1963_0201 ---------- Collegian - 1963 February 1 - Page 1 ---------- SEX ON CAMPUS T»E WESTERS WASHINGTON STATE COLLEGE CPlUEiflU VOL. LV, No. 14Bellingham, Washington Friday, Feb. 1, 1963 Hyatt Gets Rolled Today Gambler Kombol To Take OverRiver boat Today By Jeanne Smart • A roll of the dice will determine the possession of the VikingUnion today. Kerchival T. Kombol, the Mississippi gambler, will arrive at the Union at 4:30 p. m. to rollwith Mike Hyatt, AS president. Kombol will be escorted by the Bachelor's Club in a procession fromthe Carver Gymnasium to the Union Building, where he will meet Hyatt and other AS officers. If Kombolwins, the Union will then become a "Riverboat." • • • T o m o r r o w night, Les Brown's bandwill appear at the . WUS "Riverboat Days" dance in the lounge. The Union will be decorated as aRiverboat. Admission will be 50 cents single and $1 per couple. The funds collected for each "UglyMan" . will be totaled at 11:30. "Ugly Men" will be soliciting funds up until that time. The "Ugly Man"winner will be announced at 12 o'clock. JEFF KOMBOL will take over the VU this afternoon after he pulls off a shady deal with AS president Mike Hyatt. • • • • Tonight after the. game at 9:30 p. m.the Talent-Auction Show, including the Faculty Minstrel Show, will be held in the Auditorium with Dr.Paul Wadleigh, of the Speech Department, as the auctioneer. All of the "Showboat," including theperformers, will be auctioned off. Co-chairmen for the Talent-Auction Show are Linda Torfin and DonRichter. • • • • Gambling will be held downstairs in the coffee shop with the "Night People" entertaining. Minstrel girls, Al Jolsen-type waiters and a casino bar will add to the atmosphere of the"Casino." Chips may be purchased at the main desk of the Union at 5 cents apiece or 25 for $1. Stakes for the tables are being furnished by the downtown retail stores. Co-chairmen for "Riverboat Days"are Ray Devier and Virginia Stover. Westerns Prestige At Stake On Band Contract Western may beputting its profits from Riverboat Days into Les Brown's pocket instead of a contribution to WorldUniversity Service. Because of the signing of the Les Brown Band, the AS Legislature found itselfforced to pay an additional $650 in expenses for the staging of Riverboat Days. The Student Legislaturehas already subsidized $400 of that amount, but the remaining $250 will have to come from gatereceipts and other incoming monies. To help offset the added expense, ticket prices were raisedfrom 50 cents stag and 75 cents drag to 50 cents per person. The problem arose after a "gentleman's"agreement was made with the Les Brown band, t h e group insisted that Western sign a contract or face the consequences. . Pacing the consequences could well mean being blackballed by the NationalMusician's Union. So, with Western's prestige at stake, it was deemed best to; honor the contract and bring the Band of Renown to Western, although it might mean less money for WUS. • • •Richard Reynolds reported to the board that Western has been refused acceptance by two nationalhonorary societies. Western cannot join Phi Beta Kappa because of the rigorous qualifications. For onething, it must be designated as a University before it can join. Phi Kappa Phi refused Western on thegrounds that it is primarily still a teacher education school. Between 60 and 70 per cent of Western'sstudents are in education. Reynolds, suggested that it set up its own honorary until such time as it isable to join a national organization. Marv Saxon, chairman of Civil Rights Week, reported that theweek was considered a great success. Although no money was tak- See " P r e s t i g e " P-2'Inhibition Is Not The Answer Panel * Probes * Promiscuity • Sex took over the Auditorium Tuesday,as WUS sponsored an intimate look into the sex life of the infamous Wester nite. \'The friends of myteen-age sons seem to be clean cut college students," Mrs. Evelyn Hinds, music-teacher and panelmember, rernarked. "I haven't found very many dark corners at Western parties." ; -' :; Roy Mumme,Education Department, interjected prim evidence that sex has gripped Western since the schoolwas built. . "I found while browsing through a 19.13 'Klipsuh, the Biblical allusion: "He maketh me/tolie down: in green pastures,'• Mumme said. . "Americans are sex-obsessed in general," Dr. HerbertTaylor, Sociology-Anthropology . Department, quipped, "so I can't say that Western students are over sexed." Last quarter Mumme noted that he had attempted to poll student sex opinions but was.thwarted because no one answered his questions. ,„ LOVE OR LUST , Moderator Dri KatherineGar-roll probed the panel for contrasts between love and lust. Alan Collier, art professor, remarked that he had only been in America two years, but related an interesting experiment on adolescent •'. sextraining in a small English school. "Lovei is the physical plus the psychic relationship of man and:woman . -.--.• -the total personality is involved in love." He contrasted^ this .'with the promiscuouslust gt;pf students caused by their inexperience.and .fascination with ilove, the shrouded evil. • Dr.Carroll also discussed the problem of Western's curfew hours. She definitely felt that these hours weredisliked-by the girls, but questioned the possible solution of allowing the older girls special privileges."As a dorm counselor, I found that new girls are very likely to experiment with this new-found joy. But Ican't. see classifying their privileges according to age or class." she added. "You that complain aboutdorm hours just remember this when your daughter starts school," Dr. Taylor encouraged. "You'll have a chance 20 years from now. IS DARKNESS A MUST? "Get it out of your systems," was Collier's answer to pent-up aggressions. "It is perfectly natural, healthy and right; inhibition is not the answer." Dr.Carroll also questioned if the dorm hours were the only problem, while questioning if darkness was anecessary prerequisite for sex life. * * * "I don't think you can say sexual intercourse necessarilytakes place after 10 p.m.," she offered. Students who packed the auditorium to the hilt, were verysatisfied with the frank discussion and offered ovations on several of the individual opinions. "I don'tthink there is an overemphasis on sex at Western, but most students would, give that impressionbecause they, want to feel worldly," was sophomore Larry DeKay's immediate impression.- - "Sexhas been banned as. evil . . ." observed Dee Clayton. "It's placed behind a black curtain that only drawsthe curiosity of the inexperienced spectator. If sex were viewed openly—not advocated, but acceptedliberally— I believe there would be a marked decrease in sexual promiscuity and frustration." IT'SCALLED NECKING--AIH1 a number of Western students often engage in this sort of frivolity. ---------- Collegian - 1963 February 1 - Page 2 ---------- PAGE- T THE COLLEGIAN FRIDAY FEBRUARY 1, 1963 Kids Teach Instructors In Campus School My YAiAd Schwalm .This spring.will see the twentieth anniversary of the dedication of- ii^/CattipiiS;.School. In lsfeeping-; gt;^i:fe tli«!; educational na- Cjire of tVesfem,:-the school offers 4£ ready-ina/de .teaching situation for prospective educators. '; ' Just as ffee chemist needs a laboratory for a provingground, Che school teacher needs a center i,or experisneSitatipn"'in classroom instruction; Maintainedby WWSC, The Campus School provides a center for observation-, and demonstration of theorj'.i.itt-^ractice for:,stu-: dents-in te'apher education. •i The school isi a:center.for developing the "bestpossible learning situation- for. elementary school age children.- I t offers one Class in each of thegrade levels— 'kindergarten through -sixth grade. "Though operation of The Campus School i sexpensive, the. education department fefels the benefits overly compensate for the expenditures.'Hundreds of students each -quarter corhev to observe the schoolAvhich also serves -€ts: a center-If op student teaching. As a laboratory school,- it. is prepared,to demonstrate the latest theories oflearning. Plugs Freedom 'Aie We A Free Society?' By Roger Libby In a speech, "Who Protects OurLiberties?''