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wwu:14066
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Collegian - 1967 June 2
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1967-06-02
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Western Front Historical Collection
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Western Front Historical Collection
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wfhc_1967_0602
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1967_0602 ---------- Collegian - 1967 June 2 - Page 1 ---------- II / had a hammer Even Harvey C. Bunke, Western's departing president, occasionally had to vent outhis frustrations on whatever was near. (All photos by Wyman Gentle Friday "in Just—/ spring . .
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1967_0602 ---------- Collegian - 1967 June 2 - Page 1 ---------- II / had a hammer Even Harvey C. Bunke, Western's departing president, occasionally had to vent outhis frustrations on whatever wa
Show more1967_0602 ---------- Collegian - 1967 June 2 - Page 1 ---------- II / had a hammer Even Harvey C. Bunke, Western's departing president, occasionally had to vent outhis frustrations on whatever was near. (All photos by Wyman Gentle Friday "in Just—/ spring . . . when the world is mud—/ Luscious the little/ lame balloonman/ whistles . . far . . . and wee."—e.e.cummings XHe I Collegian of Western Washington State College Vol. LIX, No. 31 Bellingham,Washington 98225 Friday, June 2, 1967 Year of the chameleon By NOEL BOURASAW Collegian Editor-in-chief This has been a year of deep-seated change for Western. Many have just stood watching but asolid core of people have actively participated. Politicans met on common grounds at the Rosarioconferences for the first time this year. They convened in November and April to sooth election woundsand bruises and plan together the future of student government. The administration, faculty andstudents in theory came closer together this spring as the Student Academic Advisory Board and theDean of Students Advisory Council were formed. Gentle Friday made cold, slushy February a littlewarmer as hippies and fellow people-lovers joined one day to present a balloon to everyone on campus. It was such an impressive venture that the idea was copied at neighboring University of Puget Sound.Off-campus students banded together for the first time in years to form the Off-Campus Student Union. Itoffered a different point of view for legislators when they considered problems such as student discipline.A large-scale happening was staged in Western's Art Gallery in April after the Associated Students hadsponsored this different kind of entertainment twice in February. It was a year of controversial poets asKenneth Rexroth, Alan Dugan, X. J. Kennedy and Allen Ginsberg twisted many heads around andsupplemented the work of resident poets like Robert Huff and Knute Skinner. But the biggest changeoccurred Friday night when a musical group relatively unknown outside rock circles played at Westernunder the auspices of the Blossomtime Festival arid Joe Koester's Lid Mar Productions. The JeffersonAirplane took off with the spirits of more than 1,000 listeners on its wing and caused what hasaffectionately been termed a "near riot." „ • Student leaders hope the situation Friday night willprompt a review of the regulations concerning dances held on campus. New dean James Hitch man,dean of students for less than a year, helped formulate the Student Advisory Council at the AprilRosario conference. San Francisco sound The love-rock gospel was sun* to nearly 2,000 people in thegymnasium last Friday by the Jefferson Airplane. ---------- Collegian - 1967 June 2 - Page 2 ---------- PAGE TWO THE COLLEGIAN FRIDAY, JUNE 2, 1967 Plans for multi^ submitted for trustee cabinPlans for a multi-purpose cabin Oxi Western's 10 acres in Lakewood will be submitted to the Board ofTrustees, June 9, it was revealed at a meeting of the Lakewood Committee, Wednesday. Thecommittee, headed by Dan; Fredrickson and Mike Wakerich, Music lessons free this coming fall P r i va t e music lessons will be Offered free of charge to a ny college s t u d e n t who can pass a minimumtest of performance proficiency, s t a r t i n g fall q u a r t e r . Formerly, only music majors or minorsor persons receiving music awards could take private lessons without paying a $40 quarterly fee. Thenew policy opens free private festruction to any student, regardless of his major or minor, who candemonstrate a minimum amount of competency at an audition before music faculty. Lists of thecriteria for each instrument and voice are available in the music department office. All students takingprivate lessons will still be required to perform before a jury of music faculty in December and May.North added that beginning classes in voice, piano, band and string instruments are available for those who wish to receive instruction but cannot meet the proficiency requirement. met with Joe Nusbaum,College business manager, and College director of planning and development, Harold Goltz, to arrive at plans of finance and general construction for submittance to the Board. Wakerich, Union facilitychairman, said under the committee's proposal an architect would get a survey of the land and make a schematic of the cabin. The schematic, similar to a floor plan, would be drawn with consideration tothe committee's ideas for the general content of the cabin. Wakerich said the two-story structure wouldcontain a lounging area, a classroom and kitchen and dormitory facilities. The cabin could be used forweekend meetings for various groups on campus, or could replace or partially substitute for Rosario on Fidalgo Island as a retreat for seminars. Eric Warn appointed new business manager for summerCollegian The appointment of Eric Warn to the position of Collegian summer business manager wasapproved during the final meeting of the Associated Students Legislature, Wednesday. In otheraction, Jerry Jazbec and Ronald Ottele were selected to serve on the summer Board of Control. Thesetwo will work with chairman Gary Richardson to appoint five other students from the summer schoolenrollment to complete the board. Brewster, Neuzil top profs Winners in the Outstanding Teachers ofthe Year contest were announced last night at a banquet given in their honor at Ridgeway. Dr. LaurenceW. Brewster, speech professor, is one of the winners. He received his Ph.D from Iowa University andhas been teaching at Western since 1948. Winning for the second time is Dr. Edward F. Neuzil,chemistry professor. He received his Ph.D. from the University of Washington and has taught at Western since 1959. He first won this award in the 1963-64 school year. Each winner received $100 as well asan engraved desk-pen set. The general objective of giving this award is to improve the academicatmosphere at Western. The specific objective is to aid instruction by rewarding good teaching.Nominations were open to all students who selected 54 nominees. Two students from each department represented by the nominees were selected. In order to eliminate some nomines from the running,these students took a seven-uation test. On the basis of scores received, ten finalists were selected.Each class of each finalist took the Purdue Instructor Performance Test. The test results cut thenumber of finalists to five. The ten students representing the departments of the five finalists thenassigned points to their first, second and third place choices. The two highest scoring finalists receivedthe awards. The other eight finalists were Miss Nita Bunnell and Dr. Moyle Cederstrom, both from theEnglish department; Dr. David Clarke, political science; Dr. Ross Ellis, Dr. Edward F. Neuzil Dr.Lawrence W. Brewster aMtiwfr D I A M O N D R I N GS Milton E. Terry JEWELER Diamonds,Watches, Silver "Where jewelry is our business." Watch Jewelry Repair NEW LOCATION 1326Cornwall Ave. Art students/there's an easier way to keep your budget in balance By organizing yourbudget with an NBofC Special Checking account, you can have money when you need it—without worry. Know what you spend and where. No minimum balance. No service charge. Pay only a dime a check.Check today at your nearby office. "mmt^"* NATIONAL BANK OF COMMERCE J N 1 5 V gt; MimbirFidirii Dapotit tnturinct Ctipontia Located at Railroad and Holly St. Sheridan P. Gallagher, Vice-Pres. andManager geology; Dr. Harley Hiller, history; Dr. Erhart Schinske, speech; Dr. Harvey Tebrick,economics; and Dr. J. I. Viet, physics. Bob Partlow, the student in charge of the procedure forselection, said, "the present set-up can and should be improved for next year's contest." RIENTALS• Weekly • Monthly • Quarterly REPAIRS • All Typewriters • Portable or standard •Electric or Manual • Free Estimates • Free Delivery • Free Demonstrations Your TypewriterHeadquarters fcr new and reconditioned typewriters, we carry them all, including world famous"Olympia." BLACKBURN OFFICE EQUIPMENT 1223 Commercial (next to Gages) 733-7660 "Our 18thyear of dependable service" STUDENT CO-OP BOOK NEWS More new titles came in last week.Among them: The New Improved American by Asbell, Is the U.S. Ready for Self-Government by Saffronand Everything That Rises Must Converge by Flannery O'Connor. Shirley Jackson's famous short storyThe Lottery is out in paper under a new format. The Beach of Falesa by Dylan Thomas, and ThomasMore by Chambers are in. The New Cuyas Dictionary from Appleton- Century is available now plus adictionary of Modern Chess and a dictionary of Linguistics. The Book of the Quarter has been selected:Man Child in the Promised Land by Brown. Macbird is in!! Ureal Thoughts Bear Re-Thinking' Such as:"Where am I going to dig up the cash for her ring?" Seek out the fallacy. In this case, "cash." Since aring is a thing of the future, charge it to the future... at Weisfield's. Sec our big selection of bridal sets229.50 weisfields JEWELERS 1327 Cornwall Ave. Open every nite Monday thru Friday till 9 p.m. ---------- Collegian - 1967 June 2 - Page 3 ---------- FRIDAY, JUNE 2, 1967 THE COLLEGIAN PAGE THREE The Jeiier son Airplane -A review By STANSHOCKEY The Jefferson Airplane Concert exemplified exactly what happens when already-talented folkguitarists put electric pick-ups on their intru-ments. What you get is a synthesis of folk tradition, blues, beat, and modern electrical effects that cannot be ignored as representative of the age. The SafetyPatrol, although billed second, was surpassed by the Airplane only in their more professional stagemanner and are, by the Airplanes' own admission, one of the finest groups on the coast. KathyMcDonald's voice, Bruce Kirkman's lyrics and Jack Hanson's guitar playing form an unbeatablecombination. The Airplane did not disappoint anyone. They are professional musicians with a simplemessage which they live as well as play. The music, of course, was fantastic. Grace, the lead singerand composer of the song "White Rabbit," and Marty Ballin, the leader of the group sang songs as ifthey were giving a sermon. The most exciting member of the group, however, was Jack Cassidy, thebass player. A refugee from James Brown, the he is probably the most talented and interesting bassplayer on the coast. Musically, the concert was an evening that those in attendance won't easily forget,but it became obvious after the first couple of songs that the Jefferson Airplane performed that theimportance of the concert was not to lie soley in the music being played. The Airplane, In trying to gettheir message of love through to the audience, succeeded in creating a paradigm illustrating theesence of the "Love Movement" itself. The Airplane are respresentatives of a changing society; onethat looks upon a thousand people getting totally involved in a musical number as a beautiful sight, andnot merely as 'seeds of a riot.' It is a subculture that can smile at people who fear emotion so much thatthey grab gentleness by the shoulders and ; shove it into a 'concert' high chair to listen to songs thatwere written to be felt, and danced to. So the Airplane was telling us to love, not just the people weagree with, but also the people who have been so busy; trying to fit into a disintegrating society thatthey have never learned how to feel. The Concert, then, gave Western a much needed jolt. WhenMarity Ballin implied that Western was merely a glorified high school, he was close enough to the truth to make one flinch. He provided a {catalyst that showed that there are some guts in this school, and thatdespite such remnants as riot ^squads and student bouncers, Western might still have a chance tobecome an educational institution instead of a factory. After all, more and more students are taking thedoor mouse's advice. They danced on an airplane. (Photo by Larson) Richard Reynolds (Photo byLarson) Reynolds: should have been dance "It should have been a dance, not a concert," explained Dick Reynolds, student activities director, referring to the Friday night Jefferson Airplane show. "Theactivities commission rea- 1 lized this and suggested it to Lid- .Mar Productions but there wasn't anyplace on campus big enough, : except for the gymnasium, to stage a dance of this kind." Reynolds saidthat the Viking Union is the only other place any- ; where near as big and it only holds 1600 people."And since the people usually congregate up near the bandstand at the end of the Commons, there isonly safe room for 1200," Reynolds added. "The Activities Commission and I assured Dr. Tomaras ;ofthe phy- ' sical education department that we would try to keep those in attendance from dancing," hesaid. Reynolds employed two extra doormen for this reason, but they were powerless to stop thedancing after a student, Dana Rust, started dancing in the bleachers to inspire the crowd. "There was aconflict in reality because we never communicated to the students why they couldn't dance," hesuggested. Reynolds explained that commission representatives, one master of ceremonies, thepromoter and one band member all warned the crowd, but they never said anything 'besides, "stopdancing." "We were concerned that if we did let the pelple dance without trying to restrain them, wewould be committing a breach of faith with Dr. Tomaras," Reynolds reflected. "There was not anyserious damage, as far as I could see," Reynolds added. "The conflict pointed out that we do needa ballroom very much. One is due to be constructed in the 21st Street Activities Center in 1970 or 1971." Lid-Mar head soys dance shows unrest Joe Koester, head of Lid-Mar productions, said that thedancing at last Friday's Jefferson Airplane concert was an "indication of unrest throughout the countrycaused by contained creativity and spontaneity." Lid-Mar brought the Airplane to campus inconjunction with the Activities Commission. When asked if the Airplane was responsible for the dancing, he replied, "Obviously, if the Airplane had never showed up there wouldn't have been any dancing."He added that he thought it was great to see "everybody happy and having a good time." Koester saidthat the school did a poor job of handling the doors by letting a lot of people in free which lost him a lot of money. He added that rough tactics on the part of the doormen was "re-gretable" and that it was "theexcuse the audience was looking for to all start dancing." Nelson: would have been greatest danceLarry Nelson, the newly appointed activities commissioner who was in charge of last Friday' JeffersonAirplane concert, said he wished it could have been a dance. "It would have been the greatest dancewe've ever had," he explained. "On the other hand," he continued, "there are rules within which wemust operate," in reference to the no-dancing regulations in Carver Gym. Nelson attributed the massdancing by the audience to several factors, among which were Ginsberg's speech to the audienceand Marty Balin's urging of the crowd to dance. Marty Balin is the lead singer of the Airplane. Heexplained that the no-dancing regulation was probably meant to protect the gym floor and that lastFriday's incident may put into jeopardy further use of the gym. In response to a complaint that severalofficials used unnecessary force to prevent people from dancing, Nelson said that the regulationshad to be enforced and that Sorry, no lemmings Bellingham city police today officially reported thatthe lemmings will not be rushing to the bay this weekend. THE SHOW-OFFS They're still here. They'llbe leaving soon so don't miss this last chance for a great evening's entertainment. Casino RoomContinuous No cover Entertainment 9 to Closing No Minimum BOB'S Drive-lit Good Food, QuickService, and a Friendly Smile. -FISH AND CHIPS -HAMBURGERS -COMPLETE FOUNTAIN SERVICE519 E. HOLLY For Orders to Go Ph. 733-8790 the doormen were just there to "keep an eye on things."Tomaras claims time, effort needed Dr. William Tomaras, chairman of the Physical Educationdepartment, who is responsible for the management of Carver Gymnasium, said that it would take"Time and effort" to fix the damage done to the Carver Gymnasium floor. He said that the floor "just won't be as good as it could be" until they refinish it again next year. He made specific references to burns in the floor made by cigarette butts. Tomaras emphasized that the homecoming dance would be "theonly exception to the dance regulation."' He also said "it's for damned sure that there won't be anymore dances of that sort" with a "wild outfit that tells everyone to dance" when there are regulationsagainst it. The year of the YAMAHA The Twin Jet 100 is the swingin' thing for Spring. Doubleeverything...2 cylinders, 2 carburetors, 2 exhaust pipes...for more GO. The styling has that no-nonsense look, lean and racy like a 250cc World Grand Prix Champion Yamaha. If you can ride abicycle you can ride a Yamaha. So stop in and ride out on a Yamaha Twin Jet 100. Then you'll knowwhy Yamaha, with proven oil-injection, Is the top-selling 2-stroke in the U.S. See us today. Was $430 $j Now Reduced To. YAMAHA INTERNATIONAL CORPORATION. Discover the Swinging World ofYamaha at 1114 Duponr 134-3929 ---------- Collegian - 1967 June 2 - Page 4 ---------- PAGE FOUR THE COLLEGIAN FRIDAY, JUNE 2, 1967 This last Collegian fashion section tor the yearwas designed by Jackie McGraw and photos were taken by Keith Wyman At the height of summersportswear fashion is the bine and white seersucker little boy suit modeled above by Mary May. Thefully-lined, doubled-breasted jacket is priced at $20, the sleeveless arnel shell at $10 and the shorts at$9. The complete set- is found at Robert Burns. "Twinkle toes" is the name of this navy blue diminity dottwo piece suit and matching sleeveless jacket modeled at right by Eileen Kincaid. The suit, priced at$13, and the jacket, priced at $7, are both 100 per cent cotton and found at the Bon Marche. Summer isthe best time to travel, especially with the hobo bikini and matching square-necked shift of orange andbeige-spotted 100 per cent cotton modeled at left by Laura Parris. The suit and shift, priced at $13 each,can be found at the Bon Marche. 1 Day Skirt Service COMPLETE LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANINGFree Pickup Delivery 73*4200 205 PROSPECT HOLLY'S MEN'S SHOP FOR THE BEST-DRESSED COLLEGE MALE! 1307 CORNWALL Baby doll delicacy reaches its height in ihs yellow bikini with alee trim modeled abov lt; by Judy Delp. The lace cover-up is called "happy coat" and sports elbow kimonosleeves and split sides. The bikini, of 10 lt; per cent cotton, is priced at $14, and the "happy coat" at$13, at the Bon Marche. Binyon Optometrists 1328 CORNWALL BINYON Optometrists Ph. 733-9300 COMPLETE OPTICAL SERVICE CONTACT LENSES — FASHION FRAMES Dr. Leroy H. Freemanand associates RECORDS — B SYN . 1413 CORNWALL ---------- Collegian - 1967 June 2 - Page 5 ---------- FRIDAY, JUNE 2, 1967 THE COLLEGIAN PAGE FIVE Summer and the flowers of spring are combined in delicate style in the white two piece suit and matching jacket with flared border print sleeves modeled atleft by Jackie McGraw. Both the suit, priced, at $15, and the jacket, priced at $12, are made of cottonpolyester and can be found at WahPs. Feminine sportiness and lace icing are displayed in the 100 percent cotton yellow ruffle top and white bottoms covered by a cotton lace jacket and accompanyingheadscarf, modeled right by Eileen Kincaid. The suit and lace jacket, priced at $15 each, are found atWahl's. . Perfect for a day of fun and games is the pink cotton culotte modeled below by Paula Clark.Accompanyv ing the mini culotte, priced at $20, is a pink wide-brim-ed floppy hat, priced at $6. Both canbe found at Robert Burns. Strikingly sophisticated is this scoop-necked, black and white striped shelland white bell bottomed pants modeled above by Sally Swan-burg. Made of a nylon triacetate blend theset is priced at $30 at Robert Burns. — POSTERS ATE 733-2122 Marcel le Prescriptions • STAR REXALL DRUG STATE fir HOLLY Typewriter and Adding Machine Sales, Service and Ben i a l s Wecarry all makes of portables and used machines. BELLINGHAM BUSINESS MACHINES 1410Commercial 734-3630 (next to Bon Marehe) ---------- Collegian - 1967 June 2 - Page 6 ---------- PAGE SIX THE COLLEGIAN FRIDAY, JUNE 2, 1967 Editorial section ] 'Do people have a . .. . . .tendency to dump on you?' 1 A room in complete disarray is a good image to describe the total result ofthe Collegian this year. A lot of people were dissatisfied with the newspaper, and justibiably so. Butirrespective of that dissatifaction, a point must clearly be made. Editorially it would be harmful for theCollegian to tone down, as many have suggested. Little can be accomplished if we are too timid tospeak out and yet sit like school children straining for answers. Being afraid to say something criticalis not uncommon, and the Collegian has been reluctant several times to criticise. For instance wewaited three weeks before publishing an article on the Klipsun because we did not want to createanimosity. Yet when we did publish, action was taken as a result. Similarly faculty members oftendecline Paul Simon to criticise because of their jobs. When the Faculty News was being defended, of 33 faculty members who signed a petition, not one would make a comment to the local press. Campuspoliticians would call it diplomacy, but this editor prefers the word "cowardice^" It is not outstandingcowardice, but the same cowardice that all of us share. It is that feeling which strikes us dumb whensilence is something of a personal dishonor. Considering past performances of Noel Bourasaw, Collegian editor-elect, students are going to be faced next year with an outspoken editor. You will have to decidefor yourself whether he is speaking out when others are afraid, or whether he is just shooting his mouthoff. Whatever you decide, please keep in mind how much easier it is to remain silent than it is to saywhat you really believe and then defend it.—Bruce Delbridge. Crash Delbridge, world-famous airline pilotand esteemed journalist, has donned his crash helmet this week and left the Collegian-editor's officeforever. Happy Birthday, Brucie! (Photo by Lance) Students interested in writing for the Collegian orapplying for editorial posts should come to Room 1, Viking Union. Editor, The Collegian: Last Thursdaynight I had the unique experience of witnessing two completely opposite forces at work on our campus.At 7 p.m., I attended a College Life meeting, sponsored by Campus Crusade for Christ, wasastounded at the contrast. At .the College Life meeting, there were about 150 college stu- 'dents, clean,well-groomed and dedicated to the ideals of Christianity, and to the idea of putting their faith to workfor a better world. At the Ginsberg reading, it was a slightly different story. The students there, that isto say many of those who stayed after the intermission, were also dedicated, but to what wassomewhat unclear. Somewhat unkempt, and seemingly an some mystic contact with their great leaderwho was mouthing his rather "colloquial"' preachings, and burning incense, they were not only a firehazard, but an annoyance to those students who were truly interested in listening to Ginsberg.'Unfortunately, it is these students, and not the first group who get all the attention in our country today.This is the reason for writing this letter. One student leader I talked to said that he finally learned whatto do to keep the Hippies from complaining to him all the time. He simply gave them somethingpositive to do, and most of them he never heard from again. I'm proud to be associated with as fine agroup of students as those in Campus Crusade for Christ. Despite the fact that they aren't very loud, and that they're not always complaining, it is going to be their ways and ideals that will prevail, becausethey are DOERS and not just complainers. The world, as the hippie suggests, is in a state of revolution,but it is not Hippie revolution. The revolution will be a spiritual one, a revolt back to those things thatmade this country what it is today, those things of which the Hippies complain. Billy Graham says,"Students everywhere are searching for a song to sing, and a creed to follow." Although the song ofspiritual revolution is sung softly, and! the creed preached gently, they do exist, and they will be heard,and followed. BOB PARTLOW, Sophomore, Political Science Year of the scapegoat A fool takes nopleasure in understanding, but only in expressing his opinion.—Proverbs 18:2 It's easy for an editorialwriter to express optmistic platitudes in end-of-the-year columns. But promises aren't real. It's easy tohope for a metamorphosis out of an ugly cocoon of distrust and polarized grumbling, but people aren'tbutterflies. It isn't realistic to say people will be transformed by nature into something beautiful. Thisyear can only be a pessimistic prediction of the next academic year. Next year can be another year ofbeads and flowers; of love cults which use as a scapegoat for their problems the war mongers, theadministration, student leaders, non-fringies and the city and police. Next year again a grumblingminority can throw stones at a Mrs. Hutchinson as was done in Shirley Jackson's short story "TheLottery." They can continue on in the same tradition of Which Ginsberg and the Jefferson Airplane were crowning blows. They can continue to mouth love and feel hate, to kiss each other and hiss at the rest ofthe world. We can have another year of scapegoats, of misunderstanding, of squinting at problems, ofpassing gall instead of honey—unless people are sick of this. It can go on, unless people straightentheir spines, quit spitting and start deserving respect instead of sniveling for it; unless they quiteuphemising the scapegoat as communication barriers, and start getting through.—Jeanne Doering. Inphysics Grad degree added to curriculum The physics department is receiving applications for studynext year in the Master of Science degree program, recently approved by the Board of Trustees. Theprogram was evaluated in April by a team of visiting physicists consisting of Professors Howard Shugart,University of California, Berkeley, and John Warren, University of British Columbia, who commendedthe department for its strong undergraduate program and productive research efforts. During the past twoyears the department has offered courses and research opportunities for physics graduate students, twoof whom will complete the You wanna dance?: They wanted to dance. It was the end of the year andfrustration boiled over. The dancing annoyed some people, but many of them did not see the beautifulthing that happened in the gym Friday night. Allen Ginsberg suggested during the concert that theword, academy, grew out of the word, academe, which was the grove of trees where Plato taught. Healso explained that a gymnasium was originally a place where men learned dancing and the manlyarts. The Jefferson Airplane was overjoyed, as was Ginsberg, that Western's gym had partially re-adopted its classical purpose Friday night. But as the mess was being cleared up, many problems werepointed out. The most important is that Western does not have any place larger than the Viking Union to stage dance-concerts. Dr. William Tomaras, the director of physical education, insists that thegymnasium can only be used for one dance. That is at Homecoming. We are in sympathy with hisefforts to maintain the gymnasium floor in a condition that is f i t for classroom and athletic use. Butsince there is little chance for Western to have a ballroom before at least 1970, we ask that Dr.Tomaras reconsider his position in case a similar concert is staged by students next year. At thesame time we congratulate Dick Reynolds, activities director, for displaying good sense by not stoppingthe concert or allowing the authorities to interfere with it. We also congratulate Joe Koester, who wasbrave enough to bring the Airplane here even though they are a comparatively new group.—NoelBourasaw M.S. degree by the end of this summer quarter. Two new research projects will begin inSeptember. Dr. Rupaal will direct research on the transmission of positions in a variety of absorbingmaterials. Dr. Carl Johnansen will begin a study of the properties of thin and very pure metalic films. Thefilms will be produced by evaporation in an extremely low vacuum. This involves using an ultrahigh ---------- Collegian - 1967 June 2 - Page 7 ---------- FRIDAY, JUNE 2, 1967 THE COLLEGIAN PAGE SEVEN Buy war bonds Special Consideration ToStudents and Faculty SAVE TODAY FREE DELIVERY PH. 734-4902 OPEN 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. TheHERALD PHARMACY Herald Building GRAND THEATER 1224 Commercial 733-9755 ENDSSATURDAY Continuous from 1 P.M. TONIGHT OPEN 6:30 *24 HOURS" 7:00 - 10:55 "DOLLARS" AT8:50 A fCW hint by Released llwu TECHNICOLOR* C L I N T E A S T W O O D WIITE0 ARTISTSTogther with . . . "24 HOURS TO KILL" MICKEY ROONEY — WALTER SLEZAK STARTING SUNDAY. . COLOR by DeLuxe Released thru UNITED ARTISTS \ lt; X ^ t t W\ Also . . . THE DEFECTOR"MONTGOMERY CLIFT — HARDY KRUGER ^ Watch For Sonny Cher "Good Times" Soon! GET ABIG BASKET—YOU KNOW WE ALWAYS GET CARRIED AWAY AT ENNEN'S. ENNEN'STHRIFTWAY HIGH AND HOLLY "WHERE EVERY CUSTOMER IS IMPORTANT" Women disgustedEditor, The Collegian: We, as women students, were absolutely disgusted with your last edition of theCollegian. As the year has progressed we have seen a definite disintegration of any quality that this"newspaper," if you can call it that, once had. We are directly referring to your emphasis of the hippiemovement which the majority of us tend to dismiss as a bizarre and ridiculous attempt to produceindividuals that have instead grouped protectively under the auspices of "Peace" and "Make love, not war." Certainly, there are saner approaches to these ideals that aren't overshadowed' with rituals,costumes and eccentricity. But that's another story. Of particular disgust was the overgeneralizations made by your reporters at the "delight" of Western students with the appearance of Allen Ginsberg, arelatively unknown "father" fof the Hippies. Most students were amused at his repulsive psychedelicbus and the scabby crew that came with it. Certainly the crudeness that this man exudes isimplemented by his filthy poetry and disgustlingly unkempt appearance. The price of his appearance,$590, makes him no more worth looking at or listening to than if we had also paid a comparable bumfrom Old Town. The article by Mr. Banger was revolting. Your reporters needn't try to appear clever bypicking such worthless matter to write on. Surely there are more worthwhile subjects to write about thatare of interest to your student readers than one reporter's concern on how "he works out his majorproblems" and what he contemplates while doing it. We are also concerned with the public thatcomes in contact with this newspaper in addition to the students here at Western. What kind of a namedo you intend to give Western, anyway? Sign us, DISGUSTED WOMEN STUDENTS Helen Scougall,Merilee Marx, Becky Beighle, Pat LeGros, Jan Scott, Ginny Baker. Ed. Note: We thought you had been introduced to him. Sorry. Jobs available (Contact Financial Aids Office) MAN: Dishwasher indowntown restaurant. 8 hour shift. 4 p.m. to midnight. GIRL: Cashier in downtown restua-rant. 8 hourshift. MARRIED COUPLE: Free motel room or 2 bedroom house in Bell-ingham. To be available tocollect rent. May both be students. GIRL: Summer, clerk-typist, 8-4 p.m. Must be under 21 yrs. andplan to be a full-time student fall quarter. MAN: Summer noon to Downtown restaurant. 8 p.m.MARRIED COUPLE: Summer resort on Camano Island. Living quarters provided, maintenance work.FREE APTS.: Available after June 1. To cover phone evenings. One bachelor apt. One apt. for marriedstudent. GOOD TYPIST needed mornings in downtown office. 8-noon daily. Could work into full time job. SERVICE STATIONS: to train. Some willing MATHEMATICS Department As-sistantships available toundergraduates for summer and fall quarters '67, 75 per month. Apply math office 229-D OM by June2. MATHEMATICS Department Graders: Jobs available for summer and fall quarters '67. Apply 229-DOM before the end of spring quarter. HARMONEY 12 STRING GUITAR, 3 weeks old, $40 dollars offretail price. Call 733-3263. STUDENTS You Got These U-Haul EXTRAS At No Extra Cost *)Guaranteed Trailer Tires • $1,000 Cargo Insurance 0 Hitch Furnished • 8,000 Dealers • FreeMover's Guide #) Local One- Way U-HAUL RENTAL TRAILERS Hand Trucks — Tow BarsFurniture Pads Car Top Carriers Rent Here . . . Leave There J. Miller Richfield Mechanic On Duty 7Days Per Week Located 1115 IOWA STREET We take . . . Richfield Credit Cards, Bank of AmericaCards and First Bank Cards Note of thanks: It was a rather superficial, informal survey I ran lastweek. But I did find the information I wanted and I thank you members of the faculty who helped me findit. SUSAN DOUBT Volkswagen Sales, parts and accessories, service. Lange Volkswagen, Inc. 112Samish 734-5230 "WE OPERATE A COURTESY BUS FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE" "Where Qualityand Good Tastes Are" BUNK'S DRIVE-IN Where Qualify Goes In Before The Bun Goes On FLAVORCRISP FRIED CHICKEN BETTER THAN EVER Dine in your car or our inside dining room 2220CORNWALL Ph. 733-3520 ---------- Collegian - 1967 June 2 - Page 8 ---------- PAGE EIGHT THE COLLEGIAN FRIDAY, JUNE 2, 1987 Vikings finish quickly Western's track squadended the 1967 season in a way no one dreamed of a few weeks ago. The Viks came from a fourthplace finish in the Evco meet to a surprising second place finish behind the powerful CentralWildcats in last Saturday's NAIA district I meet at Civic Stadium. Leading the way for Westernwere John Hunt, Dick Perfrement and Dave Vander Griend, all Juniors. Hunt led a 1-2-3 Viking finish in the long jump, winning. the event for the second straight year by jumping 23' %1k.,\ Perfrementfinished second in the event while freshman Al Merritt took third. In the triple jump, Perfrement leaped45' 11" to win the event, while Hunt came through for a third place finish. Winning his specialty for thesecond straight year, Vander Griend hurled the javelin 224' 11". All three qualify for the NAIAchampionship meet in Sioux Falls, South Dakota June 9-10. Hunt and Vander Griend are going for theirsecond straight year. RECORD RUNNERS Western runners also broke two more school records, butonly finished second to Central's mercury-footed men. Tom Cambell chased Jim Boora to a newdistrict record in the 830. The Central ace circled the track twice in 1:51.2, while Cambell broke BillCliff's WWSC record with a time of 1:54. Western's mile relay team of Larry Anderson, Ron Jackman,Cambell and Rich Tucker broke a school record and a district record with a time of 3:16.6 but Centralsprinted home in 3:13.9. Five other district records were broken, four by Central trackmen •andanother by John Lee of Whit-worth. Lee ran the 120 high hurdles in 14.2, one of the better smallcollege times in the nation. Two of the top six milers in the country, Sam Ring of Central and BruceJones of Whitman dueled in this new event for 1967. Ring beat Jones, who had the third best time in thenation up to this meet. The Central distance star beat Jones' best time easily to take over the nation'snumber three spot, with a time of 30:18.1. Another one of Central's and the nation's top runners, JimHay, dropped the district 440 record to 47.3. The fourth best small college three miler, Mark Henry, also of Central, set another record with a run of 14:07.4. Results of NAIA District I meet: 6 Mile: Ring(CWSC), York (Whitman), Jones (WHTM), 30:16.1. New record, new event. 440 Relay: CWSC, Lewis Clark, 41.6, new record. Old record, 41.8 (CWSC, 1965). Mile: Englund (CWSC, Richter (SUM),Wright (WWSC). 4:14.6. 120 High Hurdles: Lee (Whit-worth), Knudsen (CWSC), Rau (St.M), 14.2, newrecord. Old record 14.4, Chambers (WHTM, 1965). 440: Hay (CWSC), Hillman (L-C), Wallace(CWSC). 47.3, new record. Old record, 48.1, Perry (WHTM 1966). 100: Beard (CWSC), E v a ns(CWSC), Lee (WHTM), 9.7, 830: Boora (CWSC), Campbell (WWSC), Stanley (EWSC). 1:51.2, newrecord. Old record, 152.2, Boora, 1966. 440 Int. Hurdles: Metzger (CWSC), Swendson (EWSC), K n u ds en (CWSC). 55.7. 220: Esser (CWSC), E v a ns (CWSC), Shaw (EWSC). 21.7. 3 Mile: Henry(CWSC), Tighe (WHTW), Smith (WHTM). 14:07.4, new record. Old record 14:22.2, Stewart (EWSC),1963. Mile Relay: CWSC, WWSC, 3:13.9, new record. Old record, 3:17.9, CWSC 1963. Long Jump:Hunt (WWSC), Perfrement (WWSC), Merritt (WWSC). 23'5y4". Triple Jump: Perfrement (WWSC),Marcum (CWSC), Hunt (WWSC). 45'11". Shot Put: Santo (CWSC), Gehring (EWSC), Shove (EWSC).52'6". Pole Vault: Rideout (WHTW) and Devine (EWSC) tie, Clintworth (CWSC). 14'0". Javelin: VanderGriend (WWSC), Andrew (CWSC), Worby (CWSC). 224111/2'\ Discus: Gehring (EWSC), Franz(CWSC), Anderson (EWSC). 152'.5". High Jump: Liles (WHTW), Swendson (EWSC). Team scores:Central 87, Western 32, Eastern 30, Whitworth 19, Whitman 8, St. Martin's 7, Lewis Clark 7. I Now you know: a fact1 a day The Hairy Snerd, a wretched little bird, only lives in a teacher's college inNorthwest Washington. STUDENTS! See BARR'S CAMERA SHOP for EQUIPMENT REPAIRINGSUPPLIES COLOR PRINTS TRANSPARENCIES BARR'S Camera Shop 108 E. Magnolia 734-5900HURLEY DRUG MART 1311 Commercial • Prescriptions • Drugs • Pet Supplies GOTSOMETHING TO MOVE? MOVE YOURSELF AND SAVE WITH A RENTAL TRAILER Save 75%. Localor one way anywhere in the U.S.A. Only U-Haul offers $1000 cargo insurance, free road service,guaranteed trailersand tires .'Hitch furnished. UCK'S TEXACO 733-9706 1315 Dupont Probably theBest" Mon. thru Sat., 11:30 A. M. till 3:00 A. M. Sun. 12 till 8 p. m. Now Serving Your FavoriteBeverages In Our NEW COCKTAIL LOUNGE 1319 COMMERCIAL STREET THE 734-6789 Hamburger...35c French Dip 5! 00 Fish Chips _ 85c T-Bone Steak Dinner $2.95 Double Burger with Fries 69cOpen Daily 6 a.m. - 1 a.m. 100SAMISH WAY Has it ever occurred to you that if you gave up carpayments for 5 years, you and your wife could spend a month in Europe or buy a boat, or finish off theattic, or build a swimming pool on the money you save. Now here's how to give up car payments for 5years. Buy a Volvo and keep it eight years. That'll give you three years to pay for it, five years to enjoy itafter you've paid for it. Worried about a Volvo holding up for eight years? Don't be. Volvos last an averageof eleven years in Sweden, where there are no speed limits on the highways and there are over 70,000miles of unpaved roads. See you soon? AVAILABLE WITH AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION. SEE FORYOURSELF AT m. PARTS AND SERVICE ( V O L V O ) i IMPORT MOTORS FOR ALL IMPORTEDCARS 120 Grand, Bellingham Phone 733-7300
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Collegian - 1967 May 12
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1967-05-12
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This issue contains an 8-page "feature and fashion section" on pages 17-24.
