- Campus Crier VOLUME 28, NUMBER 15 Sue, North Win Blood Drive Award Sue Lombard and North Halls have won the Bill Case Memorial Plaque given to the dorms that donate the most blood in the Red Cross Blood drive. The drive was held this Tuesday in the main lounge of the CUB. Sue's girls gave a total of 21 pints. North donated 19 pints. The rest of the dorms added 93 • pints for a college total of 133. The runners-up were Carmody and Montgomery Halls. The males on campus contributed 79 pints and the women gave 64. Donors from Sue were: Shirley Larkin, Marsha Glenn, Jan Kan- . enwisher, Marilyn Scheda, Ann Cusworth, Janet Hortier, Donna Bell, Dana Byfield, Laverne Rob­ erts, Darlene Brown, Helen Argus, Sandra Taylor, Ann Coulston, Don­ na Follin, Bev Nicholas, Bobby Carter, Marlehe Hoff, Louise Ross, Marjorie Turkovitch, Joanne Ris- don and Sandra Cox. North men included: Jim Clark, Bill Chapmen, Ted Wood, Wayne Johnson, Roy Gurney, Tom Newell, Alden Esping, Keith Murrilles, John Lloyd, Kay Kabota, Dean , Carr, Dee Monson, Wayne Roe, Jack Parcell, Danny Divelbiss, Dave -Divelbiss, Jerry McManus, Mike Lacey, and Jerry Lundquist. Others donating were: John Li- boky, Phil Poppleton, Don Stand- ley, Mary Wining, Mary Jo Wood- head, Neil Wallace, Pat Greenland, Larry Bowen, Ray*Stuhlmiller, Jti- dy Allan, Bill Tucker, Bob Dodge, Marita Shea, Dick Wilson, Judy Rombauer, Joan Pierce, Don Haw­ kins, Bob Wold, Dave Trosky, Ann Spence, Sue McAllister, Bev Farm­ er, Carolyn Shoemaker, Dick Rob­ ertson, Donna Rose. Wayne Keener, Oscar Lindahl, (Continued on Page 4) SSA Cards Needed For Registration "Students must have their SGA cards to register March 26," said Dr. E. E. Samuelson this week. About 15 to 20 students have not claimed their cards yet. They have been notified and shoidd get them as soon as pos­ sible^ he added. The photographer will be available to take pictures of those who do not have SGA cards. That will include new students and those who have lost their cards. SGA cards will be validated for spring quarter at the time of regis­ tration. ELLENSBURG, WASH. FRIDAY, MARCH 2, 1956 The Silver Cord' Closes Tonight Tonight is the last time to see E. Allyn Thompson's dra­ matic production in SweecyScope, "The Silver Cord". The show with three dimensional characters in bold color, will began ^at 8:15 in the college auditorium. "Actually the setting for the -i2 : ' .--I,: MM :+»:• mm i&M'' **#*• :«*'• ' , ' / - - J * v* V «j mm imm J play does give the wide-screen ef­ fect with its low ceiling. This] is made more evident after the sec­ ond scene which makes the stage look quite small," explained Thompson. : The play opened last night to an enthusiastic audience. They, seemingly completely enjoyed the. suspenseful, dramatic production ^ Special mention for its success-, should go to its director, Thomp­ son, and to the cast, Jack Turner,' Maria Lember, Barbara Michle- son, John Draper and Barbara Marker. Students on the production staff include: Patti Clark, Vera LeVes- conte, Elaine Johnson, Steve Dout- rich, Ken Brown, Rich Nichols, Jack Lybyer, Jack Hall, Joanne Risdon, Mary Pennington, . Helen Rasmussen, G 1 a d y s Coe, Joy Barsotti,, Phyllis Roc.kne, Roger Berghoff, Gary Brown, Dick Win-r inar and Deloris Filleau. . i-.-.-.r- CAST MEMBERS of "The Silver Cord" were seen in the first presentation of the winter quar­ ter play last night. Seated, from left: Barbar* Harker, Maria Lember, Barbara Michelsen and Jack Turner. Standing are John Draper and Vera LeVeseonte. Central Singers Present Last Concert Thursday The Central Singers will make their first formal appearance this year in assembly in the college auditorium next Thursday. The 70-voice choir under the leadership of Wayne Hertz, Pro­ fessor of Music, will present music from. the Seventeenth through the Twentieth centuries. : The first jiection includes ' 'Glory Tonight 8:15—"The Silver Cord, auditori­ um'.'. • After play—Co-Rec night, CUB Tomorrow ..7 p.m.—Dime movie, "Strangers on a Train," auditorium. After movie—Alford hall all-col­ lege dance, gym. March 7 8:15—Frances Yeend community concert, auditorium. / ^ March 8 11—Central Singers assembly, auditorium. March 9 j 7 p.m.—Dime movie, "The Gun- fighter," auditorium. '' 9—Munro all-college dance, gym. March 10 8 p.m.—Dime movie, "Hondo," auditorium. '« * March 11 8:15—Channing Club film, "Or­ pheus," auditorium. March 12 3:45—Professional actor's presen­ tation, "David the King," auditori­ um. March 14, 15, 16 FINAL TESTS To God iti The Highest'' By" Francfe, "Lord Who is My Guide But Thee" by Schutz, "Our Father Thou Art My God" by Lekberg. The second section will feature the Madrigal Singers, after, which the choir will sing "Gallows Tree" by Scott, "Daniel Daniel" by Moore, "There's a City Called Heaven" by Page. The program will conclude with the "I am an American" by Dra­ gon narrated by Jack Turner. * Soloists throughout the program are Jack Turner, Phyllis Reynolds, Bob Poutt, Lois Koski, Ed Faust, Wayne Calkins, Ed Sand and TwyJla Gibb. On Monday April 2 the choir begins its spring tour. The choir will sing in Selah, Highland, Top- penish, Grandview, Sunnyside and Naches. They will return *o sing the spring concerts on April 4 and then will begin the tour .again the fol­ lowing Monday April 9. The next two days they will sing in.Moses Lake, Othello, Pasco, Wapato and Yakima. , ^ A highlight of the tour will be an appearance on KIMA-TV. Alford Sponsors Dance Saturday Alford Hail Is sponsoring a dance in the men's gymnasium this coming Saturday night. Tlie dance will be held from 9 to 12. Admission will be 25 centsJfor couples and 15 cents for stags. Music will be provided. S88«g8%gg8w WS8S&fiWS# Xi ««5 ^p^jSaiMiiiiiiiiiiwiiii mii «a msft xm gg ras.A. *(H9K . XW V NEW HONOR COUNCIL MEMBERS join the remaining two for the remainder of the school year. Left to right, Chuck Saas, Marie Fugate, Chuck Schmutz, Joanne Sullivan, Dave Divelbiss and Dorothy Barich. Saas, Miss Sullivan, Divelbiss and Miss Barich were elected in last week's voting. Procedures Set For Jlegistration Registration for spring quarter according to Perry Mitchell regis­ trar will be on March 26. Classes begin March 27. General advisors will be in their offices rather than at the library as has been the procedure in the past. Students will receive cards in the mail stating what, time they are to - register with the Deans. They will be allowed to register only at the stated time, and must bring their cards with them, Students will have until March 27 to pay their fees for quarter. Final Test Dates Given The final test schedule was re­ leased last week by the Registrar's office. Wednesday: 1-3, all English classes 100 and 103 3-5, fifth period daily 3-4, fifth period MWF 4-5, fifth period TTh. Thursday: 9-11, sixth period daily 9-10, sixth period MWF, 10- 11, sixth period TTh 1-3. seventh period daily 1-2, seventh period MWF 2-3, seventh period TTh 3-5 first period daily 3-4 first peri­ od MWF 4-5, first period TTh. Friday: 8-10, second period daily 8-9, second period MWF 9-10, second period TTh 11-12, all period classes 1-3, third daily 1-2, third period 2-3, third period TTh, 3-5, period daily 3-4, eighth MWF, 4-5, ^eighth period fourth period MWF, eighth period TTh. All given spring Application Date Sef For Associate Editor Applications for associate edi­ tor of the CRIER for spring quarter will be duo on March 7. The job pays $7.50 an Issue. Students interested in the job must write an application stat­ ing qualifications and experi­ ence, and turn the application into Director of Publications Bonnie Wiley's office. Gets Queen Lois Koski reigned as queen of the Colonial Ball Friday night. Princesses were Bonnie Maitlen and Peggy Wood. Wally Johnson SGA president crowned the blond queen with a tiara of red roses and white carnations and present­ ed her with the royal bouquet of American Beauty roses. A crowd of approximately 150 couples wit­ nessed the coronation. Sherry Gage daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George Gage brought the flowered crown to the throne for the ceremony. Music for the dance was by the Hi-Fis from Yakima. The decora­ tions theme was that of a southern colonial garden with trellis gar­ den pool and pillared columns. Blue and white were prevailing colors. QUEEN LOIS KOSKI reigned over last Friday's Colonial ball, which was held in the gym. Princesses were Peggy Wood and Bonnie Maitlen. Nearly 300 attended the dance, which is a social highlight of winter quarter. final examinations will be at the scheduled time. Page Two THE CAMPUS CRIER FRIDAY, MARCH 2, 1956 No Pre-Registration No pre-registration! This lament has been echoed and re-echoed by students since the announcement was made of no pre-registration for next quarter. "I won't get my classes!" "They can't get everyone through in one day, anyway!" These comments accompany the lamentations of the students, who are looking at the sit.ua.