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The Fresno Stat. Callage Collega Mediators Replay Strugg le For Students i-^.ml HedlaUoa and (lonMn... ,„. .. ... ■*■» .--i^-wai... Fea,ral »ffl.Uoo and Concilia-, Job or «„.« ,,, „„„ , „on SerTlco in 8an Francl.co nan" l„ » „„,„„,, „ ™" "•""•<* „dl«le.ltrUMa.ral» ar labor, Th. „.„„ .„„„,„ ' and management at a mock labor- management mediation held Fri¬ day In the college Arena Theater. More than ZOO student*- saw Commissioner Wayne Kcnas-ion, a.-- nhh regional director of the service, take the role of mediator or "stralghtmsj." In the ni'Botia- lions. Commissioners K u g Barry, George Wilson, and Oliver Goodwin took the union side of iho table and Commissioner."; Ralph Patterson, Ralph Williams, nod George Ducan took the man- igement side. Tbe mediator, who has no leual power to make either side come to an agreement, had the tdugh UC Professor To Talk Here Or. Ernest S. Starkman, an en¬ gineering professor at the Univer¬ sity of California at Berkeley, .will discuss "The Present Status and Future Potential of the Gas Turbine Powered Automobile" at a special event of the college In¬ dustrial Arts Department open house Thursday lu IA 101. Dr. Starkman, who is a mem¬ ber of the mechanical engineering department at UC, will speak the 7:30 PM assembly. The third annual open house will run from 9:30 AM to 6 PM on Thursday and from 9:30 AM to 10 PM Friday. The open house will Include guided tours through laboratories and workshops, exhibits and in¬ formal talks with industrial arte majors and professors. Dr. Horace O. Schorllng. chair¬ man of the Industrial arts depart¬ ment, said that the general public Is invited to visit the dopart- jnentat-facllities either day and that junior college and high school students and their parents are especially urged to see exhibits and to examine the labo- ratorlea and shops. School groups visiting campus will have an opportunity to see the exhibits and facilities at the college, and they will be able to rlew tbe exhibits of Junior and senior high school projects on display at Fresno City College. Guided tours are scheduled in the following areas: auto me¬ chanics, art metal, drafting, elec¬ tricity-electronics, graphic arts. handicrafts, foundry processes, machine processes, shectmetal and woodworking. mutually negatiro \an,i management luul toward each other are shown by these ninrks: • Me.Ihi.or liking to manage¬ ment: "Whal Is the company po¬ sition onjthigeat" iTnio-j/ -Job! mark ,iown no/, • Mr-dlaior talking io union: "Waitd about grievances?" Man-n-cme-it: "They are just ■"," complaints, they are not grievances.*' - Unloi "We pay." Manaitcmont: "Well you are not going to get It!" The two hour long mock nego¬ tiation attcmpie*Mn epitomize the action that goes on In the days, weeks, and months of tabor- management negotiations. The negotiations, characterised by constant loud talking on both sides, began when the mediator asked for the views of both groups in a roundtable discussion. After bringing the issues into the open, the mediator had separate ses¬ sions with each side. Alone with one side, the mediator tried to show what parts of his demands be could gain and what parts he would have to acquiesce. The threat to management of tho plant closing down and the dan-rer of a work stoppage to the union If no agreement was reach¬ ed gave the mediator the power to get both sides to reach accord. The issues in the dispute in¬ volved wages, pensions. Job secur¬ ity, seniority, and a no-strike pro- Tlie mock mediation waa fol¬ lowed by a question and answer period. The Federal Mediation Service provides a service which can be requested by either side in a dis¬ pute and which in free of charge. Commissioner Kenaston said nearly GOO negotiations are ac¬ cepted and mediated by the West- states region each year and that about 87 per cent of them satisfactory settlement, mock negotiation was sponsored by tbe FSC Institute of Industrial Relations. Dr. Grady It. Mullennlx Is the director of the institute. 