - 4 p.m.: Film and tape on Santa Barbara oil spill, L-3. 6 p.m.: Rev. William Houff, "NorthSlope Oil Development," VU lounge. 8 p.m.: WSU archaeologists, "The Marmes Site: DestructionCaused by Dams," VU lounge. FRIDAY, APRIL 2 4 - 1 p.m.: Meeting, Society of American Foresters,Leopold Hotel. 4 p.m.: Panel, "Environmental Ethics," VU lounge. SATURDAY, APRIL 2 5 - 1 p.m.:Plant-in on Whatcom Creek. 8:30 p.m.: Environmental Awareness Festival, featuring Future'sEndffolksingers and Orchesis dance numbers. ---------- Western Front - 1970 April 21 - Page 2 ---------- Western Front Tuesday, April 21, 1970 Legislature tries to Project 70:drug education ^ • j t r P O n t .S l U n C l S Three Northwest Washington be enforcement, education and \ ^ ^ ^ ^ 1 1 \ # • • ! • * ^ • %* • • ^ * ^ * hrnnrlractina ctatinnc ii/ill frirm o broadcast four hours each dav. nharrmrnlnav After a week of controversy over the editorship of the Western Front, the AS legislature voted 6 to 4 last week to freeze funds contributed by s t u d e n t government for s u p p o r t i n g the college newspaper.The action was a result of Bill No. 95 which declared the editorship of the publication invalid because ofthe method used by the publications board in filling the post. After declaring the editorship vacant thelegislature announced that it was taking applicants for the position. When no one applied, speaker GailDenton offered it to Bob Burnett, the current editor. He turned their appointment down and said that asfar as he was concerned his position was never in doubt, that he had always been the editor. One 1 e gi s l a t o r , Joe McConkey, moved that, "we do e v e r y t h i n g to suspend publication of thisnewspaper." "I realize I'm being radical, but the legislature is faced with a radical problem," he said.Expressing doubt that cutting Typewriters and Adding Machines Sal*:., Servk* and Rentals Spec gt;alStudent Rental Rates' I DELLIHGHAM BUSINESS MACHINES (Next to Bon Mordw) HlICi—wcM 734-3KI J JL "Mystique" by ( or/ange hMonnom from $260.00 Everything new! everything brilliant! . . .everything perfect! Your future begins with the seventies. Begin the wedding vows with a vow toselect her diamond from Milton Terry, Jeweler. A perfect beginning to a perfect future. Milton E. Terry Jeweler "WHERE JEWELRY IS OUR BUSINESS" 1326 Cornwall 733-2030 funds to the Western Front would be enough McConkey said, "Will it continue to be funded through another fund?" Other membersof the body doubted the wisdom of the bill. Some felt discussions by both sides in the dispute wouldsolve the problem. Another member expressed the opinion that the legislature had declared theeditorship of the Western Front vacant because "by God, our man didn't get in." The question wasraised as to why there had been no resolutions expressing concern over the procedures used by thepublications board in picking the editor before the committee met. on broadcasting stations will form aspecial network beginning at 3 p.m. April 27 to present "Project 70," a program designed to educate and involve people with the problems associated with drug use and abuse. Radio stations KGMI,Bellingham; KARI, Blaine; and KBRC, Mount Vernon, are donating a total of 24 hours of primeprogramming time for the series. James L. Hamstreet, president and general manager for KGMI, cited"ignorance" as the biggest problem concerning drugs today. "The key phrase for Project 70 is 'gettinginvolved'," Hamstreet said at a promotional luncheon Friday. Bill 7 6 endorsed by Faculty Council Thenetwork series will be broadcast four hours each day, Monday through Saturday, from 3 to 5 p.m. andfrom 7 to 9 p.m. The format for each of the two hour segments will consist of one hour of pre-recordedinterviews, case histories and e x p e r t opinions from throughout the United States and Canada as wellas the local area, followed by one hour of open telephone line discussions. The program will originatefrom KGMI, which will have four incoming lines for open discussion with experts on the air, and twooutgoing lines which will be used to obtain answers to listeners' questions from other experts in the U.S. and Canada. Among the experts that will be on hand for the open line discussions will be specialists in legislation, judiciary, medicine, sociology, psychology, law pharmacology. Robert Savage, the producer and moderator for the series, spent more than three and a half years compiling information andinterviewed more than 2,800 experts on drugs. "The drug-chemical problems of abuse represents one ofthe greatest threats to society today," Savage said. "It is not just a local, regional or national problem. It is a world-wide problem. The only way to make progress is to start by overcoming the general apathyon the part of the public. "Yo.u can't legislate individual responsibility. People must have access to thefacts, but in an entertaining manner. You've got to generate their interest first, because people don'twant to be educated." Project 70 is designed to provide all of the available information on drugs"possible. "Students will continue to confront placement recruiters at Western as they deem itnecessary," AS President Greg Baker said following last week's Faculty Council meeting. Baker'sstatement came after the Council approved supporting Bill No. 76, AS Legislature's placementconfrontation policy. The Council, however, pushed back the effective date of the bill's enforcement toSept. 1,1970. Questions were directed to Baker and Frank Punches, placement office director, beforeaccepting the policy presented to the Board of Trustees Thursday afternoon. Punches stated that manyrecruiters would discontinue their recruiting at Western if such a policy were enforced, and citedrecruiters' concern about harassment and the Placement Association's present stand against such apolicy. Dr. Daniel Larner, professor of English, said that the state is subsidizing recruiters by givingthem free recruiting space and privileges. He suggested that Western would be hindering the educationof those students wishing to question recruiting personnel. Trustees hear report on hiring, retention The Committee on Faculty Hiring and Retention, which was set up by the Board of Trustees last February,presented its final report to the board last Thursday. Only one member of the six-member committeepresenting the report was at the board meeting last week to answer questions, which President CharlesJ. Flora called an "incredible lack of responsibility on the part of the faculty as well as the studentmembers." The committee proposed the establishment of departmental student committees on hiringand retention to consist of seven members and four alternates, all students. The report was sent back to the AS legislature and the Faculty Council for approval. The board is expected to discuss the reportagain at its May or June meeting. Front ranks second among 4-year colleges Festival ordinancesummary The Western Front placed second overall among four-year college newspapers in theWashington State Press Awards Saturday. The award was based on the quality of three consecutiveissues which were published Fall quarter during Mike Gowrylow's term of editorship. The awards,presented at the Eames Theater in Seattle, were sponsored by the Washington Chapter of Sigma DeltaChi, a professional journalistic society. The University of Washington Daily placed first in thecompetition, and the Seattle University Spectator placed third. The following is a summary of the majorprovisions of the ordinance concerning rock festivals: A permit is required for all ' ' o u t d o o r m u s i cal entertainments, amusements and assemblies" of 1,000 persons or more. Application must be madeforty days prior to the event. A basic fee of $500 is required. No festival may last more than one day (9a.m. to midnight) and all persons must be gone by 1 a.m. All drugs and alcohol are strictly prohibited.All plans and facilities must be approved and must be finished at least five days prior to the festival. Thepromoters must deposit a cash bond to pay for any damages or police expenses incurred. There mustbe one crowd control person for every 250 people and one parking space per four persons. The sheriffwill investigate the backgrounds of the promoters. The Commissioners may revoke a permit withoutnotice or formal hearing. Art Film Series "HOLLYWOOD COMEDY AND CAMP" presents: AnAromatic Mixture of Dirt, Manure, Corn and Verbal Surgery, as: W. C. Fields § Mae West appear in"MY LITTLE CHICKADEE" (1940) Friday, April 24 at 7 and 9:15 p.m. in L-4 Admissions: Students $.75 - General $1.25 Plus Laurel Hardy short, "TWO TARS" ---------- Western Front - 1970 April 21 - Page 3 ---------- Tuesday, April 21, 1970 Western Front 3* ingallthetroopshomenowbringallthetroopshomenowb ThreeBellingham motorcycle policemen "block" Holly Street while marchers casually over-run the vehicularbarricade. 'Experts' differ on peace march count Exactly how many people participated in Wednesday's Moratorium march is debatable. The Bellingham Police Department estimated the size of the crowd tobe 600 to 700. According to the Vietnam Moratorium Committee more than 2,000 people took part inthe demonstration. Jack Carver, long-time photographer and crowd estimater for the Bellingham Herald,said there were 700 to 800 marchers. Radio stations KPUG and KBFW agreed that there were 600marchers on Holly Street and 200 on Magnolia Street. Protestors crowded before the Federal Building towatch skits, listen to speeches and repeat chants denouncing U.S. involvement in Vietnam. WesternFront photos by Dan Shoblom, Bill Todd and Mike Pinch Marchers 'liberate' Holly Street Editor's Note:John Stolpe, camera in hand, walked alongside the leading banner in last week's Moratorium peacemarch. What follows is his uncensored version of what happened. It was a beautiful day for a peacemarch. The Jesus Jumpers were prancing up front and blowing kisses to three police motorcycleescorts while two upside-down American flags jostled each other in a slight breeze. Behind us perhaps1,500 anti-war demonstrators—mostly college students-gayly tramped in the bright morning sunshinedown to what evolved into a long and sometimes boring rally in town. Two plainsclothesmen wereperched in a second floor window of the Federal Building waiting to spot known activists, or whatever, inthe crowd below. It was a field day for Bellingham police. It looked like the whole force had turned outattired inconspicuously in business suits, sunglasses and cameras. Two of them took movies to show to their buddies back at the station. The peace march was divided into two groups. A hundred chose towalk the approved route down Magnolia Street to the Federal Building while the vast majority followedMoratorium leaders down Holly Street in open defiance of a city Council ruling. The motorcycle escortsswiftly formed a barricade across Holly Street, but the throng ignored them and triumphantly walkedaround the barricade and down the busy main street of Bellingham amidst cheers, whistles and shoutsof, "Holly Street for the people." A police car pulled in front of the procession one block down the street, but once again the marchers waved hello and flowed around the car, merrily marching to the music ofkazoos, guitars and harmonicas. At no time did police make verbal warnings or attempt to arrest anyparticipants. The single incident in the peaceful protest was provided by one woman spectator onCornwall Avenue. She stepped into the parade and kicked and pushed several students in a vain attempt to take down the leading banner. One assaulted student brushed her out of the parade's p a t h .Immediately, two Bellingham plainclothesmen (one was Sgt. Spedo Southas) jumped into the march,grabbed the assaulted student and accused him of striking the w o m a n . The procession haltedmomentarily while protestors arid police hassled over the incident. The student was hauled to thesidewalk where the police took his name while some marchers shouted, "Let him go, Spedo!" Marchleaders started the parade moving in an attempt to keep a major incident from growing out of the hassle.The last block found scores of local shoppers and businessmen gawking while protestors chanted, "1-2-3-4 End-The Damned-War!" This march was in direct contrast to the solemn, silently chantingprotestors in the candlelight procession held here last November. The Viet Cong flags, the impromptumusicians, the happy mood of the marchers and the mingling of every radical faction one couldremember gave the occasion a carnival-like atmosphere. Many who came vto hear senatorial candidateCarl Maxey t a l k about problems in Washington State found themselves barely listening to asomewhat unimpressive adaptation of Martin Luther King's old "I Have A Dream" speech. While ourJesus friend tried to interject "Love Jesus" between every speech by the host of radical speakers, thecrowd kept busy flashing peace signs and digging the sunshine while a plane circled overhead to see ifBellingham was having a Russian Revolution. When one speaker identified himself as a Marine Corpsdeserter, the two feds on their second floor Federal Building perch came to their feet. This writer flippedthem the finger and one ducked out of sight. Like we said, it was a beautiful day for a peace march.Participants and spectators included camera-wielding newsmen, a deputy US marshal, flag-wavers,disinterested shoppers and unconcerned children ---------- Western Front - 1970 April 21 - Page 4 ---------- 4 Western Front Tuesday, April 21, 1970 between the lines Dope may make dopes of some users Everblown pot? Dropped acid? Popped pills? You may not be taking what your contact says he is selling.Your pot may be half oregano, your acid a combination of anything from liquified airplane glue tounderarm spray and the ingredients of your pills as varied as their colors. Much of the "hash" recentlyrecovered in Bellingham has oeen analyzed to be a solution of pine pitch and strychnine poison. Thishas been documented. In order to provide information on the dangers and problems concerning drug useand abuse locally and throughout the country, radio stations KGMI, KARI and KBRQ will present* aspecial program entitled "Project 70." The series will feature taped interviews with anonymous drug users as well as experts in various specialist fields concerning drugs. Experts will be available to answerquestions from listeners on four open-discussion telephone lines. Bob Savage, producer and moderatorfor Project 70, spent three and a half years interviewing 2,800 experts in preparation for the program.The three radio stations are donating prime time on a "no commercial" basis in hopes of providingeducational and objective information on drug use and abuse. Listen to Project 70. Become interested. Get involved. —Bob Burnett The other troubled spaceship In Friday's early morning hours when Apollo13 was limping home from a near disaster on man's third voyage to the moon, ABC televisioncommentator Frank Reynolds said something important. "Driving to our New York studios this morning,"Reynolds related, "I could not help but wonder if our tax dollars could be better spent for making the airwe breathe cleaner, and the water we drink clearer." You see, millions are awakening to the startlingrealization that there's another spaceship all alone in the void of space, running low on the very staples of life. It's their own spaceship, Earth. If we could convince the world to become as concerned about itsown spaceship as it did about Apollo 13, then we might be able to salvage this planet from thetechnological genius which gave us the automobile, the non-returnable bottle, and nuclear energy.Tomorrow is Earth Day. Hopefully, there will be many of you who will pause long enough to learn whatyou can do for your ailing planet. The first national Environmental Teach-in, now in progress; will give youthe tools. Ralph Waldo Emerson said more than one hundred years ago that the end of the human racewill be that it will eventually die of civilization. Here's your chance to take a swat at Emerson. —JohnStolpe Congratulations to non-marchers While the last Moratorium rally downtown was a little tooradical for some, there is no question that non-participation by the majority of faculty, staff and studentsat this college was analogous to disregard for peace efforts in this nation. Those of you who sat in classwhile perhaps 1,500 persons from this campus demonstrated against the Vietnam war can patyourselves on the back and call yourselves new members of the Silent Majority. And special thanksgoes to a surprising number of narrow-minded so-called professors here who scheduled exams on that day. You too are traitors to the cause of peace in Vietnam. —John Stolpe Bob Burnett editor-in-chiefDan Shobiom photo editor thewestern front official weekly newspaper of Western Washington StateCollege second class postage paid at Bellingham, Wash. 98225 phone 734-8800 editorial, ext. 2277advertising, ext. 2276 John Stolpe Adele Saltzman Jim Bromley Bob Taylor managing editor assistant tothe editor copy editor sports editor Jerry King Bill Todd MikeErickson Bill Woodland head photographerassistant photographer cartoonist business manager Lynn Watts feature editor R.E. Stannard, Jr.advisor Reporters: Chris Anderson, Forrest Anderson, Jim Austin, Jim Baker, Ted Bestor, Deb Coleman,Robin Courtwright, Don DeMarco, Jim Diedrick, Barbara Dinner, Dave Haeck, Billie Hargadine, GaryHarrod, Mickey Hull, Diane Jacobs, Bill Johnston, Tim Knopf, Jay Long, Jackie Lawson, Julie McCalib,Bob McLauchlan, Paul Madison, Mary Peebles, Mike Pinch, Stan Shawn, Jill Stephenson, MargaretThornton, Rob Turner, Doug Van Boven. Deadlines: 5 p.m. Tuesday-display ad reservations. 4 p.m.Thursday-news copy, letters to the editor, classified ads, display ad copy. Represented by NEAS, 360Lexington Ave., New York, N.Y. 10017. Price per copy, 10 cents. Subscription, $3.50 a year, $1.50 aquarter. Member: U.S. Student Press Association, College Press Service, Associated College Press,Intercollegiate Press Service and Liberation News Service. This newspaper printed on the presses of TheLynden Tribune. It's happening All aboard for Earth John Miles contributor Imagine yourself sitting in alunar module on your way to the, moon. Occasionally you look back at that large bright sphere, theearth, receding behind you and perhaps you are impressed by the stark fact that in all the vastness ofspace the only place that you and others like you can live comfortably and naturally is that finite spherecalled earth. You never thought of earth quite that way before. As long as your feet are on the ground you are impressed by the size of the world. Only when you are outside looking in do you see earth as shereally is, a beautiful, delicate, limited environment for man. There is much argument about the value ofspace exploration. Why go out there? Why spend all of that money? These questions could be answered and the answers disputed at length, but one value of the space program already seen is its contributionto man's persepective of his world. The astronauts flying lunar missions are all glad to return toSpaceship Earth and all are impressed by the forbidding coldness, sterility and vastness of space. When we view earth from outside we can see her as a spaceship stocked with the essentials to support life.Most importantly we see her stock of essentials to be limited and we see that when the stock is depleted or destroyed we have no more. There is nowhere else for us to go. That is the end. Now that we can seeSpaceship Earth for what she truly is let us celebrate her uniqueness on Earth Day by pledging ourselvesto the rational revolution of mankind's perception of earth that must come about if she and we are not tocrash and burn. All of us must pledge and act and learn, not just a few. We are all on this ship togetherand not a single one of us is~ entirely independent of the others. From the spaceman's viewpoint national boundaries and stone walls are not visible. There is just one friendly sustaining environment and all menand all nations must do their part to preserve and conserve the whole. staff commentary Opinionsexpressed in this column are not necessarily those of the editor or other staff members. Congratulationsto marchers Lyn Watts feature editor Congratulations and thanks must go out to the members of thecollege community and Bellingham who took part in the Moratorium march Wednesday. Except for onesmall incident, both police and the marchers displayed a genuine spirit of brotherhood and cooperationwhich, it is hoped, will remain after moratoriums are no longer needed. Those in charge of organizing themarch should be commended for their foresight in explaining the entire purpose and plans of the marchbefore its start. This enabled everyone involved to make a rational decision on which route to take. Manystudents and observers were dissatisfied with those who spoke at the rally in front of the Federal Building, complaining that all seemed to represent radical factions. Many said the speakers didn't propose anysolid facts or ideas on what the average, conservative but concerned could do to help end the war. Butregardless of the complaints or dissent which seem to occur in the best of organizations, the Moratoriummarch accomplished its aims and must be deemed a complete success. CORRECTION: In my editorialconcerning the Sehome Hill Improvement Troop's letter of April 7, I mistakenly identified ZEP-777 as adefoliant. ZEP-777 should have been identified as a nonselective vegetation killer, -the editor. ---------- Western Front - 1970 April 21 - Page 5 ---------- Tuesday, April 21, 1970 Western Front 5 feedbackfeedbackfeedbackfeedbackfeedbackfeedbi SAYSMARCHERS WERE Editor: I stood and watched Wednesday as students and people from outside ofthe college formed up and marched downtown to the Federal Building. I have some questions I wouldlike answered: 1. How many of the marchers were students? In looking around the group, many of thepeople I saw were complete strangers. Many were no longer affiliated with the college. 2. What dograpes have to do with the war? Grapes are a food product; I have never heard or seen anything that was ever connected with grapes in the Army. No deadly killing gas is made from grapes. But wine is. Anymany people buy wines for parties and celebrations. So although the protestors won't buy grapes, theydo buy wines. Why? 3. Why protest? Are they against the pullout of G.I.'s from . VANDALISM, THEFTCAUSE "UNBELIEVABLE" LOSS OF MONEY Editor: I have recently been made aware of the greatamount of vandalism and theft occurring at Western. In view of the fact that all these incidents have tobe covered under the state's budget, and our fees have gone up and out-of-state applicants have beencut off, I think an expose on this unbelievable source of revenue drain would be an eye opener to many of this college community. I'm sure you would be assured of help from all the departments on campus and it would be most beneficial for us as students. Thanks for considering them. Allison B. Andres'STRANGERS' Vietnam? Even as these people protest today, orders are being cut to return somethinglike , 50,000 soldiers. I am a veteran. I have served in Korea. When I was over in Korea, I was sickenedto see the amount of protesting and demonstrating going on back in this country. A Negro sergeant,one of my best friends, asked "Why should I return?" A good question. Why should he leave a countrythat treated him like a man, an equal? What can he expect in Alabama, his home state? Can he expectto be treated as an equal? Can he expect to be respected because he was almost killed in a "Non-WarZone"? I speak for all veterans. We don't like the protests and demonstrations that are in progress. Ifthese protestors have an alternative, let them express it. I would like to hear it. Philippe Jean EdwardBateman junior art PRIMARY ENVIRONMENTAL PROBLEM political science MITCHELL CLARIFIESCOMMITTEE'S POSITION Editor: Nathan Mason stated in the last issue that our litter problem is only a secondary problem in the destruction of our environment, and that energies should be put to better usein organized activity via demonstrations, aimed at the primary problems. It is true that litter may be only a secondary problem, but b r i n g i n g the problem dramatically to focus can serve as an excellentscheme exposing primary environmental problems. It is ironic that we demonstrate, say, against apaper industry, and yet we use toilet paper, paper towels, facial PLASTIC CUPS NOT Editor: Beginning this quarter the coffee shops in Miller Hall and at the VU lounge began using disposable plastic cups for coffee. The reason is legitimate and one can sympathize. Last quarter Saga lost 1,000 coffee mugs (30 cents each) which students did not return, despite Saga's request. Saga says it cannot afford that loss; but neither can our environment afford that type of solution. P l a s t i c c u p s are nondegradable andtherefore very difficult to dispose of safely. Burning them is extremely dangerous since the plasticcannot completely break down and this adds to air pollution. These cups cannot be recycles; and Sagawhich does a large business in coffee, creates a hazard to the environment by using them. This earth is rapidly approaching an ecocatastrophy. This by now, is no news. Many people are aware of theproblem; HUMANS tissues and paper sacks by the tons without thinking; or drive our hot cars with thefast getaway and proceed to bitch about the lead and hydrocarbons polluting our atmosphere. Theprimary problem in the environmental crisis are homo sapiens; there are too many of them. If we reallywant to demonstrate, we should each wear signs saying, "I am guilty of raping the earth." The littercampaign is designed to demonstrate against our "throw-away" society. If we cannot change ourinstitutional patterns, I cannot see any major breakthroughs in solving our environmental problems on agrand scale. Ted Boss junior SATISFACTORY SOLUTION and yet awareness is not enough. Action isneeded. Saga must change back to porcelain mugs and people must stop stealing them. Studentsshould be sufficiently committed to their own futures to refrain from stealing and placing the entire burden on Saga. Both Saga and the people on this campus are involved in our environment. This is the onlyplanet we have; if it dies so do we. Lori Macko James Hutchinson freshman freshman FairhavenFairhaven REQUESTS MORE BICYCLE RACKS Editor: With all this hassle on parking spaces forfume-belching automobiles, why not relieve the problem a little by putting in more bicycle racks?Bicycles are non-polluting, small and there are now too many bicycles for too few spaces available.Steve Bjornstad junior geology Gregg Small junior biology Verie Bocock sophomore biologyENGSTROM'S STATEMENTS ' Editor: John Engstrom truly proved himself a qualified member of h i s s o - d e s c r i b e d AS government—he also cites facts that are not factual. In the existing publications policy there are academic requirements for working on student publications. Also, even though the ASlegislature last year passed a bill structuring the publications board, the administration did not whollyagree and thus still NOT FACTUAL" controls the student publications board. Changes are being made,and the AS government and the present publications board are working on a more effective structure forthe board. John, perhaps you had better spend a little more time gathering your "facts." Julie Humlingsenior speech student representative publications board Aardvark loves bookworms All Monarch Notes, including ana Brigette Bardot are now titles by Hemingway, Steinbeck, $1.00. Dickens, Salinger, Orwell, We also have The Ladders of originally $1.00 now 50c. Fire, Children of the Albatross Good selection ofposters and three more titles by Anais including W.C. Fields, Raquel Nin. Welch, Peter Fonda, HellsAngels Come i n and browse, we love company. THREE DOORS SOUTH OF SHAKEY'S ON N.STATE ST Open week nights till 9 p.m. AARDVARK Books Arts Editor: I would like to make twoclarifying statements relative to the item "Flora Faces Faculty" in the April 14 issue of the WesternFront. First, the purpose of the declaration introduced by the Executive Committee was to dialogue andthus procedures for communication and the effectiveness of in college initiate develop improvingincreasing faculty participation governance. Our concern was with p r o c e d u r e s and theirimprovement, not to establish blame for what appeared to us to be an undesirable situation. Hence, itwas not a "charge" in the sense implied in the article. Secondly, your report erred in indicating thePresident has not met with the Council. He has quite regularly, considering his other obligations. Ourreference was to lack of personal contact between Dr. Flora and the Executive Committee which isresponsible for agenda preparation and other preparatory work for Council meetings. It is this lack ofcommunication which has concerned the Executive Committee. Howard E. Mitchell chairman facultycouncil For that new shaggy look, a new look for long hair, or whatever. Your wish is our command.Wahl's Dept. Store 733-3330 Bellingham Mall a.m. - 9 p.m. Mon.-Fri. a.m. - 6 p.m. Sat.-Sun. 734-4231 Now showing the newest in summer bridal fashions — we carry many gowns featured in brides'magazines. You're invited to come in and browse. Bridesmaid Gowns $29.95 over 300 gowns to choose from y/edding Gowns $39.95 over 100 to choose from ---------- Western Front - 1970 April 21 - Page 6 ---------- Western Front Tuesday, April 21, 1970 Security offers to protect bookstore in cops' place The safety and security department is capable of providing security personnel for protection of the student bookstore,R.G. Peterson, department supervisor, said in an interview last week. "We would have to hussle but weare willing to try it," he added. Peterson believes however, that "the Bellingham police are capable ofhandling the job, and their presence would possibly be a deterrent to a criminal who may take receipts,more,than an unarmed security guard." "Some college students feel that uniforms and weapons oncampus are offensive to the college community, and what is best for the community should probably bedone. But would they gamble on losing money just to have a congenial atmosphere," he said. If thedecision was made to use security department personnel in the bookstore, P e t e r s o n said that theemployment of his men in that capacity would be limited. The security officer discussed anotherdifference between the use of a police officer and security marshal in the store. An off-duty police officeris paid a wage of $5 per hour, while a campus marshal, if hired through the security department wouldbe paid an overtime scale of $5.40 per hour, Peterson said. Peterson believes, however, that the mainreason for concern regarding police in the store has not been carefully spelled out. "If it's becauseweapons are being worn, possibly the students could come to an agreement with the police department concerning officers not wearing weapons while employed by the bookstore. "State law stipulates that an officer may use his weapon to apprehend a felon, but I doubt very much that they would use them in acrowded situation?1 If the store asks for safety and security marshals, Peterson said his department will supply the demand. His only question is how easily. Security low at Lakewood Security at Lakewood,the student-owned recreational site at Lake Whatcom, is currently at a minimum, John Miles, VUprogram director, said in an interview last week. "We have five student attendants there during the day,but the facilities are unguarded at night," he said. Three canoes and eight paddles, valued at anestimated $600, were stolen last quarter CLARK'S Feed Seed Roughouts men's women's from$18.99 WORLD'S LARGEST BOOTMAKER when the boathouse was broken into. The AS legislaturelast Fall turned down a proposal for the college-funded development project which would have includedliving quarters for a caretaker who would reside at the lake, Miles said. Reasons given by the legislators at the time were that they wanted to retain title to the property and they wanted to retain the property'sprimitive state. " I t ' s too bad the development project failed," Miles said. He pointed out that with theloss of the three canoes, the lake is not being used to its full potential. "This is rather a stiff price to pay for student government's bargaining power." SHERMAN-CLAY • pianos • organs • music 100N. Commercial 733-2460 Catherine Stephens of Western won first place in Women's Pocket Billiards at the International Intercollegiate Billiards Championships held in Florida last weekend. Exchangephoto by The Florida Alligator "If I were asked to state the great objective which Church and State areboth demanding for the sake of every man and woman and child in this country, I would say that thatgreat objective is 'a more abundant life'." Franklin D. Roosevelt I r— —' Men's Dingos roughout brown from $19.99 Clark's Feed 4 Seed Railroad Magnolia 733-8330 iISP'Roosevelt Din MONEYTALKS And its tone is persuasive with an NBofC spe-r$\ cial checking account. A great way to organize' your budget... have money when you need it. Learn how convenient i f is-and how effective - t o haveyour own personal checking account! NBC NATIONAL BANK OF COMMERCE Tenants Union getsnational recognition Forrest Anderson Western Front staff Western's Tenants Union is gaining nationalrecognition for its dealings with tenant-landlord relations, Craig Cole, Tenants Union chairman, saidrecently. The national recognition is due to efforts of formulating standardized rental agreementcontracts for tenants and landlords. The contracts have been sent to Ann Arbor, Detroit, and to theNational Tenants Union Organization in Washington D.C. Western's Tenants Union is now awaiting anevaluation of the contract and correspondence from the national organization. The Black Students Union (BSU) is cooperating with the Tenants Union by circulating the contract to other BSU's around thenation, Cole said. The tenant-landlord contracts will be officially released in about three weeks, but areavailable now, upon request, in the Housing Commission office inVU227. The number of students theunion has aided has doubled since Fall quarter, Cole said. "The reason the Tenants Union is becomingso active is simply because we are taking the initiative," Cole stated. "The Tenants Union handledapproximately 40 registereed complaints during Winter quarter." Twenty additional cases are presentlypending. The many housing cases are indicative of Bellingham housing conditions, Cole said. Lastquarter's complaints ranged from withheld damage deposits to houses that were rented which thesupposed landlord didn't even own. Complaints were received on poor health conditions, includinghouses proven to be uninhabitable. Complaints also were received about some male landlords whoviolated the privacy of their female tenants by tiptoeing around at the wrong times. A few eviction caseswere handled. "Most cases are solved out of court. When landlords see that tenants have the support of an organization, they are more willing to negotiate." Eight complaints were received about one landlord. Cole complimented the A.S. Legal Aids department, which has handled many cases. The TenantsUnion will handle all housing complaints in an attempt to relieve Legal Aids of its case load. The LegalAids department will act only in an advisory capacity to the Tenants Union in future cases. First BOQpanel to discuss 'Environmental Handbook' The Environmental Handbook, the book of the quarter, willbe the subject of a panel discussion at 4 p.m. tomorrow in the VU lounge. Discussing the handbook,which was edited by Garrett De Bell, will be Joseph W. Entrikin, manager of the Whatcom CountyDevelopment Council; Dr. Phillip H. Jones, Whatcom County health officer; John Miles, program directorof the VU; and Ted Boss, a Western Church Sunday Services 11 a.m. — Lutheran 4 p.m. —Episcopal THURSDAY 6:30 p.m. — Catholic CCM House junior who is chairman of the EnvironmentalQuality Council. The panel, "Promoting the General Welfare," will be moderated by William H.O. Scott,Western's circulation librarian. Journalists to get major The Academic Council approved by a vote of 7to 4 last week the establishment of a journalism major, effective next Fall. Western presently offers only a 24-credit minor in journalism, but the major will consist of 60 credits: 45 required course c r e d i t sand 15 credits recommended by the journalism advisor. tt)R©!00£N IMM plWH^ Orders to goCHINESE and AMERICAN 734-6262 FOOD *?!S .; Open 11 a.m. daily; 2 p.m. Sunday ---------- Western Front - 1970 April 21 - Page 7 ---------- Tuesday, April 21, 1970 Western Front Coming events: TODAY-Environmental Teach-in Week. Seeschedule of events on p. 1. 1:30 p.m.: Dean interviews, VU lounge. THURSDAY, APRIL 2 3 - Noon: TheWay, Limbo, Father Mitchell, VU-10. 7 p jn.: College Life, VU 363. 7 p.m.: Dr. Arthur Hicks lecture, "TheElements of Film Drama," L-4. 7 p.m.: Charter Flight to Europe meeting, L-3. 8 p.m.: George Rickeylecture, "Kinetic Art," L-2. FRIDAY, APRIL 2 4 - 7 and 9:15 p.m.: Art film, Afy Little Chickadee, L-4. 9p.m.: Mixer, Spoon River Anthology, VU lounge. SUNDAY, APRIL 2 5 - All day: Exhibit: "Macrame: TheArt of Creative Knotting," VU gallery. 6, 8 and 10 p.m.: Film, //, L-4. 8 p.m.: Bellingham Chamber music, VU lounge. MONDAY, APRIL 2 7 - AU day: Seventh annual drawing and small sculpture show, Western gallery. VA checks to be late Veterans in the Washington area can expect to receive their GI Billeducation'checks about five days later than in the past. This was the word given by Western's veteransaffairs director Lorraine McGaw. In the past checks have been received from the regional VeteransAdministration (VA) office in Seattle on the 10th of each month but due to change in administrativeprocedures they will probably be arriving on the 15th in the future. Students who are dependent on theVA checks for payment of rent and other debts are advised to inform their creditors that the checksmight not be in until the 15th of the month Mrs. McGaw said. She also said it is currently undeterminedwhether the entire adjustment for the months of February, March and April will be made in one check ortwo checks. Veterans are reminded not to throw away the card that will accompany their check nextmonth. The card must be returned to the VA indicating that the student has continued in the program for which he was granted the benefits or he will not receive the final payment for the 1969-70 school year.Furthermore, students failing to return the card will not be automatically enrolled under the GI Bill nextyear. Failure to complete the certificate will result in discontinuance of further VA educationalallowances for the veteran and his dependents. Deferments require credits Selective service advisorSerge Slagle announced last week the credits needed by each class in order to keep their studentdeferment. Freshmen need 36 credit hours, sophomores 86 and juniors 135. Seniors who were originally scheduled to graduate in June, but aren't, should contact Slagle about keeping their deferments. Hisoffice hours are 9 to 10 a.m., 1 to 2 p.m., and 3 to 5 p.m. daily in VU 218. The extension is 2265. Inview of the upcoming AS elections, and in compliance with election rules, The Western Front will notpublish any material which we consider to be of a campaigning nature by any of the candidates or theirsupporters until the May 12 issue. This includes letters to the editor, but does not include objectivereporting of events leading up to, and during the AS Convention. Any candidate who would like to havehis platform or policy published in the May 12 issue should submit it to the Front office by 3 p.m. May 7and have their pictures taken. Statements will not be published if they are longer than 300 words.Advertising space may be purchased on a first come, first served basis. Trustees accept plans for newstudent center t h e Board of Trustees accepted the preplanning schematics for a student activitiescenter to be built at 21st Street and College Parkway, last Thursday. The South Campus ActivitiesCenter, or as the members of the Viking Union staff call it, "the happening place," is scheduled to becompleted by late 1972. The three-story building will consist of 10 bowling lanes, a six-lane swimmingpool, billiards and card tables and other recreational facilities. The center will cover 90,000 to 100,000square feet, almost twice the size of the Viking Union and the VU addition. Total cost of the center willbe approximately $5 million dollars. The main lounge in the activities center will be twice the size of theone in the Viking Union and will be combined with a music room and art gallery. The center will alsoinclude a dining room, able to seat 600 people. People will be able to look through, windows from thelounge and dining room 15 feet down into the swimming pool. The pool will be used for combinedrecreational facilities, academic uses, water shows and competitions. A great hall is planned for thethird floor which could be divided into three separate rooms for dances, banquets, auditoriums andvarious other uses. Many other facilities and rooms are in the planning stages for the center. The finalplans should be completed in a year. OCIC to elect new president, discuss social events tonight Off-Campus Interhouse Community (OCIC) will elect a new president tonight at 7:30 in VU354. Pam Clark,Jim Dickenson and Bruce Merrick, all active freshmen members, were nominated at last Tuesday'sOCIC meeting. The new president will be responsible for coordinating social events for interested off-campus students, and for organizing the inspection of o f f - c a m p u s houses in cooperation with theTenants Union this summer. Two OCIC social events for this quarter include an anti-litter campaign at 1p.m. Saturday, May 2, leaving from Red Square, and a motorcycle motocross (cross country race)scheduled for Friday, May 22 as part of the Multi-Arts Festival. Environment-conscious students willremove refuse from 1 Day Shirt Service COMPLETE LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANING Free Pickup Delivery 734-4200 PROSPECT THE HUNTSMAN • all the better dressed 1 college bunch shops atTHE HUNTSMAN in the Bellingham Mall Cl open Evenings until 9 p.m. i L/"^/) T£2 £*3 iKl ?}($$ JM \ \ \ m^^W M^mm^^S^j^i w^Ud^'ML fp5y nnriv Br ^#i /IIf WJ * a iflCftl 11 Indian, High, Forest andGarden streets, and are requested to bring their own litter bags. Those desiring to be motocrosscontestants or safety crew members should sign up for the event as soon as possible in the OCIC office(VU 227). Safety crew members should have some first aid knowledge. The motocross, open tostudents only, will have an entry fee and trophies. The cyclists will leave at 3 p.m. from Red Square on a course that will include both trail and street riding, before returning to Red Square. Contestants mayuse their own crew teams to strip their bikes for trail riding, and to transfer and replace parts beforereturning to the road. Sandy § Vale's Shoe Repair features • hand made Mexican tire sandals$8.95 • leather barrettes $1.50 • suede hats $8.95 • suede purses $9.95 105 West Holly St. r^CUP THIS COUPONO•FL OVE ^ # Present this coupon—and your student card —at Weisfield'sJewelers for a 20% student discount on any diamond wedding set. 20% Off on any Diamond WeddingSet NAME ---------- Western Front - 1970 April 21 - Page 8 ---------- 8 Western Front Tuesday, April 21, 1970 James Cotton electrifies in outstanding blues concert ForrestAnderson Western Front staff The 900 to 1,000 who attended the James Cotton Blues Band concertlast week won't forget the crescendo of excitement that was created. The concert began with thesoothing music of Albatross, a local group that had played together for only two weeks, according to one of the band members. The audience quietly absorbed the first group's music, which ended with aversion of "Three Silver Rings" that left no ranch sandwiches for orders to go 734-1154 1306 RailroadAve. doubt of Albatross's high musical ability. Then the blues band entered with James Cottonannouncing his arrival moments later with a big "Ya!" Versions of "Knock on Wood" and "HootchieGoochie" proved to the audience that James Cotton had soul, and then it happened . .. The audienceyelled, clapped and swayed as the music throbbed. Groups of two, then five sprang up. It was soon hard to tell where the audience started and where the group left off. I suddenly realized that Jamed Cotton'sinitials were meaningfully, J.C. Once, J.C. stopped playing for 15 seconds or more, but the steady throb of clapping continued until he resumed. Finally the whole crowd stood for a standing ovation and manyremained standing. It didn't seem to matter what s o n g s C o t t o n ' s band p l a y e d - t h e y allunified "POLLUTED PLANET U Public Lecture by JOHN DARVILL Vancouver B.C. APRIL 26 2 P.M. 91315 State St. — Bellingham, Wash. everyone until there was no division between performers andaudience. Everybody shook when they played "Shake." Most sat as the beat slowed. The huge, bulkyfigure of J.C. swayed, rocked and bounced as he got totally involved in his harmonicizing, and then hestalked off the stage, playing all the way. After the break, as "Yackety Sax" began, the crowd seemedmore inhibited, partially because some house lights behind the tall bleachers remained on. The band had requested that the lights be left on so they could see the audience. The music was more relaxing too.The tempo then picked up and the people did too. Once again a few danced and the bleachers bouncedas many people kept time to the beat. The crowd rose once again as the tempo increased even more.Cotton stalked back and forth on the stage, then he walked into the audience about 50 feet singing"Feelin' Alright!" "You've got your thing together," he screamed. "It's you we really love!" Never have Iseen so much jumping and happiness. The crowd wanted more, but it had to end sometime.... But theJames Cotton Blues Band lives on in the minds of those who were a part of the dynamic sounds andmotions of that Sunday night. PROJECT 70 Drug Chemical Use - And Abuse STARTLING! -STIMULATING! So immense in scope it takes 4 hours a day for 6 days to tell it! APRIL 27th throughMAY 2nd 3-5 p.m. and 7-9 p.m. on KGMI 790 KARI 550 KBRC 1430 The Pill . . . Abuses of the Pill . . . Misuse of Chemicals . . . Hallucinogenics . . . Trash Drugs . . . Poisonous Insecticides andPesticides . . . ROBERT SAVAGE HAS DEVOTED 31/2 YEARS RESEARCHING 2800 EXPERTS . . .DOCTORS, LAWYERS, LEGISLATORS, EDUCATORS . . . HEAR INTERVIEWS WITH PEOPLE ON"TRIPS" . . . WITH PRISONERS, WITH ADDICTS IN INSTITUTIONS . . . WITH THE "EXPERTS!" THEPUBLIC IS INVITED TO LISTEN ...TO RESPOND! EACH PROGRAM WILL INCLUDE AIR-TIME FORTELEPHONE PARTICIPATION. .. Members of the improvisational theater, "Future's End," performed atlast Wednesday's peace rally in front of the Federal Building. Left to right: Angus McLane, Mark Cooper,Jan Hardy and Pres Boyd. Western Front photo by Todd 'Future's End' to perform at awareness festivalThe E n v i r o n m e n t al Awareness Festival will be held at 8 p.m. Saturday in the VU lounge. Thefestival will culminate t h e activities of the Environmental Teach-in Week. Entertainment will includeFuture's End, formerly Western Improvisational Theatre, and folk signers Larry Kronquist, Gospel singersongs of rsouf Robin Courtwright Western Front staff Stamping feet, clapping, one encore and thenanother: Marilyn Pearson presenting "An Evening of Soul and Faith." Miss Pearson, a Black singerformerly with the Edwin Hawkins Singers, is a native of San Diego and now working in Seattle. Herperformance last Thursday evening climaxed the three day "Happy Days" program sponsored by theCampus Crusade, Navigators; a campus Christian organization; and the Baptist Student Union. MissPearson told her Preston Boyd and Kathy Winkler. Dance sequences by members of Orchesis DanceClub, coordinated by Michael Ingersoll, will be featured. Doug Graff is in charge of visual media.Western's Environmental Quality Council is sponsoring the event. performs and faith9 audience ofabout 200 she wanted them to feel at home to^ stamp, clap or whatever. She would feel more at hometoo if they were relaxed. Between songs accompanied by her exuberant piano playing, the singerweaved the story of her life and faith. She told of her despondency and nervous breakdown that nearlyendedher life except tor the intervention of God. At one point in her performance, Miss Pearson had the audience participate in a motion song which they did unhesitatingly. fashion fabrics knitting yarnneedlework crafts young fashion ideas in k n i t t i n g , sewing second floor Wife 125 W Holly ---------- Western Front - 1970 April 21 - Page 9 ---------- Workers scrounge in brush; find strange new flora A * f 1 1 1 1 * CC . _1 .. _ 55 J Tuesday, April 21,1970 Western Front Elections to be May 21 A strange variety of flora was discovered on Sehome Hill,Clean-up crews from Fairhaven and Western, searching the wooded trails up and down its slopes,discovered such items as a fire extinguisher, assorted hubcaps, a large oil drum, fiberglass insulation, acar seat and hundreds of beer cans and bottles. A black labrador "eco-dog" served as mascot for the 50 or more workers, armed with plastic and burlap bags, who participated in the clean-up last week. Atthe summit of Sehome, adjacent to a parking area, hundreds of bottles, cans, and scraps of paper werestrewn, creatine a miniature garbage dump. After more than two hours of scrounging in the brush, theaccumulated garbage was placed in a truck and trailer, and driven onto Red Square. A sign and greeneco-flag was hoisted to" the top of the truckful of trash. The sign read: "From Sehome Hill How Much isYours?" AS elections for student body officers will be held May 21. Elections Board Chairman JohnEngstrom said that all candidates nominated at the convention will be required to pay a refundable filingfee of $10. Candidates will also be required to attend a meeting to find out the election rules. The dateof the meeting will be announced later. At least two days before the election all candidates must filefinancial statement and submit it to the elections board. Engstrom added that the hours for voting havebeen extended one hour to 7 p.m. Polls will open at 11:00 a.m. Fairhaven nears completion FreeUniversity seeking applications The Free University is seeking applications for a new coordinator andsecretary-treasurer, according to present coordinator Bernie Weiner. Application deadline is this Friday. Weiner and Alison Andres, present secretary-treasurer, are leaving the job because "after two years we are tired of the paper work," Weiner said. "Anyone interested in an alternative educational methodwhere there is not much money work s h o u l d submit involved but a lot of satisfying applications,"Weiner said. Newest apartment complex scheduled to open next Fall Fairhaven has finally moved ontoits campus. With the completion of the third floor office space in the academic-dining building, thefaculty and administration, the library and the laboratory equipment were moved in last week. All thatnow remains to be finished on the Fairhaven campus is the landscaping, the coffee shop on the groundfloor of the academic building and the removal of the twin to the telephone booth recently removed fromRed Square. Students already living in a residence hall will have first priority for rooms in Birnam Wood,Western's newest housing project. Styled like an apartment complex, Birnam Wood is scheduled toopen next fall. Interested students living in residence halls can apply on the residence hall renewal forms coming out the first week of May. The cost of the apartments is $200 a month for four people. ASseats four new members Four new members were seated on the AS Legislature last week. The newmembers are Jim Hansen, James Maloney, Bruce McLeod and Mary Ellen Watts. The choice was made from 11 applicants. The new appointments immediately. 1 e g i s l a t o r take affect « * SPACEOUT YOUR ENTERTAINMENT DOLLAR START BUYING YOUR RECORDS TAPES FROM ORDERNO. 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At Portland Monday Western dropped a9A- A decision to Portland State but defeated the University of Portland 10-8 in a tiiree-way match-up.On Tuesday at Ta coma's Fircrest course the Vikings defeated the University of Puget Sound \3ViAlA.Last Thursday Seattle University defeated Western \\lA-6xA at the Bellingham golf and country club.Herb Clemo, junior from Ferndale, had medalist honors for the Vikings at Tacoma, shooting a 77, andagainst the Chieftains, firing a 73. Jack Erskine shot a 75 to lead the Vikings at Portland. Next Western tee action will not be until next Monday, when coach Jim Lounseberry's squad goes, to Ellensburg tomeet Central Washington. I t HIGH SCHOOL" a Great Documentary Film by Fred Wiseman (the sameman who made "Titicut Follies") WHAT A NEW, LILY-WHITE, PROGRESSIVE SUBURBAN HIGHSCHOOL DOES TO THE MINDS AND BODIES OF ITS STUDENTS. Filmed at NORTHEAST H.S., PHILA., PA. FRIDAY, APRIL 24, 9:00 pm, L-3 Sponsored by your Whatcom Co. ACLU Also being s/iownon Thursday, April 23, 8:00 p.m. at Norway Hall, 1419 N. Forest. Ron Porterfield swings at a pitch fromthe University of Puget Sound's hurler, Craig Caskey. Rick Mark (7) waits in the on-deck circle. WesternFront photo by Shoblom Western's hopes fade as Central takes two The Viking baseball team had itschampionship hopes rattled Bellingham Hotel O'Rourfee's Buffet lunch dinner $1.72 children under 10-$1.15 7 days a week 11 a.m. - 9 p.m. Merchants Lunch $1.00 daily 734-4400 ATTENTION SENIORS ORDER YOUR CLASS RING CHOICE OF STONES - $13 DEPOSIT BALANCE DUE ON DELIVERY 5WEEK DELIVERY GRADUATION ANNOUNCEMENTS 2/35 lt; or 1.75/pkg. Deadline April 30 forordering CAPS GOWNS AVOID THE RUSH - COME NOW STUDENTS •to* STOREtntntammMcoKwanan last Saturday as they dropped both ends of a- double-header, 2-0 and 4-1, todefending Evergreen conference champion Central. Western now 1-3 in league play trails Central 4-0and Eastern 2-2. Whitworth is also 1-3. Again it was lack of hitting that spelled doom for the Big Blue.The Vikings managed but five hits all afternoon. Jeff Clark lost a squeaker in the opener as the Wildcats'Dave Heaverlo tossed a one-hit shutout. Western has not scored a run for Clark in the last 19 inningshe has pitched. Central scored its two runs in the sixth on a passed ball and successful double steal. .Jess Chavez gave the Vikings a chance to tie it up when he doubled Dave Miller, who had been hit by apitch, to third with one out in the bottom of the seventh, but there the rally was squelched. In the second game Clark Babbitt pitched shutout ball for six innings before the roof fell in during the seventh.Western held a 1-0 lead to that point. Babbitt drew a walk in the sixth with the bases loaded to force inRon Porterfield. Central's John Craig led off the seventh with a home run. From there the Wildcats wenton to plate three more runs. What proved to be the winning run was driven in by relief pitcher GregSchulte on a two-out single. Twice before in the contest Western had loaded the bases but had failed to score. Tomorrow the Vikings face Pacific Lutheran in action at Tacoma beginning at 1:30 p.m. ThisSaturday Western continued conference play hosting the Whitworth Pirates at Bellingham's Civic Field.Action begins at 12:30 p.m. ' lt;r.+,i.i'?i.\i. I, i» i.'«j". i i ' i » i jU U'V. V'V » 'I'-'.V * I'M-U IK, gt;K*J*?"}}'"P fifty W^'Vl'*"*.'* '''"J"1- «•**'• lt; '•*'» ''.'l'» • '» 'H'I.*L'I. '••"• ' ' HJ.* I .V WMMM w^///^y/y/ y/u^ M^/vfyMv/9Z£^H ^ • / v / / / //\////•//^^l sun _ _ ^RvlOvv////////H^MIBSl Pun with prescription lenses available in several tints BINYON OPTOMETRISTS 1 1328 Cornwall _733-9300 | ---------- Western Front - 1970 April 21 - Page 11 ---------- Tuesday, April 21, 1970 Western Front 11 Viking diamondmen split; get cutdown by Loggers Western'sbaseball team split a doubleheader with Seattle University (SU) last Thursday at Sicks Stadium, winning the nightcap, 5-0, after losing the opener, 1-0. In the first game, Clark Babbitt, the Viks startingpitcher, limited SU to just four hits, but one of the hits came in the fifth inning when Chieftain pitcher Ron Thompson singled to drive in the game's only run.. The Viks threatened several times to get on thescoreboard and had a big opportunity in the second inning, as the Viks had runners on second and third with only one out. Neil Crawford led off the inning with a single, was advanced to second by a sacrificebunt from Ron Porterfield. Following a walk to John Perucca, both runners moved up a base on a wildpitch by Thompson. The rally ended though, when Rich Merenda struck out and Rick Mark flied out toleft. In the second game, Western used four SU errors to score four times in a big second inning. MikeClayton proved to be one of the key figures in Western's win. The Port Angeles Vik trackmen win;trounce Whitworth Western's track and field squad rolled to a 92-52 victory over Whitworth in cinderaction at Bellingham's Civic Stadium last Saturday. Coach Dick Bowman's Vikings won five of sevenfield events and four of the eight running events while splitting the two relays. Lance Wilson took boththe long and triple jumps. The Bellingham sophomore had distances of 21'2 " and 42T 1%"respectively. Freshman Scott Taylor easily outdistanced the opposition in the mile while Larry Nielsonwon the two mile by but three strides over Whitworth's Scott Ryman. Taylor's time was 4:16.2 andNielson's 9:24.5. The two have yet to be defeated in five dual meets. The Vikings' Chuck Brown leaped6'2" to take top honors in the high jump. Jim Schmidt took the shot put with a 45'6%" heave and BillReinecke the javelin with a toss of 168T1". Tom Frank was clocked in 10.3 in his 100-yard dash victoryand freshman hurdler Rich Nominni turned in a time of 15.9 in his 120-yard high hurdle triumph. W h i tw o r t h ' s Charlie Kethrakat was a double winner for the Pirates. The California sophomore won the 220 (23.0) and 440 (49.4) yard dashes. Western's mile relay time won in the time of 3:30 flat whileWhitworth was the 440 relay victor in 43.2. The meet victory puts the Vikings' record at 3-2 on the year. This Saturday the Vikings travel to Seattle to take on Seattle Pacific. Action begins at 1:30 p.m. Yacht club to host meet Western's Yacht club will host district championships Saturday, May 2 at Lakewood. Races will also be held Sunday if Saturday's races are not completed. Teams which have beeninvited are: University of Victoria, Royal Roads Academy, University of British Columbia, Simon FraserUniversity, University of Washington, Seattle University, and Reed College. AeaDenwAwn WINNERSTARTS APR.22 -p Bmmpmi\m\mm (GOLDteHaivm AT DUSK x ^ A FRANKOViCH PRODUCTIONilKUIII viaifHau Bereman eaerus FLOW tnlroducing GOiDteHawn £ £ B asTONl |W1|TECHNICOLOR* C From Columbia Piciures also m « *?.. Gregory Peck -Omar Shariff in . . ,"JYJACKENIMA'S.GQLn^ senior scattered seven Chieftain hits, and collected two hits in three times atbat. Clayton also had a run scoring hit in the second. The Viks added an insurance run in the top of theseventh, when Porterfield hit a long sacrifice fly to right field to score Jess Chavez from third. The Vikslost to the University of Puget Sound, 2-0 here last Tuesday. The Vik pitching and defense shined, butWestern batsmen once again found hits scarce J Classified Advertising \ , \ j? Steve Anderson, one of the top fielding shortstops in the Evergreen Conference, tags out Rick Fabiani of the University of PugetSound. Western Front photo by Shoblom Women spikers triumph - at UW Invitational Meet 10 MISC.FOR SALE 1 wooden kayak with sails and paddles $200. 1 inflatable 2-man kayak with paddles $100.734-2233. 31 RIDES, RIDERS Need a ride. I'm commuting from Lynnwood to WWSC daily. Will shareexpenses. 743-9854. PERSONALS Read today's news today. Read The Seattle Times. Rates by thequarter. Call Bob: 733-1090. 60 NOTICES Buy, sell, rent or trade: use your newspaper. Place aclassified ad today. Over 8,000 readers. 734-8800, ext. 2276 or 2277. Business office: VU-2. TheWestern Front. Western's women's track and field team, outrunning all competitors, won theUniversity of Washington Invitational meet last Saturday for the first time in five years. The Vik womentotaled 102 points, outscoring a strong Central team which placed second with 94 points. All 10 girlswho entered the meet for Western, placed within the first five places of their particular event. Garneringfirsts for Western were: Toni Vandenhaak in the 220-yard dash; Karen Young in t h e long j u m p ;Penny f Complete Menu Service Pixsa Brouted Chicken Hamburgers Prawns Alaskat^F vern lliE?and T w gt;~~ J ™ " card r o om „ T^srrEAK ' Broasted potato arid toast - THE ACADEMY AWAiflWIINERil 'BEST PICTURE" PLUS... BEST DIRECTOR "BEST SCREENPLAY HELD m^r/i OVER1THEATRE! 1224 Commercial 733-9755 JEROME I JOHN HELLMAN | SCHLESIflGER •::PRODUCTION: ;' -• CUSTOM HOFFMAN p i mm l l ii mm VOK3HT ''MIDNIGHT ® No OneUnder 18 COLOR* DeLuxe M M I / * L I T "MIDNIGHT COWBOY" 5:30 9:30 I ' U I X l O n i "HAPPYENDING" 7:25 11:25 United Artists Co-Hit Jeanne Simmons "HAPPY ENDING' * Robertson in thehigh jump; and Roberta Rounds won the javelin. IT. BAKER 106 N. COMMERCIAL 734-4950 STARTING WE ONES DA Y Who knows what evil lurks in the heart of man? The 4 Magic lH Christian do.Commonwealth United Presents a Grand Film Starring TeterSellers 'GRingQStarr in'WecMagicQmstiair" TECHNICOLOR® «M lt; Wed., Thurs., Fri., Mon., Tues. "Christian" 7, 10:20 "Camel" 8:45 Sat. "Camel" 1:50,5:15, 8:45 "Christian" 3:25, 7, 10:25 Sun. "Camel" 1, 4:25, 7:50 "Christian" 2:45, 6, 9:30 ---------- Western Front - 1970 April 21 - Page 12 ---------- 12 Western Front Tuesday, April 21, 1970 Viking oarsmen sweep by PLU "Stroke harder men, we'veonly got the boat for an hour." Unfortunately it's no joke to this Viking crew; as they strain to pass theirPacific Lutheran opponents. W*..e-s-t-e rn— F ron-t p.h oto *b y ~T odd Western's crew team tookrevenge last Saturday sweeping all three races in defeating Pacific Lutheran University at Bellingham'sLake Samish. The victory avenged an earlier loss to the Lutes a week earlier at Tacoma. In the eight-oared race the Vikings won in the time of 6:18, a full 30 seconds in front of the Knights. The varsity four-oared boat finished 16 seconds in front, recording a time of 6:57. The Viking junior varsity four-oaredcrew won in 7:15,48 seconds in front of their Tacoma rivals. This Saturday the Western crew willcompete in the Corvallis Invitational hosted by Oregon State University at Corvallis, Oregon. Westernnetmen lose; to host Seattle Pacific Summary: RAVI SHANRAR in concert Western's tennis team was downed by the University of Puget Sound 8-1 last Friday in Tacoma. Arnie Larson was the only Vik totaste victory, capturing number four singles. Western's scheduled match with Whitworth here lastSaturday was cancelled due to rain. Coach Don Wiseman's netters travel to Tacoma today for a matchwith Pacific Lutheran University. On Friday, Western Seattle Pacific College. hosts Singles: 1) SteveDoerrer (W) lost to Jim Smith, 4-6,4-6. 2) Jim Solberg (W) lost to Brian Berg, 4-6, 5-7. 3) SteveAdelstein (W) lost to Steve Tiberg, 3-6, 8-6,3-6. 4) Larson defeated Rob Van Gelder,64,6-1. 5) Dan Flinn (W) lost to Tim Trefts,0-6,4-6. 6) Frank Williams (W) lost to Dave Wissman, 5-7,4-6. Doubles: 1)Doerrer-Solberg lost to Berg-Van Gelder, 6-1, 4-6, 5-7. 2) Adelstein-Larson lost to Smith-Trefts,4-6,3-6.3) Flinn-Williams lost to Wissman-Stan Taylor, 5-7, 6-3, 2-6. fron sale Wed. at VU desk ONE DAYPIPE SALE SATURDAY APRIL 25 11 A.M. to 4 P.M. 10% off on all pipes $1.00 trade in for old usablepipes on purchase of pipe valued at $5.00 up other non-advertized bargains largest selection of imported domestic pipes tobacco north of Seattle
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- 1970_0428 ---------- Western Front - 1970 April 28 - Page 1 ---------- western front Vol. LXII no. 30 Western Washington State College Bellingham, Washington 98225Tuesday, April 28, 1970 10c Drugs: the only way to fly? Bob Burnett editor-in-chief "Pot is the only wayto fly," a Western coed
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1970_0428 ---------- Western Front - 1970 April 28 - Page 1 ---------- western front Vol. LXII no. 30 Western Washington State College Bellingham, Washington 98225Tuesday, April 28, 1970 10c Drugs: th
Show more1970_0428 ---------- Western Front - 1970 April 28 - Page 1 ---------- western front Vol. LXII no. 30 Western Washington State College Bellingham, Washington 98225Tuesday, April 28, 1970 10c Drugs: the only way to fly? Bob Burnett editor-in-chief "Pot is the only wayto fly," a Western coed said recently. But according to a local mechanic,. "Marijuana leads directly toheroin and other hard drugs." A Western instructor was heard asking, "If you roll a joint with a filter on it, will you get a lower high?" This and many other questions concerning drug use and abuse are beinganswered by three local radio stations who have formed a special network in an effort to inform people on all aspects of the drug problem. In an unprecedented move, radio stations KGMI Bellingham (790A.M.), KARI Blaine (550 A.M.) and KBRC Mount Vernon (1430 A.M.) have joined to present the program entitled "Project 70" which began yesterday. "The biggest problem concerning the drug dilemma inthis nation today is ignorance," according to James L. Hamstreet, general manager for KGMI. BobSavage, producer and moderator of Project 70, spent three and one-half years interviewing nearly 3,000experts in preparation for the program. The series begins at 3 p.m. each day this week with an hour ofpre-recorded interviews, case histories and expert opinions followed by an hour of open line telephonediscussions. It resumes again at 7 p.m. with a similar format. KGMI Program Director Bob O'Neilannounced that there are four open, incoming telephone lines, and that KGMI will accept collect long-distance calls from anywhere in the listening area. There will also be two lines for the specific purpose of getting answers to listener's q u e s t i o n s from experts throughout the United States and Canada, he said. " D r u g s - m a r i j u a n a , amphetamines, methedrine and all the rest—are only a small p o rt i o n of the total drug-chemical problem, but that is where the most interest lies," Savage said. "Drugsdenote different things to different people. We can't hope to answer all of the ..questions—only togenerate interest, to get people involved. "The drug-chemical problems of abuse represent one of thegreatest threats to society today. And it's not just a local, regional or national problem, it's a world-wideproblem. "We've got to stop talking about legislation and start thinking about personal responsibility.People must have access to the facts in order to lean toward a more constructive type of thinking,"Savage said. He hopes Project 70 will be used by radio stations throughout the U.S., Canada andAustralia as an industry-wide campaign, but he emphasized, " I t ' s the follow up—the communityinvolvement after the radio stations build up the interest that reallv counts." "Our purpose is to pique thecommunities' interest and given each individual an opportunity to decide things for himself after hearingthe facts—all the facts." Protestors await Dossible charges AS tries to create pub board The .ASLegislature may establish its own publications board this afternoon in an illegal attempt to unilaterallygovern all student publicatons on campus. This move follows a student government decision last weekto abolish the Western Front and to found an "independent" student newspaper which, in their words,would be free of administration, faculty and departmental control. The official power to disband a student publication lies with the Committee on Student Publications which is responsible to the Board ofTrustees. Until a revised publications board structure is approved, student government has assigned itsthree student representatives and two additional student appointees to be selected this week to serve as an interim publications board. The official publications board normally consists of three s t u d e n trepresentatives appointed by the Associated Students and five faculty members appointed by thecollege administration. The AS Constitution and By-Laws do not include legal provisions to permit theAS Legislature to amend or abolish the official publications board in favor of one of their own design. In a special session last Thursday, the AS Legislature instructed Front Business Manager Bill Woodland tomake the following changes: 1. Inform Front advertisers of the changes in the name and staff of thestudent newspaper. 2. Cut off the Front's staff salaries following this issue and transfer those salaries tothe new " a u t h o r i z e d " student newspaper, which is yet to be published. 3. Inform all creditorsthat the Front is no longer the authorized student publication and that debts incurred after this issue will not be honored by the Associated Students. 4. Inform the Front staff that it is encouraged to serve onthe new interim newspaper staff. So far, Woodland has not carried out student government's instructions. Bellingham Police Chief Cecil B. Klein, City Attorney Richard Busse and Mayor Reg Williams areawaiting the return of film footage shot by plains-clothesmen at the Moratorium peace march, April 15.Once the film is returned by a Seattle processing firm, the decision will be made whether charges will be brought against those protestors who marched down Holly Street chanting "Holly Street for the people." Klein said that his department will not attempt to arrest all 500 or so Moratorium marchers who defied aCity Council ruling against using Holly Street enroute from the campus to a Federal Building anti-warrally. However, upon order from Williams and Busse he said that he will order warrants for the arrest ofthose who can be easily identified. "They're not planning a mass prosecution and the matter is not thatserious," Busse said. "If we decide to arrest anyone, the charge will be minor and it will probably be thepersons who caused the action to take place." When asked by the Front what the "minor charge" would be, Busse said, "How about jay-walking?" Originator of Teach-in to speak on environment The originator of the environmental teach-in idea, Senator Gay lord Nelson of Wisconsin, will speak on theenvironment at 2 pjn. Friday in theVU lounge. Nelson's proposal was made seven months ago in aspeech before the Washington Environmental Council in Seattle. In response, over 1500 colleges arid10,000 secondary schools participated in the nationwide teach-in. In his speech Nelson called for the"stimulation of the constructive energies of American youth in a massive educational effort to halt theaccelerated pollution and environmental destruction. ---------- Western Front - 1970 April 28 - Page 2 ---------- 2 'Western From i uesciay, April'28, 197; Jackson to atten eco-symposium A state-wide symposium on environmental education will attract several noted politicians, including Sen. Henry Jackson (D-Wash.),to the campus May 8. Jackson is the author of such landmark conservation legislation as the NationalEnvironmental Policy Act, the Redwood National Park and the North Cascades National Park. The day-long symposium is programmed for educators who are interested in developing environmental educationprograms in the state's public schools and colleges. President Charles Flora is scheduled to deliver theopening address at 2:30 p.m. in the music auditorium. Six afternoon panel discussions will close withan omnibus panel at 7:30 p.m. on "Can We Achieve Environmental Quality'' Panelists will include Sen. Jackson; Ian McHarg of the University of Pennsylvania; Terry Cornelius; Mrs. Lee Minto, president ofSeattle Planned Parenthood; and Glenn Paschall, legislative assistant to the governor's office. StateSenators Martin Durkan and Frank Atwood will also participate in an afternoon panel on the role of thestate government in dealing with Sen. Henry Jackson Another afternoon panel on educating the publicto the environmental issues will include Herb Altschull, KING-TV news analyst; Walt Woodward,editorial writer and columnist for the Seattle Times; and Mrs. Dolly Connelly, photo-journalist fromBellingham. The general theme for the symposium is "Education-The Catalyst for Coexistence Between Man and Nature." The symposium's sponsors a r e the N o r t h w e st Environmental EducationCenter, the Associated Students, Huxley College and the Department of Continuing environmentalproblems. Studies. Convention to include faculty, staff delegates Faculty and staff at Western will berepresented by delegation along with students for the first time at next week's AS convention, StevePlancic, newly-appointed elections board chairman, said Friday. The convention, which will signal thebeginning of campaigning for student government offices, will run Tuesday, May 5 through Thursday,May 7. A total of 453 delegates is expected, 265 to represent off-campus students, 139 for dormresidents, 27 for faculty and 22 for staff. "Only 145 delegates have signed up so far to represent off-campus housing," Plancic said. Nominees for AS offices will be elected on the last day of theconvention. Jim Baker Western Front Staff The official announcement of the man to fill the new post ofProvost Dean may come after the next Board of Trustees meeting May 14. If so, it will be the first majoraddition to the administration in many years. Both the Provost Dean position and that of Dean ofWestern were created by the splitting of chores now done by the Academic Dean. College PresidentCharles Flora, as well as others, have emphasized the undue burden on the current dean, R. D. Brown.As Flora puts it, "All the guy has time to do is respond to problems." He added that the entireadministration is presently "undermanned." Dr. Robert Monahan, professor of geography, is chairman of the 11-member committee which has sifted through 70 to 80 applicants for both posts. The committeewas to chqose two or three candidates for each post and make its final, recommendation. The Provostcandidates are Dr. Frederick Sargent, acting dean of the College of Environmental Sciences, theUniversity of Green Bay; and Dr. Arnold Biella, dean of instruction, the University of California at Hayward. The committee is less sure of its choices for Dean of Western and met last night to review theapplications. Prospective candidates for AS Government positions are reminded to submit theirstatements of policy or platform to the Western Front office prior to 3 p.m. May 7 in order to appear inthe May 12 issue. Candidates should present themselves to have their pictures taken. Statementsshould be no longer than 300 words. JL "Mystique" by ( ortange blosttom from $260.00 Everything new! everything brilliant! . . . everything perfect! Your future begins with the seventies. Begin the wedding vows with a vow to select her diamond from Milton Terry, Jeweler. A perfect beginning to a perfectfuture. Milton E. Terry Jeweler "WHERE JEWELRY IS OUR BUSINESS" 1326Conmal 733-2030 "If Iwere asked to state the great objective which Church and State are both demanding for the sake of everyman and woman and child in this country, I would say that that great objective is 'a more abundant life'."Franklin D. Roosevelt 1 , : ' .js S1' Roosevelt Dime MONEY TALKS And its tone is persuasive with anNBofC spe- UI cial checking account. A great way to organize #7 your budget... . have money when youneed it. Learn how convenient it is—and how effective —to have your own personal checking account!NBC The Provost will be the top-ranking administrator in the absence of the President. Otherwise, hisduties will include supervision of the i n s t r u c t i o n a l program, distribution of the college'sresources, maintaining contact with the deans of the cluster colleges, the director of the ComputerCenter and the library, the office of space and schedules, the office of registrar and admissions, theoffice of educational media and the Dean of Western and working closely with the President. The Deanof Western will work with the Provost on the budget. The 24 departmental chairmen {including thedepartment of continuing studies), the director of science education, the director of general educationand the director of the honors program will report to him. The Dean will chair the curricular council, andit will be his duty to oversee the development and evaluation of academic programs. The President willstill maintain direct contact with the Dean of Students, the Graduate Dean, the Dean of Research andGrants and the Business Manager. The Provost will attend presidential meetings with these officers.Dean Brown said that, in general, the Provost will deal with all-college and graduate -services andprograms while the Dean of Western will take care of undergraduate areas. The committee has beencharged by Flora to select a man for Provost who has strong administrative ability, is innovative, hasteaching experience and is well recognized as a scholar, primarily by his record of publication. TheDean of Western is required to have similar qualifications. Monahan chided the students, saying theyappeared "less than intrigued" by the prospect of a new administrator. He was referring to the teas heldin the Viking Union for each candidate which were open to the college community. The committeeincludes all three sections for the college community. Comprising administrative representation are Dr.Ronald Williams, dean of ethnic studies and speech professor and Dr. J. Alan Ross, dean of graduate s t u d i e s and psychology professor. Representing the faculty are Dr. Joseph Black, assistantprofessor of technology; Miss lone Foss, assistant professor of art; Dr. Harley Hiller, associate professor of history; Dr. Alta Hansen, associate professor of women's physical education; Dr. Richard Lindsay,physics professor; Monahan; and Dr. Marjorie Ryan, associate professor of English. From the studentlegislature are Larry Phalen, chairman of t h e Academic Reform Commission, and Steve Cooper,administrative assistant. Initiative attacks litter T h e n o - d e p o s i t, non-returnable beer and softdrink containers are the target of an initiative measure filed by Dr. Robert H. Keller, Jr., assistantprofessor of Fairhaven. Keller filed the measure last week with Washington Secretary of State A. LudlowKramer in the hopes that it will appear on the November ballot. Initiative 255, the "Keep AmericaBeautiful Act," will need 101,229 valid voters' signatures before July 3 to get on the ballot, Keller said inan interview. The initiative would place a five-cent deposit on beer and pop bottles. "Litter is just a small issue in the scop-e of ecological problems," he said. "It [littering] symbolizes society's mania forconvenience and the way in which it wastes its resources." According to Keller, the greatest oppositionto the initiative can be expected from the can manufacturers. Keller said he is relying largely on studenthelp to address envelopes and circulate the petitions when they are ready. Hopefully, they will be ready this week, he said. Plans are being made to circulate the petitions in Wenatchee during the AppleBlossom Festival the first weekend in May, Keller said. The measure stems from a drive by Keller and a group of Fairhaven students to .clean up Sehome Hill. "Most of the student help so far has been fromFairhaven," the sponsor said. "It is a college projeet—an experiment in the use of the initiative processas grassroots democracy." NATIONAL BANK OF COMMERCE LANGE V0LKSWAGEH 112 SamishWay 734-5230 Safes: New and used Volkswagens. Service: We will provide transportation forcustomers to and from the campus while your car is being serviced. Open 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday— Saturday ---------- Western Front - 1970 April 28 - Page 3 ---------- Drugs easy to get at college Tuesday, April 28, 1970 Western Front 3 Pssst! Hey buddy, want somemarijuana? According to a Western student who smokes grass himself, it's as easy to get as walkingto the VU lounge. Grass isn't the only thing peddled in the VU; you can pick from an assortment ofdrugs. He guessed that between 50 and 60 per cent of the students, including some faculty members,use drugs and avail themselves of this unofficial campus service. He added that there is no harassmentof the dealers or the users. "Faculty members take a neutral attitude and are mainly curious about theeffects." The police only give the users a hard time when they gather together. Relating how he gotstarted on grass, he said that he had heard a lot about marijuana and drugs and decided to study thesubject. "I read every angle on it and concluded that there were a lot of falsehoods about grass." Heexplained that he leaves drugs alone because, "you don't know what's in them." Some drugs sold bypushers have been found to have strychnine in it, enough to send the user on a trip that he will neverreturn from. Asked if he would ever quit, he said that if marijuana ever interfered with his career, hewould. He added that he could walk away from grass as easily as he could a fetish on pizza. ' WesternFront photo by Shoblom Government gives little help to youths busted overseas Coffee shop seeks tohelp 'ex-heads' More than 400 Americans are now in jail overseas for drug violations, according to theState Department, which is urging youth "not necessarily to stop using drugs, but to realize theconsequences of getting caught." The figure of 404 in March of this year is up 262 from the same timelast year, Mrs. Barbara Watson, administrator of security of consular affairs, said. All those in jail arebetween 16 and 30 years of age.. Mrs. Watson said "there is really very little the government can do foryou." She said that while a consular official will visit a prisoner and arrange for help from home, thegovernment will not get him.a lawyer. Many Americans are turned in by the person who sold them thedope, Mrs. Watson said. This nets the pusher a reward and keeps him in good with the police. She said that many youths think other countries allow violation of their laws, "but that simply isn't so."Sentences for Americans range up to three years for possession and up to 15 years for selling.Possession of more" than half a kilo of marijuana normally is considered proof of intent to sell. Drugstatistics give false security The drug situation at Western cannot be stated in terms of statistics for itgives a false security to know percentages of numbers, Dean of Men Ray Romine said. Romine, amember of the Drug Education Committee on campus, said that there is a considerable number ofpeople who have experimented with marijuana. However, there has been no problem in the area of hardnarcotics use. There has been experimentation however, with LSD and other drugs. "One observation isthat some students dropping out of school admit to a drug history; there is a conjecture of correlation,"Romine said. "One of the difficulties of society in coming to grips with the drug scene is a lack ofunderstanding of roots of the issue. "Society itself currently uses a variety of drugs, alcohol andtobacco. "There is a tendency to put all people who use drugs in the same categories as well as drugsthemselves. People have to recognize the differences that motivate people to use drugs and thedifferences in the drugs themselves," Romine said. According to Cal Mathews, a member of the drugcommittee, some groups and individuals who are emerging from the heavy drug use patterns can now be observed. Some are "turning on" with strong religious faiths and some are "turning on" naturally to new intellectual, academic, economic or social pursuits. "What we need to do in education is to seekalternatives that we can offer our students, and public opportunities for introspection, relief from day today tension and ultimately happiness without using external devices such as drugs," Romine said. "We have directed our efforts at treating the symptoms accompaning drug use, rather than the motivatingfactors." Mary Peebles Western Front Staff The Superior Cleaner is a newly opened coffee shopdesigned to help drug-scene drop-outs to drop back into society. The coffee shop, at 1140 State St., isrun by two young men who prefer to be called Dewy and Volkert. Both made the drug scene for threeyears. "I ' went from a society of get-aheads to a society of be-heads," Dewy said. Capt. Bill Nottle ofthe Salvation Army" said they're concerned with the spirituality of young people today. The spiritualoutreach program that the Superior Cleaner is trying, is to help kids come off drugs through anencounter with Christ, he said. There are beds upstairs and at "the house of the most-high" at 1021 High St. Doctors are available if physical need is more immediate. Presently funded by the Salvation Army,the Cleaner does need donations. "We plan to have rock and folk music on the weekends, somusicians are welcome. It'll be Christian music, but it'll be good music1,4 Volkert said. The hips callthem straight and the straights think they're hip, but they're there from early afternoon until everybodygoes home and the phone, 733-1411, is open to incoming calls. "We're trying to be a stop-gap here.We're not here to cram it, we're here to share it," Nottle said. Flora says pushing worst crime "Thepusher of hard drugs is guilty of the highest crime and should suffer the maximum possible penalty short of capital punishment," Dr. Charles J. Flora said in an interview last week. Flora referred to "harddrugs" as heroin and its derivatives. When asked what he would do to cope with the drug problem,providing all of the powers of legislation were under his control, Flora said that punishment laws should.reflect the nature of the crime. He said he agrees with minimal punitive measures for the first offenderssmoking marijuana, but recommended maximum punishment for pushers, especially those pushing"hard" drugs. "There are two schools of thought concerning what we ought to do to cope with the drugproblem," Flora said. "We can ignore the problem in hopes that it will go away, but it would be better ifwe confront the problem, seek to understand it and solve it." He seemed to feel that drug education was one way to cope with the problem, but cautioned, "There is no education worse than education withignorant teachers. We would then only be pooling our ignorance." Meeds proposes questions to Seattle educators Congressman Lloyd Meeds, in a speech in Seattle April 4, labeled drug abuse as a"Chemical Cop-out". He went on to ask educators to pose the following questions to their students: "Will marijuana eliminate the draft?" "Will LSD clean up pollution in our lakes and rivers?" "Will heroin helpyou pass a difficult examination? "Our task is to tell it like it is Western Frontphptq by Shoblom andmake it like we know ii should be," he declared. The Meeds bill for drug education was passed in theHouse last October 31 and is n o w in the Senate Subcommittee on Narcotics and Alcoholism. Itauthorizes $29 million over a three year period for curriculum development and testing, teacher training,pilot high school programs and community 'drug alert' seminars. ---------- Western Front - 1970 April 28 - Page 4 ---------- Western Front Tuesday, April 28, 1970 between the lines........... B I I I I I I B I B I I I I I 1 I I I I I I I I I I IDrugs: everybody's habit staff commentary One of the most pressing problems confronting the worldtoday is man's use of chemicals, pills and drugs—from psychedelics to herbicides. One of the factorsthat makes it such a serious problem is the average man's lack of factual knowledge concerning theirproper use. There are far too few real authorities on drugs, and far too many users and pushers whopurport to be authorities when they are not. I am appalled by the ignorance of drug users concerning theactual contents of all those little, multi-colored pills, chemical concoctions and whatever else our drugoriented society ingests. And the problem is not limited to the users of illegal drugs. We all use drugs.We use them to help us sleep, to wake us up, to relax us and to relieve our headaches. But how manyof us know exactly what amount of any particular drug constitutes an overdose? Exactly what is it in potthat affects the user's mind? Is pot really psycholgically addicting? How much truth is there in the claim that LSD affects the chromosomes of an unborn child? Perhaps you know the answers to thesequestions. Perhaps there aren't any conclusive answers. Investigative experimentation is only one way to find the answers. Consultation with experts is another. This week, we all have an opportunity to do justthat—consult an expert. All we have to do is get on the phone. In an attempt to cope with the drugproblem, and to provide their communities the widest possible range of information concerning drug useand abuse, radion stations KGMI, KARI and KBRC are presenting a 24-hour series entitled Project 70. . As Project 70 producer Bob Savage puts it, the program does not try to preach at anybody or persuadeanyone to quit using drugs. It is designed solely for the purpose of giving everyone an opportunity to learn more about drugs. Now is the time to ask our questions. Call KGMI during the open-line discussionportion of Project 70 from 4 to 5 p.m. and from 8 to 9 p.m. If they don't have the answers, they will callthe experts throughout the United States and Canada that do have the answers. Do you know all youneed or want to know about drugs? Don't join the ranks of the apathetic ignorants. Listen in, learn, andget involved. -Bob Burnett Earth Week forever! Earth Day and Earth Week are officially dead and buried, uh, cremated. The trash-ins, teach-ins, demonstrations and rallies attracted significant numbers ofstudents and even a few eco-conscious citizens who joined together for a few hours to meet thepressing demands of the environmental crisis. But most of America was content with going about itsusual litter-strewn way, standing knee deep in garbage and throwing rockets at the moon. Blackleaders in this nation told their people to ignore Earth Week activities since they believed that it was aplot by President Nixon to divert attention away from Civil Rights and the Vietnam War. But thosesame leaders failed to tell their people that the clean-up of America's cities will benefit the majority ofBlacks and other minorities which inhabit them. The environmental dilemma demands a radical changein every American's life style. Earth Week must last forever. And that means that we are going to have to cut down on our electrical consumption for a start. So, turn off your electric toothbrushes, swizzlesticks, can openers, scissors, razors and extra lights. We can walk to work and school and abandonthose automobiles which drink oil and belch toxic fumes into the air we breathe. It means that we should stop buying non-returnable bottles so that the chain grocers will be forced into bringing backreturnables. They were the ones who called for one-way bottles in the first place. And it means correcting your fellow man when you see him drop his cigarette butts, wrappers and cans on our roadways, in ourparks and on our beaches. Look around and take care of this planet. It belongs to you. —John StolpeOpinions expressed in this column are not necessarily those of the editor or other staff members. Letfreedom ring Don DeMaico Western Front Staff AS President Greg Baker appears to be imitating SpiroAgnew. Agnew, you will recall, brought a mailed fist of government criticism down on the press in 1969and accused it of being "fat and irresponsible." Baker and his cabinet have set their sights on destroyingthe Western Front and replacing it with a government approved "student" newspaper. Last Thursday, 10student legislators unanimsouly rubber-stamped their approval to a neat piece of cabinet legislation (BillNo. 101) choking off student funds that pay for a portion of the Front. Bill No. 101 also declared that theWestern Front "is no longer the authorized student publication," as of April 28. Today. This Agnewian (oris it Orwellian?) government license to do what it pleases is frightening, to say the least. The mostimmediate issue we face as a student body is to decide if student government should control the fate ofour press. Then, we must determine whether decisions of this magnitude concerning the entire studentbody should be made by a rubber-stamp non-dissenting legislative minority or by the student, faculty and administrative stockholders in this institution. Finally, the time, has come to re-evaluate what is going onin student government. The preamble to Western's Constitution is quite clear: "We the students ofWestern Washington State College feel that the purpose of student government is to serve [emphasismine] as the representative body of the students." Greg Baker, his cabinet and the student legislature are not, in my opinion, serving the best interests of this student body. thewestern front official weeklynewspaper of Western Washington State College second class postage paid at Bellingham, Wash. 98225 phone, 734-8800 editorial, ext. 2277 advertising, ext. 2276 Bob Burnett John Stolpe Jill StephensonAdele Saltzman editor-in-chief managing editor assistant to the editor copy editor Bob Taylor sportseditor Lynn Watts feature editor BUI Woodland business manager R.E. Stannard Jr. advisorDanShoblom Jerry King BUI Todd MikeErickson photo editor head photographer assistant photographercartoonist Reporters: Chris Anderson, Forrest Anderson, Jim Austin, Jim Baker, Ted Bestor, DebColeman, Robin Courtwright, Don DeMarco, Jim Diedrick, Barbara Dinner, Dave Haeck, Billie Haragadine,Gary Harrod, Mike Hull, Diane Jacobs, Bill Johnston, Tim Knopf, Jay Long, Jackie Lawson, JulieMcCalib, Bob McLaughlan, Paul Madison, Mary Peebles, Mike Pinch, Stan Shawn, Jill Stephenson,Margaret Thornton, Rob Turner, Doug Van Boven. Deadlines: 5 p.m. Tuesday-display ad reservations 4pan. Thursday-news copy, letters to the editor, classified ads display ad copy. Represented by NEAS,360 Lexington Ave., New York, N.Y. 10017 Price per copy, 10 cents. Subscription, $3.50 a year, $1.50 aquarter. Member: U.S. Student Press Association, CoUege Press Service, Associated College Press,Intercollegiate Press Service and Liberation News Service. ---------- Western Front - 1970 April 28 - Page 5 ---------- Tuesday, April 28/1970 Western Front feedbackfeedbackfeedbackfeedbackfeedbackfeedbi RESENTSBATEMAN'S GENERALIZATIONS Editor: I would like the opportunity to publicly reply to Mr. Bateman'sletter in last week's Front. First of all, Mr. Bateman, whatever gave you the impression that you speakfor all veterans? You certainly have the right to your individual opinion concerning protests anddemonstrations, but your pretentious assumption that you speak for all veterans implies that you thinkall veterans succumbed to the armed services' propaganda program as you so obviously have done.This is hardly the case. You see Mr. Bateman, I too am a veteran, but I actively participate in many ofthe local protests against our immoral actions in Vie tnam. Perhaps our opposing viewpoints are due tothe fact t h a t we had different experiences in the service. While you were in Korea, I was with theinfantry in Vietnam; while you were talking to a friend who was almost killed in a "Non-War Zone," Iwitnessed scores of my friends begin the trip home in a plastic bag; while you were "sickened to see the amount of protesting and demonstrating going on back in this country," I was sickened by the sight ofVietnamese civilians being murdered, maimed, and tortured, their villages and farms destroyed, largesegments of their population being subjected to the most inhumane treatment and conditions. And all of this under the guise of "protecting a people's right to self-determination." The logic of that statement inlight of this country's actions seems to be quite similar to the logic of fighting for peace--and we allREITERATES MORATORIUM GOALS Editor: 1 am not speaking for all the protestors in the April 15march on the Federal Building as Mr. Philippe Bateman would speak for all veterans, but I would like toreply to certain points in his letter. 1. I did not know that one had to be a student of WesternWashington State College to protest against a cruel and unjust war. Are demonstrations to be limited toa select few, who are given the "privilege" of protesting? This march was for everybody, not just for thestudents of a certain college. 2. I would like to correct Mr. Bateman concerning the grape boycott. Thisboycott has to do only with table grapes—not the ones you drink. The grape boycott in San JoaquinValley is only another symptom of the United States government exploitation of minority peoples as ishappening in Vietnam. 3. If Mr. Bateman read the signs of the marchers he would have seen that theywanted the war to be stopped now. I have been sick and tired of hearing projected plans and timetablesto end the war which lacked results. Lyndon Johnson gave us promises that never ended the war andnow Mr. Nixon is giving us his promises. There are . soldiers being pulled out of Vietnam now but howmany replacements are being sent over this week and in the weeks to come? How many VIETNAM VET SAYS BATEMAN UNINFORMED Editor: In last week's Western Front a number of questions wereposed by a Korean veteran P.J.E. Bateman. The questions were not rhetorical as he had intended, butwere instead a rather obvious indication that Mr. Bateman is indeed unaware of the proposed goals ofthe Peace Movement. I am also a veteran. While I was in Vietnam, it seemed to me that the onlypeople who gave a damn whether 1 lived or died were the protestors. They tried actively to put animmediate end to the war while the Silent Majority sent cookies and re-elected War Hawk politicians.Secondly, Mr. Bateman seems to be laboring under the misconception that peace concerns only thestudent. The Peace Movement unlike many other of our traditional institutions is completelyunrestrictive. The Moratorium Committee, I'm sure, was more than happy to hear his report concerningthe large number of "strangers" present. Finally, Mr. Batemen did not understand what grapes had to do with the Moratorium. He answered his own question later in his letter. He asked (rhetorically, of course)why his Black sergeant should want to SOCKS IT BACK TO STOLPE Editor: Mr. Stolpe of the Western Front staff seemed to take pride in being a part of the Peace March festivities last week. His editorialcomment in the paper really socked it to all those people who were in class that day trying to learnsomething. I'm glad there are those who need no more education and so have the time to demonstratefor the rest of us. Mr. Stolpe must know what he is talking about and demonstrating against. He was ahelicopter gunner in Vietnam and volunteered for an additional six months. Perhaps the war lookeddifferent from 1500 feet up than it did ass-deep in the paddies, where some of the rest of us wereoccasionally. (Thank goodness the G.I. Bill money is the same, right, John?) Yes, there is a time for civil disobedience. I suggest that Mr. Stolpe read Civil Disobedience by Thoreau to find out exactly what the animal is. As for the obscene gesture he relishes having given the officers know what that's like. Inanswer to your questions: 1. I don't think anybody counted the number of students in the march .Whatdifference does it make? The Moratorium activities are a community project open to participation by allconcerned citizens. 2. The Army made grapes an issue by increasing their orders for table grapes by800 per cent since the grape pickers' strike began. Draw your own conclusion to that. Also, tablegrapes are harvested separately from any grapes used to make commercial wines. 