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Western Front Historical Collection
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Special Collections
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Western Front Historical Collection
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1967_0512 ---------- Collegian - 1967 May 12 - Page 1 ---------- Federal grant for Western severed The Higher Education Facilities Commission has cut by $750,000 arecommended federal grant for the construction of the Education-Psychology Building. The Ed-Psychbuilding project, which includes constru
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1967_0512 ---------- Collegian - 1967 May 12 - Page 1 ---------- Federal grant for Western severed The Higher Education Facilities Commission has cut by $750,000 arecommended federal grant for the con
Show more1967_0512 ---------- Collegian - 1967 May 12 - Page 1 ---------- Federal grant for Western severed The Higher Education Facilities Commission has cut by $750,000 arecommended federal grant for the construction of the Education-Psychology Building. The Ed-Psychbuilding project, which includes construction of a new building in front of the Campus School andrenovation of the school, plus equipment for both, will cost $2.5 million. Target date for opening is fall,1968. • • TSIE ; WESTERN WASHINGTON STATE COLLEGE Vol. LIX, No. 28 Bellingham,Washington 98255 May 12, 1967 Quarterly 'Annual' promises new twist on campus events ^; By JIMWestern Providing that the proposal gains the approval of the ASB Budget Committee, the Klipsun willbe published next year as a quarterly magazine. The format and general editorial ROTC at Western?It's up to the men Western's Academic Council Tuesday considered the plausibility of an ArmyReserve Officer Training Corp program as a new addition to Western's present curriculum. In a letterreceived from Army officials, college authorities were asked to give an indication for or against theproposal by the first of June. Although details are as yet unclear, Student Academic Advisory Boardmembers believe that the ROTC program should not mean mandatory enrollment for men students.Should such a program be instituted, federal funds would be made available for a department ofinstruction in Military Science. The program could possibily be extended to include a degree in martialarts. The Academic Council has requested that the SAAB committee sample student opinion on theROTC proposal. Those students interested should attend the SAAB's next meeting at 7 p.m. Tuesdayin Room 102 of the Humanities Building. In addition, all men students are asked to complete the ballot on page 9 and leave it at the Viking Union Desk. The Army just this week answered the letter sent to them 17 years ago which requested ROTC information for Western. The Academic Council took nostand on the matter. FOLTZ Student policy will be similar to University of Washington's Tyee Magazine. It will cover campus highlights during each quarter and the spring issue will contain a picturesupplement of the graduating seniors. The original motion to change the format of Western's annual to a less expensive quarterly was unanimously approved by the ASB on April 24. To gain full effect, theproposed budget of $13,610. must also be approved by the Legislature. The proposal for the alteredformat is approximately half of the present Klipsun's annual budget. The projected editorial policy forthe new quarterly will include articles, interviews and picture essays, in addition to the photographsnormally associated with an annual. It will reflect general campus interests: sports, campusinstitutions, personalities, and activities, in an attempt to "capture" the quarter. Judy Frey, present editor of Jeopardy, suggested in her presentation to the Legislature that the magazine for spring quartermight contain articles on visiting performers and speakers. The Righteous Brothers and JeffersonAirplane or Mark Lane and Melvin Belli might be featured along with articles on spring sports—baseball, track, rugby, tennis, and golf. Articles on present campus issues and problems, forexample, expansion of Lake wood, the search •for a new Western president, the spring campuselection would- also be likely subjects. Those interested in working with the Klipsun should leave theirnames at the VU desk where a sign-up sheet is available. Suggestions and comments should also beleft at the desk. The inside scoop j page | Violinist ...2 I War crimes tribunal -------9 c Banger review 10 I Book of the quarter 11 o Fall registration 5 I Muhammed 15 " Hippies 15 I Billings 18 I Fashion 19-22 | By JEANNE DOERING Collegian Copy Editor The Board of T r u s t e e s was scheduled last night t odecide if Western would appeal t h e decision of t h e Higher Educat i o n Facilities Commission(HEFC) to reduce by $750,000 a recommended federal aid grant to Western The HEFC last Tuesdayreduced Western's $852,000 recommended grant for t h e Education-Psychology Building to $101,471,on t h e basis of a c o r r e c t e d enrollment forecast. At the same time, the HEFC increased Central'sfine arts building grant from $321,000 to nearly $1 million. Before the reassessment of enrollment figures,Western ranked ninth on the Washington state priority list of allocation of federal construction funds toinstitutions of higher learning, and was the last project to receive full funding. Central ranked tenth andreceived the remaining funds available from state allocation. ' Last week the Census Board submitted arevised priority list, changed on the basis of an error in enrollment projections. With the revised prioritylist, Central moved to ninth place, and Western dropped to eleventh, reducing its grant recommendation to $101,471. The Board of Trustees' decision to accept or appeal the revised priority rating may depend onwhether the Education-Psychology Building can be constructed with other funds. Western presentlyhas a request in the General Bond Obligation Bill for the 1968 general election for $850,000 to completeconstruction and equip the Education-Psychology Building. The request was added to the bill through the efforts of Sen. Frank Ahwood (R-Whatcom County) during the closing hours of the State Legislaturelast month in anticipation of the reduced priority ratings. In addition, Western has a special request nowpending with the Office of Education to redesign the project into two phases. The first phase, which would utilize the funds available from Referendum 15 and the $101,471-partial grant from the HEFC, wouldinclude construction of the Education-Psychology Building. The second phase gt; renovation of CampusSchool and the completion of the top story of the Education-Psychology Building, would be funded eitherwith a future grant from the HEFC or with the 1968 state bond. State bills mean funds 0 lt;«B»0-^W gt;0^^0 lt;4 i The Washington State Legislature approved in its last session, a bond issue whichmay provide Western with $5,848,500 for construction and remodeling projects in the next five years.This issue must be ratified in the November, 1968 general election. The money would be spent for anaddition to the Auditorium-Music Building, to increase the flexibilities of the music and dramafacilities; for an addition to Carver Gymnasium, to provide for locker and dressing-room space; for anew administration building; for remodeling Old Main to classroom use; and for the completion of the Education- Psychology Building. Another measure to be referred to the electorate was a constitutionalamendment establishing a State Building Authority, which would make it unnecessary to appeal to thepublic for approval of state building projects. If the amendment passes, only the renovation of Old Mainand the completion of the Education-Psychology Building will be funded by the 1968 bond issue. TheBuilding Authority will finance the other projects. Part of Governor Dan Evans' budget which directlyaffects future construction on Western's campus is $5,365,048 of re-appropriations for capital projects.$1.6 million will finish the Science-Math-Computer Center, $1.7 million will go to the Education-Psychology Building and $1.2 million will be for an addition to the Wilton Library. New appropriations forthis bien* nium total $3,386-388, and $393,120 will be used for the start-up costs of Fairhaven College.The rest of the new appropriations will be used for remodeling and general upkeep, and equipping theScience-Math- Computer Center. Another bond issue to be approved by the voters in the next generalelection will be for non-academic buildings. If passed, the issue will supply approximately $3.6 million for Fairhaven residence and dining halls, $1.5 million for a student activity center on proposed south(Continued on page 5) Profs visit to stimulate intellects Faculty Visitations, a new concept ineducation at Western, was formed to increase the intellectual stimulation of dormitory students,according to Mr. Maurice La Belle, the chairman of the project. The visitations, which began this quarter, are small group discussions held in a dormitory and directed by an invited faculty member.Topics for discussion are up to the small groups of 10 to 15 people. . Dormitory committees are beingorganized to assist in coordinating visitations. Faculty members can be invited by contacting La Belle inthe English Department. It is the responsibility of these" committees to determine the topic fordiscussion and the faculty mem. ber they wish to invite. Although the program is limited to dormitories at present, La Belle emphasized that any group of students ofif campus could invite faculty membersregardless of whether they lived in approved or unapproved housing. Elaborating on the purpose ofthe program, La Belle said that students at Western were "intellectually lazy" and that he hoped the program would be a step in the right direction. He also hoped that the visitations will better acquaintfaculty with what students in the dormitories are thinking. "Many faculty members don't know what isgoing on in the dorms," he added. Recently, Dr. Halldor Karason visited Ridgeway Beta to discuss thehumanities program. President Harvey Bunke has visited Higgin-son Hall. ---------- Collegian - 1967 May 12 - Page 2 ---------- PAGE TWO THE COLLEGIAN FRIDAY, MAY 12, 1967 European concert violinist among new musicfaculty Four musicians—one a European concert violinist, two involved in choral and vocal work andone specializing in music history-—will be Department of Music faculty members next year. BelaDetrekoy, a European concert violinist who was trained in Hungary and presently lives in Denmark,will be associate professor of music. He will coordinate the music department's string program, directthe Western Symphonic Strings, coach Ch.aTOk.er music groups and teach violin and viola. In addition,he will serve as a concertizing artist, performing on campus and throughout the state. "Detrekoy is aconcert violinist, and we hired him with this in mind," commented music department chairman Dr.Charles North. "His appointment is one lacet of expanding Western's string program." North added that afaculty string quartet may {fee established to represent Western, which would in-elude Detrekoy andpossibly his wife, who is also a Violinist and presently a member of the Royal Danish Op@i?a Orchestrain Copenhagen. North said that she might be an affiliate teacher of violin next year. Detrekoy received adiploma from the Ferenc Iiiszt Academy of Music in Budapest in 1944, where he received the highestmark in violin playing as recorded on the Academy of Music Diploma. In 1950 he received a diplomafrom the International Competition at Geneva. He has taught in Europe since 1950, including posts inSwitzerland and Denmark. Since November he has been teaching in the Faroe Islands at the request 9fthe Danish Ministry of Culture. He has presented numerous concerts in Scandinavia as a soloist,member of string quartets, trios and piano-violin duos, as well as playing in The Royal ff Orchestra ofCopenhagen. I During the 1965-66 concert season he was soloist in Geneva and Budapest concerts. jDr. Jacob Harrim, another new faculty member, comes from West Virginia University and will be anassistant professor here. A baritone soloist, he has studied extensively with personnel from theMetropolitan Opera Company and has appeared in concerts and operas throughout the United States. At Western he will give private voice instruction, direct the Western Statesmen and possibly teach avoice class, as well as being a concert artist in Bell-ingham and throughout the state. He will replaceArthur Dimond, instructor of music, who is resigning to work on his Ph.D. Dr. Robert Scandrett comesfrom Seattle where: he has been minister of music for 10 years at University Presbyterian Church,which has the largest church music program'in Seattle. He has also taught at Pacific Lutheran Urii-verstiy. Here he will be an associate professor of music and coordinator of the choral-vocal program. Hewill direct the College Singers, Concert Chorale and Vo-collegians, as well as teach conducting and vocal literature. Mrs. Mary Terey-Smith will be an assistant professor, teaching music history andliterature. She will replace Dr. Thomas Osborn, who will be on a leave of absence to pursue post-doctoralstudies at the University of Southern California. A graduate from Franz Liszt Academy of Music inBudapest, she speaks six languages fluently. She will receive her Ph.D. from Eastman School of Musicin Rochster, N. Y., this coming year. In addition to teaching music history, she will coordinate the musiclibrary program, and may teach one class of class piano. Ridgeway dorms admired nationally solutionto the college dormitory problem, the complex nests easily and informally on the landscape. In Irish poet Skinner Poet Knute Skinner of the Department of English will read for the college from his newly-published 'book, "A Close Sky Over Killaspug-lonane," at 8 p. m. Thursday in L3. Skinner, widelypublished in many American and international journals, has an earlier volume to his eredit, available inthe Bookstore, "Stranger With a Watch." A resident wf Killaspuglonane, Kil-shanny, County Clare,Ireland, Skinner teaches one quarter each year at Western. He was this year's faculty adviser for"Jeopardy," in which two poems from his latest collection appeared. this atmosphere the studentbecomes "A warm humble and humane an individual and not a computer card number." Thiscompliment about Ridgeway men's dormitories was made by the jury of the American Institute ofArchitects. Ridgeway dorms were among the 20 structures receiving the nation's highest professionalrecognition for architectural excellence. Fred Basetti and Co. of Seattla was the architect for the dorrma which have received other design awards. Five other college and school pro-, jects were among thosereceiving the award at the 99th convention of the AIA in New York this week. The winning projects wereselected from 317 entries by a jury of five architects. Song and cheer leaders chosen .Selection ofnext years song and Cheer leaders was made final Wednesday night with the naming of an all-girl pep squad. iSongleaders chosen from among 11 finalists were: Yvette Dinish, Sue Haggard, Lisa Ream, Jan Tib-fcetts and Arlene Harbo. Joyce Norris will serve as an alternate. Also, selected from fivecompetitors were cheer leaders Pam Lyle, Marlene Stoll and Vancie Turner. In competition thesongleading Uontestantsj performed two group routines, which had been taught by tlhis year's songsters and also presented one individual and original routine to the music of "Hello Dolly." Cheer leadingfinalists led three Jpells and then presented original routines to "Give Us a W." Judges for the eventincluded: Dean of Women Lorraine Powers, Dean of Men Clyde McDonald, Foot-foaH Coach FredEmerson and Basketball Coach Charles Randall. Also judging were members of this year's Pep Staffand representatives from Associated Students, AWS, AMS, the Viking W Club and the band. Thenew Pep Staff replaces this year's four songleaders: Cheryl Peterson, Anelle Jennings, Linda Strand,Ruthie Lawson and the three eheer leaders: Owen Carter, Bob Rutherford and Howard Plass. FirstChoice Of The Engageables •55555S5! CENTALS • Weekly • Monthly • QuarterlyREPAIRS • All Typewriters • Portable or standard • Electric or Manual • Free Estimates • Free Delivery • Free Demonstrations Your Typewriter Headquarters Icr new and reconditionedtypewriters, we carry them all, including world famous •'Olympia." BLACKBURN OFFICEEQUIPMENT 1223 Commercial (next to Gages) 793-7660 VQ.ur 19th year of dependable service" R EG I S T E R E D D I A M O N D R I N G S " \^SS They like the smart styling and the guaranteed perfectcenter diamond . . . a brilliant gem of fine color and modern cut. The name, Keepsake, in your ringassures lifetime if satisfaction. 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Y. 13202 I ---------- Collegian - 1967 May 12 - Page 3 ---------- FRIDAY, MAY 12, 1967 THE COLLEGIAN PAGE THREE IHC Pres. Chick resigns; Phyllis Edwardselected By RICH O'BRIEN Collegian Staff Reporter Midway through the regular Tuesday eveningmeeting of Inter-Hall Council, Acting President Roger Chick submitted his resignation. The IHC is acouncil of the presidents and representatives from each of Western's bn-campus residence halls.Chick gave low grades and his job as a student trainee at Saga as the reasons. Two profs retire after 30 years total at Western Two retirements in the education department were announced recently. Dr.David McDonald, associate professor of education; and director lt;rf the audio-visual center, retired atthe beginning of this quarter. McDonald had been at Western since 1948. He received his B.A. fromBethany College, his M.A. from the University of California and his Ed.D. from the University of Oregon.Mrs. Mabel Hodges, assistant pro. fessor of education and an elementary teaching supervisor, hasbeen on sick leave and plans to retire at the end of fall quarter. She came to Western 10 years ago,after receiving her B.A. from Western Illinois State University and her M.A. from Washington StateUniversity. He added that a good leader would have to devote many hours to the council to do the jobright. Phyllis Edwards, representative from Ridgeway Sigma, was elected new president in an immediate election. A member of an Associated Students .Legislature committee explained plans for a multi-purpose dormitory to be built at Lakewood for the summer of 1968 if plans go through. Loud carstraveling the Ridgeway service road at night have been such a nuisance that the council again broughtthe problem up. A proposal to put a chain across the exit end of the one-way service road nearAlaska House was challenged by a representative from Beta who claimed that this complete closure ofthe road would (Continued on page 9) Art prof leaving-'not a lifer' By MIKE WILLIAMS Collegian StaffReporter Martin Tucker does not want to become a Western "lifer," so he's escaping to Cincinatti at theend of the summer. Tucker, an assistant professor in the Art Department, will be chairman of the Fine Arts Department at the University of Cincinatti this fall. He has been at Western for six years. A "lifer,"according to Tucker, is a professor who* "will stay at Western no matter what. If Adolph Eichmann wasresurrected and made president here they'd still stay. There is an "overabundance" of lifers in Western's Art Department, Tucker said, who are "professional art educators." These professors areconcerned with teaching methods—the "how," not the "what"—instead of the subject of 'Flashingand Strobing' winners at Western's college bowl contest "Flashing and Strobing" was last week declared the winner of the Viking Bowl and earned $110 in the process. The team, made up of Eric Dayton,Tim and Karen place and captained by Dick Hastings, was undefeated in four nights of competition.$100 was the first prize, and the $10 was for high points one night. The second place team, fromGamma, won $50 for second place, and $30 for high points three nights, consisted of Alec McDougall,Dar-rll Mintz, Ken Lowe and Tom Mc- Roberts. Third place went to "Vern and The Americans," made up of Captain Vern Giesbrecht, Ai Porter, Vic Winquist, and Jim Coates. Wayne Leahy, coordinator and moderater of Viking Bowl, wants to set up an invitational faculty team to challange "Flashing andStrobing" later in the quarter. art per se. "Most of the students feel they are being talked down to,"Tucker elaborated. "They are being taught how to teach art to children without knowing what art isabout." The department Is stagnating, it's not moving forward, Tucker said. "The status quo is something to be sought alter. "When (Homer) Weiner left the chairmanship last year half the members pleaded for the Administration to bring in someone from the outside who had a broad perspective of the needsof students and also had contact with important people in art. This is lacking now." David Marsh, whohas been at Western for 10 years was given the position. The main concern of the Art Department, he said, is how many teachers can be placed, not in stimulating students to go on in the discipline. "Thestudents aren't challenged as these people (Tucker's "lifers") don't know how to do it." Unrest isprevelant within the department, Tucker said. The overall result is that now even the "vital part" of thedepartment (those Tucker says are interested in art for art's sake) are working for themselves. "I'm going to be in a position (at Cincinatti) to drain off what's left df the vital spirit," he added. The life of thedepartment should be in the subject itself, not methods courses, Tucker re-iterated. "I want to make itclear, that I'm not against education. I have a degree in art education. But I cannot work here underthese circumstances." Marsh, the department chairman, Try Comoro- The Hugger w Comoro hugs aroad closer, straightens a curve easier because it's the widest stance sportster at its price. It's lower,heavier, too...big-car solid and steady. You get a better ride, more precise handling for your money. Askany Comoro owner, he'll tell you.. Now, during the Comoro Pacesetter Safe^ __ you also get specialsavings on specially equipped sport coupes and* convertibles. Save on all this: the 250-cu.-in. Six,whitewalls, wheel covers, bumper guards, wheel opening moldings, body striping; deluxe steering wheel,extra brightwork inside* And, at no extra cost during the Sale, get a floor shift for the 3-speedtransmission and the sporty hood stripe! Compare Camaro. See your Chevrolet dealer now. (Salesavings, too, on specially equipped Fleetside pickups, Model CSK934.) CHEVROLET CAMARO byChevrolet said he doesn't think there's any more unrest in the Art Department than in year's past."Unrest may have had something to do with it (Tucker's resignation), but I think the fine position (at the University of Cincinatti) and the several thousand dollars more he'll be earning have something to dowith it too." Everyone likes a confident girl Haven't you ever noticed that the difference betweenpopular girls and not-so-popular girls is that popular girls always seem poised, assured and self-con»fident? Well, the chances are good that a self-assured girl has made certain that she can stay that wayevery day of the month. With Tampax tampons. Tampax tampons help a girl stay at her ease every dayof the month. They're reliable. When in place internally they are completely invisible. And tell-tale odorjust doesn't form. No pins, no pads, no belts, no bulges with Tampax tampons. They're the moderndiscreet sanitary protection. Your hands need never touch the tampon, and both the tampon and its silken-smooth applicator can be flushed away. You can dance, ride, swim or wear your most attractive clothes any time—and rest assured that your secret is your own. Wouldn't that make you moreconfident? Dreeo by "Guy D • OEVELOPED BY A OOCTOft NOW USED BY MILLIONS OFWOMEN TAMPAX* TAMPONS ARE MADE ONLY BV TAMPAX INCORPORATED. PALMER. MASS* ---------- Collegian - 1967 May 12 - Page 4 ---------- PAGE FOUR THE COLLEGIAN FRIDAY, MAY 12, 1967 editorials Be-In is out says police chief Nine-tenths of every berg . . . . . . is usually under water It ain't nice. Rog President Roger Sandberg hasjumped out of the frying pan into the fire this week. Last week his political ploys behind the scenes of the recent State Young Republican convention were discovered. Just as that episode cooled down, he and a friendly legislator just attended a student curriculum conference in Eugene, Oregon, that other peopleshould have attended. The Student Academic Advisory Board was recently created to as a subcommittee of the Academic Council. Yet only one member was chosen by Sandberg to attend the conference. Amember of the legislature, Bob Partlow, was chosen over the head of Jon Hatch, a legislator who is also a member of SAAB. Sandberg vetoed a bill a month ago that authorized the Collegian editor to attend aSan Francisco newspaper conference. He said his reason was that this year's editor did not haveenough time left in office to pass on the benefits of the conference. Yet Sandberg has even less time leftin office and he has no direct connection with curricular planning. Activities Commissioner Dick NorrisWednesday told us that he could have arranged funding for all the SAAB members to drive to theconference. But Sandberg did not consult with Norris. Sandberg has placed much emphasis this year onthe importance of student sub-committees proving their worth to academically-oriented councils. Yetcurrent evidence suggests that his concern may be hollow and politically oriented. We will be interestedMonday, as w i l l the Legislature, in hearing Sandberg maintain his innocence.—Noel Bourasaw Rofsaruck ROTC Seventeen years ago, college administrators sent an inquiry to U. S. Army officials,requesting that Western be considered as an applicant for the ROTC program. Last week the Armymade its reply, asking that Western confirm its application within the next month. We believe that theobjectives of the military and the goals of higher education are irreconcilable. The military machine isan intellectual wasteland. If this planet is to survive today's insanity, it must produce a class of mendedicated to the solution of international dispute by means of reason and intelligent collaboration. Military force is unreasonable and must not persist. Our praise goes out to Dr. Fred Knapman for hissuggestion that the college go on record as opposed to the ROTC program. We hope that his attitudereflects the majority sentiment of faculty and students at this institution. We solicit the aid of studentsand faculty alike in making it clear to the military that we don't want them. Western is well on the wayto becoming the finest liberal arts college in the state. Let's see to it that we do not become a military academy.—George Hartwell. By GEORGE HARTWELL Collegian Staff Reporter Aside from thearomatic fall-out from Georgia Pacific, Bellingham is not a bad place to live. However the city's provincialclimate and a populous well garnished with the over-40 set keep it well down on the list of libertarian centers. Oh April 30 a contingent of Western's hippies and sympathizers gathered in CornwallPark for an afternoon of dancing, lounging and a general fun time. Joe Roaster's young band donated the sounds with sights contributed by the Lux- Sit and Aurora Light Companies. At about 8:30 p.m.Bellingham Police Chief C. B. Kline and a bevy of officers arrived in the park in response to complaintsfrom concerned citizens. Cleaving a path through the dancing throng, Kline seperated the lights andelectric guitars from their power source and brought the festivities to a screeching halt. He declared thedance an illegal gathering and told participants that they must discontinue their revelry or-sufferfurther "police action. When interviewed later, Kline dismissed KPUG radio's suggestion that police hadaverted a potential riot through their quick intervention. "There were no incidents of violence," heexplained, "they were just dancing." Undaunted by the Cornwall de-facilities at Larrabee State Park onChuckanut Drive and revived the Be-In syndrome last Sunday. During the afternoon, several hundredstudents and a few faculty members cavorted in the park. Eventually a spokesman for nearbypicnickers ambled over to the bandstand and explained with a gesture of consternation, that hisconstituants were unable to digest their potato salad due to the music's intensity. His plea wasseconded by the park caretaker, leaving the merry pranksters with no recourse but to pack up theirbeads and head back to Bellingham. As conditions now stand, music lovers and happeners will continue to goof in the park on Sunday from noon to 6 p.m. until a more suitable site can be located. Koesterwill continue to haggle with the authroities for a Cornwall Park dance permit. And the authorities willcontinue to stand be' hind a city ordinance which will keep Cornwall Park the sober sanctuary of theMantovani generation. the collegian Official Weekly Newspaper of Western Washington State College,Bellingham, Wash. PHONE 734-7600, EXTENSION 269 Second-class postage paid at Bellingham,Washington COPY DEADLINE-Tuesday 12 Noon FOUNDING MEMBER PACIFIC STUDENT PRESSAffiliated with United States Student Press Association, Collegiate Press Service, Intercollegiate PressService, Associated Collegiate Press. BRUCE DELBRJJDGE, Editor-in-Chief NOEL V. BOURASAW,Managing Editor COPY EDITOR Jeanne Doering FEATURE EDITOR Chris Condon CAMPUS EDITORDana Rust Bob Banger Larry Brooks Sheila Eliason George Hartwell Pat Hughes What's with thiscollege? By TIMME HELZER The Collegiate Press Service What's a nice person like you doing in aplace like this? I mea.% really, what do you think you're doing here? It was probably your Mom and Dadwho had always expected you to go to college, and because you wanted to get away from home, theUniversity seemed just far enough distant. Or was it that all the other seniors in your high school wereplanning college careers and you didn't want to be separated from you? friends or lose your status?Maybe you had already completed your graduate work and yol and your wife thought you could makebetter advancement as a professo: at- a university which was more in keeping with your own cultural back ground. Or when coming out of high school, you had the choice of wear/ ing a blue fraternity blazer or akhaki field jacket, and you finally d lt; cided that blue had always been your favorite color. Perhaps youcoul see a better chance of finding a potentially successful husband here a the University and chose notto be a sales girls downtown after all. Well, now that you're where all the action is, baby, what is thaction? It isn't dialing the phone yourself and asking Mom and Dad fo: a little extra spending money orgoing for a coke in the Union to watc those guys in beards and wire-rim glasses and not have the courage t talk with them. Nor is it action for the newest members of the department ar attending a conference inSan Francisco. If you are the one who chos fratenity blue over Army khaki, action isn't getting up early. for you And for the sweet young thing who is looking hard for someone t love her, action isn't catching thebus for her part-time job of validatin; parking lot tickets for a downtown department store. There must bebetter way of staying where the action is and getting more out of it. In the rush to get the high paying job,the altar, the departmen promotion, or the student body presidency, you'll probably miss most oi the realaction. The action is learning to live and get the most out oj life. A part of that comes from the text bookand the lecture, but th more important end is in you and other important end is in you an other persons.It's the huddling together for warmth and understanding action and reaction, interaction and humandialogue, the wanting-takin and the having-giving. Learning to live where the actior is requires looseningup enough as. a professor to ask a few of yoi students to your home for somfi coke or coffee and aneveningl conversation, or to accept their inJ vitation to a party or for a beeif after your night class.Getting the most out of life la talking to your 60-year-old nexl door neighbor about how it waa when hewas your age, or taking the time out of your busy schedj ule to sit in' on a juvenile courl hearing andtalking afterward witlf a few of the losers. Probably or of the better ways of getting thd most out of life isto find in othel persons the qualities and characl tensities you enjoy, and want fror them, the things theycan give youl Bend them, push them, pull them! and manipulate them, but withouj intent of hurting them, and devel lop a trust in them and the free dom in yourself to encourage th€ to do the same with you.PHOTOGRAPHERS CARTOONISTS Dwight Larson Bob Banger Steve Bareface Johnson Keith WymanADVISER Scott Finley Ed Nicholls BUSINESS MANAGER Ken Riddell STAFF MEMBERS Neal Johns Mike Koch Mary Magnuson Jackie McGraw Greg Miller Rich O'Brien Gary Thompson Gail Yada ASU/£ PICK UP ON OUR STREAfl-oF-CoNoous 9u gt;r, OOR lt;LRO£ IS THE LATEST LOUE-HlPP/e" WtRO. HIS »JtG/\TW£ REACTION TO Some. "SURPRISES" FbftHW IS A SUBJECT OFCON CEP-N 0*) HIS "ANTt - f£S T ' «-fiHCt Pis" 16 POINTED tJWrrfc, DISSWnED, HO PRICE'•Too CrKtPtT w SMS AT THE. FREE U. FOR ONLY AJBOOT *[0 A. CLASS (PLUSCONTRACEPTIVES} HE LEAAHS -jutt DYNAMICS OF COoL.. THfc FIRST THtttfr IN THE CREATIVEPRoCfetf, HE FJMOS, ;s BRoKEM 44EAUTJI. AND COUERtD WITH FLOUfcfcS, KRIS UN-COOLO ESS hS Q01CW.L.V mODlFitO AND fl UMO- MASKS HIS IMAGILITY TO 6-Rou gt; A 8EARO EcT. HE TAuw FUNNY Too F3JT THftT IS A-tfc) fctlNfr TAKfcNl CARE OF. IT IS (Sljfe DECIDED THAT HESHOULD ATTEKO Q^ fcHE HIPPIE*HCE-'U'1^.^ -/ m\- \'m SUfF«Ct£KTt-Y EMACIATED HEFftocEEOES To LASC-SHARD AWA gt;SNS AND VDIOT /WPQ.U.Ci4TiOtl. (rtiS Tou*-Hfcxr .CU.AH!) rTHE^ CLASS IS fASSCm LfeP AT LrtKE SPANISH FOR A SECRET1 ' ? - i r t , i . AS THE PERPJ-EjfEP' fSTOOENT Bo lES H\IL.L /\9O0T, A VOICE , oUiTE SODDEN*-^^ 'CAuLES FMro A6dv£..•%' %0L.'? *UV)CKU - 'fctfNUUr/ojY EKfc — VTS IWLDVO fHoxST,1.' £DROP our /Wp lt;WL A * r n -c ^ u£*T w££ lt;- J$ lt;it LovE ftA«.KuWR £ ---------- Collegian - 1967 May 12 - Page 5 ---------- -FRIDAY, MAY 12, 1967 THE COLLEGIAN PAGE FIVE FALL QUARTER Pre-RegistrationANNOUNCEMENT (Fall Schedules Will Be Available Beginning May 22) ATTENTION FRESHMEN: Inpre-registering for fall quarter, you will be asked to declare your major and minor ---------- Collegian - 1967 May 12 - Page 6 ---------- PAGE SIX THE COLLEGIAN FRIDAY, MAY 12, 1967 End the draft Editor, The Collegian: The tame hascome to end the military draft. That bald declaration will startle many. But when all the facts are in, andall the current and projected needs for military manpower have been taken into account, it is difficult to avoid the conclusion that America does not need the draft, America can afford not to have the draft, andAmerica is overdue in bringing to an end this drastic invasion of the lives and liberties of her youngmen. Congress is now beginning to debate President Johnson's legislation to extend the draftanother four years. In years past Congressional examination of this issue was perfunctory. This yearthings are different. Thanks no doubt to the heightened awareness of America's young people, whoselives the draft so seriously affects, many in Congress are now 'for the first time rethinking the premisesupon which the draft is supposedly based. An increasing number of them are finding it sadly out of stepwith both our Nation's traditions and with its military manpower needs. We must never aiiow ourselves to forget that however pressing the circumstances, the draft is involuntary servitude. It is legitimate andconstitutional when Congress, exercising its power to raise and support armies, has no reasonablealternative. But conscription must always be the last desperate resort lor meeting military manpower needs, not the cheap and easy expedient. The only real argument for having an involuntary draft isthat the Nation could not reasonably afford to raise and retain the needed military manpower without it. I maintain that the Nation can afford to eliminate the draft. In doing so we will restore lost liberties. We can end once and for all the inherent inequities of a compulsory system. We can upgrade our armedforces and increase our national security. And we can do it at a price this rich and powerful Nation caneasily afford. There is no numerical shortage of manpower for filling military ranks. Each year nearly four time as many men as the military needs enter the draft age pool. With more realistic servicequalifications and sharply increased wages and fringe benefits, and with an enhanced status formilitary careers, we can attract the 500,000 men we need each year, even at Vietnam buildup level.All we have to do is to make up our minds that we are going to stop exchanging precious liberties forfalse economy—false because, when the total economics costs of the draft system are taken intoaccount, including civilian wages foregone by draftees, we may well be saving nothing at all. And thiscalculation fails to take into account the qualitative value of skilled career specialists serving incrucial military positions now filled by reluctant draftees. From the standpoint of individual liberty, equityto all, the enhancement of national security, and the total economic costs, the draft fares badly incomparison with an ail-volunteer armed forces system. How do we get from the present draft to thevolunteer army? First, we must unequivocally reaffirm our commitment to the goal of voluntary armedforces. The draft should be extended for one or at the most two years. During that time the DefenseDepartment should embark on a program designed to make the draft increasingly unnecessary. Aspecial joint committee of Congress—independent of the Defense Department and the SelectiveService System—should be set up to make recommendations for a phasing out of the draft, and tomaintain a continual review of the Defense Department's progress toward that goal. And military payand fringe benefits should be raised substantially, starting now. It is time we made the firm deci. sion toput an end to inequity, put an end to uncertainty, put an end to inefficiency, and regain for our youngpeople the liberties the draft has taken from them. MARK HATFIED Republican, Gov. Oregon Nothing to say Editor, The Collegian: . While thumbing through past issues of the Collegian I read a letter byBob Hamilton. In effect the letter stated that he "had nothing to say." I've come to the conclusion thatanybody who has nothing to say should not waste their time writing letters. RICHARD CONDON P. S.Thanks for letting me express my views. L "YOU CAN SURE TELL HIS GROCERIES DON'T COMEFROM ENNENS." ENNEN'S THRIFTWAY HIGH AND HOLLY "WHERE EVERY CUSTOMER ISIMPORTANT" Save Math 151 Editor, The Collegian: .,. I want to go on record as favoring retention ofMath 151. If Mr. Rust was "bewildered" and "stunned" by what he found, it is only because, as the restof his editorial implies, he has been prowling this campus with blinders on. I have taken Math 151 andfound it to be the easiest course I have ever had. There was nothing "bewildering" about it. It was justa math course. Anyone who does not do well in it should be ashamed to admit he is a college student.Education is part of the process of socialization that everyone goes through. Somewhere along the line a number of students got the idea that this is a democratic process. Well it is not, no matter what theythink and I hope it will never become so. The selection of courses required of each student is involvedhere. The choice is up to the administration as the representatives of the society we are graduallytrying to become a part of. They have decided that certain courses would be more beneficial to thisprocess than others. This is their right and duty. And now another rusty comment. Since when has aninstructor required acceptance of "truth tables, theorems and axioms?" I have never in my 10 years ofsecondary education found one. They often do require that you know what these theorems etc. are andmean, but what is wrong with this? Does it interfere with the rusty imagination? Are our minds so fullof freedom ideologies that we reject any idea not completely our own merely on that basis? Ifanyone tampers with someone's mind it-is because that mind is a closed one and does not see that the theory being offered is just that; a theory to be investigated and evaluated on the basis of what thatsomeone knows about other theories. The instructor wants to know if you are aware of the varioustheories he has presented. It is up to you to accept or reject their validity. Those you accept willbecome the basis by which you judge future theories. So get with it students. Dust off the rusty ideasand open your eyes and ears. After all, some day you just may find an instructor who knows more thanyou do. Accidents do happen, you know. FRANK L'AMIE Senior, Political Science KPUGer criticizesEditor, The Collegian: It is not the usual role of one journalist to criticize the work of 4 pm-11 pm Daily12 pm-12 am Sat. 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I am referring to a story headlined"Police Can Inspect Cars Any Day" that appears in the May 5th edition of the Collegian, and by-linedGreg Miller. The first job of any reporter is to get the facts straight. This Mr. Miller has not done. The first job of any editor is to see that the facts are straight. This the Collegian has not done. It is misleading to illustrate this story with a picture of a Beil-ingham Police Officer conducting what is captioned as a"local spot check." The law passed by the legislature, and signed by the governor, allows only theWashington State Patrol the power of spot checks. The method of the checks will be carried out in thegeneral manner described by Senator At wood in your story. And, in case Mr. Miller doesn realize it,there is no "Highway Patrol" in this state. This writer is quite sure that Senator Atwood would not havesaid "Highway Patrol" as is indicated in the "quotation" of bis words in the story by Mr. Miller. Thisinaccur- (Continued on page 8) Leisure hour comfort! Everyday Favorite! CANVAS OXFORDBreathable Army Duck is self-loose lined for Coolness, Comfort and, is Non-Chafing. Full SpongeCushion Insole, with Double Heel Cushion. Women's $10.00 Men's $11.00 Terrific Traction On Any Type RACQUET OXFORD Breathable Army Duck is self-loose lined for Coolness, Comfort and, is Non-Chafing. Built-in Sponge Cushion Arch, Full Cushion Insole and. Double Heel Cushion. Winged DesignToe Bumper gives Longer Wear. Men's White, Wide Only, 5-14. $11 Care-Free Comfort! LEATHEROXFORD Hand-Crafted Elk-Tanned Cowhide remains soft with proper care. Flexible and Lightweight.Sperry Top Sider anti-slip sole. Men's $24.00 ANOTHER EXCLUSIVE IN OUR FAMILY OF FAMOUSBRANDS See Our Dealer's Ad On Opposite Page. •.. V Box 338T _ NAUGATUCR,: CONNECTICUT ---------- Collegian - 1967 May 12 - Page 7 ---------- FRIDAY, MAY 12, 1967 THE COLLEGIAN PAGE SEVEN-Rub a dub, dub Collegian writers decided toclean up rather than go down the drain as they tried out the Activities Commission's Club 515 bathtub.Pictured, right to left, are Greg Miller and Gail Yada, winners of the outstanding cub reporter award,and Noel Bourasaw, winner of the Nora B. Cummings cup for outstanding service to journalism. GeorgeHart-well, the third winner of the cub reporter award, was not present for the picture. Awards presentedat pub. banquet Four Collegian staff members were presented special awards last Saturday wheneveryone who had worked on this year's student publications were honored at a Yacht Club banquet.Noel Bourasaw received the Nora B. Cummings Award for "Outstnad. ing Service to Journalism."Winners of the Most Dependable Cub Reporter Awards for all three quarters were Greg Miller, GalYada and George Hartweli. Ted Bryant, KING-TV newscaster, spoke to the.Kgroup on, the;topic ofreliability "of'' televisidh ' iiews services. Bourasaw, next year's Collegian editor, .also announced two ofhis editorial staff appointments. Jeanne Doering was announced as managing editor and Neal Johnswas appointed news editor. Service awards were presented to Collegian, Klipsun and Jeopardy staffmembers by their editors. Ed Nicholls, publications' adviser, presided. Longview high school willpresent concert The Mark Morris High School Choir, under the direction of Lawrence Marsh, willpresent a concert at 3:20 p.m. Tuesday in the Viking Union Lounge. Featured on the program will beHoward Hanson's "Song of Democracy." Your HONDA Dealer is NORTHWEST CYCLE CO. 600DUPONT PHONE 734-7580 'W-mkfim Leisure hour Everday Favorite! :,:,.....,,::::^ig|. CANVAS•~*mMKK^*mr OXFORD ^^^issssBM^ Breathable Army Duck is self-loose lined For Coolness,Comfort and, is Non-Chafing. Full Sponge Cushion Insole, with Double Heel Cushion. 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Following thetheme of "Water Fun Under the Sun" the carnival will feature competitive events both above and below the water from a scuba treasure hunt to canoe jousting. Also included in the day's activities will besailboat rides, water skiing and hopefully a water ski exhibition. Tickets for the all-day carnival will be on sale beginning Wednesday at the Viking Union desk for 75 cents to students with meal tickets, and$1.25 ta all others. Special buses will be provided for 15 cents each way for students needingtransportation. Scene Hondas what's happening. On campus and off. Name the scene, you'll find Honda. Get with it on machines like this perfectly balanced Honda Super 90. Do a carefree 65 mph oil thehighway. Look like you're moving that fast on campus. Economy? Honda's dependable OHC ^strokeengine delivers up to 160 rripg. Initial cost, upkeep and insurance are ridiculously low. Parking problems? Forget them. Make the scene now at any of Honda's 1,800 dealerships. Take a safety demonstrationride. Check wlpjjjs happening. Then let it happen to you. • $ $ ; OC HONDA Shapes the World ofWheels See the "Invisible Circle" color film at your local. Hondatfealer's. Pick up-a color brochure andsafety pamphleV •or Write: AmerioalrHonda Motor Co., Inc., Dept. C-8, B»x£ Gardena, Calif.90247. ©1967, AHM. ---------- Collegian - 1967 May 12 - Page 8 ---------- PAGE EIGHT THE COLLEGIAN FRIDAY, MAY 12, 1967 More Letters KPUG (Cont'd) acy would leadthis reporter, who has dealt with Senator Atwood professionally for some V-k years, to question theentire story. There is comment in the Collegian story about Senator Atwood feeling that "at this timethe implied consent law was in the legislature." Since the 40th session of the legislature expired onApril 30, five days before your publication date, we would wonder when "this time" was. In the opinion ofthis writer, Mr. Miller was editorializing in his news story. He is, in effect, saying that this is a bad law,by his presentation, and by the inaccuracies in;the story. On the news pages, a responsible reporterwill demand accuracy first. If he has a definite opinion on those facts, he should submit an editorial tohis editor. As a reporter, and an editor, I find it easy to separate the two categories. I think I write apretty direct editorial, but not in the context of news. I do not agree with much that is printed on theeditorial page of your newspaper. This is wholesome. But, I am taking this opportunity to express an opinion I've held for several months. I find your general product lacking in one major area—factual news. In a small city of 7,500 people, such as Western, there must be more happening than discussions ofLSD, the Vietnam War, and student rights. These topics are important, and necessary to cover forthe paper, but no newspaper can subsist forever on only three types of news stories. I would only hopethat the rest of your paper is more accurate than the story on the spot check law. JACK MAYNE News Director, KPUG Radio Liberal heart bleeds Editor, The Collegian: Recently I spoke with anoutstanding liberal professor about the war in Vietnam. My concern was the responsibility of liberalintellectuals for that war. I myself had decided that if German intellectuals were responsible for thefascist bloodbath by remaining silent, and if Russian intellectuals were in some way responsible for their silence while Khrushchev crushed the Hungarian freedom fighters, then Bertrand Russell's scathing indictment of the American liberal intellectual's silence while President Johnson destroys Vietnamjust might be too true. "But this is ridiculous," the liberal said. The left, he said, is now using guilt byassociation techniques like the late Senator McCarthy did on the right. And, he said, 'liberals will sufferin America. Well, my heart bleeas for real humanist liberals. But the phony liberalism of HubertHumphrey and Lyndon Johnson should get its due. Their liberalism is corporate liberalism—cold warliberalism— the ideology of our corporate establishment. Oh, the corporate liberal loudly claims to befor peace, brotherhood, and goodwill. But when he must choose between corporate profits andhumanism he will take the cash. Think about the liberals in Chase Manhattan Bank who lend fortymillion dollars to support slave labor in South Africa (it's a good investment) and then claim to be foremancipation. Or witness the silence of campus liberals on our war in Vietnam. None of them like war, but they will support it if they think it will discourage social revolutions that raise havoc with ourcorporate investors. Others speak Of the red terror, conveniently ignoring the terror of poverty andhunger perpetuated by our corporate exploiters. Communism is bad, they say. Better have thesepeople dead than red—regardless of what they think. Those Vietcong are, after all, just as dumb as ourIndians. The human price of the war is irrelevant to them; what they earnestly desire is to preventVietnamese rice from feeding a starving China. If the Vietnamese, don't like the corporate liberals'designs our soldiers can burn them out of the ground. Of course it's also nice to have an outlet for allthat wonderful napalm (Dow Chemical Co.), and it's a sure fire alternative to Communism. But wecan't back out on our "commitment," the liberal says. The liberal must do right by his"commitment"—even if it is to a bastard dictator. Another commitment the liberals find hard to re jectis the corporate establishment's commitment to a war-time economy. The liberal is committed, but we must penetrate through his jive to find out just what he's committed to. Here in America the liberaltolerates the Aifro-Americans he claims to have "emancipated" (after all, they die in Vietnam too). But when Stokely Carmichael stands up to the liberal and "tells it like it is," the liberal sheds great bigcrocodile tears and says such unpatriotic remarks will hurt the civil rights movement. He can'tunderstand the flaw in his logic which permits him to send young Afro-Americans to kill and be killed inVietnam while telling Negroes here that they have to wait for their rights. Consider the men who give theorders and tally the dead: Rusk, Goldberg, Lodge, Bundy, Westmoreland, and all the rest. They are all liberals. They are all honorable men. They give the orders that destroy a nation. Then they sit aroundmemorizing statistics of the other side's victims so they can sleep at night. Here on campus theliberals are running around hissing at the inevitable products of their own folly: drop-outs, hippies, andradical activists. They just can't see that students have had enough jive from their elders. Some eldersstill believe that Johnson's liberalism has moral content. But if you see one looking constipated withred ears you can assume he knows how much morality is involved in our "holy war" in Vietnam. Ifliberals repudiated their war they might feel more at ease. But that would involve loss of face—toomuch to ask from a corporate liberal. They will go on telling us to kill for peace until they areconfronted by enough of us who refuse to go. Then the liberal will have had it. R.I.P.! SCOTT WICKLUND Junior, Political Science. Where's aesthetics? Editor, The Collegian: I can only speak as a distressedEnglish major; not as a scientist, philosopher or heavy equipment operator. Thus what I say will have aslight edge which must be planed down by other specialists in fields which like mine are as limited inscope as a one-eyed sting ray with a hernia. I'm talking about aesthetics, and I'm talking because in this increasingly non-verbal society silence can mean one of two things—complete understanding orstupidity. I think the latter is what we're faced with. I'm only trying to point out the simple fact that wedon't know why we're where we're at. And nobody seems to be trying to find out very hard. To injectaesthetic awareness into a status quo society is like giving hypothetical birth control pills to ahypothetical nun. It's exactly that — hypothetical. It's this way because our country has succeeded inignoring the liberal imagination for so long that for lack of recognition, poets toss typewriters from ferryboats and plunge in after them. Nobody really likes to commit themselves much anymore, especiallyto intangibles like aesthetic perception. Instead, its so easy to be committed to an institution of higherlearning, which is in fact an institution of lethargic memorization. Look around sometime on your wayto class—or maybe if. you feel wicked, skip it. Go down to Bell- (Continued on p. 11) MEN! BEFORETHE SSI, SEE: The Shoe Tree 1326 Commercial featuring BOSTON IANS 733-7510 HelmsmenPresents The Spring Sports Informal "the" dance of the quarter Saturday, MAY 20th 9:00 until 1:00p.m. featuring "The Shadows" plus Other Entertainment I Tickets Available at Viking Union Desk $2.50Per Couple ---------- Collegian - 1967 May 12 - Page 9 ---------- FRIDAY, MAY 12, 1967 THE COLLEGIAN PAGE NINE Ho'and 1BJ'testify before class war tribunal ByMIKE KOCH Collegian Staff Reporter Last week the Western Chapter of the International War CrimesTribunal indicted students playing the parts of President Johnson and Ho Chi Minh. Bernard Weiner'sinternational politics class decided this would be an effective way of presenting both sides of the Vietnam controversy. The audience, numbering between 30 and 40 all week at the hour-long sessions in L-2,witnessed students taking the parts of the accused individuals, the prosecutors for each side, and fourwitnesses including two peasants, Premier Ky of South Vietnam and Nguyen Huu Tho, chairman of theNational Liberation Front, which is commonly called the Viet Cong. Clad in a flowing blue robe, Weinerplayed the impartial part of presiding United Nations Secretary General U Thant. Both sides admittedthat innocent civilian casualties were a by-product of the fighting. The arguments centered around thejustifications of each side for fighing the war. "Ho Chi Minh" and his prosecuting attorney held that theU.S. violated the 1954 Geneva Accords which guaranteed free elections in 1956. They cited a statementin Eisenhower's memoirs stating that if free elections had been held, 80 per cent of the population ofVietnam would have voted for Ho Chi Minh. Further, they contended that since the Geneva Accords were violated, the U.S. is participating in a civil war, making its presence in Vietnam illegal. "PresidentJohnson" and his prosecuting attorney said that infiltration from the north prevented free elections fromhaving any chance of success in 1956. The American side stated further that North Vietnam is acting inviolation of Article 51 of the UN General Assembly, an international agreement. They also said that theU.S. presence is legalized by South Vietnam having asked the U.S. to help fight aggression from thenorth. The audience, at the beginning and end of the week-long tribunal, was asked. "Do you believe theU.S. is justified in fighting the war in Vietnam, and do you agree with the course of action it is following?"The first tally showed 25 for the U.S. policy, 20 against, and one abstaining. Following the tribunal, thetotals changed to 18 for, 19 against and three abstaining. IHC approves room-phone suggestion(Continued from page 3) prohibit use of parking space along the road between Beta and Delta. Becauseprevious recommendations by the council failed to get results, Gerald Brock, director of housing, whoregularly attends the tioned. He explained that he could not meetings of Inter-Hall was ques-do anything directly to correct the problem, but added that he would continue to bring it to the attention of thesecurity patrol and the maintenance department. Brock was also asked about the possibility of privatephones in the resident's rooms. He said that the phone company had rejected his plans for increasingthe residence hall phone.,service,,_ . ,..,.. He said that perhaps the best plan of action now is to work to have phones installed in every room within one year. Although Inter-Hall Council members haveexpressed overwhelming approval of putting phones in every residence hall room, Brock said the ideahad not won acceptance among his fellow administrators. When questioned about giving each hallpresident a room to them, selves for the price of a double room, Brock replied the idea was impracticalfor fall quarter because there are more than 200 women and 100 men needing rooms. The representativefrom Sigma announced that Herbert Taylor, dean of faculty research, wall talk on "Social problemscreated by technology" at about 8 p.m. May 18, in Sigma's lounge. George Harvey from Gammaannounced the Gamma Invitational will be this Saturday in Carver gym and on the adjoining field.Pass-no-pass system does make the grade at U of O A pass-no-pass grading system will be put intouse on an optional basis beginning this summer at the University of Oregon. Students will have thechance at registration to chose whether the courses they will take are to be under the new system or theold. The measure was proposed by the Academic Requirements Committee (ARC) and accepted bythe faculty with few changes; Essentially, the only factor limiting a student's choice to take pass-no-pass for any course is departmental policy. Any student may take any class on a pass-no-pass basisprovided that, if the class is to count toward his major, the department directing the major has approved.Defeated by the ARC were several amendments, one of which would have limited first-year students fromtaking more than one pass-no- pass course during each term of their first year. Also defeated was anamendment which would have restricted the number of general education requirements a student couldtake on a pass-no-pass basis. Day of judgment Dr. Bernard Weiner donned flowing robes to preside atthe mock trial of President Johnson and Ho Chi Minh for war crimes in Vietnam. The "trial" wassponsored by Weiner's International Relations class. MEN Do you favor the proposed ROTC program atWestern. YES D NO • Comments: ; ---------- Collegian - 1967 May 12 - Page 10 ---------- PAGE TEN THE COLLEGIAN FRIDAY, MAY 12, 1967=- Quality varies at art exhibition By BOBBANGER Collegian Staff Reporter I, along w i t h many others, h a d great expectations for t h e F o u r t h Annual Small S c u l p t u r e and Drawing Exhibition. I expected t o b e overwhelmed by professionalcompetence and dazzled by daring experiments into new and exciting areas. I expected to see workthat went beyond abstraction. I was greatly disappointed. I am about as hot for painting for the sake ofpainting as I am for talking for talking's sake. I am forced to say, however, 1 liked the abstractions a good deal more than what apparently were figure drawings. As a rule the works which stayed in the relativelysafe area of abstract form manipulation were much more successful than the subjectively orientedpictures done with almost singular in-sensitivity. I regard the human form as sacred and some of theattempts to render it I found almost sacriligious. The drawings, as a rule, I felt were overworked. A wiseman once said, "It is better to be still and have the world regard you as a fool, than to open your mouthand prove it." Winosky's "Sunday News" is a good example of how, after convincing me of hiscompetence, a few added lines revealed his masterpiece as an accident. I found most of them tediousand unexpired. Chappel, Askin and Tolin leave me cold; Wiegmann and Oppenheim I find quite offensive.And Young's only offense is his monotony. I enjoyed Camblin and Grey and liked very much Mackey'sop work. Harris' "Dream 3" was, in my opinion, the least in the show. A close second was Hill's "ESDCNo. 