Daily Universe | BYU Student Newspapers (2025)

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“Voice of Brigham Young University Community”

Rebel Rally

rritiay, April 15, I960

rkinson
Return
r Forum

I

I

N

■ Forthcote Parkinson, auth-
he recent world-wide best
I “Parkinson’s Law,” a sat-
modern inefficient man-
11 nt, will speak at the Brig-
q Young University forum
!)ly Monday.

PARKINSON, who is Raf-
rofessor of History at Uni-
' of Malaya, was educated
hbridge, Royal Naval Col-
nd University of London,
s taught also at the Royal
College, at Dartmouth and
-$ity of Liverpool.

™;pokc at BYU last year.

.ng World War II, Profes-
Irkinson was commissioned
jiiic Queen’s Royal Regiment
m 1 rved as an RAF staff of-
jjjind later on the general

.Ji AUTHORITY ON naval
fl', he has written a num-
scholarly books dealing
le subject. His latest book
\\e Evolution of Political
tit,” and he has also writ-
;rade in the Eastern Seas,”
ler in Malaya,” “The Rise
Port of Liverpool” and
mouth Point.”

* • reviewers throughout
itry generally agree that
nson’s Law” is' a hilarious
ever book as well as a
I tone of human thought”
“ninistration and manage-

ll fl|

inish Speakers
Organize Ward

inish speaking students
have an opportunity to
se that a Spanish ward
'ganized during the re-
i of the campus stake this
end.

tone K. Romney, presi-
of Brigham Young Uni-
:y stake, has received
from the Church general
rities that a petition of
cidred or more names
be circulated in order to
the work.

; list must be turned in
£• an Romney by 5 p.m. to-
Those interested should
Arturo Barios at FR3-
or Rul Rodraiguez at
)319.

I Elections’
fe Continues
at BYU

fs

i

READY FOR THE BUNNY— Getting a
little impatient for the Easter bunny’s
visit are left to right, Sherrie, Dawn, and
Larry, children of Staff Sgt. George M.
and Ana Hall. The youngsters hope to fill

their baskets at the Easter egg hunt to-
morrow, sponsored by the Sponsor Corps
for children of married students. The
hunt starts at 10:45 a.m. on the fenced
football field west of the fieldhouse.

Family Daze to Begin for Marrieds

Family Daze is here again !

Now is the time for all married students
at Brigham Young University to let then-
presence on dampus be known. Next week is
a time set aside to honor the married couples
at the “Y.”

ACTIVITIES get under way Wednesday
at 5:30 p.m. with a picnic for the whole fam-
ily. The program will be held at Pioneer
Park at 5th West and Center Street in Provo.
If it rains, students will meet at the west end
of the Smith Fieldhouse.

Mom will have a chance to show her tal-
ent with a cake baking contest to be judged

at the picnic. There will be a baby crawling
contest, three-legged races for the couples
and the kids and many other fun activities.
Families should bring their own lunches, but
drinks and desserts will be furnished.

THE BABY PHOTO contest for amateur
photographers begins Thursday. There is no
age limit for the children in the photos, but
they must be children of BYU students and
preferably taken by the parents. Entries
should be in as early as possible for the final
judging Thursday.

Photos will be judged on originality, ap-
peal and cleverness of caption. The deadline
for the entires is Tuesday at 5 p.m.

HAVANA, April 15— (UPI)—

I New anti-government violence

Provo, Utah was reported today in Central

Cuba, northwest of the rain-

drenched mountains where
troops led by Premier Fidel Cas-
tro himself are said to be bat-
tling Guerrilla forces.

Anti-Castro activity has been
reported this week in the Maes-
tra. Cristal and Escambray
I mountains — the fastnesses from
which the Premier and his allies
once fought ousted ex-president
I Fulgencio Batista.

REPORTS FROM LAS Villas
Province said guerrillas emulat-
ing Castro’s own former tactics
have seized and burned several
trucks and other vehicles on the
south-coast highway between
Trinidad and Cienfuegos.

In Oriente Province, a Castro-
led force of 2,000 to 3,000 troops
and militia were said to have
clashed with guerrillas led by
ex-Maj. Manuel Beaton in the
Maestra Mountains near Palma
Soriano.

ONE REPORT SAID Beaton’s
men had overrun an army out-
post in a surprise attack, cap-
turing all of its arms and am-
munition.

Other reports from the area
said Castro’s troops, slogging
through seas of mud, were try-
ing to encircle Beaton’s band,
said to number about 80 men.

TWO OTHER GUERRILLA
bands, numbering about 85 men
in all, had been reported in ac-
tion near the logging town of El
|Uvera and in the vicinity of
Baitiquiri.

Anti-government activity also
had- been reported in the Cristal
Mountains along the coast north
of Palma Soriano, once the hide-
out Of an anti-Batista band led
by Castro’s brother Raul.

NONE OF THESE reports was
either confrimed or denied by
the government, which has
cloaked the situation in Central
and Eastern Cuba in a veil of
secrecy reminiscent of the secur-
ity precautions Batista used to
conceal details of his army’s op-
erations against Castro’s rebels.

Easter Recalls Christ’s Gift

;s in studentbody and class
ns will be taken all day in
set up on the quad, but
suits will be kept a well-
Vd secret until the Inagur-
Saturday night.

' 1 candidates will be at the
and not even they will
the results until they hear
imes called. The results
lot be picked up from
le accounting until just
the dance.

Elections Committee has
students to vote. Students
nly to present their activ-
•ds before they can pick
lots.

i Elections Committee has
ked that students be care-
fill in the entire squares
X IBM pencil to make sure
te will be counted.

SYMBOLIC SENTINEL — Perched on -the crest of a rise
on Y Mountain, this stone cross was erected many years
ago by youths of the Congregational Church and was
used by student groups for Easter sunrise services.
For several years now it has stood unused.

by Rita Wheeler
Universe Campus Editor

The cross stood deserted on the
crest of the hill, and a haze
spread across the valley.

MADE OF BROWN and gray
rocks, the 10-foot tall cross was
held together with metal braces
and dingey-colored cement. A
heavy breeze swirled dust a-
round its base and whipped the
barren bushes that tangled
around the clearing where it
stood. Only a skiff of spring
grass broke the starkness of the
scene.

But stepping up to the base of
the cross, one could see over the
break of the hill a “promised
valley” in the bright sunlight
that had suddenly penetrated the
softly-vanishing haze. Building
equipment could be seen work-
ing on the campus of a univer-
sity promised a great destiny.

FROM THE NEW vantage
point at the base of the cross
could be seen the leafed trees in
orchards, green fields, fine brick
houses and churches, many cars
and gardens and playgrounds for
children — a bounteous, abund-
ant life was visible.

There was a cross and there
were stones that figured in the
history of a Man 19 centuries
ago. Some 800 million people
around the globe will be com-
memorating this weekend a ser-
ies of events that took place in
an obscure corner of the Roman
Empire.

RECORDED BY A physician,
Luke, one aocount tells about

the shouts “crucify him, crucify
him,” about the crown of thorns,
about the women who cried for
Him, about the darkness that
lasted three hour*.

And Nephi on another con-
tinent told about the great storm,
the “great and terrible” tem-
pests, the thunder and lightning,
the destruction that covered the
land at the time of His crucifix-
ion.

YET THERE IS a new vantage
point — a new view filled with
the promise of an eternal life
and a perfected body. The same
two men, Luke and Nephi, test-
ified of the sunlight of a resur-
rection that broke through the
darkness of the crucifixion.

The stone of the sepulchre was
rolled back and the tomb was
empty when Mary Magdalene,
Joanna and Mary, the mother of
James, went to embalm the
body. Their report was received
with scepticism until the discip-
les themselves saw and talked
to the risen Christ.

AND THOSE DISCIPLES and
the followers of Christ on the
other continent saw and felt His
wounds. The people heard Him
say, "... I am the God of the
whole earth and have been slain
for the sins of the world.”

After the people had witnessed
for themselves, they cried out,
“Hosana! Blessed by the name
of the Most High God.” And they
worshipped the#Lord who had
died for their sins and then had
risen to destroy the bonds of
death and bring a glorious new
life.