* tion as if they, alone, were affected. But Registrar Perry Mitchell not only has some answers to the students, but also some points on the other sid'e of the ledger. - . Students will get their classes as easily as they fall quarter ' there was no mass confusion during registration in the library last fall.. And here is what no pre-registration means to others. Students with money have complained about having to pay , pre-registration fees for January board and room in December, while students without money who cannot pre-register say they : are being penalized with closed classes on registration day. Some - students cannot pre-register because their adviser is out of town or is otherwise unaccessible. The instructors complain that students miss classes for pre- registration, and advisers say they are interrupted between or occasionally during classes for their signatures. Finally, the ad­ visers say that, as most of the students pre-register, they must sit all day in the library for only the few advisees that remain. In the business office and registrar's office, as well as the offices of the deans, pre-registration is a headache. Mr. Mitchell says, "It takes us four days to get ready for it, five days to go through it, and then we have to do the job again on registration day." And after pre-registration, several days are devoted to erasing from the tally sheets the classes of the several hundred students who did not pay their fees. Originally, pre-registration was started with the desire to keep students in college only about 200 registered early for several years. The total has gradually grown so that 950 stu­ dents pre-registered for winter quarter . . . thus defeating the purpose of registration. Since retaining students from quarter to quarter is no problem* all that is now being done now is switching back registration to registration day. rS' . fes-' Looking Back... 1955 Jimmy Allen, Joyce Barn- hart, Larry Engelsen and Dick Schutte were elected as new Honor Council members this week. 1954 Voting on the amendment which will enable SGA to amend toe" con­ stitution .is slated for Tuesday, and Wednesday.' / .'•,*• . *• ' "• r 1953 o. H. Glenn Hogue stepped down last week as advisor for Hy- akcm after 23 years. 15 years ago • Fully recovered from injuries re- i ceived in an auto accident on the Vantage highway in January, Miss . Mary Simpson, kindergarten-pri- mary supervisor, returned to her desk in the CES Monday. 30 years ago Owsky, wow, wow, whee—for the first time a girl has been elected yell queen in a North­ west college. Margarete Car­ penter, who scored 206 points on physique compared to a mean average of 186, was the winner in all trials. Next autumn the Central football team will be urged on by the new yell queen in bobbed hair and short skirts. -AY-: V„: . \ •" . - • ' . - \V. ?•*: Browsings - v • . . - - •: * :7 : . . v? '.. Kenneth Roberts has returned to . his. beloved Maine coast in a new novel. An adventure of shipwreck and "survival, BOON ISLAND is a book which you will not be able to put down until you have read through the last page. The nar­ rator, Miles Whitworth, who is a young Oxford student, assembles the characters in Greenwich, Eng­ land, through a strange series of circumstances culminating in an unplanned killing, and subsequent­ ly finds himself aboard the Notting­ ham Galley heading for Ports­ mouth, New Hampshire. In his company are the admirable Cap­ tain Dean and his epileptic brother, the good Swede butler and his de­ voted and precocious . son, Moses, (known as Neal), the intolerable, never-do-right Mr. Langman and eight other crew members includ­ ing idlers and cowards. Mr. Roberts is convincing in the apparent accuracy with which he describes the physical scenes of his book, and his style is excellent. It would be difficult to envision a vocabulary more ably chosen to make a reader live in the situa­ tions described, even though Mr. Roberts writes in the language ot \ * What do you think of no pre- registration f o r spring quarter? Loree Sliffe, junior: "There will be too many people to put thrqugh in a day, and there., won't, be time to see your a d v i s o r s and talk with __________ them. I just don't see how they can hope to hold registration in one day." Jack Lybyer, junior "Well, you have to come back-a day ear­ lier. I liked pre- registration be­ cause you could get the classes you wanted dur­ ing your spare hours. It took me only one hour last time and I didn't miss any classes." Gladys Coe, freshman: "We. can stay out on vaca­ tion a day longer with pre - regis­ tration. Besides that, we can get it over before we go home and we don't have to worry about it. One day of reg­ istration would be awful—it wo pretty long day." or: "I think pre- registration is a good thing, but I had to stand in line four hours. I don't see how they can have registratio n in one day. At Gon- zaga we had a whole week to register. But if Uiey don't get any better facilities, it might as well be dropped." Peggy Orr, senior: "One day registr ation " saves kids from skipping classes, but pre-registra- -'-i tion gives "you a better chance to ^ 'get the classes you want . . . particularly the because the un- upperclass men, derclassmen have to take . the Gung Ho By Ah-So On© big flash for you people with the appetite for lousy liter­ ature is here . . . . for you! Through native Infested territory, through terrain crawling with beasties, over glacial clad craigs,. did the bearer of this message trek. Our correspondent from Ft. Vancouver has risked his career to give we-uns a graphic view of his pioneer life in (he wilds of the Northwest. Ron, better known to us as the Great White Hunter of Pastosa Plains or Conquerer of Peasant Pads, has at last contacted AhrSo and contributed the following for your pleasure. Brace yourselves, this is life. QUOTE: Well, tell all the local Ed Ma­ jors, quivering and slobbering in tear of student teaching, to buck up. America's uninhibited youth is the most exciting tool in the world to work with. The first day - I walked smilingly into class, they stoned me in a truly amiable fashion. Since then I've gained their confidence to such a degree that this morning they friendily threw lighted matches at me in a display of good fel­ lowship. I was touched at heajrt. I was also touched a few other places and still can't sit down. Thank you. Ron-san you. have gained a toe hold in the arts with this contribution. Have you been having trouble with your mother-in-law-san? Is there strife between you and your little lotus blossom? Do you have difficulty in getting away from home pagoda? If you have these problems , or. any similar ones you must put the all-college play down in your ac­ tivity record. Go see how two sons are wrapped around their mother's soiled little finger. The "Silver Cord" is playing tonight at the College Auditorium in Sweecy- scope. Sally onv oyer , to see it. |You will gilt S.G A4 card's worth.- , Have discovered most ilhnoral way of free entertainment imag­ inable. Believe mc, it took a let of research, but i managed. What is so glorious about the whole deal is that you can get away with it. Here it is: Go over to the li­ brary', head for the stacks, then turn around real quick and wait to be let out to the bird-dog lane of the libe. Be sure the girl that pushes {he release button is trig­ ger happy, and as you go through the turnstiles .walk very slow and casual. Man, what a charge if you can claim a healthy posterior portion of protoplasm. It's free! Ed Sand, an early 18th century narrator, classes they get, anyway/' The holiday of the. feast of the Samri in recognition of opening Golden Doors 1 of Happiness is still being celebrated. Must now go to take care of all little problems ere they get bigger Will see you there. campus ener Telephone 2-4002 — 2-2191 —v Member — Associated Press Intercollegiate Press Associated Collegiate Press Published every Friday, except test week and holidays, during the year and by-weekly during summer session as the official publication of the Stu­ dent Government Association of Cen­ tral Washington College, Ellensburg, Subscription rates, $3 per year. Print­ ed by the Record Press, Ellensburg. Entered as second class matter at the Ellensburg post office. Represented for national advertising by National Advertising Services, Inc., 420 Madison Ave., New York City. Editor Roger Asselstine Associate Editor. Sylvia Stevens Wire Editor .....Cherie Winney Sports Editor.. ...Rollie Dewing Assistant Sports Editor, Dave Perkins Business Manager. Roger -Salisbury Advertising Managers— Jeray Holmes, Bill Bourn Photographers— Joe Wilcoxson, Bert Hojme& Staff: Marilyn Trolson, Janice Kotch- koe, Sharon Saeger, Laura Williams, Dick Weber, Dave Ellingson, Shirley VyiMoughby, .John Daniels, Gary Our , ley, Loree Sliffe, Shirley Ann Shirley, Janice Vinson, Ciiff Asplund, Patti Clark, Qloria- Brondello, . CJaudetto Luce. ....... XriwfclT : amiji .•iRpir» Seaslfc^WJiey LITTLE MAN ON 'CAMPUS c m : P.g h. «. "AFTK LOOKING OVER YOLK GRAPES TP SAY VOU BOTH HAD SEVERAL FACTORS WORKING AGAINST YOU - THE FACULTY' Behave -'.rj.y SGA Meeting: Council As Education SGA council members were on their best behavior Monday night' as observers from the Education for Leadership class were present. Jerry Jones reported that $10,051.96 was in the general fund as of Jan. 31, with $110 having been spent in the social fund. He con­ tinued by reporting on the investigation of SGA budgets, which h? been requested by the council twos- weeks . ago. JOnes had talked about the matter with the college busi­ ness manager ti find out about what the SGA should be paying for and what the college should pay. After hearing reports from other schools of educa­ tion,, the council voted to have the committee continue ihvesii- gaitmg the matter. Colieen Moore reported on send­ ing letters to the University of Alabama and Roosevelt Univer­ sity as had been requested by the council. Dorm representatives report­ ed that students were pleased "with recent meals in the din­ ing halls. Ross Simmons asked about SGA financial assistance for club dele­ gates who are attending conven­ tions, as Arnold Air Society would appreciate help in sending one delegate. After discussion on what groups merit help, a committee was appointed to form a policy on tliis type, of assistance, and pre­ sent ti at the next meeting. Com­ mittee members are Mel Beau- champ, Mike