artan daily cagers vs. uop

4
Academic Council Considers Open Meetings Today’s Weather ’NMI.. (Lila 114. erall) fair. Predicted hi.th temperature today 55-63. Pre- dicted low tonight 35-45. Nort hu est lnds 5-15 mile per hour Increasing to 12-25 miles per hour this afternoon. Vol. 53 1111110 Free Concert To Feature French Horn The S.IS S’itiplurnie Band will present its first concert of the spring semester tonight and to- morrow night at .8:15 in Concert Hall. Admission is free. Soloist for the band is Miss Patricia O’Gara, senior music ma- jor. She will play Mozart’s Concerto No. 2 in E Flat Major for French Horn. The number is the first com- plete horn concerto written by Mozart. Conductor George Longazo, as- sistant professor of music, joined the SJS faculty last fall as a re- placement for Vernon Read, assist- ant professor of music, who is on leave of absence to complete his doctorate at University of South- ern California. ROTH MEMBERS Both Longazo and Miss O’Gara are members of the Santa Clara Philharmonic. Longazo plays bas- soon and Miss O’Gara plays French horn. Currently Miss O’Gara is study- ing with William Sabatini, prin- cipal hornist in the San Francisco Symphony, and William George, SJS assistant professor of music. She has studied French horn for eight years. In 1962 she re- ceived a scholarship to the Music Academy of the West in Santa Barbara. In addition to her membership in the Santa Clara Philharmonic. Miss O’Gara plays French horn in the San Jose Symphony. After graduation in June, she plans to work toward her mas- ter’s degree in French horn. WORKS PUBLISHED Longazo received a bachelor of music degree in composition at Northwestern University and a master’s of music in composition at Indiana University. He has had several compositions published. Scheduled on the concert pro- gram are Haydn’s St. Anthony Divertimento, Cable’s Stratford Suite, Giannini’s Dedication Over- ture, Joio’s "From Every Hori- zon" and Paulenc’s "Les Biches." Ryan Satisfactory Thomas Ryan, SiS professor of music. U111.1 reported in satis- factory condition yesterday afternoon, at a local hospital where he 1.4 in the intensive care unit. He recent!) under - %lent surgery. 111 ARTAN DAILY 11;4N SAN JOSE STATE COLLEGE FIVE STUDENTS are shown during a previous Spartacamp discussion of student problems. From left are Gary Cooper, Arlene D’Arcy, Mary Blomguist, Bill Erdman and Vickie Wallace. SAN JOSE, CALIFORNIA, TUESDAY, MARCH I, 1966 This year’s weekend conference theme is "Me" and will be held March 19-20 at Asilomar. Tickets for $12 are on sale on Seventh Street and Student Affairs Business Office. Asilomar Retreat Camp To Focus on Me’ By II’DV WALTER Spartan Daily Staff Writer The 13th annual Spartaciunp, March 19 and 20, will concentrate on the individual. The theme is "Me," and discussions will be held on "Family and Me," "Other Groups and Me," "The College Campus and Me," and "The World and Me." About 350 are expected to at- tend the faculty-student meet at Asilomar. Tickets are on sale on Seventh Street and at the Student Affairs Business Office until Fri- day. Guest speakers will be Dr. David Freeman, noted pmfessor of psy- chology at San Francisco State; R. Buckminster Fuller, SJS schol- ar in residence; Dr. Thomas Tut- ko, assistant professor of psychol- ogy; and Jess Marlow, news direc- tor for KNTV. Dr. Tutko will be the keynote speaker. The camp will also feature en- tertainment by a band, "The Peo- ple," and a performance by foreign students. The Student Council has allotted extra funds to the camp to make it possible to take mot e students. Thirteen SJS Students Awarded Scholarships Thirteen students were named as Death Valley course scholarship recipients yesterday by Dr. H. T. Harvey’. professor of biological sciences and trip director. The students will be among 175 to attend the April 3-9 Easter vacation course. Scholarship recipients arc Lao. rine H. Brown, Joanne R. Dean. Jean Forsyth, Williatn Harm. Charles R. Hovenden. Sanders C. Lighthail. Ann E. Miller, Winifred A. Moyle, Robert T. Roberson. Frances D. Scully, Ronald K. Shel- don. Doris A. Tongan and Domthy A. Holsinger. Students were selected by a panel of eight faculty of the Nat- ural Sciences area. Consider:dam was given to the atudent’s year in college. grade point average 12.5 minimum), rea- son tor any financial need i4 addi- tion to be academically deseming, potential teachers and two letters of recommendation. The scholar- ship was open to students in all majors. Registration for alt students will be tomorrow at 8 a.m. in the lobby of the new science wing. Tuition fw. the ,,ne-onit course. Cal -State Game Broadcast Today KSJS will broadcast today’s SJS-Cal State at Hayward base- ball game at 90.7 on the FM radio dial. The game will start at 3 p.m. KSJS will broadcast eight more SJS baseball games during the szingster. Announcers will be Jim Bales, Dave Kapsiak and J. P. Prater. About $3,500 will be spent on the camp, according to senior Bob Pitcher, camp director. Buses will leave front the Art Quad parking lot behind the cafe- teria at 8 Saturday morning. and will return by 3:30 Sunday. Meals (Continued on Page 4) Shearing Makes Music Despite His Blindness Blind since birth, George Shear- ing has overcome the obstacles of living in a sightless world to be- come one of the world’s foremost pianists. Once asked if he’d been blind all his life, he replied, "Not yet." Shearing will appear at Morris Dailey Auditorium Thursday night at 8:15. The Student Affairs Busi- ness Office, Building R. still has a number of tickets left for the performance. Prices are students $1.50 and general admission $2.50. Despite popularity in his native England --dominating British jazz polls for several years he was irtually unknown in the United States because of World War II. In the late 1940’s the original trio--Shearing, John Levy, Den- zil Restwas joined by Marjorie Hyams and Chuck Wayne and the quintet made its first American recordings. Among the numbers was "September in the Rain," an overnight smash hit. As record after record was re- leased, the George Shearing Quin- tet rose to success in jazzdam. In 1956 Shearing became a U.S. citizen. Now recognized as a composer- arranger, Shearing usually ar- ranges his own albums. 141c,fe by James Bre,,Il Two seniors beat the Sparta Life deadline by signing up for th?ii senior photos with Mrs. Helen Downs of Keith Cole Studios. Pichr.es will be taken until tomorrow at 4:45 p.m. Senic-s may sign up in the photography room of the Journalism Building, JC127. Cagers vs. UOP eager% will to op ’EDP’s express to the WCAC basketball title to- morrow night when they en- tertain the Tigers at 8 In the Chic Auditorium. ITOP is in sole pow..e..itin of first place after whipping USF last weekend. Placed on Agenda Committee Recommends Change in Constitution By STEVE AMES Spartan Daily Staff Writer Academic Council moved one step closer to inviting the public and the press to its meetings yes- terday with the proposal of a by- laws change to its constitution. Dr. Burton R. Brazil. chairman of the Political Science Depart- ment and chairman of the coun- cil’s ad hoc committee on Consti- tution By-Laws, submitted a re- port which favored open meetings. The report recommends the de- letion of the phrase "... but closed to the public and the press," from by-law 4.3. The committee report was placed on the March 14 council agenda under pending business, Dr. Gerald E. Wheeler, professor of history and chairman of the coun- cil, said. NO OBJECTIONS Dr. Wheeler said the there were no strong objections voiced to opening the meetings. "The meetings are not open yet," he reminded. "We may in- vite the press on a meeting-by - meeting basis as we do with fac- ulty who are not members cf the council." The change submitted by Dr. Brazil reads in part that "after this change, as probably before, arty person belonging to the ’pub- lic or press’ categories may attend any meeting of the Academic Council on the invitation of the Executive Committee. "Since there is not now a pro- hibition on taking notes or dis- cussing the proceedings elsewhere, nor is there now any commitment or requirement of secrecy either by members or guests, there is no need to rescind such non-existent rules." Rule 10 now provides for the exclusion of objectionable guests by majority vote of the council, and by-law 4.3 provides for the exclusion of all guests by a two- thirds vote of the council. ’RULES ADEQUATE’ Nc. 76 the recommendation by a 9-0 vote occasionally reported in the stu- with one abstention. Dr. Wheeler said that a firm resolution would be made at the next meeting to adopt the new by-laws. Dr. C. M. Larsen, associatz. pro- fessor of mathematics, and sev- eral other Academic Council mem- bers have been behind the move to admit members of the press. In January, Dr. Larson said that "considrably more faculty mem- bers would know much more about the council if its meetings wrre dent press. "If that should happen, then open meetings would greatly strengthen the faculty’s apprecia- tion of the council’s function; and the council, in turn, would b.? bet- ter able to serve the council." Dr. Larson made a final point: "It would always be possible for the council to go into ’executive session’ to hear any especially sensitive reports dealing with per- zonnel. for example." AAUP Postpones Action on Proposal By STEVE KEell Spartan Daily Staff Writer SJS Chapter of the American Association of University Profes- sors (AAUP) yesterday voted to postpone action on a collective bargaining proposal submitted to the group by its executive com- mittee. The committee proposal states, ". . . the Academic Senate would designate a special committee . to negotiate with the Trustees of the California State Colleges on budget items to be submitted to the legislature. "The Trustees would recognize the senate committee as the rep- resentative agent of the faculty and pledge to negotiate with it in good faith, without, however, closing the door to suggestions from other faculty groups." ’ELECTION NEEDED’ AAUP member Dr John Galm, vice president of the SJS local assistant professor of English and F or Reorganization of American Federation of Teach - the deliberations of the Academic Council," Mead said. In other action, the AAUP ap- proved a resolution declaring the salary increase for state college teachers recommended to the Leg- islature by Governor Brown is not adequate. and that any salary in- crease should be approved early in the year to aid in teacher re- cruiting. The Governor is asking the Legislature for a 6 6 per cent sal- ary increase for state college fac- ulty: the Trustees have recom- mended an 11.2 per cent increase. Several AAUP members also voiced concern over reports that San Jose City College and West Valley College are using a lot drawing method as a basis for possible dismissal of teachers. ers, reported that he felt the in- tent of the proposal was to "pre- vent a bargaining election," and that "an election is needed to de- termine whether or not a bar - "Hence." said the report. "these gaining agent is needed." rules are deemed adequate to the Also. the Academic Senate ex- need for executive sessions." ists only at the pleasure of the Thy hy-lavrs committer adopted Trustees, reports Calm. - Dr. Marion Richards, a.ssociate A professor of English, claimed that ru the Academic Senate has "more than it can handle," just dealing To Honor Students " ItShhet7lilesYo f r:eltomthmaetndaatiolnLutty Who’s Who Awa The Who’s Who Atnong Stu- dents in American Universities and Colleges Award will be pre- sented to about 25 SJS students during a special recess at tomor- row’s Student Council meeting at 3 p.m. in Cafeteria A and B. The recipients were chosen in November on the basis of grades, leadership, participation in ac- tivities, character and citizenship. About 12,500 award recipients are chosen annually from 750 colleges and universities. To he eligible for the award a student must have a grade point average at least equal to the all - women’s 12.54) or all -men’s (2.45i average. and must have tipper di- vision or graduate standing. The program was founded in 1934 to give recognition and as- sistance to students with out- standing achievements in their college careers. Last year 23 SJS students were honored, including ASB Pres. John Hendricks, for the second time, and Senior Rep. Ann Lauclerback. bargaining group must have an "outside identity" like the AAUP or AFT which are outside the structure of the state college sys- tem. COMMITTEE STAND The executive committee "be- lieves that the propemal to hold an election to determine an ex- clusive bargaining agent for Cali- fornia State College faculty mem- bers Welliti ... weaken fhe Aca- demic Serrate and it wouki tend to divide the faculty rather than unite it." Spartan Daily Editor Tom Mead addressed the group on the need for press coverage of Academic Council meetings. Editor Mead noted that "The SJS Academic Council crrneerns itself svith not only the atinunis- tration of the college but also stu- dent matters. STUDENT INTERIERT "Desire and interest in the areas that concern the student directb are the major reasons we Pres. Clark Asks are &aka% tor the right to men lecuve SePt- 1, 1965. A plan to reorganize the admin- istrative structure of SJS and to realign six departments into schools was submitted to Academic Council yesterday by President Robert D. Clark. Council referred the proposals to its Faculty and Staff Affairs Committee. The college president’s recom- mendations, if approved, will es- tablish three administrative posi- tions directly responsible to him executive vice president. academic vice president and director of fi- nancial affairs to replace the of- fices of vice president, dean of the college and business manager. President Clark reported to council. "The purpose of the re- organization is to render the col- lege more effective in the achieve- ment of its educational objectives and in the management of its af- fairs." Under the plan, the present Division of Sciences and Applied Arts will be divided into the School of Natural Sciences and School of Applied Arts and Sciences. Di- visions of business, education. en- gineering and humanities anti the arts will he renamed schools. The Division of Graduate Studies will becoMe the School of Graduate Studies and Research. The proposal would also require all academic deans to teach st least one class per year. Deans would also %CM(’ a six -year term, subject to l’COONV and reappoint- ment. Review of deans will begin next year vvith appointments ef-