Page 2

Daily Universe

paily Universe

Unsigned, editorials are the objective thoughts of the editor ,
written to inform, influence and entertain. The editor assumes
personal responsibility for matter therein contained.

‘That We Might Live’

They scourged Him and spat upon Him and made
Him bear His own cross to the Place of the Skull. With
nails driven through His hands and feet, having suf-
fered immeasurably in the Garden and during His trial,
He said quietly, “Father forgive them, for they know not
what they do.” He" died and was laid in a borrowed
tomb.

He rose from the dead — as He said He would —
the first fruits of the resurrection. He appeared to His
disciples. They thought He was a spirit. He said, “Feel
my hands and feet, for a spirit hath not flesh and bone
as ye see me have . . The disciples took that message
of resurrection to the entire world.

These are the days of the fast car and the fast
buck. The authors of “Advice and Consent” have dub-
bed this “the age of the shoddy.” These are the days
of compromise. These are the days of big and little
“maybe.”

The power and vitality of the story of Christ is a
tower of strengthen these days of “maybe.” Clearly,
unequivocably the story comes to us — agony in the gar-
den, a crown of thorns, piercing nails, an empty tomb,
a piece of broiled fish, a voice on the road to Damascus,
a visitation as a boy prays in a grove.

These things, these solid, uncompromising testi-
monies, should mean a great deal to us. We who are the
citizens of the age of moral “maybe” should seize the
power that these truths embody. We should take from
them strength in times of temptation, knowledge in
times of doubting, peace in times of desperation.

/ More than anything, we should set a course of
undeviating integrity, based on the principles which
He taught and died for, so that when He comes again —
as He surely shall — we will be prepared to meet Him
and do His will. n

To High Honors

Today on page four of the Daily Universe the names
of winter quarter High Honor Roll students appear. Ac-
ademic emphasis, “Brighten Your Understanding,” in-
tellectual achievement, or whatever you choose to call it,
boils down to one thing — hard work.

After you make all the allowances, give the whys
and wherefores that people are prone to give to explain
someone else’s success, the fact remains that study and
sweat are the key factors in getting good grades. People
who get on the high honor roll do so because thej r turn
in class assignments, prepare lessons with care, and in
general fulfill their obligation to themselves as scho
lars. Obviously some students have a higher capacity
for intellectual achievement than others — but that isn’t
enough. There are too many Phi Beta Kappas on skid
row, too many near geniuses working as day laborers
or third rate bookkeepers, for us to believe that the in-
telligence quotient is everything.

There must be a strong drive which intellect doesn’t
provide, if one is to succeed in any given field of en-
deavor. One important facet is that of sticking to the
job.

William James, the famous psychologist, put it this
way, “Let no youth have anxiety about the upshot of
his education, w'hatever the line of it may be. If he keeps
faithfully busy each hour of the working day, he may
safely leave the final result to itself.

“He can with perfect certainty count on waking
up some fine morning to find himself one of the com-
petent ones of his generation, in whatever pursuit he
may have singled out.

“Silently, between all the details of his business,
the power of judging in all that class of matter will
have built itself up within him as a possession that will
never pass away. Young people should know this truth
in advance.

“The ignorance of it has probably engendered more
discouragement and faint-heartedness in youth embark-
ing on arduous careers than all other causes put to-
gether.”

('VE NOTICED THAT YOU NEVER
PAT A DOG ON THE HEAD
(jOHEN YOU WALK BY HIM

April 15, 1 (HU.

Truth of Resurrection!
Survives Investigution

by Louis Cassels
United Press International

Weston H. Morrill

“This week we honor” Weston
H. Morrill, senior student from
Provo.

Morrill was nominated by the
College of Education where he
is majoring in secondary educa-
tion with a composite major in
social studies. He has maintained
a 3.3 grade point average.

Morrill is the ward statistical
clerk for the 20th Ward and has
filled a mission to California.

He is married and has two
children and is now a member of
the Student Education Associa-
tion.

Morrill will graduate in Aug-
ust $nd is returning in the fall
to do graduate work in guidance
and counseling.

i

Lucille Darley

“This week we honor” Lucille
Darley, who has been namecl as
an outstanding student from the
College of Education.

A major in elementary in-
struction from Centerville, Miss
Darley wants to teach first
grade.

Now president of the Associa-
tion for Childhood Education, an
organization for elementary in-
struction and “HDFR” majors,
Miss Darley transferred to Brig-
ham Young University after at-
tending University of Utah for
two years.

At BYU Miss Darley has been
n Y Calcares and Cumorah
Club, and she participated in the
Hill Cumorah pageant. She was
a member of Spurs at the U. of
U., an officer of Lambda Delta
Sigma and a member of several
committees for student activities.

Some 800 million people around the globe are comna
orating this weekend a series of events which took plac|
centuries ago in an obscure corner of the Roman Empire;

THE ONLY detailed record of these events, which |
birth to ,the Christian faith, is found in certain books!
known as the New Testament. These books can hardlj
called objective histories. They are obviously biased do
ments, written by men whoyhad been seized bj r a great J
viction and who were trying to communicate it to all 1
would listen.

Modern scholars have subjected these books to the a
rigorous inquiry imaginable. Every possible question at
their authenticity has been explored with thoroughness
detachment.

SOME NERVOUS Christians feared that this relent:
critical scrutiny might discredit the New Testament naj
ti-ve. But just the opposite has been true.

“As a result of all this sifting,” says Prof. Erne;
Scott of Union Theological Seminary, “many of our old
ceptions of the New' Testament have been changed, but
claim has been established more surely than ever. We
now feel certain that the facts are set before us with
tial fidelity.” .

THERE IS no longer any serious argument among $
utable scholars about the fact that Jesus of Nazareth
real, historical person; that He “went about doing good!
the gospels record; that He came into conflict with the rul
authorises because of His radical teachings about man's]
lationship to God and to his fellow man ; that He was |
before a Roman functionary named Pontius Pilate ; andf
He was crucified on a hill outside the city of
the early spring of the year A.D. 30.

If the story had ended there, the world probably
never have heard of Jesus of Nazareth. His followers,
had expected him to establish an earthly kingdom, were
disillusioned and terrified by His ignominous de^th
cross. They scattered in all directions to hide.

A SHORT time later, these same frightened men
women returned to Jerusalem and began to proclaim,
unflinching courage and assurance, that Jesus had risen
the dead.

Several attempts have been made over the centuries
explain away the disciples’ contagious faith in the resurr
tion.

One theory, which still has a good many adherent^
that the disciples were victims of mass hallucination.!
pecting to see their beloved teacher again, they were lei
self-hypnosis to experience a vision of Him.

THE DIFFICULTY with this theory is that it ign®
the abundant evidence that the disciples were totallyT
prised by the resurrection. The women w r ho found the 1
empty had gone there with the intention of embalming Jei
body. And their report was received with skepticism by
other disciples until they had personally seen and talkel
the risen Christ.

Another theory, which gained wide currency in the II
century, holds that Jesus did not actually die on the c|
but only fainted, and was resuscitated by the coolness of
tomb. David Friedrich Strauss, a German rationalist 1
osopher who tirelessly sought for natural explanations
Biblical miracles, explained why he was unable to acci
this theory:

“IT IS IMPOSSIBLE that a being who had stolen
dead out of the sepulchre, who , crept about weak and;
wanting medical treatment, who required banda:
strengthening and indulgence, and who still at last vielj
Jo His sufferings, could have given to the disciples the
pression that He was a conqueror over death and the grf

Finally there is what the theologians call “the f]
theory.” It suggests that the disciples invented the stoj
the resurrection and deliberately falsified a lot of de’
evidence to support it.

TO ACCEPT this explanation, as Dr. John Suthen
Bonnell has pointed out, one has to believe that “the apo!
gladly became martyrs in order to perpetuate a gig?
hoax.” And the question raised centuries ago by the Rom
writer Tertullian is still pertinent: Will men willinglf
for the sake of a story they know to be false?

There remains the possibility that the disciples
in sober truth, the awe-stricken eyewitnesses of the most sj.
pendous event in all history.

