Symposium to feature two LSDresearchers

Two leaders in the resvarclung Varieties 0 f Ps ychedel ic Ex- 0'\11 weekly radio program. of LSD, Sidney Cohen and Jean perience' and co-author a f The drug expert is said to be H 0 u s ton, will keynote the drug "Psychedelic Art." one of the youngest associate pro- symposium to be held at WSU on In' addition to her extensive fessors of philosophy in America. Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday. work with LSD, she has trained She is pre sen t I y teaching at In addition, three others will psychiatrists and clinical psy- l\larymount College in Tar r y- speak. They are William Johnson, chologists in the techniques and town, New York. WSU Department of Pharmacol- management of phychede lic drug The two keynote speakers of the ogy; Gary Koeppel, Portland State sessions. drug symposium will speakTues- College Department of English; Prof. Houston is director of day and Wednesday nights. Cohen and Edward Mackie, Assistant the Foundation for Mind Re- will talk on "The Medical As- Attorney General of the state of search in Ne w York City, and of pects of LSD" while Prof. Hous- Washington. the Institute for Process Studies ton will tell of "The Sociological Cohen, author of two recent at Tarrytown. She also has her Impact of LSD,'· respectively. books entitled "The Beyond With- in" and "LSD", is chief of Psy- chiatry Service at Wadsworth V. A. Hospital in Los Angeles. He is an associate professor of med- icine at UCLA. Campus proposals He has also authored two earl- ier books. They are "Mind and Psychiatry" and "Psychochemo- asked for councils therapy: The Phys icians Man- f ual." Kathy Davidson Cohen has published some 90 Nominations are wide open for he has asked Board of Control to scientific articles and has done the WSU study councils which will tabulate and organize nomina- KATHY DAVIDSON was crowned 1967 Homecoming Queen last research in the drugs area for evaluate the entire university tions from students, Some nom- night at a pep rally on Rogers Field. Miss Davidson will reign over 13 years. He is also on the program, inations for the councils will be throughout homecoming week, Oct. 30-Nov. 5; She will attend editorial board of "Psychoso- In a statement issued this week transmitted to Terrell through two alumni luncheons, one here and one in Spokane, as well as matics" and the "JournalofPsy- by President Glenn Terrell, it department chairmen and deans. a student rally and the Homecoming game against the Oregon chopharrnacology, " was noted that nom inations for Appointment to any of the 14 Ducks in Pullman Nov, 4. The other keynote speaker, the student and faculty positions councils now planned will be made Evergreen photo byLeoLee Jean Houston, is author of "The on the councils will be accepted by Tenell 011 the recommenda- from both students and faculty. tion of Academic Vice President Wallis Beasley. Terrell told the Daily Ever- To prepare reports by July 1, green that he is seeking the nom- the councils will study various ination of as many capable and aspects of the university's acad- creative persons as possible. He ernie, research, extension and WSU said he hoped the open nom ination student life activities. procedure would encourage this. President Terrell's explana- Daily EVERGREEN Nominations may be submitted tion of the councils appears on directly to the prestdents office, page 11 of today's Daily Ever- although Terrell indicated that green.

VOLUME LXXIV PULLMAN, WASHINGTON, 99163 FRIDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1967 NUMBER 15 Class government BOCcriticizes poll remains• •In limbo Now class government will get investigating class government on class government an open hearing. gave additional information on Activities Board moved Thurs- governments at other schools. day afternoon to postpone the dec- He reported that the University By Mark Reese been the perogative of the in- ision concerning the abolition of of Washington, Central Washing- dividual professor. class government. The hearing ton State College, Gonzaga, Whit- Election board's student poll Kikuchi said that no one is will be held October 31, 4 p.m, worth do not have class govern- on class government came un- advocating not going to classes. in 137 Old Education Building. ment. der severe criticism at Wed- But, he said, "in those classes It will allow all interested which do not provide more than Of the schools that do have it, nesday night's Board of Con- parties to present information the text, students should not be it is merely a prestige postion trol meeting. on class government. Activities penalized far not going to.class." that doesn't do much, he said. Dave Bishop, secretary of In- Board will then make a decision He also said that many of the terfraternity Council criticized Copies of the resolution will concerning the fate of class gov- schools that still have it are the poll's validity. He said that then be sent to Educational Pol- ernment. trying to get rid of it. the lack of individual ballots icies Committee, President Ter- Earlier in the m'2t'ting Election Board Chairman Jane Gernbol is In addition Roberts reported made it possible for the living rell and Vice President-acad- that the surplus class govern- group leader to vote for the en- emic Wallis Beasley as well as had asked that Activit ies Board take some sort of action. She ment funds are in excess of $7,- tire group. to the faculty. 000 with nearly $6,000 belong- Bishop also protested that the Kikuchi indicated that petit- described the class -election as being in a sort of "limbo." ing to the junior and senior poll was announced and pushed ions would be circulated to the classes. through so quickly that there was students early next week asking She said that the people who not enough time for students to for approval of the resolution. had filed for o.ffice did not know Bob Coppock, administrative carefully consider the issue. In Vice President Duncan Cart- what to do and that if there was assistant on Board of Control addition he thought that the Daily er who is one of the two stu- to be an election she would have reported that "there is a power to begin work towards it im- struggle going on for the money." Evergreen's stand on the issue Jane Gembolis dents 0 n EPC said that the org- swayed the issue against class mediately. Her board was left Miss Gembolis said that she anization would probably "ig- in limbo. government. He said the paper felt the poll was taken at the best nore" the resolution. should have been more objective. There was a minor repetition possible time. She said that the The boa r d also discussed of the discussion that 'took place Paper calls for Election board chairman Jane students were currently involv- President Terrel's study coun- at the Wednesday night Board of Gembolis said that individual bal- ed in the issue. "It was a hot cil proposal. Kikuchi said that Control meeting. Dave Bishop, drug legalilation' lots were not provided because issue," she concluded. he was disappointed that Terrell IFC secretary, argued that the of the high cost. But she said that The results of the poll were 'was not very specific on the de- poll taken by election board was SEATTLE (AP) - Removal of because of the high plurality of forwarded to Activities Boa.rd, tails of the structure of the com- not valid. He also said that the mar i j u a na from the narcotic students against class govern- BOC did not withdraw last week's m ittees. "Daily Evergreen had deviated classification and reductio.n of ment small inaccuracies in the endorsement. He and other student leaders unpardonably from good journa- penalities imposed for its pos- poll would not affect the final In other action the board adopt- met with Terrell Monday to dis- lism practices in its coverage of session and use were called for outcome. ed a resolution against manda- cuss the proposal which would the dispute." Wednesday by the University of The final vote was nearly 4 tory class attendance and pop investigate the academic phases Miss Gembolis reiterated that Washington Daily. to I for abolishing class gov- quizzes. of the university. the 4 to. 1 majority obtained in the In all issue devoted mainly to. Kikuchi said, "We tried to pin ernment. The actual vote was It reads: A student's attend- poll against class government the use of marijuana and drugs him dawn but he was ve ry non- 3.927 to 1168. ance record in the classroom was enough to compensate for on the campus, the paper quoted committal on the number of stu- Miss Gembolis reiterated that should in no way affect the ev- any possible inaccuractes, an unidentified mar Ijuana pusher dents and ratios on the com- it was only a poll of student aluation of his academic per- Mark Reese, news editor for who said 20 per cent of fraternity mittees. I'm bothered by the ex- opinion, not an election or re- formance and his grade in that the Daily Evergreen, defended the members at the school are fre- treme generality of the doc- ferendum that alone decided the course. Also, all forms of stu- stand taken by the paper in the ument.' quent usors o! marijuana .. outcome of class government. dent examinations should be an- Friday and Tuesday issues. Dr .. Gordon Bergy, director of Activities Board considered this nounced at least one class period Davis McElroy, adviser to He said, "It is the perogative the campus health center, was poll Thursday along with addi- prior to the examination date. BOC, reported that Terrell had of a newspape r to take stands on quoted as saying some 2,500 to tio.nal information gained from C e r t a in physical education told the American Association of what it feels are pertinent is- 3,000 persons in the area are in- class officers and officials. classes were specifically ex- University Presidents in a meet- sues. Our stand on class govern- volved with drugs. The Activities Board could cepted. ing Monday that "students were ment was made only editorially Tho Daily said that of 40 fac- make a recom mendation which President Steve Kikuchi said consulted every step on down the and we believe the coverage we uIty members responding to. .a will eventually reach through that there is currently no uni- Ime;" He wondered which stu- gave both sides of the issue was questionnaire, 71 per cent said channels to President Terrell. verSity policy which enforces dent groups were talked to be- both fair and adequate." they did not regard use of mari- He has the final decision con- mandatory class attendance. He cause "if it was BOC I'd have Tom Roberts, chairman of an juana as immoral and 35 per cent said that the policy has al ways known about it." . cerning class government. ~ ~... .. Activities Board sub corn mittee thought it had positive potential. Page 2 DAILY EVERGREEN October 27. 1967 Editorial comment 'j •• -F Slow cQtQloging (- With all the publicity a his- faster and beUer-if more time 'f tori cal book could be expected and talent were devoted to de- to receive, "The Death of a 'a veloping an existing tool-data 'j President" by William Man- processing. IE chester was placed on book- Already the library staff in- r stands this past year. cludes four computer program- Thousands of copies ha v e ers who are attempting to el- been sold, which perhaps in- iminate the costly, repetitious dicates how much it is in de- tasks now part of the catalog- mand. Yet the single copy in ing process. s Hall and Lib r a r y has been But at the current rate of checked out only twice. development, it will be at least Part of this apparent lack of two years before any kind of interest in the book could be il computerized, local cataloging because copies are available will be possible. It is vitally elsewhere. Yet much of it can needed now, however, and any be attributed to the book's not move which will speed up local being placed on library shelves cataloging and make it less ex- until at least three months after pensive will be well worth the MA.AJ \.:~.I ,_ it arrived in Pullman. ,.;." ...... ""'!~,c._.. S- ... __ T'_:r cost. The book was stored in a back iA'A DIALOGUE room of the library since no The present library system one expressed an explicit de- is approaching a sat u rat ion sire for it. As a result, it gath- point beyond which books of vi- Opinion ered dust while library per- tal and current interest may be sonnel awaited the usual, inex- left in storage even longer be- lron coronoti pensive cataloging data for the cause of the time and cost in- ra n corona Ion book from the Library of Con- volved in local cataloging. A few more programers to EDITOR's NOTE: This is the past 20 years. The celebration gress. first of occasional opinion art- also signifies Iran's coming of It would cost a mint for the help the existing staff meet the icles which will be written by age of 6,000 years of civiliza- library staff to do its own cat- information explosion w 0 u I d international students studying tion, some of it as ancient Persia. at WSU. Today's writer is from At the coronation, Her Majesty aloging of the 41),01)0books it certainly be worth employing. Iran, and is a junior in arch- Empress Farah, the queen of acquires each year. Yet local Even a year shaved off the time itecture. Iran, becomes empress and re- when local cataloging can be gent designate, the first wornan in cataloging is frequently the on- history to receive Iran's crown, ly way a book can be made computerized will mean that By Hossein Foruzani Six million colored light bulbs quickly available to library pa- much sooner that books such illuminate the streets of the cap- as Manchester's can be plac- Iran, almost equal in size to ital, Tehran, and millions of dol- trons. France, Germany, Spain and lars worth of fireworks rocket Something must be done to ed in the stacks quickly. Italy combined, started a cele- through the skies. Throughout the eliminate delays of book place- bration Thursday the likes of country there are balls, folk Books belong on lib r a ry which few countries have ever dancing festivals and torchlight ment on library shelves, and shelves and not in a storage seen. parades. not only for volumes in heavy room. For seven days and nights, Tehran's Golestan Palace has Iran celebrates the coronation of been rem 0 del e d and the con- demand. And it can be done- N. Felgenhauer His Majesty Moham med Reza struction of the world's largest Pahlavi, the shah of Iran, who is public square almost five times responsible for all the advance- bigger than St. Peters--has been ments Iran has made within the finished for this occasion. This celebration, costing mil- Butch's cage crusade lions of dollars, is a ceremony that Iranians will never forget.