36 Children Attend Clinic Second Parents' Confab Slated The second In a series of par¬ ent conferences will bo held Sat¬ urday ln the Cafeteria in conjunc¬ tion with tho second freshmen testing session. H% Dr. W. Donald Albright, dean of students, said that while more than 400 prospective freshmen are taking the English and college entrance examination board stan¬ dard achievement tests, some 300 parents will bo-receiving an orien¬ tation or what college lite Is like today. The parents will hear from various members of the admlnt- .stratlon and faculty on subjects ranging from advising and coun¬ seling to the actual course work offered In the more than 75 major fietds offered here. "The parent conference pro¬ gram was established last spring to offer parents ot prospective students an opportunity to famil¬ iarise themselves with the aca¬ demic program and the physical facilities of the college." Dr. Al¬ bright said. SPORTS CM FOR SALE Owk "53 MO-ID. Point, tap, ton- MaW, twighM, i mli, ban. -*, 3 lint oU Ih, rt™, 1 r**' "\i. Call s°h *■' u r-aan. <-iw r pm. Student Therapists Correct Speech Ills Students enrolled In a special two-unit speech class perform an important community service white training for future jobs. Eleven upper-division speech correction majors are participat¬ ing in the college Speech and Hearing Clinic ln the Speech Arts Building. U niler the 10-year-program, parents of children with speech and hearing detects register to audit the correction course. The 120 registration fee entitles chil¬ dren to visit tho clinic twice a week where student therapists (speech correction majors) work with them. Thirty-six children and four college students have been at¬ tending the clinic this semester. Most of the children are six to eight years old, according lo Donald M. Wilson, associate pro¬ fessor of speech. Work with handicapped chil¬ dren li done primarily on an Indi¬ vidual basis, said Dr. Wilson, al¬ though there are some small groups. iVe favor Individual work so the child receives all of the thera¬ pist's attention. He gets to enjoy listening and talking with the therapist. Wilson pointed.out a little boy and said. "A month ago he wouldn't sit down. He resisted any demands made on him." Now while the therapist itched, tho boy was' gleefully rowing clay against a door to release tensions. A month from , after be Is well acquainted with the therapist, ho will be ready to start correcting his sounds. Ive therapy rooms and one large observation room are used In the training program. Wilson said ln order to participate In the 'clinical experience program," students must take several pre¬ requisite courses. First they ob- » other therapists in action. Later they are observed while, working with children. Twenty-five students are now working towards BA degres In speech correction. They eventu¬ ally will hold Jobs In community, hospital and college clinics and schools for the deaf. Dr. Wilson said there Is an increasing de¬ mand for speech therapists. "The basis of speech correction Is knowing how sounds are made where they are formed," Dr. Wilson continued'. "To do this a child must learn that speech Is rewarding and that he won't be corrected every time he opens his h. He must learn to listen. The Job of the speech therapist o prepare the £hltd to listen itutly and to follow directions willingly." be added. Dr. Wilson said a good thera- ilst must be well grounded In pooch pathology, and must be friendly, curious, patient: "In hort he must understand children is well as the speech mechanism." Speech problems result from a -arlely of causes, Wilson com¬ mented. They may be physical m such as cleft palate, hear¬ ing loss, or Illness at the time of speech development. THE COLLEGIAN Publish** lour rfa-fsa wi •icar-1 holiday* and auw- Ination p*rioda by th* Fraano Siai* Col logo Aiio- darlofi. Mall iub»=ript(ona H.00 a **n.«lar. JOTS T*or. Editorial and bu*l- r.i. em<-*. loeaiad on ih* ** ' iphon* BAldwln Nfltioaal A&m&htz Smice, he - Qamarirmnm*#ntejrmmmmV*a *r OnVSmSSSa teyterai—S^J^Sf, Fred McPh*t*on. Doi**n Savior. C-*r.| i:.!Jo VLiian. , . . Adt-ertiiing Manomr !°tu- ' &&!