/ cuhat in the s
/world ig so great
about having a

\\LiBRARY GARDjy

ITS WHAT IT STANDS FOR.'J
THEY TRUST MEf THEY'RE
HONORING MY DESIRE FOR
KNOWLEDGE WITH THEIR TRUSTS

TV Becomes Better

(ACP) — University of Texas
Daily Texan tells of the two
male students observed walking
across campus on a Friday night.

A s they passed the lines of
students waiting to enter Greg-
ory Gym for the Anna Russell
show, one was overheard to say:

“Y’know, I was going to go to
that, but I figgered if she was so
good as everybody says she is,
I’d . have already seen her on
television.”

IN RETURN IM SHOWING MY FAHH
IN THEIR LIBRARY BV READING
THEIR BOOKS... IT'S A COMMON
-r BOND OF TRUST...

YOU HAVEN'T SOT A LIBRARY ]
CA RD..Y0UVE SOTATRSATY!

15, 1960

Daily Universe

Page 3

r^l

AMPUS SCENES f Heating Plant Pumps Y's Life Blood,

j

i

by Edward Geary

It has been brought to this writer’s attention, by
y of several bricks thrown through the window at
14 Allen Hall, that a small segment of the studentbody
not altogether satisfied with the sophisticated, scintil-
ing charm and wit of this column. This dissatisfied
oup seems to consist largely of Academic Emphasizers,
it radical body that seeks to overthrow our glorious
i stem of education (study dates, pizza dates, party
tes, Rock Canyon dates, wedding dates, obstetrician
. tes, in roughly that order), and substitute the ridicu-
j ts notion that college is a place for work. It is unlikely
at a group as far removed from the mainstream of
pus thought as these studymongers will ever become
iignificant force. Nevertheless, in order to please ev-
yone, today’s column will be academic.

Having been a freshman longer than anybody else
BYU/I feel especially well qualified to discuss that
igue of all freshmen, the research paper.

THE WRITING OF research papers sometimes be-
is in high school. These early attempts must be labeled
ftrly as research papers, otherwise they may be mis-
cen for fingerpainting and applied to art credit instead
English. This immaturity has all passed by the time
itudent reaches college, however, ancTfreshman papers
;en have the literary quality of comic books (that is to
f'y /, somewhat better than -advertising writing).

The most important thing to consider when writing
oaper is the person fof whom it is written. Teachers
io assign research papers fall into three general eate-
ries. First, the indifferent teacher. He assigns papers
oply because it is expected of him and has no intention
tatever of reading the things. Fortunate indeed is the
ident who drew this sleepy chap. Then there is the
aat-swept-volume teacher. He grades according to
ight, with ah “A” usually requiring about twenty
jnds. He doesn’t read either, so just prepare an at-
tive front page and then dash off some weighty
r such as “Little Red Riding Hood.” Fasten the
ges securely, so they won’t fall off his scales. The third
ie is the eternal student. This teacher dots “i”s and
>sses “t”s and expects every student to be another
ulkner. The wisest thing to do in this case, is to take
jr “E” and hope for better luck next time.

PUT ONLY A little writing on each page so that
i teacher’s children will have plenty of room to scrib-
Punctuation js important. A safe rule is a comma
»ry four words and a period every twenty. An occa-
nal semi-colon doesn’t hurt. Spelling should be
t * tched. If you mis-spell a word, blur it so completely
it it is impossible to tell if it’s right or not.
f| Diagrams can be helpful, but, really, if you can
lvince the teacher that your cross-section of a carrot
really a diagram of a nuclear chain-reaction, this
fjirld has better things in store for you than research
)ers. You’ll probably end up selling ‘‘Mr. Clean” on
evision.

by Boyd Tangren
Universe Staff Writer

of coal in a 24 hour period to
keep the water hot.

Providing heat in cold weath- ,T*\\ e * ar ® e trenches and ditches
er, hot water for showers and ™ hlch characterize the campus
restrooms, and steam for cook- in vicinity of Heritage Halls
ing in school cafeterias are func- are P ar i- °f a million and a half

m

arise)

:

rrculty to Give Monday Recital

J?he musical ability and experience of many years will
m splayed in the faculty recital Monday evening. The pro-
g , to be held in the multipurpose area of the Family
g Center, will begin at 8 p.m.

Id Laycock

oljold Laycock and Carl
■ tner will begin the pro-
M with Schubert’s “Arpeg-
n and Sonata”; and will also
fl m Robert Cundick’s “Viola
!«'a”. Cundick is a Brigham
ftl; University instructor.

• Jlw. McAllister, tenor, ac-
onnied by Elmer Nelson,
. swing two songs, by Tosti and
i^feroe. They will be followed
ozart’s “Viloin Sonata in
|i}or,” performed by Law-
Sardoni and accompanied
ugham McMurdie.

•d|\\4urdie will complete the
T]pg with three sea chanties
ugherty.

W 1

1 °

•j'

5

lu

Credit terms to suit
your budget

IIPP’S JEWELRY

140 W. Center

DAILY UNIVERSE

Published Monday through Friday
during the academic year except dur-
ing vacation and examination periods
by th eAssodated Students of Brigham
Young University. Second class mail
privileges authorized at Provo, Utah.
Re-entered Sept. 20» 1956, under act
of March 3, 1879. Subscription price
of $6.50 Der year.

tions of the Brigham Young Uni
versity Heating Plant.

Running underground from
the Heating Plant-to every cen-
ter on campus is a system of
tunnels and pipes. Circulating
inside the pipes is 60,000 gal-
lons of water that is heated to
400 degrees and under 250
pounds of pressure.

LARGE PUMPS pulsate day
and night keeping the hot water
flowing from the heating plant
to every building on campus’ and
back again. From this hyper-
heated blood line comes the heat
and hot water needed for ail
campus facilities.

Pressurized hot water heating
is a most efficient method of
heating. Although it has been
used in Europe for 50 years, it
has gained popularity in the
United States only during the
last decade.

THE HOT water furnaces
were installed at BYU in 1952.
Prior to that time, steam heat
was used. The plant has three
hot water furnaces and one
steam furnace.

Water is heated in the furn-
aces under pressure in order to
obtain a high temperature with-
out, evaporation. Water vaporizes
at 100 degrees Centigrade. When
the water is b eate< L f° ur boiler
pumps force it into large expan-
sion drums. From there three
system pumps send the hot
water but to campus-buildings.

TUNNELS, large enough for a
man to stand up-right in, honey-
comb the campus. These tunnels
house the water pipes and are
big enough to enable repairmen
to keep the heating system in
top condition as well as make
emergency repairs quickly and
easily.

Water from the plant is not
used in actual heating, but is
used to heat secondary water
systems by flowing around a
series of coils within each build-
ing. These coils in turn generate
steam and hot water for school
use. By using this system, The
same water that leaves the plant
returns to be reheated and sent
out again.

FROM THE time the water
leaves the heating plant until it
returns it loses about 75 degrees
of heat. During a cold spell, it
may take as much as 30 tons

SAME DAY FINISHING
Black and White film
In by 12:00 — Out by 5:00
ALLEN’S PHOTO SUPPLY
24 No. Univ. Ave.

PROM-GOERS

OWN A DINNER JACKET
SAVE MONEY

DINNER JACKETS

USED, LIKE NEW

NEW $33.95

REGULARS:

36

* 10.00 1

14.00

18.00 1
LONGS:

*10.00 1 1
18.00 1

SIZES ON HAND

37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 46
111
1 1112 1
2 2 2 1

/

116 W. Center

For Superior Quality at Student Prices

dollar addition to the heating
plant.

These tunnels will house a
new circulation system w’hich
will serve the library and new
business building. Two addition-
al hot water boilers will be in-
stalled by 1962 and the entire
campus will be converted to
pressurized hot water heating.

WATER WARMER— Furnaces like (his one in IiYU’s
heating plant heat the water that is the “life blood of
the Y. Circulating in a vast underground system of pipes
and tunnels, the water is the source of heat for all cam-
pus buildings.

ideas

for

fun

Jim

George Shearing, Terrace, Sat.
“Last Train from Gun Hill”

Rivoli

“Sampson and Delilah” Scera

“Who Was That Lady?”