Lacey, ^Ross Sim­ mons. Dean Wake, Connie Nichols and Ann Coulston. • Wally Johnson commented . on letters from officials work­ ing on the ECS A and PSPA meetings to be held this year. , The ECSA annual meeting will 1*5 held at CPS this year, and the PSPA meeting will be held at UBC, with Central cooper- ating. Dad's Day co-chairmen were, un­ able to appear with an evaluation, but the council had been asked to set the date for next year'j Dad's Day. Considerable discus­ sion was held on the disadvantages of holding it winter quarter, and suggestions for a Parent's Day were made. The 1957 date will not be set until the evaluation is heard. Church Notices BEREAN CLUB The Berean Club will meet at 505 North Kittitas this Sunday at from 5:30 to 7 p.m. "Justified by Faith" is the Bible study sub-, ject. Refreshments will be served. NEWMAN CLUB Johnny Lybyer is the newly elected president of Newman Club. The next meeting will be held, this Sunday at 5 r30 in the St. Andrew's Catholic Church. Holy Week will be the topic -for discussion. Sand­ wiches dessert and ^jpffee will be served. A college boy is laziness with peach-fuzz on iter face, idiocy with lanolin on its hair, and the "Hope of the Future" with an overdrawn bank book in its pocket. . : A college boy is a cornposi^ • - he has ^he energy .ofe^a R^ Van Winkle, the shyness o£-.a Mj'c Micawber, the practicality of a Don Quixote, the kindness of i Marquis de Sade, the imagination of Bill Sykes, the aspirations of a Casanova and when he wants something it is usually money, He. likes good liquor, bad liquor cancelled classes, double features Playtex ads and girls on football weekends. He is not much for hopeful mothers, irate fathers sharp-eyed ushers, campus guards, alarm clocks or letters from the dean. A college boy is a magical crea?, ture—you can lock him out of your heart, but not out of your bank account. You can get him off your mind, but you can't get him off your expense account He is *' a no-account, giri-chasing bundle of worry. But when you come home at night with only the shattered pieces of hope and dreama, he can make them seem mightily insig­ nificant with four magic words: "I flunked out, Dad."—ACP. k ii for Who Need Humor These definitions of college life have been put forth by student publications all over the United States in the past few months DIPLOMA: A sheepskin that a, graduate used to pull the wool over some employer's eyes. ^ CRAMMING: The desperate hours. CUT: Being where your- class isn't when it is. - CO-ED COLLEGE: Where .the girls go in for facts and the boys go in- for figures,. ' • COLLEGE: A mental institution. GIRLS' DORM: A male student's idea of heaven. UPPERCLASSMEN: Students who are a shining example for freshmen ... shining because they are all either bright, lit up or pol­ ishing the apple. And, a final note—(apologies to Coleridge) Tests, tests everywhere, With drops and drops of ink And never a pirof who'll leave • Andi-sal&w-a, guy. FRIDAY, MARCH 2, 1956 THE CAMPUS CRIER immmm MEMBERS include both faculty and students, after a recent re- Kn^ta-Norma Woodard, Mimaon Bonnie Smith, Sue Marilyn Grove, ?. Moore, secretary. Standing, Pat Short, North Norman HoWell, Arthur Ladd, D*. Wesley Crum (chairman) and Sam Yates, Kennedy. On Assembly Improvement By DR. J. WESLEY CRUM CHAIRMAN 8- The Committee on Assemblies and Programs has the responsibil­ ity of providing an all-college as­ sembly every Thursday morning. eleven o'clock and scheduling special programs, concerts and re­ citals. The committee has been com­ posed of five faculty members (President McConnell, Mr. Hertz, Mr. Howell, Mr. Ladd, Mr. A. Thompson), the A.W.S^ President (Delores Filleau), and the S.G.A. President (Wally Johnson). We are new in the process of re-organizing the oxi^ittee'-'rod- expanding'* its membership to in­ clude more student .representation. The? S.G.A. Secretary (Colleen I Moore) has been aslced to join the ip&trtip. Wally Johnson has been meeting with the dormitory groups !i| and asking rfor a representative J from- each dormitory. The repre-, j^entatives which iiave,been named u\us far' include: Marilyn Grove, Kamola Pat Short, North - Bonnie. Smith, Sue. Lombard . Sam Yates, Kennedy : Joe Stradl)ng, .Wilson and No^ma Woodard, Munson. The committee hopes to provide avwide variety of entertaining, cul­ tural, and educational assemblies, wjWch ~ \vill be of real . interest to Syeipy-student. It proposes to con­ tract some outstanding speakers rod arti^ta who have a .national reputation' Select Some of the best programs available in Washington, and complete the schedule by de­ veloping programs with- C.W.C.E. students and faculty members. Ev­ ery student and faculty member is urged to make Suggestions to the committee members for programs: they would like to see scheduled. One of .the: important purposes of assembly -programs is to pro- Vide-^opportunitiesstudents to gain leadership and performance experiences. The committee is V making a sincere effort to work more and more students into the. assembly programs It- is ,hoped • that this will become an outstandr Jng feature. of the G.W.G.E. as- semblies. The'committee urges every stu- \ dent and faculty member to attend. 1 eyery assembly- pipgraUri, encour- j age others to attend, pass your suggestions and criticisms, on to the chairman and to. take an active part in the assemblies when the f: opppr^uni^ comes your way. " Benjamin Franklin invented - the. ightning rod. School Supplies ELLENSBURG BOOK AND STATIONERY Peart« MunroSlates Mixer Friday "Wildcat Stomp'' isr the name of the Munro all-college mixer, to be held next Friday night March 9 in the gym. The "LaKue Five" will provide music for the dance according to co-chairmen Bernard John­ son and Reed Clark. Unique decorations, are- plan-. ned for this last dance of the, quarter. . i Slides Scheduled For CWS Meeting Featured . at next Wednesday night's meeting of . Central's Wom­ en,Students will be color slides of Scotland shown by Mrs. Leota" Rob­ inson, art instructor at Morgan Junior High Schbol. Hostesses for the meeting in the CES social rooms are Mrs. Tom­ my Dorsey and Mrs. Margaret Hanchett. Thanks to asurvey bytheWash- irigton state fire jnarshal. campus buildings are becoming, s a f e r places.. As a result of the survey, which was: made in 1954/ ail stairwells in academic-buildings and multi­ ple story dormitories must be en­ closed. The firewalls now being con­ structed in the administration building comprise only a fraction of the total work being done. Fire­ walls have already been installed in the womens' dorms. Also slat­ ed to get' firewalls are the class­ room music and industrial arts buigdings. ' ' The doors in the firewalls will be permanently open to permit traffic to flow freely, but will close automatically in case of fire. In addition to the doors in the firewalls all doors to classrooms on the stairwell side of the fire­ walls must be replaced with spe­ cial .fire resistant doors. A total of 44 doors must be installed in the administration building alone. In the , year 1940, . Dance Cub was developed as ! a section of WRA. SFCB Hears Three reports formed the? main business at the : Student-Faculty Coordinating' board meetings Tues­ day night in the Faculty Lounge.- Morag Robertson reported on the Education for Leadership class mentioning projects and speakers.. Jan Vinson and Chuck Libfey spake oh the frosh initiation committee of which they are co-chairmen. Next year added activities will create a "help week" rather, than "hell week'' for "the freshmen,^ac­ cording to suggestions submitted by the committee Don - Mitchell- spoke about. ^ the' dining, hall committee arid recent discussion of food service.: The committee went on. record as uri- ahimously endowing the dining hallv corhmittee's .action in * this matter. 1 The next SFCB meeting -will- be held March 27., ©raduatibn, Finals Subjects of Meeting Switching commencement from Saturday to Sunday and seniors getting out of finals was the subject of a meeting held Tuesday morn­ ing. r^.\. " ' • . • : :: Senior class president Mel Beau- champ and. La Verne, Roberts gave the viewpoints-ofthe class, on. the, situation. to the? Academic vAffair& committee., . This: group • will / report on the final answer "in : the near future. . \ , 'f to ^6'. are as .close • ias t h e n e a rjf£.. m:aiI boxtwWn'.you ' bank by. mail. v • • ' r J/'. J "V ' DeposiH to .younsayings account can.be- made conveniently by m^il.. We furnish special [envelopes and mail you a receipt promptly. Come in7 Write, or phone for.full particulars. ' ELLENSBURG BRANCH NATIONAL BANK OF COMMERCE Member Federal Deposit, Insurance Corporation Page Three Recitals, Feature Brass Choir, Joanne Scholen, Fred Duncan The department of music will present its first two senior'decitals this week. The first, on Sunday,, Mar. 4 at 4:00, in the CES will feature Fred Duncan, trombonist, and the Brass Choir directed by Dr. G. Russell Ross. Fred is a senior from Black Diamond and is a member of the ^ band and Kappa Delta Pi, educa­ tion honorary. He is planning to teach band on secondary level. He also studies brass with Ross., His program includes "Atlantic Zephyrs" by Simons "Solo de Con- cours" by Mazillier and "Concerto for Trombone" by Cimera. The Brass Choir will play "Two Dances on the Same Theme" by Sommer "Contrapunctus I and HI" by Bach "Suite" by Fran- cisque and "Fugue" by Hovhan- ess. Members of the Brass Choir are Harley Brumbaugh, Robert Booth, Shirley Willoughby, Ed Stradling, Ron McNutt, Don Goodale, Fred Duncan, Jerry McManus, Terry Da vies, Robert Dalton, Dave An- nonen," and Dave Perkins. "This recital is at an unusual time, but