*», MtoHcDonAm STOP...at ths Goldsn Arehsi , S ShlaUs . Show and rrai-» HERE'S ONE SOLUTION lo tha campus parking problem As everyone knows, little oars take up less room than the big oncV Acting on this principle, some enterprising shidenls put three of the little variety into the space that ordinarily holds orily two ol the big ones . . . with room to s-pare. Magazine Contest Set Literary minded students have the opportunity to win $100 In the Lyric Foundation for Tradi¬ tional Poetry Award. The competition is open to all undergraduate students In any American or Canadian college or university. Each entrant may aubmlt one unpublished poem of 32 Hues or less. The poem must be written In the traditional manner. Besides the 1100 first place award, there will also be a second prize ot J50 and 10 honorable mention awards of $25 each. In addition, the foundation will give to the college library of the first place winner a grant of J100, pro¬ viding the library subscribes to "Lyric" magarlne. Poems should be mailed not later than Juno 1 to "The Lyric," Tlr.-iL.fi Bluff. Va. The winner will be announced In the Autumn 19G3 Issue of "The The foundatlnn wants contest¬ ants to be sure to Include the name of their college or univer¬ sity. To Air Vote Count KFSTt, campus radio station, will broadcast election results to¬ day starting at 4 PM. The station Is 660 on the radio dial. BALDWIN'S presents: The newest, most moderne styling of all. in 18 Kt. — from $175 — Budget terms. Fill in coupon below for free color booklet. Sand this coupon for Free Color Booklet of Orange Blossom styles. No Ob ligation. m& =?,5 J E W E L E R S DOWNTOWN 1107 BATON PH. AD 7-2101 Open FH. Ill 9 MANCHESTER 3540 BLACKSTONE HM.BA 9-1511 Open Men. t Fri.'HI 9 Newman Senior Night—This Evening Newman Club will present "Senior Night" tonight at 7:30 PM In the St. Therese's pariah social hall. High school seniors and all in¬ terested students are urged to attend to learn more about the club's activities, said Bob Stick ley, chairman of the evening. A dance and an exhibit of the club's yearly activities will be featured at the annual event. Dressy attire Is appropriate for the evening. This program la designed to Introduce Incoming freshmen tn the organisation, said Stick-.ley. (fo Campos with (Author of "I Waa o Teen-oo* Dwarf', "The Jfan j, LiKtMefl>MeGillU",<te.) HOW TO SEE EUROPE , FOR ONLY $300 A DAY: NO. 1* Summer vacation ts just around the comer, and naturally all of you ere going to Europe. Perliape I can offer a handy tip or two. (I must oonfesa that I myself have never been to Europe, but I do have a French poodle and a German shepherd, BO I am not 60111*017 unqualified.) First let me say that no trip to Europe is complete without a visit to England, Scotland, Wales, Ireland, France, Gemuuiy, Spain, Portugal, Italy, 1 jchu-rLstcin, HolLand, Belgium, I-uxem- bourg, Switserland, Denmark, Sweden, Norway, Finland, Pa- land, Cicchot-lovnkia, Latvia, Lithuania, Estonia, Russia, Greece, Yugoslavia, Albania, Crete, Sardinia, Sicily, Hungary, Rtimania, Bulgaria, Lapland, and Andorra. Let ub take op the** countries in order. First, FaO^anti, Tfe/te^L^W*^ The capital of England is London—or Uvwpool, as it is sometimes called. There are many in tcresti n g thing-, to see ta London—chiefly the *h«-npi»*- of the guards. The guards are changed daily. The old ones are thrown away. Another "must" while in London it a visit to the palace of the Duke of Mariboro-iigh. Mariboroush is spelled Marlborottgk, but pronountaxl Martboro, English spelling la very quaint, but terribly cusorgamsed. The late George Bent-aid Shaw, author of Little Women, f0 ugh t all his life to sirnpli fy Engl ish spelling. They tell a story about Shaw once salting a friend, ''VVhat does g-h-ot-i spell?" The friend pondered a bit and replied, "Goatee." Shaw sniggered. "Pahaw," teii Shaw. ''Q-ti-o-t-i does Mt ■pell goatee. It spells fish." "How is that?" said the friend, Shaw aris-a-cred, "Oh as in enough, o aa in women, H as in motion. Put them all together, you get fith." Thia waa very clever of Shaw when you rmAi-r that he waa a vegetarian. And a good -thing; he waa. As Disnieii oooe re¬ marked to Guy Fawka-a, "If Shaw were not a vegetarian, do lamb chop in London would be safe." But I digress. Wo were .rpeakiiig of the pitJac* of *lbo Diike of Mariborough-or Mariboro, as it is called in the United Statea. It ia called Marlboro by every *a-ooker