Academy

STARTS TODAY

TONY DEAN JANET
CURTIS • M ARTIN • LEIGH

A LIGHT

LEER AT LOVE
AMONG THE
ADULTS I

Show Times

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IN OREM

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Golfing

COMPLETE GOLF SET

Five Irons, Bag
Two Woods vv/head covers
Three Balls
One Dozen Trees

Reduced to

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Page 4

DaiJv Universe

April 15,1

Dean Burton Annoumes

Winter High Honor R 'oh

Students receiving academic
honors for winter quarter have
been announced by Dean Alma
Burton of Admissions and Rec-
ords.

LISTED ON THE high honor
roll are 303 students. These stu-
dents must have earned a 3.8
grade point average, or nearly
straight “A”. The honor roll
lists 526 students and is compos-
ed of those with a grade point
average of 3.5 or better.

Last quarter 284 were on the
high honor roll and 479 on the
honor roll.

THOSE WHO ARE on winter
quarter high honor roll include
the following:

Gerald Tingey Aaron. Joan Maurine
Acomb, G. Boyd Adams, Mary Jo Alleman,
Adrienne T. Allen, Mary Inez Allen,"’ Chris-
tine Anne Allred, Doris Jean Allred, Bon-
nie Lou I. Alvord, Carole M. Anderson,
Lynn Reese Anderson, Marilee M. Arnold-
sen, Ross Lamont Arrington, Peter Peay
Ashworth, Allan Gene Austin.

Richard Henry Babcock, Carma Jane
Baker, Virginia Loree Baker, Sharon Ar-
lene Ballard, David Henry Barber. Bar-
bara Ruth Barker, Lynn Burnham Barlow,
Linda Barney, Diane Bartley, Daniel Le-
land. Bates, Geneva Lydia Bates, James
Hayward Bean, Winston Victor Beard,
James C. Beatse, Jr., John Walter Beck,
Carolyn .Ada Beede, Francis Alvin Belnap,
Joseph Ivins Bentley, Judith Ann Bilder-
back, Gary Lynn Bills, Edward M. Blotter.

Margaret Ann Boam, Arlyn R. Bodily,
Carol Elaine Bolster, Gordon Dixon Booth,
Clifton D. Boyack. Jr., Mary Naomi Boyer,
Gayle L, Brackner, Diane Lynne Bradbury,
Barbara Jean Brown, William Herbert
Brown,

Nonda Christie Browne, Gary Lee
Browning, Nancy Kay Bullock, Nedra C.
Caldwell, Linda Lou Carlson, Lila Jean
Carter, Donald Arthur Cazier, Kenneth
Wayne Chase, Charles M. Christensen,
Douglas A. Christensen, Georgia Chris-
tensen, James Lee Christensen, Ann Al-
een Clark, Kathleen Clark, Sonia Dian-
tha Clark, Neil Henry Clay, Keith Joseph
Clayton, Nina Stratton Clegg, Thelys K.
Clinger, James Curtis Coombs.

Carrie Corless, Milford C. Cottrell,
John Robert Cousins, Hyrum Bruce Cox,
Tarry Lavelle Crapo, Malcolm D. Crawford,
■Suzanne N. Crother, Ronald John Dailey,
Janet Dalton, Bernard C. Dastrup,
Theodore E. Davidson, Vernon Lamar
Densley, Harold O. Dendurent, Dianne
Dibb, Arlene V. Donaldson, Carl Nelson
Dorny, Luann Duffin, David Allen Dur-
kee, Linda E. Eardley, Luwana King Ed-
wards.

Carole Ann Eitel, Barbara H. Ellsworth,
Gary E. England, Rosalie Ann Erekson,
Marva Evans, William Edwin Evenson,
Melvin C. Fish, Elizabeth J. Fletcher,
Gene Lawrence Fox, Mary Ann Freiberg,
Emma Louise French, Mary Ellen
Fritzsche,

Ray Eugene Gammon, Joanne Nellie Gano,
Lynn Evan Garner, Ray Howard Garrison,
_>Iarilyn J. Giles, Glade P. Goodliffe,
Gordon Dickie Gortler, Dianne Gould,
Rita Kay Grant, Paul Robert Gunther,
Julia P. Halgren, Andreas F. Hall,
Blaine Hill Hall, Frankie Taylor Hall,
Wayne Ham, Marian Lucy Hanna,
Carolyn Hansen, Lynne Harris,

Betty Dodge Harrison, Duston George
Harvey, William Bruce Haslam, Ben
Frank Haws, Juliana Haws, Lamar J
Helquist, Daniel Stewart Hess, Jean Pierre
Heudier, Judith Lee Higgins, Allen Dale
Hildt, Grant Harold Holdaway, Shirley L.
Hopkins. Leon B. Hornberger, Kern Ber-
nell Hunt, Linda Hunter.

Malan Robert Jackson, Patty Jean H.
Jackson, Geraldine Jacobsen, Keith Bun-
ker Jenkins, Max A. Jensen, Reed Jerry
Jensen, Owen Oscar Jenson, Clara Ann
Johansen, Charles Edwin Johnson, Claud-
ia Rae Johnson, Hyrum Bennett Johnson,
Myles Albert Judd. Rulon V. Judd, Norma
Jean Kanahele, Kurtlee- Karlinsey, Jr.,
Nicholas Karamichalis, John Budd Keeler.
Karen Dee Keller. Kathleen Elaine Kent,
Charles W. Kernell, Jr., Gary Wendell
Lambert, Sander Leonard Larson, John
Paul Lauritz, John Richard Law, Zelda
Claudette Lee, Maxine Lewis, Theras Gor-
don Lewis, John Eri.c Liljenquist, Judith

Easter Corsage for your
girl.

• Send flowers home to
Mom and Dad.

KNUDSEN

FLORAL

58 N. University

Claire Litster, Larry George Little, Ellen
Loosli, ~ James Elgin Louder, Carol Jones
Lowry, John Lewis Lund, Stanley Gene
Lunt, James Reed Luster, Glade H. Lyb-
bert, Eldon Grey Lytle, James Dennis
Lyons, Peter Lysenko.

Polly Jene Mabey, Douglas O. Maclean,
Diana Louise Markham, Patricia Mar-
wede, Grant William Mason, Lawrence B.
McAllister, George. W. McConkie, Kirby M.
McMaster, Marilyn F. McMeen, Richard C.
McNeeley, Rhonda McQuarrie, Edeltraut
G. Menssen, Cleston Glade Merrill, Vern
Carl Merrell, Harvey Derrill Millar, Judith
L. Miller, James D. Mitchell, Theodore R.
Mitchell, Thomas P. Monaghan, David C.
Montgomery, Julia Penelope Moody, Ju-
dith Kay Morris, Gordon Ervin Moss,
Terry Jack Moyer, Vira Ann Murphy.

Clyde Richard Naylor, Carolyn Lee Nel-
son, James Henry Nelson, Robert William
Nelson, Sharon L. Neuharth, Clark Rich-
ard Neuroh, Dix Anderson Newell, Steph-
en M. Nielson. James Patrick O'Brien,
Devon Morris Ogden, Otis Jack Okelberry.
Beverly Olson, Selfrid Oquist, Elmoine
Orr.

Linda Jean Pace, Raiph E. Packard, Jr.,
Willis A. Packham, Richard Boyd Pagett.
James ScottrPaul, Lois Lodene Peay, Low-
ell Dean Perkins, Clayne LeGrande Pope,
Riki Jo Potter, Alvin Harold Price, Ralph
Lorin Price, Anne Zink Putnam.

Grant Millen Radmall, Lane D. Ras-
mussen, Frank T. Read, Sanna Lee Read-
ing, Joseph Wayne Reynolds, Merilynne
Rich, Nancy Carolyn Richens, Dee Lufkin
Risenmay, Gerald B. Robinson, Jr., Wil-
liam H. Robinson, Shauha Lynne Robison,
Bonnie Lee Rogers, Charles Buckley Rose,
Ann Ranae Russon.