. Jan. 23 in tJie YiMii^'Uiiion, flife battle for civil liberties was describe^' • as an' "endlessstruggle" ; by" t gt;rj Giovanni Cdstigan,i5rofesspr :of history .at the University pf Washington and.meriiber' 6£ the American Civil Liberities Union. ' '"V' •:-. '-•••:. • ;' - ' - l - : . ;L •' '•'"'Clyde Freem, of.Farb, Kansas, was rummaging through his attic when he found :.an old painting'of trisgreat-gr'eai-grahdfa'ther, but when, he tj-eganito clean the painting with a solvent'material lie discovered that all the paint carne off. The Costigan address, one of a series of National Student- Associationsponsored - meetings related to ciyilVrightsV • .emphasized the role of freedom in the UnitedStates today; COstigan "Stated that ". . . the battle for civil liberties is never won in,any generation." Hefelt that the area- of freedom is '''steadllj'./diminishing .'... so that each gyration;has to fight harder tokeep vyihat.-.thiere is than •the..generation before i t " '••'-;' According.;: •to" gt; Costigan, :the right to ,ex^ress.V:ppinions'/:.even when hostile'ito a society, should be- respected;:He.-felt-it; takesa good deal of. self discipline, .patience and maturity ,to',bring.ourselves, to tolerate opinions thatwe disagree with. "• • ; * WE « M U R E A COMPLETE LINE '-*. COKTACTILENS -•FIiKST.AJD.KITS" GREETING CARDS IS V./S: FREE? •' Is the .Ui?ited:,-States . truly, afftee.LsOci^ty?' JCbstigaii said it is-not He gt;tat^d:. ilWe like to believe 'Ave :are :a £pe - society.The ACLUv represents a ifrfee society.- We" talk about, the free world vsl communism. There;is muchmore freedom in Western-Europe than herje.'f'. One- 'of the examples, used: to'-illustrate, the!lack": o!freedom' in the United Stated was the state' of the-American, press. Costigan: presented some ' v e ry;• convincing: facts concerning .the: conforming' policies of the/American press. He commented: • ' -If) you go to any other democratic country in , the • world:- you will;' sag. -a ;rnuch;; [wider rangeof.opinion. We've-ipstr • one-half .of.-our freedom' of po- Ilitical expression 'because'. prac- 4 ticallyone-half; of the spectrum | has-been cut off.'in this country, gt;o that what would -'be the center '•GIFTS • •PRESCRIPTIONS STJtlf CO S t a t e aad Holly Slreeis •Phone'BE 3-1213 ' ..O.PE.N 'TIL 9 P . M . DAILY ontgpmery distributors for •HEA^ QIL 1417;Eailrpadp. BE 3-9320 ,V€. inany other country is not the left in this Country. ; " ;;•[; "We are .the. laughing.stock:of the worldbecause of conformity of the press, "Costigan noted. He went oh to say: "I regret to say 'that theoverwhelming body of the press does not present hews fairly or impartially. The press is highly selectivein what news it allows to appear before the public. This is a truism of the na-- tidhal life." :DIMINISHING FREEDOM Another.example cited by Costigan as an area of diminishing freedom in the United States was the educational institutions. He felt that educational- institutions have failed toimpress the need "Reactions" W. Robert Lawyer, English Department: "It was encouraging to hearspoken in pub lie words, so informed..with facts and. reason — especially at a. timeV when neitherseems to haye~ much currency..'' v Ellis Vonheeder,-. junior: ''Before I heard^ i gt;r. Costigan speak Iwas of the" impression that he was pro-communist, but now I feel that"'"he" stands |or "the 4deals pf'ademocratic isvay of life;" ''' ' : ..'-' Roy I. ' Mumme, Education pepartment: "The i'thiiig that impressed,me most was: his emphasis on the fact'that. the. battle for 'civil rights must'be fought in. each/generation. History has shown'that each generation faces new challenges with respect toimplementing human rights.'" .; Dr. Keith Murray, History Department": "Dr." Costigan was eloquent,as he built-up his case with .logical arguments. He. presented in a. _ra: tional way the;* role of theACLU in defending freedom^of speech for the whole ;rahge of. American public opinion-.from the JohnBirch Society to communism." ."•"'.. Mike Hyatt, A.S. president: "As far as Dr. Costigan'smaterial was concerned, there was no question as to validity, source and quality. My-'dwti opinion ofthe views he .presented rests on the fact that, for the most part, I agree with his position." - " LarryKnight, junior: "Dr.. Costigan impressed me as'being a man of firm conviction's which I feel are wellfounded." SINGER SUSAN MARO will appear with the Les Brown Band tomorrow nite. She should beable to sing a whole song on one breath. 'Prestige' (Continued from page!) en in, crowds were goodsized; ranging from 40 to 100, p.eople, at every event. Ray Devier told the Legislature that the Ugly Man Contest is well under way. The 10 gruesome candidates are busy collecting votes around campus/;•... Four of the candidates were eliminated on Wednesday. The icontest will be clo"sed,:?at 11:30tommorrbw; night. The winner jwill be announced at midnight. ' A formal reception will be held onFounder's Day, Feb. 19, from 2 to 4 'p':m'.-' Invitations' have already been sent out for the affair. : v.w for civil liberties—and that "the very word controversy has fallen into disrepute." Textbooks weredescribed as being devoted to conformity, and the educational system as a whole as being far toolimited as to the expressions M opinions.; V - What, is 'the definition; of a communist? Costigan saidthat America has an "ignorant, unthinking use" of the word communism. He felt that it is too often alabeling device, and that people are often called communists when the accusation may not concernpolitics at all. He cited various congressional committees such as the House Un-American Activitiesas an example of the misuse of the word communism. * • • What can we as students do toalleviate the problem of civil liberties? Costigan strongly recommended that interested and! dedicatedstudents consider joining the ACLU, which is. devoted to defending civil liberties of citi: zens. of theUnited States. He explained that the ACLU does, not endorse minority groups, but that it feelsobligated to defend; them from discrimination. Costigan emphasized the importance of respecting therights of all groups, as he commented: "If the rights of one group are denied, the rights' of others willfollow." He saw it as not only a political but also a moral issue. Well,; t h e r e goes our new family off.to Ennen's. NNIN'S THRIFTWAY HIGH AND HOLLY '- "WHERE EVERY CUSTOMER IS IMPORTANT"Biityon Optometrists 1328 CORNWALL B I N Y O N RE 3-9300 j Optometrists COMPLETEOPTOMETRIC SERVICE CONTACT LENSES — FASHION FRAMES Dr. Leroy H. Freeman Dr. RonaldMaloney VU Features By Susan Plotts ••• Western student, how would you like a weekendaway from the drudgery of Western campus, complete with cute coeds^ good' looking guys, fresh air,snow, singing, dancing and. a cozy hearth? Yes, Western student, you can surmount the mist oyer the pumpkin and spend a glorious holiday nestled in the folds of Mt. Baker. All thislfor-a mere pittance of200 empty bottles, or 267 unused 3-cent stamps, or two crisp, negoti-: able $4 bills. Eight dollars willentitle you to transportation to and Irorrr] the mountain, dinner: and; breakfast, a night at the lodge!; andtwo.. days of skiing aiida romping in the snow. ,? Only 100 bottles? Don^t; panic, just cash them inquicks You can still spend the:da^: Saturday on Baker. The buses will not return until after )the dancethat evening. .