hanging in confusion Letters WSU Daily Humor questioned Although overlooked in the campus housing Class presidents have expressed a reluctance EVERGREEN survey last spring, Butch VI, the Cougar mas- in giving over the money their classes pledged As spectators at the football Published by the Associated cot is also the center of a housing campaign. unless the class is given some credit for it. rally presented the evening of Students of Washington State Uni- Last February, the Residence Hall Asso- And finally, the RHA president admitted that Oct. 20, we were surprised and versity Tuesday, Wednesday and ciation started a "Build for Butch" campaign the group started the project because it needed disgusted at the low level of Friday except during the sched- to rebuild and move Butch's cage to a more something to do and that this really isn't the "h u m 0 r ' found in the ski t s, uled vacation and examination central location on campus. Suggested places sort of thing RHA should get involved in. The s e presentations reflected weeks of the regular school year. were the arboretum and the proposed mall. Butch's present home is quite adequate for extremely poor taste in subject Presently, the mascot's cage is a few feet his health and comfort. And with the opening matter and showed complete lack Editor ••••••• Neil Felgenhauer east of Rogers Field on Stadium Way. of the new administration building and the CUB, of respect for the audience. Mng. Editor •.••.• ErikaKuplis Estimated cost of the move was $15,000 Butch will not be far from the main stream In addition, the amount of pro- Campus Editor ••• Diane Hintz which included giving the cage a more cave- of campus activity. fanity used by some of the speak- Sports Editor ••••• JackOrchard like atmosphere and adding a heating unit and An official of the College of Veterinary ers was degrading, not only to Society Editor •• Jean Rosenbaum alarm system. The sentiment expressed by Medicine attested to the adequacy of Butch's the entire program but to the News Editors. • •• Tom Curry RHA at that time was that Butch deserved to present ho~e and discounted reports t~lattraff~c speakers themsel ve;. Mark Reese live more in the hub of the campus so he along S~~dlUm Way w~s. creatmg a neurot!c, It is our feeling that those who Lynn Henshaw could take a more active part in campus Cougar. T~e v.et offictal noted that But~h s compose and participate in these Head Potog. • • .Bill Mackey life, -- though they didn't say how. on~y complaint IS lack of female companion- programs should keep in mind the Asst. Sports. . • . • Mike Ahern Enthusiasm on campus seemed high as a ShIP.. " . fact that not only our student body Asst. Society ••• Sue Prendergast "Build- for Butch" dance raised $850 and a WIth the project ditched, the money raised views them but also visiting stu- Asst. News ••.• Connie Hansen KUGR radio marathon added $400 to the fund. last year could easily be used to fix up the dents and ~lder adults Hum 0 r Joan Scrupps In additton, the class councils pledged money cage and any remaining funds would undoubted- doesn't have to be obscene to be Karen Erickson and other organizations and alums promised to Iy help Butch's food budget, which pays for funny. Intelligent humor is of Bus. Mngr •••.. Bob Brunkow pitch in for Butch. Reports stated that the eight pounds of horse meat a day. much greater merit. Office: Room 115A,. Old Ed- senior architecture students were drawing up E. Kuplis The implications were such u cat ion Building, Washington plans for the new cage and that the 10-Year that illegitimate sex relations state University, Pullman, Wash- Planning Committee would then make the final are condoned by the majority ington, 99163. Printed by the decision on Butch's new home site. of students on this campus, which, New s -Review Publishing Co., It seemed only a matter of time before 25 we feel, is not so. It would be Inc. Butch would be living in the style that a stately years ago appreciated if in the future these Second-class postage paid at Cougar. deserves, -- that is, time and some pro g ram s would reflect good Pullman, Washington. Mail sub- $14,000 later. An advertisement in the Daily Evergreen said taste and clean humor which the scription $5.00 per year. However, nine months and $100 later (donated that the nation's steel mills didn't have enough au die n c e most certainly de- Represented for national ad- by a Cougar booster club) Butch is still living scrap metal on hand to last a month. serves. vertising by National Educational along Stadium Way and there appears to be a In .Its appeal for more war machinery, the Jane Griebeler Advertising Service, 360 Lexing- strong attempt to hush any discussion of the ad noted that 50 per cent of all newsteel pro- Linda Uhden ton Ave., New York, N.Y., 10017. project. The chairman of the drive has re- duced at the time was formerly scrap. Stephenson North Advertising material present- signed, no plans fqr the cage can be located, ed herein does not necessarily and no one is sure exactly how much money Class electiions were scheduled for Nov. 3, Marylu Bond imply endorsement by this news- was collected. with a full slate of candidates. Davis Hall paper. october 27, 1967 DAILY EVERGREEN Page 3 Some give approval Drugs concern students MARK JOHNSON, freshman- able. Marijuana supposedly does- CECE RYAN, senior- ttl can By Sieve Pierce "Marijuana, yes. Simply because n't have any more dangerous af- see nothing wrong With it ifit was of the fact I don't regard it as fects than alcohol or anthing else. under laboratory conditions, but "No, I don't think they should dangerous or having any side ef- I mean, there are no after effects I don't think they should be used be legalized" "Ithink I'm against fects. " .and there's no problem with the un d e r non-laboratory con d t- it," and "I guess it would be "I don't know that much about chromosome screw-up, but LSD tions. " OK," were iust a few ofthe com- any of the .others but what I do I can't see. It can totally change "I have no experience dealing ments made by students when know would indicate to me that a whole person's life." with them, but from what I've asked if the use of hallucinatory they are quite dangerous actually, "I think people would get a heard, it seems that a lot of drugs should be legalized. and I would not use them or stress big kick out of it for a while and people are either unable to cope The Evergreen surveyed some that someone else use them." use it extensively and after awhile with them or unable to know really students on the question in light "I don't think anyone would it would cool off and it wouldn't what's coming off with them." of the drug symposium to be held use them that hasn't already." be anymore dangerous or in use "As far as marijuana or some- at WSU on Monday, Tuesday and than alcohol." thing like that is concerned, from Wednesday. "I think there is a case for In general, most disapproved , the leg-alization of marijuana. " (continued on page 15) of the legalization of drugs-s-In- cluding marijuana and LSD-but a few voiced opinions for drug legalization. Almost totally condemned was the use of LSD. Marijuana receiv- ed the most support of the two. Here are some students' com- for other things bestdes freak- ments when asked if the use of ing out." hallucinatory drugs should bele- "I think the same people that galized are using it now would still be • using it. I don't think it would make anymore traffic."

See us 213 Main

THE KATHY SCALZO, freshman_ "Oh, I think I'm against it be- cause just like anything th~t is MINI-MEN legalized, there will be a lot Of':;:==;;;;;;~X;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;" abuses of it." r "I think it's a good thing i ARE HERE! some cases, but I know it will be abused when it's just handed out to the public. There would be a lot of people who would linda Barker Kappa Delta take advantage of it for rea- t:::\O ~ sons that aren't exactly honor- ~ \::> • beautifully abl~'LL Y MARTIN, sophomore- ~~ AI ,~ fill "Yes, I guess it would be OK to &la ~" ~'" adorned in legalize it. I think it's up to the ~~~'"alJfA 61. individual whether they want to ez>.,,,,, _~ SKU take it or not." taoO .cI~'fJ ' HIEDI BEHRENS, sophomore- '""11 c:{j0'if6~ v6i)@ "I don't think so because I .fi- J!(JIM '3' JJ!7IJ:--' ., .... the newest version gure you should use your mind IJ',) ~ q(/(jy?r'l?!:> of the mock tu rtle

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?knew PlY'!1out1J RoadRunne/' /1OW Qf t()/l/' Plymouth Dei1/erl w/1ele ihe /J6it on." 1"1967 Warner llro:..-So::ven Arts, Inc ..goes Page 4 'Los Amigos' organized

"Los Amigos", a branch of a exchangeprogram. nat ional organization (C on- "Los Amigos" is student di- . ference on Inter-American stu- rected, initiated and financed• j dent Projects), has been formed Finances, including the trip to at WSU. Me x i co, are earned through It is a program which func- money makingendeavors of stu- tions as a Student Peace Corps dents together in the separate group in that the student mem- areas. WSU'sarea includesEast- bers live in pueblos in Mexico ern Washington state College, during the summer to help with GonzagaUniversity, Fort Wright communitydevelopmentworkand College, Whitworthand Spokane are also involved in a cultural CommunityCollege. University Dames to hold kiddies Halloween party WashingtonStat e University Dames interest groups have Dames will hold a Halloween recently gotten underway. They party tonight from 7-8:30 p.m, in include fancy food group, bridge the WesleyFoundation,Maplest., group, current affairs discussion for theirchildren, group and the pinouchle group. Husbandsmay attend andthere Tickets are being sold for the will be games anda costumepar- Fashion ShowNov. 15. A prize ade, Anyone planning to attend will be given to the one selling call Pamela Quinette. the most tickets.