Kathleen M. Sandberg, Selene Sand-
berg, Sharyn Sue Sant, Armand Dennis
Schade, John Richard Schmid, Robert
Lyle Shedd, Joan F. Shurtliff, George
Harmon Skyles, Craig Richards Smith,
Howard Duane Smith, Karen Lee Smith,
Paula Allyne Smith, Thelma Steed Smith,
Woodrow B. Sneed, David Mayen Soren-
son, Berkley A. Spencer, Janet Spilker,
Richard P. Spratling.

G. Robert Standing, Elizabeth E. Stan-
ford, John Henry Steed, Kathryn Steph-
enson, Gary L. Stewart, Norma Lee Stew-
art, Gloria Ann Stipac, Eldon Earl Stogs-
dill, Paula Diane Stucki, Myrleen Sund-
berg, Frederick C. Swensen.

Joyce Lynnae Tanner, Janyce Lucelle
Taylor, John Keith Taylor, Lydia Joan
Thomander, Leah Jean Tidwell, Nancy
Tolman, David Rees Tree, Dennis Wayne
Trent, Linda June Tullo, Gloria Van Dam
Derrah W. Van Dyke, Glen Karl Vernon,
Sylvia R. Vincent.

Howard A. Wagner, Marjorie Kaye
Waite, Lynn Paul Walker, Patricia Joan
Ward, Ross William Warner, Paul Jene
Watts, Jr., Robert Homer Wells, Joyce
Marie Westphal, Sheldon Fred Whitaker,
Robert Norman White, Thomas Howard
White, Keith Irvan Wilhoit, David L.
Wilkinson, Richard L. Williams, Stewart
Paton Wilson, Joyce Wiltbank, Phyllis
Arlene Wimmer, Ted Avon Winn, Marcia
Wiser.

Frank M. Woodland, Chad Carlyle
Wright, John Morris Wright, Roger Lane
Wright, Vanja Louise Yorgason, Norma
Jeanne Zurcher.

Judith L. Fullmer, Marvin Lewis Fullmer,
Robert S. Gabbitas, Cheryl F. Gab-
bitas,

Friday Last Day
To Order Cards
At Reduced Rate

■ — Universe photo by Terry Calvert

EDUCATIONAL EAT — Lynn Jensen (1) and Dave
Youkstetter are just too academic minded to waste any
time. It’s not as difficult as it looks. There’s an instinct
that lets them know where to put the spoon. Lynn and
Dave are residents of Stover Hall, left wing, second floor
with a bunch of other scholars who had the highest grade
point average of the quarter in Helaman Halls. A tradit-
ional banquet in their honor will be held Monday night
at Cannon Center.

Academic Committee Instigates
Poster, Study Table Projects

The Academic Emphasis Com-
mittee, as one of the newest or-
ganized committees on campus,
has accomplished much during
their first year of existence.

AMONG THE PROJECTS in-
stigated and carried out by the
committee are the class room
posters. These posters have fam-
ous sayings by famous men and
are put in the class rooms to
try to instill a desire to learn in-
to the minds of students at this
university.

Another project of the com-
mittee has been to acquire study
tables for social units and clubs

on campus.

The committee has also insti-

gated personal contacts through
the relief society. In this way
they have reached all the off-
campus girls, and let them know
just how they can further their
education.

Seniors, hurry and place your
order for graduation announce-
ments and name cards today.
Friday is your last opportunity
to order these announcements at
the reduced price of $1.25 a doz-

THROUGH THE Academic
Emphasis Committee, the Hela-
man Halls Scholarship Banquet
has received much more pub-
licity than it has previously had.
They have also emphasized the
scholastic trophies given by
AWS and the Executive council.

wards greater academic excel-
lence.

AMONG THE PROJECTS that
are now underway and which
will be completed before the end
of the school year are a list of
all scholarships and awards
which are available to students,
extension of study areas on cam-
pus to enable students to study
while on campus, and freshman
orientation towards academics
and greater academic achieve-
ment while attending the Uni-
versity.

Academic Life

lmport<

• by Byron Fisher
Written to the Universe;
Your education is your*
sponsibility. Why do you a:
the Y?

Surely the basic reason shi
be and must be to gain an ed;
tion. By gain I do not mean
sorb along with the social
but win because of endeavor,
veneal stated, “All wish to
sess knowledge; but few.
paratively speaking, are wi
to pay the price.”

And the price we must pa;
that of individual endeavor;
titude toward excellence iij
most important. What can
eouraged by faculty, admii
tion, or studentbody goveri
is only a small part of what ;
come from you, the studeni
UPON RETURNING to;
homes for the summer, whai
you tell your friends of B'
Does the “Y” mean social"
athletic honors, friends and
sociations? I would hope so
only as a by-product of
academic work. Be this conci
ed with culture, intellectual
deavor or scholastic achieve^

— whatever term you use;,
future depends upon your o
to advance. Your friends
rate the university by whai
tell them and by the exaj
you set.

The committee feels that this
year has been the foundation for
greater things to come, and to
enable academic emphasis to be-
come a part of BYU along
with sports, social units, and
fun.

WILMA’S S B “ U P TY

You will find the newest and w V
at the most reasonable prices;!
Wilma’s.

723 North 900 East
Near the Campus

Phone FR 3-3141

BE WELL-DRESSED
FOR SPRING DATING

Among the other achieve-
ments of the committee are the
individual . encouragement to-

Starting Monday the price j
goes up to $1.50 a dozen. Sales I
will officially end a week from j
today, Friday, April 22, 1960. :
Orders will be taken today in i
the lobby of the Clark Service !
Center between the hours of 11 j
a.m. and 3

Cox Brothers
| SINCLAIR SERVICE

V 303 West 1st North Provo
DISCOUNTS TO STUDENTS

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In design
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Page 5

Daily Universe

IjJRDAY SURPRISE — "Who's going to win?" wonder Paiii
U and Lois Reid as they Jook oyer the campaign posters. Win-
jjof the election will be announced Saturday night at the annual
gural Ball. The dance is sponsored by the Elections Committee.

Dpo Debonaires Schedule
lual Dinner Dance Tonight

appa Debs and their dates will travel to Salt Lake City
it for the annual KD dinner-dance. Scene of the event
» the Prudential Building.

ighlight of the evening will be the announcement of
0 Key Man. The five men vying for the title are Harold
s, Chris Lyman, Max Pinegar, Gene Thorne and Jay
tli-is. A special song was written for the new tradition by
til) Jensen.

jJlBlue Safari,” the theme selected by the dinner-dance
iiiittee, will be depicted through jungle silhouettes and
petal plants and flowers.

■ Special favors will be presented to the men attending.
Farnsworth, Salt Lake City, is dinner-dance chair-
.nd Doris Allred, Washington, D. C., is Key Man chair-

Election Victors
Will Be Told At
Weekend Ball

Winners of the studentbody
and class campaigns will be an-
nounced at the intermission of
Saturday night’s studentbody
; dance to be held in the Smith
Fieldhouse at 9 p.m.

Campaign posters will serve
as decorations for the annual
dance. Tickets for the dance will
be sold at the door for 75 cents
per couple.

HEEL AND TIE will be the
appropriate dress for the dance.
The dance is sponsored by the
elections committee.

According to Sandra Penrod,
elections chairman, the results
will be secret until the dance.
At intermission the present class
president or studentbody officer
will be handed a piece of paper
with the winner’s name on it.

Mrs. Penrod says that the elec-
tion results will not be picked up
by the committee until Saturday
evening.

Press Club Slates
Speaker, Elections
At Tuesday Meet

All Press Club members are
expected to attend Tuesday’s
meeting at 4 p.m. in Rm. 1219
Smith Family Living Center, to
elect next year's officers.

GUEST SPEAKER will be
Mrs. Dorothy Rea, a Brigham
Young University graduate who
has worked for Deseret News of
Salt Lake City for the past 10
years. She is the staff’s leading
feature writer and travels ex-
tensively throughout the state.

.■HRS. REA edits the annual
Christmas edition which incor-
porates leading feature stories
from five western states. Last
year she was asked to present
the annual journalism award to
the outstanding woman journal-
ist graduating from the BYU.

Mrs. Rea is working on her
Mastere Degree at the Brigham
Young University. She has also
worked for the Provo Herald
and the Summer Universe.