•.;; • • ' • • : * : ' : ; ' " . If you wish to take your; own car, tickets forSaturday's activities only can be purchased, meals not included. Tickets will go on sale Feb. 11-21on a first-come, first-served basis. And then there is the situation of the gal or guy who has no bottles or bought the no-return kind . . . there is still a way . . . get. your dorm or house's nomination for snowking or queen. And if you win, you're in . . .free. Nominations must be in by the 13th. Elections are the 20th. If equipment for the day is a problem, Newton's Ski 'n; Sea Sports downtown will be. offeringspecial prices for rentals. Make Us Your H e a d q u a r t e r s for S w e e t h e a r t s Ball FlowersCORSAGES BOUQUETS Free Parking Bay Champion RE 3-2610 j. A |, . n i l '. ; ii i '. ' c . i: !» .". r •:» i ---------- Collegian - 1963 February 1 - Page 3 ---------- FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1963 THE COLLEGIAN • PAGE THREE CANDIDATES FORSWEETHEART'S BALL— Left to right: Ken Burton, Bernie Grosshams, "Vivian Oakvik, Bill Zagelow,Lenore Stakulson, Frank Ceteznick, Bev Bassett, Rod Norman, Genie Garey, arid Chuck Lindberg.Sweethearts By Linda Kleve Walk through .aru archway:, lattice, sit by a wishing ^yell,: proclaim asweetheart couple, shake hands with one of the. many silhouettes on the "wall, and dance a step ortwo to "Let Me Call You Sweetheart." You will.be a part of this when you attend the AWS-NorsemanBall. Have you noticed the hearts with question marks scattered through campus? They have beenleading up to the big event, the only semi-formal dance of the quarter. '• Tickets for the dance go onsale Monday at $1.75 per couple. There are 300 tickets available for the semi-formal affair which will beheld in the Viking Union from 9-12 on Saturday, Feb. 9. Hours will be extended to 2:30 that evening..Music will be provided by Ernie Marshall and His Combo. General co-chairmen, for. the ball are SueHall and Phil Robi-' cheau. WOMEN'S POETRY ROSES ARE RED, / VIOLETS ARE BLUE, APLEASING POEM WILL WIN $10 FOR YOU. J: Feb. 4 to 21 are the days that women students maysubmit poems to the AWS Poetry Contest. All poems must be typed and placed in. a sealed envelope addressed to the AWS Poetry Contest. Turn into the AWS box in the post office in Old Main. Apanel of five English professors will judge the contest. The best poem will win $10 for the writer: AWSreserves the right to publish the winning poem. The rules will be posted on the AWS bulletin, board inOld Main and on the Viking Union bulletin board. Pe.rr feet chance to display your talents. VALUABLE EXPERIENCE ^ * i - . lt; .A valuable experience is to be had for interested upperclassmen(sophomore and up). Girls are heeded to; help with a homework program for Lummi Indians. It will require about two hours of your time, once a week. Transportation will be provided. Those interested shouldcontact Pat Garrison at WRH or the dean of women. It should be especially beneficial for educationmajors. VISIT THE Beachcomber Bookshop Books, old, new,; pb's. Active search service. RE 4-4043213E. Holly Reliefs: An- exhibition of sculpture by leading west coast artists, drawn from the •, •art. •bank. . of. th e San Francisco-Art'Institute.-will be in the gallery, of the Art Building from Feb. 5 to :-26'. This exhibition will show one of .western civilization's oldest art forms, the relief, with new-developments iii materials and concepts. The'six artists are using such materials as steel, slate,.brass,'; . wood,, .polymer, and bronze, which are..both traditional and 20th Century media. ' Due' toshortage of"s,pace a complete, rundown, "of these art- At Wesfetfii . : ' / • • ! . "Ji ists is notpossible, but they are all comparable to Tt-Ierton. State Street Laundromat Next io" YMCA »Savetime! We wash, dry and fold.-your'clothes in life h isrs-—.' . [Just wash, Vz hour-— no needto^aitr.Phone REgeM; lt;£.4£5;G ; Flowers Mr the Sweethearts Ball Flower RE 3 After Hours...:PE©neRE 4-6264-or;;RE;4"Ig57 WE DEILI-ST-EH . 1 ^iry more people -smoke Winston:thaii; a n y ^ o ^ e r , ^ ^ c i g ^ e ^ . .^ ggla^or doesitevery;time^-rich,•goldeh^tdbaccos;:specially. . 'selecte^aiM'^fnter]sniol£iiigi; •... :;:'^-%^:.- PURE WHITE, : MODERN FILTER i PLUS : FILTER-BLEND UP1FRONT- ©IS-'L1 El. J. Jii-jj-'oKi; ~;V;ic gt; Caiuscay. Winoton-ScJeia, N. tt, 4 ---------- Collegian - 1963 February 1 - Page 4 ---------- PAGE FOUR THE COLLEGIAN . . , i; FRIDAY FEBRUARY 1, 1963 to comfort the afflicted and afflict the comforted bad scene in the brain race (gambling is the vilest, foulest, most wicked .scourge that hasever raised its slinke-dripping,' /muck-mouthed ,tiisind over the immaculate -American-'''citizenry. ':I^ff';:0^0.^00:,^..0.0.'•;•/:0:;'. Daily we see the /filth-stained••••-atrocities that jade-ior^une^has^ypim^'d^p^-'.-.: 1 on every, level, of pur,-guiltless society. Kindly oidladies';''suddenly:^be:6bmiB-: depraved maniacs as they sit J Hungrily " over a bingo card at a churclr^ipcial. Small children learn-let use' isivy^c]^]; blades — protectipn| against^dishonest •• dealers is "heart" games. 'S000- : Gambling .and; alcohol haye^ra^ged i our country /long en6ugfc--%:e;v^shouldtake steps to ban these evils eoi|evefy front. '•".•;.'••./' 0 . 0 -•: • '':0"-0-:]^' ,)-:0' Wesucceed in shopping alcohol during prohibition and^ithessed aneraofhaiS mony, tranquility, ariditemperahce,. sanctioned by such staunch supportersi of democracy as AlGaporie and; Frank . Nitti. 0^0-0^; 0± lX-\ '\'7-i It was indee^: a sad da^Hwhen ilori- ;;;;/ gress passed tM|21st A^ndmentJ: repealing the Prohibition; Act; ^;:0:?:0^l.:;; •: Nevada has given gambling a free reign and has suffered horribleconsequences. Her citizens pay no state or sales, taxes. On all levels Nevada is progressing simplybecause they have legalized gambling. : We're happy to pay taxes ".. .property -tax, highway tax,gasoline tax, cigarette tax. We enjoy driving the wide six-lane highway between Bellingham and Mountyernon. We're elated that higher ^education is losing ground, and that Washingtonians are steadily beingleft behind in the brain race. But most of all we're standing on our heads, screaming, yeah becauseWE KNOW THAT NO ONE IN WASHINGTON STATE GAMBLES—right? right! Never let is be said that the gods in Olympia will stand in the way of progress—- NEVER! We should all pause for a fewmoments imsilent meditation, and with a: prayer on our lips, knowing full we|^ that Governor Rosellini(DemOcrat- Wash) aiid-h^O^ are helping ourfstatei;o talte/ great strides—back-jwards^- i 00;.::-'0cr:.:..•.•.::0^:::r:\:0-l^.. Try Reading Editor, The Collegian: I note .with.interest your editorialconcerning "Poor Conservatism." The epigram on the front cover according to your editorial reads,"Any American who loves his country should read this book." I should like ,to point out that yourquotation is in error as, if you will, re-read the cover of this book; you will find that the exact words read,"Every American who loves his country should read this book." Consequently there are no grounds foryour so-called implication that ' 'If they don't read it, they don't love their country." Since the front coverof this book was obviously read with in? attention, it leaves much speculation for question as towhether this same inattention was applied to the contents of this book, and whether the rest of youreditorial is "sound and worth. MORICE FRANCE TouIouse-ToLose Editor, The Collegian: Once againnationalism has reared its slithey toves and at the risk of being Goerring we should like to suggest thatalthough, nationalism, is presently an extremely popular bandwagon, Mr. Toulouse should tune hisfiddle or quit the orchestra. Not only is-his instrument out of tune, he. has selected an inappropriatecomposition for the occasion. It smacks of Gilbert and Sullivan; full of catchy tunes and lots oh ypordsthat signify nothing. ToV refute all six points of '--Mrji Toulouse^s solution of the "IKS^J; Problem" wouldbe worse than Bring Class To Soc-Anthro For the last three years the Der partment ofSociologyrAnthropol-ogy has been bringing visiting lecturers from abroad. We now have two suchprofessors on campus, Dr. Carstens from the University, of Capetown,- -South Africa, and Dr. Tiger, from the London School of Economics. Dr. Carstens,._a sociology lecturer, has been here since thebeginning ; of last summer and will continue through the winter quarter. He has just received -hisdoctorate from the University of Capetown. •'••'• • lt; gt;.-./;y v.;\: v^r r- Dr. Tiger,: whooffers ah ne:\v class in political sociology, - ark rived here this jquarter and will remain .through springquarter. his original: tedious tedium^ ti-dum, ti-diim; ti-dum. However, we do feel that hbv fourth point istypical of -this popular/ unrealistic position, and^ therefore should be examined: A nation- Jwhich- "/hassupported the:U;;N; to; the exi tent the/United ; States; has; could hardly be - ^termed" a ••";''junior member:"; ,u,, , -^ - We approach: our newspapers with such a, great degree W_ fear and trepidation as it is; we shudder to think of the terrible twist the news might take if our nation: were represented atthe U, N. by, a m a n who. is "proud that he representsvthe greatest/power on earth:"..... . a power tomaim, kill and destroy;; a power'* to fill with fear .the minds of millions at -; home and abroad; ; '"•:•••: DOUG.MOSER-. , . H RIC STEPHENS': .J Sagaites Grumbling " " Validated Editor,Ttie; Collegian: ; -• A letter\'appeafed?ih last week's Collegian concerning the "Grum^ Ming SagaWorkers" (of which I am one),/•who^sirefforced to ;re- : main after designed closing time ! to handleoverflow. It, is a .legitir : mate assertion that the .doors : must remain open until all have [ been fed. Iwould like, however, ' to attempt an explanation of this.; unsavory grumbling. The dissatisfaction' ariseshot ' because-- the; workers- actually '[ mind slayin fthe^extra few -mtit utes, but because theyare.denied ; freedom of expression in voicing legitimate complaints. 