SAE LITTLE SISTERS of Minerva who were are Chris Vokmer, (top left) GammaPhi Beta; tapped Wednesday night in a midnight cere- Randi Edwardsen, PI Beta Phi; Robin Brock- mony are Cherie Pacsmag, (front left) Alpha way, Alpha Delta Pi; Sally Lokken, Kappa Chi Omega; Cathy Woods, Alpha Gamma Del- Kappa Gamma; and Cathy Olerud, Delta Gam- ta; Janet Millar, Chi Omega; and Paulette ma. Diafos, Kappa Alpha Theta. Others chosen Students hold Little S,sters of Minerva coffee hour tapped in early morning The Indianstudents on campus will host the International Cof- Songsand excitement filledthe function," said Jan. "Christ- fee Hour today from 3:30-5 p.rn, air Wednesdaynight astheSAE's mas parties, working with or- in the International Students moved from sorority to sorority phanage children, raunch din- Lounge,College 5. tapping nine new Little Sisters ners, surprise breakfasts are a The students have gathered. of Minerva in a midnight cere- few more of the activities that several displaysandarranged for mony. bring us closer to the SAE's." nat i ve Indian parlor games. The new Little Sisters are Rush for the Little Sisters HomemadeIndian cookies will be Cherie Pac s mag, Alpha Chi began on Oct. 12. composed of served and there will be folk Omega; Robin Brockway, Alpha 25-30 members, the girls must singing by a group of Indian stu- Delta Pi; Cathy Woods, Alpha be initiated members of a sor- dents. Gamma Delta; Janet Millar, Chi ority of sophomore or junior Twofilms will be shownat 3:40 Omega; Cathy Olerud, Delta standing. and 4:40p.m, Bothare color films Gamma; Chris Volkmer, Gam- They cannot be a sister of an dealing with the culture of India. ma. Phi Beta; Paulette DiafOS, active member or pledge of an The first "Bances of India" Kappa Alpha Theta; Sally Lok- SAE at the time of nomina- We have a full line of features music by Ravi Shankar. ken, Kappa Kappa Gamrna; and tion, and cannotbe pinned or en- The second deals with the his-Randi Edwardsen, Pi Beta Phi. gaged to an active member or tory, art and religion of India,. The SAELittle Sisters ofMin- pledge of the fraternity. hunting supplies. hesl I erva began on this campus in The nine girls tapped Wed- Orc eSls se ects i1959 for the purpose of assist- - nesday night were given yellow . h d 'ing the members and pledges of chrysanthj!mums with the pur;' (steel head season is elg t new ancers Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity ple letters of SAEwritten across scholastically, culturally, and them to be worn Thursday. here-See Chucks for orchests, WSU's dance hon- socially. The official uniform of the orary, bas selected eight ne w Also, the Little Sisters act as Little Sisters is a black blazer members. They were tapped official hostesses for the frat- and skirt with the Sigma Alpha equipment) Mondaynight and include: Mary emity, and are of service to Epsilon crest on the pocket of E 11en Haines, Perham, Mary the university and the comminity the blazer. These uniforms are Hurst, Perham; Joanne Hoffman, the university and the community worn every Thursday. Coman; Bonnie McDaniel, Dun- as well. Meetings for the Little Sis- can Dunn; DeborahSchock,streit; Up 0 n membership into the ters of Minerva are held the Diane Stack, Sigma Kappa,Carla group, each Little Sister re- first and third Thursday ofevery CHUCK'S HARDWARE stuekt, Alpha Gamma Delta; and ceives a little brother from the month at the SAEhouse. Barbara Williams, Regents. pledge class. This big-little The Little Sistersretainmem- Orchesis has planned several brother program is similar to bership in the organization 122 Main LO 4-4271 performances for the comin g the little sister program set through their Senior year. The year. The first will be for the up in sororities. . graduating seniors are usually 1!======~~======~~~~~~u~n~iv~e~r~S~it~y~D~am~~es~.~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;, "Coke dates, care packages honored in the spring with aSen- r and helping with personal pro- tor Banquet, where gifts are blems are only a few of the act- presented toeadl out-goingmem- ivities involved in being a big ber. Sister," commented Jan Wil- Formal initiation ceremony, 1967 Iiams, president. and a "raunch dinner initiation" "Working with our little bro- are planned for the nine new thers, however, is not our only members. ENGINEERING GRADUATES ,------Bel1shoof's Texaco & U-Haul f The Inland Steel Company,Indiana Harbor Works, East Chicago, Indiana invites you to investigate ! 1900 N. Grand : our many career opportunities. Consult the specifiC job description in the pocket of our bro- chure. Our representatives will be on campus on Friday, November 3, 1967. Friday-Oct 27 -until t • pumpkins are gone t " INLAID STEEL COMPANY • "Halloween Pumpkins" • INDIARA HABIOR WORD , . EAST CHICAGO. INDIANA I Free Halloween Pumpkin with gas , G , till up or service job , I, Attention Golfers•...these pumpkinswere grownby our great " golf pro, Al Liotta, so eating some of them could improve your golf game. , t P.S. Housewives••..you can make pies from these pumpkins- We are an EqUalOpportunityEmployer in the Plans for Progress Program. t my mother did. t ...... ~~._.~~~~~~~~ ~~ .- ...... -=------~- - -~_~- --

DAILY EVERGREEN P~ge 5 A.LA. will meet at 7:30 p.m., Foreign film Meetings Oct. 31, in Carpenter 110. Dr. Bishop will discuss "Eastern Thoughts on Time and Space" discussions INTER - VARSITY CHRISTIAN and the meeting is open to any- FELLOWSHIP will meet at 6: 45 one. to be held p.rn, tomorrow at the TUB. They CHESS CLUB will meet this will travel to the Benscoter home afternoon from 1-6 p.rn, in the 101 City View, for a speech b; The meaning of the surreal- Old Education Building 123. Keith Himple on Missions. istic m o v ie , "Juliet of the - Spirits," will be discussed at Pi KARATE CLUB will meet at r Beta Phi sorority after its final 4 p.rn. Sunday in Smith Gym, showing SUnday evening. The main gym floor for a workout. Births 1 movie will be run Saturday at 7:30 p.m, and Sunday at 3:30 COLLEGE LIFE will meet at Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Walker and 7:30 p.m, in Todd Auditorium. 7 p.rn, tomght in the Alpha Phi (student), 1605 Maple, are th~ sorority. parents of a son, born Oct._ 18. In this Italian movie, a wife is under psychiatric treatment because of the disloyalty of her husband to her. As she tells her doctor of her past, her memories "{t\E. become distracted and she slides A&.W into unreality. Inher dream world ~~ \" she tries to compensate for her O~~ husband's inattention to her. The woman's illusions and vis- Fri, Sat, & Sun. ONLY ions are reproduced on the film. "The producers are trying to make the camera recreate what HOT DOG & ROOT BEER is going on in the mind of a per son undergoing psychiatric 29¢ treatment," explained John M. Wasson, associate professor of English and co-chairman of the . sponsoring Films Committee. Wasson and FrederickL.Mar- cuse, professor of psychology, THE FIVE FINALISTS chosen for Phi Kappa Tau's annual will lead the discussion following pledge Princess Contest are Donna Austin, (left) Alpha Gamma the final show. "We will discuss Delta. Leslie Baker Kappa Kappa Gamma; Wendy Paul, Gamma comments and criticisms about Phi Beta; Ellen Giison, Alpha Chi Omega; and Sue Kennisch, the film and try to determine its Kappa Alpha Theta. meaning, even though it is hard to say just what it does mean," Five finalists chosen Wasson stated. The discussions are being · con test sponsored by the Fraternity Ed- or p r Inc e sS ucation Committee of Senior Pan- f hellenic. "We feel that Panhell- Five finalists were chosen in The princess will be crowned enic should start having a more Phi Kappa Tau's annual Pledge at the Nov. 11th pledge dance varied program to initiate in- Princess contest this week. titled "Freeholle Cantina" with terest in projects outside of the They inc 1u d e Wendy Daul, music by the Sound TransfuSion. sororities and Panhellenic it- Gamma Phi Beta, Donna Austin, The current princess is Val- self," explained Candee M. Lange Alpha Gamma Delta; Ellen Gil- orie Gifford, Kappa Kappa Gam- of AIIJh!lGamma Delta, commit- son, Alpha Chi Omega; Leslie rna. tee chairman, Baker, Kappa Kappa Gamma and ."'---~~""IIIIiIIi"';;;;;;;;;;;iiiii;;;;;;;;;;;------;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;----;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;o, ~~~ta~emmiSch, Kappa Alpha TRENTS SPECIALS The five women were enter- .... ------r------~ tained by the Phi Tau's at a C b 51 k C I C I "cocktail hour" last Wednesday. U e ea en er u They will be flown over the camp- P k Ch us and surrounding countryside 75c or ops this Sunday in a Cheokee air- lit. 69C craft piloted by a member of the 1------.... lb. house. t----..;;;;....:;...::::.--- ... Soflin Tissue Engagements 12/98~ Jan Blacklaw, Alpha Omicron r4ff:i;~i1~;;)=;_-.....-,-:~~~~~!:..-_J PI, is engaged to Dave Coombs, 'aslewell Delta Upsilon. W. 617 Main St. Penny Nelson, Streit, is engag- .Margar_ine ed to John McDonald, Theta Chi. eweisfields JEWELERS Spokane, Wash. Gloria Vogt, Klickitat, is en- ~~--__;::":=-=------I S/8SJ. gaged to Robert Isaacson, Wall- III~." ,. ere Homecoming With RAY CHARLES AND HIS RAElETTS Also featuring vocalist BiJl\f Preston and Dancer Chelsea Brown November 4-8 PM-Bohler G\fm

Tickets go on sale Oct. 28 in Bryan Hall Lobby 12-4 p. m. Get your Homecoming dance tickets FREE! with the purchase of 2 concert tickets RESERVED SEATS: 2-$4 concert tickets plus Homecoming dance tickets-$8.00 2-$3.50 concert tickets plus Homecoming Dance tickets-$7.00 GENERAL ADMISSION: 2-$3.00 concert tickets plus Homecoming dance tickets-$6.00 $2.50 concert tickets also offered YOU WON'T WANT TO MISS THIS GREAT SHOW October 27, 1967 Page 6 DAILY EVERGREEN • "tell" the computer, via coded buttons, whether to send out fine Colfax woman iniured Computer system notices. The new computer process will not only save time and money, said Pat Mitchell, Holland Lib- in automobile crash rary, researc h assistant but it set for library will provide the library staff with information that is unavail- Mary L. McPheeters, 43, of curred when Miller, t r a v e ling A new system of processing and books which are in circulation and able now. The staff will be able to re- 1704 Oak st., Colfax, received east on Highway 270, attempted circulating books will soon go into thus are not on the shelves. The minor 'injuries at 7:55 p.m, Wed- to make a left turn onto stadium effect in Holland Library. print-outs will be posted for each cognize heavily circulated books and thus order more copies, said nesday when the car in which she Way and collided with the Mc- The IBM computer in Johnson floor, ,with a main print-out on Mitchell. The new system will was riding collided with a car Pheeters' vehicle, traveling west Center, said Mrs. Jan Hayden, first floor. The print-outs are for driven by James W. Miller, 18, on Highway 270. library attendant for the science the use of partrons and the lib- collect statistics which will be valuable in improving the lib- of 608 California st., Pullman. Mrs. McPheeters was takenby circulation desk, will process rary staff. Driver of the other car was Dur- ambulance to Memorial Hospital all materials Circulating from the The computer will also pro- rary. wood W. McPheeters, 51, also of where she was treated for head 1i bra r y, except two-hour re- cess fines and overdue notices, For example, said Mitchell, the computer will show when most 1704 Oak st., Colfax. and knee injuries, Bacon said. An serves. said Mrs. Hayden. When an over- According to state Patrolman estimated $400 damage was done Each day a print-out will come due book is returned to the lib- books and mate rials are drawn Dave C. Bacon, the accident oc- to both cars. from the computer listing the rary, the library attendant will from the library so the student staff can be shifted to match heavy drawing periods.

Schedule set lRl DeVelOps Fiber OPlic _OSCilloscope on student aid

Financial aid applications for the 1968- 69 school year will be wilh 20 Picosecond ReSOlution available after Dec. 1 at the Office of Financial Aids, 102Ad- ministration Annex. Deadline for freshman scholarship applica- tions is Mar. 1. Applications for loans, grants Undergroun~ and the college Work - study Pro- gram will be due July 15. Scholarships are awarded by uclear explOSIon the Scholarship and Student Aids Committee, a seven- member n era IVEW! faculty group, on the basis of heralds new t need, G.P.A., activities, the electron-positron accelerator applicant's personal statement, -n recovery 0 and a parents' confidential state- ment. All applicants are con- being built at sidered individually. Although no ~aturalresources particular grade point average 1s required, students receiving livermore laboratory aid have an average of 3.00. "There are three things we try to be above all," said Robert G. Kinney, assistant dean of men. .:I "We try to be equitable, con- ~LRL-Livermare sistent, and objective." ...:______Enuineers bullu. Last year a total of $1,261,655 in financial aids was given to ...... rs 'lnemlelevium258" ~~-h·t engtne approximately 2,000 students. a gral' 1 e The primary programs included ."nte heaviest isalape were National Defense Student Loans, University scholarshiPS, .. ~knUwn·ta IIIiInl " to ~perate1_ t 2~000F and Federal Educational Op- portunity Grants. conttDUOUSJ_Y a I' Other programs were the Uni- versity loan fund, The Federal for more than Guaranteed Loan Pro g ram through home-town banks, and 270 hours the Work-study Program. !..f Hutchison r; Studio ,d Complete!

