pa rtan dai ly - sjsu scholarworks

4
aze ion than, tters anti e d the tilde heir ding sand air. Ring hoys met ding nigh way peed male s he aale MCP , the in mail mail have to I be ad- s of dain will and on’t nc. h no ed is in Today’s Weather S.I111,1 ( Lira : Fair today and tomorrim. Predicted high t emir ra t ure t 0 d a y, 73-33. Predicted high temperature t onigh t, 50-60. Northwest winds 10-20 miles per hour afternoon. PA RTAN DA I LY SAN JOSE STATE COLLEGE Vol. 53 SAN JOSE, CALIFORNIA, TUESDAY, MAY 3, 1466 Journalist To Discuss Science Role Earle Ubell, science editor of the New York Herald Tribune and president of the Council for the Advancement of Science Writing, will speak on the role of science in society on Thursday, at 10:30 a.m. itt Concert Hall. Title of the semester’s final ASB Forum Series lecture is "Will Sci- ence Destroy Society?" Also a vice-president of the Nu- clear Energy Writers Association, Ubell is currently working on a research project involving x-ray crystallography. In addition to his work on the Herald Tribune, he has contrib- uted articles to Look, Science Di- gest, Nation’s Business, Natural History, Vogue, Parents and others. Reports by Ubell include those on John Glenn’s flight, the first sputnik, the introduction of tran- quilizers, the Kinsey report and the first and second Atoms-For- Peace Conference in Geneva. For his efforts the editor re- ceived the New York State Society for Mental Health Bell Award in 1957; the Lasker Medical Writing Award in 1958; and the American Association for the Advancement of Science-Westinghouse Science Writing Award in 1960. Interviews Slated For Union Board Interviews for next year’s Col- lege Union Program Board mem- bers will be held in the College Union today at 2 p.m.; for Sparta - camp director at 2:30 p.m. and for Homecoming committee at 3-5 p.m. College Union Program Board members assist in the planning and coordirusting of union activities and adminster expenditures of funds for those activities, explained Clark Heinrich, ASB personnel officer. Bob Pitcher, 1966 Spartacamp director, annoureced recently that the "think" weekend would be held April 18-19 in 1967 at Asilomar Conference Grounds on the Mon- terey Peninsula. Executive To Talk At Business Fete 114’1 srl-H.1 .1. I’ll IMO, W.:1’CW iV(‘ vice president of Lockheed Missiles and Space Co., will he the guest speaker at the eighth annual SJS Business Division Banquet tomor- row at the Pavilion Building of the Santa Clara County Fair- grounds. FOREIGN FLAVORS Enjoying the foreign atmosphere of Interna- tional Bazaar held last Friday at SJS are, from left, Liz Borad, Marcia Marr and Steve Locci. Photos by Yoshi Hasegawa The many booths, representing various foreign countries, featured food, dancing and crafts. $400 Per Semester Chanceilor Raps Tuition California State College Chan- cellor Glenn S. Dumke yesterday voiced strong opposition to a pro- posal that state college students be charged a $400 per semester tuition. The California State Chamber of Commerce Thursday had out- lined a proposal to impose a $400 tuition fee at California’s 18 state colleges and a $500 per semester fee at the University of California. "Both the student and society . . . will benefit ..if tuition fees am kept to a level which will con- tinue to encourage all qualified students to commit themselves to . . . personal and social improve- ment," Dumke said. The State Chamber of Com- merce group made the tuition pro- posal in a letter sent to all state legislators. "It is the opinion of many," Dumke continued, "that Califor- nia’s econotnie resources are suf- ficient . . . to support the quality program of tuition-free education." Also the California Taxpayers Association, Et state-wide lobby to reduce taxes, proposed a state college and university tuition ear- -Photo by Yoshi Hasegawa INTERNATIONAL QUEEN International beauty Soon Chun, senior music major represent- ing Korea was selected International Queen at the International Ball Friday. Last year’s queen, Mrs. Casey Gittings Johnson pre- sented file queen’s charm, lier last week to "help balance the budget." "A departure from our tui- tion -free higher public education may precent a serious threat to SJS Faculty To Perform At Concert Three stringed instruments dat- ing back two centuries will be played ill Concert Hall tonight at 8:15 by members of the SJS Fac- ulty Quartet. Oldest of the three instruments is a cello made in Cremona, Italy, by Giovanni Baptiste Grancino in 1685 and now owned by Donald Homuth, associate professor of MtlEtte. Dr. Gibson Walters, chair- man of the Music Department, owns a Grancino violin made in 1700. Dr. Walters commented that the imitruments, each valued at $10,- 000, are in prime condition because they have been in private collec- tions. Homuth acquired his cello eight years ago and Dr. Walters has owned his violin 12 years. The third oldest instrument is a Guadagnini viola, also made in Italy, which is valued at $20,000. Albert Gillis, assistant professor of music, acquired the viola 16 years ago. Completing the Faculty Quartet Film, Love Lecture is pianist John Delevoryas, asso- ciate professor of music. He will join Gillis in the presentation of Scheduled Today Hindemith’s "Der Schwimendreh- er" for Viola and Piano. Other numbers on the program are Beethoven’s Trio in E Flat Major for Piano and Strings, Op. 1, No. 1, and Quartet in E Flat Major for Piano and Strings, Op. 47 by Schumann. the continued economic, social and cultural development of this state," Dumke’s statement contin- ued. "Therefore this problem should be carefully studied before a decision is made to change the present no-tuition situation," he concluded. The charicellor’s statement, so far, is the only official position the California State College sys- tem has taken on the proposed tuition, a chancellor’s of f ice spokesman said yesterday. The Board of Trustees has taken no stand on state college tuition so far, the spokesman added. Major Campaign Talk Dance Bids Free bids for the Friday, May 13 AsB spring formai, "Psych- edelic spring," are available te, front of the Cafeteria and Book from 10:30 to 1:30 p.m. No. 112 Christopher To Speak On Campus Thursday George Christopher, Republican candidate for governor in the June 7 state primary election, will make a major campaign address in Mor- ris Dailey- Auditorium Thursday at 10:30 a.m. The former San Francisco mayor will arrive on campus at 10 a.m. for a reception hosted by Students for Christopher in Hl. Christopher will be introduced in Morris Dailey Auditorium by SJS President Robert D. Clark. His talk, billed a major campaign speech by Students for Christopher chairman Steve Pitcher, will last until 11 a.m. "This isn’t going to be a ’nice to be here’ talk, but a major cam- paign address," Pitcher said. Following the Morris Dailey speech Christopher will depart for a luncheon at Rickey’s Hyatt House in Palo Alto. He will also speak in Santa Cruz later in the day and may return to San Jose for a "Cinco de Mayo," speech at the Santa Clara County Fair- grounds. CAMPAIGN PROGRAM In his SJS speech Christopher is expected to reiterate his 15 point campaign program with a special emphasis on his education plank. Christopher has stated in his campaign material that "the only thing more expensive than educa- tion is ignorance. The Governor ha.s certain responsibilities to call attention to defects and inade- quacies in our educational system to urge classes of proper size and to determine teachers’ salaries on a systematic professional basis rather than by political expedi- ency." CRL ENDORSEMENT He has been endorsed for elec- tion by the California Republican GEORGE CHRISTOPHER . . . speaks Thursday League which included continued free tuition for state colleges as part of its platform. In a recent canvassing of down- town San Jose precincts Pitcher reports that his group discovered a three to one ratio in Chris- topher’s favor over his chief op- ponent Ronald Reagan. "I’m confident we can over- come Reagan’s lead in the South, by getting out the vote up here," Pitcher said. Christopher is the owner of an independent dairy in San Fran- cisco. He served as mayor of that Alumni Week Activities Mark SJS’ 104th Year I city from 1954 to 1962. In 1962 he lost a bid for lieutenant govern, to incumbent Democrat Glenn An- derson, despite the fact that he drew more votes than GOP gu- bernatorial candid at e, Richard Nixon. Actor -Singer To Conclude Pop Series Theodore Bikel known as a folk singer, actor, guitarist, au- thor, lecturer and linguistwill perform Thursday night in Morris Dailey Auditorium beginning at 8:15 p.m. Tickets are still available in the Student Affairs Business Office, Building R. Prices are $1.50 for students and faculty and $2.50 for the general public. Bikel’s per- formance will conclude the Asso- ciated Students Washington Square Pop Series for spring se- mester. Bikel played in the Academy Award winning "My Fair Lady" and in "The Sound of Music" on Broadway. He sings folk songs from 20 countries in their native tongues. In 1963 he toured New Zealand and Australia. Bikel has appeared in folk festivals throughout the United States and is a member of the board of directors for the Newport Folk Music Festival. An exhibit by candidates for masters degmes in art opened yes- terday in the Art Building to be- gin Spring Alumni Week at SJS. The exhibit is in the Big Gallery, East Wing of the Art Building and in the Little Gallery, A114. It will be open 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. daily, and ends Friday. Friday Dr. Arthur Brown, presi- dent of Adelphi University in New York, will be the keynote speaker at SJS’ eighth annual Founder’s Day ceremonies, marking the col- lege’s 104th year as a state in- stitution. The ceremonies in Morris Dailey A film on the search for happi- ness and a lecture on perfect love arc events scheduled today as the second day of Religious Empha.sis Week sponsored by SJS Religious Council gets under way. The film, "Man’s Search for Happiness," sponsored by SJS Lat- e. _ t r Day Saints, will be shown ’Doctor and Devils’ every half hour today from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. in Cafeteria B. The film Tickets will go on sale tomor- follows a person from birth to row, at College Theatre Box Office death and after death. Elbert R. Slaughter, Christian for the presentation of Dylan Science Lecturer, will speak on Thomas’ "The Doctor and tho "Where Are You Going?" tonight Devils" Friday and SaturdaY at at 8 in H1, according to Robin 8:15 p.m. in Studio Theatre. Prices Perry, president of SJS Christian are 75 cents for &TS students and Science Organization. Slaughter $1.50 for general admission. The will lecture on sttch questions as Readers’ Theatre production will "Does perfect love cast out fear?" be the world premiere of Thomas’ "is there an inexhaustible source improduced film scenario based on of love?" and "Can all men find a 19th century :muter case. it?" Mlas Perry said. Auditorium, will begin at 10:30 a.m., preceded by a faculty pro- cessional from the Administra- tion Building to the Auditorium. Following a 12:30 luncheon in the MacQuarrie Hall quad area, SJS President Robert D. Clinic will dedicate the six-story struc- ture. Friday is also open house day for many of the college’s classrooms. Members of the California Teaeb. ers Association will be available in the Education Building patio, to serve coffee to visitors and guide them through open classes. The varsity water polo team meets an alumni squad in the Spartan pool at 7:30 p.m. Friday. A day-long academic confer- ence in the Spartan Cafeteria is one highlight of Saturday’s ac- tivities. Registration begins at 8:30 a.m Banquet To Honor Dr. Carl Duncan Di’. C’arl Duncan. a member of the SJS faculty for 43 years, will be honored with a retirement ban- quet tonight at the San Jose Coun- try Club. The banquet. which is sponsored by the Newman Center, and open to the public, will begin with a social hour at 7 p.m. Guest speaker will be the Rev. Francis B. Norris, SS, a translator for Protestant and other observers at the Ecumenical Council and a professor of dostmatic theology and catechetics at Saint Patrick’s Sem- inary, Menlo Park. new griep Book Talk Jacob Lowenberg’. ’Hegel’s Phenomenology," edited by Dr. Eugene Freeman, SJS associate professor of philosophy on sabbatical, will be reviewed at tomorrow’s Faculty Book Talk at 12:30 p.m. in Cafeteria rooms A and B. Blood Drive SJS students. faculty and stall members will have the chance to roll up their sleeves for the Red Cross at the Blood Drive, Catholic Women’s Center, Thursday, May 12. Students under 21 and unmarried should pick up parent per- mission slips at booths set up in front of the Bookstore and on Seventh Street, Blood Drive Chairman Don Hickey said. Booths will remain open until Wednesday, May 11. Hickey is a member of AFROTC, one of three groups sponsoring the drive. ASB Community Service Board and Sigma Kappa are also sponsors. Photography Talk An illustrated talk, "C,,’ ind Wet But Lots of Good Pictures," will be given by Jan Brantlev io members of Kappa Alpha Mu, photo- journalism fraternity. at 7:30 p.m. today in the conference room of the Journalism Building. Pageant Tickets Tickets are available tor the Miss San Jose State Pageant, to he held Saturday at 8 p.m. in Morris Dailey Auditorium. Tickets are $1 per person and are on sale in front of the cafeteria. The 12 finalists in the pageant will be presented at an informal fashion show tomorrow at 11 a.m. in Cafeteria A and B. They in- clude Jenny Bull. Louise Beresford, Sandy Germaine, Caroline Gerth, Rose Herman, Jo Hubert, Kathy Imwalle. Sharon Knecht, Diann Metssinger, Pam SEETIMtITIR, Site Walker and Anne Ward. VDC Meeting The San Jose Vietnam Day Committee will decide on final speaking arrangements for Friday’s protest rally to the war in Viet Nam, today, at 3:30 p.m. in CH236. Alumni -Varsity Game Tickets tor Saturday night’s Alumni Varsity Ftx0ball game are on sale this week in the Student Affairs Business Office, Buikl- ing. R. Admission for students, adults and children is one dollar. The game begins at 8 p.m. in Spartan Staditun.