1." I enjoyed the Alblers-like quality and the delicate-while-not-finicky line quality. The sculpture wasof a much better quality throughout. Although some of them—"Mechanical Mary" and "Susiun"—show me nothing, I was intrigued by Inveen's "Tinker Toy." The least of the sculptures is a toss-up betweenClemens' Cube and Bean's Eruption No. 642, with my inclinations toward the former. The Armstrong boxshowed interesting possibilities. The show was not without its bright points. One of the most significant is the boast this gives the art student. It eliminates a number of illusions concerning the gap betweenstudent and the "big time." Any student viewing this group of pictures and sculptures should feel, a newrespect for his own romantic notions and give his confidence a deserved boost. To illustrate-^RobertJenson showed the rejects from the show to his 101 drawing classes to show them how they, asbeginning students, were doing. They compared more than favorably. This is one of the few bright spotsin a show' that was generally quite disappointing. UFO's will fly onto local TV screens Flying saucersare the subject of two special programs to be televised at 7:30 p.m., Wednesday, on Channel 5. A30-minute KING-TV report, entitled "The Things in the Sky" and narrated by Ted Bryant, examinesStudy trip planned Study in London, Paris and Am-boise for credit will be discussed at 4 p.m.Wednesday in L-3. There are two sessions of study between April 1 to September 9, 1968. The studyprogram is sponsored by the Northwest Intel-institutional Council on Study Abroad. Western professorsWilliam A. Bultmann, history and Manfred C. Vernon, political science, will participate in the program.The Spring program will take place in London for 10 weeks. The summer session will be in Paris andAmboise for seven weeks. Estimated cost, including, tuition, fees, lodging and two meals per day, is$1800. All courses carry Western residence credit. Further information may be obtained in Old MainRoom 139. EVERYBODY WANTS TO HEAR HER! MAY 27,1967 the latest UFO evidence and lets the viewer be the final judge. A KING-TV News team has interviewed dozens of eyewitnesses, includingscientists and psychologists, in an effort to find some of the possible explanations for the mysteriousaerial phenomena. "The Things in the Sky" is both light hearted and serious as it examines the baffling evidence. The program was' written by James Compton and filmed by Al Stenson. Immediately following ."The Things In The Sky," KING-TV will present a second UFO special entitled "Captured by a U. F. O." in which a panel of distinguished scientists and reporters interview a New Hampshire couple who claimto have been taken aboard a flying saucer. "The Things in the Sky" and "Captured by a U. F. O." arebrought to you in part by Mercedes- Benz of Seattle. Foreign film is preferred by art cinemaenthusiasts The Art Film must fulfill, according to cynical definition, one of two criteria: it must beforeign, or if domestic, it must be a financial flop. This, of course, is a recognition of tendencies ratherthan a valid definition. Nevertheless, the tendencies it points out are true dften enough to suggestsome rather inr teresting cinematic questions. What characteristics, for instance, make the foreigngenre of film so popular with American connoisseurs? Why is it that supposedly artfully madepictures often fail to appeal to the movie-going masses? Even more intriguiging, why is it thatHollywood, that huge conspicuous portion of the motion picture industry, so seldom produces a filmwhich rises to the level of recognized artistry. These questions will be more easily answered ifapproached in the context of the following definition: To be considered an art film, a motion picturemust display a high degree of technical and organizational skill. It must be concerned with the life itportrays rather than a mere escape from it, and it must present itself in a distinctive, imaginative and well balanced manner. The most important criterion is, of course, the second. The art film as is all other art, is social; it deals with man, with his existence, with his position in nature and with his relationshipsto other men. The art film must concern itself, seriously and realistically, with some social attitude orconflict. Within this loosely structured framework, it can take any one of several possible forms. It canbe satirical. It can be comic or pathetic, as are the old Chaplin masterpieces. It need not evenpresent a story. It may be merely a progression of events, or it may go so far as to divorce itselfentirely from event's. There are innumerable, possibilities in presentation, but no matter what' form ischosen, it must result in two ends: It must entertain and it must promote, in the sensitive viewer, aheightened social (human) awareness. With these distinctions in mind it is possible to explore therelative artistry of the various segments of the motion picture industry. One reason why the Americantends to equate the foreign film with the art film is that the foreign movies he sees are generally selectedmaterial. He is seeing a relatively small percentage of the total foreign film output, and the number ofartistic subjected is disproportionately high. There may, however, be another reason for thepreponderance of non-domestic art pictures on the American market. This is the fact that there exists, in other countries, no such complex as America's Hollywood. Those who know how to have a goodtime go . . . DANCING Monday Thursday HAPPY HOUR Tuesday Thursday 137 W. Holly Hollywood is the mecca of money; it is the homebase of American escapism, the land of make-believe, and. it produces virtually all of America's films. It's production is dictated by the demands of the general public, and. the general public demands escape. For the average American, a night at the movies is an escape from the worries and realities of everyday living. He does not want to think; he wants to suspend hismental process for the duration of the picture and be swept into the vicariousness of happily-ever-after.This, of course, is not bad. The Hollywood productions fill a need, a need for escape, and in manycases, such as the "Flint" spy series, it does very well. Nor does the fact that it aims at the massescape audience mean that Hollywood cannot produce genuine art films. At least three of the past two years' largest money makers—"A Thousand' Clowns," "Who's Afriad of Virginia Woolf," and "Dr. Zhi-vago"— must be recognized as productions of unusually high artistic and social worth. These threemovies fulfill admirably the essential prerequisite of the art film; that is, in. addition to entertaining,they promote in the viewer a high level of intellectual and emotional response. They atta'ck some ofthe basic philosophical problems of human exixtance, and succeed in providing the viewer with, if not ananswer to these problems, at least a wider - knowledge and understanding of the problem. "Zhivago"'and "A Thousand Clowns" provide different insights into the problem of an individuals privileges in, andresponsibilities to, his society; "Virginia Woolf" deals with the problem of the love relationship and therole which each individual plays in that fusion. These are basic questions; questions which willprobably never be answered but which the inquisitive mind must constantly grapple with. And they arethe questions—they and questions of similar seriousness —to which the art film must address itself. WE'RE NOW OPEN BEL-LYN PAR-3 GOLF 9 Holes — All Pqr-3 RELAX — HAVE F U N—PRACTICE Clubs and Equipment Rentals INQUIRE ABOUT SPECIAL STUDENT RATES 3V2 MilesNorth of City Limits On The Guide Meridian BETCHA CAN EAT JUST ONE! Shakey's famous GiantPizza is enough for a whole family. 'Course, then you'll start singing happy music to Shakey's ragtimepiano and banjo...wet your whistle... have f u n . . . work up another appetite. And BINGO!-you're at itagain. Maybe you can eat two at that! SHEETS 1234 North State Street Open 7 Days A Week Ph.733-3020 PIZZA PABL0B ye PUBLIC house ©1966 SHAKEY'S INC. ---------- Collegian - 1967 May 12 - Page 11 ---------- FRIDAY, MAY 12, 1967 THE COLLEGIAN PAGE ELEVEN More Letters Aesthetics, cont'd. ingham Bay and take a close look at Georgia-Pacific. We know G.P.'s primary purpose is to keep things clean, butwhat about the Bay and what we and G. P. dump into it? What about that ugly Science Building andthose new Old English pri. sons starting on a 360 degree arc around the campus. Who built them andwhy? Consider the classes you're taking, and while you're at it, consider how little we all knowabout everything. Then if you can slip the thought in without flinching, consider Acid—how little youreally know about it—you the user, you the officiated abuser of the user, and you the abstainer. Maybewith increased investigation we'll find that acid like so many other "things" is not so baffling; is not sodirty; and does not have a direct link with Chinese opium dens and Mafia werewolves, insensiblypassing junk to God's own, with a Karlovian snicker. Maybe we'll find that getting stoned is notnecessarily a freak show. Maybe we'll see that paranoia is not healthy for war-babies. Maybe then we'llhave to recognize that we can no longer mock our sensibilities without being mocked in return. Thehuman mind can take no more garbage than can Bellingham Bay. Or take it this way: Our Earth Mother is becoming an innocent prostitute to a population of pimps. If this seems rather strong find out howlong it takes bread to get from wheat-stock conception to your mouth, and what happens to it on theway. Why the hell don't we milk a few sacred cows once in a while and find out if the milk is sour. BILLSAVAGE English, Junior Greece and Vietnam Editor, The Collegian: t , Your readers may be interested an the following thoughts expressed toy a gentleman born in Germany ©t the beginning of the century: "The trouble with getting old is The year of the YAMAHA The Twin Jet 100 is the swingin' thing forSpring. Double everything...2 cylinders, 2 carburetors, 2 exhaust pipes.. .for more GO. The styling hasthat no-nonsense look, lean and racy like a 250cc World Grand Prix Champion Yamaha. If you can ridea bicycle you can ride a Yamaha. So stop in and ride cut on a Yamaha Twin Jet 100. Then you'll knowwhy Yamaha, with proven oil-Injection, Is the top-selling 2-stroke in the U.S. See us today. Was $430 $j Now Reduced To 395 YAMAHA INTERNATIONAL CORPORATION. Dhcovtr tha Swinging World ofYamaha at IMPORT MOTORCYCLE ,CENTER, mC., v that you remember too much. You tend torecognize patterns of political development just as you recognize a movie which you have alreadyseen or a book which you have already read. I remember, for instance, that when the Germans werebeaten in 1918 it did not take them long to discover that the German soldiers had not lost on thebattlefield but that they had been 'betrayed by the home front.' The ground work for a repetition of this isalready being laid, just in case something goes wrong in Vietnam or in the case that the war in thatcountry degenerates into World War III. The American people are already being taught that if thishappens, it will be due to the home dissenters without whom Hanoi would have given up the ghost a long time ago. As soon as things do not go as easily and as ifavorably as the clique in power expectsthem to go, out will come the denunciations and the reproaches, not to speak of persecution, againstthe 'unpatriotic' dissenters." One more thought: If the U. S. is so much concerned in fighting for thepreservation of political freedom everywhere in the world, why are not 600,000 U. S. soldiers being sentto Greece to fight for the restoration of political freedom in that country, a freedom brutally taken awayfrom the Greeks by a right-wing, military coup? Why do we hear so much about Vietnam and so littleabout Greece? S. LIEBERMAN Assistant professor, Economics Vigil problems Editor, The Collegian:The hazards of protest for local participants in the Weekly Vigil now extend to taunts, name-calling,egg-throwing, and dousing. While so ffar such acts reflect the mindless meanness of young hecklers, I believe there is also a parallel between such hostility and the growing frustration of those who desireto support the war policy, yet can find little comfort in the slogans and rationalizations commonlyoffered in defense of the war effort. As one protester who was doused last week (with an undeterminedamount of water poured from a top-floor window of the Federal Building), I say to actual and potentialparticipants—take heart, there is always a brighter side. This may mean that our presence at theFederal Building makes a difference to others as well as to ourselves. As an aid to understanding forthrowers and non-throwers alike, information on opposition to the War will be provided at the Vigil infuture weeks. THAD H. SPRATLEN Associate Professor, Economics and Business .. Finds issuetaxing Editor, the Collegian, In response to Mr. H. A. Goltz, May 5, 1967: Mr. Goltz is wrong byassuming that foreign students do not pay the taxes that U. S. citizens pay. I will quote directly what hesaid: "Exception is made for non-resident students on the grounds that they do not pay state taxeswhich also support the college. But what justification can be made for admitting foreign students whoprobably pay no share of the federal taxes which help support certain Western programs?" For yourinformation, Mr. Goltz, we pay every tax in the U. S. We To Sir' said inaccurate view By BILLMORISETTE Collegian Staff Reporter The panel members of the Book of the Quarter committee Tuesday night unanimously agreed that E. R. Braithwaite's "To Sir, With Love" paints an inaccurate picture ofBraithwaite's teaching experiences. Braithwaite is a British Guinese Negro who, after the terminationof W.W. II, went to Great Britain in search of employment. After two years of futile searching, heaccepted as a last resort the job of teaching. William Scott, chairman of the Book of the Quartercommittee, began the discussion by pointing out that the book was chosen because it touches on theaspects of race and education problems, and because it was an autobiography. The book contains twothemes: The first deals with a Negro's battle with prejudice, and the second, with Braithwaite's battle with his students. Dr. David Lawson, associate professor of education, felt that the first theme is handledproficiently, but that the teaching theme is "sentimental and overdramatized." Dr. Richard Starbird,associate professor of education, also objected to Braithwaite "over dramatizing the negative aspects ofhis experiences." He stated that in doing so, "Braithwaite presents an inaccurate picture." "The(idealistic) manner in which it is written presents an atmosphere of fiction," said Scott. "Possibly theauthor does not see the children very clearly," said Dr. Lawson, "sometimes teachers have unrealisticconcepts of their jobs." The period following the panel presentation allowed the audience (eight students) to discuss the book with panel members. The students' reactions to the autobiography were largely inaccordance with panel members' attitudes. "Looked upon as a novel," Dr. Lawson concluded, "To Sir,With Love" is valuable in the fact that it provides a springboard for discussion." even pay Social Security,even if a foreign student is in the U. S. for one or a hundred years. I wonder what justification you candraw in this situation. You added, saying foreign students add richness to the campus. I would be moreencouraging, if there was a spirit of welcoming foreign students. To our shock we do not feel the wayyou say we do. It will be better for you to check with the tax office before you draw your conclusions.Probably, it will help you as the Director of Planning and Development. I know it will not help you to know the shocks that foreign students go through and probably will continue to for years to come. CARENMOIKOBU Kenya, E. Africa W8 gt; AQBSBfDggtf 1307 State Street Bellingrham What's the changingscene? A bare stage for entertainment, for sounds, lights, color and moving images. A light, airyatmosphere by day, a modern lantern show scene by night. Entertainment that changes with the scene.European-style foods, sounds of the times. ---------- Collegian - 1967 May 12 - Page 12 ---------- PAGE TWELVE THE COLLEGIAN FRIDAY, MAY 12, 1967 - Weekly Schedule FRIDAY, MAY 12 —THURSDAY, MAY 18 SATURDAY Girls Field Day, Gamma Invitational SUNDAY Movie, "All the YoungMen", 7:30 p.m., Aud. WEDNESDAY.. Fashion show, AWS Wedding Belles, VU Lounges, 3 p.m.displays, 4 p.m. fashion show. SATURDAY Club 515, Coffee Shop, 9 p.m.-midnight. t Campusunderwear (news briefs) Wilson plays The 50-piece Wilson High School (Tacoma) Orchestra will present a concert at 8 p. m. Wednesday in the Viking Union Lounge. Their performance here is sponsored by the Western Symphonic Strings and the College-Civic Symphony Orchestra through the Department of Music. Western Symphonic Strings presented two concerts at Wilson High School March 29,during the group's annual tour. Goes VISTA Patricia Dombek, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ted Dombek,3510 Hoyt, Everett, Wash., was one of 39 tainees who were recently graduated Irom a VISTA TrainingProgram sponsored by Policy Management Systems in Buffalo, N. Y. As a Volunteer In Service ToAmerica, Miss Dombek will spend one year working with the Children's Aid Society in Buffalo. A socialstudies and education major, Miss Dombek, 22, was enrolled at Western Washington State College during the 1965-66 school year. ex-SNCC speaker Julian Bond, former Communications Director ofthe Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, will speak 4 p.m. Thursday in the Viking Union.While a student at Morehouse College in Atlanta, Bond helped to form the local student anti-segregation committee, whose efforts lead to integration of public facilities and job opportunities inAtlanta. He left school to become the managing editor of the "Atlanta Inquirer," a Negro weekly inAtlanta, and joined the SNCC staff in 1961. He has been elected to the Georgia' House ofRepresentatives three times but was originally refused his seat because of his opposition to the war inVietnam. The United States Supreme Court ruled on December 9, 1966 that the Georgia House actedillegally in refusing to seat Bond, and on January 9, 1967, he took office. Poetry reading A distinguished younger American poet, X. J. Kennedy, will give a reading of his own poetry this month at WesternWashington State College. The reading will be held at 8 p.m. May 24 inL-4. Graduate grants TheInstitute of International Education (HE) announces that its competition for 1968-69 United StatesGovernment graduate grants for academic study or research abroad, and for professional training inthe creative and performing arts, will open officially on May 1. HE conducts competitions for U. S.Government scholarships provided by the Fulbright-Hays Act Exclusive One Day EngagementWEDNESDAY MAY 17th National General Corporation FOX-EVERGREEN'S T. BAKER ^ 106 No.Commerclal-734-4950 3 SHOWINGS — 1:30 — 4:30 — 8 P. M. High schoolers' books on display Anexhibit of the outstanding new library books for high school students will be on display in the reserve room of th Mabel Zoe Wilson Library from May 15-19. The display will be open from 7:45 a.m.-ll p.m.,Monday through Thursday and from 7:45 a.m.-4 p.m. on Friday. Compiled by 52 leading publishers,including several university presses,' this exhibit is used by school systems and libraries across thecountry as a major source for "is A delightful Russian cartoon featurette! RPN'F/PE'S HOllDAY APARAMOUNT RELEASE ADMISSIONS FOR THIS ATTRACTION MATINEES 1:30 — 4:30 EVENING 8P.M. GENERAL - 200 GENERAL . . . . 250 STUDENTS 1.50 STUDENTS 2.00 Special Discount ForStudent Groups Call Manager For Details 734-4950 TICKETS ON SALE NOW — PLEASE PURCHASE TICKETS EARLY (NO RESERVED SEATS) Show at Dusk Friday-Saturday-Sunday THREE HORRORFEATURERS! "The Ghost In The Invisible Bikini" lt;5«$fe THE Acclaimed as THE FEAR OF THEYEAR DrTIerPflM ItSSorrorsi W T J m ^ ^ PHOTOCRAPMCO1M I PARMK Technicolor 15 MinutesNorth of Bellingham On Interstate 5 | National flmrmrml Corporation 1FOX-EVEROREEN'S 101 No.Commoroloi-T**.**** Doors Open 5:30 TONIGHT Hotel at 6 and 10 Covenant at 8:15 Warner Bros,unlocks all the doors of the sensation-filled best book reviewing and selection. The exhibit, includingboth fiction and non-fiction books, covers more than 40 subject areas from problems of democracy tocareer and guidance material. William H. O. Scott, circulation librarian, commented, "This free serviceprovided by the Books on Exhibit Company is universally praised by librarians, teachers andadministrators. GRAND THEATER 1224 Commercial 733-9755 STARTS SUNDAY! Doors Open 12:30"GEORGY GHtL" 1:20 — 5:00 — 9:00 "BLACK ORPHEUS" 3:10 — 7:00 — 10:50,HfGEORGYGIRL' IS SUPERIOR! WONDERFUL PEUL-MELL ENJOYMENT. IMMENSELY ORIGINAL!" - Bo»l«y Crowther, N.Y. Ttm«» ' Starring Rod Taylor — Karl Maiden Technicolor Suspense Co-Hit George Maharis in "COVENANT WITH DEATH" Technicolor SATURDAYS "Hotel" 2:30 - "Convenant"1 SCHEDULE - 6:20 — 10:15 — 4:45 — 8:45 SUNDAY "Hotel" 1:30 — 5:30 — 9:30 "Covenant"3:45 — 7:45 MON. - "Hotel" - "Covenant - TUE. - 9 P.M. " — 7:15 i8Georgy. This is Georgy'sroommate. EdUMBftflCTURESffeM. M, _. _ TV* mmmMm® This is Georgy's ( roommates roommate JAMES MASON -ALAN BATES-LYNN REDGRAVE^ lfU66ESTEP FOB MATURE AUOIENCES[ 1 T f * jPLUS — GRAND PRIZE CANNES FILM FESTIVAL "BLACK ORPHEUS" color ENDS SATURDAY! 'AFUNNY THING HAPPENED ON THE WAY TO THE FORUM' Zero Mostel — Phil Silvers — Jack Gilford Together with — "THE KNACK . . . AND HOW TO GET IT" Rita Tushingham Show Time BothTheatres Dusk Approxiamtely 9:00 "DEADLIER THAN THE MALE" RICHARD JOHNSON — ELKESUMMERS Also In Color Alfred Hitchcock's "TORN CURTAIN" PAUL NEWMAN — JULIE ANDREWSThree Days Only Fri., Sat., Sun. Adm. $1.00 BENNETT DR. — TURN OFF FREEWAY AT AIRPORTpowerful Emotional Impact! -LIFE Werner liMf§|^ winner of the Wmmm$ Jfew York Critics' From theworld-famed novel by Ray Bradbury »«,CYRILCUSACK ANTON WRING -JEREMY SPENSER -ALEXSCOTT Saeeitfayty Based on the novH by Pioducedtv WANC0IS TRUFFAUTH JEAN-LOUIS RICHARD-RAY BRADBURY- LEWIS M ALLEN Francois Truffaut , M$ Internationally acclaimed and most unusualmotion ptcture Also On This Program ---------- Collegian - 1967 May 12 - Page 13 ---------- FRIDAY, MAY 12, 1967 THE COLLEGIAN PAGE THIRTEHN Recent Grecian military coup affectsAmerican academic society WASHINGTON, D. C, (CPS)— The recent military take-over in Greece has caused widespread repercussions in the American academic community because of the detentionof Andreas Papandreou, son of the former Greek prime minister George Papandreou. Papandreou hadbeen chairman of the economics department at the University of California at Berkeley and aneconomics instructor at the University of Minnesota. He was the leader of the left-wing of the CenterUnion party, which fell from power in June of 1965 as a result of pressure - from the Greek monarchy. r " The Greek Embassy and the U. S. State Department report that Papandreou is being well-seated during his detention. A Greek Embassy spokesman said there were rumors Papandreou would be sent outof the country. Both the Greek Embassy and the State Department said it was also possible thatPapandreou would be re-subpoenaed to testify at the As-pida trial, at which it was charged that he wasthe leading force behind left-wing secret societies within the Greek Army. He had been summonedto testify at the trial before the coup took place. A State Department spokesman said Americanrepresentatives in Greece had received assurances from the new government that Papandreou wouldnot be harmed. The American Embassy has been in contact with Papandreou's American wife, and sheis reported well. Papandreou came to the United States in 1940 and became a naturalized citizen. Hereturned to Greece in 1961 to become the director general of the Athens Center for Economic Studies. Since Papandreou is no longer an American citizen, the American government .has little power overany action that might be taken as a result of ithe Aspida trial. At the University of Colorado, a letter toPresident Johnson urging the President "to use all the prestige and power of your office to prevent thepossibility of harm" to Papandreou has been circulated by the economics department. . States theColorado, letter, "We have followed the scholarly work of Mr. Andreas Papandreou with admiration andwe consider him Western yacht crew hosting saiI tourney Western's Yacht Club will be hosting theNorthwest Intercollegiate Racing Association 66-67 Championships tomorrow and Sunday at Lake-wood. The University of Washington will be defending its, title against sailing representatives fromWestern, Seattle University, Simon Fraser University and the University of Puget Sound. The schoolsthat are awarded first and second place will represent the district at the national championships atLong Beach, Calif., in June. Saturday from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. in a series of 15-20 races, the two skippersand crews from each school will compete for team championships. Sunday until 3 p.m. they will betrying for the single-handed championships. I aoi asset to Greece; he must be protected if a non-Communist progressive movement is to develop in Greece." The Colorado professors com-* mentedthat it was unthinkable that "a European country and member state ol NATO should be allowed to fallunder an oppressive military dictatorship that has already abolished the very freedoms for which theWestern world stands." A petition which urges the U. S. government to "exercise its influenceimmediately in order to prevent the execution of political leaders" has been circulated at theUniversity of Minnesota. Minnesota economics professor Leonid Hurzwicz said that members of hisdepartment have made their "concern known repeatedly and forcefully to people in Washington. Ouractions are strictly humanitarian and ai on-political. We do not defend or oppose his political views.Our only purpose is to safeguard his life." An American-Canadian University Committee for AndreasPapandreou was formed at New York University (NYU) to urge the American government to offerPapandreou sanctuary in the United States. NYU literature professor Robert Clements, thecommittee's co-chairman, said that teaching positions for Papandreou have been offered at Brandeisand several other American universities. Papandreou received his masters and Ph.D. from Harvard, andClements said that "since Papandrou left Harvard to volunteer for combat service with the U. S. Navy during World War II, it is natural that our country should welcome him back." Former Western students read their poetry here Young poets should give voice to dience for the first time in their. their art andthey need an ear to listen. And so it was last Tuesday afternoon in Lecture Hall One, when 300 earslistened as Tom Davis and Don Holmes read their own poetry. Davis, a former student and teachingassistant at Western now instructing in Seattle, and Holmes, presently instructing in the EnglishDepartment, read before an au-careers. After the reading Davis commented on poetry written atWestern. "Western has a fine English Department; I'm indebted to Knute Skinner and Robert Huff fortheir poetry. I think that student poets like John Hanson, Bill Savage and Sydney Campbell are doingexcellent work—as fine as anything I've seen at the UW." TACO TIME I M E Monday and Tuesday SPECIAL Reg. 45c Taco Burger Deluxe 34£ Tostado, reg. 4 5 c . . . . . . . 38$ Hour? Mon. thruThurs. 11 a.m. to 1 a.m. Fri. Sat. 11 a.m. to 2:30 a.m. Sunday 11 a.m. to midnight Phone In ThoseTake Out- Orders 733-3761 707 East Holly Street (^omitta Si lt;MHti Blossom Time Festival PresentsIn Concert / W $gS8 ®% SONGS of Love by San Francisco's Newest Folk-Rock SensationRALPH J. GLEASON San Francisco Chronicle FRIDAY May 26 8-11 p.m. Carver Gym. Tickets at:VIKING UNION DESK Reserved $3.00 Rush $2.50 THE JEFFERSON AIRPLANE and on the sameprogram The SAFETY PATROL ---------- Collegian - 1967 May 12 - Page 14 ---------- PAGE FOURTEEN THE COLLEGIAN FRIDAY, MAY 12, 1967 A Wise Choice of Suits for Men ofFashion Be Sure of Your Appearance Depend On wm gt; is now being offered from our distinguishedcollection of spring and summer fashion styling to express an individual taste... with discretion.CORNWALL HOLLY For the Finest In Attire ---------- Collegian - 1967 May 12 - Page 15 ---------- FRIDAY, MAY 12, 1967 THE COLLEGIAN PAGE FIFTEEN from the end of the bench with dona rustLast week possibly the greatest heavyweight champion of all time refused to be inducted into the UnitedStates Army. Four hours afterward the New York Boxing Commission and the World Boxing Associationstripped Cassius Clay of his title. Since then the press has unmercifully battered away at thechampion's character with vague inferences that paradoxically range from "Muhammad Ali is acommunist sympathizer" to the notion that the heavyweight champion is an "unpatriotic capitalist." All ofthis was done in the name of justice. The world's two most powerful boxing associations robbed theworld's best known athlete of a title that he had won and defended eight times—before he had beenaccused of the crime, to say nothing of having been proven guilty of the same. And the Americanpublic, emerged in a craze of nationalism un-equaled since the time of Teddy Roosevelt, fleeced thechampion of any respect that he had left—before he had been accused or proven guilty. IS CASSIUSGUILTY? Now think, damn it! Think! Is Cassius Clay guilty? -.* He says not. He says that he is aminister of Islam and that he deserves the same right of deferment from service in the Armed Forces asthe ministers of the Christian religion. He says that he spends 90 per cent of his time working for hisreligion and that it is against his religion to fight in wars not approved by Allah or Allah's DivineMessenger. Muhammad Ali has attracted thousands of black people to the Muslim religion by living thelife of a Muslim. He sticks to its ideals: Eighty per cent of the money he earns prize fighting is given tohis faith; in the two weeks before the induction, proceedings he preached the Islam religion before 90different organizations; he divorced his wife because she would not accept his religion and its ideals; hedoes not smoke, drink or chase women; and he does not want to fight in American wars. RecentlyClay was attacked in Sports Illustrated magazine por being a Black Muslim. If I were a Negro I would notbe a Black Muslim because it is a racist group. But I CAN understand why today's Negro is turningtoward that sect. Because that sect is helping the Negro race stand erect in a society that has beencrushing the Negro for over 100 years. DIGNITY AND A SMILE That sect is helping the Negro retain thatdignity that William Faulkner talks about in his story "Red Leaves." That sect is helping the Negro retainthat marvelous smile that glows from its face. It's natural with them. They are Negro, not white. But theyare human beings. Sensitive human beings. Sports Illustrated commented on four separate incidentswhere Black Muslims were involved in violence. (Clay has rejected this: 'They're a bunch of young fools. Idon't want any of this violence.") What the editors neglected to mention was the good things that theorganization has done—the help with education, living conditions, recreation and public health. Theheavyweight champion's trainer, Bundini Brown, has this to say: "The champ wants to clean up the black man, to wipe out orostitution and dope addiction, to give the black man respect. So what difference does it make what the champ calls himself? 'f he wants to call himself Two and say he's a member of the3oop Boop tribe, that's his business. America is supposed to •nean freedom, isn't it? What whitepeople can't understand is hat the hurtingest thing in the world is to be black and live in '. ghetto. If youlive in a ghetto, you prove you're a man by Lhrowing bricks. If you're intelligent, they don't respect you fort. They think you're crazy. The champ is trying to teach respect. 'm not a Muslim, but sometimes I talklike one." After the induction proceedings Cassius Clay was relieved of a )urden that had been weighingon his body for four months. He tele- gt;honed his mother and said: "Mama, I'm all right. I did what I had to do." Huff, puff-it's the girls' turn Special Consideration To Students and Faculty FWlf SAVE TODAY FREE DELIVERY PH. 734-4902 OPEN 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. The HERALD PHARMACY Herald BuildingTomorrow the girls of Western get a chance to really show how good of', shape they are in when theycompete in the second annual Gamma Invitational. Originated last year by Serge Grant, the GammaInvitational is a full day of athletic and fun events for girls only. Competition is centered around both girls'living groups and individual performances. Under the guidance of Jim Mullen, the Invitational will be lacking the eyecatching gimmicks of last year, like the Greek Marathon run- Must be the bats thatcause losses To support a .173 batting average, a team must get slightly better than one base hit everytime it sends six batters to the plate. An amazing series of coincidental slumps has resulted in thisphenomenon in college baseball—a sub-.200 team batting average—to exist on Coach Fred Emerson's Western squad. With the exception of Bill Jor-genson's exceptional .375 mark, the highest season'saverage for a Viking regular is Steve Richardson's .192. Last season's top "stick" was Sam Calles,who boasted a .390 average. This year the Vik first baseman is a study in futility with a team—leading11 strikeouts and a .125 hitting clip. Viking hurlers have allowed 3 gt;6 earned runs every nine innings!Western's bats have redeemed 1.7: tallies in that span. Another two runs a game were chalked up bythe opposition due to 46 Vik errors. Western took advantage of 24 opponent "mit"- demeanors to thetune of .3 runs per nine frames. Big Blue chuckers have struck out opposing hitters 73 times, whileViking batters have obliged opposing hurlers on 109 occasions. The Western Washington State CollegeVikings have won a game this season. They have "not" won a game 16 times this season. ner and firehose dousing in the tug-of-war. This year events have been cut and males are excluded completely inorder to run the meet more efficiently. Trophies will be given tomorrow night at the meal ticket dance tobe held in the Viking Commons. Sigma will be out to win their second straight team trophy while thetrophy for the top individual is up for grabs. Last year's winner, Ann Peterson, no longer attendsWestern. The program gets under way, rain or shine at 10:00 a.m. with STATE STREETLAUNDROMAT NEXT TO THE YMCA WASH, DRY AND FOLD 1246 State 734-1650 the 50 yard dash and 440 walk on the track. Archery leads the afternoon off at 12:45 p.m. the tug of war and fiveswimming events start at 1:30 p.m., volleyball at 2:30 p.m. and the final events, egg toss and rab^- bitchase are scheduled for 3:30 p.m. Marcel le Prescriptions • STAR REXALL DRUG STATE firHOLLY SEATTLE-FIRST NATIONAL BANK MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCECORPORATION GIRLS! BEFORE THE SSI, SEE: The Shoe Tree 1326 Commercial featuringTEMPOS b FANFARES 733-7510 CHAR-BROILED STEAKS t£e Tftoad loom "Probably the Best"Open Monday • Friday I I :30 a. m. • 3:00 a. m. Sunday, Noon - 8:00 p. m, EASY TO FIND - TURNLEFT FROM HOLLY TO COMMERCIAL STREET COME IN FOR THE BEST IN DINING ---------- Collegian - 1967 May 12 - Page 16 ---------- PAGE SIXTEEN THE COLLEGIAN FRIDAY, MAY 12, 1967 Campus School in win over Franklin ByGARY MITCHELL Collegian Sports Reporter I walked to Campus School April 20 because someonesuggested there might be a feature in a fifth grade baseball game. I was curious as to how proficient test-tube kids would be at our national pastime. Entering the main hallway, I saw an oversized baseballglove concealing a tiny human blur. I decided this was to be the subject of my attention that afternoonand, fully aware of what happened to a girl named Alice when she made a similar decision, followed thesmall blur around the corner and down another ramp which led to daylight.. The daylight became theschool parking lot and the blur turned out to be named Dave Maness. Dave is Campus School'sshortstop, which explains why he blurred. (See "Maury Wills," Dodgers, Los Angeles, 1959-66). He andI, along with half the team, were taken by Athletic Director Mrs. O'Brien from the parking lot to FranklinElementary School. The remainder of the "squad" arrived in Student Coach Paul Kratzig's ear. Thevisitors were awed when Franklin's team wandered out of the school building wearing "uniforms (!)"consisting of yellow sweatshirts with "FRANKLIN" lettered on them. Both schools have asphalt playingfields with base and foul lines painted on the pavement. The contest was played at Franklin because ahard foul ball can break a window at Campus. Franklin started southpaw Randy Prescott on the"mound." He was touched for two runs in the first inning, the telling blow a bases loaded single by centerfielder Bill O'Brien (whose father is Dr. James O'Brien, associate professor in Western's Englishdepartment.) A home run by Franklin's John Anderson ignited a five-run rally in the bottom of the secondoff Campus hurler Roy Atwood. Anderson, who stood six to eight inches taller than any other boy onthe "field," hit a drive to deep center that was just being retrieved as he strode across the paint blot athome plate. Atwood, (whose father Frank represents the Whatcom County area in the State Senate,)was relieved of his hill chores in the third frame by a slender, well co-ordinated boy named Jamie Evans.At the end of five innings each team had managed five runs and a summit conference was held withevery kid within three-blocks gathering in the vicinity of third base to express his opinion regarding"continued bombing" as opposed to a "peaceful settlement" (a tie). With cries of "don't try to kill it, justmeet it" adding to the hysteria, Campus built a 7-5 advantage with the aid of some booted ground ballsand aT couple walks. In the bottom of the sixth, Evans got the first hitter to pop up to second basemanMatt Hitch-man, (who calls Dean of Students James Hitchman. ','Dad"), and fanned th enext two forCampus School's first win of the year. Trackmen mending spirits: tripped by tough P. State AlthoughWestern Washington was defeated 81-64 by one of the top small college track teams in the country,Portland State, they showed great promise for the future. Two school records were either equalled orbroken by Western runners, and underclassmen are leading the way in other events. DaveAnderson, a sophomore, earned a victory by tying a record of 22.1 for the 220 set in 1959 by JerryJoyce. Anderson was just nipped at the tape in the 100 and finished second with a time of 10.1seconds. Western's 440 relay team set a new school record in that event, even though they were beaten by Portland State. The team of Dave Anderson, Larry Anderson, John Hunt and Al Merritt sprintedaround the oval in 43.6 seconds. Sophomore Jim Shephard and freshman Ron Jackman again turnedin good times to win the two mile and 440 events respectively. Dave Vander Griend flipped the Javelin225' lOVfe" to win his event again, while Tom Cambell took first in the 880 with a fine time of 1:55.4 Theonly other Western victory was the mile relay which was done in 3:25.3 by Jackman, Cam-bell, LarryAnderson and Rich Tucker. Tomorrow afternoon the Vik meet Pacific Lutheran in Tacoma and arefavored to win the non-conference tussle. Next weekend Western travels to Central for the EvergreenConference champion ships. HOLLY'S MEN'S SHOP FOR THE BEST-DRESSED COLLEGE MALE!1307 CORNWALL Frosh neffer wins 7th straight as Vikings split weekend series Randy Roberts is hot!The Viking freshman from Tacoma won another pair of matches as Tennis Coach Don Wiseman's No.2 man, stretching his victory string to seven singles decisions. The wins came as Western's Racketeers defeated the University of Puget Sound, 6-3, Friday and dropped a 5-4 verdict to Seattle Pacific College, Saturday. Both contests were fought over Viking nets. No. 6 man Doug Snow also contributed a pairof singles triumphs and helped Mike Johnson best SPC's no. 3 doubles entry. Johnson also won his No. 5 singles contest against Seattle. Against the Tacoma school, it was Roger Fisher and Steve Reibewho couldn't be stopped. Besting the Loggers' No. 3 and No. 4 men respectively, the pair of Viks alsoteamed to ice Western's third season win with the No. 2 doubles victory. The Vikings host a toughCentral Washington State squad tomorrow. HURLEY DRUG MART 1311 Commercial •Prescriptions • Drugs • Pet Supplies Going to Europe? If you buy a Volvo for touring over there (it runs away from every other compact in its class and gets over 25 miles to the gallon), and then have itshipped home, you'll save money and have fun. Otherwise, we take no responsibility f OF your trip.AVAILABLE WITH AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION. SEE FOR YOURSELF AT VOLVO) I IMPORTMOTORS PARTS AND SERVICE FOR ALL IMPORTED CARS 120 Grand, Bellingham Phone 733-7300 A coffee house with illusions by the Edison Psychedelics, a resident Light Company. Two showsnightly on weekends. Cover charge Friday, Saturday. Open for Con-templation week nights. A light, airyscene in early evening, a darkened stage for color, lights, moving images at night. Open Sundays. ---------- Collegian - 1967 May 12 - Page 17 ---------- Feature and • W E I I WESTERN WASHINGTON STATE COLLEGE Vol. L1X, No. 28 Bellingham,Washington 98255 May 12, 1967 fashion section Even LIFE is favorable Hippie is life attitude, not lifestyle By BERNARD WEINER Assistant Professor of Political Science When even an editor of LifeMagazine (March 31) can proclaim the Era of the Hippie in partially favorable terms, it is time to asksome penetrating questions. (But before doing that, perhaps a definition is in order. To wit: Hippies arethose who are not essentially concerned with the goals middle-class society takes so terriblyseriously. These people can usually be spotted visually by their strange way of dressing, and by theirconnection with the drug subculture— be it marijuana, speed, acid or bananas— but they can't.always be spotted so obviously. Hippie, in this definition, is an attitude toward life, not necessarily aclearly-defined life-style.) Question 1: What does the implied acceptance of the Hippie by the more"progressive" of the mid-die- class culture presage for the future? The initial way the bourgeois Americancorpus deals with the entrance of a foreign body into its bloodstream usually is to create enoughantibodies to exterminate the newcomer in quick order. If that doesn't work, the body comes somehow to tolerate the noxious bacteria as a weak threat to a strong, healthy system. What we see at workcurrently is a combination of these two methods of approach—the use of antibodies and the attempt totolerate and weaken. In the former instance, the fuzz and the more backward elements of the massmedia carry on a never-ceasing harassment of the Hippies (busts, manhandling longhairs on SunsetStrip, denial of use of parks and auditoriums, "sanitation" checks in Haight-Ashbury, constant ridicule,etc.) While that goes on, the more forward-looking of the bourgeois—allpwing the rough stuff to go' on.but sensing that it really won't eliminate the hazard—attempts to remove the banner of uniquenessfrom the Hippies by absorbing their trappings into its own culture, by superficially adopting the Hippies'spirit-of-life into its rather moribund core existence. It is reminiscent of vampirism: an attempt to suck outthe vital blood from the jugular of the Hippie movement, which must result then, inevitably, in the deathand disappearance of the movement. In this way, you see, the stable middle-class system can live in the best of all possible worlds: enjoying the cultural and aesthetic benefits of the Hippie way of life, Whileimmunizing the orderly bourgeois system from the dangerous ideas and practices of these weirdradicals (Christianity, such as that practiced by the Diggers, Brothers and other such groups; thespread of Love as an ideology, and pacifism; the spontaneity of dress and games; sensoryexperimentation, etc.) This is certainly not a new syndrome. Philosopher George Santayana wrote yearago: "American life is a powerful solvent. It seems to neutralize every intellectual element, howevertough and aien it may be, and to fue it in the native good-will, complacency thoughtlessness, andoptimism. . . Gerald Weales came at the same idea from this direction: "Any man who lifts his voice tocriticize our society today is in danger of becoming a popular idol . . . permissiveness has become ourweapon against criticism. Our society, largely through the activity of the mass media, has learned toabsorb criticism by celebrating the critic." America can, and won't, tolerate those who hit TOO close tothe vitals—Lenny Bruce, the Living Theatre, Stokely Carmichael, the San Francisco Mime Troupe, SaulAlinsky, maybe even Tim Leary and Adam Powell —but it can, and does, tolerate and celebrate what itregards as less-dangerous, less-militant abominations. Hence, Andy Warhol makes the cover of TimeMagazine, Martin Luther King is named Man of the Year in 1965 and goes-to the White House for chats,Michael Harrington is gobbled up by the Great Society, Paul Goodman is celebrated by theEstablishment, Allen Gingsburg writes for Atlantic Monthly, Art Buch-wald gets chuckles as the CourtJester. Into the constantly pulsating vacuole of middle-class life are intaken the demigods of theother.(radical) America. In the same way that white America wants to make the Negro white beforeadmitting him to full equality, the bourgeois American wants to make the Hippie into something familiar,safe, known, palatable. Whether it succeeds in this dehumanizing process depends in large part onthe stamina and integrity of the Hippies—and, of course, on the validity and intensity of belief of theirown message. There are phonies everywhere, and certainly the Hippies are not without theirshare—the hoppers on the bandwagon, the conspicuous consumers of the garb and dialect: modernized versions of Eliot's "Hollow What do these people have in common? (Photo by Jim Groh) Men" in theirlack of a central core for internal guidance. Question 2: Is what we are witnessing in Hip-pieland agenuine resurgence of individualism, a turning inward into the unique soul, a conversion process ofmassive proportions which will alter our culture into a freer, saner place—or is what we are, witnessingthe death-rattle of a dying individualism before it is totally smothered by an all-absorbing, intolerantindustrial military-governmental culture? In other words, are Hippies truly individualistic, and if so, can this individualism survive in a society where individualism—except in carefully measured doses—isconsidered dangerous and suspect? The more obvious symbols of the Hippie culture —the voluntaryghettoes like Haight-Ashbury or the East Village, the strange clothes and trappings, the beards andboots, the giant Be-ins, etc.—can't be used as proof one way or the other. After all, individualism issomething which is internal, in the way one thinks —though often admittedly, connected with the wayone acts and dresses. It seems to me that, particularly with the younger Hippies (high school, earlycollege age), the TRAPPINGS of "Hippie individualism" are paramount — perhaps understandably so,given the psychological-sological need for a cult-feeling and the general paranoia associated with thereactionary police and press. The key to the lasting nature of individualism, I should think, occurswhen the Hippies leaves the shelter of the sanctuary—he ii the East Village or the collegecampus—and becomes, in some part, immersed in the workings of the daily bourgeois system. Thetotal dropouts—that is, those who are never going to enter the system but will remain forever, voluntarily ghettoized — will constitute a small minority of the current Hippies, I would guess. The others, the great majority, will enter th bourgeois world (to be in it, if not of it), and, this is where we will witness eithertheir bios-* soming individualism or their sell-out to the system. Judging from people I know, and frontwhat I have heard and read from others, there is reason to be optimistic about the future o/j individualism.(Not overly optimistic—we can-' not expect a totally Beautiful Society led btf totally Beautiful People; weare all, alas, ha* man beings, hence imperfect—but optimistic nevertheless.) They are bringing, and willcon* tinue to bring, to the static bourgeous cultari, a sense of spontaneity and creativeness—in art,music, teaching, films, politics, architecture—* which cannot help but change the society we tiv , in forthe better. It will not be Pure Hippie (given the analysis in Question 1, it will have-to be filtered downthrough the traditional middle-class mind-set) . but it will contain much of its spirit, and this can benothing but bene* ficial. (Strange, isn't it? That the artist and intellectual regarded by bourgeoisstandards as terribly "avaal garde" is, in reality, a defender of the "ancient ra* (Continued on page 18) ± ---------- Collegian - 1967 May 12 - Page 18 ---------- PAGE EIGHTEEN THE COLLEGIAN FRIDAY, MAY 12, 1967 Prof takes 0E0 post Billings takes national post Dr. Thomas Billings was granted a 19-month leave from Western when he was named deputydirector of the national Upward Bound program the beginning of this quarter. Billings has been director of Western's Project Overcome for two years. The Upward Bound project is sponsored by the Office ofEconomic Opportunity for economically disadvantaged students. 15 years might revamp education, laws(Continued from page 17) gime." at least with regard to the worth of the individual soul, the emphasison personal initiative, the foeauty of spontaneity and open mind—all attitudes much enshrined inAmerican mythology but rarely practiced today. Here is where the New Left and New Right could join inpraise and emulation—but, of course, they see themselves, incorrectly, as always going in oppositedirections.) In 15 years, if this hopeful analysis is correct, we can expect to witness a thoroughrevamping of American education, a dimunition of the knee-jerk reaction of mechanistic anti-Communism, a change in the marijuana laws (Lenny Bruce, as usual, struck fcome here: I know themarijuana laws will be changed because all my friends in law school smoke pot."), the election ofycunger, more creative types in public ..office (the victories and near-victories of people like •RFK,John Lindsey, Robert Scheer James Weinstein, etc., is already a sign of this), and, horrible dictaperhaps even a change in our traditional militaristic foreign policy. If my optimistic prediction is wrong, Ithink we can look for a disappearance of the Hippie as a social subgroup of any import—Hippie-ism willhave been but a fad—and a small, and totally alienated and persecuted, group of beatnik types in thestyle of the early '50's in America. And, if the foreign and domestic policies of America do not change, Ithink we can also expect to see a mass-migration of America's most dynamic thinkers and artists toother lands —a true Brain Drain. But I don't look for this pessimistic reaction to set in. The traditionalbourgeous culture—at least the type represented for the past 35 years—has signed its own deathwarrant by its lies, by it hypocrisies, by its inhumanities, by its stultification—and a new generation(turned on as never before by beauty, honesty, music, art, stimulants) will, in the nature of things, carrythe torch into the 21st Century. t NOW IS THE TIME FOR THAT "CAP AND GOWN" PIC TURE WESPECIALIZE IN FINE GRADUATION PORTRAITS You don't have to wait for your CAP 'N GOWN, WEHAVE THEM JUKES STUDIO 734-7240 1905 CORNWALl Dr. Thomas Billings, associate professor ofeducation, has been appointed deputy director of the national Upward Bound program, which issponsored by the Office of Economic Opportunity (OEO) for economically disadvantaged students.Billings was granted al9-month-leave without pay by the Board of Trustees, starting April 1, to accept the post. He has been director of Western's Project Overcome for two years, a program which is part ofUpward Bound. Fianced by the OEO, the program has as its goal the intellectual and culturalstimulation of a group of high school juniors who lack the finances to attend college. The OEO wasimpressed by the retention power of Project Overcome: 88 per cent of the students in the programwent on to college, as compared with 8 per cent of economically disadvantaged students throughoutthe nation who go on to higher education. j Congressman Lloyd Meeds quoted Sargent Shriver as saying this in announcing Billings' appointment: "Tom Billings is one of the most imaginative and effectiveeducators oil disadvantaged youngsters in the U. S. We are delighted to be able t lt;j gt; bring him toWashington (D.C.) so that his first hand familiarity with the education of poverty youngsters can be put to use nationally." •'; Meeds added that Bifflings was probably the best-pre pared person for theprogram in the country. While directing Western's program, Billings served as a consultant to thenational Upward Bound program and visited more than 50 projects throughout the nation.1 "Theoutstanding quality of Western's project has been largely due to the efforts of Dr. Billings," saidMeeds. "His move to the national level will make his experience and talent available to Upward Boundefforts throughout the country." • Billings came to Western in 1964 as a lecturer. He had previouslytaught in the 1964 summer session at Central Washington State College, and the 1963 summer sessionat the University of California at Davis. He was assistant professor of education at Sacramento StateCollege, 1960-63. From 1958 to 1960 he was a graduate assistant in the Bureau of EducationalResearch at the University of Oregon, where he received his B.A. in 1953 and his Ph.D in 1960. Heserved in the U. S. Navy, 1946- 48, and taught in public schools from 1953-58. He is a member of PhiDelta Kappa and the American Association of University Professors. He has written numerous profes* sional papers, including articles entitled "Education's Stake in the Civil Rights Movement," "TheBastard Children of Neglect" and "Project Overcome." tents are for dancing! and we have this brightspring-y look in many prints,, stylings, colorings. See them now, for dancing, for any other fun all springor summer. From $7. 125 W. Holly, Bellingham QM ---------- Collegian - 1967 May 12 - Page 19 ---------- FRIDAY, MAY 12, 1967 THE COLLEGIAN PAGE NINETEEN Announcing Spring aud semi - formal wear Young Edwardian styling has finally reached the tent. The white cotton lace tent and delicate stand-upcollar modeled by Mary Ann Waverick is priced at $28 at the Bon Marche. (Z/ta*^ lt;j@m Sdkmfr D I AM O N D R I N GS Milton E. Terry JEWELER Diamonds, Watches, Silver "Where jewelry is ourbusiness/' Watch Jewelry Repair NEW LOCATION 1326 Cornwall Ave. Rooftop dining and cocktaillounae m the Florentine Room on the 15th floor. Charcoal Broiled Steaks Prime Ribs Lobster OPENSATURDAY Phone 734-4400 for Reservations HA The epitome of elegance and femininity is pictured inthe empire waist A-line modeled by Sally Swanberg. The top of white cotton lace saparated from theyellow crepe skirt by a double bow is priced at $28 at Victor's. MAY 14th Say it with bwers Bay andChampion FREE DELIVERY Phone 733-2610 ---------- Collegian - 1967 May 12 - Page 20 ---------- PAGE TWENTY THE COLLEGIAN FRIDAY, MAY 12, 1967 Reminiscent of a spot factory is this blackand white polka dot culotte modeled by Sally Swanberg. The dress, made of rayon-acetate, is priced at$28 at Victor's. A special dinner for that special or any night. Elegant Dining In The LEOPOLDHOTEL 6:00 to 9:00 P.M. Ph. 733-3500 for Res. The lime crepe sheath and long scalloped sleeves linedin rose crepe is modeled by Sally Swanberg and priced at $32.95 at Belle Bridal. A vibrant flower garden is brought to mind in this modified tent of rayon-acetate print, mode Mary May. The bow at the necklineadds just the right touch of eleg the dress priced at $28 at Victor's. The S. S. I. Is Only A Week AwayORDER YOUR CORSAGE NOW From Bay and Champion Free Delivery — Ph. 733-2610 THE SSIIS V mxk •ffkf See the « ^ ^ f o r a c c m p l of dinner rentals anc sories. ---------- Collegian - 1967 May 12 - Page 21 ---------- FRIDAY, MAY 12, 1967 THE COLLEGIAN PAGE TWENTY-ONE This section was designed by JackieMcGrcrw, the Collegian's Fashion Editor. Photographs are by Dwight Larson. Styles in this section arefeatured in conjunction with the upcoming Spring Sports Informal. The turquoise rayon-acetate gownand delicate net overlay, modeled by Paula Clark, is priced at $29.95 at Belle Bridal. 1330 CORNWALLAVE. 