These are a few of the What kind of people are we Photographic accomplishments of scientists seeking?-Scientists, Engineers, IS. and engineers at Livermore. Mathematicians at all degree " ervlce. I. These pioneers of research work levels who have the ability and on the technology of tomorrow desire to contribute to our • LO 7-4121,. in virtually all phases of nuclear research effort. energy. Current openings at all degree If the following information is levels include: :,• Projector of interest, contact your Theoretical and Experimental l: placement office and arrange an Physicists' Hydrodynamics' interview with our representatives Nuclear physics' Fission and • Rental when they visit your campus. fusion reactions • Astrophysics • I: What are we? - One of the Geophysics' Solid state physics largest scientific research • transport theory laboratories in the world with a Electronics Engineers' Systems • Photo: staff of over 5,600 scientists, design and development· engineers and' support personnel Instrumentation' Computer engaged in virtually all phases of technology' Field systems .1;Finishing • nuclear energy research. engineering • I. Where are we? - Our Livermore Mechanical Engineers • facility is located in a pleasant Advanced machine design • I Camera ; suburban area within easy driving Analytical and experimental distance of the San Francisco stress analysis' Applied mechanics' Environmental • Repair Bay Area. or write: testing What do we offer? - A For further information about tremendous variety of unusual Lawrence Radiation Laboratory these and other openings arrange stimulating research problems; a University of California to talk with our representatives large number of outstanding P.O. Box 808 XX-78 during their ,Cameras & technical associates; a vast array Livermore, California 94550 t of equipment including some of CAMPUS INTERVIEW the most advanced computers in Tuesday, October

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SAVE! QUILTED NYLON RACER SKI JACKETS! ZIP IN HOOD! WIDE WALE CORDUROY PENN-PRESFR; SLACK BUY! 12.88 4.88 Nylon taffeta shell quilted to warm Wide, wide wale polyester/cotton Dacron® 88 polyester fiberfill. Nylon corduroy that never needs ironing! knit cuffs and inner collar. Smart rac- Machine washes, drips or tumbles ing stripes. Zip-in hood, 2 zipper pock- dry wrinkle-free and ready to wear. ets. Slate, loden, whiskey. S-M-L-XL. S.madly styled with yoke back. ,de- Hurry, quantities are limited! Signed for trimmest fit. In olive. camel, sand and blue. 29 to 36. Eniay All These Bargains Now ••• Just Say "Charge It" October 27, 1967 ?age 8 DAILY EVERGREEN Pre-registr~tionPlanning starts Koinonia House set ~~I:~e:~~~~~~~~~;~:for installation f~yrp.~~e~!,~ctivities tion are being made, according reports on Its progress WI°Il be director of the Koinonia House, to Lewis McNCoew, urr icu Iurn Inauguration ceremonies for made to the Regents monthly. has organized several exper i- Advisorv coordinator. WSU's new president-Dr. Glenn mental programs this year as Terrell-will be held March 16 The Board appointed Richard Presently advisors are doing d L. Ott, chairman of the WSU part of his work in the Common and 17, it was announce yes- an exce 11ent job, said McNew, Fa cuI t y Executive Committee Ministry. "We pick up programs terday. h t t w 0 does not share the asser- and Mrs. Henry B. Owen, Seattle and drop programs wit ou ry- h A committee appointed by the f tion that advisors are at fault I regent, to serve as co-chairmen ing to go on some kind 0 pre- Board of Regents to p an the event d or taking time to discuss pr ob- of the committee. Ott is chair- cedent," Phillips explaine • f already is at work, and regular ° Ierns with stu dents. man of the Veterinary Clinic at Under his immediate program, WSU. Phillips has set up a "Student Harry McAllister, chairman Faculty Inter-Diciplinary Study of the Department of Business Program." The students and fac- Administration and i m me d ia t e ulty members involved in this past chairman of the Faculty Ex- program select their own meet- ecutive Committee, and Herbert ing times and meet every other Wood, professor of history, (a- week. long with Ott) were named by the His program also includes stu- Regents to represent the WSU dent seminars, including a dis- Faculty on the Committee. cusston of education and educa- Allen Miller, director of in- tional reforms held every Tues- Tony Phillips formation services, and Warren day night. Students are free to B ish 0 p, vice president--busi- meet at the Down and Out Coffee which will be a follow-up to his ness, were named to represent House in the Koinonia House any book "Christ for Us in the Theo- the WSU staff and Eugene Pat- day of the week for informal dis- logy of Dietrick Bonoeffer," pub- 'I terson, director of alumni re- cussions. On Sunday evenings lished last May. lations, and Herbert Hemingway religious films are shown at .. Phillips is originally fr 0 m I of Garfield, president of the AI- the Koinonia House. "The pur- Honolulu, Hawaii and moved to umni Association, were appointed pose of the offices in the Koinonia the United Staes in 1934. In 1963 to represent the alumni of the House is to allow students on he held the postnon of Assistant institution. Two WSU sen i 0 r s campus an opportunity to drop Chaplin at the University of Ro- were appointed to represent the in for informal counseling," stat- chester in New York. During his student body. They are Bob Cop- ed Phillips. one year stay at Rochester, he Bookie Special pock and Bonnie Fine. The Koinonia House also spon- took on the job of Campus Ad- i•.•••• IIII ••••• 1ipI.... sored the "Fall Faculty Confer- ministrator and set up a religious ence in September and presently program for the students. sponsors the Serendipity and Ro- From 1964-67 Phillips taught WSU DAIRY CLUB ger Williams Houses. It also at Stevens College in Missouri supports independent stu den t Today ..•.. and was a member of the re- publications in hope that they will CHEESE SALE find a solution to the wide gap ligious staff. "The program we organized in student-faculty communica- Homecoming had a great deal to do with civil Western Cut tion. rights," stated Phillips. Under As a part of his work for the this program students took trips Sat., Nov. 4 Common Ministry, Phillips plans through various places connected "Midwale" Cords to travel around the state and 9:15 am-S:IS pm with civil rights problems. "This icommunity presenting his view was our way of teaching the stu- on the present state of theology...... $3.99 pair dents," concluded the director. He also plans to write a book

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Plenty of free parking Plenty of free Parking DAILY EVERGREEN Page 9 Terrell discusses ~p_E3.st.kE?' previous research REGISTERED DIAMOND RINGS Research in the learning con- cepts of childhood was one of President Glenn Terrell's recent activities before coming to WSU, he disclosed at a Tuesday night meeting of Pi Lambda Theta, a women's educatiunal honorary. The children for the experi- ments in psychology were chosen at random and. the socio-econo- mic status of the children rang- ed from the low to the upper- middle class. Terrell added, "We couldn't get any of the higher class students because most of them attended private schools. " It was found in these experi- HERE ARE Bertsie and Flossie Evergreen consulting Bertsle's ments that upper middle and mid- Glenn Terrell very accurate wind-up type timepiece. They're no fools-He's dle classes responded better to EXCLUSIVE AT wearing his mod checkered pants and she's wearing her mod the tests given because they were student and every student should mesh stockings. And they're also no fools 'cause they're plan- more effective in the imaginary get a chance at some type of ning to turn back Bertsie's watch an hour Sunday night 'cause BAFUS activities. honors program. daylight saving's time is all done. By this type of test it can be JEWELERS Evergreen photo by Mother Goose * * * * * seen that teachers must be flex- utah is the only state which MOSCOW, ible; authoritarianism in the allows shooting to be a form of elass room is destructive and capital punishment. Tutoring service disruptive, Terrell continued. When asked what was being done on the college level to bring out creativity, he answered, expansion ahead "Not much but the honors pro- The YMCA is continuing and This year, because eligibility gram approaches the problem expanding the University Tutor- requirements are less stringent with some degree of success." ing Service which it started last and everyone interested may par- Terrell said that he thought spring to assist WSU students. tiCipate, LeClair hopes the ser- the honors program was discrim- Those interested in becoming vice will greatly expand to include inatory to the environment of the tutors in the program should fill more students. out question blanks which ask each student's major and courses taken in that area. Forms are available at various campus bul- letin boards department offices and the YMCA office. Completed forms should be returned to the YMCA office in the Old Educa- tion Building. From the question forms, the YMCA service will organize a file containing all students list- ed under their respective depart- Whatever kind you smoke ments. 'then any student who de- you owe it to yourself t~ PIPE TOBACCO sires help with his classes will try MONZA Pipe Tobacco. have access to the files. After Your favorite pipe will give J7 finding the name of a tutor in his you more pleasure when desired field from the files, the you choose this imported student may contact him. blend of the world's fine "All arrangements as to time tobaccos. place and fee will be worked out between the student and the tu- move up to tor. This is one of the main ad- vantages of the service," ex- THE IMPORTED PIPE TOBACCO plained Bob LeClair, chairman ONLY 30t A POUCH MONZA of the YMCA University Tutor- For a COMPLIMENTARY pouch of MONZA PIPE TOBACCO, ing Service. send lO~ to cover postage and handling with this When the program began last coupon to: spring, only about 150 students participated in the program as ROMICK'S INTERNATIONAL INC. tutors. However, at that time, P.O. BOX 3033, DEPT. 292 ' the program was run different- NO. HOLLYWOOD, CALIF. 91606 ly; students qualified only if they (Please Print) were recommended by a depart- ment chairman. Name

Street _ City _ Drug Scene '67 State _ Zip _ begins Monday VARSITY DRIVE-IN THEATRE II I Speakers, panels and group Pullman-Moscow Hwy discussions will highlight the I drug symposium to be held at Open F ri and Sat. Only WSU next week. The symposium Shov:starts at 7:00 P.M. theme is "The Drug Scene' 67' ." Financed primarily by the Board of Control and the Dean's "Zorba the Greek" office, the symposium will pre- Drama-In Color I sent five speakers whose topics Anthony Quinn-Alan Bates will range from the history of I PLUS I nal'luctnator y drugs to their so- ciological impact. "The Qui Iler Memorandum" Speakers and their topics will Spy-Suspense-In Color include William Johnson, "The George Segal-Alec Guiness History of Ethnic Drug Use"; Cartoon Gary Koeppel, "LSD and the - .- Creative Experience"; Sydney Cohen, "The Medical Aspects of LSD"; Edward Mackie, "The Le- gality of Drug Use and Abuse"; WANTED: lull-time Cook. and Jean Houston, "The Socio- logical Impact of LSD." The program will begin Mon- day night at 7 when Johnson Contact George Velis speaks. A film and panel dis- cussion will follow. The following afternoon will see Koeppel speak at 4 p.rn, Beta Theta Pi, while Cohen talks at 7 p.rn, The final day. Mackie and Hous- ton will speak at 4 p.rn, and La 4-7125 7 p.rn, respectively. Page 10 DAILY EVERGREEN October 27, 1967 "Juliet of the Spirits" Class innovates Placeftlent notes