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Today’s Weather S.I111,1 ( Lira : Fair today and tomorrim. Predicted high t emir ra t ure t 0 d a y, 73-33. Predicted high temperature t onigh t, 50-60. Northwest winds 10-20 miles per hour afternoon.

PA RTAN DA I LY SAN JOSE STATE COLLEGE

Vol. 53 SAN JOSE, CALIFORNIA, TUESDAY, MAY 3, 1466

Journalist To Discuss Science Role

Earle Ubell, science editor of the New York Herald Tribune and president of the Council for the Advancement of Science Writing, will speak on the role of science in society on Thursday, at 10:30 a.m. itt Concert Hall.

Title of the semester’s final ASB Forum Series lecture is "Will Sci-ence Destroy Society?"

Also a vice-president of the Nu-clear Energy Writers Association, Ubell is currently working on a research project involving x-ray crystallography.

In addition to his work on the Herald Tribune, he has contrib-uted articles to Look, Science Di-gest, Nation’s Business, Natural History, Vogue, Parents and others.

Reports by Ubell include those on John Glenn’s flight, the first sputnik, the introduction of tran-quilizers, the Kinsey report and the first and second Atoms-For-Peace Conference in Geneva.

For his efforts the editor re-ceived the New York State Society for Mental Health Bell Award in 1957; the Lasker Medical Writing Award in 1958; and the American Association for the Advancement of Science-Westinghouse Science Writing Award in 1960.

Interviews Slated For Union Board

Interviews for next year’s Col-lege Union Program Board mem-bers will be held in the College Union today at 2 p.m.; for Sparta-camp director at 2:30 p.m. and for Homecoming committee at 3-5 p.m.

College Union Program Board members assist in the planning and coordirusting of union activities and adminster expenditures of funds for those activities, explained Clark Heinrich, ASB personnel officer.

Bob Pitcher, 1966 Spartacamp director, annoureced recently that the "think" weekend would be held April 18-19 in 1967 at Asilomar Conference Grounds on the Mon-terey Peninsula.

Executive To Talk At Business Fete

114’1 srl-H.1 .1. I’ll IMO, W.:1’CW iV(‘ vice president of Lockheed Missiles and Space Co., will he the guest speaker at the eighth annual SJS Business Division Banquet tomor-row at the Pavilion Building of the Santa Clara County Fair-grounds.

FOREIGN FLAVORS Enjoying the foreign atmosphere of Interna-tional Bazaar held last Friday at SJS are, from left, Liz Borad, Marcia Marr and Steve Locci.

�Photos by Yoshi Hasegawa

The many booths, representing various foreign countries, featured food, dancing and crafts.