734-2740 Before the SSI Dine Out At THE SWISS CHALET featuring: French - Swiss 5-Course Dinners $2.85 and up THE VIEW IS FANTASTIC! Remember: THE SWISS CHALET 331 N. State 1Day Shirt Service COMPLETE LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANING Free Pickup Delivery 7344200 205PROSPECT Typewriter and Adding Machine Sales, Service and Rentals We carry all makes ofportables and used machines. BELLINGHAM BUSINESS MACHINES 1410 Commercial 734-3630(next to Bon Marcfce) Special Flowers For That Special Girl The S.S.I. Saturday, May 20th FreeDelivery To All Student Housing JOHNSON'S FLOWER SHOP ACROSS FROM THE EON MARCHEPHONE 733-6600 ---------- Collegian - 1967 May 12 - Page 22 ---------- PAGE TWENTY-TWO THE COLLEGIAN FRIDAY, MAY 12, 1967 Fashions modeled In this sectionCompliments of The Belle Bridal and Formal Shoppe Victor's and the Bon Marche Sporting a lowbowed back, the beige rayon-acetate shell with black rose pattern overlay is modeled by Mary May andpriced at $28 at Victor's. The little girl look once again makes the scene in the pink crepe empire-waistdress modeled by Mary May. Accented by a bow at the neck and left shoulder, the A-line is priced at$29.95 at Belle Bridal. Be Sure She'll Be Pleased Order Her Corsage from y^cm* and Make the S. S. I. An Event She'll Treasure. Delivery To All Student Housing or Use Our Free Parking Lot Behind OurStore. Nothing is more versatile for evening than this peach shantung ensemble modeled b) OsseSkarpengland. The dress is sleeveless, accented by small bow and ribbon at the hem. The mandarincollared coaj proves a striking complement to the sheath. The ensemble] priced at $28, is sold atVictor's. I. V, WILSON, Florist 1426 Cornwall Phone 733-7630 Looking ior that special place to eattomorrow night or any night? Come info the Royal Inn for good food and| pleasant dining. ForReservations Phone 734-5690 208 E. Hotly ---------- Collegian - 1967 May 12 - Page 23 ---------- FRIDAY, MAY 12, 1967 THE COLLEGIAN PAGE TWENTY-THREE New certification option set ByJeanne Doering Collegian Copy Editor An experimental program, f teacher t r a i n i n g for per-onspossessing or n ow work-ng t o w a r d bachelors' degrees n a r t s or sciences (not educa-ion) w i ll b eimplemented this all. The p r o g r am will t a k e into eacher t r a i n i n g only persons vith B.A. o rB.S. degrees, a nd laving a 2.2 g r a d e point aver-ge in a major subject area aught in t h e publicschools. Their teacher-education curricu-im would include three quarters of tudy in. education and thecandi-ate's teaching area, including one uarter of student teaching, plus a jrminal quarter of studyfollowing he first year of teaching. Provisional certification would be iven at the end of the third quar- 2r of study, and general or stand-rd certification given at the end of lie terminal quarter of study. Presently,the common route to acher certification involves enter-rig the teacher education curriculum late in thesophomore year or arly in the junior year, and work-g toward a B.A. in Education with n approved major. Dr. Ralph Thompson, chairman of le education department, noted that lie experimental program woulden-ble students and departments to ursue their fields of study in great, r depth. "It is becomingincreasingly clear hat as knowledge is increased in ome fields, a person will need bout five years ofcollege work gt;rior to teaching," Thompson said. Dr. Sam Kelly, assistant profes-or of education,commented that gt;ne factor in setting up the experi-nental program was the idea that jersons whoenter teaching after vorking for their bachelors' degrees n other fields will be more commit-ed to teaching. "So many juniors and seniors go nto education without real commit-nent," explained Kelly. "Besides,nany people find that education is i disastrous field for them, and if hey have a B.A. or a B.S. in some gt;ther field, they can have greater nobility out of teaching." Dining Out Before The SSI? Why Not Visit THE TWIN GABLES RESTAURANT featuring: Steaks Seafoods A La Cartes Light Dinners HeavyDinners and An Excellent- Wine List Dinners $ 2 and up THE TWIN GABLES 3313 W. MaplewoodGo North On The Freeway Then Left At The Airport Sign Kelly also emphasized the value of B.A. or B.S. degrees in the screening process for teacher training. "By the time persons have their degree, theywill know their capacity in their area of teaching, while as undergraduates they could not predict this,"he said. "In addition, we can get a broader view of the academic capacity of degree holders." The agedifference between teacher candidates in the conventional program and those in the experimentalprogram was also an advantage, Kelly added. "If maturity is proportional to age, then the candidates in the postgraduate teacher training program would be more mature and have a broader range ofexperience," he said. "The age difference is especially important in high school," he added, "whereoften only a very few years separate the student from the teacher." Kelly also noted that personspossessing baccalaureate degrees had a better chance ifor student teaching in varying settings. "A person with a B.A. is more likely to get upper division assignments in his student teaching, than if hehad student taught while an undergraduate and still taking courses in his discipline," he said. Anotheradvantage of the experimental program would be that persons who go through it would be moreeligible for direct entry into graduate school after a year of teaching, since they already haveconcentration in a discipline, Kelly added. "The real purpose of the program ds to try both programs forseveral years and find which seems the better and more probable route to teaching," Kelly said. "Wewill determine the success of the program against the teachers' performances at Western, theirsuccess in teaching and the opinions and observations of public school officials," he said. "Then wewill judge if we will retain both programs or cease one." Thompson noted that the idea of post-baccalaureate teacher training "is not universal, but if we move in this direction, there will be anupgrading of the quality of persons who enter teaching." Thompson also observed that several persons with arts and sciences degrees—and even some with Ph.D.s—were already working towardteacher certification at Western. He added that the biology department had expressed a real desireto pursue the program of a four-year B.S. in biology and one year of professional work in education forbiology teachers. Dr. Thomas Osborn takes 2-year leave Dr. Thomas Osborn, assistant professor ofmusic, has been granted a two-year leave off absence to pursue post-doctoral studies in opera at theUniversity of Southern California. He will work as an apprentice with the chief director of operaproductions there. "My purpose in going is to gain experience in all areas of operatic production,"commented Osborn. "I wanted to get top-notch experience, rather than learn as I go along, as I havebeen doing at Western." Osborn will leave for California in August, after summer quarter's full operaproduction. He plans to return to Western in September, 1969. Barton Frank will give cello recitalBarton Frank, cellist and associate professor of music at Washington State University, will present arecital at 8:15 p. m. Tuesday in the Auditorium. Frank's performance is part of a program of exchange faculty recitals between Washington state universities and colleges. Dr. Charles North, chairman ofthe music department, and his wife Mi. chi presented a recital at WSU March 12. Frank, who teachescello and conducts the WSU orchestra, is a graduate of Curtis Institute of Music, where he was apupil of Gregor Piatigorsky, outstanding American cellist. He has also been principal cellist at theNational Symphony Orchestra in Washington, D. C, and solo cellist with the New Orleans PhilharmonicOrchestra. Frank will be joined in the recital by pianist Dr. Jerry Bailey, associate professor of musicat WSU. BaL ley is a graduate of the Eastman School of Music and performed recently as a soloistwith the Portland and Tacoma Symphony Orchestras. Misses Sportswear, Second Floor ---------- Collegian - 1967 May 12 - Page 24 ---------- PAGE TWENTY-FOUR THE COLLEGIAN FRIDAY, MAY 12, 1987 Vietnam and comedy to take to opera stage A one-act opera w i t h analogies p e r t i n e n t to the Vietnam War will be performed along wi t h two comic scenes from other operas when the Opera Workshop p r e s e n t s "An Evening ofOpera" at 8:15 p.m. tonight and tomorrow night in the Auditorium. Vaughan Williams' one-act opera"Riders to the Sea," which was written in 1937, is based on a play by J. M. Synge. Its plot concerns theinevitable fate of men on the islands of Aran where eventually men are killed by the sea around theislands.' "The opera is pertinent to the Vietnam War," commented Opera Workshop Director Dr. Thomas Osborn, "in that one by one the men will go and never come back. We have today the parallel feelingof worrying for our men in Vietnam, as the wives in the opera worried (for their departed husbands." Headded that the opera is a 20th century work, and the singing tends to imitate speech more closely thanin earlier opera, works. Opening the program will be Beethoven's "Fidelio," Act I, Scene I, which startsout as a comic piece and ends up with serious overtones when the characters swear their love andloyalty to each other. In the opera, a man is unjustly imprisoned. His wife, Leonora, in efforts to freehim, disguises herself as a man under the name Fidelio and gets employed in the castle where he isjailed. Before Fidelio (Leonora) arrived at the castle, the turnkey and porter, Jaquino, is in love withMar-celline, the jailer's daughter. When Fidelio arrives, Marcelline falls in love with him—even though"he" is actually Leonora. The scene ends with a quartet in canon form in which all the charactersexpress their feelings simultaneously. A Czechoslovakian nationalistic opera by_ Smetana is the otherscheduled number. Scenes III and IV of Act 1 of "The Bartered Bride" will involve parents who take theirmarriage-age daughter Marcnka to a marriage broker. The broker, Kekal, arranges a match betweenMarenka and the son of a rich peasant. She is in love with another peasant, though, who turns out tobe the long-lost brother of the broker's choice. Osborn stated that the purpose of the workshop was tobring the opera media to campus. "Opera is an important media," he said. "Through the workshop wecan have people participate in opera, and expose others to it, as we will do when we present one of thescenes at the humanities lectures." The best way for a undergraduate to work in opera, Osbornsaid, was to prepare various scenes from the standard repertoire which they could do very well."Preparing scenes from operas, rather than the whole operas, enables students to experiment withdifferent operatic styles of music and acting," he said. "Besides, use of various scenes lends variety tothe program." Student composers stage recital Original music compositions by three graduate musicstudents and a Bellingham policeman will be presented at the Student Composition Recital at 8:15 p.m. Sunday in the Auditorium. The four—students of Dr. Robert Whitcomb, associate professor ofmusic—have been enrolled in the two-quarter Music 435-36 sequence for music composition. HaroldRaymond, a Bellingham policeman taking music courses, will have his Intermezzo for piano played by Whitcomb. Shirley Hatch, accompanied by Diana Dexter, will sing Raymond's "Three Songs ofFebruary 1967." Bob Kennicott, who has already taught in the public schools, will have three numberspresented. He and Rick Anderson will play his Invention for two trumpets. Janet Scott on clarinet, CraigRainier and Him Hollinger on percussion and Kennicott on trumpet will play his Triology for clarinet,trumpet and percussion. His Trio for flute, oboe and bassoon will be played by Gayle Miller, flutist, JanetScott, oboeist and Bob Riggs, bassoonist. Don Hedstrom, a graduate assistant in the musicdepartment, will direct the Vocollegians in the Kyrie and Gloria movements of his Masss. Doug Sonju,clarinetist, and Janet Scott, oboeist, will play Hedstrom's Suite in four movements for clarinet and oboe. Dale Gleason, also a graduate assistant, will present "Elegy" for flute and piano, played by flutistGayle Miller and pianist Rich Asher. A brass choir consisting of Tom Hanson, trombone; Julie O'Connor, french horn; Dick Schneider, tuba, and Dan Sharp and Jim Hope, trumpets, will play Gleason's four-movement Dance Suite. Whitcomb noted that the students' SMITH'S AT IT AGAIN SLACKSSWEATERS JACKETS SKIRTS (PLAIN) 75 Each SUITS OVERCOATS LADIES COATS LADIESDRESSES (PLAIN) s 1.50 Each FREE PICKUP DELIVERY SMITH CLEANERS LAUNDRY 733-4720 STATE BLVD. compositions were traditional i n form or structure, but that they werecontemporary in their harmonies. "Gleason's Dance Suite uses the Baroque models of pa vane, cour-ante, sarabande and capriccio, but the harmonies tend to be contemporary," he commented. "He{Strom's Mass uses melodic line which are not strikingly differen but the total sound is more contenporary. "None of the pieces involve anj thing like prepared piano," Win comb added. On Campus withMaxfihulman (By the author of "Rally Round the Flag, Boys!", "Dobie Gillis," elc.) HOW TO GET A'S INALL YOUR FINAL EXAMS In today's column, the last of the school year, I don't intend to be funny. (Ihave achieved this objective many times throughout the year, but this time it's on purpose.) The hour iswrong for levity. Final exams are looming. Have you got a chance? I say yes! I say America did notbecome the world's foremost producer of stove bolts and cotter pins.by running away from a fight! You will pass your finals! How? By studying. How? By-learning mnemonics. Mnemonics, the science of memoryaids, was, as we all know, invented by the great Greek philosopher Mnemon in 526 B.C. (This,incidentally, was only one of the inventions of this fertile Athenian. He also invented the house cat, theopposing thumb, and, most important, the staircase. Before the staircase people were forced willy-nilly to live out their lives on the ground floor, and many grew cross as bears. Especially Demosthenes whowas elected Consul of Athens six times but never served because he was unable to get up to the office of the Commissioner of Oaths on the third floor to be sworn in. But after Mnemon's staircase,Demosthenes got to the third floor easy as pie —to Athens' sorrow, as it turned out. Demosthenes, histemper shortened by years of confinement to the ground floor, soon embroiled his countrymen in a seriesof senseless wars with the Medes, the Persians, and the Los Angeles Rams. This later became known as the Missouri Compromise.) But I digress. We were discussing mnemonics, wnich are nothing morethan aids to memory — little jingles to help you remember names, dates, and places. For example:Columbus sailed the ocean blue In fourteen hundred ninety two. See how simple ? Make up your ownjingles. What, for instance, came after Columbus's discovery of America? The Boston Tea Party, ofcourse. Try t h i s: Samuel Adams flang the tea Into the briny Zuyder Zee. (NOTE: The Zuyder Zee waslocated in Boston Harbor until 1801 when Salmon P. Chase traded it to Holland for Alaska and two linebackers.) But I digress. Let's get back to mnemonics. Like this: In nineteen hundred sixty sevenPersonna Blades make shaving heaven. I mention Personna because the makers of Personna SuperStainless Steel Blades are the sponsors of this column. If I may get a little misty in this, the final columnof the school year, may I say it's been a pleasure working for Personna? May I say further that it's beenan even greater pleasure working for you, the undergrads of America? You've been a most satisfactoryaudience, and I 'm going to miss you this summer. In fact, I'd ask you all to come visit me except there is no access to my room. The makers of Personna, after I missed several deadlines, walled me in. I haveno doors or windows—only a mail slot. I slip the columns out; they slip in Personnas and such food ascan go through a mail slot. (For the past six months I've been living on after dinner mints.) I am onlyhaving my little joke. The makers of Personna have not walled me in, for they are good and true andgleaming and constant —as good and true and gleaming and constant as the blades they make—and Iwish to state publicly that I will always hold them in the highest esteem, no matter how my suit for backwages comes out. And so, to close the year, I give you one last mnemonic: Study hard and pass tvith honors, . And always shave with good Personnors! * * * © 196T, Max ShulntM Personna and Personna9 s partner in luxury shaving, Burma-Shave, regular or menthol, have enjoyed bringing you another yearof Max's uncensored and uninhibited column. We thank you for supporting our products; we wish youluck in your exams and in all your other enterprises*
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Collegian - 1967 January 20
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1967_0120 ---------- Collegian - 1967 January 20 - Page 1 ---------- Cheer up. Things will 1HE WESTERN WASHINGTON STATE COLLEGE EHl£GiFlM be WUS nextweek Vol. LIX, No. 13 Bellingham, Wash. 98225 Friday, Jan. 30, 1967 Six candidates seek positions,two as write-ins Four legislator-a
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1967_0120 ---------- Collegian - 1967 January 20 - Page 1 ---------- Cheer up. Things will 1HE WESTERN WASHINGTON STATE COLLEGE EHl£GiFlM be WUS nextweek Vol. LIX, No. 13 Bellingham
Show more1967_0120 ---------- Collegian - 1967 January 20 - Page 1 ---------- Cheer up. Things will 1HE WESTERN WASHINGTON STATE COLLEGE EHl£GiFlM be WUS nextweek Vol. LIX, No. 13 Bellingham, Wash. 98225 Friday, Jan. 30, 1967 Six candidates seek positions,two as write-ins Four legislator-at-large positions will be sought by six candidates in the comingelection, but only four of them will appear on the ballot Jan. 26. Two University Party candidates,Caroline Leonard and Bruce Murray, will run as write-in candidates. The elections board chairman,Dennis Hindman, refused to allow the two candidates' names to appear on the ballot because,although they filed for the position before the deadline, they •failed to attend a candidate meetingwhich was announced in the Daily Bulletin Tuesday. The meeting was not mentioned in the electionboard rules. The official candidates whose names will appear on the ballot are Drew Pettus, Bob Partlow, Mike DeMan, Dave Cunningham. Partlow, Pettus and DeMan now hold appointed positions aslegislators-at-large but are running for election to these posts because their appointed terms expire atthe end of this quarter. An opinion poll on girls' dorm hours will also be included. Dean of studentsappointed Dr. James Hitchinarinew dean —Photo By Joffre Clark Campus building plans cut By NEALJOHNS Collegian Staff Reporter Western's plans for campus en-irgement were shot down in part Jy theannouncement of the proposed Itate budget for the 67-69 biennium [y Governor Dan Evans last Thurs-[ay. The office of College Planning and development, headed by Harold A. taltz, had submitted requestsfor (lmost nine million dollars for cap-jal improvements; Evans' proposed judget allows for about 3V'2million lollars. Goltz said that, due to cuts, there ['ill be no additions to the Auditor-lim- Music Building,or to Carver tymnasium, no marine research Lboratory- no administration build-lig, no second satellitecollege, and lo more land acquisition, beyond "/hat has already been approved, |t least out of thisbudget. Other programs which had already been approved by the. last budget or by referendums, suchas the Education- Psychology Building, the additions to the Viking Union, and the Art Building, andthe George Williston Nash Residence Hall will not be directly affected by the budget cuts. Evans'proposed budget does not allow for enlargement of the library, although library additions may be possible if funds can be secured by cuts in other areas. One operating budget request that was approved,however, is an increase in faculty and a salary increase for the present faculty. These will be fundedat their current levels, increasing in proportion to enrollment increase. Last appeal for school levy The last appeal for the special ellingham school levy will be pre-mted to voters Tuesday. All registered voters are eligible j vote; there is no property re-uirement. The polls will be open •ora 8 a. m. to 8 p. m If the levy fails, Bellingham ;hool teachers and employees will f laid off, class size will increase, assmaterials, library books, equipment and extra-curricular activities ill suffer, according lo proponents the levy. World's best kotoist captivates audience By CHRIS CONDON Collegian Feature Editor KimioEto, recognized as the world's foremost kotoist, performed last Tuesday to a captive audience whichfilled L-4 to capacity. Blind since the age of five, Eto reflects in his music an introspective qualityrelated to Eastern philosophical thougnc. Historically, most virtuosi of the Koto have been blind,possessing the type of vision which allows them to see inside themselves. Examples of this visioninclude a piece which Eto composed entitled "Haru No Augata" (The Mood of Early Spring). This pieceexpresses the flowing tranquil feeling of early spring. Another original composition, "Choryu" (TheCurrent), is described as expressing the tide of human emotion, "intense passion and then the calmand gentle feeling." The 39-year-old musician began the first half of his program with a classical piece, "Hachidan No Shira-be" composed in the middle of the 17th century. He also performed a work entitled"Kibo No Hikari (The Light of Hope), he composed at the age of eleven when under the tutelage of Michio Miyagi, the great master of the koto. After being commended by his teacher ifor his performance in astudent recital, Eto was filled with hope and inspired to compose the piece. At the end of Eto'sperformance here the audience was so moved that they demanded several encores after which theygave him a standing ovation. The koto is an ancient Japanese stringed instrument introduced from China in the 12th Century. It is a six-ifoot narrow sound box over which 13 silk strings are stretched. Eto plays a koto of his own design- none with 18 strings. He is the only one who can perform on this complexinstrument. His playing technique is quite unlike that of a harpist, though he compares the koto to aharp. He slashes energetically at the strings, but friends claim that they have never heard him strike awrong string. Dr. James Hitchman, a husky former Marine, was appointed dean of students at the Board of Trustees meeting in Seattle last Friday. Dr. R. D. Brown, chairman of the English Department, wasnamed associate academic dean. Hitchman, 34, served as assistant academic dean and assistantprofessor of history since coming to Western last fall. He hopes to continue teaching whileassuming his new responsibilities. He is replacing Dr. Merle Kuder, who was dean of students (for 30years. Kuder will return to teaching education and psychology. As an undergraduate at WillametteUniversity in Oregon, Hitchman was a varsity athlete in football and track, holding the Pacific Northwest Conference shotput record for several years. He was also student body president. Following graduationin 1954, he studied at the University of California, Berkeley, receiving his M.A. in history in 1955. Hewas awarded his doctorate from the same school jn,1965. . ^Hitchman. served with the U. S. MarineCorps from 1955-58, advanc-; ing from 2nd to 1st Lieutenant. He has been admissions counselor atWestminster College, Salt Lake City (1958-60), teaching assistant at the University of California (1961-63),; and assistant professor of history at Portland State College (1963-66). In 1966, he received a$1,000 award for outstanding teaching at Portland State, based on student ratings. Hitchman and hiswife, Marie, have two children, Matt 10, and Suzy 7. Mustachioed Dr. Brown came to Western in 1965to head the English Department. He had previously served as professor of English at Oregon StateUniversity. Brown received his B. A. in 1949, his M. A. in 1950, and his Ph. D. in 1952, all at IndianaUniversity. He received the Distinguished Teaching Award at OSU in 1960. Petition effective A numberof new magazines have been ordered by the Student Co-op as a result of petitions circulated lastquarter, according to manager Ray Knabe. The petitions were started by a number of students andfaculty members who v/anted to improve the selection of literature available to students at Western. The original petition was started by Dr. David T. Mason of the biology department, and Eileen Kin-caid, astudent. '. _ ••• gt; The freshman class legislature voted unanimously to accept arid support the petition. . Bookstore manager Ray T. Knabe said that the petitions have no real meaning, though. Ithas always been the policy of this store to order any books tha* a faculty member or student wishes."The books must be ordered though. The book store now has 35,000 books and many of these will notsell because there is no demand for them. The book store cannot order a number of other booksbecause we have neither the money or the assurance that they will sell unless they are ordered byindividuals or groups," he said. Kotoist Kimio casts charm —Photo By Keith Wyman ---------- Collegian - 1967 January 20 - Page 2 ---------- PAGE TWO THE COLLEGIAN FRIDAY, JANUARY 20, 1967 cloud needs silver lining The tranquil paceof Western life will be interrupted next week by the appearance of ugly men, gambling, slavery,UNIVAC, and white Peters points out one more mistake A charge of "factual inaccuracy" was leveled at the Collegian by Dr. .Robert Peters, chairman of the Publications Committee, at the meeting lastFriday. Peters cited a paragraph in last week's front page story, "Collegian criticized by Sandberg, pub-board," 'which said: "The petition, which had been circulating since the last week of fall quarter,contained the forged signatures of Collegian editorial board members as well as those of suchnotables as Little Orphan Annie and Walter Lippmann." Peters said he had examined the petitions(submitted to the committee Jan. 6 by Associated Students Roger Sandberg) and failed to find theseparticular signatures. "A news story should be based on fact, not hearsay," he said. Collegian editor-in-chief Bruce Delbridge admitted, after examining the petition, that the signatures mentioned were notincluded. ' "We saw the petition with these names on it, and thought this would .be the one submitted,"said Del-bridge. Byron Smith, former member of the Publications Committee, said the petition with theforged signatures had been badly mutilated, and was not submitted for that reason. AS PresidentSandberg termed the incident "just a misunderstand-' ing," and board member James Mulligancommented: "I don't think the Collegian attempted to be misleading, or to distort the facts. A memberof this committee did say those names were on the petition." Earlier in the meeting, the Committeedecided to permit Dana Rust to remain as sports editor, although his grade point falls .04 short of the•2.5 requirement for Collegian editors. - "Technically, a grade point of 2.43 is a 2.5, and since Rustis well-qualified for the job, we'll let it stand," Peters said. The role of the publications adviser was also discussed, but no definite recommendations were made by the committee. STATE STREETLAUNDROMAT NEXT TO THE YMCA WASH, DRY AND FOLD 1246 State 734-1650 Marcel lePrescriptions • STAR DRUG REXALL STATE HOLLY lines in Old Main. As campus life is turnedupside-down students will drain the silver from their pockets for contributions to World UniversityService. The Ugly Men will invade the campus movie Sunday evening, and roam the campus walkwaysand spoil appetites in Saga for the duration of the week, to scare up money for WUS week. The richestUgly Man at the end of the week will win the title of "Ugliest Man on Campus.'' A white line running down the center of Old Main's hallway next Tuesday will not be drawn to regulate pedestrian traffic, but as a blueprint for a Mile of Silver. The strip of tape will be laid to attract spare coins. Weather permitting, thetape will be laid in front of the Viking Union. Sexes in the old fashioned slave market will change placesas fellows will be raffled off to the girls at a dance Wednesday evening. Slaves are guaranteed to besubmissive from 9 a. m. to 5 p. m., Thursday. Tickets for the dance and slave raffle, limited to on-campus students, are on sale now. On Thursday, the UNIVAC Date Selector will accept applicationsfor ideal dates. In two weeks the data processed "date" wiill be returned, in time for the UNIVAC DateDance, Feb. 11. On Friday, dice will rattle and cards will shuffle as Casino Night rolls along, marking the end of WUS week. Girls' dorm hours will be extended t i l 2:30 a. m., but girls coming in after 2 a. m. will have to pay a fine of two cents per minute. World University Service is a voluntary association which not only provides material and financial aid to needy universities in more than 60 countries, but alsoworks with the problems of student health, higher education and programs of construction, printing andlaboratory aid. HOLLY'S MEN'S SHOP FOR THE BEST-DRESSED COLLEGE MALE! 1307CORNWALL Probably the Best Mon. thru Sat., 11:30 A. M. till 3:00 A. M. Sun. 12 til] 8 p. m. NowServing Your Favorite Beverages In Our NEW COCKTAIL LOUNGE 1319 COMMERCIAL STREETComposer wonts to know the score on ' 6 7 compacts DEAR REB: I'm a well-known composer, and Ineed a new car. The trouble is, I'm just too Bizet to pick one out. And what's more, many of the new cars I see are Often-, bach in the garage for repairs. But I do have a good friend who is pleased with his new'67 Dodge Dart.' He was given an excellent deal and Berlioz any money on it. My Bach is to the wall. Can you help me? LUDWiG DEAR LUDWIG: My advice is that you let yourself Ravel in the en[oy-ment ofdriving the sporty, all-new Dart for '67. You'll find its Liszt price is a lot lower than you'd expect. And eventhough it's longer outside and bigger inside this year, Dart's still an easy car to Handel. Stlc*^,^ Here'sthe swinging, man-sized compact for '67 that's got three B's of its own: Bold, Brassy and Beautiful. Darthas been completely restyled this year, inside and out. It's longer, roomier, more powerful. But still atthat snug compact price. Drop in at your nearest Dodge Dealer's and try it out for yourself. THE nmmiiumiunm WAI Dodge CHRYSLER MOTORS CORPORATION ---------- Collegian - 1967 January 20 - Page 3 ---------- FRIDAY, JANUARY 20, 1967 THE COLLEGIAN PAGE THREE Campus underwear (news briefs) gt;ISCIPLINARY CODE The Board of Trustees has post-xmed voting on the revised disciplinaryprocedures until next month. "We need more time for further itudy and consideration," said JosephPemberton, a member of the Joard. LIBRARY The reserve book room of Mabel Joe Wilson Library willbe open additional hours on Friday evenings rom 5 to 10 p. m. and Saturday mornings from 9 a. m. to 1p. m. Students are asked to use the ligh Street entrance when the main iibrary is not open. SRIDGEThe Bridge Club will meet every Wednesday night from 7 to 10:30 in •oom 209 of the Viking Union.Everyone is welcome. M gt;CTORATES Western may be able to issue loctorate degrees if certainlegislation now in Olympia is passed, according to President Harvey C. unke. In a special FacultyCouncil meet-ng last week, Bunke asked if there as faculty support for the granting gt;f doctorates' atWestern. He told the Council that after 'eading the minutes to the previous week's meeting, he haddoubts as o the amount, of support. The Faculty Council had BISO ex- gt;ressed fears that the quickestab-ishment of doctoral degrees might Jo harm to the present master's nd undergraduate programs.Bunke wanted a more specific statement of approval, acknowledg-ng general faculty support. Last weekthe Faculty Council Torum went on record in support gt;f the proposal. The question of approval wasalso sent to all the de-artments on campus. Out of the Huxley College: another satellite in Westernorbit? Plans for Huxley College, the sec-md satellite college of Western, are tow being formulated andstudied the Long Range Planning Committee. The proposed curriculum for Hux- gt;y is environmental science, according to Academic Dean Charles lora. The college could include ;uch courses asmarine biology, :resh water studies, ecology and immunity studies. Flora said that this future collegewould be programmed for a higher level of instruction than that of 'airhaven. This would mean a cur-•iculum aimed at upper division and graduate students. The name Huxley is a tentative wie. It isnamed after the biologist, H. Huxley, (1825-189). 23 departments, 15 approved of the doctorates, sevenremained indifferent and one abstained. After considerable discussion with the Faculty Council, Bunke said he was satisfied with faculty support. "I can now speak of the will of the faculty, as expressed bythe Faculty Council," he said. SUPER-VIKINGS The gorkaphone has been officially adopted as theemblem of the Super-Vikings. A gorkaphone is an instrument made rom old pieces of tubing, parts from old instruments, and other miscellaneous junk, and is played with a trumpet or trombone mouthpiece.The Super-Vikings, a newly-formed pep band, have also adopted attire including waist-highfisherman's waders, blue-striped workman's overalls, floppy felt fedoras and enthusiastic ties. Avoluntary group consisting primarily of male members of Western's Symphonic Band, they will playat every home basketball game, and some of the away games. UW DORMS Abolishment of dorm hoursat the University of Washington moved closer to realization last week. Girls living in dorms at the UWvoted 90 per cent in favor of abolishing all dorm hours, it was announced last week. If CharlesOdegaard, president of the UW, approves the recommendation, the no-hours policy will go into effectfall quarter, 1967. During a one week period, about 3500 girls voted. They comprised 95 per cent of allgirls in the dorms. UW prof fights drug policy By SHEILA ELIASON Collegian Staff Reporter "Theproposed policy at Western with respect to drug usage is unwise and unwarranted" according to JohnSpellman, a University of Washington professor who spoke on campus Tuesday afternoon. Spellmanwas the first speaker in the Campus Christian Ministry Open Forum program. "The policy may well beunconstitutional, unviable, and is most certainly unworkable," he said, adding that the policy was aviolation of fundamental student rights. Spellman was referring to Western's present policy whichmakes a student in possession of drugs on campus sometimes subject to disciplinary action by thecollege. He pointed out that neither the federal nor the proposed state legisi-lation on drugs makespossession of drugs a criminal offense, so the code makes the college able to punish a student for anoffense ' that is not valid in civil court. COURTS CAN'T DO IT "Universities," he said, "cannot punishwhat courts are unable to punish." He asserted that the only grounds for dismissal of a student shouldbe academic. "The only exception should be if an action of a student presents a clear and presentdanger to the college/" he said. Spellman also made reference to House Bill number 45, proposedWashington state legislation on drugs which has been presented to the state legislature, stressing theneed for its defeat or drastic amendment. The bill calls for a maximum sentence of 40 years for selling LSD to a minor; the sentence ror murder in this state is only 20 years, Spellman pointed out.POLICY DEFENDED In the discussion that followed Spellman'a presentation, one student defendedWestern's drug policy by saying it is much better than the interim policy because now students can only be punished for being involved with drugs on the campus itself. "I don't like my freedom rationed,"Spellman replied, "The policy is better, yes, but it is still pretty poor." Spellman concluded by re-emphasizing the importance of fighting infringements! on student rights. Spellman's speech was thefirst in a series of open forum programs sponsored by the CC1VI this quarter. Dr. Giovanni Costigan,professor of history at the University of Washington, is scheduled to speak on Student Rights:Vietnam, at 4:00 Tuesday in the Viking Union lounge. WATCH LOST A five-dollar reword is beingoffered to the findes of a Hamilton ladies' watch which was lost on Jan. 15, near the Saga Dining Hallor around Ridgeway Sigma. Contact Kris Hemion at Ridgeway Sigma, 328 or 733-4663. (Paid adv.)STUDY ABROAD Study a year abroad in Sweden, France, or Spain. College prep., junior year abroadand graduate programs. $1,500 guarantees: round trip flight to Stockholm, Paris or Madrid,dormitories or apartments, two meals daily, tuition paid. Write: SCANSA, 50 Rue Prosper Legoute,Antony - Paris, France HURLEY DRUG MART 1311 Commercial • Prescriptions • Drugs • Pet Supplies t v ^ \s/ \yy \ lt;*s \GJJ$C "BUT PAPA, WE CAN GET FRESHER MILK FOR LESS ATENNEN'S THR1FTWAY!" ENNEN'S THRIFTWAY HIGH AND HOLLY "WHERE EVERY CUSTOMER ISIMPORTANT" STUDENT CO-OP BOOK NEWS The Course by Robert Huff finoBBy arrived. A muchtalked about biography Drugoth by James Drought is worth reading plus The Source by Michener andIn Cold Blood by Capote all in paper. Three new almanacs are in stock: Information Please, Reader'sDigest, and World Almanac all new for 1967. Our paper back sale table, used and new books, changesevery week. An anticipated arrival is MacBird. SKI SHO THE GOLDEN RULE... BELLINGHAM'S ONLY COMPLETE SKI SHOP FEATURES... FISCHER SKIS HART SKIS K-2 HOLIDAY SKIS A TSKISREIKER BOOTS SPORTCASTER WHITE STAG AND MANY MORE! 114 W. HOLLY ---------- Collegian - 1967 January 20 - Page 4 ---------- PAGE FOUR THE COLLEGIAN FRIDAY, JANUARY 20, 1967 Sometimes bastards can do . . . •. •things normal people can't we're for levitafion \t wouldn't do you a damn bit of good personally to helpcampaign for the Bellingham school levy going on the ballot Jan. 24. It would only help the kids in theBellingham schools. But it would be a hell of a nice gesture. Here's what will happen if the levy does notpass: 32 teachers and administrators will be dropped, class sizes will increase by 25 per cent, advancedprograms in mathematics and foreign language will be abandoned, many extra-curricular athleticprograms will be halted, and basic supplies such as textbooks will be cut back. Simply stated it wouldmean the schools would get much worse instead of better. That's one thing Bellingham or any schoolsystem doesn't need. Help from the college would mean honest generosity on the part of Westernstudents. After all, we really won't lose a thing, if it fails. But think, when you were in high school, didn'tyou have .the very things that these kids will be denied? A few hours of your time will not be insignificant. In the last election the levy failed by 38 votes. A little help from. Western and it might pass. Despite thefact that the levy is for school children, it is not a game. State law dictates that such a levy cannot be put on a ballot more than two times in a single year. If. it fails this time, the schools will have to remain below minimum standards for the entire "year. If you are old enough to vote, we urge you to do so. If you havetime to donate to the election committee, please contact Jim Roberts at 733-4020.—Bruce Delbridge.the collegian Official Weekly Newspaper of Western Washington State College, Bellingham, Wash.PHONE 734-7600, EXTENSION 269 Second-class postage paid at Bellingham, Washington COPYDEADLINE-Tuesday 12 Noon" FOUNDING MEMBER PACIFIC STUDENT PRESS Affiliated with UnitedStates Student Press Association, Collegiate Press Service, Intercollegiate Press Service, AssociatedCollegiate Press- BRUCE DELBRIDGE, Editor-in-Chief MARY MAGNUSON, Managing Editor COPYEDITOR Jeanne Doering FEATURE EDITOR Chris Condon CAMPUS EDITOR Vern GiesbrechtSPORTS EDITOR Dana Rust Rich O'Brien Noel Bourasaw Caroline Leonard Gail YadaPHOTOGRAPHERS Scott Finley Dwight Larson Jim Hinds Steve Johnson Keith Wyman BUSINESSMANAGER Ken Riddell STAFF MEMBERS CARTOONISTS Ed Solem Mike Condon Robert La Rivieve ADVISER Ed Nicholls Joe Cox Larry Brooks Neal Johns Greg Miller Mark Hoffman Sheila EliasonJackie McGraw Student leaders protest By ROBERT A. GROSS The Collegiate Press Service The gapbetween moderate and radical opponents of the Vietnam war was dramatized last week as studentleaders across the country adopted divergent tactics to mobilize student opinion against Americanpolicy in Vietnam. WHfi 100 student body presidents and campus editors were sending a restrainedletter to President Johnson expressing their anxiety and doubts about U. S. policy, 273 campusradicals met in Chicago to plan demonstrations on four or five selected campuses in April to protestthe war, the draft, and "campus complicity" with the war effort. The letter, which received frontpagecoverage in the Dec. 30 New York TIMES, initiated a campaign by moderates to make their standagainst the war "the majority position in the country," according to United States National StudentAssociation (USNSA) Vice-President Edward Schwartz, who helped gather signatures for the letter. The student body presidents told the President that increasing numbers of students are deeplytroubled about the war and warned that "unless this conflict can be eased, the United States will findsome of her most loyal and courageous young people choosing to go to jail rather than to bear theircountry's arms." The letter urged the President to clarify American objectives in Vietnam so as toease .the following student doubts about U. S. policy: "—that America's vital interests are sufficientlythreatened dn Vietnam to necessitate the growing commitment there; ' —that such vital interestsas may be threatened are best protected by this growing commitment; and —that a war which maydevastate much of the countryside can lead to the stable and prosperous Vietnam we once hoped ourpresence would help create." In keeping with the moderate tone of the letter, the signers describedthemselves and many of their contemporaries as "people as devoted to the Constitution, to thedemocratic process, and to law and order as were their fathers and brothers who served willingly in twoWorld Wars and in Korea." The idea to send the letter grew out of a debate at last August's NSACongress between moderate Allard K. Lowenstein, a former NSA president, and radical David Harris, the Stanford University student body president. A bitter CO fights for peac Editor, The Collegian: I, like theyoung soldier who wrote the letter submitted by Miss Mik-sell, have also been thinking what is going tohappen to me in the next two years. This young man and myself seem to have a great deal in commoneven though our ideals differ greatly. -I would like him to know that I have had 15 buddies shipped to the war in Southeast Asia. One of these contracted chronic malaria in an operation in the jungles. One ofthese is alive and presently fighting in a "guerilla warfare" type of outfit. Like this young man, I too have lost 13 buddies.' The rest of the 15. They are gone from life and vanished from the earth for the rest ofeternity. All that remains is their earthly clay in various cemeteries around the nation. I too am bitter andI too fight for revenge. I fight my battle in the realms of moral ethics and religious beliefs. I fight my battleagainst the system which is responsible for their deaths. I am a conscientious objector or, if youprefer, a chickenshit. My battle has two possible endings. The first is two years in a public serviceorganization with little pay which is called a subsistance al- Appointments plan sent to Council Aproposal recommending the addition of two students with voting powers to several faculty committeeswas passed Monday by the Associated Students Legislature. The proposal will be considered by theAcademic Council in February. Also during the meeting two legis-lators- at-large were appointed andAssociated Students President Roger Sandberg summarized his "plan for action" for winter quarter. TheLegislature's proposal involves the formation of a Student Academic Advisory Board of eightstudents and two faculty members. Two student members of the board will act as voting members ofthe Academic Council and the arts and sciences, general education and teacher educationcommittees if the Academic Council approves the proposal. Drew Pettus and Mike De Man, bothpolitical science majors, were elected by the Legislature to replace two legiislators-at-large whoresigned their positions on the board. Selection of a, replacement for the senior class representativewas postponed until Monday. SANDBERG SPEAKS Sandberg, in his quarterly address to theLegislature, outlined a list of ideas, proposals, projects and services on which he hopes the Legislaturewill take action this quarter. One of the suggestions is a study in depth on grade requirements forparticipation in student activities. "Most of us recognize that grades are not a measure of intelligence. Itis time we examined the merits of having such a regulation," he said. Sandberg also suggested that the present method of representation on the Legislature be examined and evaluated because "it's allphoney." He also discussed the need for the Legislature to take action concerning housing conditions. Setting up a program to educate, students as to what to look for when apartment-hunting,establishing a housing complaint board and publishing a "black list" of inadequate off-campushousing were some of his suggestions. Speaker of the Legislature Kent Edmonds warned that simplymaking complaints was not beneficial to the students. "My apartment was mentioned in last year'shousing forum as an example of the poor conditions. Instead of improving the place they condemned it and I had to move out," he said. lowance. The term aptly applies| The second is five years on a harelabor gang in a federal prison. I suppose he would be insulted ii I said that I was also fighting foij him. Isuppose that you would bt insulted if I said I was fighting fojj you. My fight is shared by others he\cause my fight is for all. You maj think what you like of me, but mj battle is just as much a battle foijpeace as his. My battle is for broj therhood and understanding and th/ rights of man to peace, harmony|and conscience. JAMES GROH Sophomore, Speech Student condemn: military ideology] Editor, TheCollegian: I submit to you the letter of Mr| Leslie Miksell (Collegian 1-13-67) a^ an excellent example ofan individj ual's total acceptance of a colonial! industrial-military ideology, promot] ed by a misledadministration anc accepted by an apathetic populace| The value of calling attention tc Mr. Miksell'sattitudes is not in beJ littling him for his obvious miscon] strued values and sentiments, but) rather in theexemplification oi manifestations of a sick society. I would like to select a mosfl meaningful statementfrom Mr. Mik-J sell's comments. "We go througf hell trying to train men to kill i^ necessary and tbeydon't even thin! of us as human beings." Mr. Miksell, regarding your go£ of revenge against the"aggressors'] in Vietnam, for the death of youi 13 buddies, neither you nor youi comrades in arms noryour manj supporting countrymen will see the real aggressor in Southeast AsiaJ DALE PiHLMANGraduate Student Ed. note—Due to a typographical deletion it was not made clear tha(j the letter wasreceived by Miss Mik-| sell, from a friend in Vietnam. ---------- Collegian - 1967 January 20 - Page 5 ---------- FRIDAY, JANUARY 20, 1967 THE COLLEGIAN PAGE FIVE TV goes 'egghead' by 1975 By JeanneDoering Collegian Copy Editor Several television sets per dorm, ut with programming channeled toumanities or science lectures in-ead of Batman reruns, may be ommonplace at Western by 1975. Thisis one use of an educational Revision facility suggested by a )ur-man advisory team from the ationalProject for the Improve-lent of Televised Instruction SJPITI). . The team, which met with faculty ndadministrators last week, rec-nmended that instructional closed-rcuit television at Western be part : aninstitutional facility providing irvices also for audio-visuals, pho-igraphy and graphics. "Such a facilitywould serve col-iterally many departments," said r. Ralph Thompson, chairman of te Educational MediaCommittee hich called the advisory team to estern. "It would be different from the isual Communications Education /ICOED) program already institut-l here, although personnel for both 'ojects might becoordinated. "VICOED is an instructional pro-am, while the educational televi-on facility would provideservices r the whole college," explained hompson. Plans have been made to house e facility in threegyms at Campus School. REFERENDUM 15 HELPS Through the passage of Referendum 15 thecollege is receiving 1.7 million dollars for building the Education- Psychology Building, and $50,- 000of this will be used ifor instructional television equipment. Student suggestion: M. Z. Wilson, Inc.Editor, The Collegian: It seems as though our library has decided to go into the monetary •end ofbusiness rather than the loaning end. The incorporation of a computer system has hiked the book fineslive cents a day to 50 cents a day. For lost books there is a service charge of $5 plus a fine and alsofuli payment for the book. I know inflation is here but this is ridiculous, besides what happened to thepresident's 3.2 per cent guide lines. I think the legislature could finally do something worth while for thewhole student body by looking into the situation. Better yet maybe an open forum or even a boycott ofthe library might show the disatis-faction over the rising commercialism of the state run, non-profit organization—Mabel Zoe Wilson Library. RON OTTELE Senior SEATTLE-FIRST NATIONAL BANKMEMBER FEDERAL 0EP08IT INSURANCE CORPORATION WRITE-IN Stccce 'Tftunnaty Legislator-at-large (Paid Political Advertising) More funds are needed, though, said Thompson, "to equip the facilitybetter than is presently allowed through the construction budget." The college is asking for $852,000 —an amount equal to half the minimum construction cost of the Education - Psychology Building— from the federal government under the Higher Educational Facilities Act. Almost $48,000 of this sumwould be used for television equipment. The college had also requested a WOULD YOU BELIEVEGUITAR LESSONS at special rates? . PHONE 733-3263 state appropriation of $122,650 for |operational costs, but this request was denied in Governor Dan Evans' I recommendations last week.CAN DO IT ANYWAY Barney Goltz, director of campus planning and development said, "Losing statemoneys does not mean that we can not fund through our regular funding resources. "The key is whetheror not the iederal grant is approved. If it is, that could be the giant step to a first-rate instructionaltelevision-center at Western," he said. The four NPITI consultants sug- I gested that the facility could be used for classroom instruction and observation, research, access to library information andbroadcasting of special -events and lectures. Dorm-based educational television, where studentscould call up for information from the library, or tune in to lectures or language l bs, was also suggested. WRITE-IN @wiolt*te demand Legislator-at-large (Paid Political Advertising) TONITE RUGBY CLUBPRESENTS THE BANDITS — VU Lounge 9-12 Rugby Game — Sat". 2 p.m. — Downer Field —Western vs. Richmond, B. C. Come See Hear 67 fiatttent 67 NEW SOUND Come See Hear THETRAVELERS 3 'A delightful sound of Folk-Rock" in FOLK-ROCK music SATURDAY, JAN. 21 in theCOLLEGE AUDITORIUM tickets at VU Desk only $1.50 THE PAIR EXTRAORDINARY 'You'll neverhear another sound like this one!' ---------- Collegian - 1967 January 20 - Page 6 ---------- PAGE SIX THE COLLEGIAN FRIDAY, JANUARY 20, 1967 'The Ram's Horn' COMING SOON THE NEW BOWERY COMING FEBRUARY 1 THIS WEEK LIVE MUSIC Tues. through Saturday 9:30 121111th St. In The Swinging South Side One good pizza deserves another. And another...and another.People just can't get their fill of Shakey's pizza, 'cause it's so go-o-o-o-d! Try a teensy piece - t h e nstand back and "watch your tummy grow-w-w-w-w! SHEETS 1234 N. STATE ST ye Public house ©1966 SHAKEY'S INC. Mabel defrocked of her science The library science program has been moved tothe Education Department's jurisdiction on a temporary basis. Formerly located at Mabel ZoeWilson Library, the program was moved by a vote of the Academic Council an its Jan. 10 meeting. Theprogram was cited by a Library Study Committee report as being too dependent upon too few peoplein its present position. The report pointed out that the needs of Washington state are not being met byWestern's program. Only one library science major graduated last year from Western while there were168 openings in the state for librarians. Dr. R. D. Brown, chairman of the committee, deemed theprogram "very unsuccessful in past years" and recommended that it be "completely divorced from theoperation of the library."' William H. O. Scott, circulation librarian, argued that "the library would bedefrocked of an integral part" if the program were relocated. In other actions at the meeting, theCouncil unanimously approved a recommendation from the Arts and Sciences committee on thecombination of major and minor in the arts and sciences program. The report provides that two options be available to students through the department's. Students may select from a major, with supportingcourses, which will require no more than 85 credits and a minor requiring no more than 25 credits,or from a new major concentration allowing up to a 110 credit major. The first option is presentlyavailable. Pet guinea pig gets Headstart Campus School third graders will travel to Lummi IslandWednesday and donate a member of their guinea pig litter to Headstart preschoolers at the LummiI*land Day School. Miss Karen Olson, third grade teacher at Campus School, said that the trip would be educational for both groups of children, despite the differences in their ages. "Many of the Lummiyoungsters have never seen a guinea' pig or even met a child from a larger public grade school, whilemany Campus School third graders have not been around children from different social and culturalbackgrounds," she said. Headstart is a government-sponsored preschool cultural enrichmentprogram. BOOK LOST A book of German Plays of the 19th Century by Thomas Campbell was lost onJan. 7 on campus by Miss Gudrun Klix. Finder may contact her at Box 204-A. Rt. 2r Ever- Ison or call 542-2876. (Paid adv.) NOW Appearing at the Casino Room IN THE LEOPOLD HOTEL THE "TOPICS"A trio of all-round good entertainers with loads of laughter. NO COVER The Casino also extends a warmwelcome back to all Western Students. APPEARING NIGHTLY EXCEPT SUNDAY. NO MINIMUMEVERY NIGHT IS PEANUT NIGHT! Happy Hour Tues. Thurs. 6:00 - closing jt *t 137 W. HOLLYBecause You Demanded Every Tuesday Night 6:30-8:00 Is DIME NIGHT TONIGHT IS THE NIGHT!GRAND THEATER 1224 Commercial 733-9755 TONIGHT—OPEN 6:30 'The Pad" 7:18 10:49"Gambit" at 9:00 P.M. Sat. and Sun. Cont. From 1 P.M. What they do together.. ..is a crime!SHIRLEY ''**• MICHAEL MacLAINE , CAME "GAMBIT" TECHNICOLOR. PLUS — COMPANIONCOMEDY JULIE SOMMARS BRIAN BEDFORD THEIUD^i^ TECHNICOLOR' COMING - WED.-THUR.JAN. 25-26 JOSEPH E. LEVINE present! A Paul Czinner Production THE ROYAL BALLET with-MARGOT FONTEYN RUDOLF NUREYEV with TUMET DAVID BLAIR DESMOND DOYLE JULIAFARRON MICHAEL SOMES Music by Choreography by SERGE PROKOFIEV KENNETH MACMILLAN Scenery and Costumes by NICHOLAS GEORGIADIS The Orchestra of the Royal Opera House CoventGarden Conducted by John Lanchbcry Produced and Directed by Paul Czinner (~^{^\J f \ Prints byPathe An Embassy Pictures Release In V^V_ gt;/jL_iVyX\ 2 SHOWINGS BOTH DAYS AT 2 P.M. 8:00 P.M. STUDENTS 1.25 MATINEE OR EVENING GENERAL ADMISSION MAT. 1.25 EVE. 1.75 ---------- Collegian - 1967 January 20 - Page 7 ---------- FRIDAY, JANUARY 20, 1967 THE COLLEGIAN PAGE SEVEN | Western orators | i win three firsts ITwo Western students won three irst places in oratory and oral in-erpretation at a debate tournament tSeattle Pacific College last week-nd. Mary Widdifield took first in low-r division women's oratory and ralinterpretation. Lee McCullough laced first in upper division ratory. He placed third in the ame event at the Western States onference. Western debaters Linda Jacob and teve Marcus were eliminated in he finalround of debate by the irst place team from the Univer-ity of Oregon. Next weekend Western's debateearn will participate in a debate ontest at the University, of South-rn California. Committee to decidefaculty news policy President Harvey C. Bunke ex-ressed his appreciation last week 0 the FacultyCouncil for shifting ie responsibility for the editorial olicy of the Faculty News from imself to the newly-formed Faculty ommunications Committee. Bunke had set up a temporary licy for the Faculty News last uarter. His policy permitted no ditorials and no news from other ampuses. Faculty News editor JamesH. ulligan said that the communica-ions committee should have a pol-cy statement ready in a few weeks 1 will be submitted to the Faculty ouncil for approval. "Whatever the Council decides as whole will bewhat happens in the uture," commented Mulligan. He aid the Council has the power to evise and.eventhrow out the pro-osed policy. Finders, keepers Editor, The Collegian: May I use your columns to thank ;he anonymous person who left my "river's license and other cards at he Business Office, and toexpress he hope that whoever found the ost wallet is putting it and the cash I contained to good use.While gt;eing grateful for the return of the ,ards, I shall try to gain some satis-jction from havingunwittingly ielped some "needy" student or un-erpaid employee at Western. D. A. FERRIS, Coordinatorof Instructional Programs 1LENTALS f • Weekly i • Monthly • Quarterly REPAIRS • AllTypewriters • Portable or standard • Electric or Manual • Free Estimates ' I I » Free Delivery• Free Demonstrations Your Typewriter Headquarters ice new and reconditioned typewriters, we carry them all, including world famous •'Olympia." BLACKBURN OFFICE EQUIPMENT 1223 Commercial (next to Gages) 733-7660 "Our 18th year of dependable service" Weekly Schedule A.S. EVENTSBULLETIN Jan. 20—Mixer, Rugby Club, VU Lounge, 9-12. *Jan. 21—"Concert '67," Pair Extraordinaireand Travelers 3, Aud., 8 pni. Jan. 23—Student Art Contest begins, VU Lounge. *Tickets on sale at VUdesk and at the door, $1.50. W.U.S. EVENTS Jan. 20—Turtle Race, during half-time of the basketballgame. Jan. 22—Movie, "Baby The Rain Must Fall" Jan. 22—Ugly Man Contestants. Jan. 23—CarmelApple Sale, dorm to dorm and VU foyer, all day. Jan. 24—Mile of Silver, Old Main, (VU if raining). Jan.25—Slave Raffle and Dance, 7:30-9:30, Ridgeway Commons. Jan. 26—Univac Date Auction, VU foyer,all day 7:00-9:00, Coffee Shop. Jan. 27—Hootenany, 7:00-9:00, Lounge Big Brothers extend hands tostudents Fatherless junior high school boys in this area will gain male college students as "BigBrothers" in a program sponsored by the Community Involvement Committee of the AssociatedStudents Legislature. The extent of the "Big Brother" program will depend on the number o!f malestudents signing up. Nine have volunteered so far. Applications are available at the Viking Union desk.The idea for the Big Brother program came from Oregon State University where a similar program isunder the supervision of the YMCA. The pilot program, which is scheduled to begin in February, willsponsor five to ten boys. If it is successful, a Big Sister program may also be started. BinyonOptometrists 1328 CORNWALL BINYON Optometrists \ Ph. 733-9300 COMPLETE OPTICALSERVICE CONTACT LENSES — FASHION FRAMES Dr. Leroy H. Freeman and associates 4 pm-11pm Daily 12 pm-12 am Sat. Sun. 319LAKEWAY PH. 734-5140 CHICKEN^DELIGHT CHICKEN,SHRIMP, FISH $1 l i DELIGHT DINNERS ...I •** up BUCKETS $2-97 up PIZZA 8" - 10" - 12"SHAKES MALTS 35 lt; and 40£ WE DELIVER FREE TO YOUR HOME AND THE DORMS PHONE734-5140 319 LAKEWAY DR. Intelligence... Without Diligence is Nothing Contemplation is one thing.But there comes a time for pragmatic action. With marriage on your mind, one first step is a ring. Don'tlet a lack of cash deter you. As we have said before, Weisfield's gives credit to students of promise. See our big selection of bridal sets. £*'% 200.00 I weisfield's | . JEWELERS 1 1327 CORNWALL |AVENUE tmtewfr D I A M O N D R I N GS P R E L U D E " 4 SLENDER SHAFTS OF GOLD SPIRALUPWARD HOLDING A SINGLE DIAMOND IN SIMPLE ELEGANCE* MILTON E. TERRY. JEWELERQUALITY JEWELRY 1326 CORNWALL 733-2030 . PRICE RIOT at the COLLEGE SHOP 1327CORNWALL AVE. ^ | f II^TC solids and plaids, sizes 1 Afe anil la 51016. __*___/_ 16.00 y2oFF Famous maker to match skirts. Pullover and Sweaters s S = = 5 S " 5 " S . D o i t TO D a r l e n e » J a c kWinter, Jodee, M± r d l l l v Wool, flannel, and stretch 15.00 %J Dresses i-GROUP Vi OFF ABERKSHIRE Were * 28 vOX 0ver The Knee 200 I # | • Car Coats 3A and 7/a lengths.. . _ I M A A T Ca^o jackets, melton, cor- v a , u e s r o 1 A* V I M I d duroy a n d f a k e f u r s 40.00 y 2 OFF Raincoats££"173«- SCIlffS Washable 88^ ALL MDSE. FROM OUR REGULAR STOCK OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TILL 9:00 P. M. ---------- Collegian - 1967 January 20 - Page 8 ---------- PAGE EIGHT THE COLLEGIAN FRIDAY, JANUARY 20, 1967 Alaskans, Japanese plan cag tussles onViking Maples By DANA RUST Western's win-hungry basketball team will add a little international flavorto its diet this week in hopes of finding the right combination to restore the team's former winning ways.The menu includes the University of Alaska in Carver Gymnasium tonight, a trip to Seattle to meet theSeattle Pacific Falcons Saturday night, and a return to the home court to host the touring JapaneseInternational team on Tuesday night. The Japanese affair, recently scheduled as a goodwill gesture, will cost students 50 cents to attend. But it should be well worth the extra charge as it promises to be the gourmet meeting of the three games scheduled. Viking coach Chuck Randall, however, sees theclashes as much more than three non-conference games: he sees them as the key to the remainder ofthe season. "These games will show what this team is made of," he said. Randall acknowledges,however, that any title aspirations that the Vikings once held are remote after last weekend's pair oflosses to Central Washington. He describes the Viking situation as "grim." "Whitworth or Eastern areboth capable of beating Central, but they will have to play their best to do it," Randall said. And,although the usual good humor was missit in the Viking coach's manner, it was clear that has not givenup. "We played a great team in Central and thought we did a good job Saturday night," he said. It wasevident from that statement that the Bh leader was not giving up on his basketball tear, and, although histeam had been floored, he was nj counting them out! Wednesday night the Big Blue came back knockoff a highly touted Portland State team 82- in Carver Gym. The Portland Vikings came to tw with a 10-3record, including a win over Central. Western was led by Mike Dahl, who topped „ scorers with his 24points, anad Whit Hemion wj netted 19. Little AI Russell took over ball handlir chores and was the keyman in breaking Portlat State's full court press. The home club led almost all the way except f lt;| thelast few minutes of the first half. They built v a seven-point lead early in the second half and wet neverheaded, as they forced the visitors to tali many bad shots. Western's final margin of victor came mainlyfrom foul shots when Portland State w4 trying in vain to mess up their keep-away stallin] tactics. ONEOF the main reasons for Central Washington's double victory over Western last weekend was the gazelle-like figure of the Wildcat's Dave Benedict. Here the loose-limbed junior guard goes around the Vikings'Mike Clayton. Benedict scored eight straight points early in the first game and the Vikings were neverable to catch up. Western, Ducks slosh to 0-0 rugby standoff . ' " " • ' By PAT HUGHES \ Western'sruggers battled defending champ, University of Oregon to a 0-0 tie to open the Northwest Rugby Leagueseason Saturday at Roosevelt Park field. Poor field conditions made for,a.predominatly scrum orientedgame, which was controlled by Western in the second half. The Ducks nearly scored, early in the game,when scrummer Lefty Hendrickson carried the ball into the end zone. He forgot to touch the ball downbefore he dropped it and Western recovered to get out of trouble. During the second half the Viks hadcontrol, but couldn't get a score. Western's scrum and backs worked together well to keep the ball inOregon territory, but the Ducks came up with the big brakes to stymie scoring tries. Last Thursday,Western hosted UBC and after a scoreless first half fell to the T-birds 9-0. The visitors scored on a try and two penalty kicks in a space of about ten minutes. They played tight defense to keep Western fromgetting on the scoreboard. The Vikings dropped both second team games, since some players had toplay in the first team games as well. This weekend the club will host Richmond of British Columbia in anon-league game. It will be played at Downer field, next to Civic stadium, at 2:00 p.m., Saturdayafternoon. Swim team looks for win Things aren't going to get any brighter for the Viking swim team this weekend when the victory-starved Blue look for their first victory. Today coach Don Wiseman'sswimmers headed for Simon Fraser (B. C.) to meet possibly the top small college swim team in the.Northwest. Tomorrow the Vikings return home to face the defending Evergreen Conference champion,and preseason favorite, Central Washington Wildcats. Last weekend the University of British Columbiadropped the Viks 61-43 and Eastern Washington won the last relay event to nudge the Vilcs 56-47.Dick Veith and Bill Lingley remained undefeated in their specialties. Lingley made a shambles ofthree school records with victories in the 1000 yard freestyle, 500 yard freestyle, and 200 yardfreestyle. Veith won the 50 yard freestyle. Huskies stop Viks but no! Chapman Although Jim Chapmancontinued Ms victory string, the Viking grappling team was narrowly defeated by.ine University ofWashington 17- 14, Saturday, in Seattle. Chapman, I wrestling at 152 pounds, has how j won cloven in a row this season, j 1 Day Shirt Service COMPLETE LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANING Free Pickup Delivery 734-4200 205 PROSPECT Music students, is your theme song "Brother, can you spare adime?" An NBofC Special Checking account may help you changa that tune to "Happy Days Are HereAgain!" It provides a record of expenditures and helps maintain your budget. No need to carry excesscash. No minimum balance. No service charge. Pay only a dime a check. XTD^1 NATIONAL BANK OFCOMMERCE I N J 5 \J Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Located at Railroad and Holly St. Sheridan P. Gallagher, Vice-Pres. and Manager In Soc-Anthro Graduate plan formed A graduateprogram leading to a master's degree in sociology and social anthropology is being formulated by thesociology-anthropology department. The graduate program may begi in 1968 or 1969, according to D|Donald Call, department chairma/ No plans for a doctorate progral are presently in view. A. M. S.PRESENTS DAD'S DAY FEB. 11 th ALL DAY BANQUET — KARATE DEMONSTRATION GUESTSPEAKER VARSITY DRIVE-For a meal under a bun try our Double Burger • . 65 lt; GET YOURFREE STICKER AND WATCH FOR DRAWINGS OF VALABLE PRIZES. 100 SAMISH WAYAARDVARK BOOKS ARTS LARGE OCCULT SECTION U.F.O., paper backs including Frank Edward's Flying Saucers Serious Business." Two Analyses of Human Sexual Response at 75c each.SEVERAL NEW RECORDS Murrow's I Can Hear It Now Mark Twain Tonight POETRY . Stanyon St.and Other Sorrows by Rod McKuen $3.50 10% OFF FOR WESTERN STUDENTS 213 E. HOLLYPHONE 734-4043