7 Na- ; turally, they give vent tounderlying resentments'in unimportant matters. V •// This may appear to be pretty strong invective; for use in con- ; nection with- such an outwardly ' trivM;matter as•:' job' at Saga, but it is '•-•n(6t;^uriwarrahted. the jobs at Saga: ;a^e xreafedv as I understand, ity^ivot only to feed, ; the studentibodyj but to provide; students with necessary iinahciaL aid to their education. iWimout' this-type of aid,., many students would be forced -to drop out of sch/6dl.;;No^,Vthi£^^ cause, but it isvnof?iri 'the truespirit of charity that the Saga administration vieyvs jit.i j h e Saga office has -thekv ;\vo£keijs^ oyer'•;a bar.rel^they ^ know vit, • • and Tthey take advantage of it. More than a few workers, in attemptingto state a^yalid, complaint, 4 have been stopped cold • with a. smug, "Well, if you don't like ijt We'vegot 12 people to take you| place, ^mirk; srhirlj.'' Grumbliiig, dissatisfied employfee returns do hisstation. ( . The list of grievances against the policies of the Saga food service is; a long-one,. rrangingfrom the;insigriifieant^tp ia; downright denial of justice\arid democracy. The; iron hand of Sagaland wields a heavy weapon^''Shut-up and work; or forfeit your education!" An outsider may be inclined to think thefacts: presented herein are magnified out of all proportion—. but it is this very dissension within theorganization that prompts such liettersr as;: the one which appeared last % week. An organizationbased 6ri:: discontent can never provide a cheerful, ef-fici. eht, co-operative .service to the student body:Small wonder someone complains! : , - Name asked to be withheld. it^i too bad about them t h e e ;.Official Weekly Newspaper of Western Washington State College, Bellingham, Wash. Second-classpostage paid at Bellingham, Washington ;.-• ; ; ; ;: •;: . COPY DEADLINE-Tuesday 12 Noon..- :; ; gt; 1'Vv :;v - : ;"/5 0 gt; ^itor-lii-Chief/Dick Simmons ."::"•• •-,-'.:; ^ ;S;-,;..: •••':;';f'Managing^:E;di.tor::,:l..v.:.:...;:....::;X:.^.^,^ _' Business Managep.::.:..:...';s.':lV:'.0^^..;.:fe.„i;.V.:.7.i..:!.!C..;!V..„:.^,..!£;::..v.,.l!biAVE/'-BINSELER' Photographer '.;.:".'....1'. •.'."....„;..:....:.:....:"....\£...:...:''HAPPV ftYPO" COLE Photo Editor..... ..r. LARRY D. HARNDEN ' Sports Editor..; ;.,. .WEBB HESTER ' Feature Editors „ ...KAREN BAINJER, RAY BURKE Copy Editor.:....:....v.;.....„ .....;. ;. ;.JRUDY KAMPF ' Women's Editor "„......_..'. .^ .........DESiRE' MEADOWS NewsEditor.... .....;.. .L.....;. ....:.....:.. DE'NNY FREEBURN International Editor '. ...'ALLEN DORBANDSecretaries... LINDA CREWS, RHONDA PASSION; .JULIE JOHNSON Advisor..., "....„..- JAi\AESMULLIGAN Reporters, Columnists -.•"GAT;' BOYSEN, -NICK NOSTRIL, ROGER LIBBY, MERVINFllvlSTER, RIC STEPHANS, LOREN FINLEY; VICKI SCHWALM/BUDDY BUTTON,-DAVID SUFFIEA,JEANNE SMART, SCOOP FREBURN, LINDA KLEVE,DUSTI-KNUDSON, KATHY LITTLE, SHIRLEYBUGINNIS, GEORGE TOULOUSE, RAY OSBORNE, JEAN PARMENTER, GARY ANDERSON, RALPHMUNRO, RICARDO (PEPPERS) SIMMONS, DENNIS DOBBS, RICHARD HOMME, LUTHER SKAGGS,SUE PLOTTS, JIM WALKER, PJTTS BOURASAW. The E a s t e r n e r , adolescent-voiced newspaperof Eastern Washington State College in Cheney, highlighted its rather pale-looking front page last weekwith a story about elections, student elections. The Easterner kicked off the story with a smashing,extremely eyecatching headline: "Four' Candidates Bid for Elections"—and a tremendously wellwritten lead paragraph, which really wasn't a lead at all but an editor's note stating that at press timeone of the candidates who was running for president had switched his candidacy lrom;^president toexecutive vice president, but, the story was the same story they were going to run when he wasrunning for president (we must be' patient with these people at Eastern). After this first fiasco,traditional^ weekly event With the Easterner,, (inci-dently there were 12 stories ori ^he front page and nopictures) the .article. went on to quote this hopeful ASBiprejs-v ident who had switched hopes; at/ trielast, minute. ' " ^ ;.:.'(••'''.(.• (THe quote) "Many student gfovem-ments are losing theirresponsibilities because theychave shown they are hot capable^ At both the University of, Washingtonand Western Washington State College the students have lost control over athletic budgets " arid; he lt;; ("he": actually means "the"—this, was-M a typographical error, another traelitipri with theEasterner) government at: Central:- Wa^hihgtoh /State College has been seriously qi^stioned," -lies/;pointed -/•out; ;.-.v.;" I •"•:.;. 'i'^i l.S.^0^ 0 }i\'::0 "•;"; :' Of course' the 'article; didn't botherto: state just.-what- Central was Deingques-tiohed^ about, but we^ -must expectitrris' type/ of coverage!fTdrti a "hews^aper" 7 that uses .mimeographed p ^ l i c i l y ; re^ leases to fill its letter; coluhm: ' ; f ;. Ineffect; Western's student gpyerii-merit has "lost control" of the athletic budget but certainly, not throughany incapabilities on the part of that government. Two years ago the legislators agreed that instead ofloading down the' regular meetings with budget requests a series of commissions be formed com-;posed of students, legislators and faculty membersiinterested in the various.departments includingathletics. 1 These commissions explore each bud- /get; requestj arid makevthe necessaryrecommendations;•' thus taking miieh: of t h e ^straiii o|f /the student firiance office and leaving thelegislators. to cbncen-trate;^ on v clubs ahd; primarily, student. oriented: activities. . " " . ; May wesuggest' that Eastern's candidate and newspaper explore the facts a-little more jcloselyj and maybethey-'11' realize that "losing control" of the^ath-! letic budget, was ; hot ^a result /of npn-! capabilities,; bu t isimpiy^a / natural ^progression of student-government actiyitjr on a higher 'plane/-^!); S; 'r The firstsemester tallies in the ''Ole Miss" fiasco have finally arrived. The total taxpayer cost now stands at$4,500,000. This covers the salaries for 23,000 federal troops and 400 marshals. Other items includetwo lives and about $1,000,000,000 worth of world prestige. Congratulations "Ole Miss/' what's on tap fornext semester? ---------- Collegian - 1963 February 1 - Page 5 ---------- FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1963 THE COLLEGIAN PAGE FIVE From 'The' Galford Editor, The Collegian:^'X Who is George Toulouse? In his article entitled, "What-Price Victory," (Collegian, Jan. 25). heberates the dirty : bid."United States ; for -: "the U/;: .N.-'s•.: Nazi storjntrppper^.-type;;;acts':CommUr ted in theCpngo;?' He also says', "Ourv actions in the Congo will have two "Ipng-la:sting effects." Theseare both bad, of course. Then he offers- six alternative solutionsitorthis'/terrible .situation: Theses top,'are bad;v : :, ; I was\not: fortunate; enoughto glean any tangible evidence from Mr.".:Toiipuse?s^;^itp"riaLT^)\ Perhaps suchAw^rds^s gt;3^vile^?and: "corrupt'!ior/considered to-:be free" of•emotional imports and can, therefore; be offered'as-such evidence-T-perhaps •Mr.-i Toulousemerely -forgot to elucidate where he obtained his information. ;,.; Perhaps Mr,:.Toulous^-is' revrelationist and has a'^direct pipeline to the future.: He did, after all, ;use; the word./"will," v not ''maybe.'' -Eerhaps $Tr,.'-Toulouse does not vhaye ^ anyV: tangible evidence tp suppprt/'-his'.