1964_1106 ---------- Collegian - 1964 November 6 - Page 1 ---------- WELCOME TBE WESTERN WASHINGTON STATE COLLEGE Paid Off Your m Siiiy CPlUEiBM Vol.LVII, No. 7 Bellingham, Washington Friday, Nov. 6, 1964 Election Bets Yet? Queen Clover Reigns; TwoV. P. $ Retained THE QUEEN and her court: from left, Earl Stuart escorting Sophomore Princess Alexis-Lyga, Terry Parker with Senior Princess Judy Aker, Ralph Munro accompanying Queen Shirley Clover,and Dan Baukley with Freshman Princess Jeanne Stewart. Not pictured, Neal Suckerman and JuniorPrincess Eileen Foote. A brief hush and ah air of a n x i e t y preceded the overwhelming acceptance ofShirley Clover as West- ' e rn Homecoming's Queen Sigrid Wednesday evening i n t h e CollegeAuditorium. '..,••,•••••.. • i Heading the line of princesses Students Pleased WithElection Of L B.J.-Evans was Judy. Aker of the senior class. Eileen Foote reigned as Juniorclas6f'§pnncess. followed Ifr ^ e*ij5,;Ly^ triumphant. ^ Coming dbut loh top. of the freshman beautiesWas Jeanne Stewart. ' A l s o a result of the-'Wednesday elections was; the majority vote to retain the.two yice-^resident sys-. tern: in the AS "legislature. This system was begun last year due to theexcessive burden upon the Program Council and Public Affairs Commission, previously presidedNover by one person. MISS CLOVER is a graduate of Bellingham High School and is majoring ineconomics. Standing-five feet seven inches tall, the green-eyed brown haired beauty has snow skiingand bowling at the head of her list of favorite activities. Atfer the football team was introduced in theauditorium, the crowd moved to the Viking Union lounge, where students personally greeted the queenand her court. The princesses were escorted by the respective class presidents, and the queen wasaccompanied by AS President Ralph Munro. Are you pleased w i t h t h e outcome of t h e elections ordo you t h i n k your neighbors are " F i n k s " for electi n g Johnson and Evans? In a post-electionsurvey of s t u d e n t s in the Viking Union Coffee Shop it was found that the students were generallypleased with t h e choices of t h e i r neighbors. Eighty per cent of the students were pleased with thevictory of President Lyndon Johnson. In an election that ended in a landslide it would not seem unusualfor the majority to be for the victor, however, it is surprizing to note the amount of elation to be foundconcerning the returns. Jim Thornsbury, senior education major, felt generally pleased. "It is not amatter of who I wanted but who I didn't want. You might call it the lesser of two evils." This feeling isapparantly shared by many. Fifty per cent of the people interviewed who were pleased with theoutcome held the same opinion. Johnson is not necessarily the kind of president they want, but he wasthe better choice. These are their reserved reactions: Gage Barbo, freshman undeclared major,"Yea I'm pleased." Chris Moen, sophomore education major, "Didn't matter, I thank I'm pleased."Three students were a little more exuberant: Barbara May, senior psychology major; Sue Florence,senior general science major; and Kay Cusley, senior social studies major all had the same reaction, "VERY HAPPY!" Student's reasons for Goldwa-ter's defeat ranged from "his mouth is too big" and "hehas extremist views," to "people are afraid of him." Johnson's being appointed by the late PresidentJohn Kennedy as a running mate in the last election was also felt to be a deciding factor. Most of thoseinterviewed are expecting federal aid to education. They also feel that along with the aid we can expectmore federal control of the schools. In the much debated of Eastern returns affecting the voters inWashington the students feel that if at all the effect was negligible. They felt that people votedaccording to who they wanted and not who the east wanted. In the gubernatorial race 60 per cent ofthe students were for Dan Evans. Primarily they feel See 'ELECTION' p. 15 Queen Shirely will reign over the remaining homecoming events begining with: the torchlight parade, which begins at 8 p. in. biiCampus Brive. This is Western's only parade of the year and it brings out spectators from both; thecollege and the community. (See map oh page two for patir « gt;f parade); ? Following the parade willbe a ijonfire and pep rally, to be held at the parking lot behind Carver Gym. An AS mixer will start at 10p. iri. and is free of charge. The Womens* Recreation As-. sociation is holding an alumni field hockeygame at 10:30 a.m. tomorrow on the athletic field. At 11, the returning Alums will be honored in the VUlounges. Game time tomorrow is 1 p.m. at Civic Stadium with the UPS Loggers. From 5:30 p.m. to 7p.m. the Saga-sponsored smorgasbord, "Boiling Caldron" will be held at Viking Commons.Homecoming 1964 will come to an end at the Queens Ball, scheduled to run from 9 to 1 p.m. Thetheme for the dance is "Quoth The Raven, Nevermore." Mugshots In The Klipsun It finally looks as if thecontroversial 1965 klipsun is going to be stuffed with student mug shots after all, according to whatAS President Ralph Munro told the Legislature Monday. "There definitely will be individual studentphotos in the new Klipsun, but it looks like the students will have to pay an additional dollar each for them," Munro announced. The omission of student photos in last year's annual brought a barrage ofunfavorable comment and newly-appointed Klipsun Editor Lloyd Strong avowed to rectify theproblem if possible. Munro, Strong and Publications Advisor James Mulligan have been probing methods of raising an additional $2,400 to include the photos in the new yearbook. "With a $10,000 budget, there is no room for individual student photos unless the student is assessed for their cost," Mulligan saidyesterday. Group photos for clubs will be included in the new annual also, but again the club will have to See 'MUG' p. 2 Viet Nam Spectrum See Pages 10 and 11 ---------- Collegian - 1964 November 6 - Page 2 ---------- PAGE TWO THE COLLEGIAN FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1964 Torchlight Parade Is Revived tonight'sHomecoppg torchlight parade marks the revival ©f an old homecoming parade tradition and will bethe largest in Western's history, according to Mike Terry, parade co-chairman. "It's been about 10 yearssince Western has had a torchlight parade," Terry said. "We intend |o bring the tradition back with |heloudest, longest, best-lit parade in the history of Homecoming." : This year's parade includes fivebands, seven floats, 15 cars, 200 torch bearers and five drill teams. , No parade is without its brassband and this year's parade will have two, one from Western, the other from Lynden High School. Theother parade music will be provided by two pipe baiids, the Clan Camerons and Whiterock, and theMatadors drum and bugle team. Last year the parade had only cne band. The drill teams include theMoosettes, Eagles, Ridgeway, Beta Co-eds, Robin Hood and his Merry Men, and a Bellingham team. IThe ppade, will b©; lighted by 200 torOT bearing students. Terry said he had hoped he could have enlyfemale student torch bearers, but -when he couldn't get enough recruits he filled up the ranks withHighland Hall boys. The parade/ wj$l begin ajt $ £, m. in front QfCar^erHSymnasumi and wiHf terminate afc Bellingham High §ch »l. : ' ;,--;: --•-.''-; Terry sajd^tojii^t's parade is not only a reyival:^faj»/olcl: tradition but also a trial. • :,: "If the parade goes oyer well, next year's parade chairmanwill begin,plans; for "the 1965 Home-coining iii January to make, next year's parade even bigger andbetter," he said. SW$ET TAOOELIipS " CO^ERT gt;*iOV, 14 Tickets will go on sale Monday,Wednesday and . Friday in the lobby of the Viking Union between 7 and 9 p. m. for the SweetAdelines concert at i p. m. Nov., 14 in the College Auditorium. The price.of student tickets will be a $1donation. ; • Complete Visual Care • Contact Lens Specialists DR. CHRIS INGWERStN DR.DENNIS A. McCONNELL OPTOMETRISTS Phone 734-7720 207 Vz East Holly Bellingham RightAcross from the Royal WESTERN'S TORCHLIGHT PARAPE will begin tonight at 8:00 p. m.- in front ofCarver Gymnasium. The procession will advance down College Way, turning right onto High Street andwill continue down Indian Street. The floats, bands, marching units and Royalty will then proceed northonto Holly Street, turn right on Cornwall Avenue and end at Bellingham High School. ipsun Pix May Cost $1 (Continued from page I) pay nearly $£5 for th$ cost of the pagie or fraction thereof. The ippsun willbe printed at Craftsmiin Press, in Sjeattle whepe the c;staf has been promised a sO^^h^fe lower costthan ttom the gt; Be]|ingharn firm which was o r i g ^ ^ aw^ded;the contract- "Nj afly; $2iQQ0 will bes^ved if we Jffok the book in Seattle," Mulligan added. -This e#rai money will, probably be spent for ahard cover on the annual; Last year's yearbook was paper covered, and that brought additional criticism. "It looks like we're going to get a pretty reasonable book for CAMPUS COAT FASHIONS regularly$24.98 Toss-on coats for the casual life . . . whether it revolves about country, city, campus or pointsbetween. Find variety a-plenty Sueded vinyl, wool, corduroy. Some with fur trim. All with snappy detailing. —Shop at Sears and Save SEARS I FREE PARKING 1618 Cornwall—Phone 733-8120BELLINGHAM the. amount of money we; have," :;Munro remarked. There is considerable reason tobelieve that next year's annual ^01 be, taken from the Associated Student's budget and placed in ^ ebands of g separate agency. "I personally feel that if we are smart next year, we will eliminate the annual from the Associated1 Student's budget and start charging for it independently," Munro. said. Thepresent book is being paid for from funds allotted from student fees during registration. In otherlegislative action, the splons quizzed Collegian Editor JDaye Curts about his editorial policy. Thequestioning was led by legislator Clark Drummond and was inspired by student attacks HOLLY'SMEN'S SHOP FOR THE BEST-DRESSED COLLEGE MALE! 1307 CORNWALL on The Collegian atlast week's Soap Box Forum in the Viking Union Coffee Shop. Drummond's major question came whenhe asked Curts if h^ would endorse candidates for the AS elections. Curts replied that if the editorsdecided there was a clear-^cut choice among the candidates, The Collegian would make that choiceknown. Collegian editorial policy is set by Curts, and staff editors John StOlpe, Scott Rund, Jim Pearson and Mike Williams. The solons decided to have The Collegian -editorial policy investigated andclarified at a meeting of ihe Publications Board. The legislators' main argument centered around the factthat since a student paid for the publication of the paper, he shouldn't have to pay for support of hisopponent in the event he should run for-an AS office. Executive' Vice President Dean Foster moved toask the Bookstore Board to ask the Student Co-Op Bookstore management about their methods ofbook pricing. Foster claimed that he knew of one book which was marked up 8 per cent from the faceprice marked by the printer. He added that he simply wanted to know their methods involved in pricingbooks at the Co-Op. Voungfolk who sound like youngfolk and who sound off in sparkling, swingingrenditions of old favorites, current hits On the one to watch: | N I T K I ) K I IS IS and clever originals.You might be able to resist singing along with this great new gr.oup-7 you'll never resist toe-tapping.THE YOUNGFOLK Monaural: UAL 3402/Stereo: UAS 6402 ---------- Collegian - 1964 November 6 - Page 3 ---------- FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1964 THE .COLLEGIAN PAGE THREE First Crowned By Glen Foltz The year was 1938, and the event was Homecoming. It was to be as the years past, with the old pomp andceremony accented by new surges of spirit which manifest themselves at that magic time of year. "Students fix their attention "on Homecoming much as small children view the Christmas season; theylive with a feeling that they wish would never end. So it was in 1938. In the 14 years after the firstHomecoming of 1924, the ceremonies and social scene had become rery complex. Complexenough that when it came time for Homecoming in 1938, no one had any further additions to make to the regular program. It was felt that the program was almost traditional, and that few changes were needed. Ten days before the Homecoming weekend, a small group of seniors sat in a musty room of OldMain, then the center ^oi student affairs, and sought to add something to the festivities. - The smallgathering soon agreed what the one most needed addition was. Although the weekend's activitieswere well ordered, a further note of organization and color would be someone to rule over the twodays that were Homecoming. The group had decided to add a queen and court