3. You must beputting me on with this question. The Moratorium is for pulling out all G.I.'s not just a token 150,000 oreven 300,000. Bring all the troops home now! That's the alternative, Mr. Bateman. I hope you can "hear"it now. Don Smith senior Soc/Anthro are now being trained to serve in Vietnam? Mr. Bateman cannotspeak for all veterans, only as a veteran of Korea, an area whose "Non War" has not progressed to thecaliber of Vietnam. There were veterans of Vietnam marching April 15, protesting a war that theythemselves had fought. The next time Mr. Bateman feels the urge to write to the editor, I suggest that he make his arguments clear and not assume to speak for the group. Mary Frances Stuck freshman artreturn to the racism in the United States. The exploitation of migratory labor exhibited by the grapegrowers is one of the most flagrant examples of racism in this "great counry of ours" and reflects anattitude of the United States toward non-white people throughout the world. I feel Mr. Bateman barelyhas the qualifications to speak for himself, much less for all veterans. There are still some vets whohave survived the brass' brainwashing and retained their sanity. Peace! John Wesselink junior Englishfrom the Federal Building steps, I will say this: if marchers are prosecuted and he is among them, I willlift that same finger to help him. Jack C. Benedict senior English (Ed. note: John Stolpe, managingeditor of the Western Front, was a helicopter crew chief in Vietnam for two years. During that time heearned more than 20 Air Medals and the Purple Heart for wounds received in action.) COMMITTEEAPOLOGIZES FOR "DREADFUL OPERA Editor: The Arts and Lectures Committee, greatly concernedabout the poor performance of Much Ado About Nothing on April 6, authorized Dennis Catrell of thespeech department to issue the following statement on its behalf: "Several weeks ago, the Arts andLectures—sponsored production of Berlioz' opera Much Ado About Nothing was presented onWestern's campus. The Arts and Lectures Committee would like to offer its sincere apologies for thatdreadful event. Making mistakes is part of the risk of making decisions and we do not ask to beexcused. Our real concern is that someone might think that the performance had some redeemingqualities, or, worse, that any member of the Arts and Lectures Committee thought so. It was aninsufferable travesty! Most of us are overly polite in the theater but this was so bad that people boltedfrom their CHARGES EDITOR WITH FACTUAL ERRORS Editor: •Your editorial response (4/7/70) toour letter splendidly documented the very point about which we complained: Western's inability toexamine critically its impact on the local environment. We need not respond to your whitewash job pointby point. The federal banning of 245-T, which Mr. Mikelson pronounced harmless, illustrates only oneerror in your facts. More important are the issues which you ignored, including our major assertion thatthe values of the college, constant g r o w t h and maximum convenience, are similar to those ofindustry. An inference drawn from your editorial is that Western and its long range plans are ecologically pure and do not seats, practically running to the exits. The production of the Opera Theater of NewYork suffered in these specifics: the performers could not sing; the performers could not act nor movewell; the dancing was extraneous, sloppy and embarrassing; the music was unexciting and badlyperformed; the . visual aspects of the production were unimaginative and tawdry; the libretto, astranslated into English, was at the very most insipid. Anything about the production that we have notmentioned is not exempted from contempt. Programming of theatrical events is difficult and we attemptto select the best we can within a very complicated set of limits; however, Much Ado About Nothing hadlittle to do with a satisfactory theatrical or musical experience." Dennis E. Catrell, member JeromeGlass, chairman Arts and Lectures Committee merit open investigation and criticism. Since thesuggestion that part of the Ecology Teach-In be devoted to such investigation was ignored, we no doubtwill have had another week of noble sentiments directed against Georgia Pacific, Dow Chemical, U.S.Steel, Intalco, Alaska oil, large families and the vague "all of us." Meanwhile the college bulldozes intoSehome Hill. Meanwhile the college will build a $5 .million student center complete with swimming pooland a ten-lane bowling alley while pouring a raw sewage of a 10,000 person (22,000 by 1984) populationinto Bellingham Bay. Sehome Hill Improvement Troops EXPECTS SOLUTIONS TO NOTEWORTHYPROBLEMS Editor: Congratulations on your issue of April 21. It bordered on interesting. Particularlynoteworthy were the letters from Philippe Jean Edward Bateman and Julie Humling and the remarks ofJohn Stolpe concerning the Moratorium. I assume the solutions will appear in today's issue(?). SteveCunningham senior economics AS AC seeks commissioners Applications are being taken for positions of AS public events and recreation program commissioners, Dennis Hjeresen, coordinating chairman for the Associated Students Affairs Council has announced. Both positions are open to anyone willing towork, with no requirements on grade point, or class standing, Hjeresen said. Public eventscommissioner will coordinate activities including art exhibits, drama, feature films, popular and classicmusic, art films and lecture series. Recreation commissioner will handle outdoor programs, specialevents and club sports. Applications can be obtained from the AS secretary on the top floor of the Viking Union and should be returned to Hjeresen at the AS offices in the Viking Union before next Tuesday.WUS needs organizer World University Service (WUS) needs an organizer to get a program going atWestern. WUS works with university communities in sixty countries in all continents. It promotes thesharing of knowledge, experience and resources of the universities in attempts to resolve basic university problems. Anyone interested in organizing for WUS are urged to contact John Miles, Viking Unionprogram director, or AS President Greg Baker. ---------- Western Front - 1970 April 28 - Page 6 ---------- 6 Western hront Tuesday, April 28, 1970 Udall blastsmotherhood Rep. Morris K. Udall (D. Arizona) spoke last week on the necessity of population control Western Front photo by King Klipsun yearbook viewsthe individual as student The Klipsun, Western's yearbook, will look at "the individual as student," TimHeitzman, yearbook editor, said. The book will be 144 pages of colored and black and white photographs and poetry, all original work by students. The cover will give an impression of Red Square at night. Itwill be released in August. The interest the students show in this yearbook and the people in charge ofthe yearbook next year will decide whether there will be one next year. Yearbook sales have been lowso far. Only about 300 have been sold. Applications for the 1970-71 editorship are due May 8.Response to Trash-in 'mild' The Trash-in at Ennen's Thriftway last week received a mild response fromthe community. One elderly man stopped and talked with Environmental Quality Council (EQC) member Dan Nelson and commended them on a "good job." Litter gathered from Sehome Hill was deposited intwo parking stalls at the store. Three people added to it during the day. About 2 p.m., EQC membershauled the trash off to the dump. There's something about your COLLEGE RING *{ that sayssomething about YOU .THE FINEST SYMBOL OF YOUR EDUCATIONAL ACHIEVEMENT ORDERYOUR RING NOW STUDENTS , * STORE No Store More Convenient Jim Diedrick Western FrontStaff A Mormon father of six whose grandather had two wives and 16 children has spoken out againstmotherhood. Rep. Morris K. Udall D.-Arizona), calling for a philosophy "that thinks in terms of qualityinstead of quantity," said that we should no longer consider large families and a large gross nationalproduct a blessing. Speaking to a standing room only crowd of about 250 in the VU lounge lastMonday, Udall called overcrowding due to the p o p u l a t i o n explosion self-inflicted torture. Problemsof increased crime, pollution and mental disorder are a result of overcrowded conditions in the cities, hesaid. To house a population predicted by President Nixon in his State of the Union message (over 300million in the U.S. by the year 2000) we will have to build a city the size of Tucson, Arizona (pop..250,000) every month for the next 30 years, Udall noted. Udall introduced a bill in Congress in 1961proposing the formation of a committee to study population growth. It was then considered "sacrilegious political suicide," he said, indicating how times have changed. R e f e r r i n g to the policy-making endof the environmental crisis, Udall said that Nixon should be on national television "talking priorities." U d a l l proposed an "Environmental Bill of Rights" for America. He said that 20-30 billion dollars should beput into the preservation of the environment each year. Urging a strong commitment to improve thequality of life, Udall called Americans "trustees for following generations." Proposed college wouldexpect community help Jackie Lawson Western Front Staff Tentative plans for an environmental satellite college were outlined by Dr. David Clarke, associate professor and chairman of the political sciencedepartment at the Academic Reform Commission meeting last Wednesday. The college would belocated in a valley, 20 miles from Bellingham, on a 100-to-200 acre site. The land would be cleared andfarmed by the college community as a part of t h e school's activities. The community would consist ofabout 200 people, two-thirds students and one-third faculty with their wives and families. To obtainachievement it is imperative to avoid conflict, according to Clarke. "People are compelled to interact witheach other. The college would provide an environment where people could not escape into the city every evening, which is the reason for its site far from town," Clarke said. P o s s i b i l i t i e s for theconstruction of the campus appear "favorable" due to plans for inexpensive buildings. Structures wouldbe built from 2x4 construction, which is cheap, attractive, and easy to build and demolish, giving thecollege the opportunity to adapt, evolve and change. "Courses would provide training in the social andpsychological skills needed for community building, and would include a general study of the relationbetween philosophy and community," Clarke said. Curriculum offered would consist of phenomenology of religion, philosophy of history, ethics, psychology, drama, art and music. Practical studies wouldinclude home economics, forestry, farming, carpentry, or whatever combination is needed to generatethe skills to run the community, according to an article written by Clarke titled "A Modest Proposal; AnExperimental Community in the Northwest," published in The Northwest Passage. "It is impossible tosay in advance what things would constitute the highest rewards in such a community. They would have to be discovered through experience; however before life in a close and relatively permanent communityof this sort could begin to be successful and rewarding it would be necessary to develop techniquesthrough which each individual could reach a level of emotional maturity much higher than that which isusual today," stated Clarke in his article. The overt goal of the college is to offer to individuals, who have "reached the end of their tethers with the existing society," an alternative. The purpose is to train people to see other variations of existence elsewhere; to develop a pattern of living which is in harmony withthe environmental imperatives, according to Clarke. The college would not be an anti-establishment unitproduced by the present society in an attempt to change. There will be a belt between the college andthe establishment. He mentioned another imperative; the need to achieve and maintain the human scale. This means creating a community that is stable and small enough for people to know others well. Thetask is to make the college a viable and satisfactory community. Because of this, the pace of the school will be slowed to half-pace. "This means student and faculty will have half the day to do their own thing. However, it is realized that too much leisure time becomes threatening," Clarke said. Because theeducational pace would be slowed, graduation would take eight years instead of four. "I propose a newand different kind of cluster college, which shall be a kind of nursery garden for new cultural patterns. Ina decade or so we shall be needing such patterns in a desperate hurry. Now is the time to start evolvingthem" Clarke stated in his article in the Passage. now featuring JIM S SHIRLEY 9p.Tn.-2a.m Mon.-Sat. t i l CASHTO ---------- Western Front - 1970 April 28 - Page 7 ---------- Tuesday,'" Apr i l: '28,' 1'97'0 Western Front Coming events: APRIL 25 -MAY 15- Seventh AnnualDrawing and Small Sculpture Exhibition, Western Gallery. TODAY- 8:15 p.m.: John Mclntyre, facultypiano recital, music auditorium. THURSDAY, APRIL 3 0 - Noon: Gerald Wilson, "Are There FalseProphets Today?" VU 10. 3:30 p.m.: Keith Abbott poetry reading, coffee den. 7 p.m.: Daniel Larner,"Film Psychology and the Art of Editing and Montage," L-4. FRIDAY, MAY 1 - 2 p.m.: Senator GaylordNelson, address on the environment, VU lounge. 8 p.m.: Ravi Shankar concert, music auditorium.SATURDAY, MAY 2 - 1 p.m.: OCIC Utter clean-up, Red Square. 8:15 p.m.: Michael Lorimer guitarconcert, music auditorium. Noon: Organization meeting for supporters of Initiative 256, banning no-deposit, no-return bottles, VU lounge. SUNDAY, MAY 3 - 8 p.m.: Activities Commission film, The Fixer,music auditorium. MONDAY, MAY 4 - 8:15 p.m.: Bernie Weiner poetry reading, coffee den. History club selling books to finance essay competition Phi Alpha Theta will hold a book sale on campus Tuesday to help finance future essay competitions, according to Secretary-Treasurer Gary Cruzan. "We hope tomake the paper competition an annual event," he said. Proceeds will also be used for other historyhonorary club activities, such as speakers and films, Cruzan added. "Books will cover a variety ofsubjects." The sale will be held from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. in either Red Square or in front of the VikingUnion, "depending on weather and construction," he said. Moms to get dose of coed life A showing ofwedding fashions, "Wedding Bells." will start off Mother's Weekend at 1 p.m. Saturday in the VU lounge. A skating party will follow at 3 p.m. in the Armory. Saturday evening will feature a buffet dinner at theBellingham Hotel from 5-7 p.m. A movie, The Twentieth Century Woman, will be shown after the banquet in L-4. Time of the film will be announced later. Mama Sunday's, in the VU coffee den, will featureformer professional entertainer Phil Lucas, from 9-10 p.m. in a special program for the mothers. Girlsexpecting their mothers to be here are urged to sign up at the VU desk or at their dorms so theorganizers have some estimate of the number coming. telle IrlcTal m formal sLoppe you and yourmother | are invited to come and see our selection of over 300 WEDDING GOWNS BRIDESMAIDGOWNS iv jDrv *j0WNS in stoo Chemical, bacterial warfare film shown on Earth Day " A Plague onYour Children," a film on chemical and biological warfare, was shown on Earth Day last week. The filmwas produced by BBC (British Broadcasting Corporation). According to the film which was sponsored by the Activities Commission: C B warfare (chemical and biological) is the poor countries' atomic bomb.Countries all over the world are producing nerve gas and bacteria concentrates because they are soeffective and inexpensive. One breath of G.B. (code name for one type of nerve gas) would mean instant death. A pail of G.B. would be equivalent to the bomb dropped on Hiroshima, but the building wouldremain. Another type of gas coded Richard Morse to give consumer education talk The chairman of theAdvisory Committee to the Consumer Credit Commission will speak on consumer education at 8 p.m.Thursday in L-2, according to a home economics department release. The public lecture will bepresented by Dr. Richard L. D. Morse, chairman of the family economics department at Kansas StateUniversity, and is co-sponsored by the home economics department and the Arts and LecturesCommittee. Morse is also a member of the American Bankers Association's Advisory Council onConsumer Affairs. He will be the guest of honor at a student-faculty coffee hour at 4 p.m. Thursday inOld Main 3. G.V. is an effective skin contact agent that causes a slower death. One drop of G.V. on aman would shrink his pupils, make his nose run, cause muscle spasms, diarrhea, urination and finallyparalyze breath resulting in death. This could take-several days. The Geneva Convention of 1954 madenerve gas illegal. The Accord was signed by all countries involved except the United States. C.S., aweaker form of nerve gas, has a 10% adult death rate and 90% child death rate upon exposure. Plantsdie when contaminated with CS. and it takes years for the soil to recover to the point where plants maygrow again. Bacterial warfare is a process where germs are massively r e - p r o d u c e d and thenfreeze-dried and canned. engagement rings for men? Of course! The time is right for the jewelryinnovation of the century. Now men can share the pleasure of an outward sign of an inward commitmentwith these matching wedding sets. His is massive and masculine; hers is distinctly feminine. Seethese new designs at Weisf ield's. lilliliilillilliilli^ Weisiield's has credit for students of promise.•:/•*© •?7A* ,/ gt;# CT4 /? / / ? C 1327 CORNWALL AVE. J'S'i WIIT. JP. P. S ---------- Western Front - 1970 April 28 - Page 8 ---------- 8 Western Front Tuesday, April 28, 1970 Walter Zuber Armstrong Forrest Anderson assistant copyeditor Black jazz musician Walter Zuber Armstrong will not return to Western as a lecturer in musicnext year. Why was Armstrong not rehired? Various people had many answers and feelings on theseemingly easy question. The decision was based on confidential student and faculty evaluations, justas with other f a c u l t y members, Music Department Chairman Philip Ager said. The evaluation results led Ager to a decision not to rehire Armstrong. The evaluations indicated that Armstrong's teachingabilities are not as good as his performing and musical talents, Ager hinted. Ager said that the musicdepartment's budget did not allot enough funds to keep an artist in residence. A teacher can't be hired or rehired just because of his m u s i c a l r e s e a r c h or performances, Ager said. The increasedstudent enrollment, the relatively slow increase of faculty, and the size of the budget, make it necessary for every teacher to be qualified to teach several subjects. Ager said he looks forward to the day whenthe department will be able to have artists in residence, but it isn't possible yet. Armstrong was hired on an experimental program as a lecturer, on a temporary basis, Dr. Charles North, professor of music,said. "Anybody hired as a lecturer is hired without promise of tenure," North said. North, who wasdepartment chairman when Armstrong was hired, said he "hired Walter as a musician, not as a jazz mu s i c i a n . " Armstrong's seriousness and dedication to music were more important than the fact thathe didn't have a BA degree. He had studied many things, many instruments and creative forms. Histhinking was different, and chance and time ISSUES CONFERENCE WHATCOM ROOM, BELLINGHAM HOTEL 0 0rt „ . . SATURDAY, MAY 2 8:30 Registration 9:00 U.S. Senator Gaylord Nelson,Wisconsin—Keynote Address ENVIRONMENTAL SYMPOSIUM AL SWIFT, Moderator 9:30Preservation: Planning and Development Panel: George Bartholick, Architect Joe Entrikin, Director,Whatcom County Developmental Council Harry Fulton, Whatcom County Planning Director Ken Kertz,Whatcom County Parks Director Don Holzer, Real Estate Man and leader in rural Whatcom Countyspeaks Vernon Lane, Chairman, Lummi Tribal Business Council Ron Peters, Graduate Student, WWSC Roberta Ryan, Northwest Environmental Education Center, WWSC 10:45 Coffee Break 11:15 Can LocalGovernment Do the Job? and Standards and Styles of Living: Must They Change? Panel: , Bill Clement,Local Retail Businessman WWSC Dr. George Drake, Assistant Professor—Anthropology-Sociology,Rev. Leonard Erickson, Minister, Central Lutheran Church Mary Knibbs, Teacher and Bellingham CityCouncilwoman Dr. Dick Page, Asisstant to Mayor Wes Uhlman, Seattle Frank Roberts, WhatcomCounty Commissioner 12:30 Lunch Law and Orders (Al Swift, KVOS) 1:30 Law and Order Panel: i StanPitkin, U.S. District Attorney for Western Washington Jim Wilson, Washington State Attorney General'sOffice Dan Larner, President - Whatcom County Chapter American Civil Liberties Union A local policeofficer or attorney Sponsored by WWSC YOUNG DEMOCRA TS and WHA TCOM COUNTY DEMOCRATIC PARTY made him available. North's reaction when he heard of Armstrong not being rehired was one of regret. He assumed there had been criticism of the experimental program, he said. He later heardthat the program is going to be continued and that the decision was one based on personal andacademic matters. Western Front photo by King He was certain the procedure for evaluation wasperfectly normal. When asked how he felt about Armstrong's musical talents, North said he had the"utmost regard for his musical ability." . Ager considers Armstrong a "very sincere, dedicated person."Some [of his compositions] I like and some I don't, but this is true of all music," he said. "He's improved since he's been here," Ager said. Armstrong believes "there's more to it than student and facultyevaluations." He said that only 20 of the 41 students in his three jazz classes and approximately 16faculty members evaluated him and were responsible for his contract not being renewed. Ager said itwas the responsibility of the instructor to conduct the evaluation and his prerogative to release theircontents. Every full-time faculty member responded, but three didn't evaluate Armstrong because theywere new, to the department, he said. North said he thought student reaction was the key to COMESEE FOR YOURSELF!!! what ever your thing demands, Dress or Casual or ?? Solids to go with yourPlaid or Patterned Sports Coats, stripes to go with the Blazers and Solids, Casuals in checks, stripes,novelty weaves - ? ? things like blue jeans or white, cords, denim stripes - be our guest, t ry on a pair ofeach . Sizes 29 to 38 waist. Mon. - Fri. 10 to 9 lt;K~ ( - n . A - I C Where there is acres of free parkingSat. 10 to 6 p.m. QD.OU t o 3 gt; IP At t h e Be||jngham M a l l _ Sun Noon til. 6 | | ff | 11J J j ) J | | | | jf jfTTl • lt;0 gt; HffTWWTm) IJ H IH HI H f IKSportswearSpeciansts)^ the decision to not rehireArmstrong. The ultimate recommendation, which is the responsibility of the department chairman,was reached when. Ager simply wrote his own evaluation and counted it in the tally. Ager said he would not consider overriding a faculty decision concerning the hiring or firing of any teacher. The finaldecision was based on equally weighted evaluations by both faculty and students, Ager said. His guess was that weight had been placed on student evaluations. He couldn't imagine a decision to not rehireArmstrong if the evaluations had differed between students and faculty members. Ager said he merelyadded the weighted items in the evaluations and added the percent ratings, to arrive at the statisticaldecision. He said he didn't count the written comments every heavily because they tended to beextremely for or against the instructor, and balanced each other out. The three areas of evaluation wereteaching skills, scholarly research, and service to the department, Ager said. Armstrong said that even if others considered him weak in classroom ability, the chairman could have suggested he remainbecause of his strength as a performer. Bill Little, a BSU member, believes there was a systematicconspiracy by the faculty to fire Armstrong. Little considers Armstrong a musical genious and resentsthe fact that he is being fired, even if he's being replaced by another Black instructor. "We feel thatArmstrong relates closer to the students t h a n any other Black instructor," Allen Stowers, a BSUmember, said. Armstrong's lack of a BA degree was one reason Stowers and Little cited as a possibleexcuse for Armstrong not getting rehired. After Armstrong heard he was not being rehired he said, "Iwas very hurt because I was working like Hell to make the music department known." He and hisensemble have played at numerous concerts in Canada and at Western, and will be playing at SkagitValley junior College tomorrow evening. The ensemble drew more people than Cannon ball Adder lywhen their concerts were scheduled for the same night last • quarter at Western. More than 500people have attended each of his concerts at Western, Armstrong said. "I've composed all my ownmusic for my concerts." "You've got to keep up or you'll be stale." He thinks the music departmentshould have younger ideas and younger teachers. Students are concerned with contemporary music, not just with classical music or music theory, he believes. He hopes the music department will follow hisexample of teaching by the playing of instruments and records, rather than just teaching theory or bylecturing. "In the two years time I've been here I've reached a lot of people." Armstrong thinks that more than just traditional types of music should be taught in Western's music department. Rock, blues andcountry western music would make the curriculum more relevant. "I wanted to study country westernmusic by a Western faculty member, but there was no one there," he said. Armstrong said he lost asummer job working at UBC because of the announcement of the decision not to renew his contract atWestern. His job losses haven't slowed his future plans, however. He hopes to hold a special farewellconcert with Prince Lasha, another jazz musician from Vancouver, B.C., at 8 p.m,, Friday. May 22 in the music auditorium. He has been accepted for the month of September at the MacDowell Colony inPetersburg, New Hampshire, to work on his music. Only twelve artists, musicians, or poets per monthare accepted to enjoy the facilities at the colony, Armstrong said. Leonard Bernstein is one musicianwho has been there, as has Robert Huff, Western's poet and associate professor in English. Armstrongconsiders his invitation a great honor, and he looks forward to his future. Aardvark loves bookworms Two good books for all All Monarch Notes, including outdoorsmen and women are titles by Hemingway,Steinbeck, Foods in the Wilderness, $1.50 Dickens, Salinger, Orwell, and Common Edible andf/se/w/ioriginally $1.00 now 50c. Plants of the West at $1.50. Good selection of posters Foretell yourfriends' and including W.C. Fields, Raquel your futures with Tarot Cards. Welch, Peter Fonda, HellsAngels We have Egyptian, French and a and Brigette Bardot are now new set of Swiss cards at $5.00 a$ 1.00. deck. Open week nights till 9 pjn THREE DOORS SOUTH OF SHAKEY'S ON N. STATE ST. AARDVARK Books Arts 734-4043 J ---------- Western Front - 1970 April 28 - Page 9 ---------- Tuesday, April 28, 1970 Western Front Billie Hargardine Western Front Staff There's a new place togather and it's happening at Toad Hall. Toad Hall is in the basement of an old bank, building at thecorner of 1 lth and Harris streets in South Bellingham. It's a large hall with a stage, tables and chairs,games to play, books to read, people to see and talk with, things to look at and groove on. It's a kitchen that serves up homemade health foods, soup, sandwiches and a variety of teas and coffee. It's livemusic just about every night. Cliff, Charlie and Gordy, the regulars, play funky, down-home music. Acouple of local blues bands play there on an irregular basis. John Blethen and Jeff Winston, owners and operators of Toad Hall, say it is a place to come and relax, to rap with people, to be with and part of the community. Their future plans include art exhibits and a sidewalk cafe when the weather gets warm. Itopens at 3 p.m. on week-days, noon on week-ends, and closes when everyone goes home. If you'relooking for an off-campus house, the listing service is now located in the AS Housing Commission office(in VU 227) instead of in the Housing Office. The change of location occured so there would be onlyone center for all off-campus needs. The Housing Office previously acted only as a referral center byposting a list of available rental units on the wall cor prospective tenants to read. In addition to listingavailable housing, the AS Housing Commission will recruit, inspect, and reinspect housing, to providean up-to-date record of conditions of each rental unit. Inspections of all available and listed studenthousing will begin the first day of Summer quarter. The Housing Office will continue to supervise andAS business manager labels bookstore 'a Political scientists to gather The Pacific Northwest PoliticalScience Association will hold its annual meeting Friday and Saturday at the Leopold Hotel. „ Themeeting will begin with panel disucssions at 10 a.m. Friday and 9 a.m. Saturday. Representatives frompolitical science departments from universities and colleges from five western states and two Canadianprovinces will be participating. "The book store has become a monopoly on campus," Les Savitch, ASbusiness manager told the Front last week. Savitch is also the chairman of a task force assigned toinvestigate the book store's operations. He added that due to the lack of competition the book store has not had to look for ways to improve its internal operation and bring prices down. Savitch said that theinvestigation report must be submitted to AS President Greg Baker by Friday. He added that he wouldlike to hear as many of the complaints of students before that date as he can. He said that complaintscan be registered in person at the AS business office, VU 211 or by phone at ext. 2272. provide fundsfor the listing service. Policy decisions concerning the service will be made by the housingcommissioner and Jerry Brock, housing director, and must be approved by the Housing and DiningAdvisory Council. The housing commissioner is then responsible for the execution of the policy and forthe supervision of the listing service. Craig Cole, chairman of the Tenants Union will become housingcommissioner beginning Summer quarter, relieving Gary Evans, current commissioner, from his duties.M a r y H i l d e b r a n d, coordinator-secretary for the listing service, will process and list availablehousing for both faculty and students. * She'll be on hand to answer questions during the hours of theservice, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday. 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Use the coupon below to make your orders and mail at ---------- Western Front - 1970 April 28 - Page 10 ---------- 10 Western Front Tuesday, A p r i l 28, 1970 CCM house needs new location; to be replaced Hiring andRetention Committee Gives students a voice T h e t h r e e - s t o ry Victorian-style CCM House belowthe Viking Union on Garden Street can be yours for the cost of moving it. That is, as soon as the college buys the property. Currently the price is being disputed and may end up in the courts. Western wantsthe land so it can build an access route to a planned multi-level parking' ramp. The house's owner, theUnited Campus Christian Foundation (UCCF), is willing to sell—at their price—though they have noplace to move. A state assessor has set the property's value at $47,000. An independent assessor forUCCF has put the price at $62,000. ^ UCCF has estimated the cost of building a structure with similarfloor space at $120,000 in a minimum time of two years. The college has formally filed a "friendlycondemnation" suit in order to determine the price. The Rev. Max Oliphant, UCCF chairman, expects an out-of-court settlement. UCCF was the original Christian organization on campus and bought the housein 1952. After being told by the college in 1958 that it had no plans for expansion onto the property inthe next ten years, UCCF remodeled the house and added a wing. Three years later the college drew uplong-range plans which included the house. UCCF was not made formally aware of the condemnationplans until 1968. The college, UCCF and CCM have all tried to help CCM relocate, but the college couldnot offer college space because of constitutional limitations. CCM has bought a lot on Highland Drive.The Rev. William Sodt of CCM said that the sloping lot is unsuited for the CCM House. Rev. Oliphantexplained that UCCF had considered selling the house to the college and buying it back again for thecost of moving. However, this was found impractical, he said. The Alumni Association and the MentalHealth Clinic have both expressed interest in the house. The Whatcom County Historical Society hasexpressed concern about the college's plans to tear down the 60-year-old historical landmark. Thecollege has tentative plans to build a 337-space multi-level parking ramp to accommodate visitors andthose going to performances in the new music building. The CCM House stands where the entrance and exit lanes are planned. Give your contact lenses a bath toiMit In order to keep your contact lenses ascomfortable and convenient as they were meant to be, you have to take care of them. But until now youneeded two or more separate solutions to properly prepare and maintain your contacts. Not withLensine. Lensine is the one lens solution for complete contact lens care. Cleaning your contacts withLensine retards the buildup of foreign deposits on the lenses. And soaking your contacts in Lensineovernight assures you of proper lens hygiene. You get a free soaking case on the bottom of everybottle£ gt;f Lensine. It has been demonstrated that improper storage between wearings may result inthe growth of bacteria on the lenses. This is a sure cause of eye irritation and in some cases canendanger your vision. Bacteria cannot grow in Lensine which is sterile, self-sanitizing, and antiseptic.Just a drop or t w o of Lensine, before you . insert your lens, coats and lubricates it allowing the lens tofloat more freely in the eye's fluids. That's because Lensine is an "isotonic" solution, which means that it biends with the natural fluids of the eye. Let your contacts be the convenience they were :re;?m o be.Gel ome ...ensme, i'rom the Murine Company, inc. Jim Austin Western Front Staff The six-membercommittee on student participation in retention and hiring of faculty members issued a four-page reportrecently in which the members agreed that students should have a voice in the hiring and retention offaculty. The committee, consisting of three students and three faculty, proposed the establishment of astudent committee on hiring and retention in each department. The committees would consist ofdeclared graduate students, majors and minors in the department. To be qualified to serve on acommittee, a student needs to have completed 45 credit hours, including a minimum of 15 creditstoward the major or minor and must be in good academic standing. The departmental committees would each consist of seven members and four alternates to be elected no later than November of each year.They would serve for that academic year. Under the committee proposal, each department would berequired to conduct the election. For the election to be valid, at least 40 per cent of the declaredgraduates, majors and minors in the department would have to vote. Should the election be declaredinvalid, a second election would be called. The department is not responsible for calling more than twoelections in a year. However, a committee elected by a third election, conducted by students, would be,recognized if it is declared valid. The one exception to the above procedure will be made in the case ofthe general studies department during the first year. The department chairman will appoint thecommittee from a list submitted by the AS president. The out-going committee will select itssuccessors from a similar list in subsequent years. Each list submitted by the AS president will requireat least 15 names. The education department's committee will come from the students who have beenadmitted to teachers education program. The department shall have the power to recommendemployment of faculty. If the committee opposes the employment of a candidate, the department shallnot hire that candidate. The student committee will have the same power in retention of faculty. Thestudent committees will be entitled to any information in the department's files on candidates foremployment, unless the candidate specifically requests the information be read by faculty only. Anydepartmental recommendation regarding hiring or retention must be accompanied by written approval ofthe committee unless: 1 . No valid student committee has been established, or 2. The studentcommittee fails to make a recommendation within a reasonable amount of time determined by thedepartmental chairman. If the student committee opposes the hiring or retention of any facultycandidate, no action will be taken until an agreement has been reached between the student committeeand the department. The candidate will not be hired or retained unless such agreement is reached. The committee's report also recommended mandatory faculty evaluation by students, the results of whichwould be used to form the basis for decisions regarding the hiring and retention. Committee memberGene Oliver told the Western Front last week that the report will be submitted to the Board of Trusteesat the next meeting. Give Mom a Bigfffe early. And make Mother's Day last longer. Call or visit an FTDflorist today. A nd order a BigHug Bouquet to arrive early. He'll send it across the street. Or country. Aspecial arrangement. For a very special mother. Yours. Usually available at less than $12.50 he r *$*? far"*! If". If^f" ---------- Western Front - 1970 April 28 - Page 11 ---------- Tuesday, April 28, 1970 Western Front 11 Veterans receive benefit increase Improvement policyproposed More than 22 , 0 00 Washington veterans, servicemen on active duty, wives, widows andchildren, including 666 at Western will receive an increase in educational allowances, according to themanager of the r e g i o n a l V e t e r a ns Administration office in Seattle. Manager John B. Kirschassured veterans that the increase will be retroactive to Feb. 1 and that payments reflecting theretroactive increases for February through April will be made May 15. No action is necessary on the part of the students, Kirsch said. The only recipients not receiving the increase on the check in May will bestudents u n d e r the vocational rehabilitation program. These students will receive their increase inJune, Kirsch said. Single students enrolled for full time (14 or more credits) will receive $175. Full-timestudents with one dependent will receive $205 and those with two dependents will receive $230. Anadditional $13 per month is allowed for each additional dependent. S t u d e n t s e n r o l l ed three-quarters time (10 to 13 credits) will receive $128 per month without dependents, $152 with onedependent, $177 with two dependents, and an additional $10 for each additional dependent. Thosestudents who are enrolled for only half-time studies (7 to 9 credits) will receive $81 if they ..have nodependents, $100 if they have one dependent, $114 if they have two dependents and an extra $7 foreach additional dependent. Students enrolled for less than 7 credits will be reimbursed what they payfor tuition, Kirsch said. A proposal to set up a committee to review all capital improvement plans forlandscaping, roads, lighting and campus furniture has been approved by the Long-Range PlanningCommittee. The campus planning office suggested the policy with the intent of establishing physicalfacilities used on campus so that they will reflect the values and committments of the college to itsstudents and faculty. To attain this objective, Western will seek leaders in the professions ofarchitecture, engineering and landscape architecture to help plan and develop the appropriate physicalfacilities that will be conducive to campus environment. It will also be an objective of Western to provide"a private office for every full-time ranked faculty member in recognition of faculty needs associated witht e a c h i n g ; research and counseling, classrooms, libraries and laboriatories of such size to meet the optimum educational effectiveness as well as e f f i c i e n c y ; adequate recreational, physicaleducation and cultural facilities for the academic and housing program and fine, applied and performingarts facilities tc meet the academic program and the cultural needs of the college and t h e relatedcommunity programs." T h e p l a n n i n g and development of this committee will result in "greaterinstitutional capability to maintain options and flexibility for such planning concepts as cluster collegesand it will result in reduced overall capital project costs for the college and the state," Barney Goltz,campus planner, said. Geologists tour for experience, fun Wick, Western claim old construction debtsWick Construction Co., now working on various campus projects, has made a legal claim that Westernowes $319,000 in "extra costs," according to Andrew Wick, company owner. "It involves the extra costs incurred in not having the east access road to Fairhaven open. We were supposed to be able to use itby Sept. 20,1968, and we got it about five months later instead," Wick said. "Our materials had to bestored a block off the construction area creating inefficient material handling. Materials had to be loadedinto trucks and hauled to Fairhaven's cramped inner court area." Wick mentioned that the original planswere to have the materials stored close to the construction area. Then a crane could have been used tomove materials back and forth. In the meantime, Western has filed a cross-claim that Wick owes thecollege about $135,000 due to lost revenue when the cluster college's facilities were not completed ontime. Out of Fairhaven's 12 dormatory facilities only four were completed and ready to be occupied bylast Fall quarter. Remaining students had to be scattered over the college campus for housing, andthose doubled-up received rent cuts. However, the college does not know exactly how much its claimagainst Wick will be until Fairhaven is completed, according to Bert Metzger, state attorney generalrepresentative for Western. "It's the first time we've had such a difficult problem, and it's complex but allprojects are complex," Barney Goltz, campus planner, said. Both Goltz and Wick would not discussthe claims any further because "it is a legal pending claim." Jim Baker Western Front Staff About 30geology students are spending this quarter outdoors, touring various geological areas in the West,gaining 16 credits worth of practical experience and having fun doing it. The students, mostly seniors,spent the first two weeks cramming on structural geology, stratigraphy (the study of rock layers) andfield methods. They are now camped in the Calico Mountains of the Mojave Malnutrition topic tonightThe department of home economics, in conjunction with the Whatcom County Medical Association, ispresenting a public lecture on "The Impact of Malnutrition on an Advanced Society," at 8 p.m. today in L-2. Dr. Sheldon Margen, professor of human nutrition, department of nutritional sciences, University ofCalifornia (Berkeley), will be the featured speaker. Margen is the co-author of two medical books, andhas published approximately 60 works in scientific journals. At 4 p.m. today a student/faculty coffeehour will be held in Old Main 3. Gorton favors change in age Attorney General Slade Gorton announcedhis endorsement of HJR 6, the ballot measure to lower the voting age to 19 years, at a Spokane pressconference. ' ' We will h ave an opportunity, in November, to grant young people a larger role in oursociety," Gorton said in Spokane recently. Gorton has met with students all over the state and believesthey are responsible people. He said they work and study and pay taxes and raise families and serve inthe military. In his view, they have earned the right to have a voice in their government. Gortonparticularly hopes that the irresponsible acts of a few youths will not cause anyone to vote against all 19and 20-year-olds, most of whom are mature responsible young citizens. He says he feels confident that most voters will make that distinction quite clearly. He felt much more could be said in support of thisissue, but t h a t the late President Eisenhower summed it up well when he said: "If young men 18 or 19 are old enough to . . . fight their country's battles . . . then they are old enough to take part in thepolitical life of their country and to be full citizens with voting power." WE'RE NOT EXPENSIVE We Just Look That Way. HOWARD'S CHAR BROILER 1408 Cornwall 1 Typewriters and Adding MachinesSat*:;, Service and l«ntaU Spec gt;of Student Rental Rates BELLMGHAM USINESS MACHINES(Next to Bon March*) MltCMNMfcal 734-3630 Desert. Here they will take three weeks to study and mapthe area, a windswept region which presents a multitude of geological features. From there they will goto various national parks: the Grand Canyon in Arizona; Zion, Bryce and the Arches National Parks inUtah; and the Grand Tetons and Yellowstone in Wyoming. Whether they go on to Glacier National Parkor return home depends on the time factor. During the 8,000-9,000 mile trip the students must readliterature on each site they visit. After the trip they must each write a formal request. Some students doindependent research, as well. Graduate students are allowed to go, but they cannot do research ontheir theses. The trip is announced early in the Fall and those who sign up are extensively briefed. Thisgives them time to decide if they want to endure two months outdoors and do the required work, andalso allows them time to prepare. The idea of such a trip came into being and was carried through in1968. At that time 12 students and Dr. Ross Ellis, associate professor of geology, took the tour.Participation grew to 19 the next year and Dr. Edwin Brown, associate professor of geology, joined thetroupe. The selected route attempts to span "virtually the total spectrum" of geological f o r m a t i o n s, Dr. Don Easterbrook, chairman of the geology department, said. He said this project is much incontrast to the present limited Summer programs now offered elsewhere. Each student pays out $150for gas for the convoy of cars. Since the students will have no rooms to rent for the quarter, finances arenot usually a problem. Food is extra and is often shared communally. Many also provide their owncamping equipment, but others use provisions from physical education. The geology department paysfor the costs incurred by Ellis and Brown. Each group is covered by college insurance. Also, the groupincludes a few trained in., basic first aid. The Climbers' Shop FRANZ GABL'S 1515 CornwallBellingham, Wash. - 733-5888 franchisee/ dealer of: ft Pacific tent ft CM.!, ft Lowa • Dolt ft Voyager ft Jansport ft Eiger Mountain products w Mamutte Perlon ftTubbsGoldline ft Oregon Freeze-dry ftMountain products Climbers' Checklist: Ten Essentials: Compass Map Flashlight Goggles First A idKit Knife Matches Fire Starter Warm Clothes gt;Food Technical Gear: Carabiner Pitons RopeWebbing Slings Pulleys Ascenters Crampons Ice Axes Hard Hats Open 10-9 Mon. thru Fri. Til! 6Sat. Other Gear: Sleeping Bags Nylon Foam Pad Ensolite Day or Summit Pack Pack Board Canteen Stove Tarp Tents ---------- Western Front - 1970 April 28 - Page 12 ---------- 12 gt;fWestern Front Tuesday/April 28, 1970 Panel discusses BOQ A lower standard of living is seenas one solution to the pollution problem by VU program director John Miles. Miles participated last week in the first Spring quarter Book of the Quarter panel discussion of The Environmental Handbook. TheHandbook was prepared for the n a t i o n - w i de environmental teach-in on April 22. An anthologycontaining essays on the meaning of ecology, the book also suggests eco-tactics, measures thatindividuals can take to improve the environment. Other panelists included Ted Boss, chairman of theEnvironmental Quality Council at Western; Dr. Phillip Jones, Whatcom county Health Officer; Joseph W. Entrikin, manager of t h e Whatcom County Development Council; and panel moderator William H. O.Scott, special projects librarian at Western. Although Jones and Entrikin objected to the book'sidealization and propaganda techniques, it was agreed that the book was a good primer on theenvironment. A question of personal sacrifice was raised. Boss and Miles agreed that our presentaffluence is killing us. Such commodities as throw-away containers, super-charged engines, andelectric toothbrushes must be eliminated, they said. The Whatcom County Development Council'sprimary concern is to assist local industries in their growth, according to Entrikin. Secondly, the Council encourages outside industries to enter Whatcom County. Jones realized the need for populationlimitation and pollution controls, but called the concept of a total return to nature "phony." Wilkinsonforesees cftance of 1984 "Nineteen eighty-four will come, blessed by Congressional authorization,"according to Frank Wilkinson, national chairman of the Committee to Abolish HUAC (House Committee of Un-American Activities). Wilkinson was speaking on campus recently on American freedom andrepression in the 70's. Wilkinson's main concern was a bill called Defense Facilities and IndustrialSecurity Act of 1970 (H.R. 14864). The United " gt; » • States House of Representatives passedthe bill this year 288 to 81. Wilkinson warned that if the Senate passes the bill "everything will be adefense facility under the power of the Secretary of Defense." Designated in the bill as defense facilitiesare "any plant, factory, industry, public utility, mine, laboratory, educational i n s t i t u t i o n , researchorganization, railroad, airport, pier, waterfront installation, canal, dam, bridge, highway, vessel, aircraft,vehicle, pipeline." The Secretary of Defense has the power to decide who can have access to suchdefense facilities. Wilkinson also suggested that U.S. Sen. Henry Jackson be invited to Western andasked to commit his vote one way or the other on the bill before he leaves. At present, Jackson isuncommitted. Applications are now being accepted for the 1970-71 editorships of Klipsun and'Jeopardy. Interested students should apply to the Publication Board, College Hall 311 by Friday, May 8- Included in the applications should be a statement of qualifications, experience and editorial goals,letters of recommendation and other supporting documents. Werner night to be effluvia Dr. BernardWeiner, coordinator of the Northwest Free University, will present "Effluvia: A Whole Evening (for thestrong at heart) of Bernie Weiner," at 8:16 p.m. Monday in the VU coffee den. We:rner,formerly assistant professor of political science at Western, will show his recent films, Orpheus Rides Again, A Wan andA Moman, and Sex Film. For the program Weiner will also sing some songs and read from his newbook of poetry "Sewer Radiances." The program, sponsored by the activities commission, is free. -tGOODYEAR POLYGLAS TIRE SALE 40% OFF on Blems. Tires SAMISH WAY SHELL 141 SAMISHWAY FREE PICK-UP AND DELI VER Y 734-5144 Theater could become reality Underground theatermay become a literal reality on this campus in the near future. Dr. William Gregory, director of theater;Dennis Catrell, technical director and Joe McConkey, president of Western Players, met with theAcademic Facilities Committee last week to discuss the possibilities of an experimental theater belowthe present music auditorium stage. Gregory outlined the need of space for rehearsal and p r e s e n t a t i o n of student produced plays. He indicated that present space limitations precludes student use offacilities most of the time. "If experimental theater space can become a reality and if the new rehearsalrooms which will be available in Miller Hall are completed, we will for the first time be able to offer aprogram in theater which will not only give an opportunity for full-fledged productions, but also forstudents to learn about the real problems in acting and directing." Gregory said. The Committeeunanimously a d o p t e d the following recommendation: "that the proposed project be studied as to itsfeasibility architecturally (especially as to acoustical and ventilating problems), financially and as to theprogram." "We're very happy with the decision of the Committee and congratulate them on theirdecision," McConkey said. "I personally appreciate Dean Brown's help in reopening the question."'Jeopardy' features focaf, national talent, on sale Western's Je opardy, the creative writing magazine, isnow on sale in the bookstore mezzanine, complete with a Marvel Comics Group and violet-coloredcover. Two students featured in Jeopardy, David McElroy and Steven Kahn, have been chosen forpublication in Intro, a nation-wide student volume of Cocker deemed too expensive The Joe Cockerconcert scheduled for last Wednesday did not take place because Joe was too expensive. John Miles,Viking Union program director, said that the concert sponsor, Seattle Mercer Limited, did not deem itfeasible to pay Joe Cocker his $6,000 fee. If Carver Gym sold out that would be $7,000 at $2 a ticketand out of that Seattle Mercer Limited would have to pay $700 for the use of the gym leaving them with$300 for publicity, miscellaneous expenses and a profit. short stories. Kahn will publish his short storyConnelly and McElroy will publish his poem Haunting the Matchless Mine Shack with Old Man Tabor'sGhost. Poets William Stafford and Richard Eberhart and writer Richard Brautigan are a few of the non-local talents featured in the supplement. An art section done by Western students and faculty, aphotographic study by Stafford and illustrations of many features make Jeopardy diversified. Festivalneeds more publicity Many people are needed to publicize the Multi-Arts Festival around the state,especially to the colleges. Transportation is being provided and gas is to be paid. If you are interested in spreading the word about the Fesitval contact Leslie Wicklund, VU 007, ext. 2272. STUDENTS L£rfSTORE NO STORE MORE CONVENIENT ON THE MEZZANINE Ecology books that are available are:Environmental Handbook The Unclean Sky Perils of the Peaceful Atom The Ultimate Folly The FrailOcean Population Bomb Chemical and Bacteriological Weapons Defoliation •Other new titles: TheNegro Novelist by Hughes White Racism by Schwartz The American Mind by Commager Sense of anEnding by Kermode ---------- Western Front - 1970 April 28 - Page 13 ---------- Tuesday, April 28, 19/0 Western hront 13 7 Viking baseball coach Connie Hamilton discusses strategywith first-baseman Ron Porterfield (14) during the Whitworth game last Saturday. Western Front photo by Todd Vik diamondmen sink Whitworth The Viking baseball team remained in contention for theEvergreen conference title defeating Whitworth College twice, 4-1 and 10-0, last Saturday at Civic Field.Jess Clark continued his masterful pitching in the first game allowing only one hit and one unearned run,that coming in the second inning. He struck out 12. Western jumped off to a one run lead in the first on consecutive singles by Steve Anderson, Jess Chavez and Ron Porterfield. Jerry Workman scored whatproved to be the winning run in the second when he got on via an overthrow by the shortstop and scoredwhen Pirate starter Rod Taylor made another errant toss of Clark's bunt. In the fourth inning the Viksscored two insurance runs when Dave Miller doubled in Clark and Anderson. Clark Babbitt threw ashutout in the nightcap, making only 52 pitches and giving up three scattered hits. Western made eighthits and capitalized on four Whitworth errors in scoring ten runs, their biggest production of the season.Miller and John Perucca led the Western attack with two hits apiece. Porterfield drove in three runs on atwo-run single and a sacrifice fly. Babbitt had two runs batted in and Jess Chavez and Dick Merendaeach scored twice. Western is now 10-10 on the season and 3-3 in conference action. Tomorrowafternoon the Viks will host Seattlef Pacific at Civic Field. Game time is 2 p.m. On Saturday CoachConrad Hamilton's squad will travel to Spokane for a conference double-header with Whitworth.Women's tennis team downs Seattle Pacific Western's intercollegiate women's tennis team, picking uptheir second victory in as many meets, downed Seattle Pacific College, 4-1, last Friday in Seattle. Onthe very windy and cold court, Barbara Fisher defeated her opponent 6-3 and 6-2, while Alice Textor outnetted her opponent 7-5 and 6-4. In the doubles matches, Sue Ray and Kay Kramer were victorious with scores of 6-1 and 6-1. Also, Trena Page and Karen Hyde took their opponents 3-6, 6-1, and 6-2. Theweek before the women's tennis team bounced by Skagit Valley Community College 4-1. Tomorrow'saction will see Western take on the University of Washington (UW) here at 3 p.m. Friday, the teamplays Skagit Valley Community College at Mt. Vernon, and Saturday they will attend the UW Invitational Tournament in Seattle. BUNK'S DRIVE-IN HOME OF JUMBO BURGERS Mon.-Thurs. 11 a.m. - 12:30a.m. Fri.-Sat. 11 a.m. - 1:30 a.m. Sun. noon - 12:30 a.m. 2220 Cornwall Avenue Vik booters elect Carr president Western's soccer club elected its new officers for the 1970-71 season last Wednesday. T h e new o f f i c e rs are: president—Bill Carr, vice-president—Joe Peterson, and secret a ry-treasurer—Jerry Soanka. The soccer club urges new players to participate in their practices at 4 p.m.Tuesdays through Thursdays at Battersby Field across Whatcom Middle School. Experience isn'tnecessary to participate in the practices. The Vik booters will end their 1969-70 season with theWashington State University Invitational on May 8-10. Viks to face new teams Western's athleticdepartment has beefed up their basketball schedule for next Winter with some new opponents. Tahoe-Paradise of California will help the Vik hoopers open their season at Carver on Dec. 1. One week later,the Viks entertain Sacramento State, which made the Western regional playoffs of the NCAA collegedivision this past season. Southampton College of New York, a branch of Long Island University, will beanother new face the Viks will meet. The New York team will perform in Carver next January on part of a trip through the Northwest and Alaska. Western has also booked games with the University of Alaskaat Fairbanks in mid December and will return to Turlock, Calif, to defend their Turlock Invitiational Titleagainst Stanislaus State, San Francisco State and Southern Oregon College. SOC enters the Evergreen Conference, (EVCO) this Fall and will change the old four-game EVCO series to a new three-gameone. Because of the new change, the Viks, for example will play three games against Central, with tv/oof the contests here. 1 Day Shirt Service COMPLETE LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANING Free Pickup Delivery 734-4200 PROSPECT Western's Jeff Clark unleashes a pitch at a Whitworth batter. Clarkwho had been the "hard-luck" hurler for the Viks in previous games, finally got some support in last week's games. Western Front photo by Todd r Western bounce Western's baseball team found the hitting togo with its t o p f l i g h t pitching last Wednesday, when the Viks captured a doubleheader from P a c if i c L utheran University (5LU),6-l,and 11-1 atPLU. In the opener, pitcher Jeff Clark, who the Big Bluebatsmen hadn't scored a run for in 19 straight innings, got the support he needed with a big three-runthird inning. Ron Porterfield drove in two runs in the third inning with a booming triple to right field. Clark, who scattered four hits and struck-out eight, helped". his own cause with a fourth inning home-run.Roger Miller and Steve Anderson led the Vik attack in the second game, as they both collected threehits apiece. Roger Miller had a double and triple amongst his three hits, and scored four times. TheViks collected 14 hits, in all, with Porterfield the top runs-batted-in man. Bob Bridges, a transfer hurler 's batters PLU twice from the University of Arizona, stopped PLU on three hits and struck-out 10 Knights. Mike Clayton's towering home-run in the third inning, helped the Viks to a three-run lead. Three PLUerrors also helped the Viks cause. The Viks scored four times in the fourth, with Jerry Workman andBridges driving in runs, and Porterfield doubling across two. The Viks capped their scoring in theseventh, when Roger Miller tripled to drive in Clayton and Kevin Miller followed up with a long sacrifice flyto center to score Roger Miller. r Bellingham's fashion leader sun fun with prescription lenses availablein several tints BINYON OPTOMETRISTS 1328 Cornwall 733-9300 ---------- Western Front - 1970 April 28 - Page 14 ---------- Mike Clayton (24), a star basketball player for the Viks last Winter, shows intense concentration in waiting for a pitch from a Whitworth pitcher. Western Front photo by Todd Clayton gets honors at basketballbanquet The annual Western Washington basketball banquet was held last Friday evening at theBellingham Yacht Club. Mike Clayton received three awards. The senior guard won the Captain's Award,the Darigold Sportsmanship Award, presented by KGMI sports director Haines Fay and a special trophy given to him by Athletic Director Dr. William Tomaras for becoming Western's all-time career scoringleader. The Inspirational Award went to junior guard Neal Larson, who will captain the 1970-71basketball squad. Coach Chuck Randall presented framed copies of the "Athlete's Prayer" to graduating seniors Ron Caderette, Clayton, Dave Hemion and Jeff Sherburne. The master of ceremonies wasDean, of students C.W. McDonald and the main speaker Dick Stark, KPUG sports announcer. CoachRandall was given a gift by varsity team members and assistant coach George Asan was presented with a trophy by his JV squad. lt;w Complete Menu Service Pixaa Br oasted Chicken HamburgersPrawns Alaskei^vern. v^^^Mltr^-?^ C%X\U T » ^ ~ ^ card room , T^STEAK t Broasted potato and toastfashion fabrics knitting yarn needlework crafts young fashion ideas in k n i t t i n g , sewing secondfloor QM 125 W Holly Bowlers get title Five Western freshmen composed a team that won the Birchwood Men's Bowling League Championship Playoff last Monday at^ Bellingham's Park Manor Lanes.Bob Johnson, Rick Travis, Bruce Colley, Robert Ezell and Jay Long comprosed the team which defeated Artie Circle Drive-in, 2725-2613. Long, who had the league's highest average of 180, bowled a 634, withsingle game scores of 215, 188 and 231. Johnson had a 499, Travis, 482, Colley 513 and Ezell 495.Golfers to host UPS Western's golf team, idle since April 16, has two meets shceduled this week. ThisThursday, Dr. James Lounsberry's linksmen take on Seattle University at the Oakbrook golf course. OnFriday, the Vik golfers host the University of Puget Sound on the greens of the Bellingham Golf andCountry Club. Next Monday, Western's linksmen travel to Tacoma for a meet against Pacific LutheranUniversity. Long takes second Bob Long, instructor of Butokukan karate at Western, headed a team ofWestern students that appeared in Central April 18-19 for an All-College karate tournament. Long, whoholds a first-degree black belt in Butokukan, captured first-place in the light-weight black beltcompetition and finished second in the grand championship. Fred Bolster, green belt, won first place inthe' heavyweight colored belt class, while Ed Fetlis, orange belt, captured thrid-place in the samedivision. Western's spikers gallop past SPC Western's track squad swept to a 93-52 victory over Seattle Pacific College last Saturday afternoon at Seattle. The win was the Viking's fourth dual meet victory ofthe season against two defeats. The Big Blue thinclads won 12 of 17 events, including sweeps of theshot put and discus and triumphs in both relays. Sprinter Tom Frank was a two event winner for theVikings. The Seattle senior took the 100 and 220 yard dashes in respective times of 10.5 and 23.2. JimSchmidt, Rich Boyd and Jim Wilcox led Western sweeps of the discus and shot put. Boyd threw thediscus 132' 5" for top honors in that event while Schmidt tossed the shot 46' 5" in his winning effort.Larry Nielson and Scott Taylor continued their mastery of the distance events. Nielson taking the twomile in the time of 9:30.1 and Taylor the mile with a 4:18.9 clocking. Both continue undefeated in dualmeet action this spring., Other Viking running event victors were Dan Bunten in the 120 yard highhurdles (16.2) and Gary Vandegrift with a 52.7 time in the 440. Western's field event winners alsoincluded Lance Wilson in the long jump (21' 4") and Chuck Brown in the high jump (6' 0"). The Viking440 yard relay team, composed of Frank, Bunten, Larry Anderson and Don Goddard, won in 43.5. Themile baton-passers consisting of Anderson, Ed Miller, Jeff May and Vandegrift, were victorious in 3:27.4. This Saturday Coach Dick Bowman's team will compete in the Vancouver Relays at Vancouver, B.C.Viking rowers compete in Corvallis Invitational Western's four-man crew team "A" lost a close race in the finals of the Corvallis Invitational Regatta in Oregon last weekend, as the Staters Rowing Club fromOregon took the 2,000 meter course in 6:44, six seconds ahead of the Viks. The preliminary race sawthe Big Blue row past Seattle University and Lake Merrit Rowing Club, enabling them to make the finals. This Williamette River meet, one of the largest in the nation, had over 24 schools and clubs fromWashington, Oregon, and California participating in it. Overall, the Lake Merrit Rowing Club won themeet, as they scored the highest number of points. In other Vik action the eight-man team with a timeof 6:25, were aced out of the finals by four seconds, as the University of Washington (UW) fourth varsity team slipped by them. Western's four-man "B" team were defeated in the preliminaries by the StatersRowing Club and Pacific Lutheran University in earlier action. This Sunday, Western will host the U Wlightweights on Lake Samish. The exact time of the meet was not available at press time. Western'sfootball squad schedules four new opponents for Fall season against Oregon College of Education (OCE) at Monmouth, Western's football schedule will have a new look this season. Instead of playing thecustomary two game series in Evergreen Conference play, the Viks will meet Eastern and Whitworthonce only, while playing Central twice. The change in scheduling is due to the new membership ofSouthern Oregon College which joins Evco this Fall. The Viks face SOC on Oct. 3 in Ashland. CoachBoyde Long's gridders open their season on Sept. 19 m Orders to go CHINESE and AMERICAN x*2-^ FOOD Open 11 a.m. daily; 2 p.m. Sunday Oregon. OCE is just one of the many schools that Evco istrying to lure into the league. In the OCE game, Long will pit forces against his former head coach, Dr.Bill McArthur, who Long served under before coming to Western. On Sept. 26, Western hosts PacificLutheran University, and Oct. 17, the Viks face another Tacoma school in the powerful University ofPuget Sound. The Viks conclude their season on Nov. 14, Homecoming week at Western, against arch-rival Central. Church Sunday Services 11 a.m. — Lutheran 4 p.m. — Episcopal THURSDAY" 6:30p.m. — Catholic CCM House ---------- Western Front - 1970 April 28 - Page 15 ---------- uesday, April 28, 1970 Western From V. Steve Doerrer, Western's number one singles player, leaps up to knock down a smash from his Seattle Pacific opponent. Western Front photo by Todd Netmen top PLU blanked by SPC Western's tennis team split two matches last week, dumping Pacific LutheranUniversity (PLU), 6-3 on Tuesday, before getting whitewashed by Seattle Pacific College (SPC), 9-0 onFriday. Against PLU in Tacoma, the Viks swept four out of five singles matches and took the secondand third doubles matches. Arnie Larson, number four singles, won his second straight match of theseason, winning Jr \ Classified Advertising X r 6-1, 6-3. Steve Doerrer won 6-0, 6-3; Steve Adelsteinwon 8-6, 6-2, and Dan Flinn took his rival, 6-1, 6-1. Playing-on their home courts, the Viks were handedtheir worst defeat of the season by SPC. The Falcons swept every match but two by two sets. Nextaction for Coach Don Wiseman's netters will be this Friday, when the Viks travel to Monmouth, Oregonto play Oregon College of Education. On Saturday, Western plays against the University of Portland inPortland. superman in Taylor Paul Madison Western Front Staff Two weeks ago Scott Taylor,,Western's freshman miler, toured the oval in 4:16.2, the finest time of his young career; For Super'' Scott it was his fifth straight mile victory. And more amazing was that the undefeated runner had won all fiveraces with seemingly effortless ease. Track Coach Dick Bowman's eyes light up when he talks of hisfine young runner. "Maybe I'm expecting too much of Scott, but I feel he has the potential to be anational champion." A statement such as this from a man of Bowman's experience is ample testimonyto Taylor's ability. "This kid has a seemingly limitless capacity for work," Bowman continued. He doesall that I ask of him and wants more. "All he really lacks is experience." And as Bowman is quick toadd, "Remember he's only 18 years old." Assistant Coach Boyde Long has many of the same feelingsregarding Scott. "Taylor has what it takes in the two key areas, his head and his heart. He thinks whilehe's running and has what it takes to stick in there until the end." Bowman believes Scott is headed forthe nationals this year, and is possibly only two years away from being the NAIA's top miler. Suchpraise and prediction must put pressure on the youngster, but one thing is for sure. There isn't a runnerin the conference that can touch him. 10 MISC. FOR SALE Wetsuit Fins $35. 733-6919. 51 FOUNDFound: 10 speed bike, 734-0669. 30 ROOMMATE WANTED ,_ One roommate wanted for summerquarter. Also two for month of August. Contact Barry at 617 N. Forest or call 734-0370. 10 MISC. FORSALE Human hair fall reddish-brown, worn twice, free matching wiglet. Was $70 now $30. 733-5902.Olympic typewriter 1 yr. old - $60; Barb Becker 733-9668. 11 CARS AND CYCLES HELD OVERWINNER msTiupponinoACiims APA R R 22 s(00LDieHawn)DUK Like new 50cc Yamaha-only 230actual miles $175. Days- 733-1040, Martin Studio; nite, weekends, 734-3947. For Sale: 1969 GTO 400cubic inch engine, vinyl top, air conditioning, in excellent condition. Contact Barry, 734-0370. 20 FORRENT Garage for rent very $100 a year 733-0552. near college 32 WANTED Sculptures needed forMulti-Arts Festival. Preferably large works. Contact Barb Dinner, 733-5504. -p A FRANKOVICHPRODUCTION uaner inariD \I;IIIII;III Bemman eaeuis Fiower iwwteHawi Q£B as TONI |MjTECHNICOLOR* G From Columbia Pictures also Gregory Peck —Omar Shariff in "MACKENNA'SGOLD' i ^ a s Scott Taylor7 the Vikings' freshmen sensational distance runnej, strides to a long lead over teammate Tim Tubbs. Western Front photo by King Soccer club clips Falcon wings, 2-1 Western'ssoccer club downed field most of the afternoon, Seattle Pacific College (SPC), 2-1 last Saturday inSeattle. Bill Carr and Gary Alanko scored the Vikings' goals. The Vik booters controlled the ball in theGalcon side of the hurling a strong assault on the SPC goal. The Viks score could have been higher hadit not been for the fine play of the Falcon's goalie. 106 N. COMMERCIAL Doors open 6:45 tonight 734-4950 STARTING WEDNESDAY — END TONIGHT - "Magic Christian" 7 and 10:20 "Follow ThatCamel' 8:40 _ 20th Century-Fox Presents T H E KREMLIN LETTER Color by DE LUXE®PANAVISION* lt;gg gt;|IW| ALSO "Secret World" with Jacquiline Bisset ;i#v':;.v.-. v::::•:%'•;:•:# COWBOY" 5:30 9:30"HAPPY ENDING" 7:25 11:25 I STARTS TOMORROW IAlso Starring . SUSAN OLIVER ."CHANGE OF MIND" Doors open 5:00 p.m. - "JENNY" 5:30 - 9:03 co-feature "CHANGE OF MIND" 7:00 -10:30 ENDS TONIGHT! "Midnight Cowboy" and "Death Rides Horse" ---------- Western Front - 1970 April 28 - Page 16 ---------- ^Western Front Tuesday, April Ztf, iy/u PRESENTS open:.. 0 . 11 a.m.-2a.m. mon.~sat. 2p.m.~10p.msun. an**% with his original recording group appearing Monday May4 thru Saturday May 9 if you digread down home blues you will definitely dig ALBERT COLLINS and remember, mon. may 4 is partynight as usual MAT COMING ATTRACTIONS Bulldog Ralph Floating Bridge IKE TINA TURNER
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- 1970_0407 ---------- Western Front - 1970 April 7 - Page 1 ---------- the Vol. LXII no. 27 Western Washington State College Bellingham, Washington 98225 Tuesday, April7,1970 10c Udall to open ecology week "Now is the time for all good men to come to the aid of theirplanet. We have a cause worth
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1970_0407 ---------- Western Front - 1970 April 7 - Page 1 ---------- the Vol. LXII no. 27 Western Washington State College Bellingham, Washington 98225 Tuesday, April7,1970 10c Udall to open ecology
Show more1970_0407 ---------- Western Front - 1970 April 7 - Page 1 ---------- the Vol. LXII no. 27 Western Washington State College Bellingham, Washington 98225 Tuesday, April7,1970 10c Udall to open ecology week "Now is the time for all good men to come to the aid of theirplanet. We have a cause worth fighting for: a new kind of war to make the world safe for humanity againstits own worst instincts. "Perhaps this mighty global struggle to restore the quality of our humanenvironment may provide an effective and inspired substitute for national conflict and bloodshed." _Le0Burnett Advertising Co. Colleges across the nation The week will be keynoted have taken up the battlecry. on Sunday,; April 19, by U.S. A lone flower stands vigil over beer bottles on Sehome Hill. Photo byBent Meyer Lawsuit nets $850 for girls Eight Western co-eds received a settlement of $850 in theirlawsuit against their landlord, Serge Slagle announced last week. Slagle represented the girls on behalfof the legal aids department. The eight had filed c o m p l a i n t s of general z. inconsideration, lack ofprivacy, insulting of tenants and guests by the landlord, failure to make repairs and other grievances, hesaid. The landlord had agreed to return $895 in damage deposits and unused portions of rent.Legislature to fill posts Three AS legislature seats will be filled by appointment at 4 p.m. next Tuesdayin VU 224, speaker Gail Denton announced last week. Applications are due Monday and may be picked up at either the AS government office, VU 1, or from John Engstrom, election board chairman. Theyshould be returned to the government office, Miss Denton said. Attendance at next Tuesday's meetingis imperative to be considered for appointment, Miss Denton said. Army recruiter to face music April22, Earth Day, is a nationwide day of action to reclaim an environment ravaged by years of technological progress. The teach-in. on Western's campus has been expanded to a full week of speakers, clean-ups, trash-ins and rallies, in an effort to re-examine the ethic of the progress of man. representativeMorris Udall at 8 p .m. in the VU lounge. Udall, a representative from Arizona whose name issynonymous with conservation, will speak on "Man as an Endangered Species." On Friday, April 24,teachers will be requested to give an ecological slant to their class discussions. S t u d e n tgovernment leaders will attempt to expell U.S. Army recruiters from the campus placement centertomorrow afternoon. • The AS cabinet yesterday agreed to demonstrate after it was learned that theArmy would not honor a request to subject the recruiters to a one-hour questioning period open to allstudents. The cabinet will sponsor a noon musical rally in the VU plaza to draw student support for theprotest. See editorial on page 4. Whatcom may limit festivals Hearings on a county ordinance toregulate rock festivals will be held at 10 am., Monday, in the courthouse hearing room. The proposedordinance, drawn up by James Thompson, Whatcom County prosecuting attorney, will limit festivals toone day and require the approval of facilities by the health department and the county sheriff.Applications will be required at least 40 days before the event and applicants must submit fingerprints toand be investigated by the sheriffs office. Furthermore, the applicants must submit a minimum cashbond of $5,000 and give proof of liability insurance of at least $100,000 per person. Dr. Robert Keller,professor at Fairhaven and a member of the state executive board of the American Civil Liberties Union,has asked the ACLU legal staff to prepare a formal analysis of the ordinance's constitutionality. "In my opinion the ordinance violates the 1st, 5th, and 14th Amendments of the U.S. Constitution in that itprevents freedom of assembly, violates due process of law, and denies equal protection under the law,"Keller said. "This ordinance is utter hypocrisy and a corruption of the power of the government. Itviolates the idea that law should be fair, rational, and clear, not haphazard, discriminatory and vague."Keller plans to have an ACLU lawyer at the meeting. Phyliss Edwards of the Activities Commission saidthat she felt the county commissioner's action is and attempt to head off the Multi-Arts Festival and any other festivals Western may plan. Moratorium leaders plan rally Local Moratorium supporters arepreparing for Income Tax Day on Wednesday April 15 to hold their first mass anti-war demonstration inBellingham since last November. The main thrust of the Moratorium and New Mobe demonstrationsacross the liation on that date will be directed against the Internal Revenue Service, which collects taxes to financially support the Vietnam war effort. The day's activities locally will begin with a peace marchfrom the campus to the Federal Building downtown, at 10:30 a.m. Carl Maxey, a Spokane attorney whois running against Henry Jackson for his Senate seat, will be the featured speaker at a noon rally at theFederal Building. Local Moratorium Committee spokesmen explained that a daytime march will give the demonstration additional exposure to downtown merchants and shoppers while enabling the marchersto confront the bureaucrats working in the Federal Building. Maxey, who is also president of theWashington Democratic Council, will be joined at the rally by speakers from the American Servicemen'sUnion Indian Servicemen's Union, and the Student Mobilization Committee. Musicians and poets will be on hand for the program also. The campus Moratorium Committee last month voted to encouragepeople not to pay at least $5 of their income tax in protest against the war. The committee requestedpersons not to pay their telephone excise tax as well, since that tax was re-imposed to help pay for thewar. Goltz discusses further campus expansion plans By 1974 Western's campus will have a predictedpopulation of over 13,000 students, Barney Goltz, campus planner, said discussing accelerated campus construction last week. Goltz sees Western with a population of 15,000 students by 1978 and seestoday's construction as a road into the future to handle the number of students. Workmen are nowworking along High Street to replace old utility cables, the first necessary step before the library orauditorium additions, Goltz said. Also being developed is the High Street by-pass project which will cutdown traffic congestion on the campus. The project will be open for bids April 17. The college and cityare working together on the by-pass project. Once completed, High Street will be restricted forpedestrian use, except for an emergency vehicle lane, Goltz said. Along with street and academicimprovements, Goltz looks ahead to college housing now being built and more in the planning stages.With these major changes in Western's campus comes an equal idea fostered by Goltz and his staff:the search for people who can create "inspired, man-made developments." Western Front photo ---------- Western Front - 1970 April 7 - Page 2 ---------- 2- Western Front Tuesday, April 7, 1970 Four Western students were acquitted by the Judiciary Board ofcharges of "impeding pedestrian traffic" when they parked on Red Square during one of last quarter'sparking demonstrations. photo by Serge Slagle Bookstore Investigation continues AS President GregBaker is forming an "executive task force" to investigate the student co-op bookstore on campus. Baker said that the task force will be assigned to thoroughly investigate student complaints and bookstoreorganization and administration. "We will attempt to alter the bookstore after thorough investigationsand hearings have been made by this group," Baker told the AS cabinet Thursday afternoon. Thecommittee will include the chairman of the AS legislature bookstore committee, one AS legislator,student members of the co-op bookstore board, AS Administrative Assistant Al Doan, AS BusinessManager Les Savitch, and two students from the general student body. Baker told the cabinet that "it isobvious that the root of the bookstore problem is that the chairman of the co-op bookstore board (Dr.Mitchell) has on several occasions said that he feels no real problem exists and in his opinion theneeds of the students are being adequately met." The task force must present a comprehensiveproposal for effecting the necessary changes in the bookstore by May 1, Baker told the AS cabinet. Hehas not yet appointed all of the members of the task force. The AS president and Dr. Howard Mitchell,chairman of the co-op bookstore board, are listed as ex-officio members of the task force. AS Cabinetobjects to armed uniformed police Student government officials are up-tight because armed uniformedpolice were used to guard the co-op bookstore during last week's busy rush for books. Legislation willbe introduced at today's AS legislature meeting ATTENTION: COLLEGE STUDENTS SPECIAL"APRIL" PORTRAIT PACKAGE 1 - 8x10 Deluxe Natural Color 8 - Wallets Deluxe Natural ColorRegularly $39.00 now $29.95 PHOTOGRAPHY DONETTE Next to MT. BAKER THEATRE Phone 733-0540 10% Discount on all regular Studio prices for College Students calling for a halt to such practicesin the future, according to AS President Greg Baker. "I just don't want any policeman with an Americanflag on his shoulder saying halt or I'll shoot—bang," Baker told the AS cabinet Thursday afternoon.Significant quantities of cash are on hand during the first week of the quarter^ necessitating the use ofarmed patrolmen, a bookstore employee told the Front. "Even if someone stole $50,000 from thebookstore, I don't think that he should be shot for it," Baker explained. A student governmentspokesman said yesterday that the proposal to be presented to the AS legislature this afternoon willprobably include a clause calling for the banning of the use of weapons by campus security police also.Campus police currently aren't issued sidearms. Students at park-in Three students were found notguilty of violating the college demonstration policy last quarter when they appeared before theIntermediate Student Judiciary Board. Charges of "interfering with and impeding pedestrian traffic in Red Square" were filed against Jerry Field, Steve Cooper, Mike Veitenhans and -Mike Shannon following the Feb. 26 park-in demonstration. According to Serge Slagle, legal aids representative at the trial, thecharges against Shannon were dismissed because he had not been advised by any member of theadministration that he was violating the demonstration policy. In finding the other three not guilty, theJudiciary Board ruled acquitted trial that Red Square was not exclusively a pedestrian area and t h a tthe definition of "demonstration" as used in the Navigator was not clear. The Student ConductCommittee was asked to clarify the meaning, Slagle said. On three occasions last quarter, the ASlegislature passed bills supporting park-ins in Red Square to protest the parking fees. The legislatorsactively called for a park-in at the Feb. 11 meeting, and in two resolutions p a s s e d March 3 theycommended Dr. Richard Vawter, assistant professor of physics, for his stand on the policy. Vawter hadinitiated the Feb. 26 park-in that resulted in the charges against the students. OCIC selects new nameOff-Campus Interhouse Council (OCIC) officially changed their name to Off-Campus InterhouseCommunity at a special meeting held at the conclusion of Winter quarter. The name was changed toemphasize the fact that OCIC is open to any off-campus student and is not a select "council," according to Pete White, OCIC president. OCIC now handles fund raising and social events for the HousingCommission. The two groups and the Tenants Union merged last quarter. OCIC members are planningevents in cooperation with the Environmental Quality Council and for the Multi-Arts Festival. OCIC isworking with the Housing Commission and the Tenants Union in distributing contracts for rentalagreements or term leases for any landlords and tenants who request them. Approximately 200contracts have been requested so far this year. OCIC invites all off-campus students to attend itsweekly meetings at the new time of 7:30 p.m. on Tuesdays (instead of Mondays). Meetings willoccasionally be held outdoors. Tonight's meeting will be held in VU 354. Removed trees to be replacedWalking past the VU, one cannot help but notice the large hole in the ground where a border of treesonce stood. In place of the once-blooming foliage, workmen are repairing the damage done to many VUutilities such as steam, heat and sewage lines. The damage occurred when underground electrical andsteam lines came in contact with corrosive salt in the soil which damaged the pipes and made themunable to expand and contract, according to Robert Aegerter, college architect. The steam leak wasalso responsible for the death of the grass in front of the building. One row of trees will be planted thisyear and in three or four years a double row will be planted along with other landscaping, Aegerter said.London Plain, sometimes referred to as Eastern Sycamore, will be used, he said. "These are goodstreet trees in this type of area because they can be grown in areas that contain a certain amount ofpaving, and they are also pollution resistant." Apply now for ethnic studies Fall quarter applications forthe College of Ethnic Studies are now being accepted, Dr. Ronald Williams, college dean, said lastFriday. Western Washington State College ART FILM SERIES "Hollywood Comedy and Camp"presents: Chaplin's Most Successful Feature and One of the Great Comedies of All Time Charlie Chaplin in "The Gold Rush" (1927) Friday, April 10 at 7 and 9:15 p.m. in L-4 Admission: Students $.75 - General $1.25 Plus short by Chaplin: "THE CHAMPION" The cluster college offers both a major and minor inethnic studies, with seminar courses offered separately. Any Western student can submit anapplication, Williams said. Application forms are available in Old Main 143. [Church Sunday Services11 a.m. — Lutheran 4 p.m. — Episcopal THURSDAY 6:30 p.m. — Catholic CCM House ---------- Western Front - 1970 April 7 - Page 3 ---------- Tuesday, April 7, 1970 Western Front 3 Coming events: TODAY-All day: Contemporary Japanesewoodblocks, VU gallery. 10 a.m.: Episcopal worship, Campus Christian Ministry. 1 p.m.: Ed Devine,"Urban and Environmental Salvation: Must We Reverse Affluence?", VU lounge. TOMORROW-Noon:Episcopal worship, Campus Christian Ministry. 2 p.m.: Herman Fagg, Socialist Workers'- Party candidate for California governor, VU lounge. 7 p.m.: New Generation Singers, coffee den. THURSDAY, APRIL 9 - Noon: The Way, "Effective Witnessing," VU 10. 1 p.m.: Student recital, music auditorium. 4 p.m.:Episcopal worship, Campus Christian Ministry. 6:30 p.m.: Roman Catholic worship, Campus ChristianMinistry. 7 p.m.: Lecture, "The Medium of Film as Indicator of Man's Expanding Consciousness," L-4.7:30 p.m.: Outdoor program, Miller Hall 163. FRIDAY, APRIL 10- 7 and 9:15 pjn.: Art film, The GoldRush, L-4. 7:30 pjn.: Dr. Les Balzer, "The Population Bomb: Is It Really Our Baby?", 625 N. Garden St., Apt.302. SATURDAY, APRIL 1 1 - 9 p.m.: Mama Sunday's, coffee den. SUNDAY, APRIL 12- 11 a.m.:Lutheran worship, Campus Christian Ministry. 1 pjn.: Arboretum clean-up. I pjn.: Whatcom Creek clean-up. 4 p.m.: Lutheran worship. Campus Christian Ministry. 6:30 p.m.: "Repertory Dance Theatre," musicauditorium. 8 p.m.: James Cotton Blues Band, Carver gym. MONDAY, APRIL 13- II a.m.: Episcopalworship, Campus Christian Ministry. 4 p.m.: Dr. George Flynn, "Continuous and Pulsed Lasers: SomeSimple Principles," Haggard Hall 268. HEATING PLANT EXPANSION-Barney Goltz, campus planner,said Thursday that expansion of Western's heating plant will begin "as soon as possible,,' with the jobgoing to the W.G. Clark Construction Company. The Seattle firm turned in the lowest bid on the project for $491,000. Goltz said the decision to expand the plant came after a study to find the most inexpensive,but effective method of heating a campus the size of Western. The planning office predicted that the plant would be completed by December. Forums to discuss environment A series of college-communityforums on the topic ' ' T h e E n v i r o n m e n t al C r i s i s : Causes, Effects, Solutions" continues at7:30 p.m. next Monday at St. James Presbyterian Church with _ a discussion of air and water pollutionin Whatcom County. Speakers Ed Devine Ed Devine, an urbanologist and former deputy mayor ofSeattle, will speak on the topic "Urban and Environmental Salvation: Must We Reverse Affluence?" at 1p.m. today in the VU lounge. ' Devine is currently employed as a governmental consultant and was theprincipal originator Dr. Per-Olof Astrand of Seattle's Model Cities program. His appearance is sponsored by the political science department and the arts and lectures. Speaking at next Monday's forum will be Dr. William Dittrich, assistant professor of physics and Ed Dahlgren, technical director at the localGeorgia-Pacific plant. The forums, which began last night with an overview of the environmental problemby Dr. A. Carter Broad, chairman of the biology department, are being co-sponsored by the AssociatedStudents, Environmental Quality Council, and the Northwest Environmental Education Center here atWestern. Other sponsors are the Northwest Free University, Bellingham Area Council of Churches,League of Women Voters, the Northwest Passage, Washington Environmental Council of WhatcomCounty, and Churchwomen United. On April 20, Rep. Morris Udall of Arizona will speak on "Man as anEndangered Species" at 8 p.m. in the VU lounge. Following Environmental Teach-in Week on campus, a physics professor at Western and the manager of the Mobil oil refinery in Ferndale will discuss "Oil inPuget Sound" on April 27. The forums on environment are part of the second annual Bellingham people-to-people program. EQC plans clean-up meet Dr. Per-Olof Astrand will speak on "Physical Performance and Physiological Aspects" at 7:15 tonight in L-4. Astrand, a Swedish physician, is chairman of thedepartment of physiology, Royal Gymnastic Central Institute, in Stockholm. Astrand is internationallyknown in the United States and t h r o u g h o u t the world, frequently lecturing for medical societies and physical education associations. Dr. George Flynn -Dr. George Flynn, assistant professor of chemistry at Columbia University, will deliver a series of three lectures on campus April 13-15. All three lectureswill be given at 4 p.m. in Haggard Hall 268. April 13: "Continuous and Pulsed Lasers: Some SimplePrinciples." April 14: "Lasers: Some General Applications to Chemistry." April 15: "Molecular EnergyTransfer Using Induced Flourescent Techniques." A meeting for all people (not just students) concerned about the war in Vietnam will be held tomorrow at 7 p.m. in L-2 to decide on moratorium actions on April 15 and in the future. The Environmental Quality Council (EQC) is planning a clean-up of WhatcomCreek and Sehome Hill next Sunday. They will remove trash and accumulated litter from WhatcomCreek between the Courthouse and the freeway and from the Arboretum area on the western slope ofSehome Hill. The EQC hopes to attract support from other community groups and inspire further clean-ups of Bellingham's parks and recreation areas. Those interested in working at Whatcom Creek willmeet next Sunday at 1 p.m., in the parking lot of Prairie Market, 1600 Ellis St. The Sehome group willmeet in the parking lot on East Campus Way, north of Fair haven, at 1 p.m. dorit be left out. You canstill get your 1970 Klipsun. Three dollars. (V.U. 311) Could you get enthusiastic about selling the most salable product in the world? The product is ideas. The 2600 men who sell ideas for us are excitedabout what they're doing. We know that because they're successful at it. And many of them^are recentcollege graduates. In fact, our preference is for young college graduates who get a kick out of being self-starters. Bull sessions aside, college students spend at least four years being independentthinkerslrVthe world of ideas. As a member of the Moore sales team, you'd still be pretty much on yourown, with responsibility that grows as you grow. Your job would involve you with communicationproblems. People problems. Problems in business logistics. You'd be looking for ways to makeinformation more intelligible to more people. To make it impossible for carelessness to destroy efficiency. Challenging? You bet it is. Come and iook us over. Demand specifics. Weigh us as hard as we'll beweighing you. We might tu lt;n out to be your kind of people. One of our Moore men will be on campusApril 17 See your Placement director for the time and place. IMC Over 67S offices and plants, 2618salesmen in North America ---------- Western Front - 1970 April 7 - Page 4 ---------- Western Front Tuesday, April 7, 1970 between the lines Expresses concern over Hill's future Peoplemust be concerned with their man-made environment as well as their natural environment. There aresome definite questions to be answered over the future of Sehome Hill, and we feel we must answerthe letter from 13 members of the Sehome Hill Improvement Troops. First of all, none of the area beingcreated by the destruction of Garden Terrace will be reverted to parking. All of that area is for the newmusic auditorium addition including pedestrian walkways and plazas and a by-pass road. CampusPlanner Barney Goltz has also had some reservations concerning the approximately 7-acre UnitedHomes project on the southeast corner of Sehome Hill, but assures that there will be no lighted path cutthrough the hill. The pedestrian route from these married students' apartments will follow CollegeParkway. Goltz said that the long-range plan for the campus will eliminate all but pedestrian andemergency vehicular traffic through the campus. He said that campus planning and the Board of Trustees consistently try to use the best environmental-consideration practices. The wooded glen taken outbetween Fairhaven and the tennis courts was dying due to soil deficiencies created by the parking lotthat was there. That lot was removed and the trees taken out in preparation for landscaping, Goltz said. The installation of bright lights on pathways has been attacked. But it has also been supported bypedestrians who want to see where they are going at night. Bob Mickelson, supervisor of grounds andgardens, said that Western has not used a defoliant called 245-T since June, 1969. Western currentlyuses a defoliant called ZEP 777. Neither of the non-selective vegetation killers is harmful to wildlife orhumans, Mickelsen said. Western currently uses another weed killer, a granular material, which is alsoharmless to animals. The college does not own the major portion of Sehome Hill. The strip it does ownalong the western face of the hill has been left to grow wild except for a path. A proposal by theArboretum Committee that the city designate the remaining portion of Sehome Hill as an arboretum tobe created and kept by both the city and the college communities includes plans for benches, lawn areas and a small pond. Dr. Ronald Taylor, committee chairman, said that his group would like to see the hillremain as undeveloped as possible-including the closure of the existing road. But he pointed out that any proposal over the future of the hill must be compatible with the largest portion of the communities totalpopulation that would benefit from it. We realize that environmental concern begins at home. But we also realize that our home consists of both our man-made and natural environments. Our problem is tocreate a suitable environment combining the best of both of these environments which will satisfy themost people. -Bob Burnett Straight facts on placement policies Let's get some facts straight concerning recent protests over college placement services and policies. The Winter AS legislative conventionpassed Bill 76 which reads: " . . . any organization may recruit on campus, and use all facilitiesdesignated for that purpose by the college providing they also make themselves available for one hour ofpublic questioning by any member of the college community upon petition by twenty communitymembers; and that refusal to participate in this public questioning shall necessarily result in a denial ofthe privilege of use of this campus for recruiting." Bill 76 is not irrational. The proponents were interestedin making the placement experience on educational endeavor open to any interested student, not justgraduating seniors. The one hour of questioning was not proposed as an excuse for radical factions oncampus to harass employers who maintain military contracts or restrictive hiring policies. Thequestioning period was proposed to allow interested students a chance to rap with employers about their business in a peaceful manner. The placement office is bound by the open placement policy adopted bythe staff commentary Jim Bromley The Spring quarter activities calendar is reflective of the continuingdetrimental change in moral values taking place in this country. This obscene bit of paraphernalia may be shocking to few who see it, and I may be accused of being Victorian for making my views known. Even Iwas not as shocked by it as I might have been at a more tender age. Nevertheless, obscenity is notjudged solely by the reactions of people, but on the basis of common standards of decency which areuniversal and unchanging. We have lost these standards, it seems. My argument is not against nudity per se, but against the mass-productive commercialization of it, which only serves to cheapen our God-given sexuality. We have become a nation obsessed with sex and nudity to the point that they have becomeour gods for a base form of idolatry. We see graphically portrayed in our books, magazines, movies andthe theater this irresponsible sexual permissiveness. Pornography has even become a "respectable artform." It is time to face up to the fact that this type of permissiveness in our society is not making us any healthier than the Victorian prudishness of an earlier era. In other words, it is time for ActivitiesCommissioner George Hartwell's men to stop using student funds to pervade the campus with sub-cultural hippie hardware. Opinions expressed in this column are not necessarily those of the editor orother staff members. FRANKLYSPEAK1NG b/Philfirmk Board of Trustees in January 1969. Theeducation placement director told us that he has no alternative but to uphold that policy, which wasratified by the Associated Students at the time. The placement office has notified all prospectiveemployers by mail about Bill 76 and asked them to give the student proposal "serious consideration."Most employers have already responded. Only a few said that they could not honor the proposalbecause of company policy, but most were apprehensive as to how the one hour questioning periodwould be conducted. Some feared that the meeting would only erupt into a harassment session in which nobody would learn anything. Now is the time for student government to draw up solid guidelines for theone hour questioning period, since that seems to be the only real hang-up so far. Once that has beensettled, there seems to be no reason why the college community could not expect total cooperation from prospective employers. Since Bill 76's intent was to modify the open placement policy which is stillofficially in effect, the Associated Students should turn to urging the Board of Trustees to bring theplacement policy up to date. —John Stolpe 'ALL THOSE IN fAVOR oF WSBANDIN3 THE "SANTA.BfcKBN?A SURFING CLOB" SAY,, AV6!" lt;g gt; YWMe» AMS*1CA conp./ii i A*H K gt;/ST.LOU^.hAo. £3(32- thewestern front official weekly newspaper of Western Washington State Collegesecond class postage paid at Bellingham, Wash. 98225 phone, 734-8800 editorial, ext. 2277 advertising,ext. 2276 Bob Burnett John Stolpe Adele Saltzman editor-in-chief managing editor assistant to the editor Bob Taylor sports editor Dan Shoblom photo editor Lynn Watts feature editor Bill Woodland business manager Jerry King Bill Todd head photographer assistant photographer Jim Bromley copy editor R.E.Stannard Jr. advisor Mike Erickson cartoonist Reporters: Chris Anderson, Forrest Anderson, JimAustin, Jim Baker, Ted Bestor, Deb Coleman, Robin Courtwright, Don DeMarco, Jim Diedrick, BarbaraDinner, Dave Haeck, Billie Haragadine, Gary Harrod, Mike Hull, Diane Jacobs, Bill Johnston, Tim Knopf,Jay Long, Jackie Lawson, Julie McCalib, Bob McLaughlan, Paul Madison, Mary Peebles, Mike Pinch,Stan Shawn, Jill Stephenson, Margaret Thornton, Rob Turner, Doug Van Boven. Deadlines: 5 p.m.Tuesday-display ad reservations 4 p.m. Thursday-news copy, letters to the editor, classified ads displayad copy. Represented by NEAS, 360 Lexington Ave., New York, N.Y. 10017 Price per copy, 10 cents.Subscription, $3.50 a year, $1.50 a quarter. Member: U.S. Student Press Association, College PressService, Associated College Press, Intercollegiate Press Service and Liberation News Service. ---------- Western Front - 1970 April 7 - Page 5 ---------- Tuesday, April 7, 1970 Western Front 5 feedbackfeedbackfeedbackfeedbackfeedbackfeedb Let's bringecology home EJUKK:**^ Editor: We are writing about your story entitled "Environment VersusDevelopment." We agree that Whatcom County must not be transformed into an industrial park,however, we must protest the Front's lack of attention to destruction of the environment done by thecollege. It is so easy to attack Intalco, Atlantic-Richfield and Georgia Pacific (who indeed deserve the cr i t i c i s m ) , yet if the environmental battle is to be won, it must also begin at home and must involvesome pain and sacrifice on our part. To combat short-sightedness and self-righteousness, we proposethat the Front keep a constant, critical eye on campus planning and do everything possible to exposethe college's destruction of earth and trees before the bulldozers and chain-saws arrive. So, if theecology teach-in is to be something more than an exercise in accusation, we must look hard atWestern. Here are a few questions for debate: —Must we remove the picturesque and historicallyvaluable CCM House in exchange for more parking? And why must we destroy Garden Terrace for theconvenience of the Almighty Auto? —Why did the college decide to chew into SE Sehome Hill for itsmarried apartments? Does the college plan' to cut a lighted swath directly across Sehome Hill fromthose apartments? —Why has the college expanded south into farmland and orchards instead of northinto a deteriorated residential section and how can this be halted? —Why was a beautiful wooded glendestroyed to make room for Fairhaven College? Why was the land between the tennis courts andFairhaven utterly mauled instead of preserved in its semi-natural state? —Why does the college usedefoliant 245-T and how does this defoliant, which is used in Vietnam, affect birds, wildlife and humans?What other chemicals and pesticides is the college using on its grounds? —Why is so much asphaltsmeared all over the earth in contrast to a campus like Santa Cruz, where people are expected to walk,rather than drive to their offices and classes? —What are the college's long-range plans for SehomeHill? Should we build more roads on the Hill or close down the one that is there? Do we want a summitlookout tower, an artificial pond, picnic areas, conference centers, sewers, office buildings, lights, trafficand trash on the Hill, or do we want it quiet, wild and natural? —Who is so infatuated with red brick that all bare earth must Education needs involvement be covered with it rather than plants? In conclusion:Western is motivated by the same values as industry and the rest of our society, namely that progressis good, that development is good, that "the hum of heavy equipment" (as FAST puts it) is good, thathuman convenience preceeds environment and that expansion preceeds preservation of nature. Reforms should begin at home. Or, if we honor these values on our campus, let us not condemn heavy industrywhich makes much of our lovely way of life possible. (Ed. Note: This letter was signed by 13 membersof an organization called The Sehome Hill Improvement Troops which is dedicated to preserving "The Hillin its present state and, if possible, making it more wild by eliminating cars and litter from the park.")Editor: Like7 many other students in similar financial condition, ever since the parking fees went up by225 per cent, I have been unable to drive my car to school. For this reason I have followed the parkingbattle as closely as I can. Prior to this outrageous act on behalf of the numb bureaucratic "system" Idevoted my time almost exclusively to my academic progress, even to the point of actively avoidingparticipation or involvement in any "anti-establishment" movements. I had naively believed that it ispossible to get an education at Western without becoming involved. Now that I have been compelled bythe circumstances to become involved, I would like to pass some information on to my fellow students:If you do not become involved and voice your opinions, you will not get the education you are entitled toget. Though I do not intend to become a "foaming-at-the- Letters to the editor should be short and to the point, including the writer's name, class and major. Telephone numbers should be included if possible.Members of the academic community are also welcome to contribute articles, features, guestcommentaries and other material of interest to the community. mouth" revolutionary, since myinvolvement as a result of the parking situation it has become evident to me that unless enough students accept the adult responsibility of making their • views known; then this school will continue to be runin the same inefficient, high-handed bureaucratic way that it has been run in the past. Furthermore, Ithink it is a pity that those among us who honestly seek an education are not being given theopportunity to get one because the immature acts of a few give the administration the backing theyneed to say, "See there, those are the people that want the change. Observe how immature they are."Thus; desirable changes are stalled because those among us who can accept adult responsibilities areignored "because we are students and all students are immature." What's more, I think it is a pity thatthose $20,000-a-year professionals charged with the responsibility of developing our tender, young minds relegate us to the role of "niggers," and very paternalistically promise to give our demands andsuggestions "our most careful study and attention" in the hope of stalling us off. It then becomesnecessary to create a forcible confrontation. (continued on page 6) COUPON TAKE THE SAMISH WAY OFF-RAMP Coupon expires April 14th p.m. ---------- Western Front - 1970 April 7 - Page 6 ---------- 6 Western Front Tuesday, April 7, 1970 morefeedbackmorefeedbackmorefeedbackmorefeed Hansenurges adult behavior Trailer residents declare war on speeders (continued from page 5) If you are unhappy with any situation at Western, I urge you to look upon yourself as an adult; and act as a responsibleadult. No adult wants to listen to a whimpering child; but if you approach an adult on an adult level andexplain yourself and your problem in a calm and rational manner, your chance of making that change will be Litter only secondary cause of problem greatly improved. Failing in this, choose alternativemeasures, evaluate them and apply them. Finally, if your cause is just, if you have behaved in a maturemanner, and if you are still ignored, then it is time to apply for a commission in the People's LiberationArmy. Stuart L. Hansen senior Editor: He's dead. He was shot to death. All he ever did was love twogirls. Guess he loved them to death, in a way, because that speeding car hit him while he was followingthe girls. No thoughtful person would speed on a rainy night near d o r m i t o r i e s filled withstudents—but they did and almost killed the girls instead of the beautiful black Labrador. Editor:Although the campaign against litter, students vs. Sehome Hill, is admirable in some respects, I will notsupport it for the following reasons: I think that it is missing the point. Our environment is endangeredbut not because of litter. The danger lies in an entire mode of life. Litter is only a secondary aspect ofthis problem. The primary problem is the unnecessary consumption that created that litter. Attackinglitter is only attacking the sympton, not the disease. The energies expended in such campaigns wouldbe put to better use in organized activity, via demonstrations, aimed at the primary problem. Peopleengaged in such activity might think that they are engaged in something meaningful and that theirresponsibilities toward the environment have been fulfilled. Nathan M.Mason junior soc/anthro I wonder,driver of the red car, if you would have run away from responsibility on that Friday night if you'd hit thegirls instead—undoubtedly, that's your type, isn't it? The same type that speeds outrageously d o e s n ' t think of the consequences of his actions. You know, usually I worry about the population explosion,the war, pollution and all those major things but I've concluded it's often the same type of irresponsibleperson that speeds who also condones other inconsiderate, irresponsibilities like wars. So, trailer girlsare starting a war on speed. We intend to take down license numbers and descriptions of speeders and taken them to court on citizens complaints. So, BEWARE EVERYONE if you drive past Fairhaven andthe Mobile Homes. You may get a ticket from people (not pigs). Jack and Karen Nighbert residentdirectors WWSC Mobile Homes A good cry cleanses the soul After all is shed and done, your soulmay be saved . . . but your contacts need help. They need Len-sine. Lensine is the one contact lenssolution for complete contact care...preparing, cleansing, and soaking. There was a time when youneeded two or more different lens solutions to properly prepare and maintain your contacts. No more.Lensine, from The Murine Company, makes caring for contact lenses as convenient as wearing them. Just a drop or two of Lensine coats and lubricates your lens. This allows the lens to float more freely inthe eye, reducing tearful irritation. Why? Because Lensine is a compatible, "isotonic" solution, verymuch like your eye's natural fluids. Cleaning your contacts with Lensine retards the build-up of foreign deposits on the lenses. And soaking your contacts in Lensine between wearing periods assuresyou of proper lens hygiene. You get a free soaking-storage case with individual lens compartments onthe bottom of every bottle of Lensine. It has been demonstrated the improper storage between wear-ings permits the growth of bacteria on the lenses. This is a sure cause of eye irritation and in somecases can endanger your vision. Bacteria cannot grow in Lensine because it's sterile, self-sanitizing, and antiseptic. Lensine . . . the sou/ution for complete contact lens care. Made by theMurine Company, Inc. not your contacts Free U c/asses available Registration continues throughFriday for classes and workshops in the Northwest Free University's Spring quarter program. Catalogsand registration forms are available in the VU foyer from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. daily. Among the workshopsare: Dulcimer, Exploring Religious Expression, Group Process Training for Group Leaders, MushroomHunting, Non-violence, Wine and Beer Making, and Low-Budget Cooking. Among the regular Free Uclasses are: Ceramics, Yoga, Group Sensitivity Training, How Not to Write a Poem, JapaneseConversation, Magic as an Alternative Technology, Marital Arts, Body Movement, Painting and Stuff,Edible Wild Plants (seaweeds and mushrooms), Philiology, Principles of Guerilla Warfare, TherapeuticSwimming, Quilting Bee, and others. Most Free U classes begin next week. According to Free UCoordinator Bernie Weiner, the university has accepted more than 2,000 registrations since its formation two years ago. The university is also taking applications for a new coordinator and secretary-treasurer.Persons interested in either position may apply in the AS office in the VU, or may w r i t e P.O. Box1255, Bellingham. Bake safe every Friday in VU One of the disadvantages of college living is missingout on home-baked -goodies. This quarter students are in luck. Four little girls are selling homemadecookies, cupcakes and cake every Friday outside the Viking Union from 10 a.m. until everything is gone. The girls, who go to the Community School's Middle School at the CCM House, are doing this to raisemoney for a worthy environmental cause (which they will explain later in the quarter). Everything ishome-made, either by the girls in the baking class or by their mothers. STUDENTS Li :f STORE ft^fSStA NO STORE MORS CONVENIENT ON THE MEZZANINE Points of Rebellion by DouglasAmerican Power and the New Mandarins by Chomsky Man Against Poverty: W.W. Ill Prejudices byMencken Historians Against History by Noble Stratagems and Spoils by Bailey Architecture WithoutArchitects by Rudofsky THE BOOK OF THE QUARTER IS THE ENVIRONMENTAL HANDBOOK ---------- Western Front - 1970 April 7 - Page 7 ---------- Tuesday, April 7, 1970 Western Front 7 Hood gets study fellowship Outdoor Program offers activitiesBonnie M. Hood, a blind graduate student working on a master's degree in speech, has become the firstperson from Western to win a Danforth Fellowship for advanced study for the Ph.D. degree. Miss Hoodwas nominated for the award by Western and competed with about 1,900 college seniors fromthroughout the United States for one of the 107 fellowships awarded this year. She and a student fromthe University of Washington received the only awards in the state. The fellowship provides tuition andliving expenses for up to four years of study in preparation for a career of college teaching. Choice ismade primarily on the basis of the evident intellectual power of the c a n d i d a t e s and theircommitments to the importance of humane values in higher education. Coffee shop closed SundaysBeginning this week, the Viking Union coffee shop will be closed on Sundays and the coffee den will beopen from noon to 11 p.m. This change will be on a trial basis this quarter in an attempt to economizethe Viking Union operations, according to Cliff Veterans receive bin increase Holt, VU associate director. The* coffee den will not be serving breakfast on Sundays, but will add further items to their Hofbraustyle service. The coffee shop will continue its regular hours on weekdays and Saturdays. .' Veteransattending college under the GI Bill can expect a substantial increase in their monthly checks in May,Veterans Administration (VA) officials announced last week. President Nixon signed the bill last monthauthorizing a 34.6 per cent increase in allowances for edcuation. Under the new rates, retroactive toFeb. 