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1967_0721 ---------- Collegian - 1967 July 21 - Page 1 ---------- $1.25 can't buy peanuts T H E • WESTERN WASHINGTON STATE COLLEGE m COlLCGiFM 1Vol. UX No. 35 Friday, July 21, 1967 Bellingham, Wn. 98225 Rund) Project students get ready for college 'Smells of f
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1967_0721 ---------- Collegian - 1967 July 21 - Page 1 ---------- $1.25 can't buy peanuts T H E • WESTERN WASHINGTON STATE COLLEGE m COlLCGiFM 1Vol. UX No. 35 Friday
Show more1967_0721 ---------- Collegian - 1967 July 21 - Page 1 ---------- $1.25 can't buy peanuts T H E • WESTERN WASHINGTON STATE COLLEGE m COlLCGiFM 1Vol. UX No. 35 Friday, July 21, 1967 Bellingham, Wn. 98225 Rund) Project students get ready for college 'Smells of fi•s hL » Payroll system in question "It smells of fish/' said Stan Shockey, president ofthe Off Campus Student Union, in reference to the present wage controversy. Shockey, who ispresently circulating petitions protesting "the structure of the state payroll system," said that eitherthe state or the college is "using the excuse that just because ^students are exempt from theminimum wage law they can be paid below subsistance wages." The state minimum wage lawrequires that all employes be paid $1.40, except students and other state employes. Joe Nus-baum,Western's business manager, said last week that student wages are being held at $1.25 for anotheryear so that the school can afford to hire as many students as possible. Shockey, on the other hand,claimed that he could not get "any straight answers from the administration — all they said was 'I don'tknow what you're talking about' and 'We'll give you a raise next June.' " He said further that he hadwritten to Secretary of State John O'Connell to find out "who was holding back the money." Thisstatement was in reference to the promised pay raise which Shockey claims had never been actedupon. Nusbaum said that the pay raise had never been promised but instead rose out of amisunderstanding that student wages would be raised when the minimum wage was raised, whichwas not the case. Shockey said that the school treats its students like "migrant labor " by takingadvantage of this labor resource, which cannot find jobs eslewhere, neglecting the fact that manystudents "use the money to earn their way through school." Kenneth P. Riddell, Collegian businessmanager, who has frequent contacts with College financial operations, said "The administration, inits dire attempt to act in the best interests of its students, has apparently once again misinterpretedwhat is in their true interests and consequently has added to its ever - growing list of negativecontributions to the welfare of its student body." The petition which Shockey has been distributingconcerns itself with four major areas. They are that students are exempt from the state minimum wagelaw; that students with a civil service rating must work for the same below - subsistance wages asstudents without a civil service rating. Other complaints are that even with a more efficientcomputerized system, students must wait nearly a month after one pay period has ended beforereceiving wages for that work and that the "promised and much needed Pay raise" was not given.Business lacks; Grotto closes again By RICH O'BRIEN The Grotto, a student owned and operatedrecreation area in the basement of the VikingUnion, closed today, if plans made earlier this week werecarried out. The area, which already has been closed once this summer and then reopened, has beenlosing money. So the Board of Control has once again decided to close the Grotto's doors. PhilBransford, Grotto mana- r A A A A A A A A A A A A A . A A A— Buy t United States Savings Bonds \ ger, said that the area may be opened once again later this summer when a new fleet of bicycles arrive. An attendant will be needed at that time to rent out the bicycles and the same person could also runthe Grotto. The Grotto was reopened two weeks ago after Carl Lehroff and Owen Carter, both of whomworked there these past two weeks, asked the Board of Con* trol to give the area another chance. •At that time they proposed a pool tournament to generate interest in these facilities. On Tuesday ofthis week, the first day of the tournament failed to attract the expected crowds. Lehrhoff and Cartercontinue to be optimistic. Business this week was better than the preceding week. Besides, Carterexplained, "it hasn't rained one day." Although the Grotto was publicized duringthe past two weeks,Carter also pointed out that advertisements were not placed in the Ridge way Games Room nor thehalls were the Project Overcome people are staying. Carter admits that his and Lehrhoff s job bringsthem more money than the Grotto makes. But he says, "Even if I weren't working here, I would want this place open." He said earlier this summer he proposed to the Board of Control that attendants not bepaid an hourly wage but instead be paid out of the actual receipts from operating the Grotto. "They saidthat wouldn't be fair because we might make more than $1.25 an hour. And they said the maximumstudent wage must be kept at $1.25," explained Carter. A light in darkness: Overcome leads way ByBILL HORTON Collegian Reporter Before they came to Project Overcome, many of the participatingstudents were wandering about in a dark room. The Project has assumed the position of a door to thelight. Now all these students have to do is walk through the door. Many of them wanted to go to collegebut did not know how they were going to manage it financially. Now they not only can go but have a waypaved to college. Project Overcome, nationally a part of Project Upward Bound, supported by the Officeof Economic Opportunity, is designed to help students who would not otherwise succeed in college.The Project takes students for two summers. By the end of this period students are usually preparedto succeed in college. Project students receive $10 per week which is used to sub-sidize the lossesthat they may incur by not having summer jobs. In addition, they receive free passes to all campusactivities and are encouraged to participate. During the first year, the students take preparatoryclasses to get them ready for their senior year at high school, some of the classes that the first-yearstudents take are math, English, art, history and composition. Upon returning to high school mostof the students have shown more incentive and most have done quite well. At various scheduled datesthroughout the year, students return for "recalls. This gives them a chance to sit in on classes, renewacquaintances, and take various tests to ready them for the coming session. The second summer thestudents take three regular college courses with the choice of auditing them or taking them forcredit. The students have all the privileges that regular college students are accustomed to. This yearthere are approximately 100 students in the Project at Western which is directed by Sy Swartzand Mrs. Toni Shular. Swartz has recently joined the project replacing Dr. Thomas Billings who is now the national head of Upward Bound. Billings and Dr. Peter Ellich were co-directors of the Project atWestern. The students have planned many activities on their own. They are now assembling a student art magazine, to be edited by Scott Rund, Project photographer. The magazine will consist of artistic endeavors in painting, sculpture, poetry and prose by Project students. "The Grass Harp," a play byTruman Capote, is cast completely of Project students. It is directed by Tom Davis, a ProjectEnglish teacher, and will be shown later during the summer. Students have started poetry readings onFriday nights. They have formed a creating writing class on their own. Many of the students never readmuch before the project. Now with the reading and study skills classes going full force, many of thestudents have turned on to reading. The Project has (Continued on page 4, column 1) I (Photo by ScottFinley) A place for sharks to rub elbows ---------- Collegian - 1967 July 21 - Page 2 ---------- 2 The Collegian Friday, July 2 1 , 1967 editorials tell it like it His 'Smells offish' It is inconsiderateenough that our state legislators exclude students, who certainly need it as badly as anyone else, from the minimum wage law but now Western's financial administration chooses to follow suit with a similar example of bureaucratic lack of consideration for the little man. Last y£ar it was a virtual certaintythat wages would be increased from $1.25 to $1.40 per hour, in fact it was a majoV news item at onetime. But as an economy measure, wages were held to $1.25 for an additional year even thoughtuition, not to mention the cost of living, was raised. As a further "economy measure," to save inbookkeeping expenses, student wages are now being paid from Olympia—even wages paid by theAssociated Students, who should have known better— and are now paid nearly a month after the payperiod for work done has ended. What it boils down to is this—economy measures made by the stateand college administrations are being made at the expense of the students who in the meantime haveto pay rent, pay tuition, buy books and every now and then buy some food. No matter how you look at it,this college is on it's way to becoming a bureaucratic monolith with all the trappings. Inconsideratemeasures such as these make all the administrative big talk about "preventing students from becoming mere numbers, etc.," all a bunch of "horse manure" (to prevent obscenity charges). Anyhow, studentswho are short of money because they haven't gotten their wages on time can always get an emergencyloan from the Dean of Men or the Dean of Women. Perhaps if everyone whose wages are late asked foran emergency loan for the amount of their check—payable when they get their check—somethingmight get done.—Chris Condon Throw the Book at us! The Book-of-the-Quarter committee is gettingprimed to do its once-a-quarter thing; during the first week after the six-week session ends, they will make their selection. And it will probably be a good one, too. For the past 20 quarters, the committee hasrarely let the student body down. Even when only six people show up at a public discussion, it isn'tbecause the book is a lousy book; it's probably because the sun is shining outside, and everybody wants to get some of it while it lasts. However, a few members of the committee feel it is not set up right; they feel it should be a student committee, with advisors from the library and faculty. It is primarily thestudents the books are intended for, and some members (including William H. O. Scott, chairman of thepresent committee, and originator of the idea on this campus) feel that the books should really beselected by students. We think so too. We suggest a committee of about 12, with approximately sixstudents; Scott; Mrs. Jane Lawyer, of the Bookstore; and four faculty members. The students wouldprobably be selected by the Associated Students president, and would be representative of variousinterests on campus. These interests might include a member of AS government, a Collegian Editor, astudent from the English department and three from the general student body. Final selection of facultymembers we would leave to Scott, who should still be chairman of the committee, due to his experiencewith the job. He would also have the final say on student selections for the committee. Of course, thesesuggestions are rather arbitrary. The final organization would be left to Scott, but the first step, thedecision to reorganize, is up to the Associated Students.—Neal Johns Haight hippies love To arrive at your goals, one asset is patience. Patience is bitter, but its fruit is sweet.— Jean Jacques Rousseau,French philosopher. The Collegian Official Weekly Newspaper of Western Washington State College,Bellingham, Wash. PHONE 734-8800. EXTENSION 269 Second class postage paid at Bellinghom,Washington 98225 COPY DEADLINE—MONDAY 5; 30 FOUNDING MEMBER PACIFIC STUDENTPRESS Affiliated with United States Student Press Association, Collegiate Press Service IntercollegiatePress Service, Associated Collegiate Press CHRISTOPHER B. CONDON Editor-in-Chief COPYEMTOR-Neal Johns BUSMESS MANJLGER-Kenneth Riddel ART CRITIC-Bob Hicks AD MANAGER-EricWarn CARTOONIST-iie Condon PHOTOfiRAPHERS-ScottFfdey, Scott Rund ADVISER-Ed NicholsSTAFF REPORTERS Rich O'Brien r-Jm McKay - Dal Pkimlee Hippie poet advocates living, loving, LSDSAN FRANCISCO— Allen Cohen, a hairy-faced poet with shoulder length hair, advocates communalliving, love and the use of LSD. Cohen symbolizes the feelings and habits of 4,000 other young hippiesin San Francisco's Haight-Ashbury district. The "tribe" — as the hifepies call their community as awhole —is made up of students of Zen Buddhism, followers of mystical Hindu and Chinese religions,practitioners of American Indian religious rituals. "W i t h us," s a i d Sharon "sit-ins" in the middle ofintersections, tying up traffic for hours. Police arrested more than 40 of them. "To get busted(arrested) is in a sense, like society scratching itself in the dark places," said Cohen. "We don't care. Itis a drain on the tribe (for bail mo-ney), sure; but it also is a drain .»-Aau».., u.»t gt;vs Sweeney,a young blonde from What you're witnessing here Minnesota, "religion is a per- „^7/ OUiC, ^ 1(. aii5U1B k is history," said Cohen. sonal thing. It's inside; not con- on the establishment " "And," a d d ed RonThelin, ventional.'1 Hippies don't like to be nervously twisting his golden Haight-Ashbury has drawn sohippies, mustache, "if the projections much attention that it has be-are correct, there will be 50,- come atourist attraction. A bus 000 to 100,000 more kids here company runs tours through to share our'summer of love.' " "hippie town," and the hippies Cohen and Thelin claim they resent it. They don't like tobe gawked at. called are not leaders, but willingly speak for the hippie "tribe." They preach love. Mostof the hippies have tried LSD, marijuana or other psychedelic drugs at least once in their grasp tounderstand themselves, God or love. "We are a community," said Cohen, "creating a new kind of art; anew kind of human relationship and a new family relationship." Art displayed in Haight Street shopsis flashy, with colors that show the psychedelic influence and a preoccupation with sex and God.Klipsuns are here; wonder of wonders! There will be approximately 700 issues of the 1967 WWSCKlipsun available today in Room 3 of the Viking Union. The annuals will be distributed on a first come,first serve basis. The remainder will arrive next Monday, and will be available through Tuesday, July 25.Wednesday, the remaining books will be mailed to their owners. In spite of the obvious late arrival ofthe Klipsun, the editor, Bob McCarty, refused to blame any one party for the delay. He commented thatnone of the various rumors which were being tossed around campus were verifiable. When pressedabout the delay, McCarty said, "This is a time for exultation, a bacchanalian revel — especially for me." Twice the hippies have staged |leave," "That's just a word," said Cohen. "You mix with us and thendecide what to call us." "Yeh, man," added a bearded friend, "but don't stay more than a week or youwon't leave." Rubenstein Cosmetics Prescriptions • STAR REXALL DRUG STATE HOLLYTypewriter and Adding Machine Sales, Service and Rentals We carry all makes of portables and usedmachines. BELLINGHAM BUSINESS MACHINES UlObnttcial 734-3630 (Next to Bon Marehe) NewsTidbits Fall Quarter pre-registration will re-open on Tuesday, July 25. On that day only students whohave not yet pre-registered for I fall quarter may do so. The Rebels, a rock and roll dance group, will playfrom 9 to 12 on the Viking Union Lounge Saturday. There will be a 50 cents per person admissioncharge. Student Co-Op Book News Feature of the week: a "Broadside" poem by Robert Sund anddrawings Krafft. featuring a by Charles Finally—It's Happening, scene today is in. a portrait of theyouth Our latest acquisition in the Book Dept. is "Magazines." Comments on our selection of titleswould be helpful. It's time for Book of the Quarter Suggestions? selection for fall. Our summer selection of children's books has some "Pop Ups," the "Tall" books and Dr. Seuss. It's Not Far to BARR'SCAMERA SHOP for EQUIPMENT REPAIRING SUPPLIES COLOR PRINTS TRANSPARENCIES 'SCamera Shop 108 E. Magnolia 734-5900 Psych students, getting ready for a couch of your own? Startsaving now at NBofC and you'll have it sooner than you imagine. Your savings work harder with DailyInterest at 4% per annum, compounded and paid quarterly. Deposit or withdraw whenever youlike...without losing interest. Come in today. NATIONAL BANK OF COMMERCE NBC Member FederalDeposit Insurance Corpomion Located at Railroad and Holly St. Sheridan P. Gallagher, Vice-Pres, and,Manager ---------- Collegian - 1967 July 21 - Page 3 ---------- Friday, July 21, 1967 The Collegian 3 Environment house: it's Superart You walk up the outside steps,open the door and step into the skeleton of the Superwomb. You glance around; lumber is piledindiscriminately on the floors, rolls of chicken wire are stuffed in the corners and huge gunnysacks offoam rubber fill an entire half of the room. The buzzing drone of a power saw title is "Environmental Art"The house, located below the Viking Union at 508 N. Garden St., is a condemned house which mustmake way for the V.U. addition to be started in November or December. From now until the end ofsummer quarter, however, it is a work of art in the Cheryl Keenholts, enveloped by the "womb" duringcoffee break sounds from downstairs; from upstairs comes the rhythmic thud of hammer and nail.Sawdust infests the air. The house is alive with people, some scurrying, some sauntering, onestruggling with a giant slab of plywood, one or two stretched out on the mounds of foam rubber, smoking and drinking coffee. Probably the last thought to enter your mind would be that this is a classroom,but it is. The class is Art 497, and the making, a gigantic total-environment project designed toenvelop the viewer rather than sit passively by for scrutinization. You turn your attention to the doorwayproject, where a tallish long-haired blonde, one of nine students in the class, is nailing chicken wire to arow of two-by-fours lined along a raisedboard-walk. The walk shoots off in three directions, two leading to dead-ends in corners and the third leading to the stairway. "I'm going to string lights underneath andwalk," the girl explains, "and cover the chicken wire with cloth-or paper. Then I'll stuff the inside of thepassage with paper so people will have to work their way through to the staircase." She thinks a fewseconds, then adds, with a laugh, "It's like a giant womb . . . a Superwomb." Wandering around thehouse, you notice that each of the nine students has an area of his own in which to work. One, whosedomain is the kitchen, has painted virtually the entire room in dull . black, with cardboard shapes ofbrilliant fluorescent color tacked to the walls. A strobe light is in the room, but not hooked up at themoment. You climb around some more, noting plaster-of-Paris bodies in the bathroom, a plastic skulland a stuffed U.S. Air Force uniform in the living room, more raised boardwalks upstairs. "Here's LarryHanson," says the blond womb-builder. "He can answer a lot of your questions." Hanson and RobinMayor of the art department are supervisors of the project. Hanson, a slim, sensitive-looking man who has long, stringy brown hair and a full mustache, fills you in on a few details. "It's called anEnvironment," Hanson tells you, "and I don't think anything quite like ours has ever been done before. It's a very sensual thing. The object is to get the individual totally involved; not just visuaUy but with all thesenses. The moment he steps inside the door he should forget completely about the outside andimmerse himself completely in the house." There is no "master plan" to the project, you discover, butit is hoped, as Hanson says, that the house will take on an artistic unity from the nine separateProjects. You lament the fact that the house must be so soon demolished. Hanson agrees but addsthat it is "perhaps in the best American tradition of spending and wasting." (Photo by Scott Finley) John Miller and Jack Mackie work and play simultaneously 1 Day Shirt Service COMPLETE LAUNDRYAND DRY CLEANING Free Pickup Delivery 734-4200 PROSPECT Featuring LIVE MUSIC By THEINTERLUDES! every Friday and Saturday 9:30 until closing Go Go—Mon. Tues. Only WashingtonState Liquor Cards Accepted. 'Once upon a time . Kids' comedy a 'time-ly' tale It's a storybook tale that by all rights should begin "Once upon a time . . . " Arthur Fauquez' "The Man Who Killed Time," beingpresented today and Saturday by the Western Players at 3 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. in the Old MainTheatre, is a happy-go-lucky children's make-believe that is an entertaining and nostalgic hour ofdiversion for adults as well. The play stars Howard Lock-man as Ambrosio, a carefree Spanish villagerwho runs an inn. Lockman, in what is probably his best performance as a Western Player, cavortsabout the stage, scheming and grimacing, plotting and bumbling. Believing that time is a slave-master which robs people of all enjoyment in life, the idealistic night watchman-town herald who Ambrosiobegins a one-man cru- insists his jobs are important sade to rid his village of mech-"because they arecustoms." anical timepieces. To achieve Douglas Fosteris equally enter-this end he invents a hugebeard- taining as Regolo, the precise, ed stranger to blame for the time-oriented train-gate watch- "puzzling" disappearance of the man. "If I do not know the time," town's timepieces, which, of he says, "Iwill not know when course, he himself has taken, to raise my gate for the train to Binyon Optometrists i1328 CORNWALL BINYON Optometrists^ Ph. 733-9300 COMPLETE OPTICAL SERVICE CONTACTLENSES FASHION FRAMES Dr. Leroy H. Freeman and associates . The villagers are slightly stupid(which is sure to delight the children) but gentle and honest and lovable. There is Fantesca, Avbrosio'ssweetheart, played by Didge Pearson. Fantesca is a flirtatious little creampuff who is sure to overwhelmthe boys and be the envy of the girls in the audience. Merle Gebers does a good job as Spazzino, thestreetsweeper-go through." Carolyn Ross as Padrona and John McCann as Romeo, the addlebrainedfarmer, add to the general mood of fairyland whimsey. THE BOWERY Now Appearing for a limitedengagement THE BOILER ROOM FOUR 3 Years at the Boiler Room Lounge in Sun Valley LEOPOLD HOTEL'S CASINO ROOM I DANCING FRI. SAT. NITE 9-2 Nightly NO COVER 733-3500 NOMINIMUM 1 1211 11 th St. In The Swinging South Side c NO COVER NO MINIMUM j I A A A A A A . - . — — — - — —B ^^ ^ ^^ ^ ^^ ^ ^ ---------- Collegian - 1967 July 21 - Page 4 ---------- 4 The Collegian Lummi Island Southland in miniature Friday, July 21, 1967 New VII directors herePhotograph captures the mood of Lummi Island By DALE PLUMLEE Collegian Staff Reporter Tenminutes drive from Bell-ingham is William Faulkner's southland in miniature, complete with a mosquito-infested bayou scanned by a wooden bridge that stands as a monument to antiquity. Colorful county du m p i ng ground, social worker's problem | child, whatever mood it displays, Lummi Reservation is acurious mixture of past and present in a context of stagnation and apathy. Overturned cars r e s t in|graves of roadside ditches or collect in imperceptible rutted driveways leading to four-sided hovels withtar paper siding. Along with the building in crumbling ruin are lean-to sheds where fish-nets are strungineloquently, and obscene scribblings that I stand out on boarded doorways of) abandoned taverns. Forcolor, talk to Thomas Nicoll and see the sawmill he has worked for 30 years. His milll is tumbledown and sagging with | age. He will tell you that it is "about wore out," but some-| how you get the feeling hedoesn't want to believe that it is. For remiscence of Faulkner, stop before the first bridge and watch thelater afternoon life. The store here flourishes in July with the sale of popsicles to barefoot customers,who always let the door slam on the way out. Inside, there are wood floors and that undefinable smellsomething like ripe bananas and bubblegum, but something more, too. For social content there is acrowd gathered outside; idle adolescents in ringo boots waving cigarettes like new-found banners ofworldliness. An old man wearing a straw HURLEY DRUG MART 1311 Commercial • Prescriptions• Drugs • Pet Supplies hat leaves with a six-pack of Oly and disappears down the street towards a desolate field where grass has all but swallowed the remains of a shack in apathetical ruin. Thereplacements for Richard Reynolds, who will be student union director at University of Oregon, atEugene, and Neil Murray, who will take the same job at Lewis and Clark College in Portland, Oregon,took office this week. Douglas Wasko replaces Reynolds as Director of Student Activities and AlLitwiller will be his assistant, t a k i n g Murray's place. Wasko received his BA in leadership(recreation) and his MA in recreation administration from University of Minnesota. While he was workingon his MA, he was on the student union staff there. He has spent the past four years as the Director ofStudent Activities at Macalester College in St. Paul, Minn. Litwiller comes to Western from University ofOregon, where he received his BA in recreation and his MA in journalism. He has spent the last twoyears on the staff of the UO Overcome (Continued from Pg. 1) purchased many books for thosestudents who have learned to appreciate reading. The students are allowed to pick any books they feel should be added to their "library." Not only have they started reading more, but second year studentshave shown a radical change. "They have settled down quite a bit," said Mrs. Cherie Hanson, andEnglish tutor. "Some study as much as, if not more than, regular college freshman." Many of thestudents don't like to go into downtown Belling-student union, in a college "at least twice the size ofWestern," he said. "However, this is my first full-time assignment," he added. "This move to Western isa step up for me." When asked what type of activities he would try to promote at Western, Waskosaid he had no definite plans, as yet. "Afterall, I've only been here since Monday," he grinned. He didmention, though, that he thought a Program of this nature should be "balanced f o r educationalValue." Litwiller, who has been here almost a week longer than Wasko, does have one idea forimprovements he would like to see made. He is interested in developing the outdoor recreationprogram. "The program during the summer is about what I have in mind," he said, "and during theregular year, there is even more chance for this type of program." opens door ham because they areconstantly harrassed by the police. This isn't just the idea that they have a chip on their shoulders; ontwo occasions when some Overcome students walked into stores, the clerk called the police, who inturn followed them around. Later they were tailed by policemen through the streets of the town.Many of our taxpayers gripe about the use of tax money for such a thing as Project Overcome. To agreat majority of Project students, it means focusing an otherwise blurred future. MT. BAKER NOW SHOWING »PAKULA - MULLIGAN **** SK8t sraiR Starring Academy Award Winner SANDYDENNIS Basw o- m no* t»BEL KAUFMAN • * « « * tJAD MOSEl prato^ALAN J PAKULA- unm^ROBERTMULLIGAN TECHNICOLOR® FROM WARNER BROS USC00HT TECHNICOLOR' TECHNISCOPEDistributed by WARNER BROS.K FEATURE TIMES TONIGHT, MON., TUES., WED. Staircase 6 and10 Viscount 8:15 Only SATURDAYS SCHEDULE UP THE DOWN STAIRCASE 2:45-6:45- 10:45 "THEVISCOUNT" 1 P.M. - 5 - 9 SUNDAY UP THE DOWN STAIRCASE 1:30-5:30-9:30 THE VISCOUNT3:45 AND 7:45 PAYING TOO MUCH? Special Rates tor Western VW Owners Foothills Richfieldoffers: 1. experienced mechanic 2. genuine VW parts « o « o . . » 733" 9 6 74 1312 Lakeway Dr."YOU CAN SURE TELL HIS GROCERIES DON'T COME FROM ENNENS." ENNEN'S THRIFTWAYHIGH AND HOLLY "WHERE EVERY CUSTOMER IS IMPORTANT" 1307 Stat.
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1967_0421 ---------- Collegian - 1967 April 21 - Page 1 ---------- THE WESTERN WASHINGTON STATE COLLEGE EPliEBflrt Dan Fredrickson emerged the victorWednesday in a close A.$. presidential race, defeating opponent Don Duncan by 1249 864. Vol. LIX.No. 25 Bellingham, Wash. 98225 April 21, 1967 (Photo b
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1967_0421 ---------- Collegian - 1967 April 21 - Page 1 ---------- THE WESTERN WASHINGTON STATE COLLEGE EPliEBflrt Dan Fredrickson emerged the victorWednesday in a close A.$. presidential race, defeat
Show more1967_0421 ---------- Collegian - 1967 April 21 - Page 1 ---------- THE WESTERN WASHINGTON STATE COLLEGE EPliEBflrt Dan Fredrickson emerged the victorWednesday in a close A.$. presidential race, defeating opponent Don Duncan by 1249 864. Vol. LIX.No. 25 Bellingham, Wash. 98225 April 21, 1967 (Photo by Dwight Larson) Fredrickson wins presidencyDan Fredrickson is officially President- elect of the Associated Students. More than 1200 studentscast their support in Fredrickson's behalf, leaving University Party candidate, Don Duncan 385 votesshort of the mark. Jeff McKay, also with the University Party, succumbed to Dar-rell Peterson in therace for Vice- President. Terry Flanders, Jon Hatch, Al Donaldson, Bob Partlow and Becky Cohenpicked up the five legislative chairs in contention. Defeated in the balloting for legislative seats wereCharles Miller and Michael De Man. The constitutional amendment received 826 affirmative votes togive it ratification. While party politics have traditionally met with bland receptions in encounters withthe student electorate, the University Party secured three legislative posts. This year's campaignclimate went relatively unmarred by scandals and assassinations of character that have prevailedduring previous years. This student would be wise to take in account the opinions expressed Monday at the Lesislature by Dean of Students James Hitchman. (Collegian Photo) Hitchman says thumbs downon drinking while traveling By NOEL BOURASAW Collegian Managing Editor Dean of Students JamesHitchman Monday explained to the Legislature that a student is theoretically in violation of thedisciplinary code any time he drinks while in transit to or from, or attending a function where therepresents the college. When questioned about the feasibility of applying such a* rule to the thecampus, he granted that it would not be possible to discipline everyone guilty. One legislator askedspecifically if a person would be disciplined if he took an occasional drink while traveling on an airplane toa conference. "That is a difficult question," the dean answered. "Probably nothing would be done for apractical matter, but theoretically it would be a violation. "As far as I am concerned, this ruling would beapplicable to faculty and administration too. I was disappointed to see that they did not agree with this atthe last Rosario conference. Hitchman's statement was connected with the Disciplinary Committee'srecent decision concerning the Rugby Club. He explained that the club has been disciplined because they drank on their bus in transit to and from a game in Oregon this February. One of the reasons for thepunishment in that case, Hitchman contended, was that state law prohibits drinking in a moving vehicle. Collegian Managing Editor Noel Bourasaw asked the dean if the broadening of the policy to cover anydrinking was not an arbitrary action. "The problem is," Hitchman answered, "that there is no consensusof opinion or authority that the Disciplinary Committee can turn to in cases of regulation of studentactivity. "What students seem to be asking for is a trend toward anarchy. The policy must be upheld.(Continued on page 5, col. 2) ---------- Collegian - 1967 April 21 - Page 2 ---------- PAGE TWO THE COLLEGIAN FRIDAY, APRIL 21, 19671 Shortage of Lummi tutors and fish By ArtSmith Western Student The Lummi Indians and all the Northwest tribes maintain conservationprograms. The Lummis have cleaned their Spawning beds in the nearby rivers, but now the Director ofFisheries will not let them have anything to 4.0 with stream conservation. The canneries in Ferndale and Lynden pollute the streams while loggers strip the banks of timber, exposing the stream for flood andlowering the stream too low for salmon to come upstream. The State Conservation people do little toimprove existing conditions which, at best, allows permanent damage to both salmon and steel- Kteadfish, not to mention the neglect of the shellfish. There must be more control over Sport fishermen andbig industry. Intalc© Aluminum plant will add to the pollution of the Nooksack River and if something isnot done shortly, the salmon may not be around much longer. Now that the Lummis can no longerdepend on fishing to make their tribe prosper, they have been forced to turn to a money economy andthey have little time for basic arts. The Lummis take only what fish filiey can use and only a fewfamines actually fish for a living, none for profit. The total catch for all 4fee Northwest tribes was 5 percent •£ the total catch of all fishermen last year. Commercial fisheries take ovei twice that amountand sport fishermen take a fantastic 60 to 80 per cent of the total catch. The sport fishermen andclans of sporting clubs, sporting goods stores, and resorts must be controlled. The fishermen take fishthey do not «teed and are a detriment both to salmon and to people like the Lummis who live off thefish. Although the Lummis depend on tfae fish for food, they even leave ; large openings in their nets toallow enough fish to return for the spawning. They use little expensive gear mid no radios, but thecommercial fishermen say they take too many Now restricted by a 48-hour closure, the Lummisshould have a longer week to fish in since they ; take fish primarily for food and not profit, besides notgetting enough food. At one salmon derby in West- gt;«*M*t, Wash., sport fishermen take . «noresalmon than the Indians do in .«t whole year. In the past the white man has taken fish in traps and leftthem in the streams to die out of neglect. Now he catches far too many salmon that he doesn't need for food. The whites still use their money to play with and demolish their natural habitat, subjugating themore natural people who live off it's resources directly. Birch Bay has astoundingly few shellfish of anyedible type due to white man's neglect. The Lummis have preserved some fine shellfish in goodcondition, from pilferers on reservation property. The white man has to wake up and see his naturalsurroundings as part of him, and therefore sacred— to be treated with care. Right now a college isbeing proposed out at Point Francis Park on the Lummi Reservation. They need support to build it.They would teach Indian history, and have experts from the tribe teach communication with Nature's ways. Right now a house could be set up on the reservation to house persons interested in learningabout the woods and the Lummis. They The Lummi tutor- the slump to a ing program is 'gross misunder-picking up alter a standing he-slump this iall. Co-director Lynn Crane attributed By Jackie Mc GrawThe communication breakdo\ which developed between VolunteeJ In Service to America (VIST7 workersand Western's Lummi tors in December of fall quarts was all a big misunderstanding, aj cording to Mrs.David Crane, ehail man, Lummi Education Committel "Nothing was started by it ar[ nothing became ofit," she emphj sized. "In fact, VISTA is recor mending to the tribal council thj we continue tutoring nextyear. Bob French, one of 15 Lut tutors, noted that because of tl misunderstanding "students fro]campus lost interest in the Lumi program and the kids wouldn't coi because there were no tutors thei"It's started to build back these last two quarters. We haver gotten too far yet but maybe it| be betternext year," he said. Tutors Liz McKay and Chris Lai son expressed high hopes and gref interest in theprogram. Both pk to continue as tutors next year. There are no specific tutor quirements except, asMiss MeKcj remarked, "a genuine desire to he| the kids." Mrs. Crane hopes to increase tH number oftutors next year. "We are working at capacity wij the program we have now. course, as the number ofchildrd increases, we'll need more tutors! she explained. s4 Seattle (fat-0?^ (Zomfeaty Is Here A 3-Piece Band Featuring Vocalist Ed Collins NOW! EVERY TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY THURSDAY TheBowery A Seattle Cod-Fish Company Playing Every Friday and Saturday Nite 1211 11th Street I n theSwinging South Side need volunteers to show interest and something could be done right away. TheLummis, contrary to public opinion, are not supported by welfare or the U.S. Government: Thereforethey are hard put for money since they do not want to destroy their culture by merging completely withours and their fishing is limited. Does the white man have enough natural feeling and beauty aroundhim to make up for total annihilation of Natural surroundings? I have not seen it. His grandestfabrications are the shoddiest imitations compared to Nature's creations. Men's artifacts are not(Spontaneous natural creations. The Indians see the universe through Nature; they are closer to theroots of the matter, the forces that run us all. They have an acknowledged continuum with their natural surroundings regardless: of how much they are pressured by the white man's distracting interests.They have maintained an inner unity which tween Lummi tutors and VISTA workers. cannot be saidfor any community in America. JAZZ DENNY MULLEN TRII Tuesday, April 25tl 7:30 p. m. VU Lounge Admission By Donation TIME INC. Campus Representative Time Inc. — publisher of Time, Life andSports Illustrated — has an opening for a campus representative at your school. Join our nationwidenetwork of over 500 representatives in a well-established sales and marketing program in operation morethan 40 years. Earn $100 to $1000 in Commissions by making subscriptions to these widely read andrespected magazines available at special student rates. Earn extra FEES for market research and special projects. No previous experience necessary; no paperwork or billing.' All instructions and sellingmaterials supplied free. Write today to: Time Inc. College Bureau, Time Life Bldg., Rockefeller Center,New York, N.Y. 10020. (paid advertising) Junior girls honored A new program designed for young womenwho are looking for art executive position after college has been announced by the Department of theArmy. - According to the announcement, the Army's student program for -officers in the Women'sArmy Corps is available to a limited number of college juniors. Those selected for participation will beable to attend the four-week orientation course this summer at the WAC Training Center, Fort McClellan, Ala. Next September, successful graduates of the course may return to college and receiveapproximately $300 per month during their senior year. Upon graduation they will be commissioned asecond lieutenant and serve on active duty for a period of two years. Applications are being accepted by Sergeant Antoine George at the recruiting station at 100 E. Magnolia Street. * * * * * * ±±±±Discover For Yourself the Great Food at Varsity Drive- In Varisiry Double Burger. .60c French DipSandwich. . .$1.00 T-Bone Steak Dinner. . .$2.95 BREAKFAST LUNCH DINNER Served AnytimeHOURS — DAILY 6 A.M. -- 100 Samish Way 1 A.M. 734-6789 ---------- Collegian - 1967 April 21 - Page 3 ---------- FRIDAY, APRIL 21, 1967 THE COLLEGIAN PAGE THREE of royalty Ski festival in The crowning ofSnow Festival king Dave Swanson and queen Becky Payne climaxed last weekend's festivities on Mt.Baker. The two, who reigned over the "Snow Bunny Ball"., were selected by votes of the more than 400Snow Festival participants. "Excitement and things to do were far from lacking," said Camille Johnson,Snow Festival chairman. Saturday afternoon was spent. by most snow lovers either skiing or watchingthe crazy antics of the fellows in a huge 25-man rubber raft botiading down the slopes. Trophy winners in the senior men's slalotaxwere respectively: Bob Gis-wold, "Buzz" Bussmeir and Bob Clark. ChrisSparks, Gudren Klix and Barbara -Halley were the respective .winners in the senior women's division.In the junior division, Bruce Shu-man and Camille Johnson claimed first place trophies, while DaveHageman and Janet Horman took second. In summing up this year's Snow Festival, Miss Johnsonsimply concluded that "Mt. Baker will never be the same . . . at least not till next year." TeachersWanted Southwest, Entire West and Alaska Salaries $5400 Up Free Registration SOUTHWESTTEACHERS AGENCY 1303 Central Ave., N.E. Albuquerque, New Mexico Snow festival time (Collegianphoto) Hanson displays art works By BOB BANGEN Collegian Staff Reporter A visit to the campus artgallery up to April 29 is a journey into the personal world of Lawrence Hanson. A Western art professor,Hanson las offered for public scrutiny a lumber of sculptures and drawings phdch are of a very intimateand leaningful portion of the artist's for Id. Although the exhibition is a very Personal world, it is notintended to be private. In fact, Hanson hopes | t will be a very warm and friendly Mie. In order to findmeaning in an list's world, you must bend as far as possible to fit yourself into is world. To do this, youmust acquaint yourself with the attitudes id thoughts of the artist. Hanson's art is a combination ofclassicism and contemporary ideas, sense of history and an understanding of formal elements are aprerequisite for admittance. You must have some idea of what las happened along with what islappening. This union is shown by lanson's involvement with light shows, happenings and othercontemporary trends. Along with his emphasis on the Itraditional (among his favorite Ipainters areVermeer and Rembrandt), he is a great fan of popu-music from Dylan to the Beatles, which he says is the most important art form of our generation. "I want to be a 1960's person," said Hanson. A number ofhis sculptures are named after rock tunes "Plastic Fantastic Lover." His interests increase therichness of his world, but somewhat lessens the number who may enter. His world is limited to peoplewith similar experiences or, as Max Bechman, German expressionist and one of Hanson's favoritepainters, said, "people with the same metaphysical vocabulary." "This is why he creates first forhimself, then for people like himself and so on down the line. "I feel no responsibility to society assuch," said Hanson, but I do towards humans. It Is the artist's job to look at and be aware of the world, see it in a new way, and translate it in terms to make it obvious to the world. He is not to reflect thevisible, but to make visible." The visions that are shown to the world, Hanson feels, should be mute arid"dumb." They must be strong and powerful, but not didactic. His attitude is best expressed by this quote from "The Ineloquent Art" by Barenson. "If they express anything it is character, essence, rather thanmo. mentary feeling or purpose! They manifest potentiality rather :than activity. It is enough that theyexist in themselves." STUDENT CO-OP BOOK NEWS There are some interesting new titles: Teach-ins: U.S.A., China After Mao, No Peace for Asia, The American People and China plus The Struggle For Racial Equality by Commager. In the humorous section we have some hardback gift books by Mr.Schulz. Hallmark has sent us Between Coffee Breaks, Party Lines and Happy Travelers. The Bathroom by Kira is an attack on plumbing in general. What Nader did to cars Kira has done to bathrooms. X. Y.Kennedy is our next visiting poet. We have copies of his book of poetry, Nude Descending a Staircase. 1327 CORNWALL AVE. ---------- Collegian - 1967 April 21 - Page 4 ---------- PAGE FOUR THE COLLEGIAN FRIDAY, APRIL 21, 1967 jpps*e* Editorials Authority should not demand respect... it should deserve it nauseated but scared "Then they'll teach you through many a day thatwhat you used to do at one stroke and without restraint, like eating and drinking, must be done in theorder of One! Two! Three! -^-from Geothe's Faust I sat through the first session of one of the Math-151classes the other day and left with my head swirling. Bewildered. Stunned. The realization that I must, if I were to get a degree, accept truth tables, theorems and axioms, left me not only nauseated—butscared. Scared, because it seems apparent that we as students are becoming subjected to more andmore of this computerized learning. Of this "One! Two! Three!" if you will. Indeed to procure that blessedsheepskin and that final handshake, we are forced to subject ourselves to not only the Math 151requirement, but courses in chemistry (or physics), biology, and geology (or geography). Not once inWestern's 'encyclopedia of requirements' are courses such as pottery, dramatics, drawing, choir, creativewriting, orchestra, weaving, etc., mentioned. The very fact that the administration has overlooked courses of this type, as a collegiate requirement, seems to negate their value. This negative attitude toward theimagination seems not only insulting but contrary to what most believe a college education is for. That is, a search for truth. Because it is not just the scientists that are intimidating the students. It is no secretthat to get through most of the literature courses offered in the Humanities building, one must barf up anunappetizing conglomeration of facts and ideas handed out by the instructor. We are lettingsomeone else tamper with our minds. Through the complicated mechanics of the institution, we havelearned to accept facts and forget feeling. To accept logic and forget our essential selves. We wouldhope when the Student Academic Advisory Board (SAAB) meets that it would accept this notion, andwould consequently recommend the deletion of Math 151 as a requirement and substitute one course''for the imagination." It would seem at least that would be an affirmation of themselves!—Dana RustAuthoritarians ride again The Disciplinary Committee has found the first loophole in the recently approvedDisciplinary Code and the Rugby Club is going to suffer until this September because of the Committee'sdecision. The Committee learned by rumor that members of the club had been drinking on a charteredbus while coming back from a game at Corvallis, Ore., on Feb. 12. The club president, when questioned,admitted the drinking. The Disciplinary Code, in part, reads: "Immediate and severe disciplinary actionmay be taken when a student consumes or possesses intoxicants . . . at college-sponsored functions,either on-campus or off-campus; or appears on campus or at college-sponsored functions after havingconsumed alcholic beverages and is in a condition that brings discredit to the individual or to the college." The Committee extended the code's applicability and set precedent with this interpretation: "TheCommittee also decided that the college policy against drinking by college-sponsored groups applied totrips to and from the place of the function as well as at the function itself. To decide otherwise wouldsanction drinking while traveling, which would be not only unwise but dangerous." One can immediatelyascertain that: • 1. Drinking itself is the penalized action, not the "condition which brings discredit."This could set a precedent whereby any 2 1 - year-old Western student, while traveling to, attending, orcoming back from an event, could be penalized for drinking, no matter how he conducted himself. Z. TheDisciplinary Code was itself overridden to allow for moralizing by Committee members. At asubsequent appeal board hearing, the Rugby Club was sympathized with and their punishment wasaltered, but they were still adjudged guilty of a charge which was formulated in the minds of thecommittee.—Noel V. Bourasaw Trouble in Hu City Editor, The Collegian: It came as quite a surprise tome to learn the other day of the great effort involved in composing one of the humanities exams. This, Iwas told, was so onerous a task that for some time now the exams used for make-ups have been thevery same exams regularly administered: On the make-up for the winter final, for instance, the five essay questions as well as the 75 lecture items were all re-used verbatim when the exam was re-given in thefirst week of this quarter. Nor, I have been told, are the data by which objective grades are figured altered to take new "variables" into account. Apparently this policy has been in practice for some time and Iam assured there are no plans to change it. The reason I am writing is that I am afraid that this policywill be- I come known to students at large (I [rejoice that they have not already I discovered it), becausethen students who were failing humanities might feign sickness before the exam, later quiz theirfriends, and finally take the make-up, having memorized the answers and researched theessays—they would be able, so to speak, to "crack the bell curve." This, as you must admit, would beunfair to the other students. The very thought of it is sickening. JIM ALLAN English Instructor grendeserve to be applauded for their courage and determination in fighting for a worthy cause. With peoplelike Diane and Cheryl behind the Viking Palace—it will be in Seattle next year. MARY JANES DIANACRISP JEAN WENTZ the collegian Official Weekly Newspaper of Western Washington State College,Bellingham, Wash. PHONE 734-7600, EXTENSION 269 Second-class postage paid at Bellingham,Washington COPY DEADUNE-Tuesday 12 Noon FOUNDING MEMBER PACIFIC STUDENT PRESSAffiliated with United States Student Press Association, Collegiate Press Service, Intercollegiate PressService, Associated Collegiate Press- BRUCE DELBRIDGE, Editor-in-Chief NOEL V. BOURASAW,Managing Editor Thanks, Diane, Cheryl Editor: We, as members of the cast of the Viking Palace, would like to publicly express our gratitude and deep felt thanks to two people who fought, and are stillfighting, to take the VP to Seattle. Diane Zettervall and Cheryl Wahl. Remember signature Ed Note:We have received a letter with no signature concerning the distribution of questions on humanities tests.Again we must remind letter writers that unless we receive letters with a legible signature, class andmajor affixed thereon, we are obliged by policy not to print them. If letters fulfill these requirements andthe writer wishes his name to be withheld, we will withhold it and keep his identity in confidence. COPYEDITOR Jeanne Doering FEATURE EDITOR Chris Condon CAMPUS EDITOR Dana Rust Bob Banger Larry Brooks Sheila Eliason George Hartwell Pat Hughes PHOTOGRAPHERS CARTOONISTS Dwight Larson Bob Banger Steve Bareface Johnson Keith Wyman ADVISER Scott Finley Ed NichollsBUSINESS MANAGER Ken Riddell STAFF MEMBERS Neal Johns Greg Miller Mike Koch Rich O'Brien Mary Magnuson Gary Thompson Jackie McGraw Gail Yada A new Guru? Editor: Poor Weiner, whichway to run- Maybe he should turn to Ch'an! And for the rest of the crew, Could they use a new guru? No Mi-la-ras-pa (Name withheld) Sr. Geology /THt wtcesT lt;;TUD£NTS PLAH. £Y£SW£ ftCTUm*H"\ttt VQfct*\ THE Pr\A6**iATiC- . PrtfcANOtie. DetiDES-S HE: HAS l+KD ErWouetH or TH«r .CRlH? * So rtfc HOPS pH Hts"P£rtC pl«rH MO PREPARES ft'WoTHt-R. »*\Ai!cH ARmep wirH| gt;ut lt;fo lt;5o*«EJ gt; PotiTt STICKS titi TM£ Fftxrtr TIRE: WITH TKC SMC» lt; CbH*mmt INTO A'TSACTHtlfc^APPuc/VToR , lt; , io(TK ---------- Collegian - 1967 April 21 - Page 5 ---------- [FRIDAY, APRIL 21, 1967 THE COLLEGIAN PAGE FIVE Richardson A-OK litor, The Collegian: [We,the undersigned students of [WSC, believe that the editorial of last issue of the Collegian was fair andungrounded criticism of tir" ASB Vice-President. We strongly W'ect to the editorial on April 14, •67,for the following reasons: 1. Misinterpretation of Gary's ftended praise. Was the praise the publicity ofProject /ercome, for the project itself, or our glorious editor has inferred (•for the picture which"graphically pr'trayed' Robert Michener, Western p professor, holding his young son lile the youngsterurinated off the ikewood dock.'" view of Gary Richardson's dedi-ition and hard work as vice-presi-fart ofthe WWSC Student Body, criticism was completely un- Istifiable. J 2. The objection we voice to theIcture of excretion in Vietnam is Vrhis paper is supposedly a gen-fal consumption newspaper (or it louldbe). If this newspaper is to more than a colorful, sensation-trite newspaper, such pictures, feel, areentirely inappropriate- Incerely, (Curtis B. Achziger, Cheryl Wahl-jen, Al Donaldson, Bob Partlow, logerSandberg, Michael H. De Jan, William Wakerich, George [arvey, Roger Chick, Shirley Lones, raigWoodward, Michael P. Rich, [arie Rex, Arlene Harbo, Darrell sterson, Charles Miller, Evelyn rane, DavidCrane, Meg McCauley, lute Adams, Pam Thurman, Jim [iltimore, Larry. Bauthues, Dave inks, SpencerM. Wells, Mead [ gt;hnsen, Sue Cairns. (Becky McClain, Eileen Jones, ristin Nielsen, Nichola Young,lil Ross, Byron C. Smith, Tom iderson, Dan Fredrickson, Steve Donna M. Wiley, Penny .Jo lith, RobertW." Rutherford, Mar- Kelly, Maik Vaughn, Sharon toriarity, David E. Moe, Klaus llix, Auta Viles KrisAnderson, Jarcia Dillon, Bob Overry, Vickie llasser, Joe Ann Hedman. Mason's nitty gritty |ditor,Collegian: (re: certain items in the April issue) [May I suggest to Keenholts and W companion in illogic,Mayor, that (tason is in fact sticking to biology science or knowledge of life), id that this does not end,as they ight suppose, with picking at the ttty-gritty of dead fish? And I might further ask Mayor what onearth he expects from an art critic if it isn't honesty and sincerity, which is exactly what Mason'sreview (Collegian, April 7) demonstrates. Would he prefer to be written up by someone like Robbin (April14, page 10) whose preconceptions about "diagonal and linear arrangement of form" and how "bones and flesh unite and perform" are dragged slimily over the pages of "Jeopardy?" Is it better to walk into an art show with your head plugged with garbage like that than to walk through it with a plugged nasalsystem? I mean, the latter is at least real, and has at least some emotional meaning. Should the. artistbe more or less proud that he satisfies the urge to unplug a nose than if he satisfies the critics desire tosee his preconceptions adhered to? Which, really, gives the greater feeling of fullfill-merit and spiritualrelease? Try it and see; but. be honest. I only hope that Mayor, Keenholts, and, in fact, all of the world'sRob-bins may one day walk into an art show with plugged noses and blow them really hard—by somedivine accident they may also blow; their minds and rise from the great heap of bubbly mucous seeingthings a little bit more like they maybe are. Mason, with his biology, his knowledge of life, displaysmore understanding of the essential act of criticism than many a professional I have met, and it's alittle tiring that his gentle satire should be met with such provincial yops, especially from people whoshould know better. Yours, for mountains and rivers without end, T. JAMES BRIDGE, Department ofEnglish i l l lltlllra Campus underwear (news briefs) iPs Barnacles swim "Water Colors '67," Western'sannual art festival on water will be presented Friday and Saturday, April 28 and 29.. ' Friday'sperformance begins at 8:30 p.m. while two shows will be presented on the final night, the first beginningat 7 p.m. and the last at 8:30. Under the direction of Dr. Louise Kilby, 20 girls and six boys willparticipate in several synchronized routines. ... Complimentary tickets are available at the VikingUnion desk. 