we thought it would give students a better chance to at­ tend," said Dr. Ross. Joanne Anderson Scholen will present the next student recital on March 11 at 4 p.m. , in the college auditorium. - Jo is a senior inusic major pre­ paring for the primary grades. She is a member of Luther Club, Cen­ tral Singers, Sigma Mu, Kappa, Delta Pi and FTA. She was a Spur and was selected for "Who's Who in American Colleges." She is studying piano with Juanita Davies. Her program includes "Toccata and Fugue in E Minor" by J. S. Bach, "Ballade in A Flat" by Chopin, "Three Preludes" by De­ bussy, "Two Dances" by Hinde- mith and "Berceuse" by Tansman. She will conclude the program with the first movement of the Greig A minor Concerto. Miss Davies will play the second piano part. FTA to Attend Gonzaga Meeting Twenty-three Central delegates will attend the state FTA conven­ tion this weekend at Gonzaga, ac­ cording to Larry Bowen, president. Those who will attend are: Dean Puryear, Larry Bowen, Sharon Saeger, Marilyn Taylor, Barbara Conrad, Ed Chamberlain, Joan Mount, Donna Follin, LaVerne.Rob­ erts, Sandra Taylor, Deane Robin­ son, Dave Perkins, Bill Rashkow, Bob Feuchter, Mary Pennington, Paul Lambertsen, Mary Jo Wood- head, Claudette Cooley, Trinka Lu- kas, Loree Sliffe, Helen' Adams and Jackie Archer. Adviser Ann Lembesis will accompany the group. Other activities will keep FTA busy for the rest of the quarter. Chi March 6 the film "Mike Makes His Mark," about a teen­ age boy in trouble, will be shown at 8 p.m. in the CES auditorium. The constitution revisions will be voted on, so 2-3 of the members must attend, Bowen said. On March 9 and 10 LaVerne Rob­ erts and Larry Bowen will attend the NEA Department of Classroom Teachers conference in Pendleton, Ore. March 16 and 17 several FTA members will attend the DCT meet Tacoma. ( in Home Ec Club Sets Members of the Home Eonomics Club are reminded of the meeting next Monday to elect two repre­ sentatives to attend the convention tb. be held in Spokane in April. ' The meeting is scheduled for 7:30 in C32i. Forty per cent of U.S. exports go to the Western Hemisphere. Home of r.Ott "TStf/p. Courtship and a lifetime of happiness. The two are as one, for the incomparable heauty, quality and value of Courtskip Diamond Rings endure forever. Your Courtship jeweler hag an exciting..selection, each ring a masterpiece, each registered and insured -- all mode stly priced. m for nearest COURTSHIP jeweler and brochure, write COURTSHIP, P. 0. Box 1914, Seattle II, Washington U $ H ° \\ V T r. & mr- Page Four THE CAMPUS CRIER FRIDAY, MARCH 2, 1956 ^-3L W W *• • v i *...-. . "• g& ~ A: ? ' % ...... : * - vV "'* 00+-XW \ " fe^T - mm immm .x SS3g?5 w$$mW% ART DISPLAY IN LIBRARY places on exhibit a variety of materials which illustrate the broad scope of art and particularly, art education. Bob Iverson arranged the display, which was executed as a part of Creative Design class. K':'' • Library Display Features Art Literature, Examples To create an interest in the literature of art and to point out the various areas of art is the purpose of the art display of the library. Areas include graphics, or printing arts sculpture, 3-dimensional art forms and painting, 2-dimensional design form. Others are primitive, where ? - — — painting is done on paddles, (im­ plements, decorated knives and masks) contemporary, which often take abstract forms as the works of Paul Klee and Picasso, and de­ signs which includes all elements of ail: in both two and three dimen­ sional art. - _ Another area is in art education. This stresses putting to practical use in. education all the phases described. Library facilities which provide material in this area in­ clude magazines, courses of study, and textbooks. The display was prepared by Bob Iverson for creative design "class. • s- % y , 7A. , y ?' V.-V-v :K- . Charming Club Slates 'Orpheus' "Orpheus" written and directed by Coc-teau will be Channing Club foreign film shown in the college auditorium March 11 at 8:30 p.m. The film is a story of man's contest with death and 'is an ex­ citing drama from every stand­ point. Orpheus won the Grand Inter­ national Film Prize in Venice Fest­ ival in 1952. The movie will be in French with English subtitles. Contest Set Announcement was made this week of the annual Smyser award, which is offered each year to a student who submits an outstand­ ing paper dealing with some prob­ lem of human relations or human behavior. The amount of the award is $50. The award was established by Mr. Wroe Alderson, 1923 Central graduate, in recognition of the in­ fluence upon his education by Sel­ dom Smyser, professor emeritus. Any CWCE student currently en­ rolled during any quarter may compete. Students entering' must prepare it in literary or scientific form and must include a bibliography of the references used in the study. All papers are to be submitted to E. B. Rogel, chairman of the com­ mittee on scholarships, by May 1 in room 205 of the administration building. Students , desiring further infor­ mation are invited to confer with Dr. Harold Williams or any mem­ ber of the social science faculty. Delegates to Leave For Oklahoma Meeting Nathalie Heinz, who recently at­ tended a home economics conven­ tion in Minneapolis, will be off again Mar. 11—this time to attend the national meet of Kappa Delta Pi in Stillwater, Okla. Miss Heinz, president of the local chapter, will be accompanied by Fred Duncan, alternate. Meetings Will run from Mar. 15-17. KDP made an apnouncement this week that an extra meeting will be held Mar. 7 at 7:30 in the Faculty Lounge to elect a new president. Washingtonian to Appear Here As Concert Artist on March 7 A native Washingtonian will be featured as the next Community Concert attraction. Frances Yeend, born in Vancouver and a grad­ uate of WSC, will appear in the college auditorium on Wednesday Miss Yeend (rhymes with blend) is a favorite soprano at the . ~— • 9 March 7, at 8:15. New York City Opera Center, where she has sung over 100 lead­ ing roles. She has also appeared all over the United States. Last fall she toured with the Northwest Grand Opera Company to Seattle, Tacoma, Spokane, Portland and Vancouver. Miss Yeend will open her con­ cert with a Wagnarian area. Her second group is composed of Ger­ man Lieder followed by a group of American folk songs. After intermission the accom­ panist, James Benner,, who is her husband, will play three Chopin Etudes. The second half of her program will open with three modern art songs. The highlight of the eve­ ning follows with two selections of Mimi's from "La Boheme." She will conclude the program with three Spanish songs. Admission to the concert is free with student body cards. i life r^-v Sue, North Win Award (Continued from Page 1) Danny McCue, Mary Lou Estey, Nancy Breedlove, Allan Young- blood, Caroline McClinton, John Dodge, Marty Budzius, Harold Carlson, Fred Kiser, Gerald Soren- son, Shirley Shirley, Bob Hartman, George Winkelseth, Hazel Lenton, Carol. Marvin, Bob Olson, Bill Sampson, Stan Langstom, Joan Scroup, Bob Booth, Roger Salis­ bury, Bill Leth, Dean Reed and - Larry Engleson. Also giving blood were: Dan Or­ gan, Charles Olson, Jim Clark, Karen Cole, Joan Isaacson, Donna Cavadini, Delores Carter, Juanita Daniel son, Marjie Wade, Steve Spitzer, Don Petre, Jerry Stock­ holm Loree Sliffe, Sandra Sneel, Jeriy Kirk, Georgia Kibler, Joanne Wallenberg, Sharon Orr, Lynn Wil­ liams, Bill Quirt, Dick Bounds, Bert Thompson, Carol Garinger, Dave Carnahan Florence Erick- son, Mary Hutchins, Lynn Sloeum, Hugh Albrecht, Vance Savage, Louie Schultz, Steve Doutrich, Jim Sullivan, Paul McCulloh, Janice Fulton, Joyce Asmussen, Sonja Kehl, John Lybyer, Santos Panto- ja, Jim Gosney, Ed Stradling, Barb Peterson, Don Mitchell, Josee Gordon, Jan Radley, Jill Freitag, Dave Peterson, Sharon Oswalt, Barb Shinn, Ted Notman, Jack Lince, John Johnston, Ted Cook and Janice Vinson. Mike Lacey and Marilyn Olberg of the SGA were on the organizing committee with LaVerne Roberts, Dale Mitchell and Arlene Pearson of the Health Committee. "We'd like to thank the Spurs, Mi-s. Schnebly, Mrs. Marsh, Dr. Samuelson, the dorm captains and the local Red Cross people for all their help and cooperation," said Miss Roberts. JOBS OFFERED Senior men interested in a job with the Pacific Telephone and Telegraph Company will have the opportunity for an in­ terview March JC. A company representative will be on campus from 10 a.m., and arrangements are to be made through the personnel o-ffice. New Shoes and Repairing Star Shoe Shop Temporary MUN Heads Selected "Dilligent: study" is the pass­ word of MUN delegates as they prepare for the trip to Oregon State College, early in April.