The Telescope 22.52

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ETELESCOPE May 27, 1969.

A special run-off election tomorrow will decide the election of ASB vicepresident in a race between Nick Ashcraft and Mark Iacuaniello. The run-off wasnecessitatedlast week when neither received a majority of the votes cast for the office of vice-president. Iacuaniello's 19 6 votes constituted a plurality but was short of a majority by almost lOOvotes. Ashcraft was second in the polling with 141. Ashcraft, an independent candidate, opposes the $20 ASB card fee increase and the large athletics budget, as does Iacuaniello. Iacuaniello is the candidate from the $10 Slate that opposed the raising of the ASB 0."rd fee. Jeff Chamoerlain, e lection chairman, had not yet been able to verify the validity of the 330 signatures. on the petition calling for a vote of confidence on the ASB card fee. However, he has ruled that the wording of the petition's statement does not call for repeal of the fee, only a consensus of student opinion on the increase. Therefore , he said , the student vote will be only an indicator of opinion but regardles s of the result of the eventual vote, there will be no legally binding vote, such as that of a referendum. As of press time yesterday, he had not been able to verify all the names on the petition. He stated that if he is able to d o s o before today's meeting of the Elections and Credentials Committee, t hat the issue will be on tomorrow's b allot. T he polling place will be in the Student Union. An ASB card is required to vote.

emorial services fated tomorrow Memorial Day services will be held tomorrow in fro nt of the flagpole at 11 a.m . The annual service will honor the late Charles D. Henricks, a Lt. •in the United States Marine Corp, and former Palomar student who died in Vie tnam t his March. Sponsored by the Vet's Club, this service will include participation from the drum and buglecorps from Camp Pendleton and will be accompanied by a cereonial rifle drill team. An invocation will be presented by a local ministe r and ASB president Lloyd Walker will present General Logan's Order, an order establishing Memorial Day a s a national holiday. Also scheduled on t he program are a short speech from Dr. F rederick Huber, president of Palomar College, and closing remarks by Vet's Club president Chris )V1arza ek. Vet's Club member Pat mith is the c hairman of the program.

P alomar College's Tom Ries took t hird place in the 440-yard intermediate hurdles Saturday night i n the California State Junior College Track and Field Championships. Sacramento City College's Mike Bates won the event in 52. 8. Ries was c locked in 54 flat. The Comet mile-relay team and Pancho Enriquez in the 880 were never l n contention in their events, while "ties was left in the blocks in the 120 igh hurdles .

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Tomorrow "Every man' s dream, the s ecret of Michelangelo" will be presented by the Newman Club in P -3 2. The 11 a.m. showing will last a full hour. Students are invited to bring their lunch. This is a new film, recently shown on the ABC television network.

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Concluding two years of intensive campus studies and inhospital t raining, 22 s tudent nurses will take part in a pregraduation "pinning" ceremony, June 8 at 2 p.m. in P32. The faculty of the Nursing Education Department will sponsor the "Family Day" program in honor of the first nursing class to graduate from Palomar. Parents, school administrators and

92069

Best actor, actress named at play festival

Special run-off

election slated lor tomorrow

San Marcos, Calif.

,

Mike Stodghill and Glenda Bradley Jones received Best Actor and Ac tress accolades Friday night at the Will Geer Original One Act Play Festival. John Rabe was laude d for Best Dir ection, while Bill Holt was honored with Best Play honors for his play, "In Which: A Station Waits for its Train and Ted Watches it Wait." Awardi ng the plaques was a panel of critics composed of play sponsor Will Geer, theater critic Welton Jones , and former Palomar drama instructor Frank White. The first of three plays presented in the evening portion of the festival was "Apollo, Your Time is Up." Written by Frances Greenough, the moon-bas ed play was directed by Armelda Graham and Buddy Ashbrook. A satire of the Gods of Mount Olympus , the play covered the various methods and conniving employed by them to keep man on earth. Appearing in t he play were Dale Baldridge as Zeus , Mariechen Demchak as

Spring sports award banquet

slated tomorrow Tomorrow the Vet's Club will sponsor a memorial program to honor the nation's

war dead. The ceremony will take place in front of the flag pole. --Photo by Anthony