to the program. Withonly 10 days to work out the many problems that go with electing a queen, the committee divided thelabors and set out to see if they could make the pre- Queen I In 1938 liminary arrangements. Amember of the committee was sent down to find a crown for the queen and robes for the whole court, t he task turned out to be the most demanding assignment in the planning. While it took little effort todecide who would be eligible and who would vote, the crown had to be sent from Seattle. The candidates would be elected from the Valkyries, a women's service organization still existaht today, and it wouldbe the football team's task to choose the queen and her two princesses. The crown could not beobtained in Bellingham, and before' it was certain that Western would get one from Seattle in time,the last copy of the Collegian before Homecoming came out. The committee had no chance to publicizethe election of a Homecoming Queen. The crown came two days before crowning, and the footballteam chose Betty Shay to reign -over the activities. On Nov. 20, 1938, Betty Shay became -QueenSigrid I. , 28 Volunteer For Lurrtmi Tutor m Twenty-eight students have a-greed to participate in a Lummi Indian tutoring prbgram, announced student legislator Blair Paul this week. The students will attemptto teach the Lummi high school students the value of an education. "I was very encouraged with theamount of participation." Paul said. The tutors will teach remedial studies to the Indians. The tutorswant to show the Indians that educated people are not some kind of "creeps" or "freaks." "We wantthem to realize that education is a way of life instead of six dreary hours a day that they hate," Pauladded. The Indians will be brought to the campus for tutoring. The purpose for this is-to have the Indians as close to the college atmosphere as possible. This poses two major problems. The first is getting thereluctant Indians to come. The second is transportation. The problems are being worked on now, butno solutions have yet been found. There is much work to be done before the tutors can begin work.Between now and the next meeting, Nov. 19, Paul will be working with members of the WWSCEducation Department to set up instruction for the tutors. Instruction is scheduled to begin in thesecond week of winter quarter. The tutors will begin work next quarter. "I am beginning to see more andmore hope for success instead of failure like so many other groups of our type," said Paul.HOMECOMING CO-CHAIRMAN Marie Smith is caught in one of her characteristic smiles. HomecomingMums, like the one she is sporting, will be on sale today in the Viking Union for $1. WOMEN'SAPPAREL LOCATED IN THE HEART OF DOWNTOWN 1326 Cornwall, Bellingham 734-1720 theWILLOW HAND SEWN BY WINTHROP 'The Willow" Hand Sewn Front by Winthrop is a campusfavorite. SIipon or two eyelet tie available in Shiny Black, Otter Green, Golden Palomino Tan and Genuine Shell Cordovan, in sizes 6Vz to 14, widths A to E. T i e . . . nv. STUDENTS — Drop in and meet MR.BOB SHULAR, 1964 WWSG graduate, and let Bob help you with your shoe needs. SOINE'S FeatureMen's Sixes 6 to 16, widths AAA to EEEE In Our 34th Year oines BELLINGHAM NATIONAL BANKBUILDING For a Family of Happy Feet . . . Make Soine's Your Family Shoe Headquarters ---------- Collegian - 1964 November 6 - Page 4 ---------- PAGE FOUR THE COLLEGIAN FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1964 OTOOLE MAN ON CAMPUS teee. ipYOU voir tu.i\x vew gt; SUSSES—tuose wtCB^,-. HMtJlfYlNfi 1-gNSK MUS'MAKg mmtPZ- HOB0WP01SPW to comfort the afflicted and afflict the comforted By Editorial Board For the benefit ofWestern's Legislature, The Collegian makes public for the first time its well-guarded editorial policy. ©We are against apple pie. It is a proven fact that every American who ate apple: pie' before the Civil War is dead. Minority report: I, John Stolpe, do hereby object and do endorse the portion of this editorialdenouncing apple pie. I like pie alamode. • We are against editors. They get the idea that they canprint damned well what they please. © We are for bus-driver pants. We said this just to please thealums. The alums don't contribute much to this paper, but we're afraid they might drop their voluntarysubscription. • We believe that college is a social romp. Where else can one learn the art of dancingthe.FLY. • We are against publications advisors. They think they can tell us what we are damn-wellgoing to print. • We are for blue blazers for Legislature. We are for coats for the program council,sweaters for the SWEA, collars for the PAC, leashes for the Committee to Investigate InactiveCommittees^ • We are for legislators minding their own business and not wasting our time with beingso concerned With our editorial policy. We are too busy. • We are for lemonade arid coffeeat'the ASLegislature Committee, but stress the fact that legislators should drink coffee to stay awake duringprinted filibusters. © We support President Munro's presidential scholarship, Blair Paul's Lummiprogram, Mervin Finster's Equal Education for Corn Pickers, Nitwit Loadstone's Fight the FerryCommittee, and all other worthy attempts at something. • • We support Vic Meyers'statement•"•'when!heSIeawted of ^getting dumped for Secretary of State: "I asked- the voters' to-help gt;me«6ut and that's just what they did." • We are for Nationar:Newspa^r •We%k,1 gt;^ our policy. • We are against yellow* journalism =t)^ause darnel people'thifik it is part of our policy. •We are for the Bellingham FireBepartirient and enjoy**heir frequent false alarm sprints up the hill. • We are for a Finster in the White House ni 1968. • We support lynchings as long as they are in effigy. • We are against pickles and ice cream because1 it is the major cause of college dropouts. • We areagainst Sehome Hill. It is the major cause of. pickles and ice cream. • We are against students biting-dogs on campus. • We are for campus cops because they have been successful in keeping elephants off campus. • We are against flagpoles because they continually snag lew Hying garbage cans. •We are against three-headed snakes. Three is a crowd. • We are for mother. er Senatorrelect BobbyKennedy-of ^New York is now beginning his long journey to the White House to'finish his brother'spermanently interrupted work. But on RFK's suitcases is stamped the word "carpetbagger." ; Merriam-Webster nonchalantly tags the word -as-pertaining to -a- non-resident who meddles in politics. ~Garpetbaggers; made Hheir disrespectful entrance"into Ahaerica^n*politics^directly following the Civil War-when N6rthernersipafek^d4neir earpetbags and flocked south seeking piivate'gain Under the-reconstruction governments. - . Certainly voters of the Empire State do not think of Robert F. -Kennedyas that kind of carpetbagger. True, he is seeking private gain, but seemingly for the public good. TheEastern Seaboard is fast becoming one big family. Hamlets are joining hands with villages making towns, and towns are bumping elbows with cities making metropolises. In fact; the. strip joining Boston withPhilly is nothing less than a megalopolis, or one big city. Problems facing certain states in thismegalopolis, tend to be quite similar in nature.' Senators from Massachusetts, New York, New Jersey orPennsylvania could quite easily exchange offices and feel right at home with the problems at hand.Bobby Kennedy's trek to New York is perhaps a sign of the times. There seems to be little doubt in theminds of New Yorkers that Kennedyr can handle their problems. He has been dealing with personaland public problems quite successfully'for some time. •As Pierre Salinger painfully discovered, theWest is not ready for a carpetbag candidate/ The West has not yet :been completely touched by thepopulation ; and industrial booms which are slowly stretching their fingers westward. The West isnot a megalopolis but many separate states facing many separate problems unlike those of theEastern seaboard. For Easterners, Webster's definition of a carpetbagger cannot possibly be in stride with the rapidly changing times, Carpetbagger Kennedy has set a justified precedent which is a suresign of a growing America.—John R. S'tolpe. don't gag the Collegian ty^ictuTe^ofSthet^iaptis. tFoosoften, college gt;nfew#p^pers are Warped -iin lt; their gt; missions ^ ^ a d m i n i s t r a tors *#ho^Would sstltbyert ^very gt;trace of free ^xptegsion -*to t*he"§ause lt; lt;fcf the in- ^stitutiohfe legooldfimageV" Ironically, *it *is lt;not'the administration the Official Weekl/Newspaper of WesternWashington State College, Bellingham/-Wash: As Roger Ebert, former president of the United StatesStudent Press Service, once said, nobody can say for sure what constitutes a college newspaper, andperhaps there is really no /purpose in trying to define such an inexact animal. . College newspapers, likelittle boys, come in an astounding variety of sizes, shapes, dispositions and personalities. Some arevibrant forces within their educational communities, acting as catalysts for a continuing debate onthe idea of a university. Others are 'little ^nore than campus bulletin boards,, *e3dstihg only to serve theegos • lt;of student ^leaders who enjoy seeing "their ?ttameslin print.iStill dthers are^oxjmeld Nto^ihalMife^sfpublic^rela-we have to fight but students—students who do not deny the Collegian's right toendorse a candidate for the President of the United States but would gag the Collegian during Western'sown election, There is a petition circulating through the campus seeking signers who are againstthe*Collegian%ndoring AS candidates. :^hisiis^a^l#grarit attempt at controlling -the 'editorial ^freedom of this studeht^new^paper ahd^ a violation of the f reetioms^eclared *by'• USSPA. If a n y o n etotitside ' t h e - confines of the Collegian c€ffiee 'begins to regulate the content ^ f 4 t s ? news-columns or the editorial page, ^ h e -Collegian will degenerate ?fr©m^«strxMig wOieeHo' a m e ek V.U. Neyrs. ^This *eiflitorlal %oard "Would soone^r niiftiepgra^h *a ?free Yfoiir^page stapled Collegian -than try *to gt; type with tied hands. We^violently oppose-tfeenritent of this petitiont^uid •U*ge^tu1*irits tto follow our example *at 'Stoppuig fthis attempt to thrownbu^ ^the^fr^dom the firstifree bm vgu^r^riteeti in the Bill of fcs of'the^United-States Constitution. code of ethics Affiliated withUnited States Student Press Association, Collegiate Press Service, Pacific Student Press Second-class postage paid at Bellingham, Washington PHONE 734-7600, EXTENSION.269 COPY DEADLINE-Tuesday 12 Noon Managing Editor. Editor-in-Chief—Dave Curts ... --r— JiScott Bund BusinessManager .,..iEIizabeth Webb Photographer ...-. .^.ilHarry-Justice Sport Co-Editors -Mike Williams andJim Pearson Secretary- .. Pam Barber Copy Editor ._.. John Stolpe Advisor ...James MulliganReporters Bob Stark, Cadahce Guidinger, Jim Austin Tom Davis, Nanci Laugen A code of ethicsfor thestudent newspapers of ;the nation was drafted by a committee of student editors this summer at the Third National Congress of the United States Student Press Association. "^The code presents apattern of freedoms and responsibilities for the nation's student-newspapers to follow. The editorbf^The'Collegian was on the committee that drew up the document and firmly believes in he agoalsthe code presents. 1. FREEDOM Freedom of expression and debate by means of a free and vigorousstudent press is essential to the effectiveness of an educational community in a democratic society.The stoMent press must be free of all forms^f-external interference designed to-regulate its content. "Jhefreedom of the student press mustvnot be abridged by confiscation of issues or facilities, suspension ofpublication, academic, personal or financial sanctions, «arbitrary removal of staff members, orthreats of these actions. 'Wo "one outside the student staff shall »1delete,5dictate, or revise ^thecontent of *a -Student ^publication. 2. mEsmrniBisMx. Jltiis'the'i^ole of ithe-studeht press to re-v p o t t ^ e heWs^andTp^^vMe an outlet for fedmpusopihioniarid* creative Effort. j i t fis ^the respohsibiiity 6f thestudent spress tto * maintain tthe^ highest standards of i^eciiracy, • trtftKftilness, -and fairness, ?inH\iU iimgnhis 'Sole. /Phe ^student i$f£ss *imist 'maintain re-s# ectffOr£the?pri^ the individual.iPeFSOttaltbias,5vestecl ^interests, or editorial ipoliiey *mtist *ttot ^dictate or in-flue^il€etthe^vriting,fplacement or length of ^neWssstorifes.HN^Wsvaluemust be the only'Criterion. The^student ipress *mu£t insure the highestdegicee^of aeeutacy,'and must not misrepresent tithe Opinionsor actions of individuals0 orfgroups. A correction fmusfypromptly be issued and fairly1 placed^where: t he re has been a factual inaccuracy. 