- This group must have a thorough background of the procedures and problems which make' the United Nations a functioning body. Last Tuesday Feb. 27, the dele­ gation began the process of pre­ senting and discussing resolutions. This marked the beginning of' a process which will continue for the remainder of the study time. The group will attempt to discuss as many of the major problems as it is possible in the time which remains. Temporary chairman for the committees presenting resolutions include Richard Robertson, Polit­ ical and Security Committee Fred Isakson, Economic and Financial Paul .McCulloh, Social, Humanitar­ ian, and Cultural George Worth- ington, Trusteeship and Don Rob­ ertson, Ad Hoc Political Commit­ tee. Selection of delegates to attend the Convention in April will be made sometime before spring va­ cation by a Student-Faculty Com­ mittee. I CUB Fun Set For Tonight Tonight is CUB activity night. There will be bingo, pool, ping pong, and 'television,-"with., fun starting in the CUB tonight at 9 p.m. and ends at 11 p.m. "Bring your girl and have a ball. Those who are stag can come, too." said Dave Divelbiss, chair­ man of the activities. The activity nights have been planned to keep students on cam­ pus during the weekends. The students own all'the bingo equip­ ment whigh includes 150 bingo cards at 35 cents each. "Come on out tonight and hit the jackpot," urged Mike Carter. TYPEWRITER SALES—'RENTALS and Repairs Patterson's Stationery 422 N. Pine Ph. 2-7286 8th and 8 Lubrication Tune-Up Pickup and Delivery Phone 2-6214 . /V7' BOSTIC'S DRUG Phone 2-6361 4th and Pearl Sweecy Clipper Across From College Auditorium In at 9 —Out at 5 5th and Pine •' " '-•7. ' • 'r MEETING CANCELLED Whltbeck Shaw club members are reminded that the March 13 meeting^ has been cancelled. In' its place, members attended a geography class meeting yester­ day afternoon at which Dr. Hagopian spoke. Central to Host Central will play host on Tues­ day, Mar. 13 to the Central Wash-, ington Solo and Ensemble Contest. All phases of performance includ­ ing voice, piano, and instrumental will be judged. The high school students will also rehearse a contest band which will be directed in concert that night by Bert Christiansen, in the college auditorium at 8:15. ' ' Judges for thef contest are from Northwestern colleges. ' 4 We have A New Shipment of pastel and Tweed Wool skirts and 10 to 18 Esther-Marian Shop FRIDAY, MARCH 2, 1956 It Happened Off Campus ... World Review By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Crash Kills 14 People SWAMPSCOTT, Mass. (ff) — A four-car Boston and Maine Rail­ road commuter train plowed into a second train, halted outside the si ation yard here Tuesday, with a heavy toll of dead and injured. .'By 1 p.m., five hours after the wreck, 14 bodies had been recov- ert d and, Dr. Joseph Diclerico of Nehant, district medical examin­ er, said he thought all the dead had been accounted for. About 50 injured were taken to hospitals. Many of the 1,000 passengers,in the two trains were college stu­ dents, some bound for Boston in­ stitutions and others for Burdette College, a business school in Lynn. The collision came in a blinding snowstorm. The rear car of the halted train was splintered and overturned. The lead car: of the four-car train of diesel-propelled Danvers-Boston commuter train waa torn open "like a watermelon," in the words of one eyewitness. A passenger in the halted train, Warren S. Martin of Danvers, said the train was more than 20 min­ utes late when it left Salem, and came to a stop about a quarter of a mile from Hie Swamps cott sta­ tion "I heard the short blasts of a whistle from another train, and the next thing we knew we Were .rammed," Martin said. ^ The halted train was en route 'from Portsmouth, N.H., to. Boston. The injured were rushed to hos­ pitals in the vicinity as ambulanc­ es and doctors were hastily sum­ moned. Priests hurried to . the scene and later to hospitals to ad­ minister last rites... Don Flynn of The Lynn Daily Item said most of the dead he saw were badly mangled. Most of them were men. Books, brief cases and lunch boxes were scattered for a half mile along the tracks. Train seats were tossed helter skelter. 'Pipe Makes Cool Shelter FORT NELSON, B.C. (ff. — A jet plane's tail pipe provided shelt­ er for an Australian jet pilot through three days of subzero *cold after a crash-landing in British Columbia's northern wilderness. Flying officer Ernie Howlett, 27, w&s picked up Wednesday, but thrfee men who parachuted to his rescue bad, to spend the night in the "bush." Howleit was O.K., but blackened from the exhaust soot of the tail pipe where his parachute and two blankets kept him from freezing. Howlett crash-landed his T33 jet trainer after he had radioed Sun day that he was bailing out on., a flight from Alaska to Fort Nelson. Rain Replaces Bitter Cold LONDON (IP) — Europe's killing four-week cold wave was breaking up Monday but violent rainstorms and landslides struck new terror in Italy. For the first time in the month- long arctice siege, government meteorologists confidently predict­ ed an end to the freezeup. It has claimed 919 lives and cost an estimated 2 billion dollars in crop and property damage. Slowly rising temperatures were reported nearly everywhere though the mercury still hovered around freezing in many regions. Flood barriers were hastily strengthened against the ap­ proaching'thaw. U.S. Army En­ gineers in West Germany were or­ dered to blast giant ice jams if floods threatened along the mighty Rhine River. Violent rainstorms "hit central and Southern Italy, drenching vil­ lages snowbound only a week ago. The Pescara River burst its banks, flooding several towns. At Vasto, on the Adriatic Coast, a creeping landslide still edged down on the city of 18,000 at the rate of 20 inches a day. Other landslides struck at Or- tona, on the Adriatic, and blocked rail lines in Puglia between Bari and Taranto. A slide at Ortona swept a locomotive into the sea. The engineer escaped but the fire­ man was injured. Portland Area PORTLAND (&) — Restoration of gas service to this city and the Willamette Valley was under way Monday, but thousands of families still faced several more days with none or temporary cooking and heating facilities. Service was cut off to some 61,000 meters, affecting an esti­ mated 200,000 persons, by a half- million dollar fire at the Portland Gas & Coke Co. plant here Friday night. A stepped-up schedule for re­ sumption of s:ervice was announ­ ced Sunday after some 500 ex­ perienced workers had been flown here from other parts of the coun­ try and Canada. At first, com­ pany officials feared it would be 10 days to two weeks before full service was restored. But intense work by the local and imported crews caused a revised prediction that ali customers will be back on service by Saturday night. Some 300 to 400 customers at Unnton, site of the plant fire, began receiving gas again Sun­ day evening in the first restora­ tion. THE CAMPUS CRIER Snow Squelches Disk Jockey's Counterattack CENTRALIA, 111. (JP) —. A blinding snowstorm Monday up­ set an Oxford, Miss., disk jock­ ey's plan to scatter 25,000 min­ iature Confederate battle flags over Chicago. Allan English of Oxford, Miss:, landed in Centralia in a four- place plane after having been, forced back by heavy snow north of Champaign, 111. "We were 13 minutes out of Chicago, when the storm forced us to turn back," he said. "We're going to make the flight some other day when the wea­ ther is better." English planned his counter­ attack after a Chicago Negro disk jockey, A1 Benson, sent a plane over Mississippi to scat­ ter copies of the U.S. Constitu­ tion. Schools Get New Head—? SPOKANE VP)'— Lloyd J. And­ rews said Tuesday he probably will run for the office of state superintendent of public instruc­ tion, a jot? held' since 1941 by Mrs. Pearl A. Wanamaker. Andrews, 35, is a Spokane Coun­ ty farmer and is now completing a four-year term as a Republican member of the state Senate. "We are sending out 50,000 questionnaires about education in the state and asking people wheth­ er they will support a change in the administration," he said. Andrews said he probably will have an announcement within 10 days. The job he seeks is nonpartisan and could be decided in the Sept. 11 primary if one candidate re­ ceives a majority of the votes cast. Andrews was graduated from Washington State College in 1942 and taught school for four years. He has owned and operated a fruit farm at nearby Green Bluff since World War II. Experts to Seed DENVER (#) — A group of weather- experts met here Thurs­ day to pick a spot for the next U.S. government tests of cloud seeding to make rain. Government-sponsored seeding with silver iodide smoke has been carried put in southwest Wash­ ington, California and Idaho. A report submitted this month by the President's advisory committee cm weather-control said cloudy seed­ ing is producing "very important results to-rthe water economy of the nation." "Next, we want to pick out a non-mountainous area, well to the east, where more complicated weather conditions subject to mod­ ification by seeding can be stud­ ied," said Capt. F. A. Berry, Navy meteroligist and chief adviser to the committee. i Witches Celebrate Holiday—on Earth c By HAL BOYLE • NEW YORK m — Magic rides this morning. . This is the 29th of February, the holiday of witches. Graciousness rides this day and lights all people born upon it who have a birthday only every four years. But the 29th of February is also the reverse of Hallowe'en. Witches don't zoon off into the yonder they brake their brooms downward and .become part^of the party. Typical witch talk at an earth party: First witch (elderly): "Oh, I say, the crowd sitlje has gone downhill isFnce Shakespeare wrote about us, I must say:" : • Second witch • (middle-aged): "You couldn't be more right, dearie. Ever since I lost my late husband (the poor devil) I've felt so. . .What's that, sir, are you in real estate, too? How unexpected. May I offer a suggestion on your new tenant rates?" Third witch (young): "So many overpowering young men. What they see in me I really don't know . . .or do I? Why of course, young man, I will dance with you. What is the rhythm. . .the polka. . .the turkey trot. . .the rhumba. . .oh, the waltz?. The waltz any witch from any time remembers. . . never mind leading me, I'll lead you. . .'Da-da-da-da' — How can one forget it? —'Da-da-da-da-da'— Won't it go on forever?" The music goes on and on as if. it would never stop, and the first witch finally-says: "Listen girls, we are losing our sense of social responsibility. At. least