SB budget $2,000 in black Cuts totaling over $26 ,000 left ASB wi th a $2000 excess in the 1969-70 budget. Projected income should total $260,730 while expenditures for the 1969-70 school year are estimated at $258,105. The budget was adopted by the ASB council in a recent 3 hour meeting, at which time the members voted for delet ion of fu nds to Bravura, the campus li te rary magazine. The budget was presented to the board of governors last Tuesday as a tentative budget. It is expected that the final budget will be accepted or rejected by the board of gove rnors at their final meeting in June. Virtually every club and organization on campus took cuts in their proposed budgets to meet the $26, 000 deficit. Budget committee chairman Hank Pinto urged that organizations showing no or 1· ttle income, implement their treasuries by engaging in fund-raising programs. Hi s committee drew up the budget after

various faculty members will be invited to the ceremony and reception which follows in Q3.

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Due to the Memorial Day holiday, there will be no Friday edition of THE TELESCOPE. The final edition will be Tuesday.

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All lockers on campus will be opened for inspection and all contents confiscated and destroyed June 16. Any personal locks remaining on the l ockers will be sawed off by custodians after that date. Art lockers will be available within two weeks of the clean out date.

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Richard Norlin, English instructor will replace Adolph Heyne as the faculty adviser of Alpha Gamma Sigma, according to Victori a Richardson, club official. Norlin will be joined in the post by new faculty member Steve Hinthorne in the advisership.

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Representatives from ACCESS, a comm unity service organization, will be on canJflllS tomorrow from 10:30 to 1 p.m. in the student union. Mrs. Dorothy McEliheney, ACCESS coordinator from Escondido, is looking for volunteers to work with pre-school Chicano children in Escondido.

three weeks of hearings. · Due to the fact that Palomar will be · entering a new athletic conference next fall, (the Mission Conference, comprable to the present football conference in which we play San Bernardino, Citrus, Chaffey, etc.) most of the athletic teams were given consideration for extra transportation. Significant incomes and expenses include the bookstore which has projected a $2 05,000 income and a $179,933 expense; Telescope, who has projected a $400 income and a $3 ,440 expense, Focus, $150 income versus a $1,676 expense and football which expects $5,000 income and $8 ,695 in expense.

Certificates and awards will be given out tomorrow night at the Spring Sports Award Banquet in the student union at Palomar College. Sponsored by the Associated Student Body, the banquet is slated to begin at 6:30p.m. Both present and prospective athletes are invited to attend as guests . Certificates will be awarded to the participants in all the various sports, and a sophomore plaque will be presented to students who have participated in sports for the college the last two years. Also included in the presentation will be awards fo r the "Most Valuable", "Most Inspirational'', and "Most Improved" players in baseball and track. Both sports will also have an award for cocaptains. A member of the track team will be presented with the "Iron Man Award." Palomar's tennis and archery teams MVP will receive trophies. Another trophy will be awarded to the golf teams MVP, as well as one for the "Most Improved" player. Awards for "Most Outstanding Athlete" and "Sportsmanship" will also be pres en ted in the course of the evening.

Hera, Greg Krueger as Apollo(the first of two roles he played that evening), Barbara Hulbert as Aphrodite, Glenda Jones as Athena, Kent Gordon as Mars, and Bill Holt as Hermes. Named as Best Play of the evening was the second play, "In Which: A Station Waits for its Train and Ted Watc hes it Wait". Directed by Dave Jones the Holt play centered around a hapless young man waiting for his train and the situations he sees unfold in the station. For example, while waiting, two hippies, boy and girl presumably, enter, unroll a double width sleeping bag, crawl in, and proceed to roll about the floor with assorted c rie s and laughter. In come two policemen, one with a shoulder patch identifying himself as a Chicago policemen. Ted is accused of having someone stashed in hi s bag, until the officer opens it to reveal a hand . The male hippie is handcuffed, and after an encounter with a weird, far-outreligious leader named The Conductor, they all march out. Then enter the two plainclothes policemen, Philonius and Hylus. Stodghill was honored for his role as Philonius. Others in the cast were Rich Creighton as Ted, Greg Krueger as The Conductor, Rick Briggs and John Rabe as the two policemen, Chris Cremin and Carol Wycoff as the hippies,and Bob Hutchings and Glenda Jones as friends of Ted. "Second Judgeme nt", the final play of the evening, was written by Greg Krueger and directed by John Rabe, who received Bes t Direction for the play. Adapted fro m Frederic Brown's s hort story, "The Weapon", it is a story of a scientist who has invented a crop- killing chemical a nd his internal struggle and decision of whether or not to give the compound to the government. Starring in the dramatic play are Mil Schuster as Dr, Markam, Jim Southe rs as Mr. Lewis , Bob Hutchings as Dr. Markam ' s mentally retarded boy Donald, and Sandy Hume as Mrs. Brockett, from the Women's League for Peace, a group opposing the chemical's distribution to the government. Technical staffs for the plays were: "Apollo": Jeff Chamberlain, lights; Kevin Wholey, special technical work; and Belita Felgen, costumes. "In Which:. . • ": Dave Jones, director; Glenda Jones , assistant; JeffChamberlain and Bob Hutchings, lights; and Bill Holt, props, costumes, and makeup. "Second Judgement": JohnRabe, director; Dave Humpheries and Jeff Chamberlain, lights.

