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\ June 17, 1863 COUEGIAN — SUMMER SESSION Page Three Three Bulldog Athletesj-Recreaf/on Try For US Track Team At least three Fresno State College athletes wilt try to win spots on the U.S. team for international meets with the Soviet Union and Poland at this week end's AAU track and field championships in St. Louis. Definitely entered are sprinter Sam Workman, broad ♦jumper Sid Nlckolas, SS Film Series Set For 1963 The showing ot the award win¬ ning "Cat on a Hot Tin Roof tomorrow will open the 1963 summer film Merles for 3Umraer session students, faculty, and staff, and their famlllea. Films will be shown at 1:30 and 8:30 PM each Tuesday in the Little Theater of the speech arts building. In addition. "LIU" will be shown at the summer ses¬ sion picnic July 18. The films cover a broad cro-ts- section or the best recent Holly¬ wood productions. They ranee Trom tho stark drama of "l'lace in the Sun" to the suspense of "Savage Innocents" to the un¬ inhibited comedy of "When Com¬ edy Was King." Si-iL-ion Opener Opening the series will be "Cat on a Hot Tin Hoof." adapted from tho Tennessee Wll- HamH play. It won a National Board or Review Award as one of the 10 best rilms In the year it was produced. Elizabeth Taylor is starred in the title role as a woman who wants a child. Paul Newman Is cast as her husband, an alcoholic ex-college athlete, who is search¬ ing for "the click In my head" which drinking will give him so he can forget tho sorrows and in¬ securities of his life. Burl Ives plays Newman'B father; dying of cancer, he de¬ mands an heir to his fortune, Jack Carson and Judith Anderson complete the cast. jLIz Taylor The remaining schedule In¬ cludes: June 25. "A Place In the Sun," also starring Elizabeth Taylor and also adapted from a classic of American literature (Theodore - Dreiser's "An American Trag¬ edy"). Featured In the other sides of an explosive triangle are Montgomery Clift and Shelley Winters. July 2, "When Comedy Was King," an anthology of films' from the golden age of Ameri¬ can screen comedy (1914-28), featuring such comedians as Charlie Chaplin, Laurel and Har¬ dy, and Buster Keaton. July 9. "Savage Innocents," a drama of cultural conflicts In¬ volving an Eskimo hunter, greedy white fur treaders, a zealous mis¬ sionary whom the Eskimo unin¬ tentionally kills, and the two Canadian policeman who attempt to bring him to Justice. Alti- Guinness July 16. "The Scrapegoat, featuring Alec Guinness- in one of his patented double roles, play¬ ing both a mousy English school j teacher and a decadent French nobleman who hires the school' teacher as a double so he can escape his family and responsibil¬ ities. July 18, "LIU," a musical In which Leslie Caron Is cast as a 16-year-old French orphan who Joins a carnival puppet show and falls In love with a handsome ma¬ gician. July 23, "All the Fine Young Cannibals," the,story of a young man who become!* an outstand¬ ing trumpet player In New ,York' but nurses, the wounds of an un¬ happy love affair. Admission Is free on presenta¬ tion Ot summer session activity cards or faculty cards. and inter¬ mediate hurdler Duane Relden¬ bach. There's a possibllty that a couple more Bulldogs may enter after the NCAA meet which wound up Saturday in Albuquer¬ que. New Mexico. Ironically, the best FSC bet to Schedule At A Glance The summer s-.-s.-ii,.., i-t-c n.';i- tlon and io.,i]in'ntiiituil 1 ntru¬ in uml progmin at a fi*lance: DAILY ACTIVITIES Swimming '2-6 PM Ping Pong ...'. 