1, veterans will receive $175 per month. Married veterans will receive $205 a month while marriedVeterans with one child will receive $230 monthly. An additional $13 is authorized for each additionalchild, a VA spokesman from Seattle said. The increase will probably not be reflected until May.According to VA officials it will take them that long to program the computer. Zappa tickets on sale now Five hundred one-dollar shares went on sale at noon today as advance admission tickets for the FrankZappa concert at Western in May. The public sale of shares is needed to raise the final $600 for Zappa's contract. Zappa's proposed May appearance would correspond with "Let's Respect American PlasticsWeek," also in May. The "Hava Zappa" table will be on campus, sponsored by the ActivitiesCommission. FRANZ GABL'S GOES SUMMER CAMPING CLIMBING HIKING BACK PACKINGWATER SKIES CANOEING Kyaks Back Packs With Aluminum Frame Reg. $24.95 Now $14.95 Down Filled Sleeping Bags Reg. $44.95 Now $34.95 TONI SAILEN Fiberglass skis y2 Off Free ChapstickNEW HOURS 10—9 M—F Till 6 on Sat. 1515 Cornwall Ave. Bellingham Across From Sears andSafeway Hiking, climbing bicycle rides and horseback riding lessons are some basic activities theOutdoor Program has outlined for Spring. A meeting to discuss these programs is scheduled for 7:30p.m. Thursday, Miller Hall 162. Organizers emphasize that the Outdoor Program is not a club. It is opento any person who would like to organize a group activity or participate in one. Activity sign-up sheetsare available in the Outdoor Program room in the VU basement. John Miles, program director, willteach a course this quarter dealing with clothing and equipment, first aid, and map and compass work.Horseback riding lessons are Late stickers pose problems Students are having difficulty borrowing books from Wilson Library because Spring quarter validation stickers have not arrived. A c c o r d i n g toRuby Gunderson, in charge of library loans, students who prepaid for Spring quarter are listed in a"computer print-out" and may Physics department offers ESP seminar Do you have ESP? Dr. PeterKotzer, • physics lecturer, is conducting a seminar on ESP this quarter for physics honors students.The seminar will deal with such topics as telepathy, clairvoyance and precognition, and how they relateto known laws of physics. Interested students must be enrolled in physics honors and must obtainapproval from the department and instructor to enroll in the seminar. have their Winter quarter stickerssigned by the librarian for present use. Those not prepaying, i n c l u d i n g all those on scholarshipsand loans, must present their tuition receipt to check out books. According to John Miles, VU programdirector, Spring validation stickers should now be picked up at the VU desk. The reason for their delaywas a mix-up in who was to order the stickers. Waste management to be speaker topic Wastedisposal in the Puget Sound region will be the topic of a discussion at 4 p.m. Monday in Miller Hall 104. Peter H. Vogel, former director of public works in Covina, Calif., will speak on the technological aspectsof waste management in the area. Breeze Through That Term Paper Rent Your Typewriter From TheStudent Co-op Month Smith Corona Portable Sterling Model 9.00 3 Mo. 24.00 Min. 1 week 7.00Smith Corona Portable Galaxie Portable . . . .12.00 33.00 10.00 Smith Corona 120 Electric Portable22.50 60.00 15.00 .B.M. Selectric Standard. . . 24.00 65.00 15.00 SPECIAL SALE WHILE THEY LAST CONVERSE COURT STAR GYM SHOES Reg. 9.50 - Now. 7.50 STUDENTS ,flHP STOREttOSrOMMMOMMOOJiVBiatfT being taught at Doran's Riding Stables in Blaine. More information onprices and transportation can be obtained from the Outdoor Program office. In-addition, a hiking trip inMontana has been planned for the end of Spring quarter. Local weekend trips are also made. Rentalequipment is available for 25 cents a weekend or trip. Ropes and SCUBA gear are rented only toqualified persons. Camping and hiking equipment can be purchased at discount prices.Shes^akesl'lf^pax st'»c-ta mPc • wnatm° h e t T ^ H i t e. ,ntern^ort.Forac ss gt;* TAMPAX"TAMPONS ARE MADE ONLY OV TAMPAX INCOnPOnATCO, W L M C H , MASS. ---------- Western Front - 1970 April 7 - Page 8 ---------- 8 Western Front Tuesday, April 7, 1970 Spring plays cast selected "In an attempt to pander tocontemporary tastes we will try to make Man of Mode funny, bawdy and dirty," Don Adams, who isdirecting the Western Players' production, said. Auditions were held last week to cast Man of Mode andLook Back in Anger ^ which will be staged May 14-16 and May 28-31, respectively. "These were thebest try-outs that I've seen in four years at Western," Gayle Cornelison,, director of Look Back in Anger, said. Adams also was "delighted by the number of people who turned out." The first Spring show will be George Etherege's Man of Mode^ which presents a 17th century man-about-town who is constantly inthe process of exchanging one mistress for another. The foppish Dorimant will be played by BillTreadwell, who has appeared in several Western Player productions, including Brother Julian in thisFall's Tiny Alice. The ladies in his life include his has-been mistress Lady Loveit (Connie Matthews) and Harriet (Louise Bushnell), who entices him into matrimony. Bruce McLeod will play Medley, Dorimant'spartner in conspiracy, and Harlan Moyer is cast as the foolish Sir Fopling Flutter. Look Back in Angerby John Osborne is an angry protest against postwar English life,with a look at the love life of fourmembers of the "beat generation." Preston Boyd will play the angry and intense Jimmy, who can'tunderstand why "the wrong people are always dying," He vents his frustrations with verbal andoccasionally physical abuse of his wife, Alison (Kathy Winkler) and his business partner, Cliff (RodDavis). Into the middle of this domestic uproar comes Alison's actress friend, Helena (Linda Freeman),who induces Alison to leave Jimmy. Following the separation, Helena moves in and Jimmy has a newtarget for his abuse. Alison's father will be played by Mike Jorgensen. Eventually Alison returns andshe and Jimmy are reunited with nothing to offer each other except need. Review: Firstmusic,dance,drama production results in successful madrigal fable Chaplin films to be shown The GoldRush, one of Charlie Chaplin's most successful features, will be shown Friday at 7 and 9:15 p.m. in L-4. "The picture I want to be remembered by," Chaplin said of the script when he shot the film. The film ispartly a satire on Alaskan yarns and partly an ironic commentary on man's greed. Film topic isphotography Concepts in Communication, a Kodak production, will be shown at 7 p.m. tomorrow in L-4. The 45-minute film deals with the effectiveness of photography for direct and rapid communication ofideas and images. VICOED will sponsor the showing. BLUEBEARDS under beard p have a p nk for any osi.ii on 1411 Cwmwwdl Mark Swain plays the role of Big Jim McKay while Chaplin portrays theLittle Tramp. A Chaplin short subject, The Champion, will also be presented. Hollywood comedy andcamp films will be screened this quarter every two weeks. The films are co-sponsored by Western'sdepartment of continuing studies and Activities Commission. Tickets on sale for UW concert Mail-order tickets are now on sale for the Blood, Sweat and Tears, who will perform at the University ofWashington Saturday, May 2. Ticket prices range from $3.50 to $6 per person. Send checks to theSpecial Events Chairman, 205 HUB, University of Washington, Seattle 98105. Survival in the Seventies Depends Upon Your Being Informed On April 22nd the first National Environ mental Teach-in will beheld at colleges anc universities across the nation. If you're asking yourself what can I do. THE ENVIRONMENTAL HANDBOOK will serve as a source of ideas and tactics. Other related titles: THEPOPULATION BOMB by Dr. Paul R. Ehrlich (95c THE FRAIL OCEAN by Wesley Marx (95c MOMENTIN THE SUN r , by Leona Robert Rienow (95c! S S T and Sonic Boom Handbook by William R.Shurcli/f (95c) PERILS OF THE PEACEFUL ATOM: The Myth of Safe Nuclear Power Plants by RichardCurtis Elizabeth Hogan ($1.25) Available wherever .QID,BAL gt;ANTINrB,p,08,S.Ar^m. •. - BarbaraDinner The Unicorn, The Gorgon and The Manticore, or The Three Sundays of a Poet, a madrigal fableby Gian-Carlo M e n o t t i , held three performances, the last one being Thursday. For the first time themusic, dance and drama departments integrated in putting on the program. The concert choir narratedthe story, under the direction of W i l l i a m S c a n d r e t t. Choreography was done by MichaelIngersoll, who was the lead dancer and portrayed The Man In The Castle. Steve Sletner depicted theunicorn, Jayne Muirhead the gorgon, and Helen Farias the manticore. Gregg Ross was the Count andEllen Catrell the Countess. The townspeople were Melanie Kirk, Beverly Schneider, Dan Fuller and Brent West. Special mention goes to Sue Timm in charge of costumes, Jody Dowdell, lights, and IreneHogson and Louise Bushnell, who took care of properties. The articulate voices of the concert choirenhanced the dance-mime. The cast clearly presented their parts with emotional impact to convey asocial comment. The Fable illustrated how society is the indifferent killer of artistic dreams. Theperformance was successful in the estimation of the audience, who gave the cast and choir twoencouraging curtain calls. The entire production is going on tour this month and will perform at varioushigh schools in Seattle. Linguist to speak on racism Sol Saporta, chairman of the UW department oflinguistics, will speak on "Language and Racism," at 7 p.m. Thursday in L-3. •Saporta is a well-known linguist whose published works cover such topics as Spanish and general linguistics, languageacquisition and generative transformational grammar. . The professor is here at the invitation ofWestern's foreign language department. Spring study skills classes offered Are you spending more time studying and getting the answers less? Even if this isn't your predicament, you may take any of thefour help classes being offered this quarter on a free, no-credit basis. These classes will have limitedenrollment to insure meaningful help in the improvement of ' reading and studying ability. Day classesare scheduled at 9 a.m. Tuesdays and Thursdays, and 1 p.m. Mondays and Wednesdays. Eveningclasses are scheduled for 6:30 p.m. Mondays and Wednesdays. Classes will begin tomorrow in MillerHall 250. Additional information can be obtained in Miller Hall 251 (ext. 1523) or Miller Hall 252a (ext.1423). James Cotton Blues Band to appear in concert Sunday with Albatross The James Cotton BluesBand will appear at 8 p.m. next Sunday in Carver Gym. The Cotton group is noted for its performancesof both Chicago and Delta folk blues styles. Appearing with them will be the Albatross, a local folk-rock band. Tickets for annual Shakespeare Festival in Ashland, Ore. may be obtained at 10 per centdiscount prices from Bill Osbom of the Aardvark Bookstore. Persons interested in attending the three-day festival should contact him at 734-4043. . Tickets are available at the VU desk and will be sold atthe door. Black gubernatorial candidate to speak Herman Fagg, the Socialist Workers Party candidatefor the California governorship, will speak at 2 p.m. tomorrow in the VU lounge. Fagg, the only Blackcandidate in the California gubernatorial race, has been endorsed by Black Students Unions in thatstate. He is also the National Chairman of the Third World Task Force. Western Washington StateCollege ARTS LECTURES SERIES presents the University of Utah's Resident Ensemble TheRepertory Dance Theatre Young, Vital, Assured A Major Force in Modern American Dance Sunday,April 12,6:30 p.m. Music Auditorium WWSC Students, Faculty, Staff Free General Admission $1.50,High School $.75 ntuMMUBBIflWMTEi. ---------- Western Front - 1970 April 7 - Page 9 ---------- Western sweeps twin-bill as mound staff glitters Tuesday, April 7, 1970 Western Front Skiers finishfourth in D affo dil Classic Western's Viking baseball team, behind the excellent pitching of Bob Bridges and Jeff Clark, took both ends of a double-header from Everett Community College last Fridayafternoon, 4-1 and 6-0, in action at Everett. Bridges, a hulking left-handed transfer from the University ofArizona, gave up an unearned run and four hits in the opener. In the second game Clark fired the Vikings' first shutout of the young season. The slim right-hander, a transfer from Washington State, limited theTrojans to two hits. Outfielder John Perucca continued his batting rampage, driving in Ron Porterfield ona triple in the initial inning of the first game. The Seattle senior is hitting .426 through the first ninegames Western has played. Bridges drove in what proved to be the winning run in the second inning ona single and Porterfield iced the contest with a third inning home run. The Vikings scored an unearnedtally in the seventh. In the second game the Vikings plated two second inning runs and four in the sixth. The four-run outburst was highlighted by singles by Jerry Workman and Rick Mark. The two victoriesupped the Vikings' overall record to 4-5. During spring vacation Western took a road trip acrossWashington and into Idaho playing seven games. On the excursion Western won two and lost five. TheVikings opened their season in Wenatchee, splitting a double-header with Wenatchee CommunityCollege, dropping the opener 12-6 but taking the nightcap 9-6. The Vikings' next stop was at Pullmanwhere the Cougars took both ends of a double-header, 4-0 and 10-8. Against Idaho State the Vikingswere edged 6-5. Western then lost 3-2 to Lewis-Clark Normal before taking a 9-7 win over Boise State.This weekend Western plays their tenth and eleventh consecutive road games. The Vikings will take onthe Eastern Washington State College Savages at Cheney in a double-header beginning at 1 p.m. Thefollowing Tuesday the University of Puget Sound will be entertained by Western in it's first home game of the season. The contest at Bellingham's Civic Field will begin at 6:15 p.m. Western's ski team raced to a fourth place finish in the men's division of the Daffodil Classic ski race held last weekend on CrystalMountain. Alaska Methodist University (AMU) won the men's division title of the three day meet. The ski classic marked the end of the season for Western's team of Mark Pinch, John Schutt, Bill Green, Steve Ayers and Mike DeLesalle. Greg Larson, Western's All-Northwest Ski Conference all-star, was unableto attend the meet. The racing began Friday night with an under-the-lights giant slalom race which sawSchutt grab 4th place and Pinch taking 13th spot out of 30 racers. On Saturday morning, Pinch placedfourth in the downhill; while Schutt grabbed 6th and Ayers took 14th. Also on Saturday, Pinch finishedfourth in the jumping contest, with leaps of 76 and 74 feet. The cross country race Sunday saw AMUtake the first five positions. Western's Schutt, Pinch, Green and DeLesalle finished 9th, 10th, 12th, and15th, respectively. Viks take second in rugby tourney Western's hard-fighting rugby squad drove to asecond place finish in the Portland Rugby Tournament held last weekend in Portland. S i x t e e nteams from Washington, Oregon, and Canada participated in the tournament. Saturday, Westerndefeated University of Washington 8-3, Oregon State University 15-0, and Williamette University 9-0. Inthe championship game Sunday, the University of Oregon slipped by Western 6-3. ftCORD SPACEOUT YOUR ENTERTAINMENT DOLLAR START BUYING YOUR RECORDS TAPES FROM ORDERNO. TITLE ARTIST R E T A I L PRICE JOE COCKER! • Joe Cocker. Dear Landlord; Bird On The Wire; Lawdy Miss Clawdy; She Came In Through The Bathroom Window; Hitchcock Railway; That's YourBusiness Now; Something; Delta Lady; Hello Little Friend; Darling Be Home Soon. SP4224 taw?BUTCH CASS1DV AND THtSUNOANCeKID BUTCH CASSIDY AND THE SUNDANCE KID • BurtBacharach. The Sundance Kid; Raindrops Keep Fallin' On My Head; Not Goin' Home Anymore; SouthAmerican Getaway; On A Bicycle Built For Joy; Come Touch The Sun: The Old Fun City. SP4227WITH A LITTLE HELP FROM MY FRIENDS • Joe Cocker. Feeling Alright; Bye Bye Blackbird;Sandpaper Cadillac: Don't Let Me Be Misunderstood; With A Little Help From My Friends; I Shall BeReleased. SP41C* LEE MICHAELS • Lee Michaels. Tell Me How Do You Feel; (Don't Want No)Woman; My Friends; Frosty'*; Think I'll Go Back; Stormy Monday; Who Could Want More; Want MyBaby; Heighty Hi. SP 4 1H 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 1 1 . 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19.20. 2 1 . 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27. 28. 29. 30. 31. 32. 33. 34. 35. 36. 37. 38. 39. 40. 41. 42.43. 44. 45. 46. 47. 48. 49. 50. 51. 52. 53. 54. 55. 56. 57. 58. 59. 60. 61. 62. 63. 64. 65.66. 67. 68. 69. 70. 71. 72. 73. 74. 75. 76. 77. 78. 79. 80. 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Part Payments or COD's will not be accepted.Indicate your choice by circling LP 8 TR TAPES CASSETTES List additional choices by title, artist label NAME ADDRESS CITY, STATE, ZIP Total amount enclosed $ ---------- Western Front - 1970 April 7 - Page 10 ---------- 10 Western Front Tuesday, April 7, 1970 CONTACT STUDENT TRAVEL O ---------- Western Front - 1970 April 7 - Page 11 ---------- Tuesday, April 7, 1970 Western Front 1.1 Western's Jim Schmidt, launches the Central-Western trackmeet last Saturday. shot-put during the Western Front photo Viking thinclads lose to Central TheViking track squad suffered its first dual meet loss last Saturday afternoon, as Central Washingtondefeated them 90-54 at Bellingham's Civic Stadium. Freshman sensation Scott Taylor continued hisbrilliant running, taking the mile run in 4:27^5 and the 880 in 1:58.3. It was the third straight mile victoryfor the slender runner from South Bend. Larry Nielson took the two mile with a 9:33.0 clocking for theonly other Viking running event first. In the field events freshman Doug Anderson won the pole vault^clearing 12 feet, while Viking netters fall to Central Western's tennis team dropped their opening meet of the season to Central, 8-1 last Saturday in Ellensburg. Steve Doer re r was the lone Vik netter to tastevictory, as he downed the Wildcats' Ron Frederickson, 6-4, 9-7. The next week for Coach DonWiseman's racketmen will be this weekend against Eastern, here. Western booters edged by BCITBritish Columbia Institute of Technology (BCIT) broke through for four second-half goals, and went on towhip Western's soccer club, 5-2, last Saturday. Western held a slim 2-1 lead at halftime on goals byDave Asher and Glenn Hindin. It was the second time this season that the Viks were defeated by theCanadian school. Earlier this season in the Royal Rhodes Invitational, BCIT whipped the Viks, 3-1. ThisSaturday, Western hosts the Royal Rhodes Military Academy from Victoria, B.C. The Vik booters shut-out the Royal Rhodes 2-0 in the Royal Rhodes Invitational. Chuck Brown high jumped 5'10" for tophonors. Times and distances were hampered due to poor track and field conditions brought on by asteady rain. In all Central took 12 of the 17 individual events plus the mile and 880 relays. In thepreceding two weekends the Viking thinclads have defeated Pacific Lutheran 78-66 and the University of British Columbia 89-52. Both meets took place in Bellingham. This weekend Coach Dick Bowman'ssquad travels to Cheney to meet Eastern Washington. Starting time is 1 p.m. Jr \ ClassifiedAdvertising \ r 20 FOR RENT 45 acre farm, 2 bdr house, 3 donkeys, stream. Students preferred, doyour own thing. $175. Also 1 bdr house adj. $95. Seattle EA 2-3986 Becky. 30 ROOMMATE WANTED2 roommates wanted for summer quarter. Also two for month of August. Contact Barry at 617 N. Forestor call 734-0370. Girl to share apt with three others. Available Now $135. 734-8030. 31 RIDES, RIDERSNeed a ride. I'm commuting from Lynnwood to WWSC daily. Will share expenses. 734-9854. 32WANTED Homeworker wanted immediately ! Send name, address to: Home-workers, P.O. Box 582,Bellingham. 33 HELP WANTED Secretary Wanted. Apply in person at Western Front, business office.VU 310 and ask for Bill Woodland. Graphic Artist Wanted. Apply in person at Western Front, businessoffice. VU 310 and ask for Bill Woodland. 50 PERSONALS Read today's newspaper today. Subscribe to the Seattle Times. Rates by the quarter. Call Bob: 733-1090. The person who lost an earring atOCIC's Finals Fling last quarter may claim it by calling Bob at 733-1090. Men's spring sports begin withvolleyball Western's Spring intramural programs begin this week. Participating sports are volleyball,softball, weight lifting, golf and track and field. In volleyball, various leagues will be formed with a doubleelimination tournament. The top two teams from each league will meet in another double eliminationtourney for the All-College Championship. U.S. Volleyball Association rules will govern play, unlessotherwise specified. Softball will be divided into two categories, mushball and slow pitch. Competition inweight lifting will be in the following divisions: 123, 132, 148, 165, 181,198 and heavyweight. Two-manteams will compete in the All-College Championship Golf Tournament. U.S. Golf Association rules willapply and play will be best ball and aggregate score for 18 holes. In track and field, an all-tollege meetwill be held on two days with the events divided between the two days. With the conclusion of winterintramurals, dorm standings are as follows: Nash 895, Highland 490, Beta 320, Kappa 155, Higginson130 and Fairhaven 115. Western oarsmen out-row SeattleU. Western's crew team, battling wind andrain on a squalling Lake Samish, pulled to its first eight-oared victory of the season lasL Saturday,beating Seattle University by two boat lengths. Rowing for Western on the 2,000 meter course were Rob Fieldman, bow; John Ausness, MT. BAKER HURRY ENDS THURSDAY "Captures beautifully colored,explicit sex, in Roman pads filled with active swingers." -N.Y. Times camille tKe 'xiow'diild DanieleGaubert Nino Castelnuovo —COMPANION FEATURE— David Hemmings-Joanna Pettet THE BESTHOUSE IN LONDON number 4; Howie Anderson, number 3; Don Buthorn, number 2; Rick McCurdy,number 5; Bruce Potocki, number 6; Dave Stobel, number 7; and John Olbrantz, number 8. Al Pheiferwas the coxswain. On Sunday, Western lost to the strong University of British Columbia crew for thesecond time this season. The UBC varsity finished the race in 6:17, far ahead of the visiting Vikoarsmen who came in at 6:30. This weekend, Western's crew will row against Pacific LutheranUniversity (PLU) and the University of Oregon on American Lake in Tacoma. The year's best comedyi-k" * ---------- Western Front - 1970 April 7 - Page 12 ---------- 12 Western Front Tuesday, April 7, 1970 McDonald's. In Bellingham. A 5-minute run from campus.Come on over and get acquainted. We're located just west of the State Street exit off the Freeway. Easyto get to. Fast. We specialize in piping hot 100% pure beef hamburgers and cheeseburgers and BigMacs. Crisp, golden brown French fries. Triple-thick chocolate and vanilla and strawberry shakes. Andmore. We also specialize in fast, friendly service. Sensible prices. Big and small orders. Stop by. Seewhy we say, "McDonald's is your kind of place." M C DUO n a l d ' S your kind of place. U 1914 KINGSTREET
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- 1970_0804 ---------- Western Front - 1970 August 4 - Page 1 ---------- Western Front in Western's 1975 facilities will be nearly three times as large as the current campus,with an enrollment of 14,150 students, according to Campus Planning Director Harold Goltz. This is thearchitectural model o
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1970_0804 ---------- Western Front - 1970 August 4 - Page 1 ---------- Western Front in Western's 1975 facilities will be nearly three times as large as the current campus,with an enrollment of 1
Show more1970_0804 ---------- Western Front - 1970 August 4 - Page 1 ---------- Western Front in Western's 1975 facilities will be nearly three times as large as the current campus,with an enrollment of 14,150 students, according to Campus Planning Director Harold Goltz. This is thearchitectural model of the central part of the campus, to be erected between existing facilities andFairhaven College. photo by Litzenberger Western in 1975 Gazing into crystal. balls seems a little outof character for Harold A. Goltz. Tall and lanky, with horn-rimmed glasses, Goltz probably doesn't own or rent anything like a crystal ball to furnish his Campus Planning Office in Old Main. But if you're theleast interested in the future here at Western, then you had better take a trip to Old Main for anappointment with Campus Planning Director Goltz. He is one of the few people on campus with theready-made answers to those burning questions you have wanted to ask someone in the know aboutWestern. A good place for starters might be where will the campus and student body be by 1975? Thatone would be a breeze for Goltz, having just completed an in-depth analysis of that very question lastweek and sent it off to Olympia to the Office of Program Planning and Budget for Washington State."The most obvious change will be size, of course," he said. "We're expecting a Fall 1975, enrollment of14,150 students. "By that time, the campus as it stands today will seem pretty small by comparison.Between now and then we expect Western to expand to nearly double its present physical facilities, at a cost of some $68 million. "The campus itself will expand southward to fill up the area between thepresent campus and Fairhaven College." Western won't be the old traditional "Teacher's College"anymore either, according to Goltz. With a marked increase in business and economics studentsexpected and an ever-increasing interest in the social studies departments, the training of teachers willplay a smaller role in campus life. Western will no longer be the traditional "Normal School" of the past,but more and more a Liberal Arts College. Will it remain a college for long, however? "Personally I don'tthink it's even an issue," Goltz said. "Whether we're a university or a college by 1975 won't change thefunction of the school. "Either way, we're going to be a very large and complex institution and it won'tmake a lot of difference whether somebody calls us a college or a university." "Large" is probably thekey word in dealing with the subject of Western in 1975. Detailed maps of all proposed buildingsbetween now and then show a steady march up, over and down the hill toward Fairhaven. Currentaccesses to campus by vehicle will likely be shut off to the public with student and faculty parkingfurther and further removed from the college area itself. "That isn't exactly going to be a popular move onour part, but there really isn't any other solution," Goltz said. "We're looking strongly to publictransportation to take up the slack and bus people on a regular and efficient basis." Expansion will havean explosive effect on the number of upper division and graduate students on campus, Goltz noted, withan appropriate increase in married students' quarters desperately needed in the next five years. "We'realso going to see a much greater emphasis on the fields of economics, business and technology withincreases needed in building facilities for all these departments," Goltz said. "Right now technology andart are sharing the same building. We determined it would be better for technology to move and artremain, so between now and 1975 we need a brand new technology building to handle the increase inthat faculty, for example." The final great change in the next five years will be the sky-rocketing increase in on-campus living, with approximately 5,000 students expected to occupy student dormitories andother living quarters by 1975. "This will mean a lot more dormitories between now and then," Goltz said. "We were originally counting on housing something like 50 per cent of the student body, but we had towork down from that figure when we got into the actual planning." That actual planning got started in theFall of 1969, when Goltz and his staff were asked by Olympia to prepare a detailed study of projectedenrollments and a theoretical budget for the Fall of 1975. That is where the crystal ball gazing all began."We got started with a lot of false impressions," Goltz said. "We'd done a 20-year projection just a yearbefore, which saw us predicting a 1988 enrollment of only 15,000 students. Suddenly we were faced with the overwhelming task of compressing a 20-year plan into a seven-year plan." Goltz blamed this sudden change on the dynamic growth of this area and its effect on Western in the last two years and in thefuture. When all the facts and figures were in from the dozens of departmental planning committees,Goltz was looking at a college which would need twice the classroom space, twice the physical facilities and twice the area by 1975, just six years away. "That's going to require a budget of $68,305,034,"Goltz, said, "with the state chipping in some $50 million and the rest from our own sources of incomelike housing, and tuitions." Reflecting on this enormous undertaking, Goltz pointed out that Western had a student population of only 3,000 when he arrived to take over his present duties in 1957. "Now we'reexpected to-provide triple the amount of facilities for almost five times the student body," he said with ashake of his head. "I'm not at all sure that our one thousand students-per-year growth rate is healthy forus as a college, but that's what we're faced with and that's what we're planning on handling." by DavidSherman ---------- Western Front - 1970 August 4 - Page 2 ---------- L i t 9 ft y We, the governing force of the United States, will extend the frontiers of American freedomwhich is the freedom of commerce and protect those frontiers with all our power with tactical nuclearbombs and strategic nuclear bombs and total destruction horrors of all chemical and biological organisms inimical to all human life and we will spill the blood of our young and of citizens of any other country thathas any other idea of freedom. We will annihilate them in order to bring them within the frontiers ofAmerican freedom which is the freedom of commerce, which is the kingdom of total death. COUNT MEOUT We, the governing forces of the United States, will farm out forests and use the trees for packagesthat contain packages that contain odd things that do not have to be packaged. We will use the trees fornewspapers and magazines that fight the truth with every device of libel and untruth developed through allthe centuries of human misery and we will let the forest land erode and the deer drop of starvation. Wewill hunt the puma and the wolf and every bird until those pests are gone and nothing is left but a greatvoid on the face of the earth. COUNT ME OUT We, the governing forces of the United States, will imposeunjust laws and chaotic order on all the citizens we hate, those with black skin, those with bronze skin,those american Indians whom we have not yet destroyed and everyone who looks Jewish, all with hair ontheir faces, all with long hairs growing out of their heads, all artists and poets, all musicians and honestscientists, all women who are proud and happy with their naturally beautiful hair and bodies. We will cutand shave and tear out their hair and condemn them to endless oppression and allow only one style oflife. COUNT ME OUT We, the governing forces of the United States, will produce more than we consume and grow bloated while the rest of the world starves and we will force our citizens to eat poison in theirfood and we will not care for the mentally ill, but will put them in dull trances to manage them more easily. COUNT ME OUT We, the governing forces of the United States, will pave over Vietnam with cement,paint it for parking lots and then it will be exactly like Los Angeles. COUNT ME OUT We, the governingforces of the United States, will increase the sewage and garbage we produce in our vast wastefulnessuntil every shallow body of water and every desert is filled and every canyon is leveled out to the tops ofthe. hills. We, the governing forces of the United States, will dam up all the rivers so that no one of themreaches the sea. We will use our power to make people to buy more and more and more and moretelevision sets and deep freezes and destroy the powerful salmon and the wily steel-head. COUNT MEOUT We, the governing forces of the United States, will use weapons of war against our people that areoutlawed by civilized nations and we will attack our citizens from the air by helicopter, and airplane, withpoison gas and with shotguns. We will put our citizens in concentration camps and beat and brutalize and humiliate them. COUNT ME OUT We, the governing forces of the United States, will separate the young from their elders and plant mutual suspicion and hatred in their hearts and we will exploit the blacks, thechicanos, the american indians whose land we stole and whose lives we have oppressed until they'reexactly like the consuming greedy monsters who have destroyed the planet. Then we will pollute themoon and blank out the sun and establish commercial exploitation on every planet in the solar system.COUNT ME OUT We, the governing forces of the United States, will separate brother from sister, sisterfrom sister, brother from brother, and we will let no man sleep because of fear in the night and no manwalk in freedom because of fear in the day. COUNT ME OUT We, the governing forces of the UnitedStates, will take our young people and put them in barracks that we will kindly call dormitories, we willmake them play soccer even if we have to shoot them like the animals we hate. We will tell them how tohave fun, we will fill the streets with alcoholics, we will put in prison anyone who smokes the benign weedcalled marijuana. COUNT ME OUT We, the governing forces of the United States, will idolize theautomobile and General Motors and Goodyear Tires and Standard Oil and we will take the bestagricultural land in the world and cover it with freeways and we will take the most beautiful areas everproduced through millenia of geologic and zoologic growth and we will make them so uninhabitable thatpeople will go mad, and then we will crowd people together until they rend each other and their youngwith fangs poisoned with insecticide. COUNT ME OUT We, the governing forces of the United States, will sell the sea to fiends who will bubble oil out over the beaches so the sea lions die and the ottersdisappear and even the mightly leviatian will flounder his flukes and the young people can not swim andthe oysters will yield up light inorganic corruption and the old people will not be able to walk through thetar on the beaches and the gulls and the terns and the sandpipers will not be able to fly because theirwings are clogged with oil. COUNT ME OUT We, the governing forces of the United States, will takeAlaska, process it, kill the caribou, murder the Eskimos, and we will call this progress, wiping out theforce of Alaska, slaughtering the seals and the beautiful white polar bear and the mighty swift terriblepowerful kodiak bear and the soil created by millenia ground away for airports which will create anabomination in the air of the city. COUNT ME OUT We, the governing forces of the United States, willbuild universities which will take our most creative youth and turn them into loyal plastic robots for asociety that doesn't give a damn. COUNT ME OUT COUNT ME OUT COUNT ME OUT -torn parkinsonRead at the Berkeley Commencement by John Bachrach before the parents and friends of the class of'69. COUNT ME OUT ---------- Western Front - 1970 August 4 - Page 3 ---------- Tuesday, August 4, 1970 Western Front 3 The Transportation Dilemma Boys and Girls CILtl TIE PICTI1E All HEMMIZE TIE IILES FOR YOUR PROTECTION, REMEMBER TO: • T n inn lifts frM stnMjvs •Rtfm rite iffvii |y itrtfpri • Avott ark art kwry stmts • Knw jonr local poKamu S•i^ T C H i t c h i n g by Lyn Watts Hitchhiking as a mode of transporting oneself between home and college has been, untilthis past year, an institution at Western in the tradition of keg parties. The police department for manyyears passively ignored the practice, but suddenly last January cited 19 Western students with violations of the city's hitchhiking ordinance in one day, making it clear that thumbing rides would no longer betolerated. Bellingham Police Chief Cecil Klein said that the reason for the crackdown is the continuingtraffic hazard caused by hitchhikers. "We had many complaints concerning traffic jams caused aroundthe campus by cars stopping for hitchhikers," Klein said. "But the crackdown wasn't just around thecollege, it was city-wide." In an article in a past Western Front, R. G. Peterson, Supervisor of Safety and Security at Western, says that hitchhiking is "gambling with your life." He believes that "many pervertsdrive the streets for the sole purpose of picking up hitchhikers." Municipal Court Judge Leslie Leeconsiders it "rather foolish for a young girl to hitchhike," but considers thumbing a ride "a minor thing," for which he imposes a $4 fine, though fines for second offenses have been running much steeper. Despite warnings from the city and college fathers, hitchhiking is still a very real and flourishing activity aroundWestern's campus. How do these hitchhikers avoid a bust? Title 18 of the city code states, "It shall beunlawful for any person upon any public highway of this city to solicit by word or sign or by any meansfor himself or for another or for his baggage or for the baggage of another any transportation on vehiclesbeing operated upon such public highways." The key word in the phrase is obviously solicit-any personstanding by the side of the road facing traffic is not soliciting and therefore not violating the law. Offeringa ride to a person who is not openly soliciting is also not illegal. Hitchhikers' points of departure fromovert soliciting seem to vary depending on the section of the city. Perhaps the favorite points are in theimmediate vicinity of the college. In front of the VU and all along Indian Street are especially popularplaces. Many students are understandably reluctant to pick up hitchhikers who persist in using thethumb or the leg or any gestures, but most don't seem to mind picking up a person who is casuallystanding by the side of the road facing oncoming traffic. So if you must hitchhike, be careful to avoidgestures which might get you busted. If you're a chick, try to hitchhike with another person. If you'redriving, it's up to you whether or not you pick someone up, but remember that someday you too mayneed a ride. .ntl- r Act WASHINGTON - (CPS) - Antiwar forces are preparing for the next round ofVietnam protests, to be held August 6-9 in cities across the country. The demonstrations will mark the25th anniversary of the dropping of atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The actions were calledby the Cleveland conference last month, which was dominated by the Student Mobilization CommitteeAccording to organizers, actions have so far been announced in Atlanta, Berkeley, Boston, Chicago,Cleveland, Detroit, Madison, New York, Scottsdale (Arizona), and Philadelphia. More are expected, they say. Park ing from Tenants' Union The City of Bellingham has imposed two-hour parking restrictionson several city streets near the campus. This act, combined with the unavailability of state money for the influx of nearly 1,000 new students this Fall has faced Western with the worst parking crisis in its 71-year history. The two-hour limit affects the following streets: Indian Street, between Maple and Oakstreets; Garden Street, between Maple and Ivy streets; E. Myrtle Street, between Liberty and Highstreets; and Jersey, Key and Liberty streets, between Maple and E. Myrtle streets. Students returning in the Fall who are used to all-day parking on these streets will either have to suffer daily parking citationsor will be forced to play musical cars every two hours. The students and faculty who live on these streets can no longer legally park in front of their homes for more than two hours at a time. Landlords have notprovided sufficient off-street parking for their tenants in this area, and the college has not providedsufficient parking for commuters. In order to provide off-street parking for their tenants, landlords arepressured into investing in off-street parking, which will cause a rent rise. The college, despite continuing efforts in Olympia, has not yet been able to secure the sorely needed funds to provide additionalcommuter parking. Director of Campus Planning Barney Goltz reports that transportation and parkingreceive little or no emphasis on the list of state-funded priorities. Surveys show that one of every threeWestern students has a car. Even with a limited enrollment of 9,600 students in the Fall, this represents 3,200 cars on campus. According to Supervisor of Safety and Security R. G. Peterson, there will be2,330 parking spaces in the Fall, which means that there will be nearly 1,000 students without a place to park. Another survey shows that between 700 and 800 cars are parked on city streets near the campuson weekends. On schooldays, this figure jumps to nearly 1,500, representing at least 700 cars belonging to commuting students. These figures are in. addition to the number of cars accommodated by the lotsprovided by the college. The Tenants' Union of Whatcom County, campus planners and security officersagree that the imposition of two-hour parking is a pressure move on the part of the Bellingham Board ofPublic Works. Superintendent of Traffic and Communications Tom Tow admitted that the move maypressure landlords into providing off-street parking. He called the situation unfortunate, but necessary.Included in the BPW's move, was a recommendation to provide angle parking on streets where it isfeasible. He said that money for such a development had not been made available. Campus plannerGoltz has announced two plans which may alleviate some of the problem. One plan involves thepurchase of some 40 acres south of the campus for parking development, including a subsidized shuttleservice at a minimum cost to students. This plan would create 1,000 additional parking places per yearfor the next four years. The other plan is for an expensive parking ramp near the music building. TheTenants' Union of Whatcom County feels that the imposition of two-hour parking was an unnecessaryand unwarranted move on the part of the city. It asks, however, that both the city and the collegecontinue to •work together toward solving Western's parking problems. It asks that all concernedindividuals write letters to their state representatives and lobby in Olympia to help solicit the neededstate funds. But furthermost, it asks the members of this college community to work with the city andtry to understand its views. 1 Day Shirt Service COMPLETE LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANING FreePickup Delivery 734-4200 Htosrtcr teds lakeway motors We specialize in repaying broken bugs ---------- Western Front - 1970 August 4 - Page 4 ---------- Western Front Tuesday, August 4, 1970 editorial In our editorial of June 30 we described the fate of theproposal for student involvement in hiring and retention of faculty which had been adopted by the JointCommittee on Student Participation. That committee had worked long and hard before reaching acompromise solution which at least partially remedied the problem of student impotence in decisionmaking. The Faculty Council was not receptive to the notion of that power being in the hands of thestudents. Although their representatives had served on the joint committee (indeed, the part of theproposal dealing with hiring received unanimous support from the faculty representatives on thecommittee) the Faculty Council devised an alternative plan which solidified the separation betweenstudents and decision-making power. This plan was shown to some student leaders two days before itspresentation to the Board of Trustees. It was totally unacceptable to them. When the issue came to theTrustees, a Faculty Council member said that the Joint Committee's plan was unworkable, dictatorial,against students' interests, and that its implementation would destroy the college. Their plan was thenadopted by the Trustees over the vigorous objections of all the students present. We closed that editorialby saying: "The next time students ask for a place in the decision making apparatus perhaps they should preface their requests with the techniques that have proved their result producing ability at other colleges: agitation, disruption and the threat of violence." Many of the people who expressed displeasure at thefate of the Joint Committee's constructive proposal for reform nevertheless questioned the efficacy of thesolution we proposed. It is for their benefit that we look at the case of Bill No. 76, in the hope it can shedsome light on the way decisions are implemented. Bill No. 76 was passed by the winter convention ofAssociated Students. It provides that anyone wishing to use on-campus facilities for the purpose ofrecruiting for employment must be willing to respond to questions concerning the organization herepresents in an open forum when petitioned by at least 20 students. The initial response to Bill No. 76from college authorities was to ignore it. This was a strategy which had proved remarkably effective in thepast. After a while, so they hoped, the bill would be no more than a notation in the bowels of some filingcabinet. This time the students were determined to see trie thing through. They stated that if the policyset down by Bill No. 76 was not carried out by the placement office, the students themselves would takethe responsibility for seeing it implemented. The bill was denounced by the Director of Placement as aplot of the local radicals and compared to the Army-McCarthy hearings and the Salem Witchhunts. Hestated "I see no way for Bill No. 76 to receive any status." It was against the students' interests and itsimplementation would destroy the college's placement service. This despite the fact that the CollegePlacement Council (CPC) itself recognizes an employer's obligation "to give students a true and- factualpicture of the employing organization." The CPC does oppose mandatory question and answer sessions.The solution they propose in the event an employer does not give a true and factual account of hisorganization is a complaint to the college placement officer. The students were as good as their word.When recruiters from R. J. Reynolds refused to show up at the open forum, a group of students went tothe placement office and explained that they could no longer recruit on campus and that they wouldrestrain them from doing so if necessary. After a brief discussion the recruiters departed. The studentsmade it clear that they would continue this type of action as long as necessary. Mysteriously the attitudeof college officials toward Bill No. 76 improved with great alacrity. The Director of Placement described itas "the first step towards a better understanding of our mutual problems." He strongly urged allorganizations to abide by it. It is perhaps anti-climactic to conclude by noting that when Bill No. 76 wasfollowed and an open forum was held, it was almost universally acknowledged to be highly successful bystudents, faculty, administrators, and the recruiter himself. The dire predictions of the destruction of thecollege placement service turned out to have as much substance as the proverbial "things which go bump in the night." Editorial Board Now I'vo HEARD all this NONSENSE about tha STUDENT a* o NIGGER IAbout 'om having no rlghti and no protection and to-eallad studanr-taochar SEGREGATION and I juttwant to got a faw blasted thing* STRAIGHT I I Firstly, lot mo icy torn* of my BEST friands antSTUDENTS and BASICALLY you couldn't WISH to moot a mora POLITE, RESPECTFUL, HAPPY lotwhan thay know tholr plaea. Why torn* of 'am or* •von quit* ATTRACTIVE., (chuckla) Yaohl ButGOSH DARN It torn* folks talk about 'tn Ilk* rhay war* US I And FACE I t , what contribution are th«ymaking to tha ARTS? How many DOCTORS, LAWYERS and BUSINESS LEADERS are STUDENTS?Biologically thoy're jutt not EQUIPPED to handl* FREEDOM and POWER) How I Mivy tntMil So rhuaOUTSIDERS who try to STIR 'EM UP ovor RIGHTS and tuch are just making TROUBLE forEVERYBODY! First thing thay'll want to writ* on ovary lino and m t staff washrooms and call us by ourFIRST NAMES I And brorhar, tharo's N O THING won than on UPPITY STUDENT! WIfb tholr ownkind rhay SMOT ID ENJOY rhamsalvas IMMENSELY... dicing (got a lorta rhyttaa I L„ wooring gaudyclorhasl Wo TEACHERS gt;ay If you could bo a STUDENT |utt ONE Saturday night you'd NEVER want to baa taochar AGAIN I (chuckla) And thay'ra VERY good otSPOtTSI And just botwaan us wouldyou wont ona to many your doughtar? HITS 08, Ana Arbor, Kick. Unionizing the Teacher Editor: George Hart well " features: (Bert Halprin Copy Ed.: Dave Sherman Reporters: Libby Bradshaw, Gary Harrod,Lyn Watts, Billie Hargadine, Stu Johnson. Business: LesSavitch, Gary Sharpe Photography: Bill Todd,Ron Litzenberger by Dr. David Ziegler Political Science Department Aristotle, Marx, and contemporarypolitical scientists agree that politics undergo development. Aristotle viewed the process as cyclical,Marx as linear, while contemporary political scientists hold that the process is indeterminant and erratic.That is, development is not inevitable-politics can degenerate as well as develop. The appearance ofmany new independent countries after World War II led to a rediscovery of the concept of developmentthat had been discredited and buried with Social Darwinism. Earlier definitions were blatantlyethnocentric, equating development with the American form and style of government. Subsequentacademic discussion has refined the concept so that today we can offer one which is relatively neutral:Development is the creating of an integrated political community with public interests that are heldsuperior to parochial interests, and the simultaneous creation of institutions which provide stability bycontaining increased participation in public business so that it is handled in a regular way. Thedegenerate policy is one in which group, family, and individual interests are paramount. We commonlyrefer to this as "corruption." For example, nepotism, graft and speculation each involve putting narrowinterests ahead of community interests. Degenerate politics are known as "praetorian" and are typicallydominated by the military. In praetorian societies all groups are fighting to capture the state for their ownbenefit-business, labor, monks, students-but the military usually wins because clubs are trump. TheUnited States is undergoing a process of degeneration. In New York City the process is most apparent.Policemen, firemen, garbage men, oil delivery men, apartment supervisors all disrupt the life of the city to press for their own group's demands. The motto of each group is, "The public be damned." Any groupwhich puts parochial interests ahead of community interests is corrupt—firemen who let buildings burndown, hospital workers who let people die, policemen who permit robberies to go unchecked. In eachcase where this actually happened (Gary, New York, Montreal); the issue was not subsistance wages orinhuman working conditions, but "parity" with some other group. In. effect they were striking for the thirdcar, the power boat, the summer cottage. Now it's the teacher's turn. In a time of great turmoil on thecampus, of fundamental questioning of the purposes and methods of education, of demands forrestructuring the universities to allow a greater student voice, what proposal do some members of ourfaculty come up with? A teachers' union. At a time when we should be examining the validity of gradingprocedures, they ask us to scrutinize pay scales and fringe benefits. When we should be planningcourses that are relevant to contemporary society, they ask us to concern ourselves with faculty parking. When we should be devoting more time to personal exchanges with students, they ask us to lobby inOlympia. If arguments of material self-interest fail to sway the old fashioned teacher, dedicated to a taskrather than a salary, the clinching argument is, "It's necessary to band together for self-protection-allother groups do it." Indeed. The praetorian society is at our door. Can the junta be far behind? ---------- Western Front - 1970 August 4 - Page 5 ---------- Tuesday, August 4, 1970 Western Front 5 trouble ahead for North Cascades The time has finally comewhen we, the people, must decide how our government shall act on certain issues. We find adventure ata crossroads, a place where changes in direction, and in goals, can be made; a place where theworthiness of the democratic form of government can either shine with success or be shamed with failure. A little more than a week ago in Mount Vernon, a public hearing on the usage of the Mt. Baker,Wenatchee, and Okanogan National Forests was held. The Forest Service listened to five hours of publictestimony, coming from such groups as loggers, miners, four-wheel drive enthusiasts, andconservationists. The stakes did not appear to be very important, but judging from the response of thesediverse groups, (over 50 people spoke at the hearing) we must conclude that the issue was important tomany. Briefly, the Forest Service proposal entailed the prohibition of logging in the Mt. Baker area, andcutting back of logging in the Nooksack River and Baker Lake Areas. There were plans for other areas as well, but we are concerned primarily with these three areas which are all within 50 miles of Bellingham.The purpose of these changes in management was to enhance the recreational qualities of the landsurrounding the North Cascades National Park. The plan itself, despite minor problems, is basically asound one. It recognizes the beauty of the North Cascades, and the fact that recreational needs are going to increase more than timber needs in the foreseeable future. There exists only fixed amounts of land onthis world of ours, but, unfortunately the population is growing at an increasing rate, and the need forwilderness and near-wilderness areas will increase. The loggers contend that to cut back their interestswhen the economy of Washington State depends so strongly on logging, would mean greaterunemployment and a worsening of economic woes. This claim, which is probably valid, must be viewed as shortsighted and detrimental to any hopes of man's future as a mentally healthy individual. The loggersare out for their interests; they are concerned with the present, and do not view the wilderness as an endin itself. Their scale of usefulness is guaged in dollars, this was confirmed by the Mayor of Sedro Woolley, a former logger, who referred to the wilderness as a "wasteland." Because of the North Cascades scenic qualities and the increasing recreational needs of this area, I believe the Forest Service should severelycut back logging and other industrial and commercial interests in order to preserve as much land aspossible for the enjoyment of future generations. We are lucky here in the Northwest to still have largestands of timber; but now we must recognize the future needs and manage our lands appropriately. There is a chance that these lands can be preserved in their natural state, but it will require public concern. Ifyou care about the North Cascades, write the Forest Service and advise them how you would like to seethe area handled. This is the best way the public can make its demands known to the government. Thisbattle is only one in the larger war against the careless use of land, resources, money, and man-power,that is so prevalent in government and big-business today. Let your voice be heard when you seeinequality and mis-management, for to remain silent is to condone the misuse. Dave Shannon' It ispreoccupation with possession, more than anything else, that prevents men from living freely and nobly. - Bertrand Russell 1872-1970 Front too political? 111 E. Magnolia Street Next to Pay, 'n Save Ordersto Go 734-9635 We specialize in the Finest Italian Foods Editor, The Western Front: Your three wordanswer to Dr. Rutan's letter in last week's Front illustrates the absolute truth in the charges he makes.The Front seems to have become an eight page editorial for private causes supported by the individualstudents on the editorial staff. There are many issues and news events that have taken place during thepast few weeks which, even though being of newsworthy interest to the students at Western, have notgotten any coverage. Perhaps a prime example of such events might be the intensifying of the plannedharrassment of the students at Western by the city of Bellingham in regard to parking and hitchhiking.This is an issue which strikes close to home for a vast number of Western students. Yet, since it has no Leftist political significance, no coverage has been given. Another newsworthy happening which tookplace at Western recently was the meeting of the Western Division of the Canadian Association ofGeographers, during which Dr. Teshefa of Western's Geography Department was elected to theirCouncil. This type of happening is news. Certainly not politically significant news but rather news of thecampus which to me it seems to be one of the duties of the Front to publish. Finally I would like tocriticize the management of the Front for their seemingly above debate, on an issue, outlook. They didnot even have the courtesy to answer Dr. Rutan's letter. Additionally the management's aversion to adiscussion o f their beliefs might be shown by the example of editor Hart well's unannounced failure toshow up to take his place on a Book of the Quarter discussion panel, which he was scheduled for onJuly 15th. Sincerely, Jim Smith Junior, Political Science To Dr. Rutan's charge that the Western Fronthas closed its pages to "points of view other than our own" we can best respond-Look over thisSummer's Front. Do it when you are calm enough to be objective. The pages are filled with "points ofview" with which we disagree. We have never refused an article because we disagreed with its politics.Indeed we sought out such articles more often than we received them. Perhaps you and Dr. Rutan would have found the Front more acceptable had you submitted articles with your point of view in them. Wewould have been happy to print them. -Editorial Board Looking for someone who understands yourpocketbook problems? Dave's Richfield Service 516 Holly St.-7338800 Quality mechanical work doneSTEREO PLAYING POSSUM ? Perk it up with a visit to the WIZ KIDS ~3—c WIZTRONICS , INC.Electronic Repair We are located at 2500 Cornwall (corner of Alabama and Cornwall). Our phonenumber is 733-5191. ---------- Western Front - 1970 August 4 - Page 6 ---------- 6 Western Front Tuesday, August % iyvu leditorial half of US. adults illiterateJ All too often, it seems, the freedom to speak does not bring the desired result of being heard. The issue-oriented campaign of StuJohnson for state representative is an attempt to build bridges to the average citizen of Whatcom County. It is centered on the SLF tax initiative—the elimination of taxes on income below $10,000 and onproperty valued below $30,000. The difference would be made up by increasing taxes on the few very rich (some of whom now pay little, if anything.) We fully endorse Stu's candidacy as an important first stepin building a truly majoritarian movement— one which will serve the interests and needs of the mass ofpeople. We urge everyone to contribute effort, time, money, skills, whatever they can, to the campaign.Get in touch with them in the AS offices upstairs in the Viking Union. (Another student leader, JohnEngstrom, is running for Whatcom County Sheriff. While not familiar with the details of his campaign wefeel it would be worthwhile to support him also.) —Editorial Board By GREG deGIERE College PressService SAN FRANCISCO - (CPS) - Half of America's adults are "functionally illiterate" - and the literacyrate is still plunging-according to a just published Harvard University study. Fifty per cent of the peopleover 25 "probably lack the literacy required to read such basic items as newspapers, job applications,driving manuals, or the simplest exposition," according to the study. These statements contrast sharply with official Census Bureau figures, which admit to a 10 per cent functional illiteracy rate among adults.Walter Cronkite of CBS news believes that lack of reading ability is the most severe problem incommunications today. "Of the television audience, a number we cannot begin to estimate-tens, orhundreds of thousands, millions perhaps-seldom read a newspaper, or a news magazine, and never read a journal of opinion," he wrote in the May issue of Signature Magazine. But the amount of informationbroadcast in an hour TV news program could be printed on a single page of a standard sized newspaper.So, Cronkite added, there is no time in any single broadcast to develop even essential arguments on allsides of an issue, and the viewer must depend on background reading or he will get a highly colored anderroneous impression of the news. "Most American cities now have but a single newspaper, and thesemonopoly survivers, in many cases, are not doing the thorough job of coverage that they should,"Cronkite said. "The result of all this is a genuine crisis of communications," he concluded. , Parents'alarm that their children are not learning to read appears to be well founded. The Saturday Review'scommunications editor, Richard L. LANGE VOLKSWAGEN 112SamishWay ^ 734-5230 Sales: New and used Volkswagens. Service: We will provide transportation for customers to and from the campus whileyour car is being serviced. Open 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday - Saturday Tobin, sees wide implications inthe widening literacy gap. "It may be that we are drifting into two classes of adults, not divided by social position, income, color, religion, or background, but by those who can read and write and do sohabitually and those who, for all practical purposes, cannot," said Tobin. But reading instruction may beof a lower quality in low-income and racial minority schools. At San Francisco's almost all black Peltonjunior high school, for example, the average reading level stands at the 3.5 grade level, according toschool administration estimates. "Parents frequently complain about teachers' racism and liberalism.The kids are usually passed from elementary to junior high to high school, whether or not they learn therelatively few words we try to teach them," said John Roemer, a teacher at Pelton. The literacy levelappears to be dropping, Roemer said. "Parents tell us that when they went to school they learned 25words a day, but their children are only expected to learn 10 words a week. And they're passed whetherthey actually learn the 10 words or not. The parents know how to read, but the kids don't, and probablywon't learn without special programs that the school system isn't willing to pay for," he added. The onlysolution may be for teachers, parents, and students together to demand these reading programs. Thishappened at Pelton last year, and a new program is now slated for next year, Roemer said. Part of thecause of this alarming decline in literacy is the great increase in television viewing in the last 20 years,all agree. The Saturday Review's Tobin is both harsh on TV and alarmed by what he believes are theconsequences. "If half our adults are already functionally illiterate, as the Harvard survey suggests, and if television continues to operate in the vast wasteland of lowest-common-denominator mass mediocrity, it is NOTICE Will the person who removed the tan briefcase from Hu. 301 last Thursday afternoon pleasereturn the important contents to the English Department main office or to Robert Huff in Hu. 301. . . . » . . - • • - - •. • • m*. lt;*.:• • • «- •- •- ^ •- •- •- • t f . U L L ^ •• «. •• 1 I •- L . 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 W 1«. '• ". '. '• '* I g S S S S j^TCTCT^Fg*s^ sat kvos -tvchannel ^f® THURSDAY AUGUST 6 9 - 1 1 . P.M. little wonder that academic freedom and freespeech have in recent weeks eroded, occasionally to a sort of fascist emotionalism, without muchoverreaction on the part of the average American," Tobin wrote. But intentional or unintentional neglecton the part of school officials and some teachers may be an even more important cause than television.Both the Federal government and California are continuing to cut education funds, including those forteaching reading, Pelton junior high's Roemer pointed out. The same is true in other states. In SanFrancisco^ U.S. Elementary-Secondary Education Act (ESEA) reading funds are now spent entirely atthe elementary ~ level, Roemer said, leaving illiterate pupils above that level without much hope. At least some teachers and future teachers believe that the literacy drop is planned. "The big businessmen whoreally run the government and schools want to have a large class of illiterate and, they hope, servileworkers who will believe whatever they're told on television," charged Harvey Poskins, an elementaryeducation credential candidate in San Francisco State college's school of education and a studentteacher in a local elementary school. "They try to play the teachers, parents, and pupils against eachother with things like the racist New York teachers strike. They hope this will stop us from uniting to getbetter education, which happened in the Los Angeles teachers strike," he said. "If they wanted kids tolearn to read, they certainly wouldn't keep using the same irrelevant reading books in every school inCalifornia year after year," Poskins added. Roemer was less certain of the causes. "It's certainlypossible that the school authorities are trying to increase illiteracy, and they certainly don't try very hardto teach reading, but it could be just lack of interest more than anything else," Roemer said. ParallelsA brash young fencer Once stopped to question An old man fishing a pond. "Old man, for many amorning now I have watched you as you fished. On each of these mornings I have seen you Carefullyroll out your line And cast ever so gently As to cause ripples Such as a feather might stir If thrown upon the water. I can see the fish in this pond. Yet I have never seen you catch any. Why is this, old man?"Without looking up From what he was doing, The old man replied, "You see, but do not observe, Whatyou do observe You do not comprehend. If you cannot see and observe. Observe and comprehend, Why do you fence Is it only to kill?" Then the old man pulled in his line To cast again, And for the first timeThe young man saw That no hook was tied to it. Yen Hop Sr. English ---------- Western Front - 1970 August 4 - Page 7 ---------- Tuesday, August 4,1970 Western Front voter registration inconsistent The over—30 crowd is forevercomplaining about students who refuse to work through the "System." But this same "System" is oftenmanaged in ways that exclude student participation. The obstacles which students face whenattempting to register to vote is one illustration of the system's intransigence that has come to lightrecently. This writer was denied registration three weeks ago and this past week, allowed to register.The relevant circumstances affecting my eligibility to register in Bellingham had not changed at all. Onthree occasions I witnessed three persons administer distinctly different approaches to students whowere trying to register. Only one of the individuals used an approach which was consistent withWashington State Law. The crucial point of contention is whether or not a student's financialdependence on his parents has any bearing on his right to register in Whatcom County. Two out of three persons registering voters at City Hall claim that any support to students from their parents, in theirformer home town, disqualifies them from voting in Bellingham. Daniel Larner of Western's EnglishDepartment and a member of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) said, "Alfred Loop, citycomptroller, feels that it's his duty to apply the necessary tests to determine a student's elegibility butLoop applies a financial test, which he nor anyone else needs to know." "Loop is mistaken about thelaw-financial dependence is totally irrelevant. Larner said. The opinion of a former Washington StateAttorney General clarifies the law regarding voter nixon cuts work- study Last Fall approximately 300Western students received jobs through Western's Work-Study program. The federal government paidapproximately 80 per cent of the wages and the college paid the remaining 20 per cent. The purpose ofthe Work-Study program is to aid financially students who wish to further their education, but who don'thave access to needed money. These students are assigned jobs that will permit them to carry anormal load of college classes, while earning approximately $1.60 per hour on the job. Due to PresidentNixon's cut in aid to education, roughly one-third of the students will be cut from the payroll this Fall.This leaves only two alternatives open to the students who have depended on Work-Study jobs. One isto quit school in hopes of finding full time employment (with the state rate of unemployment at nine percent such jobs may be hard to find). The other alternative is to accept an available government loan thus obligating the student to eventually search for a job in a jobless market in order to repay his heavy debts. registration. This opinion states that when a student plans to remain in a particular town, he mayregister to vote in that area. The Attorney General said nothing about financial dependence and neitherdo the existing laws. Larner indicated that the ACLU is working on this problem and is in contact withWashington's Secretary of State, Ludlow Kramer. Larner further remarked that, "if policies are notchanged in Bellingham, there is a good possibility the ACLU will take the matter into the courts to get the necessary clarifications." Any student who has difficulty in registering to vote in Bellingham is asked to telephone Jerry Richard, (733-8551). A number of statements have been collected and more are beingsought. by S t u a r t j o h n s o n ; si$$ Pictured here are two of the only above-ground chlorine storagetanks located within the boundaries of an American city. The tanks, situated on Georgia-PacificCorporation property, contain enough of the deadly WW I gas to wipe out the citizens of Bellinghamseveral times over. detention camps still legal WASHINGTON - (CPS) - The bill to repeal the 1950Internal Security Act provisions giving the President the right to set up detention camps is bottled up inthe House Internal Securities Committee, and may be killed there. The bill, unanimously passed by theSenate, has been held by the committee since March, primarily because Chairman Richard Ichord (D-Mo.) does not want to report it. Ichord says the extensive hearings the committee held in April and Mayare being kept open in order to allow either Attorney General John Mitchell or Deputy Attorney GeneralRichard Kleindienst to testify for the administration. They have refused on the grounds they don't havethe time, although Kleindienst sent a letter to the committee endorsing the repeal. The administrationoffer of a lower official was refused, and both sides are standing firm. If no action is taken, the bill will die in committee, and President Nixon will still have the power to round up and place in detention campsknown security risks or persons "as to whom there is reasonable ground to believe that such person willprobably engage in, or will probably conspire with others to engage in acts of espionage Although thecommittee, and especially Ichord, is usually blamed for holding up the legislation, it is possible that thefailure of Kleindienst or Mitchell to agree to testify stems from something other than lack of time. S h o rt l y after the Nixon administration took office, Kleindienst •was quoted in. Atlantic Monthly as sayingthat "if people demonstrated in a manner to interfere with others, they should be rounded up and put indetention camps." He denied saying it, but Atlantic reporter Elizabeth Drew insisted the quote wasaccurate, and produced her notes. That quote, which was widely reprinted in underground newspapers,together with generally increasing fears of repression, helped make the detention camps, which hadgenerally been ignored, into a major issue. Kleindienst recognized this when he wrote the committeethat "the repeal of the legislation will allay the fears-unfounded as they may be-of many of our citizens.This benefit outweighs any potential advantage which the act may provide in a time of any internalsecurity emergency." The repeal legislation is being pushed in the House by Rep. Spark M a t s u n a ga (D-Hawaii), a Japanese-American who remembers the last use of the detention camps, or sabotage."» » » » » » » » » * * * * * * * *.*.¥ * * ¥ ¥ * * * * * ¥ ¥ * ©RANK HELD OVER ENDS TUES. jssasiaa 1224 Commercial 733-9755 THE BIG ONE? MMMOUKFrlCIUESi. DIRECT FROMROADSHOW ENGAGEMENTS LEE MARVIN ; CUNT EASTWOOD UlEANtfBERG : m i N T YOURWAGON Bawd on tlieLenwand loev* ftrvukw muscal pUr KWWALSTON HARVEPRESNELLiu*4rtwGi»DffSM FntmfaiMriklOHVIlUOOT' v^-^AlANWLERNEF *-ktok6»*fc ^JOSHUAU0CAN^.\l^lAyiERNERw«. tuiwsor TKHNKOOT AWUWXMHOIKJS! Weekdays Performances 5:30 p.m. 8:45p.m. Saturday Sunday. 2:30 p.m. - 5:30 p.m. - 8:45 p.m AT REGULAR PRICES ' A BIG MUSICALHIT-IN THE WINNER'S CORNER!" Archer Winsten, N.Y. Post HILARIOUS AND ENTERTAINING .INTHE STREAM OF SOUND OF MUSIC" * —Joyce Haber, L.A. Times Syndicate "A BIG, BAWDYRIP-ROARING MUSICAL! HOWLINGLY FUNNY!" —Wanda N.Y. GP Hale, Daily when Japanese-Americans were rounded up during World War II. Matsunaga tried to go around Ichord and convince theother committee members to report on the act, but he failed, and in addition angered Ichord. Ichordrefuses to say whether he favors the bill, but he has stated he feels "extremist organizations," such asthe Black Panther Party, SDS, and the New Mobilization Committee to End the War represent a largepotential threat to the country's internal security. Tech. course Man And Technology, a new course, will be offered this Fall as Technology 391. The class will focus on man and his relationship to industry, one of the chief ecological concerns today. Dr. Fred Olsen is the instructor for the course. News * * * * * * * * * ALL AGES —PARENTAL DISCRETION * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * ---------- Western Front - 1970 August 4 - Page 8 ---------- A Short Calendar of Remaining Events FILMS: Wednesday: The Man From the Diner'sClub—Children's movies, also cartoons. Lecture Hall 2, 1 p.m., 25 cents. August 12: A Monkey'sUncle—Children's movies, also cartoons. Lecture Hall 2, 1 p.m., 25 cents. OUTDOOR ACTIVITIES:August 8: San Juan Cruise—The boat will be leaving Squallicum Mall at 9:45 a.m. and returning at 5p.m. Those interested in going, tickets are available at VU desk and are $5 each. You may bring or buyyour lunch. Sign up at the VU Desk. August 8-9: Anderson Lakes Hike—Sign up in VU 304. August 15: Sulphur Mountain Day Hike—Sign up in VU 304. August 18-22: Northwest Washington Fair-Will beheld in Lynden., TELEVISION: Today: 1985-KING TV, a fictional news documentary on theenvironmental crisis. Channel 5, 7:30 p.m. Thursday: Everybody's Talking— KVOS TV, a documentaryon polarization of society over lifestyles and personal values. Channel 12, 9 p.m. BOOKS: Today:American Militarism 1970-The final panel discussion topic for the Book of the Quarter is "Leadership-Catching Up With The People." Lecture Hall 2, 7 p.m. MUSIC: Thursday: Berkeley Square-A British folkgroup that has been playing in Vancouver, will perform here at 8 p.m., VU Lounge, $1. Friday: MamaSunday's—Coffee house, come and provide some of the entertainment. VU Coffee Den, 8-11 p.m.August 11: Michael Rabin, Violinist-The Ford Foundation has named him one of the ten top concertartists. Music Auditorium, 8:15 p.m., Students, Faculty, Staff free, General $1.50, High School $.75.August 12: Barton Frank, Violincello, and Levine, Piano-A Faculty Recital; they will play sonatas byBeethoven (Opus 69); Debussy; Shostakovich (Opus 40). Music Auditorium, 8:15 p.m., free. August 14:Mama Sunday's—The last coffee house gathering of the Summer, and a good place to break from Finals studies.. VU Coffee Den, 8-11 p.m. ART SHOWS: Western Gallery—Victorian Decor-must bementioned-again, all artifacts are from local residences. It's very interesting, stop by and see it if you can. Art building, up until August 2 1 . , POLITICS: Thursday: Meeting for all those interested in working onStu Johnson's campaign in any capacity. 4 p.m. in N/'U 008 (upstairs). STUDY IN CLASSIFIED 51LOST AND FOUND Lost: Large full grown stocky white male dog-with choke chain, answers to"Memphis." Reward. Wendy Allen, 733-4722. . Lost: grey tabby (mottled striped) kitten named"Sasha"' If found, please contact Barb at 733-6400 or 734-3653. 40 Services Fresh whole wheat breadmade for you-order one week in advance. 734-9955. MEXICO During the 1970-71 academic year. Central Washington State College and Fairhaven College, a division of Western Washington State College, willoffer a wide range of courses for WWSC credit. These courses, taught in Mexico by Washington andMexican professors, were chosen because we feel that the content can be materially enhanced bylocation. They will be, in general, organized on a seminar/field study format with some of the offerings onan individual study or special project basis. DEADLINE FOR APLICATION FOR FALL QTR. —SEPT. J,1970 For more information: Central Washington State College Continuing Education/Institute of LatinAmerican Affairs Ellensburg, Washington 98926
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- excitestudents, in or out of the classroom, to become academically involved. Western has instructors readingthe same dusty, yellowing lectures (and I mean reading) this quarter that they read five years ago.Another good one is reading from or paraphrasing the assigned text and refusing to answer qu
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excitestudents, in or out of the classroom, to become academically involved. Western has instructors readingthe same dusty, yellowing lectures (and I mean reading) this quarter that they read five ye
Show more excitestudents, in or out of the classroom, to become academically involved. Western has instructors readingthe same dusty, yellowing lectures (and I mean reading) this quarter that they read five years ago.Another good one is reading from or paraphrasing the assigned text and refusing to answer questions.These people can grade with the best but I question considering those grades as valid criteria of astudent
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- 1970_1209 ---------- Western Front - 1970 December 9 - Page 1 ---------- WESTERN FRONT Vol. LXIII No. 25 Western Washington State College Bellingham, Washington 98225Wednesday, December 9, 1970 FRONT LINES: Bookstore Rebate P- 3 Meet the AS Candidates p. 8Interview with Agnew p. 12 ---------- Wester
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1970_1209 ---------- Western Front - 1970 December 9 - Page 1 ---------- WESTERN FRONT Vol. LXIII No. 25 Western Washington State College Bellingham, Washington 98225Wednesday, December 9, 1970 FRONT