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Academic Council Considers Open Meetings Today’s Weather

’NMI.. (Lila 114.�

erall) fair. Predicted hi.th temperature today 55-63. Pre-dicted low tonight 35-45. Nort hu est lnds 5-15 mile per hour Increasing to 12-25 miles per hour this afternoon.

Vol. 53 1111110

Free Concert To Feature French Horn

The S.IS S’itiplurnie Band will present its first concert of the spring semester tonight and to-morrow night at .8:15 in Concert Hall. Admission is free.

Soloist for the band is Miss Patricia O’Gara, senior music ma-jor.

She will play Mozart’s Concerto No. 2 in E Flat Major for French Horn. The number is the first com-plete horn concerto written by Mozart.

Conductor George Longazo, as-sistant professor of music, joined the SJS faculty last fall as a re-placement for Vernon Read, assist-ant professor of music, who is on leave of absence to complete his doctorate at University of South-ern California.

ROTH MEMBERS

Both Longazo and Miss O’Gara are members of the Santa Clara Philharmonic. Longazo plays bas-soon and Miss O’Gara plays French horn.

Currently Miss O’Gara is study-ing with William Sabatini, prin-cipal hornist in the San Francisco Symphony, and William George, SJS assistant professor of music.

She has studied French horn for eight years. In 1962 she re-ceived a scholarship to the Music Academy of the West in Santa Barbara.

In addition to her membership in the Santa Clara Philharmonic. Miss O’Gara plays French horn in the San Jose Symphony.

After graduation in June, she plans to work toward her mas-ter’s degree in French horn.

WORKS PUBLISHED

Longazo received a bachelor of music degree in composition at Northwestern University and a master’s of music in composition at Indiana University. He has had several compositions published.

Scheduled on the concert pro-gram are Haydn’s St. Anthony Divertimento, Cable’s Stratford Suite, Giannini’s Dedication Over-ture, Joio’s "From Every Hori-zon" and Paulenc’s "Les Biches."

Ryan Satisfactory Thomas Ryan, SiS professor

of music. U111.1 reported in satis-factory condition yesterday afternoon, at a local hospital where he 1.4 in the intensive care unit. He recent!) under-%lent surgery.

111 ARTAN DAILY

11;4N SAN JOSE STATE COLLEGE

FIVE STUDENTS are shown during a previous Spartacamp discussion of student problems. From left are Gary Cooper, Arlene D’Arcy, Mary Blomguist, Bill Erdman and Vickie Wallace.

SAN JOSE, CALIFORNIA, TUESDAY, MARCH I, 1966

This year’s weekend conference theme is "Me" and will be held March 19-20 at Asilomar. Tickets for $12 are on sale on Seventh Street and Student Affairs Business Office.

Asilomar Retreat

Camp To Focus on �Me’ By II’DV WALTER

Spartan Daily Staff Writer The 13th annual Spartaciunp,

March 19 and 20, will concentrate on the individual. The theme is "Me," and discussions will be held on "Family and Me," "Other

Groups and Me," "The College

Campus and Me," and "The World

and Me." About 350 are expected to at-

tend the faculty-student meet at Asilomar. Tickets are on sale on Seventh Street and at the Student

Affairs Business Office until Fri-

day. Guest speakers will be Dr. David

Freeman, noted pmfessor of psy-chology at San Francisco State; R. Buckminster Fuller, SJS schol-ar in residence; Dr. Thomas Tut-ko, assistant professor of psychol-ogy; and Jess Marlow, news direc-tor for KNTV. Dr. Tutko will be the keynote speaker.

The camp will also feature en-tertainment by a band, "The Peo-ple," and a performance by foreign students.

The Student Council has allotted extra funds to the camp to make it possible to take mot e students.

Thirteen SJS Students Awarded Scholarships

Thirteen students were named as Death Valley course scholarship recipients yesterday by Dr. H. T. Harvey’. professor of biological sciences and trip director.

The students will be among 175 to attend the April 3-9 Easter vacation course.

Scholarship recipients arc Lao. rine H. Brown, Joanne R. Dean. Jean Forsyth, Williatn Harm. Charles R. Hovenden. Sanders C. Lighthail. Ann E. Miller, Winifred A. Moyle, Robert T. Roberson. Frances D. Scully, Ronald K. Shel-don. Doris A. Tongan and Domthy A. Holsinger.