1V-8 PM lttvlminton tt-tt I'M Volleyball • PM Hiisketball t»VO PM Tennis 2-4) PM make the American team is ■■<;,,if B-O r.M doubtful starter In the AAU meet. Charley Craig, a Bulldog sopho¬ more, rankB in the first 10 na-; tionally In the triple Jump but may pass up the meet because of a Job conflict. Double Entrants Craig has also met the AAU qualifying standard ln the broad Jump. Both Workman and Nicko¬ las may also be double entrants if they meet the standards in their second event. Workman Is filtered In the 220 but hasn't met the standard of 0.5 ln the 100 legally; he has three 9.5 clockings but all are windaided and his best legiti- tlme is 9.6. Nlckolas' best hlKh hurdle, time of 14.4 is also a tenth of a second off the qual¬ ifying mark although he does have a wind-blown 14.2- pllfying Craig's Job In the triple, Jump. If he tries to make the American international team, Is the Tact that several of the other top Jumpers are foreigners. The No. 1 triple jumper of the American outdoor season. West Coast Relays champion Mahoney Samuels (52'OW" and 54' 5tt"w) Is a Jamaican; Chris Ohlrl, Harvard's ICK4A champ- halls from Nigeria and Elif Fredrlcksen, 1962 NCAA runner- up Troin Washington State, from Norway. The men Craig will have to beat to represent the U.S. abroad are veterans Bill Sharpe. Herm Stokes, Kent Floerke, and Dar¬ rell Horn. All have bettered 49 feet this year and have gone far¬ ther than 50 feet at one point or another In their careers. Sharpe and Stokes were on the 1960 U.S. Olympic team. 27 Footers Nickolas will have to make sig¬ nificant improvement to place against a star-studded broad Jump field led by 27-footers Ralph Boston nnd U. of Wash¬ ington sophomore Phil Shinnlk Tho hurdle field, where Olympic medal winners Hayes Jones and Willie May will battle Blaine LIndgren. t h e Pan-American Games champ, appears equally tough. Workman has an outside chance in the 220. He defeated Steve Haas of Occidental, fourth- placer In-last year's. AAU meet, ln an FSC record of 20.9 for the curve 220 at Modesto recently. Reldenbach will be trying to Improve on his FSC record of S2.1 for the 440 hurdles. It will probably take 51 seconds or bet¬ ter to place with the field being topped by Pan-American Games Trampoline '.. 2-3 PM Weight I',.nni 2-3 I'M EVENING ACTIVITIES (Tue-il.-iy through Thunwlny only) Swimming tt-0 PM Ping Pong 0-0 PM It-tdmlnton tt-9 PM Volleylmll 0-9 PM Tennis 6-0 P.M Oolf 6-0 PM Trampoline 7-0 PM Weight Room 7-0 PM INTHAMUItAL TOURNAMENTS Golf (Regular) — Second through fifth week; men's and women's individual match play; signup through June 25th; men play at Airways Coif Course, women at Hank's Swank Pitch and Putt Course. Badminton— Third week, Tues¬ day evening (July 2nd); mixed doubles; gymnasium. Volleyball — Fourth w •* e k, Tuesday evening (July 9th) co¬ educational teams; gymnasium. Bowling—Second through sixth weeks. Monday afternoon; men's and women's singles; ladder tourament, high game, high ser¬ ies, high total; Blackstone Bowl. Golf (Hole In One) to be held al summer school picnic July 18th. Varied SS Recreational Program Now Available A varied program of recreational activities and intramural competition is on tap for summer session students, faculty, and staff members, and their families. Recreational facilities will be available every* afternoon from Monday through Friday and Tuesday through Thursday evenings, Myron Anderson, dl-f" rector of the summer program, reported. In addition, five Intra- ural tournaments are sched- '63 Yearbook Still Available A limited supply of 1963 year¬ books Is stll available In tho asso¬ ciation office. While reservations on the '63 books expired last week, students who made reservations can still pick up their Campuses while the supply lasts. There Is no charge for students with student body cards tor both fall and spring semesters and a $2.50 charge for students with only the fall sem¬ ester card. Students who failed to reserve yearbooks can obtain one for $3.50 on presentation of one or both semesters' ASB cards. The charge for persons without stu¬ dent body cards Is $7.50. Copies of the 1959 Campus will be sold while the Bupply lasts for $1 per book. Sirman, Ross Play In NCAA Fresno State College golfers Johnny Sirman and Ed Ross will open play today in tho qualify-1 ing rounds of the NCAA champ-! ionshlps In Wichita. Kansas. A total of 36 holes are sched-1 uled both today and Tuesday with; the low 64 scorers beginning match play on Wednesday. Two 18-hoIc matches are scheduled on both Wednesday and Thursday' with semi-finals slated Friday and the 36-hole final Saturday. Slrman carries most or Fresno State's hopes. His competitive record is outstanding—a 13-6 