Show more1970_1209 ---------- Western Front - 1970 December 9 - Page 1 ---------- WESTERN FRONT Vol. LXIII No. 25 Western Washington State College Bellingham, Washington 98225Wednesday, December 9, 1970 FRONT LINES: Bookstore Rebate P- 3 Meet the AS Candidates p. 8Interview with Agnew p. 12 ---------- Western Front - 1970 December 9 - Page 2 ---------- 2 Western Front Wednesday, December 9, 1970 te Vote Taken Today IHC Stresses Cooperation ByDAVE SHERMAN Bookstore rebates are exactly two votes from becoming fact. This afternoon, thebookstore committee will vote on their proposed rebate policy and recommend acceptance by theAssociated Students. The final approval or rejection will be made by the AS legislature at a meeting inthe near future. By general consensus vote Wednesday afternoon, the six-man bookstore boardaccepted a seven-point rough draft of a rebate policy to return all available Student Co-operativeBookstore profits to student and faculty patrons by means of a percentage rebate. Any such rebate willbe contingent on the bookstore showing a profit for the entire fiscal year. In outline form, the proposedrebate policy under discussion by the board this afternoon is as follows: - a t the beginning of fall quarter, a pro forma income statement for the fiscal year will be made available to students. -should the proforma income statement show an estimated profit for the year, students will be advised Student CopsOffered Aid Law enforcement personnel of tomorrow are going to have to be better trained than everbefore. With this in mind, the Justice Department has established the Law Enforcement EducationProgram (LEEP). This program gives college financial aid to employees in police, court and correctionalinstitutions (in-service) or students preparing for careers in those fields (pre-service). Student loans canbe up to $1,800 per academic year. The actual amount granted is determined by Richard Coward,director of the financial aids office, on the basis of need. The recipient must sign a promissory (promise)note. Upon becoming a certified full-time employee at a public law enforcement agency, 25 per cent ofthe person's loan is cancelled every year in service. If the person does not go into law enforcement, theloan has seven per cent interest on it and must be paid within 10 years or at $50 a month. Grants canbe up to $200 a quarter with preference given to those students working to become state and local lawenforcement officers. Legal Advice Available Now A key to legal problems students may encounter isbeing offered through the Associated Students Legal Aid Service. Coordinators Pete Musselwhite andJim Blizard are manning the recently-acquired office (VU 217) from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. daily, ready andwilling to help individuals with legal problems. L a n d l o r d - t e n a n t disputes, contracts, alcohol ordrug violations, information on legal rights and general help in encouraging awareness of-*he law allcome under the legal aid services. Blizard intends to branch out from the traditional function of individual problems to broaden the legal aid program. He is going to do this by preparing bust manuals on generalproblems such as drug and alcohol laws, traffic accident procedures and other major problems studentsmay encounter. Blizard urges students to take advantage of the legal aid service. If a student can't make the 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. office hours he may arrange individual appointments or call during office hours at676-2460. to keep all personal bookstore receipts to be turned in at, or before, the end of the fiscal year,July 31. —actual profit figures to be returned via a rebate will be determined by an independent a u d i t o r ' s report to be made immediately following the end of the fiscal year. -individual rebates to studentsturning in their receipts will be made on a percentage basis of any profits determined by the bookstoreboard to be available for rebate. -rebates will be made on all receipts received during the fiscal year from Aug. 1 to July 31 of the following year showing a minimum of $1 total rebate. -receipts turned in after the July 31 deadline will be carried through the following year. —rebate will be made by check to bemailed out, or picked up personally, during the month of September. A final draft of the outlined proposal will be voted on formally by By JACKIE LAWSON The Palestine teach-in, held to inform students of theproblems facing the Palestinians today, turned into a heated debate between the various attendingfactions. The teach-in, held last Thursday in the VU lounge, attracted a standing room only crowd. Thepanel consisted of moderator Leonard Helfgott, lecturer in Western's history department, Dr. KayeFaulkner, assistant professor of economics, and Nubar Housepian, an Arab graduate student in politicalscience at the University of Washington. Housepian, an Armenian from Egypt, represented the "Palestine liberation movement, not to be confused with the Popular Front, an unrecognized organizationin Palestine. He was in the Middle East last summer and visited most of the Palestinian refugee camps. "I am one of the niggers of Egypt," he declared at the outset of his presentation. "Even the niggers ofthe Middle East support the Palestinian revolution," he said. His presentation dealt with three segments of the present conflict; the Zionist movement, labeled political; the creation of the State of Israel, May15, 1948; and the meaning of the Palestine movement. "The revolution is yet to begin in the office of thePopular Front in Beirut," he said. Palestine has been a nation in exile for the past 20 years, accordingto Housepian. Referring to the Zionist movement, which was organized as a political movement inEurope and became an organization to create the State of Israel, he accused the movement of makingthe people living in Palestine invisible in the eyes of the world. Prior to the acquisition of Israel'sstatehood, the inhabitants of Palestine were a majority constituting 90 per cent of that area's population.They would be forced to diminish into a minority if the state of Israel were created, he charged. Jewsthroughout history have been oppressed, he admitted. "They played a significant economic role inEurope, but later b e c a m e the scapegoat of mercantilism and capitalism," he said. Oppressionseemed to diminish in the 18th and 19th centuries, and was stopped abruptly with the Dreyfus trial inFrance. Theodore Herzl, initiator of the Zionist movement and journalist, covered the trial and "recordedits outcome solely for the purpose of creating sympathy for Jewish oppression, a move which would lead to the creation of a Jewish state somewhere in the world," Housepian said. A brief historical sketchwas given by Housepian to give the audience a the bookstore board this afternoon, and be turned over tothe As legislature in the form of a recommendation. In light of the proposed change of policy, the boardvoted unanimously to request AS legislature to modify their current "no-rebate" policy which has been ineffect since 1958. "Until now, all bookstore profits have gone toward retiring bonds sold to coverconstruction costs of the present bookstore," board chairman Howard Mitchell said. "Funding of thesebonds has now reached the stage that current student bookstore building fees ($2 per quarter fromregistration fees) are sufficient to cover retirement of the remaining bonds. "We are therefore proposing to the AS that they modify their agreement of April 9, 1958, concerning allocation of bookstore profits, toallow payment of a rebate contingent upon bookstore profits to be determined by the bookstore board."Mechanics of the rebate will be worked out by the board working with bookstore manager Ray Knabe,but will basically involve keeping a file on all students returning bookstore receipts throughout the year.At year's end, these receipts will be tabulated and verified, and any rebates will be made out and mailedto patrons in September. Basically, each student or faculty patron will receive a percentage of his totalpurchases, the percentage to be determined from total available profits and the number of receipts turned in. "This is all assuming the bookstore will show a profit, of course," Mitchell stressed. "We havealways shown a profit in the past and hope to continue doing so in the future. Because we are a co-operative, in which all faculty and students participate, we are now proposing to r e t u r n those profits to our members." "We need a positive means of increasing community awareness of our (the college's)existence and a means to work cooperatively with local citizens in areas of common c o n c e r n , " astatement for a community relations program reads. Inter Hall Council (IHC) is sponsoring thecommunity program which has been organizing this quarter, and has been contacting townspeople tosee who's interested in the progrm. "Our goal is to contact a broad scope of organizations downtown,"Assistant Dean of Students Tim Douglas said earlier this week. Through this program some stereotypescan be broken down, Douglas said. Douglas hopes that the IHC community program can be correlatedwith other groups on campus that are attempting to establish better college-community relations.Palestinee Teach--iIn Arrouses Crrowd better understanding of the events which led to the presentPalestinian crisis. As a political movement, Zionism was directly related to the rise of Europeannationalism. This must be understood in the context of the conflicting interests of the national Europeanbourgeoisie and the Jewish b o u r g e o u s i e , and resulting anti-Semitic sentiments, according toHousepian. Both Marx and Lenin rejected the basic concept of Zionist ideology; that the Jewish peopleconstitute a nation. Herzl, however, exploited these conflicts to gain support for his concept of anational Jewish state, Housepian explained. The first Zionist Congress was established and held in1897. Positions adopted at this congress in Basle, Switzerland included; the promotion of organized,large-scale Jewish colonization of Palestine, the acquisition of an internationally recognized right tocolonize Palestine, and the formation of a permanent Zionist organization to unite all Jews in the causeof Zionism, according to Housepian. At the conclusion of the congress, Herzl wrote in his diary, "If I were to sum up the Basle Congress in one word, which I shall not do openly, it would be this: At Basle Ifounded the Jewish State. If I were to say this today I would be met by universal laughter. In five years,perhaps, and certainly in fifty, everyone will see it." The colonization apparatus established at the firstZionist Congress was unsuccessful because the Zionist movement was not endorsed by any of thecolonial powers of the time until England, in 1917, gave international recognition of Zionism through theBalfour Declaration. In 1920? the British gained a mandate over Palestine and appointed Zionist SirHerbert Samuel as First Commissioner of Palestine. Also at this time the secret armed force of theZionist, "Haganah," was established. From 1920 on, the Arabs demonstrated and petitionedinternational bodies to express their rejection of the Jewish migrations to Palestine. This led to the major armed revolt of 1936, which was suppressed. In 1939 the Zionist movement shifted its headquartersfrom Europe to the United States. In 1942 the Biltmore Declaration stated clearly that the goal was toestablish a Zionist state in Palestine and that the gates of Palestine be open to Jewish immigration.Between 1939 and 1947 Jewish immigration greatly increased. On November 29, 1947, fifty years sinceHerzl's statement in Basle, the United Nations partitioned Palestine giving the Jews 55 per cent of theterritory. This was the beginning of the Arab-Israeli war, according to Housepian. By the end of the warthe Zionist occupied and controlled 84 per cent of the total land area of Palestine, forcing many of theArab inhabitants of the occupied area from their homes and into refugee camps, according to Housepian. "A people without land to a land without people," became the Zionist slogan in 1897 after the WorldZionist Organization voted Palestine to become the future state of Israel, he said. "The Jews' desire for ahomeland was a noble desire, but when their' homeland was created on my homeland that desire islost," he said bitterly. In helping find the Jewish state, the Palestine refugee problem was found,according to Housepian. "If the Zionist movement were to reach its goal, the Palestinians would becomea homeless people," he said. A member of the audience broke in, interrupting Housepian in the middle of a sentence and demanded he define Zionism. "The only way to define Zionism is to quote a Zionisthimself," he said, referring to Theodore Herzl. "You're not answering my question," the student charged. "Zionism was an idea, initiated by Theodore Herzl. It became a political movement after receivingsponsorship by the colonial powers of the world, specifically Great Britain, from 1917 to 1945. After 1945 Great Britain was not helpful to the Zionists. Inside Palestine the movement was disorganized," heexplained. Housepian continued with an explanation of the changes in immigration laws. "As theimmigration laws changed so did the economic conditions in Palestine in the twenties," he said.Palestine was suffering from inflation and eventually went into a recession. Jobs were diminishing and t h e p o p u l a t i o n increased. "The Jewish population," he added, vehemently. By 1923, manyPalestinians were jobless and a labor strike ensued. The British administration decided to cut off allrailroad building in Palestine, a move which polarized the Jewish and Arab communities, he added. Adistinction between Jewish commandos and Arab commandos in Palestine was created. This brought on a revolt by Palestinian Arabs "who didn't want the creation of the State of Israel in our midst," he said."If the Jew wanted to assimilate into Arab society, he could have," Housepian said. This commentbrought a violent reaction from the crowd. Some applauded wildly while others booed, hissed andmuttered, outraged. In 1936 there was a major revolt in Palestine, the longest labor union strike in theworld, lasting three years. It was broken by Jewish forces allied with British forces. "No one should besurprised today that there is a Palestinian movement. It is a culmination of many factors. We must beself-reliant to survive," he said. "The Hitler massacre in Europe was an outrage which resulted in a mass support of the creation of a Jewish state in Palestine," he said. "Most Jews know that the attitude taken by the United States following the holocaust was not benevolent. The immigration laws packaged up the problem (Jewish immigrants) and sent it to us in the Middle East," he said. "In 1948 the Palestinianpeople became homeless because of the creation of Israel," he charged. Housepian declared the crux of the problem as the Palestinians' desire to return to their homeland. "The State of Israel is not really thehomeland of the Jewish people," he declared. The audience went wild. The Palestinian representatives in the crowd applauded while other students were violently antagonistic. The Palestinians were living inrefugee camps in the Gaza Strip, the Golan Heights, Syria, and Jordan from 1948 on. The question wasasked as to why the Arab states didn't take the refugees into their countries. "The Palestinian people, as a nation, refused to be assimilated into the Arab world," he retorted. "The security of the Jew is notaccomplished by fighting. They are more in danger now than ever before," he said. "Is the question tomaintain the Zionist state? No, it is to, in effect, maintain the Palestinian refugee camps," he declared ---------- Western Front - 1970 December 9 - Page 3 ---------- Wednesday, December 9, 1970 Western Front Both Bombs: Explosions Causing Problem By JILLKREMEN Two great problems existing now in our world are nuclear explosion, and population explosion. A third great problem is that we can not find a solution for these two problems. Sripati Chandrasekhar,minister of health and family planning in India, is trying to find the solution to the population explosion inIndia. He spoke to students Monday at the population symposium in Miller Hall. . A population problemis defined by Chandrasekhar as being evident if one family's needs are-not being met. There are 3.5billion people living on earth. The population estimate for the year 2000 is seven to eight billion people. Ifneeds are not being met now, how will they be met then? India now has 550 million people with 21million babies born every year. A total of 13 million people is added every year to India's population. By2000 A.D., India will have a population of one billion. Chandrasekhar is trying to reduce the populationgrowth from 42 per thousand to 28 per thousand. He is using what he calls the cafeteria approach tobirth control. Family planning is advertised in a Madison Avenue manner. One of the main thingsChadrasekhar is pushing is that female children are just as good as male children. Another non-clinicalapproach is pushing for raising the legal marriage age for children. Now any girl can marry at the age of15. There are four main types of birth control in India. They are sterilization, done mainly to the menbecause on women it is a major operation, 2) the loop, and inter-uterine device, 3) the pill, not used asmuch as the others because of the expense and the lack of understanding of it by the women, and 4)the condom. Ghandi's attitude toward birth control was "marry but don't sleep." Chandrasekharadvocates this policy "if at all possible." Abortion is legal in India for t h e r a p e u t i c reasons only.Chandrasekhar believes abortion should be completely legal. "Men who can never bear babies have noright to talk about it." He feels women must decide whether they want to have the child. Chandrasekharended his lecture saying that solitude is an important part of our daily life. If the population growthcontinues at its present rate, solitude will become an impossible state. Two other goals Chandrasekharis working toward are the possibility of all people being at peace with the environment, and at peace with their fellow human beings. Arab Detention Surveyed Preventive detention of Arabs has been an issueraised by critics of the State of Israel as evidence of the undemocratic character of the government.Professor Alan Dershowitz of the Harvard Law School, a noted civil rights lawyer and a member of thenational board of the American Civil Liberties Union, investigated this in an on-the-spot survey in Israelsome weeks ago. In the December issue of Commentary, Professor Dershowitz reviews his findings, and comments on the general use of preventive detention by countries at war. Professor Dershowitz wasgranted full access to the Israeli Arabs being held under preventive detention. In his private interviewswith Fawzi al-Asmar, a poet, whose continuous detention has become a cause celebre in Israel andother countries, the latter protested his innocence, as did others imprisoned with him. But whenProfessor Dershowitz examined the dossiers that Israeli Intelligence g a t h e r e d , and met withrepresentatives of the Shin Bet, the government intelligence agency, he became convinced that thegovernment's decision to keep 23 of its Arab citizens in jail was in most instances justified. "On thebasis of my experience," Professor Dershowitz writes, "I find it difficult to understand the criticismleveled against Israel by groups such as Amnesty International who claim that Israel will not open itsdoors to their investigatory teams. Almost every door in Israel seemed unlocked; all that was needed was some initiative, and sometimes, a gentle push. The authorities in Israel were aware of my criticalattitude toward preventive detention; yet they imposed no restrictions on my activities." • ProfessorDershowitz notes that the regulations authorizing preventive detention in Israel were ones carried overfrom the British Mandate period. They were used by the British against Irgunists and other Jewishterrorist movements. (A member of the Shin Bet offices who met with Professor Dershowitz had beenimprisoned under the same provisions during the Jewish struggle for Statehood.) Professor Dershowitznotes that preventive detention was no longer in operation against individual Jews and "was hardly usedat all" against non-Jews by the Israeli authorities between 1953-1965. The 1967 war, however, broughtabout an increase in terrorism among Israeli Arabs, because the open border between Israel and theoccupied territories made it possible to smuggle in materials necessary to carry out acts of terrorism.As of August 1970, Professor Dershowitz reports, only 23 Israeli Arab citizens are actually beingdetained, and at no time has this figure exceeded 100. Several hundred additional Israeli Arabs are under intelligence surveillance or have had some restrictions imposed upon their movements. Evaluating thetreatment afforded Israeli Arabs by the Israel government, Professor Dershowitz concludes that whileArabs in Israel are subject to some "de facto discrimination," usually involving routine identificationchecks, "they enjoy full rights of citizenship" and have "no restrictions . . . placed on them." Reviewingthe use of preventive detention in other lands, Professor Dershowitz briefly examines the A m e r i c a nd e t e n t i o n of Japanese-Americans during World War II. In that instance, he recalls, the UnitedStates dispensed with the standard rules of evidence regarding suspected spies and herded thousandsof its citizens into detention camps. On balance, he writes, he would favor repeal of the EmergencyDefense Regulations. But he emphasizes that Israel is a nation at war, with a major segment of theconflict carried on within its own civilian areas. "Israel is taking considerable r i s k s , " ProfessorDershowitz concludes. "Indeed I know of no country including our own that has ever exposed its wartime population to so much risk in the interest of civil liberties. But risks to safety have always been the price a society must pay for its liberty." Drug Seminar Class Offered Again Winter] Due to the great demandfor, and success of the seminar in drug education offered for the first time this quarter, the class willagain be open Winter quarter. The class is open to high school ' and college students, to public schoolteachers, parents and anyone else wanting to learn about drugs. The sessions will examine the drug s c e n e from many different perspectives in order to investigate the many-faceted area. Speakers willinclude Robert Keller of Fairhaven C o l l e g e , the newly-elected prosecuting attorney Jane Mason,Bellingham narcotics officer Spedo Southas and Christopher Taylor of Western's psychology department. Students may sign up for the course as Health Education 497t or Soc/Anthro 497t for the two creditclass. There is no prerequisite for the class but a limit of 100 persons has been established. It is alsoopen for audit. Registration can be mailed in with the fee, which is $30 for credit of extension students,$6 for single auditors and $10 for a married couple, to the Department of Continuing Studies, CollegeHall 139, or one can go there in person to register. Fall Klipsun Due The Fall quarter Klipsun isscheduled to be distributed on campus | today) The magazines will be placed around campus at theViking Union, the coffee shops and other spots. Bus Your Body Western has taken the initial step instarting a mass transit system to campus with the subsidizing of a campus bus route. The new busroute which started Monday extends to Birnam Wood and the Bellingham Mall besides hitting thedowntown and campus area. It is on a trial basis until the end of February and then it will be evaluated.According to Jack Cooley and Lester Lee from the Business Administration office, if it proves worthwhilethe number of buses and routes will be expanded. . "The goal is to really provide service to the campus," they emphasized. "It is hoped that students and faculty will support it." The price of tickets is one dollar for a book with eight tickets in it. This is HVz cents a ride, half of what it presently is to ride a bus.Tickets are not sold by the bus drivers. They are sold only at the V i k i n g Union (VU), Co-opBookstore, and other areas on campus. "One thing people should know is that any time a transfer fromone bus to another is involved, the students will have to pay the full fee of 25 cents," Cooley pointed out. Theatre Tryouts Try outs for the Bellingham Theatre Guild's production of "Androcles and the Lion" byGeorge Bernard Shaw will be held Dec. 16 and 17 at 7:30 P.M. and Dec. 19 and 20 at 2:00 P.M.Auditions will be at the theatre guild, 1600 H street. There are 14 male roles and two female roles.Financing of the route costs the college a maximum of 84 dollars - day which is seven dollars an hou:This is payed to the Bellinghar Transit System for the use of thei buses and to pay the bus driver. Themoney to pay for this wil come from ticket money sales, fron those who pay the full fare, and frorr various college funds, if needed. The whol idea of the college helping finance a bus route came about as aresult of the last election in which the Bellingham voters failed to pass the measure to help subsidize the Bellingham Transit System which is a privately owned company. The transit company is presentlyhaving great financial difficulties. "Even if the City Transit folds, which is a strong possibility, the campus run will still continue," Cooley said. The bus runs from 7:30 a.m. to 7:30 p.m. Monday through Friday.On Saturday, it runs from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. The exact scheduling and bus stops are posted in the VU.Bible Concert Here Mezzo-soprano Frances Bible will appear in concert at 8:15 p.m. tomorrow in themusic auditorium. Miss Bible has sung major roles as a member of the New York Opera Company andhas been a repeated guest artist with the San Francisco Cosmopolitan Opera. Miss Bible also sang thestarring role in the Seattle Opera production of "The Crucible" in 1968. Tickets are available in advance at the Viking Union desk and will be on sale at the box office. The performance is a presentation ofWestern's Arts and Lectures series. Opm ni^its till 9 pjn. THREE DOORS SOUTH OF SHAKEY'S ON M. STATE ST. AARDVARK Soaks Arts The I Ching Whole Earth Catalog SeptemberSupplement—$1.00 How To Keep Your Volkswagon Alive (A manual of step by step procedures for thecomplete Idiot)-. Let's Cook It Right by Adelle Davis $1.50 ' Let's. Eat Right to Keep Fit by Adelle DavisMARK BERGQUIST JIM FORSMAN GINGER HALE MARY WATTS Broadened base of studentinvolvement through: 1. Equal rep. on standing comm. for any student 2. Informative news in collegepaper 3. Minority student representation 4. A.S. involvement in political issues such as tuition increases, enrollment policy and repressive legislation toward students.%JM»»»MI»»»»»»»W/MMMMXZ 3BIO BANDS VU Louise s- CITIZENS BM4D ***ALBATROSS "» MOJO HAND Se8ftLe~7 THIS £RU gt;i\7 ---------- Western Front - 1970 December 9 - Page 4 ---------- 4 Western Front Wednesday, December 9, 1970 Live Mike By MIKE PINCH Hello again. This is the lastWESTERN FRONT of the quarter. We hope you have enjoyed reading the WESTERN FRONT thisquarter. The feedback we have received leads us to believe that you did. This college community neededand deserved more than a weekly newspaper. We, the WESTERN FRONT staff, are proud to say that atwice-weekly newspaper is now a part of this community. Now we will be striving to improve the quality of the newspaper. We hope to have our own print shop equipment some time next quarter. With thisequipment we will be able to produce a finer paper more efficiently. Tonight the Publications Board willselect a new editor for next quarter. It will be really interesting to see what changes the paper will haveunder the direction of another editor. But that will be next quarter. Between now and then we all havesomething very important to do. That is, have a good vacation. In order that we do a good job nextquarter at whatever we do, it is important that we take the time to enjoy ourselves this vacation. So,really, have a Merry Christmas. And for those of you who celebrate the feast of dedication, happyHanukkah. aint Procedure Unfair By LARRY LEMON The procedure for academic complaints, coveredon page 34 of the General Catalog, should be revised. As presently set up, it does not insure fairrevieWof student complaints. On Nov. 2, Clarence Smith initiated an academic complaint concerningtesting and grading procedures used before and after a Geography 101 test given Oct. 20. Geography101 is a required general education course listed under option one in the General Catalog and taught byFranklin Raney. On Dec. 2, Smith received a five page report from Robert W. Teshara (assistantprofessor of geography) who was appointed arbiter in the case by Howard Critchfield, chairman of thegeography department. On page one of his report, Teshara states that "Inasmuch as specific procedures are not stipulated in the General Catalog, I developed one which I thought compatible with the generalguidelines." In his conclusion, Teshara states "I have no real hope of effecting any reconciliation ofdifferences, and inasmuch as control measures have been implemented in an endeavor to prevent further incidents of this type, I recommend that the case be closed at this point." Smith was then informed ofhis right of appeal under section two of the academic complaint procedure. Smith can now appealTeshara's decision to a three-man committee composed of the department chairman (Critchfield), afaculty member chosen by the. instructor involved (Raney), and a student or faculty member chosen bySmith. If Smith chooses a student to represent him, that student must be a geography major. Thecomposition of this committee, as well as the choice of Teshara as initial arbiter in the case, havestacked the odds against Mr. Smith's getting fair review of his complaint. This does not mean that he willbe unfairly treated; it just means that he stands a good chance of being unfairly treated.RECOMMENDATIONS FOR REVISION The chairman of each department at Western should appoint one member of his department to be part of a pool of arbiters for academic complaints. All academiccomplaints should be submitted directly to the dean of Western, and the dean should then choose atrandom, in the presence of both the appellant and the chairman of the accused department, an arbiterfrom the arbiter pool. Should the arbiter chosen be from the accused department, the dean should select at random, also in the presence of the appellant and the defending chairman, another arbiter. Appealsstemming from the initial arbiter's decision should be directed to a committee composed of the defendingdepartment chairman, a student or faculty member of the appellant's choice, and a member of theaforementioned arbiter pool. The arbiter chosen would not be from the defending department and would be selected at random by the dean of Western using the methods outlined above. The initial arbiter wouldbe automatically disqualified from serving on the committee. Final appeal could be made to the dean ofWestern. His decision, stated as the conclusion of a report on the complaint, would be final and binding. The majority of the decision-makers under the present complaint procedure are members of thedefending department. This is hardly a fair and impartial jury to judge academic complaints! By JOHNSTOLPE A FEW LAST WORDS You would have liked Dick Crosby. He was a skinny college dropoutwho had the not-so-unique misfortune of being a part of President Johnson's big Vietnam buildup in themid-sixties. I first met Sergeant Crosby in an Army enlisted men's club on the windy central coast ofSouth Vietnam four years ago. He stumbled in out of the muggy night and took a barstool next to mine.After downing several cans of warm beer he looked my way and asked, "Where you from, partner?"Bellingham, Washington, I answered. "Jesus Christ!" he shouted. "Put her there, man, I'm fromSpokane." In the many monsoon-drenched months to follow, Dick Crosby and I became pretty goodfriends. We ritually sat for hours in the red mud behind the club, drank beer, and argued vehemently about the war. Both of us were hawks—we just disagreed over tactics. "I just can't understand it," Sgt. Crosby would say. "If the United States government really wanted to win this war, why don't we just bomb thehell out of Hanoi and Haiphong?" I would usually slap my fists in the mud and answer, "No. No. We justneed to step up our guerrilla warfare tactics just as the Vietcong and North Vietnamese regulars havebeen doing for years." Needless to say, neither of us convinced the other how the Vietnam War shouldbe won. But we did agree that if Gen. Westmoreland was to march up Highway 1 to raid North Vietnam by land, then we would gladly fall in line and give him a hand. The general never did march up Highway 1.Before the year was over, we were convinced that the U.S. military was committed to a "no win" policyand that it would be a big shame if we happened to get killed for nothing. Dick and I both wanted to finishcollege, anyway. Three days before he was scheduled to fly home to his parents and his girlfriend, Sgt.Crosby disappeared on a routine helicopter flight on the night of December 3,1967. We never saw himagain. Whether they were committed to the war or not, fifty thousand Dick Crosbys will not be home forthe holidays this year, or ever. * * * GHOST OF CHRISTMAS PAST There is no peace now. There canbe no peace so long as_people are oppressed and hungry in the world. There can be no peace while men have weapons and nations have armies. There can be no peace in a world that believes that might makes right. Today people are oppressed and hungry, men have weapons and armies, might still makes right,and today there is open warfare among nations. Even during this season, as we begin to pay lip serviceto the song of the angels, we are, with unconcerned hypocrisy, preparing to plunge into a third world war. —Western newspaper editorial, 1950. * * * Our Jewish friends on the staff are holding me at gunpointdemanding equal time for Hannukah. I should have suspected trouble when I spotted a Jewish Star ofDavid sketched on top of a Christmas tree in a stationery store advertisement in the last issue. It seemsthat one of our graphics men is Jewish, and he just thought it would be a nice gesture if . . . . TodaysMuckraker will be the last. In retrospect, there have been some controversial issues which probablydeserved more attention. But, hopefully we brought you a little entertainment over the weeks. Thanks forreading, and remember what peace there may be in silence. John Stolpe The Western Front Twice-weekly newspaper of Western Washington State College Editor Mike Pinch Managing Editor DaveSherman Copy Editor Bob Burnett Copy Editor Ron Graham Production Manager Jill Kremen SportsEditor Bob Taylor Exchange Editor Jim Austin Business Manager . . . . . Les Savitch AdvertisingManager Gary Sharp Advisor R. E. Stannard Jr. Reporters Jim Diedrick Paul Eklund Larry Lemon GaryHarrod Mickey Hull Steve Johnston Glen Jones Bill Kinney Paulette Martinis Mary Peebles KenRitchie Adele Saltzman Bill Todd Lyn Watts Bob McLauchlan Roy Hanson Paul Madison JackieLawson Deb by Hudson Photography Ron Litzenberger Dan Shoblom Graphics Jon Walker David M.Davis Bruce Anderson John M. Smith Second class postage paid at Bellingham, Wa. Price per copy,10 cents. Subscription $7.00 a year. Phone 676-3160 or 676-3161 Represented by N.EAS, 360Lexington Ave., New York, NY 10017 333= ---------- Western Front - 1970 December 9 - Page 5 ---------- Wednesday, December 9, 1970 Western Front 5 Berkeley Is Everything to Everybody By JACKIELAWSON A gray-haired, elderly woman wearing rubber galoshes trudged past a crimson-robed girlwhose blonde hair hung wildly around her shoulders as she strummed a guitar and sang to a group ofstudents clustered around her. A diverse mixture of students is an everyday sight on the campus of theUniversity of California at Berkeley (UC). Newsweek's recent claim that UC is the number one ratedinstitution of higher education in the nation, rated "just above Harvard" is difficult to dispute. The campus contains an interesting conglomeration of students and non-students from pig-tailed, knee-sockedsorority girls to braless, shoeless, defiant women's liberationists. Long-hairs intermingle with mensporting crew-cuts, sports jackets and ties, while campus revolutionaries d i s p u t e their views withright-wingers. And of course there are the great majority of students in between. Hari Krishna dancersand Jesus freaks welcome students and street people alike at the entrance to Sproul Plaza, a haven forjust about everyone. Dogs on the UC campus are to students as cows are to the inhabitants of India.Students oftentimes sustain skull-shattering blows from local police, but the canines are never harmed.The campus is impressive; an attractive mixture of old and new architecture, somewhat similar to that ofthe University of Washington. It is immense, yet friendly. The faculty is comprised of some of the best,most renowned figures in education today, including many Nobel prize winners in all academic fields.UC, "probably the most successful public institution of higher learning the world has ever known,"according to Newsweek, however, is facing many internal problems which directly parallel those atWestern, specifically in the area of student government. UC's governmental structure consists of 30senators (comparable to Western's 15 legislators) elected at-large, 15 in the Spring and 15 in the Fall,who serve a one-year term. There are five officers, elected in the spring; president, executive v i c e - p re s i d e n t (two people hold this office), academic affairs yice president, administrative affairs, and astudent advocate, whose position requires defending students on conduct changes and disciplinarycommittees. The government consists of two basic divisions; the operations commission and theactivities commission. Operations encompasses the student bookstore which grosses a staggering twoand one half million dollars annually, bowling alley, game room, and the four-story student union whichhouses meeting rooms and a ballroom with a seating capacity of 2,000. Activities commission is incharge of student activities in the Associated Students of the University of California (ASUC),comparable to Western's AS. The activities commission is broken down into, and deals with, twosegments: boards and specific activities. The boards include, for example, the Third World Boardconsisting of Asians, Chicanos, Blacks and Native Americans. Funding from student body fees totalsseven dollars per quarter per student, which includes both graduates and undergraduates. The fee lastyear was $4.50 per student per quarter but this academic year the students voted to raise it. Most of the fees are channeled into activities, operations, and salaries for the 72 full-time paid personnel. "We aretrying to expand. We would like everything under (ASUC) control," ASUC Vice President Bob Famulener said. F a m u l e n e r , tall, lanky, conservatively dressed; is a junior Independent Political Sciencemajor, who sports a perpetual sardonic grin and occasionally grits his teeth when speaking of the UCBoard of Regents. When the topic shifts to student control his eyes gleam with an obviouslymischievous twinkle. The academic senate is the faculty governing body on campus, consisting of 1^00tenured faculty members. This senate contains a vast number of committees, some of which includestudent membership and votes. An extremely controversial segment of the campus is the ExperimentalCenter for Participant Education, funded with $14,000 per year by the ASUC. Eldridge Cleaver previously taught a class on racism under this program and "the program blew up," according to Famulener. "Theregents, of course, raised hell," he said. T h e c l i m a x from the Cleaver-regents conflict occurredwhen Tom Hayden, of the Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) taught a course the following quarter. "The regents again got a little u p s e t , " Famulener sarcastically quipped. Another segment of theASUC is the Administrative Committee, headed by the administrative vice president. The registration fee (tuition) is $150 per quarter or $450 per year. This goes for the funding of the housing office, hospital(student health services), counseling center, and the alumni-student placement center. Student services are attempting to get input intoj and control over gt; student government, according to Famulener. UC's student government was formed in 1887. "We (ASUC) built the Memorial Stadium; intercollegiateathletic field, counseling center, Cowl Hospital and the housing offices. As these services expanded the university, which Famulener considers synonymous with the board of regents, confiscated them. Therewas little or no student input. "I no longer consider them student services. They serve more the university than the students. They are like little fiefdoms running around the campus, but we are trying to regaincontrol," Famulener said. To combat the regents ASUC established a non-profit corporation off campus,ironically titled Students of Berkeley, Inc. (SOB) SOB was created because "on campus we are limitedin what we can do and say politically, by the regents," according to Famulener. "We were forced to setup an alternative, and we had no option but to move off campus. There we could make enough profit tosurvive as a student government; as a service to students," he said. ASUC senators and executiveofficers sit on the board of directors of the corporation, the only connection with the university. Profitsmade from .£OB a r e u s e d a t the ASUC discretion with no interference from the university, onlyfrom the state of California. The corporation started with a record store which began operation with $900capital, accumulated by collections from students. In its first year and a half the record store grossed ahalf million dollars. The corporation is presently expanding to include a bicycle shop, clothing store, andarts and crafts shop. Famulener departed to an executive meeting and ASUC President Craig Fenechcontinued. Fenech is a graduate student . studying law at UC, and previously attended and graduatedfrom Notre , Dame. "We hope to elect students to the Berkeley City Council," Fenech said. ASUC hasformed a coalition of left—'Oriented people; Blacks and Berkeley hill liberals (rich academic people),some from the university community and some street people. The Berkeley City Council is comprised ofsix people, and on April 6 an election for five of those positions will take place, one of which is themayoral position. "We will run candidates, by and large, of liberal, radical, leftist leanings. We stand avery good chance of getting them elected. Students comprise 20 per cent of the population of the city ofBerkeley, and the Blacks comprise about 50 per cent. If we can pull those two factions together we have a good chance," Famulener said before he left. The strategy is to set up a lobby with the otherUniversity of California student governments. Weyerhauser Wants to Improve Ecology The WeyerhauserCorporation, a major polluter in Washington, is interested in improving the ecology of the state. WilliamS. Noce, assistant to the director of environmental resources for Weyerhauser, conveyed these andother intentions when he spoke in the Viking Union Lounge Dec. 1. "Weyerhauser has spent $15 millionthis year in anti-pollution devices," Noce said. "Sure, there's been pressure from the public too," hecontinued. "We're willing to put investments in developing new concepts, as long as the cure isn't worsethan the disease," he said. "Our Everett mill is the most offensive in the area," said Noce. "The decision is being made now whether to begin improvements or close the mill down, but I think they've decided tomake repairs," he said. Another subject questioned was the feasibility of re-processing used papers and cardboards for further use. Noce aired the problems and costs. ."It .would.,be.far top.expensive J'qr , us to build a new re-processing plant now," Noce said. "Several small local operations in that business have folded because of high costs and low demands," he added. "Few customers are interested in t h e re-processed cardboard products," Noce continued. "The boxes fall apart when they get wet, and if weimpregnate the cardboard with plastics for reinforcement, they cannot be re-processed again," he said.One other topic discussed was the future of the state's tree crops and resulting supply of wood products. "Right now we're planting ten trees for every one we cut," Noce said. "Our harvest in the year 2020 willbe our greatest ever, and there will be more trees on the land than ever before," he predicted. HUGE WILD DISCOUNTS .' STEREO RECORDS TAPES SPEEDY SERVICE - SEND FOR YOUR FREELIST THE STUDENT STORE P.O. BOX 64 REDONOO BEACH, CALIFORNIA 90277 NAME ADDRESS ZIP The topic swiftly switched to last spring's strike. In the first days of the strike the ASUC turned out seven million leaflets. By the end of the first month 15 million had been distributed. "That's a hell of alot of paper," Fenech said. A massive speaker's program was organized over the course of the strikewith about fifteen thousand students actively working on some segment of it. "Twenty to twenty-twothousand participated in a negative sense by not attending classes. UC had the best organization of any college during the strike and the most incredible mobilization. We had the building (referring to entirelystudent owned Eschellman Hall which houses tlu; ASUC office) and we kept it. 'The entire event wasexciting; an adventure. We felt like 'god damn-we're finally doing i t ! ' " he said, somewhat wistfully. The Daily Californian, UC's newspaper with a circulation of 25,000 has its separate conflict with t h e r e g en t s , according to Editor-in-Chief Bruce Koons. Last June the regents passed a resolution stating thatall UC newspapers must come up with guidelines for publication or they would be restricted frompublishing. Koons labeled the guidelines "abstract" and said they cause the staff to work in a vacuum.This demand by the regents stems from an action taken by the UCLA paper, which printed a photosimulating copulation. The Daily Cal's fight with the regents is "suppression of freedom of the press,"according to Koons. ' ' T h e r e g e n t s and the administration don't feel the need, or understand thesignificance of a student press. They would just as soon not have one on campus," he said. Koons, asenior History of Western and Political Thought major from Arizona, was selected in an election by theDaily Cal staff. There is no publication board at UC to select editors as is the case at Western, butrather a publishers board, labeled a "rubber stamp" organization by Koons. The fight with the publisher's board involves the administration who are "reacting fearfully. to the regents," according to Koons. Theboard stifles the student press and is attempting ''to prevent controversy by subtly exercising priorcensorship. The board now consists of four students, who apply and are selected at-large, one ASUCrepresentative, one journalism professor, and one business education professor. The structure of theboard, however, is attempting to reorganize to include a professional journalist and two faculty oradministrative representatives appointed by the chancellor of the university. ' ' W e d e s i r e a morestudent-directed pub board with faculty members nominated by the faculty senate," Koons said. Thiswould be the first step toward independence for the paper. Twenty per cent of the revenue for the paper is acquired from student fees. The paper's budget per year is $280,000; $205,000 comes from a d v e r t is i n g , $4,000 from subscriptions, and $70,000 from student fees which are called block subscriptions. The paper employs Associated Press style, but is open to personalized reporting-being careful to keepthe reader aware it is personal. "Fairness and accuracy is the key because the regents object to anypolitical bias," Koons said. The past editor was tyrannical, and as a result many conflicts ensued,especially over party politics, according to Koons. "There is less ego tripping and we have, as a result, a more congenial paper," he said. Credibility is a major concern for Koons. The paper must meet thediverse range of students on UC's campus. "When we take a strong editorial stand we must havecredibility," he said. There has been much controversy over letters to the editor, resulting in runningdebates over such issues as the war and the Palestine conflict. The Daily Cal is concerned with being acommunity press as well as merely a college paper. The staff, therefore, does much communitycoverage. The Daily Cal is attempting to set up a Uni-Press service involving all the University ofCalifornia campuses and their newspapers. Many factions on campus have become sensitive to theproblems facing the Daily Cal, which is oftentimes caught between these factions. "That's really a dragbecause all we want to do is put out a nice paper," Koons sighed. Koons is optimistic about the fate ofthe Daily Cal in the next few years, despite frequent conflicts with the regents and the administration.TRADE, SELL OR BUY IT IN THE CLASSIFIEDS 676-3160 BANK ROBBERY INFORMATION? TheWashington Bankers Association again announces its $5,000 REWARD FUND Since theestablishment of this fund in 1954 awards of varying amounts have been paid to private citizens who havebeen alert to observe and report helpful information directly to law enforcement agencies, whichinformation has led to the arrest and conviction of persons who have robbed banks in the State ofWashington. The Washington Bankers Association, in its sole discretion, determines the possibleeligibility of these civic-minded witnesses to receive an award and the amount to be given. It takes noaction in considering an award, however, until the bank robbery has been solved and the criminal hasbeen sentenced. The Seattle Office of the Federal Bureau of Investigation acts in an advisory capacityand assurance is given that such reporting of information to law enforcement authorities will, if requestedby the informant, be given confidential handling. Bank employees, members of the Washington BankersAssociation and lawenforcementpersonnel are ineligible to receive awards from this fund. *mm*** , , r. t t » * t , • •• ^ •- * gt;• "* " ' gt; ',, •pjMimjWJtMa^MfeiAM,y.i:gfff,l tft,JSj5^fi|*!tf ---------- Western Front - 1970 December 9 - Page 6 ---------- 6 Western Front Wednesday, December 9, 1970 Deferment Drop Deadline Set Registrants wishing todrop deferments and be reclassified into Class I-A status in order to take advantage of a year-end policy announced last month by the Selective Service System have been given until midnight, December 31, to file for reclassification. The announcement is contained in instructions issued to local board personnelby Dr. Curtis W. Tarr, Director of Selective Service. These instructions alter previous policy which statedthat the application had to be in the hands of local boards prior to a December meeting of the localboard. The instruction to local boards will be of interest to men who hold high numbers in the 1970 draftlottery. Should a young man hold a number higher than that reached by his local board (no higher than195) it is to his advantage to voluntarily give up his deferment for a I-A classification. In these cases, hewill move to a lower draft priority group on January 1, 1971, with other members of the 1970 first prioritygroup with unreached numbers. Tarr explained that "the law allows young men to elect whether they will apply for a deferment and those young men granted deferments should be able to drop them if theydesire." By defining a specific cut-off date, the new policy allows all registrants an equal amount of timeto take advantage of the reclassification offer. The types of deferments affected by the memorandum are high school and college student deferments, occupational deferments, agricultural deferments, paternity and hardship deferments. Dr. Tarr pointed out that all deferments are issued for limited periods of time,generally for one year, and that it is the responsibility of the registrant to submit documentation for anextension of his deferment. In the absence of documentation, the new local board memoranduminstructs local boards to promptly reclassify registrants into I-A. This means that registrants wishing tocontinue holding their deferments should submit the supporting documentation to their local boards.LANGE VOLKSWAGEN mSamishWay 734-5230 Sales: New and used Volkswagens. . jj/wnat. wt WMprovide uunpwnuMMi ior cwtoflKis to and from the campus wUe yow car k being serviced. Open 8 ajn. to 6 p.m. Monday - Saturday NBofC has an easier way to balance your budget. Unsteady about yourfinances? With an NBof C checking account you simply reconcile your checkbook with our statementeach month and you're back in control. NBof C checking-an easier way to balance your budget.NATIONAL BANK OF COMMERCE MEMBER F.O.I.C. • ACCOUNTS INSURED TO $20,000 EACHDEPOSITOR. NBC Free coffee! One cup. Its the least we can do during exams. Yxjr friendlysympathetic McDonalds. Good evenings after:7 p.m. now through Dec. 18, 1970. Just present yourStudent Body Card. McDonald's 1914 King Street Just west of Freeway State Street Exit. ---------- Western Front - 1970 December 9 - Page 7 ---------- Wednesday, December 9, 1970 Western Front 7 Men pour asphalt on new bypass. Bypass Ready Soon Anyone who drives through campus via High Street is in for a pleasant surprise winter quarter when thenew by-pass street will be ready. Gordon Hayes, vice president for C. V. Wilder Construction, said thathis crews will have the road open on schedule, despite the hindering weather that forced paving to stoplast week. Hayes said that the asphalt could only be laid- in 50 degree plus temperatures and thatworkmen were unable to do it last week. It should have been finished yesterday. The main purpose forWest Campus Way will be to ease traffic along High Street in front of the Viking Union, library and music building area. During class changes traffic flow is badly disrupted and could be a hazard in the case ofemergencies. The by-pass will have three lighted lanes, two up and one down, and a sidewalk on oneside. There will be no space available for parking. Making connections just south of the music andauditorium building along High Street and at Garden and Oak Street, the project has been underconstruction for the past 18 months. In the past, campus planner Barney Goltz has said that future plan is to completely close down the campus section of High and make it into a mall or park with trafficspace available only to emergency vehicles. Closure on any basis will not come until October, 1971,since there must be improvement on Garden and surrounding streets to take the traffic flow increase,Goltz said. Tow Charge Refunded The Parking Appeals Board passed a motion to refund RichardLocasso, a student, a tow away charge he paid when his car was impounded, last Sept. This was thefirst case the new board has heard. Between Summer and Fall quarters on Sept. 15 at about 10 p.m.,Locasso had his car towed away because he had parked inside the chain closing the driveway betweenMiller Hall and the Art Annex. Locasso said that he had driven his car through the chain entrance to lot10A at High Street, and parked his car in front of the chain on the other side. Normally, parking in front of a driveway on the first offense calls for just a ticket. In this case, he had parked in front of a fire lanewhich usually calls for impounding the car. Locasso said that if he had known that the closed offdriveway was a fire lane he would not have parked there. The sign stating that the driveway was a firelane had been posted on the other side of the chain, which at that time of night he had not seen. Theboard agreed that there was an improper posting of the sign and granted Locasso a refund for the towingcharge. In other action the board elected Greg Baker chairman. Baker and the other members stressedthat any persons in the college community wishing to make an appeal for having their vehicle impounded are urged to do so. They can either set up an appeal date with Bob Peterson, Director of Safety andSecurity, or go directly to the board meeting. The Appeals Board, which has six cases they want to hear before vacation, will meet tomorrow at 4 p.m. in Viking Union 008. Their regular meetings are held everyMonday at 4 p.m. Typewriters and Adding Machines SOWSf 5#CVIC* QftQ RMROb Special StudentRental RqtM IKLUM6IMM BISIKSS MACHINES (Next to Bon March*) lMOComnercial 734-3630Recent grad of W.W.S.C. seeks to give special attention to YOU in home purchasing in this area. Ask for Echo Reed at Bob Bailey Realty. BOB BAILEY REALTY 2S1-4 MERIDIAN ST.. NO. 8 BEUUNGHAM.WASH. 98225 Reg. 676-0182 Office 733-3930 Education May Thwart Stork Western biology professorIrwin Slesnick concluded last week's portion of the population symposium by investigating thepossibilities of p o p u l a t i o n control through education. Slesnick, a former consultant to populationeducation programs in India, pointed to that country as the testing ground for evaluating populationeducation. Yet, he indicated that the United States must initiate an effective population educationprogram since it is the only country with the necessary resources to develop one. "It's no secret that the birth control program in India is failing," Slesnick said. The Indians aren't really motivated to availthemselves of family planning services the government has provided. This motivation isn't beingsignificantly affected by the mass media barrage in favor of birth control either, according to Slesnick.People are now concluding that mass media only serves to reinforce already established values. In orderto change the basic attitudes, the young people must be reached, he said. Approximately 50 per cent of the world's population is under 16, Slesnick said, and an effective program of population educationmust be aimed for them because it has been found that attitudes toward family size are gained whenchildren are from 8 to 13 years old. Slesnick explicitly cited the behavioral objective of populationeducation. As he sees it: AS Working with Dorms S t u d e n t g o v e r n m e nt representatives andthe Council of Dorm Presidents have met twice this quarter in an attempt to break down barriers whichhave separated dorm governments from AS government. Ted Sundquist had been appointed to act as aliaison from AS government to Inter Hall Council. The Council of Dorm Presidents meet with Sundquistonce or twice a month so both groups can be informed and help one another and jointly work together tosolve problems affecting them, according to AS President Steve Cooper. -every act of intercourse mustbe proceeded by a conscious act of contraception unless a child is desired, and -child bearing must belimited to zero, one or at the most, two children per family. Education programs must be developedwhich infuse the American schools at all levels, in all courses, if they are to be genuinely effective,Slesnick believes. He offered an example program in which third graders would do story problems whichwould illustrate that smaller families can be wealthier, would read stories depicting happy small familiesand would see Indian art which would show small, happy families. Besides this infiltration acrosssubject lines, population education w o u l d become progressively sophisticated. In science, forinstance, a student could study natural controls on plant populations on a simple level in the fourth grade, move into the same type of stuff for animal reproduction and sexuality in the fifth grade, advance tohuman reproduction, then population control and so on. Slesnick pointed to several isolated programswhich are entering the educational world. The Planned Parenthood World Organization is planning toestablish special teacher education programs on population control in six colleges. Pilot programs willbe run under these colleges and selected public schools. Many books, films and other educational toolsare being considered and developed as means of conveying population education. "What's going tocome of this (the individual projects) is still much a mystery," Slesnick said. The Federal governmentprobably will recognize the need for population education in the future and then move into the field. Itwould then pick the best programs and supply funding for a nationwide program. Another possibility,which is being explored, is the use of mass media directing the attitudes of population control to youngchildren. The well-known Sesame Street program intended for pre-schoolers is seriously considering theaddition of population control ideas to their program, according to Slesnick. "I don't mean to say thatpopulation education is the only way to solve the problem," he added. "Population is a wide field,pregnant with many possibilities." Population education is one possibility which must be considered,according to Slesnick. y/////^///x/y////////'/M'A////////y/////yy////4, I Translating: French, English-French j(letters, documents, articles, etc.) jalso, expert editing, proofreading,] letter writing. 733-5404V/M///m/AM^^^ Mazda Delivered in Belling ham $1792.65 1200 2 Door Coupe Plus TAX and LICENSESee Jim McClymont 733-8002 733-7610 BELLINGHAM MAZDA 1200 COMMERCIAL ST. Open till 6p.m. Special Price - One Week IO/5-IO/9 Bic Pens 19* Value Now 13* 25* Value Now 17* 49* ValueNow 27* TYPEWRITER RENTALS Bic Pens Smith Corona Portable Sterling Model Smith CoronaGalaxie Smith Corona 120 Electric Portable IBMSelectric Electric Month 9.00 12.00 22.50 24.00 3Month 24.00 33.00 . 60.00 65.00 Min. 1 week 7.00 10.00 15.00 2 weeks 15.00 First Three Monthsof Rental May Apply to Purchase of Machine Colorful Candles and Incense STUDENTS Jkf. Clocks -Timex Watches STORE NO STOMS tlORM COHVXK1MNT ---------- Western Front - 1970 December 9 - Page 8 ---------- 8 Western Front Wednesday, December 9, 1970 Legislature Candidates Jim Foreman My purpose forrunning for AS legislature is to inform students what is going on in student government a n d r e l a t e da c t i v i t e s. Communications through the student newspaper, bulletins and open meetings are myprime concern in this area. Another area I feel is important is that minority representation is needed inall areas of Associated Student activities. As an Indian Student I hope to encourage minority studentinvolvement. I feel that I am qualified and willing to serve, my experience includes being AS legislator, fall q u a r t e r ; member of Fiscal Management Committee; and I am also a transfer student from SeattleC.C. and served with Student Government there. I am also working, and a member of the Indian StudentUnion. My major is English and I hope you will vote for me on Dec. 10, 1970. Jim Forsman SharonStalin I believe that when a person starts a job, he should work on it until he gets it done. I believe toomany legislators presently don't have this attitude. I would, therefore, work very hard on the followingareas: —Greater student involvement in departmental decision-making is imperative. I believe I canshow many students how important it is to get involved in the grass roots of academic change. -Oncampus students over 21 should be allowed to drink in their dorms. - I f tuition is going to go up, Ibelieve student wages should go up proportionately to a tuition increase. As AS Research Assistant Ihave seen how important it is to do a job, do it thoroughly and do it right. Sharon Stalin Food Stamps:Ginger Hale I feel the major issue is giving students more representation on standing committees. As itis now, the administration has representation and feedback, but the students have very little, if anyfeedback, except through indirect channels. Perhaps, to the average student this seems irrelevant, butthese committees are the ones that make decisions concerning Western's individual tuition hike, theenrollment, and where our money goes. Also, after serving on Legislature, I have found a great lack ofcommunication between the Associated Students and its government. We should be informed of thegovernment's action on a regular basis. It should be current news, not a week late. This would combat alot of the apathy and generate more interest. Now each individual has a voice in the decision-makingprocess. Ginger Hale Mark Bergquist Student views towards AS government impress a feeling ofapathy and alienation upon me. The average student has little knowledge of AS legislative workings.Without the knowledge there is nothing to base an interest on. Typical responses to the candid question of "What do you think of AS government?" are: "Don't ask me," "It's worthless," or "Its policies don'taffect me." Did you, as an individual, ever wonder what our student government is doing with over$60,000 of our money per quarter? Do you know what the AS government is doing to fight the proposedtuition hike? Have you realized that you, as an i n d i v i d u a l , have power in decision-making policies? My goal is to stimulate student interest in college affairs-to bridge the communication gap. MarkBergquist Michele Evans My interest in AS is fourfold: 1. Student services are Associated Students'one main accomplishment. These facilities are both useful and necessary. Their continuation andincreased activity are essential. 2. The possible increase of tuition to $210 a quarter cannot be allowed.An increase of this amount would deprive . many excellent and interested students from a collegeeducation. Although Western needs the financial support increased tuition would provide, students needto have equal opportunity in entering this college. 3. AS needs a lawyer. Legal advice of student rightsand, if necessary, the ability to take legal action to obtain those rights are mandatory. 4. DaugertProposal-against. The major problem is that AS is not an effective voice. The Daugert Proposal does notimprove this situation, but binds us even more. Michele Evans Mary Ellen Watts A major responsibilityof AS government is student representation on the policy setting committees of this campus. Aschairman of the AS Legislature Committee on Student Services, I have been working to get equal votingrepresentation for students on college committees that set policy for such services as the StudentHealth Center. Another major AS responsibility, in my opinion, is political action to protect studentinterests in such areas as proposed tuition increases, enrollment policy and repressive legislation (i.e.Sam Guess's proposed legislative review of college conduct). For this reason, I give my full support tothe efforts of the Political Action Committee which is designed to protect the student interest in thisarea. Fulfilling these student needs is Legislature's responsibility. Mary Ellen Watts Dan RuddellBASICALLY-It comes down to this: I believe that this year we've developed a student government that isrelevant to the real needs of the student, academically as well as socially (i.e., more student say ondecision-making bodies here at Western). It's a good start. I would like to see it through. I am willing toput in as much time as needed to help make our student government more responsible and effective.Dan Ruddell Vote Tomorow Many students on this campus gripe about student government. Few havethe right. Fewer than one third of the student body voted in the last election. I urge all students toexercise their rights and to vote tomorrow, Dec. 10. The VU lounge will be the only polling area. It will beopen at 8 a.m. and will remain open until 7 p.m. All those in line at 7 p.m. shall be allowed to vote.Please bring your student ID. Your cooperation is needed for a legal, credible and a real "voice of thepeople" election. All questions, comments, and gripes cheerfully accepted in VU 215. Gaby SchillingElection Board Chairman Jamie Bryson Legitimate and responsive student government is on the way inat Western: But we need more than ever to push for action: Action in constitutional revision; I support anew constitution with provisions for the cluster colleges and student services. This constitution would bea basic guideline for the AS and would be able to meet today's needs. Action in academic reform; Isupport the idea of students and faculty together throwing out out-moded courses and revamping majorand minor requirements. Action in community relations; here lies the key to Western's future. Thecommunity relations action council is a step in the right direction, but we must see that it is carried out.Action in keeping tuition costs down; AS is the students' best method of communication with the statelegislature. I am confident that a responsive student government will effectively represent the students'feelings. Jamie Bryson RENTALS • Weekly • Monthly • Quarterly REPAIRS • AHTypewriters • Portable or standard • Electric or Manual • Free? Estimates • Free Delivery• Free Demonstrations' Your Type jwiter Headquarters | frr new and reconditioned typewriters, wecarry them all, including world famous "Ofrympia." BLACKBURN OFFICE EQUIPMENT 1223Commercial (next to Gages) 733-7640 State Tightens Qualifications Western students may find itharder to qualify for food stamps now thati -new regulations are in effect. There are two proposals, which have been the new policy in Bellingham for about a month. There are plans to expand them statewidethis week. One proposal would require students under 21 to prove they are not dependent on theirparents. "They will probably have to show proof from their parents," said a welfare official in Olympia.Married s t u d e n t s are c o n s i d e r ed "emancipated"-free from their parents' home-and will beeligible for stamps if their income is low enough. The other proposal is a new definition of "household."The old rule classified households as "one economic unit" and all members' income would be counted.In some cases students would pay rent to the head of the household and be classified as a "boarder"and, the rest of his income wouldn't be counted. "Now a group of unrelated adults will be considered ahousehold," said Al Brandt, welfare supervisor in Bellingham. "The burden of proof is on the student" to ---------- Western Front - 1970 December 9 - Page 9 ---------- Wednesday, December 9, 1970 Western Front By BOB TAYLOR Off the Bench, as promised in lastweek's column, presents its brief survey of Western's Evergreen Conference opponents. Central - TheWildcats once again appear to be the clear-cut choice for Evco championship. Although Central lost three outstanding players, including All-America's Dave Allen and Paul Adams, the Wildcats seem to havefilled those gaps with transfers and returning lettermen. Central, which placed second in the NAIAplayoffs, returns two key starters: Mitch Adams and George Bender. Western- It's no secret that CoachChuck Randall feels that this is his strongest team in recent years. In fact Randall thinks that the NAIAtitle could be decided in Evco. Western will be a top challenger. Southern Oregon- , •The Red Raiders could very well be the conference "sleeper." Southern s success will hinge on just how well four transfersplay. Three of these transfers are huge. Allan Graves, 6'-9", who started for San Jose State last year,seems to be a cinch starter, but Nate Turner, 6'-9" and Roger Brown, 6'-10" will see lots of action.Another key performer is Gary Carroll, a guard who started for Oregon State last winter. EasternWashington- Eastern doesn't appear to have the deep bench, but the Savages will display a potentstarting five, led by all-Evco Steve Barnett. Whitworth- The Pirates, who return seven lettermen, couldsurprise. Whitworth doesn t have too much height, but it does have several outstanding shooters like Glen Hiemstra and Willard Ranee. Oregon College- The Wolves are even shorter than Whitworth, with itstallest player being Bill Shogren a 6'-4V2" skyscraper. Coach Bob McCullough feels defense will keyOCE's hopes. Eastern Oregon- Eastern won the Oregon Collegiate conference title last season, but inthe process lost several key players due to graduation. Oregon Tech- Tech will also field one of theleague's shorter teams. Height however, won't be the Owl's major problem, experience will be. Only threelettermen return from a 12-14 season. Evco coaches though, should watch Tech with caution, as theOwls have a history of coming up with the big upsets. Western's basketball player of the week is GaryWhite; wrestler of the week is Terry Beckstead. White earned the honor for his great effort againstSacramento State, while Beckstead earned his award for his performance in the Pacific Lutheran match.Vikettes Give Spirited Show Despite Western's loss to Sacramento State in Monday night's basketballgame, at least something of winning quality was established. The Vikettes, a new precision dance anddrill team made their first h a l f - t i m e appearance during intermission. The Vikettes, formed thisquarter by the Black Student Union (BSU), stepped, danced and glided through their routines to theenjoyment of the crowd. Stephanie Preston, whose husband Mike stars on the Viking varsity, thoughtup the idea for the group early this quarter to provide e n t e r t a i n m e n t and possible inspiration toWestern's basketball team and fans. The 19 young female members of the BSU, outfitted in blue andwhite Vik Spiker Sfarts Early Tim Tubbs, a runner on this fall's cross-country team, is now tuning up lor the upcoming track season. Last Friday the long-distance runner competed in the Green LakeInvitational, and finished 12th. Tubbs' time over the 5.8 mile course was 30:49. On Jan. 10, Tubbs willaccompany a contingent of Western runners in the University of Washington Indoor Invitational. andperforming to taped music, have practiced four days a week since the idea was conceived. They plan tomake similar presentations during the rest of Western's home game half-time breaks this season.Wrestlers Rout PLU Western's wrestling team won its second meet of the season with a crunching 37-0 win over Pacific Lutheran University(PLU) last Friday in Tacoma. The Viks wasted little time in gettingon the scoreboard, as Mike Donnelly pinned PLU's Ralph Niels in the opening match. Two more pinsfollowed Donnelly's, with Admiral Flunder and Bill Lowman winning. Terry Beckstead showed immenseimprovement as he defeated Paul Fernham, 7-4. Beckstead lost to Fernham a week before. JeffMichaelson, a hard-hitting defensive tackle during football season, made a successful debut by d e f e at i n g the Lute's Gary Huntington, 8-2. The Viking win was its second of the season over PLU as theViks defeated the Lutes, 38-6 the week before. This Friday, Coach Lanny Bryant's matmen will facetheir toughest opponent of the season in the University of Washington (UW). The match against the UWwill give the Viks a good look at the Huskies' All-American Larry Owings. On the following Friday,Western travels once again to Seattle as the Viks compete in the UW Invitational Tournament.Western's next home match will be on Jan. 7 against tough Seattle Pacific College. Summary of thePLU match: 118-Donnelly pinned Niels 126-Fluhder pinned Nils Tanji 134-Lowman pinned Paul Mattison 142-Beckstead over Fernham, 7-4 150-Tom Tripple over Doug Doten, 6-5 158-Jerry Bailey over GaryBerner, 4-3 167-Don Anderson lost to Bob Hervey, 4-3 (exhibition) 177-Ron Lee won by forfeit 190-DarylMcClanahan won by forfeit ^ HW-Michaelson over Huntington, 8-2 WESTERN WASHINGTON STATECOLLEGE Arte and Lectures Series + gt; presents Frances Bible Mezzo-Soprano Thursday,December 10 3:15 p.m. Music Auditorium W.W.S.C. Students, Faculty, Staff High School 75 centsGeneral $1.50 Free B I N Y ON / Qfttmitrists \ 1321 CIIRIILL 733-S3N HAKE THE' BRiGHKRMtt9M*MMmmMMHM \7ts Today Ex-volunteers at Viking Union Foyer JV's Stun SU, UW Western's JVbasketball team continued its "giant killer" pace as the JV's whipped the previously unbeaten Seattle U.(SU) Frosh, Monday night in Carver Gymnasium. Last Saturday, the Viks stunned the University ofWashington (UW) freshmen, 77-68. Monday night's game proved to be a highly inspirationalperformance, as the JV's trailing by as much as six points, came from behind in the closing moments to win. Jeff Hamilton scored the winning basket for Western with just eight seconds remaining, as he tooka pass from Keith Reynvann and scored on a lay-up. Up to Hamilton's winning basket the game provedto be a "see-saw" affair. The Viks led throughout the first half, only to see the Papooses come-from-behind to take a 33-31 halftime lead. SU then was in command throughout the first five minutes of thesecond-half, before Bobby Nicol tallied on a 20-foot jumpshot to put the Viks out in front, 43-42. Theteams then traded baskets before Western got control of the ball with 1:02 left in the game. The JV'sthen went into a ball-ccntrol offense setting the stage for Hamilton's winning score. Nicol was the leading scorer for Western with 16 points. Jim Dudley, who played a great game on defense, contributed 13points and eight rebounds. Tom Mount-rounded out the double figure scoring for the JV's with 11 points.Saturday night's game saw the Viks snap a 23 home game winning streak for the Huskie-Pups.Western, which held a 38-33 intermission lead, was in front virtually all the way. Don Lehman led the JVassault with 22 points. Lehman also came up with a strong defensive-effort holding the UW's muchtouted Jeff Hawes to just two field-goals. Lehman was also a top rebounder for Western with 12.Reynvaan tallied 13 points, Nicol-scored 10 and Dana Bessecker rounded out the double figure scoringfor Western with 11 points. International Film Festival J This festival will present features and short fromall film-making countries. These films have been well received elsewhere, but are rarely available either intheaters or on the Late Show, sponsored by the International Club Feature: THE SWINDLE (IL BIDONE):Italy; A Frederico Fellini film with Broderick Crawford about a fun loving trio who pose as churchofficials to swindle peasants. Short: PERFECT DAY: U.S.A.; Laurel and Hardy film about preparations for a picnic. Dec. 10 Thursday, 8:00 p.m. L-4, 75 cents admission YOU'RE WELCOME AT QM Come In , See Our Selections . Fashions . Gifts . Posters. Candies . Fabrics . Knitting . Beauty Salon RightAcross From The Parlcode open Fridays till 9 pm. 125 W. Holly, Downtown 734-5100 1 - . ' i L LU•~^M«W*B« gt;I««»^^ ' ---------- Western Front - 1970 December 9 - Page 10 ---------- 10 Western Front Wednesday, December 9, 1970 Sacramento State Tops Viks By PAUL MADISONSacramento State, using a disciplined offense and an effective 3-2 zone defense, defeated Western'sViking basketball team 78-72 in a hard-fought battle Monday night at Carver gym. The Hornet defenseheld Western to only 27 field goals in 86 attempts, a shooting percentage of only 31 per cent, whilehitting 28 of only 67 attempts themselves for 42 per cent. Guard Jim Jones and center Charlie Walkerpaced the Sacramento offense. Walker scored 20 points, 18 in the last half, while Jones potted 19. Itwas Jones' crucial three-point play with 1:58 remaining that broke the back of a Western comeback. The Vikings moments before had knotted the score 67-67 on a jump shot by forward Gary White.Sacramento took early command of the game and held as much as a 6-print advantage until a lay-in byJohn Reed tied the score at 24-24. A minute later center Rudy Thomas scored on a lay-in to give theVikings their first lead since early in the contest 28-26. Western held this same 2-point margin athalftime, 32-30. The Vikings continued to lead throughout the early part of the second half, though neverby more than 3 points, until a lay-in by guard Terry Ray tied the score 43-43 at the 13:58 mark. ' Thegame remained a virtual deadlock the next five minutes as the . score was tied no less than six times. Itwas excellent shooting by guard Mike Preston that kept Western in the contest. The transfer from Green River Community College hit four straight field goals from 20-feet. Then with the score tied 55-55Sacramento reeled off 8 unanswered points to take a 63-55 lead. Field goals in this stretch were scoredby forward Lloyd Berens, Walker and guard John Maloney. With 6:39 left Western came back asThomas and White led the way. Guard Mike Franza hit a 15-foot jump shot to cut the deficit to only twopoints 67-65, and then White's 12-footer brought the crowd to its feet as the Vikings tied it up 67-67. Itwas then that Jones scored a lay-in and fouled on the play put in the subsequent foul shot to give theHornets a 70-67 lead they never relinquished. The Western press, which had been a big factor in theircomeback, proved ineffective /thereafter. Another three-point play by Berens with 1:03 left sewed it up for Sacramento as they led 75-69. Foul shots made for the final 78-72. White was the game's high pointman with 23, Thomas had 21 and- Preston 12. White also led the Vikings in rebounds with 12. Thomashad 11 and Lee Roy Shults 9. Though extremely cold from the floor Western did hit 86 per cent from thefoul line and outrebounded the Hornets by a slim margin of 56-52. Sacramento, besides 20 points fromWalker and Jones' 19, got 15 points from Ray and 12 from Berens. Walker was the game's leadingrebounder with 14. Western's next action comes this Friday and Saturday nights as they travel toCollege, Alaska to take on the University of Alaska. The Vikings' next home game will be on Dec. 22against the College of Great Falls from Montana. Then the following night, Dec. 23, Seattle Pacific willinvade Carver gym. Both games will begin at 8 p.m. / k NATIONAL GENERAL THEATRE STARTSTONIGHT TWO SHOCKERS! With TR0G and DRACULA the HORROR begins! Starring JOANCRAWFORD __ TECHNICOLOR' FROM WARNER BROS. [GP) lt; TASTE THEHii OF DRACULAStarring CHRISTOPHER LEE TECHNICOLOR® From WARNER BROS. jwVed., Thurs., Mon.,"Pracula" 7:30 p.m. only "Trog" 9:15 p.m. \ Friday ^^^^^^^^Sat., Sun. "Dracula" \"Trog" 10:15 P - ^ - ' / ^ ^N R l ^ 4 ' 3 0 p.m.7:30 p.m.' )racula" 8:45 p.m.M U I ff I T' I i1 ^ i 4 " T r o 9 " 6 : 0 0 p , m - —9:30 p.m.Tankers Edge PLU Western's swimming team splashed its way to its first win of the season, as the Viktankmen downed Pacific Lutheran University (PLU), 55-54 in Tacoma last Friday. The Vik tankers gottheir winning edge as they captured first-place and third-place in the next to last event of the meet, the200-yard breaststroke. Ken Visser won the 200-yard breaststroke in 2:36.9, while Rick Budlongfinished" third. Tom Ward highlighted the Vik victory as he captured two first-places and one secondplace. Ward, a speedy sophomore, won the 200-yard freestyle and the 200-yard butterfly. He' alsofinished second in the 500-yard freestyle. Jeff Stith completed a Vik sweep in the 200-yard butterfly bytaking second-place. The Vikings also swept the 200-yard individual medley with Todd Wirtz finishingfirst and Larry Caton capturing second. The only other Western first came when the Viks won theopening event of the meet, taking the 400-yard medley relay. Comprising the relay team were: BruceJohnson, Budlong, Stith and Jerry Ruthrauff. Western's next swimming meet will be on Jan. 14 againstHighline Community College at Highline. |U HURRY ENDS 1224 Commercial 733-9755 TOMORROW"A SHOCKER! FASCINATING!" -New York Daily News ^ THIS IS THE DAWNIN6 OF THE ABE OF \uTHE FORBIN PROJECT A UNIVERSAL PICTURE • TECHNICOLOR8 PANAVISiON* AND GREAT,CO-FEATURE I LLMAIT1I1T UUDUEL ZZ.ELRr \OU sbmng Joseph Cotten-Cesar Romero i Co -starringRichard Jaeckel • Patricia Medina and introducing Linda Haynes as Dr. Anne Barton STARTINGTHURSDAY An ALBERTO CRIMALDI Production FELLINI SATYRfCON (English Subtitles) COLORbyDeLuxe8 PANAVISION* ( 5 ] lt; ^ United Artists MARCELL0 MASTROIANNI in John Boorman's"LEO the last" M ^ COLOR byDeLuxe® United Artists RATED "R" UNDER i f WITH PARENT ONLYCLASSIFIED ADS 6763161 I0r41lsc. for sale Mens ski boots: like new. Italian Firelli. Size 11. $20. CallMark at 676-591:S. RADIO-SHORT wave FM AM| excellent sound nice wood; finish-must sell-need new skiboots- $40,676-5187. For sale Stereo. $250 Lafayette 50 watt amplifier, Gerard turntable with ShureCartridge, and two medium size 40 watt Criterion Speakers. Will consider selling separate pieces. CallGreg at 734-3361 10 speed Schwinn bike. $75 Call 734-6340. LeeTompren ARMY-NAVY Surplus: Justarrived! Turkish towels; B-9 Hooded parkas; work shirts; sail or bell bottoms; work six; Army ammobags; Aviator kit bags; Winter mackinaws; bush jackets; field jackets; Army blankets, Navy jackets;Pea-coats; GI Mummy down sleeping bags; Space age shoes; Tool parts box; Teeshirts; HBT Jackets;Nylon rope; Gas cans; French Alpine 100 per cent duck down sleeping bags; Nylon mountain tents; 3' 5' 10' Foot weather balloons Jungle first-aid kits; Army cargo packs; gas masks; Good canvas book bags; Cross country skis (limited in quantity) Mount Blanc backpacks complete with nylon pack (strong butlight-good for hikers). Global Imports and Surplus Sales, 2025 James Street (end of State due N o r t h -t u r n left) 734-91 20. PRO Plectum Banjo; 6 foot bass; Gibson Banjo-mandolin; Fender Guitar; BassGuitar; Phonos; Tape R e c o r d e r s ; Tools; Singers Typewriters. Frank's Pawnbrokers, 3304Alderwood, Phone 733-1077. Ski boots: size 6Vi womens. $30 Call Debbi at 734-5696 Reg. PERSIAN,heavy coated MANX in lovely colors. SlAMESE-terms. Nice crosses. $5 up. Call 734-5590. FISCHERglass skis; Maker bindings $75. Buckle boots SVi mens $30, TK Poles $5. Call 734-4443 or Ext. 3358.Motor cycle helmet $12 Ken at 733-9504 Call Size 10 female ski clothes: stretch pants, red, brown for$5. Dior vinyl suit $25. Pink engel outfit $20. Call 733-1526. Laminated, wood skis, womens size 7boots, solomon bindings for $35: Call 676-5637. Ski boots: Letrappcur buckle. Chicks size 8. Like new.734-6870 NEW laminated wood skis only worn once plus bindings and poles $30. Also size 7 womenslace boots $5. Call 733-8261 after 6 p.m. WHITACRE WHITACRE: student photographers.Professional pictures. Satisfaction guaranteed. Reasonable Rates. 733-9554 Evenings. Alder fire wood.$20 per cord. Cut, split and delivered. Call Gary at 676-3460. I I Cars and cycles 57 Ford $50 733-49461970 Mazda 4-door sedan. Must sell by Christmas. Joe Nusbaum. 592-3251 orext. 3180. 1970 Volvo low mileage like new. 384-1849. 1970 Maverick 3 speed small 6 good cond. 1800 734-3737. 1970 VW justback from Germany. Radio, heater etc. Like new except for price. Phone 734-4443 or ext. 3358. 1966VW convertible. Yellow. $1000. See Kathleen Emerick at 2565 Friday Creek Rd, South Lake Samish.FOR SALE: our much-loved beetle c a m p e r . 1966 VW-motor over-hauled last spring, double bed,table, spacious cabinets, gas heater. Very well cared for. $1800 Call 734-0279 after 5:30 p.m. ^ ^ ^ 2 f ^o r r e n ^ ^ ^^ UNFURNISHED 3 bedroom house 2 baths, water and garbage paid $130. 6 months lease.Available after Jan 15 call 676-3075 or 734-2807. ROOM for rent on farm $20 per qtr. or 190 room board 592-3100 after 5. HOUSING: call Dr. Buckley at 676-5111. 21 Room and board For winter quarter 311 Laurel Street 2-bedroom house own bedroom $60/month call 676-4350 or 734-1761 for details. Forsingle guy only. Free rm. and board in exchange for light housekeeping and babysitting. Private room.Mrs. Levin at 713-5194., Private room for man. $100 per month. Call 734-7664. 30 Roommate wantedDorm room needed for male Christian. Call Jim Bromley, 676-5904 or 480 Higginson via campus mail.SEX SEX SEX SEX SEX now that you're here look at our ad-ok. We. are selling for local artists ,craftsmen they make some nice things. Come see at 1305 State just off Holly. Fresh air headmades oh yes, posters now 20 per cent off. Room wanted. Prefer to live with hip people. Max $50/mon.Call Janet at 676-4283 MEN. One block from campus.i Kitchen. $120-$ 140 a quarter. 317! Cedar. 734-6987. ' SINGLE bedroom vacancy, in 5 girl apt. All utilities paid. 733-3453. FOURTH female roommateneeded for winter quarter. $145 per quarter, all utilities paid, close to campus. Call Adele or Christy at734-8030. GIRL to live in with morning classes only. Babysit three children during afternoons. Free roomand board plus babysitting pay. Call Mrs. Winans at 734-5647. 32 Wanted Anyone seeing car accidentThurs. at 3:00 in front of Bon Marche call Shawna 676-0425. ROB RANSOM: WRITE TO CALHOUN IJAZZ-ROCK Guitarist (teacher during summers) wants to form group with serious musicians. 676-5921Evenings. JOANNE: I love you. If I get my haircut can I come for Christmas? Love NEDDER. Wanted:Small outbuilding for degenerate hippy bum and dog. Rent must be low but am prepared to do repairs.See Rich at Toad Hall. Leave note on counter. ' ONE female roommate for new apt. Live with 3 girls. Call 733-4549. NEEDED live-in sitter to care for 2 children from Dec. 25-28. Call 733-6085. 4U ServicesStudents-Europe for Christmas Easter or Summer? Employment opportunities, economic flightdiscounts. Write for information ( a i r m a i l ) Anglo America Association. 60 Pyle Street, Newport I.W., England. OWN your business no investment no obligation no door to door selling 733-6132. 2012 A St.No. 7. LOW cost remodeling, framing or whatever in construction area. Call John at 384-3150. LocatedNorth end. ^ ^ 4 ^ l n s t r u c t j o n ^^ Frenchman will tutor all levels. 733-1526PCr h° U r ' d c p c n d i n 8 - Reasonable dress making, hemming and alternations. Call Kym at 734-9285. 528 North State, Apt B: ---------- Western Front - 1970 December 9 - Page 11 ---------- Wednesday, December 9, 1970 Western Front Sorbonne Summer. Session for American StudentsExtension universitaire de I'Universitaire de Paris COURSES OFFERED Professorial Staff fromI'Universite" de Paris: M. Georges MAT0R£, M. Antoine ADAM, I. Lower Division Courses 102Elementary French - emphasis on grammar, phonetics and conversation. 60 hours (prerequisite: 2 yearshigh school French or 1 semester college French.) .201 Intermediate French - grammar review withemphasis on conversation. 60 n o u rs (prerequisite: 1 year college French.) 202 Intermediate French-composition and syntax study. 30 hours (prerequisite: 201 or equivalent.) 212 Intermediate Phonetics -emphasis on pronunciation, reading and speaking. 30 hours (prerequisite: 102 or equivalent.) II. UpperDivision Courses 331 French Civilization - political, social and intellectual development up to the French Revolution, with emphasis on literature and art. 30 hours (prerequisite: 202 or equivalent.) 332 FrenchCivilization - political, social' and intellectual development from the French Revolution to the present,with special attention given to literature and art. (to be offered summer 1971.) 30 hours 412 AdvancedPhonetics - intensive practice in pronunciation, reading and speaking, to achieve a true command of thespoken language. 30 hours (prerequisite: 202 or equivalent.) 421 Survey of French Literature - advancedstudy of French literature from the Middle Ages to the French Revolution. 30 hours (prerequisite: 202 orequivalent.) 422 Survey of French Literature - advanced study of French literature from the FrenchRevolution to the present, (to be offered summer 1971.) 30 hours 433 Principles and Methods of "Explication de Textes " - advanced study of techniques and elements of literary expression in poetry,drama, and prose. 30 hours M. Maurice DUVERGER, Mme Cecile GOLDSCHEIDER, M. Jacques Vanden HEUVEL III. Graduate Courses (open to last semester seniors) 515 17th Century Literature - study of Baroque and Classical trends of 17th century. 30 hours 525 18th Century Literature - study of thewhirlpool of new ideas during the first half of the 18th century. 30 hours 535 19th Qentury Literature -study of French Idealism from Lamartine to Hugo. 30 hours 555 French Drama - indepth study of 2 or 3contemporary plays including ALL aspects of its nresentation and literary merit (decor, mise-en-scene,audience participation, etc.). 30 hours 565 French Art - study of the evolution and revolution in art fromthe Middle Ages to the 17th century. 30 nouw 566 French Art - study of the movements and schools of art from the 17th century to the present, (to be offered summer 1971.) 30 hours 585 French Stylistics andCreative Writing - study of structural and semantic elements and their application in literary expression.30 hours IV. Graduate Seminars 605 Baudelaire - les origines de la po6sie contemporaine. 30 hours 615 Flaubert devant la Critique - ses contemporains, la critique traditionnelle, la nouvelle critique. 30 hours655 La Notion d'Engagement - de 1918 a 1938, de 1939 a 1958, del 958 a 1970. NOTE: Special"Conferences" will be given, if the demand for them is sufficient. (Gallo-Roman Art, The RecentDiscoveries in Archaeology, The New Wave in French Cinema, French Politics since De Gaulle; Franceand the Common Market, The French Press, Education since May' 68, France and the Problems of BigBusiness, etc.). Therefore, students are asked to indicate their choice on the application form. 30 hours10 hours KEY TO COURSE NUMERATION Undergraduate Courses: The first number represents theacademic year (100 = Freshman, 200 Sophomore, etc.). The second number indicates the genera!subject-area treated ( 0 = Grammar S Composition, 1 Phonetics, 2 S 3 - Literature, Civilization, andrelated subjects). The third number represents the semester level. Graduate Courses The 500 and 600serie courses represent graduate level. The last two numbers designate the course title. CREDITREGULAR ATTENDANCE is a requisite for obtaining credit. Although the purpose of this summer session is to fulfill the requirements of American college and university credits, it also conforms to Frenchuniversity regulations. Each 30 hours course is usually equal to 2 American credits. If studentssuccessfully complete the average summer session load of 90 hours, they normally receive 6 Americancollege credits. However, students are a d v |sed to consult with, their professors, their DepartmentChairman, their own school's Registrar s Office, BEFORE MAKING FINAL ARRANGEMENTS, toascertain the EXACT number of credits their school grants for the Sorbonne Summer Session. -SORBONNE SUMMER SESSION for American Students A special Summer Session is offered by the "Cours de Civilisation Francaise " at the Sorbonne for those students who wish to improve their knowledgeof French language, literature, and civilization. This program is particularly designed with Americanacademic needs in mind, as it can meet the standard semester requirements of most universities andcolleges. Thus American students can derive the double benefit of foreign travel and college credits.Similar to American summer sessions, the Sorbonne Summer Session lasts six weeks, June 29 toAugust 7. " A round trip flight from New York to Paris by Air France will be scheduled to leave New YorkJune 28 and return from Paris August 8. Students on this program will enjoy the privacy of a luxuriousapartment plus two meals a day. All university fees, a round trip ticket, apartment and meals will costonly $ 1638. APPLICATION FORM Please type or print all information. Last name (Mr., Mrs., Miss) . . .- First name Date of birth Permanent address Academic standing as of Sept 1970: Freshman,Sophomore, Junior, Senior, Graduate University or college last attented University or college address Ifdifferent than the above, address of university or college to which Sorbonne transcript should be sentDate and type of diplomas earned (or to be earned) as of June 30,1970. Major Minor Teaching experience (indicate level, subjects taught, number of years): RESERVATIONS MUST BE RECEIVED BEFOREJAN. 20, 1971. *^ gt;r Pre-Enrollment and Reservations, please air mail special delivery the followingitems to Dir. M. Ward Mcintosh/ASTRA, Summer Session for American Students, Cours de CivilisationFrancaise, Sorbonne, 47, rue das Ecoles, Paris 5 , Prance: 1. this application form. 2. a 65 dollar deposit (by International postal money order). 3. a transcript or transcripts of college or university work. 4. asmall recent photograph. Name and address of persons to be contacted in case of emergency: Coursesselected: (please check) 102 • 301 • 515 • 201 • 302 • 525 • 202 • 331 • 535 Q212 D 412 • 555 • 421 D 565 • 433 • 585 • Choice (or choices) of special " ConferencesWill you be taking the final examinations for credit? 605 • 615 D 655 D ---------- Western Front - 1970 December 9 - Page 12 ---------- 12 Western Front Wednesday, December 9, 1970 Interview With Agnew Associated Collegiate Press(Ed. Note: Michael Bates, editor of the Wichita State University Sunflower, held this interview with VicePresident Spiro T. Agnew during the latter's visit to Wichita, Kan-, for a GOP benefit banquet.) Bates:What I'd basically like to center around since we have such a short time, is more or less your thoughtsabout college and college kids today. In other words, after your many trips throughout the United States, and after speaking to thousands of people, what is your concept of the typical American universitystudent? Agnew: I don't think there's such a thing as a typical American university student and toofrequently we're asked to reach a conclusion that there is. The people who ask for a composite university student raise the question that one is potentially in existence. The same for the people in thecommunications media who love their generalizations of the young, the Black and the poor, but oursociety is so varied, so infinitely complex that is unrealistic to expect that a bunch of young peoplecoming from different backgrounds, coming from different areas and centering in a university, wouldimmediately assume a homogeneous quality that they would all think alike. Now there is a tendency, inthat circumstance, to develop a peer opinion. I agree with that, but I think that if you go around thecollege campuses you will find the great variety of opinion among students. I don't question the fact that principally, because of the impact of the liberal thinkers who, for the most part, dominate the faculties inthe universities, that there is very little of the philosophies of the people such as me. There hasn't beenenough chance for me to communicate in depth with college students on my belief about the principlesof the country, which is one reason why I welcome this interview with you-and there is almost the imagethat anyone representing the conservative establishment as a class, contained rather cold, calculatingperson is hard to overcome. So, basically, returning to your question, I don't think we should evercharacterize the students on campuses as being represented by one opinion. Bates; Let me ask youone direct question. I'm sure you are familiar with President Nixon's speech at Kansas State Universityand that there were a few hecklers that were, as you said, in the minority. There's been some questionas to whether these hecklers should be prosecuted for that heckling and for calling out. How do you feelabout that? Do you think that is an answer to it? Agnew: I don't think that's the answer. I think thatanswer is the discipline that comes out of the college campus itself. After all, what they have done morethan break the kind of law that is generally punished publicly, is to betray just outrageous bad manners.And they are part of a community where good manners and reasoned thought are supposed todominate. If they are unable to adjust to that community, then it seems to me that the collegeadministrators should impose their own discipline. I don't think outside laws should affect this. It's moreof a body of ethics that should develop around an academic institution to take care of-that would bemuch more effective, I think, than the laws. Bates: If you find yourself as a university student today, what do you think, aside from your studying, your activities would center on? In other words, would you be instudent politics, ecology or what? Agnew: I just don't know how to answer that because my politicalactivities emerged rather late in my life and during my college years, I was much more interested in theconventional pursuits of the day-fraternity activities, athletics and the things that young people did inthose days. There wasn't this overpowering sense of social consciousness that exists at the presenttime. There was more of an interest in students separating into groups that were brought about by theiraspirations for the future, rather than their concern for contemporary problems. In short, the engineeringstudents stuck together, the liberal arts students did, and everyone was sort of interested in how to getahead in his chosen course of action. Bates: Do you think that the sort of protective world of government leaders is a hindrance to college problems? In other words, if they had access to the machinery ofgovernment, more, could talk with people, say like I'm talking to you, do you think it would be a help?Agnew: It would—and yet, I think there is a lot more of it that goes on that we give credit for. We haveintern programs in the White House-White House interns. I had an intern program when I was governor(of Maryland) that I setup to bring students in during the summer months to work in the departments ofgovernment. We had legislative interns and White House fellows and rpograms of that sort. And we haveas much communications as is feasible. Now, students must be aware that, as elected officials, wehave to represent a constituency in which the student population of this country is less than 10 per cent. We must be just as available to these other groups as we are to students. They should have equalaccess to us, but certainly not superior access. And this is a time problem of government. We have todo our jobs too. One of the ways I think communication would be improved would be if this fashionablething on the campus about not allowing people to be heard when they are invited to come and speakwould just disappear, because it really. is the most anti-intellectual facade that's ever been erected in an intellectual community. If I go to a college campus, and I want to give a speech and they won't let metalk or be heard, how am I ever going to get my point across? It is recently that this has started. It'sbeing done by a very small minority of the students. Hopefully, the other students will get tired of it andby their repudiation of it, it will come to an end. Weisfield's has credit for students of promisepreterit'i/us coupon To Receive a Special Discount Present this coupon and your student card for your20% discount on any diamond wedding set. 20% Off on any Diamond Wedding Set 1327 CornwallGETAWAY by Greyhound Go Greyhound on GETAWAY weekends, holidays, semester-breaks, oranytime. Take your belongings, too. You can check up to 150 pounds free with your bus ticket. Andremember you can ship packages anytime by Greyhound Package Express at low rates Next time youGETAWAY—Go Greyhound. TO ONE-WAY TO ONE-WAY Everett Seattle Tacoma Portland 2.153.00 4.15 7.50 Olympia Ellensburg Spokane Yakima 5.20 7.40 12.65 8.85 Buses leave from 1329State St. Phone 733-5251 GO GrEyhOUnd—andlEavethEdjUrfngtoiis
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- 1970_0210 ---------- Western Front - 1970 February 10 - Page 1 ---------- the western front Vol. LXII no. 22 Western Washington State College Bellingham, Washington 98225Tuesday, February 10, 1970 10c Students demand say in renewals Mike Go wry low editor-in-chief TheBoard of Trustees, surrounded by
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1970_0210 ---------- Western Front - 1970 February 10 - Page 1 ---------- the western front Vol. LXII no. 22 Western Washington State College Bellingham, Washington 98225Tuesday, February 10, 1970 10c