^wiid'-' and willfulstatements. Perhaps I am looking in; the wrong place, • : ROBERT GALFORD REPUBLICANS "-DEMOCRATS Poetry Reading Monkeys Too Conferences On Tap For Summer Dr. J. Alan Ross urgesall students to accelerate their studies by attending summer- quarter" at Western.1 '-'-' "-;•'V- ;'.:-r--' Ross pointed out special music and djama events; an.:arts festival . a n i : ; , several conferenceswhich should'be of interest'to students. He also emphasized the fact Oiat additional earnings gained ' from an earlier -graduation often more; than compensate, for. loss of summer employment;; Anadded^featurp ;.of summer=quarter is the list of- electives which are offered during the summer only. One of the conferences included in the summer quarter program Will :be;the^:Danfprth Ea^t-WestConference,.Which is designed to increase interest, jn^and;.-'.understanding of '"the: non-westernworld: This summer's conference activities will - focus, on -, Japan. Speajkers will include a Japaneseeducator and a representative of the Center for Cultural and Technical Interchange Between East andWest, University of Hawaii. A Japanese art show and -an; outstanding rJapanese, film; will beadditional features of" the; conference program. _ '••/ •:;-,.: Characteristics of successfulteachers will be studied as a part' of" a: conference, on ..-.teacher; competency,-, and studies pfemotions- and monkey's, will.be includr; ed in a .psychology in education conference. Studentsinterested in attending summer quarter should 1 drop byi the Graduate office, OM j 116. ' '• - ' '' 'I .The Western Washington State College Young Republican Club sent six delegates to the Washington State Federation of Young Republicans' annual convention held at the Edgewater Inn in SeattleJan.25 and 26. " The club wasr accepted into the federation Friday in a special committee meeting of the constitution- fees committee. This is the first year the club has qualified to be federated. .'.,.- •'...Terry GaUagHer,^president; of the club^ was elected Second/Con^: gressional District director. ^^The;Melegates/' und; it "a most ^prthwliile • eJ^erience^. Howeyeiv ;the? tension Wa^/^riemef^eari-didates^ scrambled-, for :yotes,,and delegates werecfaced with the re^ ^possibility of casting their votesin .elections decided by as few as one or two votes. Monday evening's Young JDem-ocrat's meetingproduced a new president, Bill Maher, and revealed plans for the upcoming state convention inFebruary. Retiring president George King discussed, plans for the convention and announced that/anynew or old member of YD's will be eligible to attend this annual affair. "How will the typicalcomplacent, immovable student of the college, who isn't interested in either political party, make thesudden transition?tp be/ an intelligent voter, once he or she becomes old enough,". gt;yas thequestion posed by Vice President Ken Gpary;V.'• " .• ".", . •_;.'./• . The; next meeting ofYoung -Democrats will be Monday afternoon, Feb-4,' ait 4 p / m . in Room 10 , of the:Viking Union.Various committees /will be appointed. Any interested students are welcome. A BOOK DISPLAY isnow appearing in the VU, Library and Campus School; aimed at elemental, junior high and secondarystudents. VU Features Book -Display; 'A series of book displays is currently being presented onWestern's campus. The displays, appearing in the' Viking Union, the Library and' the Campus SchoolLibrary, are aimed at elementary to junior high school students through secondary; students andadults! ^u...' Of interest to education students are some.^150 publications subscribed to by the ASB;Since Western has joined NSA these. publjcatiohs on student travel in Europe; the Peace Corps, United Nations and the like have/ been made available! Political subscription, range from/ the "far right"through the '-far left." . ; Copies of the^ publications may be checked'out. for..-two/Aveeks with an AScard in the Viking Union..-. 7'..1;;/ j ; t';: .... /.."--.:' ;~ In speaking hopefully about the project, Gary.Beerriah, AS exec-tive vice president said,: "If gt;this arrangement, doesn't work out. the collection willhave to be do: natpd" to the library.'' - ;; An , exhibition of;'.books of the Spring Season, ranging ..fromkindergarten through the ninth grade, is appearing in the Campus School Library between 8 a m. and5-p. m. Books that came out during the fall of last year for junior and senior high school-levels will be ondisplay in the reserve book room of the main; Library; / Some 503 titles are represented in the campusschool collection. The Three Jolly. Coachmen, .located near the corner of State and Holly Streets, willhave another poetry reading session this coming Monday. Poets from Western and the \ Northwest•Washington..area will ] TMR 3 UQU./CQtf^iMeN 1 give their selections. The! readings will, start-at7:00 and. will continue Itill finished. There will be no admission charge. We F e a t u re THE BEST Forthe Noted author Henry filler has: COLLEGE MAN come out, with, a new book that] promises-to/.'outsell all of his; earlier wPrksY Title is "See Sal-1 ly." - • - ; , ; ' • ; • ' : ; . . • gt;-.:. ! Miller is awriter of children's! primers and not. to..be ..confused j with the Henry: Miller who wrote! "Tropic pf-Cancer," etc. | CHILLER'S MEN'S WEAR 1324 Commercial) '-- NBoffC Scramble Game No. 1CAMPUS QUEENS LOVE ' E l i Car expenses keeping you strapped? Why not fceeji track of cair costsand all your expenses with -«t» NBofC Special Checking Account. You pay -lor on'iy those checksyou write. And i t ' s mighty businesslike! NATIONAL BANK OF COMMERCE Ee!!ir# T, Office: 1281Holly Street •$heridjn P. Gallagher, V.P. and Mgr. - eOfYRlGHT © 1961, THE COCA-CCi.*COMFWV. CCCfi-COLA AKO COKE ASE REGlSTERM) IflAOfM^KS ^^^^^^^^iSil^^^^^^^^^^^^^^Mms^^^x?®®®. NOW! MT. BAKER i'BEST PICTURE! A Winner of 10 m Academy Awards? BOXOFFICE OPENS 5:45 P. M. Two ShGws Each Evening — 6 P. M. and 9 P. M. — SATURDAY ANDSUNDAY 2:30 P. M. — 6 P. M. — 9:15 P. M. Prices: Gen. 1.25 Children 50c *umttw wine* MIIH* !GREAT BETWEEN COURSE; ! Get that refreshing new feeling with Coke! ! Bottled under authority of The Coca-Cola Company by COCA-COLA BOTTLING CO. j OF BELLINGHAM ---------- Collegian - 1963 February 1 - Page 6 ---------- PAGE SIX THE COLLEGIAN FRIDAY FEBRUARY 1, 1963 SUPERIOR CLEANERS 18 lbs. $2-00CLEANED SPOTTED ALSO F i n i s h e d Garments at S t u d e n t Discount Laund r y Service.STUDENTS ESPECIALLY WELCOME 1140 STATE ST. Western: Little Mississippi Civil Rights: ABellinghcim Bomb By Dave Suffia Who says Bellingham is in Mississippi? We don't havesegregation and discrimination here, do w e ? . . ' • . . , . . . ':_• J. • The problems of: theLummi Indians in-Whatcorn^Gounty.were the topic of discus^pn.at a symposium held in t % y i Jlounge last Friday in conjunction with Civil Rights Weiek.; . gt;' : ; gt; :, ••"•" "A'paneLpf threeprominent local figures agreed that th§. Lummi in the Bellingham. area are Dr, Co IngwersenOpfomefrisf 3 Phone RE 4-7720 T^^;Ea|m gt;lly Bellingham illGHX ACROSS FROM THE ROYALSweethearts Ball Flowers For that Special Gal IBB * Call J. Q. s RE 4-4310 Distinction WithoutExtravagance 1305 Railroad Just Off Holly EEBKSaHEKfl BOOKFAIR FEBRUARY 11 TO 15 StudentUnion Building, Room 10 Sponsored By The Following Publishers Avon Bantam Cardinal WashingtonSquare Dell Mentor Signet Evergreen Scribners Le Voire De Pouche Paperback Library PopularLibrary Premier Pyramid Monarch Charter Collier Macmillan Simon and Schuster - gt;-^lr:'V-; lt;:^^:^::X: • . PLAN TO BROWSE AND BUY BUILD YOUR LIBRARY NOW STUDENTS CO-OPSTORE definitely faced with discrimination. Gary Beeman acted as moderator for the panel whichconsisted of Mary Hillaire of the Lummi tribe, Dean Clyde McDonald, representing the BellinghamCity Council, and John Munroe, principal of Marietta Elementary SChCO). ' -,. Although prejudice doesnot appear in overt actions^ it is still present, in more subtle forms. NO JOBS Probably the mosteasily recognized form of discrimination lies in job opportunities. The Lummi are hard pressed to finddecent employment or any employment at all. In Whatcom County there are only 25 Lummi engagedin full time, year-round jobs. Another 15 have seasonally permanent jobs. The rest must scratch a livingout of odd-job opportunities. The panel agreed, however, that the main cause of employmentdiscrimination stems from the fact that most of the Lummi are educationally unprepared for most tjipesof labor. LUMMI UNPREPARED However, the panel failed to agree on why the Lummi are unprepared. Two main viewpoints were expressed. Mary