'Heiress/ May 4-6 "The Heiress," a play by Ruth and Agustus Goetz which was adaptedfrom the Henry James' novel "Washington Square," will be performed by Western Players May 4-6 inthe Auditorium. The play is directed by Dr. Thomas Napiecienski. Attention pre-meds Studentsplanning to apply for medical school in the fall and winter of 1967-68 for entrance in the fall of 1968 arestrongly urged to take the medical college admission test on May 6, 1967. Applications, which can beobtained from Clyde M. Senger, in Room 327 of the Humanities Building, must be submitted bytomorrow. Drinking decision aired (Continued from page 1) "There are so many pressures onadministration figures to control student activity that a strict policy is necessary. " • "i am sure that the amount of pressure and lack of concensus is one of the reasons that the President (Harvey C. Bunke)resigned, and it is one factor that led to the committee's decision." He went on to say that the code hadbeen negotiated from November to February between students, faculty and administrators and that therewas no chance of an arbitrary ruling in light of this. "The college disagrees with that element of thestudents who believe that they are exempt from "college jurisdiction," he explained. "When the majority agrees upon the ground rules the community will be relatively happy. Don Duncan, legislator-at-large,noted that many more veterans over 21 are going to be returning to campus this fall. He asked Hitchmanif the rule could be enforced against this body of students. "There are many things unenforceable on thecampus," Hitchman answered. "The resentment to authority is manifested in small elements now. It willbe my duty to help enforce the rule where disciplinary action is needed." Movies move me, ma By NOEL BOURASAW Collegian Managing Editor After a while I was looking for handles on the l^alls and theplane that girl parachuted from, but I uld not find either one. Higher than a non-psychedelic kite I swished rough the smoke-filled, strobe-shattered, colored Ight beams and enjoyed a 1920 "Dracula" movie inlight. Lawrence Hanson, an assistant art professor, arted it if anyone did. He said it was "happening" and it was going to art late. The foam-rubber mats sucked our feet as we esitated into the parttime artgallery where a white nd black hairy biology professor greeted us with a ock lecture. Two floors off thecollege ground level, I felt like was currency locked up in a bank vault and for* otten overnight by afadeaway bank clerk. Rqck-n-roll, bluegrass, jazz bands poked plungers lto my ears and yanked out thatgarbage I've been earing for months. • What they troweled back in was not the greatest ut it filled thevoid in a very nice way. Meanwhile a motorcycle raced across our path s we strode in air to that distantdrummer. A hundred guinea pigs posed for a photograph that arned out to be a sham. People danced,some after rehearsing for weeks— ome after taking off their shirts. A white girl in white tights preparedfor and reposed in her bed. A black boy in black tights jerked his bearded head with jewel affixed tothe drummy beat of the jazz band. Spectrums were stretched, slashed, doilied, oiled, greased and lubed to project patterns of varying degrees of intensities onto the walls. . "Freeze!" A red and black nymphcommanded as she threw me twirling into a mass of petrified bodies. "Dance!" She coaxed as shetapped her finger wand on our getting-attuned bodies. "Laugh!" I bellowed as I thought how minutesbefore I had hopped from foot to foot in phony, smiley anticipation. I did not remember until two daysafter the night, last Saturday, to ask if the thing would happen again. Hansen said: "Maybe. We want totalk about it with a few people to judge their reactions. Art 400 is just a practice course and we areworking out of its framework. "We have considered staging a performance in Seattle." He paused. "And I have dreams of staging a big one here." I did detect the absence of something important while flyingthrough space. Touch, hearing, sight, all responded and shot messages up and down the length of mybody but nothing assaulted my nostrils. And here I was, smothered in a huge cherry pie. YRs go toSpokane More than 20 Young Republicans from Western are scheduled to attend, a YoungRepublican state convention April 28 to 29 in Spokane. The students, 21 of them delegates, will payan estimated $300 for the weekend convention expenses, coming mostly from their own pockets. Thepurpose of the convention will primarily be to elect officials to important offices of the state YoungRepublican Party organization. Western's Steve Smith is a can. didate for the office of nationalcommitteeman. People in the age group from 16 to 41 comprise the membership of the YoungRepublicans. They function as a part of the senior party organization and are influential in it. Smithsays that the convention is a fine educational opportunity. YR's will learn how the functional politicalparty works and take part in practical party politics. "There is a lot of intrigue at each convention," saysSmith. and $3 reserved section seat. Their appearance is sponsored by the Activities Commission.Righteous Brothers The Righteous Brothers will present a concert here at 8 p.m., May 4, in CarverGymnasium. Prices for tickets, available at the Viking Union desk, are $2.50 a seat Upper Grotto opens Upper campus has its own "Grotto" now with the opening of a games-room on the ground- floor ofRidge» way Saga. The gamesroom is open from 6 to 11 p.m. on week days and 2 to 11 p.m. onSaturday and Sunday. Facilities include three pocket billiard tables, two ping pong tables, a table topshuffleboard plus free use of cards, chess and checkers. The billiard and shuffleboard tables cost 60cents an hour, but the cost may be divided among any number of players. The ping pong* tables cost 30 cents an hour. Moms are coming Mothers of Western coeds will be able to taste college life May 6-7when the Associated Women Students sponsor the annual Mother's Weekend. With the theme "LoveMakes the World Go Round," the weekend will, include a fashion show and reception, .a buffetbanquet and the Spring Sing. Prices for tickets for the weekend are $4 for meal-ticket holders and $4.75 for persons who do not have a meal ticket. Weekly Schedule DAISY DAZE BEGINS FRIDAY, APRIL 21 — THURSDAY, APRIL 27 FRIDAY . . Club 515 "Ice Cream Social Coffee Shop", 9-12 p. m.SATURDAY ...Bedrace Campus School to High St. and back to VU, 2:00 p. m. Street Dance CampusSchool Field, 9-12 p.m. (If raining in VU Lounge. MONDAY.. .Speaker Mark Lane, author of Rush ToJudgement'9, Auditorium, 4:00 p. m. SUMMER QUARTER PRE-REGISTRATION ANNOUNCEMENTFOR STUDENTS ENROLLED SPRINC QUARTER PROCEDURE: 1. File an application for a registrationpacket in the Admis° sions office before April 28. 2. Obtain approval of program of studies from adviser. 3. Arrange Registration Appointment in Edens Hall Registration Center according to the followingschedule: Seniors "and Graduates — Tuesday, May 2 All Other Classes — Wednesday, May 3 4.Report to the(Registration Center with approved blue book at appointed time to complete pre-registration.PAYMENT OF FEES ALL STUDENTS — PAY as you Pre-Register • or Pay by Mail by Monday,June 5 * Students baling unusual cases may petition for a de-ferred paymepf at the time ofPreRegistration. ---------- Collegian - 1967 April 21 - Page 6 ---------- PAGE SIX THE COLLEGIAN FRIDAY, APRIL 21, 1967 Dr. Thompson announces resignation DR.RALPH H. THOMPSON SEX TOPIC OF SPEECH Jon Braun, National Field Coordinator for CampusCrusade for Christ, will speak on petting and premarital sex at 3 p.m. and 7 p.m. Thursday in the VikingUnion Lounge. Cheerleaders Anyone who wants to he a cheerleader for the school year, 1967-68, isrequired to apply in writing at the Viking Union Desk, before April 28, according to Ruthis Law-son,cheerleader. The actual tryouts are scheduled for May 1 and 2. By JEANIE DOERING Collegian CopyReader Dr. Ralph H. Thompson announced his resignation as chairman of the Department of Educationlast week to resume teaching responsibilities. His resignation becomes effective July 1. Dr. Elden A.Bond of the education department will be named acting chairman if a new chairman is not appointedbefore that time. Thompson said he resigned from the chairmanship so he could return to teaching,"which I like to do better than administrating.. "I've had at least one foot in administrative work for six orseven years, and for a person who doesn't want to be an administrator, I've been in and out of it toomuch. When I took this job two years ago, I didn't expect to keep it long," he said. Thompson has beenat Western for 17 years. In addition to fulfilling administrative duties in the education department, heserved as acting academic dean in 1965, prior to Dr. Charles J. Flora's appointment to that post.Thompson has also served on numerous committees and academic councils including the FacultyCouncil, General Education Council and Teacher Education Council. In an interview with the Collegian,Thompson commented on the following questions: Q. Do you think your successor will be chosen fromthe present education faculty or brought in from outside the college? A. I don't know. The standardprocedure is to nominate candidates inside and outside the college. Q. Was your resignation related toPresident Harvey C. Bunke's resignation? A. Not at all. Q. Besides wanting to return to teaching, werethere any other reasons for your resignation? A. No. I think that I had the support of the educationdepartment for the two years I was chairman. Q. What do you think are the greatest problems facing theeducation department now? A. That's hard to say. It depends on what time of the year you ask andwho you ask. Probably our biggest problem is insufficient staff time for work we ought to be doingcooperatively with the public schools and in educationaal research. For example, there really isn't enoughtime for in-service preparation of teachers. In addition, we are weak in some areas of staffing, but this is a market problem. We can't compete with colleges who hire hard-to-come-by people at salaries we can'tafford to pay. We'll miss the Campus School for observations next year. We hope to use television forteaching demonstrations and observations, but this will be a once-removed experience, and we'll have toget people into the public schools for some live observations. Q. What do you predict for the educationdepartment? A. We have been working with the psychology and speech departments for a cooperativeeducational service center for teacher preparation and research. It will deal with learning disabilities ofall types—physical, intellectual and emotional—since factors of disability tend to cluster together.We want to have specialists work in this center who could both examine disabilities and teach, thusserving graduate students, parents and the public schools in the area. We also have a budgetrequest—which was postponed until the next biennium—for a reorganization of the educationdepartment, calling for directors of special programs, such as reading or secondary education, who would form a type of executive committee. Q. Will college growth hinder the individual instruction desired in the education department? A. Size is a problem in any institution. I hope the education department willalways be concerned with individual students. Growth might mean that you don't have as muchopportunity to work with individual students, but we are committed to the personal touch, and canovercome problems of growth by keeping our class loads reasonable. For example, in Education 301, wehave twice-weekly lecture sessions, but we also have twice-weekly small discussion sections of about25 students each, where we can keep an eye on individual students to judge their adequacy for theteaching profession. Every Friday Night 8 O'clock till??? COFFEE and DONUTS SERVED You'rewelcome \o make your own music LOCATED AT Corner of Gladstone and Franklin St. (1st FloorUnitarian Church) the Acey Bird is gonna get ya! T h e A R C T I C CIRCLE announces GRANDOPENING APH. 22 23 TWO-DAY SPECIALS HAMBURGER DELUXE, reg. 19c 15 RANCHBURGER,reg. 49c 36 Includes double meat, cheese and fries CHEESEBURGER, reg. 29c . . 24 MILKSHAKE,reg. 29c 21 EVERYDAY SPECIALS FISHBURGER 39 FISH-N-CHIPS 69 BEEF TACO 29 FRIEDCHICKEN .99 - 1.39 - 3.29 - 3.89 For Take Out Orders Phone 733-9883 CLIP THIS COUPON 1 1SAVE - SAVE - SAVE MILKSHAKE AND HAMBURGER ONLY 30 LIMIT ONE PER CUSTOMERCoupon Void After April 23, 1967 Cash Value 1/20 Of One Cent' Open 11 a.m. -12 p.m. 511 E. HOLLY ---------- Collegian - 1967 April 21 - Page 7 ---------- FRIDAY, APRIL 21, 1967 THE COLLEGIAN PAGE SEVEN Class government drooping By GAIL YADACollegian Staff Reporter The election of all class officers except those for the freshman class will be heldin class meetings s t a r t i n g Spring Q u a r t e r , 1968, the Associated Students Legislature ruledMonday. While the motion to abolish all class government was rejected, most of the legislators didagree that there is not enough interest in class elections to keep them on the general elections ballot.Dennis Hindman, elections board chairman, had reported that only 10 students applied for the 21positions this year. There are no applicants for sophomore and junior class secretaries ortreasurers and six candidates for other offices are running unopposed. "We're hanging onto a deadtradition," said Steve Anderson, junior class representative. "Class government has become a non-functioning organization. "It's just something to add to your list of. college activities," he continued.However, in spite of the lack of student participation, legislators concluded that class government is stillnecessary, especially for freshmen and seniors. Legislators then approved the formation of acommittee to meet with officials of the intramural sports program to investigate reasons for the lack offunds provided for those activities. Terry Flanders, freshman class representative, had proposed aninvestigation of possibilities for the AS to appropriate financial aid to the intramural program. RichardReynolds, director of student activities, explained that six years ago activities such as debate, dramaand intramurals were removed from the AS budget and given to the respective departments.Presently the physical education program is supported by state taxes, while varsity sports andintramurals are paid by student fees. "The problem," said Reynolds, "seems to be simply a matter ofreallocation of the funds." In further action, the Legislature unanimously approved a new preamble tothe AS Constitution. This new preamble defines more clearly and in detail the roles and responsibilitiesof student government. Also approved was the establishment of a committee to investigate streetlighting facilities on and near Western's campus. Areas of prime concern were Highland Hall, GardenStreet, Old Main and in front of the Viking Commons. Mike DeMan, legislator-at-large, pointed out thatineffective attempts to obtain better lighting facilities were made about three years ago. However,legislators agreed that better lighting is necessary and nothing can be lost in another attempt. Finally,the Legislature agreed to endorse a letter of application to involve Western in a program for settingup a course and teacher evaluation on 10 campuses throughout the nation. John Dickinson, NationalStudent Association coordinator for Western, explained that NSA has received a grant of $80,000 fromthe U. S. Office of Education to establish this program. Western's chances of being accept, ed aregood, predicted Dickinson. "Western is unique in that it is one of few large state supported colleges," he said. "Also, as a college of education such as Western would fit right into the NSA program." IfWestern is accepted, three representatives will be sent to a four-day summer conference to design ateacher and course evaluation program specifically for Western. The representatives will meet againthe following summer to evaluate the progress on their campuses. Dean of Students James Hitchmanwas invited to the meeting and he submitted to questions from the board and other students. SteveAnderson, legislator - at - large, asked if the dean agreed that work on student government should beaccredited. "No, it's not right that you should be paid," Hitchman answered. "This is work that is overand above schoolwork. You are supposed to be responsible statesmen not out for a buck or credit."To that end, a legislator should regard his constituents and not be self-seeking." Hitchman went on tosay that financial inducements on a wide scale often increase the number of "professional students":"You shouldn't linger in school," Hitchman said. "Your purpose is to get in and get out." China won'tdeclare war stated Scalapino Tuesday «• Communist China is not likely to declare war on either theSoviet Union or the United States, said Dr. Robert Scalapino, in a speech Tuesday night, as part ofthe China Symposium. Scalapino, a professor of political science at the University of California atBerkeley, said that "Full-scale war, instigated by China, would be the worst mistake China could makeat this time, and the Chinese know it." On the internal struggle now in China, Scalapino, author or editorof 45 books on Japanese and Chinese governments, said that the Maoists may. win the present battle,but lose the war. "Due to the split," he added, "China is likely to be left weak and divided for theforeseeable future." The split, said Scalapino (who claims to be an expert on guerilla warfare, due to his18 years at Berkeley), began in 1958, with Mao's Great Leap Forward. The Great Leap tried to putpolitics in command, to put agriculture and industry on an equal status, and to substitutemanpower for the growing mechanization. The Leap failed, the Harvard graduate said, because theCommunists didn't take into account "human nature" and the necessity of an -incentive basis forproduction, because of three successive seasons of bad weather, and because the Russian scientistsand technicians went home. Scalapino said the split is between the "primitivists" and the "profes-sionalists." The primitivists favor indoctrination" and almost religious belief in the party, and profession-alists- favor a pragmatic look at all subjects by the people. Scalapino predicts China may go one of fourways in the near future: The Maoists may win (which will depend quite a bit on the sentiments of the army), there may be a compromise and a restructuring of the party, the Anti-Maoists may win, or theremay be a prolonged crisis with regional autonomy and "warlord control." China won't cope withtechnology generated problems, says North Dr. Robert North contended in two l e c t u r e s last week th a t neither t h e Chinese regime nor t h e rest of the world have faced up to t h e i r problems. SpeakingWednesday and Thursday evening, North explained that the problems created as an after-birth oftechnological expansion have never been adequately coped with. "It's much easier to fight ideo^ logicalwars than to solve the technological problems which none of us understand," the Stanford Universitypolitical science professor asserted. "What we take to be madness in China is simply a frustratedimprovisation on the part of Mao Tse- Tung to solve problems which he scarcely understands by usingold, familiar guerilla tactics," he said. North classified the pressing issues of the world into severalcategories. "Technology has simultaneously taken off at a wild gallop," he explained, "but at differentrates in different parts of the world. "For every inch technology is raised in China, the population raises a foot." Besides the population explosion, he pointed out the problems with control and use of nuclearenergy all over the world. The possibility of genetics intervention may become another problem, healso suggested. After pausing for a moment of quiet reflection Dr. North asked whether we could reallyafford ideological solutions to these problems. "These issues have world-wide implications," he said."None can or should be expected to be solved on a national level." the RIGHTEOUS BROTHERS INCONCERT Thursday, May 4th, 8 p.m. IN THE CARVER GYMNASIUM Tickets Available At The VikingUnion Desk ONLY A FEW RESERVED SEATS LEFT RESERVED TICKETS $3.00 PER PERSON —RUSH SEATS $2.50 PER PERSON FYTD A QfiC REFILL El A 1 l i / i t/0 COUPON with a PARKERJOTTER ball pen !§ and you choose the point j j size that's right for you. ^ZtuzJtJig' Oti dtMJfLs7 t lt;~es SVMML w Regular or §| New Compact LIMITED TIME OFFER: Buy a Jotter and get acoupon good for an extra 98fi r e f i l l free from Parker. Offer ends July 31,1966. #8 JL. each STUDENT CO-OP 'No Store More Convenient' ---------- Collegian - 1967 April 21 - Page 8 ---------- PAGE EIGHT THE COLLEGIAN FRIDAY, APRIL 21, 1967 HOLLY'S MEN'S SHOP FOR THE BEST-DRESSED COLLEGE MALE! 1307 CORNWALL Peace marchers were out tor more than fresh air Sat-urday as they hiked down to the Federal Building to protest the Vietnam war. photos by Dwight Larson P.E. students, is your savings account a 97 lb. weakling? It doesn't have to be. With NBof C's DailyInterest, at 4% per annum, your savings build muscle faster—work day in and day out! Interest iscomputed daily, compounded and paid quarterly. Start a savings-building course right away! NBCNATIONAL BANK OF COMMERCE Membtr Federal Deposit kisurcnc* Coipaatioa Located at Railroadand Holly St. Sheridan P. Gallagher, Vice-Pres. and Manager H^I Silent vigil Last Saturday's Vietnampeace walk was described as "very successful" by a spokesman from Students For Peace inVietnam who sponsored the march. Approximately 230. students and townspeople, nearly twice lastyear's number, marched from the front of the Viking Union down Indian and Magnolia Streets to theFederal Building. At the Federal Building the marchers paraded by a mailbox where they mailed lettersto President Johnson and local congressmen in protest of the Vietnamese war. The group then stoodfor an hour in silent protest before disbanding. The march was marred by some Western students hurling eggs and insults at marchers near Higginson Hall.; The tormentors were quickly dispersed by Westernfaculty members, participating in the march. Several bystanders were - asked for comments oh themarch; Carl E. Jensen, a Bellingham business-man^ said, "We have no business being in that war." Arepresentative of the National States Rights Party who were carrying anti-Negro posters commented"This is representative of the Communist^ way of doing things. Wait' until the elections—then you can express rebellion. We don't want Black.Power here." A Peace March spokesman said, that the marchhad nothing whatsoever ta do with civil rights.or black power. . . . • . H) lt;mm gt;o-mm-o-mm-o-mm'0-mK*omm*o-mm+o-mm+o-mm gt;0'mm-omm+o-mm-0"m+o-mm lt;( lt;imm+o-mm-In Heraldeditorial j Vietnam peace walk hit f Marchers Have Rights But Not Special Privileges ED. NOTE: TheCollegian editors, in an attempt to show the reaction by the city of Bellingham to the silent peace vigil,last Saturday, are printing the editorial printed in the Bellingham Herald last Friday: Two sharplycontrasting views of peace —or rather what it really means and how to achieve it—are presented inletters on this page today. One is from an adult, welt educated and well traveled, a spiritual leaderwhose professional and private life is dedicated to Christianity. The other is from a college student, a girltoo young to vote, who readily admits she does not know all the answers but whose concept of moralityhas room for the ideals of national honor and the idea that government by, of and for the people is worthdefending, elsewhere as well as here. At least that's the way we read it. And if you haven't guessed bynow which letter this editor agrees with, we'll tell you. It's the young girl's. Despite her youth and ~inexperience, she has the keen perception to distinguish between common sense and distortedpropaganda of the type printed as an advertisement in yesterday's Herald. This is not to imply that Mr.Walker endorses'' that vitriolic and spurious appeal to emotionalism in the ad sponsored by the"Committee for Peace and Vietnam," and. we do respect his sincerity. But we feel compelled tocomment on his remarks about Blossom Time being " i n " because a festival parade can be held onHoliy Street and "peace" being " o u t " because a parade for that alleged 'p'urpbse must be "relegated tothe back streets." Let us preface our subsequent remarks by noting that neither we nor anyone else weknow put Blossom Time or anything else ahead of any real peace based on world stability and mutualrespect among nations for the right's of other nations. . We believe our concept of this kind of peace iscloser to the golden Rule than the'kind that is based on approving the.forced enslavement of humanbeings, eventually including ourselves. The streets are public facilities and so long as the publicgenerally supports the idea of closing off a downtown section for a few hours for a once-a-yearcommunity, festival, the city is acting properly in doing so. But this can hardly be equated withagreeing to block traffic every time some small though aggressive group wants to demonstrate itsconcern over "something it considers important. No, of course we're not saying peace isn't important!What we are saying is that these pathetic little parades and displays of signs may make theirparticipants feel very noble and give a feeling of Martyrdom—knowing that they annoy a lot ofpeople—but they serve no discernible useful purpose. Even conceding that such expression—carriedout in hundreds of communities—does add up to noticeable proportions nationally, it is our belief thatwhatever influence it has makes genuine peace more difficult rather than easier. They are not regardedseriously by many Americans, but reports indicate that they are interpreted in Hanoi as significant and -thus they strengthen the resolve of the communist North Vietnamese regime to continue their effortsto conquer the South. Well, that's the way we see it. And because this is America, those who see itdifferently have every right to express themselves whether they agree or disagree with us, theAdministration, the Birchers, Martin Luther King or whomever. The right to dissent, within theframework of the laws under which society is organized, is absolute. But it doesn't mean the rest of ushave to turn over the town and become a captive audience. 0 gt;H •OH •OH •OH •OH•OH •OH •OH •OH •OH •OH •OH •OH •OH •OH ••OH •OH •OHBOB'S Drive-ln Good Food, Quick Service, and a Friendly Smile. -FISH AND CHIPS -HAMBURGERS -COMPLETE FOUNTAIN SERVICE 519 E. HOLLY For Orders to Go Ph. 733-8790 ---------- Collegian - 1967 April 21 - Page 9 ---------- FRIDAY, APRIL 21, ,1967 THE COLLEGIAN PAGE NINE Alan Dugan gives poetry reading By JOHN and CHERIL HANSON For four days last week the poet Ian Dugan made himself avail-ble to the studentsand faculty ere at Western. Besides the for-lal poetry reading and "Mock Lec-ire" which had beenscheduled, ugan also appeared at informal iscussions and a creative writing ourse. The reading packedL-4 to apacity and a fair number of en-msiasts continued to show up each me he appeared. Among other ings, he visited one of the ex-erimental sessions of the "hap-ening" which occured here last aturday;his response was enthu-astic and he made a special taped jcording of some of his as yet un-perceptions. About all I can do is to reproduce, in a rather disjointed fashion, a few of the remarks he has made.Most of what he said had about it an obvious sensitivity and concern for people. It is that same social—human— concern which is the meat of most of his poetry; when he says, "I am a Marxist, although I guess other Marxists might not think so," we get some of the flavor—though somewhat distorted—of that social concern. Clearly, his poetry goes beyond politics, however; it is more concerned withhuman interactions than with political dialectics. In "The Distinctive Voice," Dugan has said of hispoetry: "I don't vices. "When I started out I was seventeen and didn't know that I was writing poetry. Iwas influenced by Thomas Wolfe; then I discovered T. S. Eliot by accident . . . the point I guess beingthat I was always impressed by Eliot's diction but ap-as I can see, there is always that tension betweenone's larger history in the language and one's local origins. That tension in itself is a source of poetry." "I really don't see any reason to accept a rigid position on these mat- Poetry is a difficult art and therewards are not those that are stated by poets in their poems . . . A young person will start out tryingto make poetry, often for personal reasons, but the pressures of American society and the drudgerywill kill them and their artistic creati- A packed lecture hall listened to Alan Dugan, left, read his poetryThursday. Here he converses with Western prof Knute Skinner. There were times when he had youeating out of his hand. i iblished poems for the occasion, ie tape was then incorporated into ehappening. The general consents among the students here seems have been, "He turns me on."Dugan's books, "Poems" and Poems 2," have twice sold out at e bookstore. More copies are on •derand in September his third gt;ok, "Poems 3" will be available, mong other awards, Dugan has iceived atravel grant from the ochester Foundation, The Yale ounger Poets Prize, The National ook Award, ThePrix de Rome, id a Pulitzer Prize. Because of the limitations of space this article, I catt^nly begin to:etch in his genuinely exciting -eadth of personality and aesthetic HURLEY DRUG MART 1311Commercial • Prescriptions • Drugs • Pet Supplies (Photos by Dwight Larson) know what myvoice is or was, but I know that my voice is changing; I'm sick of wit and eloquence in neat form and amtrying to say what is hardest to say; that is, words wrung out of intense experience and notconstructed." Dugan adheres to what is called the "Colloquial" tradition of poetry in which verseapproximates natural spoken language and, above all, seeks to avoid artifice and archly-poetic de-palledby his desertion of America and his attempt to be an Englishman. So I imitated him but I happenedby blind chance and good fortune to encounter William Carlos Williams who I admire more than anyother American poet. He decided to be local and write in the American language . . . The conflict stillgoes on in my own writing so that once in awhile I try the mandarin, semi^moralistic style of Eliot; atother times I try to write the language I hear in my own city (the Williams' tradition) . . . "I think the two things (ri-gidness- austerity and colloquial usage of language) are basic because . . . I have a kind ofa conviction that it has to be local and you should, if you can, stay where you came from, where youhave the . . . knowledge of what life is really like. But it is also true that most of the time you can'tstand staying where you came from because they are going to kick you out if you're going to be a poet.So you are forced by a kind of social necessity to broaden yourself as much as you can and becomeinternational in that respect. In that larger body of the English language, as far Senior Class Presents JA ZZ by the DENNY MULLEN TRIO with DENNY MULLEN ON PIANO ROGER BLANCHARD ONDRUMS CHUCK EASTON (Charlie Brown) ON STRING BRASS Tuesday, April 25 7:30 p.m. In The VULounge Admission By Donation ters; you do what you can and for my own self, I'm interested in the way language works in my particular locality, but I'm also interested in the whole spread of history. One ofthe things I like about New York (his origin) is their beauty of diction within their own limitations. Butwhat appalls me also is their complete blindness to anything that existed a hundred years . . . or threehundred years ago. And so I guess my annoyance at this, condition . . . at that lack ofcomprehension of the knowledge of the past, leaves me to try and make reference echoes back toprevious situations, previous civilizations . . . I suppose its a didactic ambition to point out to people thatpeople really did live those thousands of years ago . . . and that they had their own civilizations whichwere pretty good in some cases." "It's been the tradition to assume that poets are crazy. I tend toaccept that view. Many of the best poets I know personally go carzy or commit suicide . . . I try todiscourage people from becoming poets. vity. They get mixed up in the bourgeois society and killthemselvesi . . . American writers die of alimony, alcohol, and lies." "It's the college and high schoolkids who read poetry, and they already know . . . I break my back going up and down the north-eastcoast with other writers reading poems against the Vietnam war. It was all buddy-buddy (with theaudience) but probably ended there." "All art is temporal. Nothing lastst . . . To my mind, there is norelation between the amount of time a work of art will last and its value." (Why write poetry?) "You can analyze and make judgements about intelligence (in a work of art) but it has to include feeling . . . Many artists learn by imitation, plus a little of their own personality. It's a paradox; you have to work todestroy your influences. One of the basic impulses is to be in competition with one's father. The otherreason for writing poetry is that you can have a conversation across time with thousands of people. Youknow, you put your two bits in." LAST CHANCE To Reserve Your Copy of the 1967 KLIPSUN-Only$2.00 All Reservations Made After April 26 Will Cost $4.00 Each ---------- Collegian - 1967 April 21 - Page 10 ---------- PAGE TEN THE COLLEGIAN FRIDAY, APRIL 21, 1967 jl§ Le Protti awarded U 1 ; Stan LeProtti lastweek received « $1*000 award from the President's Council on Physical Fitness and the NationalJunior Chamber of Commerce for his contribution to physical fitness. Hie award was presented at abanquet in Washington, D. C. An assistant professor of physical education, LeProtti was one of 12nominees invited to the award presentation and was one of three to receive the $1,000 cash prize. The group also was honored at a White House luncheon, attended by President Johnson. Poli Sci gradsaccept jobs in business, school Law school, government management internships, graduate study,private business, state civil service and teaching are the choices being made by this spring'te crop ofpolitical science grads at Western. Dr. Manfred Vernon, Western's political science departmentchairman, said that five or six graduates will go to Law School. Norman Elf-strom wil attend StanfordUniversity Law School. Les Huntsinger and Leo Reinikka will be among the Board of trustees fill manypositions William A. Bultmann and Ray Mc- Leod were chosen last Thursday by the Board of Trusteesto join Robert Lawyer on a committee to advise in selection of a new president of , Western. iultmann, a history professor, and McLeod, an associate physics professor, were chosen from a list of fourprofessors under consideration. The others named by ithe Faculty Council were Fred Ellis of theDepartment of Education, and Howard J. Critchifield of Geography. The trustees approved a $25,000Increase in the remodeling budget for the Viking Commons, over the Vigorous objection of Joseph Pem-berton. Pemberton complained that under the contract the college is responsible for all maintenanceand replacement of equipment. He was also disturbed that the board was not asked to approve Sagacontracts. In other action the board approved south campus sites for a new commissary,maintenance and possible married student housing. The trustees also named the Education-Psychology Building for Irving Miller, a former chairman of the Psychology Department. PresidentHarvey C. Bunke informed the board that Howard F. McGaw was resigning as director of the libraryand Lawyer will be acting director effective Sept. 1. four graduates to attend Wdllam-mette UniversityLaw School in Oregon. A few students will take part in the Junior Management Internship Program ofthe U. S. government. Elaine Doll and Richard Hastings, two of these students, will assume positions atgovernment agencies in Washington, D. C. Many students are being considered for summer studygrants at other institutions of higher learning. A number of students have also applied for entry into thegraduate program in political science at Western. If the evaluation of the proposed program goeswell, it will be initiated next Fall Quarter. - Others will choose teaching, business and the state civilservice as their careers. sinqaown By BANDY STOREY Western student The j^H^ig:^j|^Sf|^p: ':^^^fll^•Hlx V DANCING HAPPY HOUR 1 137 W. iisSKi^v ^F - THURS MOK FRI SAT - TUES THURS Holly WWSC Art Film Series presents SUNSET BOULEVARD (USA 1950) starring Gloria Swanson,Eric Von Stroheim, Willam Holden COLLEGE AUDITORIUM APRIL 21, 1967 6:15 and 8:30 P. M.Admission: Adults $1, Students 65c Tired-voiced vocalists are back on campus this week, trying torecuperate from their annual tour, April 11-14. Last week eight high schools, one church and theviewers of King T. V.'s "Community Workshop" program were serenaded by Western's Concert Choirand its sidekick ensemble, the Vocolegians. They traveled down the east side of the Sound, as farsouth as Olympia, warbling songs from Renaissance Sacred/ to contemporary love themes. In avttemptto achieve a height oif expression in the latter, the Voco-legianl men determined to select one youngllady each and sing directly to heir; one such girl caught the eye of three basses, who found that blondes blush a very deep red. After a hard day, the choir members practiced miscellaneous vocal stunts atlate hours that did wonders for their voices the next morning. Sleepy choir members could often catch on the bus what sleep they missed the previous night—if they dared close their eyes; the bus driversgained fame by racing each other in the streets of Tacoma. Grafted Arts Show London Grafica Arts willpresent an exhibition and sale of its original lithographs, etchings, wood cuts, lino-cuts and silk-screensat 10 a.m. to 9 p.m., May 1, in Room 213, Industrial Arts Building. We'd rather not switch... . . . orfight. No trouble at Shakey's. Just the world's best pizza and beverages, happiest ragtime piano andbanjo, and sirigin'est customers. Got a black eye? Come on over anyway. We're awful friendly! SHEETS 1234 N. STATE STREET Open 7 Days A Week Ph. 733-3020 PIZZA PAJL0B ye PUBIIC house THE New Century Singers are here for one more week. Don't miss a chance for a great evening'sentertainment. CASINO ROOM LEOPOLD HOTEL'S 9 - 2 Nightly NO COVER 733-3500 NO MINIMUM GRAND ^THEATER 122i Commercial 733*9755 T TONIGHT (FRI.) OPEN 6:30 "FANTOMAS" 7:00-10:29 "DOLLARS" at 8:54 P. M. SAT. SUN. TIMES BELOW DANGER UTS HIM LIKE A TIGHTBLACK GLOVE! Its the first motion picture of its kind. It won't be the last! j PLUS — A SECONDADVENTURE! Super-Thief.- Master Lover... He's out to ransack . t h e world! A Film of ANDREHUNEBELLE COLOR by DeLuxe CinemaScope® Released thru UNITED ARTISTS SAT. SUN.SCHEDULE 'FISTFULL OF DOLLARS" 1:33 — 5:25 — 8:54 P. M. "FANTOMAS" AT 3:08 — 7:00 —10:29 P. M. EASY COME 7:30 11:10 BUSY BODY AT 9:30 MOONLITE ELVIS PRE5LEHExcitement! Adventure under the sea! WM PARAMOUNT PICTURES bBOMe P^^gf"^- 1 MODUCTIQW DODIE MARSHALL- PAT PRIEST- PAT HARRINGTON - SKIP WARD -FRANK McHUGH M ELSALANCHESTER H A N WEISS and ANTHONY LAWRENCE JOHN RiCH-ieonauriSM PLUS A JOYOUSCOMEDY IN COLOR THE BUSY BODY with Sid Ceasar - Anne Baxter COMING NEXT WEEK National Society of Film Cfilics | A Carlo Ponli Production Antonioni's BLOW-UP Vanessa Redgrave DavidHemmings • Sarah Miles COLOR UrcoMMiHoro ton M»tunt «UDICNCC?1 • A PremierProductions Co., Inc. Releose Plus THE VENECIAN AFFAIR ;J color Robt. Vaughn • Etfce Summer ---------- Collegian - 1967 April 21 - Page 11 ---------- FRIDAY, APRIL 21, 1967 THE COLLEGIAN PAGE ELEVEN Spellman continues review of recentlegislative motions ED. NOTE: Dr. John Spellman was recorded for an early-March commentary onKRAB radio. This is the second part of the transcript. The obscenity bill is a real joker, to the extent that possessing undeveloped film which, if developed, would prove to be obscene, would be a criminaloffense. This is really going crazy for all types of reason, not only the pure absurdity of any laws againstobscenity. I happen to believe that pornography ought to be made available, even to babies in the cradle. There's a big thing about having to protect children from pornography. We just had a very interestingreport from the New Jersey "Right to Read" committee in which there were something like nine hundredpsychiatrists surveyed for a report to Gov. Hughes, of New Jersey, and the report showed what many ofus have long suspected: that there is no correlation between reading pornography and sexuallydeviant behavior. Indeed a significant number of psychiatrists have held that the suppression of thistype of literature is probably more responsible for sexually deviant behavior, in terms of curiosity etc.,than is its availability. And yet we, and indeed even the Supreme Court, will persist stating thatpornography ought to be the subject of legislation. NOT THEIR BUSINESS Well, I happen to believeagain that it is no business of the Legislature. If a person wants to read about sadism, masochism,fornication or God knows what, that's his business. It sure as hell isn't the business of adults to tellother adults what they may or may not read, and I want that principle to go across the board and include pornography. Well then, if you gaze at this general foundation of the I.D. cards, of the loyalty oath,of implied consent, of the horrors of the wire tapping bill, it looks like a pretty frightening situation.Now you say, well, maybe it looks that way, but surely we can expect our public officials to reasonablyimplement these piec-es'of legislation; after all, the police aren't going to go around biting everybody.And if the police aren't going to go around biting everybody . . . And if the police are suspicious of a guy,they're probably right; he probably is a criminal, and after STATE STREET LAUNDROMAT NEXT TOTHE YMCA WASH, DRY AND FOLD 1246 State 734-1650 all we've got to catch the criminals. They're using unfair means, so why shouldn't we do the same to catch them. And now I propose to read to you a series of case histories of what has been happening in the Seattle public schools within the last fewweeks. First of all I want to lay down the principles that are involved. Students are in the schools byvirtue of the law; it is a criminal, offence not to go to school. They are, in that sense, a captiveaudience. No policeman can come to my house or your house or anyone else's house and interrogateyou without your consent or a warrant. But they have now found that they can • go to the schools and violate the most fundamental liberties that we have: the right to privacy and the right to the kind ofsecurity we would have in our own home. EVEN CRAZIER This is a horrifying thing. I may say that inthe state of Arizona, which has gone even crazier on this subject, the police department has offices inthe high schools. The cops carry guns'I they go into the classrooms; some of them even teach. When Isay. teach, that isn't to say that they are qualified by academic regulation to teach'. They have noteaching certificates; in most cases they hold no university degrees, but they teach and theyinterrogate students. They have access to all the students' confidential files, which they may at anytime turn over to the police department. As I said, the state of Arizona has gone even farther in thisarea than we have, and yet here in the state of Washington, in the city of Seattle, the police are in theschools; they are interrogating, without benefit of council, without due proeess. And I propose to reada series of reports that the ACLU has received from the students questioned by the police in theschools. Now look, this kind of rot in this city is really going too damn,, far when judges tell studentsthat if they don't cut their hair they're: going to go to the Youth Center. _,~ When police go fromschool to school and interrogate students in the way that we've been describing here, then it seems tome that something is not just crazy but that in fact it is a state of absolute terrorism. Now I don't know if you remain unmoved by these stories. And. this is only the beginning of page four of an eight pagedocument of just story after story like this. Tve-£ gt;een reading them consecutively. Andjthat follows,with another USLJOLMOCU-ments about students who were forced to go to psychiatrists on thepenalty of suspension from school. Now is this or is this - not something that is pretty damned closeto ges-tapoism. POLICE STATE What do we do auout it? The police continue, they continue this week, last week, and I have no doubt that they will continue next week, and next month, and followingmonths to go into the schools in this most flagrant violation of the rights of children, threatening, co-joling, bribing and indulging in the dirtiest and most vicious practices, all under the guise of saving the kidsfrom drugs, like" marijuana, a drug, so called, which doesn't have one jot of harm, less harmful than allthe booze that their parents are drinking. And yet this is the price that we pay. What amazes me is thatpeople are willing to pay it, that people are willing to listen to this, that people know these stories,and they don't protest. They don't write letters to the schools raising hell as they ought to with theprincipals, they don't call up the police department or the mayor or the city councils, they don't writeto the newspapers. APATHY RAMPANT They do nothing. They do the same thing here as is done inthe state legislature and we sit and we pathetically watch our liberty be eroded and eroded anderoded. And thus it is that I ask when things get as they are getting now in this state one wonderswhether this ship is sinking so fast that we'd better get off, maybe some kind of mass migration out ofhere, everybody who's concerned with liberty get the hell out. If we want to leave a bunch of placidconformists who are prepared to be regulated like robots then let them stay. But is that you? And if itisn't you what in hell are you doing about it? Ky called puppet Johnson castigates Ky, By LARRYBROOKS Collegian Staff Writer "Marshall Ky is disliked by almost all people in Vietnam. The onlygood words I h e a r d of h im w h i l e on my visit t h e r e w e r e from t h e American Embassy where he was said to be m a t u r i n g , " stated Russell Johnson, speaker at t he V i e t n am Teach-in lastSaturday. Johnson, international Marcel le Prescriptions • STAR REXALL DRUG STATE fir HOLLY RENTALS • Weekly • Monthly • Quarterly •.'; REPAIRS • All Typewriters • Portableor standard • Electric or Manual -\ • Free Estimates • Free Delivery • Free DemonstrationsYour Typewriter Headquarters for new and reconditioned typewriters, we carry them all; including worldfamous "Olympia." BLACKBURN OFFICE EQUIPMENT 1223 Commercial (next to Gages) 733-7660"Our 18th year of dependable service" GOLFERS MEET SEATTLE Five straight years the champs ofthe Evergreen Conference Western's golf team traveled to Seattle yesterday, to attempt to matchstrokes with Seattle University, consistently a national collegiate power on the links. The Vikingsentered the clash a 1-1 season mark, the result of a lop. sided win over Pacific University and a narrowdefeat by the University of Puget Sound. affairs representative for the American Friends ServicesCommittee in Southeast Asia, said that Ky is little more than a puppet dictator set up by the U.S."Twelve years ago r found people in South Vietnam who thought that the American umbrella ofoccupation would help to build a free society. Today most of those people are confused and frustratedwith the American policy of destroying their lands, homes, villages and fellow countrymen," chargedJohnson to the scattered crowd of 140 people. "In North Vietnam we are hated because of ourcontinual bombing of churches, hospitals, schools and other structures," he explained. "While we havebeen bombing out their country, killing people and destroying agricultural and industrial areas, the NorthVietnamese have been building. The society I saw there is one of the most balanced, educated and wellfed in Southeast Asia," he also asserted. "The communists are there to help the people. A village chiefwould find it far easier to collaborate with the Americans and feed out of our trough than to join thecommunists and work for them," said Johnson. Quoting former U.S. Ambassador to Vietnam HenryCabot Lodge, Johnson said: "The people who have done more for the little men at the grass roots thananyone else are the communists." Johnson then turned to some of the historical developments thathave led to the present U.S. involv-ment in Vietnam. From the time of the defeat of the French by theViet Minn we have been paying at least 80 per cent of the cost of the war," stated Johnson. He said thatone of the main reasons for the United State's involve ment was and is the red scare in the U.S. StateDepartment. "We have this strange idea that a Vietnamese Communist is a communist but not aVietnamese. All along it has been the Communists who are interested in the nationalistic movement,"he said. Many times the State Department uses China as an excuse for being in Vietnam, addedJohnson. "Red China has made no established move to overrun any country. All China wants today isto be left alone. China, militarily, is too weak a nation to get involved in conquesting her neighbors."China did not intervene in Korea until after repeated warnings, to Gen. MacArthur. After they fought theU.N. forces to a standstill they pulled their troops out . . . ours are still there. "We call the CommunistChinese agagressive. Yet there is not one Chinese troop outside of China. We have troops all over theworld," said Johnson. According to Johnson the problem in Asia and all over the world is land reform.Johnson pointed out some countries that the United States has been "helping" and some of theproblems that have arisen. "In the Philippines the rich Americans and their native counter, parts live up in the hills in houses that cost $500,000 or more while over 80 per cent of the people live in filth. "Ourgovernment tells us that Korea, Japan and the Philippines! support the war in Vietnam. The commonpeople of these countries are not for the war; they would much rather improve their own country. It is only the puppet governments of these countries who support the United States," he said. There is littlecorruption in China, especially in government. The streets are clean, flith has all but disappeared fromthe country. "China has done far more for hew-people than we have for Vietnam, Korea, Latin and SouthAmerica or the Philippines. "Our next target is Thailand, new one of the most peaceful countries inAsia. She is stable, clean and her people are happy. Since the first of this year we have moved in over50,000 American troops with an expected 100,000 by the end of this year," said Johnson. Johnsonmade a number of suggestions on pulling out of Vietnam and pointed out that the war is illegal by theGeneva Accords. "The United States is trying to establish a world empire and as all empires, we shallfall," he stressed. "Where Quality and Good Tastes Are" BUNKS DRIVE-IN Where Qualify Goes InBefore The Bun Goes On FLAVOR CRISP FRIED CHICKEN BETTER THAN EVER Dine in your car orour inside dining room 2220 CORNWALL Ph. 733-3520 ---------- Collegian - 1967 April 21 - Page 12 ---------- PAGE TWELVE THE COLLEGIAN FRIDAY, APRIL 21, 1967 Trackmen upset Eastern 80-65 Fresh off an impressive 80-65 victory over Eastern Washington, Western's track team hopes to keep winning in mind when they take on Whitworth in Spokane tomorrow. The Viks showed strength in both the track and the field contests as they won 10 of 17 events. Eastern's apparent power in the field events was practicallyneutralized while Western runners only losL two races. Enlightning performances were turned in byfreshmen runners All Wright and Ron Jackman. Wrightl took first in the mile, while JackJ man won the440. Other Vikings breaking the tapel first were Dave Anderson, 100;[ Tom, Cambell, 880; BrianAnderson,! 440 hurdles; Jim Shepard, two mile;| and mile relay teams. Dave Vander Griend won theja«| velin and Dick Perfrement the triple jump to lead Western. John Hunt grazes the bar whilewarming up for Saturday's upcoming meet with Whitworth in Spokane. Hunt is a Viking standout inthe broad jump as well as the pole vault. Coach Stan Le- Protti's track squad stunned a first victory ofthe year.—Photo by Keith Wyman. Ruggers win last local game Western's Rugby team kept up theirwinning trend as they stomped the Vancouver, B. C, Georgians 13- 6 last Saturday at Bellingham'sRoosevelt park. Making a good showing in their last Bellingham appearance, Western broke a 3-3deadlock midway in the second half by exploding for two tries and conversions which gave them aninsurmountable 13-3 lead. Tonight the ruggers trek to Nook-sack Valley High School where they willtangle with a team from the Meralomas club of Vancouver, B.C. in their last home game of the season. The Meralomas finished second in the recent Portland Tournament and are out to avenge an earlierdefeat from the Vikings. In last Saturday's game, the best each team could manage during the first halfwas a penalty kick apiece. A! Anderson booted Western's penalty kick through the uprights a fewminutes after the visitors had scored. Bob Unick broke the deadlock in the middle of the second half byblocking a kick and picking up the ball and downing it in the end zone. Al Needier kicked the two pointconversion. The Georgians hustled back for a try, but; Bob Unick blocked the conversion kick and theVikings held on strong until the end. 1 Day Shirt Service COMPLETE LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANING F r e e P i c k u p Delivery 734-4200 205 PROSPECT Tennis team wins Viking racketeers' ran theirfirst stop-sign on the long road to recovery, sneaking by Eastern Washington State, 4-3, Saturdayon Bellingham courts. The win was Western's first in five tries this season. Coach Don Wiseman's no. 2 doubles team of Steve Reibe and Mike Johnson won their match of the season. They have yet tolose this year as a doubles pair. Reibe also picked up his first solo win of the- year, besting theSavages' no. 3 singles entry. Randy Roberts also won his first singles match against Eastern's secondbest netter. Roger Fisher rounded out Vik scoring with a no. 5 singles win, his third against five seasonopponents. Diamond in drought Coach Fred Emerson's fruitless baseball squad continued to flounder, dropping three of four games last week. Bill Jorgenson's three-run homer paced the Viks to their first win against small college competition, a 6-4 decision in the first game of a double-header, Wednesday, atPortland State. Larry Belle earned the win with three shoutout innings in relief of Mike Clayton. TheViks week of woes begin with a 3-0 defeat in the second contest. Western's hapless nine lost numbersix and seven of the year to Eastern Washington, 6-1 and 12-2. The Vikings will try to break their current trend against Seattle Pacific, Thursday, in Seattle and Central Washington, Saturday, in adouble- header at Ellensburg. Probably the Best Mon. thru Sat., 11:30 A. M. till 3:00 A. M. Sun. 12till 8 p. m. Now Serving Your Favorite Beverages In Our NEW COCKTAIL LOUNGE 1319 COMMERCIALSTREET Volkswagen Sales parts and accessories, service. Lange Volkswagen, Inc. 112 Samish 734-5230 "WE OPERATE A COURTESY BUS FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE" On Campus (By the author of"Rally Round the Flag, Boys!", "Dobie Gillis," etc.) with MaxShulman REQUIEM FOR A SQUARE You, like, any other lovable, clean-living, freckle-faced American kid, want to be a BMOC. How can you make i t? Well sir, there are several ways, none of which will work. You're too puny to be an athlete, too lazy to be a valedictorian, and too hairy to run for Homecoming Queen. As for becoming a best-dressed man,how a re you going to buy clothes with a miser for a father? Are you licked then ? Is there no way tomake BMOC ? Yes, there i s ! And you can do i t ! Do what? This: Become a hippie! Get cool! Getalienated! Have an Identity Crisis! Be one of the Others! How? Well sir, to become a hippie, simply followthese five simple rules: 1. Read all of Tolkien in the original dwarf. 2. Have your Sophomore Slump in thefreshman year. 3. Wear buttons that say things like t h i s: NATIONALIZE DAIRY QUEENASTHMATICS, UNITE LEGALIZE APPLE BUTTER HANDS OFF AIR POLLUTION 4. Go steady with agirl who has long greasy hair, a guitar, enlarged pores, and thermal underwear. 5. Attend Happeningsregularly. This last item may require some explanation, for it is possible that Happenings haven't reachedyour campus yet. Be assured they will because Happenings are the biggest college craze sincemononucleosis. A Happening, in case you don't know, is the first formless art form. Things justhappen. For example, eighty naked men come out and squirt each other with fire hoses containing tintedyogurt. Then eighty more naked men come out and light birthday candles in the navels of the first eightymen. Then one girl, clothed, comes out and pulls three thousand feet of sausage casing through herpierced ear. Then eighty more naked men come out and eat a station wagon. There is, of course, amusical accompaniment to all these fun things. Usually it is "Begin the Beguine" played by 26 trenchmortars, a drop forge, and a rooster. There used to be, some years ago, still another requirement forbecoming* a hippie: a man had to have a beard. But no longer. Beards were worn in the past not somuch as a protest, but because shaving was such a painful experience. Then along came PersonnaSuper Stainless Steel Blades. Today if you don't want to shave, well, that's your hangup, isn't it, baby? Imean when you've got a blade like Personna that tugs not neither does it scrape, what's your copout,man? I mean like get with i t ; you're living in the past. Shaving used to hurt, used to scratch, used togouge, used to give you all kinds of static. But not since Personna. It's a gas, man. I t ' s a doozy; it'smom's apple pie. You dig? I mean, man, you still want a beard? Crazy! But you don't have to turn yourface into a slum, do you ? Shave around the bush, baby, neatly and nicely with Personna. I mean likePersonna comes in double-edge style and Injector style too. I mean like any way you t ry it, you gottalike like it. - * * * © 1%7, Max Shulman Hey, man, like hoiv about doubling your shaving cool? Like how about wilting those crazy tvhiskers with some BurmU'Shave? Like regular or menthol? Like have you gota better friend than your kisser? Like treat it right, right? Ye-yel
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Collegian - 1967 February 3
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1967-02-03
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Western Front Historical Collection
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1967_0203 ---------- Collegian - 1967 February 3 - Page 1 ---------- Its high time 1HE WESTERN WASHINGTON STATE COLLEGE CaU-EG'PM • I Vol LIX No. 15Bellinham, Wash. 98225 Friday, Feb. 3, 1967 someone explained LSD Berkeley head defended,criticized Ed. Note: In resp
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1967_0203 ---------- Collegian - 1967 February 3 - Page 1 ---------- Its high time 1HE WESTERN WASHINGTON STATE COLLEGE CaU-EG'PM • I Vol LIX No. 15Bellinham, Wash.