'Where an individual or group has been damaged by the error, anapology is necessary. ---------- Collegian - 1964 November 6 - Page 5 ---------- FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1964 THE COLLEGIAN PAGE FIVE JEOPARDY IN JEOPARDY Editor, TheCollegian: , In. explanation, this last week the new-mold of "jeopardy" was. formed as a new outlook inliterary, magazines. Perry Mills, assistant editor, and • I are rejecting "I fall on the thorns of life, I bleed" poetry and prose, from, our magazine, placing the emphasis on honest attempts on the. part ofthe students at Western to communicate an experience or idea. ; Signs, prepared, by LindaNelson, art editor, were placed around ;the campus, and jeopardy was distributed as an idea—anexperience. : Students already want "jee-pardyy" Several of our signs have*been removed from bulletinboards* and taken to the student's heart* as he ran away with joy at his?, rich find. Our subscripttiens^will go as well (presently bein§r sold by Joyce Meeny), because, "jeopardy" is new and honest. Those students- do not need to settle» for a sign. They can have the real thing when "jeopardy" is.published: containing humor, satire, love and probably good honest sex. Since we are placing literaturein "jeopardy," I guess you would say it. is a steal. LARRY W, GASSER Editor, "jeopardy'' THANKSFOR. PARTICIPATING Editory The. Collegian,:. On.; behalf of. the members of the Commission for,College Campus Polls and the N.S.A; coordinator, Ken Riddell, I would like to thank all the. exmembersof the on-campus dorms that participated innour recent preference polls; The results from our polls were arna?ingly close, to? the results from-,the national; and .state elec-tionssift icertain;instances. We enjoyed cooperation from all off the house-mothers with: the exception of one who-jwas-exceedingly;,, rude to our representatives. DALE, GRUVER HE?S STILL RIGHT Editor, TheCollegian: : It is; a ;sadday for America indeed ;When itheA people of; America dps not care enoughfor theirf own? country to .vote, for, a worthy^cann didate for,, President; Now. thati Lyndon^Johnsoiii has been elected President; we can lopk-fo^ward-to; a ;do^othing.,administration ;and?a: 'soft; onCommunism' foreign policy. This appears to be whak a majority .of Americans (radical liberals:.included) wanted, and gt;so it willbei Needless, to say, this does not* make.it right. 30$,million Americanscan't be wrong. Outvoted^ but not^wrong* If .it?is. "wrong^ tawopk and; campaign; to try, to gt; protect, a government and way^of/3 life that is truly Americany one which,you:da. notiwishi to/v be~ changed,int a welfare-state type Soviet?,Satelitey then let all: Republicans and Conservative- and lovers ofFreedom, be gt;damnedr: America is a nation of free^ individuals not merely members of I a "GreatSociety" that- flock, around; a dprnpthing - knownotht ing figure head! A1I( Americans; onee gt;knew gt; but? it appears that most have forgotten and must learn again, that it is impossible to bedependent and at the same time independent. This country was not built- by security-minded.,dependents^ nor byy r a d i a l ; socialistsV; bu t rather by loyers-of freedom. It seeniS; thenewiAdniuiistraA tion jfeelsnit: is gt; perfectly* jiis|'; to rot the basis, for; basisafo Amerr ican^tseifireliancev and? push, its welfarishsnds^^^ to -•;th% American, peoples '. The? people., offAmerica;: wepe given a choice when they?went; to the.polls, it; is extremely^unfortunate, however,thatrtheyvclearjiy made the wrong. choice, whea gt; it came to votingi: DALE GRAVER? INADEQUATESIGNS—Here a r e t w o reasons why it is n e a r l y impossible to f i n d i W e s i e r n by?using;signsas a guide. By/ Nancy Laugen College? \ W h a t college? Do you s e e a lt; college and; a direetionalfsign^ ppintingi t o a college i n Bellingham? Since: t h e s t a r t ; of" t h e q u a r t e r , college students,t h e i r - p a r e n t s a n d i v i s i t o r s to Western a n d ! B e l l i n g h am haye^beenvusing; a; " h u n t and peek" s y s t em to find t he campus* In rSLi rece^campusssufyeyj the lack- b£| difeciipnal gt;signs: gt; andean inadequacy reading college sign have been pinpointed as the problems, The^. collegesign on the corner of Indian and Holly Streets now reads Western Washington College. and.;ishardyto. see due to seyejraJbburned eutr lights.; Recent action has been taken byRonJStephensyFacjUities Board chairman* ancU thfe Program Council^v^lu^haye^deiegfted Don Martin^a freshjnaji and Facilities coirkniitteeniaat to present the change of/theCoUege sign to theASULegislature in the near?fu-: tures ' • __ Befpr-ev?ther* suggestion* gpesv to the.vLegislaiiure^Martin. wUli.bp; seeking^bidSiipr^ bigger andt mores effective•* sign. • GROCERIES •SUNDRIES • SCHOOL SUPPLIES • COSMETICS • n^BRr FAVORITE REFRESHMENTSRAWS' SUPERETTE 714 EAST HQLLY? "THE BRIGHT SPOT AT THE^TG^ OErHQM^^ "III were askedto state the great objective which Church and State areiboth demanding for the sake of ievery man andwoman and child in this country, I; would;say that that great objective is 'a more abundant life':." ,Franklin D. Roosevelt i ' : ' "-: \ ) THE* COLLEGIAN'S letterscol-umn- dropped off slightly this week.However, a few students were able to find other means to express their opinions. Roosevelt DimftMONEY TALKS And its tone.is persuasive with an NBofC spe- ^ cial checking account. A great way toorganize ^ your budget... have money when you need it. Learn how.convenient it is—and how effective—to have your own personal checking accountl ¥i NATIONAL BANK OF COMMERCE A good place:to bank, RAILROAD AND HOLLY Sheridan P. Gallagher, vice president and manager He is also.interested in obtaining . a new design and has asked for the aid of any. other concerned students.The proposed sign may cost approximately $400 and will be one with a daytime function as well as night time so that the College will not be vso commerr ciaUy advertised; Nothing has been definitely decided,however, Martin added.; In the event the proposal for the new sign is vetoed* three suggestions werementioned by the committeeman,. lt;1) The freshman class may want. to appropri-ate funds to buythe much-needed sign for their school as a class project. «2) The senior class may-want to beassociated with the renovating of the now present sign and replace it with a new one as their class giftupon their; graduation from Western. Or,, (3) The Associated Students may want to make contributionsto see the sign improved. : Another suggestion was mentioned to Martin concerning the; signsituation on Highway 99fandl the five exit signs announcing; Bellingham. s It seems that when . visitors; traveling north to the College-on Highway 99 see that big, greeiil and white sign announcing "Bell-,iugham next five exits;" Visitors; not knowing which road•• to-,take; often flip a coin and wind up on; Chuckanut Drive or on the road: to Lyruleii before they realize-where the College is. TRADITIONAL IVY Keeps Its Promise . . . to the American „ male who looks to the ^ lean, trim fitting slack of easy care fabric; for comfort and performance. They're tapered-to- the-narrow cuff with belt loops and separatewaistband; Sizes 28 to 38. $7.98 55% Acrilan 38% Rayon 7% Nylon Bens Men's Shop 1331 Cornwall ---------- Collegian - 1964 November 6 - Page 6 ---------- PAGE SIX THE COLLEGIAN FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1964 HOMECOMING TIME • • • isFALL'N SKIN TIME IS NEAR VISIT OUR SPECIALTY SKI SHOP . . . . . . SOON. HAVE A COKEAND TALK SKI'N "SEE THESE _ HOT.:. NEW ITEMS" • Stretch Pants By Pepper 2 4 . 9 5 and 3 6 . 95 • Stretch Parkas By McGregor 2 1 . 5 0 to 4 0 . 00 • Buckel Boots By LeTrappeur 3 9 . 9 5to 6 9 . 95 9 Used Gear Skis • Boots • Poles "BIG SAVINGS" 'EQUIPMENT, CLOTHINGSERVICE OF QUALITY" SOPHOMORE PRINCESS candidates, from l e f t / a r e Laura Buckmaster,Claudia Hillbery. Princess Alexis Lyga and Beverly Smith. AH four girls are pictured as princess hopefuls, shortly before Princess Alexis was crowned* -' Typewriter and Adding Machine ... Sales. Service andRentals We carry all makes of portables and used machines. BELLINGHAM BUSINESS MACHINES (next to Bon Marche) 1410 Commercial RE 4-3630 1411 Cornwall BELLINGHAM PICTURED ABOVE.in Beta's Skit at last night's Skit Night is Lady Macbeth as she (?) strips for a shocked Macbeth.PICTURED AT THE right is the nearly-completed Queen's float, the final touch will be added tonight byQueen Sigrid and her court at the Torchlight Parade. The BELLINGHAM CHAMBER OF COMMERCEExtends Greetings to WESTERN WASHINGTON STATE COLLEGE And Those Attending the 1964Homecoming JUNIOR PRINCESS Eileen Foote escorted by Junior Glass President Neal Suckerman. ---------- Collegian - 1964 November 6 - Page 7 ---------- FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1964 THE COLLEGIAN PAGE SEVEN • • CREATES Shirley Clover -Sigrid XXVII .iT^I^^JftlfiHLANtt dorm r a ^ ^ s wit. in the cdld trying to gt;ut ui» his Frdnk^ipn advertisingRight Guard Deodorant. Housi displays are up in front of every dorm and house|near campus. ALTHOOGH MOST of the music lovers were in the Coffee Shop with the jam session Monday night, about 50 students stayed upstairs to hear various folk singing groups such as the trio pictured above. - gt; 'Do YouKnow What's In Our Casket?' PICTURED LEFT during Monday's "Hoot" are "Don and Joan" a popularcampus singing couple. -SAVE-STUDENT CASH AND CARRY DISCOUNT Fine Dry CleaningExpert Repairs and Alterations FREE MINOR REPAIRS SUPERIOR CLEANERS 1140 STATE ST.Samish Motorcycle Sales 1822 Old Samish tfoad JAWAS — PARILLAS New and Used MotorcyclesAsk for Student Discount On Parts and Labor and Accessories First a New Used Bookstore cumCommercial Art Gallery, cum off-beat Records, and now the Coachman Coffee House has re-opened. All culture, refreshments and entertainment •% in one buildng! Come i-^-'see'.us ahd bring your usedbooks to sell or trade. ARDVARK BOOK ARTS 217 E. Holly St. Ph. 734-4" ---------- Collegian - 1964 November 6 - Page 8 ---------- PAGE EIGHT THE COLLEGIAN FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1964 m 'Streetcar' Derailed But Good Recovery By Marilyn Morgan The Western Players, under Dr. Byron Sigler's direction, produced TennesseeWilliam's "A Streetcar Named Desire" last week with admirable success. There were awkwardmoments but good recovery. The crude passions and poignant tenderness of Williams' characterstwisted their way out of the actors and thumped against the audience with coarse energy. - : JOHNSTOUT released the savage, blundering character Stanley Kowalski with nearly professional skill.From his first entrance until final curtain Mr. Stout commanded the brutish Stanley with firm controland strength. j His hands gripped, twisted, smashed, smoothed and caressed. His back, arms, legs and face Were in constant emotionally expressive action, and always with unity and purpose. Hispowerful voice moved from thunderous shouts to muffled whispers without losing clarity. If Marlon Brando did as well with Stanley in the late 1940's, it probably highlights his career. Adelle McGilliard portrayedthe fragile, ^flirtatious, distorted Blanche Dubois with ability, proving the diversity: of her talent. Attimes her control wavered and words were" lost in a too-rapid pace, but she recovered for a goodcharacter development^ moving Blanche in and out of reality with the brittle grace necessary. PrudyKeeler, appearing in her first major role,; deserves a special round of applause. As Stella Kowalski,Stanley's wife, she met and handled a difficult challenge. Stella, sister of Blanche, escapes thedestructive forces which shatter Blanche by rejecting her home and choosing a sensuous, grovelinglife with the ape-like Stanley. Miss Keeler created a pliant, contented Stella to contrast with iheagitated Blanche. Roger Keagle, as the sensitive, sentimental Harold Michell, Robert Fonning ascrude, fun-loving Steve Hubble, and Kathy Ward as Steve's brash wife Eunice, ,1 loadit with a cartridge2.... or fill it from an ink bottle jThe Parker 45 is full of surprises. It gives you a solid 14K gold point foronly $5. It's "convertible"...you can load It with a big Super Quink cartridge (shown above) or you canreplace the cartridge with the ingenious little "converter" and fill it from the handiest ink bottle. The 45even helps pay for itself, because the cartridges cost you as much as 20c per pack less than the kindyou tiave to use with cheap pens. You get five for only 29c. You get the pen, the "converter/' and acartridge/ all beautifully gift-boxed, for $5. : If the point size (and we have a choice of seven for you) isn'texactly right, we or any franchisee! Parker dealer U.S.A., will exchange an undamaged point at nocharge, within 30 days of purchase. Simply use the card in the 45 box. 4 gt; PARKER Maker of theworld's most wanted pens' WATCH FOR ABT PRINTS SALE COMING SOON! WELCOME ALUMNI . . ; DON'T FORGET TO BUY YOUR SWEAT SHIRTS BEFORE YOU LEAVE STUDENT CO-OP "NOSHOP MORE CONVENIENT" created highly credible characters, and: each deserved ;thdr spotlights.