match record for three years in¬ cluding two wins over three-time Far West Intercollegiate champ John Lotz of San Jose this year, a 73.6 stroke average, the South¬ ern California Intercollegiate title, and a second placo in the San Joaquin Valley Amateur ln his last tournament appearance. Ross' record is less spectacu¬ lar but still good. The high point was his third place finish In the SCI tourney. He had a 4-3-1 match record and a 76.2 stroke average. Best showing by an FSC play¬ er ln the NCAA tourney came In 1960, when Henry Fogg reached the third round before being eliminated. uled. Included among the recrea¬ tional activities open to summer school personnel are swimming, ping pong, badminton, volleyball, basketball, trampoline, tennis, golf, and weight lifting. The weight lifting program Is a new addition this year. The weight room, in GM 201, will be open from 2 to 3 PM dally and from 7 to 9 PM Tuesday through Thursday. The trampoline haa also been moved from tho main gymnasium to room GM 202 and will be available at the same hours. The swimming pool will be open from 2 to S PI* dally and Trom 6 to 9 PM on Tuesday through -Thursday nights. The other activities will be available In the gym during the same hours. Tournaments are scheduled in golf, badmintion, volleyball, and bowling. In addition, a hole-ln- one tournament is scheduled In conjunction with the summer school picnic July 18. All events are open to both men and women. First event on the intramural -schedule will be the golf tourna¬ ment. Signups will continue through June 25th with play be¬ ginning the following day. The bowling tournament will begin next week also. Contest¬ ants will roll three lines each week In tho Blackstone Bowl. The badminton tourney will be held during the third week of the summer session and the volley¬ ball tournament during the fourth week. medalists Willie Atterbcrry and Russ Rogers plus USC star Rex Cawley. Pole vaulter Bill Allen hoped to qualify for the pole vault but needed a 15'3" clearance at Al¬ buquerque. In any event. It Is ex¬ pected to take 16 feet to make the team for the Russian eet. DR. AL GREENSTONE OPTOMETRIST (Formerly In Manchester Center) * Examinations * Prescriptions * Frames * Repairs PERSONALIZED VISION CARE FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY Purity Shopping Center Corner Cedar & Shields Phone229.42.16 SECOND CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST PHONE IA 9-S371 Sunday School—°,15 a.m. 310 WEST SHAW AVENUE Sunday Service)—I 1 o.m. Wednesday Evening Teilimoniol Mealing*—B p.m. FREE READING ROOM AND LENDING UMAIY Open 1 2,00 la 3t30 p.m. Monday thru Friday CALVARY PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 9,30 Campul Hour 9,30 & 11,00 Morning Wonhip 9.30 Service Radio Broodcail (KUDU. 1130) Alan H. Brown, Mill filer %> BA 7-4913 — CLINTON AT THORNE CEDAR AVENUE BAPTIST CEDAR NEAR BELMONT 9,43 AM Collego Buiinei* Bible Clou 6,15 PM College Bt---ln--.il Fellow, hip 1 1,00 AM Morning Worihip 7>30 PM Evening Wonhip MORNING SERVICE BROADCAST— KIRV—DIAt 1510 Ir-a-Iog E. Penberthy, D.D., Pallor URST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH M & Calaveras St. Duplicate Servicei—8,50 & 11,00 Coll-ogen FeltowiMp—B.30 Church School—9,30 Evening Wonhip—7-30 Or. Robert N. O.rtrar, Pa-tor Rev. Wotly Droit.. College Pottor PEACE LUTHERAN CHURCH 4672 N. CEDAR AT GETTYSBURG m. Sunday School and Bible Clan*). I & 10 a.m. Worihip Service Martin Schobocker, Pa.lor — BA 2-2310 and BA 9-B333 TRINITY LUTHERAN CHURCH Lutheran Church in America Duplicate Service.—9i00 4 ID,30 AM Sludanli ate alwoyi welcome ol Trinity 3973 N. Cedar Wear Ashlan College lulher Out)—7,00 PM rhilip A. Jordan, Potto- BA 9-B5B1 FIRST METHODIST CHURCH TUOLUMNE 4 M ST. Morning Wotihip ...9:00 * U-00 AM Sunday School 9-30 AM Weiley Fellow,hip ..7,00 PM lev*, t. Moon. O. Pe'enon, 4 ST. COLUFABA'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH PALM AND SHAW Holy Communion—7,-15 A.M. Morning Service and Sermon 9s30 A.M. and 1 1.00 A-M. REV. GEORGE TUPeEY. mnttee
Object Description