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HIJSTOV

HARVEY

Looks

at

Trying to relate the
items in Life magazine to
BYU is rough this week.
However, most girls on
campus (I would say all,
but the exception — if
there is one — would un-
doubtedly gripe) wear
make-up. And often look
silly because of it. But
what’s important is thaft
they contribute to the
burgeoning U. S. beauty
business.

For instance, last year
the gals spent $15 mil-
lion on eye make-up
alone. Frightening isn’t
it! The Big Eye is the
latest female fad. In 150 well-chosen words, Life tells
the women of America how to look out at the world with
eyes that are ‘‘thick with suggestions of illness, lack
of sleep, world weariness, sophistication, abandonment.”
They also look bruised. And the Heritage Hall coeds
will all be sporting them before the year’s over.

Actually, even more frightening are the things
coming up. The latest is a brown lipstick with coffee
flavoring (optional, of course). Then there’s Techni-
color eye-shadow, which is scheduled to run from eye
to eyebrow. The shingle haid style of the Roaring
Twenties is also reported to be returning.

According to Life, the beauty supplies for a well-
made-up girl cost more than one quarter’s tuition.
Which proves that America hasn’t lost its sense of
values.

WHAT A GAMBLE . . .

Speaking of a sense of. values, Life seems tc have
lost its this week. The cover of the magazine (below)
shows a smiling-type' couple. Inside are seven fact-filled
pages on the lovely pair. \\Vho are they? They’re the
Porumbeanus’s, that’s who they are.
v Gamble Benedict Porumbeanus, 19, and Andrei
Porumbeanu, 35, are their names. You may have heard
of them before. They eloped to Europe a few weeks
ago. Didn’t last very long. The Benedict clan (a group
of cars, (the article seems to say) didn’t think much of
Andrei as a mate for Gamble. Seems he already had a
spouse.

However, a Meximan divorce took care of that and
the coupler was off again. This time to North Carolina.
They got married, too. It’s all pretty exciting stuff.
You know, just like a soap opera or something. Reason
it got published, of course, is that Gamble is heir to a
several million dollar estate. Which doesn’t seem like
much of a reason for a full-page picture of her sweep-
ing a floor.

There’s also a story on a party thrown by a wealthy
Texan named Bruner. He must have invited the Life
publisher to it or something. It wasn’t even as exciting
as Gamble’s love life.

TAKE A FEW . . .

Librium sounds like good stuff. There are a few
campus personalities and a couple of profs that could
use some.

It’s a new tranquilizer. It turns animals gentle and
friendly, but still active. It’s worked out fine on a lynx,
a dingo, a kangaroo, a baboon, a devil (Tasmanian) and
a tiger. If it’ll make a baboon friendly, it might work
on my professor of Franistrophy.

AND THEN THERE’S . . .

Life this week also contains a little (very lit-
tle) news : DeGaulle in Lon-
don, Wisconsin primary re-
sults, South African assas-
sinations and Adenauer in
Japan. It also has a feature
on Dr. Tom Dooley, -some
marvelous photography of
New York’s Central Park
and Easter sketches by
Rembrandt. A new Cardin-
al, a new nightclub act, new
bonnets, a Pittsburgh Pas-
sion Play, concrete archi-
tecture, the ‘‘Oscars” and
some miscellany fill out a
magazine which might pos-
sibly be worth 19 cents. It’s
doubtful though.

Page 6

Daily Universe

April 15, 19(

‘Clads Begin Defense

COASTING COSTA— Ed Costa, who has
cleared 6 feet 9% inches this season, will"
be out to smash his Skyline mark of 6-9
this Saturday at 1 :30 p.m. in the Ute Sta-
dium when the Cats open defense of their

cinder crown against Utah’s underman-
ned squad. Costa ranks in the top four
intercollegiate high jumpers in perform-
ance thus far this season and is a defi-
nite Olympic hopeful.

Y Netters Host Falcons, Aggies
If Weather Continues Sunny

Brigham Young University’s tennis team, following a
long wait for the weather, will, swing into action this week-
end with matches against the Air Force Academy and Utah
State University.

COACH BUCK DIXON’S net squad will host the Acad-
emy Falcons at 3 p.m, Friday on the home courts, then play
Utah State at 2 p.m. the following afternoon.

BYU’s team, which lost more matches than it won on
a tour of New Mexico and Arizona earlier this year, may
find the going tough against both opponents.

Coach Dixon admits his netters face a building year.
Of 17 players on the ‘60 roster, only four are upper classmen.
Garj Crandall and Richard Dixon, a three and two-year letter-
man combination, will be carrying most of the load.

Players who lead the Cougars in the singles competition
are Dixon, Crandell, Glenn Meier, Brent Turley.

If the Academy elects to play six singles, the other
BYU entries will come from a group composed of Kirby Mc-
Master, Mel Bennett, Tom Means, Jerry Amussen, and Ross
Woodward.

Traveling lighter than usual,
Brigham Young University’s
track and field team moves to
Salt Lake City this wekend to
open another western division
season with a dual meet against
Utah.

Although the Cougars .are shy
some of the customary talent and
depth that propelled them to five
consecutive conference cham-
pionships, it appears they still
have enough to be favored to
beat the Redskins.

Clarence Robison and the
Cougars haven’t lost a dual meet
in the western division in more
than seven years, and it is un-
likely the Utes will turn the
trick when the two schools meet
Saturday afternoon on the Utah
oval.

It’s no secret the Cougars
haven’t the depth they have had
in years past, as was demonstr-
ted on their recent tour of the
Southwest. BYU’s trip to Ari-
zona and New Mexico netted two
defeats and one victory.

Several events will be divided
between the two rivals Satur-
day. Cougars have sure point-
getters in the high jump, broad
jump, mile relay, and distances,
while the Utes’ strongest bids
will probably come in the
weights, hurdles, 440 and jav-
elin.

Three Skyline champion per-
formers who hold records with-
in the conference, will be on the
BYU roster for this trip. Pole

vaulter Marcus Nielse n M.
jumper Ed Costa, and disti
runner Gary Griffeth will sp
head the attack.

Of the three, Nielsen may

counter the most trouble
day. Even though he has cle
14' several times this seasol
BYU senior will have to
proach that mark again to!
a pair of aggressive Utah 1
ers. I

Neil Schmidt and Mel ']
have both gone 13’ or be
Ward holds the school recq
Utah with a vault of 13’ 9
Costa currently ranks fo
among the nation’s collt
high jumpers with a le^
6’ 9 14”.

Hoop Frolic Reac
Rival Staffs Gas

Hoop fans, your seasorfi
really over yet. The year’j
sic will take placeYhis Sai
when the Universe Unicorns*'!
Fearsome Five) invade Ei
Nielsen Fieldhouse to engag
highly-touted (by them)
Chronicle team.

Last year the Unicorns $i
ped the Chronies (the Co-
Crew) in a clase 29-27
An almost unbelievable 1-6
tramural record, with on^
by forfeit, by the Ui
leaves little doubt that the *9
five will emerge victorious.

Cubs Hand Giants First Loss

by United Press International
THE CHICAGO CUBS hand-
ed the San Francisco Giants
their first loss of the season last
night, 6-5, when Frank Thomas’
pop fly double in the ninth inn-
ing scored Bob Will with the
winning run and broke up a
home run battle.

Thomas’ blow came off loser
Billy O’Dell, who relieved start-
er Jack Sanford in the eighth
inning. The Giants tied the score
at , 5-5 in the bottom of the
eighth on Willie McCovey’s
three-run homer.

ALL THE GIANTS’ runs came
on homers. Orlando Cepeda con-
nected in the second inning and
Willie Kirkland in the seventh,
both blows coming with nobody
on base. Ernie Banks smashed
the eighth grand slam homer of
his career in the third. Don Els-
ton was the winner.

Los Angeles handed St. Louis
its third straight loss, 3-2. Gil
Hodges tripled to tie the score

| in the ninth and then came home
with the winning run on Bob
Duliba’s wild pitch.

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8TH ANNUAL

CONTEST

IT’S GETTING LATE*

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Voting Begins Monday!