Show more1970_0210 ---------- Western Front - 1970 February 10 - Page 1 ---------- the western front Vol. LXII no. 22 Western Washington State College Bellingham, Washington 98225Tuesday, February 10, 1970 10c Students demand say in renewals Mike Go wry low editor-in-chief TheBoard of Trustees, surrounded by a roomful of students, formed a committee last week to determinewhat role students will play in faculty contract renewals. The move was in response to an unscheduledhour-and-a-half long discussion between students and the Trustees at their regular monthly meeting. AS President Greg Baker, who led the group of more than 150 students into the room, demanded that theTrustees give students "equal" power in faculty hiring and firing matters, r a t h e r than relying ondepartmental recommendations alone. The college's termination of Dr. William Heid, associateprofessor of psychology, was a specific issue in the students' argument for their right to have a say inthis area. Heid will not be retained after the 1970-71 school year. Several petitions containing severalhundred names called for the retention of Heid. Baker went beyond the Heid case in demanding votingpowers, using Heid's case an an example of what has been occurring on the campus in recent years. He charged that "young, creative and provocative teachers are disappearing from the ranks." The studentswished to know, at least in principle, if the Board of Trustee members believed that students should have a hand in determining who teach them. The Trustees declined to comment without first consulting thefaculty, they said. The students repeatedly requested individual opinions from the board members.Trustee Ben Hodges said that he "believed in student involvement," yet was not prepared to makespecific decisions without further consideration. The discussion appeared at a stalemate whenAcademic Dean R. D. Brown suggested that the More than 150 students crowded into College Hall 131to hear the Board of Trustees' decision regarding the students' role in determining faculty contractrenewals. students ask President Flora to form a commission to look into the matter. Students strongly declined such a move. Baker AS committee uncovers facts about bookstore Bob Burnett assistant tothe editor The AS legislature bookstore committee uncovered many revealing facts concerning the co-op bookstore on campus in a recent confrontation with Ray T. Knabe, bookstore manager. Over the lastthree years, approximately $60,000 from bookstore profits have been "stashed away" in a building fund,Knabe told the committee. $35,000 was put in the fund last year alone. Wally Sigmar, AS legislator and chairman of the committee to investigate alleged exorbitant prices, overstocking and mismanagement,asked why students had to pay a premium for books so that the profit might go toward a new bookstore which "few of today's students will ever have an opportunity to use." Knabe gave no direct answer. Hesaid that the original cost of the bookstore was being paid off more rapidly than had been anticipated. Itis paid by a $2 per student bond. "The retailing of books is not the store's most profitable area. Booksmake a narrow 20 per cent profit, at the most, while other merchandise makes as much as a 35 per cent profit, or more," he said. Sixty-five per cent of the store's sales are in books and 35 per cent is generalmerchandise. Items such as sports equipment, sweatshirts, mugs, gifts and greeting cards sell best,turning over about three times each year. Record albums sell slower, having a once-a-year turn over.Asked why there was such a large inventory on books if there was such a narrow profit, Knabe replied:"We buy whatever the faculty tells us to buy. "We try to meet the faculty and coordinate their requests,but this doesn't always work out." (continued on page 2.) stated that working with the administrationwas infeasible. Baker demanded action "from the top" to circumvent administrative intransigence. TheTrustees decided to form a committee composed of three students, three faculty members, and threeTrustees. In addition, three administration officials would sit as ex officio members, without voting rights. Baker was "not willing to accept that proposal" but the Trustees passed the motion despite hisprotests. He objected -photo by shoblom t o any administrative representation in the matter, believingthat they were not responsive to student requests. The Board will meet March 12 to consider theproblem and the committee should be meeting soon to develop a proposal for the Board. Boardmembers in the committee are Ben Hodges, who will act as chairman, Harold Philbrick, and Mrs.Ritajean Butter worth. The faculty representatives will be selected by the Faculty Council and thestudents by Baker. Heid issue sparks all-college forum Humanities gets departmental status The Board of Trustees last week gave the humanities program departmental status. Humanities director Dr.Roland DeLorme predicts that the change 'will give the department new opportunities for solving some ofthe teaching drawbacks of the current program. Dr. DeLorme is chairman of a special personnelrecruitment committee that will formulate new criteria for the department and recruit faculty. "We hopeto cut the size of classes, going from large lecture classes to discussion classes and perhaps a fewindependent study courses," DeLorme said. He stressed that faculty to be recruited for the program willbe selected primarily as teachers, not as scholars. A person prepared for intra-disciplinary instruction is desirable over one who has specialized knowledge in a specific area. DeLorme has already receivedmore than 40 applications for the new department from faculty members currently with the program aswell as from institutions throughout the nation. "We have more students to service than any otherdepartment on campus, it is worthwhile to have a first rate general education department." Withdepartmental status we can get good instructors, who know that they will get promotions because theyteach well. DeLorme stressed that he did not mean to belittle the present program, but that due to thefact that no promotion or tenure was possible through the humanities program itself, teachers receivelittle benefit from their efforts, no matter how good they are. This causes some resentment amongfaculty members. "We currently have some dedicated and talented faculty members in the program,"DeLorme said. "The additional funding we will receive will allow us to make general education atWestern the best part of the institutional offering." How much status and power do students possess inthe college community? This question will be the topic addressed.at an all-college forum which will beheld at 3 p.m. Thursday in the VU lounge. Speakers will include Bernard Weiner, coordinator of theNorthwest Free University; Greg Baker, AS president; George H a r t w e l l , a c t i v i t i escommissioner and Dr. William Heid, assistant professor of psychology. The major issue to bediscussed will be how much influence students have in the hiring of faculty and in the retention ofuntenured faculty. The forum has grown out of the controversy over Heid, whose contract has not beenrenewed for the 1971-72 school year. The forum is being sponsored by the Moratorium Committee andAssociated Students. All students and faculty are invited to attend the forum. Trustees limit enrollment:move termed 'necessary' An enrollment limit of 9,570 students for next Fall was set by Western's Boardof Trustees last week. This was the first time that Western has ever set enrollment limits. The 9,570figure used is the state funding figure arrived at for next year. This means that the coUege has funds forup to that figure. Any additional students will increase expenses, and the additional costs will have to be absorbed by the college. The college is currently r e q u e s t i n g $3.5 million additional funding for the 1969-71 biennium at the special legislative session in Olympia. The budget pinch has been felt thisyear since enrollment funding for 1969-70 was 7,750, but actual enrollment is currently 8,365. Western's President Charles J. Flora termed the move necessary to insure the continuance of a high standard ofeducation at this institution. ---------- Western Front - 1970 February 10 - Page 2 ---------- 2 Western Front Tuesday, February 10, 1970 Bookstore facts revealed (continued from page 1.) Knabesaid that surveys asking students, "What do you want in your bookstore?" have been inconclusive. Hefeels that the bookstore board is an adequate representation of the student's needs. The bookstoreboard is made up of three students and three faculty. The board reviews the prices set up by themanager. Knabe said that some publishers will not accept return of books that are not sold. Othersallow only a 10 per cent refund. Still others offer a full refund. But in no case will a publisher acceptunsold books after 120 days. "Why couldn't storage problems be alleviated by stocking fewer varietiesof merchandise?" Sigmar queried. "They probably could," Knabe responded, "but then we wouldn't begiving every student what he wanted." Legislator Ron Roberge asked if Knabe had ever received gifts,merchandise or other gratuities for purchasing a certain quantity of merchandise from a particularcompany. Knabe responded with an emphatic, "No!" Sigmar suggested one method of cutting down thebookstore overhead would be to use student patrolmen rather than the Bellingham Police (who charge$4 per hour) as guards during the beginning of the quarter and use non-uniformed s t u d e n t patrolmenas floorwalkers to cut down on pilferage. "The presence of an armed guard is necessary during thebeginning of each quarter when a great deal of money is on hand," Knabe said. As for pilferage andstudent patrolmen as floorwalkers: "A student wouldn't stop a fellow student. There was a $6,000 or$7,000 loss from pilferage last year." Roberge asked if there were jobs held in the bookstore by non-students that might just as adequately be handled by students. ' ' N o . We need the non-student, full-time employes for continuity's sake," Knabe said. "Our labor costs are lower than the average amongcollege bookstores." Winter legislative convention to discuss campus 'gut' items Two fencers take astab at the sport. The fencing club meets from 7-8 p.m. every Thursday in gym C. -photo by go wry lowReligion Symposium set for Feb. 17-18 Many "gut" issues will be discussed at the Winter ASConvention to be held Feb. 18 and 19, according to John Engstrom, elections board chairman.Engstrom cited growing student unrest on Western's campus and the need to cope with relevant issuesby non-violent means as two of the big reasons for holding the convention. "There have been numerouscomplaints that important decisions concerning the entire student body are made by only a handful ofrepresentatives," Engstrom said. "This is the first time we've ever held a convention of this type duringWinter quarter. We are holding it so students will be able to have a direct involvement in currentimportant issues." A Seattle television station has been filming some of the non-violent methods used by Western to solve its problems, he said. "If every student is assiduous and takes an active role, or atleast airs his gripes with his respective delegation during the convention, Western will be on the road tosetting an example to all college campuses by solving its problems without violent protests. "The mainpurpose of the convention is to nominate candidates for the AS legislature general election (scheduledfor Feb. 26) but it will also be an opportunity to put issues such as the bookstore, discriminatoryadmissions practices, the Heid controversy, the parking crises, hitchhiking and tenure in the open." The Winter Convention will be held from 6 p.m. to midnight Feb. 18 and 19 in the VU lounge. Tenants Union lawsuit goes to court tomorrow ( orange blossom \^ J diumomd ring* W e s t e r n ' s HousingCommission and Tenants Union will be taking their largest case to Whatcom County Superior Courttomorrow. Serge Slagle, representing the AS Legal Aids Department, will act as plaintiff for eightWestern girls. The girls are sueing Charles Day, vice president of Evergreen Incorporated, and his firmfor $900 and court costs. The case involves many of the problems that students have been facing intenant-landlord relations, Slagle said. priced from $260.00 To the girl who knows what she wants but not where to find it. Match your style with our many distinctive designs, and ask us about our famousOrange Blossom guarantee. "If I were asked to state the great objective which Church and State areboth demanding for the sake of every man and woman and child in this country, I would say that thatgreat objective is 'a more abundant life'." Franklin D. Roosevelt i , gt; Can religion offer a solution toman's problems? "Religion and the Future of Man," a symposium jointly sponsored by the ActivitiesCommission and the Campus Christian Ministry, will deal with the religious future of man. Thesymposium, scheduled for next Tuesday and Wednesday, Feb. 17 and 18, in the VU lounge, will feature Dr. Alan Watts, president of the Society for Comparative Philosophy; Michael Murphy, president of theEsalen Institute and Dr. Keith Bridston, professor of systematic theology at Pacific Lutheran Theological Seminary. Lectures by the three speakers and discussion groups will comprise the two-day event,which is scheduled to run from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. both days. Watts will give a special lecture entitled"Experiment in Meditation" at 7:30 p.m. next Tuesday in the VU lounge. Specific scheduling of lecturetime will be left up to the speakers themselves, Activities Commissioner George Hartwell emphasized."We're trying to leave the schedule as flexible as possible," he said. Anyone interested in joining adiscussion group should sign up at the VU desk beginning today. "Students who sign up for thesymposium should plan to stay with their discussion groups both days," Hartwell said. Watts, a formerresearch fellow of Harvard University, specializes in the interpretation of Eastern thought to the West,particularly of Zen Buddhism. Watts was born in England in 1915 and received his early education atKing's School in Canterbury. He holds an honorary doctorate of divinity from the University of Vermontand a master's degree from Seabury-Western Theological Seminary in Illinois. A prolific writer, Wattswrote his first book, The Spirit of Zen, when he was 20. His other works include The Book: On theTaboo Against Knowing Who You Are and The Two Hands of God. Bridston, who received his doctoratein divinity from the New College of Edinburgh University in 1949, has had extensive administrative andeducational experience. Bridston was former executive director of the Lilly Endowment Inc. Study ofPre-Seminary Education, 1961-63, and served as lecturer at the University of Nigeria, Nsukka, during the summer of 1965. Roosevelt Dime Milton E. Terry Jeweler 1326 Cornwall 733-2030 MONEY TALKSAnd its tone is persuasive with an NBofC spel l cial checking account. A great way to organize qf yourbudget. . . have money when you need it. ^ Learn how convenient it is—and how effective — to haveyour own personal checking account! NBC NATIONAL BANK OF COMMERCE for the SweetheartsBall Valentines' Day floral arrangements, corsages, wristlets, nosegays we deliver to dorms SAYLOVE YOU ^SWEETLY 733-7630 IV Wilson Florist 1426 Cornwall ---------- Western Front - 1970 February 10 - Page 3 ---------- Tuesday, February 10, 1970 Western Front 3 TODAY- 8 p.m.: Dance concert, Doc Humbead's NewTranquility String Band, VU lounge. TOMORROW- 3 p.m.: Jim Touve, "The Grape Strike," VU lounge.THURSDAY, FEB. 12- Noon: Dr. Maurice Dube, "Christianity and Science," VU 10. Sponsored by THEWAY. 1 p.m.: Student recital, music auditorium. 7 p.m.: College Life, VU 363. FRIDAY, FEB. 13- 3p.m.: U. of Washington Arab Student Union panel, "The Arab-Israeli Question," VU lounge. 3 p.m.:Swimming, Western vs. U. of Puget Sound, there. 7 and 9:15 p.m.: Underground films, Relativity, MatchGirl and E.P.I. L-4. 8 p.m.: Basketball, Western vs. Eastern, Carver gym. 9 p.m.: OCIC Folk Festival,VU lounge. SATURDAY, FEB. 14- 1 p.m.: Swimming, Western vs. U. of British Columbia, Carver pool.1:30 p.m.: Wrestling, Western vs. Central, Carver gym. 8 p.m.: Basketball, Western vs. Eastern, Carvergym. 9 p.m.: AWS Sweetheart's Ball, VU lounge. 9 p JH.: Mama Sunday's, coffee den. MONDAY, FEB. 16- Last day to drop classes and change from pass/fail. Valentine for Nixon heads week's MoratoriumCommittee's activities Two sculptures by George Segal are on display through Feb. 21 in the art gallery,art building. The materials composing the pieces are plaster, rope, metal and wood. These works portrayhuman beings in opposing situations of life and death. The public is invited to attend the exhibit. —photoby shoblom Vietnam Moratorium activities this week will center a r o u n d an a n t i - w ar " V a l e n t in e - f o r - N i x o n " campaign. The drive will collect signatures on a giant Valentine shaped letter,urging total US withdrawal from Vietnam and an end to the support of the Thieu-Ky military clique inSaigon, according to Curt Rowell, Moratorium Committee organizer. The CIA will be recruiting oncampus tomorrow and a booth will be set up inside the placement office, next to the CIA booth. TheMoratorium booth will urge "recruitment for The Movement." All students opposed to the war-machinerepresented by the CIA, and who support anti-imperialist and anti-racist aims, are urged to come talk tothe "recruiter," Rowell said. There will also be a gathering at noon tomorrow outside the Edens Hallplacement office, which promises another series of skits by the "Nippie Guerrilla Theater," music andother surprises. A short film, Mark of a Man, will be shown at 12:30 p.m. Thursday in the VU lounge.The film, distributed by Newsreel, deals with GI's rapping about the anti-war effort within the military.Speakers from the Shelter Half Coffee House in Tacoma will talk following the film. The Shelter Half isbeing harassed by the Army at Ft. Lewis because it caters to anti-war GI's, presents speakers, showsfilms, etc., Bo we 11 explained. A series of speakers, including Dr. William Heid, will address thequestion of how to better protect untenured faculty members at a forum to be held at 3 pjn. Thursday inthe VU lounge. (See story page 1.) The Moratorium Committee is also making long-range plans for awar-tax refusal program and a mass demonstration outside the Bellingham Office of the Internal Revenue Service on April 15. A final planning meeting for this week's anti-war Moratorium activities will be at3:30 p.m. today in VU 8. The meeting is open to interested persons. Monday deadline to drop classeswithout failures Next Monday is the deadline to drop classes without failures, Louis T. Lallas, assistantregistrar, announced last week. It is also the deadline to change from pass/fail to letter grades. Failureto properly withdraw from a class by next Monday will result in a failing grade, Lallas said. Properwithdrawal includes returning the admit to class card to the registrar's office in Old Main 113. PistonService, Bellingham Auto Parts Headquarters welcomes Western students Featuring Brand Name AutoParts at low cost prices Complete machine shop service open 7 days a week: Monday thru Friday 8 to9 Sat. 8 - 6 Sunday 10-5 1824 Cornwall Ave. — across from Discount City Apartment bid gets trustees acceptance Housing '71 appears on its way as the Board of Trustees have accepted a bid for$2,853,000 to build the 404-student apartment building. The bid represents extensive redesigning of thecomplex to reduce costs. Previously known as Housing '70, construction had to be delayed becausethe lowest bid was $850,000 over available funds. Wick Construction Co. made a low bid of $2,918,000.The bid was lowered an additional $ 6 5 , 0 0 0 through the substitution of asbestos shingles instead ofcopper and resilient flooring instead of wood parquet. Some underground utility trenches were alsoeliminated as part of the cost-shaving efforts. The trenches were designed for future expansion and maybe added at a later date. Bond marketing was authorized by the Trustees for the 532-bed housingcomplex along College Parkway and the Housing '71 project. 108 E. Magnolia • airs AMERA SHOPEverything for the Darkroom Enthusiast DURST KINDERMAN KODAK Complete line of books,chemicals and papers For your convenience Shop from your car Use our DRIVE-IN WINDOW Turn onMagnolia into alley 108 E. Magnolia BARRS CAMERA SHOP "We are Specialists" ---------- Western Front - 1970 February 10 - Page 4 ---------- 4 Western Front Tuesday, February 10, 1970 19-year-olds deserve the vote The decision of whether our19-year-olds should be allowed to vote will be in the hands of 21-year-olds this November. #The StateLegislature approved putting the constitutional amendment proposal before the people last week. TheLegislature has done its part in passing a proposal that was squelched during the regular legislativesession last year. Now the people must respond. The great silent majority of Washington must beeducated in the rights of our young adults to have a say in matters that concern them. Often it is theyoung that are affected most since they must face the draft and fight a war that was essentially begunby their older counterparts. Also, the young may in some cases have more knowledge in importantissues since most are more in the educational framework and have less reluctance to change when itseems necessary. As they say, with age comes conservatism. The status quo is always the easiestroute and until situations become acute enough, some members of our society will not care to make any changes. We seem to be a crisis-oriented society. It is easy to put off the warnings of others until thecries become so overt that ignoring them is no longer possible. When a plan of action is finally decided upon, it is usually almost too late. The problems of pollution and its close relative overpopulation, areacute problems and must be acted upon now. We hope that the voters of Washington will have theforesight to realize that 19-year-olds are responsible and can contribute to the betterment of thiscountry— not destroy it. —Mike Gowrylow Abortion battle just beginning The special legislativesession in Olympia deserves a hand for being so productive. In addition to approving the presentation ofthe 19-year-old vote constitutional emend-ment, and the passage of environmental bills, they approved areferendum for abortion liberalization. However, the toughest battle lies ahead, and that is convincingJohn Q. Public that abortion reform is the right of women. A strong reason for abortion reform is thatmany women have and will continue to, get abortions anyway. But not from qualified doctors for the mostpart. They are usually forced into the hands of mid-wives and quacks, often charging exorbitant prices. The price is often their life. The poor are also discriminated against under the present 1909 abortion law.With money, a woman may fly to Sweden, Puerto Rico or several other countries to have an abortionlegally. The poor may not find the money so easily. We hope that the voters will realize the fundamentalright of women to decide whether they wish to bear a child or not. With the passage of this bill, a greatstep towards equality and democracy will have been made. —Mike Gowrylow The signs, they are achangin' We would like to thank those persons responsible for changing the "Wes . . . ashi . . . Code . .. ome of the . . . ings" sign at the foot of Indian Street into a "Western Washington College Home of theVikings" sign. We talk of improving our environmental quality and beautifying our campus. Passingthat sign each day for the last four months has made us cringe. We wonder, however, if that sign,whether all the letters are lighted or not, is really beneficial. Couldn't we find something a little moreartful? And what are we selling on campus that we have to advertise with neon lights? Education?! -BobBurnett thewestern front Official weekly newspaper of Western Washington State College Bellingham,Wash. 98225 phone 734-8800 editorial, ext. 2277 second class postage paid at advertising, ext. 2276Mike Gowrylow editor-in-chief Bob Taylor sports editor Adele Saltzman managing editor Jim Austinexchange editor Bob Burnett assistant to the editor John Stolpe copy editor Maryjo Hardy ad manager Bill Woodland business manager Jill Stephenson assistant copy editor R. E. Stannard Jr. advisorReporters: Mary Berling, Ted Bestor, Jim Bromley, Don DeMarco, Jim Diedrick, Barbara Dinner, MikeErickson, Forrest Goldade, Morrene Head, Jackie Lawson, Jay Long, Paul Madison, Mary Peebles,Margaret Thornton, Lyn Watts. Cartoonist: Mike Erickson Head Photographer: Dan ShoblomPhotographers: Mike Arnold, Jerry King. Ad salesman: Steve Stubbe, Ron Jones., George Walter.Graphics: John Driscoll Deadlines: 5 p.m. Tuesday-display ad reservations 4 p.m. Thursday-news copy,letters to the editor, classified ads, display ad copy. Represented by NEAS, 360 Lexington Ave., NewYork, N.Y. 10017 Price per copy, 10 cents Subscription, $3.50 a year, $1.50 a quarter. Member: U.S.Student Press Association, College Press Service, Associated College Press and Intercollegiate PressService. Mudflats 'beautiful' John Miles contributor Mudflats are beautiful! Don't you agree? Look at all ofthat brown, gleaming mud, sculpted neatly into contours. Throw in a collection of muddy tree stumps two feet high and canted at various angles and you have a recreation paradise. Bound by the structures ofcity life you dream of your next trip to this aquatic paradise, the Middle Fork Dam on the SnoqualmieRiver. Don't hurry up there today for a look. You have lots of time. Actually the dam isn't built yet. In fact,construction hasn't even begun. If you go up there now all you will find will be an accessible area of riverand semi-wilderness with water flowing freely and clearly in the river channel and no mud anywhere. At the moment it is no place for a mud lover—but there's hope. The Army Corps of Engineers, thegovernment's beaver corps, proposes to build a $51 million dam up there now and another $54 milliondam by the year 2000. Floods, they say, must be controlled. People living on the flood plain of theSnoqualmie will get wet, washed away, unless something is done. The people of Seattle need a nice lakeon which to play. Folks are raising some questions about this major corps proposal. Why, they say,should we destroy a heavily used, easily accessible natural environment to save damage to property on amuch less heavily used area downstream? A dam upstream will only increase the building on thefloodplain. It won't greatly reduce major floods. Thus we pay much money, create an ugly mudflat in anow beautiful environment, increase development pressures on the floodplain and expose thereby morepeople to the really damaging major flood that comes very occasionally. Recreation, argue the beavers,will be a primary benefit from damming the Middle Fork. Those of us not inclined to admire muddycontours disagree. We've seen many such "recreation" areas before. They are fine for speedboats andeven swimming for four months of the year. Then drawdown comes and the mess is exposed. On top ofthat, in this instance, the recreation planning agencies in the Seattle area see no demand or need formore flat water presently or in the future. The flowing river is recreationally more valuable. Still, theultimate question is that of design. When are we humans going to learn to design our civilization withnature rather than in opposition to it? Really, Mr. Beaver, a floodplain is a floodplain. Right?? Disposableera dawns Mike Gowrylow editor-in-chief An era has passed. During a spending spree at a localsupermarket the other day, I noticed an ominous gt;sign next to the cash register. It read something like this: "After December such-and-such, deposit bottles will no longer be redeemed." Apparently, the eraof the good ole refillable bottle is coming to a close. No longer may one return to the store with mountains of empty beer bottles; no longer will kids search along roads and abandoned garages for empty bottlesto return to the store. Deprived of working for a living, these youngsters have been reduced to a welfare-like existence, subsisting only on what meager allowance their parents afford to them. Plainly, the candybar business will take a nosedive. Not that it has been sudden. Over the last several years the non-returnable bottle has crept into existence, at first regarded as an optional luxury, then later as a lesstroublesome alternative to bothering with empties cluttering the back porch. Now it appears that the ---------- Western Front - 1970 February 10 - Page 5 ---------- Tuesday, February 10, 1970 Western Front Observer thanks volunteer trash collectors V f ^KJCSOKJCS-Q. Editor: Between 4 and 4:15 p.m. last Tuesday afternoon four students, dressed in their hippie-like attire—pink pants, fur coats, rim glasses—caught my attention as they ambled about the fountainin Red Square. You might guess what they were up to! But depending on your bias, again you might not. With cold hands and some effort, the four were picking the d e b r i s out of the fountain—paper,styrofoam and even one of the large concrete trash receptacles which had been submerged. Saystrustees inadequate in policy decisions Editor: During the student-trustee confrontation last Thursday Iwas amazed at the trustees' claim that they had no opinion concerning student rights in collegedecision-making. Either they really had no opinion, or they were reluctant to express it for fear it woulddiffer from faculty or administration opinion. In either case, the trustees have shown their inadequacy incollege policy decisions. The trustees are (and should be) essentially concerned with l e g a l and m o ne t a ry considerations, not with policy decisions. Yet they have ultimate authority in policy decisionswhether they exercise this power or not. Social and academic policy at this college is no concern of the state politicians (who appoint the trustees); rather it is the concern of those who are most affected: thestudents and faculty. T h e r e f o r e , legal and monetary matters should be handled by the trustees,while academic and social matters should be handled by the people who are directly involved. Westernis ready to be a functionally autonomous college. Policy decisions should be made of, for and by thecollege community, not by an elite board that meets here once a month. If we are going to preachdemocracy, let's practice it, and college is the best place to start. Greg Boyd junior psychologyEychaner says 'immaturity' causes rivalry Editor: I was very interested in the comments made by TedBestor in the Jan. 27 Western Front concerning the friction between the so-called "freaks and jocks" o fF a i r h a v e n and Ridgeway/Highland. Being a transfer student from Fairhaven to Western andHighland Hall, I think it almost amusing to find that college students can still muster the petty rivalriesthat earmarked our high schools. I must agree with Mr. Bestor in that the main cause of this friction is a misunderstanding between the rivals, but I want to go a step further. Liberators to recruit help Editor:On Wednesday, Feb. 11, in conjunction with the National Liberation Front and other third worldstruggles, the American Liberation" Movement will recruit anarchists, street-fighting men, orators,revolutionary fugitives, escape artists, magicians, popcorn vendors, chemists, con-men, bank robbers,carnivores, fire-eaters, members of the Justice-League, Mouseke teers, plumbers, drunkards, prophets,tugboat captains, steeplejacks, nippies and other desperate subversives. AMERICAN YOUTH, WEMUST UNITE TO SURVIVE. Lend us your talents. Interviews will be conducted all day, Wednesday atthe Edens Hall placement center; bring a friend, your dog, some wine and dope, and the latest bull. Curt Rowell American Liberation Movement (ALM) The stereotypes of the Fairhaven . freak and theRidgeway/Highland jock are present, but they are not the r u l e . This friction and misunderstanding canonly be the result of gross immaturity on behalf of a few individuals who are unwilling to examine theproblem (if there is a problem?) or their own actions. Students of Fairhaven and Western, as well as anyother institute of higher learning, are referred to by the administration as men and women. It nowappears that a few boys and girls have infiltrated onto campus. Jim Eychaner freshman general ed.RINGS HAND CRAFTED in Silver or Gold . . . precious or semi-precious stones set . . . individualfittings, now at 217 GALLERY L_. Have You Heard? WE ARE NOT JUST A BRIDAL SHOPPE!Besides having the largest selection of wedding gowns and veils you will find the loveliest selection of:• COCKTAIL DRESSES from s19.95 • FORMAL GOWNS from '24.95 ielle fecW m formal 734-1213 306 W. Champion To those who were spurred into action, while I among others watched, go muchthanks. The example they were setting is much n e e d e d at all social-environmental levels. Perhapsthis note will inform those who would make our square a trash heap that indeed others care enough toclean up after you—just one piece of paper from each of 8,000 students and 350 faculty creates quite a mess. Thanks again. What have you done for Western today? Anonymous Objects to living in garbage Editor: This letter is to all of you students who have the disgusting habit of throwing your candywrappers, cigarette butts, sticks, rocks and various other forms of rubbish into and around Fischerfountain. You can be seen everyday down by the fountain dropping pieces of paper here and throwingdown candy wrappers there. You do this even though the waste receptacles are close at hand. So highis your disregard for the waste receptacles that one of you actually threw one into the fountain. Feb. 3,the fountain was drained and the terrible amount of residue was exposed. It made me sick just to look at it. You seem to have no regard for other people's rights, and you don't seem to realize the fact thatother people might not like living in your garbage. If your behavior is indicative of your attitudes, I suggest that you grow up and learn to face the responsibility of living in a society. Ted Gegoux sophomorechemistry [Church Sunday SeWlCeS 11 a.m. — Lutheran 4 p.m. — Episcopal THURSDAY 6:30p.m. — Catholic CCM House BURGER FAMILY FISH-CHICKEN Viking Special: PapaBurger FriesRoot Beer 96c Free gal. of grape with this ad as coupon We Deliver 733-1512 310 N. Samish WayCTr gt; DINO'S PIZZA 111 E. Magnolia 734-9365 where the College Bus stops Half-Price SpecialTuesday, Feb. 10 and Wednesday, Feb. 11 Visit DINO'S remodeled place with its wonderfulatmosphere and enjoy "the best pizza people have ever had," for half-price by presenting the coupon.COUPON DINO'S PIZZA Half-Price Special Tuesday-Feb. 10th Wednesday-Feb. 11th Cash Value1/20 of 1 cent ANY PIZZA price Vi Limit One Per Person ---------- Western Front - 1970 February 10 - Page 6 ---------- Western Front Tuesday, February 10, 1970 Computer names Board members Members for theIntermediate All-Student Judiciary Board have been chosen from 24 applicants, according to Dean ofWomen Mary Robinson. The board members and their class standings are: Allison A n d r e s , senior;Gary Frederickson, graduate; Rocky Champagne, senior; Ross D. Briggs, junior; Leslie May, senior;Jolyon Raymond, junior; Donald Ream, sophomore; and Terry Simon, sophomore. Alternates includeClaudia Higbee Partlow, junior; Lorin Rice, sophomore; and Patricia Van derlip, junior. The selectioncommittee an lt;l their status includes Janis Crosby, randomly selected; Kathryn Cooper, randomlyselected; Linda Bridges AWS president; Greg Baker, AS president;Steve Deisingjnter-hall Council;William "Tobey" Gelder, randomly selected; Frank T r a n t e r , AS legislature; Maurice LaBelle, board's faculty advisor; and C.W. McDonald, dean of students. The three randomly chosen students on theselection committee were named by a computer. According to Dean Robinson this method of selectionwas to allow objective student viewpoint. The committee will meet for orientation at 4 p.m. tomorrow inMcDonald's office, Old Main 217. /Music educators to present concert Members of Chapter 265, MusicEducators' National Conference (MENC) at Western, will present a concert at 3 p.m. Sunday in L-4. The program will include ensembles, soloists and various other styles of music. Tickets for the concert may be purchased at the VU desk, from MENC members or at the door. All proceeds will be used to helpsend a representative from Western to the organization's convention in Chicago next month. ValentineCanbp Carte Candy - 8 9 $ t o S10.50 Hallmark Cards SPECIAL! S2.50 Coty Spray ColognesEmeraude L'Origan L'Aimant . free gift wrapping AUBERT I i DRUG CO. PRESCRIPTION SPECIALISTS Bellingham National Bank Building Cornwall and Holly 734-4340 Valentines Special 20% OFF on allSweat Shirts id Jackets HO STOMX MORS CONVENIENT mi W^iWi ; ^ : ? l « ^ ^ « * ^ ....... ... ™, —photo by shoblom CIA comes to Bellingham Jim Hutchinson contributor Ladies and gentlemen,February 11 you will have a rare chance to see, actually see, a little piece of the CIA machinery right onour campus. As we all know, The CIA is one of the greatest of American institutions. They keep ourcountry free of communism, fascism, and other euphemisms for tyranny. Our Gross National Product also smiles benignly on the CIA. Citizens of Bellingham and members of the campus community shouldappreciate this opportunity, for it is seldom that one, be it the press or the president, can pinpoint thewhereabouts of any of this organization's members. Let me review some of the exploits that the CIAleaders, whoever they are, have graciously made public. My being a loyal American citizen and thereforehaving a slightly defective memory, I flash with some difficulty on the CIA's fine job in Guatemala in 1954.There our brave non-citizens aided high-minded patriots in overthrowing a "communist" named Arbenz.The fact that he had been democratically elected became worthless after he proposed his land reformprogram. After all, the United Fruit Company (UFC), a worthy benefactor of the free world (?), ownedsome of the land this maniac was going to redistribute. The plan was definitely non-free enterprise. Thematter was no doubt important to the US since a sumptuous amount of money is earned (?) by thiscompany; and the CIA director at the time, Allan Dulles, was in tune with the UFC's troubles, having beenpast president of the company. The operation was a CIA success. After this notable success, the USwas so grateful that Dulles' successor, General W.B. Smith, was made a vice-president of the UnitedFruit Company one year later. Or if that is not proof enough of our high idealism, let us speak fondly ofthe dignified attempts our boys made to assist those Cubans in regaining their country from thecommunists. At the time our government wisely withheld from the public, to ease our consciences nodoubt, any information about our fine efforts. " The proud truth is that our own CIA recruited, armed andorganized the uprising of these noble Cubans. It makes my eyes misty with patriotism to think that mytaxes helped finance that worthy effort. Four brave Americans even gave their lives to help reinstateCuba's free government. My words, however, are sloppy with emotion. I will let John Ferassi speak for mefrom his book, The Great Fear. "Obviously, the CIA's only goal was that after Castro's fall, Cuba bereturned to it's Batista conditions-totally dependent on the U.S. and 80 percent owned by The U.S. TheCuban invasion tactics were masterminded by Richard Bissell.... Moscoso (then head of the Alliance forProgress) appointed Bissell as his aide-to study how the Alliance funds should be spent." I am chokedwith gratitude for these freedom fighters. Less our protectors more recent actions go unpraised,Nallow me to relate one more heroic activity. Australian correspondent Wilfred Burchett reports that,"The CIA hasstored an arsenel of botulism toxin-tipped bullets for the Operation Phoenix assassins." Even Newsweekcredits Operation Phoenix with "neutralizing" more than 20,000 communist agents through intimidation,torture, and outright murder. My heart swells. Surely Joe McCarthy rests easy in his grave. Could you get enthusiastic about selling the most salable product in the world? The product is ideas. The 2600 menwho sell ideas for us are excited about what they're doing. We know that because they're successful atit. And many of them are recent college graduates. In fact, our preference is for young college graduateswho get a kick out of being self-starters. Bull sessions aside, college students spend at least four yearsbeing independent thinkers in the world of ideas. As a member of the Moore sales team, you'd still bepretty much on your own, with responsibility that grows as you grow. Your job would involve you with An equal opportunity employer communication problems. People problems. Problems in business logistics. You'd be looking for ways to make information more intelligible to more people. To make it impossible for carelessness to destroy efficiency. Challenging? You bet it is. Come and iook us over. Demandspecifics. Weigh us as hard as we'll be weighing you. We might turn out to be your kind of people. Oneof our Moore men wilj be on campus .... February 20 and April 17 ... See your Placement Director for thetime and place. MOORE BUSINESS Over 675 offices and plants, 2618 salesmen in North AmericaFORMS, MMC . , . . ^ . . . ^ , . . , v , - . . . l ^ . ^ l - ---------- Western Front - 1970 February 10 - Page 7 ---------- Tuesday, February 10, 1970 Western Front 7 death of a peace-lover Bert randRussell, 1872-1970 JohnStolpe copy editor . . . / want to stand at the rim of the world and peer into the darkness below, andsee a little more than others have seen .. : I want to bring back into the world of men some little bit ofnew wisdom . . . —Bertrand Russell, in a letter from Brixton Prison, 1918. Who was this man whomanaged to bring his many bits of new wisdom into the troubled worlds of his 97 long years on thisplanet? Perhaps no one will ever know precisely what drove this unquestionably remarkable man tobecome an accomplished mathematician, Nobel Prize-winning author, philosopher, professor, peace-lover, or the "passionate skeptic" as envisioned by biographer Alan Wood. His political activities included campaigns for nuclear disarmament, intervention in the Cuban Missile Crisis, staunch opposition to the Vietnam war, and even criticism of the Warren commission Report. Russell's everyday vocabularyincluded 'love and peace' decades before they became associated with the current reform generation.Even his most vehement critics could not mask their awe over his life's accomplishments, and hisseveral biographers were no match for Russell himself, who completed three autobiographies, the mostrecent published a few months ago. Biographer Alan Wood compared Russell to the inn-keeper inBernard Shaw's play who was told by Napoleon, "You will never be hanged. There is no satisfaction inhanging a man who does not object to i t ." Now that Bertrand Russell is gone, we can anticipate theerection of the scaffoldings of belittlement which followed- the death of octogenarian Winston Churchill. But he would not object. Deadline close for financial aid Financial aid is not automatically continuedfrom quarter to quarter, the financial aids office announced last week. A student receiving aid must gothrough the financial aids office each quarter if he wishes to continue receiving it. Unless a student whois r e c e i v i n g financial aid preregisters, his financial aid will not be available until a week after Springquarter has begun. The financial aids office wishes to remind students that now is the time to apply forfinancial aid and information is available at Old Main 103. Socialist leader to speak Bill Purdue, nationalcommittee coordinator of the Young Socialists Alliance, will speak to students at 1 p.m. Friday in theVU lounge. Purdue has been active at the University of Washington in support of the Palestinian Arabcause, according to a UW Arab Students Union (ASU) news release. He will join with members of theASU to discuss the Palestine issue. DENNY'S RESTAURANT open 24 hours every day • FreeParking • Orders To Go • Breakfast Anytime • Luncheon Specials • Dinner Specials 3600Byron — on the Freeway cc KBFW RADIO Best Country In The World " GIFT CHECK BOOK 930 On Your Dial Offers OVER $100 In Merchandise, Services And Entertainment For Only $14.95 THIS MAYBE YOUR LUCKY DAY When the KBFW RADIO telephone operator calls you, you will be entitled to buy your KBFW RADIO GIFT CHECK BOOK worth over $100.00 for only $14.95. X is Your radio check book has many th made possible by KBFW RADIO and over ings for everyone in your family and 45progressive merchants. AAA Vacuum Appliance Rep New Montgomery Ward Auto Service CenterGordon's Auto Parts Kirby Company of Bellingham Inc. Northwest Liquidators 20th Century BowlingKentucky Fried Chicken Garden Street Dairy Drive Big Daddy Drive In Maurice's Beauty StudioMaurice's Hair Fashions air In Tilley's Tee (Golf Driving Range) Diehl Motor Co. Yeager's MoonlightDrive In Walton Bottling Co/ Betty Brite Cleaners Bellingham Beauty School Forbidden Inn ChickenDelight Harbor House Shrimp Shack Pay-N-Save Cascade Aircraft Inc. Whatcom Auto Foothills Smart Set Larry Elaine's Hypnosis Studio AtoZ Rental George Henderson YMCA Health Service WatkinsProducts Bunk's Drive In Bob's Drive In Fred's A W Drive In Morrie's Drive In Bel-Lyn Par 3 GolfCourse Barr's Camera Jansen Firestone Bellingham YMCA Advance Office Equipment Debord PaintCenter MacMorgan's Hallmark Merle Norman Cosmetic Studio I.V.Wilson FloristMr. Steak Taco TimeSornberger's Freezer Telecable of Bellingham Whatcom Radiator ---------- Western Front - 1970 February 10 - Page 8 ---------- 8 Western Front Tuesday, February 10, 1970 Colleje Press S«rvir» ©1970 SftWVEfl PRESS fluRIGHTS RESERVED F^OBB Nasser wanted intervention during Arab-Israeli war Egypt was not prepared for a war with Israel in June 1967, Dr. William L. Cleveland, assistant professor of history at SimonFraser University, told members of Phi Alpha Theta history honorary here last week. "The six-day warwas brought about by circumstances beyond Egyptian President Gamal Abdel Nasser's control,"Cleveland said. Syria, a neighboring Arab state, made repeated attacks on Israel during 1966 and early 1967 using Jordan as a base of operations, the professor related. "Israel's retaliation was aimed atJordan and the Jordanians put pressure on Egypt to take action," he added. "Nasser had to dosomething to maintain his position as leader VALENTINE CARDS Featuring The BIGGEST CARD INTHE WORLD Comes In Giant Envelope Also RUSSELL STOVER VALENTINE CHOCOLATESUNUSUAL GIFTS MacMorgan's Hallmark Bellingham Mall • *.*:ti, f i ' i u lt;v. of the Arab world.Each move he made in May 1967 was a calculated gamble." He was hoping that the United Nationsand the United S t a t e s would intervene, Cleveland noted. - ' Nasser first demanded that the UnitedNations withdraw troops from the Sinai Peninsula, then he closed the Gulf of Aqaba to Israeli shipping.The Israeli's considered the gulf international water and denied that Egypt had the right to close it, hesaid. The Egyptians claimed that the gulf was Egyptian. Cleveland attributed the quick Israeli victory totwo factors: 1. Israel was technologically more advanced than the Arab states, and 2. The Arabs weredivided themselves. "The Arabs have accustomed themselves to think in terms of Islam rather thanpolitical governments," Cleveland said. Cleveland has travelled throughout the Middle East and teachesMiddle East history at the Burnaby, B.C. campus. He was in Egypt during the 1967 war. ^ ^ Find the ^^ right gift for your Vakntine at Schaeffer Jewelers flgt-UlNfrHflM HOTEL. gUPfr. Proposed High Streetblock Betty Gulledge, Joe McConkey student legislators student welfare committee Western man'sdream of power through conception has finally made its mark on Western Washington State College, andthe average student, because he is either blind or apathetic, cannot view the problem asimmediate—something that he must fight here as well as within the society. One of the many problemsdue to over-population that the student faces at this college is the parking dilemma. The college feels (inlieu of 15,000 students on this campus) it necessary to plan for 3,000 more parking spaces within thecampus area, maintaining rapid mobility for the students to and from on-campus activities. The presentargument of the student as to why he does not want to buy a parking sticker enabling him to park oncampus is that they cost too damn much! Surely $18 a quarter ($54 per year) is asking a little bit morethan the average student is financially willing and able to pay; and the funny thing about it is that many ofthe parking spaces around campus are empty because of this fee. What is even funnier is the fact thatthe spaces will remain empty, and after the school builds 3,000 more spaces, quite a large portion ofthose spaces will remain empty because, obviously, the parking sticker cost will have to rise due to thecost for the additional spaces. The present proposed plan of the college is that of 1,300 ramp-typeparking spaces on campus (costing approximately $3,250,000), the remainder of the spaces (3,200) willbe permanent-type parking spaces costing $260 per stall (approximately $832,000). The total cost of this atrocity being approximately $4,082,000! Several proposals have been put forth, one of which is that of a trolley system running not only on campus, but off as well. The argument against such a system is that,being controlled by the city, it would cost an unreasonable sum (as if four million dollars is not) of moneyto operate. If such a trolley system were college-operated, using student employees, the fee for thissystem would be considerably lower. Another proposal put forth, and by far the most ecologicallyfeasible, is that of the elimination of all cars from campus. The thought of 5,000 land-usurping,environment-polluting cars on this campus is sickening. Our contribution to air pollution resulting from the exhaust of these cars would give Georgia Pacific stiff competition. The second proposal calls for placingthe 4,500 parking spaces on level ground—temporary or permanent-type. (Temporary costing $75 perstall; permanent costing $260 per stall, in comparison to the $2,500 per stall ramp-type parking.) Thesespaces would be placed near the physical plant which is near Sehome High School. Either the proposedtrolley system or a bus could transport students to and from the plant up to the campus. With the carsoff campus, there would be additional room for building development and the beautification of the area,instead of building-to-building pavement for parking spaces. It would only seem reasonable that, sinceWestern is a state school and has "no control over its growth," that the student can at least maintaincontrol over his environment. The following bill will be proposed to the AS legislature today: We, thestudent welfare committee, AS legislature, feeling that the problem of parking both on and off this campus is immediate and critical, therefore propose that all members join in demonstration to dramatize thisproblem by the blocking off of High Street with parked student vehicles for one hour on Thursday, Feb.12, from noon to 1 p.m. If this bill is not passed, the demonstration will still occur. Students who do notwish to participate are urged to take alternate routes. We cannot remain apathetic to issues concerningourselves! Student participation is needed! The student on this campus must realize that the over-populated college problem which faces him is at its minimum. With 15,000 students on this campus, notonly parking will be critical, but registration, student activities, library facilities and many othereducational privileges that a small college provides, in comparison to over populated colleges. The time to act is now, not next year or the next! The population problem is now and we have to decide now whetherwe want to be technological paraplegics or to control our environment so that it will be pleasing to live in."People are recognizing that we cannot forever continue to multiply and subdue the earth without losingour standard of life and the natural beauty that must be part of it . . . these are the years ofdecision—the decision of men to stay the flood of man." Art Chaney Combo to play at AWS ball The Art Chaney Combo will provide music for Saturday night's Sweetheart Ball. Colors chosen for the event arepink and white, and the theme is "Cherish." Tickets for the 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. formal dance can beobtained at the VU desk. ---------- Western Front - 1970 February 10 - Page 9 ---------- Tuesday, February 10, 1970 Western Front 9 HTHE OIL \N THE WATEfc SuRe H£U?5 S AMDC4STLES ST/\y TOCreTMeft BETTEG." History win cash Phi Alpha Theta will award a total of $100 foressays of historical significance, Gary Cruzan, secretary-treasurer of the club, announced last week.The deadline for submissions is March 20. The contest is open to all undergraduate and graduatestudents, he said. "However, the essay must deal with some aspect of history." Essays will beaccepted on Canadian, American, European and East Asian history. Cash awards will be given for thethree best essays, Cruzan said. can awards The amounts of the prizes are $50 for first place, $30 forsecond place and $20 for third place. The essays will be judged by Dr. Edward Kaplan, lecturer inhistory; Dr. James Hitchman, associate professor of history, and Dr. Harry Ritter, lecturer in history. ' 'A n y a s p e c t of history —economic, social, political or military—may be treated," Cruzan said. Allessays should be limited to 15 typewritten pages. The awards will be made from the proceeds of theclub's book sale held last month. Essays may be turned into Cruzan in Humanities 280. Aquaculture:all wet job Vernon Lane from the Lummi Indian tribal council will speak on Lummi Island aquaculturetoday at 4 p.m. in VU 354. Aquaculture is the Lummi's method of raising and harvesting fish. Lane willalso discuss the Lummi's fishing rights on the Nooksack river. He will address the EnvironmentalQuality Council. The meeting is open to the public. GRAND OPENING SPECIAL BETTY BR/TE I HR.CLEANERS 7 Day Offer 2 pants or 2 straight skirts cleaned, 19 cents each Castro mobilizes militaryto help with sugar harvest Betty Bn'te I Hr. Cleaners 1314 State St 734-9670 Prime Minister Fidel Castro has mobilized the officers and men of the Revolutionary Armed Forces to participate in Cuba's 10 -million -ton sugar harvest. Castro told the military that they have been mobilized for the sugar harvest"as they would have in the case of war," according to Gramma, the official organ of the CommunistParty of Cuba. Castro claimed that representatives from South and North Vietnam would be helping tocut cane this season since the harvest has been dedicated in tribute to Lenin, whose c e n t e n n i a l is being commemorated this year. Gramma also said that Castro e m p h a s i z e d that the mobilization of the armed forces would not leave the nation undefended. "There will always be sufficient forcesavailable in case of any attempt at aggression," Castro was quoted as saying. The prime minister andfirst secretary of the Cuban "Sometimes the revolution has to fight important battles by taking upweapons, and sometimes it has to fight other, also very important, battles." In addition to the armedforces, school children and white collar workers in the populated areas will be trucked to the cane fieldsto help harvest the cane crop, considered to be Cuba's most important economic asset. CommunistParty explained that Western faced with population explosion The US is already in "very serioustrouble" in regards to population, Dr. Charles Ross, geology professor, said last week. "We are facedwith a population explosion on campus which relates to the whole problem," Ross added. Ross, who ishead of the Bellingham Planned Parenthood Association, spoke last Thursday night in the RidgewayKappa lounge following To Plan Your Family, an educational film on birth control. Dr. MargretheKingsley, physician at the student health center, spoke Wednesday night after the film on the medicalaspects of birth control. Ross, discussing recent Two-thirds of the nation's population between the agesof 18 and 21 will be attending college by 1980, according to Howard R. Bowen, professor of economicsat the Claremont Graduate Schools. warnings on the use of the pill, said that women who use it havecheck-ups every six months or year, which would detect any danger before it was too late. MexicoColegio Victoria, Guadalajara, announces its 1970 summer session. Room, Board, Tuition, Fees,$250. Transportation for groups of 50-$ 125 R.T. Also actively seeking representatives. Duties includepromotion, student recruitment, publicity and advisement. Full or part time. Excellent earnings andfringe benefits. No gimmicks. Call 988-4333 or write: Director Colegio Victoria, Box 1327, Bellingham, Wash. 98225. A W S p r e s e n t s S a t u r d a y , F e b . 14 9 p . m . - 1 a m V U L o u n g e A R TC H A R N E Y C O M BO S 2 . " 7 5 a c o u p le ---------- Western Front - 1970 February 10 - Page 10 ---------- 10 Western Front Tuesday, February 10, 1970 TV: ' Now let me make this perfectly clear' MichaelErickson staff reporter The following is an abstract view of the future: "Now let me make this perfectlyclear," said a lathered face beaming from the television, "that I take it off, all off with Noxzema shavecream" Thereafter a jowly five o'clock shadow is scraped off on national TV. So you switch to anotherchannel, and take another sip from your beer as a tall Texan strides in from the range. "Yes, mah fellowAmericans, ah feed all mah beagles Kal Kan dog food." His eyes narrow, with overwhelming humility andsincerity he continues, "Why just look at those healthy ears. . ." As you stuff more pretzels in yourmouth George Murphy and little Shirley Temple dance their way into your heart in another innocuous latemovie. How much of a beating can your heart take? Once again you decide it's time to change channels, and once again you squirm out of your easy chair and meander down that time worn path between thechair and your TV. Bending over, you're suddenly face to face with an emotional little man holding up apair of tennis shoes, " . . . for all you pussy footin' liberal folks out there . . ." His southern accent fadeswith the picture, you've had enough of TV for tonight. Weary of the tube you pick up a magazine. Leafingthrough, you spot another of the now numerous Spiroburger ads. A hulking man with a double chinglowers from a full-page ad and chortles, "The big burger for the big man with the big mouth and a bigappetite to match!" The ad boasts of over two hundred franchised Spiroburger drive-ins coast to coast.On another page you see an ad for a cologne, "Try Old Muskie for that dashing New England appeal."Then you might start wondering why they call it Old Muskie since it just came out. But if you're going tostart worrying about things like that you might wonder why a Harlem congressman is promoting vacationtours to a small Caribbean Island. You might even start wondering why so many familiar faces are turning up in commercials and promoting franchised outlets from sports coats to compost fertilizers. Money.Fast money. Children all across the nation have been inspired. They have wild visions of making a namefor themselves, and in the true capitalist spirit, cashing in on it. You might also wonder how far back thisall goes. If you do, then you might remember that day when Joe Namath stood before a Senatecommittee investigating the franchising industry and told them he wasn't one of those celebrities whouses his name "trying to make a fast buck." Perhaps, after the committee had adjourned, a senatormight have gone home, paused before a mirror and contemplated his own popularity. \# gt;-VALENTINE'S DAY % % GIVE BEAUTIFUL by Wilson Florist Orders taken at the Co-op Representedon Campus by your Student Co-op Placement director says rumors false Rumors condemning thecampus placement office for maintaining confidential student files and for charging graduates for unusedservices are only partly true. Frank Punches, education placement director, told the Western Front thatdepartmental faculty recommendations were the only confidential reports included in personal files forprospective employers. "It is absolutely false that personal reports from residence directors anddisciplinary board hearings are part of our files," Punches said. Students are asked to obtain free faculty recommendations from their major department. If the faculty member chooses to show the evaluation tothe student, it is his decision. ' ' I f the f a c u l ty recommendation is sent directly to us, we respect the c o n f i d e n t i a l i t y of the evaluation," Punches noted. Two other forms, a personal informationpage and an unofficial academic record, are filled out by the graduating student and are not confidential. Punches charged that a rumor claiming that half of a senior's $8 graduation fee was used for placementservices, regardless of whether or not they are needed, was also false. "The registrar's office collectsthe entire $8 graduation fee, of which only $2 is used for placement services," he said. Punchesadmitted that the college collects the $2 placement fee regardless of if it will be used or not. In ThisAnalytical World There are still a few things left that are unquantified. Love, for example, is hard tocalculate. And the value of the diamond you choose together can be computed only in terms of yourfuture. 300.00 weisfields JEWELERS 1326 Cornwall Ave. 733-2030 ---------- Western Front - 1970 February 10 - Page 11 ---------- Tuesday, February 10, 1970 Western Front 11 ACE, NSA propose end of IIS deferments W A S HINGTON-(CPS)-The American Council on Education (ACE) has joined National Student Assocation(NSA) President Charles Palmer in calling for an end to II-S student Young Republicans discuss grapeissue Jim Toevs, president of the Washington Young Republican Federation, will speak on the Delanostrike issue at 3 p.m. tomorrow in the VU lounge. Toevs will supplement his talk with slides of thecontroversial Delano area, and answer questions about the grape boycott issues. The Western YoungRepublican Club reaffirmed its opposition to the grape boycott s t r i k e led by Cesar Chavez last week,according to member Diana Rassmussen. Panelists to discuss BOQ today in L-2 The Book of theQuarter panel meets at 7:30 p.m. today in L-2. Panelists will include Dr. Edwin A. Pritchett, aBellingham physician; Dr. Sandra S. Smiley, a s s i s t a n t professor of psychology; Richard T. Bishop, education lecturer; Dr. Richard H. Lindsay, professor of physics, and moderator W.H.O. Scott,circulation librarian. The discussion is open to the public. 1 Day Shirt Service COMPLETE LAUNDRYAND DRY CLEANING Free Pickup Delivery 734-4200 205 PROSPECT J \ Classified Advertising \ , r 20 FOR RENT Share Vi bedroom in large house 5 other girls, 2 bath. $35 includes util-ities. 733-1893. 30 ROOMMATE WANTED Female roommate wanted now. 1020 High "A" Barb $45. 2roommates wanted for summer quarter. Also two for month of August. Contact Barry at 617 N. Forest orcall 734-0370. 41 INSTRUCTION Guitar lessons: Blues-Folk-Rock taught in home, call 734-0104.selective service deferments. ACE said it once supported student deferments as being necessary for the national welfare, but now, under the lottery, "The available pool of draft eligible men is so large ascompared to the numbers likely to be called into service that a t e r m i n a t i o n of student defermentscannot affect the regular flow of highly educated manpower." Also at issue, according to ACE, is thequestion of equity. In order to make the draft more equitable, the government must "expose all youngmen of a given age to exactly the same probability of induction," it said. It recommended that thosecurrently enrolled in college be allowed to graduate. Palmer favors a voluntary army but has taken theposition that if the draft is to continue, it would be fairer to eliminate student deferments because theyfavor affluent youth able to afford college over poor Black and Chicano youth. Hearings on the draft arescheduled to begin this month in the Senate Armed Services Committee. Secretary of Defense MelvinLaird has already said the Nixon administration will press for an end to student deferments thislegislative session. If you don't like the way people talk to each other, we'll pay you to change it. We'rein the communications business. And during the next 30 years we're going to upgrade all the equipment we now have in order to provide even better service to our 6 million existing customers. As if that weren't enough we're also going to have to come up with enough new equipment to provide telephone service toabout 26 million more people. As well as equipment for a much more extensive data communicationsprogram. We need enough people (electrical, civil, mechanical and industrial engineers, designers,accountants and economists) to plan, design, build and operate a company that will be four times biggerthan we are today. We also need engineers, researchers and scientists to develop electronic switchingequipment, laser and other communications systems we'll be using 10, 25 and 50 years from now. Butthis is only one part of our communications business. Our Sylvania people, for example, are involved inother types of communications. Like color television sets, satellite tracking stations and educationaltelevision systems. Automatic Electric, Lenkurt, Ultronic Systems and some of our other companies,subsidiaries and divisions are working on advanced types of integrated circuitry, electro-opticals andcommunications systems between people and computers and between computers and computers. Soif you think you have something to say about the way people talk to each other... we're ready to listen.General Telephone Electronics Equal Opportunity Employer Sylvania Electric Products • LenkurtElectric • Automatic Electric • Telephone Companies in 34 States • General Telephone DirectoryCompany • General Telephone Electronics Laboratories General Telephone ElectronicsInternational • GT E Data Services • GT E Communications ---------- Western Front - 1970 February 10 - Page 12 ---------- 12 Western Front Tuesday, February 10, 1970 Festival to provide 'do your own thing' The Folk Festival,which starts at 7 p.m. Friday in the VU lounge, will provide a "get up and do your own thing"opportunity. Scheduled events will include all types of music, skits, poetry and prose readings andpossibly a fencing display. There will also be many unscheduled events, Pete White, president of Off-Campus Interhouse Council which is sponsoring the festival, said. "We welcome audience participation. In fact, that is the whole idea. If someone wants to sing, or play the guitar or read a poem, he just getsup and does it," White said. A huge graffiti mural, made from newsprint donated by the BellinghamHerald, will also be on display as part of the festival. The casual, multi-media jamboree is an effort toassault the audience from every conceivable angle and to spur it into becoming part of the show, Whitesaid. Art exhibit now on display The Fine Arts Festival art exhibit now showing in the VU art gallerycontains student art work of all kinds—would you ^believe a drum case as sculpture? The Fine ArtsCommittee of the Activities Commission, in an effort to give recognition to talented student artists, issponsoring the event. Most of the work was turned in during the last few weeks and judging took placelast week. Wilfred Vosti earned the $75 first-place award. John Francis took the $50 second-placeaward, and Karl Sedt won the $25 third-place award. The two $10 honorable mention awards wereclaimed by John M. Smith and Ron Bourke. Films to be shown tonight Three films of the undergroundwill be shown at 7 and 9; 15 p.m. Friday in L-4. Relativity, by Ed Emshmiller, A Typewriters and Adding Machines Sale:;, Service and Rentals Specof Student Rental Rates BELLINGHAM USINESSMACHINES (Next to Bon March*) 1410 Commercial 734-3630 J will initiate the evening while AndrewMeyer's Match Girl will be the second picture on the screen. The third film to be shown will be E.P.I, byAndy Warhol. All three films are in color and are co-sponsored by the department of continuing studiesand student activities commission. Audiences have been screaming over the mystery-thriller Wait UntilDark written by Frederick Knott and directed by Lorri boothe, graduate in speech. Lara Nation (right) andCheryl Bredy have leading roles in the play which goes into its second week of performances Thursday.Reservations at the Guild Playhouse, 733-1811. -photo by gowrylow 1970 Stage Band Festival refreshing, artists superb Forrest Goldade staff reporter The big band sound of the 1970 Stage Band Festivalexplored elements of jazz last Wednesday night. From the traditional ballad Bill Baily Come Home toalto sax solos reminiscent of Handy and Mulligan, the old and the new in Complete Menu Service Pizza Broasted Chicken Hamburgers Prawns Alasfcii iwcrn i x : 209 W. Holly T$2°S§STEAR * * * • ** * • * * * . * * ¥ • + • * + . ¥ * * + * * . * * * * * + * + * * * * * * * * * " m \^ Broasted potatoand toast TONIGHT e gt;o CTLJIUBSU^ NEW TRANQUILITY STRIN r 1 ! O mm * * * * * * * * ** * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * ** jazz were handled with refreshingsophistication. The Central Stage Band performed good back-up for the trumpet work of their directorRobert Pannerio. They delved into elements of the cut and run style in a student written piece titledWinter Break. Some outstanding jazz was presented by the UW Lab Band directed by William Cole.Especially noteworthy were the performances of Charles Keagle on alto sax and Alan Dorsey, trombone. Keagle handled alto with professional elan as he got into rhythmic expressions similar to Coltrane. Hewas just as adept when it called for harmonic interweavings, as he and the entire group jammed theirway through Sweet Georgia Bright a composition written by a freshman in the band. Not to beoverlooked was the very good presentation of the Western Stage Band, under the baton of Phil Ager.Rick Clark on percussion and Frank Bliven on guitar are to be lauded for several good solos. The entireband was very up tempo and fine. They were especially good in performances of Indian Lady andStretched Out Funk. The latter song was written by Bill Bliven one of the saxophonists. On the whole,the evening was replete with examples of excellent jamming. The Festival was presented by the musicdepartment as part of the just-concluded Fine Arts Festival. Math 481 changed for Spring quarter Math481, for mathematics in grades 1 through 8, has been rescheduled for Spring quarter. The 9 a.m. section has been changed to 10 a.m. Monday through Thursday. The 2 p.m. section has been cancelled.STUDENTS ilQHp. STORE SW SO STORE MORE CON VENIENT I I ON THE MEZZANINE NineChains to the Moon by Fuller Education Automation by Fuller How to Think Creatively by HutchinsonSierra Club Calendars Whole Earth Catalog New Left Reader Air War Vietnam Consumer ReportsRolling Stone NEW HARDBACKS ARE ON SALE plus some critical books in paper-back ---------- Western Front - 1970 February 10 - Page 13 ---------- Tuesday, February 10, 1970 Western Front 13^ Caderette defies odds Paul Madison staff reporter IfViking guard Ron Caderette did not have a rather long and easily distinguished name, people probablywouldn't know he was a varsity player, much less a starter. Such is the case of one of Western's leastrecognized, yet most valuable ballplayers. To date the 6-2 senior, from Coos Bay, Oregon has a 4.3game scoring average and a 1.4 rebounding average. Both figures are far from awe-striking and evenmore astounding is the fact that he has shot only five foul shots all season long. So what keepsCaderette in the starting lineup? The most important reason is his defense. Caderette usually checksone of the opponents' better ballplayers, most often a forward who is several inches taller. In oneinstance this season he checked a 6-9 center. On defense Caderette holds his man down not only inscoring, but in rebounding as well. Coach Chuck Randall has termed him the finest man he has ever had at "blocking out," not letting his man get past him for a rebound. Offensively Caderette adds that not so easily acquired quality of poise. He scores when he's open and seldom loses the ball. He also is anexcellent passer. These qualities make Caderette more important than statistics can reveal. Hisleadership on the court will be sorely missed next year. Western tank team hosts UBC Wrestling has its ups and downs,as one Vik matman finds out again from his Cal Poly opponent. The Viks, who lost 40-0to Cal Poly, found out why Cal Poly is one of the wrestling powers in the nation. -photo by shoblom Vikmatmen pinned with double loss Western's swim team will take part in a three-way meet in Tacoma thisFriday before hosting the University of British Columbia (UBC) on Saturday. On Friday, Western swimsagainst tough University of Puget Sound (UPS) and Pacific Lutheran University (PLU). UPS has a strong freestyle swimmer in Steve Lougee who has broken several Logger swimming records this season.Also swimming for the Loggers is Ron Payne who is a strong swimmer in the breaststroke event.Leading PLU is Randy Senn, a strong freestyle swimmer. Western's wrestlers were downed twice lastweek, losing to powerful Cal Poly of San Luis Obispo, 40-0 and then getting edged by Seattle PacificCollege (SPC), 22-18 on Friday. Against Cal Poly, the Viks lost every match but at the same time theywere facing one of the toughest teams in the country. Cal Poly had two national champions, Terry Hall(118) and John Finch (152) wrestling for them and Rick Arnold (167) who was a national runnerup lastseason. Against SPC, the Viks gave the Falcons a much tougher time than when the teams met twoweeks ago at Western. SPC's star wrestler, Ken Hagen extended his unbeaten streak to nine as hedecisioned Mike Compton, 19-1. Summary: 118-Lee Allen decisioned Ron Kuhnhausen (W), 15-1;Dennis Moore (W) won by forfeit; Steve Swan (W) won by forfeit; 142-Ken Jackson decisioned DennisDaniels (W), 16-0; 150-Bob Lute pinned Terry Beckstead (W); 158-Drake Lemm decisioned DennisBauer (W), 11-2; 167-Bill Hunt (W) decisioned Jim Moule, 15-7; 177-Hagen decisioned Compton (W);190-Phil Lundberg pinned Jeff Michaelson (W); and heavyweight-Terry Jarboe (W) won by forfeit. ThisSaturday, Western hosts defending conference champ Central at 1:30 p.m. The Wildcats, who weretough to beat last year, are strong again this year. Four junior college transfers bolster the Wildcat matsquad: Kenichi Kano (118); Terry Dawson (167), a national community college champion in 1969; GaryStevenson (177); and Ed Harris (190). Also returning is Evco champion Craig Skeesick (134) andrunner-up Ray Blondin (167). Aardvark loves bookworms Alan Watts is coming to J Western. Prepareyourself for discussion—read one of his books: Beat Zen, Square Zen and Zen, The Book, orPsychotherapy East and West. We also have a good supply of Tom Wolfe's The Electric Kool- Aid AcidTest. Come to Aardvark for The Whole Earth Catalog and seven different titles by Herman Hesse.Richard Brautigan's Trout Fishing in America; The Pill Versus the Spring Hill Mining Disaster; and InWatermelon Sugar are all waiting for your inspection at the Aardvark. THREE DOORS SOUTH OFSHAKEY'S ON N. STATE ST. Open week nights till 9 p.m. AARDVARK Books Arts SAMISH WAYSHELL Across from Valu-Mart Free pick-up and delivery if needed ONE WEEK SPECIAL no casing,mounting charge or excise tax involved highway recaps (any size) $37.30 wide oval $28.00 snow tires$28.00 These tires are in sets of two Call 734-5144 for more information Open 14 hours a day ---------- Western Front - 1970 February 10 - Page 14 ---------- 14 Western Front Tuesday, February 10, 1970 Viking guard Jeff Sherburne (44) drives for lay-in asWestern's Tom Hilyard and Redlands players look on. ' —photo by shoblom YOU'RE HERE TO GETAN EDUCATION. PERIOD. With a full academic load, and maybe a job on the side, you need all thetime you can find to get what you came for . . . a college education. Marine Corps officer programs don'trequire time for on-campus training. For the facts on Marine air and ground _ _ officer training, talk tothe Ma- / v ) K f rine officer who visits your campus. a Marine In the Placement Office Feb 16,17 and 18 Viks fall to Whitworth All chances to catch conference leader Central Washington were lost but for amiracle Saturday night when Western's Viking basketball team lost 90-67 to the Whitworth Pirates atSpokane. Friday's scheduled contest was postponed when the Vikings' flight from Seattle wascancelled due to fog at the Spokane airport. The game will be made up at a later date if it has a bearingon the league standings. Whitworth's guard Willard Ranee and forward Ted Hiemstra were the keyfigures in a second half explosion that wiped out a 32-29 Viking half time advantage. The Pirates scored 61 points in the half, more than they had scored in either of two previous losses to Western atBellingham. In the 20 minutes Whitworth hit 82 per cent from the field and 95 per cent from the foul line, missing only eight shots. Ranee hit seven of 11 from the field and eight straight free throws for 22 points and game scoring honors. Hiemstra, who boasted a 20-point average, scored 17, 14 in the second half. Other Pirates in double figures included Glen Hiemstra 10, Rick Pettigrew 10 and Doug Hansen 13.Viking guard Neal Larson played an excellent all-around game, scoring 16 points, making seven stealsand having numerous assists and rebounds. Other Vikings turning in good performances were guard Ron Caderette and center John Reed. Whitworth hit 55 per cent from the field compared to Western's 41 per cent and outrebounded the Vikings 43-38. The loss put Western's overall record at 8-7 and theirconference ledger at 3-4. Next action for the Vikings is this weekend when they play host to the Eastern Washington State College Savages Friday and Saturday nights at Carver gym. Game time both nightsis 8 p.m. Western whips Redlands Last Wednesday night Western defeated the University of Redlands63-57 in basketball action at Carver gym. Viking coach Chuch Randall used his starting five but the firstten minutes of the contest before using nine substitutes the rest of the way. Western led 33-21 at thehalf but lost a 15-point lead in the second half and fell behind 53-52 with a little over five minutesremaining. But the Viking "bench" rose to the occasion and, led by John Reed, Jeff Sherburne and TomHilyard, regained the lead and victory. Redland's guard Randy Orwig led all scorers with 26 points. TheBulldogs' Reggie Williams Intramurals enter third week with close league races Men's intramuralbasketball heads into its third week of play with close races for first place in the four leagues. TheCream leads the American League with a 4-0 record, but close behind are the Hot Flashes, RIP, and the Peltics all 3-0. In the National League, there is a four-way fight for first between Screaming Yellow,National Steel Construction Company, Beta Bailers, and the Gloryholes, all are 3-0. In the rookieLeague, the Goobu Bombers, 4-0, are in first, with several teams battling for second. Cross Country and Jumping Skis Bonna Edsbyn Splitkein Sandstroi Cross Country and Jumping Boots Assar Perssons Kikut Karhu NORDIC SKI EQUIPMENT] 733-5461 evenings with 10 points was the only other Bulldogin double figures. Sherburne led Western's attack with 13 points. John Reed had 11 and guard MikeClayton 12,in his brief stay in the game. Redlands outrebounded the Vikings 51-46, with Williamsgetting 14. Reed and Hilyard had 11 and nine, respectively, for Western. Vik JV's get double winWestern's JV's scored two wins last week, downing the St. Martin's JV's, 74-64 on Monday, and thenwhipping the Seattle U. frosh, 59-52 on Thursday. Mark Roberts was the high point man in both gamesfor the Viks, tallying 17 points in each game. Against St. Martin's, the JV's broke a 50-40 deficit.Against Seattle U. the JV's led 26-23 at the half but often trailed by as much as four points in the second half. Roberts went seven for seven from the free-throw line in the Seattle U. game, to bring his streak at the charity line to 15 in a row without a miss. Roger Fuson once again came off the bench to spark theJV's against Seattle U. Fuson scored 10 points and was tough on the boards. Mike Franza added 11points for the JV's. THE HUNTSMAN all the better dressed college bunch shops at THE HUNTSMANin the Bellingham Mall open Evenings until 9 p.m. ---------- Western Front - 1970 February 10 - Page 15 ---------- Tuesday, February 10, 1970 Western Front 15 A player for the Kingsmen (skins) fires up a shot againstthe Zeros (shirts). These teams are just two of the 94 teams playing intramural basketball this Winter.—photo by shoblom Ruggers fall to Victoria; host Oregon Western's rugby first team was trounced bythe University of Victoria last Saturday, 31-3. Western got on the scoreboard first, when scrummer JimNoonan scored a try as he plunged from two yards out. Victoria, however, came back to get the halftimelead at 10-3, and then blew the game wide open in the second half. Rod Fiddick, a back, played well for the Viks. Western's second team battled the Victoria seconds to a 0-0 tie. Russ Barstad and ScuzzyMcDonough were the individual standouts for the seconds. This Sunday, Western plays tough OregonState University, here at Roosevelt field. Both teams have faced a common opponent in the University of Washington. Oregon State was downed by the Huskies, 6-3, while the Vik ruggers fell to the Seattleschool, 6-5. Last year, the Beavers whipped the Viks, 15-9. The second team's game will start at 1:15p.m. and the first team will play at 2:30 p.m. ML BAKER STARTING WEDNESDAY elia kazans tKCatYSIllgGlIIGflt —ENDS TONIGHT— John and Mary 7-10:20 Party 8:40 only ( • • ] UNLESS ACeliakazan ideborah trichard dkirk j,4 4 iaye ideborah hoomue glas dunaway kerr boone cronynSuspense Co-Feature OHCC YOU tina conductor; uy Ctivnl; odwcf.on desianf-c tJy nt-r.tf • ,i 3URKK i f r / I fTI31HGCI? PH;: '^ CAPFY LYNLtY H'fti PFTFR LIND HAYES Schedule: Wed., Thur., Fri.,Mon., Tues. Doors Open 6:45 one showing of each Feature Kiss A Stranger 7:15 Arrangement 9:15Continuous from 1:30 Saturday, from 1 p.m. Sunday Viks face crucial series; host Eastern this weekend Western's hoop squad hosts Eastern this weekend in a series that will either make or break the Viks'chances of staying in contention for the Evergreen Conference basketball title. Western, 3-4, still has aslight chance to win the Evco title should Central, 8-0, lose its remaining four games. Although it seems unlikely that Central will lose all four games, the Wildcats will be put to a severe test this weekendwhen they host red-hot Whitworth. The Pirates have won their last five games, including a victory overNorthwest power Seattle Pacific College. The first meeting between Eastern and Western in Cheneyended in a split, with Eastern winning the first game, 81-63, but Western coming back to take thesecond one, 74-53. The Savages, 1-7 in Evco, are a tall team led by Steve Barnett, a 6-5 junior. Barnetthas averaged 13.7 points a game and has pulled down eight rebounds per game. The Savages dependupon jumping-jack Joe Bullock, a 6-2 guard, to key their running game. Bullock is averaging about 11points a game. Eastern also has two outstanding shooters in Duane Barnette and Al Gale. Barnette isone of the top free-throw shooters in Evco with a 78.9 percentage; while Gale was a key player inEastern's split, when he totaled 23 points in the game the Savages won. At center for Eastern will beeither big Dave Pounds, a 6-8 junior, or Jack Burns, also a 6-8 junior. Burns, who recently regained hiseligibility, has been one of the few bright spots for the Vik women tie in tourney W e s t e r n ' s women's intercollegiate basketball team finished in a three-way tie with the University of British Columbia (UBC)and Simon Fraser University (SFU) for first place in the Sportsday tournament, held here last Saturday. Western, SFU and UBC all finished with 2-1 marks. Western lost to SFU, 30-26 but defeated theUniversity of Washington (U of W), 55-29, and UBC, 46-34. Leading scorers for Western against SFUwere Judy Johnson and Kathy Silverthorn with eight points apiece. Against the U of W, Geri Campbellled the Vik scoring with 12 points. Miss Johnson and Kathy Knutzen each totaled 10 points. In the UBC game, Miss Knutzen topped Vik scoring with 11 points, while Miss Johnson scored 10. This Saturday,Western hosts the AAU Sandpipers of Seattle. 1224 Commercial 733-9755 ^ l THEATRE M , ™ ¥ *LY ENTERTAINMENT! AS tnttie wor/tf •fices: co«* W.'ARQ 8EST ACTRESS STREISANDFUNNVGIRL KAY V-CFO^-.'-Vif FPA;"C6-V.-'..,.TtRP::iG;:0'.,.-,..*« **rDA,C7Q/•"«' lt;.•,' gt;• gt;!.J I'M CO '* gt;-•*••'•• r**- '•••.- gt;...» .-•-»... •: •••«. = *• IV, SCHEDULE OF PERFORMANCES TONIGHT—DOORS OPEN AT 5:00 P.M. PERFORMANCES AT 5:30 8:30 P.M. SATURDAY SUNDAY— OFEN.,2:C0,PERF'S—2-30—5:30—-8:30 GENERAL— S£.00 STUDENTS—SI.50—CHILD U/12—.75 Savages in recent games. Burns has averaged 10 points and nine rebounds in Eastern's last four games. TheSavages have a fine sophomore in Randy Buss. Buss, 6-5, scored 20 points against Western inCheney. Western's probable starting line-up will find Mike Clayton and Neal Larson at guards, Lee RoyShults and Ron Caderette at forwards and John Reed at center. Clayton could score his 1,000th pointduring the Eastern series, making him the first guard at Western to achieve such a figure under CoachRandall's ball-control style offense. Clayton, up to last night, has totaled 973 points in his collegiatecareer at Western. Next Monday, Western plays Portland State in Portland in a rematch of last night'scontest. It's Always HAPPY HOUR at the UP UP when the band is not playing Wed. Pitcher night8-11p.m. Fri. TGIF 4-7 p.m. Lowest Priced Pitchers In Town Live Music By The Unusuals Thurs., Fri., Sat. from 9 p.m. on All this at The UP UP 137 W. Holly ---------- Western Front - 1970 February 10 - Page 16 ---------- 16 Western Front Tuesday, February 10, 1970 PAID ADVERTISEMENT 1. A faculty member is beingfired over the opposition of students.... 2. The prices in the bookstore have reached the point of robbery .. . . 3. Tuition is being raised from $88 to $120 without your consultation . . . . 4. The free and openexchange of ideas on campus is being threatened.... This page has been purchased by the Associated Students to examine the sources of frustration and alienation common to all students. Each of usexpresses that feeling in a number of ways: boredom, a feeling of fatigue at the thought of attending class, dropping-out, etc. The immediate cause for our alienation is to be found in the system of education, withthe crass way in which we are manipulated to behave like pablovian dogs. A positive step toward endingthat alienation will come when the college community is organized to operate as a democracy and whenall of us, students as well as faculty, have the right to control the decisions which shape our lives. Thegrievances described here are merely examples of the inequities which hinder our development. Onlywhen we are united can we begin to solve our common problems-and only you can decide when that dayshall be. I. With Bill Heid this year, Bernie Weiner a few years ago, and no doubt many others, thesystem that excludes students from its membership roles continues to function. As Paul Woodring,Professor of the College, WWSC, states: "Because of this preference among the tenured faculty forresearch, the system is rigged against those who like to teach undergraduates and do it well. A younginstructor quickly discovers that the way to get ahead in the academic world is to find a position with thelightest possible teaching load in order to devote his major energies to research." While students aretransient, it is nonetheless important that they have a hand in the crucial, as well as the non-crucial,decisions the institution finds itself forced to make. Continued efforts on the part of students must bemade until they have a significant role in the decision making machinery for selection, retention andpromotional decisions made by academic departments and the college. II. Although students supposedly operate the "Co-op" bookstore, they in fact have little or no influence in its management. Studentscontinue to find that prices in their own bookstore are substantially higher than elsewhere in Bellingham.A.S. is currently being blocked from hiring a management consulting firm to examine the bookstore andsolve its problems. Some random examples of price differences are: Toothpaste — 15c higher thanmost Bellingham stores Shaving cream —30c higher than most Bellingham stores After shave — 50chigher than most Bellingham stores Razor blades — 20c higher than most Bellingham stores Here again this problem is one of student participation in decision making and here again students are beingexcluded. HI. Tuition has been raised from $88 to $120 by the Legislature (with the consent and approvalof the college). Students were not consulted ^formally or informally about this decision. With the currentlyineffective Public Assistance program, how many students are going to find it increasingly difficult toget any college education at all, regardless of its quality. Alternatives to increasing fees ad infinitum havebeen proposed, but because of their newness of approach and perhaps the support of students theyare being discontinued. IV. On January 29, the Dean of Students moved to enforce a portion of policyrelated to speakers on campus. The policy included in the navigator specifies that "the Dean of Studentsoffice will be notified at least seven days before the appearance of an invited speaker." Un* i recently thispolicy was ignored and nobody was complaining. Now, however, the policy has been re-invoked—butonly in respect to students. When the Office of Student Activities balked at the idea of filling out theforms used to supply information on speakers for "approval" by the Dean (the form includes questions onfees paid and biographical information), the Dean countered by blocking the students' efforts toschedule space for speakers' programs. At no time did the Dean seek to discuss the matter withstudents. The effect of all this is that the free exchange of ideas is being seriously interfered with and allof us lose a little of the meagre portion of liberty we possess. The above items and many more seem tohave a common denominator, the intransigence of the college, administration and faculty. In most casesstudent influence is vetoed in a subtle way: two students on a committee of eight, or a chairman whodetermines agenda items, for example. In academic departments students may voice their opinions, yetmost often these opinions are ignored and decisions on important items are made by tenured faculty.Occasionally the college slips and exercises its veto in a very direct way. When forty students wanted torent state vehicles to attend an anti-war rally in Olympia, they were told by the motor pool that novehicles were available when in fact a number of them were. When confronted with this, the collegeadmitted that their decision was entirely subject and that had the rally been for some purpose theysupported (i.e. lobbying for increased appropriations for the college), the cars could have been rented.Students are not often able to observe these arbitrary, subjective vetos by the college in such obviousways. It would seem logical that in many of these situations the college and students should worktogether, yet unfortunately the opposite is true. For change to occur, the initiative must come fromstudents, for apparently it cannot come from the other members of the community. Yale PresidentKingman Brewster Jr. said last September, "Accountability is what we are striving for, and ifaccountability is to be real, (there has to be) some regular, understood process whereby reappraisal of the competence of the administration and the community's confidence in it can be undertaken withoutwaiting for a putsch or rebellion." This editorial cartoon is a reprint from the May 26, 1967 issue of theWWSC student newspaper. Its meaning is fust as applicable today as it was then. A YOUNG GIRL'SLETTER (A "young girl's letter" was printed in the magazine section of the New York Times on November29, 1964.) To the Editor: I'm a student in the oldest girls' school in the country. I love my school, but your recent article on homework really hit home ("Hard Day's Night of Today's Students," by Eda J. LeShan).I came to this school not thinking I could even keep up with the work. I was wrong. I can keep up. I caneven come out on top. My daily schedule's rough: I get up at 6:30 and have classes from 8:15 to 3:00 and stay in study hall or engage in activities until 5:30. I have majors, plus religion, speech, music and artonce or twice a week. All this I can take. The homework I can't. I work from 3:00 until 5:00 in school.After dinner I work until midnight or 12:30. In the beginning, the first two weeks or so, I'm fine. Then I begin to wonder just what this is all about: am I educating myself? I have that one all answered in my mind. I'meducating myself the way they want. So I convince myself the real reason I'm doing all this is to preparemyself for what I want. Only one problem. After four years of this comes four years of college and two ofgraduate school for me. I know just where I'm going and just what I want, but I'm impatient. Okay, I canwait. But meanwhile I'm wasting those years of preparation. I'm not learning what I want to learn. I don'tcare anymore whether 2 + 2 = 4. I don't care about the feudal system, I want to know about life. I want tothink and read. When? Over week-ends when there are projects and lectures and compositions, pluscatching up on sleep. My life is a whirlpool. I'm caught up in it, but I'm not conscious of it. I'm whatJ gt;OH call living, but somehow I can't find life. Days go by in an instant. I feel nothing accomplished inthat instant. So maybe I got an A on that composition I worked on for three hours, but when I get it back Ifind that A means nothing. It's a letter you use to keep me going. Everyday I come in well-prepared. Yet Idread every class; my stomach tightens and I sit tense. I drink coffee morning, noon and night. At night,after my homework I he in bed and wonder if I've really done it all. Is there something I've forgotten? At the beginning of the year i'm fine. My friends know me by my smile. Going to start out bright this year.Weeks later I become introspective and moody again. I wonder what I'm doing here. I feel phony; I don'tbelong. All I want is time; time to sit down and read what I want to read, and think what I want to think.You wonder about juvenile delinquents. If I ever become one, I'll tell you why it will be so. I feel cramped. Ifeel like I'm in a coffin and can't move or breathe. There's no air or light. All I can see is blackness and I'vegot to burst. Sometimes I feel maybe something will come along. Something has to or I'm not worthanything. My life is worth nothing. It's enclosed in a few buildings on one campus; it goes no further. I'vegot to bust. Name Withheld P.S. I wrote this last night at 12:15 and in the light of day I realize this willnever reach you. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * This profound expression of anguish isshared by many students, in the same way, here at Western. It is difficult to imagine a more devastatingindictment of education. Meeting Information There will be an open forum on the Bill Heid problem and the issues presented above. VU lounge 3-"30pm Thursday Bill Heid, Dan Larner, Bernie Werner, etc., willbe speaking. A T T E N D t A slave who seeks freedom with the consent of his master is not readyfor it *
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- 1970_0217 ---------- Western Front - 1970 February 17 - Page 1 ---------- Park-in attempt unsuccessful The park-in attracted many on-lookers as cars blocked the walkwaybetween the libraryllnd the Humanities building. Only one car drove into Red Square proper. He arrived bydriving over the steps betw
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1970_0217 ---------- Western Front - 1970 February 17 - Page 1 ---------- Park-in attempt unsuccessful The park-in attracted many on-lookers as cars blocked the walkwaybetween the libraryllnd the Huma
Show more1970_0217 ---------- Western Front - 1970 February 17 - Page 1 ---------- Park-in attempt unsuccessful The park-in attracted many on-lookers as cars blocked the walkwaybetween the libraryllnd the Humanities building. Only one car drove into Red Square proper. He arrived bydriving over the steps between the library and Haggard Hall. —photo by king Bob Burnett assistant tothe editor Western students dramatized their feelings concerning parking fees, two-hour parking andhitchhiking Thursday when approximately 200 people confronted the administration at a demonstrationnear an entrance to Red Square. The AS legislature passed a resolution Wednesday night to hold apark-in involving students' vehicles which was to have blocked a portion of High Street for one hourThursday. In consideration of emergency vehicle access, it was decided to move the demonstration toRed Square, according to AS President Greg Baker. Students were prohibited from driving their cars intoRed Square by Director of Safety and Security R. G. Peterson and Dean of Men Ray Romine. During the confrontation which followed, Baker cited the alleged repeated "deaf ear" given student requests by theadministration concerning parking problems, the cost of parking fees, the city's proposal to imposeparking restrictions on streets surrounding the campus and hitchhiking enforcement as the reason forholding the demonstration. Baker directed several questions to Romine concerning parking policies.Romine said that he could not, as a single member of the parking committee, answer any questions forthe committee as a whole. Romine repeatedly cited lack of student representation at committeemeetings. "Of 14 meetings, three students were present on three occasions," he said. The demonstration digressed into several discussion groups, finally breaking up to migrate to an all-college forum in the VQlounge. (continued on page 2.) Vol. LXII no. 23 Western Washington State College Bellingham,Washington 98225 Tuesday, February 17, 1970 10c Students voice unrest at forum Morrene Head staffreporter Greg Baker, AS president, opened the ali-college forum last Wednesday by saying thatstudents are "second-rate citizens" in the college community. Grievances over several campus issueswere aired, but nothing was resolved during the two-hour meeting. Baker cited the recent statement bythe faculty council that students have an advisory role in matters of hiring and retention of faculty. Baker told about 350 persons in the VU lounge that students are being denied the equal participation rightsthey deserve in the matters that directly affect them. George Hart well, Activities Commissioner, saidthat the commission has been denied space for speakers on campus by the Dean of Students, C.W.McDonald. Failure to fill out information on speakers was the reason given by McDonald for the denial,according to Hartwell. Kathy Dix, of the Black Student Union, said that the BSU is prepared to takedestructive action if the scheduled speakers for Black Culture Week are not allowed space to speak.Bernard Weiner, Free University coordinator, said that t h e present American educational system "turns out easily-manipulated products. "When you get out of college, your options have pretty well beendecided for you." Weiner explained that today's students don't wait until they get out of college tobecome "political animals." It is up to the students to call for systemized, standardized procedures atthe departmental level, he concluded. (continued on page 8.) Several students presented a skitparodying the present education system at last Thursday's all-college forum in the VU lounge. —photoby king necessary forms used to supply Non-residents first to feel enrollment limit Out-of-stateundergraduates will be the first to be refused admission to Western, President Charles J. Flora said lastweek. This is a result of the trustees' decision to limit fall enrollment to 9,570 students. Exceptions tothis new policy are: — F a m i l i e s of federal employees officially assigned and domiciled in thestate. —Persons who have moved into the state with the intention of becoming legal residents. —Non-residents permitted to enroll as transients for the summer session only. The college has alreadyreceived 2,772 applications for freshman enrollment as contrasted with 1,720 a year ago. A total of 469transfer student applications have arrived, 275 more than a year ago. Planning proposed Pubcommittee members and a state liquor inspector are getting together this morning to d i s c u s s theproposed faculty-student pub on campus. Committeeman Al Doan, former AS president, said that thepub is nearing the end of its planning stages and that, "things are definitely looking good." The pubcommittee has been meeting twice-weekly this quarter in tackling the miles of red tape involved. "Weare going to do a first class job with this proposal," Doan said. When a final recommendation stagesnear end for faculty-student pub paper dealing with financing, management and operation problems iscompleted, the proposal will be submitted to the Board of Trustees for the final consideration. So far, the committee has agreed that the pub must include a food service facility to help take some of theincreased load off the present Viking Union food service areas. Doan said that he had "no guesses" asto when the pub might open, pending the approval of the board of trustees. "There are still many littletechnical and legal matters that we have to iron out before we can submit the proposal to the trustees,"he noted. Pub committee members include Greg Baker, AS president and committee chairman; AlDoan, AS administrative assistant; Steve Cooper, administrative assistant; John Engstrom, AS cabinetmember; John Stolpe, AS cabinet member; Cliff Holt, union facilities coordinator; and C. W. (Bill)McDonald, dean of students. **it^_^+^^mmmsm'jiz * gt;,'* *--*»© ^ ^ l £ t a f t gW ---------- Western Front - 1970 February 17 - Page 2 ---------- 2 Western Front Tuesday, February 17, 1970 Park-in thwarted (continued from page 1.) When studentsarrived in their automobiles to participate in the park-in, they found all entrances to Red Square blockedby campus security jeeps. Shortly after noon, 11 cars were backed up in the entrance to the squarebetween Wilson Library and the Humanities building. A Volkswagen bus, which had entered the squareby another route, blocked a security jeep, which, in turn, blocked other vehicles from entering. The busbecame the center for the events which followed. Peterson asked the driver of the bus to remove hisvehicle, stating that he was in violation of Western's demonstration policy which states, in part, "Anystudent or group of students shall not, by their conduct, disrupt, disturb or interfere with: . . . pedestrianand vehicular traffic." Another vehicle had moved in behind the bus at that time, prohibiting compliance.When Peterson tried to obtain the motorist's name, he replied, "Free." "What's your first name? Peterson asked. "Free," he responded. Baker asked why students were not being allowed to enter Red Square to hold their demonstration. Romine, using an electric megaphone, announced that Baker had not obtained permission through proper channels to use Red • Square for that purpose. After hearing the college'spolicy concerning the use of public address systems read by "Free" Romine refused to use themegaphone again. There was some talk about sending a small group of students to invite PresidentFlora to come out and speak, but the group was never formed. During one of the more heated phases ofthe confrontation, a group of students began to push the security jeep out of the way, but Petersonstopped them by saying that forcing their way into Red Square wouldn't solve anything. MEDITATI astaught by Maharishi Mahesh Yogi Introductory meeting Feb. 19, Thursday 3 P.M. L-4 8 P.M. L-3 AlDoan, AS administrative assistant, takes his turn at the megaphone during last week's park-in7whichinvolved a maximum of 27 vehicles. -photo by king Saga to serve soul food dinner Dick Gregory,Cannonball Adderly and a soul food dinner will highlight the second annual Black Culture Week, Feb.21" through Saturday, March 1. Gregory will speak on civil rights at 2 p.m. next Tuesday in the musicauditorium. Adderly will perform in Carver Gym next Friday night at 8 p.m. Soul food will be served fordinner Saturday, March 1 in upper and lower Saga. See accompanying schedule for a complete list ofBlack Culture Week events. Dean of Students C.W. McDonald will discuss specific violations ofcampus regulations at an all-college meeting at 4 p.m. Thursday in the VU lounge. All members of thecollege community are invited to attend and to participate in a discussion of student rights following themeeting. SATURDAY, FEB. 2 1 - 9-12 p.m.: Natural Soul (band) VU lounge. TUESDAY, FEB. 24-2p.m.:Dick Gregory, music auditorium. 7 p.m.: Afro-American fashion show, VU lounge. WEDNESDAY,FEB. 2 5 - 3 p.m.: Keve Bray, speech on Black Nationalism. 8:15 p.m.: Black play, music auditorium.THURSDAY, FEB. 26- 4 p.m.: Black studies panel, VU lounge. 8 p.m.: Films and poetry by Blackstudents, L-2. FRIDAY, FEB. 2 7 - 3 p.m.: What is the BSU? (BSU panel discussion) VU lounge. 8p.m.: Cannonball Adderly, Carver Gym. 8:15 p.m.: Walter Armstrong Quartet, music auditorium.SATURDAY, FEB. 2 8 - 10 a.m. to noon and 24 p.m.: Music workshop with Cannonball Adderly Quartet, VU lounge. All Day State BSU steering committee meeting. (Not open to the public.) 8 p.m.: BSUcabaret, VU 361. (Not open to the public.) SUNDAY, MARCH 1 - Soul food dinner, upper and lower Saga. (Dinner hours.) There will be a Black Art display in the VU art gallery during Black Culture Week. Theworks were donated by Eddy Walker, Seattle. Faculty wants trustees off committee The Faculty Councilmoved to remove the Board of Trustees from the committee which will investigate the question of the"students' participation in retention and hiring of faculty" at a special meeting last Tuesday. The councilalso passed a motion which states in part, " . . . that the appropriate role for students in (employment,promotion, tenure and dismissal of faculty) is in an advisory capacity at the departmental level." Theyrecommended that the findings of this committee be submitted to the Faculty Council for considerationof the need for policy changes. The investigation committee was called for in the Board of Trustees'resolution of Feb. 5, when about 150 students confronted the trustees at their meeting. The studentsdemanded the right to participate in the hiring and retention of faculty. Students present at the meetingclaimed that they had exhausted all channels for participation in faculty matters except going to theBoard of Trustees. Faculty council members said that it appeared that the consensus of opinion among faculty members in matters of hiring and retention of faculty is that students should not share equallywith faculty, but that student voice and expression should be heard. THE HUNTSMAN all the betterdressed college bunch shops at THE HUNTSMAN in the Bellingham Mall open Evenings until 9p.m. lt;\ \'% gt;, lt;, gt;«,«,« gt; W^.**.*£X» l W ^ ^ ^ v ayyVyy^^ ---------- Western Front - 1970 February 17 - Page 3 ---------- Tuesday, February 17, 1970 Western Front TODAY-All Day: Activities Commission symposium, "TheFuture of Religion," VU lounge. 10 a.m.: Episcopal worship, Campus Christian Ministry. 8:15 p .m.:Chamb er orchestra, L-4. TOMORROW-AU day: Activities Commission symposium, "The Future ofReligion," VU lounge. Noon: Episcopal worship, Campus Christian Ministry. 4 p.m.: William Dunlop,"Shakespeare and Measure for Measure, "L-2. 6 p.m.: AS nominating convention, VU lounge.THURSDAY, FEB. 19- Noon: Film, This Solitude Through Which We Go is I, VU 354. 1 p.m.: Studentrecital, music auditorium. 4 p.m.: Episcopal worship, Campus Christian Ministry. 6 p.m.: AS nominatingconvention, VU lounge. 6:30 p.m.: Roman Catholic worship, Campus Christian Ministry. 7 p.m.: CollegeLife, VU 363. • 8:15 p.m.: Play•, Measure for Measure, music auditorium. FRIDAY, FEB. 20- 7 and 9:15 p.m.: Art film, Hallelujah the Hills, L-4. 8 p.m.: Basketball, Western vs. Central, Carver gym. 8:15p.m.: Play, Measure for Measure, music auditorium. SATURDAY, FEB. 2 1 - All day: Snofestival atGrouse Mt., B.C. 1:30 p.m.: Swimming, Western vs. Pacific Lutheran, Carver pool. 2 p.m.: Wrestling,Western vs. U. of British Columbia, there. 8 p.m.: Basketball, Western vs. Central, Carver gym. 8:15 p.m.: Play, Measure for Measure, music auditorium. 9 p.m.: BSU dance, VU lounge. 9 p.m.: MamaSunday's, coffee den. SUNDAY, FEB. 2 2 - All day: Snofestival at Grouse Mt., B.C. Black CultureWeek. See Western Front and daily bulletin for details. 11 a.m.: Lutheran worship, Campus ChristianMinistry. 4 p.m.: Episcopal worship, Campus Christian Ministry. 7 and 9:30 p.m. AS film, The Graduate,music auditorium. MONDAY, FEB. 2 3 - Washington's birthday. No classes. 11 a.m.: Episcopalworship, Campus Christian Ministry. AS convention begins The first-ever Winter AS legislativeconvention will be held at 6 p.m. tomorrow and Thursday in the VU lounge. "The main purpose of theconvention is to nominate candidates for the AS legislature general election but it will also be anopportunity to put issues such as the bookstore, discriminatory admissions practices, the Heidcontroversy, the parking crises, hitchhiking and tenure in the open. "There have been numerouscomplaints that important decisions concerning the entire student body are made by only a handful ofrepresentatives," John Engstrom, elections board chairman, explained. A summary of the conventionrules appears on page 9. Housing groups merge to help solve living condition problems Three relatedhousing organizations on campus have merged. The Housing Commission now consists of the Tenants Union and the Off-Campus Inter-house Council (OCIC) in conjunction with the housing commissioner.The OCIC voted last week to accept a proposal by Housing Commissioner Gary Evans that it comeunder the jurisdiction of t h e Associated Students government and, specifically, under the direction ofthe housing commissioner. The merger provides the OCIC, which had previously been self-supported,with a broader funding base, Evans said. Each organization remains a separate entity under the merger with its own duties and functions. One of the goals of the Tenants Union is to "promote b e t t e r t e na n t - l a n d l o rd relations," Craig Cole, Tenants Union officer, said. A meeting was held Wednesdaybetween tenant representatives and landlords to discuss possible solutions to consistent problems andto anticipate new problems while trying to solve them before they arise. Cole said that it was the firsttime such a meeting had ever been attempted at Western. The Whatcom County Board of Realtors hadsent a delegation to the meeting. The OCIC-sponsored social functions are profit-oriented to build up ahousing fund to be used to meet the demands of all three groups. Commenting on the benefits of themerger, Pete White, president of OCIC said, "The defactionalization of housing efforts gives us a realpotent force toward solving some of the problems associated with housing." Forthcoming programsinititated by the Housing Commission include an investigation of sewage disposal problems incooperation with the Public Health Department, and a student housing probe in cooperation withWestern's s o c i o l o g y - a n t h r o p o l o gy department. The probe will consist of a questionnaire to be completed by a random test group of approximately 400 students. "From the questionnaire, we c an d r a w up some generalizations to find out what needs to be handled in the future," Cole said. Thequestionnaire will provide information on damage deposits, withdrawal procedures and standardization ofrental contracts. Cole said the Housing Commission is also investigating the possibility of printing abooklet of laws concerning the rights of tenants and their landlords. Tenants, landlords to negotiatecontract The Tenants Union has called a meeting of tenants and landlords for 7 p.m. Wednesday in VU008, Chairman Craig Cole announced last Friday. "The purpose of this meeting is to negotiate astandardized contract that will protect tenants' rights," Cole said. "We have finally gotten the landlordsto sit down to negotiate." "The Tenants Union and the Housing Commission are not going to yield to the whims of any landlord," Housing Commissioner Gary Evans said. "The Tenants Union is concernedwith obtaining contracts that will protect the tenant," he said. "The state statutes are too landlord-oriented." The Tenants Union and the Housing Commission lobbied in Olympia for House Bill 168 "Thefantastic Dino's Grinder' which dealt with tenant-landlord relations. The bill died in committee, Colenoted. "We are going to war to push for tenants' rights." 111 E. Magnolia 734-9365 Out-Of-Sight PIZZA where the College Bus stops] STUDENTS .£Jrf STORE 3S.S SO STORE MORE CONVENIENTSv»\— ON THE MEZZANINE We are discontinuing some of the Barnes Noble Outline Series. Theyare now on sale for 50 and 25 cents. The same prices appply to many of the Van Nostrand paper-backs. A few new titles have come in: The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test by Wolfe, Flying Kites, StudentRevolution by Califano, Education for Tragedy by Benne, Political Leaders of Latin America by Bourneand The Wisdom of Spiro T. Agnew. (jormrefaor 3i\ ---------- Western Front - 1970 February 17 - Page 4 ---------- 4 Western Front Tuesday, February 17, 1970 Odd bodkins COVJVO MID£ wow of sane use To u?...c*. pounce FROM THE Sjlb lt;a s^ Suggests AS consider reorganization plan Apparently, noteveryone views some of the recent actions of the Associated Students as. responsible, nor do theybelieve that the Western Front is a newspaper that is representative of the student body. (See Murphyletter, opposite page.) While we might agree with Mr. Murphy that the Associated Students have madesome errors in planning their activities, we do believe that they have worthy objectives in mind, and that is the achievement of greater student involvement in college governance. We suggest that the AS consider the almost-dead college government reorganization pfan that would indeed give them greater collegeresponsibility. Why the AS does not support this proposal is unknown, since the document is a well-thought-out one and would provide students with more representation than most other colleges haveincluded in similar plans. This proposal will appear in next week's issue and hopefully will receive greater student support than it has in the past. We also believe that Mr. Murphy's charges that the WesternFront represents the "New Left" and is not representative of the student body, are in error. A newspapercannot be completely objective, and if we have to make a choice, we would rather lean to the left thanto the right. However, we do not believe our political philosophies have biased our reporting or induced us to withhold any copy that does not comply with "the cause." In regard to the advertisement by the ASin this newspaper last week, we see nothing wrong in letting any group buy an ad and explain theirpolitical philosophy. There are opportunities for anybody to respond to their views by means or a letter or a guest commentary, or an ad if desired. We attempt to cover as much of what is happening on thiscampus as we can, and if this means covering the actions of the AS, whatever they are, then that is what we will do. Would some people suggest that we ignore them? —Mike Gowrylow Let's hear it forjustice Have you ever been arrested? Four off-campus students were arrested by Bellingham Police for"suspicion of sabotage" after walking past the Georgia Pacific plant last week. A G-P security guardapparently suspected them of setting adrift a privately-owned fishing boat, which was supposed tohave been moored at Citizen's Dock adjacent to the plant offices at the foot of Chestnut Street. Localpolice apprehended the foursome downtown after being tipped off by G-P officials. The students weretreated to the customary mug-shot and fingerprint routine at police headquarters in the course of a 12-hour-long detention. Last Monday, the defendants were arraigned before District Circuit Judge Jack Kurtz to face charges, but the deputy prosecutor had none. Judge Kurtz dismissed the case. Theprosecuting attorney's office told us Friday that they had "insufficient evidence" to press for aconviction, but added that they felt that the police were justified in making the arrest. The matter is dead, right? Wrong. The Bellingham Herald, in a front-page story Feb. 9 which smacked of journalisticirresponsibility, inflated what should have been a minor incident into, "Students to Face Sabotage-Related Charge." The names, ages and address of all involved were given prominence. Besides beingfactually inaccurate, the story was in poor taste for page one. After the case was dismissed inMunicipal Court, the Herald discreetly buried the "Charges Dropped" account deep inside the paper.Apparently they were embarrassed. The most serious outcome of Georgia Pacific's overt paranoid over-reaction to the presence of students near their toilet paper plant will linger for years. Contemplate theimpact of a future job application questionnaire: Have you ever been arrested? Yes, for suspicion ofsabotage. Slaps Baker's hand Jim Bromley staff reporter Last Thursday's all-college forum mulled overthe dusty issues of parking, promotion and tenure as if they were brand new problems. The infantiledemonstration which took place at noon that same day on Red Square was nothing more than a show ofbravado to attract attention to another issue: tenure and promotion. At the most, the forum demonstratedan attempt by AS President Greg Baker to inspire confidence in his leadership capabilities by inflatingissues and fostering suspicion amongst various elements of the academic community: administration,faculty and students. Baker's pledge of last month, that he will not "play games with the administration,"serves as an opening move to a dangerous game he himself is playing. That game is known asopportunism. At the least, the forum represented a barrage of foolish accusations of so-calledadministrative tyranny by the tenure and promotion committee in its decision not to reinstate Dr. Bill Heidas assistant professor of psychology. It would do well for the tenure and promotion committee to publicly state its criteria for determining whether or not a faculty member will be re-hired or promoted. At least this would make their position on the matter clear. President Flora has said* repeatedly to seemingly deafears that he fully approves of student evaluations as a basis for the committee's consideration. But hehas also said that, as long as he is president, he will not allow students to sit as voting members of thatcommittee. Such a position is not unreasonable because, unlike many students, faculty who sit on thetenure and promotion committee are not nearly so concerned with a teacher's present abilities as they are with how his abilities may develop after tenure, when it is not nearly so easy to get rid of him if he should prove ineffectual as a teacher. Baker is not justified in demanding that the committee make known itsreasons for dismissing Heid. Those reasons are nobody's business but Heid's, and if he wants to speakfor himself about what they are, he has a perfect right to do so. The proceedings of last Thursday leftsome questions unanswered: Why is Baker, who has himself been a student representative on theparking committee, avoiding to explain to the student body what specific suggestions he has given thecommittee to help alleviate the parking problem? Why haven't the students who have taken classes fromHeid explained exactly why they have or have not benefited from his teaching? And, finally, where are allthe masses of students who are "no longer tolerating being treated as niggers"? The Western Front ofFeb. 