who imjcys a fine, rioh breed of tobav-xos, who approeis-lea a pure white fitter, who Kkea a soft pack that it really soft, a Flip-Top box that really ffipa. Be eon you an well su pplied with HarIbo*-cs when you maka your trip abroad. After * long, tiring day of nighlwrini thetta ia l-aothing bo welcome aa a good flavorful Marlboro and a foot- bath with hot Epiwm salts. Epsom salts can be obtained b England at Epeo-m Downo. Ennsingtoa salts can be obtained at Ki!Mirigton QariaTtr-j, Albert salts can be obtained at Albert Hall, Hyde nltl tarn U obtained at Hyde Park, and the crown Jewels can tn obtained at the Tower of LtMidon. The guards at the Tower of I^indon an called Beef eaten because they are always beefing about what they get to cat This is also known as "oricket" or "petrol." Well, I press that about covers akjUod. In next week's eoh-tom we will visit the Land of the Midnight Bun-l-ranc*--. • tn-ai La al Illy stela* s*! tha '
Object Description
Title | 1963_05 The Daily Collegian May 1963 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1963 |
Description | Daily (except weedends) during the school year. Microfilm. Palo Alto, Calif.: BMI Library Microfilms, 1986- microfilm reels; 35 mm. Vol.1, no.1 (Feb 8, 1922)- |
Subject | California State University, Fresno -- Periodicals. |
Contributors | Associated Students of Fresno State. |
Coverage | Vol.1 no.1 (Feb 8, 1922)- to present |
Format | Microfilm reels, 35 mm. |
Technical Information | Scanned at 600 dpi; TIFF; Microfilm ScanPro 2000 "E-image data" |
Language | eng |
Description
Title | May 1, 1963, Page 3 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1963 |
Description | Daily (except weedends) during the school year. Microfilm. Palo Alto, Calif.: BMI Library Microfilms, 1986- microfilm reels; 35 mm. Vol.1, no.1 (Feb 8, 1922)- |
Subject | California State University, Fresno -- Periodicals. |
Contributors | Associated Students of Fresno State. |
Coverage | Vol.1 no.1 (Feb 8, 1922)- to present |
Format | Microfilm reels, 35 mm. |
Technical Information | Scanned at 600 dpi; TIFF; Microfilm ScanPro 2000 "E-image data" |
Language | eng |
Full-Text-Search |
The Fresno Stat. Callage Collega
Mediators Replay Strugg le For Students
i-^.ml HedlaUoa and (lonMn... ,„. .. ... ■*■» .--i^-wai...
Fea,ral »ffl.Uoo and Concilia-, Job or «„.« ,,, „„„ ,
„on SerTlco in 8an Francl.co nan" l„ » „„,„„,, „ ™" "•""•<*
„dl«le.ltrUMa.ral» ar labor, Th. „.„„ .„„„,„ '
and management at a mock labor-
management mediation held Fri¬
day In the college Arena Theater.
More than ZOO student*- saw
Commissioner Wayne Kcnas-ion,
a.-- nhh regional director of the
service, take the role of mediator
or "stralghtmsj." In the ni'Botia-
lions. Commissioners K u g
Barry, George Wilson, and Oliver
Goodwin took the union side of
iho table and Commissioner.";
Ralph Patterson, Ralph Williams,
nod George Ducan took the man-
igement side.
Tbe mediator, who has no leual
power to make either side come
to an agreement, had the tdugh
UC Professor
To Talk Here
Or. Ernest S. Starkman, an en¬
gineering professor at the Univer¬
sity of California at Berkeley,
.will discuss "The Present Status
and Future Potential of the Gas
Turbine Powered Automobile" at
a special event of the college In¬
dustrial Arts Department open
house Thursday lu IA 101.
Dr. Starkman, who is a mem¬
ber of the mechanical engineering
department at UC, will speak
the 7:30 PM assembly. The third
annual open house will run from
9:30 AM to 6 PM on Thursday
and from 9:30 AM to 10 PM
Friday.
The open house will Include
guided tours through laboratories
and workshops, exhibits and in¬
formal talks with industrial arte
majors and professors.
Dr. Horace O. Schorllng. chair¬
man of the Industrial arts depart¬
ment, said that the general public
Is invited to visit the dopart-
jnentat-facllities either day and
that junior college and high
school students and their parents
are especially urged to see
exhibits and to examine the labo-
ratorlea and shops.
School groups visiting
campus will have an opportunity
to see the exhibits and facilities
at the college, and they will be
able to rlew tbe exhibits of Junior
and senior high school projects
on display at Fresno City College.