$400 Per Semester

Chanceilor Raps Tuition California State College Chan-

cellor Glenn S. Dumke yesterday voiced strong opposition to a pro-posal that state college students be charged a $400 per semester tuition.

The California State Chamber of Commerce Thursday had out-lined a proposal to impose a $400 tuition fee at California’s 18 state

colleges and a $500 per semester fee at the University of California.

"Both the student and society . . . will benefit ..if tuition fees am kept to a level which will con-

tinue to encourage all qualified

students to commit themselves to

. . . personal and social improve-ment," Dumke said.

The State Chamber of Com-merce group made the tuition pro-posal in a letter sent to all state legislators.

"It is the opinion of many," Dumke continued, "that Califor-nia’s econotnie resources are suf-ficient . . . to support the quality program of tuition-free education."

Also the California Taxpayers Association, Et state-wide lobby to reduce taxes, proposed a state college and university tuition ear-

-Photo by Yoshi Hasegawa

INTERNATIONAL QUEEN International beauty Soon Chun, senior music major represent-ing Korea was selected International Queen at the International Ball Friday. Last year’s queen, Mrs. Casey Gittings Johnson pre-sented file queen’s charm,

lier last week to "help balance the budget."

"A departure from our tui-tion-free higher public education may precent a serious threat to

SJS Faculty To Perform At Concert

Three stringed instruments dat-ing back two centuries will be played ill Concert Hall tonight at 8:15 by members of the SJS Fac-

ulty Quartet. Oldest of the three instruments

is a cello made in Cremona, Italy, by Giovanni Baptiste Grancino in

1685 and now owned by Donald Homuth, associate professor of MtlEtte. Dr. Gibson Walters, chair-man of the Music Department, owns a Grancino violin made in 1700.

Dr. Walters commented that the imitruments, each valued at $10,-000, are in prime condition because they have been in private collec-tions. Homuth acquired his cello eight years ago and Dr. Walters has owned his violin 12 years.

The third oldest instrument is a Guadagnini viola, also made in Italy, which is valued at $20,000. Albert Gillis, assistant professor of music, acquired the viola 16 years ago.

Completing the Faculty Quartet Film, Love Lecture is pianist John Delevoryas, asso-ciate professor of music. He will join Gillis in the presentation of Scheduled Today Hindemith’s "Der Schwimendreh-er" for Viola and Piano.

Other numbers on the program are Beethoven’s Trio in E Flat Major for Piano and Strings, Op. 1, No. 1, and Quartet in E Flat Major for Piano and Strings, Op. 47 by Schumann.

the continued economic, social and cultural development of this state," Dumke’s statement contin-ued. "Therefore this problem should be carefully studied before a decision is made to change the present no-tuition situation," he concluded.

The charicellor’s statement, so far, is the only official position the California State College sys-tem has taken on the proposed tuition, a chancellor’s of f ice spokesman said yesterday. The Board of Trustees has taken no stand on state college tuition so far, the spokesman added.

Major Campaign Talk

Dance Bids Free bids for the Friday, May 13 AsB spring formai, "Psych-edelic spring," are available te, front of the Cafeteria and Book from 10:30 to 1:30 p.m.

No. 112

Christopher To Speak On Campus Thursday

George Christopher, Republican candidate for governor in the June 7 state primary election, will make a major campaign address in Mor-ris Dailey- Auditorium Thursday at 10:30 a.m.

The former San Francisco mayor will arrive on campus at 10 a.m. for a reception hosted by Students for Christopher in Hl.

Christopher will be introduced in Morris Dailey Auditorium by SJS President Robert D. Clark. His talk, billed a major campaign speech by Students for Christopher chairman Steve Pitcher, will last until 11 a.m.

"This isn’t going to be a ’nice to be here’ talk, but a major cam-paign address," Pitcher said.

Following the Morris Dailey speech Christopher will depart for a luncheon at Rickey’s Hyatt House in Palo Alto. He will also speak in Santa Cruz later in the day and may return to San Jose for a "Cinco de Mayo," speech at the Santa Clara County Fair-grounds.

CAMPAIGN PROGRAM In his SJS speech Christopher

is expected to reiterate his 15 point campaign program with a special emphasis on his education plank.

Christopher has stated in his campaign material that "the only thing more expensive than educa-tion is ignorance. The Governor ha.s certain responsibilities to call attention to defects and inade-quacies in our educational system �to urge classes of proper size and to determine teachers’ salaries on a systematic professional basis

rather than by political expedi-ency."

CRL ENDORSEMENT He has been endorsed for elec-

tion by the California Republican

GEORGE CHRISTOPHER . . . speaks Thursday

League which included continued free tuition for state colleges as part of its platform.

In a recent canvassing of down-town San Jose precincts Pitcher reports that his group discovered a three to one ratio in Chris-topher’s favor over his chief op-ponent Ronald Reagan.

"I’m confident we can over-come Reagan’s lead in the South, by getting out the vote up here," Pitcher said.

Christopher is the owner of an independent dairy in San Fran-cisco. He served as mayor of that

Alumni Week Activities Mark SJS’ 104th Year I

city from 1954 to 1962. In 1962 he lost a bid for lieutenant govern°, to incumbent Democrat Glenn An-derson, despite the fact that he drew more votes than GOP gu-bernatorial candid at e, Richard Nixon.

Actor-Singer To Conclude Pop Series

Theodore Bikel � known as a folk singer, actor, guitarist, au-thor, lecturer and linguist�will perform Thursday night in Morris Dailey Auditorium beginning at 8:15 p.m.

Tickets are still available in the Student Affairs Business Office, Building R. Prices are $1.50 for students and faculty and $2.50 for the general public. Bikel’s per-formance will conclude the Asso-ciated Students Washington Square Pop Series for spring se-mester.

Bikel played in the Academy Award winning "My Fair Lady" and in "The Sound of Music" on Broadway.

He sings folk songs from 20 countries in their native tongues. In 1963 he toured New Zealand and Australia. Bikel has appeared in folk festivals throughout the United States and is a member of the board of directors for the Newport Folk Music Festival.

An exhibit by candidates for masters degmes in art opened yes-terday in the Art Building to be-gin Spring Alumni Week at SJS.

The exhibit is in the Big Gallery, East Wing of the Art Building and in the Little Gallery, A114. It will be open 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. daily, and ends Friday.

Friday Dr. Arthur Brown, presi-dent of Adelphi University in New York, will be the keynote speaker at SJS’ eighth annual Founder’s Day ceremonies, marking the col-lege’s 104th year as a state in-stitution.

The ceremonies in Morris Dailey

A film on the search for happi-ness and a lecture on perfect love arc events scheduled today as the second day of Religious Empha.sis Week sponsored by SJS Religious Council gets under way.

The film, "Man’s Search for Happiness," sponsored by SJS Lat-e. _ t r Day Saints, will be shown

’Doctor and Devils’ every half hour today from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. in Cafeteria B. The film

Tickets will go on sale tomor- follows a person from birth to row, at College Theatre Box Office death and after death.

Elbert R. Slaughter, Christian for the presentation of Dylan Science Lecturer, will speak on

Thomas’ "The Doctor and tho "Where Are You Going?" tonight Devils" Friday and SaturdaY at at 8 in H1, according to Robin 8:15 p.m. in Studio Theatre. Prices Perry, president of SJS Christian are 75 cents for &TS students and Science Organization. Slaughter $1.50 for general admission. The will lecture on sttch questions as Readers’ Theatre production will "Does perfect love cast out fear?" be the world premiere of Thomas’ "is there an inexhaustible source improduced film scenario based on of love?" and "Can all men find a 19th century :muter case. it?" Mlas Perry said.

Auditorium, will begin at 10:30 a.m., preceded by a faculty pro-cessional from the Administra-tion Building to the Auditorium.

Following a 12:30 luncheon in the MacQuarrie Hall quad area, SJS President Robert D. Clinic will dedicate the six-story struc-ture.

Friday is also open house day for many of the college’s classrooms. Members of the California Teaeb. ers Association will be available in the Education Building patio, to serve coffee to visitors and guide them through open classes.