Students were selected by a panel of eight faculty of the Nat-ural Sciences area.

Consider:dam was given to the atudent’s year in college. grade point average 12.5 minimum), rea-

son tor any financial need i4 addi-

tion to be academically deseming, potential teachers and two letters of recommendation. The scholar-ship was open to students in all majors.

Registration for alt students will be tomorrow at 8 a.m. in the lobby of the new science wing. Tuition

fw. the ,,ne-onit course.

Cal-State Game Broadcast Today

KSJS will broadcast today’s SJS-Cal State at Hayward base-ball game at 90.7 on the FM radio dial. The game will start at 3 p.m.

KSJS will broadcast eight more SJS baseball games during the szingster. Announcers will be Jim Bales, Dave Kapsiak and J. P. Prater.

About $3,500 will be spent on the camp, according to senior Bob Pitcher, camp director.

Buses will leave front the Art

Quad parking lot behind the cafe-teria at 8 Saturday morning. and will return by 3:30 Sunday. Meals

(Continued on Page 4)

Shearing Makes Music Despite His Blindness

Blind since birth, George Shear-ing has overcome the obstacles of living in a sightless world to be-come one of the world’s foremost pianists. Once asked if he’d been blind all his life, he replied, "Not yet."

Shearing will appear at Morris Dailey Auditorium Thursday night at 8:15. The Student Affairs Busi-ness Office, Building R. still has a number of tickets left for the performance. Prices are students $1.50 and general admission $2.50.

Despite popularity in his native England --dominating British jazz polls for several years he was

�irtually unknown in the United States because of World War II.

In the late 1940’s the original trio--Shearing, John Levy, Den-zil Rest�was joined by Marjorie Hyams and Chuck Wayne and the quintet made its first American recordings. Among the numbers was "September in the Rain," an overnight smash hit.

As record after record was re-leased, the George Shearing Quin-tet rose to success in jazzdam.

In 1956 Shearing became a U.S. citizen.

Now recognized as a composer-arranger, Shearing usually ar-ranges his own albums.

�141c,fe by James Bre,,Il

Two seniors beat the Sparta Life deadline by signing up for th?ii senior photos with Mrs. Helen Downs of Keith Cole Studios. Pichr.es will be taken until tomorrow at 4:45 p.m. Senic-s may sign up in the photography room of the Journalism Building, JC127.

Cagers vs. UOP eager% will to op

’EDP’s express to the WCAC basketball title to-morrow night when they en-tertain the Tigers at 8 In the Chic Auditorium. ITOP is in sole pow..e..itin of first place after whipping USF last weekend.

Placed on Agenda

Committee Recommends Change in Constitution

By STEVE AMES Spartan Daily Staff Writer

Academic Council moved one step closer to inviting the public and the press to its meetings yes-terday with the proposal of a by-laws change to its constitution.

Dr. Burton R. Brazil. chairman of the Political Science Depart-ment and chairman of the coun-cil’s ad hoc committee on Consti-tution By-Laws, submitted a re-port which favored open meetings.

The report recommends the de-letion of the phrase "... but closed to the public and the press," from by-law 4.3.

The committee report was placed on the March 14 council agenda under pending business, Dr. Gerald E. Wheeler, professor of history and chairman of the coun-cil, said.

NO OBJECTIONS

Dr. Wheeler said the there were no strong objections voiced to opening the meetings. �

"The meetings are not open yet," he reminded. "We may in-vite the press on a meeting-by-meeting basis as we do with fac-ulty who are not members cf the council."

The change submitted by Dr. Brazil reads in part that "after this change, as probably before, arty person belonging to the ’pub-lic or press’ categories may attend any meeting of the Academic Council on the invitation of the Executive Committee.

"Since there is not now a pro-hibition on taking notes or dis-cussing the proceedings elsewhere, nor is there now any commitment or requirement of secrecy either by members or guests, there is no need to rescind such non-existent rules."

Rule 10 now provides for the exclusion of objectionable guests by majority vote of the council, and by-law 4.3 provides for the exclusion of all guests by a two-thirds vote of the council.

’RULES ADEQUATE’

Nc. 76

the recommendation by a 9-0 vote occasionally reported in the stu-with one abstention.

Dr. Wheeler said that a firm resolution would be made at the next meeting to adopt the new by-laws.

Dr. C. M. Larsen, associatz. pro-fessor of mathematics, and sev-eral other Academic Council mem-bers have been behind the move to admit members of the press.

In January, Dr. Larson said that "considrably more faculty mem-bers would know much more about the council if its meetings wrre

dent press. "If that should happen, then

open meetings would greatly strengthen the faculty’s apprecia-tion of the council’s function; and the council, in turn, would b.? bet-ter able to serve the council."

Dr. Larson made a final point: "It would always be possible for

the council to go into ’executive session’ to hear any especially sensitive reports dealing with per-zonnel. for example."

AAUP Postpones Action on Proposal

By STEVE KEell Spartan Daily Staff Writer

SJS Chapter of the American Association of University Profes-sors (AAUP) yesterday voted to postpone action on a collective bargaining proposal submitted to the group by its executive com-mittee.

The committee proposal states, ". . . the Academic Senate would designate a special committee . to negotiate with the Trustees of the California State Colleges on budget items to be submitted to the legislature.

"The Trustees would recognize the senate committee as the rep-resentative agent of the faculty and pledge to negotiate with it in good faith, without, however, closing the door to suggestions from other faculty groups."

’ELECTION NEEDED’ AAUP member Dr John Galm,

vice president of the SJS local assistant professor of English and F or Reorganization of American Federation of Teach-

the deliberations of the Academic Council," Mead said.

In other action, the AAUP ap-proved a resolution declaring the salary increase for state college teachers recommended to the Leg-islature by Governor Brown is not adequate. and that any salary in-crease should be approved early in the year to aid in teacher re-cruiting.

The Governor is asking the Legislature for a 6 6 per cent sal-ary increase for state college fac-ulty: the Trustees have recom-mended an 11.2 per cent increase.

Several AAUP members also voiced concern over reports that San Jose City College and West Valley College are using a lot drawing method as a basis for possible dismissal of teachers.

ers, reported that he felt the in-tent of the proposal was to "pre-vent a bargaining election," and that "an election is needed to de-termine whether or not a bar-

"Hence." said the report. "these gaining agent is needed." rules are deemed adequate to the Also. the Academic Senate ex-need for executive sessions." ists only at the pleasure of the

Thy hy-lavrs committer adopted Trustees, reports Calm. - Dr. Marion Richards, a.ssociate

A professor of English, claimed that ru the Academic Senate has "more

than it can handle," just dealing

To Honor Students " ItShhet7lilesYo f r:eltomthmaetndaatiolnLutty

Who’s Who Awa

The Who’s Who Atnong Stu-dents in American Universities and Colleges Award will be pre-sented to about 25 SJS students during a special recess at tomor-row’s Student Council meeting at 3 p.m. in Cafeteria A and B.

The recipients were chosen in November on the basis of grades, leadership, participation in ac-tivities, character and citizenship. About 12,500 award recipients are chosen annually from 750 colleges and universities.

To he eligible for the award a student must have a grade point average at least equal to the all -women’s 12.54) or all -men’s (2.45i average. and must have tipper di-vision or graduate standing.

The program was founded in 1934 to give recognition and as-sistance to students with out-standing achievements in their college careers.

Last year 23 SJS students were honored, including ASB Pres. John Hendricks, for the second time, and Senior Rep. Ann Lauclerback.

bargaining group must have an "outside identity" like the AAUP or AFT which are outside the structure of the state college sys-tem.

COMMITTEE STAND The executive committee "be-

lieves that the propemal to hold an election to determine an ex-clusive bargaining agent for Cali-fornia State College faculty mem-bers Welliti ... weaken fhe Aca-demic Serrate and it wouki tend to divide the faculty rather than unite it."

Spartan Daily Editor Tom Mead addressed the group on the need for press coverage of Academic Council meetings.

Editor Mead noted that "The SJS Academic Council crrneerns itself svith not only the atinunis-tration of the college but also stu-dent matters.

STUDENT INTERIERT "Desire and interest in the

areas that concern the student directb are the major reasons we

Pres. Clark Asks

are &aka% tor the right to men lecuve SePt- 1, 1965.

A plan to reorganize the admin-istrative structure of SJS and to realign six departments into schools was submitted to Academic Council yesterday by President Robert D. Clark. Council referred the proposals to its Faculty and Staff Affairs Committee.

The college president’s recom-mendations, if approved, will es-tablish three administrative posi-tions directly responsible to him�executive vice president. academic vice president and director of fi-nancial affairs to replace the of-fices of vice president, dean of the college and business manager.