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245 North University

|:1 15, 1960

Daily Universe

Page 7

Cats Look for Win No. 1

lid Grind Half Through

gruelling, sometimes ted-
grind of spring football
reached the halfway
at Brigham Young Uni-
this week with members
coaching staff reflecting
i$it encouragement for pro-
]nade thus far.

D COACH Tally Stevens
aff are still carrying 60-
layers, roughly the num-
ey expect to have for the
j? game with the alumni,
ougars will meet the. Y’s
|tl alumni April 27 in a
hat will wind up the off-
practice.

haven’t much in the way
oth,” commented Stevens
iday’s session, “so we’ve
a few players in an ef-
3d! > balance out what little
Jwe have.”

J one switch the Cougars
id. Larry Harrison, junior
aljnan at center, to right end.
Jdiicobsen, another letterman
,x back, has been moved to
fback.

ral members of last fall’s
.an team were also shuf-
the change of positions.
Fortie, a small but speedy
:k, has been working as
;erback; Tom Stolworthy
•n shifted from halfback
back; and Val Weenig has
from end to tackle.

AN OVERALL evaluation of
the club finds BYU somewhat
weaker than the ’59 club in near-
ly every position. Only at center,
where the Cougars didn’t lose a
man, are they relatively strong.

Ball-snapping chores will be
handled, for the most part, by
Dick Magoffin, two-year letter-
man who is serving as team cap-
tain during the spring drills. Be-
hind Magoffin is sophomore
Steve Dangerfield and two pro-
mising freshmen, Mike Brady
and Hal Neighbors.

In several instances the coach-
ing staff has uncovered a few
pleasant surprises. Two backs
who helped spark the frosh to a
3-1 record last fall, Bill. Wright
and Steve Clark, are looking
good, Tally reports. Roger Du-
Paix, Martin Seneca and Mike
Conrad are also , showing well
among the frosh newcomers.
Gene Frants looks lige a comer
as an end, and will have com-
pany in Glen Richardson and
Jim Johnson.

Lettermen returning who are
showing well in practice include
guards Steve Sullivan and Art
Brown; tackles Ron Nielson and
Wes Vorwaller; ends Merlin
Smith, LeRoy Overstreet and
Don Peterson; quarterback Bud
Belnap; and back Dion Frazier,
Paul Allen and Eddie Young.

i Coach Glen Tuckett’s struggl-
ing diamondmen host Utah State
in a doubleheader Saturday on
Cougar field at 1 p.m.

I THE PUMAS dropped their
j opening pair to Utah last week-
's end to get off to a poor 2-0 start
I in Western Division play. Two
more losses to the Aggies would
put the Cougars so deep in the
hole that they wouldn’t be able
to climb out far enough to chal-
lenge the defending champion
Redskins.

Sporatic pitching that allowed
; 8!i runs per game against the
Utes will have to be improved if
I the Cats are to take the Aggies.

his infield to come up with a re-
placement.

The Cats suffered two severe
blows to their chances this week
when Ashby broke his hand and
second sacker Carl Clayton quit
the squad. The two had been
starters in the opener against

the Utes and both were letter-
men.

Seven Cats, including Martin
and Moore are betting .333 or
above. However the Pumas lack-
ed power at times in the opening
series with only five extra base
hits in two encounters.

I0W.!

iksters Eye Aggie Club Men

[We played good golf, but we were just up against a
Biot Utah squad,” said BYU link coach Dave Crowton as
ptemplated hosting Utah State Friday after losing to
pdSkifts 16-2 last weekend:

HE COUGARS will take on the Aggies at 2 p.m. on
|y on the Timpanogos course.

were inside the Redskins on our drives,’ said the
ear mentor, ‘but we were two putting while they were
fitting. The Ft. Douglas course greens have always been
ace, and our kids lacked confidence.’
he Utah match was the first match for the Cougars
sason. It was also the first for the Pumas under Coach
Crowton, who replaced Buck Dixon, who is now de-
olf his time to the tennis squad.

» l'he Cougars have only two seniors on a freshman squad,
yam has four frosh out of the eight members.
ROWTON’S linksters use a ladder system to decide
be the four respresentatives at each contest, and as of
sday Gil Tomes, Bob Peterson, Lyman Tracy, and
a. i loyack rank as top four men on the squad.

IRWIN HAWS, who has pitch-
,6 1/3 innings without allowing
j an earned run to cross the plate
and Bob Mosteller, who has had
j trouble getting started the last
couple of outings, will likely
i start the twinbill for mentor
: Tuckett.

I The Cougars hit fcq- a .280 av-
; erage against the rival Utah
' nine. First sacker Jerry Martin
is leading the Cat stickers with
a hefty .571 average. The big
hitter banged out four hits in
seven appearances, including
one home run.

DANNY MOORE, who moved
to shortshop from second after
Ralph Ashby broke his hand
j earlier in the week, follows with
| a .500 mark. The Cougar infield-
j er also leads the club in runs
batted in with three.

The visiting Ags split a double-
header with Weber College ear-
lier in the week. Coach Floyd
Slater will call on Jerry Scho-
field and Gerald Bruno as his
I orobable starters against the
host Cats.

GARY WILSON, the Aggies’

| regular shortstop, has been
| benched with * an injury and
| Coach -Slater has had to juggle

ENTRIES CLOSE

Entries for Bowling mixed
doubles; horseshoe doubles;
and tennis doubles close to-
day at 5 p.m. in 232
Smith Fieldhouse, according
to men’s intramural director
Jay Naylor.

FERGUSON’S BIKE SHOP

"We Sell the Best
and Service the Rest ”

795 South State in Provo
FR 3-3750

FRESHLY BAKED

PIZZA

LARGE 10 INCH

69c

HAM, PEPPERONI, SAUSAGE
SALAMI, CHEESE
HAMBURGER
(3 Minute Service)

HI-SPOT

14th South & State - Orem
3rd South 6th East - Provo
1st North & State - Orem

Available £cch!

RECORDS and TAPES
of CRAWFORD GATES’. . .

i

rflTlPImpll

may be reserved NOW at the

B.Y.U. Audio-Visual Center

Concert excerpts on record:

A. Monaural, 33 1/3 R.P.M. L.P., 12” Album $4.95

B. Stereo, 33 1/3 LP., 12” Album $5.95

Full Program on tape:

C. Monaural, 71,4 I.P.S. 7” reel, both sides $7.00

D. Stereo, 7!/> I.P.S. on two 7” reels $16.00

The album designed by Arnold Friberg is to be released
June I, I960, but you will be wise to reserve your
copy NOW!

LIMITED EDITION!

I

To Audio-Visual Center, Brigham Young University, Provo, Utah
Dear Sirs:

Enclosed find by check or money order for $

Please send me:

A. Monaural Record (s) at $4.95 each*

B. Stereo Record (s) at $5.95 each*

C Monaural Tape(s) at $7.00 each*

D Stereo Tape Album (s) at $16.00 each*

. City..

. State...

* Plus 25c Postage

0&

CALL FR 4-1211, EXT. 2077
8-12, 1-5, MON.-FR1. ADS CALLED
IN BY NOON MAY APPEAR IN
FOLLOWING DAY’S PAPER

Balling! Buy a lovely fragrance
lily 99c. Call Mar jean, FR 3-2051.
p ■■ A15

1 11 os, record players, tape record-
Jnything electrical. Prompt guar-
■ l service. Wakefields. A22

in 'tanning a Wedding?
SPECIAL PRICES
Vedding Announcements
Id- Engraved - Embossed
1/ CENTURA PRINTING
48 West 1st North
S TV Service

Radio J. TV. 91 South 300 West
713. Over 25 years service in
County. TFN

repairing

Watchrepair. Cleaning, regulat-

mainsprings. Satisfaction
or money back. Phone Wil-
campus watchmaker. FR3-
4 p m. (313E. 400 N.)