The varsity water polo team meets an alumni squad in the Spartan pool at 7:30 p.m. Friday.

A day-long academic confer-ence in the Spartan Cafeteria is one highlight of Saturday’s ac-tivities. Registration begins at 8:30 a.m

Banquet To Honor Dr. Carl Duncan

Di’. C’arl Duncan. a member of the SJS faculty for 43 years, will be honored with a retirement ban-quet tonight at the San Jose Coun-try Club.

The banquet. which is sponsored by the Newman Center, and open to the public, will begin with a social hour at 7 p.m.

Guest speaker will be the Rev. Francis B. Norris, SS, a translator for Protestant and other observers at the Ecumenical Council and a professor of dostmatic theology and catechetics at Saint Patrick’s Sem-inary, Menlo Park.

new griep Book Talk

Jacob Lowenberg’. ’Hegel’s Phenomenology," edited by Dr. Eugene Freeman, SJS associate professor of philosophy on sabbatical, will be reviewed at tomorrow’s Faculty Book Talk at 12:30 p.m. in Cafeteria rooms A and B.

Blood Drive SJS students. faculty and stall members will have the chance

to roll up their sleeves for the Red Cross at the Blood Drive, Catholic Women’s Center, Thursday, May 12.

Students under 21 and unmarried should pick up parent per-mission slips at booths set up in front of the Bookstore and on Seventh Street, Blood Drive Chairman Don Hickey said. Booths will remain open until Wednesday, May 11.

Hickey is a member of AFROTC, one of three groups sponsoring the drive. ASB Community Service Board and Sigma Kappa are also sponsors.

Photography Talk An illustrated talk, "C,,’ ind Wet But Lots of Good Pictures,"

will be given by Jan Brantlev io members of Kappa Alpha Mu, photo-journalism fraternity. at 7:30 p.m. today in the conference room of the Journalism Building.

Pageant Tickets Tickets are available tor the Miss San Jose State Pageant, to

he held Saturday at 8 p.m. in Morris Dailey Auditorium. Tickets are $1 per person and are on sale in front of the cafeteria.

The 12 finalists in the pageant will be presented at an informal fashion show tomorrow at 11 a.m. in Cafeteria A and B. They in-clude Jenny Bull. Louise Beresford, Sandy Germaine, Caroline Gerth, Rose Herman, Jo Hubert, Kathy Imwalle. Sharon Knecht, Diann Metssinger, Pam SEETIMtITIR, Site Walker and Anne Ward.

VDC Meeting The San Jose Vietnam Day Committee will decide on final

speaking arrangements for Friday’s protest rally to the war in Viet Nam, today, at 3:30 p.m. in CH236.

Alumni-Varsity Game Tickets tor Saturday night’s Alumni Varsity Ftx0ball game

are on sale this week in the Student Affairs Business Office, Buikl-ing. R. Admission for students, adults and children is one dollar. The game begins at 8 p.m. in Spartan Staditun.

/1141PARTAN Ttleclny, May N. WA IIIMON11

PA RTAN DA I LY I le -"C..."." SAN JOSE STATE COLLEGE

Editor � TOM MEAD Adv. Minium JEMMY k

Staff Editorial

Creative Venture The only thing wrong with the SJS housing lockout

tradition i- that it is contrary to one of the most basic pulpit -es of higher education. That purpose is the stim-ulation of original thought, the inereasing of self-relianre. The desired result of this idealistic purpose is the ereation of responsive, sober members of their -ociety. Good citizens.

But how can students acquire this responsibility? Certainly not by being treated like children. Certaittly not by ha. ing to make only a few decisions for them-’ekes. -,e11-relianee and responsibility can only be ac-quired effeethely by doing things oneself. Not by liming them done by a housemother.

Lockout. and its cause. approved housing. has ac-romplished one notable thing. It has created a field for creathe student venture. A new area for ingenuity. 1�’e -wale imitates of approved establishments now spend luturs de% 1,11Ig relllarkably crafty methods of sneaking out

from forging signutit cards to simple fence-hopping. These sneaky methods. while admirably inspired,

coold hard’) he construed as conducive to the educational precepts I.-elf-reliance. sobriety. responsibility) that are eonsidered sod, an integral part of collegiate life. X\ 11) then. must they continue to exist by the grace and con-sent of the administration?

Responsibility is not nurtured by force or threats, but It) compliance with society’s ideals. Responsi-bility is not something that is attained easily. but it ran lu� attained. 1ppro�ed housing has 1141 pillet� in the pur-suit a that responsibility. %nil the pursuit of respon-sibilii) the duty and function of every student. Every admittistrator and faculty member is duty-hound to fa-cilitate that quest.

I recognize the more lenient aura the approved housing polie) has taken partial lessening. why not iate ressation of most hail I igent

appros ed derisions

in the last year. Why only a the whole thing? The immed-housing would be one of the

rendered in the past five years. �L.C.

"Move that over here and this over there. And ..."

Thrust and Parry

’American Ideals’ Debated ’No Such Thing!

Viet Nam Victory’ Editor:

Mr. Anderson’s letter (Daily, 4/21( only indicates that he needs, among other things, a course in world history in the hope that it would open his sightless eyes and mind to the fact that there is no such thing as a victory in Viet Nam!

He refers to me and to my "American buddy" Bacon as "the blind leading the blind. The cold war is to their advantage for in-filtration, subversion, and thiev-

TAKE ADVANTAGE OF OUR GIANT

REC0111) SALE caee up to SO%

on all teelt-knokft labeb

NOW AT

cpaptan geokitoPe ("right on campus")

ery." Meanwhile, editor, because there are quite a few Andersons around, you notice that Ameri-can foreign policy in this day and age is failing ahnost every-where. Anderson overlooks the fact that fear, force, and distrust generate a threat to American interest�not security.

Colonial and imperialist meth-ods are a thing of the past. They are contrary to American tradi-tions, and resorting to them now can only enhance communist in-fluence. And in this sense, the U.S. in Viet Nam is defeating its own purpose.

The U.S. war on communism will not be won with guns, even though it may seem necessary on occasion to use them. Commu-nism is a strong ideology and no one has yet been able to destroy an ideology with a gun. An ideology can be conquered only by a better one, not by force as the Andersons advocate.

I am glad that there are, on the other hand, Bacons and Ko-gons who stick to the better ideology of the old American ideals of justice and fair play. It is hard to think of a better time and place to practice these ideals and demonstrate their superior values than in this nu-clear age and in Viet Nam.

Nfohammad Adwan A15526

Writer Had Rather

’Fight Than Crawl’ Editor.

In the letter of T. Kogon (Daily 4/26), one could say that he (Kogon) has become Bacon’s advertising agent. Thus, with Adwan, we have the Baeon-Ad-wan-Kogon pact.

Kogon, like Bacon, does not stand for America but for an-other country (U.N. govern-ment?). As to American nation-alism, what is wrong with it? Other countries can be nation-alistic; why not Ameriea?

Kogon’s thinking augurs to the fact that he has been brain-washed to accept the U.N.isin as a fact of life, H e has become a tuyere of that idea- an idea which is deleterious to the Uni-ted States Constitution and its eutectic values. . . .

Insofar as losing the country or anything else American, it is clear that the U.N. is a drag on the economy and makes in-fringement into the life of every citizen (the facts are in the school library).

Kogon fears the end of man’s existence and like others in his shaky train of thought, he prob-ably is worried about an atomic bomb threat. The real threat, however, is not the atomic bomb but surrender to a world gov-ernment and disarmament. Ko-gan and Bacon types want to give away the country and scream peace at any price.

Right now there is, in fact, a de facto global war being waged against the United States, the citizenry, and institutions by all Communist parties jointly and severally. The U.N. is their Trojan Horse and they are using it effectively to brainwash the Kogon and Bacon types who have lost their backbone.

The Communists want every-thing. The only way to stop them is by the means which they readily comprehend�a dy-namic, driving military and moral force which has backbone. I’d rather fight than crawl.