STANFORD GRAD AT 20

Instructor Bedford 'does hi thing' By Linda Dean "I cannot classify myself in the past few years, I do just what I feel is me," stated Mr. William L. Bedford, instructor in chemistry, Engineering, Mathematics, and occasionally Russian. He graduated at the age of 20 from Stanford and later did graduate work at the University of California at Berkeley. He is married and has four children ranging in age from five to fourteen years. The family resides in Vista where they have lived for 9 years . Mr. Bedford has been very active in many community activities. Among the ones he stressed was the office of president of the North San Diego County American Civil Liberties Union ofwhich he states, "We are concerned with protecting the Constitutional rights of ALL citizens .. " This organization was founded in the early 1900's and has become well known in its protection of civil liberties.

one time or another any or all of us . " Before coming to Palomar College, Bedford served for years in the Ai r Force as a Russian language specialist and worked for Standard Oil Co. as a research engineer. He has a fluent use of two other languages, German and Spanish. Another field of specialization is psychological group work (he has a psychology degree from Stanford. Bedford is also a registe red professional engineer in the field of Chemical Engineering. He finds mountain climbing to be fascinati ng as a sport, and likes music of varied descriptions ranging from classical to acid rock, but dosen't care for musicals. During part of the interview, while seated in the Student Union, the juke box was playing "Variations on a Theme" written by. Erik Sa tie and recorded by Blood, Sweat, and Tears. He hesitated

He is past chairman of the Unitarian Fellowship in Vista and said, "I am concerned with philosophy and, religion, and I am very concerned about the future of the human race. " It appeared that Mr. Bedford has many concerns dealing with the behavior of people in general. He is a board member and former president of the Palomar Family Counseling Service Association which has branch offices in Vista and Escondido. The function of this group is to "counsel people with family problems which they cannot resolve on their own without help." He concluded, "'This could be at

William L. Bedford

and then stated , "That this is one of the best pieces of music I've ever heard," His family contains a veritable menagerie. At present they have two dogs, five pups , four cats , five citizens, a rat, tw.o parrots, and did have a goat but it "was just too much to milk her twice a day." Mr. Bedford has a deep concern for young people, and has invited c ollege students who have no permanent residence while at college to be guests at his home. To further substantiate the above interest, he illustrates concern in stating, "I have fou nd that some students coming to college lack background in mathematics, chemistr y, and physics. Students are more apathetic and less interested than previously, but I concern myself with those students who are interestedand not apathetic . " Mr. Bedford at one time lived with the Joan Baez family for a year. Joan is a folk singer well known to those who enjoy fol.k music. Alfred Newman is his idol. Near the end of the interview, Mr. Bedford explained, "When I first started teaching I was worried about the studentteac her relationship. I felt that it was necessary to create a barrier. Now I am not afraid to be open." He often gives students flowers and when asked about the 'hippies' and 'flower children' he shrugged and said, "With luck they may save us." On his office wall, hangs a circuit board with protruding wires which he (Continued Page 2)


