Campus Crier 1963 Summer Session VOLUME 36, NUMBER 27 CENTRAL WASHINGTON STATE COLLEGE, ELLENSBURG, WASH. FRIDAY, AUGUST 9, 1963 LANDSCAPING IS JUST one of the signs of p. ogress visible on Central's campus As each section of the campus becomes complete the surrounding area is landscaped, this activity is carried on by the Student-Faculty Site and Development Committee. this summer. Planning for Central Sends Six Delegates To National Student Congress Six Central students are leaving for the 16th National Student Con­ gress at Indiana University in Bloomington on Saturday, Aug. 17, James Talbet, NSA co-ordinator, said. The annual National Student Congress serves two purposes: 1. pro­ viding facilities for the student leaders of this country to meet and to discuss mutual problems, pro­ grams and plans, and 2. establish­ ing by democratic processes the policies and programs of the U. S. National Student Association. The Congress will open with a keynote address on Sunday, Aug. 18. The students will attend semi­ nars in special areas on Aug. 19 and 20. Central students will be attending seminars on civil rights, academic freedom, student-faculty- administration relations and the role of students in policy forma­ tion, the role of student govern­ ment, the cold war and higher education and the history and de­ velopment of USNSA. Legislative committees will meet from Aug. 21 to Aug. 25. Cen­ tral's subcommittees include goals and model practices in higher edu­ cation, community human rela­ tions, civil liberties, student gov­ ernment and extrinsic campus ac­ tivity, political and social aware­ ness in the university community and campus international program­ ming, Talbert said. The legislative plenaries will be held from Aug. 26 to Aug. 29. At this time the resolutions and declarations appearing in the cod­ ification of policy of the United States National Student Associa­ tion will be voted upon by the members of the congress. Throughout the summer the con­ gress delegates have received in­ formation and working papers on the seminar and committee they will attend. Attending the Congress from Cen­ tral will be Talbert Joyce Rus sell, NSA co-coordinator Linda Mahler, SGA secretary Soren Sor- enson, SGA treasurer Roger Gray, SGA social vice president and Jim Fielder, SGA executive vice pres­ ident Library Gives Schedule All library books are due Fri­ day, Aug. 16 at 5 p.m., Beatrice Haan, college librarian, said. During vacation the library will be open weekdays from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. with a small staff. Campus Gains Lawn, Shrubs Construction of approximately $33,000 worth of landscaping is be­ ing carried out in the vicinity of the New Commons, Paul Bechtel, physical pland director said. Through the area, including that portion or property between North, Wilson, Stephens, and Whitney halls, side walks, lawn, shrubs, and street lighting are being in­ stalled. The canal, better known to the students of Central as the Genges, will receive its share of the land­ scaping. The portion of the canal between the east end of the Ken­ nedy hall parking lot and Chest­ nut street is to receive the face lifting. Another part of the work will be a sidewalk system interlocking the respective buildings in the vicin­ ity. This includes a large walk­ way from this complex of build­ ings west of Jenny Moore hail to the Leo Nicholson pavilion. Although work on the program has been delayed to some extend by unforseen happenings, the land­ scaping will be completed by the time that the fall term begins, Bechtel said. Music Building To Open Soon The new Music building will be­ come occupied during the first week in September, Dr. Wayne Hertz, music department chair­ man said. The instructional area or the east end of the building will, however, be the only part in use. Final construction of the recital hall which takes up the western end of the structure will be com­ pleted a few weeks later. It should be completed by the time school starts and the recital hall will not be needed until probably the second month of school, Hertz said. The structure will be composed of 48,200 square feet of instruc­ tional space. Facilities in the building will include a large re­ cital hall, teaching studios, prac­ tice rooms, classrooms, adminis­ trative offices, and an open air patio in the center of the build­ ing. Approximately fifteen pastel shades of paint will be used throughout the building. When completed this will give the build­ ing a completely harmonious col­ or scheme. The building will be opening in approximately one year since con­ struction began on the structure last September. This new building is replacing