A. P. Anderson A 21943

EDITOR’S NOTE: The Thrust end Parry section of the editorial page offers students end faculty a chance to express their views on campus, local. national or international issues. Space is allowed to encourage written debates on such current atfairs.Contri-butions to Thrust and Parry must not exceed 250 words, must be typewritten, double spaced within 55-space margins and properly signed with the writer’s name and faculty or ASB number. The Daily will not print letters which are libelous, in poor taste or include

personal attack.

SCREEN SCENES CINEMA

552 Mouth Bascom 295-7238 2 Hilarious Battles of the Sexes

"MALE HUNT" and

"WOMAN IS A WOMAN"

SARATOGA

TOWNE 1433 The Alameda 297-80f10 Lawrence Harvey and Jean Simmons

"LIFE AT THE TOP" also

"THE COLLECTOR"

STUDIO 396 South First 292-6779

14502 Big Banin Way 867-3026 Debbie Reynolds in One of the year’s 10 best. "THE SINGING NUN"

"TO DIE IN MADRID" also "THE BIG PARADE

OF COMEDY" G A Y tO0 South Firet 294-5544

"A HOT SUMMER GAME" also

"HIGHWAY PICKUP"

Come to the show tonight

while the lines are short.

Teaching Devices

’Gadgets To Replace Gadgets That Replace’

By STEVE AMES

The ideas are frozen. This is the Gadget Age.

But why? According to Dr. S. P. R. Charter, Cybercultural author and publisher on campus last week to lecture to the Division of Engineering Course on Cybernation and Man, it comes tlwough conditioning.

"The school child today is en-meshed in teaching devices�overhead projectors, gymnasium sets. No one knows how to use them. But they are there."

Dr. Charter said he was horri-fied at the teaching devices available to schools.

NO FUNDS "They have no funds for more

or better teachers. Instead the federal government provides money for gadgets."

Too bad for Dr. Charter, et al. The gadgets are here to stay. Soon there will be gadgets to re-place the gadgets, and some to replace the gadgets that the gadgets are replacing and we �k ill have more time for watch-ing the Giants or soaking tip some suds.

Then there wouldn’t be this drag of hming to go to school. Students would not be sitting in classes being instructed what to think . . . and heaving it back to the professor on an IBM test answer sheet.

NO THINKING How about the individual that

in the end has done no thinIcing, but by virtue of being able to memorize receives, in essence, a vicarious education? What good is he to society once out of the security of the academic com-munity? Is there a job for him?

Suppose there are no jobs? Dr. Charter suggests that a to-tally new approach to education be made towards prognostica-

tion of the future. A change is in order, he said; a determina-tion of purpose.

History could repeat itself. The Ice Age could be just around the corner.

RTAN DA I LY "’� SAN JOSE STATE COLLEGE

Second class postage paid at San Jess. 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 Ert. 2383, 2384, 2385, 2386. Advertising Ext. 2081, 2082, 2083, 2084. Press Globe Printing Co. Office hours 1:45-4:20 p.m. Monday through Friday.

Editor TOM MEAD Advertising Mgr ___. JERRY FORD Day Editor GARY WILLIAMS Managing Editors .. PAT HEFFERNAN

JEFF STOCKTON Associate Editor LAVELLE JACKSON Copy Editor _ SHARON °SAKI Sports Editor PAUL SAVOIA Campus Life Editor _ SUE BETHARD Fine Arts Editor PAT SHARP Wire Editor ______ DAVID LEBSCH Photo Editor 1108 REED Public Relation RICHARD SHYPERTT Credit Mgr. PILL EWERTZ Business Mgr. ... KAREN TODOROFF Nat. Adv. Mgr. DEBORAH CALDWELL Classified Mgr..... ...... PETE WESTRUP Prod. Mgr. _ LEA ANN HERNANDEZ Promotion Mgr. WALTER FINCK Office Mgr..... SADAKO FUJIKAWA Classified Promotion

DOUG CHAMBERS CAROLINE WATTLES

REPORTING STAFF: Steven Ames, Carol Armstrong, Jim Bailey, Kris Blakely, Carolyn Bushnell, Anne Carr, Larry M. Coy, Don Dugdale, Dick Daniels, John Jackson, Lee Juillerat, Stephen Kech, Dave Koll, Linda La-mann°, Mary Putnam, Don Seyrens, Frank Sweeney, Judy Walter, Ted Weisgal, Gary Williams, Charlotte Wong.

A511 Spartan Programs Presents

...74eoclore 12,’itet internationally-known folk singer and star of stage and screen

Thursday, May 5, 8:15 p.m. Morris Dailey Auditorium

tickets available: at door and Students Affairs Business Office

SI 50 for SJS students and faculty 42.50 for general public

....Cerr..e .4,- .0.-

College Graduate? Interested In Selling? Seeking Sales Career?

100-year old national company tripled sales during the last 8 years. Will appoint sales representative on July 1, 1966. Two year individually-supervised training program.

For appointment phone: Mr. Bull at 294-1013

An equal opportunity employer

Be sure to read the

SPARTAN DAILY

ALUMNI WEEK EDITION

Containing stories about the past, present and future

of your college One of the many

Features: ***************************************

1,t 5ite .Sparch Sioiy

***************************************

Coming

Thursday

MAY 5

111Mir

Old Soccer Players Haunt Former Coach

Old soccer players never die. They just sit around waiting for an opportunity to come back and haunt their former coach.

Led by Joe Battaglini, who boot-ed in four goals, the old-timers came back to topple the varsity 7-4 Friday night in Spartan Sta-dium.

Former SJS All-Americans Al Korbus and Lou Fraser combined for the other three goals.

Bob Davis. who coach Julie 1,�ii-

a1111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 = m

Intramura s I Ei

COED VOLLEYBALL Today is the last day for all

athletically-inclined females to get their coed volleyball entries into the Intramural Office, MG121. Competition begins next Monday.

TRACK AND FIELD Friday is the deadline day for

track and field entries to be turned in to the Intramural Office. The two-day zo�er which begins Fri-day, May 13, L�nd concludes the following Saturdey, features 14 events, with points awarded for the first six finishers in each event.

Individuals will be limited to competing in two field events, one track event and one relay, or two track events, one field event and one relay.

GOLF Golf concludes this semester’s

intramural activities, with both team and individual entries due in the Intramural Office by Thui day, May 12. Competition sun t, Friday, May 20

WEDDING PHOTOGRAPHY

$89 all col.or

JRS ENTERPRISES Phone 286-5392 evenings

We are experts

at serving Spartans.

After all, we’ve had

14 years experience.

ANGELO’S STEAK HOUSE 72 E. Santa Clara St.

Elbert R. Slaughter Christian Science Lecturer

WHERE ARE YOU

GOING

Men go where their

thoughts take them. The

journey to Truth is a reve-

lation of Spirit � the king-

dom "within you." Hear

this lecture "Where Are

You Going?" by Elbert R.

Slaughter.

Today at 8 p.m.

Home Economics Bldg.

Room I (lounge)

Sponsored by SJS

Christian Science

Organization

endez terms, "the most improved. and best-conditioned man on the squad," knocked in a pair of scores for the varsity. Hernan Arango and Steve Locci tallied the other points.

BEATEN RY ALUMNI "We were beaten by the alumni

because they wanted to win. They kept pressing us throughout the contest," reports Menendez.

The following of ternoon, the ,;partans fell again, this time 4-1’ r., a ioned Brigham ’Coung University squad. After ,,,king a 1-0 halftime lettd, the -4.IS hooters faded.

David ag,ain booted the San Jose goal. According to Menendez, the junior-to-be was the Spartans’ out-standing player over the weekend.

Injuries played a part in both losses. Various Spartans could not go at full speed due to leg injuries. The boaters suffered a major set-back Saturday when second team All-America goalie Frank Man-giola suffered a mild concussion in warmup drills.

HIT IN HEAD

head by. a rifled kick while fielding Mangiola WLIN slammed in the in Rematch

another shot. Menendez decided to take no chances, but Mangiola returned to watch the garne-in street clothes.

Tomorrow night Stanford tests the soccermen at 8 p.m. in Spartan Stadium in the final spring test.