• ; ~ Among fthe minor supporting roles, a Mexican woman played by Christianne Murraycontributed substantially to mood development; chilling the audience with her morbid cries. AWilliam's plays require a great deal of care in the set and lighting department of theater. Last week'sshow: displayed artistic skill; here, too. Sound effects were miserable at times and; quite distractingwhen timing and. volume contebl miscued. Blunders such as broken zippers, tottering cbau-s, andstage hands s t a ^ l ^ g j^ito:^^ cur-tains can probably be excused as hazards of the trade. Soexcused. ':'~:':'.-:i^ •:..-•- "V:-.'" As a whole, the play was successful Ail ambitiousundertaking in the beginning; showing a few faults. in the production, it pulled through, and was as well received as a Williams play might be. expected to on this campus. '•"' He's Still Right GoWwater In'64 ? (Chairman Dale Gruyer) PICTURED ABOVE as they appeared in the opening scene of "StreetcarNamed Desire" are Adelle McGilliard as Blanche, Prudy Keeler as Stella and Kathy Word portaryingEunice. CLASSICAL RECORDS m m FROM HUNDREDS OF TITLES AT HUGE SAVINGS $4.98 $f 73SCHWANN LIST X EACH M-G-M (COLLECTOR'S SERIES) | BRILLIANT WORKS OF YOUR FAVORITECOMPOSERS"] vox (MONO AND STEREO) (MONO AND STEREO) $4.98 $ 0 45 SCHWANN LIST£ EACH 1 ARTISTS AND CONDUCTORS OF WORLD RENOWfT"~1 2-RECORD $6.95 $ Q 75 SETS(MONO AND STEREO) SCHWANN LIST EACH [ FAaORY FRESH LPS OF THE HIGHEST QUALITY "1SC80 $9.96 T*l» (MONO AND STEREO) SCHWANN LIST i f 3P-E1R2" SLEPTS | COME EARLY -Quantities Of Individual Titles Are Limited | SALE BEGINS OCT. 3 1 , 1964 STUDENT CO-OP ,vNOSHOP MORE CONVENIENT n ---------- Collegian - 1964 November 6 - Page 9 ---------- FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1964 THE COLLEGIAN PAGE NINE Otis e (Ed. Note: Harrison Wibbe is thenom de plume of a man who is deeply involved, professionally, in the hectic world of college admissions,but who (in case any reader should make the mistake of taking this spoof seriously) adopts a pen nameto protect the innocent.) Dear Mr. Fingerling, I would like to take this opportunity to apologize for nothaving answered your letters until now, but I have spent much of the time since you and Otis visitedtvyside in analyzing our information on your son and conferring with President Peeker and Dr. Grosscup,our Treasurer. Then, of course, there has been the usual pressure of business here in the AdmissionsOffice. The volume of applications here at Ivyside has become so burdensome that, in most.instanceswe simply do not have the time to write the: kinds of letters to parents that we would like to write.However, because you have been such an active alumnus (the sewage disposal plant will "go intoaction," if that is the appropriate term, next week, by the way) and have made the trip front Nebraskatwice with Otis, the .President has asked me to make an exception this lime and write a detailedaccount --of our decision about your son. Otis has many fine qualities, .Mr. Fingerling. -Throughout thereception you and he received on the steps of Fingerling Hall and at the banquet you attended inFingerling Commons he consistently displayed the humility and dignity we look for in Ivyside men. This is a small point perhaps but I liked his posture too, particularly while he was reciting those excerptsfrom Goldwater addresses at the banquet. (Have you by any chance considered any of the militarycolleges for Otis?) As you know, we at Ivyside consider the high school record to be the mostreliable single predictor of a student's performance in college. This doer ument is, as you might say, "the real McCoy"! There are clues and insights in this day-to-day record that simply do not show up inother evidence. Let me give you an example: The principal- of J l i Otis's high school,(who,?Iunderstand, is some sort of protege of yours) tells me that Otis has a real feeling for music. , "WhenOtis first came to us as a freshman," he wrote in a recent letter, "he was a shy boy, always holding back and tugging at his forelock.'He almost never entered into activities. But since joining the school band,this boy has found new confidence." Now, granted, the kazoo is considered a rather primitive instrument,more a toy than anything else. But that is not my point. I want to tell you that when that youngsterplayed the Washington Post March for me that morning in my office, there was something about his spirit and enthusiasm that seemed to sum up everything we look for in our freshmen. Contrary to what somemay think, the typical Ivyside undergraduate isn't a "grind" with his nose in a book anymore than he is afootball major. The truth is that there is no "typical Ivyside boy." But there is: an Ivyside attitude whichPresident Peeker likes to call a "passion for life." I saw some of that passion in your son Otis while hewas playing that kazoo. I sincerely hope that he will continue this interest, perhaps graduating in time tosome more conventional instrument. (There are some mighty fine music schools out your way!) It was fun to meet a boy with such interesting hobbies. That bottle top collection, for example, struck my fancy. It must be truly extraordinary from what you and Otis told me the morning of pur interview. I can'timagine where or how anyone could manage to find a "Moxie" bottle top in this day and a'ge! It musthave taken real "get-iip-and-go" to find that one! More important, this collection indicates a certain driveand initiative which we look for in all our freshmen. If Mrs. Wibbe and I ever get out to Nebraska, we'llcentainly have to have a look at the ceiling of his room with all those bottle tops imbedded in it. I feelcertain, Mr. Fingerling, that you would, not respect my judgment if I merely listed Otis's strong points and neglected to give you the other side of the coin, so to speak. There are one or two problems, amongthem Otis's academic ability. I just wish there were some easy academic category in which to placeyour son—some educational jargon I could use that would help me explain his situation. The only termthat springs to mind is "remedial," Otis needs a good ideal of help academi- .' cally. :." '. •-!', . \ gt;;---0'"; His school record shows that\he has consistently failed every subject except Band and DriverEducation. His success at the former, while certainly encouraging from the viewpoint of bolstering his confidence, does not unfortunately apply at Ivyside because the Music Department does notrecognize the kazoo. And there is no chair here iii Driver Education. While his record does show asteady improvement in Life Adjustment, this can only serve as a foundation for him at Ivyside, not aspreparation for any course of study. Thus, I am afraid, that your idea of a major and- minor program ofstudy for Otis should be rt considered in light of these restrictions. ;* At Ivyside, the school recbrdf as Ihave indicated, is considered the single most important predictor of a boy's academic performance in college. But we also make it a practice to consider other evidence in the over-all admissions "mix." Forexample, test scores, if used with intelligence «nd understanding^ can be very useful as a yardstickfor measuring the intellectual skills of students from all kinds of schools and backgrounds. However, testscores, if improperly interpreted, can lead to cruel misunderstanding, which seems to have been the case with Otis. Otis's teacher has apparently confused'!. Qi scores with scholastic aptitude scores. An I. Q. score; of 250 would undoubtedly rank Otis with the most brilliant students at Ivyside, as his teacher hassuggested. In fact, this score would probably rank him with Einstein and Fermi. But a scholastic aptitude test score of 250 is , a horse of a very different color, to use an awkward metaphor. The tables that were sent with his scores indicate that Otis's chances of academic success are rather dim (approximately2 out of 580). However, being a humanist like yourself, I have always been suspicious of statistics. Thegrip of a boy's handshake, as President Peeker has always maintained, is worth a volume ofstatistics.. Hus brings us to the important question, "Up to what do4s all this add?" Does your son havethe Academic Potential, the Personality, and the Motivation ("APPAM," as we like to call them) tosucceed at Ivyside? : On the surface, the prospects for admission for anyone with Otis's school record and test scores would seem to be bleak. But Otis is not just "anyone," as the many: letters ofrecommendation have made so clear; (President Peeker and Dr. Grosscup were"^particularly impressedby the letter from your friend With the Ford Foundation.) Your $eir may be a risk academically, but thisis a gamble we are, willing to take. Ivyside has never been known to select only "sure winners." If we had, we would not have the interesting cross* section of minds and skills that have made this the outstanding liberal arts institution that it is today. (Would it be impertinent to add that if we had backed sure winnerswe would never have seen Fingerling Hall or Fingerling Commons either?) In other words, Mr. Fingerling,under President Peek-er's administration, we have come to believe more firmly than ever in the "latebloomer." The final criterion we consider before making a decision about any candidate for admission isour feeling about him—that deep-down intuitive feeling :we have after being with a youngster. This feeling does not always occur during a formal interview; it is apt to manifest itself in informal circumstances, ; It came over all of us that afternoon^ while we were discussing the for Fingerhng Gymnasium. Your boy'senthusiasm for the squash courts and the |f|§§ eagerness with which he helped us locate entrancesand. exits on the blueprints made a deep impression on us all. The point of this letter could besummarized rather eloquently^ I think, by quoting a remark-made'by ^^^^ President Peeker after youleft that afternoon; Folding up the blueprints, he turned ' to Dr. Grosscup and myself and said,"There's something about that boy that we need." Very truly yours, Harrison Wibbe '....•'. Dean ofAdmissions. *Copyright 1964 by Editorial Projects for Education, Inc. Peace Corp Test November 14 Inresponse to requests from, interested students, arrangements have been made for a special on-campus administration of the Peace Corps Placement Test. The non-competitive test, used only inassisting in the placement of potential Volunteers, will be given Nov. 14, at 9 a.m. in Old Main 226. Inaddition to the more than 8,000 Americans who will go into training in 1965, 1,000 juniors will enterSummer, 1965 training to begin preparing for overseas assignments in 1966 after completion of their senior year. For further information contact College Examiner's Officer "Flowers of Qualty" I. V,WILSON FLORIST 1426 Cornwall Ave. Phone 733-7630 Guaranteed Flower Delivery By Wire Ute .OurFree Customer Parking at Rear of Our Shop JACKPOT NOW WORTH 2 0° THREE OTHERNUMBERS EACH WORTH $5.00 IN GROCERIES ALL FOUR NUMBERS AT AL'S EASTS IDESAVEV/ELL NEW NUMBERS POSTED EVERY FRIDAY Open 9 a. m. to 11 p. m. Monday thruThursday To Midnight Friday Saturday 10 a. m. to 9 p. m. Sunday Go down Indian Street, turn right atMaple — Just a lew blocks and you're at APs Eastside Savewell. AL'S EASTSIDE SAVE-WELL Prof iI (Student Directory) Now Available in the Student Co-Op Bookstore L ---------- Collegian - 1964 November 6 - Page 10 ---------- tm COLLEGIAN FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 6, id i Vol. 3, No. 2 Viet Nam a collegian supplement By ScottR«r*a Viet Nam—Stronghold Of Indifference In Saigon last week, U. S. Government Officialscharged Vietnamese military leaders with failing to act on warnings of a Viet Cong attack which,killed four Americans and wiped out half of the B-57 air force there. On Western's campus, former armyintelligence officer Kent Edmonds, stationed in Viet Nam last year gt; asked; "What are the UnitedStates troops doing in Viet Nam in the first place?" ; Answer: Westernizing the natives of that country. However, Edmonds- saw no evidence of Westernization among any of the Viet Cong or the Vietnamese when he was there. "Those people don't want to toe Westernized," Edmonds, sophomore majoring inEnglish, said. "To them, we are imperialistic warmongers who have brought war and violence to theirland. U. S. officers begin their attempts of indoctrinating Viet •Cong captives by showing them thehigh living standards of the democratic countries. They give them new clothes, good food andcomfortable housing—all of which is unfamiliar, to them, according to Edmonds. They