the old one which in the past has been the old Elementary school as well as housing the Music De­ partment of Central Washington State College. Job Opportunities Cited Approximately 225 college stu­ dents have found summer em­ ployment through the student em­ ployment service," Wilma Pratt, director of student employment said. "Campus jobs vary from stu­ dent office help to cafeteria work. Anyone interested in obtaining a job for fall should submit his application now," Mrs. Pratt add­ ed. Campus Calendar Today SGA Movies, "They Came to Cordura," 7 p.m., "Shoot the Pi­ ano Player," 9 p.m., McConnell auditorium. Saturday, Aug. 10 SGA Movie, "Caine Mutiny," 9 p.m., McConnell auditorium. Tuesday, Aug. 13 Forthright Review, "Catch 22," Anthony Canedo, 8 p.m. CUB Lair. 2 CENTRAL WASHINGTON STATE COLLEGE, ELLENSBURG, WASH. FRIDAY, AUGUST 9, 1963 Central College Bowl Finds Adherents Pushing Activity Approximately nine months ago several students were sitting around discussing a recent General Electric College Bowl and soon found themslves involved in an impromptu match of their own. From this has grown a program which has spread to an annual campus event. This new program did not stop there since that time Western Washington State College has also taken up the program. Western received the idea of the program when Jim Mattis, SGA president, presented idea of the college bowl to the Northwest Student's Association. Central met Western in competition last May. Since beginnings on the CWS campus, the program has been introduced by delegates from here to the spring conference of the Great Northwest Region of the United States National Student Association. Later this month an exhibit of the program will also be shown at the 16th National Congress of the National Student Associa­ tion. As far as it is known, Central was the first institution of higher learning to begin a program of this type on the col­ lege level and along with Western to hold intercollegiate competition on their own. The enthusiasm which greeted the competition both in spectators and teams seemed to show that dances, basket­ ball gams and movies were no all the members of the Central college community were interested1 in. The enjoyment of par­ ticipation and observances of the intellectual is also present. Plans for the continuation of this program are already in the works for the coming school year. Under the new SGA budget, the program has received funds with which the new College Bowl Chairman, Ella Anglin, can produce a new round of competition. Trustees Name John Allen To Post Of Head Librarian By MIKE KYSAR The Central Washington State College Instructional Materials Cen­ ter, better known to campus inhabitants as the Victor J. Bouillon li­ brary, has a new acting director. Mr. John P. Allen is assuming the duties of the office of Director of Libraries left vacant by Mr. Clarence Gorchels, who resigned last month Allen received his B.A. and M. Lib. degrees from the University of Washington, and has been at Central over 11 years. The college will continue to seek a person to become permanent director, as Al­ len has been appointed on a temp­ orary basis. "The directors purpose is to ad­ minister activities of the library services as they should reflect the needs of the campus community," Allen said. This will be the first major library staff turnover in over a decade. Many of the staff-members are taking new positions in the library, and there are going to be some new members hired. Allen related that he and the director of audio visual will have a total of eleven people on their staff. The book budget for next year is much better, and the Friends of the Library organization is be­ coming a rewarding operation, Al­ len said concerning library fin ances. Next year will bring furth er developing of the media and operation of the facilities for mu­ sic listening. Development is also in sight of a union card catalogue where all materials in the center may be catalogued. campus erier — Member — Associated Collegiate Press Telephone WA 5-1147 — WA 5-5323 Published every Friday, except test week and holidays, during the yea? and bi-weekly during summer session as the official publication of th« Student Government Association of Central Washington College, Ellens, burg. Subscription rates $3 per year. Printed by the Record Press, Ellens, burg. Entered as second class matter at the Ellensburg post office. Rep. resented for national advertising by National Advertising Services, Inc., 18 E. 50th St.. New York Cltw. LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS 0 IKt ipsj s © *L00tC AT ITTHI0 WAY.^THAL— M-WZ "TW' 0ANP PON'T NeepHo/Hxs. Tfccmotie nwetoe.