RESTRUCTURES STUDENT GOVERNMENT

FROM THE RIGHT SIDE

We have paid enough By Steven A. Krueger Tomorrow the Veteran ' s Club will add yet another name to the growing list of former Palomar s tudents killed in Vietnam. The addition of Marine Lt. Charles D. Henricks to the plaque beneath the flag pole brings the number of names to an even ten. Henricks died earlier this year. But the growing list of dead here is only part of an idiotic and tragic story called Vietnam. All wars are hell, it is said , but this war will stain the generation that spawned and the names of those leaders who a llowed it to continue. Vietnam is expending the lives of 40 soldiers to capture Hamburger Hill. The bodies are barely cold and already our military is making plans to pull back off the summit. Vietnam is expending billions of doll ars to support a government thatdenies to its citizens the basic rights we as Americans and free people enjoy. Vietnam is 32,000 men dead in a fight to stem the tide of Communism, while a government we helped install espouses the same ideology from a haven 90 miles from Florida. Vietnam is over 300,000 men wounded

· and missing. These are the real heros, the ones that may only receive a headache and scalp wound, or the ones that may loose an arm or foot. Two years ago, while visiting the naval hosptial at Camp Pendleton, we saw a load of these casualities being brought home. One man was wheeled past with the stump of his leg draining into a plastic bottle. Another young man was wheeled passed in a wheel chair, his head encased in a crimson bandage. Vietnam is a young wife nursing a newborn baby and waiting for word of her missing flyer husband . Vietnam is the sailor's wife, worried because she hasn't heard from him in over a month. The tragedy then is not just the growing list of fatalities. It is the fear, the heartach~, the crippled and maimed. Tomorrow and again Friday, we should pay .honor to those men who have fallen in the war. We are not honoring the war and the criminals in Washington and Hanoi who allow it to go on. We are honoring the individual heroes who saw what they considered to be their duty, and did it. Let us pray that next year the Vet's Club will have no more names to add to the plaques beneath the flagpol e.

'There are no children no

I

By Bill Demorest There are no children here now, they have all returned to their homes until we will be able to come back. Tomorrow, tomorrow, tomorrow ..... If only we had sufficent supplies and sensitive personnel to give each child the attention that he deserves, we would be here tomorrow. An hour and a half ago when I arrived, the silence could be heard, broken only by the sound of a bird calling happily to her young in the nest. The house had no lawn, no garage, only a few scattered clumps of flowers and some trees. A car passed by, throwing small pieces of gravel, billowing dust behind it, that settled again awaiting the next car. The children and other volunteers arrived then. The children were black haired, brown haired, tall, short, plump, skinny, shy and bold, smiling and bubbling with laughter, a few too scared to do more that sit and stare at this firghtening new place with all of its wonderful activity and commotion.· They ranged in age from one year old to seven or more. I brought out my marbles and my yoyo and a pencil and we communicated for this hour that we had today. We talk-

ed and learned from one another for this short time. It has been stated that 80 per cent of these beautiful children will not graduate from high school. They will drop out to roam the streets and begin working at jobs that lead nowhere. They are from the minority community called Mexican- American and it seems that there is more emphasis on the former part of this cultural name than on the latter. Why should a brown skin and a cultural name keep 80 per cent from going beyond the tenth or eleventh grade ? These are the ones who are not strong enough to cope with the prejudices of our society. It becomes very quiet and time to go back to the world where there are few barriers that I cannot overcome, given a little time and the need to do so. I am blond and I don't have brown or black skin and almost everyone will say "hi" to me . For information about how you can help, please call the ACCESS office in Escondido at 745 - 6544. We ask only two hours a week during the day for anyone who is willing to volunteer their time.

Oxy begins new era By Chris Read Tucked away on a hillside in the Eagle Rock area of Pasadena, amongthe lofty eucalyptus trees and middle class homes and coated with heavy blanket of smog lies the campus of Occidental College. Occidental is a private school, one of the oldest in the Los Angeles area, and has an enrollment of 1700. Tuition is high, as are the academic standards . It avoids the "rich man's college" image because 55 per cent of the student body are attending on scholarships. They have a football team, on- campus living, off-campus fraternities, and sororities, SDS, and a relaxed atmosphere. Walking around campus, listening to what is going on, you get the feeling that the students have an interest in what is going on. It seems that the 1700 are a close knit bunch. They trust each other. Another thing unusual about Occidental is that it has no associated student body as we at Palomar know it. Last Wednesday I accompanied Dean Theodore Kilman, Neil Hoffman, and Pat Smith to Oxy. Dean Kilman had heard, at an Occidental alumni meeting, that student government there had been restructured. He became interested and, following conversations with Hoffman, arranged a trip to the campus so we could learn first hand. I was invited to record what happened, and Pat Smith went to represent the ASB. It was a fruitful visit. Dean o f St udents