Show more1967_0203 ---------- Collegian - 1967 February 3 - Page 1 ---------- Its high time 1HE WESTERN WASHINGTON STATE COLLEGE CaU-EG'PM • I Vol LIX No. 15Bellinham, Wash. 98225 Friday, Feb. 3, 1967 someone explained LSD Berkeley head defended,criticized Ed. Note: In response to the re- :ent firing of President Clark Kens' the University ofCalifornia Joard of Regents, Collegian report-r Noel Bourasaw this week inter-rtewed Westernadministrators and acuity about the action. President Harvey C. Bunke eon-ended that Kerr should nothave been fired because he had achieved many positive results . while president of UC. "He is anindividual with a deep committment to the democratic process, as can be seen in his ac- •(M•o gt; lt; KM KH •o lt; The inside scoop Goofy protest Counseling center Shaw in Short Book of the Quarter 2 5 . . : . .8 9 ....10 I i Dr. Harvey Bunke tions during the Free Speech Movement. "Hefollowed the dictum of Voltaire: 'I disagree, with you but I will fight for your right to say it,'" 2 Bunkeexplained. "Kerr was an excellent arbitrator when opposing parties negotiated various problems,"Bunke continued. "All in all, I would say it is a tragedy. Kerr was at the helm during a dynamic anddifficult period Protest against Leary mailed to governor A petition of 1,200 signatures pro-sting Dr.Timothy Leary's perform-rice at Western tomorrow evening, ad been collected by Karl Williams f Lynden, who has sent it to Gov-rnor Dan Evans. When interviewed by a Collegian Or. Timothy Leary eporter hesaid "I just don't pprove of Dr. Leary and what he ;ands for." What upset him most, he said, was lereport of people up on LSD imping out of windows and the sexual business" reported in an rticle in lastSeptember's Playboy, e described the magazine as "the filthiest book I've ever read." Despite his protest against Leary's appearance on campus, Williams expressed a desire to- hear him speak but he alsosaid that his wife "would shoot him" if he went. Although people have claimed that LSD has helped them, Williams said "I don't know how in the world LSD can do anyone any good." He remarked that he hadunderstood himself all his life without taking drugs.'' « " gt; « * • • Williams concluded thetelephone conversation by saying "you might think I'm just a hick and that I'm narrow minded, but youpeople are ^oing-to be running this country in a tew years. Even if I'm dead and gone I would like to see a few good people left to carry on the traditions and morals of this fine country of ours." Williams saidthat he and his wife worked only two days in collecting the signatures and that the response had been terrific. "Only one person refused to sign the petition and she was sick and didn't know who Leary was," he said. Dean of Students James Hitchman commented earlier that several people have complainedabout the scheduled appearance of Leary. He has accepted their comments but explained the freespeaker policy at Western to them. Leary is scheduled to speak in the auditorium Saturday at 7 p. m.for higher education. "If you will, the squares got tired of him when he had stepped on their tees quite afew; times." DUE TO GET AX ANYWAY Dr. Herbert Taylor, dean of the Bureau for Faculty Research,suggested that if Kerr had not been fired for the existing set of reasons, he would have eventually been removed on some other pretext. "He had too many adversaries on both sides." Taylor was on theBerkeley campus during the Free Speech Movement of 1965 and saw some of thc» problems thatKerr had to face. "My main impression was that the multiversity would not work," Taylor explained. "Nouniversity should be that big." "The chancellor of the Berkely campus boasted to me that he saw eachone of his deans at least once a year. That school alone has more than 100 deans." "Communicationwas notoriously poor when the Free Speech Movement began," Taylor reflected. "One example wasthe action that caused the movement. An assistant dean of men noticed students speaking freely anddisrespectfully at their Sather Gate meeting place, and he decided that the speakers shoukLberestricted. "He issued an order to curb their speakings and students immediately began organizing aprotest on the basis that Sather Gate was traditionally the place where students could speak onanything. "But it took two weeks for the senior members of the administration to hear of the action bythe junior administrator and its result. By that time the movement's leaders and followers includedmany more of Kerr's detractors. Kerr was off-campus at the time. "If we can determine that sheer size is causing this lack of communications and impersonality at Berkeley, perhaps we should think twiceabout our own expanding college. Apparently Kerr did not realize soon enough." KERR NOTINNOCENT Dr. Fredrick Ellis of the education department insisted that Kerr was guilty of not seeingthe problems of the multiversity: "He underestimated the impersonality that accompanies bigness."In question here is the integrity of the board of regents," Ellis contended. "Their role demandsintelligence and imagination and a great deal of moral courage. But they seemed to have reacted tohigh pressure in this case. "The regents claimed that Kerr had outlived his usefulness, but I would sayrather that he just had myopic vision. "The man did seem to be sincere, however. His detractors mayfind that Kerr's successor will be much worse than he ever v/as. If Governor Ronald Reagan is pickingthe successor, he could be a very poor' replacement." Dr. R. D. Brown, assistant academic deanthought that Kerr had been in his position so long that he had polarized both his opposition and hisallies. "The university grew a great deal while it was underneath Kerr," Brown explained. "The men whohave to replace him may find that the. job his successor will have, to fill might be big enough for three Dr. Herbert Taylor Actor will speak in Arts Festival An actor from television's "Peyton Place" will speakhere Feb. 16 as part of this, year's Fine Arts Festival. - Ed Nelson, who plays . Michael Rossi in thetelevision serial, will speak on "Television As an Art Media." Along with Nelson's appearance, a folkmusic concert, a modern dance performance, . underground movies and- a modern jazz concert are also scheduled for the Festival^ Feb. 13-26. Malyina Reynolds, a folk music composer and singer, and theModern Jazz Quartet will be among those performers coming here. The Festival's theme this year is"The American Way of Art." Napoleon tricked Al Simpson, Joe Grant and Bill Savage discuss the witchproblem in "Man ol Destiny," one of the two plays in the "Shaw in Short" program. For a review-preview of these plays, see page 8. They are being presented at 8:15 p.m„ Friday-Sunday in L-l. ---------- Collegian - 1967 February 3 - Page 2 ---------- PAGE TWO THE COLLEGIAN FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1967 protests reluctant recruiters Photo byWyman Volunteer hates delay Bruce Eichelsdorfer's draft status Is 1-A and he demonstrated in frontSTATE STREET LAUNDROMAT NEXT TO THE YMCA WASH, DRY AND FOLD 1246 State 734-1650 of the Federal Building Monday to protest his deferment. "Why won't you let me in?" read one side ofhis sign. The other side explained that Eichelsdorfer, a December graduate of Western, was I-A andphysically qualified to join the army. Since he's I-A, Eichelsdorfer can't get a job, and also can't get hisdraft board to take him as a two-year volunteer. The eager volunteer, from Bothell, said he probablywouldn't be drafted till March or later. "I should go to the head of the list," he said. New legislatorswaif for spring Approximately 1300 students voted in the sharply contested Jan. 26 election of fourlegislators-at-large to the Associated Students Legislature. .Three of the winning candidates, DaveCunningham, Caroline Leonard, and Bruce Murray, wll take office spring quarter. The fourth, DrewPettus, and two of the defeated candidates, Bob Partlow and Mike DeMan, now hold appointivepositions on the Legislature. The election results will be sub-mitteed to the legislature Monday forvalidation, said Dennis Hindman, Election Board chairman. "I will neither support nor oppose validation, because of the controversy connected with the election," he added. The results of the girls' dormhour referendum, which are being 'tabulated by the Data Processing Center, will not be available for twoor three weeks. The Associated Women Students, Inter-dorm Council, and the Legislature's StudentWelfare Committee plan to use the results of the survey in formulating a proposal for changes indorm regulations. Western University? Olympia considers bill Bills proposing university status and thepower to grant bachelor of science and doctorate degrees for Western are now under deliberation in theState Legislature. The bills are sponsored by Sen. Frank Atwood of Bellingham. NOT JUST WESTERNThe bill calling for university status for the three colleges was made but the bill if or granting thedoctorate ds only for Western. The major plea for university status for the three colleges, was made by Dr. James Brooks, president of Central Washington State College, in a hearing held by the SenateHigher Education Committee. President Harvey C. Bunke was also present at the hearing. "VERYRECEPTIVE" No commitments were received from the committee hearing, but the legislature "was veryreceptive toward the bills" according to Arnold Bricker, administrative assistant to President Bunke. In the spring of 19Q6 a faculty committee at Western deliberated on the subject and wrote a report whichprobed deeply into the possibility of Western's attaining university status. The report said that "thename 'university' might in itself be challenge or incentive to the institution to set its sights higher, todemand more of itself, to undertake tasks which otherwise it might hot." Binyon Optometrists 1328CORNWALL BINYON Ph. 733-9300 Optometrists \ COMPLETE OPTICAL SERVICE CONTACTLENSES — FASHION FRAMES Dr. Leroy H. Freeman and associates SPEECH COMPETENCY TEST for all Teacher Education transfer students who have had the equivalent of Speech 100 elsewhere.Friday, Feb. 3, 2 p.m. or 3 p.m. Report to Old Main, Room 309. FINANCIAL AID APPLICATIONS for1967-68 may be picked up in the Financial Aids Office starting Feb. 1. Applications submitted by April 1will be given priority consideration. Students interested in Scholarships, Economic Opportunity Grantrenewals, NDEA loans, and pre-arranged employment are encouraged to apply. qL^a0w lt;£s- ?6 D I A M O N D ^ ^ % ^ R I N G S REMINDER TO STUDENTS—Students planning to graduate inJune must have a senior evaluation in the Registrar's Office by Feb. 28. Prospective August graduateswho plan to participate in June commencement services must have an evaluation by March 17.Make an appointment soon. Have your major and minor approved in your blue book before keeping the evaluation appointment. Exception: The elementary concentration or minor will be approved by theRegistrar's Office at time of evaluation. P R E I _ U D E " 4 SLENDER SHAFTS OP GOLD SPIRALUPWARD HOLDING A SINGLE DIAMOND IN SIMPLE ELEGANCE* MILTON E. TERRY, JEWELERQUALITY JEWELRY 1326 CORNWALL 733-2030 FOR YOUR ENJOYMENT THIS WEEK- -Rib Cut Pork Chops 69c lb. -AA Large Fresh Ranch Eggs . . . .39c dozen PLUS MUCH MORE- — AL'SSAVEWELL IS OPEN LONGER TO SERVE YOU BETTER — AL'S EASTSIDE - CONVENIENT TO THE COLLEGE STUDENT OPEN UNTIL MIDNIGHT DAILY — 8 P.M. ON SUNDAY 1118 E. MAPLLE 733-8413 AL'S SAVEWELL 2404 ELM 733-0950 ---------- Collegian - 1967 February 3 - Page 3 ---------- FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1967 THE COLLEGIAN PAGE THREE Constitution revised; 1 Bloiers shedcoats By MARY MAGNUSON Collegian Managing Editor Three constitutional amendments revisingrepresentation on the Associated Students Legislature were approved by the Legislature Monday.Later in the lengthy but productive session four motions were introduced which stemmed from- thecontroversial Jan. 26 election. Although the legislators were favorable from the start toward theproposed reapportionment of the Legislature, much discussion preceded voting on the amendments.Introduced by Dick Hastings, the amendments would make the Legislature consist of 14representatives-at- iarge and one freshman representative. The reapportionment, besides increasingthe Legislature by one member, eliminated representatives from each class, the Associated WomenStudents and Associated Men ' Students. FAIRER REPRESENTATION "This will make legislators more representative of the student body," Hastings said. Agreeing, Al Donaldson pointed out that this yearthe junior and sophomore class representatives were elected by little more than 100 Votes and thesenior class representative ran unopposed. Also the chair reserved for AMS has been unoc- - eupiedall year and AWS has sent , a series of different representatives. A suggestion that the dorms have• a representative was rejected by . the legislators. "If they want someone-they have enough power toelect him," Hastings said. An amendment was also passed revising the elections so that fivelegislators are elected each quarter. By the constitution, two-thirds of the legislators were to be electedspring quarter and one-third winter quarter. DISCARD JACKETS The legislators also unanimouslyapproved a motion to eliminate their traditional blue blazers, budgeted through A. S. funds. Anothercutback in expenditures was made through the decision to withdraw from what the legislators called the"anemic" Pacific Student Presidents' Association. ELECTIONS SCRUTINIZED Four of nine motionswhich were introduced and then referred to committee were precipitated by the events leading up to theJan. 26 election: 1) that the chairman of the elections Board be paid $50, retroactive winter quarter (Al Donaldson), 2) that there be a study of election rules and procedures for possible clarification andchanges (Don Duncan), 3) that the Judicial Board review the winter election (Mike DeMan), and 4) thata constitutional amendment be made enabling the AS presi-ident to call a special.session of. theLegislature only if a majority of the legislators agree (DeMan). - Bob Partlow suggested investigatingand recommending changes concerning library fines and the $3 fee for dropping classes. Bothproposals were part of the University Party platform. Other motions included loaning $300 to RidgewayGamma' for the Viking Palace, re-establishing the campus tutorial program and organizing a civicservice program. Fathers'feast has Bunke and karate on same ticket Sports, speakers and smashersWill highlight Dad's Day Feb. 11. The event, sponsored by the Associated Men Students for thefathers of a l Western students, will include a buffet-style banquet at 6:30 «p. m. in the VikingCommons. The banquet will feature a karate demonstration and President Harvey C. Bunke asspeaker. ,- Following this, dads and students can attend a swim meet or basketball game. Tickets for Dad's Day—costing ~ $2.50 for non-boarders and $1.65 for boarders—are available at the , VikingUnion desk. Petition circulates £» lt;) j Salaries doubled 5 Salaries of resident aides will I bedoubled next year but, ac- 5 f cording to Ray Romine, assist- I | w ant director of student activi- I ties inresidence halls, pay- A c ments will be in the form of J | room and board. ~ I After next fall, aides will be I I paid on a merit system, and I have the opportunity to earn A c up to $120 each quarter in ad- | I ditionto board and room. j c Applications i o r resident I A aideships are now being taken f | by Romine. A 5Romine is also seeking quali- I I fied graduate students to work 2 ! as assistant residence direct- I | ors.Their pay wiH be room o I and board plus up to $170 a A c month. f S»-()«B»()«»-()«H»0 lt;«»()«a»048 Students seek age 18 vote A petition urging that a bill reducing thelegal voting age in Washington be passed by the State Legislature is. now circulating at Western.The petition, which was endorsed last week by the Associated Students Legislature, is being distributedby a state-wide youth committee. The youth committee believes that since 18-year-olds are faced withthe responsibilities of marriage and parenthood, the draft and compulsory military service, full adultpenalties for crime and full taxation, they should have a voice in determining the destination of thecountry in which they live. A similar bill for lowering the national voting age has been introduced intothe United States Senate by Senators Mike Mansfield and Everett Dirksen. MEMBER FEDERALDEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION WUS Week ends Cash breaks loose for WUS The trickle ofcoins being contributed to World University Service early last week broke loose Saturday evening in arushing stream of silver. Casino Night, sponsored by Helmsmen's Club, grossed about $1,750, saidMaria Van Leuven, WUS Week co-chairman. The net profit is still unknown, she added, but predictedthat it would be over $1,000. Because profit reports from many of the other participating organizationsand dorms have not yet been turned in, it will be about two weeks before the total amount collected willbe known, Miss Van Leuven said. luck runs out Casino night Luck ran out on several Western studentsat Casino Night Saturday in the Viking Union as they were nabbed by the WUS police, and thrown in jail. Bail was 20 cents, or two chips. Students spent a night of gambling for the charitable organization andlost more than $1,000. Photo by Jim Hinds 10c HARD ICE CREAM CONES NOW ONLY 5c AT THEVARSITY DRIVE-IN LARGEST SHAKES IN TOWN 30c LARGEST DOUBLE BURGER IN TOWN 65c100 SAM1SH WAY 733-980! EVERY GIRL is a Special Consideration To Students and Faculty SAVETODAY FREE DELIVERY PH. 734-4902 OPEN 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. The HERALD PHARMACY HeraldBuilding SWEETHEART in her gown from Belle Bridal AND Formal Shoppe 306 W. Champion St.CLOSE TO B.B. FURNITURE Oodles of Beautiful Long and Short Gowns ---------- Collegian - 1967 February 3 - Page 4 ---------- PAGE FOUR THE COLLEGIAN FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1967 editorials Sometimes bastards can do . . . • . . things normal people cant Oh dad, poor dad The case of Leary vs Lynden has become quite aninteresting display of local color in the last few days. Dr. Timothy Leary, well known expert on LSD and other psychedelic drugs, has been criticized by a group of citizens in Lynden, a small farmingcommunity north of Bellingham. Karl Williams, a resident of Lynden, has collected 1,200 signatures on a petition to ban Leary's Saturday appearance on campus. The heat has also been coming in overdosesfrom local Bellingham residents. Most observers would probably agree that recent action by theSeattle City Council barring Leary's appearance in the Seattle Center, has stirred much of the protestagainst him. Many have felt morally obligated to jump on the band wagon and do their duty. I t isassuring, 'midst all this pressure, that college officials, up to this writing, are remaining faithful toWestern's free speaker policy established in 1964. It appears that Leary will speak as scheduled,despite protests. We feel it is important that local citizens realize the policy, which the college issupporting, was written with student help. It would seem a bit odd to allow collegians participation in formulating basic policy, and, at a later date, to deny them credit for having common sense. By allowingLeary to speak, the administration seems to be displaying a faith in students as rational beings. Students evidently have the power to see truth just as clearly as Joe Blow on the streets. We will even go so faras to say modern college students have a " . . . faith that good ideas will prevail over bad ones," as alocal paper stated in a freedom of speech editorial Wednesday. That the "good ideas" of dad's day maynot be the same today is something for dad to face. •—Bruce Delbridge Lstny Party supports 's visit here Editor, The Collegian: It is not news to you that Dr. Timothy Leary is going to be on campus thisSaturday evening. Since the announcement of his engagement on campus and the subsequentcancellation of his appearance at the Opera House, much controversy has arisen. The Navigatorspeakers' policy states: "The trustees, the administration, and the faculty of the College subscribe to theproposition that an important aspect of the education of college students is the opportunity to listen tospeakers representing a wide variety of opinions and beliefs on important public issues." It goes on tosay that any faculty or recognized student group may invite to the campus any speaker the group wouldlike to hear. The policy also states that the appearance of a speaker on campus does not involveendorsement of his views by this college, its faculty, its administration, or its Board of Trustees. We feelthat Leary's speech falls within the jurisdiction of this policy and we further feel that attempts by members of our Board of Trustees and members of our community to stop his appearance on campus is anexpression by these individuals of the lack of faith they have in the members of ours college community to make intelligent judgments concerning varied and controversial topics. The program will also include Dr.Sidney Cohen of UCLA presenting a rebuttal to Leary's presentation. Cohen is a noted authority on drugs and legislation. We believe the speakers are vital to the educational process and that this program,offered by the Associated Students, is of enough educational value to merit its presentation. Anyinfringement on the speaker policy for "special" cases would destroy the entire policy. It is crucial to thewelfare of students that this policy be upheld in every respect. Respectfully submitted, THEUNIVERSITY PARTY U. Party candidates thank supporters Editor, The Collegian: We, the candidatesof the Universal Party, wish to thank those students who contributed their time and invaluablesupport to our election. Without their help our victory Would have been impossible. We hope that wewill have your Continued support in our efforts to be responsible legislators. BRUCE MURRAY andCAROLINE LEONARD Placement office less congested; recruiters move Recruiting tables forgovernment agencies have been moved to the Placement Office on ah experimental basis. "ThePlacement Office is a quieter place for interviewing. Besides, the congestion by the coffee shop, where the tables were formerly located, had to be'relieved," said Dean of Students James Hitchman.'Mysteries'will be explained by Dr. Leary, student claims Editor, The Collegian: I have heard so muchopposition to the appearance of Dr. Timothy Leary that I would like to say something in favoi?of him. Iam a freshman at WWSS and eagerly look forward to Dr. deary's appearance, as do many of myfriends. I read about and listen to older people getting extremely excited over the doctor's appearance.One of the main reasons for the doctor's speaking tours is to clarify many facts that these very peopleare in doubt of. LSD 25 is still a mysterious drug of which much is un-proven. It is actually too early for people to be drawing conclusions about it. Dr. Leary is one of the foremost authorities on this drug andI believe can explain many of the so-called mysteries concerning it. It will do no good for these people totry to ban Dr. Leary in the hope that LSD will simply fade away. LSD is here to stay. This drug can bemanufactured synthetically by any competent high school chemistry student possessing the Bill toban movies gets info Senate A second bill to ban state colleges and universities from showingentertainment films in competition with private theaters has been introduced into the State Legislature. Evergreen Theaters, a statewide chain, is the chief advocate of banning campus movies, claiming that it is unfair for state supported schools to compete with private establishments. The bill, sponsored bySenators James Keefe (D), Spokane; R. R. Greive (D), Seattle; and James A. Anderson (R), Bellevue,would prohibit state institutions of higher education from showing recent entertainment films. Asimilar bill has been introduced in the House of Representatives. I formula. LSD, commonly known asacid, is the foremost of the hallucinogenic drugs which have caused such a controversy in the country. What many people don't know is that such common substances as nutmeg and morning gloryseeds can also cause a psychedelic experience if taken in the right quantities. The uses of thesesubstances are shrouded in mysteries and superstitions which have been compounded by TV showsand other publicity, mainly in an unfavorable light. People have closed their minds to the many possible good uses of LSD in psychiatry and alcoholism. Dr. Leary has conducted many studies in thehallucinogenic drugs, besides being a qualified man of letters. Why ban him? Just because peopledisapprove with what the man has to say doesn't mean that his freedom.of speech should be restricted.The college is a free institution where students are admitted h gt; regardless of race, creed, religion, |and color. Why then should a speaker be restricted because he professes a different religion orbelief? If people want to protest against Leary," why" don't they invite an equally qualified speaker tospeak on the other side of the issue? I, personally, would like to meet Dr. Leary because I believe hehas mueh useful knowledge to impart to us. Once more, I would like to give my emphatic approval to the speaking of Dr. Leary at WWSC Feb. 4. I would think that this city would consider it an honor to havesuch a thought-provoking and famous speaker appear here personally. BERNIE J. M. W. FLEMING ; (Freshman) Helmsmen add $1,000 The Helmsmen's Casino Night added $1,000 to the World University Service's nearly empty coffers last Saturday night. The non-profit service club also produces theHomecoming parade, the AS nominating convention, and the Spring Sports Informal. the collegianOfficial Weekly Newspaper of Western Washington State College, Bellingham, Wash. . PHONE 734-7600, EXTENSION 269 ' - . ' Second-class postage paid at Bellingham, Washington COPY DEADLINE-Tuesday 12 Noon FOUNDING MEMBER PACIFIC STUDENT PRESS Affiliated with United. StatesStudent Press Association, Collegiate Press Service, Intercollegiate Press Service, Associated Collegiate Press- BRUCE DELBRIDGE, Editor-in-Chief MARY MAGNUSON, Managing Editor COPY EDITORJeanne Doering FEATURE EDITOR Chris Condon CAMPUS EDITOR Vern Giesbrecht SPORTSEDITOR Dana Rust Rich O'Brien Noel Bourasaw Caroline Leonard Gail Yada PHOTOGRAPHERSScott Finley Dwight Larson Jim Hinds Steve Johnson Keith Wyman BUSINESS MANAGER KenRiddell STAFF MEMBERS CARTOONISTS Ed Solem Mike Condon Robert La Rivieve ADVISER EdNicholls Joe Cox Larry Brooks Neal Johns Greg Miller Mark Hoffman Sheila Eliason Jackie McGraw ---------- Collegian - 1967 February 3 - Page 5 ---------- FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 3,- 19B7- THE C01LEG1AN PAGE FIVE Counseling Center free, confidentialCounselors are willing to listen By VERN GIESBRECHT Collegian Campus Editor Talking to a counselor is not like going to a "headshrinker," the director of Western's counseling center said Friday. "Somestudents attach a stigma to professional counseling, but I want to emphasize that most students whoseek counsel are not mentally ill at all, but just want to talk to someone about their problems," Dr. Frank Nugent told Collegian staff members during their scheduled class period. He said the counseling centerlocated on the second floor of Old Main, is designed for students who have vocational, academic orpersonal problems. "Some students can't specify their problems," Nugent said. "They may be generallydissatisfied, or wondering what they're doing in college." Other students, he said, have very definiteproblems, such as a broken love affair, low grades or indecision concerning a major. "Our emphasis ison situational problems," Nugent said. "Chronic cases are referred to other agencies, such as theMental Health Clinic." ALL CONFIDENTIAL Nugent stressed that all the counseling is confidential."No one has access to our files, not even the F.B.I., Peace Corps, or the administration. We have talked to students with drug problems, but no report goes out about these people," he said. Many studentscome to the counseling center voluntarily and others are referred there by faculty, ministers orfriends, he said. Asked what a counselor would do if a patient told him he had murdered someone,Nugent said it would be up to the counselor. "Individual rights are important here, and it is hard to saywhat the counselor would do. In this state, a counselor can't be forced to testify against his patient," hesaid. ANOTHER WHITMAN Nugent was then asked how the counseling center would deal with astudent who said he wanted to kill someone. "This is another hard question," Nugent answered. "Wewouldn't just say 'Because you've said this, we're going to lock you up." Since he came in voluntarily, we would take for granted that he wanted to talk about the problem. We would probably refer him to another agency." In answer to another question, Nugent said the counselors did not try to adjust a person to aparticular pattern. "We believe strongly in the uniqueness of everyone, and this uniqueness is sacred.Each person has to find his own personal balance," he said. Student aid in HUAC abolition sought by civil liberties leader By GREG MILLER Collegian Staff Reporter An emotional appeal for the pre-Tservation of civil liberties was presented Tuesday in the Campus Christian Ministry Open Forum.Frank Wilkinson, Executive Director of the National Committee to Abolish the House Committee onUn- American Activities (NCAHUAC), asked students to sign petitions and send letters to theircongressmen urging the abolition of the unconstitutional activities of the House Committee on Un-American Activities (HUAC). "A lot of people think HUAC's purpose is to protect the country He's outto get HUAC Frank Wilkinson fervently condemned the House Committee on Un- American Activities and all its actions since 1945 in a speech Tuesday in the Viking Union Lounge. Wilkinson, ExecutiveDirectors of the National Committee to Abolish the House Committee on Un-American Activities, washimself labeled a communist by the Committee when he was a promoter for a slum project, photo byJim Groh from subversive overthrow of the government. But they are wrong," Wilkinson said. HUAC hasno power to investigate any overt acts such as government overthrow, he said. "It can only investigateideas and opinions and ' recommend laws to prevent certain 'subversive" ideas from circulatingthroughout the country," he explained.. QUESTIONABLE METHODS Wilkinson said that since 1945HUAC" has been using such methods as payoffs, perjury and publicity to label innocent groups andindividuals as communists. "The Committee is protected from slander and libel suits because it is aSenate committee and therefore is allowed certain protection from the regular laws," he added. Theexistence of HUAC is a breach of the first amendment to the constitution and its actions violate thefifth amendment, Wilkinson asserted. Wilkinson added that he wanted student support for the comingpeace vigils scheduled for April 8- 15. The chairman of HUAC, Edwin E. Willis, has already publiclyclaimed that the peace groups are communist influenced. He pointed out that student peacemarchers who are legally exercising their rights of free speech and protest, .are labelled by HUAC ascommunists. "This puts many students in the position to be investigated by HUAC," he said. Marcelle Prescriptions • STAR DRUG REXALL STATE HOLLY STUDENT CO-OP BOOK NEWS TheWarriors, Reflections On Men In Battle by Glenn Gray is a new issue from Harper's that ranks with manystudies on why wars should not have a future. A new paperback I Saw Red China by the famouscorrespondent, Lisa Hobbs, has gained some interest. In American History a two volume paperbackentitled The American Scene 1600-1860 and 1860-to Present edited by William Chute containssome good general review. A hard bound title we would like to stock. Alice in Womanland or TheFeminine Mistake. All of the Tolkien books available in paper are in.. Fall quarter 158 students tookadvantage of the counseling center and there was a waiting list of 17 at the end of the quarter, Nugentreported. "The waiting list is unavoidable," he said. However, anyone with an urgent problem can see acounselor immediately," he added. "No matter how long a waiting list, there is always a counselor onstandby." For A Radical Change THE, COMMUNIST VIEW by Gus Hall 50c VIETNAM PROFITEERSby Victor Perlo 50c Full Selection of Marxist Books Order by Mail CO-OP BOOKS 710 Stewart StreetSeattle, Wash. 98101 HURLEY DRUG MART 1311 Commercial • Prescriptions • Drugs • PetSupplies VIKING Lost n' Found For Information Contact V.U. Desk LOST GOLD WEDDING RING Onthe Campus, Jan. 13th. Contact Ben Stobbe, 853-2897 Clearbrook, B.C, LOST GRAY HERRINGBONECOAT With black fur collar at the dance Jan. 13th. Contact Dennis Hadley, 734-3827 1004 High St.LOST BOYS' BLUE JACKET At the dance Jan. 28th. Contact Roger Long, 733-5924 904 High St.LOST BLUE WINDBREAKER In V.U. Jan. 28th. Contact Bruce Sherman, 733-6634 519 Ivy St. LOSTDARK BLUE WINDBREAKER On Casino Night in V.U. Somebody took wrong one. Contact Ron Ottele,907 High St. AARDVARK BOOKS ARTS • Stanyon St. and Other Sorrows • "1601" by MarkTwain • Understanding Media by McLuhan • Summerhill • Tolkien's Books LARGE VARIETYOF SCIENCE FICTION — NEW USED 213 E. HOLLY PHONE 734-4043 Business students, do allthe budget problems balance-except your own? An NBof C Special Checking account may help you stay fn the black I A great way to organize your budget and provides a record of expenditures. No need tocarry excess cash. No minf. mum balance. No service charge. Pay only a dime a check. Inquire today!"KTUtfif NATIONAL BANKOF COMMERCE I N D\J •"• lt;'•'• Member FedersJ DepositInsurance Corpoiiiioi Located at Railroad and Holly St. Sheridan P. Gallagher, Vice-Pres. and Manager ---------- Collegian - 1967 February 3 - Page 6 ---------- PAGE SIX THE COLLEGIAN FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1967 Here's your application for the 13th AnnualNational College Queen Contest I would like to submit the-following name for The National-College Queencompetition. Kindly mail full details and an official entry-blank. :: MY NAME I ATTEND _ .AGE (or, mycandidate's name) (or, my candidate attends) (name of college or university) AM ( ) FRESHMAN MYMAILING ADDRESS SOPHOMORE ! ) JUNIOR I ) SENIOR (or, my candidate's address) (no. and street) (city) (state) (zip code) I obtained this application when it was published in:. (write in name of collegenewspaper in which this application appeared) If you are nominating someone other than yourself, pleasesign your name in the space opposite. The entry blank will be mailed to her. •_ MAIL THISAPPLICATION TODAY TO: NATIONAL COLLEGE QUEEN CONTEST COMMITTEE P.O. Box 935, NewYork City, N.Y. 10023 Deadline: This newspaper application must be received in New York City within 10days from the date of this issue. You can win more than $5,000 in prizes and earn recognition for yourschool, It's nomination time again! Colleges in all 50 states are nominating their candidates in the 13thAnnual National College Queen Contest. And the time is right now—the nominations close soon. Sendin your name—nominated friend lots of girls send their own names, so don't be shy! Freshmen,Sophomores, Juniors, Seniors—all are eligible. And anyone con make a nomination... campus group's,fraternities, sororities, friends. Just fill out the application blank, Not a "Beauty" contest Those whoentered last year will tell you that this is neither a "glamour" nor a "genius" contest. Candidates arejudged on their all-around abilities..7" they're questioned on current events, fashion, home economics,career goals and the like. 50 state winners Every state elects its own College Queen in April. As a statewinner, you'll come to New York City (all expenses paid) for a 10 day visit and the National Finals. You'llappear on a National Television Special, and attend a reception at the United Nations, theatre trips,backstage visits with Broadway stars, and the formal Coronation Ball. More than $5,000 in prizes Thenew National College Queen will tour Europe from London'to Paris to Rome. She'll win a wardrobe ofthe newest styles, worth $500—and her own car, a brand new sports convertible. She'll discoverAmerica—travelling from New York City to Disneyland, including featured appearances at the Rose Bowl Game and the traditional Tournament of Roses Parade., Enter Today It's easy to enter, fun to nominate. Take a minute right now to fill, out the application yourself. And how about your club, fraternity or sorority nominating someone? Remember, this is not a typical "Beauty Contest." It's for the-real girl, the. all-around girl—it's for you! The National College Queen Contest is sponsored by Best Foods: Makers'of:Bosco Milk Amplifier, Best Foods / Hellmann's Real Mayonnaise, Best Foods/Hellmann's Dressings, Karo Corn Syrups, Knorr Soups, Mazola Corn Oil, Mazola Margarine, Nucoa Margarine, Skippy Peanut Butter, Niagara Spray Starch, NuSoft Fabric Softener, Rit Tints and Dyes, Shinolo Shoe Polishes and Waxes.Best Foods is o division of the Corn Products Company, • I would like to submit the following name for ^H The National College Queen competition. ^fl I I I Kindly mail full details and an official entry blank.MY NAME AM __ C * " " • ' " ' I AM IIFK5HUAN I | SOMOMCtf / I JUNK* I I SfNIOt MY MAILINGAMntw I I I [coupon for bashful girlsj^ ---------- Collegian - 1967 February 3 - Page 7 ---------- FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1967 THE COLLEGIAN PAGE SEVEN House is needed; palace is planned Tobuild a house, Ridgeway Gam-na will use a palace next month. The men's dormitory is planning 'ikingPalace (similar to televi-ion's Hollywood Palace) to raise tioney for an Indian family whose ouse wasdestroyed by fire last fall. Serge Grant, chairman, said Vi-ing Palace will include musicals, ombos anddance routines, and Ik singing. "The Sanchez home on the Lum-i Indian reservation burned to the rounddruing Homecoming Week," e said. "The family didn't have ny insurance, and have been liv-ig withfriends. With all the talent n campus, I thought we could put n a show to raise enough money »r ahouse." Four musicals—The Sound of Mu-c, West Side Story, South Pacific nd Mary Poppins—areplanned for le March 4th performance. Rellingham and Sehome high ±ools will combine to produce The ound of Music. "Sigma is jazzing Mary Poppins and Kappa is add-a college flavor to West Side tory,"Grant said. Grant said any individual or group ay try out for a part in the show, ryouts will be held from 7to 9 m. Thursdays in Upper Saga. In addition to awarding a trophy r each category (musicals, dance idcombo, folksinging) Gamma ill hand out Gammi awards to the tstanding singer, instrumentalist, ddancer. "I'm not worried about filling the iditorium," Grant said. "I think e'll get a good response from the}rnmunity as well as the students." Grant has set a goal of $3,000 for iking Palace. "We hope to raise at ast $1,000 here," he said. "Rolf xomberg, music critic of the Seat- Post-Intelligencer,. will attend ieshow. If he likes it, he will ar-mge a performance in the Seattle ivic Center." Director of Viking Palace isDar-tl Hubbard, a Seattle sophomore, ublic relations are being handled by m Mullins, sophomore fromVan- gt;uver, B. C. Dance planned Couples will be "Snowed Inn" lturday at the steak dinner and mi-formal dance in the Ridgeway ining Hall. The dinner (8-9 p. m.) and dance -12 p.m.) are sponsored byTriad, ckets are $2 per couple for Triad embers and $3 per couple for non-embers. IIENTALS •Weekly • Monthly • Quarterly REPAIRS • All Typewriters • Portable or standard •Electric or Manual • Free Estimates • Free Delivery • Free Demonstrations Your TypewriterHeadquarters fcr new and reconditioned typewriters, we carry them all, including world famous"Olympia." BLACKBURN OFFICE EQUIPMENT 1223 Commercial (next to Gages) 733-7660 'Our 18thyear of dependable service" SPRING QUARTER ADVISEMENT AND PRE-REGISTRATIONADVISEMENT WEEK - FEB. 13-17 All Students - Except Freshmen Who Entered Fall Quarter 1966 orWinter Quarter 1967 - Pre-Registration Will Be By Appointment PROCEDURE 1. Arange the time ofyour Pre-Registration Appointment in the registration center, Ground Floor Edens Hall, according to thefollowing schedule. Feb. 7—Graduates and Seniors Feb. 8—Juniors Feb. 9—Sophomores Freshmen except those who entered Fail Quarter 1966 or Winter Quarter 1967. 2. During AdvisementWeek (Feb. 13-17): A. Bring your blue book up to date. B. ALL UNDERGRADUATES—Go directly toyour major department to arrange for academic advisement. If you plan a change in major, report to the department of your new major. Students in a pre-professional program, or those who have not declareda major — report to the Dean of Students Office for assignment to an advisor. C. GRADUATES-—Obtain materials from the Graduate Office and secure program approval from the Graduate Programadvisor and Dean of Graduate Studies. 3. During Pre-Registration (Feb. 20-Mar. 1) —Report, with yourapproved bluebook, to the Registration Center, Ground Floor of Edens Hall, at the time of yourapointment. Freshmen Who Enrolled Fall Quarter 1966 Or Winter Quarter 1967 PROCEDURE 1.Arrange an advisement conference with your faculty sponsor. Your conference must take place prior toFeb. 20th. 2. Plan your spring quarter program on the Spring Quarter registration form which was sent toyour faculty sponsor. 3. Leave your Registration form with your faculty sponsor. Your sponsor will turn itinto the Registrar's Office. 4. Report to the Registration Center, ground floor, Edens Hall, to completePre-Registration as follows: Mar. 8—Last Name beginning S-Z Mar. 9—Last Name beginning H-R Mar. 10—Last Name beginning A-G Mary Zoe has education library The first of several planneddepartmental libraries housed within Wilsoni Library has been in operation for a year. Locatedbehind the whale-skin doors on the second floor of the library, the Education-Curriculum Divisioncontains about 140,000 items for classroom teaching. A small workroom with typewriters, aduplicating machine, mag-zines for clipping's and free pamphlets has also been provided foreducation students. Music, science and fine arts may undergo similar programs of librarycentralization and expansion, according to Mrs. Gayle Rahmes, education librarian. PAYMENT OFFEES ALL STUDENTS Pay as you Pre-Register or Pay by mail by Monday, March 13 Students havingunusual cases may petition for a deferred payment at the time of Pre-Registration. "I WON'T EAT ITUNLESS THE INGREDIENTS CAME FROM ENNEN'S THRIFTWAY!" ENNEN'S THRIFTWAY HIGHAND HOLLY "WHERE EVERY ^CUSTOMER IS IMPORTANT" cHARBROittD STEAKS "Probably theBest'1 MOD. thru Sat., 11:30 A. M. till 3:00 A. M. Sun. 12 till 8 p. m. Now Serving Your FavoriteBeverages In Our NEW COCKTAIL LOUNGE 1319 COMMERCIAL STREET FORMALS from $25.00 up sizes 5 to 16 ONE GROUP FORMALS FROM $12.00 ---------- Collegian - 1967 February 3 - Page 8 ---------- PAGE EIGHT THE COLLEGIAN FRIDAY, FEBRUARY -3r 196' Both plays complete Shaw does not Areview-preview By NOEL BOURASAW Collegian Staff Reporter George Bernard Shaw's plain butmeaningful English combined with humility on the part of the Western players are the factors that make"Shaw in Short" a success. Milky treatment of Shaw's lines could be disastrous for the presentation of his two one-act plays, "Man of Destiny" and "Dark Lady of the Sonnets." In "Destiny" Joe Grant playsNapoleon Bonaparte, who is tricked and possibly defeated by a woman spy. Shaw did not write about astereotype Napoleon and neither does Grant act in an affected manner. Ellen Catrell is the woman whotricks him. She also plays tricks with the audience and heightens the ambiguity of her non-007personality. Bill Savage hops across the stage in a bunny-like characterization of Napolean's aide.Guiseppe, an Italian tavern-keeper, sometimes tells Napoleon a few things he does not know. He isplayed.by Al Simpson. In "Destiny" Napoleon explains universals to the audience and explains howthey apply to men in battle. But his female adversary also explains to him how personal battles whichdecide many wars are often won by women. ACTORS SHINE The actors in "Dark Lady" could easily be overshadowed by the fine set built by Larry Hopp, and the colorful costumes designed by Don Adams.But they are not. Frank Jenkins' voice convinced us that he believed in the man, William Shakespeare, whom he is portraying. It is especially notable that he treats Mnes gently and does not throw them atthe audience. Shaw meant the play to be an argument for a British national theatre that would featureworks by serious dramatists. He hoped that this would draw good material that had been shunned before by money-hungry theatre promoters. 1 Campus underwear { I (news briefs) ENGLISH Dr. James H.O'Brien, associate professor of English, was named acting chairman of the English departmentMonday. , O'Brien is replacing former chairman Dr. R. D. Brown, who became associate academicdean last month. | Dr. Peter J. Elicli, associate professor of psychology, has been serving as actingchairman of the Psychology department since shortly after Dr. Charles W. Harwood was named deanof Fairhaven College in December. GEOLOGY A lecture and seminar on urban planning will be givenWednesday by Dr. Boyce, associate professor of Geology at the University of Washington. Thelecture, entitled "Antipodal and Paradoxical Conceptual Approaches to Urban Spatial Structure", will be presented, at,-.3 p-.nl in Room 26 of Ojd Ivj^iiri.:^e ^seminar will be at 7.p.mV"iri the same room.ECONOMICS A master of economics program started this quarter at Western has an enrollment of twostudents, according to Bruce Richardson, economics instructor who at present teaches the onlygraduate course. The four credit class is the first in the master's program which may be in full operationby fall 1967, according to Richardson. Students will be able to complete the master's degree in twoyears. Half of the credits will be taken from upper division undergraduate courses. Queen Elizabeth, who is characterized by Dell Patterson, rebukes Shakespeare early in the play but later sympathizes withhis own designs for a national theatre. , Shaw depicted Elizabeth in her flowing passion-red wig, which must have irked many of his Victorian-age readers. It would seem that the Victorians' sympathy wouldmore than likely lie with the raven-haired "Dark Lady." Susan Albert portrays this lover to whomShakespeare often refers in his sonnets. • * • Shakespeare is busy during the play recording linesspoken by her and other members of the cast, in an effort to capture the actual speech spoken byEnglishmen in his time. The Beefeater who guards Queen Elizabeth's quarters is, in this play, theapparent source for many of Shakespeare's most famous sonnet lines. Forest Goldade plays this part.this is the year of the ram; it is always year of the horn; see, dance, and listen to STARK NAKED and the retreads performing Wednesday and thursday (formerly the ten-high tavern) 114 Cornwall — 1block south of the Leopold Leary, light show come to Western A psychedelic weekend is in store forWestern students as The Union Light Company and The "Train of Thought" present a psychedelic lightshow and dance this evening and Dr. Timothy Leary and Dr. Sidney (pohen present a discussion on LSD- ^5 tomorrow night. | The light show is described by Scott Roherer, a member of the IjJnion LightCompany, as being a 'ftotal environment experience guaranteed to blow your mind." The "Train ofThought," which will provide the music for the dance, includes two Western students, Joe Mackie onbass guitar and Barry Drost on harps (harmonicas.) The two shows will be in the coffee shop at 9 and10:30 p. m. Saturday, Dr. Timothy Leary and Dr. Sidney Cohen will discuss the psychedelic (mind-expanding) chemical, LSD-25. Leary's academic career began at West Point which he left after 18months because his interests were "philosophic rather than militaristic." In 1942 he graduated from the University of Alabama with a B. A. in Psychology. At the end of World War II he resumed his schoolingat the University of California at Berkeley where he earned his Ph.D. In 1958 Leary went to Harvard as a lecturer on clinical psychology, From the beginning he was a proponent of unpopular ideas andtechniques, such as the evaluation of social interplay and personal behavior as "so many stylizedgames." Cohen, a psychiatrist from the University of California, is also regarded as an expert on LSDand he has taken several "trips." He opposes the uncontrolled use of the. drug.. ' Much of the humor ofthe play is I "Destiny"' is directed by Byi derived from Shaw's juxtaposition Sigler, while ThomasNapiecinski of these famous lines with the na- rects "Dark Lady." Bill Catrell tural speech of hischaracters. I technical director. Now at the Bowery FROM DJS in SEATTLE MISS PATTY ALLEN with69th FOURTH ESGULATOR appearing f ri. f rom 9* - on saf. from 8:30 - on cover charge after musicstarts fri. and sat. on hies., wed. thurs. the "unusuals" (Closed Monday) BETCHA CAN EAT JUSTONE! Shakey's famous Giant Pizza is enough for a whole family. 'Course, then you'll start singing happy music to Shakey's ragtime piano and banjo...wet your whistle... have f u n . . . work up another appetite. And BINGO!