Monday, Oct. 30 TEKTRONIX, INC.: a film you can't miss plus grading system BS and MS in E.E., M.E. and BUREAU OF RECLAMATION: C.E.; Physics and Chern. Students in a behavioral psy- Ag. E., C.E., E.E. and M.E. WESTrnGHOUSE ELECTRIC Buck Rogers serial chology class can choose the WASHINGTON WATER POWER CORP.: grade they want and get it. Thir- CO.: BS and MS in Physics and Eng. ty-five psychology students in BS in E.E. TEXAS rnSTRUMENTS, INC.: Kenneth E. Lloyd's analysts of U.S. STEEL CORP.: E.E., M.E. and I.E. behavior class can, under a new MS in Metallurgy, C.E., Chern. . Todd Aud. Sat. 7:30 teaching system, do just that. E., E.E., M.E. and Mining E. Wednesday, Thursday, To get a particular grade, MBA in B.A., Production Man- Nov. 1,2 50~ Sun'. 3:30 & 7:30 the student must earn a speci- agement, Personnel and Account- fied number of points by com- ing; MS in Math and Physics. TEXACO INCORP.: pleting activities. Each grade Chern. E., C.E., E.E. and M.E.; is assigned certain require- Tuesday, Oct. 31 Applied Math and Physics; MSand ments. The grade D require- PhD in Chern. and Geology. ments must be done first. If WESTERN UNION TELE- the student is satisfied with a GRAPH CO.: Thursday, Nov. 2 "INTERREGNUM" grade of D, he may stop work- BS and MS in E.E., Math and ing when he has achieved it. If PhYSics. MBA in Accounting BA CHEVRONCHEM. CO.: Ag and Biological Sciences. not, he completes activities for in Liberal Arts. ' (Between the W ars]: higher grades, until he reaches U.S. NAT. BANK OF OREGON: HOWARD, NEEDLES, TAM- the grade desired. BA and Liberal Arts MEN & BERGENDOFF: This film with drawings by social satirist The activities offered are de- PACIFIC GAS ANDELECTRIC C.E. and Arch. E. HUMBLE OIL & REFINING George Grosz autobiographically traces Ger- signed to give the students a sam- CO.: many's pattern of corruption and destruction pling of life as a psychologist. Info Sci., EngineeringEcon.,Sta- CO.: spanning the two World Wars, giving a portrait Reading and discussing articles tistics and Technical Sales. Marketing, Econ., B.A. and Lib- eral Arts. of evil. Extremely sophisticated; not a film about psychology, laboratory LAWRENCE RADIATION MCCONNEL DOUGLAS to be enjoyed. work with rats, attending lectures L.A.B.: CORP.: and symposiums sponsored by the BS, MS and Ph.D in Chern. E., psychology department, field E.E. and M.E.; BS and MS in C.E., E.E. and M.E.; MSandPhD trips, and observation of re- Math and Info. Sci.; MS and PhD in Chern. E. and Structural E., search are among the activities in Physics; PhD in Chern. Chemical Metallurgy, Math, Phy- Fri. evening 8:00 & 9:00 PM Lloyd lectures only occasion- GENERAL FOODS CORP.: sical Met all u r g y, Nuclear and ally. Classroom time is spent BS and MS in Chern., Food Tec- Hydraulic Technology. mainly. in discussion. This gives hnology, AG. E., Chern. E. and R& NAVAL UNDERSEA the student an opportunity to talk M.E. WARFARE CENTER: Sun. evening 9:00 & 10:00 PM about psychology and to appre- EASTMAN KODAKCO.: BS and MS in C.E., M.E. and ciate what he has learned by Engineering, Chern. P hys ic s; E.E., Metallurgy, Math and Phy- telling others about it in his own U.s. A. F. RECRUITING: sics. "Up & In" 3rd floor words. Engineering, Physical Sci., Lib- PRICE WATERHOUSE & CO.: According to psychologists, an eral Arts, Ed., and Office Adm. Accounting environment which reduces un- SEATTLE ENGINEERING Thursday, Fr'lday , -also- certainty makes learning easier. DEPT.: In Lloyd's class, a lack of am- E.E. and C.E. Nov. 2, 3 biguity is created by defining what ARA INSTITUTIONAL SER- the student must do to achieve Wednesday, Nov. 1 VICES: a particular grade. Hotel and Restaurant Mang., B.A. Open discussion on The student sets his goals AGRICULTURAL RESEARCH and Dietetics. in the beginning of the course SERVICE, USDA: and his method of reaching them. Ag., Biology, Chern., Chern. E. Friday, Nov. 3 He is thus assured that every- and Ag. E. 'SBlood with. thing he does in the class will U.S. ARMY MATERIAL COMo. U.S. GYPSUM CO.: apply to his grade and that he MAND: BS in Engineering, Chern. and will not waste time studying any- M.E., E.E. and Ind. E. Architecture. thing unrewarding. While be is Marketing, Biology, Chern and THE BON MARCHE: editorial staff working toward his grade, he Liberal Arts. B.A., Marketing and Accounting will show himself that the prtn- COAST &GEODETIC SURVEY: CONNECTICUT MUTUAL cip1es of psychology about which BS and MS in C.E., E.E. and M.E.; LIFE INSURANCECO.: he is learning can be applied to Math, Physfcs and Meteorology. summer employment. "Up & In" 8:00 P.M. his own life. DEERE & CO.: GREEN GIANT CO.: This method of teaching has BS and MS in M.E. and Ind. E.; Ag. and B.A. been used in a few schools in the Metallurgy and Gen. Business. INLAND STEEL CO.: country by professors interested NAVAL WEAPONS CENTER: BS and MS in C.E., E.E. and in the approach, according to BS, MS and PhD in E.E. and M.E.: Math, Physics and Meteo- Lloyd. It has also been used in Phystcs; BS, MS in M.E. rology. psychology 198 courses here. PACIFIC MUTUAL LIFE IN- INTALCO ALUMINUMCORP.: The classroom role of the teach- SURANCE CO.: MS in Metallurgy and Engineer- er is minimized B.A., Liberal Arts and Math. ing. ITT FED. SUPPORT SER- DODSON'S has VICES, INC.: B.A. MANNlNGS,INC.: We 'rlLisqs qt CJJiamolld anyone Bookie Special U.S. NAVY ELECTRONICS LAB.: E.E. and Physics; BS and MS in Math. Today ••••. Central selects Negro as queen ELLENSBURG CAP)- Jeanette Print Jean Sale Graham, a 21-year-old junior ed- ucation major from Seattle, was $2.99 pair chosen Wednesday as Central wasnmgton State College home- coming queen. Miss Graham, believed the first Negro selected to reign

i~i.ii;iiiii;;;iiil~~l~~~~~over the college's celebration. .. You thought it would never happen to you. But at last love has bopped you. Happily it's hit him too. And he ln- sists you have a ring. From our splendid selection you choose the DANCING EVERY FRI. & SAT. NIGHT one right diamond. It sparkles and glows, and you both know that this To William Penn and the Quakers is it and this is great. $225.00 Watch For The Pizza Peddlers. DODSON'S Twenty-six kinds of Pizza Fine Jewelers for 80 years .. And Your Favorite Beverage Moscow-Spokane DAILY EVERGREEN October 27~ 1967 Page 11 Study plan explained