Our first stop was at the office of the Dean of Students. Dean David Collins briefed us on the history of student government at Occidental, telling us the events that led up to the restructuring student government to what is now known as community government. Ironically, the restructuring of their student government followed a period much the same as we at Palomar are experiencing right now. Student apathy prevailed. Student government was uneffective and did not appeal to the students. In fact members of the Occidental Student Senate voted themselves out of office. Of course, some will ask what is wrong with our present system, but I believe that the 20 per cent voter turnout at the recent election indicates that something is dreadfully wrong. When 80 per cent of the students at Palomar don't care who spends their money, and for what, then there is something wrong either with the students themselves or with student government. I believe that it is the student government. I don't believe I am alone .

The five student members of the Council are elected by the students at large and as in a board race, they run for an individual seat on the council. At the disposal of the students are numerous committees covering everything from housing to conduct to athletics . The five students appoint a chairman to each committee and they are staffed with a proportionate number of students, faculty, and administrators according to the purpose of each committee. For instance a social committee would have more students than faculty and administrators, since it mainly pertains to students . On the other hand, a committee on faculty hiring would have more faculty and administrators than students because it is of prime concern to the faculty and administration. Community re p re sented

The committees, through the chairman, make recommendations to the college council. By use of these committees, the total college community is repr e sented and therefore becomes involved . This i s not the answer to government at Palomar, howe ve r. There are many differences in the two c ampuses. Oxy is a private school, Palomar is public . Funding is handled differently. Oxy has on-campus living, Palomar does not. So the Occidental s tude nt government sys tem or Community Governmen as they c all it, will not work he re at Palomar. The thing to keep in mind is that Oxy had a system that was outdated and failing. They searched for a new and better system and found it with their Community Government program. They took the giant step towards ending their "sand-box" government. They are now beginning to reap the rewards . Palomar needs to take that giant step. Perhaps we can get together and work out a more effective form of student

Photographic exhibit opens in library The final photographic display of the semester has been hung in the library, according to Justus Ahrend, photography instructor . The display features selections from the basic photography class from the fall semester. It is located on the east wall of the main library in the photographic display area. The display will be available for viewing throughout the remainder of the school year.

government. Maybe using Occidental as a model, maybe not. If we can get together and rap about some of your ideas learn to listen, and above all learn to trust each other maybe we can lick the problems that we are now facing. As Dean Ryf, Dean of the Faculty at Occidental told us, "Amazing things can happen when people learn to trust each other."

COPE sponsors jazz festival in June Jazz buffs unwilling to make it to this year's Monterey Jazz Festival in September will be treated to a local fes tival June 21 and 22 at the San Diego Sports Arena. Approxomately 30 performers and acts will appear in the "Jazz By The Bay" festival sponsored by COPE(Community Opportunity Programs in Education) in conjunction with San Diego's 200th Anniversery, Inc. Scheduled for sets at the two day affair are Sammy Davis Jr. Gabor Szabo, Oscar Peterson, Cal Tjader, Jimmy Smith, Odetta, The Young-Holt Trio Unlimited, Ahmed Jamal, Herbie Hancock, and Shelley Manne. COPE hopes to raise $100,000 for aid to needy youngsters from minority and disadvantaged families in San Diego and for community education projects such as tutoring centers .

BEDFORD

(Continued from Page 1) titled "Executive Decisions". He has two friends, Bilbo and Frodo Baggins, who are "Hobbits" and share his office with him. They are shy and come only at night. They are characters from books written by J.R. Tolkien. He can communicate with Bilbo and Frodo without talking. The interview most revealing with this gentleman of many concerns, ended with his presentation to the writer of a poem by Joan Baez. A short stanza-; "The sky goes through four days in an hour, the trees wail, little animals skitter in the mud and everything gets dark and goes completely wild. But it's really God- - playing music in his favorite Cathedral in heaven--shattering a stained glass--playing a gigantic organ--thundering on the keys--perfect harmony--perfect joy. "