-you're at it again. Maybe you can eat two at that! SHEETS 1234 N. STATE STREETOpen 7 Days A Week Ph. 733-3Q20 PIZZA PARL0B ye PUBLIC house © 1966 SHAKEY'S INC."THE FOUR KNIGHTS" Specializing in a smooth soul sound with a touch of comedy, this group is rightbetween the Ink Spots and the Mills Brothers. NOW AT THE CASINO ROOM NIGHTLY EXCEPTSUNDAY NO COVER NO MINIMUM ---------- Collegian - 1967 February 3 - Page 9 ---------- RIDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1967 THE COLLEGIAN PAGE NINE ife like cat's cradle: meaningless game ByCHRIS CONDON Collegian Feature Editor People's lives are nothing more than games* symbolized bythe :at's cradle and "the thing about a cat's cradle," says Kurt Von-tegut, author of the_Book of theQuarter, "is that there is no damn :at and no damn cradle." Vonnegut is saying that the lives ofindividuals have no leaning. That was the conclusion of the panel Tuesday on the "Cat's radle" which was moderated by Dr. Thaddeus H. Spratlin of the Iconomics department. "Cat's Cradle," the Book of theQuarter, is a novel concerning he end of the world. A scientist develops a substance called ice-9 /hich,through an accident, causes the entire world and almost all s inhabitants to freeze. The book, althougheasy to read, contains nany religious, social and political implications. Dr. Herbert Taylor, dean ofresearch and professor of soci-logy- anthopology, pointed out that "cat's cradle," a game played pithstring on the hands was of Polynesian origin and spread from here to the rest of the world. John Hanson,a senior English major, added that the Eski-nos made cat's cradles while telling myths. He said the titleim-lies that the story is a myth about our society. Hanson went on to say that the heart of the book wasthe uestion of the role that science and scientists will play in determin-ag the fate of humanity. Thequestion is whether Honniker, a scientist, who seems to epresent Albert Einstein, is wicked because heis so out of contact pith humanity that he purposely creates destruction in the form of ce-9, or whether he is merely innocently evil because he is not eally human and therefore not capable of feeling. This led into the question of free will and determinism. Dr. awrence Lee, of the English department, stated that,according to fonnegut, man does not have free will and therefore cannot-be held iccountable for his acts.JOD IS VILLAIN Han.s..n later commented that the real villain of the book is lod. He is up there pullingthe strings and playing a cruel joke on s all. Bokonon, leader of a new religious cult, recognized theinherent vil and poverty of man's condition on the earth and resolved the roblem by saying that man neverhas and never will understand is condition or his actions. Bokonon also said that if we don't under-tandwhat we do we aren't evil for doing it. The point was raised that Frank's shaking up the jar in order o keepthe ants fighting is an image that "smacks of the military." yhen scientists create an atomic bomb andthen turn it over to the lilitary they are, in essence, saying "here, you shake it up." "You can't inventsomething like the atomic bomb or ice-9 nd then forget about it. One of these days everything is going too "whoosh," Hanson said. Like Heinz's 57, 'Catchup works with varieties (of kids) By JEANNE DOERING Collegian Copy Editor Sterling Brand startled about 30 student teachers Jan. 25 by whipping a bottle of catsup out of a paper tag. "I'm here to tell you about Project Catchup, not catsup," he said, "butProject Catchup, like Heinz's 57 varieties, worked with 50 different children." Brand, principal atMountain View School, assisted in the Project Catchup's first program designed for "underachievers"held here for six weeks last summer. The project, directed by Dr. Evelyn Mason of the psychologydepartment, received a $100,000 two-year grant from the Rockefeller Foundation. "We had 50children aged 13 to 14 who had been labeled underachievers. They were average students according to subjective judgment and standardized tests, but they had been failing their subjects,''' saidBrand. "The youngsters were not the school rowdies. They were the types who pretended they wereworking in class and were not turning in assignments. As a result, they went through grade schoolwithout really learning or changing because they had caught on to the system. "The key to helping them was a daily positive relationship with each Hitchman probes Health Service Dean of Students JamesHitchman has launched an investigation of the Student Health Service and plans to present a proposalfor increased medical service to President Harvey C. Bunke and the Board of Trustees in March.Hitchman believes the college should hire more nurses for the service, including one public health nurse, and contract a doctor who would provide services like setting arms, taking stitches, lancing boils andgiving prescriptions. The personnel in the Health Service now are not authorized to perform suchservices, said Hitchman. "About all they can do is dispense bandaids and cold pills and refer students to doctors in the community. "The Health Service has plenty of beds and doesn't need much moreequipment, but it is hampered by lack of authorized personnel," he said. MORE INVESTIGATIONSHitchmian also wants to appoint a committee of students, faculty and student personnel staff to look into iarth and Violin: air extraordinaire By JEANNE DOERING Collegian Copy Editor gt;r American violinist Sidney h his concert here Monday night another extraordinary perform-and a soloist's nightmare, stringon his violin broke half-through the second-to-last num-scheduled. it with the grace that character-hisentire performance he ed off stage, changed the string returned to play the number n. is little wonderthat this Ameri-violinist has been acclaimed for naturity, individuality, and im-ation. om the very classicalVivaldi ta: in A Major to the stormy ick Tocatta Brutale, he exhibit-ixtreme control, splendid tech- B andsuperb dynamism, mpared with his immense sta-his violin seemed lost, but he e it speak with suchauthority there seemed to be a marriage e two: THIS was truly the pair lordinaire. try to describe themusic that id from his violin would be like ig to describe a fine tapestry, n the pizzicato and the chargednances to the harmonics and ng passages, he wove a har-y ranging from the richest bro-to velvet to thevery sheerest d if Sidney Harth can rival the », then his playing cannot be rded as anything butmasterful, vonder that Los Angeles critics gt;ed his playing as "virtuosity le flaming tradition." e lyricalpassages in Beethov- Sonata No. 9, Schumann's Pro-c Bird and one of Harth's two re numbers sung out like no could sing them. 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Another committee to update the college policy on student dissemination of fliers is beingformulated, with Director of Student Activities Richard Reynolds as chairman. "We want to remedy thehalf-hazard distribution of fliers by settling on a broadly-based agreement with students. "Thecommittee will probably draw up policies directing the when, how and where of flier distribution — butnot the what," he explained. child," he said. Academic improvement within the six-week session wasastonishing, according to Brand. "During the session some of these youngsters improved three gradelevels in their reading ability. They didn't revert to previous behavior as is often the case during thesummertime," he said. Personality changes could also be seen. Brand felt that art classes were agood take-off point for working with the youngsters. "In art work they were faced with a material thatfought back, and they had to combat this antagonist," he said. Project Catchup will continue thissummer with another group of 50 children. Brand cited several improvements for the next program. "Forone thing, we are going to cut down on the don'ts. The youngsters need a positive approach. "We willnot 'herd' them as much, either. Last summer they had a set schedule: so many minutes here for.language arts and then some time there for math. This summer we will divide them into three groups and stagger their class times, much like college classes," he explained. The purpose of the program, Brandsaid, is to "build children who will be solid citizens, who will have financial and social security, friends,many outside activities, feelings about moral teaching and religious training, and some physicalabilities." DANCING Monday Friday Saturday 137 W. HOLLY PEANUTS Monday TuesdayWednesday Thursday Friday Saturday OPENING FRIDAY FEB. 3 BEAUTIFULLY REMODELEDSNACK BAR rN-CAR HEATERS b RAIN SHIELDS OUTSTANDING FILM FARE DEANO'S NEWESTFOR OPENERS PG KS-LcOse/ COLUMBIA PICTURES Prisma. An IRVING ALIEN ProductiM ANN-MAR6RET DEAN MARTIN * MATT HELM MLurDERERS row ,.,,... CAMILLA SPARV JAMESGREGORY BEVERLY AOAMS Introducing DINO. OESI and BILLY • Featuring ihe "Slaygirls" •Screenplay by HERBERT BAKER Based on ihe novel by DONALD HAMILTON • Music by Lalo Schifrin • Produced by IRVING ALLEW Directed by HENRY LEVIN • A Meadway-Claude Picture • T E CH N I C O L O R ' "GUNPOINT" Audie Murphy in Color Murder's Row 7:30 11:00 Gunpoint 9:30 ---------- Collegian - 1967 February 3 - Page 10 ---------- PAGE TEN THE COLLEGIAN FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 114 years old Fairhaven rocks-n-rolls in old ageThey don't make doors like they used to The nucleus of the town, Fair-haven, was conceived in 1853when John Thomas and Dan Harris first staked a claim on a plot that lies at the foot of what is nowHarris Avenue in Bellingham. The town itself was born forty years later when it was incorporatedafter it had annexed to the small town of Bellingham to the north. It began to grow up when it mergedwith the towns of Whatcom and Sehome further to the north and became in 1903 what we know now asthe entire city of Bellingham. At that time Fairhaven was 5,500 people strong and had a thriving business community. Banks, numerous cigar stores, livery stables and colorful saloons were among the manyestablishments' that dotted the town's streets. Now college students know the old townsite as thebowery or as "the other oldtown." The northern boundary is Douglas Avenue. The Northwest NormalSchool, from which Western descended, was built on this boundary so that residents from all parts ofBellingham could reach the Normal by streetcar. . • • • An old man saunters daily past theonce-majestic bank whose doors have not admitted any depositors for more than 30 years. He is carefulnot to step on any of the cracks in the sidewalk but he slices sunbeams with his methodical stride. Hewaves to Charley who lives on the bank's second floor. Charley does not know why he lives there but heknows he likes it. He can go walking each day past dozens of deserted office-space-for-rent buildings.And he can salvage his past from faded advertisements pasted on buildings that were alive with activity.His friend wanders on until he finds the tavern he has visited daily since 1950. • • • Threecouples dance from their parked car into the tavern that features a hot college-age band with asaxophone that screams into the musty night. In the midst of crumbling and decaying buildings thisone-time warehouse sways at its reinforced seams and dares the ghosts of the Fairhaven past tohalt its basic beat. The old men shy away from here except when they're curious. One student objectsto the ness of the tavern's recess^ staggers out into the long-sir serted street to sober up. As hestumbles down towail docks, he is enveloped by the ering-sweet smells of sea anc He is deafened bytrain as a freight rumbles along bay. In his dizziness, he stops| street corner and barfs. Charlie lookson from his window and laughs. Watch tor the cracks Do your triends just fade away] The future is asmuch a question as was the past ---------- Collegian - 1967 February 3 - Page 11 ---------- FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1967 THE COLLEGIAN PAGE ELEVEN from the end of the bench with dan arust It seems as if students are not the only ones that are" hav-trouble with the "older generation." FredEmerson, Western's neophyte football coach]was idealist when he started his college coachingcareerUast 1 on the Viking campus. ; § He came knowing that he had the ability to bilild ajwin-lgfootball team on his alma mater's campus. After ail, he left Western Washington a winner when hegrad kted 1959 and had gone to Kent Meridian High and produced ialf-dozen winning football teamsbefore being appointed id football coach at Western. .1 He knew when he came that the Viking footballprogram Eided rebuilding. He knew that the team's basic attitude s not that of a Winner. ] "They didn'tcare if they won or lost when they were there. They had no pride," Emerson said. But at the! end theseason things had changed. The former Viking half-ik's philosophy had become ingrained in his players."They w what it was like to win and they liked it." Thus the new football coach completed successfullythe mary task that he had seen before him. What the blonde-ded coach did not see were two problemsthat lay under-th. Problems that the ordinary football fan does not an-pate. "When I accepted the job Iwas assured that the football gram here was part of the curriculum of the college and xpected thecollege's support," the blonde-headed former tie All American said. ' He found; out otherwise. Not onlywas he disillusioned th what turned out to be a lethargic and uninterested stu-it body, but he especiallyfound little encouragement from administration. "When we recruit we know that we cannot cornpete h the large schools. We can only offer scholarships on basis of need and naturally we do not have the prestige Notre Dame, University of Washington or Washington te University. So we have to sell them on ourprogram it is difficult when we don't get any encouragement m up on the hill. ; "My job is to coachfootball and to teach. If we a r e going put out good coaches and good teachers we are going to e to have a winning program." So it appears that President Bunke and the BoaM of [ents, who have proven to beso adept at getting^ grants money to the school, will have to provide more than ds to this institution if it is going to do what it ha set to accomplish. '•' ' -"?i Of course the administration is not all to blame.^Vest' s student body can hardly be called the most actif e in country. "I can't remember it being likethis when I wits in ool," Emerson said. "I just don't know what is the^mat- • :r:;l Some point out that itis not just athletics that is] suf-ing from lack of enthusiasm but most of the events on campus. If this istrue there seems, to me to be a frighten-lack of direction on campus and lack of direction means k ofleadership. Leadership usually comes from theHop. Whatever is the case Western is liable to be withoutone those leaders if things are not changed. : i Fred Emerson is a winner. Fred Emerson has that ab-ictthing called "class." And Western Washington ifeeds the "class" it can get! .Jt Mud ruggers bear hugging beat Vancouver's best 9-3 Never behind, and in control most of the second half, Western's Rugby team upset one of Vancouver, B.C.'s top teams, the Meralomas, 9-3 in a mud battle last weekend on DownerField. The Meralomas are one of the top two teams in Vancouver'^ First Division and are comprised ofnumerous B. C. all-stars as well as former Western players. Last Saturday's loss was only theirsecond since they started the season, in late August. Poor field conditions slowed play downconsiderably but both teams had scoring opportunities early in the first half. Ralph Burba, Vikingstandoff, broke through the visitors defense around mid-field and was on his way to a score but wascaught from behind at about the 25 yard line. Burba lateraled to Larry Wilman just as he was hit andWilman was home free except that the referee ruled a forward pass and called the play dead. Later inthe half Burba blocked a kick, picked up the ball and raced some 30 yards for the opening three pointerof the game. With some fine ball handling, the Meralomas came right back and ran the ball into thecorner of the end zone to tie the score. Neither team could muster another score, so the half ended in adeadlock, 3-3.' In the middle of the second half Western had the Vancouver club backed up against it'sown goal. Vik break, Bob Unick made a jarring tackle on a 'Loma back causing him to fumble the ball inthe end zone, where scrummer Rick Anchan fell on it to give the home club the go ahead goal. A fewminutes later Bob Unick caught a long lineout pass and ran around and through tacklers for about 40yards and the final score of the game. This weekend Western gets back into league play with a matchagainst the University of Victoria here, Saturday afternoon. The Viks will be sporting a 6-2-2 record whenthey tangle with the Canadians at 2 p.m. on Roosevelt Park field. Sunday afternoon the Westernsecond team will take on Richmond, B. C. in an exhibition game. Swimmers busy looking for firstvictory Western's swim squad is invading eastern Washington this weekend in hopes of gaining their first victory of the season. Last weekend coach Don Wiseman's tankmen lost to Pacific LutheranUniversity 60-44 in Tacoma. Each team won 'five individual races but the Lutes took both relays to cinchthe victory. Freshman Bill Lingley came through again for the Vikings by winning the 1000 and 100 yardFreestyle events. Other winners for Western included Jim Carlson, 200 yd. breastroke; Mike Dodson, 200 yd. backstroke; and Jeff Hopper, 200 yd. individual medley. Thursday night the Viks met Gon-zagaUniversity in Spokane for a non-league encounter with the Spokane Catholic school. Friday afternoon they go to Cheney for an Evergreen Conference meet with Eastern Washington. The Viks finishtheir road trip with a rematch in Ellensburg against defending league champ Central. The Wildcatsdefeated Western 70-34 two weeks ago in Bellingham. FOR THE BEST IDRESSED LOOK IT'S THETOGGERY MEN'S APPAREL GRAND THEATER 1224 Commercial 733-9755 WmM SECONDHILARIOUS WEEK! (RECOMMENDED FOR MATURE AUDIENCES) MICHAEL CAINEisALFlEMIUICENT MARTIN "JULIA FOSTER • JANE ASHER • SHIRLEY ANNE FIELD VIVIEN MERCHANT • ELEANOR BRON • WITH SHELLEY WINTERS AS RUBYTECHNICOLORsTECHNISCOPEeALEWIS GILBERT PRODUCTION E § 3 9 l OPEN TONIGHT 6:30P.M. SHORT SPECIALTIES 7:00 "ALFIE" 7:30 9:54 SAT. SUN. OPEN 12:30 "ALFIE" 1:30 — 3:34 — 5:38 — 7:42 — 9:56 COMING FEB. 15 "DOCTOR ZHIVAGO' 4 pm-11 pm Daily 12 pm-12 am Sat. Sun. 319LAKEWAY PH. 734-5140 CHICKETOELIGli CHICKEN, SHRIMP, FISH DELIGHTDINNERS CHICKEN, SHRIMP, FISH DELIGHT SNACKS 1 «45 1.00 RIB DELIGHT DINNER 1.95 12-pc. 16-pc. BUCKETS 2.97 .3.96 20-pc 4.95 24-pc 5.94 Etc. PIZZA Cheese Pepperoni MushroomSausage ... Olive Combination of 2 Combination of 3 8" .69 .79 .79 .79 .79 .89 .99 10" 1.09 1.29 1.29 1.29 1.29 1.49 1.69 12" 1.59 1.89 1.89 1.89 1.89 2.19 2.39 Vanilla, Chocolate Strawberry Shakes .35 . Malts .40 WE DELIVER FREE TO YOUR HOME AND THE DORMS PHONE 734-5140319 LAKEWAY DR. ---------- Collegian - 1967 February 3 - Page 12 ---------- PAGE TWELVE THE COLLEGIAN FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1967 Jeff Hopper, student individual medleyspecialist for the Viking swim team, practices the butterfly in a recent workout in the Western pool.Hopper and the rest of the Viking swimmers will be in Eastern Washington this weekend looking fortheir first win. (Photo by Jim Hinds) Cagers relax, study If it's not one thing, it's the other! At mid-seasonWestern's basketball express was derailed by an injury and an incomplete grade. Now, with the seasonnearing completion and' the express roaring once again, mid-term exams and another injury havetemporarily stopped the Viking progress. Coach Chuck Randall's team will take time off next week toconcentrate on the books before they host the Whitworth Pirates in a pair of Evergreen Conferencecontests Feb. 10 and 11. The .Vikings, winners in five of their past six outings, will likely be without theservices of husky- Whit Hemion, the sophomore from Tacoma, who has come on with a rush in the lateseason spurt. To complicate matters further, Randall must go in the two games without senior centerBob McGinnis, who decided to leave the team because he felt his studies needed more attention.However, things are not entirely bleak. Don Burr- ell will likely be back at his starting guard positionwhen the Pirates come to town. The flashy leader has been missing from the Viking lineup for nearly amonth because of a relatively minor knee injury. Whether or not the junior speed demon can win back his position is another question. Senior Allen Russell has taken over as the Viking's floor leader duringBurrell's absence and freshmen Mike Clayton and Rich Blanc have stood out on occasions. Claytonplayed the hero's role Tuesday night when his 15-foot jumper, with one second remaining, beat SeattlePacific 57-55 in Carver gymnasium. The win reversed an earlier 89-77 setback that the Falcons hung onWestern in Seattle earlier in the season. Clayton's bucket came after the two teams had played volleyball with the lead throughout the second half. Western held a 30-25 margin after the first half but threequick baskets by the Falcons gave the visitors the lead early in the second half. From then on the twoteams were never more than five points apart. However, with 1:49 left, the Vikings got the ball and hungonto it until Mike Dahl shot, with five seconds left. The ball bounced off of the back rim to Clayton, whofired and ripped the bottom of the net. John Hull sparked the Vikings with 17 points and 12 rebounds,while drawing the difficult assignment of checking the Falcon's Dave Holmer. Clayton helped out with 12points while Dahl added 10. Friday and Saturday Western belted the University of Puget SoundLoggers 62-49 and 68-57. Hull, Dahl and Hemion were outstanding in the two-game set. Wrestlers home this weekend Western's wrestling squad will try to get a win streak going this weekend when theytake on Eastern Washington and Portland State in Carver Gym. Coach Boyd Long's grapplers tanglewith Evergreen Conference foe Eastern at 8:00 p.m. Fridaj Saturday night Portland State com{ to townfor a non league tussle. Last weekend Viking matmen g\ back on the winning trail by easij defeating theUniversity of Pug| Sound 36-8 on the Big Blue's mat! THIS WEEK IN SPORTS FRIDAYSwimming—Western vs. Eastern Washington State College, 2 p.m. Wrestling — Eastern WashingtonState vs. Western, Carver Gym, 8 p.m. SATURDAY Rugby—University of Victoria vs. HOLLY'SMEN'S SHOP FOR THE BEST-DRESSED COLLEGE MALE! 1307 CORNWALL Ruabv Club offers loot Team statistics Dahl 191 82 42.9 96 60 62.5 224 Hallgrimson 219 85 38.8 54 38 70.4 208 Hull 175 7341.7 73 42 57.5 188 Clayton 159 75 47.2 41 33 80.5 183 Hemion 122 50 41.0 38 31 81.6 131 Riersgard96 44 45.8 61 35 57.4 123 Russell 94 38 40.4 " 44 37 84,1 113 Burrell 35 10 28.6 7 3 42.9 23 Tucker 259 36.0 5 3 60.0 21 Blanc ., 16 4 00.0 17 12 70.6 20 Larsen 8 0 00.0 7 6 85.7 6 Others (3) 15 1 10 5 50.0 7 McGinnis 41 14 34.1 22 11 50.0 39 14.9 10.9 9.9 9.6] 7.3 6.5 5.9 A $10 prize is being offered bythe Western Washington Rugby Club to the person who designs the most appropriate emblem for theclub's blazers. Designs should be turned in to player-coach Dick Layzel or club Western, RooseveltPark (Belling-ham), 2 p.m. Swimming—Western vs. Central Washington State, Ellensburg, 2:30.Wrestling — Portland State vs. Western, Carver Gym, 8 p.m. treasurer Rick Anchan. Layzel feels "thisis a chance for all those who gripe about other jacket emblems to come through with somethinggood." Be a rugger hugger ,* 1 Day Shirt Service COMPLETE LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANINGFree Pickup Delivery 734-4200 205 PROSPECT TAC0 T I E TRY OUR TAKE OUT SERVICEWITH HOT PACKS Looking for a SPORTS CAR? One with creature comforts and plenty of power? Look no more. MONDAY-THURSDAY 11A.M.-1 A.M. FRIDAY-SATURDAY 11 A.M.-2.-30 A.M Sunday 11A.M.-Midnight Phone 733-3761 The new Midget sports roll-up windows, draft-free vents, wrap-aroundwindshield, complete instrumentation including tach, speedo with trip and mileage recorder, .two-spoke steering wheel, locking doors, redesigned fascia, padded bucket seats, improved suspension system and a lockable boot. Beneath the bonnet—the famous MG Series "A" engine. 1098 cc, 55 horses at 5500rpm, dual carbs, new manifolding and exhaust systems, close ratio gearbox, aeroplane type discs upfront with 7-inch drums in the rear. Top speed: over 90 mph. Fuel economy: 35 mpg plus. Come ondown. Seethe new MG Midget. It's at our showroom today. IMPORT MOTORS 120 GRAND 733-7300
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Collegian - 1967 July 7
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1967_0707 ---------- Collegian - 1967 July 7 - Page 1 ---------- Howcum fireworks are illegal WESTERN WASHINGTON STATE COLLEGE CalUGfiN and we still haveH-Bombs I Vol.LIX No. 33 Friday, July 7, 1967 Bellingham, Wn. 98225 PROJECTS OVERCOME ANDCATCH-UP intermingle to dance at a Birch Bay outing. Parti
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1967_0707 ---------- Collegian - 1967 July 7 - Page 1 ---------- Howcum fireworks are illegal WESTERN WASHINGTON STATE COLLEGE CalUGfiN and we still haveH-Bombs I Vol.LIX No. 33 Friday, July 7, 1967 B
Show more1967_0707 ---------- Collegian - 1967 July 7 - Page 1 ---------- Howcum fireworks are illegal WESTERN WASHINGTON STATE COLLEGE CalUGfiN and we still haveH-Bombs I Vol.LIX No. 33 Friday, July 7, 1967 Bellingham, Wn. 98225 PROJECTS OVERCOME ANDCATCH-UP intermingle to dance at a Birch Bay outing. Participants in both programs are calling Western "home" for the rest of the summer. Flora ascends in temporary shuffle Bunke in Indiana but stillpresident President Harvey C. Bunke's resignation doesn't officially take place until Sept 1, but he'salready moved to Bloomington, Indiana, anyway. Until a new president is chosen and assumes office,Dr. Charles J. Flora is taking over the presidential duties. Dr. R. D. Brown, chairman of the EnglishDepartment is serving in Flora's post as Academic Dean. On Sept 1, Dr. Bunke will officially assume his new post as Director of Undergraduate Studies and Professor of Economics,at Indiana University, inBloomington. Until that time he is "on call" should any matter of great importance come up. Bunkehas not quit working for Western, yet, though. On Aug. 5-12, he and Dr. Herbert C. Taylor, dean ofresearch, will be attempting to win grants for Fairhaven College; the IBM 360/40-360/20 computer whichwill go in the Science-Math-Computer Center; the library, which is in great need of expansion: additionalfunds for acquiring more faculty and paying the present faculty more; and more ttinds for studentscholarships and work on both the graduate and undergraduate levels. Bunke and Taylor will make stopsat the Carnegie, Esso, Ford, Rockefeller, and National Science Foundations, as well as the U.S. Officeof Education. Players present absurd odyssey By BOB HICKS Collegian Troubleshooter "The greatestsingle benefit derived from this project will be in the attitudes of the staff members who work with these kids during the summer and will return to the public schools in the fall." This, in the words of co-director Sterling Brand, is the justification for Project Catch- Up, now in its second year of operationat Western. Catch-Up, directed by Dr. Evelyn P. Mason of Western's psychology department, is a"reclamation project" aimed at un-derachievers and potential school dropouts in the seventh-andeighth-grade age brackets. Funded by a$100,000 two-year Rockefeller foundation grant and a $10,900service and facility donation by Western^ the project consists of 19 staff members cial and ethnicbackground. Intelligence quotients in the Catch-Up group range from 95 to above 140, with aconcentration in what is considered to be the "average" range. A large percentage of the children arefrom broken homes or weak home backgrounds, and although Project Catch-Up is not associated with the poverty program, a great number of the participants are economically deprived. Students andstaff live in the Ridgeway Omega residence hall. The students have a six=hour-a-day class schedule,with an hour each in mathematics, communications, art and science as well as two "free"hours whichmay be spent in individual counselling or continued work in one of nie other study areas. Individualinstruction is the key to the Catch-Up program,, The project is geared as much do not like school. Weare attempting to induce an attitudin-al change in the Catch-Up students toward the function of thepublic schools," he added, As a means of the goal of kindling or re-kindling an interest in school, theCatch-Up directors are placing a rather high degree of decision-making responsibility on the students.Attendance at the two "free" class periods is not compulsory. The students are allowed to decide forthemselves what they will do during these hours. Each student is allotted one dollar a day for "a job well done." and is allowed to decide whether or not he has earned the whole dollar. In the event that astudent decides to take less than a dollar (and this does happen) he is not asked why he dockedhimself. "Project Catch-Up is definitely beneficial to the students Overcomers" and "Catch-Uppers"line up at side of road Western theatre turns absurd July 13, 14 and 15 when the Western playerspresent Eugene Ionesco's "Victims of Duty" under the direction of Dr. Thomas H. Napiecinski.Ionesco, dubbed by critics as the "father of the absurd,"tells a tale of lives tortured and twisted in thename of duty. The French playwright portrays men, according to Napiecinski, as ". . . alternately comicand pathetic figures in the absurd 'comedy-drama' of life." "Victims of Duty" represents a unique effortin method by Ionesco. It is a "dream play," most of the action taking place in the mind of the leadingcharacter rather than in the "real" or physical world. It is an "odyssey of the unconscious." The play takes place in the typical bourgeois home of Monsieur and Madam Choubert The couple becomeinvolved in an argument about drama, he claiming that all drama is nothing but cheap detectivefiction. Soon a real detective with questions of his own and a quarrelsome neighbor join the argument.Finally, the neighbor stabs the detective to death and Choubert is shamed by his shrewish wife into taking over the job of the detective. Choubert is played by Al Simpson, and Madleine, his wife, byEllen Catrell. Don Crag portrays the Detective and Frank Jenkins is Nicolas D'Eu, the neighbor. Thecast is rounded out by Sandy Gould, The Lady, and Carl Lehrloff. who portrays "Mallot with a V ", theobject of the detective's search. The performances will take place in the Old Main Theatre at 8:30 p.m.Tickets are 25 cents for Western students and one dollar for general admission. Scene design is byDennis Catrell, with costumes by Don ' dams. and 49 students, 10 of which are Mexican-American,16 American Indian, and 23 Caucasian. All students and staff are from the Whatcom and SkagitCounty public school systems. According to Brand, principal at Ferndale's Mountain View School, thejunior high-age students were nominated by their schools as being social and academicunderachievers and were carefully screened before being allowed in the program. Then each wasmatched with a control-group individual of similar intelligence, achievement, and so- Sophomore co-eds get keys Undergraduate women on campus (except freshmen) have no closing hours this summer.Dr. James H. Hitchman, dean of students, said the elinination of hours was "the sensible thing to do forthis summer." Women in Beta, who are at least 20 years old, or have junior or higher status, have rooms with doors which open directly to the outside, so there is no feasible involved," said Brand, "but the real value of the program will be in the adoption of certain Catch-Up procedures by the public schools.The public school can't be as loosely structured as we arc here, but it can do a better job than it is doing now. More individual help can be given in the classroom. Recreational facilities and types ofrecreation can be improved. And the student should be allowed to establish stronger personalrelationships with adults outside the home." Such steps as these, according to Brand, would raisethe quality of public education and consequently revise the educa-onto an inside hallway, and the tionalattitude of the able but outside doors are locked at the reluctant student, closing hour. Last week,though, The future of Project Catch- 32 sophomore women were given Up is unknown at the momentkeys to the outside doors; they The original Rockefeller grant no longer have closing hours, will expire atthe end of summer. Tentative plans are to ask the as possible to a recognition of the unique educationaldifficulties of each student. With 8 instructors and 10 counsellors for the 49 students, the opportunityfor providing individual attention is much higher than in the public classroom. The organization of Project Catch-Up is much less stringent than that of the public schools. "It is the structure of the publicschools to which these children react mostly violently," stated Brand, "and in many cases, the studentscan hardly be blamed. "Most of them, very bluntly, "No hours" was the rallying cry for girls all last year,even though a poll taken winter quarter showed that most women, though they didn't want hours forway to impose closing hours in themselves, thought that young-thatdorm. . er, "less experienced" women Kappa's doors, however, open should have hours. Rockefeller Foundation for 50 per cent of the cost ofanother two years with the other 50 per cent coming from other sources, possibly including Westernand-or the local school districts of Whatcom and Skagit Counties. ---------- Collegian - 1967 July 7 - Page 2 ---------- 2 The Collegian Friday, July 7, 1967 editorials tell it like it 'tis Enlightened administration There was atime once, a long time ago, when girls who were not yet juniors or were not yet twenty were required tolive in dormitories. Not only were they required to live in dormitories but they were required to be in by ten on weekdays and midnight on weekends. After considerable student pressure, the rules were relaxed.The hours were extended from ten on weekdays until midnight and from midnight on weekends until two.Now, after an entire year of student dissatisfaction over dormitory regulations, another gain has beenmade. Sophomore girls have been given keys which, in essence, means that they have no hours. Thetrend is definitely a good one and we hope it continues next year with increased liberalization ofregulations to the point where a student is perfectly free to live where he or she chooses. Perhaps theadministration is more enlightened in some areas (but not all— just to keep up the image) than somepeople think. —Chris Condon Waving the flag? So Tuesday was July 4th. Holiday fireworks, nationalanthem, display of flags. Ever stop to think about patriotism? Patriotism isn't John Philip Sousa marchesand firecrackers and D.A.R. rallies and flying a flag from your porch and town square speeches andreciting Longfellow's poem about Mr. Revere's ride and cheering the president's television speech.These are surface considerations. Patriotism is having the fortitude to challenge your government when it is wrong. It is having the courage to stand alone or in the minority when the majority is shaming yourcountry before the rest of the world. It is the Peace Corp and Vista. It is denunciation of crooked politicsand social inequity. It is getting behind constructive reform and pushing hard. It is refusing to support awar you consider immoral. Patriotism is having a social conscience and heeding what that consciencetells you. True patriotism does not teach national superiority; it teaches humaneness, respect, and,above all, co-operation with the peoples of the world.—Robert W. Hicks Roten print exhibit showsquality, inferiority If you don't like the quality, at least the variety of the art prints in the art building'sstudio gallery will interest you. The prints, which will be here through July 28, are specially selectedfrom Baltimore's Ferdinand Roten Galleries and range from weird incongruities of Andy Warhol's word-poem-pictures to the tense, excitingly refined "Trio" of Mervin Jones, a vivid orange and black woodcutwhich strokes life into a/ dignified chamber music group. The prints represent a cross-section ofcontemporary styles, including pop, op, surrealist, expressionist, abstract, geometric abstract, andrealist, as well as others. Many of the works bog themselves down in style; many others, while not being overly stylistic, simply lack the tension and clarity required to make the viewing of a piece of art anexciting experience. Two of the finest works in th$ collection are Harvey Brever-man's "Conniver" and"Dubious Honor," a figure study in-contrasting browns. "Conniver," a portrait of a country gentleman,oozes the subject's psyche out of the work and into the mind of the viewer. Warrington Colescott'scollage- print "Marelne You Were the Most" is a carousel of vivacity and exhuberance. Its woman-figures breathe youth and happiness and love, with small WANT ADS LOST — Kodak InstimaticCamera in V.U. lounge-commons on graduation day. June 9, 1967. Please return to V.U. desk. Dowhat you want with the camera, but at least return the film, please. It is irreplaceable. E. Bare, 912Indian, Bellingham. 1953 FORD— Clean with "street machine extras," $150. Call Chris Condon. 734-8800, ext. 269. NEEDED — Bike repair man. must be experienced. See Phil Bransford in the Grottofrom 12-2:00, $1.25 hour. Camp Kirby—Girl over 21 for 2nd cook. Shoe Salesman wanted,experience not necessary. l-aiMii Bellingham apartment needs lt; a — ^ man for gardening threedays a week, 4 hours per day. Service Station—Approximately 15 hours per week. Night Clerk—Maleover 21, five nights per week, midnight-8 a.m. For Further Information Contact Financial Aids OfficeRoom 215 Old Main worth a thousand words The Collegian Official Weekly Newspaper of WesternWashington State College, Bellingham, Wash. PHONE 734-8800. EXTENSION 169 Second classpostage paid at Bellingham, Washington 98225 C6PV DEADLINE—MONDAY 5:30 FOUNDINGMEMBER PACIFIC STUDENT PRESS Affiliated with United States Student Press Association, Collegiate Press Service Intercollegiate Press Service, Associated Collegiate Press CHRISTOPHER B. CONDONEditor-in-Chief COPY EDITOR-Neal Johns BUSINESS MANAGER-Eric Warn ART CRITIC—Bob HicksAD MANAGER-Kenneth Riddel CARTOONIST-Mke Condon PHOTOGRAPHER-Scott HnleyADVISER—Ed Nichols STAFF REPORTERS Rich O'Brien — Jim McKay — Byron Mauck It's NotFar to •s CAMERA SHOP for EQUIPMENT REPAIRING SUPPLIES COLOR PRINTSTRANSPARENCIES 'S Camera Shop 108 E. Magnolia 734-5900 but significant touches of nostalgia and sadness. "The Wizard," a stark lithograph portrait by Thomas 0*Con-ner, is perhaps the moststriking print in the exhibit The tense white features of the subject leap ghoulishly out of a death-coldshroud of black, defying the viewer with their awesome power. Dean Meeker's "Lola" is a sensualdelight; a heady trip into fantasia. Lola is a swirling, fleshy nude, innocent and provocative, virtuousand enticing; a goddess of sex in the highest sense. y "Guns" is the abstract subject of an artistnamed Arman, and somehow the red, white and black print communicates the power and contrastingbeauty and ugliness of a revolver. Editor condemned July 1, 1967 Editor, the Collegian: When I readyour personal complaints against President Johnson and saw the accompanying repulsive cartoondrawn by your brother in the June 30 issue of the Collegian, I was astonished at your bad memory.Have you forgotten the admonishment of Alan (sic) Ginsberg, "Father of the Beat Generation,"whose appearance on campus four weeks ago was eagerly awaited by Western's hippie cult, youincluded? Ginsberg asked how you could pretend to be love cult members and yet have a facade of hate. Speaking specifically to the pacificists, Ginsberg told of his proposed "Think of President JohnsonWeekend" this summer. Johnson, he said, was a weary man who was a good card player, butsomehow was losing. He said you should love Johnson, as you wouldn't want to trade jobs with him. Hereminded you that you shouldn't hit Johnson, as that meant that Johnson had to hit somebody else."Pass Johnson the honey,"he said quietly. "Don't make Johnson a scapegoat." In addition to makingJohnson a scapegoat, you're simplifying the Vietnam war. Mr. Condon. Your "editorial did not reflectsound editorial judgment. I ask why you call yourself a spokesman for the "American academic-intellectual community," when your "editorial We,'1 having spilled from an inner sanctum, has nodignity. JEANNE DOERING P. S. This letter is well under the 250 word limit and should take 7" ofcopy. WE'RE NOW OPEN BEL-LYN PAR-3 GOLF 9 Holes — AIIPar-3 RELAX — HAVE FUN —PRACTICE Clubs and Equipment Rentals INQUIRE ABOUT SPECIAL STUDENT RATES 3Vi MilesNorth of City Limits on the Guide Meridian] Binyon Optometrists 1328 CORNWALL BINYON Ph. 733-9300 Optometrists \ COMPLETE OPTICAL SERVICE CONTACT LENSES — FASHION FRAMES Dr.Leroy H. Freeman and associates Art students, there's an easier way to keep your budget in balance By organizing your budget with an NBofC Special Checking account, you can have money when you needit—without worry. Know what you spend and where. No minimum balance. No service charge. Pay onlya dime a check. Check today at your nearby office. _ NATIONAL BANK OF COMMERCEJN 1 5 V gt;Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Located at Railroad and Holly St. Sheridan P. Gallagher,Vice-Pres. and Manager ---------- Collegian - 1967 July 7 - Page 3 ---------- Friday, July 7, 1967 The Collegian 3 Sgt. Pepper's Band challenges the world to turn on; XA splendidtime is guaranteed for a l l ' said Mr. Kite By STANLEY J. HODSON Senior, Anthropology CornellUniversity Bob Dylan gave us one of the best, most concise definitions of a work of art when he said, "A song is anything that can walk by itself." (Bringit it All Back Home). The task set before us is that ofseeing through the eyes of another with our own eyes. Such an attempt is an impossibility from thebeginning, but, perhaps because of the very nature of me attempt, it is necessary. The subject of thefollowing attempt is a creation by John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison and Richard Starkey(Ringo Starr), entitled "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band." Because the album does walk by itself, I prefer to approach it as a single unit. Certainly the separate songs are entities unto themselves, butthey are much more meaningful and alive when they are seen in the context of the entire album.Keeping in mind the fact that such terms as "structure" and "organization" are metaphors, devices, wecan apply them to the album. The work does have a structure of sorts. It has an introduction and aconclusion, the whole piece revolving around Harrison's homily. From the verybeginning, when BillyShears is introduced to sing the first song, we are cued in that we are being ushered into a worldseparate from any world of the particular men, Lennon, McCartney, Harrison, Starkey, Beatles. This is not a bit of petty joking; we are supposed to hear Billy Shears, not Ringo, singing that song. The songwhich Billy Shears sings and the questions put to him during the song go together to produce anexample, beautifully prosaic, of an actual lonely hearts club ques-tionaire. Though the album is acreation of the Beatles, it has a personality all its own, its own life blood. The album is populated withlonely hearts, with Eleanors Rigby's and Father MacKenzie's, with all the lonely people and wherethey do come from and where they seem to themselves to belong. In my walks around Bellingham andother cities, I have often caught glimpses, through the doorways and windows of small taverns and inGreyhound bus stations, of Mr. Kite and the Hendersons performing for their own benefit. It has beensuggested that the important interpretational clue to the album is the second song, "Lucy in the Skywith Diamonds," the upper case letters in the title spelling out LSD. I agree that the song is a variation on "trips," but to say that the TAC album is an acid-head's album and to view the entire album throughthat one song seems to me to limit the work drastically. The hippie who is confronted by a girl withkaleidoscope eyes is as much a lonely heart as the man who needs to be needed and fed when he issixty-four; the hippie is a self-determined part of life's flotsam, no more and no less man lovely,masculine Rita. That the Lonely Hearts Club Band wishes to turn each of us on is obvious, but that theymean only to turn us on with LSD or pot is to misunderstand their intent. We are to love the peoplepresented in the album; we are to enter their worlds. That drugs may be a means to reaching this love ispossible, but surely one of the best guides we have in this matter is the album itself. Lest album is amanifestation, but nevertheless, only a weak manifestation, half a reflection. A work of art is itself ametaphor; to capture even briefly and only partially that which is felt, that which lies behind, is thebest that an artist can hope for. The members of the Band realize that they are going through a"routine," one of their own choosing and devising perhaps, but in the end a routine, a show. They seethemselves as being put through their paces, doing summersets over horses, hoops, and garters;however one must "challenge the world" in some way. The last words given to us on the back of thealbum cover are an echo of Messrs. Kite and Henderson, "A splendid time is Employment opportunities f oi U.S. college students U.S. college students can live with well-to-do European families in return for teaching their children English. The American Student Information Service announced mat mere areyet thousands of employment opportunities available to U.S. college students wishing jobs in Europe. Areas of employment include resort work, office work, life-guarding, sales work, and restaurant work.The jobs are being filled on a first come, first serve basis. Some jobs pay $400 a month with no previous experience or foreign language ability required. Room and board are often included. Job applicationsand detailed job descriptions (location, wages, working hours, photographs, etc.) are available in a 36-page booklet which interested students may obtain by sending $2 (for the booklet, overseas handlingand air mail postage) to Dept. IV, ASIS, 22 Ave. de la Liberie, Luxembourg C i t y, Grand Duchy ofLuxembourg. John, Paul, George and Ringo we, because of our "superior, over-all view," become smugor condescending toward the people in the album let us note how the album is placed in our hands. The album comes complete with paper cut-outs and the words to all of the songs on the back cover (we areinvited to sing along), all of which smacks of Mitch Miller or an album of hymns by Tennessee ErnieFord. This is the trivia game at its most sublime. When you hold the album cover you are touching a"genuine article," something "camp." You sit, linked intimately with the unique, supremely important tivialities of the lives of the people of the album "and the time will come when you see we're all one, andlife flows on within you and without you." Behind the work there is a reality out of which the work grows, something of which the guaranteed for all." The eyes of the Band have turned inward and something isbeing said about people who try to say something about life and love. It is here also that thepessimism enters the work. Knowing that what they are trying to say is ineffable, the members ofthe Band make no pretense at having achieved communication. The only thing the Band guarantees is that it will raise a smile and the audience is instructed to simply "sit back and let the evening go."That is exactly what the audience does. At the end of Harrison's song, the most overtly "message -laden" song in the album, the audience guffaws. At the end of the show, when the Band is very tritelybowing off, the audience reacts with boisterous exuberance rather than thoughtful silence. Apparentlythe audience has done exactly what was expected of it. I Delightful South of the Border Foods w DON'TBE SKEPTICAL" OUR FINE FOOD IS AMERICANIZED . . . NOT HOT . . . BUT JUST RIGHT! STOP IN FOR A REAL EATING TREAT... WE WILL BE WAITING TO SERVE YOU TOP OF HOLLY ST. FOOTOF COLLEGE HILL Rubenstein Cosmetics Prescriptions • STAR REXALL DRUG STATE HOLLY IDay Shirt Service COMPLETE LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANING Free Pickup Delivery 734-4200 205 PROSPECT STUDENT CO-OP BOOK NEWS New titles for general reading have arrived,Valley of the Dolls by Susann, The Prophet by Gibran, Songs For Swingin' Housemothers by Lynn, TheGospel According To Peanuts and more Grooks. After a long time The Teacher by Ashton-Warner isavailable. Vance Bourjaily's The Violated is in stock plus an Anthology of Scandinavian Literature andStrachey's Eminent Victorian. Our teaching aid section has some new material, Ruler, Compass andFun, Handbook For Principals, and The Enjoyment of Mathematics. Student Co-Op Book News 501High Street Campus W W S C BELLINGHAM, WASH. 98225 "YOU CAN SURE TELL HIS GROCERIES DON'T COME FROM ENNENS." EMEU'S THRIFTWAY HIGH AND HOLLY "WHERE EVERYCUSTOMER IS IMPORTANT" ---------- Collegian - 1967 July 7 - Page 4 ---------- 4 The Collegian Friday, Ju1J 7, 1967 Ex-employee appeals re-open Grotto The Board of Control agreedWednesday to give the Grotto another chance. Their decision resulted from a request made by OwenCarter and Carl Lehr-hoff, both of whom lost their jobs because the area had been closed. The BOC,which is the summer managing body for student owned facilities, will allow the Grotto was closed afterthe board decided that not enough students were using the facilities to warrant paying an attendantThis spring the Grotto got its first competition when the Housing Department bought equipment for asimilar games room in the Ridgeway Commons. Although this games-room is open in the evenings,Carter and Lehr- TWO OF A HOST of long-haired patriots paint industriously away at Bellingham'scontribution to polychromatic mayhem, the psychedelic put-on truck. Entertainment Diversions Dept. — SATURDAY — Featured for those who enjoy the rough outdoors, a hike to Twin Lakes andWinchester Mountain . . . and for those who prefer the comfort and leisure of a plush seat, a bus trip toVancouver, B.C. — SUNDAY — Salt sailors will be pleased to know that today's recreation includes a cruise through the scenic San Juan Islands. — TUESDAY — For business-minded students andother interested parties there will be a guided tour through Bellingham's main contribution to the wareffort, United Boat Builders Inc. And for the more culturally inclined, the prominent Anas-tasio-Weingart trio will perform in concert at 8:30 in the College Auditorium. The trio will feature works bySchubert, Dvorak and Smetana. — WEDNESDAY — Daniel Nagarin, a dance soloist, will performat 8:30 in the College Auditorium. Nagarin is a "superbly disciplined contemporary dance technician." — THURSDAY — For the arty set on campus, art films will be shown at 8:25 in the CampusAuditorium. The main feature is a flick entitled "Freaks" (U.S.A., 1932) about "circus anamoliesseparated by physical appearance from 'normal society';" also "Zero for Conduct," a film aboutrebellious youth, something school teachers should see. The second of three steak fries at Lakewood will also be held. B A R B S The campus protest disturbance seems pretty dull in comparison with the traditional panty raid. HURLEY DRUG MART 1311 Commercial • Prescriptions • Drugs •Pet Supplies Candy-colored psychedelic happening salutes Fourth to operate from 10 a.m.to4p.m. hoffbelieve the centrally located beginning Monday. Grotto operated during the day The recreation area in the is also wanted by students for basement of the Viking Union recreation. PAYING IOO MUCH? SpecialRates for Western VW Owners It isn't every day that one gets to witness the creation of a work of art,but last Wednesday was one of those days. Out in back of Mathes Hall on Garden Street, a group of ten happy-looking people were celebrating the Fourth of July in their own unique manner. Marching tunes by John Phillip Sousa prompted the crew on as they virtually attacked a rickety old truck, which lookedlike it was straight from Steinbeck's Six to attend conference Six students from Western will participate in a three-day conference at the denominational headquarters of the Christian Science Church inBoston, Massachusetts on August 24. Those who plan to attend are Cindy Smetana, JanetGeer,Shirley Whiting, Christina Granmo, Ara Green and Edwin Bare. They will meet with more than 50,000students from colleges and universities around the world to discuss such subjects as "new morality,"drugs, birth control and premarital chastity. The Keynote address will be given by Erwin D. Canham,Editor- in-Chief of the Christian Science Monitor. Other speakers will be Christian Scientistsdistinguished in various other fields and will include a key figure from the diplomatic service. Duringthe three-day period some 18 hours will be spent in assembly sessions with most of this time given tostudent papers and open discussion. "Grapes of Wrath," with buckets and spray cans full of variouscolors of paint. By the time a Collegian reporter arrived the painting was almost done and a crowd had gathered admiring the artists' work and discussing its significance. The conversation wentsomething like this: Collegian: What is happening here? Bystander: It's a happening, man.Collegian: A what? Bystander No. 2: Keep in mind that happenings are the happening thing . . . thatpretty well sums it up. 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