10 ran a headline on its front page which read, "Students demand say in renewals." It might betterhave read, "150 students demand say in renewals." That's real honesty.ifiiiHtiiiim«(i(iiitiiiiiiiiimt/iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiNiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimimiiitmniiuiiiiiiitiinKic j thewestern front I Official weeklynewspaper of Western Washington State College 1 5 second class postage paid at Bellingham, Wash.98225 \ | phone 734-8800 editorial, ext. 2277 advertising, ext. 2276 | 1 Mike Gowrylow Adele SaltzmanBob Burnett John Stolpe| I editor-in-chief managing editor assistant to the editor copy editor| | JillStephenson Bob Taylor Jim Austin Maryjo Hardy Bill Woodland | I assistant copy editor sports editorexchange editor ad manager business manager! s § | Reporters: Mary Berling, Ted Bestor, JimBromley, Don DeMarco, Jim | | Diedrick, Barbara Dinner, Mike Erickson, Forrest Goldade, 1 | MorreneHead, Jackie Lawson, Jay Long, Paul Madison, Mary 1 | Peebles, Margaret Thornton, Lyn Watts. | |Head Photographer: Dan Shoblom R- E- Stannard Jr.| | Photographers: Mike Arnold, Jerry King. advisor \| Ad salesmen: Steve Stubbe, Ron Jones, George Walter. I | Graphics: John Driscoll. 1 I Cartoonist: =Deadlines: -John Stolpe | Mike Erickson | 5 p.m. Tuesday-display ad reservations f, 4 p.m. Thursday-news copy, letters to the editor, classified ads, 1 display ad copy. | | . Represented by NEAS, 360Lexington Ave., New York, N.Y. 10017 \ | Price per copy, 10 cents Subscription, $3.50 a year, $1.50 aquarter. Member: 1 | U.S. Student Press Association, College Press Service, Associated College Press i | and Inte/coljegja^e P^ss^ery^e,, . , , gt;\ gt; ;.,*. lt; lt; gt; • \^\ • i•laMfAmiMliilirtMrntiilBiiift^i A •'••;•• ifmidirim •mfrWmih ---------- Western Front - 1970 February 17 - Page 5 ---------- Tuesday, February 17, 1970 Western Front Murphy takes aim at AS Editor: For some time now I havebeen increasingly disenchanted with some of the statements and actions of the AS and the WesternFront, which purports to be representative of the student body. The most recent such statement withwhich I must take issue is the paid advertisement that the AS took in the February 10th issue of theWestern Front. What was supposed to be an examination of the sources of frustration common to allstudents proved to be a reiteration of the polemic of the "New Left" for which the paper and the AS seemto be spokesman. The ad states quite clearly that the source of all the problems that the student bodyfaces are the result of ". . . the intransigence of the college, administration and faculty," w i t h no part of the responsibility being taken by the student body itself. Such a position—that the other party is allwrong while I am all right-is much more fitted to the political demagogue than to any honest inquiry intothe sources of problems. Both the AS and the newspaper staff seem much more interested inconfrontation and the credit for any change, rather than the change itself. A clear example of this wasthe juvenile staging of the confrontation on the sidewalk between the Humanities Building and the Library on Thurs., Feb. 12. When the speaker was unsuccessful in inciting the crowd into moving the securityvehicle by force, it was then agreed upon to have a meeting that afternoon to consider the subject. Iwent to that meeting, as did members of the parking committee, only to find that parking was not whatwas to be discussed, and in fact when Greg Baker was put on the spot with respect to his attendanceand contributions to the parking committee, the discussion returned to a consideration of the Bill Heidcase. Those of us who had come to hear a reasoned airing of the problems were instead treated toanother stanza of Bernie Weiner's whimpering about his having been dismissed by the political sciencedepartment, and the activities chairman complaining that vehicles owned by the people of the State ofWashington were not made available to him for an activity which could in no way be construed to be anactivity for which the state should provide transport. The general attitude of this whole group presently in office seems well summed up in the letter printed as part of the ;above-mentioned advertisement. "Idon't care anymore whether 2 + 2 = 4. I don't care about the feudal system," are statements which aremuch less a devastating indictment of the educational system than they are a clear indication of anundisciplined mind. Until the student can discipline his own thinking, I think that the administration andfaculty would be greatly remiss in their obligations to even consider any student voice in either hiring ortenure questions. Dennis R. Murphy graduate economics ALAN VflflTS-EXP0HMENTIN MEDITATIONtonight at 7:30 inVU Lounge Park-in marred by disrespect Editor: One of those incredible acts ofstupidity that so often mar protests has again occurred. The park-in on campus Thursday afternoon wasthe excuse for the owner of a Buick Grant Sport—licence no. DDZ 005—to show his irritation with theparking situation on campus, drove across the lawn in front of Old Main to get in on the "big protest";perhaps he would prefer to turn the bird sanctuary into an asphalt parking lot. This, to us, constitutes acomplete lack of respect for the rights of other people and gives the protest a black eye, deserved or not. Joe Simpson Robert Peck political science history junior senior CIA protestors lacked maturity Letters to the editor should be short and to the point, including the writer's name, class and major. Telephonenumbers should be included if possible. Members of the academic community are also welcome tocontribute articles, features, guest commentaries and other material of interest to the community. Editor: If the human animals who made a barnyard of the grass and flowers and expanded their intelligencewith free wine at the CIA 'demonstration' on Wednesday are representative of the 'responsible' 19-year-olds who 'DESERVE the vote,' perhaps you may wish to re-evaluate your recent editorial statement andpropose raising the voting age to 25. What you are saying is that if my 14-year-old son works hard tokeep the family car washed, he DESERVES to drive the car at age 14. Frightening, isn't it? DorothyWachter staff member Copy Ed. note: Touch'e. Contact lenses are m of modern plastics which have en tirely different characteristics than the tissues and fluids of the eye. Consequently your eyecannot handle this foreign object without help. So, in order to correct for Mother Nature's lack offoresight, you have to use lens solutions to make your contacts and your eyes compatible. There was a time when you needed two or more separate solutions to properly modify and care for yourcontacts, making W them ready for your eyes. But now there's Lensine from the makers of Murine.Lensine, for contact comfort and convenience. Lensine is the one solution for complete contact lenscare. Just a drop or two of Lensine coats and lubricates your lens. This allows the lens to float morefreely in the natural fluids of your eye. Why? Because Lensine is an "isotonic" solution, very much like your own tears. Lensine is compatible with the eye. Cleaning your contacts with Lensine retards thebuild-up of foreign deposits on the lenses. And soaking your contacts in Lensine between wearingperiods assures you of proper lens hygiene. You get a free soaking-stor-age case with individual lenscompartments on the bottom of every bottle of Lensine. It has been demonstrated that improperstorage between wear-ings permits the growth of bacteria on the lenses. This is a sure cause of eyeirritation and, in some cases, can endanger your vision. Bacteria cannot grow in Lensine because it'ssterile, self-sanitizing, and antiseptic. r-7,t Let caring for your 'ij;.!|j| contacts be as conven- J O | ient aswearing them. J H J P I I Get some Lensine... M|M|j|M Mother's little helper. LENSINE Mother Naturenever planned on contact lenses !»W*f»*«^W?^?»«'.i48,uWW*-1 ---------- Western Front - 1970 February 17 - Page 6 ---------- 6 Western Front Tuesday, February 17, 1970 McCain suggests 50-cent excise tax Lauds unstructuredclasses Editor: This is in response to Mr. Gowrylow's commentary on the untimely disappearance ofthe returnable pop bottle: An excise tax of 50 cents per container sold at wholesale on all glass andmetal containers for liquids (with a capacity less than, let us say, five gallons) could be expected to have the following effects : 1) By raising the fixed costs of the distribution of bottled and canned liquids, itwould, in the long run, raise the price and reduce the consumption of these fluids to some degree. Some reduction in the profits of their producers would occur, in the short run. 2) It would bring back thereusable bottle, with a deposit large enough to discourage throw-aways and to make collection worth-while wherever v i s i b l e collections of throw-aways did in fact occur. It is possible that it might makemechanized collection feasible. Since mechanized collection would probably be cheaper if all debriswere collected and the bottles only separated later, it is p o s s i b l e that private, profit-making firmswould then clean the roadsides and beaches at their own initiative; indeed, they might compete to buyfrom the state franchises to do so on particular segments of state land. 3) It would conduce the use oflarger containers, since the excise tax would be the same on a gallon container as on a 10 ouncecontainer, but the the gallon container the tax would amount to less than a penny an ounce, while on a10-ounce bottle it would be 5c per ounce. Packaging cost would thus be five times as high per unit liquid for 10-ounce bottles as for a gallon jug. Thus fewer bottles would be lost in all, because of smallernumbers and also because bottles of a larger size would be harder to lose. 4) It just might bring back"bring-your-own-bucket" type draft beer sales. That just might bring back the neighborhood tavern.And—who knows?—that might even bring back the neighborhood. Roger A. McCain Facultyeconomics (Good idea-editor) Typewriters and Adding Machines Sales, Service and Rentals SpeoolStudent Rental Rates Bl ELUNGHAM USINESS MACHINES (Next to Bon March*) 1410 Commercial734-3630 (Ed. note: a copy of this letter has been sent to the psychology department.) This letter is inregard to Dr. Bill Heid's termination at Western. I am a senior in music education and took psychology352 from Dr. Heid this Fall. I feel that I have gained a good understanding of the psychology involved inteaching and personal relations as well as in other areas of life. I know that my ability to workindependently, learn effectively from books, perceive learning experiences of others, and understandmyself as a future teacher has increased tremendously due to this class. I feel that I have developed adeeper and more mature interest in psychology, our system of education and society as a whole due topersonal interaction with fellow classmates, discussions and the readings for 352. I am only beginning to embark on a life-time of learning experiences with myself, other s t u d e n t s , adults and children . . .experiences which were in a great part triggered in this class. Murray questions validity of Quixotes jEditor: This observation was found in the Soc/Anthro 202 textbook: "For example, Philip Selznicksuggests that, on university campuses today students tend to respond most readily to two types ofprofessors: the technician and the demagogue. Some admire the scholar who earned a reputation fortechnical competence in his discipline. Others rally around the professor who speaks out on socialissues or takes part in social action. This type of student demand can encourage professors toemphasize one aspect of their professional career while neglecting other responsibilities. One possibleconsequence is that many professors may avoid less dramatic roles which are necessary to the dailyfunctioning of the institution." And from Webster's: "Demagogue: 1. Leader or orator popular with oridentified with the people. 2. One skilled in arousing the prejudices and passions of the populace bySAMISH WAY SHELL TIRE SALE rhetoric, sensational charges, specious arguments, catch words,cajolery, etc." And Dylan says, "Don't follow leaders, watch your parking meters . . . . " What'shappening on our campus these days? Too often, it seems, I have to jump out of the way to avoid beingtrampled by a thundering flock of sheep who are off to mill about their newest Quixote who is tilting atthe system. Doug Murray junior political science I know this is true of many of my fellow educationstudents, also. I would like to compare my feelings here to those I held at the end of my junior year ofcollege. At that time I sincerely believed that our institutions of higher learning had failed in adequatelypreparing me to become a teacher—after three years! Although I had gained knowledge and verbalability (both necessary qualities, of course), I felt that something was missing in myself and in manyother education students which is a vital prerequisite to becoming an effective teacher: an integratedperson. I think that we at Western —faculty, staff and students—and Americans as a whole, realizethe need for better teachers in our public schools. I feel that meaningful public education in America has fallen short of its goals due partially to teacher training programs in our colleges. To get to the root ofthe problem, we also recognize that in Western civilization today there exists fragmentation and lack ofcommunication within all our institutions—which is reflected in each of us as individuals. I stronglybelieve that the use of unstructured classes as Dr. Heid's (at least one in all my 16 years of schooling!)is a successful method in building the knowledgeable and integrated persons who will have theimportant role of molding our future generations. Speaking as a concerned s t u d e n t , parent of a pre-schooler, and a citizen, please reconsider your position on Dr. Heid's termination. Claire DeMan musiceducation Panel discusses abortion aspects Set Of (2) Highway Recaps (anysize) $24.95 1) FreeMounting 2) No Ex. Tax Charge 3) No Casing Charge also a good selection of blemish tires, 40% off10% discount on tune-ups, scope analysis, lube jobs, spin balance, wheel alignment and muffler, forStudents with WWSC I.D. Cards The fetus is seen as an "enemy" by many people today, competing forfood and land, according to Dr. Richard H. Lindsay. Lindsay, professor of physics at Western, madethis statement as a panelist in the second Book of the Quarter discussion on The Terrible Choice: TheAbortion Dilemma. He also discussed the religious aspects from a Christian viewpoint, wondering whatChrist would have done were he a physician today. Other panelists included Dr. Edwin A. Pritchett, aBellingham obstetrician; Dr. Sandra S. Smiley, assistant professor of psychology; Richard T. Bishop, ed u c a t i o n lecturer; and moderator William H.O. Scott, circulation librarian. Bishop looked at theabortion problem from a secular v i e w p o i n t , noting the elimination of needless suffering as anabortion reform incentive. P r i t c h e t t said that liberalization of the law will stop favoring rich over poor. The last BOQ panel of the quarter meets tonight at 7:30 p.m. in L-2. Watts to speak on religion Dr.Alan Watts, president of the Society for Comparative Philosophy, will speak on "Experiment inMeditation," at 7 p.m. tonight in the VU lounge. Watts is one of three featured speakers on campus forthe "Religion and the Future of Man" symposium, being held today and tomorrow in the VU lounge. The symposium also features Dr. Keith Bridston, professor of systematic theology at Pacific LutheranTheological Seminary and Michael Murphy, president of the Esalen Institute. The seminar is being jointly sponsored by the Activities Commission and the Campus Christian Ministry. ---------- Western Front - 1970 February 17 - Page 7 ---------- Tuesday, February 17, 1970 Western Front 7 Western's soccer club is shown here with the trophy theyreceived last Tuesday. The trophy was for winning the Western Washington Soccer Conference last fall.—photo by king Coolness as a virtue An Open Letter to Western Students: At the recent basketballseries at Central, I understand there was some abusive language directed by fans at our players andcoach and that some fans came onto the court during a dispute among players of the opposing teams.Also, I hear rumors to the effect that some of our fans are talking about retaliatory measures when Central plays here Friday and Saturday of this week. If there are such plans, I would like to appeal to anyindividuals involved to drop any plans for abusive language or ridicule of opposing players or coaches andcertainly to keep their cool under any circumstance. Come to the games, exercise all the enthusiasmyou can generate, but, please, let's keep our language and signs dignified and sportsmanlike. I havegenerally been proud of the behavior of our sports' fans and would be terribly disappointed if we allowedour enthusiasm to get out of perspective. I like to think that.,despite our desire to win, the students atWestern respect sportsmanship as a virtue. Our team and our coach are perfectly capable and anxious to deal with the opposition to the very best of their ability. Let's not detract from their efforts by resorting topoor sportsmanship or bad manners. William A. Tomaras Director of Athletics Tuition may increase forFall The Washington State legislature has authorized the governing boards of the state colleges anduniversities to increase tuition and fee rates beginning next Fall quarter. The bill was passed by theHouse and Senate last week and Governor Dan Evans is expected to sign the bill this week. Under thebill, state colleges would be authorized to increase tuition from the present $264 per year to $360 peryear for residents and from $471 per year to $720 per year for non-residents, college Business Manager Joe Nusbaum said. The University of Washington and Washington State University are authorized toincrease their tuition and fees from $399 per year to $432 per year for residents and from $879 per yearto $1,080 per year for non-residents, Nusbaum said. The legislative action was prompted by the need formore funds. A report issued by the governor's office revealed that the actual enrollment for the 1969-70academic year was higher than the enrollment budgeted and a revised budget projection exceeds thenumber budgeted for 1970-71. The University of Washington was the only one of the five stateinstitutions of higher learning that did not find itself under-budgeted, the report said. The University lastyear limited its enrollment at 33,600 for Fall 1969 and 35,100 for Fall 1970, the report noted. Aardvarkloves bookworms Alan Watts is coming to i Western. Prepare yourself for discussion—read one of hisbooks: Beat Zen, Square Zew and Zen, The Book, or Psychotherapy East and West. We also have agood supply of Tom Wolfe's The Electric Kool- Aid Acid Test. All Monarch Notes are now half price.This includes Shakespeare Hemingway. Richard Brautigan's Trout Fishing in America; The PillVersus the Spring Hill Mining Disaster; and In Watermelon Sugar are all waiting for your inspection atthe Aardvark. THREE DOORS SOUTH OF SHAKEY'S ON N. STATE ST. Open week nights till 9p.m. AARDVARK Books Arts Placement director explains policies, use of graduation fee The $2received by the placement office from the $8 graduation fee is used to help defray the costs ofmaintaining senior credentials files, Frank Punches, education placement director, explained Friday."These credentials files provide the basic support for candidates in employment interviews," Punchesstated in a letter to the Western Front. He noted that while some seniors may not use placementservices, their contribution helps to cut down the costs of service to those who do. Education majorsmust assemble credentials since school districts employ teachers only on evidence in collegecredentials. "Senior credentials are also the basis for permanent files which are used by alumni forreemployment, and the college provides both placement and credentials service to graduates as long asthey are in teaching," Punches added. Arts and sciences graduates are offered the same employmentand services package. Presently, 197 arts and sciences seniors are registered for service and areparticipating in the on-campus interview program. "This represents about one-third of the total number of arts and sciences seniors graduating in 1970," Punches noted. He warned non-participating arts andsciences seniors that they mighj face certain binds for failing to use the college placement services. "Ifone examines the nature of the confidential information he must provide a commercial employmentagency, as well as the exorbitant fees charged, it should be clear that the $2 campus placement service fee could have been one of the best bargains he will ever see in this world," Punches said. Lummiswork with environment The Lummi Indians' ' aquaculture project is "better than having smoke stacks"according to Vernon Lane. Lane, chairman of the Lummi tribal council, showed a film and answeredquestions on the project at an Environmental Quality Council meeting last Tuesday. Also present wereDr. Wally Heath, director of the project, and Sam Cagey, vice-chairman of the tribal council. The Lummiproject includes the growing and harvesting of fish, worms and algae in Bowman's Bay on WhidbeyCorrection on financial aid The Western Front erroneously reported last week that students must renewtheir financial aid contracts each quarter. It should have read that students must renew their contractseach year. Island, and oysters in Lummi Bay. A 4-acre experimental pond has been built on Bowman'sBay as a "feasibility study" in raising trout. The fish are hatched in the spring and are ready for sale inNovember. Heath said that the project is an "ecological concept." He added that the Lummis'considered industry, but decided to work with the environment instead of against it. In c o n si d e r i ngthe aquaculture project, the tribal council had the Indian People's interests in mind," Lane said. Theycould have leased the land to developers, he noted, but they had always wanted a fish hatchery.AMERICA'S LEADING CHEESE STORES 126 varieties Sample Sefore Wou oftuy BELL1NGHAM MALL How long is it? WOW! where did it come from? J 12 inches! RANCH SANDWICHES across thetracks from the sandpiper ---------- Western Front - 1970 February 17 - Page 8 ---------- 8 Western Front Tuesday, February 17, 1970 Wine, skits help to protest CIA One hundred studentdemonstrators turned out to welcome Central Intelligence Agency recruiters to the campus Wednesday. The spring-like weather gave the demonstration a festival atmosphere with singing, guerilla theater skitsand gallons of free wine. Despite the demonstration on the Edens Hall lawn, the CIA people managed to interview 16 applicants for positions with the nation's top secret security organization. R. G. Peterson,campus security director, impounded two of the many gallons of wine circulating through the crowd.Demonstration organizers were told that they could claim the wine at the dean of men's office. Petersonand several assistants kept a close watch on the demonstration until it broke up later in the afternoon.Several collections were taken to purchase more wine. One CIA recruiter was tipped off about theprotest activities in advance and chose to use a back door to the Edens Hall placement center. Thedemonstrators were later criticized by students and faculty for turning the soggy Edens lawn into a mudhole. HALLELUJAH THE HILLS (U.S.A. 1963) a wild,comical satire on the American way of ShowingFriday, February 20, 1970 Lecture Hall 4 7:00 and 9:15 p.m. Short Subject: The Redwoods Admission -Students $.75 and General $1.25 ife It was a festive demonstration that met CIA recruiters last week asthe protestors cavorted in the sunshine, presented skits and drank wine. -photo- bjrRTng Forumdiscusses relevancy (continued from page 1.) Dr. William Heid said that the chairman of the psychology department is presently receiving information and reconsidering the non-renewal of Heid's contract."College today is indeed relevant. It is relevant to the demands of a rapidly expanding corporate system." Therefore, the students and This is the "something good" you've been looking for. When you goshopping for "something really good" in stereo equipment, you usually have to pay more than youexpected, or.-settle for something less than you expected. The KLH "Model Twenty-Four changes thatsituation—radically. The Model Twenty-Four is a complete stereo music system. Its performance andsound quality are close—very close—to that of the best equipment that KLH, or anyone else, makes.But it costs only a fraction of what it sounds like. And it fits gracefully into any living room. There'snothing missing from the Model Twenty-Four. It has a sensitive, drift-free FM stereo tuner, a custom-made Garrard record changer with Pickering cartridge and And now AM radio can be beautiful too. TheModel Twenty-Four also available with new high quality AM. diamond stylus, plus jacks for externalequipment and for making tape recordings. The solid-state circuitry is powerful enough for any livingroom, and the unobtrusive speaker cabinets contain a pair of full-range, two-speaker systems. Themodest size and price of the Twenty- Four are the results of advanced engineering instead of corner-cutting. Everything from its components to its oiled-walnut cabinetry is designed to provide a genuinesurprise rather than that "nice for the money" feeling. Come see and hear how little it can cost forsomething really good. ADVANCED ELECTRONICS taxpayers are not directly represented, Heidexplained in calling for a re-establishment of a community of scholars which is free of obligations toeconomic institutions. The parking committee was present to answer questions. Dr. Laurence Brewsterof the committee said that the parking situation is going to "get worse before it gets better." Due tolibrary construction next year, there will be about 180 less spaces than at the present time. When astudent asked about picture taking Wednesday at the placement office and Thursday at the parking rally on Red Square, Dean of Men Ray INTERESTED IN AN OVERSEAS CAREER? Of KLH RESEARCH* BEVELOPMtKT I Dr. Robert L. Gulick w i l l bs on fhe campus T u e s . , February 24th to discussqualifications for advanced study al THUNDERBIRD GRADUATE SCHOOL and job opportunities in thef i e ld of INTERNATIONAL MANAGEMENT Interviews may be scheduled at t h e Placement OfficeTHUNDERBIRD GRADUATE SCHOOL OF INTERNATIONAL MANAGEMENT (Formerly: The AmericanInstitute for Foreign Trade) P. O. Box 191 Phoenix, Arizona 85001 Affiliated with The Amer'icanManagement Association — I , 1. I. I. .. i. I- i. •• l-i- i. •' . ..i—r—. . .. -. • Romine explainedthat the pictures taken were to be used in judiciary action when a violation occurred. When accused ofsending the pictures to federal agencies, Romine denied that the pictures ever leave the campus. Hartwell closed the forum by expressing concern over students who leave meetings before they are over,leaving them in a state of doubt. Weiner added the students must get together, go to their departmentsand "don't just wait." Parachute club shows movies The Western Parachute club will present a film onskydiving Thursday at 7 p.m. in Haggard Hall 168. There will be a discussion session afterwards forthose interested in making a jump, Jim Fullerton, spokesman, said. [Church Sunday Services 11 a.m.— Lutheran 4 p.m. — Episcopal THURSDAY 6:30 p.m. — Catholic CCM House 1 Bay Shirt Service COMPLETE LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANING Free Pickup Delivery 734-4200 205 PROSPECT i i ti f i I r i I I i. ---------- Western Front - 1970 February 17 - Page 9 ---------- Tuesday, February 17, 1970 Western Front Summary of legislative convention rules (story on page 3.)The following is a summary of the Winter quarter AS Convention Rules: Sturgis and NominatingConvention Rules will be used for the convention. All delegates must be members of living groups theyrepresent and must be duly selected by that group to be delegates. Each dorm shall be allowed onedelegate for each 20 persons living therein, and one additional delegate for any remaining odd number ofmembers over 10. (Example: 91 members. Four delegates for the first 80 members, and one delegate for the remaining 11 members. Five delegates total.) Each college-approved house shall be allowed onedelegate per each 20 persons living off campus and one additional for any remaining odd number over10. They will be selected from those expressing written interest in being delegates. Each respectivedelegation shall elect a chairman for the purpose of tallying and reporting votes. No delegation can seatmore delegates the second night then they did the first night. A credentials committee of threemembers shall be appointed by the election board to review the procedures of delegate selection andvote to validate or invalidate the delegates' credentials. C r i t e r i a for judging credentials includepublicity methods and selection procedures used by the individual delegates-elect. Mime Troupe offersnight performance The Richmond Shepard Mime Troupe gave a lecture demonstration and a nightperformance on Feb. 8. The company included Richmond Shepard, Susan Ubans "and Corky Greene,accompanist. Shepard and Miss Ubans presented the technique of the mime while Corky Greene didnarration, improvisational sound effects and played a guitar background. Shepard explained the stylizedmanner in which the mime is taught. The emphasis is placed on facial expressions, hand gestures andvarious types of walking movements. The night performance was one of precise and exactcommunication. An essentially satiric impression resulted from the fusion of theme and technique.Shepard and Susan Ubans recreated scenes and moods from contemporary life. In one mime Shepardstarted as a young boy and ended up as an old man. The transition of facial expression and the bodymovements was effective. Communication with the audience was achieved in one sequence in which heasked the audience to call out characters or objects to portray. Someone called out Superman andCorky Greene's sound effects added to the realism of the spontaneous improvisation. Other mimesdone concerned man's situation in war and his constant worry about the future. For those who viewedthe performance it was a most enlightening experience. It would be nice to see the Shepard MimeTroupe make a return visit to our campus sometime in the future. IT'S WASHINGTON'S BIRTHDAY and GEORGE says come in and dig the groovy specials* Sweaters jy and now / gt; price Jackets ^ odds and ends $1.00 up FEBRUARY 20,21, and 23 6 5 men CTh S shop Cornwall at Magnolia If thecredentials committee invalidates any delegation, the president of the dorm or recognized house shall be instructed immediately to submit a new list. The convention speaker shall be the AS president or hisappointee, who will be ratified by the election board. Officials for the nominating convention shall consistof the speaker, a parliamentarian, live secretaries, pages and two sergeants-at-arms. Any of the aboveofficers and employes may be delegates. Voting privileges shall include the right to cast a ballot, tomake nominations or to debate a motion. . Only the delegation chairman has the right to speak from the floor when recognized by the convention chairman. A roll call vote may be demanded by delegates,otherwise the ruling of the chair will be accepted. Any individual or group may be designated as alobbyist or pressure group and will have to be yielded the floor from another delegation to speak.Nomination speeches are limited to four minutes. Seconding speeches are limited to two minutes.Acceptance speeches are limited to five minutes apiece. All candidates for legislative positions shall beselected by secret ballots which shall be provided by the election board. The chairman of eachdelegation will tally the votes of his delegation and report this total to the speaker during the ballot rollcall. A ballot will be taken for all positions unless there is only one persons nominated for that position. The 10 candidates receiving the most votes for legislature shall automatically be qualified for the general election ballot (Spring quarter) with the runners-up being designated as alternates. All demonstrationsfor nominees will be limited to two minutes following nomination or acceptance speeches. Politicalsupport may be arranged between delegation chairman, but each chairman must speak from hisdelegation. Language department outlines requirements The department of foreign languages invites allmajors, minors and others interested in foreign language study to a general meeting at 4 p.m. tomorrowin L-4. Foreign language offerings and major requirements will be outlined, and opportunities for studyabroad and future employment will be presented by faculty members and students. Increasedparticipation of students in planning within the department will be considered. The general meeting willbe followed by individual section meetings, providing an opportunity for specific questions and answersregarding each language area. Public Meeting Open Invitation to: ALL STUDENTS FACULTY Issues: Student Rights / Faculty Tenure / CIA Parking Demonstrations / Bill Heid Controversy / Closed DoorMeetings. Dean Mac Dona Id has been invited VU Lounge, Thursday 4 p.m. BOOKS BY THE POUND th th FEB. 17tnTHRU 28 Special Selection of Paperbacks,Hardbound, Old EditionsTexts ONLY 32 CLB STUDENTS .Arf STORE NO STORE MORE CONVENIENT '"»-rtWl®SSBB8B!S»S3«»«wi«««.v-^ ---------- Western Front - 1970 February 17 - Page 10 ---------- 10 Western Front Tuesday, February 17, 1970 Players to stage comedy Western Players will presentold-fashioned bawdiness, a disguised duke and a triple marriage in Shakespeare's Measure for Measureat 8:15 p.m. Thursday through Saturday in the music auditorium. Directed by Dennis Catrell, the 17thcentury comedy is basically concerned with social relationships and the roles people play in society."Ii\ the words of the current jargon, it has relevance," Catrell said. Duke Vicentio (George Mead) ofVienna decides that he wants a first-hand look at what goes on in his dukedom. Consequently, he turnsover t h e government to his scrupulously honest deputy, The cast and crew of Measure for Measurehave been spending many hours on stage preparing the set and the show for this weekend's production. -photo by arnold Angelo (Vaughn Mitchell). The duke then disguises himself as a friar and enters theworld of the street people. Angelo, as his first official act, decrees the death penalty for an adulterer,Claudio (Dan Fuller). To further complicate the situation, Angelo falls in love with the condemned man'ssister, Isabella (Jayne Muirhead). The play evolves into a melee of sub-plots and counter-plots whichinvolves the prosperous world of bawds, pimps and whores—represented by Mistress Overdone(Victoria Lyon), Pompey (Brent West) and Lucio (Gregg Ross). When the action reaches an epitome ofseemingly hopeless confusion, the ever-present duke resolves the tangle by meting out justice tempered with mercy and ending the play with a triple marriage. This will be the first Shakespearean play thatCatrell has directed. "In reading the play, it seemed difficult and I decided that the way to make theshow happen was to do it," he said. The entire show will be s t a g e d on a simple, irregularly-shapedrevolving platform, which was designed by Stephen McDowell, senior speech major. "We aren't trying to establish nQYvURWN THING NOWI rinses with majors Were ^ ^ ^ f o n j j ^ . nTl Liberal Arts IM$ecnanical 'cS '•. ^t,,rai Design I ,v' , Admin- *Ercnhg,tTet,nnnQ / AccIo unPteinrsgon P/ CcoommPp uter istrat'onl » Food and Hoiei d?£enm eMnatn aIg em^ ent fI ^ C| n d ufs tnea// ^^Sea-PeoP,e^rnuson . RETAKING . BUYING . ACCOUNTING . AUDITING . ARCHITECTURE ER, NG .MECHANICAL ENGINE . MERCHANDISING . PERSONNEL . FOOD MANAGEMENT . VENDING ,s .COMPUTER PR" • P E R S 0 N A ^ N T ENG'NEER'NG ' VTRANSW gt; P . W T , 0N Ideas andpeople make our business. We're in the retailing, food and personal services business. And YOURIDEAS can help us do a better job. Here's where YOU come in. We're changing. And growing. And we're looking for bright young people who can help us make our changes work. YOU are one of the new-idea people we're looking for. HERE'S OUR OFFER: You can start out in management right now. Youmake good money. You put your own ideas to work and evaluate the results. You move up fast. Youwork almost anywhere in the world, with opportunity to travel. You're a big part of our operation. And youaccomplish whatever your talents lead you to work toward. That's it. YOU have the opportunity. We have openings. Let's get together and see if our ideas are in the same bag. Our representatives will be oncampus soon. See your placement director and sign up for an interview NOW! If you can't make ourscheduled interview date, don't sweat it. Write us direct and find out if our ideas are in the same bag.Write to: COLLEGE RELATIONS MANAGER DEPT. NP ARMY AIR FORCE EXCHANGE SERVICETHE SI'STEM 3911 WALTON WALKER BLVD. DALLAS. TEXAS 75222 Equal Opportunity EmployerwujmuiMwuiium~j M*mxBJMm/UiiiiMw Backstage work can be hazardous, as demonstrated by twounidentified crew members who are hanging and focusing lights from far above the stage floor. —photoby arnold an exact realistic locale, but the platform will provide us with a way of changing the audience's viewpoint of the actors," Catrell explained. The costumes, designed and constructed by costumer DonAdams, will also tend to suggest the period of the play, rather than trying to be nit-pickingly authentic.Catrell is experimenting with anthropomorphic scenery—all the actors will be on stage for the wholeshow, actually becoming part of the scenery. This will eliminate the sometimes lengthy entrances andexits that slow down the action. Lighting effects, designed by Bruce McLeod, junior speech major, willalso facilitate rapid scene changes and allow the audience, as well as the actors, to easily follow thetransitions from place to place. Tickets are available at the VU desk and at the door the evenings ofperformances. Wild comedy coming Friday Hallelujah the Hills, a wild comedy made in the early daysof American experimental cinema, will be presented at 7 and 9:15 p.m. Friday in L-4. The 1963 AdolfasMekas film resorts to slow motion, fast motion and stop motion, with the screen continually changingsize and shape. One frame carries Russian subtitles and another Japanese, while in a snow scene, thesound track plays ethnic music from equatorial Africa. "It is a satire on the American way of life and atthe same time a hymn to the joys of youth and friendship," the Manchester Guardian said. TheRedwoods, a short subject, will also be shown. The films are co-sponsored by the department ofcontinuing studies and student activities commission. weisfields JEWELERS 1326 Cornwall Ave. 733-2030 ^dm'Jt^msm. ---------- Western Front - 1970 February 17 - Page 11 ---------- Tuesday, February 17, 1970 Western Front 11 Clayton breaks 1,000 as Viks whip Eastern Guard MikeClayton, passing two scoring milestones, led Western to a sweep last weekend over EasternWashington, 60-54 and 78-54, at Carver gym. The 6-2 senior from Port Angeles scored his 1001st career point Friday to become the first backcourt man in Viking history to do so. The next night he upped histotal to 1,019, passing forward Jim Adam's (1960-63) total of 1,007, going into second place on the all-time Western scoring list. Clayton is almost a sure-bet to pass forward Stan Peterson's (1947-51)leading total of 1,084. Western never trailed the Savages either of the two nights in upping their overallrecord to 11-7 and Evergreen conference (Evco) mark to 5-4. Eastern is now 6-14 on the year and 1-9 in Evco play. Friday the Vikings led at halftime 36-24 only to see it evaporate to one on a powerful surgeby the Savages. Using their patented stall Western staved off the rally, but the contest was nip-and-tuck until the final minute. Clutch second half scoring was provided by Ron Caderette, Neal Larson, JohnReed, Lee Roy Shults, and Jeff Sherburne. Besides Clayton's 16 points, Reed had 11, Larson andShults 9 each, and Sherburne 8. Forward Dave Hayden led Eastern with 13 points and 11 rebounds.Steve Barnett put in 11 points and Bill Broderick 10. Eastern outrebounnded the Vikings 49-36, but had14 turnovers to Western's 6. Saturday Western galloped to a 9-1 lead and never looked back. TheVikings led at the half 38-28 and the closest Eastern came was six early in the second half. Clayton led the Big Blue with 15 points, Larson had 14, Sherburne 10, Shults and Reed 9 apiece, and DannyJohnson 7. Eastern's Randy Buss scored 16. George Gamble had 12 and Barnett 10. Dave Pounds had11 rebounds for the Savages. Western led in rebounding 57-53 with Reed getting 8 and all twelveVikings seeing action at least 2. The Savages were called for 37 fouls in the contest with no less thansix players fouling out. Next weekend Western meets Central Washington at Carver gym. The followingTuesday the Vikings play in their final home appearance of the season against Pacific LutheranUniversity. Vik skiers place second Western's Ski Team raced to a first place finish in slalom andsecond overall in the Winter Carnival at Snoqualmie Pass Feb. 7 and 8. The meet, sponsored byOlympic College, was won by the University of Puget Sound (UPS) with a total of 192.56 points.Western finished second with 182.60 points. Third was captured by host Olympic with 154.51 points.Individual standouts for Western were Gregg Larson and John Schutt. Larson finished second in theslalom event and Schutt placed third in the slalom and third in the giant slalom. First place in bothevents was won by Dick Pattison of UPS. Vik grapplers lose to Central Western's matmen lost a hard-fought 22-15 meet to Central here last Saturday. The inspired Vik grapplers, who trailed one time 12-0,came back to take a 15-14 lead, but Central won the two remaining matches to win the meet.Summary: 1 1 8 - K e n i c h i Kanno decisioned Ron Kuhnhausen (W), 15-5; 1 2 6 - K i m Richardsdecisioned Dennis Moore (W), 3-1; 1 3 4 - C r aig Skeesick decisioned Dennis Daniels (W), 7-1; 142— Thurman Landers decisioned Dennis Bauer (W), 6-2; 150-Lee Anderson (W) and Orrin Hatcher, 3-3draw; 15 8-Dave Climer (W) decisioned Dennis Dahl, 6-4; 167—Bill Hunt (W) won by forfeit; 177-MikeCompton (W) pinned Gary Stevenson; 190—Steve Smith decisioned JeffMichaelson(W),0-9; HWT-EdHarris pinned Jerry Jarboe (W). The Vik matmen conclude their season on Feb. 27 when Western hosts the Evergreen C o n f e r e n c e Wrestling championships. JV's win twice Western's JV's picked uptheir 11th and 12th victories of the season here last week, by whipping the University of British Columbia frosh, 8746 on Monday and then defeating the Whidbey Island Naval Air Station, 8749 on Saturday. J \ =X Classified Advertising JT 10 MISC. FOR SALE I pair new flared fiberglass front fenders for '61-66VW $44.95. 734-5209. I I CARS CYCLES Complete Menu Service Pizza Broasted ChickenHamburgers Prawns ^ For Sale: 1969 GTO 400 cubic inch engine, vinyl top, air conditioning, inexcellent condition. Contact Barry, 734-0370. 21 ROOM AND BOARD Room and board available forSpring quarter. Elkins Hall, call Linda Bennett 733-9968. 30 ROOMMATE WANTED ~~Alasl«§llfll*veri\ x;ri 209 W. Holly $2$o STEAK A Broasted potato and toast 2 roommates wanted forsummer quarter. Also two for month of August. Contact Barry at 617 N. Forest or call 734-0370. Girl toshare two-bedroom apt. Spring. Close to campus. $135. 734-8030. __ 50 PERSONALS NORTHWESTFREE LAW SCHOOL-Accepting applications for instructor positions Spring quarter. No pay, but tenureto all. A new concept school to teach liberal law-military law, landlord law, narcotics law. Here's yourchance to fix the world. Write John Stolpe, 309 Glad-stone St., Bellingham. 51 LOST AND FOUND M T. BAKER 106 N. COMMERCIAL 734-4950 DOORS OPEN 7 p.m. TONIGHT STARTING WEDNESDAYDoors Open 6:15 p.m. —ENDS TONIGHT— OnceYou Kiss a Stranger starts 7:15 only TheArrangement starts 9:15 only WATT A WAY TO PLUG A BRAIN GAP! In antique ring with diamondsand a turquoise stone in a gold setting lost on lower campus. If found contact Susan, Kappa 334.Reward offered. Lost: Glasses in black case, left in VW bus Saturday, Feb. 7 when picked up at Hollyand Indian. 733-4192 if found. Stleised gt;) BUtNH VISK 0ISIBI8UII0K CO. INC '1965 Kill Oi:nerProduction! ALSO - WALT DISNEY'S "PARENT TRAP Feature Times: Wed. Thurs. Fri. Mon. Tues.Computer 6:30-10:15 Parent Trap 8:15 continuous from noon, Sat.-Sun. Western's Mike Clayton (14)gets his shot off despite double coverage from two Eastern defenders. Chip Kohr (22) moves in for apossible rebound for the Viks. -photo by shoblom Rugby teams whip Oregon State Paul Barstad's game-winning Western's rugby seconds also try with a minute left, enabled won as they defeated the OregonWestern's rugby firsts to whip State seconds, 3-0. Vic Coudriet Oregon State, 12-1 i last Sunday scoredthe lone try. at Roosevelt Field. P ; AT POPULAR PRICES! CONTINUOUS PERFORMANCES!DIRECT FROM :A ITS LONG-RUN VIUUW/ " ^WILUAMWYIER-RAYSTARK. ROADSHOW .ENGAGEMENTS! $ \ A i t l gt; r TTECHWCOIOWwwson*'ggg) 3RD WEEK! ITHEATRBT gt;^—^rSchedule of Performances 1224 Commercial 733-9755 Today—5:30-8:30 wmmmmmmm COLUMBIAPICTURES and RASTJR PRODUCTIONS orestnl OMAR Open Every Night-7:00 P.M.MetroGoldwynMayer presents Martin Ransohoffs Production of , A d f t l . $ 1 . 5 0 "lee Station Zebra"Rock Hudson Ernest Borgnine Patrick McGoohan-Jim Brown co-storing ^B*W I I srr^y^ lbny Bill LlOydNolan Super Panavision®and Metrocolor « $ MGM [ G j ^ i ^ also A Disney Featurette "A Boy AndThe Eagle" Boy And Eagle- 7:37-11:23 — Ice Station Zebra-8:40 ,-**Hnrrtr*ttrirrmmTrtrn lt;r-n,nmmansysaEiBiatfSK. ---------- Western Front - 1970 February 17 - Page 12 ---------- 12 Western Front Tuesday, February 17, 1970 Viks to host Evco champion Central Nationally-rankedCentral Washington will face Western in basketball action this Friday and Saturday nights at Carvergym. The Wildcats, ranked eighth among the nation's small colleges last week, ran their winning streak to 16, defeating Whitworth twice 83-64 and 93-71 at Ellensburg last weekend. The wins clinched theEvergreen conference (Evco) championship. It was the sixth straight title for Central coach DeanNicholson. Central's overall record is 22-1, losing only to Whittier, 59-57 in the championship game ofthe Chico State Invitational ^tournament. In Evco play Central owns a perfect 10-0 record with Westernthe only team able to tarnish that mark, this being the final weekend of conference league games. Overin Ellensburg the Vikings lost twice 78-63 and 75-66. The Wildcats, several of whom were suffering withthe flu last week, are reportedly back at full strength. They are led by forward Paul Adams, a 6-6 senior. The All-American candidate is socring at an 18 point per game clip and is among the league leaders inrebounds and assists. Mitch Adams, brother of Paul, and George Bender will also be up front for theWildcars. Mitch, a 6-5 junior, was an All-conference selection last season while Bender, a rugged 6-7performer, is only a sophomore. In the backcourt will be guards Dave Allen and Joe La Duce. Allen, aslick shooter and ball-handler, is a 5-10 senior. La Duca is a flashy 6-0 senior. Guard Andy Harris, upfrom the junior college ranks, and forward Eric Schooler supply the bench strength. In Central's lastappearance here they lost twice 59-48 and 54-53 before going on to finish third in the NAIA nationaltournament at Kansas City. Larson leads Viks past Portland State Neal Larson put it all togetheragainst Portland State University and those who witnessed the effort will never forget it. Western's "Mr.Hustle" scored 26 points and hauled down 14 rebounds in leading the Vikings to an 83-68 victory lastMonday night at Carver gym. In the first half alone the 6-1 junior from little Rosburg, Wash, put in 18points. At one point he scored seven straight field goals for the Vikings, thwarting Portland State'sattempt to run away with the contest. The blond-haired guard, who kept the crowd in a continued uproar, fired through 12 of 18 field goals from everywhere on the court. His departure from the game with 1:26remaining . sparked a standing ovation that lasted nearly a minute. Larson's heroics along with scoringbursts by Dave Hemion and Lee Roy Shults cut a six-point Portland State lead to one, 4140, at halftime. A Larson field goal put the Vikings ahead to stay 45-43, though Portland State stayed within fourpoints until Western pulled away in the last five minutes. «29: WVVSC Dept. of Speech mgmti^ioxim?z£ 734-8800 present a bawdy comedy by WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE MEASURE FORMEASURE COLLEGE AUDITORIUM February 19,20%2\ 8:15 P.M. Reserved Seats Now On Sale AtVIKING UNION DESK UBC sinks Vik tankers Western's swimming team lost to the University of British Columbia (UBC), 65-39 here on Saturday; after splitting in a double dual meet in Tacoma on Friday.On Friday, Western whipped Oregon College of Education (OCE), 59^4, but lost to the University ofPuget Sound (UPS), 7340. Against UBC, Western garnered just three firsts, as the strong Thunderbirdteam dominated the meet. Western's team of Bruce Johnson, Jeff Hopper, Tom Ward, and Gerry Gentwon the 400-yard medley relay (4:05.4). Ward won the 200-yard butterfly (2:22.6). Western swept the200-yard breaststroke, as Hopper (2:35.6) finished just ahead of Ken Visser (2:36.0). Against OCE,Western swept the first two places in six events. Against UPS Robin Allen saved a possible Loggersweep, as he won both diving events. Western's tank team concludes its regular season this weekendwhen the Viks host Pacific Lutheran University. The Hoop Scoop Paul Madison sports reporter Abasketball rivalry that has reached red-hot proportions will be renewed this weekend when nationally-ranked Central Washington invades Western's friendly confines of Carver gymnasium. In recent years the two teams have waged titanic battles and this upcoming confrontation appears to be no different. This isespecially so after happenings earlier this season over in Ellensburg. There the Vikings dropped twogames, though outplaying Central in the second, only to be victimized by poor officiating. Reason in partfor the lopsided foul count, 33-17, in the extremely physical game by both clubs was one official inparticular. A month before the series Coach Chuck Randall had requested that this official not call ineither contest due to his poor calling in previous years there. Also one of the Wildcats succumbing to the heat of the contest started a near-brawl by striking Western's Neal Larson. The incident cleared bothbenches with several punches thrown and brought a few fiery-eyed Central fans onto the floor. After thefight the crowd, which up to then had backed the Wildcats with several standing ovations and extremevocality, became highly abusive toward Western. This was especially true behind the Viking bench where unruly spectators hollered obscenities and tossed debris. Central's newspaper put the entire blame forthe incident on Western, who it stated, "battered, elbowed and clipped" the Wildcats using "grapplertactics." The following week a fight broke out in the first game of the Central-Eastern Washington seriesat Cheney. One wonders how their sports writer accounted for this. It is hoped Western fans attendingthe contest show just how much enthusiasm can really be generated without resorting to the "bush"tactics shown at Ellensburg. The lone objective for the Big Blue will be to answer a question posed by the Central paper, "Is Western for real?" Let's find out if the Wildcats are for real. Look What 22 £ WillBuy! toothbrushes playing cards dozen shoe laces ceramic mugs shoe caddy oven mits flashlights1500 in. cello tape 100 envelopes ash trays 3-12 in. candles incense candy bars comet cleaner 9-volttransistor batteries assorted scrubbers SAVINGS SPECIALS! Wallets reg. 5.00 now $1.22 Bumble See Tuna 4 cans $1.22 Men's Socks reg. .98 pr. now 3 for $1.22 Desert Flower hand body lotion reg.$4.00 now $1.22 FEB. 18-22 PAYHSAVE 1400CORNWALL AVE. 733-0580
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- 1970_0225 ---------- Western Front - 1970 February 25 - Page 1 ---------- Vol. LXN no. 24 Western Washington State College Bellingham, Washington 98225 Wednesday, February 25, 1970 10c Black Culture Week Feb. 22-28 Western's second annual Black Culture Week is now inprogress. Black culture begi
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1970_0225 ---------- Western Front - 1970 February 25 - Page 1 ---------- Vol. LXN no. 24 Western Washington State College Bellingham, Washington 98225 Wednesday, February 25, 1970 10c Black Culture W
Show more1970_0225 ---------- Western Front - 1970 February 25 - Page 1 ---------- Vol. LXN no. 24 Western Washington State College Bellingham, Washington 98225 Wednesday, February 25, 1970 10c Black Culture Week Feb. 22-28 Western's second annual Black Culture Week is now inprogress. Black culture begins for Blacks where history books stopped teaching or fust did not teach.Black Culture Week helps Black people re-identify with their Afro-American heritage by showing Blackachievements with art displays, music, plays, poetry writing and readings. TODAY- 3 pin.: Keve Bray,speech on Black Nationalism. 8:15 p.m.: Black play, music auditorium. TOMORROW- 4 p.m.: Blackstudies panel, VU lounge. 8 p.m.: Films and poetry by Black students, L-2. FRIDAY, FEB. 2 7 - 3 p.m.:What is the BSU? (BSU panel discussion) VU lounge. 8 p.m.: Cannonball Adderly, Carver Gym. 8:15p.m.: Walter Armstrong Quartet, music auditorium. SATURDAY, FEB. 2 8 - 10 a.m. to noon and 24p.m.: Music workshop with Cannonball Adderly Quartet, VU lounge. All Day State BSU steeringcommittee meeting. (Not open to the public.) 8 p.m.: BSU cabaret, VU 361. (Not open to the public.)SUNDAY, MARCH 1- Soul food dinner, upper and lower Saga. (Dinner hours.) There will be a Black Artdisplay in the VU art gallery during Black Culture Week. The works were donated by Eddy Walker,Seattle. waves so slow no colors are formed so fast jazz is slow massaging messaged of ] life intomicro sensual separations between every muscle-feeling fibre and jazz is strength carrying History,pushin' ahead people towards peace —Jeannette Bland $Jfe ~ On the inside: BahaiWeek-p.2Convention passes many important bills - p. 2 Parking talks continue - p. 6 College Senate and AllCollege Government - p. 7-10 Tenants Union negotiations - p. 14 ---------- Western Front - 1970 February 25 - Page 2 ---------- Western Front Wednesday/February 25, 1970 Convention passes many important bills John Engstrom,elections board chairman, labeled the AS legislature Winter Quarter Convention, "a grand success."Engstrom said that though attendance was not as large as he had hoped it would be, the quality of thebills submitted far surpassed that of the first legislative convention held last Spring. The conventionpassed 19 bills, failed 2 and placed 2 in committee. Six other bills were withdrawn by their sponsoringdelegations. The two bills sent to the Student Welfare Committee were the controversial Student Bill ofRights and the Bill of Particulars. These bills reinforce the rights established in the US Constitution andestablish particular student rights on the Western campus. A motion passed instructing the StudentWelfare Committee to publicize committee meetings and allow any person attending those meetings tohave full voting privileges on those two bills. Another motion that the convention go on record as being infull support of the purpose of the students' rights bills was passed. The convention passed a billrequesting the psychology department and the administration to reconsider its position regarding theretention of Dr. William Heid, and that the "Associated Students go on record as supporting the right ofDr. Heid to use his teaching methods and goals . . . and urge his retention as a faculty member." TheBeta delegation submitted a resolution that the convention go on record as giving unanimous support tothe continued bookstore investigation. _ (Continued on page 13) Three more resign from AS legislature;only 73 left Three elected AS legislators, including this quarter's speaker, have resigned their studentgovernment positions over the past two weeks. Jim Eberhardt, speaker, Terry Sanders, legislator-at-large; and Wally Sigmar, legislator, all gave up their student government posts. Eberhardt said that hewas forced to resign because of his 'The fantastic Dino's Grinder' academic load and for reasons ofhealth. Both Sigmar and Sanders gave no official reasons for their resignations, other than the fact thatboth have been dissatisfied with the AS legislature and its accomplishments this quarter. Theirresignations drop the legislature membership to 13, of which five are appointees chosen to fill previousvacancies. 10% off all food orders 'til the end of the month 111 E. Magnolia 734-9365 The Pizza isSuperb! where the College Bus stops I "the way to wealth is as plain as the way to market. It dependschiefly on two words, industry and frugality; that is, waste neither time nor money, but make the bestuse of both. Without industry and frugality nothing will do, and with them everything." Benjamin FranklinV J ranklin Half Dollar MONEY TALKS And in no uncertain terms with NBofC special 7lf\ checking.Your own checking account protects | " l your funds—no need to keep much cash around. W It providesa record of expenditures—helps to maintain your budget. Come in today! NBC NATIONAL BANK OFCOMMERCE to Zoroaster, Jesus and Mohammed. Interested students are also invited to Baha'i forums, held each Wednesday at 3 p.m. in VU 361. Dean of Men C.W. McDonald speaks to Don Alford, whodrove his Volkswagon bus into Red Square last Monday. Alford was protesting the parking situation afterhis vehicle had been towed from a parking lot the previous week. —photo by wyman Bahai promisesunited world A united world by the year 2000 is one of the promises of the Baha'u'llah faith. Informingpeople about this, and the other teachings of Baha'u'llah, a 19th century Persian, is the aim of Bahaiweek, planned for March 2-7. Oneness of God, religion, and mankind, is the theme of the faith, whichhas no clergy and depends upon independent investigation. Each service is different and all ritual isforbidden. The faith began in 1863 when Baha'u'llah proclaimed his mission to the world. There are nowabout 20 million Bahai believers, including 11 on this campus and the numbers are steadily growing.Bahai's believe that Baha'u'llah is the latest manifestation of God, successor Bahai Week scheduleMONDAY, March 2 - 7:30 p.m.: Wes Baker, "Oneness of God and Man." TUESDAY, MARCH 3 - 7:30 p .m.: Clyde Johnson, fireside chat. WEDNESDAY, MARCH 4 - Phil Lucas and the World Citizens. (Timewill be announced later.) THURSDAY, MARCH 5 - 7:30 p.m.: Richard Yankee, fireside chat. FRIDAY,MARCH 6 - 7:30 p.m.: Farhang Javid, "Dawning of a New Age." SATURDAY, MARCH 7- 3 p.m.: KavusMonadjemi, "Personal Transformation through Baha'u'llah." 7:30 p .m.: Jinai Singers, "It's Coming." ALLWEEK-Bahai art, VU Gallery. (Places for Bahai Week events to be announced later.) Doubt saysWashington may become most liberalized state for abortion law Washington State's abortion law will bethe most liberal in the United States if the referendum is passed by the people next November, Dr.Normadell Doubt said here last week. Liberalized abortion laws are on the books in five states besidesWashington. Doubt, a Bellingham physician, was a member of last Tuesday's Book of the Quarter panel discussion on The Terrible Choice: The Abortion Dilemma. Other panelists included Linda Bridges,junior and Associated Women Students president; Mrs. Margaret Mortenson, a local pharmacist;Edward B. O'Connor, a Bellingham attorney; and moderator William H. O. Scott, circulation librarian atWestern. Cheapest Price On Kegs In Town NO TAP DEPOSIT Contact Campus Brewery Rep. JERRYHENSOIM 734-8011 'It's the Water' Miss Bridges expressed the hope that abortion reform will notcheapen the respect for life, while Mrs. Mortenson cited the possibility of "doing away" with old or sickpeople as a potential outgrowth of abortion reform. O'Connor discussed the legal aspects of theproposed abortion law, pointing out that any abortions performed after the four-month conception periodare illegal. The Spring Book of the Quarter selection is The Environmental Handbook, prepared for thefirst national environmental teach-in on April 22. star flowers 79£ a bunch I.V. Wilson Florists 1426Cornwall 733-7630 ---------- Western Front - 1970 February 25 - Page 3 ---------- Wednesday, February 25, 1970 Western Front TODAY-Noon: Episcopal worship, Campus ChristianMinistry. TOMORROW-Noon: Rev. D. Negen, "The Christian and War," VU 10. 1 p.m.: Harriet Ashton,"The Revolutionary Dynamics of Women's Liberation," VU lounge. 1 p.m.: Student recital, musicauditorium. 4 p.m.: Episcopal worship, Campus Christian Ministry. 5 p.m.: Inter-Hall Council, Gold Room, Ridgeway dining hall. 6:30 p.m.: Roman Catholic worship, Campus Christian Ministry. 7 p.m •Cramming conference, Cheney. 7 p.m.: College Life, VU 363. FRIDAY, FEB. 2 7 - I p.m.: Evergreenwrestling conference, Carver gym. 7 p.m.: Swimming conference, Cheney. 7 and 9:15 p.m.: Undergroundfilms, The Flower Thief and The Bed, L-4. 8:15 p.m.: Walter Zuber Armstrong Ensemble, musicauditorium. SATURDAY, FEB. 2 8 - 7 p.m.: Swimming conference, Cheney. 9 p.m.: Mixer, "Carl Wilsonand Heart, VU lounge. 9 p.m.: Mama Sunday's coffee den. SUNDAY, MARCH 1- All day: DrugEducation Symposium, VU lounge. II a.m.: Lutheran worship, Campus Christian Ministry. 4 p.m.:Episcopal worship, Campus Christian Ministry. MONDAY, MARCH 2 - Baha'i Week. See Western Frontand daily bulletin for week's activities. Doctor to speak on drug abuse during symposium Dr. Joel Fort, a doctor from Ohio State University and a specialist in drug abuse, will speak on "The Mind-Adulterating Drug (M.A.D.) World," at 8 p.m. Thursday, March 5, in the VU lounge. Fort will be a featured speakerduring the Drug Education Symposium, March 2-5, sponsored by Inter-Hall Council. The symposium will also include two faculty-student panels which will deal with the social, biological and medicalimplications of drug usage. Discussing the medical effects of drugs will be Dr. Christopher Taylor,assistant professor of psychology and Dr. Don Williams, assistant professor of biology. Dealing with the social implications will be Dr. Robert Meade, professor of psychology and Dr. David Pevear, assistantOswald says bookstore board ineffectual; should constantly assess co-op's actions Bob Burnettassistant to the editor The present bookstore board is ineffectual because it has not made a constantsurvey of the bookstore, according to AS legislator John Oswald. Comments made by Dr. HowardMitchell, chairman of the bookstore board, support this belief, Oswald charged last week. "I don't thinkOswald has the necessary background in economics, finance and marketing required to make thesejudgements. He is stating his f e e l i n g s , " Mitchell responded. A bill asking for disbanding and re-establishment with new members of the bookstore board and calling for bookstore manager Ray T.Knabe's resignation by June, 1970, died at the AS winter convention Thursday night. But delegates ofthe convention went on record, by a majority decision, as being in fuh support of a continued bookstoreinvestigation. The bookstore committee c i t e d lack of student representation on bookstore issues as a major reason, for the investigation. Mitchell said that any student or faculty may register complaintswith any member of the bookstore board at any time. He added that no major policy decisions had beenmade this year since there has been little student representation on the bookstore board. "The ASshould meet with the bookstore board at least once a year to discuss policies," he said. Oswald saidthat investigation had shown that Western's bookstore offered 170 different styles of sweatshirts, T-shirts and sweaters with the school emblem or markings, whereas the UW bookstore offered a maximum of27 varieties. "The UW bookstore has some 15 clothing stores in its immediate vicinity which offer whatthe bookstore does not," Mitchell said. Bellingham merchants do not offer the variety Western studentswant, Knabe said, "and we do." Legislator John Engstrom asked why so much paper has been stocked. Mitchell said that the possibility of a nation-wide trucking strike initiated the overstocking. "Papermerchants guarantee delivery, but can't possibly deliver without the truckers. Students can't write theirtests on a guarantee," he said. Pass-fail system to be reviewed by committee The pass-fail system,which was installed at Western two years ago on a trial basis, is up for review this year. Dr. RobertMeade, professor of psychology, has been appointed chairman of a committee which will study theeffectiveness of the pass-fail system. The committee, consisting of three faculty, two students, and oneadministrator, will study "opinioned evidence with respect to pass-fail education," Meade said. As many aspects as possible of the pass-fail system will be investigated and considered before the committeemakes recommendations on whether the system should be continued, dropped or modified, Meadesaid. Letters and comments on pass-fail education are encouraged, he added. They should beaddressed to Meade in the psychology department. pomwvm IHH Mexico Colegjo Victoria,Guadalajara, announces its 1970 summer session. Room, Board, Tuition, Fees, $250. Transportationfor groups of 50-S125 R.T. Also actively seeking representatives. Duties include promotion, studentrecruitment, publicity and advisement. Full or part time. Excellent earnings and fringe benefits. Nogimmicks. Call 988-4333 or write: Director Colegio Victoria, Box 1327, Bellingham, Wash. 98225.734-6262 Orders to go CHINESE and AMERICAN 1*jHt FOOD Open 11 a.m. daily; 2 p.m. SundayiiiiiiiiBWii professor of geology. Panelists will conduct discussion groups in the dorms each night duringthe symposium. Fort is on the faculty of the University of California at Berkeley (School of SocialWelfare) and has been a leading spokesman for the reform of drug laws. Fort, a former Consultant onDrug Abuse for the World Health Organization, founded the Haight-Ashbury Crisis Clinic and the SanFrancisco Center for Special Problems, both of which treat all forms of drug abuse. The author of ThePleasure Seekers, Fort has also written Pot: A Rational Approach. He also served as a defense witness during the trials of Lenny Bruce and Timothy Leary. Drug symposium schedule MONDAY, MARCH 2 -Noon: Faculty-student panel, "The Medical and Biological Effects of Drug Usage," VU lounge. TUESDAY, MARCH 3 - 2 p.m.: Films, You Can't Grow a Green Plant in a Closet, LSD 25 and The Children areChoosing, VU lounge. WEDNESDAY, MARCH 4 - Noon: Faculty-student panel, "The Social Implicationsof Drug Usage," VU lounge. THURSDAY, MARCH 5 - 8 p.m.: Dr. Joel Fort, "Mind-Adulterating Drug(M.A.D.) World," VU lounge. Federal aid applications due Students desiring summer jobs with thecollege work study program must apply for qualification for the federal aid t o education programimmediately. Because qualification is based on need, each applicant must file a copy of the ParentsConfidential Statement in the financial aids office, 103 Old Main. A summer work study orientationmeeting, planned for March, will give students an opportunity to apply directly for summer employment.rf % ec t GIFTER prints custom framing complete line of.art supplies BELLINGHAM MALL "If; I wereasked to state the great objective which Church and State are both demanding for the sake of every manand woman and child in this country, I would say that that great objective is 'a more abundant life'."Franklin D. Roosevelt I , : gt; -'••"•- -•--" r Roosevelt Dime MONEY TALKS r . A n d 'ts tone is persuasive with an NBofC spe- | j cial checking account. A great way to organize i | 7 your budget. . .have money when you need it. ^ Learn how convenient it is—and how effective — to have your ownpersonal checking account! NBC NATIONAL BANK OF COMMERCE i ---------- Western Front - 1970 February 25 - Page 4 ---------- 4 Western Front Wednesday, February 25, 1970 Odd bodkins Constitutional proposal deserves supportThe Committee on College Government has re-submitted its constitutional proposal for Western. Aftermaking several changes necessary to make the document legal and more clear, the committee, underthe auspices of the Faculty Council, is now awaiting response from the constituencies. The previousproposal, which was printed in the Oct. 7 issue of the Western Front, received little response, and during several meetings concerning the proposal, few people were present. The committee needs responsefrom the people before it will present the document for a vote by the academic community. While theproposal, like all compromises b e t w e e n rival college factions (a d m in istration-students-facu Ity-staff), is not perfect nor completely satisfactory to everyone, we believe that the proposal is a well-thoughtout one and deserves more support than it has been getting. We believe that student response to theproposal has been especially poor and that the present AS administration should take some action inrecognizing the proposal and working with the committee towards presenting it to the academiccommunity. Last year the AS sat on the committee and fought for student representation. Perhapsthrough discouragement, student interest dropped off until there are no student members left on thecommittee. While student representation is not as high as some would like it, it is representation. Allthis confusion about student participation seems ironic: when there is a positive route to studentparticipation begging for a chance. The proposal is making a last stand, after years of effort. If it does notreceive response, it will die. Along with it will die a chance for honest student participation. —MikeGowrylow Off-campus students apathetic Student apathy has been demonstrated at Western again. Atlast week's legislative convention, on-campus students were well-represented. That means approximately a third of the student body was well-represented. But what about the other two-thirds—the off-campusstudents? Of an estimated 6,000 off-campus students, only about 150 signed up to be a delegate. Ofthose students, only 35 attended Wednesday and only 70 on Thursday. We have arrived at theconclusion that one of two situations have taken place: either the off-campus students have decided tolet the on-campus student speak for them, or they have developed an "I don't give a damn" attitude. Wewould rather think it is the latter. What bothers us is that after the convention is over and its bills havebeen enacted, there is bound to be some complaints. It just doesn't seem to be in the nature of peopleto be satisfied with what they have but when they have a change to do something, they "let George do it." Before you start griping about what the convention did and didn't do about such issues as parkingtenure and promotion and other important topics, ask yourself one question. Where were you during theconvention? —Jim Austin thewestern front Official weekly newspaper of Western Washington StateCollege second class postage paid at Bellingham, Wash. 98225 phone 734-8800 editorial, ext. 2277advertising, ext. 2276 MikeGowrylow Adele Saltzman ' Bob Burnett John Stolpe Jill Stephenson editor-in-chief managing editor assistant to the editor copy editor assistant copy editor Bob Taylor Jim AustinMaryjo Hardy Bill Woodland R. E. Stannard Jr. sports editor exchange editor a(* manager businessmanager advisor Reporters: Mary Berling, Ted Bestor, Jim Bromley, Don DeMarco, Jim Diedrick, BarbaraDinner, Mike' Erickson, Forrest Goldade, Morrene Head, Jackie Lawson, Jay Long, Paul Madison, MaryPeebles Margaret Thornton, Lyn Watts. Cartoonist: Mike Erickson Head Photographer: Dan ShoblomPhotographers: Mike Arnold, Jerry King. Ad salesman: Steve Stubbe, Ron Jones., George Walter. .Graphics: John Driscoll Deadlines: 5 p.m. Tuesday-display ad reservations 4 p.m. Thursday—newscopy, letters to the editor, classified ads, display ad copy. Represented by NEAS, 360 Lexington Ave.,New York, N.Y. 10017 Price per copy, 10 cents Subscription, $3.50 a year, $1.50 a quarter. Member:U.S. Student Press Association, College Press Service, Associated College Press and IntercollegiatePress Service. * Edens should remain dorm (A copy of this letter was also sent to President Flora.)Bekka J. Jensen Director, Edens Hall I have been informed that the decision about whether to changeEdens South into office space this July has been forwarded to you. I hope that before the final decision ismade that you will consider what I present to you in this letter. In my position as director of Edens I feelthat I am one of the few that now represents student opinion about Edens. I am informed about bothsides of the argument. The students and I have presented the arguments to Jerry Brock, Director ofHousing, but we feel that it will further our chances of retaining the hall if we also present them to you. 'Last week we presented a petition to Mr. Brock containing over two hundred signatures. He expressed the opinion that the petition did not hold much importance since most of those who signed would not beliving in Edens next year anyway. The opinion was also expressed that so far most of the reaction toclosing Edens has been emotional and not logical. Both of these criticisms are poor. First, the petitionsigned by that many students is very important They have used the most proper of channels in trying toexpress their wishes. Whether they live in the hall or elsewhere is secondary. Second, emotional feelings about losing a place like Edens South are real and justifiable and should be considered valuable. Butbesides our love for Edens we do have many logical reasons for wanting to retain Edens as a home. Forexample, it is obvious that it is an appealing residence. During last Fall quarter, Edens South housed 192women. No other dorm on campus was able to triple up as Edens was. Although its capacity is only 132, very few complaints were registered. On the contrary, the south section of Edens, which is beingconsidered for office space, is now housing 143 women. It is still 11 over capacity because eachadditional girl petitioned the housing office and agreed to pay regular double rates even though living in atriple room, in order to stay at Edens. With campus population rising to over a thousand more next year, it seems logical to retain the extra beds at Edens. This was the feeling of the Housing Advisory council of Auxiliary Enterprises, which voted in favor of retaining Edens as a residence last week. I know that newbeds are promised for next Fall but this promise was in effect last Fall when Edens was tripled andstudents were sleeping in sleeping bags in the Viking Union, in tents, and in station wagons. The location of Edens is really ideally suited for a women's hall. Girls have told me that they could not or would notwalk to the campus at night from off-campus. Future plans, however, are for housing to be located a milefrom campus. Since many students are without cars, their use of the library and their participation incampus activities during the evening would be restricted. And finally, the constructionally unique qualities of Edens can never be duplicated in newly built dorms with today's architectural plans. For instance, Iknow that because of the wide hallways here, many small group meetings have taken place that have notoccurred in the newer north section of the building. Almost all of the south rooms have four large closetsand a wash basin. I wonder if administrators would appreciate these items as much as students do. Itmay seem trivial, but Edens South is the only dorm with interior ceilings ten feet high. This spaciousness is extremely pleasing. If academic space is really short and room must be found, would you pleaseconsider taking the Edens' north section? Since those rooms and hallways have always been consideredsomewhat sterile and cold it is easier to justify losing them to office space. Edens South is a beautifulold building that is now in the same position as the Pike Place Market in Seattle. Those in favor ofrenovating were right perhaps about making or saving money. But they were wrong about making a betterspace for people. The charm and beauty and historical value and uniqueness of Edens South cannot bemeasured in dollars and sense. Office space will always just be office space. Converting the "Home ofColor and Light" would be tragic. . / * j * # / / / ^ y ^ ^••«**~~««*-~~««..M«•••»» •* gt;,*•.** %r fca»Bjfc.* *J • ---------- Western Front - 1970 February 25 - Page 5 ---------- Wednesday, February 25, 1970 Western Front Proposes faculty park-in Editor: As a member of thefaculty, I would like to voice my concern over the exorbitant student parking fees. Since the students'objections have only been met with the advice to take their demands to the parking committee (whichapproved the present situation), perhaps the following facts will shed some light on the generalconfusion. 1. The maximum student parking fee per quarter at Central is $3, at Eastern is $5, at WSUis $2.50, at U of Wis $15, as compared to $18 at Western. 2. As of June 30 the parking fund had abalance of $66,850 to the good. Note that is after the $43,000 spent last year to improve the lots to theirpresent expansion. 3. If the parking fees had not been increased this year and the revenue from permitshad remained the same as last year at $52,160 (even though there was an increase in the number ofparking spaces), the net profit for this year would have been $26,160, using their projected operatingexpense of $25,000 for this year. 4. The projected profit for this year is $70,000, thus giving a projectedtotal balance of $136,850 at the end of this year. The figures in the last three statements are containedin "Western Washington State College Parking Study" presented to the Board of Trustees on July 11,1969 and approved by the Parking Committee. Since the college exists for the benefit of the studentsand n o t the f a c u l t y or administration, why should parking be a profit-making operation? Myinquiries have led me to conclude that the administration feels that such a large profit is necessary inorder to finance the sale of bonds for a proposed new Viking Union ramp parking structure. The cost ofsuch a structure is approximately $700,000 for 340 stalls or about $2,000 per stall. Thus the studentsare being forced to subsidize a parking structure from which they themselves will get little benefit. Toclaim that students will have the same right to park there as anyone else is like saying that according to the present parking regulation, students have an equal right to park in the lots near Old Main.Somehow it just never works out that way. Moreover, to make such a structure feasible, there will haveto be day and night parking permits. This means that even if a student were willing to pay an even higher fee to park in such a ..r^a^as?^. structure, he could not park there at night without additional charge.There are other ways to raise the initial equity needed to build such a parking structure than from thestudents. In order to stress my conviction that the student parking fees should be lowered, I will parkmy car in Red Square this Thursday at 10 a.m. I invite any other concerned faculty member who iswilling to stand up for the students to join me. Richard Vawter assistant professor physics departmentHospital thanks Western for donation (For those who doubted me or thought I was insincere, here is aletter explaining following matters that occurred after the collection was taken to Seattle—Philippe Jean Edward Bateman.) (Ed. note: Bateman collected money for birth defects and this letter from theChildren's Orthopedic Hospital and Medical Center in Seattle is in reply to his efforts.) Dear Students ofWestern Washington State College: On behalf of the Board of Trustees, it is my pleasure and privilegeto send you this expression of deep gratitude for your recent, magnanimous donation to our Hospital.Your welcome generosity will help to meet the costs of caring for, among others, three teen-agers whohad to miss out on going home for Christmas. All three are paralyzed from the waist down as the resultof accidents—Sheila in a diving mishap, John in an automobile crash, and Bill on the football field.John's left arm is also useless at the moment. All three happen to be beautiful, alert, intelligent children, cuffed by seemingly senseless blows from fate right out of their happy, active and rewarding life pattern. They are participants in our newly instituted Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation program, whichinvolves many months of intensive treatment on the most comprehensive possible scale: they receivedaily physical and occupational therapy, schooling, baths, massage, in sho.t our every rehabilitativeresource; and in between they are strapped to "circle beds," in which they can be turned and tilted andeven stood upright. Although the word "lucky" may be inappropriate, these children are at least lucky inthe sense that they have been accepted for what we call P.M. andR. Due to the small number of bedsat present available for P.M. and R., the only candidates we can accept just now are those whoseprognosis is favorable. So there are good reasons to hope that Sheila and John and Bill may still reachthose futures bright with promise. Futures in which you have had a stake. We do thank you. Mrs. Arthur Hedderly-Smith Corresponding Secretary Letters to the editor should be short and to the point, including the writer's name, class and major. Telephone numbers should be included if possible. Members of theacademic community are also welcome to contribute articles, features, guest commentaries and othermaterial of interest to the community. Doan criticizes Bromley Editor: Jim Bromley's attack on ASPresident Greg Baker (Feb. 17 issue) is preposterous. Bromley claims that the parking demonstration in Red Square was Baker's attempt to inspire confidence in his leadership capabilities by inflating issues. On the contrary, the demonstration was initiated and organized by AS legislators. This fact Bromleyknew. The only planning on Baker's part was to persuade the organizers to change the site from HighStreet to Red Square. This was a wise decision, as even college administrators have admitted. Bromleysays that "Baker is not justified in demanding that the committee make known its reasons fordismissing Heid." Dr. Heid disagrees; he has requested reasons for his dismissal. Bromley thencontradicts himself by saying, "It would do well for the tenure and promotion committee to publicly state its criteria for determining whether or not a faculty member will be rehired or promoted." EvidentlyBromley's long time stand that students are irresponsible has affected his personal journalism. v AlDoan senior soc/anthro (Ed. note: To avoid confusion on the matter of staff and guest commentaries, itmust be remembered that they reflect only the view of the writer, and not necessarily anyone else. Aneditorial, however, represents an official position of the newspaper.) Progress Resides In Problem'sKnots There's a simple solution to so many problems . . . difficult only the first time faced. Such as, how to buy a diamond when you haven't any cash. Just go to Weisfield's and ask for credit We're happy toassist any student of promise. See our big selection of bridal sets. 175.00 weisfield's MWBLBM 1327CORNWALL AVE. *ma m ma !mi$ gmmw mm w gt; ^i£*^- •^;-Ttrme^mcSame lt;m!^i gt;^~*am**m*ll!HS*aigSim^ ---------- Western Front - 1970 February 25 - Page 6 ---------- 6 Western Front Wednesday, February 25, 1970 Parking talks continue. "The college administration has no right to tell students what they can and cannot do," George Hartwell, activities commissioner, saidduring an all-college forum last Thursday. Approximately 60 people a t t e n d e d the studentgovernment forum called to d i s c u s s the r e c e nt demonstrations in Red Square Feb. 12 and at theplacement center Feb. 11. Dean of Students C. W. McDonald said that student leaders are notresponsibly representing the student body on parking problems. "Student representatives haven't shown up at parking committee meetings and there have been no concrete solutions made," McDonald said.The dean said that student representatives on the parking committee "failed to act" during the Board ofTrustees meeting three weeks ago when present parking regulations were being finalized. "Red Squareis not a parking l o t , " McDonald said. "We probably would have allowed a demonstration if you hadcome to us first." Western's demonstration policy, found on page 26 of the Navigator, was approved with all elements of the college community represented, the dean said. "But I don't think that the Board ofTrustees could rescind regulations arrived at by orderly democratic processes." Don Alford, head ofWestern's Chapter of the ACLU, said that present parking regulations were a legal form of car theft. Thesystem doesn't allow for an appeal channel, he said. "The state legislature's attitude is that a car is notessential for college," McDonald said. "I don't buy that attitude." He stressed, however, that parkingcosts must be paid by the users. State funds are not provided for parking. A reassessment of parkingfees will be made at the end of t h i s year, according to McDonald. "I guarantee they (the fees) won't go up," he said. Computer selection will pick appointees Computer selection is being used now and will be used again in the future to randomly pick students for committee positions and other appointments,according to Mary Robinson, dean of women. Mrs. Joan Straughan of the Computer Center, whose office is located in Bond Hall 316, elaborated on the specific computer that recently picked Play starsMcConkey, tape A tape recorder and Joe McConkey, senior speech major, will co-star in Krapp 's LastTape, a contemporary drama by Samuel Beckett, at 9 p.m. Friday and Saturday in the coffee den. Theplay is directed by Roger McCracken, graduate student in speech, and is being presented in conjunction with Mama Sunday's. "We may have a Sunday evening performance if the turn-out is good enough theother two nights," McCracken said. The one-man show is a "picture of a lonely man" and is beingpresented as intimate theater with a three-quarter round staging. the three members of the All-StudentJudiciary Board's selection committee. "It was an IBM 360 model 40 c o m p u t e r which is medium-sized. To select the students for the committee the total enrollment figure of the college was firstcalculated. "Each student in the college is given an alphabetical number when they register each quarter and 10 of these student numbers were randomly selected and from these, three were picked to work on the committee," she said. The student's name is matched with the corresponding alphabetical numberand the selection is completed. Anyone interested in computers can attend a tour of the ComputerCenter every Tuesday at 4 p.m. and should report to 323 Bond Hall. Flinn attacks 'fraudulent' ACadvertising Editor: Last quarter, the Activities Commission sponsored several tournaments, one of which was a chess tournament. Each participant was required to pay a $1 entry fee in order to be eligible toplay. In the event that 25 participants did not sign up, the money was to be refunded. I have visited theActivities Commission office five times since the cancellation of the chess tournament. During eachvisit, I was told to see a particular person and the money would be refunded. Every time I approachedthat person, he told me to go to someone else, and this went on until I got tired of the situation andsimply left my phone and address with someone at the office. The quarter is nearly over, and I haveheard nothing from the Activities Commission. This seems to be a pretty A Student Co-op SPECIAL IIBRISTOLITE GYM SHOES Reg.- $5.25 Now - 99$ LEATHER JACKETS Reg.- $28.00 Now - $19.00ATTENTION THE CO-OP Will Buy Back Books March 9th Through March 20th STUDENTS ,J££poor way for an organization to get its capital: In many ways, it resembles the fly-by-night organizationswho cheat old ladies out of their welfare money. The loss of one dollar is by no means a major issue;fraudulent advertising and stealing certainly is. It was quite clever to hold two of the other tournamentsand then let the smaller ones slip. That provided a very good cover for the minor tournaments. Thegeneral idea is that the few people who lost their money on the cancelled tournaments will grow weary of chasing around to get their refunds, and the Activities Commission will have enough capital to sponsoranother series next year! Dan Flinn junior English Condemns off-campus apathy Editor: Hooray forrepresentative student government! The legislative convention showed h ow well democratic governmentworks at Western. The on-campus and Fairhaven students, comprising about a third of the student body, were beautifully represented. The off-campus students, comprising the remaining two-thirds of thestudent body, about 6,000 people, had all of 35 delegates. Any screams of anguish and/or frustrationemanating from the souls of the off-campus students after the convention wraps up and its regulationsand laws are put into effect, should be done in private. And, perhaps, with just a bit of shame for nowshowing such concern when their opinions and their votes were desperately needed. P. B. WhitePresident, Off-Campus Interhouse Council sophomore foreign languages Ministers suggest follow-upEditor: George Hartwell and all who worked with him on the symposium "Religion and the Future ofMan" deserve thanks and congratulations. We at the Campus Christian Ministry felt STORE MO STOXX HOME COMfBUMHT privileged to have a share. We would like to suggest that small groups of peopleget together to reflect on the happening while memory is still fresh. Many people have a great feeling;some are high. Now our task is to assimilate as much as we can from the experience before it getscold. The Campus Christian Ministry will be happy to help co-ordinate and facilitate follow-up meetingsfor people who want to get together and keep alive the good effects of this outstanding event. John F.Harriman William G. Sodt 1 Day Shirt Service COMPLETE LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANING FreePickup Delivery 734-4200 rtosrtCT ---------- Western Front - 1970 February 25 - Page 7 ---------- Wednesday, February 25, 1970 Western Front COLLEGE SENATE AND ALL-COLLEGEGOVERNMENT summary report of the ad hoc committee on college government (Ed note: The followingwas released by the Ad Hoc Committee on College Government to be published for the academiccommunity.) Your Committee on Government herewith presents its final proposals for a WesternWashington State College Constitution, By-laws and Bill of Rights. We have worked just about one yearon the document; we have interviewed many individuals, spoken with many groups, held many critiquesessions, read many documents and spent many hours in discussion. What we offer you is adocument which is necessarily a blend of conflicting views yet one which we believe workable andimprovable over time, given the will to do so. Beyond what we wrote in introducing this Constitution tothe WWSC Community on October 7,1969 in the Western Front, (viz., remarks on the relation betweenthe Constitution and By-Laws; recommendations (also repeated in the Constitution and By-Laws) forratifying the documents; election of the first Senators; and remarks on the relation between the Board of Trustees, the academic community and the proposed Constitution) it may be well to summarize herewhat major changes we made in the documents since then. They fall under a few headings: 1) The firstparagraph of the Constitution gave us some trouble and gave trouble to the Attorney General's office.After correspondence and discussion it appears our new wording will not be unconstitutional, whereas the previous language was rejected as likely to be such. 2) An Undergraduate Council. Here we sought topreserve a logical and functional parallel between graduate studies and undergraduate studies by givingthis council the title, "Undergraduate Council," instead of "Arts and Sciences Council." It then followedthat the Undergraduate Council should have as major subcommittees an Arts and SciencesCommittee, a Teacher Education Committee and a General Education Committee, (see 4.411) 3)Matters of welfare (salary, retirement and other fringe benefits) we finally decided should start in asubcommittee of the Business and Finance Council where budget requests and budget allocations aredrawn up for review by the Senate. Of course the Senate's "Committee on Council and Committees"appoints the Business and Finance Council with the Senate's confirmation. Moreover, this new Welfare Committee must also have the approval of the Senate's Committee on Councils and Committees (see4.61). 4) Though not stated in our proposals it is a consequence of them that the (old) Faculty Counciland Faculty Forum will have no "official" status vis-a-vis the Senate although they may continue to existfor whatever other purposes the faculty wish them to. Most of the functions of these bodies will in effectbe displaced by the functions of the newer bodies. To repeat our summarization of the matter from ourlast report: In consonance with principles we agreed upon and submitted to the college community late in the Spring, we have attempted to create a small, efficient, visible governmental structure which willoperate, hopefully, through a reasoned debate, cooperation and considerable delegation of powers.The structure is a democratic one but the main thrust of the community's work, the academic, isplaced mainly in the faculty's hands, with the student constitutency having a large share of theresponsibility of governance in both the academic and non-academic areas. Specifically the benefitsaccruing to each constituency are as follows: The faculty will become a more than merelyrecommendatory body increasing considerably its role in the institution, and it will become thestrongest partner in the joint enterprise of making the policies and setting the procedures for thegovernment of the College. Students will in effect become the junior partners in the same areas. Theirvoices and votes will be exercised to a degree not presently enjoyed. Administrators will participate inthe making of all-college decisions and freely be able to voice the concerns and problems of their officesto an all-college governance heretofore denied them. Finally, one general advantage may be mentioned, namely, the creation of a common forum where the various constituencies can come together to speakand act for the good of the entire college community. The original Committee: S. Daugert, Chairman (V)M. Besserman (V) A. C. Broad C.F.oisie(V) B. Gazoway (V) R. Hicks (V) R. McDonnell (V) R.McLeod (V) J. Nusbaum (V) R. Starbird H.C. Taylor (V) The following assisted the Committee asSubstitutes or Alternates for some of the above: S. Kelly (V) G. Drake H. Frick (V) A. Doan (V) J.Eberhardt (V) A. C. Broad (V) Invited to sit in the Committee: W. Martinez Note: In the final committeevote to accept or reject the entire document the results were: 4 to accept, 1 to reject. PREAMBLEWestern Washington State College, an academic institution of higher education established and chieflysupported by the State of Washington and dedicated — to the instruction of post high-school youth fortheir increased knowledge and training, happiness and welfare through a general education-specialeducation program in liberal arts and sciences; — to the instruction and preparation of teachers for thepublic school, junior colleges, universities and other academic institutions of the state, the nation and the world, an instruction and preparation consistent with the purposes above-mentioned; — to thevocational preparation for gt; careers of students in the various subject areas consistent with a soundgeneral education; — to providing knowledge, information, guidance and service to individuals, groupsand agencies on all levels of government and other institutions and enterprises to improve the quality oflife; and further — to undertake scholarly and research efforts to extend the frontiers of knowledge andimprove the condition of man, do establish this constitution for its governance and the orderly regulationof the academic community. FOOTNOTES (V) signifies voting member *At present this is the AcademicDean. In the future it may be a Provost or equivalent officer. +Numbers in parentheses designateallocations only when the area involved reaches a qualified number (See By-Law 4). For the present these numbers are included in the At-large category. WWSC PROPOSED CONSTITUTION AND BY-LAWS /.The Senate 1. A Senate shall be the legislative body for recommending policies to the Board ofTrustees. It shall review and recommend internal policy. It shall recommend to the Board of Trustees and the President procedures for implementing policies. 2.1 2.2 3.1 //. Membership of the Senate TheSenate shall consist of 41 elected and 2 ex officio members. The ex officio members shall be thePresident of the College and the principal academic Vice-President, Dean or Provost.* The electedSenators shall be chosen from the four major constituencies of the academic community of WesternWashington State College: faculty, students, administrators and staff. 2.3 Senators shall be elected by the academic areas of Western Washington State College, in addition to which there are hereby created "at large" memberships hereinafter specified. 2.31 For purposes of at least the first election, Senators shall be elected by the following "areas" in the stated numbers: Faculty: Physical Education 2,Language Arts 3, Social Sciences (including Philosophy) 4, Science-Mathematics 3, Fine and AppliedArts 3, Education 2, Fairhaven 1, Huxley (1)+, Ethnic Program (1)+, At-large 5 (3) ; Students: PhysicalEducation 1, Language Arts 1, Social Sciences 2, Science-Mathematics 1, Fine and Applied Arts 1,Education 1, Graduate Students 1, Fairhaven 1, Huxley (1)+, Ethnic Program (1) , At-large 4 (2) ;Administration: At-large 2; Staff: At-large 3. 2.32 There will be a review of these numbers by theSenate after two years, at which time they may be amended by vote of the various constituencies. 2.4A quorum in the Senate shall consist of a majority of Senators. 2.5 The terms of office of Senators shallbe 2 years. Senators may not serve for more than two consecutive terms. ///. Officers of the Senate The President of Western Washington State College shall be the President of the Senate and Chairman ofthe Executive Committee. The President shall be the spokesman for the Senate in all representationsexternal to the academic community. As an ex officio member of the Senate he shall be allowed to vote. 3.2 There shall be an officer called Chairman of the Senate elected by the Senate from the electedSenators, who shall normally preside at Senate meetings. 