also lecture them and show them democracy-oriented movies every day. "Occasionally, the officers will ask the Viet Cong if they are Westernized yet, or do they like democracy now," Edmonds explained. "They tell theofficers that they do, and they are released then and told to go home and be good Vietnamese. Within aday or two, they are back- in the fields fighting the Vietnamese army and killing American soldiers."We are losing a great deal of time, money and American lives," Edmonds said, "but, while I was there, I saw no progress." Evidence of this waste was_ pronounced on the day that Defense Secretary.Robert MacNa-mara came to inspect the troops fin South Viet Nam, according to Edmonds. "We werein the field when we heard that MacNamara was coming,", Edmonds said. "At that time,, all of ourtroops and the Viet Nam troops were called in to clean up the area. U. S. troops not even stationed inViet Nam were brought in to help straighten the place up. This could have been done in one day, but ittook the U. S. and Vietnamese armies a week." THE VIETNAMESE army does not cooperate with theU. S. officers in planning attack maneuvers, Edmonds pointed out. When the troops are in a goodposition to strike, the Vietnamese officer in command begins a climb up the bureaucratic ladder of Iauthority, ending with the approval of the nation's Premier. This takes from severals hours to severaldays, and by the time the troops get the word to attack, the Viet Cong have long since dispersed. Incase of a need to retreat, however, the Vietnamese waste no time seeking the approval of theirsuperiors. "Because the Vietnamese officers are afraid to take the responsibility for giving orders, weare losing out in Viet Nam," Edmonds said. "The Vietnamese officers- are cowards." The people, of VietNam don't understand why their villages are being burned or why they should fight and die in this war,Edmonds explained. They don't know what democracy is and they don't have a reason for being at war.Since the Vietnamese citizens do not share our interests in this, war, Edmonds, feels that we have noright to be fighting it; their country. Another Western student With experience in Viet Nam said that"We are fighting two wars in Viet Nam—one with the South Vietnamese and One With the Viet Cong/' ' Jerry Corthell, freshman majoring in industrial arts, spent 11 months instructing Vietnamese in theuse of Radar equipment. He agreed with Edmonds that, unless the South Vietnamese learn to think aswe do on the (Continued below picture) SERVING . . . DINNERS STEAK — LOBSTER PRIME RIBOF BEEF Plus Several Other Appetizing Items! FLORENTINE ROOM On 15th Floor Open Friday andSaturday Nights, 6:00 to 12:00 BElllNGHAM H0TE1 Enjoy View of City, Bay, Campus and MountainsSPECIAL ATTENTION COLLEGE GROUPS For Reservations Call 734-4400 FORMER ARMY intelligence officer Kerii Edmonds explains plight of Viet Nam to Collegian reporter Scott Rund. . leldsJi^lolr^fe i•'trio of Exclusively ours... Diamond Rjngs*. Featuring the' Finest Quality Diamonds in New, SlimTailored 14 Karat Gold Rings Love." A perfectly matched threesome to symbolize the love and happiness you'll share for a lifetime. With a radiant low as solitaire engagement diamond to cherish always, Inobjectives of the battle against Communism, we don't belong there at all. "We are at a dead stand overthere,'" Corthell said. ''If we can't bring them to our way of 50 10.00 month white or yellow gold with satinfinish accents. ASK ABOUT WEISFIELD'S LIFETIME DIAMOND GUARANTEE *As advertised in Life and other national magazines INSURANCE PROBLEMS —Under 25 —Cancelled —Premiums Too High —License Suspended —Bad Driving Records GrifffitiInsurance 104 Unity St. PHone 734-4050thinking, it's a lost cause. If they don't care, who will?" The Vietnamese students who have been to theUnited States and studied here want to Westernize Viet Nam, according to Corthell. However, theyare very few in comparison to these who are ignorant of a purpose for the war. Another problem is thatmost of the aircraft, used by American ' pilots are obsolete,, according to Corthell. While he was : there, four, airplanes were lost because the wings fell off. "As far as I could see, the Vietnamese didn't carewhether we/were shot out of the air or not,'.': Corthell said. "Until this attitude ehanges, there will be noprogress made toward. Westernization/' . . -. -not Binyon Optometrists Diamonds You Can Buy With Confidence WEISFIELD'S 128 WEST HOLLY 1328 CORNWALL VHiKINlYi SOiNl i f RE 3-9300 /Optometrists \ COMPLETE OPTOMETRIC SERVICE CONTACT LENSES — FASHION FRAMES Dr.Leroy H. Freeman Dr. Ronald Maloney ---------- Collegian - 1964 November 6 - Page 11 ---------- FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1964 THE COLLEGIAN PAGE ELEVEN Viet Student Should Educate OwnF*eople By Kenneth Winter The Michigan Daily CPS—What Viet Nam needs is a domestic PeaceCorps. Such a project would be staffed and run entirely by Vietnamese youth. They would "go into theVietnamese villages, living and working with the people and trying to explain what democracy is, whatthe free world is and what Communism is," Dao Duy, president of the Vietnamese Catholic Students'Federation, explained recently in an inter- View. Dao Duy feels that this may be the key to defeating the Communists and bringing peace to South Viet Nam. The immediate problem, in Dao "buys opinion,is that few Vietnamese are interested in resisting the Communist Viet Cong insurgents— andmany actually side with the rebels. Without the populace behind them, Western efforts to drive out theViet Cong are failing. But behind this problem, Dao Duy argues, a broader one exists: the politicalignorance . of the South Vietnamese. It permits the Communists — under whose regime, Dao Duy isconvinced, hopes of a better life for his people would be shattered—to win the allegiance of the SouthVietnamese. The answer, Dao Duy asserts, is to send students into rural areas. There each studentwould use the skills he is learning in school to help the Vietnamese improve living conditions. At thesame time he would be teaching "the importance of democracy and freedom" and the drawbacks of living under Communism, Dao Duy explained. An experimental pilot program already is under way. Studentsare going for day-long stretches into rural areas and already meeting some of the difficulties U. S. Peace Corps workers have faced. Many of them, for example, are from upper and middle- income homesand find rural life hard to endure, Dao Duy said. Unlike the U. S. Peace Corps, however, the proposedVietnamese project would have no ties with.the government. Saigon at first offered aid to the pilotprogram, but withdrew the offer when the students refused to promote the government line intalking to the people. Operating the proposed domestic peace corps in Dao Duy's plan is to be acouncil consisting of Dao Duy's Catholic organization, the Buddhist Student Organization, the Boy -Scouts and Girl Guides and Voluntary Youth, a Quaker organization. This council, Dao Duy hopes,will run the organization, with the credit going to "Vietnamese students—without adjectives such asCatholic or Buddhist." For the moment, Dao Duy has become a salesman for his idea. "We are trying to awaken our students to social reality," he declared. "When we set up this program, we may havedifficulty with the Communists. They know they will lose forever once our people know what freedom anddemocracy is." Dao Duy expects the Communists to employ terrorism against the student workers."Many of us may be killed, but I think- our deaths will have some meaning to the peasants. They willwonder: 'This student came to us and gave us an opportunity to lift ourselves up. Why did they comeand kill him?' " Catholic Leader Blames Vietnamese Fate On U.S. Ex-Lieutenant Says Policy Is TooWeak By Stan Dziedzic Northern Illinois University Star (CPS)—We are not doing all we can in VietNam, a former lieutenant in the U. S. Special Forces in Viet Nam said recently in an interview. .-..-_"I'd like to see the United States take a stronger stand," eaid Lieutenant Bruce Carlson, aiow a graduatestudent at Northern Illinois University. "We've Committed ourselves to the defense of South VietNam but actually we are taking only halfhearted military action," he continued. "We should putAmericans in key military positions to exert greater influence on Vietnamese policies." Carlsonsaid that members of the Special Forces generally agree that the war should be carried to the point ofattacking North Vietnamese industries by air. "We can win if we take a Strong stand," he said."However, if we resort to the conference tables, the American lives lost in Viet Nam are truly lost." The12-man team which Carlson commanded was assigned to train the montagnard (mountain people) incounter-guerrilla warfare. How did it work? "These people are primitive: their clothing' is a loin cloth andthey live in mud-thatch huts. Their native weapon is a crossbow. We go in and start from scratch and inthree to 10 months, depending on the size of the village and the amount of Communist activity, we havethem set up to defend their village, and to go out and hunt the Viet Cong." There is a sharp differencebetween the regular Vietnames army and the montagnard tribesmen. Generally, the Vietnameseare the lesser soldiers. Vietnames have been at war for more than 25 years and have grown upknowing only war. They are conscripted for military service and their attitude toward fighting theCommunists is less than vigorous. The montagnard, however, have a fierce hatred of the Viet Congand will balk at little to get them out of the neighborhood. For instance, if the Vietnamese capture aguerilla they will rough him up, sometimes brutally, try-1 ing to obtain information from him. On the otherhand, a guerilla captured by the montagnard is lucky if he ever gets a chance to be interrogated,Carlson explained. "We urge the Vietnamese to be more aggressive in battle situations.Occasionally, because apathy, cowardice, or inexperience, the Vietnamese will hold back in asituation that requires immediate action. In order to take advantage of the situation an American will take the initiative and start the action, thereby jeopardizing himself. This is the main reason American livesare being lost when out on combat missions," Carlson said. In contrast to the Vietnamese soldier, themontagnard has a very specific notion of what he's fighting for and for whom he is fighting against. Heidentifies with his tribal village and tries to do away with those who attempt to take it away from him.He has little to do with the nation as a whole and has no concept of fighting.to keep South Viet Namfree. ". " ' "If the montagnard felt that they were fighting only for the nationalist cause," Carlson said,"we'd have a hard time keeping them going." A Catholic student leader explained why U. S. policywas, in part, responsible for the success of the Communist Viet Cong's winning over large segments ofSouth Viet Nam's populace. Dao Duy, President of the Vietnamese Catholic Students' Federation,detailed how the Viet Cong —or the National Liberation Front —has gained the sympathy of hiscountrymen. Dao Duy's version of the Viet story begins in 1954, after a popular movement forindependence from France had succeeded. Ho Chi Minh, one of the leaders of the independencedrive, declared himself a Communist and made a bid to run the entire nation. Because "the Communists were very strong," Ho managed to gain control of North Viet Nam when the nation was divided in aGeneva agreement in 1954. "A million people, who had followed Ho until then, refused to live underCommunism and moved to the South," Dao Duy^recalled. "In South Viet Nam- they wanted theopportunity to choose their own leader. But at this time, the United States government 'proposed' NgoDinh Diem." The "proposal," Dao added, amounted to a threat to cut off sorely-needed U. S. aid ifDiem were not placed in charge. "Unfortunately, Eisenhower was President of the U.S. at the time. As a military man, he looked Viet Nam as a strategic territory against the Communist i them. j world,"he continued. Hence, the I U.S. to aid to Viet Nam consis-j ted mostly of military supplies. I Diem'sgovernment became less and less popular. "The peGr. pie were never against Diem himself. He hadsome virtue; he was honest and incorruptible. We liked this but he always followed the advice of hisstaff, and his staff was very bad," Dao Duy said. Sensing Diem's unpopularity, the Central IntelligenceAgency threw its weight behind his opponents and had him overthrown. But Diem's successor, Duong Van Minh, turned out to be a "a little stubborn"; he balked at going along with U.S. policies, Dao said. So, he asserted, the U.S. arranged Duong's exit and replaced him with Major General NguyenKhanh. who now has a tenous hold on the Sou^h Vietnamese government. Khanh is "less popular"than Duong was, the "main reason" being that Vietnamese feel he was placed in power by the. U.S.,Dao Duy explained. "As a result," he said, "Communist propagandists say we have been frustratedfrom our victory —the French have left, but now we have the U.S. Army. "The Communists have fount!that people will fight for such nationalistic causes—so they call themselves nationalist. They use thisnationalism to betray our people. With U.S. foreign policy as it is, it is hard to argue againstNORTHWEST BAPTIST CHURCH 3545 Northwest Ave. Howard T. Olsen, Pastor Phone 733-0554 JoinUs For These Services 9:45a.m.