under Shakespeare we knew where the next pot we could cast an asp into was coming from." "Oh, don't be so professional," oigi.s the second witch, who was working into a fast early century fox trot. "I've just got my date at the point where he is telling me the sad story of his wife." . The music changes, switches to jitterbug, and the third witch's mouth flies open in the slack-jawed posture common to this form of art. Movement? Obvious. Conver­ sation? Impossible. Dawn cracks suddenly. The eld­ est witch cries, "Girls, you know we shouldn't be out after mid­ night." All three witches mount brooms and fly away. "Just like women," grumble the men. "Always breaking up the party." The mystic quadreriniel holiday of Feb. 29 is over — leaving man­ kind the old calendar problem: March the First. Page Five Politicians Ready For Ballot Battle With elections not too far off, political pots boiled through* out the nation, according to news that came in over the CRlER's Associated Press wires this week. Sen. Kefauver D-Tenn., carrying his bid for the DemOf cratic presidential nomination into Iowa, attacked the Eisen~ hower administration for what he said was answering farmers' complaints inadequately. Eisenhower, meanwhile, has made no I-will-run announcement and as far as his staff knows has told no one»of his plans. His brother, Earl Eisenhower, said in Chicago he believed Ike would seek a second term, in Chicago he believed Ike would seek a second term. Presi­ dent Eisenhower announced Wednesday he is available for a second term. $: * A lady in Santa Monica learned not to wake her sleeping husband by yelling: "The house is on fire." She learned it the hard way.- A neighbor, hearing the shout, called the fire department. Fire! There's no fire here," the startled lady told firemen who arrived, with noise. "Oh, my goodness!" she added sheep- isfily. "I was trying to get my husband out of bed." From Tokyo comes news that Mt. Sakurajima, Japan's second largest volcano, erupted more than 30 times last week. The eruptions sent tons of lava and yellowish- tinted gases spewing into the air. Nearby villages escaped. Bombs Away! The Malayan capital shook-vio­ lently last week as Australian Lin­ coln bombers dropped 20 tons of bombs in a guerrilla-infested jun­ gle valley six miles from. Kuala Lumpur. The bombing was the biggest since the war with the Communist rebels began nearly eight years ago. In Tulare, Calif., Si Tyler said pancakes may help send U. S. athletes to the Olympic games in Melbourne next fall. Tyler, pres­ ident of the Central California Assn. of the Amateur Athletic Union, says Olympic Pancake Festivals are a sure way of rais­ ing cash, for the team's travel ex­ penses. In Washington, D.C. Adm. Arthur Radford, chairman of the joint chiefs of staff, advised Con­ gress against making civil de­ fense a branch of the Defense Department. He said such an arrangement might distract the Defense Department in time of war from its main job—to carry on offensive operations against the enemy. In Seattle, Warden Lawrence Delmore Jr., said because some 500 inmates of the Washington State Penitentiary have nothing to do, "We sit on a powder keg." He said the present period of the year is particularly critical, add­ ing that the men "have too much cell time." Money in a Box In Chicago a secret room in a ramshackle house has divulged a treasure box filled with money and gold and some intriguing side­ lights about the life of two elderly spinster sisters who earned a for­ tune on the stock market. The 100-year-old, two-story dwelling in the center of a suburb was the home of Josephine and Cecelia Schroeder. Josephine died in 1954 and Cecelia, last September, leav­ ing the bulk of the §225,000 estate to charity. The executor, knowing nothing of the. fortune in cash, stumbled onto it when he picked up a box in a cluttered secret room he had discovered in the house. The lid flew open. The cash was inside. The pro-Nationalist Hong Kong Times said Monday the Russians had tried to kill Mao Tze-Tung by sabotaging his private plane, but the aircraft exploded and crashed before the Chinese Com­ munist leader boarded it. No word of any such crash has come from Peiping radio. In Spokane the announcement was made that the American Bar Assn. probably will "relax" its rule banning photographs and broadcasts of judicial proceedings. In Paris, Premier Guy Mollet warned the nationalist rebels of Algeria Tuesday that France will be forced "to mobilize all her strength'' to put down their 17- month-old revolt if they refuse to stop fighting. The Premier promised free elections three months after fighting stopped. - From Rio De Janerio came word hat the first bloodshed was re­ ported Tuesday in Brazil's minia- ure revolt. Field dispatches said . an aide of rebel leader M&j. Haroldo Veloso was killed and hree Indian guerrillas captured in a brush with government troops. The rebels defying Preside rt t Juscelino Kubitschek's government1 are believed to total less than 100 men. Deadlock Vienna reports that Austria's two-party coalition government, deadlocked over questions of na­ tionalization of industry, decided Tuesday to ask dissolution of Par- ! iament and hold new general elec­ tions on May 13. The U.S. Army has given 1,000 more "C" rations for the relief of 600 families in a desperate con- " dition because of the cold wave in the Atlantic port area of La Rochelle, France. South Africa's "white suprem­ acy" Nationalist government Mon­ day night won its five-year battle to take the white man's vote from the only colored persons who had it, Capetown reports. By a vote of 174-68—twelve more than re­ quired two-thirds majority—both houses of Parliament in joint ses- sesion amended the South Africaii Constitution to remove 50,000 "cape coloreds"" persons of mixed blood from the common voting roll. They now go on a separate roll. Like the black voters, they will ballot only for white candi­ dates nominated by the party in power. A fourth racial group, the Asiatics, has no vote. Most are Indians. I Deer Take Beating Deer had it rough this winter. From 40-50,000 deer will die in five central Washington counties this year "from the effects of the bitter winter cold and snows. John A. Briggs,. state director of game, makes the estimate and says the loss is a certainty in spite of the department's all-out efforts to save the deer. He made the announce­ ment in Seattle. More snow and rain hit the Pacific Northwest again, early this week but below normal tern* peratures were forecast. If the low temperatures hold, the flood threat is postponed. In Washington, D.C. Secretary of State Dulles Tuesday rejected Democratic criticism that he has been too optimistic in judging the danger of new Soviet policies. But he said the free world must con­ tinue to be fully alert? Dulles told a news conference the first round of the cold war conflicts appears to be over. He said a second round may be beginning in which Communist leaders will be equal­ ly predatory through employing more guile and less naked force than heretofore. Maybe people are getting bet­ ter. The Federal Prisons Bu­ reau said in .Washington, D.C. 1955 again spotlighted a trend toward fewer civil executions-, in evidence for a number of years. Last year's 76 executions were the smallest number since the bureau started keeping track, in 1930, except for 1953 when 62 criminals were put to death. *''During the defeade 1936-39*. an average of 167 prisoners were executed per year," the bureau reported. A U.S. Air Force survey party of seven men is back from tfce Antarctic with plans to airdrop^&t entire scientific base at the South Pole. • •? r •ft Page Six •" THE CAMPUS CRIER FRIDAY, MARCH 2, 1956 Cats G To In llSift ftftfftft: THE CATS MEOW By ROLLIE DEWING :' ft .cv~ Dewing A,,- The final whistle of the Central-Whitworth game at Spo­ kane closed the book on another basketball season at Central. It was a winter of drama, thrills and chills for Central rooters. The? team looked like a championship outfit in the early stages of the race for the title, then faded to wind up in third place behind PLC and Whitworth. The turning point of the season seemed to be the Cats* disastrous trip to Vancouver where the University of British Columbia Thunder- birds tripped the Centralites twice. Prior to these two losses Central was riding in second place close behind the Gladiators of PLC and with the best schedule of any of the title con­ tenders. After the twin setbacks in Vancouver the Wildcats never regained the confidence and sparkle that was shown earlier in the season against Whitworth, PLC and Eastern. Had Central won those two games at Vancouver the Ever- ^ jgreen conference might well have had a different champion. Spring Sports Next With the basketballs stored away for the year, the atten­ tion of Central sports followers will soon be turned to baseball, track and tennis. Baseball coach Warren Tappin will have his pitchers and catchers working out in the gym the rest of the quarter and track coach Monte Reynolds also will .be trying to give his charges some indoor work. - Cats Look Good Going on last year's records, Central should grab its share bf glory in the spring sports. Tappin has almost his entire East­ ern division championship squad back for another season. These v.eterans plus some promising newcomers establish the Cats as pddvS on favorites to take the conference crown this year. Pierce Back Track potentialities are not as great as those shown by the baseball team, but Central should have an average to good sea­ son m the cinder sport. At present, Reynolds is a little thin in the field events but has some strong runners returning. The man