3.3 A Secretary of the Senate shall be elected from the elected Senators. He shall be responsible for recording and publishing minutes of the Senateand giving notice of Senate meetings. ---------- Western Front - 1970 February 25 - Page 8 ---------- Western Front Wednesday, February 25, 1970 College Senate and All-College GovernmentCONSTITUENCIES FACULTY STUDENTS ADMINISTRATION STAFF ACADEMIC AREAS: P.E.,Language Arts, Social Sciences, Science-Math., Fine Applied Arts, Education Cluster Colleges Programs, Graduate Study, At-Large, All-College CHIEF GOVERNING BODY: Admissions AcademicFacilities Ed. Media Library Computer Policy Cont.Studies Comm-College Relations Tenure Promotion College Cultural Env. Load CHIEF ACADEMIC BODY: COUNCILS: UNDERGRADUATECOUNCIL T GRADUATE COUNCIL ACADEMIC COORDINATING COMMISSION COLLEGERELATIONS COUNCIL GEN. ED. COMMITTEE TEACHER ED. COMMITTEE ARTS SCIENCESCOUNCIL College-Community Relations Continuing Studies Alumni Public Info Placement HealthFinancial Aids Publications (Internal) Bookstore Arts Lectures Aud. use Discipline BUS. FINANCE COUNCIL Aux. Enterprises Adm. Info Systems Adv. Committee on Purchasing SafetyCommittee Parking Committee Welfare Committee IV. Commissions and Councils of the Senate Thereare hereby established certain Commissions, Councils and Coftimittees acting under the authority ofthe Senate. All decisions of the Councils and Commissions of the Senate, namely, the AcademicCoordinating Commission, Business and Finance Council, College Services and College RelationsCouncil, shall have the implied consent of the Senate unless or until the Senate chooses to review them. The-Senate shall appoint all its Commissions and Councils through its Committee on Councils andCommittees with the Senate's ratification. All Commission/Council/Committee appointments shall beannual but renewable with a 3-year limit. Members shall serve until replaced or reappointed. AnAcademic Coordinating Commission shall consist of 16 members: 10 faculty, 5 students and the second-ranking academic officer of WWSC who shall be the chairman ex officio. This body is charged withauthority over all matters relating to curriculum, teaching, load, academic programs and the like. It shallin turn appoint the appropriate Councils and Committees under it whose decisions shall have the impliedconsent of the ACC unless or until the ACC chooses to review them. It shall report to the SenateCommittee on Councils and Committees the subsidiary councils and committees it appoints. Eachundergraduate Cluster College and Cluster Program with an operational curriculum shall form its ownacademic council which will operate under the jurisdiction of the ACC. The Academic CoordinatingCommission will appoint the following councils to serve it: 1) An Undergraduate Council. This body shallhave jurisdiction over all undergraduate curricula and degree programs except those in Cluster Colleges or Cluster Programs. It shall appoint a) a General Education Committee which shall have jurisdictionover the General Education Program; b) an Arts and Sciences Committee which shall have jurisdictionover all Arts and Sciences programs; and c) a Teacher Education Committee whose jurisdiction shall beto organize and recommend all undergraduate teacher education programs, including those inCluster Colleges, and "fifth-year" programs, except that recommendations for fifth-year programs will go directly to the Academic Coordinating Commission for decision; and any other committees it deemsnecessary. 4.412 2) A Graduate Council. This body shall have jurisdiction over all graduate curricula anddegree programs. It shall be chaired by the Graduate Dean, ex officio. 4.413 3) A Research Council. Thisbody shall make policy for the development of research programs and proposals and for theadministration of research funds. The Dean of Research shall chair this council, ex officio. 4.5 Decisionsof the ACC may be overturned or amended only by a 2/3 majority of the entire Senate. 4.6 The Senateshall appoint through its Committee on Councils and Committees three other Councils which will report directly to it, namely, a Business and Finance Council, A College Relations Council and a CollegeServices Council. 4.61 The Business and Finance Council shall be responsible to the Senate forformation of policy in college business, finance and non-academic administration, including policiesgoverning the preparation of budget requests and budget allocations. Operating and capital budgetrequests to the state and annual budget allocations shall be submitted to the Senate for review. The chief Business and Finance Officer of the College shall preside and at least two members of the Senate shall be members of the Business and Finance Council. With the approval of the Senate's Committee onCouncils and Committees, the Business and Finance Council shall appoint such committees as itdeems appropriate to conduct its business. Among these committees there shall be appointed a Welfare Committee which shall have as its main function to develop and propose policies and schedules forsalaries and fringe benefits throughout the College. 4.62 The College Relations Council shall beresponsible to the Senate for formation of policy regarding relationships of the college to the local,state and national community. Alumni relations endowment funds, community relations and publicinformation shall be among the responsibilities of this Council. Subject to the approval of the Senate'sCommittee on Councils and Committees, the College Relations Council shall appoint such committees as its deems appropriate to conduct its business. The principal college relations administrative officerof the College shall preside. 4.63 The College Services Council shall be responsible to the Senate forformation of policy regarding non-academic services for students and others. Student welfare functions as health services and financial assistance; student activities such as organized recreational, social andcurriculum related clubs; student guidance functions such as counseling and discipline; and communityfunctions such as internal publications and special events, shall be among the responsibilities of thisCouncil. Subject to approval of the Senate's Committee on Councils and Committees, the CollegeServices Council shall appoint such committees as it deems appropriate to conduct its business. Theprincipal student affairs administrative officer of the College shall preside. ---------- Western Front - 1970 February 25 - Page 9 ---------- Wednesday, February 25, 1970 College Senate and All-College Government Chart showing theconstituencies and academic areas of elected Senators Western Front ELECTORATES orCONSTITUENCIES FACULTY STUDENTS ADMINISTRATION i STAFF c ,0 +J to o •a in "o5 gt; Q. 2 1 Language Arts 3 1 CO 8 C .32 'o C/3 "ra 'o o 4 2 CD u c .32 "o C/) 3 1 to+• gt; lt; .32 " a a lt; T3 C CD a gt; _c iZ 3 1 c o (0 u 3 -o 2 1 . Cluster College orProgram c gt; CO s: "55 u_ 1 1 gt; .22 X 3 (D+ (D+ .- "c .c 4-" LU (D + (D+ © •I-"CO 3 •o (0 CD 1 j _ n gt; _J lt; (3)+ 5 (2)+ 4 2 3 en 23 13 2 3 +Numbers in parentheses designate allocations only when the area involved reaches a qualified number (See By-Law 4). For thepresent these numbers are included in the At-large category. *The Senate has 2 ex officio Senators inaddition. 41* BILL OF RIGHTS Western Washington State College, an institution of higher learning, is afree marketplace of ideas. The expression, exposition and criticism of ideas is the very life of the college.No contravention of this principle is tolerable. V. Committees of the Senate 5.1 There shall be a SenateExecutive Committee which shall also be responsible for establishing the Senate Agenda and forappointing such Senate committees as follows: Councils and Committees, Elections, Legislative,Long-Range Planning, and Individual Rights and Grievances, subject to Senate ratification. 5.11 TheExecutive Committee may recommend to the Senate action on measures proposed or under debate. Inaddition it is charged to oversee the implementation of measures passed or approved by the Senate.5.12 In situations or instances in which decisions by the Senate are not possible or not feasible, theExecutive Committee shall act for the Senate, such actions being subject to ratification by the Senate atits next regular or special meeting. 5.13 The Executive Committee of the Senate shall consist of sevenmembers, of whom five shall constitute a quorum. Its membership shall consist of the President of theSenate, who represents no consitituency, the Chairman of the Senate, the Secretary of the Senate and four other Senators chosen from the elected Senators by the Senate. 5.2 The membership of theCommittee on Councils and Committees shall be made up from the four constituencies in as nearly aspossible the same proportions as the Senate but with a minimum of one representative from eachconstituency. This committee is charged with the review of all appointments to Commissions, Councils,and Committees of the Senate. UP* 6.1 VI. Constituencies, Electorates, and Agencies Theconstituencies or electorates of WWSC, namely, faculty, students, administration and staff, mayorganize in whatever manner they choose. Each shall have its recognized agency to represent and act for it on appropriate occasions. VII. Rules of Order and By-Laws 7.1 Unless provided for elsewhere in thisConstitution and By-Lawsj Robert's Rules of Order shall prevail. 7.i2 By-Laws to this Constitution maybe added, amended or abrogated by a 2/3 vote of the Senate provided only that notice of the change,addition or abrogation be given in the official newspaper of the College one month before the final vote istaken. VIII. Ratification of Constitution and By-Laws 8.1 This Constitution and By-Laws shall be ratifiedby an affirmative majority vote (of those voting;) of each of the four constituencies. After such ratificationthe President shall submit it to the Board of Trustees with his recommendations. 8.12 In the event anyconstituency fails to ratify, the Faculty Council will convene the chief officers of each of the fourconstituencies to amend the proposed constitution in an effort to accommodate objections. Thusamended the constitution shall be - resubmitted to all constituencies for ratification. 8.13 Should thesecond submission of the Constituion fail to be ratified by all the constituencies, the President shallreport to the Board the results of the voting with his recommendations. 8.2 Should this constitution fail towin approval by the Board of Trustees the President shall obtain from the Board in writing its reasons forfailure to approve and present these to the Faculty Council. The Council will convene the chief officers ofthe four constituencies to negotiate whatever differences exist. In the event of successful negotiation ofthese differences the convention shall return the document to the Faculty Council, which will treatthese differences as proposed amendments to the Constitution. 8.3 The present system of governmentshall prevail until the following have been completed: i) Ratification of the Constitution by theconstituencies; if) Approval by the Board of Trustees; and iii) Election of the first Senate. 8.4 After theConstitution is ratified amendments may be effected as follows: 1. a) By petition of 10% of at least twoconstituencies; or b) By vote of 2/3 of Senate membership; and 2. By submission to and ratification by all constituencies by majority vote of those voting. 3. a) Upon approval by the four constituencies, the President shall submit the amendment to the Board of Trustees with his recommendations, b.l) In the event a proposed amendment fails to receive approval by the four constituencies, the chief officers ofthe four constituencies shall attempt to negotiate whatever differences exist. In the event of successful negotiation of these differences, the four constituencies shall again vote to accept or not to accept the proposed , amendment. 2) In the event a proposed amendment fails a second time to be ratified byall the constituencies, the President shall report to the Board of Trustees, with his recommendations,the result of the voting. IX. Relationship of the Senate to the President and Board of Trustees 9.1 It isrecognized that Western Washington State College has responsibilities to the state by statutoryrequirements, including responsibilities to executive and legislative agencies and higher education reviewagencies, and that the Board of Trustees and its principal designee, the President, have the primary legal duty to respond to these legal requirements. Nothing in this Constitution shall impair the legal status ofthe President of the College in relation to the Board of Trustees and of each of their relationships to stategovernment. If the President of the College believes any action of the Senate or its subordinate bodiesconflicts with policies of the Board of Trustees or of appropriate state agencies, he may suspend itsimplementation only until such is reviewed by the Board of Trustees at its next meeting. ---------- Western Front - 1970 February 25 - Page 10 ---------- 10 Western Front Wednesday, February 25, 1970 College Senate and All-College Government BY-LAWS BL1 Constituencies, defined: Faculty, students, administrators and staff are the four constituencies (orelectorates) of WWSC for the purposes of this Constitution and By- Laws. a. "Faculty" are personswhose primary role in the academic community is teaching and research. These persons are underannual contract, are appointed with the approval of the Board of Trustees, and hold rank of professor,associate professor, assistant professor, instructor, lecturer, emeriti, professional librarian, or suchtitle. b. "Students" are persons whose primary role in the academic community is learning byinstruction. These persons are registered for seven or more residential or extension credit hours, exceptthat persons qualifying under this definition as students in the spring quarter, and who have enrolled sothat they will qualify as students in the fall quarter, may continue to serve in appointed or electedpositions during the summer session. c. "Administrators" are persons whose primary role in theacademic community is in the direction and execution of programs. These persons are appointed withthe approval of the Board of Trustees and are exempt by the Board of Trustees from the civil service laws. d. "Staff are those persons not holding faculty or administrative rank whose primary role in the academic community is in providing services in support of instruction and administration, and in the operation andmaintenance of the college facilities. These persons are usually appointed under the civil service lawsand qualify as permanent employees of Western Washington State College. BL2 "At-large" defined: At-large faculty Senators are those faculty members elected Senators by the entire faculty. At-largestudent Senators are those students elected Senators by those students who have no declared major orare not affiliated with a department. At-large administrative Senators are those administrators elected Senators by the administrative group. At-large staff Senators are those staff persons elected Senatorsby the entire staff. BL3 Provision to stagger terms of Senators: All Senators shall initially be elected atone time. At the end of the second year of the Senate's existence, the Senate Committee on Electionsshall arrange the next election so that 1/2 the new Senators shall serve for 1 year and 1/2 serve for 2years. Thereafter staggered elections shall be held to insure that approximately half of the Senate shallbe elected annually. BL4 Provision to keep Senate number (43) stable for first two years: Academicareas become functional and are entitled to representation (according to the numbers specified in theConstitution) when the full-time student enrollment in that area equals 25. Until such time as suchCluster Colleges or •** Cluster Programs attain this number of students, these members will beelected from the At-large category. BL5 Senate elections: Senate elections shall take place in the firstweek of Spring quarter. Senators shall be seated at the first Senate meeting following their election. ^BL6 Motions, votes, ballots in the Senate: Motions, votes, ballots and the like will be heard and takenonly when the Chairman presides or the Secretary of the Senate presides pro tempore. These officerswhen presiding will have the right to cast a tie-breaking vote. BL7 Meetings of Senate open to academiccommunity: All meetings of the Senate and its Councils and — Commissions at which action is taken shall be open to any member of the academic community. BL8 Commission and Councilappointments under the Senate: All Commission and Council appointments under the Senate shall befor a limit of three years, provision being made for resignations, terminations, etc., the Committee onCouncils and Committees making necessary arrangements for the renewal of lapsed or terminatedmemberships. BL8.1 Minutes of Commissions, Councils and Committees of the Senate shall bepromptly forwarded to the Senate for its information. BL9 Secretary of the Senate to preside: TheSecretary of the Senate shall normally preside in the absence of the Chairman. BL10 Officers of theSenate, when elected: The Officers of the Senate, except the President of the Senate, shall be electedannually from the Senate. BL11 "Appropriate Agencies," defined: The "appropriate agencies" for theseveral constituencies are presently as follows: Faculty Council, Student Legislature and StaffEmployees Council. An Administration Committee of the Whole may serve as the appropriateadministrative agency. BL12 Academic Coordinating Commission, appointment to: The Committee onCouncils and Committees shall solicit from the appropriate agencies of faculty and students a list ofnominees for appointment to the Academic Coordinating Commission. From this list the Committee onCouncils and Committees may choose the members of the Academic Coordinating Commission withthe approval of the Senate. BL13 Academic Coordinating Commission, Committees appointed by: The Academic Coordinating Commission shall appoint Committees for Admissions, Academic Facilities,Education Media, Library, Computer Policy, Cluster Colleges and Programs, Continuing Studies,College-Community-College Relations, Tenure and Promotion and others at its discretion. BL14Business and Finance Council, Committees of: The initial committees of the Business and FinanceCouncil shall be: Auxiliary Enterprises Committee, Administrative Information Systems Committee,Advisory Committee on Purchasing, Safety Committee, Parking Committee. BL15 Committees of theBusiness and Finance Council, Decisions of: Decisions of Committees of the Business and FinanceCouncil shall have the implied consent of the Council unless modified or rejected by the Council. BL16Committees of the College Relations Council, Decisions of: Decisions of committees of the CollegeRelations Council shall have the implied consent of the Council unless modified or rejected by theCouncil. BL17 College Services Council, Committees of: The initial committees of the College ServicesCouncil shall be: Financial Aids Committee, Publications Committee, Bookstore Committee, StudentActivities Commission, Arts and Lectures Committee, Student Personnel Committee. BL18Committees of the College Services Council, Decisions of: Decisions of committees of the CollegeServices Council shall have the implied consent of the Council unless modified or rejected by theCouncil. SUPPLEMENTARY REMARKS Concerning the individual rights-grievances- judicial issueswhich often arise on campus, your committee concluded that there was no need for an elaborate formalstructure such as is found in many political systems. Rather, we thought that in addition to the normalpractice of seeking redress from the agencies, individuals or officers most closely concerned or involvedin a particular case,that the structures presently used in the various constituencies for seeking justice(Judicial Committee, Grievance Committee, Student Judicial Board, the various Deans' offices, etc.) wereadequate and needed only our acknowledgment. The only new body we suggest—similar to theGrievance Committee of the present Faculty Council—is a procedural committee of the Senate whichwould not administer grievance procedures nor act as a higher or appellate body, but would try to assurethat appropriate grievance procedures were available to all college personnel. The charge to this"Committee on Individual Rights and Grievances" might be to review for the Senate and report to it onprocedures to protect the individual rights of all college personnel. The Committee may find that certain of the existing procedures are appropriate. In other cases the Committee might find that the procedures are inadequate. In still other areas the Committees may find there are no procedures that protect therights of the individual. Where the committee found the procedures inadequate or non-existent, it would be the Committee's responsibility to recommend to the Senate appropriate changes or additionalprocedures. The Senate's Committee on Councils and Committees will, we trust, serve to nominateand coordinate membership on all Senate councils and committees to insure a distribution of talent tomatch, insofar as possible, individual interest in serving with appropriate assignments, and to provide anoverview of who is serving when and where. In sum, this committee should allocate talent to necessaryactivities and arrange suitable procedures for allowing members of the community some choice in theirassignments. The Senate should first address itself to the critical formative questions posed elsewherein, this document. As each new Commission, Council or Committee is appointed, the Senate shoulddetermine the time the new group becomes operational and when the old group or groups become non-operational. The ACC is the first body which the Senate will appoint. The ACC should carefully considerthe question of Cluster College and Cluster Program representation in its subcommittees. It appearsadvisable (and we have provided for such in the Constitution) that the ACC should have members fromthose colleges and programs on subcommittees. We also leave to the Senate (especially to itsCommittee on Elections) many details of election procedure, but we trust that these can be worked outand incorporated in By-Laws. The Senate should consider the appointment not only of a Parliamentarianfrom its members but also a Sergeant at arms, or equivalent officer, to maintain order. For purposes ofeasier communication with the Board of Trustees we hereby suggest the possibility of asking the Boardof Trustees to appoint one of its members to the Business and Finance Council with voice but no vote. A system of computerized voting should be considered by the senate for ease and efficiency or referenda,amendments, schoolwide ballots, elections, and the like. A room or "chamber" large enough for theSenate and its audience should be scheduled both for regular Senate meetings and Executive Committeemeetings. Lecture Hall 4 appears a possibility. Consideration should be given to means ofidentification of Senators on campus A Constitution Review Committee should be appointed by theSenate early in its first term to keep the Senate informed on the successes and failures of theConstitution and By-Laws, and to draft modifications for the Senate's review in the form of new provisions, amendments,.and the like. ---------- Western Front - 1970 February 25 - Page 11 ---------- Wednesday, February 25, 1970 Western Front 11 Symposium speakers discuss religions "People aremore shy of their religious convictions than their sexual ones," according to Dr. Keith Bridston, professor of systematic theology at Pacific Lutheran Theological Seminary. Bridston was one of three speakersinvolved in a two-day symposium on religion, held last week in the VU lounge. The symposium, jointlysponsored by the Campus Christian Ministry and the Activities Commission, also featured two otherspeakers: Dr. Alan Watts, president of the Society for Comparative Religion, and Michael Murphy,president and founder of the Esalen Institute. All three men discussed what they believed to bedrawbacks in traditional religious worship, and suggested what elements a future religion should contain. "Meditation in our culture has been suppressed and neglected," Murphy said during the first lecture last Tuesday morning. ' ' T h e r e ' s something fundamental within man that's trying to surface in hisactivities." Sensuality and the arts of friendship and love are also being neglected, Murphy said. "Weneed to be sensitive to what our bodies are telling us." Murphy discussed the following four processeswhich, he said, are cultivating a better awareness to our senses: 1. A richer array of disciplinesavailable to us. 2. The willingness to experiment in every technique of meditation. Dr. Keith Bridston—photo by todd 3. An appreciation for individual differences of perceiving the world. 4. The marriage ofstructural design with a transformation of consciousness. Watts says meditation slips into 'non-verbalworld of here,now' Alan Watts has described meditation as the act of "slipping out of the verbal world ofsymbols and into the non-verbal world of here and now." An over-capacity crowd of approximately 800"slipped out" in silent meditation with Watts, president of the Society for Comparative Religion, lastTuesday night in the VU lounge. The s e s s i o n lasted approximately an hour. Sitting cross-legged ona rug, Watts told the group, "Close your eyes, and become aware of the sounds around you." Don't tryto name the sounds, he said. "Don't try to make sense out of anything I say. Your brains will tell youwhat it means." The group began to practice deep breathing. local poet to read own works at COMLocal poet and professor Knute R. Skinner will be featured at 9 p.m. Friday, March 6 in the CCM House. The reading, sponsored by the Campus Christian Ministry, is free. "Become aware of your breathing.Let your lungs breathe as they want to breathe." The atmosphere was generally free and easy, evenhypnotic. Some people were gazing at Alan Watts -photo by todd Watts, but most were sitting withtheir eyes closed, on couches, chairs or crosslegged on the floor. Children crawled about the silentmass. "There isn't any past or future. There are memories or expectations, but they are immediate."The meditation reached a climax when Watts began chanting Byzantine liturgy. The sound of the groupfollowing along was like the low droning of hundreds of bees. The use of the chant was a techniquecalled "matra," which, Watts said, makes it easy to "stop thinking and to come into a direct realizationof what is the center of the universe." According to Watts, there is no purpose to meditation. "Youmustn't understand what you are doing. The whole quest is being here." Typewriters and AddingMachines Sol*::, Service and Rentals Special Student Rental Rates k A BELLINGHAM USINESSMACHINES (Next to Bon Morctw) | lMOCtMMical 734-3530 Wedding Gowns 139*95.. One Rack of _ _Bridal Veils 12.22 One Rack of Wedding Gowns....Reduced 44.44 this week only New selection ofSummer Wedding Gowns Bridesmaid Gowns Open Monday Nites 'til 7, y T Frid,,aiyl? N ites bTo IbTwWfar^l ampion Bellinghs "We repress total areas of our consciousness," Bridston said during hislecture later in the day. "We're afraid to celebrate, we're afraid of spontaneity and we're afraid of beingafraid." There is a feeling that the Christian religious tradition has hindered man's search for wholenesswith himself, other men and nature, Bridston said. "Religious anxiety is due to doubts and fears we havewhich we're afraid to bring out." A form of psychoanalysis, which Bridston called "theonalysis," hasbeen developed to deal with these anxieties, he said. Bridston criticized the traditional sacraments,such as holy communion and baptism, for having lost their original vitality and sensual impact. "Howcan one hour on a Sunday morning turn you on? If it does, it is truly a miracle." The theologian described two requirements which the church must meet. "We need a reconceptualiza-tion of what religion is and to recover the real presence of God in and through, over and above true humanity," he said. Wattslinked traditional Christian concepts of God to present ecological problems. Man has a hostile attitudetoward nature due to his image of God as a monarch, he said. Watts described the belief that man isnothing but an i nsignificant "self-perpetuating fluke, made up of skin and ego and nothing else." "Wehate materialism. We hate our bodies, and we're afraid to touch each other for fear of it being interpretedas an indecent advance. "If physical skin and ego is all you are, you'll always feel hostile." Film toshow Flexible House Architect Robert A. Adams of Bellevue will speak to the personal environmentaldesign class at 3 p.m. today in L-l. Adams will narrate a film o r i g i n a l l y produced for televisionshowing his own residence, known as Flexible House, which features a development of living spacesdesigned to adapt to family needs and life styles. The approach used is said to be applicable to manybuilding types involving rapid change and growth for the time when conservation of urban space willrequire re-use of buildings and their environs designed today. There will be space in the class for alimited number of interested students. HONEST! Free Delivery Wife wants to go out for dinner?Compromise. Shakey's pizza patrol delivers your favorite piping hot pizza to your door. Bend a little.Phone 733-3020 ---------- Western Front - 1970 February 25 - Page 12 ---------- 12 Western Front Wednesday, February. 25, 1970 Waves lapping the pilings of a rustic pier set apeaceful waterfront mood. —photo by king University of Wisconsin offers major in A fro-Americanstudies Madison, Wis. — The University of Wisconsin has joined Harvard among the first schools todeveldp a major in Afro-American studies. Letters and Science Dean Stephen Kleene's proposalincludes a "model" curriculum, though actual courses and content will be determined by the departmentand go through the usual college curriculum channels. General requirements for majors in the newdepartment will be the same as for other majors in the College of Letters and Science. A student wouldtake between 30 and 40 credits of Afro-American studies, with at least one course in each of the areasof concentration (history, culture and literature, and Aardvark loves bookworms ! All Monarch Notes arenow Let your mind go with the half price. This includes complete trilogy of the Lord of Shakespeare Hemingway. the Rings. i | Richard Brautigan's Trout \Fishing in America; The Pill We also have a goodsupply of Versus the Spring Hill Mining Tom Wolfe's The Electric Kool- Disaster; and In Watermelon AidAcid Test. Sugar are all waiting for your inspection at the Aardvark. THREE DOORS SOUTH OFSHAKEY'S ON N. STATE ST. Open week nights till 9 p.m. AARDVARK Books Arts ~J society). He would need at least 15 credits in one of the areas and at least 15 in advanced courses. The modelcurriculum lists 32 courses plus opportunities for advanced study. Included are: I n t r o d u c t i o n toAfro-American History, History of Racial Protest Movements in America, Afro-American Cultural andIntellectual Tradition, The Black Man in American Fic-tion, Afro-American Music, A f r o - A m e r i c a nArt, Discrimination and Prejudice in American Society, The Legal System and Afro-Americans, and S tr a t e g i e s of Economic Development. All courses offered by the department would be open to anystudent with the proper academic prerequisites. The proposal indicates an expected enrollment in allcourses of between 1,200 and 1,500 the first year. This is expected to rise to between 2,100 and 2,400by 1973-74. Adderly Quintet to give concert Jim Bromley staff reporter A 2-day experience in jazz is in store when the Cannonball Adderley Quintet presents a concert and series of lecture demonstrationshere Friday and Saturday. Both events axe in conjunction with Black Culture Week. The quintet,conducted by a l to saxophonist Julian "Cannonball" Adderley, will present a concert at 8 p.m. Friday in Carver gym. Tickets are on sale at the.VU desk. The Adderley group will also hold a series ofdemonstration lectures at 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. Saturday in the VU lounge. The morning session will dealwith samples of five periods of jazz from early ragtime and Dixieland to contemporary free-form avantgarde. In the afternoon, a seminar on "Black Music: A social Factor" will deal with jazz as an art formand mirror for social change. Individual workshops on brass wind, woodwind, stringed and percussionwill be conducted by members of the quintet following the lecture. In Adderley's words, the purposes ofthe seminar are to "motivate students' interest in Black music in its various forms on a less superficiallevel, and to show Black music as a cultural factor in the Black experience." Cannonball, a graduate ofFlorida A M College, taught in the Florida school system before becoming a professional musician. He played trumpet in high school, switched to sax in college and spent several years as music director atFort Lauderdale's Negro high school before forming his own group. This versatile jazzman also playstenor sax, trumpet, clarinet and flute. . Private scholarship forms available now Applications for threeprivate scholarships are now available to Western students in the financial aids office, Old Main 103.Deadline is Monday, March 2. The Easter Seal Scholarship, for $250 is open for students planningcareers working with the physically handicapped. The $750 Oeser Cedar Scholarship is available tostudents in the technology department interested in forestry, wood products technology, industrialdesign or industrial graphics. Three Whatcom County Medical Society Scholarships of $500 are forstudents interested in x-ray or medical technology or nursing. Free U to form classes for children inSpring Western students can work with "real live" children this Spring by offering a class through theFree U, according to Julie Humling, a Free U class leader. Classes are forming now and can be offeredin any subject, to any age group. The classes can be outings or regular weekly class meetings—it isentirely up to the leader. The children's classes have been extremely successful so far and have had agood response from the community, Miss Humling said. The Free U is particularly interested in boysclasses and springtime activity classes along with classes in creative exploration. Think Sears... ...forour executive development program Whether you're in liberal arts or accounting, in retailing, engineering or business administration — no matter what your field of study — you may be just right for Sears. Sears is a great many people, with a great variety of backgrounds, doing a great variety of jobs, in the dynamicmerchandising field. You are not limited to remaining in the line of work you have prepared for in school— unless, of course, you want to — because at Sears the emphasis is placed on developing manytalents — talents you perhaps never suspected you had. merchandising • credit management -controllers MARCH 5, 1970 Interviews Please make necessary arrangements through the PlacementOffice. An equal opportunity employer. Sears ---------- Western Front - 1970 February 25 - Page 13 ---------- Convention results (Continued from page 2) The resolution was passed by unanimous vote. RidgewayAlpha's bill asking that certain confidential and personal records maintained in the placement center bedestroyed at the student's prerogrative and that no future files of that nature be kept was passed. AFairhaven bill demanding that students share authority in faculty rehiring and granting of tenure waswithdrawn in view of a similar off-campus bill which passed. Another off-campus bill demanding equalvoting privileges for students on all curriculum boards in all interdepartmental programs and departmentswas passed. The convention passed a bill recommending the AS legislature take steps to abolishseparate faculty lavatories and parking spaces on all college-ope rated facilities. A bill concerning the war in Vietnam was passed and says, in part, "that the Winter Quarter Legislative Convention goes on record as being in opposition to the war in Vietnam and demands the immediate withdrawal of all US. troops."The bill also provides that a campus-wide referendum whether to condemn the war or not be conducted.Several other important bills were passed: —library hours be extended to midnight each week and to 2a.m. during finals week. —an investigation be launched into the operation of the health center and theeffectiveness of personnel. —the possibilities of implementing a low-cost day-care center for pre-schoolchildren to be used by students and faculty. —that Activities Commission dance policies be altered toallow any recognized college organization, including dorms, to sponsor dances through the Commissionon a first come, first serve basis. —providing suitable voting accommodations in the Fairhaven office forstudents living at Fairhaven and Hidden Valley. —that a commission be established to promote voterregistration for eligible persons on the campus community. —that a program be established directed atrecruiting women into graduate schools. The two bills that failed concerned the abolishment of thepractice of confining meal ticket usage to the meal ticket purchaser and mandatory appearances bycandidates for the AS legislature. BSU sponsors Ki-Swahili class Wednesday, February 25/1970Western Front 13 The Black Student Union is s p o n s o r i n g a second introductory class in Ki-Swahili J s= gt; Classified Advertising \ jf 10 MISC. FOR SALE Aria classical guitar w/plush case,like new,$100. 733-0830. Gibson Les Paul guitar, vintage model; new frets, 733-8005, Mike. For Sale:26-ft. Thunderbird Class sailboat fully equipped for racing or cruising. Call 733-9577 evenings. 30ROOMMATE WANTED Male to share apt with 2 other guys. Close to campus, $33 a mo. utilities paid.Call 734-4501. 2 girls to share apt. with 2 others Spring quarter, $135 close to campus. 734-8030.this afternoon. The class is scheduled for 1 p.m. in VU 354 and is open to all interested students. Thefirst class, held last week, emphasized grammar, verb forms and vocabulary. The language class,instructed by Tom Heidelbaugh, will discuss potentials for making the course permanent on campus.Heidelbaugh has spent four years in Kenya working with the Peace Corps and the Kenya government. 0. 33 HELP WANTED GIRLS WANTED GIRLS WANTED - Must be 18 or over. Single college girls only.Compete for "Miss Campus QT." Personable with desire to meet and greet public and businesscommunity, work for local radio station for 5 weekends parttime. Excellent guaranteed salary. FiveMiss QT's will be selected by prominent local businessmen women. Apply at The Cavalier Room,Leopold Hotel, Bellingham, 1:45 p.m. Sharp? Feb. 28. 41 INSTRUCTION _^ Guitar lessons! Blues -Rock - Funk. Call 734-0104 Evenings. 50 PERSONALS Sensitivity training sessions. Become moreaware of yourself in the here and now. Contact David Takagi at 734-9956. To borrow a book which givesan intellectually and emotionally satisfying basis for meaning and value in your life phone 734-2944.No obligation except returning book to owner, a student wanting to share a significant experience.nge blossom diamond rlmgm LYRIC . . . . FROM $195 To the girl who knows what she wants but notwhere to find it. Match your style with our many distinctive designs, and ask us about our famousOrange Blossom guarantee. Milton E. Terry Jeweler "WHERE JEWELRY IS OUR BUSINESS"1326CornwaUi 733-2030 Olympia by night. —photo by shoblom Students to elect delegates toRepublican convention A local caucus of campus Republican students will elect two delegates to theRepublican state convention to be held in August, the Republican State Central Committee announced.The two delegates will be elected at a local caucus here on campus, Tuesday, March 3. Western'sdelegates will join 23 other college delegates, representing 39 accredited colleges in the state. Delegate apportionment is college enrollment. based on State Republican Chairman C. Montgomery Johnsonsaid that this is the first time in party history that college students will be able to elect their owndelegates directly to the state convention. . "This will be the first year that 18-year-olds have been giventhe right to participate in the convention system in this state," Johnson noted. Any 18-year-older oncampus is eligible to attend the caucus on campus, according to Russ VanBuren, caucus chairman forWestern. VanBuren said that interested students should watch the daily a c t i v i t i e s bulletin fornotification of location for next Tuesday night's meeting. ©Bristol-Myers Co., 1970. How would you feelif your father smoked pot? If it were all right with him, would it be okay with you? How okay? Anytimehe's home? What about while driving? What about at work? Even if he's a pilot? If pot should be legal, can anyone smoke it? Including the President? The Supreme Court? What about your kid sister? How aboutyour mother? Think about it. A message to stimulate thinking from NoDoz—the pill that helps you thinkwhen you're tired. l U B f l i f z ^eeP a^e r t tablets. ~; ---------- Western Front - 1970 February 25 - Page 14 ---------- 14 Western Front Wednesday, February 25, 1970 Talks successful,Cole says The first round ofnegotiations between landlords and the Tenants Union were successful, according to chairman CraigCole. About 30 landlords attended the meeting last Wednesday to negotiate a contract that "will protect the tenant and be fair enough that the landlord will use it," Cole said. Landlords are just as interested in a mutually p r o t e c t i v e contract, he explained. Such a contract will alleviate some of the landlords'problems, he said. A 12-man panel has been formed consisting of six landlords and six tenants, Colesaid. Kay Collinson, a member of the legal aids department, will be in charge of the actual wording ofthe contract, Cole said. "The Tenants Union cannot force a landlord to use the contract. So it has to befair to him (the landlord)." Cole hopes to have the contract ready for use by Spring quarter, he said. If amutually-acceptable contract is developed at Western it could be a pace-setter for the rest of thecountry, Cole said. Further negotiations are being scheduled. Tenants interested in the contract maycontact Cole with questions or suggestions. Orcas outing planned March 6-8 An outing to Orcas Islandhas been scheduled by Western's Outdoor Program, March 6-8. in two's and three's and then hike andcamp on Orcas Island (at landowner's consent). sheet for the your own thing" A signup weekend "doevent is available in the Outdoor Program lounge, VU 304. The group Moran state Constitution, Orcas.may go to either park or Mount too, both on Tentative plans are to hitchhike to the Anacortes ferryStudents who transportation are can provide urged to be generous. Equipment needed for the outing is up to each individual. Outdoor Program organized two treks this past weekend. One group went on theLost Lake campout (in search of a lake!) while the others went on the Big Wall climb, Feb. 21-26.Speaker to talk on Quioxte meets Quark' Dr. Hans Frauenfelder, professor of physics at the University of Illinois, will speak on "Mythology of Matter: Quixote Meets the Quark," at 8 p.m. tomorrow night in L-3.Frauenfelder received his Ph.D. in experimental physics from the Federal Institute of Technology inZurich, PRICES HAVE FALLEN FRANZ GAEL'S SKI SHOP Switzerland in 1950, and came to theUniversity of Illinois in 1952. In 1959-60 and again in 1963, Frauenfelder worked as a Guggenheim andFord Fellow at CERN, the European high energy center in Geneva, Switzerland. F r a u e n f e l d e rstudied radioactive decay and began investigations of surface processes by means of radiotracers while at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology. The physicist is presently involved with studies in highenergy physics. Drinking won't be condoned (This is a copy of an open letter sent to the AssociatedStudents concerning the recent CIA protest.) Dear AS President Greg Baker and Associated Studentslegislators: It has come to my attention that during the demonstrations held while the CIA was visiting the campus on Feb. 11, there was a flagrant breach of college regulations by several students. The violationinvolved the use of intoxicants on the campus. In addition to being a violation of college policy, the use ofintoxicants in a public place is in violation of local and state laws. Up until the point that intoxicants wereintroduced on the scene, the actions of the group demonstrating about the CIA visitation on campus were well within the demonstration policy which has been adopted by student, faculty and administrativeaction. The college will not, and cannot, condone the open drinking of intoxicants on the college campus. Students involved in such activities are subject to disciplinary action by the appropriate college judiciarybody and are even possibly subject to action by civil authorities should law enforcement agencies external to the college become involved. Because of the large number of students involved and because of thedifficulty in identifying all of the individuals, the college administration is reluctant to selectively instituteaction against those few who could be identified. It should be further noted that non-students were alsoinvolved in this incident. Needless to say, I am disappointed that an otherwise legitimate demonstrationhad to be marred by the introduction of an obvious breach of the college code of conduct. It should benoted that the issue of a "pub" on campus and other modification of the policies governing the use ofintoxicants on campus are being considered. Responsible actions on the part of students are certainlyinvolved in the total decision-making process in arriving at responsible regulations concerning the use ofintoxicants. It is my hope that problems such as this can be handled through the collective efforts ofstudent government and the college administration. I recognize that the Associated Students in no wayendorsed or condoned the violation that ensued. However, I encourage some positive action on the part ofyour legislative group and other student agencies in helping prevent the type of incident which occurredon February 11. Your opinion and cooperation regarding this matter will be appreciated. This office, andthe administration, remain open to entertaining further negotiations pertaining to the regulations governing the use of intoxicants on campus. C.W. McDonald Dean of Students McDonald announces speakerpolicies 40% OFF SWEATERS 30% OFF SKI PANTS Edelweiss FUR HATS 25% OFF SELECTIONOF SKIS Valkl, Rossignol, Kastle, Soni Sailer SKI POLES Scott, Allsop, P K, A S SKI BOOTSLange, Nordiea, Rieker WARM UP SUITS Sport, Obermeyer TURTLE NECKS Medico, Skyr 20% OFFSKI PARKAS Meister down Sportcaster Sport-Obermeyer Ljungberg (The following statement wasreleased by Dean of Students C. W. McDonald last week.) "The following procedure will be in effect tocomply with the college speaker policy as established by the Board of of the following Trustees:Whenever any person or organization schedules space for a speaker, our reservations secretary willmake special note Bellingham's only Professional Ski Shop 1) who is speaking and the topic, 2) whenand where, 3) sponsoring organization. This information will be transmitted to the dean of students office seven days prior to the event. Any exceptions of this policy may be directed to the director of studentactivities or to the dean of students. It is understood that this is not a request for approval of thespeaker, but solely for informational purposes." The summer session fee schedule has been revised.Residents who register for the 9-week session will be c h a r g e d S 1 1 0 and non-residents $220. New rates for the 6-week session are $80 for residents and $ 160 for non-residents. [Church Sunday S e MC eS 11 a.m. — Lutheran 4 p.m. — Episcopal THURSDAY 6:30 p.m. — Catholic CCM House ---------- Western Front - 1970 February 25 - Page 15 ---------- Wednesday, February 25, 1970 Western Front 15 Western loses twice to EVCO champ Central CentralWashington swept a two-game set from Western's Vikings at Carver gym last weekend, but not withoutmoments of anxiety. The Wildcats upped their record to 24-1 in nailing down 71-58 and 54-49 decisions, running their win skein to 17 straight. Western rallied from a 27-23 halftime deficit Saturday night totake a 31-30 lead with 14:45 remaining. Guard Mike Clayton, who scored 20 points in the contest, wasthe main figure in the Viking uprising. He was assisted by the sparkling play of guard Neal Larson andforward Lee Roy Shults. Central regained the lead moments later, but couldn't shake the Big Blue.With the Wildcats in command 43-36 with eight minutes left, the Vikings charged back again. In therally Shults scored two field goals and Clayton three, the last on an unbelievable steal and assist byLarson. The blitz put Western to within one point of Central, 4847, before the Wildcats went into a stallat the 1:15 mark. Central's Paul Adams was fouled with 52 seconds left and hit two clutch free throws to seal the verdict. Mitch Adams led the Wildcats with 20 points, Paul had 11 and guard Dave Allen 16.Vik hoopers edged by Portland State Western's Viking basketball team, failing to make crucial freethrows, lost to Portland State University, 72-71, last Monday night at Portland. The game had everything including a fight between the Vikings' Lee Roy Shults and Portland State's Leon Edmonds. Westernheld a 10-point lead midway through the first half, but saw it whittled to four at halftime, 40-36. GuardMike Clayton, who scored 23 points in the game, put in 15 during the initial half. The second half sawthe lead change hands nine times with the score tied 10 times. Portland State guard Willie Stoudamire, who took game scoring honors with 26 points, scored 17 in the final half, most from long range. Withthe Vikings trailing 69-68 at the 2:29 mark, Shults and Edmonds fought for a rebound beneath thePortland State boards. Edmonds clipped Shults on the ear, drawing blood. The "Golden Bear," upquickly, chased Edmonds across the court. At this point both benches emptied and an estimated 50Portland State fans rushed onto the floor to enter into the melee. When the action finally quieted down,the two main combatants were ejected from the game. Vik JV's rip St. Martin's Western's JV's sweptto their 13th and 14th wins of the season, downing the St. Martin's JV's 104-74 last night in Olympiaafter defeating Edmonds Community College 65-60 here last Saturday. Mike Franza led the JV scoringattack against St. Martin's with 21 points. Roger Fuson led the JV's against Edmonds with 21 points.Mark Roberts added 13. Against Edmonds, the JV's led 29-27 at halftime and kept in the leadthroughout the remainder of the game. Western coach Chuck Randall blamed the fisticuffs on theexceptionally poor officiating which let the game get out of hand. Technical foul shots after the fight stillhad Portland in front 70-69, but a Clayton field goal with 1:29 remaining put Western in the lead for whatwas the final time. No scoring came for another minute as the Vikings missed their third straight one-and-one situation foul shot in the last three minutes. With 31 seconds remaining, guard CharleyStoudamire hit an impossible field goal from 25 feet out to make the final 72-71. The bucket was his firstof the night. The Vikings had a chance after Stoudamire's basket, but a jump shot by Jeff Sherburne hit off the back rim and the subsequent jump ball was controlled by Portland, who ran out the clock. Afterthe game another fight broke out with a Portland player the instigator, but it was quickly squelched.Friday the Vikiitgs led for the first ten minutes of the contest before Central pulled away to a 35-28halftime lead and proceeded to gallop to a 71-58 victory. Paul Adams put in 24 points for the Wildcats,hitting 11 of 16 field goals. He also pulled down 12 rebounds for game honors in that department. OtherCentral scorers in double figures were Allen with 14 and Joe La Duca with 11. John Reed, the leadingfigure in Western's early surge, put in 15 for the contest. Forward Danny Johnson, who scored fivepoints and had seven rebounds, did a fine job for the Vikings in a relief role. Viks to host tournmentWestern hosts the Evergreen Conference (Evco) wrestling championships this Friday. Central, thedefending Evco champions, will be highly favored to retain its crown, while Western should prove to bethe Wildcats' chief competitor. The Wildcats, who defeated Western two weeks ago, have three toughwrestlers who will contend for individual titles: Craig Skeesick (126), Kenichi Kanno (118) and Ed Harris(190). Kanno, former state community college champion in 1968, is 8-1 for the season and will be highly favored to take the 118-pound class. Eastern, which hasn't had a very successful season, has a finewrestler in sophomore heavyweight, Jim Withrow. Whit worth has a tough wrestler in Steve Tucker (167). Western's.best bet to claim an individual Evco title should prove to be Mike Compton (177). DennisMoore (126), Lee Anderson (150), Dave Climer (158), Dennis Daniels (134), and Dennis Bauer (142)could be contenders. 106. N. COMMERCIAL 734-4950 DOORS OPEN 7 p.m. TONIGHT WATT A WAY HELD 2nd WEEK ENDS SOON TO PLUG A BRAIN GAP! IllMHtf br BUEM VIST* DISTRIBUTIONC0.1MC CI96S Will Oun.) Pioductioni ALSO - WALT DISNEY'S "PARENT TRAP" Feature Times: Wed.Thurs. Fri. Mon. Tues. Computer 6:30-10:15 Parent Trap 8:15 continuous from noon, Sat.-Sun.Western's John Reed (40) gets outjumped by Central's Paul Adams (43) in the starting tipoff of thesecond-half Saturday night. Lee Roy Shults (32) looks on for the Viks. Central went on to win 54-49. -photo by shoblom Complete Menu Service Pizza Broasted Chicken Hamburgers Prawns Alasliltiivern209 W. Holly I _ T$B§STEAK I ^ Broasted potato and toast J LGRANDJ ^ « THEATRE Jf 1224Commercial 733-9755 STARTS TONIGHT William Faulkner's Pulitzer Prize-Winninj Novel "The Reivers"is now a film! Steve McQueen plays Boon in The Reivers" Panavisiorf Technicoloi.'A Cinema CenterFilms Presentation A National Ceneral Pictures Release. 1M| *zz'££~r^ - O£LO.:. yulbynner **thefileof the golden goose ^ ^ color by deluxe ^ " ^ United Artists WEEK DAYS DOORS OPEN 5:00 p.m."REIVERS" at 5:30 9:15 "GOLDEN GOOSE" 7:15 / 11:00 99 COMING SOON! Following "THEREIVERS' "A LYRIC. TRAGIC SONG OF THE ROAD! AN HISTORIC MOVIE!" -RICHARD SCHICKEL.LIFE PANDO COMPANY in association with RAYBERT PRODUCTIONS presents GSSSftidCRestricted IPETER FONDA- DENNIS HOPPER JACK-NICHOLSON COLOR * Releastd by COLUMBIAPICTURES ---------- Western Front - 1970 February 25 - Page 16 ---------- 16 Western Front Wednesday, February 25, 1970 Ruggers rip WSU, to host UBC next Western's rugbyfirst team shutout Washington State University (WSU), 8-0 last Saturday at Roosevelt Field. All the Vikscoring came in the first half. Tim Koeneman led the rugger scoring attack with a try and a conversion.Koeneman got the first score of the game in the first two minutes of play when he ran 25 yards for a try. Late in the first half, Don Ridland got Western's second score as he blocked a WSU kick and rambled25 yards for a try. Koeneman kicked the conversion to make the score 8-0. Western's seconds alsowon, defeating the WSU seconds, 8-3 on Sunday at Roosevelt Field. Like the first team, all theseconds' scoring came in the first half, highlighted by Vic Coudriet's 40-yard run scoring try. PaulJohnson accounted for the seconds' other try as he picked up a loose ball and scored from five yardsout. Harry Dumptruck kicked the conversion. WSU averted a possible Vik shutout by scoring a try withjust a minute left in the game. This Saturday Western's rugby teams host the tough University of BritishColumbia at Roosevelt Field. Game time for the seconds is at 1:15 p.m. and the first team's game willstart at 2:30 p.m. Western wins women's badminton doubles title Western's Hester Hill and Judy Vosewon the National I n t e r c o l l e g i a t e women's badminton doubles title on Feb. 7. Miss Hill andMiss Vose won the title by defeating a team from Cal State of Long Beach. The triumph enabledWestern to finish second to Cal State of Long Beach in the tournament hosted by Newcomb College ofTulane University. Yeagers whip Reinke's Yeagers (Western's Redshirts) won the second half title asthey walloped Reinke's Fabricators, 86-5 5 last Thursday in Bellingham Thursday Night City Leagueaction. Yeagers ran to a 22-11 first-quarter lead, and steadily built up their lead throughout the game.The win was the seventh in league play for Yeagers against one loss. Jim Holen paced the Yeagerattack with 18 points, Gary Cressman added 17 and Whit Hemion had 16. This Thursday, Yeagers plays for the Thursday Night City League championship. Yeagers' opponents will be Bornsteins, winners ofthe first-half. Game time will be 6:30 p.m. in the Shuksan middle-school gym. YMCA begins soccerclass Glenn Hindin and Jerry Nist, members of last Fall's championship Western soccer club, havestarted teaching a new middle school boys soccer program at the YMCA in Bellingham. The first of 10sessions began last week and will continue for the next three weeks every Monday and Friday from 4-5p.m. Vikings drown PLU, set relay record Western's swim team concluded its best season in recentyears by defeating Pacific Lutheran University, 72-32 here last Saturday. The Vik aquamen set a newrecord in the 400-yard medley relay of 4:04.7 on the way to their fifth win of the season. Bruce Johnson,Jeff Hopper, Tom Ward and Gerry Gent comprised the relay team which broke the old record of 4:05.3set in 1966. Ken Visser led Western with two first places, winning the 1,000-yard freestyle (11:58.8) and the 200-yard breaststroke (2:31.4). Hopper won the 200-yard individual medley (2:21.8) and completeda Vik sweep in the 200-yard breaststroke, finishing behind Visser (2:42.1). Todd Wirtz completed a Viksweep in the 200-yard individual medley by taking second (2:22.5). Western also swept the 100-yardfreestyle, with Rob Veith finishing first (55.2) and Ross May taking second (55.4). Other Vik first placeswere by Bruce Johnson in the 200-yard backstroke (2:24.3) and Pat Lemmon in the 500-yard freestyle(6:04.9). Western concluded the meet by winning the 400-yard freestyle relay (3:42.1). Gent, GerryRuthrauff, Vieth and Jeff Stith comprised the team. Randy Senn led Pacific Lutheran with two firsts,winning the 200-yard freestyle (1:54.3) and the 200-yard butterfly (2:09.4). This Thursday, Friday andSaturday Western competes in the Evergreen Conference Swimming Championships at Eastern.Western pockets regional billiards competition honors Two Western students captured the RegionalCollegiate Pocket Billiards championships at the University of Oregon on Feb. 14 and 15. KittyStephens took first place in the women's division while Dave Steele took top honors in men'scompetition. Both students will represent Western at the National Collegiate Pocket BilliardsChampionship in Florida later this year.
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- . Carlton, speakingof changes in the program since it began six years ago, said this year there has been a change indirection for better autonomy for instruction as compared to last year which was a transitional period.Jn the past, students were required to read history texts from which objective te
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. Carlton, speakingof changes in the program since it began six years ago, said this year there has been a change indirection for better autonomy for instruction as compared to last year which was a t
Show more. Carlton, speakingof changes in the program since it began six years ago, said this year there has been a change indirection for better autonomy for instruction as compared to last year which was a transitional period.Jn the past, students were required to read history texts from which objective tests, graded bymachines, were given. This year study requirements are left mostly to the instructor
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- the Vol. LXII no. 18 western front Western Washington State College Beltingham, Washington 98225 Tuesday, January 13, 1970 10c Doan quits presidency; Baker in AS President Al Doan voluntarily resigned his office Thursday afternoon. Vice-president Greg Baker has assumed the presidency under p r o v i
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the Vol. LXII no. 18 western front Western Washington State College Beltingham, Washington 98225 Tuesday, January 13, 1970 10c Doan quits presidency; Baker in AS President Al Doan voluntarily resigned
Show morethe Vol. LXII no. 18 western front Western Washington State College Beltingham, Washington 98225 Tuesday, January 13, 1970 10c Doan quits presidency; Baker in AS President Al Doan voluntarily resigned his office Thursday afternoon. Vice-president Greg Baker has assumed the presidency under p r o v i s i o n s of t h e AS Constitution. Doan told the AS legislature that he was stepping down due to physical, financial and administrative reasons. His decision came as a complete surprise to most of student government. "I have been swamped with a lot of little stuff during the past quarter and couldn't accomplish what I had set out to do," Doan explained. He later told the Western Front that the decision was also based on his "lack of ability to accomplish anything due to the intransigence of administrators and faculty." Doan admitted that he was disappointed with the sluggish progress of the proposed faculty-student pub on campus. The pub was one of his campaign pledges during last Spring's AS elections. In his closing remarks before Thursday's legislature meeting, Doan said that he was d i s a p p o i n t e d w i t h the legislature's failure to take the i n i t i a t i v e necessary for responsible leadership. "Too many times legislators came to me for answers, not advice," Doan remarked. He added that he had "all the confidence in the world" that Greg Baker would adequately handle the presidency. Doan, a part-time student this quarter, said that he would be willing to assist student government on the pub project and the current bookstore issue. AS suggests Co-op study JOHN STOLPE exchange editor The Associated Students might finance a comprehensive survey of co-op bookstore operations on campus, former AS P r e s i d e n t Al Doan announced late last week. Doan said the study is necessary following wide-spread student complaints of bookstore operations over the past three years. " T h e survey would be s i g n i f i c a n t l y helpful in determining whether or not a rebate system is feasible and primarily if we can promote more efficient operation of the facility," Doan said. Bookstore Manager Ray Knabe had no comment for the Western Front when asked for an opinion of the proposed study. Dr. Howard Mitchell, acting chairman of the economics department and chairman of the Bookstore Board, said that neither he nor his board had been confronted with the alleged inefficient operations. "I think that the Associated Students should come to the Bookstore Board with their problems before hiring a management consultant," Mitchell explained. Due to a cut-back in state funds, the survey will have to be financed by the Associated Students. The AS legislature must give the go-ahead by a two-thirds majority vote. Doan said that he was confident that the legislature will give the final approval. A preliminary study proposal has been submitted by Harry J. Prior and Associates, Inc., management consultants in Seattle. The proposed survey includes a student wants questionnaire and a comprehensive survey of bookstore operations and plans. The study would include observation of bookstore operations and a review of operating records. Doan said the study might cost the Associated Students as much as $8,400. Al Doan, AS President, has resigned his office due to a number of reasons. See letter page 5. -photo by walker Speakers set for Moratorium Vietnam Moratorium activities for January will center around programs offered this Thursday, Friday and Saturday. Thursday has been designated "Peace Action Day" throughout the country. A special ceremony honoring the memory of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.,-the assassinated civil rights and peace activist who was born on January 15—will be held at 12:30 p.m. Thursday in L-3. A speech he delivered shortly before his death, linking the liberation struggles in Vietnam and America, will be read, and the award winning film, A Face of War, will be shown. A s p e a k e r from the student-organizers of the Canadian Vietnam-protest movement will explain what is happening in Canada and how t h e n a t i o n a l and local movements can be tied together Friday afternoon in the VU lounge. "Mr. Nixon has made it quite clear that the war is not going to be over soon," Dr. Bernard Weiner, a Moratorium Committee spokesman, said. "Indeed, the aims of the Nixon Administration are the same as those of the Johnson years: to 'hold' South Vietnam for American military and economic ends, one way or the other, with American or puppet troops. "Hence, we have to redouble our efforts to educate first ourselves on the facts of the war, and then help educate others." There will be an important meeting of Western's Vietnam Moratorium Committee at 3 p.m. today in VU 10. The Committee will discuss this month's program and h o w it can be coordinated, and plan for February's larger Moratorium activities. Police crack down on hikers The Bellingham Police Department began enforcing a city ordinance against hitchhiking early last week. Nineteen citations were issued to Western students on Tuesday alone. Under Title 18 of the city code, the provision states, "It shall be unlawful for any person upon any public highway of this city to solicit by word or sign or by any other means for himself or for another or for his baggage or for the baggage of another any transportation on vehicles being operated upon such public highways. This thumb's owner is in for a bust, as Bellingham Police have "accelerated enforcement" of city's hitchhiking ordinance. —photo by gowrylow "It shall be unlawful for any person operating any vehicle upon any public highway of this city to offer or give to any such person or other person aforesaid transportation upon such solicitation . . .. " This does not mean that a person cannot offer or give a ride to any person as long as that person had not solicited for that ride before hand. The key word is solicitation. As long as no soliciting sign or word is made, no law has been b r o k e n , whether transportation is given or not, according to a spokesman for Police Chief Cecil Klein. Persons offering rides to non-solicitors are not breaking the law as long as they do not block or impede traffic by doing so. This provision does not apply when a person is soliciting transportation from a public conveyance or passenger carrier such as a bus or taxi-cab, or f r o m s o l i c i t i n g aid or transportation from a passing motorist when an actual emergency exists. The s p o k e s m a n cited "numerous complaints" by citizens concerning congested traffic caused by hitchhiking as part of the reason for the recent crackdown. He noted the ease with which runaways might obtain transportation if the hitchhiking laws were not enforced. A B e l l i n g h a m Police Inspector noted three rape or attempted rape incidents involving Western women as another reason. In two of the c a s e s t h e women were hitchhiking and in the other an offered ride was accepted. The police spokesman said that the police department was not c o n c e n t r a t i n g their enforcement on streets adjacent to the college, but said that more citations naturally would be issued in an area of higher violation frequency. There was no outside pressure from either the college or the s t a t e t o encourage the accelerated enforcement, he said. i uesuciy, jdiiudi y i J , i y ; u western i-foiu 'Guilty' hitchhikers awarded $ 1 2 fines Nine Western students entered pleas of "guilty" to hitchhiking in Bellingham m u n i c i p a l Court Friday morning. Judge Ward Williams awarded each of them a $12 fine, $10 of which was suspended. A college is a collection of intelligent and attractive young men and women which "attracts a different element on the college periphery," Judge Williams said. A spokesman for the court cited three rape or attempted rape cases involving Western coeds as one of the primary reasons for the accelerated enforcement of hitchhiking laws. "However, this is not the beginning of any anti-student campaign on the part of the Bellingham Police Department," he said. Judge Williams considered defendants' complaints that there had not been sufficient prior warning in levying the suspended fines, but noted that the court would not be so "amenable in the future." The court took 11 minutes to dispense with the hitchhiking cases. Judge Williams also stated the "court's views" on parking tickets. "President Flora attended a meeting where we discussed the parking problems and was asked how the college intended to cope with them. "He detailed the current expansion of the college but offered no solutions to the parking problems," Judge Williams said. "If you get a parking ticket, pay it. That's all," he said. UN ambassador to talk on Indonesian problems Ambassador H. Roeslan Abdulgani, permanent representative of Indonesia to the United Nations, will be on c a m p u s t o m o r r o w and Thursday. Dr. Abdulgani will speak on c o n t e m p o r a r y Indonesian problems at 4 p.m. tomorrow in the VU Lounge. A reception will also be held at 11 a.m. Thursday in the VU Lounge with a questions and answers session. Dr. Abdulgani is the author of numerous books on the subject of Indonesian history and nationalism. Fairhaven students moved into four completed dorms last week after many setbacks. —photo by fisher Wick meets deadline : more dorms The Wick Construction Co. met a much-delayed deadline and turned over four Fairhaven dorms to the College in time for the start of Winter quarter. The remaining four dorms and the dining hall/administration building are expected to be finished sometime around the beginning of Spring quarter. As a political activist, he was a member of the guerilla forces fighting against the return of Dutch forces and was injured in the fighting at Jogdjakarta. Comfort replaces Sprague as trustee The ambassador also holds three honorary degrees from Indonesian universities. Patrick C. Comfort, a Tacoma lawyer and a former state representative, has replaced David Sprague on Western's Board of Trustees. A dinner will be held at 7 pjn. tomorrow night at the L e o p o l d H o t e l in Dr. Abdulgani's honor. P e r s o n s interested in obtaining tickets should contact the Whatcom County Library for further information. An open reception will follow. Shop At The Student Co-op And Save S p r a g u e resigned last Thursday to devote his time to matters in the state legislature Vo Hair Spray - $2.35 $1.89 Burley After Shave - $2.00 $1.89 Lipp Ice - 494 394 Tooth Brush - 694 394 Newsprint Pads Reg - $1.25 754 ,£g4 STORE »0*TOKXMO*MCO*r*KattT and his Seattle insurance business. He had been on the board since 1957. The new trustee is a member of the American Bar and Trial Lawyers Associations and serves on the Board of Trustees of the Tacoma-Pierce County Bar Association. He graduated cum laudefrom Gonzaga University in Spokane and was both student body president and editor-in-chief at that institution. He also holds a degree in law from New York University School of Law. Free U classes unavailable after Friday Registration ends Friday for the Winter quarter classes and workshops offered by the Northwest Free University. Registration forms and catalogs can be obtained at the Free- U booth in the Viking Union foyer from 9 a.m. to 3 p m . daily. Leather Sleeve Jackets Reg-$27.17 Now-$ 19.50 STUDENTS' The addition of these dorms brings to eight the number finished in the Fairhaven cluster. Seven are housing Fairhaven students, all now on campus, while one houses Western men. TURN ME ON by JON WISWELL What this country needs is a good 5-cent carrying charge. * * # After a recent night at the movies, we've decided that adults s h o u l d n ' t attend science fiction films without a 12-year-old along to explain the technicalities. * * # Career girl: one who is more interested in plots and plans than pots and pans. » # * The only man who ever got his work done by Friday was Robinson Crusoe. # Conversation, French C o n v e r s a t i o n , Ceramics, Candle-making, and others. Among the special workshops are Birth Control, Body-control for Actors, Film Criticism, Home Maintenance and Repair, Low-Budget Cooking, Natural C h i l d b i r t h , Non-Violence T e c h n i q u e s , Wine a n d Beer-Making, Politics and Dissent, and others. The Free U is also expanding its experimental children's classes in the areas of sewing, dance, crafts, art, creative-writing and cooking. Five legislative positions open The AS legislature will fill five vacant positions in a meeting on Monday, Jan. 19. Graduate and undergraduate students interested in applying must have been enrolled for at least one quarter, have a 2.5 GPA and be carrying a minimum load of 12 hours. Application forms are available at the VU desk or from the AS secretary. The meeting will be at 4 p.m. inVU224. * # Bookkeeper: a person who feels good when things start looking black again. # The Free U is offering about 30 regular classes, which meet weekly, and about 15 special workshops, which meet only several times during the quarter. Among the classes are Alpine Mountaineering, The Drug Experience, Group Sensitivity Training, How to Make Money in the Stock Market, Humanistic Reform in Education and Psychology, Mass Media in Society, Music and Stuff, Quilting, Still Photography, Swedish Massage, Technical T h e a t r e , Mandolin and Dulcimer, Japanese * # Repair tape recorders, car radios, two-way radios and other audio equipment. WIZTRONICS 205 Unity St. 733-5191 LUTHERAN STUDENTS You are invited to an evening of songs, discussions, games, dessert, etc. at the home of Prof, and Mrs. John Reay, 117 Hawthorne Road, this Sunday, Jan. 18, at 7:30 p.m. Please call 734-7180 if you need transportation. For further details see Dr. Reay (Math. Dept., BH 302, campus extension 2408 or 733-1195). Tuesday, January 13, 1970 Coming events ALL WEEKBlack Panther film, Off the Pig, will be shown. Check daily bulletin for time and place. TOMORROW4 p.m.: Dr. Hadji Roeslan Abdulgani, Indonesian ambassador to the United Nations, VU lounge. THURSDAY, JAN. 1 5 11 a.m.: Reception for Ambassador Abdulgani of Indonesia, VU lounge. 12:30 p.m.: Special ceremony in memory of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and film, A Face of War, L-3. 3 p.m.: A Face of War, L-3. 8 p.m.: Illusionist Andre Kole, L-4. FRIDAY, JAN. 1 6 3 p.m.: Speaker from the student-organizers of the Canadian Vietnam-protest movement, VU lounge. SATURDAY, JAN. 1 7 11 a.m.: Jerry Rubin, co-founder of the Yippie Party, music auditorium. 9 p.m.: Dance, with Shirley Lorrene, VU lounge. 9 p.m.: Coffee House, VU Coffee Den. SUNDAY, JAN. 1 8 8 p.m.: AS film, The Fox, music auditorium. Western Front 3 Speaker shows beauty amidst ugliness in Vietnam slides "We ought to get away from the blood and guts and gore we see on television every night," Roger Steffens, actor, poet and lecturer; said last week. An estimated 150 persons watched Steffens show more than 300 color slides he took during his 26-month tour in Vietnam. The slides played down combat and depicted the beauty of the people and religions of Vietnam. Steffens came to know the Vietnamese people personally while working in civic actions in Saigon and the rural regions. He directed the operations for refugees after the Tet offensive in February 1968, he said. The b o m b i n g leaves thousands homeless, he said. He showed pictures of entire families living in sewer pipes. The Vietnamese people despise the officials, the leoturer said. "If Thieu and Ky were removed from power the condition would be created under which a leader would emerge who could unite the political and religious factions in the South." He attributed the failure of American propaganda to the lack of understanding between the American soldiers and the Vietnamese. Steffens is currently on a 6-month tour of college campuses throughout the United States, he said. His book, The Coconut Monk and Other Vietnamese Portraits will be released soon. Western may offer course in Chinese language in future A proposal that Chinese be offered at Western next year is currently being studied by the Arts and Sciences Committee of the Academic Council. Two primary reasons for the request were given in a m e m o r a n d u m which was unanimously endorsed by the history and political science departments. First, at this time there is an obvious need to study and understand Asia, and second, that Western now has both the staff necessary to "develop a serious and advanced program of Asian studies." Currently there are ten courses offered by five departments that could fit into such a program. There are at least 18 courses proposed for the 1970-71 academic year. • A survey of students in the existing classes indicated that at least 37 would be immediately interested in a course in Chinese. Dr. Henry G. Schwarz, professor of history and political science, stated that knowledge of the language is essential to undertake any serious study of Asia. Also the lead time necessary to gain a reading knowledge of oriental languages is so much greater than for European languages that the sooner Chinese can be started the better, Schwarz said. Dr. Walter L. Robinson, chairman of the department of foreign languages, expressed qualms that due to budgetary restrictions, the introduction of Chinese might , result in the cutting back of existing language programs. Students interested in pursuing studies in the Asian field should talk with either Dr. Schwarz or Edward H. Kaplan in the history department. Underground films planned for Winter: 'Beyond the law,' 'Piggies' scheduled Beyond the Law, an underground film by Norman Mailer, will be shown at 7 and 9:15 Friday night in L-4. Mailer's film probes the world of the big city policeman and explodes the Hollywood myth of the dedicated cop. Professionals Rip Torn and Beverly Bentley and amateurs George Plimpton and Michael McClure appear in the picture, which stars Mailer as the main character. Piggies, a selected short subject, will be shown too. The film is the second in a series of ten being presented by the Department of Continuing IChurch Sunday Services 11 a.m. — Lutheran 4 p.m. — Episcopal THURSDAY 6:30 p.m. — Catholic CCM House RBEsiWW^^cSHasra* Studies and the Student Activities Commission this quarter. Five Friday evenings will be devoted to films of the underground while the other five alternate nights will feature "films of the inner edge." A few of the films being presented in the future weeks will be The Titicut Follies, The Flower Thief, Hallelujah the Hills, The Bed, and Echoes of Silence. Each film will have two showings. MIX EM OR MATCH EM Roger Steffens showed slides last week depicting the beauty, of the Vietnamese people and customs. -photo by shoblom Western Security office now has parking permits Enforcement of parking regulations suspended during the quarter break was resumed last Tuesday. T h o s e who have not purchased parking permits for this quarter may do so at the Safety and Security office at 316 21st St. Monday through Friday from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Faculty & Staff The quarterly parking fee for lot I-D, located on Indian Street between Laurel and Myrtle Streets, has been reduced from $8 to $4 for Winter quarter. Those who have already purchased Winter permits for 1-D at the $8 fee may apply at the Safety and Security Office for a refund. HOW tfM CUSTOM TAILORS Students MAKE BIG SAVINGS SALE FRI. SAT. SUN. JAN. 16,17,18 BURRIT0S TAC0S 3 FOR 8 9 * FRI-SAT 11 A . M . - 1 A.M. S U N 11 A.M.-1 A.M. 707 E. HOLLY ST. BOTTOM OF COLLEGE HILL MADE TO YOUR MEASUREMENT Men's Suits Sport Coats $35 & up $25 & up Call B o b 733-1090 for Appointment EXCLUSIVE WORKMANSHIP British Woolens, Silk Mohairs, Tropical Worsted - All Year 'Round - Many More! 3,000 Samples to Choose From. All Latest Colors - Any Style of Your Choice. WORLD'S FINEST FABRICS Custom Made 4 Western Front Tuesday, January 13, 1970 between the lines Comment on college trends in the 70's guest commentary The new decade, from almost every posdecade many of the innovative approaches sible angle, promises vastly different colto the Fairhaven grading method will be leges and universities than those of the adopted for general use. 1960's. College curricula, much of which is alThe changes will come about partly ready being quickly revised to include through student-demanded techniques relevancy and ethnic awareness, will also Hitchhiking on Western's campus has never been more see major changes within the next 10 years. triumphantly test-flown in recent years and popular—or more dangerous. Many perverts drive the streets for the partly through the sluggish normal evolusole purpose of picking up hitchhikers. One common factor in many tion of higher education. A few education experts predict the unsolved sex crimes is that the victim liked to hitchhike. The computer, the destruction of which gradual de-emphasizing of questionable During last Fall quarter a number of Western coeds were has been encouraged by Newsweek columngeneral education classes in favor of indisubjected to molesters, exhibitionists, perverts and rapists as a result ist Stewart Alsop on the grounds that it has vidual studies of greater interest to the of hitchhiking or accepting rides from strangers. individual student. made possible for the "goddam bureauOne evening near Kappa Residence Hall, a young lady accepted crats" to take over the country, will neverSeveral Eastern universities are encouraga ride from a stranger. Instead of reaching her destination she was abducted and upon threat of her life forced to perform perverted acts theless play an ever-increasing role on the ing off-campus internships for students after which she was raped. She was fortunate that her abductor finally working on undergraduate degrees in urban nation's campuses during the seventies. released her. planning, for example. Already, students at such innovative A Western coed chose to ignore scary warnings from friends schools as Oklahoma Christian College are about hitchhiking. She solicited a ride on High Street around midnite College costs are mushrooming and since using the computer approach to learning in one evening and was picked up by .two men. She foolishly everyday applications. student tuitions cover barely one-third of accompanied them to a motel where one of them raped her. Students there can dial any one of 136 ' what it takes to educate a student today, it Another young woman believing that she could help an looks like a general trend toward higher tape-recorded reference sources from a emotionally disturbed man she met on the street at two o'clock one individual costs. personal computerized study carrel in the morning, went for a ride with him to "talk about his problems." She college library. ended up being raped for her efforts. On three separate occasions girls had been picked up wnne Several efforts are being made by educaThe system, one of the largest in the hitchhiking and were molested before they could get out of the tion interests to make the cost of higher nation, affords a study center for each vehicle. education easier for the nation's students— student on campus (more than 1,000). Other women who have "thumbed a ride" have entered the the number of which will grow to 10 Grading systems employed at most of vehicle to find the occupant exposing himself. million by 1977. the colleges and universities in the nation Nobody can separate the potentially dangerous from the will come under especially heavy fire. Flak Students at Bowling Green State Uniwell-meaning motorist until it is too late. Even if the motorist has no is already being sent up to destroy the versity and Ohio State University are criminal intentions, hitchhikers are killed or injured when other controversial ABCDF system most frecurrently allowed to use bank credit cards drivers crash into the rear of vehicles stopping unexpectedly for quently used to evaluate students. to pay tuition and fees—and in certain hitchhikers. Some hitchhikers are killed after obtaining a ride with Many of the newer cluster campuses in cases—books, lodging and food costs. intoxicated drivers. Others are killed or injured by standing in the the nation, including Fairhaven College at Rep. Ogden Reid (R-N.Y.) is planning to roadway hitchhiking in dark clothing at night. Western, have virtually done away with the introduce an "omnibus" education bill In the State of Washington it is a misdemeanor, punishable by a maximum $300 fine or 90 days in jail or both, either to solicit a ride old grading system by providing graduating that, if passed, would set federal education "by word or sign or any means," or for a motorist to stop an students with a more personalized written priorities for the next five years. automobile and offer a ride to a stranger except "where an emergency evaluation instead of an ambiguous letter The bill is expected to include a longactually exists." Under this law, in 1968, the Washington State Patrol grade. term student loan bank and institutional arrested more than 1,700 persons for hitchhiking. The Bellingham grants program where banks would loan Despite the fact that Fairhaven Dean Police Department has informed the College that they will strictly students up to $20,000 for education, Charles Harwood insists that Fairhaven enforce the hitchhiking law beginning with the new year. payable over a period of 30 to 40 years. College is not a model for a future Western, Be safe, don't hitchhike. You may be gambling with your life. it would be safe to predict that within the —John Stolpe R. G. Peterson Supervisor of Safety and Security Cites danger of hitchhiking ll-S's — look before leaping into the pool Two weeks have passed since the initiation of the draft lottery, but the actual operation of the new system still remains unresolved. Conflicting information has been received by Serge Slagle, Western's draft counselor. According to Slagle, the local Bellingham draft board has one version of the way the system should function, and law publications from Washington, D.C., have published a conflicting system. Amid all the confusion taking place, Slagle stresses that students should not waive their II-S student deferments, in the belief that their number is high enough to be safe. No number is safe, Slagle warns, and dropping your deferment now will serve no purpose other than to increase your likelihood of being inducted. It appears at present that if a student retains his deferment, he will still be in the 1970 pool if it expires anytime this year. There is no advantage to dropping it. You will still be in this year's pool if your deferment is expiring this year. Even the various states have been speculating about the workings of the new system, and the confusion precludes any final determination of what is going to happen for the present. It seems likely that some major changes or ground rules will soon be made, and the ll-S deferment itself cannot be considered sacred ground. Check the story on page nine. It may provide some insight into one of the most perplexing messes that has yet been devised to stall the demands of the reform-oriented of our country. —Mike Gowrylow Offers fact vs. fiction for hitchhikers Fact: Hitchhiking in the city of Bellingham is illegal. Fact: Strict enforcement of the hitchhiking laws along Indian and other collegeaccess streets will reduce the frequency of hitchhiking violations along these streets— but it will not stop hitchhiking. Fiction: Strict enforcement of the hitchhiking laws will restrict the movements of rapists, perverts and exhibitionists. In fact, we feel that this strict enforcement will increase the opportunities social deviates have with Western coeds. Many coeds have relied on hitchhiking a ride to campus and would now accept a ride more readily from questionable persons, since student-motorists, having been made aware of the accelerated enforcement are less likely to offer rides. Any person who would risk the penalty for rape is certainly not worried about the relatively minor penalty for picking up a hitchhiker. And offering a ride to a nonhitchhiker is not illegal. - B o b Burnett QUIPS AND QUOTES FROM THE CAMPUS NEWSPAPER 20 YEARS AGO Following the pep rally Friday, Nov. 12, 1948, the annual bonfire, built by the freshman boys, will be guarded by the upper classmen in their attempt to light it. It will be built in the parking lot on the the campus. College President W. W. Haggard predicted today that Western's enrollment will soar to the 1,300 mark by Fall Quarter 1948. He noted a high number of veterans were among new enrollees. western front Official weekly newspaper of Western Washington State College second class postage paid at Bellingham, Wash. 98225 phone 734-8800 editorial, ext. 2277 advertising, ext. 2276 Mike Gowrylow Adele Saltzman Bob Burnett Jim Austin editor-in-chief managing editor assistant to the editor copy editor Maryjo Hardy Bill Woodland John Stolpe Bob Taylor business manager ad manager exchange editor sports editor R. E. Stannard Jr. advisor Reporters: Suzanna Berk, Mary Berling, Ted Bestor, Jim Bromley, Carol Caldwell, Allan Cunningham, Don DeMarco, Jim Diedrick, Mike Erickson, Forrest Goldade, Morrene Head, Jackie Lawson, Jay Long, Paul Madison, Mary Peebles, Bob Rhoads, Margaret Thornton, Jill Stephenson, Lyn Watts. Photographers: Wayne Fisher, Dan Shoblom, Jon Walker. Cartoonist: Mike EricksOn Ad salesman: Steve Stubbe, Ron Jones, Rich O'Brien Deadlines: 5 p.m. Tuesday-display ad reservations 4 p.m. Thursday-news copy, letters to the editor, classified ads, display ad copy. Represented by NEAS, 360 Lexington Ave., New York, N.Y. 10017 Price per copy, 10 cents Subscription, $3.50 a year, $1.50 a quarter. Member: U.S. Student Press Association, College Press Service, Associated College Press and Intercollegiate Press Service. Tuesday, January 13, 1970 Western Front 5 feedbackfeedbackfeedbackfeedbackfeedbackfeedba Doan cites reasons behind withdrawal from presidency Ellis clarifies request Editor: It was unfortunate that an open letter which I addressed to President Flora was published in the Western Front issue of Dec. 9, 1969, as a letter to the editor. In this context my letter made demands for the names of faculty you as editor could hardly be expected to furnish. My letter to President Flora was essentially a request that the names of all faculty members who received merit increases be published widely and not simply made available to members of t h e various departments represented. I reminded the President that Skagit Valley College published the names of its faculty who had received merit raises in the Bellingham Herald. This information is of interest not only to academic people but to taxpayers as well. Not to publish the list along with the criteria used in selecting "meritorious" faculty gives rise inevitably to charges of political log-rolling and academic nepotism. Moreover, if the list were made public, those who did not earn merit increases would have the names of their fellow faculty who were deemed to be superior as models for their own teaching effort. There really is no good reason why the list should not be made freely and widely available. Indeed, we teachers, students and tax-payers are entitled to it! Frederick E. Ellis professor education Bow-Wow! Students rescue trapped dogs DON DE MARCO staff reporter Quick-thinking students responded to the frantic, almost human, barks and cries of two overly-playful puppies trapped in the icy water of the Fischer Fountain in Red Square last Tuesday. According to witnesses, the two animals, species or pedigrees unknown, were chasing each other, around Red Square. Their frolicking antics carried them over the fountain's retaining wall and down to the thick ice below. The ice is thick only at the outer edges of the moat and thins out near the middle. This is where the pups fell in. Pitiful cries from the scared canines immediately attracted a crowd of about 150 students Poll sci club to meet The Political Science Club's regular monthly meeting will be held 3 p.m. Thursday in VU 364. Curriculum changes will be discussed and all Political Science students, or any student with nine or more credits in this area are invited to attend, Bruce McDonald, spokesman, said. Suggestions are welcome concerning the Political Science curriculum. and faculty, including this reporter. Various arts and science solutions to free the animals were contemplated. One excited student raced into Bond Hall and returned with a six-foot push broom. He tried, unsuccessfully, to beat a hole in the ice with the handle. As the broom was held out, another excited genius yelled to the pups, "Grab the handle! Grab the handle!" Then, a pair of male students began to shot-put huge cement blocks into the moat, breaking up the ice and clearing a path for one of the stranded pooches. Finally, a wild-eyed coed, obviously more concerned about the dog's safety than her own, ripped off her coat, tippy-toed across the ice, grabbed the second animal and dragged it to safety. As the crowd began to break up, one student made a rather sober comment. "The water should have been drained from the moat a long time ago—at least before the cold weather set in. "With all of the campus school kids running around, next time it could be one of them—and then we might not be so lucky." To Western Students: The major way a president can be representative is by keeping his campaign promises. This I have been most conscious of for the past eight months. Some of the promises I have kept, while others I have been prevented from fulfilling at this point. There is little I want more. I shall continue to work on these and will have more time to do so. A second task of the president is to act as a buffer between students and the administration, etc. This becomes increasingly difficult with administration intransigence and has physically exhausted me. Another task is that of administrating the Associated Students and here I have found that Greg Baker's ability surpasses mine. With my resignation is an application as his administrative assistant. I have a maximum amount of faith in his ability and look forward to governance by him, a younger man. In the past quarter he has adequately demonstrated his leadership ability. My personal problems have become complex. Financial obligations that I had -not anticipated have become pressing. The summation of these and other problems has forced me to realize that to continue in office would mean doing a less effective job than what needs to be done, one less effective than what Greg can do. I would like to discuss this with anyone who has questions. My office hours will be 10 to 12 daily, room VU 005. If I could have any wish or ideal it would be as Erich Fromm's—that every man be his own leader. Only then can all of us attain the responsibility that will make us free. Remember that we are living in a world of permanent change. Al Doan, AS President Questions PE curriculum Editor: In a capitalistic society like ours it seems natural for most college physical education p r o g r a m s t o focus on competitive sports. There exist, however, other types of "physical education" that have thus far been neglected in Western's P.E. curriculum—for instance sensitivity training and yoga. Why can't these subjects be offered? Huh? Marty Wener junior political science S t u d e n t s who have received a parking citation for parking in the 800 block of North Forest Street (west side) are requested to bring the tickets to Jon Walker, director of legal aids, in VU 217. Aardvark loves bookworms Make a date to see all three different Sierra Club Calendars. Outdoor lovers see the book that shows the way. Footloose Around Puget Sound, 100 walks on Beaches, Lowlands, and Foothills is a 224-page book of p h o t o g r a p h s , maps and directions by the Mountaineers, the famous Seattle club. Come to Aardvark for The Whole Earth Catalog and seven different titles by Herman Hesse. Richard Brautigan's Trout Fishing in America; The Pill Versus the Spring Hill Mining Disaster; and In Watermelon Sugar are all waiting for your inspection at the Aardvark. Andre Kole, America's leading illusionist, presents one of the most exciting and unique programs seen on the college campus today. TtJ^r irJezr 7£&r ftj&r Don't miss it! Open week nights till 9 p.m. THREE DOORS SOUTH Of SHAKEY'S ON • N. STATE ST. AARDVARK Books & Arts > -i O z > r T h u r s d a y , J a n . 