Guided tours are scheduled in
the following areas: auto me¬
chanics, art metal, drafting, elec¬
tricity-electronics, graphic arts.
handicrafts, foundry processes,
machine processes, shectmetal and
woodworking.
mutually
negatiro
\an,i management luul toward each
other are shown by these
ninrks:
• Me.Ihi.or liking to manage¬
ment: "Whal Is the company po¬
sition onjthigeat"
iTnio-j/ -Job! mark ,iown no/,
• Mr-dlaior talking io union:
"Waitd about grievances?"
Man-n-cme-it: "They are just
■"," complaints, they are not
grievances.*'
- Unloi
"We
pay."
Manaitcmont: "Well you are
not going to get It!"
The two hour long mock nego¬
tiation attcmpie*Mn epitomize the
action that goes on In the days,
weeks, and months of tabor-
management negotiations.
The negotiations, characterised
by constant loud talking on both
sides, began when the mediator
asked for the views of both groups
in a roundtable discussion. After
bringing the issues into the open,
the mediator had separate ses¬
sions with each side. Alone with
one side, the mediator tried to
show what parts of his demands
be could gain and what parts he
would have to acquiesce.
The threat to management of
tho plant closing down and the
dan-rer of a work stoppage to the
union If no agreement was reach¬
ed gave the mediator the power
to get both sides to reach accord.
The issues in the dispute in¬
volved wages, pensions. Job secur¬
ity, seniority, and a no-strike pro-
Tlie mock mediation waa fol¬
lowed by a question and answer
period.
The Federal Mediation Service
provides a service which can be
requested by either side in a dis¬
pute and which in free of charge.
Commissioner Kenaston said
nearly GOO negotiations are ac¬
cepted and mediated by the West-
states region each year and
that about 87 per cent of them
satisfactory settlement,
mock negotiation was
sponsored by tbe FSC Institute
of Industrial Relations. Dr. Grady
It. Mullennlx Is the director of the
institute.
36 Children Attend Clinic
Second Parents'
Confab Slated
The second In a series of par¬
ent conferences will bo held Sat¬
urday ln the Cafeteria in conjunc¬
tion with tho second freshmen
testing session. H%
Dr. W. Donald Albright, dean
of students, said that while more
than 400 prospective freshmen
are taking the English and college
entrance examination board stan¬
dard achievement tests, some 300
parents will bo-receiving an orien¬
tation or what college lite Is like
today.
The parents will hear from
various members of the admlnt-
.stratlon and faculty on subjects
ranging from advising and coun¬
seling to the actual course work
offered In the more than 75 major
fietds offered here.
"The parent conference pro¬
gram was established last spring
to offer parents ot prospective
students an opportunity to famil¬
iarise themselves with the aca¬
demic program and the physical
facilities of the college." Dr. Al¬
bright said.
SPORTS CM FOR SALE
Owk "53 MO-ID. Point, tap, ton-
MaW, twighM, i mli, ban. -*, 3 lint oU
Ih, rt™, 1 r**' "\i. Call s°h *■'
u r-aan. <-iw r pm.
Student Therapists
Correct Speech Ills
Students enrolled In a special
two-unit speech class perform an
important community service
white training for future jobs.
Eleven upper-division speech
correction majors are participat¬
ing in the college Speech and
Hearing Clinic ln the Speech Arts
Building.
U niler the 10-year-program,
parents of children with speech
and hearing detects register to
audit the correction course. The
120 registration fee entitles chil¬
dren to visit tho clinic twice a
week where student therapists
(speech correction majors) work
with them.
Thirty-six children and four
college students have been at¬
tending the clinic this semester.
Most of the children are six to
eight years old, according lo
Donald M. Wilson, associate pro¬
fessor of speech.
Work with handicapped chil¬
dren li done primarily on an Indi¬
vidual basis, said Dr. Wilson, al¬
though there are some small
groups.
iVe favor Individual work so
the child receives all of the thera¬
pist's attention. He gets to enjoy
listening and talking with the
therapist.
Wilson pointed.out a little boy
and said. "A month ago he
wouldn't sit down. He resisted
any demands made on him."
Now while the therapist
itched, tho boy was' gleefully
rowing clay against a door to
release tensions. A month from
, after be Is well acquainted
with the therapist, ho will be
ready to start correcting his
sounds.
Ive therapy rooms and one
large observation room are used
In the training program. Wilson
said ln order to participate In the
'clinical experience program,"
students must take several pre¬
requisite courses. First they ob-
» other therapists in action.