Varsity-IFC Tilt Batmen Divide Pair; Moved to Thursday Meet Gators Today

The t arsity -IF(’ bawit.t11 game milts postponed until ’rlitarstlay night, Ile Ole Wks who showed up at Municipal Stadium last night learned the hard way.

The game was originally sched-uled for last night and a story in yesterday’s Daily announced the et vitt.

Dint et cr, it was discovered later that the !Stadium could not b.. used last night and the ganw %1:te r% Oil to Thursday night.

Ilitnestly The WC squad, which issued

the challenge to varsity coach Ed Soltezak, is happy to Ket the additional time to gel their rusty limbs and halting eyes into shape.

The game will he the latst of the season for the varsity, as it clips,. laid its regular schedidc Thursday afternoon against tic San Diego Marine Corps.

One More Time--Smith Top Athlete

I. is gt�ll its lx� a lit tie monotonous.

For the fourth time this season, SJS’ Tommy Smith has been hon-ored as athlete of the week by the Northern California Track and Field writers.

The latest honor came yesterday when the writers named Tommy the track man of the week for his efforts in anchoring the Spar-tan 440 and 880 relay teams in the Mt. SAC Relays.

Last week, Smith was honored as the field athlete of the week for a 25-11 broad jump against Fresno State.

Previously, he was twice named track athlete of the week.

Tommy was on hand as the guest of honor yesterday to re-ceive his honor and announce he will run the 100, 220 and 440 relay this Saturday as the Spartans play host to the Santa Clara Valley Youth Village and the Athens Ath-letic Club of Oakland.

Golfers Test SFS Today

Almaden Country Club provides the test for Spartan golfers for the final time this year today when the SJS crew takes on San Francisco State at 1 p.m.

The battle with the SFS link-sters will be a rematch. In an earlier meeting over Harding Park, Jerry Vroom’s boomers blasted to 16t� to a l(W.; win over the Gators.

Vroom plans to send his top golfers into today’s meeting on the long, wide Almaden course.

Lecl by Terry Small and Ross Randall, the golfers hope to adti to their 6-3 seasonal mark.

Others going for the Spartans will be Don Keifer, Chris Andrews, Ken Slasor and Jim Troncatty.

Troncatty returns to the start-ing six after missing the last month of play. Vroom expects the senior swinger will boost the Spar-tan golfers’ overall depth.

The meeting will be the next to last for the linksters. Closing out the seaso.i a week from today, the final encounter will be at Stanford as the SJS crew will swing for its ninth straight victory over the Indians.

Stanford fell earlier this season at Almaden by a 16-10 score.

OUT-OF-STATERS Four performers for the Spar-

tan track team come from a state other than California, with Wayne Hermen the biggest grab.

Hermcn is from Affton, Mo.

I 1 11f1 GOA’ I leSSter

tilkeS the mound today against Sun Francisco State ut San Francisco a.s the Spartan nine moves one step closer to completing a dis-appointing sea.son.

Hessler. a hard-throwing right hander, has been either very good or very poor this season, compil-ing a 1-3 record. In his last out-ing. the flame thrower from South San Francisco went one perfect inning in a relief stint against St. Mary’s.

The baseballers, who have only a Thursday home contest against San Diego Marine Corps team left on their 1966 schedule, enter the

Tennis Team Meets Bears In a ’Toss-Up’

Losing doesn’t go well with SJS netters. In the last two years, the tennismen have come out on the short end only four times-in :18 dual matches.

California, a team responsible fov two of the losses, faces the. Spartans today in Berkeley.

Coach Butch Krikorian rates the match a "toss-up."

Cal won earlier this year by a narrow 5-4 margin.

REBOUND PERFORMANCE? Last year, SJS grabbed the

first meeting, but the Bears bounced back to grab the re-match. The Spartans hope to re-peat the rebounding ability today.

Raul Contreras, Gordon Miller, Bob Murio, Rcxiney Kop, Yit Louie and Flob Skinner will carry San Jose’s singles load.

Opposing the Spartans will Iv Cal stars Chuck Darley, Gene Canton, George Fareld, Jan Ku-cera and Ron Batchelder.

Kop and Miller, Murio and Contreras and Steve Jones and Louie will go for San Jose in dou-bles play. The Bears’ combination of Darley and Canton will oppose the No. 1 STS team in one of the highlights of the afternoon.

SINGLES ATTRACTION Contreras is expected to battle

Darley in the feature match. In their last meeting, Contreras up-set Darley by winning in straight sets.

Krikorian figures the home court advantage will be significant because the Berkeley courts are fast and slick. San Jose had earlier experience on the courts, however, in the season-opening Northern Cal Intercollegiates.

The netters take a 15-2-1 record int() today’s meeting.

- - �

The authentic, traditional, classic, conservative button down. Very acceptable.

The long points on this Arrow Decton Oxford are just right. Anything less would ride up. Anything more would give you too much roll. Other noticeable details! Back collar button, box pleat and hanger loop. Tapered to a T. "Sanforized -Plus", in a wash and wear that goes past midnight without a wrinkle. Available in other colors. Bold New Breed by $7

�ARROW-

giune with a 12-20 rrutrk that in-cludes an early season 4-2 victory over the Gators.

CUSTOMARY FASHION The Spartans played their final

twin bill of the season in Stockton last Saturday, and performed in their customary fashion, splitting the games with UOP.

Terry Delanuiter h e 1 ped UOP ’ top the Spartans 3-0 in the first game by hurling a three-hitter, but SJS ace Bill Schmidt came up with a three-hitter of ins own in the second contest as the Spar-tans trimmed tlie Tigers 1-0.

Third ba.seman Paul Glennon’s third-inning home run was all the help Delamater needed in the first contest as he atoned for an earlier setback at the hands of the Spar tans by going the distance, fanning nine and walking only three.

NO WALKS Schmidt, the acknowledged lead-

er of the SJS hill crew, topped Delamater’s performance in the second game, striking out nine and not walking a single batter en route to his third con.secutive victory.

Just to make the day a little more complete, the curve ball art-ist also drove in the only run of the _game with a ground ball to shortstop with the bases loaded in the second inning. Schmidt was thrown out at first base on the play for the second out of the inning, but not before Al Taylor had scored the winning run.

10°/o Discount with A.S.B. Card

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INTERVIEWING! Thrifty Drug Stores interviewing

WEDNESDAY. MAY 4 for Retail Management Trainees

Contact Placement Center for Appointment

Produced by the Radio & TV Jourtudism Students of San Jose State

"SPARTAN SPECTRUM"

Twice nightly tonight and every night

7:25 and 7:55 p.m.

KXRX�at 1500 on your AM radio dial

PUT YOURSELF IN THIS PICTURE

You con have fun . . . earn good pay . . . and hov� a variety of in-teresting summer job risp�rienciss as Western Girl. As one of the world’s leading temporary h�lp servic�s, we hav� office assign-ments especially suited to your inter�sts. Befor� planning your sunermr, drop in to see us!.

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San Jose 293-8651

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Home Office � San Francisco

362-5486

Here are 7 knotty problems facing the Air Force:

can you help us solve one?

1. Repairs In space. tf something goes wrong with a vehicle in orbit, how con it be fixed? Answers must be found, if large-scale space operations are to become a reality. For this and other assignments Air force scientists and engineers will be called on to onswer in the next few years. we need the best brains available.

2. Lunar landlag. The m exact composition of the lunar surface, as well as structural ond propulsion char-acteristics of the spoce

� vehicle, enter into *is problem. Important study remains to be done-ond, as on Air Force officer. you could be the one to do it!

3. Life-support biology. The falling al metabolic needs over very extended peri-ods of time in space is one of the most

fascinating subrects thor

Air Force scientists ore .F1

reshooting The resells promise to hove vital tom itications tor ow lile on eotfh. as os outer woes

� � � � �

4. Space orientation. The orbital prob-lems of a spacecraft, including its ability to maneuver over selected points on the earth, ore of vocal importance to the mili-tary 0.1.zolion of space. There ore plenty of assrgnments tor young Air Force physi. cots in this 0,013.