-—Sunday School (Including a college' age class), 1 1 :00 a.m.—Morning Worship 6:00 p. m.—College Age Fellowship 7:30 p.m.—Evening Service YOURCHURCH AWAY FROM HOME Everything for your campus wardrobe: Dresses Suits SweatersSkirts Coats Car Coats Formats Skirts and Car Coats Limited Number Now !/3 off The NEWMARTINSONS 119 W. Magnolia Ph. 733-9240 Across from the Bon Marche Students! Far away-fram-hame charge accounts. Jain Beta Omega Nu a member of the Bon Marche's Beta Omega Nu club, youwill be issued a club card which will be your "Greek Key" t o charge the things you need, when you need them throughout the school year! You will be sent advance notices of important store sales. Personalchecks will be honored with your card as identification. You may charge up t o $25, $50, $75 or $100 . . . t o suit your individual budget. Visit Our Fourth Floor Credit Office for Further Information MM ---------- Collegian - 1964 November 6 - Page 12 ---------- PAGE TWELVE - ' TFBE COLLEGIAN FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 6,: 1964v Lee Pardini smsmm George.Anderson Larry Gidner Les- Huntsinger LINE OF UNSUNG HEROES Mike Costello The offensive lineare the unsung heroes of the football team. Diligently, every game, they drive from their three^pointstances into the waiting defensemen. The centers, guards, tackles and ends often emerge from thepile-ups in a sorry state, covered with mud, blood and bruises. And what do they get for it from the fans? Nothing. All the spectators are usually busy, watching the ball carrier go 72 yards for a touchdownthrough the hole the line opened up. So as a Homecoming special the Collegian presents another public service in introducing the Viking Offensive Line: Coach Jim Lounsberry has been DON'T MISS THEBOAT . . . On Your Night Out — for a memorable evening, visit the fabulous PRINCESS ELAINE TheNorthwest's Newest and Finest. Floating Theatre Restaurant Four separate and unique rooms to serveyou: The Harbor Pining, Room Featuring Fine Cuisine and Unusual - Atmosphere Th© C. P. R. Room Banquets, Special Parties, featuring-our Fine Foods and Panoramic View. The Princess RoomOverlooking the harbor. Serving Your Favorite Beverages. The Captain's Quarters Dancing and FloorShows. Tuesday thru Saturday-—Gourmet Dining*—. Now featuring the Three Deuces. MAKE YOURHOMECOMING RESERVATIONS NOW Complete Dinners from $2.75 ro $3.50 Sunday Buffet Servedfrom 2 ' t i l 8 Phone 332-6598 Berthed in the harbor, Blaine, Wash. alternating four ends throughoutthe. season. Dick Lay?ell is the leading passTreceiving end. He has grabbed six passes for 107 yards and one touchdown: The 6?3", 219 pounder is a local: Bellingham boy. Although he is a senioracademically, he is only a .sophoT more in eligibility. Mike Costello has nabbed six passes for 65yards. Costello is a 6-foot, 180 ppund junior from Lake Washington-High School in Kirkland.Sophomores George Anderson, 6'2", 190-pounds, and Gary Mc- Cauley 6'1", 185-pounds, round out theends. Two sophomores fill the tackle slots, Gary Sunich is a 6'3" 210- ppunder from Auburn. Les Huntrsinger, at 6'2", 215-pounds is the second biggest player on the offensive- line. "Huntsinger has done avery good, job on downfield blocking" Lounsberry said. The Vikings have mainly worked with threeplayers at the two! guard positions. Larry Gidner a 210 pound sophomore from Rodse- Special ForCollege Students Only! Only $1A00 All Day To Rent 80 c.c. Cycles CALL FOR= RESERVATIONS \By Hour Rental $2.50 i k WerSferyice: and Repair All, Makes Cycles Open 7 Days A WeekBellingham Cycle Sports Center 113 Grand Ave. Phone 733-4144 yelt High' in Seattle has naileddown;.!one: of the posts*, Lounsberry said, that Gidner hadi been doing an "exeel-* lent';' job ibloeking;onu trap; plays. His;; brother, Bob; - is. a Viking halfback and rates among.the top NAi A-rushers. -,Lee Pardini a 5'10", 195-pound-fer from Franklin-Pierce of Ta-coma, wasithe other- starter* until' hewas injured in the Whit-w; 6rth game two weeks.ago. He was; replaced by freshman Dave Swanson a. 6-'2vV 215:pound §e-~ attlite, Pardini may see action this week. ' Playing the center slot• gt; for th© Viks- is - venerable—for a college player--27*year-old Gene: Fry. Fry^;;.:a converted guard isdescribed'by Lounsberry as f 'one of the best centers in the conference." 3 Of t he line as a wholeWestern's resident football: genius said^ "they, are young." (All are underclassmen . in eligibilityexcept Fry:); "Their enexperience has hurt us occasionally. The loss of John; Fullerton at tackle at thebeginning of the season hurt us a Jot:" Gene Fry G L A S S E S G U A R A N T E E D —FOR ONEruu TEAS against breakage of tense* or frames when prescriptions, are filled with .our speciallyhardened lenses. Olrsfe rn «H gt; plicdl DISPENSAHY.INC. Ph. 733.2130 1262 Slate St.,Bellingham Bui A University STUDENTS OF WESTERN; we? are a. university. At least that's; what,they think up,there in the" •i . ••• . • - .. inysterious land to the nocth—•.. Canada. • On the front'page of the esteemed University of British Columbia sheet, The Ubyssey, Fri?. day,Oct. 23, was a story aboufc their new sports stadium whiefr is scheduled to be built in 1967. GeorgeReamsbottom, Ubyssey sports editor, said Dr. Robert Os-bourne, head of the Physical EducationFaculty hoped "it (the stadium) can be modelled after: the Bellingham Civic Stadium where theUNIVERSITY of Western Washington plays its major sporting events." THE SAFE WAY to stay alertwithout harmful stimulants NoDoz keeps you mentally a]^{;wit)^the-.8apie; safe re-freaherfound in coffeeand tfca; Yet" NoDoz is faster, handier, morereliable. Absol u t e l y not habit-forming. Next? time'monotony makes* you feel drowsy while driving, working or studying, do gt; aife millions do . . . perk upwith safe, effective NoDoz tablets. Aoothtf BM t» odtict of Grov« Laboratories. ---------- Collegian - 1964 November 6 - Page 13 ---------- FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1964 THE COLLEGIAN PAGE THIRTEEN CONDITIONING himself for theupcoming* hoop*season-is Gary ? Burch, a 6'0" junior guard from Spokane, Wash. Burch, in 'last year'sseason,' hddl a field goals made percentage of 41.6, and scored a total of 216 points i . for Western.*This made Imv the Viking's third top scorer for the .year; • (Photos by Harry Justice) Viks'SeasonTo Be Best Ever Varsity basketball coach "Chuck Randall has released his rosteif for*the comingseason which he hasi predicted could -be Western's "best ever." *He said he feels :4be? team-has a-ohance to go "all t«e' lt;way"-tb the NAM tournament in Kansas next March. 1 'The season gets under way Bee. 3 !^with the • tipjoff gt; tournament iri Ellensburg. After exams-the team has: two, gameswith St. Martin's College arid one with Portland University as a warm-up for the Las Wegas 'Holiday^Tournament runningjfrom»Dec. 28^30. Teams'1 m- the' TdOtney; are^iidst University of Nevada-Las"Vegas, California vWesteM„ • Ocdoderitiat and Western. The Evergreen Conference^ warsbegin Jan/ff'when the Viksj host WMtworth, **atid ^'continue through^Feb. 19. | The Vikings will be led by Keithi Shugarts,-^4 sehior^from Olyml pia. Last season Shugarts wasj the te rtr's heading gt; scorerwith! 257 points in :s22 gatoes. Other varsity members -4re] Ga*y Burch, 6-0, Norm Gregory;! G-6;*BonHuston, 5-10; Joey Rifchj! er, f6-0; George Asan, 6-4; John Hull/6-3; Bill Salisbury/^; and; EobJoha«son gt; fr-3. . ; Three other players, Stan Bij anchi, Kirk Brown and Rich Tucker, are ineligiblethis term but will fbe able to i play next quarter. Statistics-wise Jim Lounsber-ry's -Vikings Couldn'thave; picked a-better foe for Homecoming tomorrow than the University of Puget Sound Loggers. TheViks dulled the UPS axes in the waning seconds of their Evergreen Conference opener this season in a7-0 defensive battle. THE LOGGERS have run into some rough timber since then arid can sport aseason record no better than 1-6, the lone Win* being a 7-6 non-conference encounter -With PacificLutheran. UPS has one of the nation's top pass receivers in sophoiriore sensation Joe Peyton. The 28-year- lt; gt;fd'Peyton grabbed 33 passes last year to set a UPS season record for receptions andgained honorable mention honors on the AP College All-America team. After six games this seasonthe Speedy right end had netted 374 yards, 100 yards ahead of the run- -ner-up man in the Evco passreceiving department. Against Eastern last week Peyton grabbed eight passes, three fortouchdowns, as he stretched his season's total receptions to 32. However, quarterback SteveMaddocks, the other end of many of Peyton's faerialvgrabs, is^ldte-lined with a broken - collarbone. The200rpo«nd ^senior 'letterman set eight UPS ? passing records last seas6n?^aikl^asagam^atJ the top ofthe'Evcoirpassing'category this season when7he*was injured; Terry ^ Larson, 'junior,. '-• arid BruceOrness, |soi gt;hohiore, ^halve! shown capability at?thesignalt»oJ sitionarid ean^difeet a^I ggerattack. Running frdm^the^liaifbaGkipo-T sitions ^are ^freshman Corky Disheth -and sophomore JbhnWhitehead. Junior transfer Loren Wall fills , in the fullback slot which was left vacant last week when the. Loggers' two top fullbacks quit the team. Bolstering ithe line are three-year lettenrieri-Harlan'*.Patterson, 212, and TonvRawlings,'203.sPat-terson, who is trircaptain along with Peyton?aridiMaddocks, ^was named r to the ;rAll-Cpnferenee team as a sophomore guard. Rawlings will playon both the offensive and defensive units. Veteran center Andy Pazaru-ski, 213, adds experience to thecenter of the line while Ron Glew, 220, and Larry Gaston, 195, fill Evergreen Conference StandingsCentral ....;:. • Pacific Lutheran Whitworth " Eastern ..'. .•_•.-... WESTERN ,._,._ • 'PugetSound :...-.......... Games last weekend: Central 20, Whitworth 0. Eastern 36, Puget Sound 20.Tomorrow's games: UPS at WESTERN 1:30 p. m. Whitworth at PLU. Central at Eastern. W ..A ...3...3 ..:3 ..2 . 0 L PF PA Pet. 69 82 103 77 33 47 27 55 75 73 62 104 .880 .600 .600 .600.400 .000 in at tackle and guard respectively.' -Heading the defense is Peyton who was named tothe All- Coriference defensive and offen-^ sivei -teams last season. At the other end spot is the Loggers'heftiest player, 261-pound freshman Jim DiStefano. INEXPERIENCE labels the defensive backfield.The two half-back positions and the safety spot are filled by freshmen. Junior letterman Ed Kosnoski, -196, and senior letterman Kent Chisman, 210, back the Logger line. The hard-tackling Chisman wasnamed to the J. C. All-America team in 1958 and played three years with the Seattle Ramblers beforejoining the Tacoma school: -Ted Green, another semi-pro player, -sets his 225-pound frame in thedefensive guard slot. The Logger defensive have allowed 152 yards rushing per game, 15 less than' the Viks, but Western is equally ahead of the Loggers in the pass defense department. The .big question.will be whether Western's pass defense TOP CONDITION NEEDED TO SURVIVE RUGBY TURNOUTS It is a necessity that all-vafsity rugby aspirarits be in shape-in order that they might survive the openingturnout Nov. -16, accord-to Stan LeProtti, head coach. "It will be a grueling experience for those whoare not in good physical condition," LeProtti explained. He said that the ruggers would be required torun five miles without stopping and carry someone for one mile. Western, a member of 'the Northwest. Intercollegiate Rugby Conference, opens the season Jan. 9 With. a home encounter with the Universityof Washington. Included in the seven-match schedule are teams from Oregon State University,University of British Columbia, University of Oregon and the UW. The season will culminate wrheri allconference members attend the Oregon Rugby Union Invitation Tournar ment at Portland April 3. cancontain Peyton's pass-grabbing antics. If the Viks can harness the elusive end, they should beheaded for a homecoming victory. For Thai '• '• r try one of our Small, Medium, Large LodenHedlfctek vBta k -BbfHe Careen vfirjpper Frotft Hooded Melton Cloth W^'IS 00 1327 Cornwall Ph.734-4351 WASHINGTON DAIRY PRODUCTS COMMISSION, SEATTUS ---------- Collegian - 