to watch on the track team will be towheaded Don Pierce who ran the 100 yard dash in a sizzling 9.5 seconds last year. [Two-miler Walt Wilson was a consistent winner last year too. Lettermen Aris Frederick, Bill. Pearson, Bob Allen and Bob LaLonde should give coach Lea Nicholson's tennis team enough punch to carry out a successful campaign. : This being the last issue of the CRIER for winter quarter, a big thanks goes to assistant sports editor-Dave Perkins who has done so much, to help carry the load while his cohert was stu­ dent teaching. CATTING AROUND . . . Tile spring athletic program tnetf get a late start this year because of the blanket of you- know-what around these parts . . . To those who haven't yet heard, Warren Tappin used to be the baseball ooach at the University of Washington Tappin came here from the U in 190 ... Ironically, one of TappinV chief difficulties at the school was that there were no baseball scholarships . . . fVfocibe Reynolds picked up 11 letters in his college days at Mon- ttt&a. • Leo Nicholson was a starter on the U of W's basket- ball team in the 1920fS: . . . Outfielder Remo Nicoli and in- fielder Dick Carlson of Centra! both received professional base* ball offers last spring . . . Don't forget your fishing gear dur- ipring vacation. ft" ft :: ftft:-..' ft-: • v- KY­ JACK BRANTNER sprawls after the ball during the UBC game, scrappling with unidentified players from UBC and Central. Central took the game, which was the last home conference game, by a score of 42-36. —• EVERGREEN CONFERENCE (Final Standings) W L Pet. Pacific Lutheran 15 3 .833 Whitworth 13 5 .732 CWCE ...... 12 6 .667 Eastern Wash. ...... 8 10 .444 British Columbia .. 7 11 .389 PUget Sound 4 14 .222 Western Wash. ...... 4 14 .222 ATTENTION All those intending to turn out for the varsity baseball team are asked to be in S-100 at 4 p.m. on Monday, March 5. Brantner And Myers Win Playoff Schedule Set Up for MIA With MIA action concluded for this-year, final playoffs will begin next week and will be held on Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday fiigbjte. The schedule for the playoffs is as follows: ^ Monday, March* 5: .......... 8:9G—Game 1, WinnerLeague D vs. 2nd place League A 8"M—Game 2, winner League C vs. 2nd place League C 9:03—Game 3, winner League 3 vs. 2md. place League D - - 9:60—Game: 4, wanner League A vs. 2nd place League B„ Tiie^a^ March 6. 7:30—Game 5, winner Game ! Vs. Winner Game 2 9:00—Game 6, winner Game 3 vs. Winner game 4. Wednesday, March 7 8:2£j—Game 7, winner Game 5 vs. Wilder Game 6 (Winner is MIA champion) The first four games will be played, under regular MIA rules, including the two halves with a cociftant moving clock. Games Your Beauty Health and Prescription Center Ostrander's Drug 401 N. Pearl five, six, and seven will be played under collegiate rules, with the clock storing m fouls, jumps, and so forth, and all other icgulation rules- Game times for the two final nights of action will be different than those of regular MIA contests, Jerry. Parish, MIA commissioner, pointed out. In the two leagues that were set up under last year's program, Munson took first place in the Na­ tional League and. the American League champs were the A.S.D. five. In the final playoffs between the two leagues, Munson won in a thriller by a 36-30 count. Jack Brantner was chosen by his teammates for the Inspirational Award winner on the 1955-56 bas­ ketball team. Brantner is a sen­ ior from Twisp. Besides winning the. Inspirational. Award, Brant­ ner was the leading Wildcat scorer this season. Don Myers, the spunky junior guard from Wapato, was chosen as the honorary captain of this year s Central Washington basket­ ball, team.. The Wildcat basketballers also chose an all-opponent team select* ed from all the teams Central faced this season. Three mem­ bers of the all-opponent squad were chosen from the Eielson Air Force team, a squad that the Cats played during Central's Christmas vacation invasion of Alaska. "Die player's first arid second team choices were: First Team John MeLcod—UBC F Chuck Robins on—i-E i elson Army F Everett Pigs—Eieison AF iO Jack Thiessen—Whitworth - G . Glen Robinson—Eielson AF G Second! Team »• Marv Adamsi—Whitwortt, F.: ft- Bob Burthardt—EWC F — Quick Curtis—PLC C ft~ Roger Iverson—PIX3 G Del Klicker—-Whitman G Wildcats Lose to Pirates Finish Third in Conference Central Washington's Wildcats are a third place team again this year. With a tie for second theirs and a chance not only to grab the second place spot all for themselves, but a berth in the NAlA playoffs as well, the Cats invaded Whitworth last Thursday night to try to knock the Pirates down to third place. The first half of the contest looked as if the Cats^ : : — —— might do it, as they pressed the Whitworth crew all the way, but the Central five ran out of go- power in the second stanza and fell before the Pirates, 73-55. The Cats looked good in the first half at Whitworth and they actual­ ly led at one point in the game by eight points but the Pirates, led by big Marv Adams, came up by halftime-to take the lead away and hold a 33-31 cj^rgin at the halfway mark. From that point on Central couldn't find the range in their shooting. Whitworth poured through 40 points in the final per­ iod while Central only managed to pick up 24 counters. Stall, Fouls Hurt Cats With 12 minutes to go in the game and a lead in their hands, Whitworth went into ball control and. the Cats were licked from that point on. Trying to get the ball for themselves, the Wildcats again and again fouled Whitworth's men, sending them on a constant march to the free throw line, and Whitworth again and again sank those free ^throws. The Pirates picked up 39 points on charity tosses to make over half of their points from the center of the key. Jack Brantner, Stu Hanson, arid Don Lyall all left via the personal foul route, Bill Coordes was *eady to depart with four and Tom.Ox? Wang, Don Myers, and Bill Bieioh had three, each. Marv Adams, Jack Thiessen, and Glerin Martin led Whitworth-s scoring attack with .16, 14, arid. 13 COME TRY OUR Hamburgers! WEBSTER'S BAR-B-Q Across from the Auditorium mm ••Cok®* over—when you pause for Coca-Cola. It's sparkling with quick refreshment... and it's so pure and wholesome —naturally friendly to your figure. Let it do things—good things—for you. BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY Of THE COCA-COLA COMPANY BY -Xv^^LENSBURG COCA-COLA BOTTLING CO. 282 N. Anderson St F. L. Schuller is a registered trade-mark. ©1956, THE COCA-COLA COMPANY •V FRIDAY, MARCH 2, 1956 Pratt Helps Cat Strength Tom Pratt, a lanky 6' 4" lad from Cle Elum, is the final Wild­ cat basketball player to be fea­ tured this quarter in Sportrait's rundown of Central hoop stars. Tom is actually only spending his second quarter of school here this year and is a junior in ath­ letic eligibility. He had previously attended Clark Junior College for THE CAMPUS CRIER . •» - Wildcat Scoring ACTION WAS HOT AND HEAVY at the W-Club smoker last Thursday night. Here Allan Youngblood and Dick Hull exchange blows in the final contest of the night. The bout was declared a draw. Tom Pratt two years before entering Central last winter quarter and returning this quarter. Cle Elum's Warriors gave Tom his high school basketball experi­ ence. The tall boy lettered two years in basketball there and was given All-Valley honorable mention in his senior year. Tom also gave baseball and football a crack while in high school,, but was forced to drop out of football after his sophomore year because of a back injury. 1 ' •*' v' " ' Clark J. C. saw Tom lettering two years while it picked up the state's Junior College champion-, ship with their 1952-53 team. Tom was vcfed the most improved play­ er award at Clark. He also went oUt for track and ran the niile r.ri:" fvo mile events for the J. C. cii*derftieri-- Pratt started suiting lip with Cmlral's Wildcats on the Alaska trip and has been one of the top reserves since. His best night no far this season came at CPS last Feb. 11 when he poured through 22 points to lead the Cats to a double victory over the Loggers. "I think our club made a very fine showing for itself although it didn't go all the way this year," Tom commented. "We have the nucleus back for a fine club next year, and although we are losing two very, valuable men in Brantner and Lyall, we should do all right." Tom was married ^ast Septem­ ber to Wilma Bettas, a former Central student. The 21 year old junior is presently minoring in physical science, mathematics, and ^ysical education. CWC Girls' Team Goes Undefeated The girls' basketball team from Central won all three of their games at the basketball Sports Day held at the College of Puget Sound last weekend. Central was the only undefeated team in the tourna­ ment. In the first game they led all the way, defeating W.W.C.E. by a 54-18 score. High point girl was Nadine Fallis with 23 points. The second game with E.J.C. resulted in a 29-19 win for Central. The third game against the Uni­ versity of Washington was the thriller of the tournament. After trailing 17-12 at the half, Central came from behind to defeat the University 28 to 22. The following girls made the trip: Nadine FaUis, Karen Bainton, Darlene Brown, Pat Callahan, Laura Columbo, Anne Coulston, Bev Crumpacker, Carol Garringer, Pat Lacey, and Verna Osborne. Smoker Event Pleases Crowd Central's W-Club Smoker last Thursday night was well received by CVVCE's sports fans, according to various members of the sponsor­ ing lettermen's club. The bouts and matches presented on the card were, in some instances, revised slightly due to various difficulties, but in all