President Clark reported to council. "The purpose of the re-organization is to render the col-lege more effective in the achieve-ment of its educational objectives and in the management of its af-fairs."

Under the plan, the present Division of Sciences and Applied Arts will be divided into the School of Natural Sciences and School of Applied Arts and Sciences. Di-visions of business, education. en-gineering and humanities anti the arts will he renamed schools. The Division of Graduate Studies will becoMe the School of Graduate Studies and Research.

The proposal would also require all academic deans to teach st least one class per year. Deans would also %CM(’ a six -year term, subject to l’COONV and reappoint-ment. Review of deans will begin next year vvith appointments ef-

2�SPARTAN DAILY Tuesday. ‘Nfrircli 1, ictr,r;

(SIPARTAN DA I LY SAN JOSE STATE COLLEGE

F.dIttse TOM MEAD Adv. Manner ...IFItftV FORD

Guest Editorial

’Ugly American’ NIt tilt the ,, e�ent. yr; e, in n hielt tile tailed ty-

is int itli itt jet Nato and al hotel.. people in other countries ate turning to \ merica nit!’ 41oubtful thoughts

as to %11ellter or nut thi� countr... -hould be re-spected.

During this time the \itterican irate’s abroad should be more conscious a Ili- action- in other coun-tries than eter before.

Is the American abroad lit ing up to this responsibil-ity? .No, he is not. The "l’gly Ameriran- t�eborn again and again. day after day, from \tubules!, Iran, to St. Blaise. Switzerland.

The American often finds the people, their dress. customs. and ideas all strange, and he doesn’t fail itt letting his attitude be known.

Antagotti-to con-tato produced abroad when local en,toms. place-. atol holidas are not taken into respectful con-ideratitm. merican nomen are obserted entering churches nitIodit covering their heads. The men indignantly refuse to git e tip their cameras, for fear

� that these "dirty makes- may steal them. An American cannot get cotnplete knowledge of a

� people 11 silting hotel rooms. being herded around to a fen tourist attractions. and alnays assoriating nith only a group 4,1’ Engli-11-1,eaking people.

. When a foreigner i- a-ked if he respects the Aineri-_ can ideals of democracy. freedom. brotherhood. and

peace. tt do tt think he would sa.t ? hat noti141011 � say? - l’ai NleCulloch

T1) DUET TNT /OW

WORLD’S FIRST THEAT,C WITH ALL PERFECT SWF

PRBENTS:

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Phone 738 -1111 XSIErit)AS:(ATAIO’haYskCEPTiD� I

738 EAST EL CAMINO REAL 51164ffiVALE Between Wolfe Rood and Fair Ocics Aversua

Mao Tse Gaulle

Thrust and Parry

Rhodesia, Faculty Council President

Replies to Larsen I Alit or:

In Friday’s "Thr ust and Parry." Professor Charles Lar-sen, AAUP chapter president, questioned my knowledge of col-lective bargaining procedures. Those proceduies can indeed be complicated, particularly in the ease of public employees who are not governed by the National Labor Relations Board.

My objections to Professor Larsen’s proposal that the Aca-demic Senace preempt a bargain-ing agent election are based on consultations with lawyers and economists, specialists in labor relations, retained by the College Council.

The impractical nature of Pro-fessor Larsen’s proposal arises from two facts: 1. To be effec-tive, the results of the kind of negotiations which he moposes must result in a contract, and any party to such a contract must have the legal authority

The younger the weekend

the better for RAND

The campus tradition is all here. flandsewn up front every stitch of the way. Yours for campus or country in smooth burnt sugar or russet or jodphur or black leather. Rand Trujuns $13.00 to $18.00.

wouhin.i ion like to be in nur 1,. America is. ’International Shoe Co.. St. Louis, Mo.

Available at these Fne stores: Baron’s Shoes 2B7 South Taafie �et Sunnyvale. Califorr’a

Seward’s Shoes 3i17 Meridian Rd. San Jose. California

Fclix’s Shoes 2057 El Camino Real Santo Clara, California

to enter into that contract. 2. Any group of employees

which seeks to bargain collec-tively must have the strength and freedom to act so as to induce the employer to bargain and to enforce the terms of the bargaining agreement.

First of all, the Academic Senate of the California State Colleges was created under the authority of the State College Trustees. As an agent of the Trustees it has. no power to enter into any binding legal agreement with anyone, least of all vvith the Trustees whose crea-ture it is.

Consequently, there can be no enforceable, therefore mean-ingful, agreement between the Academic Senate and the Board of Trustees.

Second, the Academic Senate has neither the strength nor freedom to take any action which would induce the Board of Trustees to bargain with it or to enforce the terms of any agreement which might be made.

See a

complete line

of H.I.S.

casual slacks

in

M ACY ’S

17� ^’"

TIGER SHOP

Rabble Rouser

Rum Vaporizers N odka

Possible I lu Cures By PATRICK HEFTFERNAN

The flu bug got me last week

and after the first day of misery I copped out and went to the doctor’s to get some professional advice about a cure (I’d had enough non-professional advice to kill me by then).

After sticking a flashlight into my ears, a log into my ton-sils. and a stethoscope that he must store in his freezer under my armpits, he solemnly told me I had the flu.

FEARS CONFIRMED

My worst fears were con-firmed.

"Please, doc, is there anything I can do, or is it ... hopeless?" I pleaded.

The good doctor was just full of cures. First, I should cut class. I felt better right awaY� Then I should not go to work, which made me feel great be-cause sick pay is more than regular pay in California, and

Policy Discussed The AFT has supported the

Academic Senate and campus Academic Councils from their inception. They are educational policy-making bodies, except, of course, that they have no legal power, only that granted them by governing administrations.

Our stated policy is to achieve collective bargaining for the faculty and to negotiate a legal role for the Senate in policy matters. The bargaining agent would concern itself with compli-cated probletns of finance.

John G. Sperling President, College Council, AFT

Economic Sanction

O.K., Writer Says Editor:

I strongly disagree with many of the statements made by Al

VRTAN DA I LY "". SAN JOSE STATE COLLEGE

Second class postage paid a+ San Jose, California. Member California News-paper Publishers Association and Audit Bureau of Circulations. Published daily by students of San Jose State College, except Saturday and Sunday, during college year. Subscription accepted only on a remainder-of-semester basis. Full academic year, $9; each semester. $4.50. Off-campus price per copy. 10 cents. Phone 294-6414� Editorial 61. 2383, 2304, 2385, 2386. Advertising Ext. 2081, 2082, 2083, 2084. Press of Globe Printing Co. Office hours 1:45-4:20 p.m. Monday through Friday. Editor TOM MEAD Advertising Mgr..... . JERRY FORD Day Editor � STEVE KECH City Editor PAT HEFFERNAN Makeup Editor JEFF STOCKTON Associate Editor LAVELLE JACKSON Copy Editor SHARON OSAKI Sports Editor PAUL SAVOIA Campus Life Editor SUE BETHARD Fine Arts Editor PAT SHARP Wire Editor DAVID LEBSCH Photo Editor BOB REED Public Relations RICHARD SHYPERTT

Mason in a Guest Room editorial in Wednesday’s (Feb. 23) Spar-tan Daily concerning United States foreign policy towards Rhodesia.

In that editorial, he compared conditions and principles in the American colonies of nearly 200 years ago with conditions in the Rhodesia of today.

I suggest that editorial opin-ions about the Rhodesian situa-tion should be supported by re-searched facts.

For example, Arthur J. Gold-berg, U.S. representative to the United Nations, said in the U.S. State Department B ul le ti n, (Nov. 1965), that the perpetua-tion of minority rule is incom-patible with the "principle of

equal rights, and self-determina-tion of peoples proclaimed in the charter of the U.N. and in the Declaration on the Granting of Independence to Colonial Coun-tries and Peoples contained in the General Assembly resolution 1514 (XV) of December 14. 1960."

I also would like to refer Ma-son and interested students to statements by Ian Smith, prime minister of Rhodesia which were printed in U.S. News and World Report on Nov. 8, 1965.

With two articles in mind, I think the United States is justi-fied to support Great Britain in bringing about the economic sanctions against the Rhodesian government. The U.S. is a mem-ber of the U.N. and also thus must support Great Britain which is abiding by provisions of the U.N. charter in this situa-tion.

Jeeba Abbeyquaye AZI803

WAS IT MY DEODORANT? OR THIS SQUARE SHIRT?

MAYBE / SHOULD SWITCH TO h.LsPRESS-FREE SHIRTS

tax free to boot. I looked for a

long, slow recovery. Then came the medicine. W8S

ordered to drink a quart of hot

lemonade liberally spiked with

vodka, several hot brandies

sweetened with honey, and some

straight hot whiskey every day.