S. Synergetic plane changing. Theobil. ay of a spa. er,cilt to change altitude con also be crucial to space operations. Where but in the Air Force could Sc.B.’s get the chance to work on such foscinoting proj-ects right at the start of their careers?

6. Spate propulsion. As out space flights cover greater ond greater distances, pro-pulsion-rnore than any-

� � thing else-will become the

limiting factor. New fuels and new propulPon tech-niques must be found, il we are to keep on exploring the mysteries of space. And it may well bean Air Force scientist on his first assign-ment who makes the bio breakthrough!

7. Pilot performance. Importont tests must still be made to determine how the pilots of manned Gee:,

spacecraft will react to

long periods away from

the earth. 01 course not every new Air Force officer be-comes involved in research and develop. ment right away. BO where the most ex-

citing advances are taking place, young Air Force scientists,

administrators, pilots, and engineers

are on the stone.

� �

Want to tind out how you fit into the Air Force picture? Contact your nearest Air Force representative, or mail the cou-pon today.

ir--------.--

1 UNITIO SUM AIR MICK Me A. Dept SCP 44

toreSolpA AFC Pros MO

I Nem

I College CI

4.44. re so

*deft y

CAN Sk0111 - Cede-.

114 PART OF IT-41A1111.14111 4111101411.2 TOMO

1

1--NPARTAN DAILY Tuesday, may S, 1966

-- ATTENTION -

ELECTRICAL

ENGINEERS

PHYSICS MAJORS

MARKETING MAJORS

Mr. Robert D. Pemberton, Bile. EE, sill be interviewing on Campus Monday, May 9, for those intereeted in career opportimities at Motorola Incorporated. Seinieondurtur shin, Phoenix, Arizona.

Job specifieution. tool the excellent vtarting salary range are on record

ith the College Placement Bureau.

AGENT

HAYES,

11 1.11AWAY & KELLY Personnel Consultants

(CAREER HOT LINE) 322-6240

151 University Avenue

Palo Alto, California

322-6247

AGENCY

Cafeteria Service

Ideas No Changes EDITOR’S NOTE: This is th� last of � three-part series on the Spar.

tan Cafeteria, discussing the quality and price of food and the services provided.

By TED WEISGAL Spartan Daily Staff Writer

An Informational booklet pub-lished by the Spartan Cafeteria on

the facility states, "The manager

and his staff are open to construc-

tive suggestions from the students

and faculty of the college at any

time." Suggestions have been made, es-

pecially during the past month, by the Inter-Dorm Council Food Committee, and individuals rep-resenting their own interests, and in effect, the interests of every cafeteria customer.

NO CHANGES

Nevertheless, no changes of any con.sequence have been made.

Most of the complaints have come from meal ticket holders. I’hey complain about the small quantity of food, its general quali-ty, the recent increase in prices and numerous other problems.

For every complaint the Cafe-teria Manager Michael Dolan has

Spartan Daily Classifieds

"ANNOUNCEMENTS 111

SUMMER JOBS. Summer & part-time positic..,.. Apply to 2.000 major firms in this area. For fall information, call 379-2340 or 29- i’ter 6 p.m. HOW MUCH DO YOU KNOW ABOUT YOUR COLLEGE? Read the Spartan Dail, 4 e e k Edition and you will 1 -, Thu�tday, May 5.

AUTOMOTIVE (21

’61 AUSTIN HEALY. Recently over-hauled, r h soft & hard tops, Bruce’s RS 5 caps. Must sell. $1250. 292-6105. Jim.

’58 HILLMAN. New engine, clutch, & brakes. Great condition. $175- 298-2572 before 3 p.m. 556 S. Sth, #I9.

’63 HONDA 250 SCRAMBLER. Recent overhaul. 36 & 52 tooth sprockets, tool kit. Great for road or dirt. $365. 286-9384.

’57 BUICK convertible, V8. good top, r/h, excellent condition. $475 or best offer. 293-5367 after 5 p.m.

’55 BUICK. 2 door hardtop. Power brakes & steering. ’56 Roadmaster engine. $225. ’50 Austin. $40. 663 Miller St. or call 286-6426 or 286-3114.

’63 LAMBRETTA 125 ce. Excellent condi-tion. IR iies.) $260 or best offer. Paul i Iviarkham Hall. 205A. 294-6019 ’56 CHEVY SURF PANEL. Fuel -injected

.s chrome. $595. -295. t.tE, S. I ith St., #8.

TR.3A, ’58. Overdrive, wire wheels, re-& bolo. ced engine, new top and curtains new Pirelli Cinturatos.

:’1 967-0505. ’56 CHRYSLER. 2 door, automatic trans-

, �-� offor of $145 or over mension 2348.

POR SALE 131

BIKE, 10 sr,. Gond condition. $50 or a offer. Banjo cost $85 new, $30 or

Call 296-2674. Dam --- -

LUDWIG 5 PIECE DRUM SET. Origi-r. y 700. Practically nOW. Nos $425. tAust sell. Call 295-3178.

12’ SAILING PADDLE-BOAT, "KELPIE." � - easy to operate. 6175

� � r Call 736-8381.

ROYAL CUSTOM PORTABLE TYPE-WRITER. Bracci new! $100 or best offer. Ca’l 269-5463.

BICYCLES PEUGEOT 10 SPEED-$69.95 AND UP

SPECIAL! Cable key locks-41.25

Regularly $1.49

DES1MONE’S 72 S. 2nd St.

HELP WANTED (41

JUNE GRADS. Widen your employment I Apply to 2,000 major businesses in th,s area. For full information. call 3/9 2340 or 297-1297 after 6 p.m.

MALE OR FEMALE to do T.V. viewing interviews. 50c per interview. Phone 286-8943. Ask for Tom.

BABYSITTER, Tuesday & Thursday, 7:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. One 2I/2 yeer child. $25 a montb. 243.6606 after 1:30.

WANTED: Life guard & swimming in -OF Ur tor to work WiTh children 41/2-10. Need WSI. Brookside Swim & Racket Club. I9127 Cos Ave., Saratoga. 253. 0231. Call or come out.

HOUSING 151

3 BEDROOM furnished, carpets, electric hec. $120. 294 9745 after 4 p.m. 2

bedr,-..,m, furnished. carpets, electric kils.hen. $120. 794-9745 after 4 p.m. We itrive: a studio, 3 bedroom, & 2 bedroom apts. Carpets. drapes, electric kitchen.

&60 furnished. 294-9745 after 4 p.m.

FEMALE ROOMMATE needed now or June. $40 per month. Private room. In-quire evenings at 99 S. 14th St., #14. Donna. 2 BEDROOM, 4 pies. Drapes. Wall to wall carpet. Ail electric kitchen. Laundry room, parking. 1778 Rock Spring Dr. 292-4716. TWO FEMALE roommates needed to share house for summer. Rent $30. 496 S. 9th St. 295-7548. Call after 6 p.m. for Vic or Jill. NEW DUPLEX. 2 bedroom, large living room & electric kitchen. Nice location. New Dating Craze Quiet. $125 a month. 219 S. 18th St. Call 286-6030.

month. 617 S. 6th St. or 725 S. 5th Si Sweeps the Nation MEN. Single room, quiet & cool. $35 per

Call 295-8858. STUDIO APARTMENT FOR RENT. i or Out of computers faster than 2 girls or married couple. $75 a month. 132 S. 10th. Call 295-2035. the eye can blink fly letters

stacked with names of males a n d females - taped, scanned, checked, a n d matched. Into the mails, speed the compatible pairs. Eager males grab their’ phones. Anxious females dial -1 ing paired -off mates-a thou-sand ring, ring, rings jar the air. Matched pairs exchange viewpoints. A nationwide dating spree is on. Thousands of boys and girls who have never met plan weekends to-

geWtheHr.Y is computer dating sweeping the nation? Through a complex system of two-way matching, the 1401 high-speed computer does not pair a male with his ideal female unless he is also the fe-male’s ideal male, thereby giving them assurance of mu-tual compatibility.