Hillaire, Department of Public Assistance, and one of onlytwo Lummi to graduate from Western, placed the blame on the federal government. "Inadequateprograms are made available to the Lummi," she said. • "The Lummi schools are poor and Indianchildren in public schools find that "their teachers discriminate against them." For this reason, fewLummi ever graduate from high school. Even the number finishing the eighth grade is surprisingly small.,; Since the majority fail to stay in school for even eight years, jobs for the majority are hard to come by. ' :•;' Miss Hillaire seemed" to think that the cfederal w, government should stand by itsresponsibilities and do something about the situation. STATE SHOULD TAKE OVER On the otherhand, Dean McDonald feels that the state should handle things, not the federal government. The state could enforce compulsory education laws and see that the Lummi get a decent education thatwould enable them to compete for decent jobs. However, for the state to help the Lummi, theirreservation would havje to be dissolved. Whether or not they want that is an unanswered question. •Right now the state has no authority on the Lummi Reservation. It is a federal protectorate. "Thereservation has outdone its usefulness," said Dean McDonald. "It serves only as a bar- ON HUAC ByAllen Gibbs .:•'", (The.vieivs expressed in this column ate not neces- :. savily the vieius ofThtiCollegidn—-Editor) Once again-the anti-HUAC: forces are urging abolition of " the HouseCommittee;on.Un-American Activities. The USNSA and Dr. Giovanni Costigan are such illustrations. Thisissue is well defined, as the liberal advocates change by abolition, and the conservative urges onlyremedial changes strengthening such a committee. The question of semantics is, "What is un-American?" There is no one who can justifiably say what is "un-American," or what, is "American." Itappears that an attitude must have its roots in American tradition to be called "American." Certainly*communism has no such roots, but the Ku Klux Klan does and yet is "un-American" according to HUAC. However,, most of HUACs. attention is devoted to the more clear arid present danger of communism inour government "and the world. It would then seem best to measure "un- Americanism" in terms ofdanger to American traditions and government indicating, rightly so, that groups like the KKK don'trepresent such a danger. On this basis alone, conservatives could urge abolition of HUAC. But, astanding house committee on communist activities would first have to be .established, thereby removingthe semantic stigma and also nullify an argument successfully exploited by the anti-HUAC forces. , , Ma n y good citizens have criticized the inquiries of HUAC, hot from any softness towards communismbut''out.''of a ^iri- ' cere, if riot confused or obsessive, worry over freedom of speech arid association,'besides having accused the committee of abusing individual rights. • • * Our republic wasformulated oh th assumption. that nearly all points of view are, if not equally honorable, at least equallytolerable. Yet Jefferson,, with his .talk.of a.free society, denounced his contemporaries as "swinish". aridattempted .to use the courts in diminishing their influence. Even Lincoln finally arrived at the conclusionthat some viewpoints, such as.those favoring slavery, were intolerable and thus the Civil War. Only in ourtime has the idea of a really free society been espoused. Today, in the spirit of a free society, ourfreedoms under the constitution arid bill of rights have been extended to our enemies. It is indeed ironicaLthat these very cornerstones of American heritage may result in their self-destruction. It is preposterousto tolerate conspiracy in our midst under the guise of preserving freedom. Our security is endangered bythe Fifth Amendment which has provided" the communists protection from our society's desire forsecurity. • • • It's time to throw off the mantle of John Stuart Mills' other wordly pronouncementsin this world of communism and the atomic bomb. If the constitution can't cope with contemporaryproblems and preserve itself, then, it must be modified, as it has been before. If we want to perpetuatefreedom, we must change the Constitution and Bill of Rights. We must not have security withoutfreedom, but freedom with security. Let us heed well the needs of our time, not the idealistic cries - of.the liberals and anti-HUAC forces. It would be wise for Western's National Student Associationcommittee, in considering abolition of HUAC, to note the words of Macaulay who said that "A nation maybe placed in such a situation that the majority must either impose disabilities or submit to them, andthat what would, under ordinary circumstances, be justly condemned as persecution, may^ fall withinthe bounds of legitimate self defense." HUAC falls within such bounds. Orchesis Slates Program Eightmembers of Orchesis, Western's modern dance club, will perform ah original trilogy at 7 p. m. Feb. 7, atthe annual Bellingham's Women's Service Groups banquet in the Crystal Ballroom of the Leopold Hotel. Miss Ruth Weythman, head of the Women's P. E. Department ner. "If they (the LummiLwant tocompete in our society," he said, "they'll have to lose their inde-tity." The group agreed that right now the Lummi are unprepared to compete. How they might be prepared to compete is something that fourpeople could not answer alone. SHOE SALE ENDS 4 FEBRUARY PRICES START AT 88c atWestern, is chairman of the Soropiimists' Club. lt;"h;ch is sponsoring the affair. The first dance, PP.itl^d "Ritual of the Warm-Up," :s a study of both the simple and intricate movement patterns -ised bydancers in warming -p The eight dancer . Andra Armstrong, Becky •"* r-rn* David Highnam, Chris r 'ri^on, Susan! Plot.ts, Joann P ^ - ^ i , Carolyn Ross, and Lyn S ' ^ ^ r v . worked together to ch v - -raph and learn the three c1"^^. . "• " These same th,v gt;- dances will be performed w' * •*'•' turiies-at the -Orchesis co^-^V March S and 9. in the coF.e " gt; auditorium. S, oceted BELLINGHAMNATIONAL BANK BLDG. The four leaf cl ed a good luck c' Yant sin t'ing tri' fortunately, the the GobiDeser no clover there. The Yant sin " plagued with b long, long time. ;s cqnsider-mong tlie ' ' "!hina.Unlives in '' there is save been 'ck for- a Remember We Specialize in Diamonds - S i l v e r — FiAJso — J c Watch J tches welry and a ir Milton I erry JEWF *? 113C5 Commercial ---------- Collegian - 1963 February 1 - Page 7 ---------- FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 1. 1963 THE COLLEGIAN PAGE SEVEN DAVE EMERY shoves off in Westernswim meet, •season. He has tallied up four records to his credit this iCobwebs: ®M m HatchetMen Chop Away Hipsters Split Genttaly Liites : Western showed Central how to play- defense "last.Friday., as they won 56-32, but paid the price the following night -wheit. tall- Pacific Laitheran^beat-themv67r58o By beating .Central;•'•}Western avenged ah earlier loss to the Wildcats in;Dece^erand^shbw-ed the" Viking Vdefense, bquld1 cope with a rtaJl .offence. - ',•-.•..•.-Z:; --'•: .The;Viking" hatchet -rmen did: more than/copeI'-with;tlie two six-foot, sevehrihch Wildcats., They literallypushed; them* under, the bbards'as Jim" Adarris:set' a: school record of 22 rebounds to lead" theVikings fcf aL 57:;44: "rebouhd advantage. ;The-Vikings .exploded.; in the; first 10 minutes to,lead: 16-4 andf sew up-the~gamei -The-Wildcats - didn't come-within 10 points of the Viks the rest vof the-nighf.Adams led; the -scoring -column with 13 while Kirlglji for 10, all on 15-foot jump; shots. Denny Hustonwas once: again the sparkplug of ;,the Viks;' defense-in addition to' scoring?9 ipointe. 'DennisColacino collectedjrf:7i'and freshman Roger Bruett' hit 6- as a standrin for Bob Giida. ; A hustling,close checking Viking defense plus a howling crowd that was on its feet half of the game kept therWildcats on edge and made them hurry their shots with-the result that they hit only 21 perTcent of theirshots from the floor. Co-Rec Has Much To Offer Recreation activities are scheduled every Saturdayafternoon for •the general' student: body; The sport's program includes a wide selection; of -games-including basketball,, bowling,, badminton, swimming, weight lifting, and table tennis. Schedules ofthe extra-curricular sports activities are posted in the gymnasium. Dr. William Tomaras, actingchairman of Men's Physical Education, remarked, "Students are participating extensively and. weare trying our best to offer a varied program to encompass the various tastes of students.'' Many ofthe activities are informal such as shooting baskets or working out on the weigh!