Title | 1963_06 The Daily Collegian June 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 | June 17, 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 | \ June 17, 1863 COUEGIAN — SUMMER SESSION Page Three Three Bulldog Athletesj-Recreaf/on Try For US Track Team At least three Fresno State College athletes wilt try to win spots on the U.S. team for international meets with the Soviet Union and Poland at this week end's AAU track and field championships in St. Louis. Definitely entered are sprinter Sam Workman, broad ♦jumper Sid Nlckolas, SS Film Series Set For 1963 The showing ot the award win¬ ning "Cat on a Hot Tin Roof tomorrow will open the 1963 summer film Merles for 3Umraer session students, faculty, and staff, and their famlllea. Films will be shown at 1:30 and 8:30 PM each Tuesday in the Little Theater of the speech arts building. In addition. "LIU" will be shown at the summer ses¬ sion picnic July 18. The films cover a broad cro-ts- section or the best recent Holly¬ wood productions. They ranee Trom tho stark drama of "l'lace in the Sun" to the suspense of "Savage Innocents" to the un¬ inhibited comedy of "When Com¬ edy Was King." Si-iL-ion Opener Opening the series will be "Cat on a Hot Tin Hoof." adapted from tho Tennessee Wll- HamH play. It won a National Board or Review Award as one of the 10 best rilms In the year it was produced. Elizabeth Taylor is starred in the title role as a woman who wants a child. Paul Newman Is cast as her husband, an alcoholic ex-college athlete, who is search¬ ing for "the click In my head" which drinking will give him so he can forget tho sorrows and in¬ securities of his life. Burl Ives plays Newman'B father; dying of cancer, he de¬ mands an heir to his fortune, Jack Carson and Judith Anderson complete the cast. jLIz Taylor The remaining schedule In¬ cludes: June 25. "A Place In the Sun," also starring Elizabeth Taylor and also adapted from a classic of American literature (Theodore - Dreiser's "An American Trag¬ edy"). Featured In the other sides of an explosive triangle are Montgomery Clift and Shelley Winters. July 2, "When Comedy Was King," an anthology of films' from the golden age of Ameri¬ can screen comedy (1914-28), featuring such comedians as Charlie Chaplin, Laurel and Har¬ dy, and Buster Keaton. July 9. "Savage Innocents," a drama of cultural conflicts In¬ volving an Eskimo hunter, greedy white fur treaders, a zealous mis¬ sionary whom the Eskimo unin¬ tentionally kills, and the two Canadian policeman who attempt to bring him to Justice. Alti- Guinness July 16. "The Scrapegoat, featuring Alec Guinness- in one of his patented double roles, play¬ ing both a mousy English school j teacher and a decadent French nobleman who hires the school' teacher as a double so he can escape his family and responsibil¬ ities. July 18, "LIU," a musical In which Leslie Caron Is cast as a 16-year-old French orphan who Joins a carnival puppet show and falls In love with a handsome ma¬ gician. July 23, "All the Fine Young Cannibals," the,story of a young man who become!* an outstand¬ ing trumpet player In New ,York' but nurses, the wounds of an un¬ happy love affair. Admission Is free on presenta¬ tion Ot summer session activity cards or faculty cards. and inter¬ mediate hurdler Duane Relden¬ bach. There's a possibllty that a couple more Bulldogs may enter after the NCAA meet which wound up Saturday in Albuquer¬ que. New Mexico. Ironically, the best FSC bet to Schedule At A Glance The summer s-.-s.-ii,.., i-t-c n.';i- tlon and io.,i]in'ntiiituil 1 ntru¬ in uml progmin at a fi*lance: DAILY ACTIVITIES Swimming '2-6 PM Ping Pong ...'. 