1964 November 6 - Page 14 ---------- PAGE FOURTEEN THE COLLEGIAN FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1964 WESTERN'S CROSS COUNTRYrunners get in last -minute conditioning for tomorrow's encounter with Seattle Pacific College inBellingham's Cornwall Park at 11 a. m. From left are Dave Park, Wayne Bell, Jim Pearson, Bill Cliff, EdBraithwait, Mike Jones and Clyde Curry. This will be the first meet for the Vikings who are defending NAIA District One champions. Viks Host Falcon Runners Tomorrow Western's cross country squad will meetthe highly-rated Seattle Pacific College runners tomorrow at Cornwall Park in the northern section ofBellingham. The Falcons, who defeated the University of Washington cross, country runners last week,are led by Jim Ross, Civic Stadium COMMERCIAL ST. ENDS TUESDAY .FeZiNNEMANN productionGttQORV PECK ANTHONY OUINN OMAR SHARIF BEHOLD A PALE HORSE —CO-FEATURE-rAN INCREDIBLE LOVE! three-mile record holder. Leading the Vikings are a pair Cf Canadians, MikeJones and Eill Cliff. Jones ran for the Viks two years ago while Cliff is a newcomer to the team. Bothhave turned in good performances in the time trials this fall. Back from last year's NAIA District Onechampionship team are Jim Pearson and Dave Park. Both have run in AAU meets this fall as has Dave's twin brother, Jim, a veteran from the 1962 squad. Three newcomers, freshman Clyde Curry, EdBraithwait, junior, and Wayne Bell, senior, complete Westenfs depthless squad. Bell was a member of the Viking hack team as a half miler last Spring. Tomorrow's race, will be the second annualmeeting.of the' two teams at the Cornwall Park course. s PSFCHE0 MARINES TO LAND The MarineCorps Officer Selection Team will be in the Viking Union Monday and Tuesday. The team,consisting of Captain Rice and Captain Cupples, will be available to discuss Marine Corps officerprograms that are designed for undergraduates and recent graduates. Interviews may be scheduled bycontacting the Marine located at the appointment table in the Viking Union. Starring Patricia NealSchedule Tonight, Mon., Tue. Pale Horse 7 and 10:50 Psyche 59 at 9:05 . — SATURDAY — PaleHorse 3-7-11 Psyche 1:15-5:15-9:15 — SUNDAY — Pale Horse 1:30-5:30-9:30 Psyche 3:45-7:45STARTS WEDNESDAY Glen Ford, Nancy Kwan 'FATE IS THE HUNTER' Co-Hit The Earth DiesScreaming COMING! WED., NOV. 18th ONE DAY ONLY TWO PERFORMANCES 2 p. m. and 8 p. m. BURTON HOLMES Presents ON THE STAGE IN PERSON AND ON THE SCREEN Fabulous SpainIN LIVING COLOR Romantic, Exciting iVz Hour Feature Motion Picture MOONLITE DRIVE-IN TheatreOpen 5 Days Each Week Closed Mon. Tue. 75c with ASB Card. Starts 7:00 IN-CAR HEATERS TheViking offense failed t o function in two scoring s i t u a t i o n s at Lincoln Bowl in Tacoma Saturday.The r e s u l t : Pacific L u t h e r a n 7, Western 0. The loss dropped the Viks into fifth place and out ofcontention for the Evco title. The Knights moved into a three-way tie with Eastern and Whitworth forsecond place. Central, with a 4:1 record, leads the Conference. Early in the second period Bill Nelsonreturned a punt to the 49 to give the Viks possession in PLU territory for the first time. TOM GUGLOMOproduced the big gainer, a dash up the middle and to the left for 14 yards, as he shared the load withBob Oid-ner and Ron Roe in a 35-yard Viking march. With a fourth and two and a half situation on the16, quarterback Ralph Burba pitched left to Gidner who was stopped cold on the 14, inches short ofthe first down. The Knights took over but made little progress and were forced to punt out of danger, Jeff Carey's punt rolled dead on the Viking 20, and then the Viks were ready to roll. Gidner broke straightahead for six yards and Burba completed a pass to Delbridge for a first down at the 45 yard line. Roethen produced Western's longest run of the afternoon as he romped around end for 20 yards to the 35.Burba again pitched io Roe who went around Eyes On Sports By Mike Williams, Collegian Sports Co-Editor Well, here it is people, Homecoming Weekend! Once again the Alums return to their Alma Materto sing the old songs and drink- the new beer with friends of a day when bellies weren't overflowing theirbelts and hair wasn't raining down from their heads. The big event is the Homecoming football gameagainst the Loggers from the University of Puget Sound and all the ushers at Civic Stadium have beenequipped with shoehorns to aid in easing every student and ex-student into place. All the attention will be on the players and the sports pages of this and other sheets are filled with stories about the players. But how did they get there? Who are responsible for putting the players on the field? The coaches are,Bunky, and here they are: DR. JAMES LOUNSBERRY, the head Western whistle-tooter, is very familiarto Pacific Northwest football buffs. He attended Central Washington College, where he played football^and graduated in 1941. He received his Masters and Doctorate degrees from the University ofWashington. He became an assistant coach here in 1959 and head coach ia 1960. Previous to that hehad coached Whitworth to three consecutive league championships from 1952-55 and had worked asassistant to Jim Sutherland at Washington State from 1956-59. His all-time collegiate coaching recordstands 51-31-3, including seven games this year, but his record at Western is 19-23-2. The rest of thestaff is considerably younger. STAN LE PROTTI is a "rookie" in the Viking domain. Before coming toWestern he spent the previous eight years as football coach and physical education instructor at LaSierra High School in Carmichael, California. While there he developed what is probably the best highschool P.E. program in the United States. His "La Sierra Physical Fitness Program" has been written upin several magazines including Sports Illustrated and Reader's Digest. LeProtti graduated from SanFrancisco State College in 1950 and received his masters from Cal Poly, San Luis Obispo, in 1963, DON WISEMAN is another Pacific Northwesterner. He attended Idaho State College and played halfbackfrom 1950-53. He returned there in 1956 as assistant football coach and head swimming coach. Aftera coaching and teaching stint at the University of Oregon he came to the Hill in 1962. He is also headswimming coach here. TOM WALKER is a graduate assistant and has played pro ball with the B.C.Lions of the Western Football Conference. He attended high schoolin Vancouver, B.C., and college atIowa State and University of British Columbia. DAVE ALFRED is another graduate assistant. He playedfour years of football at Western. As a sophomore he placed on the second all-conference team andearned first team honors as a junior. Last year, as a senior, he was hampered with a bad bck. Alfred iscoaching the offensive and defensive lines. SANDRA DEE "Ml thA ROBERT GOULET ANDYWILLIAMS «iMA«RIC£CrlEVALIER-«^to' • , . . . . . . t . t , . » » » t « » » A UNIVERSAL PICTURE — Co-Feature -—•- SOLDIER IN THE RAIN Jackie Gleason, Steve McQueenAdmissions Matinee 1.49 — Eve. 1.75 All Taxes Incl. COMING WEDNESDAY Yul Brynner InvitationTo A Gunfighter and WOMAN OF STRAW Gina Lollobrigida Come Hear Terry Meredith Sing playFolk Songs Fri. and Sat. 'til 2 a.m. Weekdays 11 a. m. -11 p. m. No Cover Charge 'KlVE-EMTERTAIMEN' ftr^sii" end for six yards with only 1:30 remaining in the half. With 1:08 to go inthe^half] Burba hit Delbridge with a pass on the 20. The husky slotback plunged forward to the 18. Burba took tothe air again, but was hit as he passed and PLU took over via interception. The Black and Gold tookRoe's halftime kickoff to the 30 and commenced to march 70 yards in nine plays for the score. Withfullback Mike McKay and halfback Morris Blankenbaker carrying the lead, the Knights moved to theViking 35-yard line in seven plays. Quarterback Curt Yates then rolled out from his I-formation positionon an option play, cut inside and galloped like a knight in armor 32 yards to the Viking three. One playlater McKay crashed over right guard for the six points. Dave Nyman's PAT attempt went true, andmidway through the third quarter PLU had the lead for good. Girls7 Field Hockey Team Wins Again The ---------- Collegian - 1964 November 6 - Page 15 ---------- FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 6, Jftfc* THE COLLSQIAN PAGE FIFTEEN "Enrollment cribs'' is a i/Btm iaaifittiNFto the American educational cemmanity. l i is becoming increasingly familiar to the European studentas well. Last year there were 216,600 students in the higher eflttcatfomsystem #f Great pjtfeiin; ?ffl lt;WQ in W«ft Germany; and 3©»,p*§4a Prance. Western Emope is taking long second looks at Hsprovisions for educating a rapidly growing populace. This is the firsr«rticW 1» a Collegiate PressService serie3 on Higher Education and the European student. It was written in Europe this summer byCPS correspondent Rita Dersbowitz. By Rita Dershowitz Collegiate Press Service LONDON (CPS^l —The E u r o p e a n student today s t u d i e s under qonditip sr t h a t differ radically from t h o s ewhich existed only a g e n e r a t i o n ago. Whereas American education1 is rooted i n t h e r e l a t iv e l y mpderri concept of mass educatJQii,. t h e E u r o p e a n sys.tejRi) r e a c h i n g far back into tie Middle Ages, h a s traditiona l l y fulfilled an elitist axxd r a t h e r esoteric function. Fifty yearsago, for example* British education was designed to prepare children "of the ruling class for theireventual roles in the political system. Now one- of the accepted functions of the educational system is to uncover the untapped talents of the lower middle and working classes, which has the effect ofweakening class lines. The most prominent guardians ot the tradition, Oxford and Cam-fcridgev areprobably . the last bastions of the old style, strongly and resolutely resisting the pleb-ian onrush. Buteven these two old dowagers of the Ivory Tower , are slowly beginning to awaken *nd join the nationaldebate ©a university reform.. The revolution now tajkigg . place, in Western European highereducation rises out of many of the same pressures that American universities are feeling: the post-World War II .baby boom; the demands of aa: increasingly, industrialized society; middle-class families;clamor for higher education. And - very, often the response to these pressures is a democratizationsimilar to the American system. The question is whether higher education should be open to allstudents who desire it, and the problem becomes acute in the face of the rising student population. InBritain and West Germany almost 20 per cent of all high school students are following a course ofstudy leading te university entrance. , In France the figure leaps to 60 per cent, in Sweden 70 per cent,and in the United States virtually all high school students have the opportunity to get into seme instituteof higher education. A recent series of articles ©n reform of the French educational system by Girodde l'Ain, education editor of Le Monde, posed the question of whether educational reform "is amatter of reaching the American system in stages. No European country, either west or east, seems to have decided." _ The contrast between the old and the new is most striking in JBritain. The "Oxbridge"system, the oldest in England, now pro^ vides places for only 16 per cent Qf all university students, asagainst 22 per cent before World War II. The burden of providing higher education for an increasing ^til-dent population has fallen to the ^redbrick universities^' dynamic gt;j ^nstifutwns ;Jk)ca|^ ih theindustrial ^enters and originally intended to serve local heeds. They have become national centersdrawing over one-third pf »U the university students in England. More r«eent expansion hascentered about the younger civic universities, founded between the two- wars, and the establishmentof seven new universities since 195$. A government commission on higher education, headed by LordLionel .Bobbins, professor of economics a.M-he University of London, issued a mammoth andunprecedented report in 1963 calling for rapidly increasing expansion of the university system.The Robbins report seems to have marked the beginning of a new era in Britain, and all discussion onthe subject begins either for or against Robbins. The report was startling not simply in terms of thenumbers of students it wished the universities to accomodate, but also in the emphasis it placed onthe concept of a university as an institution responsible to the needs of society as well as to the needsof its individual students. The first objective o£ any properly balanced system, the Robbinsreport declared, is "instruction in skills suitable to play a part in the general division of labour. We putthis first, not because we regard it as the most important, but because we think that it is sometimesignored or undervalued" IN