15 8p.m. Lecture Hall 4 admission 75$ 6 Western Front Tuesday, January 13, 1970 Student group gives legal The legal aids department at Western has been organized to give students legal assistance, Jon Walker, director of legal aids, said in an interview last week. " W e s t e r n has reached community stature and as such requires such student-oriented services," Walker said. ' The legal aids department began last year as a segment of the Tenants Union. Due to a number of n o n - h o u s i n g claims, the department separated from the Tenants Union at mid-quarter, Walker said. Since the split from Tenants Union, Walker said the legal aids department has returned approximately $900 to students. This is in addition to the estimated $1,400 returned while a part of the Tenants Union, he said. Walker emphasized that the legal aids staff members are not qualified legal personnel. "We do have a lawyer on retainer," he said. The department's purpose is two-fold, he said. "We. screen the claims to determine which can be settled easily. "Those that require professional legal assistance we refer to our lawyer." Walker said he is looking for volunteer student help. Anyone interested in working with the department may contact the director at 2272 or inVU217. O E O shows interest in T e n a n t s Union The legal services department of the Office of Economic New Heuga tile carpet which was installed during Christmas break Opportunities (OEO) has adds beauty to VU coffee shop. expressed an interest in the —photo by fisher Tenants Union at Western, Craig Cole, Tenants Union chairman, said in an interview last week. Cole talked with OEO officials during the Christmas vacation. purposes, Cliff Holt, VU The new pale green Heuga tile He also observed the Tenants associate director explained. carpet in the VU coffee shop has Union at the University of drawn many comments from It makes a much more faculty and students. pleasant room, Holt commented, The carpet was placed in the and many coffee shop patrons coffee shop instead of a hard have agreed. floor covering for aesthetic S t u d e n t s agree carpet improves coffee shop Michigan in Ann Arbor, he said. The Tenants Union at Western was established last quarter to act as liaison between tenants and landlords, Cole said. The organization works closely with the Housing Commissioner, Cole said. He was appointed chairman by AS Housing Commissioner Gary Evans. Evans was appointed to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Jerry Field. Field resigned at the end of last quarter, Evans said. The Housing Commission is looking for volunteer typists, on-campus representatives, and other students, Evans said. Anyone interested may contact Evans in VU 217. Western lobbyists seek to lower voting age Serge Slagle available for Selective Service counseling Men students needing Selective Service counselling may talk to Serge Slagle, campus selective service counselor, from 1 to 5 p.m. daily in VU 218. Slagle maintains current Selective Service file information to answer most problems concerning draft and military obligation requirements. Thompson to speak to club about 'Clinical Psychology' Dr. Richard Thompson, a s s o c i a t e p r o f e s s o r of psychology, will speak on "Clinical Psychology from the Viewpoint of the Behaviorist" at the first Psy Kee meeting of Winter quarter at 7:30 tomorrow evening in MH 158. Psy Kee is a student organization primarily made up of majors, minors and graduate students of the psychology department, although the club welcomes any interested student. Meetings are held every second and fourth Wednesdays of the month. ifef STUDENTS STORE NO STORE MORE CONVENIENT ON THE MEZZANINE Whole Earth Catalog Nobody Loves a Drunken Indian by Huffaker Era of McCarthyism by Aptheker The Uncertain Giant by Adler Nature of Man by Fromm and Xirau Beyond Vietnam by Reischauer Price of Prosperity by Bernstein The Book of the Quarter is The Terrible Choice, the Abortion Dilemma Two students from Western are engaged in a state-wide lobbying effort to place a referendum before the people in November that will lower the voting and legal responsibility age to 18. Gordon Kalich, chairman of the Political Affairs Commission at Western, and Bruce Donner, co-chairman, will be making frequent lobbying efforts in Olympia during the special legislative session that began yesterday. The Intercollegiate Political Affairs Commission (IPAC) is organizing the efforts of Western as well as the other two state colleges and both universities. The Washington Education Association is also working with IPAC towards lowering the voting age. The role that college students can take in promoting the age reduction will be explained at a meeting 7 p.m. tomorrow in VU 208. Abortion and ecological reform will also be discussed. Both men believe that the change is essential, and passage of the bill must be accomplished during the special session. If it isn't, the next opportunity will not occur until the state elections in 1972. We wish to provide channels to people who are interested in age reform, Donner said. EQC to probe current relevant problems The most frequently heard c o m m e n t from students concerning the environment is "What can I, as one person, do to help?". Starting this issue, the Environmental Quality Council (EQC) will periodically report specific problems which can possibly be solved with the help of the students. The EQC is currently supporting the cause of Dr. A. Frans Koome. Koome, a Renton physician, has publicly admitted to performing over 140 abortions in a courageous effort to repeal the archaic Washington State abortion laws. Koome needs support, and any student interested in helping to reform these laws can write to him in support of his cause at 1128 K St., Renton, Washington 98055. Black Panther film showing Off the Pig, a Black Panther film featuring Eldridge Cleaver and Huey Newton, will be shown on campus all this week. Consult the daily bulletin for a listing of times and places. The controversial film is being brought to campus by Western's newly-formed Radical's Caucus. According to Caucus member Curt Rowell, the film deals with Black Panther Party ideology and actions. "The film should be of significant interest to students concerned with the recent assassinations of Illinois Panther leaders and the oppressive hand which has come down upon Black Panthers across the country," Rowell said. Western Front Tuesday, January 13, 1970 National Campus Review From the INTERCOLLEGIATE Press Service CINCINNATI, Ohio - A total of 7,750,000 students, an increase of about 3.3 per cent over last year, are enrolled this academic year in the nation's colleges and universities. According to Dr. Garland G. Parker, national authority on collegiate enrollment at the University of Cincinnati, even greater increases are forecast for the future, thanks to softening of the Vietnam war and the growing importance of graduate studies. STORRS, Conn. — A "representative" signer of one of the mass-signature Vietnam protest petitions, was probably a ranking faculty member in the social sciences from a large northeastern university. These were among the findings of a recent survey conducted by Dr. Everett C. Ladds, Jr., an associate professor of political science at the University of Connecticut. His study indicated that signers of these petitions, published in the New York Times between 1964 and 1968, came from 100 to 150 of the "top or middle range" institutions of higher learning in this country. Dr. Ladd claims that there are 2,400 such institutions. Dr. Robert Holz, director of the computer center, displays an IBM 360 computer which may be used to "teach" in the classroom. —photo by walker New machine 'teaches' daily classes in computer center JIM BROMLEY staff reporter "Greetings," the computer types. "This demonstration shows two related uses of Computer Assisted Instruction (CAI)." Thus begins a unique demonstration of a promising new breakthrough in classroom teaching, the first of its kind in any school on the West Coast. Other schools, such as the University of Texas and Stanford University, are also doing extensive work with CAI. Western's computer center is offering daily CAI sessions "taught" by the IBM 360-40 computer, installed last Spring quarter. These sessions are designed to demonstrate the teaching and testing abilities of the computer for classroom teaching. The computer will not replace the teacher, however, according to Rick Galosy, a graduate student in psychology. Galosy is presently doing research on the effects of CAI on the learning process. "The teacher will still be needed to handle individual student needs, such as answering questions not included in the basic program," he said. In addition, the teacher will continue to play a vital role in determining what material his s t u d e n t s will learn by programming. "The program is only as good as the programmer,- and its quality depends on the instructor's knowledge of the course," Galosy said. CAI was developed primarily by Joe Hansen, a former Western graduate student in math, now at the University of Texas. The computer gives necessary information on a particular subject to the student, then asks him questions based-on it. The student types his answers on a typewriter terminal. The machine will then respond to the student's answers by typing its answers on the terminal. It will correct any wrong responses and provide additional background information, if necessary. "Commands" such as "calc" can be used to help answer difficult questions. Calc enables the computer to function as a calculator for figuring math computations. CAI has many advantages over traditional teaching methods. Its main advantage is that it meets the needs of both fast and slow learning students. "The student can control his own pace by how well he responds," Galosy said. The computer will give more background information for the student who is having trouble, Robert Holz, computer center director, added. In addition, the teacher has complete control of reinforcement and the necessary steps the student takes in learning new material, Galosy said. Statistics are gathered on the number of correct and incorrect responses, and the response time for each question asked. The instructor can use these statistics to evaluate and improve his course, Holz said. CAI is also beneficial for professions requiring much technical knowledge and memorization work, such as engineering or medicine, he said. The system has some drawbacks, however. The main problem is the length of time required to write a course. "It takes hours to develop one hour of instruction for a student," Holz said. This is due to the lack of textbooks available for CAI programming and language, he said. "Costs have been one of the biggest problems," Holz said, referring to another major disadvantage. A computer teaching 20 students is obviously more expensive than an instructor, and few schools can afford the cost, he said. "It costs $2,000 per year to run one typewriter terminal." Despite these drawbacks, the future looks promising for CAI. CAI courses are being developed at Western, including new math and how to find the area of a rectangle. In addition, a course in computer language is underway, and Dr. David Ziegler, assistant professor of political science, is using it for teaching a course. H o l z and Galosy are confident that more will be done in this area. There are presently ten typewriter terminals being used, and Holz hopes eventually to have additional terminals on other parts of campus, including the dormitories. The IBM 360 has a capacity to handle 50 terminals. "Strong use of CAI is only a few years off," Holz said. SEATTLE, Wash. — The Associated Students budget at the University of Washington is in hot water. Following the failure of guest speaker and concert performances during the first portion of the academic year, student government officials are cutting back almost every activity on campus due to lack of funds. The Special Events area of the ASUW program division has already lost approximately $20,000 of the $64,000 general program fund. Big name concerts and programs, including Bob Hope's homecoming visit, failed to attract sufficient paying students. Sophomores eligible for scholarship applications The financial aids office is now accepting applications for the Easter Seal Scholarship, the Oeser Cedar Scholarship, and the Whatcom County Medical Society (WCMS) Scholarship, Fran Titus of the financial aids office announced last week. The Easter Seal Scholarhsip is an award of $250 to one student who plans to work with the physically handicapped. Applicants must be in the upper 50 per cent of their class, Mrs. Titus said. The Oeser Cedar Scholarship of $750 is made to a technology major who plans to specialize in f o r e s t r y , wood products technology, industrial design or industrial graphics. The WCMS Scholarship is an award of $300 each to three or more students planning a career in the medical profession or para-medical field, Mrs. Titus said. All applicants must have completed their freshman year of.college work. Applications for each of the scholarships are due in the financial aids office by March 1, Mrs. Titus said. The communist threat struck noticeably closer to home last Saturday (Jan., 1949) when three University of Washington professors were released from their duties on the Seattle campus. Hopes have been expressed by members of the State Legislature that this will only be the beginning of a vigorous drive "to ferret out to what extent the boys and girls in America are being led down the road to communism by professors who are supposed to protect our way of life." The Russian newspaper Pravda called the firing of the professors a "repression of civil liberties." —from a campus editorial STORE WIDE CLEARANCE shoes, boots, sUyyers ^ % / % •3* Cosmetic Sale! Ogilivie highlights shampoo $1.75 Dorothy Gray cold cream & dry-skin lotion at Desert Flower deodorant 1/2 price Tussy lipstick 2 for $1.00 Aubert Drug Co. 734-4340 Cornwall & Holly Bellingham National Bank Building Sale starts Thurs. Jan. 22 The Shoe Tree 8 Western Front Tuesday, January 13, 1970 What I have learned .. . . . . . . what I must learn CARLOS CARMONA contributor I have learned to communicate and relate to others in my life, but . . . most important I have learned that there is so much more to know and to understand! . . . 1. From environment and traditional education "I have found that . . . I have learned a little!" . . numbers without sciences, philosophy and metaphysics! . .. mathematics without mathematics! . .. medicine without knowledge . .. biology . . . philosophy! . . . and even sometimes without patients! . . . Sentences without any context! .. . and even words without any meaning! .. . Religions without knowledge, reason and . . . even soul! . .. "Cold education" through . .. hypocrisy! .. . wrong values, beliefs and even truths! . . . and even wrong books! . . . or even through wrong totalitarianism, superstition or . . . computer systems! 2. I have learned also "to listen carefully and patiently to somebody else talking for hours," in my own language! . .. without even understanding a word that was said! . . . 3.1 have learned also "to tolerate the harmful, hateful and vain ego! . . . and hypocrisy, and evil, and stupid common human behavior!" . . . 4. Also I have learned "to smile, and even to laugh" . . . mainly by imitation, yes! from groups and individuals' universal smiles and '' laughs . . . that it is commonly or . . . generally coming from dark, weak, desperated, afraid, dead, pessimistic! . . . empty or wrong minds and souls! . . . 5. Also . . . I have learned "to love and to feel hated" . .. and even sometimes not to recognize my own parents, brothers, love and . . . best friends! . . . 6. I have learned "the necessity to waste many, many years in schools" . . . almost without any reward to my mind, my soul and my reason! . . . 7. Also I have learned "to waste my own home, food, clothes and even my toys! .. . and even my money .. . and even my precious life's time! with somebodv else!" .. . hoping for a better love . . . a better friendship . . . a better brotherhood . . . or just hoping for more and better communication with others! but .. . almost always for nothing! . . . 8. I have learned too that . . . "teaching well I mainly waste my precious life's time!" . . . 9. And . . . I have learned "to watch . . . to listen . . . to talk! and . .. even to read! and to . . . even think and feel! almost secretly and furtively most of the time!" . . . looking like a strange, or .. . crazy, creepy, stupid, spy, coward or traitor! . . . 10. Lately — having been myself an adventurer of the world, "I have learned so many, many important things!" . . . out of schools and books! . . . 11. And lately . . . I myself have been shaken violently . . . I Dotv'r FEEL 6&HT.... I VY/\NT T» BE—. 17. Main things in human life, like God . . gods . . . love, friendship .. sex .. . population, overpopulation . . pollution of any kind! . . . Individual human being .. . social human being . . . People! . .. countries! .. . future! of myself, future of mankind! . . . I have learned it: "reading, watching things and watching others; listening, discussing . . . rushing with people . . . going around the world . . . but .. . mainly thinking, reasoning, feeling! . .. LIVING! . .. & & ^ Federal Careers Day offers job opportunities '• The placement office is sponsoring a Federal Careers Day on Tuesday, Jan. 20. Representatives from federal agencies will be on hand throughout the day to discuss current and future federal career opportunities with students. Some of the agencies participating include: the forest service, the Department of Labor, the Internal Revenue Service and the U.S. Navy. All students are invited and no appointments will be necessary. On t h e same day, representatives from the Bank of Hawaii will make their first recruiting visit to Western. They would like to interview seniors from Hawaii who are interested in banking careers in the Islands. Other students who are seriously considering living in Hawaii on a long-term basis may also apply. Qualified students can sign up for interview appointments in the placement office now. between clear despair and desperation, and even sometimes fear's perception, as never before! .. . And so . . . "I have discovered then how easy we can play, profoundly and harmfully, with our mind and deepest soul! . . . and even with the mind and soul of others too!" . . . 12. So .. . this has taught me then: "despair and desperation with truthful goals is very useful and constructive! . . . but the final despair and desperation: fear . . . is totally destructive! . . . to myself! and . . . to the others too!" . . . 13. But . . . I have not yet learned "to like and truthfully enjoy myself with more than one person" . . . It is shocking to me to run with many people — all together; in anything! neither schools, jobs, enjoyments, ideas, ideals nor goals of my own! . . . 14. I have not yet learned either "to kill anyone for someone else's ideas, ideals or . . . truths! . . . unless for ideas, ideals or truths of my own!" . . . 15. And lately, having been moved suddenly to a new world, a different world's language, I have learned it frequently by despair and desperation: "the unquestionable values of today so many, many languages to .. . communicate, to think, to love and hate each other: ISOLATION between the same animal species: earth's people!" . .. 16. From the world of my own I need to jump frequently to the people's world, the common world. "And so — practicing it for years, almost every day, I have learned to do it perfectly!" . . . 18. But . . . anyway, I know that . . . to survive '^better" . . . or .. . "more": "I must also learn too, to work— looking happy — without enjoyment!" . .. 19. And . .. "to wear more than one mask!" . . . 20. Moreover: "I know well that what I have learned is the best for my better future!" . . . 21. And . . . I still have my best and strongest belief and hope "for an effective and truthful COMMUNICATION AND BROTHERHOOD here, there and . . . anywhere! without exceptions!" . .. 22. So . . . I have learned "to tolerate and tolerate and . . . tolerate patiently, and without any complaints, almost everything! . . . from anyone!" . . . 23. Finally: I have learned truthfully, profoundly and strongly, the unquestionable main truth, at least for myself: "To do, to believe and to hope always the best for me! . . . and for you, my enemies! . . . and for you too, my friends!" . . . Western Players will entertain with Shakespeare comedy, satire Western Players' Winter quarter plays were cast last week. Shakespeare's Measure for Measure, directed by Dennis Catrell, is a comedy concerned with the tempering of justice and mercy, with bawdy women and disguised dukes added to increase the confusion and merriment. The play ends in a triple marriage. It will be presented Feb. 19-21 in the music auditorium. A newcomer to Western's stage, George Mead, will be playing Duke Vicentio. Angelo, the Duke's scrupulous deputy, will be Vaughn Mitchell. Claudio, a man threatened with death for adultery, will be Dan Fuller and his sister, Isabella, will be Jane Muirhead. M i s t r e s s Overdone, a prosperous woman of the night, will be Victoria Lyon, with Gregg Ross as Lucio. Dr. Byron Sigler will direct Elmer Rice's The Adding Machine, which will be presented March 5-8 in Old Main Theater. This expressionistic play presents a satirical and f r i g h t e n i n g vision of a mechanized society which is filled with types, rather than individuals. The cast includes: Mary Stolaas as Mrs. Zero, Linda Freeman as Daisy Devore and Cathy Wiseman as Judy O'Grady. The male roles had not been cast at press time. NIATURE STAR FLOWERS and a large selection of candles to brighten up your pad from I.V. Wilson Florists 1426 Cornwall 733-7630 Tuesday, January 13, 1970 Draft lottery fails all 1-A's eligible College Press Service "We're going to be breathing down the back of every individual available. I have no doubt that men with the number 366 will be drafted. "-Col. Arthur Holmes, State Director, Michigan Selective Service. WASHINGTON - President N i x o n accompanied the unveiling of the draft lottery with an announcement that those whose birthdays fell in the first third drawn (1-121) stood a "high probability" of being drafted in 1970, those in the second third (122-244) stood an "average probability" and those in the last third (245-366) stood a "relatively low probability." Today, little more than a month after the dates were picked in capsules from a bowl before a national television audience, even the National Selective Service Headquarters concedes Nixon's forecast was mistaken. "I doubt anyone with a 1-A classification is safe," says one national officer. "Men who are 1-A and are not drafted by December stand a good chance of not being drafted at all, but the possibilities are very slim that they can escape (from having their number come up)." Selective Service directors in several states have flatly predicted that they will reach all 366 numbers during the course of the year. Col. Holmes-in Michigan says his office has been scraping the bottom of the 1-A barrel for the past five years to meet induction quotas, and since the anticipated 1970 Michigan quota is 15,000—the same as past years—he sees little chance that any with 1-A classifications will escape the draft. Holmes says of students who plan to drop out of school to take their chances in this year's pool: "We'll welcome them into the pool. And we'll probably induct 'em." Col. Clifford Hall, Delaware Selective Service director, says his state will not only draft 19-26-year-olds classified 1-A; it will have to draft some 18^-19-year-olds. "With my knowledge of the 1970 draft call, I will have to tell local boards that they can go down the list to number 100, just for January," he says. Col. Byron Meaderx of New York State's Selective Service estimates that, "if our draft calls are at the levels of the last three years, we expect to exhaust all numbers from one to 366 . . . . by May or June," Massachusetts, New Jersey, Oklahoma and North Dakota also predict they will use up all lottery numbers during 1970. In addition, spokesmen for eight other states and the District of Columbia told an Associated Press survey that those with high lottery numbers are definitely not safe from conscription. 29 states said it was too early to make projections. State spokesmen in only four states—Alaska, Colorado, Kansas and Utah—say those with high lottery numbers are unlikely to be called. The variance in the projected manpower needs of different states raises questions as to the methods employed by the National Selective Service Headquarters to meet the national draft quotas. According to Capt. William Pascoe, chief information officer for the Selective Service, each month each local board compiles a "report of availability" that gives the number of physically and mentally qualified 1-A men in its jurisdiction. The report is sent to the state office, which formulates a state report. The national office receives all the state reports, and assigns a percentage to each of the 50 states plus Washington, D.C., Guam, the Canal Zone, Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands and New York City. The percentage represents the number of qualified 1-A men living in that state as opposed to the national total. The state and local quotas are established as follows, explains Pascoe: "Say for a particular month Maryland has 1.9 per cent of the 1-A's and the national call that month was for 20,000 men. 1.9 Smoking pot in Haggard Hall causes much alarm Six units of the Bellingham Fire Department, including a ladder truck, responded to a fire alarm at approximately 8:45 a.m. last Thursday in Haggard Hall. An electric coffee pot in a faculty lounge short circuited Channel Master cassette tape recorder, battery and A.C., booksized, recording time up to 2 hours causing the small fire. No damage was reported. COMPLETE LAUNDRY AND'DRY CLEANING per cent of 20,000 is 392, so that number of inductees would have to come from Maryland. Maryland has 66 local boards. Say board 10 has 2.83 per cent of all the 1-A's; then it would be called upon to supply 2.83 per cent of 392." Pascoe says if it turns out that one local board is drafting a middle lottery number while another is drafting a low number, it will be due mainly to three variables; the number and distribution of volunteers, number of deferments, and chance geographical distribution of birthdays. There are more than 4,000 local boards, each of them in an area w i t h a d i f f e r e n t socio-economic make-up, he says, and a board in an affluent area might be calling high numbers ahead of most other boards because many youths who otherwise might be drafted are able to afford college. A state director, he says, is empowered to maintain evenness in the calling of lottery numbers b y withholding the assignment of a quota to a board that is using up the numbers faster than other boards. In North Dakota, one local board was found to have 294 as the lowest lottery number. Those states, along with Utah and California, are reported to have decided tentatively on systems of evening out the calling of numbers. If those with low numbers enlist in the Navy, Air Force, Marines, National Guard or Coast Goard to "make the best of their military experience," Pascoe says, the higher lottery numbers will be reached sooner. Similarly, if some with high lottery numbers who were planning to enlist reverse their decisions because they think they're fairly immune from being drafted, the vacuum in military personnel will have to be made up by draftees. refusing induction are up. Draft resistance is currently the fourth largest crime in the U.S.; nearly 10 per cent of all federal court cases involve the Selective Service. All this diminishes the possibility that a person with a high lottery number will avoid the draft. But the single most important variable is the Vietnam war. If it is escalated—and Vice-President Agnew said his New Year's Resolution is to "Win the War"—then no one is safe. It if is toned down, then 1970's projected military manpower needs of 225,000 men may be decreased. The number of inductions for the last nine years reflect to a g r e a t e x t e n t t h e U.S. commitment in Vietnam: 1960- 86,602 1961-118,586 1962- 82,060 1963-119,265 1964-112,386 1965-230,991 1966-382,010 1967-228,263 1968-296,406 1969-265,000 Only President Nixon, who controls the scale of the war, can really tell what draft prospects the future holds—not your local draft board. Pascoe says that in light of the variables, students shouldn't drop out of school to gain entrance to this year's pool. A recent Selective Service decision makes it mandatory for a full-time student to be classified 2-S, so it is necessary for a student to drop out of school to receive a 1-A classification. There are other "variables." The re-enlistment rate in all services is down, and the absence-without-leave rate, desertion rate, number of people leaving for Canada and number of people going to prison for PLUTO'S W E L C O M E S A L L W W S C STUDENTS HELP FIGHT INFLATION DON'T BE FOOLED BY PRICE CHANGES PLUTO'S STILL GIVES MORE FOR LESS 2 FOR 1 LADIES NIGHT 7:00—9:00 WEDNESDAY NIGHT- FT— Pickup & Delivery 734-4200 PITCHER SPECIAL 8:30-12:30 2 FOR 1 6:00—9:00 SUNDAYS FRIDAY, S A T U R D A Y NIGHT Schauffer Jewelers 1304 Cornwall Ave. LIVE M U S I C B Y T H E RUBBER B A N D 205 PROSPECT 9 The beauty of Bellingham Bay is accented by the sun setting over the San Juan islands. -photo by shoblom TUESDAY- 11a j Skirt Service Western Front 1211 11th. 7 3 3 - 9 9 2 9 OPEN A T 4:00 M O N . - S A T . 2:00 O N S U N . .\ .[ \ l i > l i i ' 10 Western Front Tuesday, January 13, 1970 Viks drop Whitworth twice; get fifth straight win Western's red-hot roundballers swept two games last weekend, defeating the Whitworth Pirates 64-57 and 88-58 at Carver gym. The victories were the fourth and fifth straight for the high-flying Vikings, placing their overall record at 6-3, tying for the Evergreen Conference lead with Central Washington at 2-0, who defeated Eastern twice. The Big Blue howitzers opened up Saturday night after "hunt and pecking" the Pirates to defeat Friday. Viking shooters hit an excellent 58 per cent the first half to take a 46-27 lead. Finishing with 45 per cent from the floor, the Viks hit 22 of 26 free throws for 85 per cent and outrebounded the taller Pirates 58 to 38. No less than eleven Viks got into the scoring column with Jeff Sherburne leading the way with 15. Others in double figures were John Reed 13, Neal Larson 12 and Mike Clayton 11. Lee Roy Shults led all rebounders with 12. Shults was the Viking "man of the hour" Friday as he dumped in 20 points and pulled down 15 rebounds. The burly junior from Vancouver, Wash., hit 10 of 20 field goal attempts in the 64-57 triumph. Clayton with 13 points and Reed with 11 were other top scorers. Western's famed defense was the key to victory as the Pirates, closely checked, hit only 30 per cent from the field, both nights. W h i t w o r t h forward Ted Hiemstra was the only Pirate to score consistently, putting in 18 the first night and 20 the second. Interesting to note was that the Vikings trailed Whitworth only for five seconds both nights. Next action for Coach Chuck Randall's squad is this weekend in Spokane against the tough Eastern Washington "Savages." Western hoop squad reverses form; wins Turlock tournment, defeats Davis Western's Viking basketball fortunes took a sharp about face over the holidays as the Viks won three of four contests after beginning the season losing two of their first three. Viking forward Lee Roy Shults (32) scores two of his 20 points over Whitworth's Ted Hiemstra (51) in Friday night's 64-57 triumph. Jim Nieman (43) looks on. Western continued its fine play on Saturday, by thrashing the Pirates, 88-58. _photo by wyman SALE SUITS 59.67 69.67 79.67 And M a n y More At Popular Prices SWEATERS 7.67 Two team records were set as the Viks shot an unbelievable 59.2 per cent from the field and potted a total of 45 field goals. Guard Mike Clayton led all scorers with 27 points while forward Lee Roy Shults scored 15 and had 17 rebounds. Highlighting the victory surge was the winning of the Turlock Invitiational at Turlock, Calif. Western adapted well to the climate of the sunny south. Against host Stanislaus State in the opening round of the two-night, four-team tourney, the Vikings romped to a 103-73 victory. It marked only the third time in Coach Chuck Randall's eight years on the hill that his team had gone over the century mark in scoring. Against powerful St. Mary's of Moraga, Calif, the Viks "cooled off to a field goal accuracy of 51 per cent in taking the championship game 83-78. It was St. Mary's who lost to Duquesne, nationally ranked earlier in the year, by only four points. The pressure filled game saw the lead change hands several times before guard Jeff Sherburne came off the bench to put the Viks ahead to stay. The senior from Pocatello, Idaho, scored 22 points, hitting nine of 14 field goal attempts. Clayton had 17 points, center John Reed, 12 and Shults, 11. Clayton and Sherburne were named to the All-Tournament team as tourney sponsors the Turlock Jaycees awarded the Viks with a handsome team trophy and individual awards. On returning to Bellingham, Western defeated the University of California, Davis "Aggies" 57-55 at Carver gym. Clayton 11.67 15.67 Pullovers Ski Sweaters, Bulky Knits M a n y To Choose From M a n y Other Things To Choose From A t Great Savings! It's always HAPPY HOUR at the UP & UP when the Band is not playing WED. - Pitcher Night 8:00-11:00 FRI.-TG I F 4:00-7:00 Could be drown time, pitcher time, or what Plus Reduced Prices at all other times LIVE M U S I C by *•!or the clothes horse" THE UNUSUALS Thurs., Fri., and Sat. from 9:00 on OPEN MONDAY NIGHT TIL 9:00 CORNWALL AND MAGNOLIA PHONE 734^-3000 ALL this at the UP 137 W. Holly &, UP and Sherburne scored 16 and li points, respectively, while forward Chip Kohr played an exceptional floor game and had 12 rebounds. Two days prior to going to California the Viks lost 83-73 to the University of British Columbia "Thunderbirds" at Vancouver, B.C. Western trailed the hot-handed Canadian team throughout as Clayton paced the Viking attack with 22 points. JV's split two games Western's J.V. basketball team split two games last weekend, defeating the McChord Field Flyers, 82-75 Friday night, here; then losing to the undefeated University of Washington freshmen, 78-48 on Saturday at Seattle. In Friday's game, Joe Nyberg and Mike Franza teamed for 42 points, Nyberg scoring 26 and Franza scoring 16. Tom Hilyard also hit double figures for the J.V.'swithl2. In the Saturday's game, the tall and talented Husky freshmen proved just too strong for Western, as the Huskies won in a romp. Mark Roberts led the Vik scoring with 13. The J.V.'s are now 5-3 for the season. Giraud named Ail-American honorable mention Butts Giraud, Western's outstanding football defensive tackle, was given honorable mention recognition in the N a t i o n a l Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA) All-American selections released Jan. 2. Giraud, a 250-pound senior from Vancouver, B.C., was the main figure in the Vikings fine defensive line that had much to do w i t h Western being co-champions of the Evergreen Conference in 1969. Tuesday, January 13, 1970 Western Front 11 Basketball leads intramurals Western's Bruce Johnson battles to catch up with his Highline opponent. -photo by shoblom Vik tank team gets double dunking We stern's swimming team dropped both of its meets last weekend here, losing to Highline Community College, 57-37 on Friday, before they were edged by Portland State, 54-50 on Saturday. The Vik swimmers gained only two firsts against the strong Highline team, Gerry Gent winning the 50-yard freestyle in 24.5 and Robin Allen winning the diving with a total of 236.3 points. In both events, Western swept the first two places, Veith finishing second to Gent in 25.0 and Doug Brown second to Allen with 187.6 points. Otherwise it was all Highline, with both Ron Johnson and Gary Devereux taking two firsts apiece. Johnson won the 200-yard individual medley (2:19.2) and the 200-yard backstroke (2:23.4); while Devereux won the 200-yard freestyle (1:57.3) and the 500-yard freestyle (5:26.4). Western received strong finishes from Tom Ward, second in the 200-yard freestyle (2:01.4) and in the 200-yard butterfly (2:18.0); Jeff Hopper Redshirts edged by Bornsteins Western's Redshirts were edged by Bornsteins, 64-63 last. Thursday in Bellingham City Thursday Night League play. The loss dropped the Redshirts into second place behind • Bornstein's which took over sole ownership of first place. The Redshirts led 32-28 at halftime, but fell to a f o u r t h - q u a r t e r rally by Bornstein's Whit Hemion led the Redshirt attack with 18 points and also pulled down 10 rebounds. Rich Lindsley added 12 points and G?ry Cressman 10 to round out the double figure scoring for the Redshirts. The Redshirts, now 3-1 in the City League, had previously defeated Georgia-Pacific, 63-47; Kendalls, 85-65; and Rick Hardins, 56-54; going into last Thursday's game. This Thursday night, the R e d s h i r t s face Reinke's Fabricators. second in the 200-yard individual medley (2:21.6), Ross May second in the 100-yard freestyle (56.1), and Ken Visser second in the 200-yard breaststroke (2:33.2). On Saturday against Portland State, the Vik swimmers battled the Oregon school all the way, but received just two firsts to Portland State's nine. Ward won the 50-yard freestyle in 23.6 and Gent completed the sweep in the same event, by finishing second in 24.4. Hopper won the 200-yard individual medley for Western in 2:22.4. Western's only other first came when the relay team of Todd Wirtz, Gent, Visser, and Ward won the 400-yard freestyle relay in 3:42.0. Mike Hadley and Frank Moore paced Portland State with two firsts. Hadley won the 1,000-yard freestyle (12:12.4) and the 500-yard freestyle (5:49.2); while Moore took the 200-yard freestyle (23.6) and the 100-yard freestyle (53.7). Western received second-place finishes from Wirtz in the 1,000-yard freestyle (13:16.1); Visser, second in the 200-yard freestyle (2:05.3) and second in the 500-yard freestyle (5:51.7); Allen second in the diving with 222.75 points; Ward second in the 200-yard butterfly (2:24.7); Gent second in the 100-yard freestyle (54.8); Bruce Johnson, second in the 200-yard backstroke (2:31.0); and Hopper second in the 200-yard breaststroke (2:34.8). T h i s S a t u r d a y Coach Wiseman's swim team will seek its first victory of the season against three losses, when the Viks host Eastern. Intramural basketball begins this week, heading the Winter intramural sports program. Intramural basketball will consist of round robin play. Teams will be put into leagues according to ability. The "A" league, for example, will be composed of the better teams. There will probably be four leagues. The top two teams from each league will compete in the All-college basketball tournament at the end of the season. National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) basketball rules will apply in all cases with the exception of time. A game will consist of two 20-minute halves with a five minute intermission at halftime. Winter sports, wrestling and swimming, will be held later in the quarter. Wrestling competition will be conducted in the following weights: 127, 137, 147, 157, 167, 177, 191 and heavyweight. A team consists of at least four men. NCAA wrestling rules will apply in all cases with the exception of time. A match will consist of threy one-minute rounds. Intramural swimming competition will consist of the following events: 50-yard freestyle, 75-yard backstroke, 75-yard breaststroke, 75-yard medley (breaststroke, backstroke, and freestyle), 200-yard freestyle and the 200-yard relay. Four men compose a team which will compete for the All-college championship. Central tops Eastern twice Central's defending Evco champ Wildcats kept pace with Western's two victories over Whit worth, by easily defeating Eastern twice, 81-68 on Friday and 82-65 on Saturday. Leading Central in the Friday game was Paul Adams with 19 points, with Dave Allen scoring 17 and Mitch Adams adding 13. Leading Eastern were Steve Barnett and Duane Barnette with 15 points each. Saturday, Central notched its tenth victory in 11 games, leading 38-30 at the half. Joe LaDuca led the Wildcat scoring with 21 points, while the Adams brothers, Paul and Mitch, added 15 and 14 points respectively. Steve Barnett led Eastern with 13 points. Former Vik basketball star Paul Hallgrimson is the fourth leading scorer in the semi-pro Metropolitan League of Seattle. Complete Menu Service Pizza Broasted Chicken Hamburgers Prawns ,<1 Alaska vern jf'!'""-**;'' 209 W. Holly T £:PSTEAK t Broasted potato and toast Western guard Dave Hemion (30) drives around Whitworth's Glen Hiemstra (11) as Viking forward Roger Fuson (42) awaits possible P s* -photo by shoblom Western to face Eastern This weekend Western's hoop squad puts its five game winning streak on line against the Eastern Savages in Cheney. The Savages are three and seven for the season, but this is not indicative of Eastern's type of play. The Savages have played a tough schedule so far, having competed against such powers as the University of Montana, the University of Puget Sound, and having participated in the Fresno Holiday Classics and the Granite City tourney, where they played several powerful teams. The Vikings who play a more deliberate style of basketball will face a team that likes to run. The Savages, who led the Evergreen Conference in scoring last season, are led by 6-5 Steve Barnett, a 230-pound junior. Barnett was Eastern's leading scorer against Central last weekend tallying 28 points in two games. The key to Eastern's running game, is its strong rebounding duo of Al Gale and Dave Pounds. Gale, 6-4, was third in Evco rebounding last season, while Pounds, 6-8, was tenth. The Savages have been getting strong performances from their Mt. Baker Ends Tonight KEIR SENTA i ULLI IDULLEA BERGERlPALMEil <ie Fh^lJST0N.lTHE.BBEsf1 COLOR , and 3 in the Attic No one under 18 admitted I.D. Required starts Wednesday The Outdoorsman The greatest hunting and fishing spectacular ever filmed COMING Wednesday 21st FANNY HILL and Love Factory two guards this season, Duane Barnette, a 6-1 junior; and Joe Bullock, a 5-11 senior. The Savages have also been getting good bench play from two sophomores, Randy Buss, 6-5, and Eric Ellsworth, 6 4 . Last season the Viks won three out of four games the two teams played. J % Classified Advertising \ r 10 MISC. FOR SALE Hayer Klira-i 12 string guitar,, $212 new, best offer. 115 Highland Hall 733-9934, ask for Bob. For Sale: Indiana alto sax, condition excellent. Cost orig. $300, will sacrifice for $150. If interested call Noel Dunnavan, 614 Beta. Luggage case included. 11 CARS AND CYCLES '69 Olds 442, got drafted must sell, 734-0973. '62 Chevy II good condition $450, call 734-0745 after 5 p.m. 20 FOR RENT "* Two rooms for students: 25 min. driving W. of Ferndale, newly decorated, new heater and appliances, furnished. Pay rent, deposit & deposit utilities. Call ext. 2589 or 2570. 30 ROOMMATE WANTED 1 or 2 roommates wanted: males, females or couple. $90 for 1, $75 for 2 plus utilities per qt. Call 734-2066. Girl wanted to share furnished apt. $65/mo. CaU 734-9201. 32 WANTED Members needed for soul band, organ, drum, and brass. Call Mary 734-5696. 33. HELP WANTED Wanted-Campus representative, unlimited commissions, no investment, no paperwork. Record Club of America. 40 SERVICES PROFESSIONAL EDITOR Experienced writer will edit undergraduate term papers, book reports, or minor theses. We will edit and type your work for a combo price of 50 cents per page. Satisfaction is our business. Phone PRO-ED at 733-6902 after 7 pm daily. Custom tailored men's suits, direct order from Hong Kong $35 up. Call Bob: 733-1090 for appointment. 41 INSTRUCTION Spanish tutoring or instruction. Will accept odd jobs as payment. 733-6335. 50 PERSONALS Subscribe to The Seattle Times, $7 for quarter. Call 733-1090. , 51 LOST AND FOUND Found: Instamatic 134 Camera. Found during finals week. Owner identify and claim. Call 733-1823 after 6 p.m. 12 Tuesday, January 13, 1970 Western Front Vik matmen crush Eastern Western's matmen won their opening Evco match of the season, crushing Eastern, 39-0 Saturday in Cheney. C o a c h B o y d e Long's grapplers scored five pin victories, in their easy win over the Savages. D e n n i s M o o r e , Terry Beckstad, Dennis Bauer, Dan Moffett, Mike Compton all scored wins by pinning their opponents. Summary: 118-Rich Bowers (WWSC), dec. R. Davis (EWSC), 13-0; 124-Moore (WWSC) pinned J. Rees; 134-Beckstad (WWSC) pinned M. Vehieake; 142-Dennis Daniels (WWSC) dec. R. Hoecher, 20-0; 150-Bauer (WWSC) pinned C. Kremen; 158-Lee Anderson (WWSC) decisioned M. Wright, 16-5; 1 6 7 - B i l l H u n t (WWSC) decisioned J. Byrne, 8-3; 177-Moffett (WWSC) pinned L. Burkhuff; 190-Compton (WWSC) pinned S. Allen; Heavyweight, Jeff Michaelson dec. J. Withrow, 10-6. Western's Chip Kohr (22) drives by Whitworth's Ted Hiemstra (51). Kohr, who played on last year's JV team, is one of the most improved players on Coach Chuck Randall's hoop squad. -photo by wyman Date Opponent, site The Washington State closed badminton tournament will be held this Friday and Saturday at Western's Carver gymnasium. Jan. 17 Jan. 23 Jan. 31 Feb. 3 Feb. 6 Feb. 14 Feb .21 Feb. 27 at Central Seattle Pacific College, here San Francisco State Tournament, San Francisco, Calif. Cal Poly at San Luis Obispo, here at Seattle Pacific College Central, here at the University of British Columbia Evco Tournament, here Mike Clayton, 6-2 senior from Port Angeles was named the Evco player of the week last week, for his brilliant play in the Turlock, California Invitational. Clayton was an all tournament selection. REMAINING WRESTLING MEETS STUDENT ACTIVITIES QUARTER A NEW "UNDERGROUND," **. MENTAL AND QUARTER'S SERIES FOR WINTER IMPROVED DOCUMENTARY, FILMS. FALL "UNDERGROUND" INTRODUCES DREW SERIES AND OF EXPERI- SENSATIONAL ACCLAIM EVEN FROM THOSE WHO WEREN'T AMONG THE CROWDS WHO FLOCKED TO THE TICKET BOOTH. HERE'S A SAMPLING OF REMARKS FROM THE ADMINISTRATION AND FACULTY: " . . . SORROWFUL MASOCHISM . . . WHERE ONE SEEKS TO LOSE HIMSELF IN THE MANIPULATION OF SYMBOLS." . . . AND ANOTHER, "ANY READING OF HISTORY WILL INDICATE THAT A The Hoop Scoop PAUL MADISON Early this season an onlooker after witnessing Western's 58-55 loss to Simon Fraser made a comment something to the effect of, "That team played worse than a high school squad. In fact they played like grammer school kids." Such an opinion at that time was commonplace and many were even worse. But now things have changed. The Viks have won five straight ballgames, the last two over a highly touted Whitworth five and are currently tied for the conference lead with Central. What has happened to grammer school basketball? First of all, winning. Winning begets winning and after coming back to defeat Simon Fraser 5249 at Vancouver, B.C. a change came over the Vikings. They had tasted victory and wanted more. Another thing is the heart and desire this team possesses. They can't be kept down and if these terms aren't easily comprehended come to a ballgame and they'll be defined on the floor. Also a big factor for this season's squad is that of a strong bench. Sitting next to coach Chuck Randall are substitutes capable of doing just as good a job and many times a better one than the starting five. Such a situation keeps everyone on their toes and doesn't let an opponent physically wear the Viks down near the end of a game. Thus three reasons for Western's surge, but there is yet another. Each and every player on the Viking squad has only one goal in mind, that of going all the way. They won't have any part of just breaking even. That was proven in part last Saturday night when they didn't let down after winning Friday, instead they came on even stronger. Hat's off to a gutty ballclub. REMAINING BASKETBALL GAMES Date Opponent, site Jan. 16-17 Jan. 30-31 Feb. 4 Feb. 6-7 Feb. 9 Feb.13-14 Feb.16 Feb. 20-21 Feb. 24 Western at Eastern Western at Central University of Redlands, here Western at Whitworth Portland State, here Eastern, here Western at Portland State Central, here Pacific Lutheran, here A Film by NORMAN MAILER presented by Grove Press " I t has g u t s , humor, a n d ialent"-cuE jjjjg^y "A series of terrifying and fanny confrontations with wife murderers, gamblers, perverts prostitutes, pimps and innocents played by a rare assortment of professionals including Rip Torn and B e v e r l y B e n t l e y and amateurs like George P l i m p t O n / ' - V I N C E N T CANBV. NY. TIMES SOCIETY WHICH LETS ITSELF BE SUFFUSED WITH THIS SORT OF CORRUPTION FACES EITHER DISAPPEARANCE OR REGENERATION." HELP REGENERATE SOCIETY . . . PATRONIZE OUR FILMS! [ Jan. 1 6 - BEYOND THE LAW by Norman Mailer PIGGIES by Jim Tatum Jr. Jan. 3 0 - THE TITICUT FOLLIES by David Wiseman UNDER MIND TIME by John Mottishaw Feb 1 3 - RELATIVITY by Ed Emshwiller E.P.I, by Andy Warhol MATCH GIRL by Andrew Meyer Feb. 2 7 - THE FLOWER THIEF by Ron Rice THE BED by James Broughton Mar. 1 3 - ECHOES OF SILENCE by Peter Goldman SKIN by Carl Under PERFORMANCES 7:00 & 9:15 Friday January 16 L-4 TICKET INFORMATION Students $ .75 General $1.25
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- 1970_0120 ---------- Western Front - 1970 January 20 - Page 1 ---------- Baker announces he won't 'play games' Greg Baker, Al Doan's successor to the AS Presidency, citeshis major priority to be making the Associated Students more efficient, JOHN STOLPE copy editor ASPresident Gr
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1970_0120 ---------- Western Front - 1970 January 20 - Page 1 ---------- Baker announces he won't 'play games' Greg Baker, Al Doan's successor to the AS Presidency, citeshis major
Show more1970_0120 ---------- Western Front - 1970 January 20 - Page 1 ---------- Baker announces he won't 'play games' Greg Baker, Al Doan's successor to the AS Presidency, citeshis major priority to be making the Associated Students more efficient, JOHN STOLPE copy editor ASPresident Greg Baker says that he will refuse to "play games" with the college administration. Baker, asophomore political science major from Juneau, took over Al Doan's presidency after Do an resigned forpersonal reasons two weeks ago. "The rules of the college administration simply maintain the statusquo while student government seriously wants to make some changes," Baker told the Western Front in an interview Friday. Baker's major priority for this quarter will be to make the Associated Students more efficient, representative and flexible. "We hope to accomplish this priority through the results of n e g o t i a t i o n s with the administration over the demands of last quarter and through reorganization of theAS legislature," Baker explained. He added that the proposed faculty-student pub on campus would beless emphasized under his administration. "I have turned the entire issue over to Al Doan since he ismost vitally interested in its success," Baker said. Doan is working for Baker as administrative assistant this quarter. Baker noted that student government had several new projects of major interest tostudents under consideration. "We have several people working on a report to the Office of EconomicOpportunity in an effort to obtain federal aid for our legal services project on campus," Baker remarked."In addition, we also hope to obtain federal aid for student co-op housing." Baker, who was elected ASvice president during last Spring quarter's general election, said that he "hasn't had time" to considertossing his hat into this year's AS presidency race. "I'm swamped with other priorities right now," he•said. representative and flexible. -photo by shoblom the western front Vol. LXII no. 19 WesternWashington State College Bellingham, Washington 92825 Tuesday, January 20, 1970 10c Two-hourparking tabled, hassle continues The Bellingham Board of Public Works (BPW) has decided to table any further decision on the proposal to impose time restrictions on parking on streets surrounding thecollege until April 6, according to Serge Slagle, AS representative to the meeting. It had beenannounced at Friday's all-college meeting that the BPW was to discuss the two-hour parking restrictionat yesterday's meeting. Several other current parking issues were discussed before an estimated 400persons at Friday's meeting. After a brief description of the many parking problems, Wally Sigmar, ASlegislator, opened the meeting to questions from the floor. Barney Goltz, director of campus planning,blamed "over-population based on previous estimates" as the main cause of the current situation butsaid "there are no definite and immediate solutions." "We had a plan to effectively cope with the parkingsituation before Western accepted, rightly or wrongly, more than 1,000 extra students. "I feel that weshould ask the state legislature to pay for these extra students," he said. Goltz emphasized the need to r e - e s t a b l i s h a friendly atmosphere between the city and college in solving the various problemsimposed by the current college expansion. He suggested that the city give the college one-year advance notice concerning changes in parking regulations affecting Western students. H. Stuart Litzsinger,director of the physical plant, noted two proposals which were currently under consideration. The firstwas a $10 million to $12 million parking ramp which would not be built in time to answer the needs ofstudents now attending Western. The second proposal considered buying a 35-acre plot of groundsouth of the campus for parking and providing shuttle-bus service on a frequent schedule. Anotherproposal, which appeared in last Thursday's Herald, asked the feasibility of using the large Civic Stadium parking lot at a nominal fee and providing shut tie-bus service from it. J.D. Adams, owner of theBellingham Transit System, is considering doubling bus service which would provide a bus every 15minutes to the campus and reducing the rates for college students to two tokens for 25 cents, according to Litzsinger. Any proposal involving the Transit System would require a study of the proposal's financial practicality, since the bus company is currently losing money. R.G. Peterson, supervisor of safety and security, said there was "no truth" to the charge that his office had asked the city to enforce thehitchhiking ordinance or impose two-hour parking restrictions in order to force students to buy parkingpermits in the paid lots. Peterson also denied the charge that the campus security force was working in conjunction with the Police Department in enforcing the ordinance against hitchhiking. "None of us hasthe power of arrest and student patrolmen cannot detain a hitchhiker until the police arrive to issue acitation," he said. He noted, however, that since 90 per cent of the security force was made up ofstudents, a patrolman might advise a fellow student that he was breaking the law. Jerry Field, senior,political science, speaking from the floor, described the student as a second-class citizen who wasfrequently "milked" by the city. "There is too much apathy on campus. Each student should devoteserious thought and oppose the passage of two-hour parking restrictions," he said. Huxley Dean toexplain goals at EQC meeting Dr. Gene Miller, newly appointed dean of Huxley College, will speakbefore the Environmental Quality Council (EQC) at 4 p.m. Tuesday, Jan. 27 in VU 350. Miller'sappointment as dean was announced September of last year. Classes at Huxley will begin next Fallquarter. According to Ted Boss, chairman of the EQC, Miller will discuss the environmental sciencescluster college—its goals and its relation to environmental quality. This will be the first EQC meeting ofthe Winter quarter. Proposed projects this quarter are 1) the publishing of a weekly environmentalnewsletter, with articles listing all news relating to the environment, and 2) the construction of a detailedplan for a footpath along Whatcom Creek, between the freeway and City Hall. Boss added that "themain goal of the Environmental Quality Council at Western is to make the public aware of all aspects ofthe environment-air,, water and open spaces, and to show how these aspects are interrelated andreduced to one common denominator, namely population." The area involved in the two-hour parking limit the city may impose about the campus is indicated by the dotted lines. The lines form the perimeter ofthe area affected, with all streets along and within that perimeter subject to the time limit.F~* tww gt;SMmi?m!i#mw gt;eiw gt;$®!#*?$* - ---------- Western Front - 1970 January 20 - Page 2 ---------- Western Front Tuesday, January 20, 1970 Flora calls for new promotion criteria The mere mention of"publish or perish" was once enough to keep aspiring college professors in nightmares. But thatcontroversial and heated issue is dead, according to one man on campus. College President CharlesFlora assured the faculty last week that Ph.D.'s without formal publication records would be able to"climb as high as possible" within the academic community. While Flora dismissed publication recordsas major criteria for reviewing teacher candidates and mandatory criteria for granting tenure toprofessors, he quickly called for new requirements. "We must become more demanding and exacting in evidence before we hire new teachers and grant tenure," Flora said. He informed department chairmenthat teacher candidates must show "excellent potential as a scholar and as a teacher" before beinghired. In addition, he remarked that solid evidence from both a teacher's peers and students that he is acompetent teacher would be required before tenure will be granted in the future. "When in doubt, we willdeny tenure," Flora warned. He called for all instructors and professors on campus to use studentevaluations as a criterion for conducting their classes. "I will require objectively administered studentevaluations from anyone seeking tenure," Flora said. Flora's remarks were made in his periodic "Stateof the College" address before several hundred faculty last Wednesday in Miller Hall. Winter enrollmentdown 4 9 3 from Fall quarter Winter quarter enrollment is 493 less than Fall quarter enrollment,according to Registrar William J. O'Neil. The registrar said last Thursday that total day enrollment forthis quarter is 8,141, compared with 8,634 last quarter. The figures include both full-time and part-timeday students. O'Neil attributed the decrease in enrollment to two factors. "We issued 232 baccalaureate degrees in December and we controlled the enrollment by not admitting any transfer students with less than 75 transferrable credits," he said. Last Winter quarter showed an enrollment of 6,229 daystudents. Public invited to discuss BOQ choice for Winter quarter William H. 0. Scott, Book of theQuarter (BOQ) chairman, will moderate a panel discussion on the Winter quarter selection at 7:30 p.m.next Tuesday in L-2. The Winter BOQ selection is The Terrible Choice: The Abortion Dilemma by theHarvard-Kennedy International Conference on abortion. The panel will include Dr. Phillip Jones, Whatcom County Medical officer; Evelyn Kest, instructor of home economics; Michael Lipscomb, Bellinghamattorney, and Jennifer Marshall, AS representative to the Washington Council for Abortion Reform. Thepublic is invited to attend. STUDENTS :fr:f STORE % ! *» NO STORE MORE CONVENIENT sym—ON THE MEZZANINE J. T. by Wagner The Pill: Pregnant or Dead? by Marshall Guide to Mexican Art by Fernandez Joan Baez Songbook The Ultimate Folly by McCarthy Ego, Hunger and Aggression by Perls Search for a Method by Sartre Agony of the American Left by Lasch Whole Earth Catalog WoodstockNation by Hoffman President Charles Flora has established new criteria concerning tenure and promotionamong faculty members, as well as citing possible tuition hikes for next Fall, see stories this page. -photo by gowrylow College costs may increase to ease financial difficulties (Ed. Note: This is an officialstatement issued last week by President Charles Flora concerning the financial problems of the college.) In an earlier communication to the College Community on September 23, 1969, the enrollment andconsequent financial problems confronting the College last year and again this year were related. Subsequent to that announcement, further financial problems developed as a result of Governor Evans' efforts to reduce state spending. The combination of these factors has resulted in fiscal restrictions within thecollege such that we are this year experiencing genuine and serious financial hardships in manyprograms. At present, Western has been allocated funds for the coming year sufficient to accommodate 7,900 students. However, our officially projected enrollment is 9,570. Without 'additional funding, it willbe impossible to accept this projected number. Accordingly Western, as are its sister institutions, isand will continue to make every effort to receive an appropriation to allow the larger number. But at thiswriting, it appears that such an appropriation is unlikely. Should this be true, the following courses ofaction remain: 1. Turn away as many as 1,670 (or more) qualified students who would seek to attendWestern. 2. Increase student fees to a level commensurate with the average for colleges like our own($264/year for Washington State colleges, $3 70/year in comparable schools). The first alternative I find unthinkable, the second undesirable. Reluctantly, I am led to the conclusion that if our efforts forincreased appropriations fail, I will be obliged to support a fee structure which brings Western closer tothe average of comparable institutions rather t h a n deny educational opportunity to many and increasethe burden upon our already beleaguered sister institutions. Flora appoints Diers: first woman head ofcampus Honors Program Dr. Carol Diers, associate professor of psychology, was appointed director ofthe Honors Program at Western by President Charles J. Flora last Tuesday. Dr. Diers has been amember of the Western faculty since 1963 and assumed her new post at the beginning of Winterquarter, succeeding Dr. Samuel P. Kelly. She will spend half her time in her new position. Kelly willremain as a member of the Honors Program board. Dr. Diers said she would like to see more "brightmales" in the Honors Program. She added there has been an "overbalance" of females in the program.FLY NAVY Officer Information Team Available Monday Thru Friday JAN. 2 1 - 23 IN EDENS HALLQualification Tests Will Be Given NO OBLIGATIONS She also noted that the Program has changedrecently. An "exploratory" quarter is available to students, allowing them to do independent research ortravel for credits. It is also possible for a student to make up his own major with two or moredepartments, providing he has the Honor Board's approval. Asked how it felt to be the first womanappointed director of the Honors Program at Western, or possibly at any college, Dr. Diers said: "Iprobably don't feel much different than if I were a man." The Honors Program concerns the yearlyselection of some 20 college freshmen to join about 40 upperclassmen in tutorials and colloquia, special courses and seminars offered to accelerate learning throughout its membership. Students interested in entering the program should contact either Dr. Diers or Dr. Henry Adams, professor of psychology,inMiller Hall. ---------- Western Front - 1970 January 20 - Page 3 ---------- Tuesday, January 20, 1970 Western Front 3 Coming events THURSDAY, JAN. 2 2 - 8 a.m. to 4 p.m.:Phi Alpha Theta Book Sale, new VU Foyer. 1 p.m.: Student recital, Music Auditorium. 3 p.m.: RobertHorsley, representative from Industrial Workers of the World, VU lounge. 7 p .m.: College Life VU 363.FRIDAY, JAN. 2 3 - 7 and 9:15 p .m.: Art Film, The Connection, L-4. 7:30p.m.: wrestling, Western vs.Seattle Pacific College, Carver Gym. SATURDAY, JAN. 24- 3:30 p.m.: Swimming, Western vs. U. ofSanta Clara, there. 9 p.m.: Mama Sunday, coffee den. SUNDAY, JAN. 2 5 - 8 p.m.: AS Film, Alfie,Music Auditorium. MONDAY, JAN. 26- First day of the fine arts festival. Check daily bulletin for timesand places. 3:30 p.m.: Western Players, VU 364. 8:15 p.m.: Don Redlich Dance Company, MusicAuditorium. OCIC asks for volunteer help for March of Dimes Bob O'Neil, KPUG disc jockey andsupervisor of the Whatcom Chapter of the March of Dimes, and Mrs. B. J. Bates, March of Dimesofficial, were the guest speakers at last week's meeting of Off-Campus Interhouse Council (OCIC).O'Neil spoke in an effort to promote assistance from Western students in making the Annual Mothers'March of Thursday, Jan. 29 "more profitable than ever." He stressed the need to cope with the "ever-increasing" rise in birth defects. Any child whose mother contracted German Measles within the firstthree months of her pregnancy has only one - chance out of six of being born without some, form of birth defect, according to O'Neil. "German Measles accounts for approximately 20,000 of the children bornwith birth defects each year," he said. Marchers will be distributing information about the RubellaVaccine against the disease. OCIC and the Associated Women Students will actively support theMarch and are calling for volunteers, "male or female," to participate in the campaign. Students maysign up at the VU desk or phone the March of Dimes office at 734-9790. Profits from the March will bedistributed three ways. Half of the money will be sent to the National Foundation for Birth Defects tosupport research. Twenty-five per cent of the money will go to the Children's Orthopedic Hospital inSeattle while the remaining 25 per cent will be distributed to families within Whatcom County withchildren who have birth defects. Other topics discussed at the OCIC meeting were the Folk Festival,scheduled for 7:30 p.m. Jan. 29 in the VU lounge, and the Snow Carnival, which will take place "if andwhen we get some snow." Pete White, president of OCIC, said there is still room for more studentmusicians who would like to be in the Folk Festival. John Stolpe newly appointed liason between ASand city John Stolpe, a senior political science major from Bellingham, has been appointed AssociatedStudent liaison to city government. The appointment to the new AS cabinet post was confirmed by theAS legislature yesterday. Stolpe will keep student government informed of matters discussed before theCity Council of interest to the college community. History society holds book sale Phi Alpha Theta,history honorary on campus, will sponsor a book sale from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Thursday in the foyer of theViking Union addition. The books will include various American and European history titles priced from$1 to $1.50. Proceeds from the sale will be used to fund Phi Alpha Theta speakers and films open tothe public on campus. AS President Greg Baker said that he hopes the new post will further promotebetter relations between the city and the college. Stolpe is a former editor of the campus newspaper and currently works with the Western Front editorial staff. Unique Multi-Arts Festival promises untypicalactivity What in hell is a Multi-Arts Festival? Other than it promises to be untypical, not even theorganizers know for sure. An open meeting to discuss a planned Multi-Arts Festival scheduled here forMay 17-23 will be held at 8 p.m. Thursday in L-2. According to Paul Door pat, Seattle Helix originatorand festival planner, the organizers are looking for a festival of the whole body, not just the eyes andears. "Sensitivities are broadened by the cross-breeding of the arts-divide up the arts and we divide upourselves," Doorpat explained to the Western Front Sunday afternoon. Al Doan, former AS president, islisted among the festival's organizers. Doan added that the Multi-Arts Festival idea grew largely from astudent-interest questionnaire which he solicited during last Spring's AS general election campaign. "Alarge majority of the students polled indicated that they wanted a special festival of one sort or anotherand we hope this will be the kind of festival they wanted," Doan said. Doorpat wants to make the festival a "community thing." "It won't stay on campus and during the duration we will have to make decisionsabout which of several directions we wish to go," he said. It was no coincidence that the festival wasscheduled for the same week as Bellingham's Blossomtime Festival. "There will naturally be someinteresting cross-breedings- from that aspect," Doorpat noted. The festival's content is still up in the air."What anyone wants to do will be done and while the organizers will attempt to do everything requested,they won't be doing it themselves," Doorpat remarked. He explained that the festival will be just like thewelding of entertainer and entertained. "It will be something to lift us out of Post-Psychedelicdepressions," Doorpat said. Indonesian Ambassador explains industrial development of countryMORRENE HEAD staff reporter Indonesia is today a "pre-industrial country." Dr. Hadji Abdulgani,Indonesian Ambassador to the United Nations, said here last week. "Five kilometers from the capital,everything is still in darkness: there is no electricity, no newspaper and there is much gossip."Speaking before an estimated 100 people in the VU lounge last Wednesday, the ambassador tracedIndonesian progress since the Japanese occupation of World War II. A f t e r the war, the Nationalistsfought to maintain independence from the Dutch, who had ruled Indonesia for more than three centuries, Abdulgani related. "Indonesian nationalism is a blend of the Islamic religion, a sense of unity andpatriotism, and the sense of social justice." During the early fifties, the Scholarship to senior womenApplications are now available in the financial aids office for the 1969-70 Soroptomist scholarship. The$200 scholarship is for senior women selected on the basis of scholastic ability and financial need.Applications are available in OM 103. question was in debate: "should the goal be national unity andterritorial integrity or economic rehabilitation?" Abdulgani said. Today, "spiraling inflation has been turned down," and the population race and economic growth are the major concerns, he said. "All forms ofcolonialism are e v i l , " Abdulgani added. Therefore in 1965, Indonesia "pulled itself out of the armpit ofPeking," and in 1966 the country rejoined the U.S. after a two year absence. When asked about thenation's stand on family planning, Abdulgani said that last year the government named birth control as acornerstone of economic development. Yet, most Indonesians have a "philosophical, mental resistanceagainst birth control because they feel that to have a child is to be in the grace of God," he said. TheIndonesian government recognizes Hanoi and not Saigon, Abdulgani said. The Indonesians feel a kinship with V i e t n a m , due to the anti-colonial activities of both nations in the forties^ he explained.Contrary to what many U n i t e d S t a t es administrators feel, Abdulgani said, "Hanoi is not a puppet of Peking; there is a great deal of nationalism in North Vietnam." Abdulgani concluded by saying thatIndonesia's main goal is economic independence r e s u l t i n g ultimately in Asian-African solidarity.THE CONNECTION (U.S.A. 1962) The exploration of the world of the heroin addict and the nature ofillusion versus reality. Showing Friday January 23, 1970 Lecture Hall 4 7:00 and 9:15 p.m. AdmissionStudents $.75 - General $1.25 Short Subject "A Day with Timmy Page" wetsj JEWELERS ---------- Western Front - 1970 January 20 - Page 4 ---------- Western Front Tuesday, January 20, 1970 between the lines Doan deserves support; pub will be assetAl Doan, who stepped down from his position of AS President two weeks ago, deserves a vote of thanksfrom his electorate. Though the pressures inherent in the job test any man's endurance, Doan workedthrough Fall quarter, striving to fulfill his campaign promises. While the physical and academic strain the office produces forced Doan to resign, he has left the presidency in the hands of a capable leader, GregBaker, former vice president. Doan will still be operating in student government as Baker's administrativeassistant. In this role Doan will strive to fulfill at least one of his campaign promises—a pub oncampus. The pub issue was one of Doan's major priorities last Fall and the Western Front witnessedsincere efforts on his part to push this program through. However, the establishment of a pub is not asimple matter and both the Associated Students and the administration know full well the ramifications behind the establishment of a pub. The main argument President Flora uses is that since Western ispresently experiencing a rapid rate of expansion, there is a shortage of available space in the VikingUnion and elsewhere on campus. President Flora believes that the pub issue has lower priority than other college needs. This argument cannot be dismissed lightly. Doan's main argument for theestablishment of a pub is that it would produce revenue for Western and make this campus a morepleasant place, promoting social interaction between students and faculty, as only a pub can. Those ofus who have debated over a cool beer may well know this to be true. While we believe that the profitpicture of a pub might not be quite as optimistic as Doan has suggested, even if it made no profit at all it would still be worthwhile in terms of social interaction. Of course there are fears. One fear we believe the administration silently harbors is the possibility that students and (heaven forbid) faculty members would proceed to get inebriated in the sanctity of the pub prior to class time,—making for interestingdiscussions. The Western Front believes that the good outweighs the evil, however, and endorsesDoan in his efforts to bring a pub to tnis campus. The fears of some that people will be randomly passingout in front of the Viking Union are overexaggerated. A pub on campus, is not necessarily an evil,indeed, it can be an asset. It is time Western grew out of its conservative bonds and worked with Doanin obtaining a pub on campus. It is 1970, we are adults and we can make our own decisions regardingour desire to drink or not to drink. —Mike Gowrylow Vietnam vets merit bonus; bill keeps failing Thestate wheeler-dealers have done it again. The legislative budget committee last week failed to submit arecommendation to the special legislative session on a bill authorizing payment of a bonus to veterans of the Vietnam War. Similar bills have been defeated in the last two legislative sessions. We would like toknow why. Why are the Vietnam War veterans any different than the veterans of World War 11 and theKorean War? Veterans of the latter two wars were awarded bonuses with the funds coming partly fromthe state cigarette tax. Payment of those bonuses will be completed by June 1971 and unless thelegislature votes a bonus to the Vietnam War veterans, the cigarette tax will revert to the general fund. We believe that veterans of the Vietnam War should receive the same benefits that their predecessorsreceived. We urge veterans of the present war to write their legislators and express their opinion on thismatter. We also ask the legislators who failed to make the necessary recommendation and those whohave twice defeated the bill to publicly give their reasons. —Jim Austin thewestern front Official weeklynewspaper of Western Washington State College second class postage paid at Bellingham, Wash. 98225 phone 734-8800 editorial, ext. 2277 advertising, ext. 2276 Mike Gowrylow Adele Saltzman Bob Burnett,John Stolpe Bob Taylor editor-in-chief managing editor assistant to the editor coPv editor Jim Austin DanShoblom Maryjo Hardy Bill Woodland exchange editor head photographer ad manager business manager sports editor R. E. Stannard Jr. advisor Reporters: Suzanna Berk, Mary Berling, Ted Bestor, JimBromley, Allan Cunningham, Don DeMarco, Jim Diedrick, Mike Erickson, Forrest Goldade, MorreneHead, Jackie Lawson, Jay Long, Paul Madison, Mary Peebles, Bob Rhoads, Jill Stephenson, MargaretThornton, Lyn Watts, Barbara Dinner Cartoonist: Mike Erickson Graphics: John Driscoll Ad salesman:Steve Stubbe, Ron Jones Deadlines: 5 p. in. Tuesday-display ad reservations ~. , :u. Thursday-newscopy, letters to the editor, classified ads, display ad copy. Represented by NEAS, 360 Lexington Ave.,New York, N.Y. 10017 Price per copy, 10 cents Subscription, $3.50 a year, $1.50 a quarter. Member:U.S. Student Press Association, College Press Service, Associated College Press and IntercollegiatePress Service. High start to New Year JOHN MILES contributor I stood in a little saddle squeezing withall my might a little plastic water bottle while the icy wind whistled past my exposed nose and blowingsnow rattled my windpants. Not a bit of nourishment was to be had from that bottle. Gary and Bob,picking icicles out of their beards, watched for a minute and then turned their steps upward, walkingdaintily on the intricately wind-sculpted crust as though not wanting to mar the symmetry of it.Occasionally, on steeper stretches, they rhythmically kicked footholds into the icy slope. I stood a whilelonger taking in the view. At this point we were well over 13,500 and perhaps over 14,000 feet, close tothe summit of Mt. Elbert, our objective. A magnificent panorama of clouds and snowy Colorado stretchedout in every direction. Clouds had been building in the valleys all morning and looked solid enough to walk on to the north. The other side of the ridge was clear and our track up the canyon, through tangles ofaspen, over avalanche show and onto the ridge was clearly visible. There was no other sign of lifeanywhere. Suddenly Bob, despite the altitude, let out an exhilarated yell as he topped the summit ridge.Removing my gaze from the incredible scenery and my body from the protected saddle, I plodded upwardand about an hour later the three of us strolled to the top of Colorado. Jan. 1, 1970, noon. Temp. -10°F., wind light. Scattered clouds and cold sunshine. Happy New Year! We are probably the highest(elevation wise, anyway) Americans standing on the lower '48. A helluva great way to start the decade! It was a great feeling to have overcome the cold and snow, the frozen food and waterbottles, the avalanchehazard and the distance in climbing this mountain. I couldn't help but feel this climb a good omen to be in this particular place on this particular day with these particularly good friends. I know there is hope forus all if we look for and find our world and each other like this. Magic show really sermon MIKEGOWRYLOW editor-in-chief It's possible I am extremely naive, but when I attended Andre Kole'smagical performance last Thursday I expected to see some magic. Instead I saw some pretty standardmagical tricks, most of which I could figure out without too much concentration. Disregarding theantiquity of some of the tricks performed, my main concern centered over the content of this performance. While I suppose the fact that the show was sponsored by the Campus Crusade for Christ wouldpresuppose the inclusion of some religious overtones, what I witnessed was not a magic show at all, but a traveling salvation show designed to strike fear into the hearts of all us pagans in the audience. Mr. Kole did an admirable job of citing facts that indicated that the world will soon end and the day of judgment isimminent. However, that is not why I attended this "magic" show. If I wanted to be preached to I couldattend one of the local churches in Bellingham. Mr. Kole also did a fine job of discrediting the magicalprofession during his act. I am surprised that during his denunciation of the supernatural and ESP hedidn't expose how he performed what few tricks he did do between his sermons. During one of the fewtimes I have gotten to see a magician live instead of on television, I had hoped to see a mystifyingdemonstration of ESP, witchcraft and the supernatural (as pre-show advertising suggested). But afterspoiling what mystification there was to his magic by insisting repeatedly that they were just tricks, itbecame apparent that the magical act was only a facade for Mr. Kole's religious sales pitch. My gripe isthat the only hint I had that there would be religion involved in the program was a single sentence inhandouts distributed the day of the program: "Mr. Kole will include some observations he made from hisinvestigation of the miracles of Christ from the point of view of an illusionist." When I read this I supposedthat he would do a few minutes of religious observations during the show, a slight addition in deference to his sponsors. Other advertising had no mention of religion. I got instead a routine magical show thatprogressively evolved into a sermon, with the magical facade serving to captivate the audience. Kolemasterfully dangled the later tricks before the audience, taking what seemed like fifteen minutes to do aone minute trick. In the interim he did his monologue. I don't mean to ridicule religion. To each his own.But if I decide a sermon would clear my mind of doubt and confusion, as Kole suggested many peoplesuffer from, then I would attend one. I don't like being "tricked" into one, no matter how noble the crusade. Which just goes to show: "Let the buyer beware." ---------- Western Front - 1970 January 20 - Page 5 ---------- Tuesday, January 20, 1970 Western Front 5 feedbackfeedbackfeedbackfeedbackfeedbackfeedba'Happiness is a warm ride' Editor: The intent of this letter is to inform people about the hitchhikingordinance in Bellingham. The ordinance is not a new one but since Monday, Jan. 5, it has been morestrictly enforced. This ordinance makes it illegal to solicit a ride or for a driver to give a ride to a personwho is soliciting, even to a friend and presumably a relative. The fine may be heavy. A maximumsentence of 90 days and/or $300 to even first time offenders. A look at the situation. Many studentsdon't have cars and many others cannot afford the exorbitant cost of $18 per quarter to park at schoollots. It is almost impossible to find parking places on nearby streets. These students must get toschool, therefore, they walk or hitchhike, usually a little of each. I wish to make it clear that it is notillegal to accept a ride or to give a ride to a fellow human. It is only illegal when soliciting occurs. Theseason is a cold one and happiness is a warm ride. Hitchhikers: no signs, hands in pockets and bothfeet on the curb and the bust can't touch you. Drivers, please give a lift to a friend. A local chick knownto some as Annie Fanny received a ticket from Officer Groves for giving a student a ride. After a lectureand the ticket, Annie said to the officer: "I'd rather be humane than obey a law like that." Doug BuatteSophomore Student registers complaints Editor: I've decided to air my gripes: Trying to register lastquarter for the present quarter was a total absurdity. How, may I ask, are the appointments made? (Irealize it is an improvement over the former system but change is still necessary.) It would seemplausible that students with the greater number of credits would receive priority. I'm a junior and noticedsophomores registering at' the same time. If someone with fewer credits has the same opportunity totake a class, how will the student with the greater number of credits ever get into that class? (Possibly if the person with more credits has to attend summer school—as I now have to do.) Enough people have a similar problem that a solution should be considered. Limiting enrollment? Further changes in r e g is t r a t i o n procedure? Something! When this quarter started I wanted to add a class. I went past theregistration center (3:25 p.m.)to pick up an "add" slip from Old Main. I returned immediately and was told I'd have to come back tomorrow and there was no way I could find out if the class I wanted to add wasfull. If no one can enter the registration center after 3:30 p.m.'why did the sign say 4p.m.? A fewchanges and answers would be greatly appreciated. Barbara Mallett Junior Spanish Blood bank needsdonations of the campus blood donor Illusionist show draws capacity crowd A standing-room-only crowd of 434 watched illusionist Andre Kole combine magic and the Christian gospel in an unusualpresentation of spiritualism and ESP last Thursday night in L-4. The show was sponsored by CampusCrusade for Christ. Kole used the medium of magic to expose the trickery used by people who claim tohave supernatural power. For a demonstration in ESP, Kole blindfolded himself and had four participantsfrom the audience hold objects about three inches under his fingertips. He guessed most of the objectscorrectly. "What you have just seen might better be called extra sensory deception," Kole said. "Thiswas a simple trick that anyone can do if he has the time and the money, and knows how to doit."Willful communication with the dead is impossible," Kole said, referring to spiritualism. "I have seenpeople turning to fantasy to find reality. "When I graduated from high school, I was voted the most likelyto succeed in life. "By the time I was 25, I was in charge of the state-wide operations of one of thelargest corporations in Arizona, co-owner of a ranch and doing as many as 30 to 40 shows a month. Isometimes made as much as $ 100 a minute. "Even after attaining these goals, there seemed to besomething lacking in my life. "I began to ask, Why am I here? Where am I going? What is the realpurpose of life?" "I was challenged to consider the validity of Christ and the Bible as a sceptic," he said. "I had no intention of being deceived by a first-century trickster, if that was all Jesus was." Kolediscussed five "signs of the times" which, he said, are leading to the second coming of Christ to earth.Three of these signs are a sudden increase in the frequency and intensity of earthquakes, famines andwars. Kole mentioned a sudden increase in sorcery as the fourth sign, and discussed the June, 1967Israeli war from the viewpoint of Biblical prophecy. "If Jesus Christ isn't man's only hope, then man hasno hope," Kole said. Editor: It has come to my attention that the Whatcom County Blood Bank is onthe verge of bankruptcy. Recently planned surgeries have been postponed to conserve available blood for possible emergencies. The Associated Students of Western, our faculty and staff, represent a largepotential source of blood donors. We hear much about preserving and saving life, of helping our fellowbrother. Here is a practical opportunity for many of us to give of his most precious commodity, hisblood-for his fellow man in need. I urge all those people over the age of 18 to make themselves availablefor blood donation. Please watch for f u r t h e r publicity and notification in the daily bulletin drive.Allison B. Andres Senior Political Science AWS planning Sweetheart Ball Anyone interested inplanning the Sweetheart Ball, scheduled for Feb. 14, is welcome to attend a meeting at 4 p.m., nextTuesday in VU 10, Linda Bridges, AWS president, said. Miss Bridges also suggested that volunteerwork was available for those who want to help in the city's program for handicapped and retardedchildren. Interested persons should contact Rosie Grange at 734-3599. Fundamental gymnasticsturnouts being organized Art gallery exhibition shows major trends in modern art \( O Mf tge blossom•diamond ringm Men and women interested in gymnastics are invited to meet at 7 p.m. tonight inGym D to organize a proposed bi-weekly gymnastics turnout, Kraig McBride, junior physics major,said. The turnout, which may meet from 7-9 p.m. on Tuesdays and Thursdays, is designed to givegymnastic students extra practice as well as to provide an opportunity for other persons to IChurchSunday Services 11 a.m. — Lutheran 4 p.m. — Episcopal THURSDAY 6:30 p.m. — Catholic CCMHouse gain an interest in the sport. R. L. Bowman, men's P.E. lecturer, will be one of three gymnasticinstructors present to teach the fundamentals of the trampoline, horizontal and parallel bars and sidehorse. The Paintings of the 60's exhibition currently on display in the art building gallery is one of the"most important exhibitions ever shown at W e s t e r n , " according to Lawrence Hanson, assistantprofessor of art. The showing is from the collection of Virginia and Bagly Wright. Hanson says thepaintings portray the major directions of contemporary art. "One is tempted to say that there is scarcely a single major American artist who is not represented in their collection," Hanson says in hisintroductory remarks to the exhibit catalogue. Gallery hours are from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. and 7-10 p.m.Monday through Friday. MEN'S SPORTSWEAR Js Pleased to Announce Outstanding Values for ourJANUARY CLEARANCE Button Down sht. slv. Shirts . . . $3.66 Casual Dress Slacks, reg. 12.50- $8.50 V-Neck Sweaters, reg. 16 $10 Cardigan Sweaters Vioff All Wool Mock Turtles, reg. 16 $8 Velour Slip-Overs, reg. 18 $8 Jackets, Raincoats . . . .up to 50% off Sport Coats . . . .entire stock reduced Shop the HUNTSMAN - in the BELLINGHAM MALL - We're open Nites till 9 p.m. To the girl who knows what shewants but not where to find it. Match your style with our many distinctive designs, and ask us about ourfamous Orange Blossom guarantee. Milton E. Terry Jeweler 1326 Cornwall 733:2030 H M ---------- Western Front - 1970 January 20 - Page 6 ---------- 6 Western Front Tuesday, January 20, 1970 Theater Guild to offer thrills, chills with 'Wait Until Dark' TheBellingham Theater Guild's production of Frederick Knott's play Wait Until Dark will feature severalWestern students during performances on Feb. 5-7 and 12-14 at the Guild's playhouse, 1600 H Street,according to Lorri Boothe, director and graduate student in speech therapy. Lara Nation, a case workerfor the Department of Public Assistance, will play the lead role of Susy, the blind girl whose husbandhas unthinkingly left her to face three despicable crooks in their attempt to obtain a doll containing$50,000 worth of pure heroin from her. Miss Nation has appeared in the Guild's production' of SeparateTables. Harold Raymond, sergeant for the Bellingham Police Department, plays Roat, the mostcontemptible of the three crooks. He has appeared in The Bells Are Ringing. Cheryl Bredy, a sixthgrader at Whatcom Middle School, plays Gloria, the nine-year-old brat who causes many of Susy'sproblems. This is Miss Bredy's first appearance on stage. Wayne Greenough, fifth grade teacher atEverson Grade School, plays Mike, one of the criminals who turns out to be not so bad after all, whileMark Reece, a senior art major, plays Carlino, the other crook. Both Greenough and Reece haveappeared on stage before. Other members of the cast include Bob Burnett, sophomore speech major asSam, the husband; Henry Cunningham, senior speech major, as one of the policemen; and PaulRobinson as the other policeman. Kevin Keyes, junior speech major, will be the stage manager for theshow. Miss Boothe, who has directed no less than 18 plays, describes Wait Until Dark as a "suspensemystery thriller, designed to entertain." Since parts of the play will be performed in total darkness, thecast is rehearsing blindfolded, Miss Boothe said. Nationally acclaimed Redlich Film explores worlddance company to perform of addicts, junkies The Don Redlich Modern Dance Company will present the first performance in the Arts and Lectures series for Winter quarter at 8:15 p.m. Monday in the musicauditorium. The company is composed of Redlich, Gladys Balin and Elina Mooney. Redlich isconsidered one of modern dance's most progressive experimental choreographers. Complete MenuService The threesome performed in a series of dance concerts sponsored by the Ford Foundation atBroadway's Billy Rose Theatre in New York last year. Redlich experiments with film, sound, light andcolor in harmony with his dance presentations. The range of the company's work extends from dynamicseriousness to comedy. Pizza Broasted Chicken Hamburgers Prawns Alaska Havcrn 209 W. HollyT$SSSTEAK t I Broasted potato and toast Breeze Through That Term Paper Rent Your TypewriterFrom The Student Co-op Month Smith Corona Portable Sterling Model 9.00 Smith Corona PortableGalaxie Portable 12.00 Smith Corona 120 Electric Portable 22.50 3 Mo. 24.00 33.00 60.00 Min. 1week 7.00 10.00 15.00 I.B.M. Selectric Standard 24.00 65.00 15.00 STUDENTS jgrf STORE HOSTORM MORS OOSVKViRHT Jack Gelber's play, The Connection, put to the screen by Shirley Clarke,will be shown at 7 and 9:15 p.m. Friday in L-4. Filmed in 1962, the picture is about a group of junkieswaiting in a New York apartment for the arrival of their "connection." The film's unique technique buildstwo "documentary film makers" into the action of the play, so that the audience is constantly aware ofthe presence of cameraman, director, etc. What emerges is an exploration of both the world of theheroin addict and the nature of illusion versus reality. A Day with Timmy Page, a selected short subjectwill also be shown. David Wiseman's Titicut Follies, an underground film, will be presented Jan. 30 byWestern's Department of Continuing Studies and the Student Activities Commission. Directors needactors for plays Try-outs for Winter quarter student-directed plays will be held at 4 p.m. tomorrow and 4and 7:30 p.m. Thursday in L-l. The directors will need 25 to 50 actors; past experience not necessary,according to Dr. Byron Sigler, who is teaching the intermediate directing class. The eight one-act showswill be presented March 12-14 in Old Main Theater. Co-ed views VU display —photo by shoblom Water colors on display in VU art gallery exhibit The 49th annual exhibition of the California National WaterColor Society is on display in the Viking Union addition art gallery. The display's visit represents the first time the exhibition has been shown on the road. The paintings include both professional and amateurworks, according to John Miles, Viking Union program director. Forthcoming art gallery presentationsinclude: Jan. 27 - Feb. 16: Fine Arts work); Feb. 18 - March 12: Bahai Art Show; March 14 - April 1: The Oils of Charles Leura; April 13-24: Collograph; April 26 - May 15: Macrame- The Art of Creative Knotting; May 17 - June 5: Prize-Winning American Prints; July 20 - Aug. 8: The Computer and Art. Studentsinterested in bringing art exhibits to campus or those willing to volunteer for work in the gallery maycontact Miles in the Viking Union offices. Festival Show (Western student Theater needs actors forsummer musicals Coeur d'Alene Summer Theatre is now accepting applications and resumes from a c t o r s , singers, dancers, musicians and technicians to fill vacancies in the company for the 1970season. Company members must be basically singers but are expected to be versatile. The musicalrepertory theatre, in its sixth year, operates from mid-June through Labor Day in the Idaho city. Thisseason will probably produce Hello Dolly, Oliver, Guys and Dolls and Vagabond King. The 16 full-timemembers receive a small living expense and room and board. Apprentices, with and without board, areunsalaried but are also signed. Those interested should send applications or letters of inquiry to RobertE. Moe, the general manager, at 320 West Palizada, No. 3, San Clemente, California 92672. Aardvarkloves bookworms Hurting for bread? Pick up a directions by the Mountaineers, copy of "How to Live onNo-\the famous Seattle club. thing,"only 75 cents. ' Come to Aardvark for The Available now-Kurt Vonne-Mole Earth Catalog and seven gut's "God Bless You, Mr. Rose- ^ g ' f tltles R b 5 y ^ m a n » £ * ;„ . Richard Brautigan s Trout water- Footloose Fishing in America; The Pill Around Puget Sound, 100walks Versus the Spring Hill Mining on Beaches, Lowlands, and Disaster; and In Watermelon Foothills is a 224-page book of Sugar are all waiting for your p h o t o g r a p h s , maps and inspection at theAardvark. Open week nights till 9 p.m. THREE DOORS SOUTH OF SHAKEY'S ON N. STATE ST.AARDVARK Books Arts 734-4043 Typewriters and Adding Machines Sales, Servk* and RentalsSpeool Student Rental Rates BELLINGHAM USINESS MACHINES (Next to Bon March*) j 1410Commercial 734-3630 j ---------- Western Front - 1970 January 20 - Page 7 ---------- Tuesday, January 20, 1970 Western Front The Hoop Scoop PAUL MADISON Though a few oldstersmay disagree, it seems without a doubt that Viking Mike Clayton is the finest guard ever to play b a s ke t b a l l at Western Washington. Clayton, soft-spoken and mild-mannered, is a picture of calmnesswhether on or off the court. Yet underneath his placid exterior burns a keen desire and determination towin. Already he has surpassed the previous high career point total for a guard. To date he has 935points, shattering Mike Kirk's record of 784 set in the early sixties. This despite playing in an offensedesigned for equal scoring opportunity, favoring—if anyone—the forwards. Captain of this year's team,Clayton can handle any court challenge. An excellent dribbler, he can, if called upon, break a press byhimself or take on anyone one-on-one and score. He is also an excellent passer, always among theleaders in assists and gets his share of rebounds. Another of his attributes is Ms excellent defensiveability. Already he has 52 steals this season and is a key figure in Western being ranked among the top "stop" teams in the country. Perhaps his rarest ability is that of getting "position," causing the man heis checking to be guilty of charging. Early this season Clayton was named to the All-Tourney teamselected at the Turlock Invitational. It marked the third straight year he had so been honored. The twoprevious years he was named to the Cal-Aggie invitational tourney team. Coach Chuck Randall feelsthat Clayton would do well in professional basketball as his talents would stand out even more in theirrun-gun style of ball. What's more his defensive ability would make him twice as valuable. ThoughWestern has had few basketball All-Americans, if those selecting take all into account, there should beno question that Clayton plays that caliber of ball and is that type of a man. Hadland named mostvaluable Last Thursday night the annual Western Washington football banquet was held at theBellingham Elks' Club. Athletic Director Dr. William Tomaras presented the E v e r g r e e n Conferencechampionship football trophy to head coach Fred Emerson. Highlighting the individual awardpresentations was the naming of Steve Gregorich as recipient of the Gerald L. Salsgiver award whichgoes to the outstanding senior player. Jr \ Classified Advertising \ , Jt 10 MISC. FOR SALE HayerKlira-12 string guitar,, $212 new, best offer. 115 Highland Hall 733-9934, ask for Bob. 11 CARS CYCLES '62 Ford needs transmission work, call after 6 pm 734-2169, $75. Others receiving honors were quarterback Glenn Hadland, most valuable player; reserve tackle John Mattila, most inspirational; DanDolfin, offensive back of the year; John Martin and Marv Nelson, offensive lineman of the year; VicRandall, defensive back of the year; Butts Giraud, defensive lineman of the year; and Rocky Hughes,"Tiger" of the year. Emerson gave a season resume and presented plaques to this year's lettermen. Inturn the players presented Emerson, Defensive Coach Boyde Long, and graduate assistants Tom Mays, Chuck Manuel, and Bob Unick with trophies. Garner Ekstran, former Washington State great andCanadian professional, was the guest speaker. Haines Fay, local radio sports announcer, emceed theevent and Exalted Ruler Larry Peterson made welcoming remarks. 20 FOR RENT Three bedroomunfurnished apt. $110 for two, $125 for three, 2115Vi J Street, upstairs apt. 7 Large Single, 1 Doublefurn. rooms w/kitchen priv. run of the house. Utilities pd. Lots of parking avail. 733-9789. 32 WANTED Members needed for soul band, organ, drums, brass, and guitar call Mary 734-5696. 33 HELPWANTED Experienced graphics man to work for Western Front. Apply in person at VU 310. Bringportfolio. 40 SERVICES Men's suits, material. Direct order from Hong Kong. Sole US agent. Manystyles to choose from. Call Bob, 733-1090. 41 INSTRUCTION Guitar lessons - Blues - Rock. Call 733-5581 between 5-7 p.m. 50 PERSONALS Read today's news today. Read The Seattle Times. Quarterlyrates. Call Bob: 733-1090. Mt. Baker NOW PLAYING The OUTDOORSMAN and WALT DISNEY'STHE COUNTRY COYOTE GOES HOLLYWOOD Coming Soon LOVE FACTORY and FANNY HILLNeal Larson (12) flips a pass to Dave Hemion (30) in the Whitworth game two weeks ago. Larson, whoplayed well against the Pirates, extended his brilliant play against Eastern. —photo by shoblom Viksrally to split with Eastern Playing superb defense, Western's Viking basketball team rallied to a 74-53victory over Eastern Washington Saturday night at Cheney. Friday night Eastern's Savages rolled to an81-63 triumph. Western's switching, sagging, man-to-man style of defense forced Eastern into 25turnovers and a miserable field goal accuracy of 29 per cent. The Viks led at halftime 36-20 and early inthe second half held the Savages without a point for six and one-half m i n u t e s , t a k i n g aninsurmountable 50-25 lead. Neal Larson, a junior from Rosburg, Wash., led the Vikings at both ends ofthe floor, putting in 16 points and making nine steals. Mike Clayton, the other half of the fine Vikingguard duo, hit 6 of 10 field goal attempts and 14 points. He also had four steals. Leading Western'sinside attack was forward Lee Roy Shults. The "Golden Bear" ripped in 15 points, grabbed off eightrebounds and had five assists. Other Vikings in the scoring column were Jeff Sherburne 9, John Reed 8, Ron Caderette 6, Dave Hemion 4, and Terry Brower 2. The Vikings hit 53 per cent f r om the floor andout-rebounded the taller and huskier Savages 41-40. Eastern's lone scorer in double figures was guardJoe Bullock with 13. Friday the story was completely reversed as Eastern using an offense made up ofone guard and four forwards romped to victory. The Savages led by Al Gale and Randy Buss, whoscored 23 and 20 points respectively, were never behind throughout the contest. Western came back to narrow a 44-34 halftime deficit to 49-43 with 13 minutes left, but Eastern scored seven unansweredpoints to squash that threat. CGRAND! • THEATRE Jg 1224 Commercial 7 3 3 - 9 7 55 I - ,l I . I I . nIT-IT-.—.T-T—. i r r ^ r w i ^ - , f.l.tuL' ' HELD OVER 2nd WEEK! B lt;tffl gt; B CS ALBERT R.BROCCOLI and HARRY SALTZMAN present IAN FLEMING'S _ "ON HER MAJESTY'S PANBVlil iSECRET SERVICE" • = George Lazenby Telly Savalas Diana Rigg PLUS...CO-HIT ' SALTZMANpresents |C3 ~- TECHNICOLOR" RMIAVISIOr United Aptisls . @ | M I t oeOp»e'"t h e »o„t ^, U CU,Hepe°p l e a ° % mnrnT mnil 1 COtUMBW PICIUWS and »ASfA« PHOBUCIIONS cresentDIRECT FROM n. n n n , n»i»n ITS • , BARBRA OMAR LONG-RUN y^M STREISAND SHARIFnnnnouniAi \ U N l l / -WILLIAM WYLER-RAY STARK*.™. CniUHUCIVICHIIO! Id* M I K I ^T I.ICHNKXXOR" PANAWSUW $: ® Eastern hit over fifty per cent from the field and outrebounded theVikings 48-34. Other Savages scoring in double figures were Steve Barnett 12 and Bullock 11. It'sAlways HAPPY HOUR at the UP UP when the band is not playing Wed. Pitcher night 8-11 p.m.Fri. TGIF 4 - 1 p.m. Lowest Priced Pitchers In Town Live Music By The U nusuals Thurs., Fri., Sat.from 9 p.m. on All this at The UP UP 137 W. Holly ---------- Western Front - 1970 January 20 - Page 8 ---------- 8 Western Front Tuesday, January 20, 1970 A Western swimmer dives into the pool in the 400-yardmedley relay; won by Eastern. _p h o t o b y s h o b l om Vik swimmers outsplash Eastern for first winWestern's swim team splashed its way to its first win of the season, with a 56-48 victory over Easternlast Saturday, here. Highlighting Western's win was a new one-meter diving record set by Robin Allen of 257.11 points. Allen broke the varsity and pool record he set in 1968 of 252.85 points. Western received a fine performance from freshman Tom Ward who won the 200-yard freestyle (2:03.0) and the 200-yardbutterfly (2:30.6). Rob Veith won the 50-yard freestyle for Western (25.3). Ross May completed thesweep in the event by finishing second (25.4). Western also won the 400-yard freestyle relay (JerryGent, Ward, Veith, and Todd Wirtz) in 3:44.3. Other strong finishers for Western were: Ken Vissersecond in the 1,000-yard freestyle (12:35.7) and second in the 200-yard breaststroke (2:31.1); Gentsecond in the 200-yard freestyle (2:08.6) and second in the 100-yard freestyle (54.2); Jeff Hopper second in the 200-yard individual medley (2:24.8), and Bruce Johnson second in the 200-yard backstroke(2:27.9). Keith Semier and Robin O'Donnell led Eastern with two f i r s t s . Semier won the 1,000-yardfreestyle (12:12.9) and the 100-yard freestyle (54.1); while O'Donnell won the 200-yard individual medley (2:19.5) and the 200-yard backstroke (2:24.9). Tomorrow, Western hosts the University of Alaska. Thisweekend, the Vik swimmers travel to California where they will swim against San Jose State on Friday,and then they will take on Santa Clara on Saturday. Ski team shows promise, lacks funds LYN WATTS staff reporter Lack of finances may hurt Western's Ski Team's chances for a high finish in theNorthwest Collegiate Ski Conference this year. Chris Karp, director of student activities and presentlyWestern's ski team coach, said last week that the ski team has little chance of completing its 10-meetschedule this year due to a lack of funds allotted to the team. Western has been invited to several largemeets including one at Banff, but this trip will probably have to be cancelled, due to a probable total cost of $700. The ski team's finances for the entire year total only about $850. The team shows goodpromise, Karp said, with a couple of veterans back from last year's team. According to Karp, GregLarson of Western is one of the best skiers in the Northwest, and can go four ways for the team. He won races last year, and promises to be even more of a threat this season. Western's schedule includes ameet at Crystal Mountain last weekend and one Feb. 6 and 7 at Anthony Lakes, Oregon. WesternWashington State College Arts and Lectures Series presents the DON REDLICH DANCE COMPANYOne of New "York City's best groups working with mixed media Monday, January 26, 1970, 8:15 p.m.Music Auditorium WWSC Students, Faculty, Staff free General Admission $1.50, High School $.75Ruggers rip Seattle, 21-0 Western's Rugby Club began the Winter quarter successfully, with a 21-0 winover the Seattle Rugby Club last Saturday. Western's backs, Don Reiland, Rod Fiddick and Willie.McCann, all scored runs. Western's big scrum, which averages 6-1 and 210 pounds per man, alsoscored twice, with Rich Blanc and Jim "Fats" Noonan each scoring trys. Harry Dumptruck finishedWestern's scoring as he made two of five conversion attempts. Western's seconds also won, as theyshut-out the Seattle Rugby Club seconds, 6-0. Bob Nygren and Bill Arthur accounted for the trys. NextSaturday both Western's teams go to Oregon to play the University of Oregon. Central takes two fromWhitworth Central moved into first place of the Evergreen Conference with two come-from-behind winsover Whitworth in Spokane last weekend. On Friday, Central overcame a four point halftime deficit towhip the Pirates, 82-74. Mitch Adams was the big gun for the Wildcats, scoring 24 points and pullingdown 10 rebounds. Paul Adams had 18 points and Dave Allen 12 to round out the double figure scoringfor Central. Ted Hiemstra and Jim Nieman each had 14 points to lead Whitworth. On Saturday night,Central defeated Whitworth 70-68. (Results of the game were not available at press time.) Mitch Adamsof Central was named the Evergreen Conference player of the week, last week. Adams got the honor forhis play against Eastern, in which he grabbed 32 rebounds in the two games and scored 27 points.Western's Lee Roy Shults was the runner-up for his great performance against Whitworth. Two Vikmatmen practice for the upcoming Seattle Pacific College match this Friday. —photo by shoblomMatmen lose to Central; host Seattle Pacific Friday Western's wrestling team suffered its first loss of the season, losing 26-8 to defending Evergreen Conference champ, Central, last Saturday in Ellensburg.Although most of the matches were close, Western's wrestlers generally found themselves outmanned.Dennis Moore and Dennis Bauer were the only Viks to taste victory, Moore decisioned Kim Richards,while Bauer pinned Orin Hatcher. Results; 118-Kenno decisioned Kuhnhausen (W), 9-1; 126-Moore (W) decisioned Richards, 5-3; 134-Skeesick decisioned Beckstad (W), 11-2; 142-Landers decisionedDaniels (W), 8-0; 150-Bauer (W) pinned Hatcher; 15 8-Dahl decisioned Anderson (W), 6-2; 167-Dawsondecisioned Hunt (W), 11-0; 177-Blondin decisioned Compton (W), 3-2; 191-Smith decisioned Moffett(W), 6-2; and heavyweight-Harris pinned Michaelson (W). The next match for Coach Boyde Long'smatmen will be this Friday against Seattle Pacific College here. The Falcons are 24 for the season, buthave wrestled against nationally-ranked and unbeaten Portland State, the unbeaten University ofWashington, and Washington State. Leading the Falcon matmen is Ken Hagen, a 177-pounder, is whois unbeaten. Bob Lute, a 150-pounder, is another strong wrestler for Seattle Pacific. May Skirt ServiceCOMPUTE LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANING FT— Pickup Delirery 7344200 PROSPtCT CANADACALLING! Attention Canadian Graduate And Post-Graduate Students Each year, Canadian businessand industry offers many excellent career opportunities to young men and women completing theiruniversity education. The Canadian government will send, upon request, a copy of the: Directory OfEmployers to assist you in coming back to Canada to work upon graduation. This directory will help youin making direct contact with Canadian employers. WRITE TO: Operation Retrieval Department ofManpower and Immigration, 305 Rideau Street Ottawa, Ontario. DEPARTMENT OF MANPOWER ANDIMMIGRATION GOVERNMENT OF CANADA
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