It seems that alcohol Is good

for flu virus, not to mention

whatever else ails you. Just to

keep under control at night, I

also was ordered to keep a va-

porizer going . . . with rum

in it.

ONE HITCH

There was only one slight

hitch that hurried my recovery

�I’m a teetotaler. * � �

I see Rand McNally has come out with a full-color road map of Viet Nam. Just the thing for little side trips off the Ho Chi Minh Trail. Or maybe it would make some airman a great gift--so he won’t bomb the wrong village by mistake.

� � �

That mysterious voice called on the phone last night to ask me to warn all my HUCK agents that the new secret political party is infiltrating the fraterni-ties. They plan to place their people in key places among the actives.

I know several persons who just finished pledging and would like to know how the infiltrators can avoid that. If they succeed with the sneak, they should pub-lish a book for rushees ... "Con-formity�Painlessly."

* � �

Another mysterious voice con-tacted me while I was battling (and losing) the flu virus. The, one wanted to do something constructive about the parking around campus. If you’re inter-ested in a project to straighten out our parking laws, call 293-5955 and ask for Pat.

pliesOmPallulai�aliarkestaitimt

Special Discount � FACULTY

� STUDENTS � ALUMNI

just present your staff or ASB cord

Movie & Still � Cameras * Supplies � Prolectors * Equipment

t developing � printing rentals � repairs

hie bit 6) n CAMERA SHOP

SALE 1/2 OFF

SPECIAL SALE ON ALL

SWEATERS

Sleeveless V-Neek

Crew-Neck Cardigan

VAUGHN’S 125 Se. 4th St.

Across from SJS Library

Hours: 9:30 a.m. to 6 p.m. daily Thursdays open until 9 p.m.

1

Hermen Sets World Mark In Cow Palace 160 Sprint

Spartan sprinter Wayne liermen set a world record in the little-run 160-yard dash Friday night to head a strong Spartan showing in the Golden Gate Invitational indoor track meet in San Francisco’s Cow Palace.

Hearten sped to a 16.4 clocking in the 160 to break the world-and meet -record of 16.5 held by Stanford’s Larry Questad.

The 160 dash is unique to San Francisco, not being run in any fuller city. It Via,: instil uteri Ifiv0

year and has been run twice in both the Golden Gate and San Francisco Exfuniner meets.

Only two sprinters run in the race which covers a lap on the indoor track-and they start and end at different sides of the track, passing each other in the middle of the race.

Hermen also took a second in the 60-yard dash with a 6.3 clock-ing and was the leadoff man as the Spartans remained undefeated in the mile relay.

in /lie relay Spartan ace Tommy

Swimmers Drown UOP; Look Toward Tourneys

With the dual meet campaign ners. Swimming the 200 butter-completed in winning style, Spar- fly for the first Hine this year, tan swimmers set their sights on he gained a 2:09.0 clocking, one lowering times for post -season second off the school record. tourneys.

The mermen paddled to a 62-31 victory Saturday over the Uni-versity of Pacific to conclude the dual-meet season with a strong 8-1-1 mark.

Steve Hoberg again led the fin---

Hayward at SJS; Big Baseball Week

Spartan varsity baseballers be-gin a busy week today with a 3 p.m. game against Hayward State at Municipal Stadium.

Also on tap for the Spartans this week is a home contest with Laney College tomorrow, a battle with San Francisco State here Friday and a big game with Cali-fornia in Berkeley Saturday.

Hayward beat the Spartans twice last season, and the Spartans am looking for revenge today with ace righthander Bill Schmidt on the mound.

In order to get a little more punch into the lineup, coach Ed Sobezak will in.sert senior Robin Tomlin into today’s starting line-up. Tomlin, who had three hits in SJS’ second game loss to Davis, will lead off and play right field.

With Tomlin in the lineup, Charlie Nave will switch to left field and Dave Gigliotti will move over to center.

Open Tonight Until 9 p.m.

folthr10.1

Sporting an unloaded lineup, SJS kept the meet reasonably close. Other firsts went to Jack Likens, 200 free, 1:54.6; Steve William.s, 50 free, 22.8: Kevin Currlin, 200 individual medley, 2:16.4; Steve Hancock, diving, 195.65; Ted Mathewson, 200 back, 2:09.0; and the 400 free relay team of Hoberg, Mathewson, Williams and Mark Petersen, 3:26.0.

Mathewson’s win gives him an undefeated record for the back-stroke in dual-meet battles.

Gymnasts Beaten; Lose Close Battle

It’s the same old song for the SJS gymnasts.

Despite another star perform-ance by Tony Coppola, the Spar-tans dropped a Saturday evening dual at San Francisco State by a slim 152-149 score.

Four firsts by Coppola, in floor exercise, long horse, parallel bars and still rings, were not enough.

Jeff Wolfe added a high bar victory and tied for individual honors with a SFS foe on the side horse. Other Spartan entries showed improvement, but the final point total fell short.

Clair Jennett’s crew gets an-other shot at SFS on March 7 when the Gators visit San Jose.

Their next test comes Saturday afternoon when Sacramento State pulls into the Spartan gYm for a dual meet.

TOUGH REBOUNDERS

In the latest West Coast Ath-letic Conference statistics re-leased, SJS is ranked third in team rebounding, averaging 50.6 grabs per game. UOP (57.2) and USF (55.61 are ahead of the Spar-tans, with Santa Clara 150.5i close behind.

DIAMOND RINGS

PRELUDE�� a SLENDER SHACTS

01 GOLD SPIRAL UPVVARD HOLD-

iNu A SINGLE DIAMOND IN SIMPLE

ELEGANCE�PRICED FROM*126

You .4re Cordially invited to visit our Rridal Registry and see our 22 new patterns in Chinaware, featuring: � Syraruse Fine China � Crystal Stemware by Holme-gaard Bodes from Sweden.

-RIAAZ 72 8. First St

San Jose Phone 297-0920

Mailer

fieweter.1

Weatgate Shopping Center 1600 Saratoga Ave.

Phone 379.3051

Smith took the baton and a 10-yard lead into the final leg, but fell down going around the turn.

He quickly jumped up, barely ahead of California’s Forrest Beaty and former Cal great Jack Yerman, and held the lead, giving the Spartans a meet record time of 3:19.7.

Other Spartan winners wer,. .10(t Neff. who ran fl 1:56.4 to off a strong 880 field, and Ken Shackelford, who took a 1:11.6 victory in the 600.

Tim Knowles, a member of the mile relay quartet, also took a second in the 440, Craig Fergus placed fourth in the triple jump with a leap of 48-7’42. Gene Zu-brinsky cleared 6-10 in the high jump and freshman Bob Talmadge was third in the 160 at 16.8 for other strong SJS showings.

The Spartans return to action this weekend in the annual Stan-ford Relays, with the thought of revenge on their minds after a 104-83 loss to the Indians la.st year.

WAYNE HERMEN . . . world record

Rain, Santa Clara Dampen Freshmen

Wrestlers Spartan Five Hopes To Stop

In Revenge UOP Title Drive Tomorrow

Over UCLA

I Tttesday, March 1. 1968 SPARTAN DA1LY-3

Inspired SJS wrestlers took down UCLA 22-9 Saturday night in Los Angeles to avenge the Bruins for an early season defeat.

Santa Clara provided the opposi-tion last night, but Spartan men-tor Hugh Mumby expected little threat from the weak Broncos.

Mumby gave Loren Miller and Cy Lucas the evening off and tested little-used grapplers. San Jose stood 8-5-1 going into the encounter.

Six quick wins against UCLA SJS freshmen hast�ballers irmel Put the Spartans ahead to stay.

to San Francisco today to take Dennis Runyon gained a forfeit in the 123 divisin, and Dave Austin took a fall over his 130 foe and four grapplers followed witt de-cision.s.

their third game of the season. Victories went to Ron Wathe-and second in league play, when son (137), Dan Swenson (145), the Santa Clara frosh up-ended Miller (152) and Lucas (160).

on San Francisco City College in a double header.

Last Friday the Spartababes lost

them 5-0 in a rain-dampened game that was called after five innings. SJS got only two hits

Miller’s win gives the rugged g-rappler an undefeated dual match tecord

BULLETIN USE human’ Joe Ellis %%as

voted Northern California bas-ketball phi)er ot the year yes-terdo ,,,,, eon a a meeting or area sport» writer». The group also voted coaeh of the year honor% to l’OP’s Dick Edward*.

After being eliminated from title contention a week and a half ago, Spartan basketballers hope to spoil the title aspirations of UOP Wednesday night in Civic Audi-torium.

UOP whipped USF 82-71 Satur-day night to move into undisputed possession of first place in West Coast Athletic Conference stand-ings for the first time this season.

