By ELIAS BLay “taslont” 7 The Leadership Council is Sponsoring a food drive for families in need which are helped by the Tri-City Volun ters located In Niles. Deliv eries of food will be made in tine for Thanksgiving. A do nation of a non-perishable food item will be accepted at the door. A drawing will take place Nov. 21 in Administra tion. First prize will be a 20 pound turkey and second and third place prizes will be a pizza of your choice at Barn aby's. Food may be dropped in the freshman or senior of fices Monday through Nov. 25 from 7:30 to 4 a.m. and on ‘Tuesday, Nov. 26 from 7:30 to 8 a.m. Winners, will have three minutes to claim their prize in the freshman office after their names are called. Also with your coupon receipt you will get a 25 cent discount at the next dance. ‘The next dance is Tuesday, Nov. 26 from. to 10 p.m. The band will be Ivory Tower. Ad mission will be 75 cents with an ASB sticker and $1.50 without. Yearbooks may be bought before the end of the first se mester. There will be no more sold after that. The cost is $7.25 and they are now on sale in the junior office. Denise Brand, the founder of the Service Club, is looking for ideas for improvements on campus. If you have any suggestions put them in her box In the junior office, this club hopes to get things fixed such as the benches. Barry Schaffer has been ap pointed as Mission's Student Representative to the school board by the Representative Assembly. If you have some gripes you, want to be heard, let him know. ‘A proposal is now before the Repesentative Assembly to have open campus all day long for certain students. For a student to qualify he must be doing well in all his losses, and he must have a certain number of classes. Ach month his teachers wand sign a form saying he may continue 0. be allowed its privilege Representative Assembly has decided that all clubs, teams, organization, etc. that have won an award of some kind may have the wag to sing the Mission Bell. 1 yeur oaganization has won some thing, ring the bell. See the Junior class aomiistrator for permission. ‘The new Representative As sembly meeting will be Nov. in the Little Theater. The performing arts depart ment will put on its first pla of the year Nov. 20 through Nov. 23 at 8 p.m. each eve ning in the Little Theater. ‘The play is “The Children's Hour.” It is about two young women, Karen Wright and Martha Dobie, who have set up a boarding school. Their lives are shattered when a pupil, Mary, runs away to her et, Mrs. Tilford, a pillar of society , and — to prevent, being sent back — accuses her teachers of an abnormal sexual relation ship. Mary convince Mrs. Tilford of this by blackmailing anoth er girl into corroborating her . When Martha's aunt, Mrs. Mortar, fails to appear as a witness the teachers lose their libel suit. The school is wrecked. Karen break her engagement to a doctor, Martha, ac cuses herself of hitherto sup pressed unnatural feelings, commits suicide. Too late, she broken Mrs. Tilford attempts to right her wrong. Barbara Simmons plays Martha Dobie, Lesa Warren plays Karen. Wright, double cast as Rosalie Wells are De nise Watring and Cherie Keis ter, double cast as Mary Til ford are Doreen Tighe and Mary Ann Brick, and also double cast as Mrs. Mortar are Janet Stoll and Tina de Lacchi. Glen Sparks plays Dr. Jose phy Cardin and Kim Tharguen plays Mrs. Amelia Tilford. Admission is §1.75 for stu dents, 31,59 with an ASB sti cker, and $2 for adults. Ten students have been named to the Mu Alpha ‘Theta, an international high school and junior college mathematics club. The an nouncement was made by Dr. Harold Y. Huneke, national secretary-treasurer, who is a professor of mathematics at the University of Oklahoma. To be eligible for member ship requires that a student must have completed at least four semesters of college pre parory mathematic with dis tinction and be enrolled in a fifth semester and must also have at least a B average in all high school work. ‘Those earning membership are Jim E. Black, Elias J. Hlawie, Dena M. Gomez, Da vied W. Halliday, Karen J. Hamme, Robert G. McGraw, Sheila M. Murphy, Mark A. Owyang, Lawrence J. Pang, and Jonathan Lee. Mr. George Crozier is the faculty advisors for the Mu Alpha Theta club on campus. ‘Mu Alpha Theta was founded in 1957 at the Univer sity of Oklahoma and has to more than 1,000 clubs in 46 states and Canada, Japan, Puerto Rico, the Canal Zone, Iceland, Turkey, Brazil, and Kinawa. “Membership in Mu Alpha Theta is the highest honor possible of a high school or junior college student in mathematics, Dr. Huenke said. Club activities consist of work in the area of math ematics not usually covered in the classroom.”