EDITOR'S NOTE: The following is a letter Presi- dent Glenn Terrell sent to all faculty and nonaca- demic staff this week. It expresses his general outline for the establishment and functions of 14 study councils which will evaluate WSU this year. In addition, it mentions the future formation of a Planning Council which will seek to tie together the findings of the individual study councils. A study plan There is general agreement that it is time for a comnrehensrve analysis of the educational objec- tives of WSU. We need to arrive at a common ac- cepted focus for our activities and to clarify our vision of our future. American society has changed dramatically in recent years. Colleges and universities have ex- hibited an alarming tendency to respond slowly to these changes. Also, in too many cases we have been followers of society rather than its leaders. Yet the great majority of those participating in uni- versity life are convinced that institutions of higher learning should provide leadership in determining the direction of cultural and societal change. Uni- versities have the intellectual resources, the fac- ilities and the energies to participate actively in the search for that better life to which we are de- dicated. But we cannot play such a role by backing into the future or by trusting to luck. It is only through a continuing reappraisal of our educational objectives and our relationship to society that we can reflect and influence the aspirations and the reponses of the larger community of which we are a vital "THE Hfi,L" will come under close 14 study councils will evaluate WSU. student life, extension, and general, part. I am convinced that WSU has a bright future sc rutiny during the next eight months Some of the areas to be covered international and professional ed- if we allocate our intellectual and material resources as student and faculty members of include general academic areas, ucation. in accordance with a thorough, carefully formulated, educational plan. The development of such a plan must involve dents, through the appropriate student leader to 1. The relationship between teaching and research all segments of the university community-facul- the president's office. in the university. ty, students, administrators and the Board of Re- 2. An evaluation of the problem of maintaining a It is requested that all nominations be in the pres- balance between undergraduate and graduate educa- gents. ident's office at the earliest possible date, but not tion. The following procedure has been developed in later than Nov. 16. 3. General education and specialization. consultation with the Faculty Executive Committee, Outstde consultants will be employed to assist 4. How can our faculty be. encouraged to maintain the Administrative Council and studentleaders. Brief- the study councils whenever it appears that such an experimental approach to curriculum development, ly. a number of study councils will be appointed very consultants will be useful. teaching methods and evaluation of learning? soon consisting of faculty members, students and Study councils will be appointed in the following 5. The implications of future educational objectives administrative officers from various academic dis- general areas of the university: for the acqufsttton of library, computer and other ciplinary groupings, and from other general univer- Humanities, social sciences; biological SCiences; research facilities. sity components. Additionally, in the near future an physical sciences; engineering; teacher education; The study councils will be asked to recommend all-university, Long-Range University PlanningCoun- eeonomtcs.and business; agriculture; home economtcs; priorities in the implementation of the goals and ob- cil (referred to hereafter as the University Plan- professional education; international education; stu- jectives that they propose. ning council) will be appointed. dent life; general education; and off-campus programs, The University Planning Council will be asked extension, continuing education. to. 1) recommend to the president priorities for All councils will be requested to submit a report accomplishing the proposed objectives of the study to the President by July 1, 1968. Planning Council councils, and 2) coordinate the work of the study councils. The study councils "Rill be appointed by The Planning Council, which will be appointed at an the president on recommendation of the appropriate early date, will be asked to review the reports of department chairmen, deans, and the vice president- the study councils and to submit to the president any academic, Membership of the study councils will Study council charge recommendations regarding these reports that it vary depending upon the total number and distri- The study councils will be asked to make a sys- deems appropriate. The principal task of The Planning bution of the areas represented. tematic analysis of the recently submitted depart- Council will be to suggest prtortnes In trnptementmg In order to maximize the likelihood of a desir- mental ten-year plans and to consider in their delib- the recommendations of the study councils. able "cross-fertilization" of Ideas In the deliber- erations the goals and priorities contained in these The Planning Council will also serve as a coor- ations of the study councils, every effort will be plans. To assist them In this analysts, copies of all dinating agency for the work of the various study made to include in the membership of the councils departmental ten-year plans will be distributed to ~l counctls; For example, study councils may be asked individuals from disciplines other than those dir- members of the study councils. The study counctls- to report periodically throughout the course of their ectly appropriate to the academic area considered. will also be asked to describe the current status and deliberations to the Planning Council. Additionally, But such members will be in the minority. Also, characteristics of the programs of instruction, re- from time to time it may prove to be desirable for the membership on the study councils will be so de- search and service in the various disciplinary group- Planning Council to arrange for open hearings to which termined that there will be no domination by de- ings represented by the councils. all interested ta.culty members and students may be partment chairmen. The order of appointment of invited to comment on the deliberations of the councils. The heart of the charge to the councils will be In my frequent discussions with ta.cult.y members, study councils will be at the discretion of the pres- a request for a statement of the university's edu- students, regents and members ofthe admmtstratton, I ident and the vice president--academlc. cational objectives for the next ten to twenty years. detect an enthusiasm equal to my own for the impor- The procedure for securing nominations for mem- The councils will be asked to conceptualize the in- tance of the analyses projected in this plan. bership on the study councils will be as follows: structional, research and service requirements of I am certain that with the resources we already The vice president--academic will meet with the WSU in the next decade or two in order that we may possess, (and those that are potentially.ours), plus appropriate college deans and department chairmen educate students for tomorrow's world. for each study council. At such a meeting the objec- the superb attitude toward higher education that pre- tives of the study councils will be discussed fully. It is realized that this will be a difficult assignment vails in this institution and in the state of Washington Department chairmen will be asked to conduct an and will require a thorough knowledge of current generally, we shall be successful in developing a election in their departments for the purpose of trends in the various academic disciplines. But more master plan for our continued growth in the years nominating two persons for membership on the 'important, the success of the councils in accomplish- ahead. council in question. ing this objective w1l1 be directly related to their Chairmen will transmit the names of the persons ability to bring imagination and insight to this task selected accompanied by their own suggestions, to of "looking into the future." the app~opriate college dean, who will, in turn, The councils are being asked to consider topics transmit these, nominations, and his suggestions, and questions such as the following. Obviously, the to the vice president--academic. In addition, all list is not exhaustive, but is offered merely in order deans will be asked to nomiante faculty members to provide some guidelines to the council's delib- from outside their colleges, as well as students, erations. President for membership on the councils. " WITH THIS LETTER, I AM ALSO SOLICITING STUDENT AND FACULTY NOMINATIONS FROM BOTH FACULTY MEMBERS AND STUDENTS FROM UW specialist to lecture Wednesday THE ENTIRE UNIVERSITY FOR MEMBERSHIP ON ANY OR ALL OF THE STUDY COUNCILS. This letter is also being sent to the prestdents Loring B. Rowell, a heart spec- his address will be "Adjustments tioned athletes. of the following student organizations: ASWSU, As- ialist from the University of in Regional Blood Flow and Me- His work is supported by the soctated Graduate Students, Associated Women Stu- Washington will present a public tabolism in Man in Response to Washington State Heart Associa- dents, Crimson Circle, Daily Evergreen, !nterfra- lecture at WSU Wednesday. Thermal and Exercise tion. ternity counctt, Mortar Boar~. .Panhellemc Coun- Rowell, who is an Established Stresses. " The add res s is sponsored '1 and Residence Hall ASSOCiatIon. Faculty rnern- Investigator of the A mer i can Rowell currently is a research jointly at WSU by deIllrtments ~~rs and students are asked to send their nomina- Heart ASSociation, is scheduled assistant professor in the UW of physical education and zoology. tions directly to the preSident's office, or alter- to discuss his research in the School of Medicine, Dtvisfon of It is scheduled to be held at nately, in the case of the facult~, through th: de- area of circulatory and metabolic Cardiology. As subjects for his 7:30 p.m. in Room 218 of Science partment chairmen, d~an, acade.mlc Vice pr es ident, adjustments made in man during. study he uses normal men car- Hall. to trye preSident's office; and In the case of stu- stresses. The formal title of diac patients, and highly-~ondi- 'I'hc public is invited to attend. Page 12 DAILY EVERGREEN October 27~1967 , Preece leads offense, OSU big and bruising Oregon State is not what you'd rnentals well and stays away that physically wears down, yet characterize as a fancy football from the frills. Obviously this seldom burns an opponent, He team, but then the object of foot- theory of Beaver coach Dee An- has a big, strong lineman and ball is winning games, not putting dros holds a lot of water, as his crushing running backs, whohave on a circus, as WSU will likely s quad is coming off an impressive just enough speed to keep the find out in Corvallis tomorrow upset win over Purdue last Sat- defense from stacking up against afternoon when the Cougars face urday, before 62,000 rabid Boil- the Instde power plays. OSU in the Beaver Homecoming. ermaker fans. The key to the OSU attack is OSU executes the basic funda- Andros has the type of team junior QB Steve Preece, an ex- cellent runner but a suspect pas- ser. Preece's ability to inspire ENGINEERING STUDENTS tea_m confidence and provide on- field leadership is rated by many coaches as on a par with UCLA's ASCE is offering a EIT Review Book Gary Beban-a tall order for any junior. Preece likes to run the 1777 EITproblems with solutions. option play and has already gained 284 yards rushing to date. Preece is complimented il} the The cost is $7 and they can be backfield by 230 lb. fullback Bill Enyart, a converted linebacker, ordered in Room 148 Sloan Hall. who would rather run over tack- lers than around them. Enyart has packed the ball for 406 yards Ken Lyday (32) of the WSU frosb is shown breaking a tackle February grads must order by November 1 this season. The halfbacks are en route to his second touchdown of the day in last week's 34-14 DOnnie Summers (190 lb) and loss to the Washington Pups. Grasping for Lydaywas Bob Cornell Bill Main (188 lb.) whohave gain- (38). who made up for his defensive mistake by tallying two UW ed 211 and 352 yards, respective- scores. The Coubabes, 0 - 2 on the year. are in Corvallis today ly, during the first six OSU to face a strong Oregon state Rook ball club. games_. . Preece, a 6'1" 188 pounder, has thrown for 511 yards, but 1M X-Country qualifiers a poor 35 for 95 completion re- cord. OCTOBER 28, 1967 GOLF COURSE The strength of the OSU run- SATURDAY AT 11:30 A.M. ning attack is concentrated in the sa, Gerry Giles offensive line where tight end QUALIFIERS: 13:17 83. Doug Reams Gary Houser (225), tackles Roger 13:23 Stalick (215) and Jeff Hardrath ROGERS HALL ORTON HALL (240) and center John Didion 85. Jim White (230) open a lot of holes for 12:35 1. Jim Burney 13:20 Preece and Co. 2. Jim Carey fight it. 13:25 88. Chuck Whipple 13:18 On defense, again the Beavers ALPHA GAMMA RHO are big across the front, but are 91. Kirk Ketter 12:43 30 Norm Davis 12;54 92. Marty Warner 11:16 perhaps even bigger in the line- 4. Tedd Nealey 13:05 95. Clark Satre 11:47 Get Eaton's Corrasable Bond Typewriter Paper. backing department with Fred 5. Terry Nealey 14:50 96. Larry Ovall 14:11 Milton 5'9", 240 and Skip Van- 8. Tim TIppet 13:13 97. Tom Price 12:52 Mistakes don't show. A mis-key completely disappears derbundt 6'4" 225 ready to greet 10. D. Johnson 14:09 any touchdown-minded runner. 100. John McIlhenny 12:04 from the special surface. An ordinary pencil eraser lets Vanderbundt is also an able pass 11. T. Hall 14:09 LAMBDA CHI ALPHA you erase without a trace. So why use ordinary paper? defender with three interceptions 13. Steve Alder 12:40 15. V_ Pffaff Eaton's Corrasabte is available in light, medium, heavy under his belt this season. Up 13:29 front the Beavers feature Jess PHI DELTA THETA SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON weights and Onion Skin. In 100-sheet packets and 500- Lewis (230), Ron Boley (225), 18. Pat Collins 12:48 103. Andy Swess 12:10 sheet ream boxes. At Stationery Departments. Jon Sandstrom (225) and Bill 19e . Rick Doane 13:30 104. Bob Dickenson 12;07 Nelson (6'7" and 245). 20. Tim Thomsen 12:35 107. Ken Snick 13:15 21. Dave Dalbotten 13:58 APARTMENT DWELLERS 22. Dan Alley 14:06 108. Ralph Lloyd 10:20 Beban, Simpson 23. Phil Brady 14:11 110. Richard Milne 11:53 27. Roger McKee 12:41 111. Roger Long 11:20 scoring leaders 31. Mike Haynes 14:01 112. Bob Rowe 13:12 32. Dan Hutsell 11:55 FARMHOUSE 34. Don Moe 11:27 113. Mike Richer NEW YORK (AP) - o. Jo Simp- 11:40 son of Southern California, Gary 36. Jeff Pewe 12:40 114. Jay Lancaster 12:05 Beban of UCLA and Rick Eber of FERRY HALL 115. Mark Jacobsen 12:33 Tulsa are currently tied for the 40. Vance Mcfairland 12:06 116. Jerry Teeter 12:24 individual scoring lead among the 41. Robert French 12:16 SfEPHENSON SOUTH nation's major - 42. Bert Carbaugh 12:58 119. Dave Brown 13:24 Only Eaton makes Corrasable~ players. 44. P. J. Hill 12:24 122. Boyd Gittins 11:40 45. Bill Jolly 13:17 TAU KAPPA EPSILON EATON PAPER CORPORATION. PITISFIELD. MASSACHUSEITS All three scored two touch- downs last weekend, giving each THETA CHI 122. Bob Harris 12:08 46. Dick Agman 12:15 124. Bill Marcan 13:14 47. Ken Sharp 12:57 128. Randy Koehler 14:13 48. steve Ingam 13:13 130. Scott Eggars 13:45 49. Jack Hoffman 14:00 133. Jim Christianson 13:22 50. Dick Duncan 13:02 135. Randy Malanca 13:31 53. Ron Smith 13:21 136. Tom Moore 13:32 54. Gary Paine 13:14 STIMSON 55_ George Woodal 12:30 145. Mike Hubbard 11:05 SiGMA NU 149. Jay Dearborn 11:51 63. Gentry 13:56 151. Dave Kolva 13:40 65. Sweitzer 13:30 153. Guy Munro 10:56 DELTA UPSILON WALLER HALL 69. Gordon Scougale 156. Pat Adams 71. Doug Hackett 157. Bob Green 72. Larry Amos 158. Howard Martinson 74. Tom Logsdon 161. Mark Ronayue 75. Steve Llewellyn 162. Gary Iverson 80. Mike Beuhler 163. Dave Moore