* Recruiting, Offense Chores Work New Football Coach Central football coach Mel Thompson will be heading into his first campaign this fall as head mentor. Last year, Thompson served as line coach under A. L. Beamer, who has been elevated to the position of athletic director. Thompson will have 16 letter- men returning from last year's squad, plus an additional five let- termen from previous years. The group will be spearheaded by two all conference performers, quarter­ back Phil Fitterer and 250-pound tackle Dick Shannon. The new coach will go with a multiple set offense, utilizing the wing T principles. Coach Thompson is optimistic about the coming season, pointing out that the team will have a bigger line. He feels that the Ev­ ergreen Conference will have bet­ ter balance than ever before, pointing out that all of the teams will be real strong. Even East­ ern should pick up in football this fall, with the hiring of an entire new football staff. Thompson noted the high en­ thusiasm among the coaching staff and the players. He said that many of the players have visited the campus this summer and have expressed eagerness toward this fall. Thompson will be assisted by Art Hutton, Jim Nylander, Arnie Tyler and Serge Grant. Hutton, the new track coach, will be start­ ing his first season at Central, coming to Ellensburg from Eisen­ hower High School in Yakima. He will be working with the backfield. Nylander, the Central baseball coach, will again be working with the backs. Tyler, a recent gradu­ ate of Central, will assist Thomp­ son with the linemen, as will Grant. Grant is a transfer student from the University of Washington, who will not be eligible for football this fall. Thompson has been busy re­ cruiting this spring and summer, and has come up with some fine football talent. He was particu­ larly successful in picking up line­ men, including Ernie Ross, a 6-4, 240 pound tackle from Canada, Roland Hachtel, a 255 pounder from Wenatchee, Mel Cox, a 6-4, 240 pound tackle and Chuck Adams, a 6-3, 235 pound frosh tackel. This group of linemen is augmented by returning lettermen, Byron John­ son, a 6-3, 238 tackle, Wayne Swan- son, a 230 pound guard, end Art Ellis, a 6-0, 185 pound veteran, guard-tackle Rod Gilman, a 225 pounder, Lou Lawrence, a 195 pounder, who started at right end last year and several others. FRIDAY, AUGUST 9, 1963 CENTRAL WASHINGTON STATE COLLEGE, ELLENSBURG, WASH. 3 2«rsr DR. HERBERT ANSHUTZ IS looking at one of the 283 pages of the poem he is writing which he calls an inverted Prelude. The poem entitled, I Barefoot Ran, will be nearer 300 pages in final copy. Review Series Draws Crowd By PAT DEANE If success can be measured in terms of participation, the sum­ mer book review program, Forth­ right Review has indeed been suc­ cessful. "These 8 p.m. Tuesday night pro­ grams have attracted capacity crowds to the Lair. In fact, we've had to add as many as fifty extra chairs to seat the overflow," James Quann, director of student activi­ ties said. "We are justly pround at the success of the program, and will make every attempt to see it in­ troduced to the students during the regular year," Quann said. Tuesday, August 13, the last of the summer series will be present­ ed by Anthony Canedo, assistant professor of English. He will re­ view Joseph Heller's novel, Catch- 22, first published in 1955. As a stage adaptation given by an off-Broadway group in 1961, Catch-22 received the impetus that led to its having four hardbook editions and several paperback printings. According to a summary writ­ ten by Canedo, Catch-22 is a war novel centered around an Ameri­ can bomber squadron stationed on a small island off Italy. But it a war novel that mey well end all war novels, especially if its "hero," an officer named, Yossarian, has anything to say about it. It's sat­ irical tone and wholly bizarre world can be exemplified in the follow­ ing passage: The last person in the squadron was Major Major who wanted to be brought down with a flying tackle by Yossarian. There was something inherently disreptuable about Yossarian, always carrying on so disgracefully about the dead man in his tent who wasn't oven there and then taking off all his clothes after the Avignon mission and going around without them right up to the day General Dreedle stepped up to pin a medal on him for his heroism over Fer- rara and found him standing in formation stark naked." CWS Professor's Creation Reaches For 7,000 Lines CWSC Employs New Staff Man Florida native Robert Howser has recently joined the staff at CWSC in the newly formed posi­ tion of personnel director, John Ludka, director of information said. "As personell director, it will be