UOP Ls now 11-1 in league play. USF is 10-2 and SJS 6-6.

If UOP gets by the Spartans Wednesday night and Santa Bar-bara Friday night, it will win its first-ever WCAC crown and break USF’s three-year hold of the champion.ship.

UOP already owns two vietr-,ries

over SJS this season, a 68-75 vic-tory in the WCAC Christmas Tourney and a 71-57 victory in Stockton.

SJS, 10-12 on the season, closes action for the year when it enter-tains St Mary’s Friday night.

Spartan Judokas In Action Tonight

SJS judokas continue their busy schedule today with a triangular match against Stanford and Cali-fornia in the Spartan Gym at 7 p.m.

Last Saturday in Seattle, Spar-tan Paul Maruyama decisioned fel-low SJS student Yuzo Koga to capture the grand championship in the Pacific Northwest AAU Charn-pion.ships. Roth Maruyama and Koga won in their weight division.

In order to advance to the championships, the 139-p ound Koga threw and defeated 239-pound heavyweight champion Dave Snell

computer dattng

Here’s all you do

Central Control is a new service that tells

and assigns you to make contact.

who is your ideal date? You

know there is such a person, but

making contact is something else.

you who is your ideal date,

Central Control,

combining

advanced techniques of psychologi-

cal measurement

and computer

technology, will put you in touch

with the person who will be your

perfect date.

In fact, if you will iill out our

questionnaire and send your

remittance of $3, we will provide the

� e persons. Each of

nameS 0

1. Fill in the Central Control personal study questionnaire. Answer all questions honestly. If you have no questionnaire, contact Central Control at our massive international headquarters.

2. Mail the questionnaire, together with your $3 fee, to P.O. BOX 245

San Jose, Cal. 3.

Wait a few short days while our data processing section reduces your whole personality, your secret dreams and inner powers, to digits in a punched card. You are then processed in a huge high-speed computer, which knows about any number of other numbers, repre-senting members of the opposite sex. Some of these are ideal for you. I The computer knows. In seconds, the computer spews out the identi-ties of five perfect dates for you.

CENTRAL CON

4. You receive your assignment from Central Control. The five names are I provided to you, and your part of , the action begins. You are to make I contact, and remember, the person I you contact is waiting to hear from I you, because you are ideal, too.

5. Fulfil your assignment and go out with your ideal date. It is not required by Central Control that you file any kind of report with us. Some things can be kept private. I

I Th. Oueatfonnoira a for magic persona only

NAME

CURRENT ADDRESS

TOWN_

STATE__

TELEPHONE NUMBER

AGE

RACE SEX

these five will be perfectly matched

with you in interests, outlook and

background.

Central Control tells you that you

will find any one of the five, or all

of them at once, very en\ (Dyable.

Central Control tells you that

meeting your ideal date will be one

of the most memorable

experiences

of your lite. If you do not have the

most wonderful time of your lite, do

not admit it to Central Control.

Our computer cannot be Wrong.

01-, Inc.

[tainted

rergeie

HEIGHT WEIGIO

Gloom answer tho following questions horndly in coder to insure actuate terelehinol

0116111AL

MItn h the mort imonnawl in appearance? 7/.:,1.1�81.011111.:1 hair

Satiably clot.,

2. If you had a rho.. which of the following would 7e�

Nod., � 3. Whi,h of the following Kehl ends do yeet plebs,

‘11:1’,2 c. Formal dower

4. "’huh ol the following you Meol enjoy? a. Camping and rivh.ng b. Terme r. Slur,

% Whnh of the following tolled terest yaw Mat, PNlinnplw INnhdogy

c. Mb. d. None ate of interne

6. Whi,h of the following b of the mat intend to pa

I.? A. a I .1.11 ofenA ,hurele sal Sunday whoa? � Regularly ? 0....00rially r Nod

t. Ono tour fend, ray? a. Replan. b Ch..deonally

d. Neves

3. Whieli of the taping mon awry eppteobet gen doper � to.., Ind ...toning b. !Wald and oneueledir c treitonning tnd punning

No ...rete ,no.ept

4. le two people ulna enady art not ef the pp faith do yp then deo inflame. drould

P.itriVd ’171 et ’1.7hO’t titre � Lett to done bat thenPhr,

3. *tepid you enter into an loaf kith ourdyn? a Ve. h No

tWren.1, or rebon

6, Woohl you cot. manage with s Men *la rernOlt tote

a Ye. h No c Kobe

SATING

1. Where wend yea prefer toren ward f hunt, lent non.

h tun.ton. Immo onion Intoulmed ha tripe!, sod wilding

2. aft...h ol the tallow eng de pme pert., lo do on a Irra dor � a Mow

DONE g. VIMAM

Nerne et taw

Limo � Whrth tare of pane front the felkones Inn in fee

mart conalortsble nob � � Aggpane

Sto and rpring .. -talkative

.L Plan, for date OPald bemired al lc � Nate b. �,,,�t, c. Mutual agreement

5. Wraeld you lid on � fied datelt a. Yea b. No c Fattens

6. Woold you pet en � fird dd.? � Yes b No c Perhap�

7. Would no pet with penn with when glat not erred!! a, 7. b. Never c. Ferber.

? n. you believe that calling � Nit to Peat !wheeler is garb . .. Plies,. b. Man a Pliganon

Joint obbeetore

1411111114�1

1. lb you.entdet that nut patent haJ happy minim?

c. N.. opinion

Wooeld you mon � pence e mod. lower ,onorta: level hue your own � a. Yrs

Of,u1,1 depend on other &Ore t Net et

3, at odd MI pole, le Prey a peon � Older b Younger , goo, apo

I. Do no hope to keg, Idren? a. Y. b. No

Indecidtd

3. Ileer large a family de no glan le Ion? a. One b. Tee r. More nun two d None

1..locateree

? Ye. tbut only elide nollple) c. No

% If rou knew a pop hat pewits! en whine; irmild

hbern� ono’. � emelt, Mot foto. c. N. man

I. Wand no prefer Toot owe ro bat Sem Aland than .04

In Lae arra tha A Awareseirly the lanw edocv ft

1.1 t

Menet �m.

MAILMAN Orr.) W.m1.1 you gn�rry � reran who Ps of Pother rue?

rv:hap� c No

10. Woadal aon malty � pram IGO wand ned live fa ot on near your oanowanity: a. Yea b Perhaps c. No

21111011AUITA10151161116111

1. la your usual wood iattion to be Happy

b. Pnernelic t. eteble d. Moody e. Nowt% don On yon find that you fine � IORGISIGIII1 � Conplententan oi when b. (nivel of other.

Indenerent to other. &

Pawn. ally C, And aolavog

4 La Hera feeedabke A> pat e. An taw tone b. A dithdale Noe

2. Do the inends that you hot MOGI Jong perpia el lone:

Nf: c Sometimes

6. Ale year relation.; did, gen (NG, a Friendly and 0010 b. Indeftwevt e. Antagernotit el. Nam ot then

611066

L Who fondled &turn torn Carl, a %ober Iv. Mother c. gpally ahated nitonsifiihn

3�, Of the following which *gull seve for ’ st..

11,ez.

Intend GI pitmen

j1. Deno believe in giving 105 to netthowh. � Yea b. No

4. Do you think the Arernnee Aral carol the pr011 ann.? a. Yea b. No e. Depend, van the 4h:0in

9, II pa mei. el � latge sent of maga � gift, would you peeler to � Sava X It d

Srterwl

/41061111.1 *NO P1/1611111 SOU 61NCIP1S

� ot you fed receded ;r1 non ’

1. no ova from � home wNeet

h- Not"heet:=1, Fowl nortintmo .1�1.11 nudge

2. n. eme nhoe � nue stout I help ’Oh heowhold .hurr� v Aloe,. h th,suonally . seldom .1. Never

3, Ile no NG.. a woman Not., wog. efter trotrisn? e. Aiwa..

IrNorver whunt, ;a.m., c. TAM doe Habana nettit Madinat. ed.

J. rare � Never

.1. yoa map do you went per maniage ho ? llo,lun.1 dominated b Monx.,a.1

lb REIM, war dom.., I hat w hothen.1 a vowel .Pneied

It-SPARTAN D 1LT Tuesday, March I, IfI66

Professor To Speak To Honorary Society

Dr. Franklin Rogers, associate professor of English, will speak bo Eta Epsilon Sigma, honorary

English Society, today, in F0104

at 3 p.m.

WEDDING PHOTOGRAPHY

$89 all color

JRS ENTERPRISES Phone 286-5392 evenings

The meeting is open to members and students eligible to join the society. According to Dr. Robert

H. Woodward, chairman of the

English Department, to be eligible

a student must earn 20 English

units with a grade point average

of 3.0, or 12 units with a 3.5

g.p.a. and must have been enrolled

in SJS English for one previous

I semester.