Bookie Special and I knew he Leanand limber and all man in the fit of his Van Heusen "417" Vanopress shirt, Made with the authentic button-down collar, this shirt was permanently pressed Today •••• the day it was made and will never need pressing again. No more laundry bills! As for the great new Van Heusen fabrics, TRADE BOOK DEPT. colors and patterns. , , they make him guytheto keep an eye on! . 1/2 Price Clearance Build up your following with Passport 360, ..Ithe influential iineof men's toiletries by Van Heusen of Little Field Outlines October 2'1, 196'1 DAILY EVERGREEN .,-ii-;ri' Cougs to play eager Beavers Nobody expects to run against dition flankers Larry Thatcher Steve Bartelle and d e fen s 1v e rushers. the forward wall of OSU and WSU and Charlie Hayes are looking backs Gregg Field, Mike Cadigan. The game will be the 56th in. coach Bert Clark isn't going to for a few long bombs, in hopes Rick Reed, Mark Wicks and Lee a series that started back in TREE dispute the experts as he expects of duplicating their earlier open Omlid may see heavy duty. if the 1903. WSU bas won 25. lost. 28 WSU .laces one of the strong- to test the Beaver secondary with field exploits. front four can't stop the OSU and tied 2. est college football teams, phy- a few pas s e s in tomorrow's The Coug running game will sically, in the country, tomor- AAWU clash with Oregon State be entrusted to Carmichael, Glen row, when they travel to Cor- in Corvallis. Shaw and Mark Williams, with vallis to play the OSU Beavers. Gametime is set for 1: 30 PDT, Williams the leading WSUrusher YESI It's no secret the Beavers are in remodeled Parker Field on the for the season. He has gained a rugged team. They run on near- OSU campus. 273 yards so far, ranking him "Down and Out ly four plays out of every five and Clark, apparently disappointed ninth in AA WU stats. their goal by the end of a game with Jerry Henderson's intercep- The WSU defensive line will is not to win on the scoreboard tion habits, has had JohnnyDavis be tired if nothing else at the ;s open [tl co"ee house but to also bodily exhaust each back running the offense at quar- day's end, as the Beavers run player on the opposing team. terback this week in practice. Da- on 78% of their plays. Drawing DAILY- '0 AM to closing hours Coach has assem- vis started the year as the first the opening assignmems will be bled a team made up of hitters string signal-caller, but lasted Wayne Swayda, Steve Van Sinde- Weekends-8:30 PM to closing hours and pounders, The OSU backs only half of WSU's opener with ren, Jim Guinn and Jim Vest. don't run, they run into some- USC, before he gave way to Hank Gary Branson, J. D. Smith, Ron Sack lunch carriers one. The OSU linemen don't op- Grenda and Henderson. Souza and Dennis McCurdy will Breaks for Coffee en a hole, they make a crater. It anoears that Clark will start likely see a lot of action as their As a consequence, OSU football replacements. Conversation INo juke IIIx!) is about as interesting as Beav- Linebackers Steve Boots and er basketball. Unfortunately, however, the two sports have rOIlO.fA HOUSE the same nasty success habit TWOOOOIS DOW. FIOM THE 800ilE in common, even if they aren't field selected fun to watch. The WSU social board commit- .' Supposedly Oregon State was to tee picked Gregg Field as =cou- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~d be weak in the backfield this gar of the Week" for his excel- season. Pete Pifer, a bruising lent defensive play against Ari- , ' I All-Coast fullback who had gain- zona State in last Saturday's .------~------, ed over 1000 yards in his last I Robinson's I two seasons, was missing and so was Bobby Grim, one of the flashiest halfbacks in the nation. I ' Also graduated was Paul Broth- I ers, a Rose Bowl as ~'V (\~ ; a sophomore, a toilet bowl quar- , 4.V(\~ I terback as junior, but a mature quarterback as a senior. His ma- I ~V ,~ I turity had led OSU to seven wins in their final eight 1966 games. I I While everyone W.lS crying for Andros, the Great Pumpkin de- I DELICIOUS 24c HAMBURGERS AND ,I -scended on Corvallis and made linebacker Bill Enyart into a 230 Johnny Davis I EXCELLENT SERVICE OUR SPEC- I lb. fullback and blessed QBSteve with Henderson, but should Jerry I IALITIES. THICK SHAKES AND Preece with the poise Brothers start throwing to the Halloween was supposed to have taken with garbed Oregon Staters, Davis I FRIES TOO. ORDER BY PHONE FOR I him. Last week it all paid off may find himself back in the sad- I YOUR CONVENIENCE I as the Beavers rippedandspear- dIe again. ed No.2 ranked Purdue 22-14. Henderson shot to the front of ! ~~7J~~~~~~~~J It would be nice to have a AAWU passers, yardage-wise, few players of the ostr-size in 'Nitha 201 yard performance the WSU starting nne-up," but v s; Arizona State. But he added apparently Andros keeps the ani- six interceptions for a total of 15 ONE WEEK ONLY mats well fed. None have yet (also tops In the league) on the escaped from the Corvallis Zoo. year. In fact one of the big ones that Henderson and/or Davis will Gregg Field osu possesses asked for admit- .have the waiting hands of Doug From hIS defensive halfback tance after an abortive career Flansburg, Bob Simpson and Del position, Field made many fine ·,tit WSU. That big one just might Carmichael to throw to. All three tackles, and broke up several bust a few heads tomorrow and rate in the top ten conference Arizona ~te pass plays. LAMB HOOD make Bert Clark wonder if re- receivers with Flansburg third On one occasion, he made a tops for you r looks cruiting shouldn't be done by a on 22 catches. Simpson is eighth diving interception of an A-State lion tamer. with 15 grabs and Carmichael pass that halted a Sun Devil perfect for cold days ahead The big car's name is Fred tenth with 12 receptions, In ad- scoring drive. You'll Look So Attractive In This Warm Fluff Of A Hat Of Processed Dyed Lamb, Milton and his dtmensions are ijii-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii·iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii". 5'9" and 240 pounds. He looks Water Repellent, Dry Cleanable, And It Iike something somebody strip- Comes In Many Delicious Colors. ped off Mt. Rushmore as a sou- Reg. 10.00 Spec. 8.00. venir. Milton plays middle line- backer and if the Cougs thought e Curley Culpwas mean, they might II! think Milton is Frankenstein re- :) 0( incarnated. Fred Milton likes to a:: hit people. And when he hits I- someone, it usually results in DIAMOND R I N G S a visit to the Sidelines. The only rub in the Milton saga is that he was supposed to go to WSU. Recruited as a high school senior by WSU from Col- umbia High in Richland, Milton had to first attend Wenatchee J. C•. on a lend lease arrangement, so he could pass the WSU en- trance requirements. After an all-Washington J.C, rating from Appleland, it appear- ed he was headed to Pullman for his remaining three years of eli- gibility. But somehow Milton ne- ver made it. Amidst the cries of piracy from Clark and his assis- tants Milton rode the Halloween expr~ss down to the land of Trick or Treat. It is not Milton's fault that he went to OSU. In fact his mo- ther lives in Portland. It is per- CAPRI ••••••• FROM $145 haps the oversight of the WSU coaches, who thought they had Largest selection in the Palouse Empire this prize prospect in the bag. Credit Terms-As little as $20 Down So on Tuesday night, when all the little kids have their bags open for some Halloween goodies, CROWN JEWELERS Maybe B.C. can sneak out w~th a bigger bag and re-capture MIl- ton for WSU. When WSU missed 127 Main Pullman , Milton, they missed the train. That train is liable to choo- os o DEPARTMENT STORE - MOSCOW choo somebody permanently to- morrow afternoon. There is .no excess baggage when Fred Mll- WHERE STUDENT BUSINESS IS APPRECIATED ton travels. Page 14 DAILY EVE,RGREEN october 27. 1967 '1\ Church Services ASSEMBLY OF GOD CHAPEL News horizons broadening 612 Campus, Pullman. Sunday School - 10:00 a.m.; Morning Worship - 11:00 a.m.; Social Hour 6:15 p.m.; Evening Service - 7:00 p.m, Ralph E. declares veteran reporter Mader, Minister. CHURCH OF CHIRST "Generally speaking, the hor- "If I were 21 again and pick- 901 Stadium Way; ED 2-3233. izons of journalism are broad- ing out a career I am pretty Paul Vertz, Preacher. Hours ening. The over-all picture is sure I would select journalism," of Services Sunday: Bible study, bright. Two great inventions-- K il gall e n reflected." Being a 9:30 a.m. Worship, 10:30 a.m.; Radio and Television - are con- newspaper man is an important Evening Service, 6:00 p.m ,; tributing to the situation." calling, and a decidedly interest- Thursday Ladies' Bible Study, With these words, James L. ing one." 10:00 a. m, Mid - week Bible Kilgallen, nationally pub 1i shed From his own experiences he Study, 7:00 p.m, College accred- journalist and veteran newsman, turned the topic to journalism ited Bible courses through the sum marized the future of journa- as a career for today's college Pullman Bible Center. lism for his audience in Kim- graduate. COMMUNITY CONGREGATION- brough Hall Auditorium last "If you have a strong desire to AL CHURCH night. become a newspaper man or wo- 409 Campus. T. C. Edquist Sun- Kilgallen's speech marked the man, and you have initiative and day Schedule: Church School: end of a three day visit on camp- imagination, an aptitude for writ- 10:30; Worship 10:45. Campus us as the guest of Sigma Delta ing, a willingness to work hard Ministry: The Common Ministry, Chi, nat ion a I pro f e s s tonal and are looking for an interest- Koinonia House. 904 Thatuna, journalism honorary. Duringthat ing occupation, I'd say yes, go in ST. JAMES' EPISCOPAL time he addressed several com- for journalism.' CHURCH munications classes both here He went on to com ment that 1200 Stadium Way. 8:00 a.rn, - and at the University of Idaho, though mergers have diminished Holy Communion (every Sunday). as well as taping a TV show. the number of large metropolitan 9:30 a.rn, - Family Service (Holy A professional SDX dinner for dailies, job opportunities in jour- Communion on 2nd Sunday). 11:00 faculty members and their wives nalism are still good. The growth a.rn, - Service (Holy Communion was held in Kilgallen's honor at of radio, TV and suburban news- on 1st - 3rd Sunday). _ a Pullman restaurant preceding papers have opened a wide scope JEWISH DISCUSSION G R 0 U P his speech last night. of jobs for future journalists. Jim Kilgallen Monthly meetings and Sunday Kilgallen opened his comments Killgallen encouraged news- School. First open house Friday, to the Kimbrough audience with paper work as a good stepping journalists were fir s t news- ized the traits that would make Sept. 29, 13:00 at the horne of recollections of his more than stone to other careers in mass paper men. The networks seem to them successful journalists. sixty years in journalism. Dr. & Mrs. Adolph Hecht, 306 media. "The best Radio and TV prefer those who have newspaper "First of all, a reporter should Derby. For information call Mrs. experience. " be accurate. Never fake anything. Adolph Hecht, LO 4-4262 or Mrs. The immergence of women in Get it right and write it right." Carl Cagan, ED 2-2946. the field of journalism was not- Secondly, he stres sed tact as an ed by the veteran reporter who THE PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH invaluable asset to a reporter. Stadium Way at Gaines Road. recalled when "there was" a "A tactfUl approach often helps Morning Worship: 9:30 and 11:00 strong prejudice against women a great deal in getting an ex- in the newspaper business." a.m. Rev. J. Edgar Pearson, clusive story. And it's an in- Minister. Church Phone: ED 2- "Today," he remarked "wo- dication of character when you men are accepted in full equality. 1441. give your best to every story, class of 1987 They have proved they can get big or small.' SIMPSON METHODIST CHURCH and write news and features as In drawing upon his life-long Phone LO 8-5761. 1105 Maple well as the best of the male Ave. William G. Berney, Pastor. experiences in newspaper work staffers. " to illustrate his comments, Kll- Cooperating in the Common His own daughter the late Dor- Ministry offices in Koinonia galIen proved the truth of his re- othy Kilgallen was a noted col- mark "no two days are alike." House, 904 Thatuna. Sunday, 9 umnist and one of the first wo- a.m, Worship and Church School "What other job offers such men to attain real prominence in variety?" he asked "In what for all ages (till 10:30). 11 a.rn, the news world. Worship and Church School for other line would you be dealing In offering his advice to men with a skid row character one pre - school youngsters only. and women alike aspiring to a Junior and Senior MYFs, 6 p.m, day and perhaps a pres1dential news career, Kllgallen emphas- candidate the next?' Youth Choir Rehearsal, 10:30 a.rn, Tuesday 9:45 a.rn, Spiritual Growth Group Thursday 7 p.m., Senior Choir Friday 4 p.rn., (hem scientist says Junior Choir. SAiNT THOMASMORE CHAPEL, 1201 Maiden Lane, LO 8-8821. Sunday Mass at 10 and 11:30 a.m, corrosion big enemy and 4:30 p.m, Tues.-Fri. Mass at 4:30 p.m., confessions pre- Corrosion is one of the nation's gram," he said. ceding. Sat. confessions 4 - 5 p.rn, biggest enemies--with an annual "The process industries such Father J. Severyn Westbrook. tab of around $10 billion, a WSU as pulp and paper, oil refining, BETHANY BAPTIST CHURCH research scientist recently re- rubber, paints, raw and refined 1503 Ruby, Pullman. Sunday vealed. chemicals and many others are School 9:45 a.m., Morning wor- Mark F. Adams, head of the beset by corrosion from all sides. ship 10:50 a.rn., Bible Doctrine chemical research section of the The transportation in d u s t r i e s class 6:00 p.rn., Evening ser- College of Engineering Research bear a heavy part ofthe cor-reston vice 7:00 p.rn., Mid-week ser- Division, said that of the total costs in damage to combusron en- vice 7:30 p.m., Wednesday. ·Pas- annual cost of cor roston, at least gines, exhaust systems, rarls, tor Ronald Breckel, 303 City $5 billion is spent on preventative internal and external wing struc- View, LO 7-8041. measures such as paint, special tures. alloys, cathodic protection and "The food processing indus- TRINITY LUTHERANCHURCH& special metallic coatings. tries have to be particularly STUDENT CENTER, 2200 Ly- The remainder of the amount, watchful agaInst corroston be- becker; PH: ED 2-1985 Philip he said, is spent for uncontrolled By the time this young fellow is ready for col- cause corrosion products cause Engstrom, Karl Ufer - pastors corroston due to negligence, in- contamination of the finished pro- Sunday services at 9:00 & 11: 15 lege, electricity - "the energy of progress"- difference, ins u ffic i e n tknow- duct, while at the same time the a.rn, Adult & StudentStudyClass, ledge and ignorance of existing corrosion decreases the useful- 10: 15 a.rn, Lutheran Student As- will have helped make more wonderful knowledge. ness of the process equipment." sociation (LSA), 5:30 p.rn, Stu- '''Manage ment is neg 11g e n t changes in our way of living, education and Adams said "the farmer, the dent Center open daily for meet- when it is informed that a corr o- ings & study Campus Office - transportation. sion problem exists, including a housewife, the business execu- Koinonia House, Room 4. picture of costs and savings, tive, the youngster and his toys-- CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE Right now your investor-owned electric light and still does not follow through all are involved in this business 105 South High, 9:45 a.rn, Church and power company is sharing in research on a corrosion mitigation pro- of corrosion." School, 9:50 a.m, College hour, 4 11:00 a.m, Worship, 7:00 a.m. and development projects in the electric power u------Chapel hour. Edwin E. Crawford, I I Pastor - Phone LO 7-5612. field that will make tomorrow better than to- PULLMAN BAPTIST CHURCH day. While we're working to provide the Spring and East Main. Rev. David best possible electric service now, we're also !THE ROYAL RESTAURANT! A. Leach, Pastor. 9:30 a.rn, Church School; 11:00 a.m, Wor- at work to make the future better with electric ship Service. service that's ever more useful, dependable ! PRESENTS THE FIFERS THE CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST and low in price. No matter how many new i OF THE LATTER-DAY SAINTS. and wonderful ways young folks of the future I EVERY FRIDAY AND SATURDAY I 1610Orchard Drive, Pullman Uni- find to use it! versity Ward, Fenton E. Larsen, I IN THE I Bishop ED 2-1159 ED 2-1151 Sunday: Priesthood Meeting 9 a.m, Relief Society 9 a.m., Sun- day School 10:30 a.m., Sacrement Meeting 7 p.rn, ~ ! LEGEND ROOM ! Monday: Relief SOciety 7:30 p.rn, mE WASHINGTON WATER POWER COMPANY Friday MIA 7:30 p.m, Institute : 917 GRAND ST. LO 7-5011 I of Religion: Richard Modey I I Director ED 2-1151 ED 2-2239. ._------October 27~ 1967 DAILY EVERGREEN Page 15 Drugs concern