Later they are observed while,
working with children.
Twenty-five students are now
working towards BA degres In
speech correction. They eventu¬
ally will hold Jobs In community,
hospital and college clinics and
schools for the deaf. Dr. Wilson
said there Is an increasing de¬
mand for speech therapists.
"The basis of speech correction
Is knowing how sounds are made
where they are formed," Dr.
Wilson continued'. "To do this a
child must learn that speech Is
rewarding and that he won't be
corrected every time he opens his
h. He must learn to listen.
The Job of the speech therapist
o prepare the £hltd to listen
itutly and to follow directions
willingly." be added.
Dr. Wilson said a good thera-
ilst must be well grounded In
pooch pathology, and must be
friendly, curious, patient: "In
hort he must understand children
is well as the speech mechanism."
Speech problems result from a
-arlely of causes, Wilson com¬
mented. They may be physical
m such as cleft palate, hear¬
ing loss, or Illness at the time of
speech development.
THE COLLEGIAN
Publish** lour rfa-fsa wi
•icar-1 holiday* and auw-
Ination p*rioda by th*
Fraano Siai* Col logo Aiio-
darlofi. Mall iub»=ript(ona
H.00 a **n.«lar. JOTS
T*or. Editorial and bu*l-
r.i. em<-*. loeaiad on ih*
** ' iphon* BAldwln
Nfltioaal A&m&htz Smice, he
- Qamarirmnm*#ntejrmmmmV*a *r
OnVSmSSSa teyterai—S^J^Sf,
Fred McPh*t*on. Doi**n Savior. C-*r.|
i:.!Jo VLiian. , . .
Adt-ertiiing Manomr !°tu- '
&&!*», MtoHcDonAm
STOP...at ths Goldsn Arehsi
, S ShlaUs . Show and rrai-»
HERE'S ONE SOLUTION lo tha campus
parking problem As everyone knows, little
oars take up less room than the big oncV
Acting on this principle, some enterprising
shidenls put three of the little variety into
the space that ordinarily holds orily two
ol the big ones . . . with room to s-pare.
Magazine
Contest Set
Literary minded students have
the opportunity to win $100 In
the Lyric Foundation for Tradi¬
tional Poetry Award.
The competition is open to all
undergraduate students In any
American or Canadian college or
university.
Each entrant may aubmlt one
unpublished poem of 32 Hues or
less. The poem must be written
In the traditional manner.
Besides the 1100 first place
award, there will also be a second
prize ot J50 and 10 honorable
mention awards of $25 each. In
addition, the foundation will give
to the college library of the first
place winner a grant of J100, pro¬
viding the library subscribes to
"Lyric" magarlne.
Poems should be mailed not
later than Juno 1 to "The Lyric,"
Tlr.-iL.fi Bluff. Va.
The winner will be announced
In the Autumn 19G3 Issue of "The
The foundatlnn wants contest¬
ants to be sure to Include the
name of their college or univer¬
sity.
To Air Vote Count
KFSTt, campus radio station,
will broadcast election results to¬
day starting at 4 PM. The station
Is 660 on the radio dial.
BALDWIN'S presents:
The newest, most moderne styling of all.
in 18 Kt. — from $175 — Budget terms.
Fill in coupon below for free color
booklet.
Sand this coupon for Free Color Booklet of Orange Blossom
styles. No Ob ligation.
m&
=?,5 J E W E L E R S
DOWNTOWN
1107 BATON
PH. AD 7-2101
Open FH. Ill 9
MANCHESTER
3540 BLACKSTONE
HM.BA 9-1511
Open Men. t Fri.'HI 9
Newman Senior Night—This Evening
Newman Club will present
"Senior Night" tonight at 7:30
PM In the St. Therese's pariah
social hall.
High school seniors and all in¬
terested students are urged to
attend to learn more about the
club's activities, said Bob Stick ley,
chairman of the evening.
A dance and an exhibit of the
club's yearly activities will be
featured at the annual event.
Dressy attire Is appropriate for
the evening.
This program la designed to
Introduce Incoming freshmen tn
the organisation, said Stick-.ley.
(fo Campos
with
(Author of "I Waa o Teen-oo* Dwarf', "The Jfan j,
LiKtMefl>MeGillU", |