proved to be quite crowd pleasing. Opening the evening's entertain­ ment was a match between Darre?l Furstnow and. Dick Boyer, which Boyer won by decision in, a close scrap. Jim Pollock .''nd Richard Bement fought to a draw in the second match, as did Jim Cook and Jim Yarbrough in the third match. The fourth match of the evening saw the only TKO of the evening, as Richard Wilson opened up a cut over Dick Wilson's right eye early in the match and was de­ clared the winner by a technical knockout in 29 seconds of the sec­ ond round. Wrestling stole the show as the fifth event of the evening. Loren Peterson as the "Mad Svede" and Oscar Lindahl as the "Great Dane" put on an exhibition that had the crowd of fans howling with excite­ ment and laughter. Employing all the wrestling tactics so popular on television these days, Peterson and Lindahl threw each other out of the ring, kicked, stomped on, and Page Seven generally tried to mutilate • each other in the three-fall event. Lin­ dahl, dubbed the "hero" by the crowd, took the first fall, but Pe­ terson, playing the "villan's" role, came back to win the last two falls. Boxing took over again as the sixth event, as C. G. Robbins beat Wynn Hess by referee's decision in a close one. Then wrestling came back into the spotlight in the form of a tag team match pitting George Argelan, Jim Nel­ son, and Yarl Jensen against Remo Nicoli, Glenn Martin and Don Pierce. The first team won the event, but not before a rough and .tough tussle in whicn even the referee had been tossed around a bit. Dick Hull and A1 Youngblood fought to a draw in the heavy­ weight match, that concluded the evening's activities. Del Good- paster, originally scheduled to fight Hull in the heavyweight division, was forced to sit out the event with a broken foot. Radio Repair Phonographs Headquarters for Latest in Phonograph Records DEAN'S Join Dean's Record Club and get a FREE RECORD with every nine you buy. 3rd and Pearl Ph. 2-1645 HEY STOP! IT'S LUCKYU OROODLE TIME! WHAT'S THIS? For solution see paragraph below. '• y SUNDIAL WITH 5 O'CLOCK SHADOW Charles Segal Clemson OSTRICH IN DANGR . Samuel Salkin U.of California Plajrerr a fg ft Pf *P ave. Brantner .. .27 127 157 68 411 15.222 Coordis .... ...24 110 92 59 312 13.000 Lyall ....27 100 62 73 262 9.704 Oxwang ... 22 103 56 54 262 11.909 Myers ...,24 77 89 60 243 10.125 Hanson ...27 66 52 76 184 6.815 Wood .26 33 49 54 115 4.423 Pratt ...16 21 19 16 61 3.813 Bieloh . .16 20 12 32 52 3.250 Deeg ...14 17 8 11 42 3.000 Ken oyer ...11 11 4 1B 26 2.364 Snaza ...* 8 3 8 5 14 1.750 Aho ...17 0 8 8 .471 Team :.259 688 616 537 1992 7.691 Average Points per Game: Central Opponents .74.1 ..67.7 NOON RUSH IN PIGPEN Eileen Peterson South Dakota State ISHING AROUND for a better- ting cigarette? Investigate the Droodle above: Skin diver taking » " Lucky break on shore. Moral: Experts on deep-down enjoyment prefer Luckies because they taste better. As you know, Luckies are made of fine tobacco . . . natu­ rally good-tasting tobacco that's TOASTED to taste even better. So get in the swim—-light up a Lucky. You'll say it's the best- tasting cigarette you ever smoked! DROODLES, Copyright 1953 by Roger Price Automotive Service . . . Lockhart Pontiac Ph. 2-88U Students! EARN *25! in on the Lucky ay $25 gold mine. We pay for all we uae—and for a whole raft we don't use! Send your Droodles with descriptive titles. Include your name, address, col­ lege and class and the name and aadress of the dealer in your col­ lege town from whom you buy cigarettes most often. Address: Lucky Droodle, Box 67A, Mount Vernon, N. Y. CIGARETTES Zmmxm mm !." * ! - : • "'if!! .-•Sili 11111I mmm i LUCKIES TASTE BETTER - Cleaner. Fresher, Smoother! n«DVCT OF AMSBIC A'8 IE ADINGt MANUFACTURER OF CIGARETTE! T" CAMPUS CRIER Page Eight mmmmk Ti t:*.«: * *»'•' * * • , .*. • w.-,.. v '&". ........ -,.... ...• • „ '!€•: ,,, FRIDAY, MARCH 2, 1956 PROPOSED VIEW OF UPPER CAMPUS a- seen in an artist's sketch shows North hall and Wilson hall at the left. Centered around the din.ng hall are three new mens' residence halls, which are to be built within the next ten years. ... - ...... Dining Hall, Library, Music Building, PE Plant, Dorms Planned as Additions Several new dormitories, a physical education building, a dining^ hall, a library building, a classroom building and a music building are being planned for Central Washington College of Education in the future. / These new buildings will be .'v'- V 1 •built to take care of the expected increase in enrollment in the next ten years. It has been estimated that Central's enrollment by 1965 will be near 2500 students. "The increase in enrollment in the next ten years, approximately 100 students per year, will be caus­ ed by two important factors," Dr. Robert E. McConnell, Central's president stated. "The increased birth rate during and after World War II, and the immigration into the state during the same period, will cause college arid university enrollment in Wash­ ington to swell in the next decade," . Dr. McConnell explained. It has been estimated by the experts that enrollment in the in­ stitutions of higher learning in Washington will increase from 33,- 960 in 1951 to 60,900 by 1965. This is an increase of 79 per cent. Baring some unprecedented na­ tional catastrophe, there will be approximately twice the number of young people of college age in the United States in 1970, than there "were ten years ago. Central will get these new-build­ ings by two means. The instruc­ tional buildings will be paid for With money appropriated by the state legislature. The first of these buildings, the combination field house, gymnasium and natatorium, will be asked for when the legis­ lature meets in the spring of 1957. The dormitories will be paid for through public or federal bonds. The public bonds will be paid off in 20 years through room rent and the federal bonds have to be paid LIBERTY I'lionti 21171- STARTS SUNDAY CINEMASCOPE ttfE SINGIN KANCIN SAfiN OF THOSE KANSAS ' CAUCO DAYS // off in at least 40 the same method. or 50 years by The three new men's dorms will be built on the same block on which North Hall and Wilson are situated. The three dorms 'and a dining hall will be situated on the present Vetville site. An apartment building for both married and single students is also planned' for the lower campus. It will be built one block west of the present college library, on 8th ave­ nue. The new library, music building and classroom building are sched­ uled to be built on the present Tomlinson Field. The field is on lower campus just" below the rail­ road tracks on the east side of Walnut Street. , It is now used for track and baseball in the spring and football turnouts in the fall. According to President McCon­ nell, a master plan of the campus is being made at the present time and it will be ready in several months. It will show just where every one of the future buildings will be situated on Central's cam­ pus. Sighs of Relief Are Heard As Chinooks Herald Spring By JOHN DANIELS This winter's weather in Ellens- burg has been some of the most severe on record. Townspeople and college students alike have felt the bitter bite that began early in November and is just now show­ ing promise of being dulled. The long-range weather prophecy for this area is an easing into more spring-like weather and a continued "balmy" trend. It ap­ pears as though "Old Man Winter" has had his inning in Ellensburg. Every student has experienced a certain amount of hardship and misery due to the snow and ice. The frozen car radiator, tire chains, slips and falls on the cam­ pus pathways—all these were part of the daily routine on campus and in town. But most of this is behind now. Even the perennial spring winds have sent in their pre-season sam­ ples of spiraling hats and spoiled hair-do's. College administration can begin to breath a little easier due to the receding problems of flying snowballs—they too often result in broken windows—and slippery side­ walks that endanger life and limb of the college population. The problem of heating all the dorms adequately, or that of keep­ ing trees and shrubs free from freezing harm are also gradually becoming minor worries. Don Jongeward, heating plant «- and maintenance head, revealed that there has been more damage to school property this year than any other of the twenty years he has been at Central. Eight units in Vetville had frozen water pipes, but once they were thawed out, there was no more trouble. Occupants were ready for a repeat and took the necessary precautions, said Jongeward. The regular five man ground crew was kept busy all winter long clearing snow off the walks. Outside snow-removal aid had to be summoned in the form of about $350 worth of contracted labor, Jongeward said. It took 850 tons of coal to keep the students warm in January alone. Some radiators in the dorms were broken due to carelessness of occupants, usually caused by leaving windows open and radiators turned off. During the last bad cold snap, there were rumors flying about concerning the closing of the col­ lege due to heating plant trouble. The true cause of the trouble was the failure of city water pressure at the wells. The most popular story going around at the time was that the heating plant's water liihes were frozen, but that Was quite false. Who started tiiat vumor, any­ way? fm GREATEST mm .. "M .v,: -. T"-' "ft* / , PPsiii * 1 'Jk- " mm mmm- wmm V.V.V.' 1. SUPERIOR TASTE So good to your taste because of L&M's superior tobaccos. Richer, tastier—espe­ cially selected for filter smoking. For the flavor you want, here's the filter you need. 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