Opens Friday

A MAN FOR ALL SEASONS By Robert Bolt

A Drama Department Production

Runs March 4, 5, 9, 10, 11, 12

College Theatre Student Tickets - 75c

For Reservations Phone 294-1931

Spartan Daily Classifieds

ANNOUNCEMENTS (11

MALE TO TOUR EUROPE in summer, needs companion to share expenses. 297-7967 after 6:30 p.m.

AUTOMOTIVE (2)

’55 NASH METROPOLITAN. Good mo. tor & tires. $350. ’64 Riverside scooter.

10° co.P.O� $200. 948.5429.

’57 DODGE. 2.door hardtop. Custom Royal. Automatic transmission. Power brake. radio, heater. One owner. Rebuilt V-8 engine (3 years old). $195. 253. 1734. Week days after 5 p.m.

’61 RENAULT DAUPHINE $280. 470 S. I ith. See manager. 298.7157.

’56 FORD ZEPHYR 4 door 4 speed Eng-lish. Looks sharp, low mileage. Best offer. 297-8097 or 2136-9733.

’62 CORVA1R MONZA SPYDER 4 speed. Vibrasonic. r/h, good condition. Best offer. 297.9730. Roger Brown.

’60 CORVAIR. Best offer. 294-4047. 295 E. Fernando #2. ’64 MG MIDGET. Red & White. 18,000 miles. Good condition. $1300 or best offer. 297-9742. Betty.

’34 FORD model B..58 Herni head en-gine. Needs interior & body work. Must sell. $300 or best offer. 294-2130. ’64 HONDA 150. Vory clean. 6600 mi. Bored to 160cc. Excellent condition. $350. 298-7357. Bob. ’62 OLDS Cutlass Sports Coup. R/h, automatic trarsmission, bucket seats, belts. $1t95. 293.1104. ’61 VESPA 150 SCOOTER. 1966 license. New pa,nr. Excellent condifion. $175. 243-3278 between 6 & 8 p.m. ’64 HONDA. 305 Dream. 6000 miles. like new. Electric start. rack, helmets. $400. 293-2631. VW JUDSON BLOWER & linkage. Ad� vertised 40’ more p,wer. Barely used. $50. J. Slivkoff. 179 N. 9th.

FOR SALE (31

KASTLE METAL Reinsenslalom 215 cm. Nevada toe lift heel. Usod twice. $150. Included. used Scott poles. 293-0650 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. daily. BEER REFRIGERATOR. 151/2 gallon ca-pacity. Complete cleaning & tapping kit, 2 matching keg stools. $150. 537-7416. SKI BOOTS, Reiker 91/2 medium. $15. Ski pants, 32 medium. $5. 295-2697 be� tween 4:30 & 6:45 p.m.

VW CHAINS. Used once. Fit any late model. $9. 286-2208.

BRIDAL GOWN. Long sleeves. chapel train. size 10 petite. $60. 252.5788 after 3 p.rn.

HELP WANTED (4)

2 GIRLS. Room/board for part.time work in nursery school. Close SJS. 286-0883.

YOUNG MAN as manager of smell sum-mer resort. Must be earnest & ready for long hours. Quarters furnished. Salary. $33 per month. Starts June I5th thru Labor Day. Submit resume to Box 13. Saratoga.

EE MAJOR, upper division. Part time employment. Schedule flexible but 20 hours minimum week desired between 8 a.m. & 4:30 p.m., Mcm.-Fri. Includes full time on all school vacations. Phone 243-3600 Underwriters’ Laboratories, Inc.

CHINESE STUDENT te teach Mandarin once a week. Good pay. Call 258-1293. evenings.

GUITARIST to accompany Singel‘ on standard & show tunes. Call 248-6278. evenings.

HOUSING 151

ANN DARLING Apts. I & 2 bedrooms. No. 33rd & Marburg Way.

ROOM II BOARD. $69. Excellent cook. 2 blorls to SJS. No curfew. Clean rooms 293-4275.

FOR RENT. Large 3 bedroom house. Plenty of parking space. 11/2 blocks frem men’s gym. 293-5760.

I BEDROOM furnished apt. $75. Married couple, only. 295.8121 after 5 p.m.

MUST SELL contract for unapproved fur-nished apt. 1 bedroom. POD Par month. 728 S. 10th, #. 4.

tor po,tt it,ns in manufacturing engineering mgmt. training pro-gram. U.S. citizenship required.

Kaiser Aerospace and Electron-ics Corp.; EE majors for positions as junior EE. U.S. citizenship re-quired. THURSDAY

Standard 011 Company of Cali-fornia and Chevron Research Co.: ChE, CE, EE, and ME majors for positions in research, development, process design, plant design, con-struction supervision, refinery en-gineering, refinery tech. service. and oil production engr. Training is on-the-job with careers in tech., operating, staff and mgmt. func-tions. U.S. citizenship or per-manent visa required.

Pacific Missile Range; EE, aero., ME, and physics majors for posi-tions in a one-year training pro-gram in areas such as, telemetry equipment systems design, data automation, flight data analysis, environmental testing, communi-cation systems design and modifi-cation and weapons system evalua-tion, including ship guided mis-sile weapons systems. U.S. citi-zenship required.

U.s. Naval Chii Engineering Laboratory, EE, CE and ME ma-jors for positions in EE, CE and ME. U.S. citizerLship required.

California State Govermnent: See Wednesday for information.

Factory Alutual Engineering Corp.; Engineering majors for po-sitions as field engineer-fire pro-tection. U.S. citizenship required.

Army Special Sersicets--Dept.of the Army; lib. sci., recreation, P.E., music, drama and arts and crafts majors. Women with any bac-calaureate degree may be consid-ered for recreation specialist-(so-cial activities) grade 5 positions. L’ S citizenship required.

Get Commissions Seven SJS students have been

commissioned as U.S. Army second lieutenants after completing re-quirements of SJS Reserve Offi-cer Training Corps detachment.

Jerry E. Fitzgerald, Robert W. Martin, Lloyd K. Clair, James A. Wililamson, Henry J. Cotton, Rob-ert G. Petersen and Gilbert W. Hogue were commissioned at re-cent ceremonies held in the Cam-pus Chapel.

t. Col. Carl W. Ivie, pmfessor of military science, directed the event.

Spartaguide TOM OR ROW

College Young Life, 9:45 p.m.,

Campo,. Christian Center, 300 S. 10t h.

Arah-Amerlean Club, 3:30 p.m., CH162. Sign ups for Arabic classes will be held along with election of officers.

Pershing Rifles. 7 p.m., Home Economics Lounge. A pledge smoker will be conducted. All in-terested ROTC cadets are invited to attend. Refreshments will be served.

Tau Delta Phi. 7:30 p.m. H5. A speaker is scheduled. The 50th Anniversary Committee meets at 6:45.

American Marketing Association, 7:30 p.m., Morris Dailey Auditor-ium. Officers will be presented at the "Kick-off" meeting which will also feature a Playboy bunny, rock and roll band, and door prizes.

Newman Club, 8 p.m., Newman Centi.�r. All students weicoine at this general meeting.

THURSHAY

Chi Alpha, 6 p.m., Chi Alpha Student Center, 104 S. 13th.

Folk Music Club, 7:30 p.m., 300 S. lOth. A Hootenanny is planned. All instruments and favorite rec-ords welcome.

Arab-Ainericisn Club. 2:30 p.m., TH55. Guest speaker will be for-mer U.S. Ambassador and foreign affairs expert, Mr. Harold Minor.

Angel Flight, Operation 1 -up, 7 p.m., MH324.

Semper Fidel& Society, 7 p.m., H2. Devil pups will be discussed at this first tactics class.

Overseas interviews, Placement Center, Adm. 234. Miss Evelyn Hanock of the Army Special Serv-ices, Washington, D.C. will inter-view June and summer graduates for overseas positions with special services.

SCREEN SCENES CINEMA

552 South Bascom 295-7238

A Film for All Americans to See. "CHINA"

In color, also "JIGSAW"

STUDIO 896 South First 292-6778

Two Academy Award Nominees

’’THE COLLECTOR" and

"KING RAT"

Have a hot dog at I he

alMI�lasme

TOWNE 1433 The Alameda 297-3060

Italian agent 38-24-36 in

"THE TENTH VICTIM" and

"THE CONJUGAL BED"

G A Y 400 South Firm 294-5544

"LA POUP-EF" (Sin on the ceiling) and Peter Sellers in

"THE BIG TIME OPERATORS"

SARATOGA 14502 Big Basin War

Rod Steiger in

"PAWNBROKER"

PIZZA HAVEN’S

* Weekly Specials *

MONDAYS

Am 8" pizza -W

TUESDAYS Spaghetti Night

Side order of spaghetti and two pieces of garlic bread - 40c

Take advantage of these specials every Illonday and Tuesday.