If you’d like to get in on the computer dating craze, fill in the following coupon, mail it to us, on arrival, WO

Will mail you your question-aire, have the information transferred to I.B.M. cards, where it will be code d, screened and matched by the 1401 high speed computer. You will receive the names, addresses and phone numbers of your compatible mates in plain sealed envelopes, and they will receive your name, address and phone numbers. Then don’t leave the phone.

a standing answer. In effect, he sons students give for moving out

says the cafeteria is doing all it

can.

Rising costs make it impossible

for the cafeteria to operate at

lower prices. If the food is not

satisfactory, students should re-

turn it.

When the coeducational resi-

dence hall opens in September,

1968, a hirge aznount of the pres-

ent Spartan Cafeteria traffic will

be eliminated.

CONTINUED COMPLAINTS

All dorm residents will eat their meals in the new cafeteria fa-cilities, making it easier to main-tain not only the dining area, but also the kitchen in the Spartan Cafeteria.

Until the new cafeteria opens, continued complaints will undoubt-edly be forthcoming. IDC’s food committee will do as much as it possibly can to improve conditions. Their efforts may result in minor changes, but anything of any large consequence will be hard to cotne by.

Bob Johnson, chairman of the IDC food conunittee, aptly states, ’The Cafeteria serves a certain type of food at a certain price. It is econemicat, but if students don’t care for it, they have the opportunity t,o eat elsewhere."

ADEQUATE FOOD

Those who are happy with the cafeteria say they get an ade-quate amotmt of food at a fair price. Those who are not satis-fied either complain or follow Johnson’s advice and eat else-where.

One of the most common ma-

LOST AND FOUND 161

LOST, man’s Longines calendar watch, 11 th & E. Williams April 22nd. Reward 286-9368. LOST in SJS area, a 1 year old Siamese cat. Lost in area of 9th & 10th Sts. Re-ward. Call 294-2916. Nadine, *230. BLUE CINELLI 10-SPEED, LOST 4/28, 6 p.m., S. I2th. With racing tires. Need fci competition. Fat reward. 294-7670 or 264-1861.

PERSONALS T

WANTED: A SAFE GARAGE for storage of my small box trailer, motor scooter, and miscellanea. Call DON GORDON, 252-1217, evenings. CUSTOM MADE contemporary wedding rings. Original jewelry in cast gold & sil-ver. G. Larimore 354-1273. GOT THE P.D.’S, a textbook by Trager and Henderson? Had English 172 or other course using the P.D.’S? Bring to English office FOE 102 & sell it for a dollar. NEED GIRL roommatets) for summer dot. at South Lake Tahoe. Call Jan. 286-2372.

SERVICES (81

FAST, ACCURATE, GUARANTEED TYP-ING in my home. Editing upon request. 259-5118. TYPING. Pica Electric. Work guaranteed. 243-6313 9 a.m. to B p.m. AUTOMOBILE & MOTORCYCLE IN-SURANCE for students. Chet Bailey, 286-5386. 707 N. First St.. Suite #1.

EXPERT TYPING. IBM electric. Theses, term papers, etc. Work guaranteed. 378-8577. Jo Vine R & C PHOTOGRAPHY. The finest in color. Weriding service. $85 with the al-bum. Call 259.0364.

& MARRIED. Receive age 25 or over rates on Auto insurance. Liability net $67 annually. Dave Towle. 244-9600.

FAST, ACCURATE TYPING in my home. Corrections mads by request. All papers. 293-4420. TYPING IN MY HOME. Experienced, accurate, guaranteed. Editing also. Call 259-4710.

EXPERT TYPING SERVICE. 5 years typ-ing for &IS students. 258-4335.

SPELLING, GRAMMAR CORRECTED. Pica electric. Term papers. thesis, dia. sertst,on experience. 296-1163.

TRANSPORTATION 191

NEED RIDE TO IIIM from SJS & back. 1.5 p.m. Mon.-Fri. Call Ansilla. 286-0832 after 5 p.m.

To place en ad: � Visit the �

Classified Adv. Office- J206 Deily

10:30 - 3:30 � Submit ads 2 publications days prior to day ad is to run. � Send in handy order blank. Enclose cash or check. Make check out to Spartan Daily Classifieds. � Phone 294-6414, Est. 2465.

(Advertisement)

Computer Dating Inc. 1615 BROADWAY SUITE 711 OAKLAND, CALIF. 94612

NAME ADDRESS CITY & STATE

1 Please send questionnaire. Enclosed is $S 00 ICash, check Of

money order) in advance.

of the residence halls is the poor

food service. It is unfortunate that incoming

SJS students are not completely

informed about the cafeteria and

the meal ticket situation.

TICKET SAi’rS MONEY

They are told that if they buy a meal ticket they will save money. If they use the tickets every day, they do save the advertised 5 per cent.

Unfortunately, it is often diffi-cult to get to the cafeteria every day between 6:45 and 10:30 a.m. or between 2:30 and 6:45 p.m.

As a result, students, in many cases, don’t just go away. They go away mad!

But, ag of now, apparently nothing of any great consequence can be-or will be-done.

Volleyball Tourney Today at noon is the deadline

to register for the men’s and

women’s volleyball totumarnent to be held tomorrow at 7 p.m. in PER-101. Students may sign up in PER-111.

Job Interviews June and Summer graduates

may sign for Interview appoint-ment* INSW in the Placement Center, ADM234.

THURSDAY Best Foods, Division of Corn

Products Co.; any major for posi-tions as sales representative.

Marlon Labs., Inc.; science, busi-ness and liberal arts majors for positions as sales representative-ph a rrn aceu t ica I sales.

Thrifty Drugs; any major for positions as retail management t rainees.

John F. Forbes and Company; accounting majors for positions its staff accountant. U.S. citizenship required.

Slutsta County Welfare Depart-ment; sociology, psychology, eco-nomics, anthropology, social sci-ence of other majors for positions as social worker, U.S. citizenship required.

The Pillsbury Company, busi-ness or liberal arts majors for posi-tions as sales representive. U.S. citizenship required.

FRIDAY General Mills; business admin-

istration, liberal arts and beha-vioral science majors for posi-tions in accounting, advertising, data processing, home economics, marketing, personnel, production, purchasing, sales and traffic.

Pacific Intermountain Express; MS or MBA-business, math, IE and computer science majors for positions in management training or as computor systems analyst.

Spartaguide TODAY

Christian Science Organization, 8 p.m., H1, lecture entitled "Where Are You Going?"

Social Affairs Conunittee, 3:30 p.m., College Union.

Lutheran Student Assn., 7 p.m., Campus Christian Center, 10th and San Carlos.

Alpha Eta Shrma (Accountants’ Honorary, Society), Accounting Lab, LN401, 7 p.m.

Spartan Christian Fellowship, 12:30 p.m., tables near women’s PE and Seventh Street, Bible study, all invited.

Alpha Phi Omega (National Service Fraternity), 7:30 p.m., ED335.

Industrial Technology Society, 7:30 p.m., Cafeteria B, guest speakers Louis Saiia from Valtec Vacoe Technology, will speak on "Value Engineering," and Foss ’ Hamlin, branch manager Simplex Corp., will speak on "Marketing."

Baptist Student Union, 12:30 p.m., Memorial Chapel.

Spartan Spears, 6:15 p.m., ED-241.

Circle K Club, 1:30 p.m., Cafe-teria A, important meeting, elec-tion of fall semester officers.

Economics Club, 12:30 p.m., H1, speaker Ray T. Mings, assistant professor of economics, will speak on "Depression Responses in Se-lected Counties."

U.S. citizenship required. Public Housing Administration;

accounting majors for positions as t raveling auditor trainees. U.S. citi-zenship required.

Security First Natloms1 Bank; business, economics, finance, ac-counting, management, marketing, and liberal arts majors with some business courses for positions as management trainee leading to branch operations, lending, trust administration, data processing,

work measurement, auditing, and other bank functions. U.S. citizen-ship required.

McClellan Air Force Base; en-gineering, business, and liberal arts majors for positions as en-gineers-electrical, electronic, In-dustrial, mechanical, and aero-space. Administrative - logistics, support, personnel administration, production management and tech-nical supply support. U.S. citizen-ship required.

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