^ training facilities.Team play is supervised by men and women P. E. graduate students. Tomaras cited-.; the : recentgrowth, of the "Intramural program, which at the present time includes 36 basketball teams playingon a round-robin schedule." Concerning the weekend 'schedule Tomaras added, "The recreationprogram is offered every Saturday afternoon from 1-4 p. m. except when the facilities are to be usedfor" home events such as wrestling and swim meets. When home events are scheduled. the generalrecreation program is set in the morning from 10-12;" ! The swimming pool is available, for student useaccording to the following schedule; Men only- Monday from 3-4 p. m. Women oiily—Tuesday from -4:30-5:30- p: m. and Thursday from 7-8 p. m. Pacific Lutheran's center, Curt Gammell, was thebeginning;, of the end m the PLU game' Saturday night as, he led the Lutes, .to a 67-59 victory oyerthe Vikings'. Pacific Lutheran; had a weave in their offense which required some fast switching on thepart pf; the. Viking defense. Western did an .excellent job in switching out- but, often as hot, when theyveave- stopped, six-foot six-inch Gammel had a man guarding him some eight inches shorter—whichhelped him score 18 points-in the first half.. ' ; In the second half the Vikings startedyboxing out Gammel under the boards but another six-six Lute, ;Tpm;WhXten,';'stacte lt;i hitting on" 12-; to"_ 15jfdpt. jumpshots^ to take up the scoring ;slack. ; Western-heeded a hot percent: age from the floor to win thisgame but hit only 37 per cent of their shots, 8 per cent below their season average. ; J im Adams led the scoring for the Vikings with 16 while Denny Huston and Mike Kirk each hit for 10. The. Vikings edgedthe Lutes in rebounding, 46-44, as they came on strong/in the second half. Western didn't hurt itsdefensive average which is ranked second in the nation over the weekend as they held Centraland PLU to an average of 49.5 points a game. From The Desk | | i of Webb Hester.. Hff They said itcouldn't be done but they did it. The Western student body not only made noise at the last two basketball games . . . they yelled, cursed and cheered at the right time until;thejr were hoarse. At the Central game the effect of the loud support by the crowd was most noticeable when the Wildcat players nit only" 21per cent of their shots. If Western wants to make its bid for first place in the nation in defense they mustdo it this weekend for the Viking BB;squad-will next play Central, PLU and UPS in away games where the chances to lower its average will be pretty slim. Let's hopft Oglethorpe (first in the nation) gets bombed this weekend. The intramural basketball schedule is in full flight now with the Cats leading the strong ALeague with a 5-1 record. The Higjh-r view Hellcats are trailing in second place with the Exits in thirdplace. The Rams are undefeated in B League with a 4-0 record. Intramural bowling is producing some topflight performers: with half a dozen bowlers ringing up 500 three-game totals. Neil* De Goujer has the topseries with 556. Chuck Hunger has a high game record of 210. The Eye Ques lead the standings with' a3-i' record followed by the Pin Busters in second place. The Eye Ques have the team high for threegames with a 1608 total. The intramural badminton and weightlifting tournaments for; winter quarter will,start next week and all entries should be in no later than next Monday. The Rugby team won its matchwith Victoria 14-3 last weekend 1 and this week travels to UBC. Western's play-it-by-ear soccer team will take on the UBC Engineers tomorrow in their first game of the season. Emery Scores On Road DaveEmery took the 50-yard freestyle and the 200-yard butterfly against Central and Eastern in two dualaway meets last weekend to win Western's only VIKING varsity man drops one in as Western splitsgames with Central and PLU. Matmen Stage Triangle Meet The Western Washington State wrestlingsquad will face Lewis and Clark and Pacific University in a triangular meet beginning at 2 p. m. tomorrow in Carver Gym. s Because each wrestler must wrestle twice during the meet, there wilL be two matches going on constantly so that'the meet might be completed within an hour and a half. In last weekJs meet with; the University of Washington/John Bayne, 147, and Terry Lane, heavyweight, each won decisionsas the Vikings'lost 19-8. Bayne won 9-0 and had his man on his back or half turned over almost thewhole match. Lane's match was the climax of; the meet as Terry was tied i : l with" his opponent with10 seconds :to go but his opponent had riding time on him and would receive an extra point at the endOf the; match to win. Terry came through in the clutch with a takedown for two points to win 3-2. JimChapman rounded out the Viking scoring as he fought his opponent to a draw. first places in the meets. Results of the meets: AT EASTERN: 400-yard Medley Relay —• Craig Hill, Spence Davidson^ Dave Emery, Ken Colvin, second place. 200-yard Freestyle — Colvin. third. 50-yard Free — Emery first,Chapman third. 200-yard Individual Medley; — Lockwood second, Wright third. Diving—Irving third.200-yard Fly—Emery first. 100-yard Free—Colvin third. 200-yard Back—Hill third. 500-yardFree—Williams third. 200-yard Breast—Davidson second, Lockwood third. 400-yard FreeRelay—Chapman, Hill, Colvin, Emery, second. AT CENTRAL 400-yard Medley Relay—Westernsecond. 200-yard Freestyle—Colyin. 50-yard Free. — Emery first, Chapman fourth. 200-yard Individual Medley — Lockwood third, Wright fourth. Diving—Irving third. 200-yard Fly — Emery first, Williamssecond. 100-yard Free — Colvin third, Chapman fourth. 200-yard Back — Hill second, According tofamed 14th cen^ tury meterorologist, Buoeno of gt; Sienna, snow: did not .exist-; He considered itmerely an optical-illusion. Buonno died in 1384 of pneumonia contracted while wallong around barefoot in the. Great; Sienna Blizzard of 1384.? ji Wright fourth., 50d-yard Free_ -WiiliamSw third.|; 200-yardBreast ~". Davidson; third gt;^LbckWoodrsecond;i: 1 400-yard "Free Kelly — ^Wright,1: Lockwood,Hill, Colvin, second.^ THE BELLINGHAM NATIONAL RANK "Locally Owned and Operated Since 1904" CORNWALL HOJLLYJ Drive-In Office at 1605 Cornwall Ave. Member F.D..I.C. SANDY AND VALEShoe Repair J o i n Lucky "7" Club | COLLEGE DEMANDS GOOD lt; • SOLES—KEEP THEMTHAT' WAY 117 W. HOLLY (Next to The Toggery) We Feature A Complete Line of Magazines,Groceries Refreshments RAWl'S SUPERETTE 714 E. HOLLY Are You GUILTY? Of Pouring DryCleaning Dollars Down the Drain? . . . if you are here's a solution Park Manor Self Service DryCleaning offers • 75% Savings on Quality Cleaning -——• • Full-time consultants to help youwith your fabric care • Automatic pressing for that "final touch' • 10 Machines — no waiting •Free Coffee — Beautiful Study Area ACROSS FROM ALBERTSON'S Hours — Mon. - Sat., 9 a. m. - 9p. m. Sunday Noon to 6 p. m. I 4 ffl 6 H W a » s B ff B s a K » i*! a a uuHiMtnnniininnninninnMMUiniiis . M « « e as « ts r, .14 m 1 i ,a . • » » i a a a a » a » 3 . * t tK » B f t i * H - ' »™ • ' * " ». ---------- Collegian - 1963 February 1 - Page 8 ---------- PAGE EIGHT THE COLLEGIAN FRIDAY FEBRUARY 1, 1963 I Stink, You Stink' Professors GiveFavorite Quotes By Ray Burke and Linda Finnie ,„"• lt;' When asked "What is your favoritequotation?" Br. J. G. McAree, history professor, said "I stink, you stink, we all stink, but we're gettingused to it." "In defense of the frequency and ferocity of examinations given—regardless of course,college or creed/' Ipr. E. A. Schinske of the Speech Department propounded this famous maxim: "Theunexamined life is not worth living"—Plato. •' A mora serious favorite quotation came from W. R. ;Lawyer of the English Department. "Men fear thought as they fear, nothing else on earth—more than ruin, more even than death. Thought is subversive and revolutionary; destructive and terrible; thoughtis,anarchic and lawless, indifferent to authority, careless