31 Dressmaking

12 Help Wanted

MR. Findlay will take applications for
full-time summer work anywhere in
U. S. with scholarships available to
male students who qualify. Contact
Mr. Peterson. Placement Bureau. A20

(8 Typewriters

SMITH-Corona electric portable. Almost
new. $120. Call FR 3-0609. A15

CUSTOM sewing, no patterns, required.
Wedding dresses my specialty. Work
guaranteed. Call Mildred Bickham. Mil-
dred's Bridal Shop, 44North 100 East.
FR 3-4337. TFN

71 Aoamnents to» Ren*

NEW, partly furnished. One bedroom,
kitchen, living room. $45.00 per
month, includes utilities. FR 4-1006 or
AC 5-0523. M5

CLASSIFIED AD RATES

Number Cost per word

of days (Min. 10 words)

46 Typing

TYPING - All kinds, pickup and delivery.
AC 5-0904 A25

LARGE — Three room and bath. Refrigera-
tor. stove, garage, laundry. Most utili-
ties furnished Couples. 55 E. 2 N„
FR 3-6301. A15

>2 Furniture for Sale

1 07

* J1

3 .13

4 17

NEW used and rebuilt vacuum cleaners,
all kinds from $5.00 to $50.00. FR3-
3039. TFN

74 Homes for Ren*

44 For Sale- Miscellaneous

THREE homes left Three bedroom. IV.
baths. Built-ins, carport, fireplace, full
basement. All improved lots. 360 S. 7th
E., Orem. Five minutes to BYU. Very
low down payment to BYU faculty.
FR 3-6453. M12

FERGUSON'S Bike Shop. Schwinn dealer.
New, used, trade in. Repairs, parts.
795 South State. FR 3-3750. Ev. F

PORTABLE stereo phonograph, four speed
automatic changer, New Sapphire Cart-
ridge, Excellent condition. Ext. 4475.

TFN

S <1 week) *0

10 (2 weeks) 35

FURNISHED one room cottage. 937 N.
50 E. $45.00 Utilities paid. AC 5-1988
evenings. A19

20 (4 weeks) ~ 60

Bring your ad to Universe Ad
vertising Office, 160 Student
Service Center.

ES tme Want adsi

in the

CLASSIFIED SECTION
of The

DAILY UNIVERSE

»l autos htr Salt

RETURNING to Canada. Must sell 56 Mere
Monterey 2-door hard top. Take over
payments. See Reid. 473 N. 2nd E. A19

Pa'ge 8

Daily Universe

April 15, 196

The Kappa Debs have originated an idea on the BYU
campus that is traditional for a good number of sororities on
many college campuses. The KD’s will choose a dream man
who will be crowned “KD Key Man” at the unit’s dinner
dance tonight. The key is the symbol of the Kappa Debs,
and the members have written a special song they will sing
to the key man.

KD’s key man will be chosen from the list of five can-
didates which includes Chris Lyman, Jay Stevens, Gene
Thorne, Max Pinegar and Harold Scholes.

In celebration of taking second place in songfest, the
Kappa Debs held a pizza party at their meeting,..Thursday
night. When the delivery men came with the pizza, the KD’s
sang their songfest song to them which was titled, “Simple
Simon’s Fantasy.” The song tells of a modern pieman, which
of course is a pizza pieman.

# * * * *

Athenians and Cami Los serenaded each other with many
of their songs .as the two units met together in the Smith
cafeteria following their respective meetings last Thursday
night. The evening was capped off when the Athenians sang
their prize-winning songfest song.

* * * * *

Two roommates cleaned up at the Saxon elections rec-
ently. Ben Banks was elected president, and roommate A1
Thomas was elected vice-president. Both men, plus the other
newly elected officers, will take over at the Saxon dinner
dance April 22.

KBRG, BYU’s FM radio station, is doing a limited am-
ount of experimental music broadcasting at the 88.9 spot on
FM radio. As of yet the station has not received their license
from the FCC to program their full broadcasting schedule.

What’s it like to be a member of an entertainment group,
traveling from place to place spending most of your time en-
tertaining?

Recently we talked to four fellows who -really enjoy it.
They’re a musical group known as the “Stardusters,” who
are presently appearing in Las Vegas. These fellows, who
have appeared on TV and in many of the big cities across
the nation, present two 40 minute shows 6 nights a week in
the Nevada town.

“We take in movies in the afternoon and during the
rest of our spare time we see the other shows in town,” the
leader of the group offered.

It may sound tiresome, but these guys love it.

Universe Campus Quickies . . .

Sun Valley Speeches Now Availabl

Copies of the speeches given
at the Sun Valley Leadership
Conference are now available
for those student leaders (about
300) who attended the confer-
ence. The booklets can be picked
up in the Student Coordinator’s
office during the next two
weeks.

Two hundred and fifty copies
of the speeches were printed, so
they’ll be distributed on a first
come, first served basis. The
booklet contains speeches by
Secretary of Agriculture Ezra T.
Benson, his wife, President Har-
vey L. Taylor, Faculty guests
Reed Bradford and Stewart
Grow, Dean Wesley P. Lloyd,
and student coordinator Paul
Felt.

* * * * *

Get Banyan Receipts

Any student who has lost his

receipt for his 1960 Banyan may
come to the Banyan office Mon-
day through Friday from 2 to 3
p.m. to purchase a new one.

They will cost 25 cents. Every
student must haVe a receipt to
pick up his book when they are
distributed.

The Banyan office is in the
basement of Clark Student Ser-
vice Center.

Rush Chairmanship Open

Persons interested in applying
for Central Rush Chairman
should fill out applications and
turn them into the ISUC box in
the Inter-Organization Council
office by April 22.

*****

Helaman to Elect Officers

Application blanks for offices.,
of inter-hall and dorm presidents <

of Helaman Halls may nom
obtained from hall presidents*
Primaries will be helde
Wednesday, and finals w3l
on Friday, according to m
Babbel.

*****

Return Crutches j<

“We’ve got to have them!™
Donald Student Health Cej
workers have exclaimed. §
Students who rented cruj
during the outdoor sport si
have not returned them, l!
who rented crutches are pa;
60 cents a month, not justii
cents total, health center pf
nel warned.

They added that if cruti;
aren’t returned and rental!
paid, grades for this quarter 1 -
be held up until a settlem^ i
made.

SPORT SILLY - YET SMART ’N NEAT

m

New sun sport with the fashion set! A shade hat in straw that’s as
witty as it is wacky! Floppy, fringy ones to wear at ’beach, lamp-
shades to sport with smart race meet cottons, tie-on boaters to breeze
along in a convertible, flower baskets to go with sun backs! We have
them all — to many to tell about in fact — but every one’s a doozy from

MAIN - FLOOR

Daily Texan Discusses New Look
At College Ph.D. Degree Plans

“THE PH.D. does not, and can-
not, test teaching ability — it
tests aptitude for scholarship.

“A recent Manchester Guardi-
an article quoted the American
scholar William James, who said:
(the instructor’s) ‘moral, social
and personal characteristics may
utterly disqualify him for suc-
cess as a teacher; and of these
characteristics his doctor’s ex-
amination is unable to take any
account whatever.’

(ACP) — From the University
of Texas Daily Texan comes this
look at the Ph.D. degree:

“DISCUSSION ON the merits
of research and published works
as bases for professorial ad-
vancement has worn itself down
to a new topic: The role of the
Ph.D. degree in college teaching.

“And it is apparent that some
re-thinking may now be neces-
sary concerning the relative val-
ues of a Ph.D. degree for under-
graduate liberal arts teachers.

“Has the Ph.D. become little
more than the union card of the
American academic profession?

Is the obtaining of that degree
merely a questionable selection
process?

“ ‘THE GRADUATE School
and the Decline of Liberal Edu-
cation,’ a pamphlet put out by
the Teacher’s College of Colum-
bia University, argues in this
vein:

“Liberal education .has been
almost killed by the vogue for
research, and by the growth of
the great graduate schools which
brought it about.

“For a person who intends to
devote himself to pure research
the Ph.D. may be valuable, but
it may be perfectly irrelevant for
someone who wants to teach un-
dergraduates.

I I

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| (Formerly MILLER'S) |

IS MOVING! |

| SACRIFICE PRICES! |

& iT

EXPERT - —

SERVICE FOR
ALL MAKES

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Specialist

UTAH STATE SAFETY
INSPECTION
STATION

MORRIS MOTORS

• Oldsmobile *Jeep

• Rambler

Selected. Used Cars

1131 N. 5 W. Provo

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