my duty to represent the college in all areas concerning civil service employees," Howser said. "This will include administering civil service tests and maintaining the rules and regulations set up by the civil service authorities." This work was formerly handled by Kenneth Courson, business man­ ager, but it has developed into such a large job that it was neces­ sary to create this new position," Howser added. Howser graduated from the Uni­ versity of Miami in 1957 with a major in personnel and industrial relations. Howser and his wife Nancy are presently residing in Stephens Hall with their children, Erin, 5 and Ruskyle, 4, until they can find a more permanent home. Since May 6, besides his regular duties as professor of English, Dr. Herbert Anshutz has found time to write a poem that is new 283 pages long and should be nearer 300 pages in the final copy. "Experiences — physical, intel­ lectual—help define words words in turn make up philosophical pat­ terns (also influenced by our ex­ periences,)" Dr. Anshutz said. •Philosophical patterns adopted then pre-define both our words and our perception of past ex­ periences." In his poem, Dr. Anshutz has tried to realize concretely people, places and experiences of the past and relate them to what he now believes within the inter-influenc- ing cycle of experience, word and pattern. Comparison Drawn Because Wordsworth was work­ ing deductively, looking back over his childhood and adolescent ex­ periences and forcing them to fit into his formula, when he wrote his "Prelude," Dr. Anshutz con­ siders his poem an "inverted Pre­ lude." "By 'inverted Prelude' I mean that I let experiences flow into recollection and tried to capture them in words (being as objective and dispassionate as possible) to see what they might inductively add up to," Dr. Anshutz said. The experiences are not present­ ed in chronological but in free association order. The passages of experiences are tied closely to the many "plateau" passages dis­ cussing the experiences given and the trilogy of experience-word-pat­ tern (that can be reversed or circle-like may start at any one of the three and continue.) Because he has let the first word determine the next and one page by association lead to the next, Dr. Anshutz sees that he is trapped by where he has been and what he has seen and sensed and read and thought as was Wordsworth. "Nevertheless, an 'inverted Pre­ lude' it is, even if only because it disagrees so sompletely with his increasingly more orthodox transcendentalism," Dr. Anshutz said. Dr. Anshutz has titled his poem "I Barefoot Ran." It is the first poem he has been able to com­ pose on the typewriter. Punctuation Slim "Now I keep up with the flow of impressions—and the poem shows this. Containing little punc­ tuation, it is composed of quick- running coordinate and subordi­ nate clauses. Some passages run several pages without punctuation but can be easily followed, Dr. Anshutz said. "It reads rapidly because it was written rapidly." He is still toying with what if any internal headings or organi­ zational aids he will use. "Perhaps naming the two to 10- page sections by the names of the places where the experience happened might do," Dr. Anshutz said. "Perhaps along with such place names I could use the names of people (suitably disguised) as they wander into the narrative." Although the poem will be al­ most 7,000 lines when complete, Dr. Anshutz hopes to have it pub­ lished. "It's been fun. It is fun. Even if I were to burn the 283 to 300 pages, the writing has been a catharsis of sorts," Dr. Anshutz concluded. COMING FROM FLORIDA TO become the new Director of Staff Personnel is Robert Howser. Howser will be in charge of all civil service jobs on the campus. All civil service testing will be done through his office. 4 CENTRAL WASHINGTON STATE COLLEGE, ELLENSBURG, WASH. FRIDAY, AUGUST 9, 1963 Central In Focus Central Students Find Different Ways, Places To Do Studying -fir X - if fliii ii AS THE FINAL WEEK OF THE quarter approaches more and more students are finding the library a worthwhile place to spend their time. Nancy Becker is checking some material against refer- ance books. SITTING IN THE SMOKING ROOM in the library, Lonnie Hunt has trouble deciding whether to read a magazine or to study. At this moment it looks like the studying won. I liilli BIW mm® isBBi-m DURING THE WARMER TIMES of the day the CUB Cage is a cool place to study. Betty Linden is enjoying a lemonade while reading about the modern theatre. SOME STUDENTS PREFER to study out in the fresh air and sunshine. Ellen# Anderson and Paul Wollen are taking advantage of the benches in front of the CUB to get their reading done.