of the , well-tried wisdom of the ages. Thoughtlooks into the pit of hell and is not afraid. It sees mari, a feeble speck, surrounded by unfathomabledepths of silence; yet it bears itself proudly, as unmoved as if it were lord of the universe. Thought isgreat and swift and free, the light of the world, and the chief glory of man." This quotation was taken fromthe British philosopher, mathematician and sociologist, Bertrand Russell's "Why Men Fight" "HUMOROUS TOUCH /'Hail -Mary! Use second gear only. Do not use first or third gear!". This humoroussaying appeared on a farm tractor in a Trappist monastery. Dr. Adams of the Psychology Departmentsubmitted this anonymous saying as his favorite. Dr. M. S. Kuder, dean of students, contributed asaying from Pope John XXIII, "See everything, overlook a great deal, correct a little." "If I have been able to see further than others, it is because I have stood on the shoulders of giants." This gigantic quotationfrom Issac Newton, is Dr. E. F. NeuziFs favorite. '••• The sparking romantic of the EnglishDepartment, Dr. A. C. Hicks, expressed his favorite quote as, "There lives more faith in honest doubtbelieve me, than in half the creeds," from Alfred Tennyson's "In Memor-iiim." Dr. Hicks elaborated on thisby stating that it shows intellectual integrity, earnestness of life, and personal responsibility. • •• • • . . .• Dr, G. 1. Flora, of the Biology Department, said ihat he frequently uses thisstatement facetiously. "Remember ladies and gentlemen, from chaos comes confusion. Without someconfusion, nothing very good ever develops." This, by the way, is a Dr. Flora original. . Quotations with asomewhat religious connotation .-SKjere submitted by Dr. P. H. Atteberry, industrial arts professor; andDr. A. Van Aver, English Department professor, Atteberry. stated "Oh Lord, grant me the Serenity toaccept the things I cannot change, and the eourage to change the things that I can and the wisdom tpknow the. difference." Van Aver exclaimed, "The fear of the Lord, that is the beginning of wisdom," takenfrom Job. EDCATIONAL INTERESTS • A. A. Collier, art professor, explained one of his favoritequotations from the pen of D. H. Lawrence, famed author of "Lady Chatterly's Lover." Lawrence speaksabout Van Gogh's painting the "Sunflower." "When Van Gogh paints a sunflower, he reveals or achievesthe vivid relation between himself as a man and the sunflower as a sunflower at that quick moment oftime; it is-a revelation of the perfected relation at a certain moment between a man and a sunflower." Dr.Collier interpreted the quotation as expressing "the whole nature of the visual arts. The genuine art imageis expressing the relationship between man or object and some experience." • Speech professor Dr. L. W. Brewster chose a quotation from the pen of Robert G. Ingersol, an American agnostic, as hisfavorite: "Every life, no matter if its every hour is rich with love and every moment jeweled with a joy, will,to its close, become a tragedy, as sad* and deep, and dark as can be woven of the warp and woof ofmystery and death." * PHILOSOPHY OF LIFE - Dr. H. Taylor stated, "It is not necessary to hope inorder to undertake, nor yet necessary to succeed in 'order to persevere," originated by Charles"The Bold," of Burgundy, 15th Century duke in what is now France. A philosophical interpretation of life wasexpressed by C. F. Lappenbiisch, physical education instructor and football coach. He bases: his"straight line" philosophy on the concept of "Flexible, progressive adjustment rather than flexibleretrogressive adjustment." • "Aurea mediocritas" or the golden mean of moderation expressed bythe Roman poet, Horace, in his "Odes" was foreign language professor Dr. R. A. Young's favoritequote. • • • • From the book* "Democracy and Education," by noted philosopher and educator John Dewey, comes R. I. Mumme's favorite excerpt. "Education is that reconstruction orreorganization of experience which adds to the meaning of experience, and which increases the ability todirect the course of subsequent experience." Jean-Charles Seigneuret, of the Foreign LanguageDepartment; submitted his favorite quote in French. He stated, "Le refiis des louanges est un desir d'etreloue deus fois," written by the French moralist of the 17th Century, La Rouchefoucauld. Translated itmeans "The refusal of a compliment is a desire to be complimented twice." M "Mathematics is thesubject in which one does not know what he is talking about nor whether what he is saying is.true"stated G. E. Witter, Western mathematics instructor. Witter explained that he found this among thewriting of Bertrand Russell. • Assistant professor of education and director of the Audio-Visual Center,Dr. David McDonald said "I never use an educational film if I can do it equally well in any other way. Thisis what I preach and teach." He continued by stating that a film must make a unique contribution tolearning or else there is no basis for using it. /. '• Kennicott, La Riviere To California Two Westernstudents will represent the school this month at the Regional College Union Tournaments at theUniversity of California. Bob Kennicott and Randy La Riviere as victors in. the table tennis and billiardsgames in the Grotto, won the expense-paid trip/ to Berkeley. Winners of the regional tournament willbe sent to the interna-' tional one to be held in May on the University of New Mexico, campus inAlbuquerque. Kennicott beat Bob Richards, who had held the toprung^for several weeks, in the last dayof play. The third spot on the table tennis ladder is held by Jini Ethell. " Ron Oldani and Nick Fisher • were the second and third run-ners- up in billiards. ' The Grotto tourneys will con-; tinue in table tenniswith either cash or trophy prizes. If enough are interested, contests in billiards, chess, checkers,bridge and pinochle will be set up. Similar tournaments for girls will be held if the response is greatenough. B'Dnaham Orubi 'it, despite despite historical references, was not the third sultan of Bushwah.OFFICIAL NOTICES By pwiiiieation of these notices students are deemed to be officially notified of anyeveuts are obligations indicated. "Cpncorelta'' On Tap Concordia Choir, directed by Paul J. Christiansen, will appear for the first time at Western in the College Auditorium at 8:15 Wednesday night for thesecond Concert-Lecture series. The choir, composed of 60 voices, will present a program ranging from16th Century classical through the Bach era tp the contemporary masters .uung with several works by t ie director's father, F. Melius . lt;Christiansen. The group has won wide acclaim on a tour ofNorway, Holland, Germany and Austria, with special concerts at the Brussels World Fair and ViennaMusic Festival during the summer of 1958. (Tickets, for the concert may be obtained with an ASB cardat the Auditorium on Monday and Tues djay. Typewriter and Adding Machine Sales/. Service ~ andRentals We carry all makes of portables and used machines. Bellingham Business Machines (nextto Bori Marche) 1410 Commercial , RE 4-3630 any convenient amount Opens Your no-minlmum-balanc* . Nrsonal Checking Account -rand ThriftiChecks cost mud! lew than, postal money often!NORTHWESTERN COMMERCIAL BANK Commercial at Magnolia MEMBER F.D.I.C. DECLARATIONOF MAJOR— Attention: All students who fiave completed three quarters of college study or who will doso jby the end of the current quarter. Unless you have already done 60, it is required that you fill . cutthe declaration form. Dates: Thursday and Friday, Feb. 7 and 8. Hours: 9:00 to 12:00 noon; 1:00 'to4:00 p, m, Place: Old Main 106 (opposite registrar's office). A properly validated form is required of allstudents except first and second-quarter freshmen. A new declaration form must also be filled out bystudents changing majors, previously "undeclared majors" now prepared to choose a major and thosewho have lost or mislaid their declaration form. Help For Overexertion , Nervous Tension ',' Emotional Anxiety 'Men And Women Phone For Appointment Bay St rett Mastiff Everything S3 Complete •;316 E, HOLLY STRETCH YOUR EDUCATION DOLLARS WITH US WHEN YOU NEED DRUGS ORPRESCRIPTIONS Phone RE 3-9260 FREE DELIVERY Your Hair and Scalp Is Our Business IT PAYSTO LOOK WELL HALVERSON'S DRIVE-IN BARBER SHOP BELLINGHAJ4 HOTEL Phon« RE 3-9861 TV