1V-8 PM lttvlminton tt-tt I'M Volleyball • PM Hiisketball t»VO PM Tennis 2-4) PM make the American team is ■■<;,,if B-O r.M doubtful starter In the AAU meet. Charley Craig, a Bulldog sopho¬ more, rankB in the first 10 na-; tionally In the triple Jump but may pass up the meet because of a Job conflict. Double Entrants Craig has also met the AAU qualifying standard ln the broad Jump. Both Workman and Nicko¬ las may also be double entrants if they meet the standards in their second event. Workman Is filtered In the 220 but hasn't met the standard of 0.5 ln the 100 legally; he has three 9.5 clockings but all are windaided and his best legiti- tlme is 9.6. Nlckolas' best hlKh hurdle, time of 14.4 is also a tenth of a second off the qual¬ ifying mark although he does have a wind-blown 14.2- pllfying Craig's Job In the triple, Jump. If he tries to make the American international team, Is the Tact that several of the other top Jumpers are foreigners. The No. 1 triple jumper of the American outdoor season. West Coast Relays champion Mahoney Samuels (52'OW" and 54' 5tt"w) Is a Jamaican; Chris Ohlrl, Harvard's ICK4A champ- halls from Nigeria and Elif Fredrlcksen, 1962 NCAA runner- up Troin Washington State, from Norway. The men Craig will have to beat to represent the U.S. abroad are veterans Bill Sharpe. Herm Stokes, Kent Floerke, and Dar¬ rell Horn. All have bettered 49 feet this year and have gone far¬ ther than 50 feet at one point or another In their careers. Sharpe and Stokes were on the 1960 U.S. Olympic team. 27 Footers Nickolas will have to make sig¬ nificant improvement to place against a star-studded broad Jump field led by 27-footers Ralph Boston nnd U. of Wash¬ ington sophomore Phil Shinnlk Tho hurdle field, where Olympic medal winners Hayes Jones and Willie May will battle Blaine LIndgren. t h e Pan-American Games champ, appears equally tough. Workman has an outside chance in the 220. He defeated Steve Haas of Occidental, fourth- placer In-last year's. AAU meet, ln an FSC record of 20.9 for the curve 220 at Modesto recently. Reldenbach will be trying to Improve on his FSC record of S2.1 for the 440 hurdles. It will probably take 51 seconds or bet¬ ter to place with the field being topped by Pan-American Games Trampoline '.. 2-3 PM Weight I',.nni 2-3 I'M EVENING ACTIVITIES (Tue-il.-iy through Thunwlny only) Swimming tt-0 PM Ping Pong 0-0 PM It-tdmlnton tt-9 PM Volleylmll 0-9 PM Tennis 6-0 P.M Oolf 6-0 PM Trampoline 7-0 PM Weight Room 7-0 PM INTHAMUItAL TOURNAMENTS Golf (Regular) — Second through fifth week; men's and women's individual match play; signup through June 25th; men play at Airways Coif Course, women at Hank's Swank Pitch and Putt Course. Badminton— Third week, Tues¬ day evening (July 2nd); mixed doubles; gymnasium. Volleyball — Fourth w •* e k, Tuesday evening (July 9th) co¬ educational teams; gymnasium. Bowling—Second through sixth weeks. Monday afternoon; men's and women's singles; ladder tourament, high game, high ser¬ ies, high total; Blackstone Bowl. Golf (Hole In One) to be held al summer school picnic July 18th. Varied SS Recreational Program Now Available A varied program of recreational activities and intramural competition is on tap for summer session students, faculty, and staff members, and their families. Recreational facilities will be available every* afternoon from Monday through Friday and Tuesday through Thursday evenings, Myron Anderson, dl-f" rector of the summer program, reported. In addition, five Intra- ural tournaments are sched- '63 Yearbook Still Available A limited supply of 1963 year¬ books Is stll available In tho asso¬ ciation office. While reservations on the '63 books expired last week, students who made reservations can still pick up their Campuses while the supply lasts. There Is no charge for students with student body cards tor both fall and spring semesters and a $2.50 charge for students with only the fall sem¬ ester card. Students who failed to reserve yearbooks can obtain one for $3.50 on presentation of one or both semesters' ASB cards. The charge for persons without stu¬ dent body cards Is $7.50. Copies of the 1959 Campus will be sold while the Bupply lasts for $1 per book. Sirman, Ross Play In NCAA Fresno State College golfers Johnny Sirman and Ed Ross will open play today in tho qualify-1 ing rounds of the NCAA champ-! ionshlps In Wichita. Kansas. A total of 36 holes are sched-1 uled both today and Tuesday with; the low 64 scorers beginning match play on Wednesday. Two 18-hoIc matches are scheduled on both Wednesday and Thursday' with semi-finals slated Friday and the 36-hole final Saturday. Slrman carries most or Fresno