(continued from Page 3) legalized because of the fact that we aren't sure of the entire effect what I've heard about it, there's they're going to have-s-the medi_ nothing wrong with it really any- cal effect as well as the psycholo- more than drinking. It's just gical effect. They haven't been in that it would be so much easier use popularly that long for us to to, say, smoke marijuana wh.ile know." you're driving and become ID- "I think the harmful results fluenced than it would be to, either equal or outweigh the es_ 1961 .V.W. excellent condition, drink." thetic effects, so to speak." For custom - made draperies Park VIllage, #76, Moscow. HOUSING with serged center seams, side Three Room Hatch-lor Apt., and bottom hems blindstitched furnished, walking distance cam- MOTORCYCLES Call LO 8-5771. pus, available December Lst, ED 2-1782. 1966 Honda 250 Scrambler, ______1,300 miles LO 7-24Bl. ANNOUNCEMENT Sublease, two bedroom Apt,; 11166Honda C.B.160 Scrambler Westinghouse Stack-up washer LO 7-3972. equiped plus original equipment. and dryer priced to sell. Call ED 2-2501, Dave Carolyn, ED 5-451B. Not satisfied with your present living conditions? Want a male roommate. Jr. or Sr. in B.A. '64 Honda 90, New paint and tires, carrier, motor guard preferred. $60-$65 total living For Sale 40 cu. f 0 0 t Com- expense. Call Dick Roberts ED 2- sprocket with carrier, helmet mercial refrigerator, four doors, 2125 after 7:00. and mirrors. LO 7-9495 after ic e compartment, exc ell en t 5:00. working condition. ContactHouse Manager, Phi Kappa Tau, ED 2- CARS '63 Honda, dream, 250 C.C., 2503. 1954 Plymouth Wagon for sale, Wayne, ED-5-5713. very reasonable runs good. See Larsen, 308 Oak, Apt. 1 after 5. Eric Gustafson stereo components, recorders, 1967 305Scrambler. Excellent, cameras new, used, major brands ANN BOREN, sophomore - 1949 Milk truck ED 5-3856. helmet 2,200 miles, $600. ED2 best prices repair facilities Hup- "I'm against it being legalized 2501. Doug. pin's HiFi and Photo W419 Main personally, because I've seen, '64 Volkswagen, excellent con- Spokane. some of the bad effects of it. dition, ED 5:3694, Room 326 I mean, I've never had it, but between 6-7:30 p.m., weekdays JOBS I've talked to hippies and things only. 30" Range, $35.00; 9 cu. ft. and just from their experiences, Refrigerator with separate fre- a lot of them were converted Babysitting wanted, good with ezing compartment $50.00 See into becoming hippies because Clean 1963 Plymouth 4 door children and experienced. Phone Paul Barnes at 802 Kamiaken, sedan 6 cylinder standard shift. LO 7-6541 before 4:00. they liked it. But generally, I Room 3 after 5:30 weekdays. LO 7-0011. think they regretted it. "I would say it should not be made legal. I think, if it was 1957 M.G. A. , New engine, $750 Dance to the "Journey's End". made legal, there would be a LO 7-4551. Call Doug Gross, ED 5-5281, big mad rush to try it and I 133 Gannon. think it would die down after For sale: 1962 Corvette, good a while. I don't think that the condition, $1750. Call Moscow 882-4016. rise would continue in a trend."_ LOST: Brown rimmed, every- Sewing wanted LO 4-9483. day glasses, if found notify ED '61 Cadillac, New tires, excel- 5-5706, James Baldwin. lent condition. LO-7-2083. Wanted part-time service sta- "It seems to me that if you 1964 V. W. excellent condt- tion attendants, experience pre- Used Furniture sale Saturday, say they're all legal, then you're tion ED5-4636 or LO-8 5012. ferred. LO-7-7951 after 5:00. October 28, Regents Hall, base- opening it up to everyone to par- ment, starts 10:00 a.rn, take, and I'm equating it With 4 Chev. Mag. Wheels $125 like alcohol. new. LO 4-5224. "In other words, some people 'SBLOOD Staff for copy dis- Wanted to join car pool from argue that alcohol gives the same '60 Plymouth V-8 Sport Fury, tribution call Kent Smith. L04 Spokane to Pullman daily. Call type of feeling and everything. $350 .or best offer ED 2-1446. 7095 or Claudia Bushman, LO~7 LO 7-4121 or FA 5-5578 in But a lot more is known about 0712. Spokane after 7:30. alcohol." "I think that there's still so much to be learned about these JOURNEY'S Wanted drummer for Country drugs that it would really not Western Band. Phone ED2-1724 LOST: Gold Parker Pen, en- be beneficial to treat them as after 5:00. graving. If found call ED 5-3984 alcohol, and this is the argument ask for Clyde. ' that some people say •. _. like END letting everybody have them." Barbie Vaughn , "Another thing is, I feel that Rock & Soul BARBARA VAUGHN, senior- not only do we need to know more "No, I don't thiro. they should be about them medically, Doug Gross & MISCELLANEOUS LOST: Phi Delt membership pin between Library and Ful- Associates mer, reward. ED2-2605, Larry U.S. coins buy, sell, trade. Hunt. 7he{Y}¥ WQV IV catch ED 5-5281 133 Gannon ED 2~3986. ------~e Road RunnerISat JOUt PlytnOfllh [)e;J/etS. He's bugged about Evergreen

~ > Classified Ad being only

6¢a word. Call ED 5-4573

Old Education Building,

(across from the

hospital) Page 16 DAILY EVERGREEN October 27, l!J67 I .-.------.---.------~---~------. -~-- Profs and students Savio released from iail BEltKEL EY, Calif. CAP)- Ma- ver s ity of California B,'rkcley rio Savio WJ5 relased from jail campus in 1964. Wednesday after ser ving 120 days Munic ipal Court Judge Floyd of a 200-day jail term stemming Talbot suspended a $366 fin2 and I: plan hostel retreat from his leadership of the free the remaining 80 days in jail. He s pee c h movement on the Uni- said Savio was a model prisoner. "A retreat should mean some- thin&' hut the bare essentials," a possible :'beach-in" and "Any- thing personal. That's why we're adding that ra ingear is necessary one can do W[I.1t he likes whenever getting away from campus," said and gr ubbies are de rigeur. he likes" Pr imruso said. Dna Primrose, chairman of the "Anyone who can should bring Panel discussions, short talks Hostel Committee, The commit- a mus ica ..: instrument," he said. ani g,nGr.lJ conversation with and tee is sponsoring an upperclass- Entertainment will be spontan- by students as well as professors man-faculty retreat at Camp Lu- eous and not structured. There's are the main body of the retreat. LOOK FOR ~SBLOOD .--._- ..._----_ ..-_ --_- tharhavan on Lake Couer dtAlana . today, tomorrow and Sun-Jay, r- - -_-_-_.__ _-----, In 1. final co-ordinating meet- ing Oct. 24, Primrose reiterat- I Everybody's Welcome I Toda4-- (Distributed at ed the aims of the new retreat. I It's aimed at drawing out the I buried interest in the university I I random points on campus) that upperclassmen have. If these at the SPRUCE TAVERN interests didn't begin until this I I year, or if they weren't reached I before, or if the student stiffled I 15¢ per issue them in the interest of grades, I Home of the famous SPRUCE BURGER I they dominate now. I There's a balanced ratio :Je- \, Guy W. DeVaney, Owner Moscow, Idaho Phllle TU 2-9981 I tween different classes as well I as undergraduate am graduate students. There are also, for the first time, three foreign studen'.s, One hundred people are par- ticipating. There are 80 students: 58 from living groups, 10 by spe- cial Invttation, six graduate stu- dents, three ASWSU officers; and 20 professors. Transportation begins at Rog- ers Field House and Bohler Gym today at 2; 00. At 4; 00 and 5; 00 BOOKIE'S respectively, two ROTC buses will load. Private and professor driven state cars are also avail- able. Stressing warm clothes, Prim- rose warned, "Don't bring any- ,14th ANNUAL Sigma Chi's win campus-alum hassle over racial clause OCTOBER The presidents of the Univer- sity of Oregon and Oregon State University have told the Sigma Chi Fraternity chapters at their schools that they will be permit- ted to remain on campus, Arthur Fleming, UO, and Ja- mes Jensen, OSU, had given the fraternity until wed n e s day to SOCK show why its Oregon and Ore- gon State chapters should not be k icke d ofi cam nus ,or nrac- ticing racial and ~eligiou; dis- crimination in the selection of SALE their members. Sigma Chi had been charged with violating antidiscrim tnatioa MEN'S SHOP ..... rules set down by the Oregon State Boar d of Higher Educa- tion. 69c and 99, Fraternity officers informed the two school pre::;[:l:.!"ts Wi.>;l,. nesday that their national organ- ization had given the two-Oregon- based chapters permission to ig- nore vetoes of national alumni in the selection of members. The pr es idents of the Oregon and Oregon State chapters guar- anteed presidents Flemming and Jensen that they now have full autonomy in selecttng pledges, in compliance with state rules .. COED SHOP ..... Controversy arose last year When a Sigma Chi alumnus liv- ing in San Diego vetoed ElP. a:j- mission of a boy 0; Japanese 2 for $1.09 d·~s(;:~ai into the Oregon State chapter . The boy later became a mem- Stunning Stems Nylons ber, howevsr , It was reported that the grant- ing of temporary autonomy to ih{~ Oregon a.id Oregon State chapter s Regular 2 for I.39 was the result of a special mue t-. lng of Sigma Chi national officers called last week by the national grand consul, Floyd Baker of Denver. (mesh or plain) Normally, Stgma Chi chapters do not have free selection of pledges at the local level. **** A press breakdown at the Id-. ahonian printing plant caused late delivery of the Wednesday edi- tion of the Daily Evergreen. The paper, which is nor mally deliv- ered at 6 a.rn . was not printed until 7 a.lJl.