FRANCE the crisis in higher education consists almost wholly of anumbers game. The main building of the Sorbonne, the liberal arts faculty of the University of Paris, wasbuilt in 1890 for a student body of 1,000. Present enrollment in the same building is over 33*000. Arecent newspaper article described the University as so overcrowded "that the govern? ment is reducedto accusing the student unions of demagogy when they advise all their members to show for class todramatize their plight." Decentralization of the monolithic French higher education system has beenproposed as the solution to overcrowding in Paris. The French government has attempted toencourage students to attend the provincial universities and a couple of new campuses outsideParis, but this has consistently failed. In fact, provincial, universities are under-attended becausestudents have always regarded Paris and the Latin Quarter as the cultural center of France and theonly suitable setting for a university education. The American concept of the campus, isolated andself-contained, is scorned upon by French students; who prefer the tiny ;prawide4 cafes along theBoulevard St. Michel to a spacious, air-conditioned stjident union: IN WEST GERMANY, °n theOther hand, what is called the "catastrophe of education" is blained : on decentralized, relativelyuneoorduiated e^ational systemi Because of Germany's preoccupation with social welfare aridreorganization of the economy after the war, education, until now had been relegated to a secondary position. Schizo's Two Heads Talk Of Haggard Hall 'ELECTION' {Continued from page 1) that he hasgood plans _ for the state. ,j Some students .; said RoseUini lost because he had been in too long,Gary Pughes, graduate education major, didriHIeei that this was such an issue. "I don't see anythingwrong with a third, fourth or fifth term if the man is excellent. I don't feel that excellent men are foundvery often though," he said. The reaction to whether Evans will have trouble with a Demo-; craticcongress was quite varied. Denny Freeburn, junior politic cal science major, "he will have plenty ofrtroublef but less than Rosellini had in his last four years. Harold Haddock, junior physical educationmajor, "He will have ho trouble really. Everyone is interested in the welfare of our state whether they areDemocrats or Republicans. • • • FACTORY-TRAINED MECHANICS Expert Service CostsLess SEE US FOR DIAMONDS - WATCHES - SILVER We Also Specialize In Jewelry Watch Repair MILTON E. TERRY, Jeweler 1305 COMMERCIAL "WHERE JEWELRY IS OUR BUSINESS" CourtesyBus for Campus Leaves 8:40 a.m. Daily Evergreen Motors 112 SAMISH WAY Phone 734-5320 ®AUTHORIZM OEALM A double headed snake, that resembles a reptile from the pages of Greekmythology, has become a recent addition to the board of reptiles andinsects in the Biologicaldepartment at Haggard Hall of Science. Schizophrenic, wbich connotates a dual personality, is thegarter snake's name. SCHIZO, is only about 6 inches in length. The two heads each have a yellow lineup their neck that is Characteristic of a garter snake. His age is estimated at about three or four months. A glass box is the snake's home. About two weeks ago it was found near Lowell Grade School byKathjf Beard, daughter of Guy Beard, science technician at Western. "The odds of hatching a twoheaded snake is unpredictable because not that many are found to count them," said Linnea Berg, ajunior General Science major. Linnea feeds Schizo once a week. The. reptile, is fed grub worms that arekept in a biology lab in the science building. "Schizo could become two headed by a embryonicreaction or feflr a hereditary deformation/' Lin* nea explained. "We're hoping he will ^ve i» be fullgrown," she adde«L Schizo has already become a popular exhibit. The snake ha3 spent one of his two weeks at thp Campus School being observed by the grade school children. At the present however, helies contentedly in the office of Pf. Jrwin Slesnick, a professor of biology. TWO HEADS are better than cne they always say. o j3 ealce* D I A M O N D R I N GS True artistry is expressed in the brilliantfashion styling of every Keepsake diamond engagement ring. Each setting is a masterpiece of design,reflecting the full brilliance and beauty of the center diamond...a perfect gem of flawless clarity, finecolor and meticulous modern cut. The name, Keepsake, in the ring and on the tag is your assurance offine quality and lasting satisfaction. Your very personal Keepsake is awaiting your selection at yourKeepsake Jeweler's store. Find , him in the yellow pages under "Jewelers." Prices from $100 to $2500.Rings enlarged to show beauty of detail .^Trademark registered. HOW TO PLAN YOURENGAGEMENT AND WEDDING Pleose send new 20-page booklet, "How To Plan Your Engagement and Wedding" and new 12-page full color folder, both for only 25tf. Also, send special offer of beautiful 44-page Bride's Book. Name-k (UUANIUS .v,i gt; Addrest. '7M«fllH»l»S I I I ' KEEPSAKEDIAMOND RINGS, SYRACUSE, N.Y. 13202 City- _Co. .State- " I , I I I I I I I ! I I J ---------- Collegian - 1964 November 6 - Page 16 ---------- PAGE SIXTEEN THE COLLEGIAN JPRIDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1964 Wop! Wop! One Homecoming IdeaWas Smashing Success If broken windshields, dented fenders, ripped upholstery and shatteredheadlights are any signs of achievement, then Alpha Phi Omega fraternity's car-smash Tuesday was asmashing success. \ THE OMEGANS towed an old Pontiac sedan onto High view Hall's parking lotnext to the Viking Commons. One end of the car was marked ''LBJ" and the other "Goldwater." At two-swirtgs-for-a-dime, Joe College or Betty Co-ed could take a swing with a 10-pound sledge hammer ateither end of the car. Aside from raising dough for the frat's Homecoming float, the intent was to see how many dents each opponent's side.would receive— the winner receiving the YD's Revamp Office Dave Smith, a senior history major, is the new president of Western's Young Democrats following theresignation of President Chuck Summers. Kitty Peterson, sophomore history major, suceededSecretary- Treasurer Donna Cunningham. least number of dents. As it turned out, neither Barry orLyndon ended a winner. Both sides were:so crushed-in by late, afternoon that the car resembled a pile of junk. The fraternity brothers huddled and declared themselves the winners, because they took in a mint. The only casualties involved in the melee of flying hammers, pieces of glass, chrome, hubcaps andtaillights was a to eager fraternity brother who sat down on a hunk of windshield glass in all theexcitement. "•-'•-.. Tonight, th£ Omegans, members of one of the largest men's fraternities inAmerica,1 will be whooping it up on their Homecoming float—the largest in the parade. The frat isWestern's newly-formed men's service organization. Harry Justice, Collegian photographer,; reallyknows-what it is to have understanding friends. They have collected enough mon^ ey from students oncampus to fly Justice's fiancee to town for Homecoming—she lives in Colorado Springs, Colo. , 'Bonnie La Verge will be met at Seatac Airport tonight at 7:30 p. m. so she can spend the weekendfestivities with his. The $150 jet ticket was coughed up by Highland Hall, The Collegian, Saga andRidgeway Kappa. The drive was secretly led by Larry Stuart, junior; Neal Sukerman, junior geologymajor and Ray Lines, sophomore engineering major. Sunday Miss La Verge will head back home inColorado to go back to work at Montgomery. Ward. Justice is a mighty happy college student- rjghtnow, thanks to some friends who had a little Homecoming spirit. Winter Quarter Advisement and Pre-Registration Announcement Advisement- Week - Nov. 16 - Nov. 20 Pre-Registration Period - Nov. 18 -Dec. 4 Shirt Service COMPLETE LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANING Free Pickup Delivery 734-4200265 PROSPECT 50 Man Suicide Squad To Save Many Academic Lives •^ Western has their ownspecial suicide squad waiting to rescue stuctents disappointed with their mid-term grades- arid arecontemplating running to the roof of Old Main '.and taking a flying leap. The Stitderit Tutor Society isback in operation. Western's hatioiiaily recognized student tutor program is designed to help b o i h ^4 student being tutored and thetiitpr. p The tutor gains valuable teaching, experience while the otherstudent receives aid from an experienced tutor1 who has majored in the subject the student ishaying trouble in. A student may obtain a tutor fcy filling out a confidential application at the VUdesk. The application is then forwarded to the Student Tutor Society for assignment of a tutor. A tutor must be a junior or above with at least a 3.0 GPA. 'Fifty student tutors are now en- Hans says § # § CtAII Premium Payments Are Refunded as an Extra Benefit if death occurs within 20 years after youtake out 77»e Bene-factor, College Lifers famous policy, designed' expressly for college men andsold exclusively to college men because college men are preferred risks* Let me tell you about ail 9 bigBenefactor benefits. No obligation. Just give me a ring.?? rolled in the program," Pat Daw- Tson,chairman': of \ the program, said. "But we do not have any tutors in the Math or Physics Departments,"she added. College department chairmen are going to be asked to provide prospective tutors to thesociety, in the areas where no tutors now exist for assignment. Joe Radebaugh, junior history major,commented on his reasons for becoming a student tutor. "Being a student tutor gives me experience inteaching -students who Have trouble learning. I feel this will benefit me when I start teaching in publicschools." Tutors receive no official commendation for their work at present. " A n effort is beingmade to get an entry in the student's transcript stating he participated as a tutor," AS President RalphMunro said. At present only 15- students have been placed with tutors. "Now that mid-term test resultsare being received maybe more students will take advantage, of the Student Tutor Society," Rade-:buagh commented. « PROCEDURE FOR ADVISEMENT WEEK AH Students—Except FreshmenWho Entered Foil Quarter 1964 1. Bring your blue book up to date immediately. 2. During AdvisementWeek—Nov. 16 to Nov. 20—go directly to your major department office where you will be given anappointment with a departmental advisor. (Take your blue book with you). At this time you will plan aschedule of classes for winter quarter. If you plari a change in major, report to the department of your new major. SPECIAL NOTES Students in the pre-professionaI program or those who have not declared amajor—report to the Dean of Students7 Office to arrange an appointment with an advisor* Teachereducation students who are planning a 40 credit hour elementary concentration who do not have an.advisor see Mr. Van Wingerden in Humanities 221 on Nov. l lt;f or 17: J Freshmen Who Entered FoilQuarter 1964 r Arrange an appointment with your faculty counselor for Nov. 19, 20, 23 or 24. (Take yourblue book with you). (CPS) — The Prohibition Party is attempting to organize a Voung ProhibitionAssociation at the University of1 Kansas this fall. Reverend Rolland E. Fisher, the party's statechairman, said: "If the party is. needed anywhere, it Procedure for Pre-Registration Period . Afteradvisementappointment, complete pre -registration at th lt;e registration center, ground floor of EdensHall, according to the following schedule: Nov. 18 and 19—Seniors and Graduates Nov. 20—Juniors, M-Z Nov. 23-—Juniors gt; A-L Nov. 24—Sophomores, N-Z Nov. 30-—Sophomores, H-M Dec.1—Sophomores/ A-G Dec. 2—Freshmen, 8:30 a. m.-l 1:30 a. m.—T, U, V, W, X, Y, Z 1:00'p. m.-4:00 p. m.-^-N, O, P, Q, R, S j Dec. 3—-Freshmen, 8:30 a.m.-l 1:30 a. m.—K,L, M 1:00 p. m.-4:00 p. m.--G ,H, I, J ' Dec. 4—Freshmen, 8:30 a. m.-l 1:30 a. m.—G, H, I, J 1:00 p. m.-4:00 p. m.—A, B is needed on college and high school campuses. Some young people are thinking seriously about the problem ofliquor." To solicit membership, the party has placed advertisements locally. *HANS LORENTZEN1600 Britton Road Bellingham, Washington RE 30981 representing THE COLLEGE LIFE INSURANCECOMPANY OF AMERICA . . , the only Company selling exclusively to College Men The HeraldPharmacy HERALP BUILDING Looks Out for College Students and Faculty Members SAVE TODAYFREE DELIVERY OPEN 9 A. M. TO 6 P. M. Phone 734-4902 Official Notices By publication of thesenotices students are deemed to be officially notified of any events or obligations indicated. SPEECHCOMPETENCY TEST for all Education transfer students who had a course id speech elsewhere —Saturday, Nov. 21 at 10 a. m. Sign up in Speech Office—M309. r CLIP THIS COUPON LIL JOHN'STHIS COUPON WORTH 1 ON LARGE PIZZA Valid Mon.-Thur., Nov. 9-12 4 : 3 6 - 1 2 : 0 0 p. m.(Sorry about last week's date) CLIP THIS COUPON J