State's hopes. His competitive record is outstanding—a 13-6 match record for three years in¬ cluding two wins over three-time Far West Intercollegiate champ John Lotz of San Jose this year, a 73.6 stroke average, the South¬ ern California Intercollegiate title, and a second placo in the San Joaquin Valley Amateur ln his last tournament appearance. Ross' record is less spectacu¬ lar but still good. The high point was his third place finish In the SCI tourney. He had a 4-3-1 match record and a 76.2 stroke average. Best showing by an FSC play¬ er ln the NCAA tourney came In 1960, when Henry Fogg reached the third round before being eliminated. uled. Included among the recrea¬ tional activities open to summer school personnel are swimming, ping pong, badminton, volleyball, basketball, trampoline, tennis, golf, and weight lifting. The weight lifting program Is a new addition this year. The weight room, in GM 201, will be open from 2 to 3 PM dally and from 7 to 9 PM Tuesday through Thursday. The trampoline haa also been moved from tho main gymnasium to room GM 202 and will be available at the same hours. The swimming pool will be open from 2 to S PI* dally and Trom 6 to 9 PM on Tuesday through -Thursday nights. The other activities will be available In the gym during the same hours. Tournaments are scheduled in golf, badmintion, volleyball, and bowling. In addition, a hole-ln- one tournament is scheduled In conjunction with the summer school picnic July 18. All events are open to both men and women. First event on the intramural -schedule will be the golf tourna¬ ment. Signups will continue through June 25th with play be¬ ginning the following day. The bowling tournament will begin next week also. Contest¬ ants will roll three lines each week In tho Blackstone Bowl. The badminton tourney will be held during the third week of the summer session and the volley¬ ball tournament during the fourth week. medalists Willie Atterbcrry and Russ Rogers plus USC star Rex Cawley. Pole vaulter Bill Allen hoped to qualify for the pole vault but needed a 15'3" clearance at Al¬ buquerque. In any event. It Is ex¬ pected to take 16 feet to make the team for the Russian eet. DR. AL GREENSTONE OPTOMETRIST (Formerly In Manchester Center) * Examinations * Prescriptions * Frames * Repairs PERSONALIZED VISION CARE FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY Purity Shopping Center Corner Cedar & Shields Phone229.42.16 SECOND CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST PHONE IA 9-S371 Sunday School—°,15 a.m. 310 WEST SHAW AVENUE Sunday Service)—I 1 o.m. Wednesday Evening Teilimoniol Mealing*—B p.m. FREE READING ROOM AND LENDING UMAIY Open 1 2,00 la 3t30 p.m. Monday thru Friday CALVARY PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 9,30 Campul Hour 9,30 & 11,00 Morning Wonhip 9.30 Service Radio Broodcail (KUDU. 1130) Alan H. Brown, Mill filer %> BA 7-4913 — CLINTON AT THORNE CEDAR AVENUE BAPTIST CEDAR NEAR BELMONT 9,43 AM Collego Buiinei* Bible Clou 6,15 PM College Bt---ln--.il Fellow, hip 1 1,00 AM Morning Worihip 7>30 PM Evening Wonhip MORNING SERVICE BROADCAST— KIRV—DIAt 1510 Ir-a-Iog E. Penberthy, D.D., Pallor URST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH M & Calaveras St. Duplicate Servicei—8,50 & 11,00 Coll-ogen FeltowiMp—B.30 Church School—9,30 Evening Wonhip—7-30 Or. Robert N. O.rtrar, Pa-tor Rev. Wotly Droit.. College Pottor PEACE LUTHERAN CHURCH 4672 N. CEDAR AT GETTYSBURG m. Sunday School and Bible Clan*). I & 10 a.m. Worihip Service Martin Schobocker, Pa.lor — BA 2-2310 and BA 9-B333 TRINITY LUTHERAN CHURCH Lutheran Church in America Duplicate Service.—9i00 4 ID,30 AM Sludanli ate alwoyi welcome ol Trinity 3973 N. Cedar Wear Ashlan College lulher Out)—7,00 PM rhilip A. Jordan, Potto- BA 9-B5B1 FIRST METHODIST CHURCH TUOLUMNE 4 M ST. Morning Wotihip ...9:00 * U-00 AM Sunday School 9-30 AM Weiley Fellow,hip ..7,00 PM lev*, t. Moon. O. Pe'enon, 4 ST. COLUFABA'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH PALM AND SHAW Holy Communion—7,-15 A.M. Morning Service and Sermon 9s30 A.M. and 1 1.00 A-M. REV. GEORGE TUPeEY. mnttee |