Open daily at 11:30 a.m. Corner of 10th and William

Restaurant Price Only

867-3026

While They Last

ERASABLE Typing Paper loo Sheets -Medium Weight

Only 63‘

’keteliN 19g Open Tonight Until 9 330 So. 10th

FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted. Share large apt. with 3 others. 148 E. William, #18. 295.1548.

3 BEDROOM HOME. Carpets. Drapes. Partly furnished. 720 S. 8th. $175 per month. Call owner. 842-6454.

HOUSE for rent. 4 bedrooms, fully fur nished, quiet. Lots of parking & storad. 2 blocks to SJS. $185. For information. call 252-4247.

WANTED. 1 male roommate. Own bed-room. $50 a month. 628 S. 10th, *3. 295-2393.

I GIRL wants same to share modern fur-nished 2 bedroom apt. Only $60 apiece. 576 S 5th. *5 after 6 p.m.

NEEDED. Second man to share a nice I bedroom apt. 286-4135. $45, all utiEties. 329 E. San Fernando, *7.

NEED. 4 girls for 3 bedroom apt. Elec-tric kitchen, drapes, carpets. $150. 628 S. iOth. 294-9745 after 4 p.m.

ROOMS for men students. Share kitchen & bath. $30 up. 46 S. 12th, evenings, week -ends. NEED 2 GIRLS TO SHARE APT. 294-3810. MALE STUDENT. 1 single room, living room & kitchen. $37.50. Utilities in-cluded. 167 E. St. John St. 295-6869.

DELUXE STUDENT apts. Brand new. 2 bedroom. 2 bath. Danish furniture, elec-tric kitchen, large closets. 3 persons, $150. 4 persons, $180. 706 S. 9th. 294. 9170. NEEDED. Third man for deluxe 2 bed-room apt. 294-9643. 780 S. I Ith.

MEN room & board. 10 meals. $21 per week. 104 S. 13th. 286-1940.

MALE roommate to share 3 bedroom du-plex with 2 seniors. Near Civic Center. Need own transportation. Upper division student preferred. $42 month. 293.6258 or 298.1725.

LOS T AND FOUND (41

LOST. Gold identifictaion bracelet. Names on both sides. If found, please call 295-3442. Reward offered.

LOST GLASSES on courts between dorms. Charcoal gray frames. Contact Doug Schuyler, 295-9927.

PERSONALS (71

CUSTOM MADE contemporary wedding rings. Original jewelry in cast gold & silver. G. Larimore. 354.1273.

SERVICES UN

RENT A T.V. Esche’s-Call 251-2598. $10 per month. EXPERT TYPING. All kinds. Reasonable, Phone 294-3772. 21 & MARRIED. Receive age 25 or ever rates on auto insurance. Liability net $67 annually. Dave Towle. 244.9600. Class of ’59. FAST, ACCURATE, GUARANTEED TYP-ING in my home. Editing upon request. 259-5118. EDITING service. per job. Typing, per page. 762 Melannie Ct. 292-2346.

TV’s for rent special student rates. $8.00 per month. 377-2935. WILL DO SEWING and alterations in my home. Reasonable prices. 401 S. 15th St. 294-6715. TYPING. Pica Electric. Work guaranteed 243.6313 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. PROFESSIONAL typing at student rates. Editing. 293-7692. 1760 The Alameda. #14C�

TRANSPORTATION VIO

RIDE NEEDED FROM � Cruz for Mon., Weal., Fri. classes. 423 7563. Doris. RIDE OR CARPOOL wanted from Pros-pect Ave. in Saratoga. Mon., Wed., Fri. 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. 257-1509.

To place an ad:

� Vi�at the �

Classified Adv. Office - J206

Daily

10:30-3:30

� Send in handy order blank. Enclose, ca,h Of check. Make check oul in Spartan Daily Classifieds. _

� Phone 2444414. Ed. 2405.

ASB Interviews Alt interslessn are held In the

e ’,Alegi. Union. 315 S. Ninth St. A pplicatlomi, sign up sheet, and farther Informallon ma bi� Oi-ta Ined in the (lollege Union.

TOlDAY Atudent Connell Senior Repre-

sentative; 2 p.m.. must be in clear academic standing. a member of the E1enior Class and hold no other major elective or appointive posi-t ion.

student Council Freshman Rep-reeeniatiwe: 3 p.m., must be in clear ,academic standing, a mem-ber of the Freshman Class and hold .so other major elective or appoint ive posit ion. TOMOBIROW

Community Service Committee; 2 p.m., ’vacancy is chairman.

meg Homecoming Committee; chairmat,. 2 p.m., applications ac-cepted tow.

Spartacamp Set For March 19 and 20

Arab-Americans Schedule Lecture By U.S. Official

Harold B. Minor, former United States ambassador to Lebanon. will speak on "American-Arab Re-lations in a Changing World," Thursday, at 2:30 p.m. in JC55.

Minor, who first entered the foreign service in 1927, is presently a consultant to private organiza-tions and the United States gov-ernment.

Minor, a nationwide lecturer on Middle East and general foreign relations, is being co-sponsored by the ASB Lecture Committee and the Arab-American Club.

Before he was ambassador, he served in Palestine, Iran, Afghan-istan and Greece. His first years in the foreign service were spent in Latin America.

Minor presently serves as vice chairman of the Board of Ameri-can Friends of the Middle East.

iCent,s sued front Paige I) He makes his home in Boca Raton, and housing’ will be provided for Fla. the campers.

A speake !.* corps of camp coun-selors is 01:Ring campus living centers to ta.lk about Spartacamp. Any living cisnter wishing to hear a speaker cam, make arrangements by calling this College Union.

Members the Spartacamp Committee h a ve been holding practice sessiorts to get ready for the meet. Student members in-clude Bob Pitcher, director; Rich Corby, assistant director: Shirley Rhoads, accommodations; Kris Ox-sen, program; Kalthy Moffett, sec-retary; Gail GI yetsema. ticket sales; Dick Miner, speakers; Dick

Wolfe, publicity; .3nd Larry Col-lins, utility.

ANGELO’S $

STEAK HOUSE s:

$

$

A Growing Tindal", "t

San Jose State

for 14 Years

72 F.. Santa Clara St. �.;

TODAY Epsilon Eta SIgIlla. 3 p.m.,

F0104, Dr. Franklin Rogers, asso-ciate professor of F:nglish, will speak on Mark Twain. New mem-bers are welcome.

Circle K, 1:30 p.m., HI. Young Republicans, 7 p.m.,

CH160, discu.ssion of CYRCF con-vention. A film on the treatment of prisoners in Korean War will be shown.

Spartan Shields Extend Deadline

Deadline to apply for Spartan Shields. honorary sophomore men’s society, has been extended through Friday. The original deadline was yesterday.

Applications and sign-ups for interviews are available at the Student Union. All male students with 60 or fewer units, two activi-ties. a 2.25 grade average overall and a 2.5 la.t ,emester, are invited to apply.

Job Interviews June and Slimmer zzi adiniten

may sign for Wien-less appoint-ments now in the Placement Center, ADIV1234.

TOMORROW

U.S. Navy Electronics Labora-tory; physics, math, and EE ma-jors for positions in research and development. U.S. citizenship re-quired.

Sylvania Electronic Systems--West; EE. ME, business and mar-keting majors or those svith an MS in Math/Statistics, or Physics for positions in engineering, mar-keting, or business. U.S. citizen-ship required.

California State Govermnent; lib. arts or business adm majors for positions in acctg., investiga-tions, real estate and insurance, parole and probation, fiscal and personnel mgmt., correctional and vocational rehabilitation, and re-search and statistics. U.S. citizen-ship required.

Continental Can Company, Ine.; ind. mgmt., ME. and IF: majors

Rly

Summer Session 5 departures June 18. 25. July 2. 9. 16

60 DAYS ()pen to BOTI1 Co’s "N’ Eds

Pan American $599 United

Package, Includes 1. Round trip via Pan Am and United JETS

2. Transfers round trip 3. Deluxe apartments for 60 days including maid service*

4. Circle island tour 5. Get acquainted PARTY 6. Tahatian show and LUAU 7. Your OWN 1966 Chevy 11 with UNLIMITED mileage

for the whole 60 days. This is your car, you just pay for the gas.

* Price based on two bedroom Suite for four

UNLIMITED MILEAGE

tYou Pay the Gas . W� Pay the Moleag,

CALL FOR SERVATIONS

2 9 2430 0

tut tauei 223 SO. FIRST ST., SAN JOSE ,

ff rile or call

for remereof ions

& folder

.luene

. II/dress

City

Plume