Colle g e Coun cil

Dear Editor, I have just read Mr. Mott's piece in the May 6 issue of the Telescope and I find his thoughts shallow! F irst of all, Mr. Mott makes the assertion that Americans basic right is to live in peace. Then, he goes on to state that it's impossible because there are forces that want what is not theirs, presumably our peace or a piece. I do agree on his latter point, but not on his first. Americans basic right is freedom! America, as we know it, was born in the midst of turmoil, only to survive because men had the chance for freedom. Yes, freedom from European conscription. Now, Mr. Mott deems it necessary for free men to be forced into surrendering their liberities (sic) to a military regimentation and he hopes it continues! How can regimentation facilitate independent thingking-which is 'thee' prerequisite for democracy? I'm well aware that a militarey (.sic) force is a 'necessary evil'. But, it should bethe individual choice, on whether to subject himself to unquestionable obedience, that a military requires. Further on, Mr. Mott states that our men are in VietNam to retain Americans freedom. Does this mean if we lost or •pull out" that we will collapse ? This issue, Viet Nam, is so complex, that I'm surprised he could ever stereotype it, as a simple objective. Aside from this, other statements need scanning. Another questionable account is that, according to Mr. Mott, they are dissenters ("young, immature students") who have been taught not to respect basic rights of individual s . This may be true in s ome cases, my argument is not schooled here. But in that Mr. Mott defends the service, which does not believe in individualism and has the power to execute these beliefs. Finally, he said there is no better educ ation, training, c haracter and discipline .builder than the military. Also, t he service p r ovides opportunities for

travel and to meet people. These are very questionable statements. The ultimate purpose of military training and education is to militarize. As to the question of character builder and discipline! The military does build discipline, but the character building is developed into a indoctrinated individual. Armies, of any nationality do their best to instill subordination, which is an enemy to the basic concept to democracy. And for travel, military personnel are very limited . They are limited to specific areas most of the time in the service. The myth about 'seeing the world' should be only applied at the recruiting station. And as for meeting interesting people the military has a nice little caste system. In conclusion, my thoughts run as John Gunther's did when he said, "Ours is the only country deliberately founded on a good idea." I have a feeling he mains FREEDOM!

After two years of hard work, unforeseen problems, and a heck of a lot of determination Occidental has thrown out the tradition of ASB and come up with the college council. The college council is a 12 member board dedicated to dealing with the problems of the entire college community. The board is made up of five students four faculty members, and three administrators. They make all the executive decisions, from curriculum to cafe teria policy.

I SHoULD

LEAR N

THE TELESCOPE

Published Tues day and Friday of each school week, except during final examinations or holidays, by the Communications Department of Palomar College, San Marcos , Calif., 92069. Phone: 7441150, Ext. 40. Advertising rates are $1.50 per column inch. Opinions expres sed in signed editorials Michael McCarthy a nd articles a re the views of the write r s D 2486 a nd do not ne c essarily represent opinions of the staff, views of the Associated Student Body Council, college administration, or the Board of Governors. The . TELESCOPE invites responsible "guest editorials" or letters t o the editor. All c ommunications must be signed by the author, including I. D. nu mber. Names will be withheld upon request. Letters may be submitted to the TELESCOPE editorial office, R-1. The second annual teacher evaluation Editor-in-Chief .•.•..• Steven A. Krueger will begin as early as today in some News Editor • . .... .... •.. . . •. Jim Strain classes, according to evaluation chairPage 1, Tuesday .......... Tom Anderson woman Karen Schmidt. Page 2, Tuesday ....... . ... . ... Chris Read The evaluations will be filled out in Page 1, Friday ... . . .. . ....... Jackie Easley individual classes and returned by stuPage 2, Friday. . .......... .. . Phil Fellows dents or instructors to the student counExchange Editor .... . ..... . .. Lois Cavalier cil chambers in R-3. Ad Manager ....... . .. . .... .. Starr Bennett Last year's form has been somewhat Photographers . .... . .. William Anthony, simplified in its usage and rating scale. Gene Masterson, Dwaine Moore, Ted It begins with a "1" rating for "strongly Kar ounos agree" to "5" for "strongly disagree". Editorial Adviser . . . . Mr. Fred Wilhelm Areas to be covered include content, Graphics Adviser . . . Mr. James McNutt p r esentation, assignments, miscellaneoPhorography Adviser. Mr. Justus Ahrend us, and additional comments.

Faculty evaluation will begin today; rating simplified

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SUMMER ScHoOL CALL

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