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4-THE DAILY COLLEGIAN r, March 12, 1975 ON CAMPUS WORLD NEWS IN BRIEF Dr. Demetrl Kenallakos will lecture on •Psychopsyslology and ss* In CU 312-314 at UPC department represent: lives will meet at noon In tl Collegiate Room. •La Cenerentola* will be l sented through Saturday in Little Theatre at 1:15 p.m. THURSDAY The Academic Policy and PI ilng Committee will meet In T at 2:15 p.m. Union will sponsor The San Joaquin Valley Export- Import Association will hold an International credit and finance seminar In CU 309 from 10 a.m. •Horse Feathers" and *The Producers* will be shown In the College Union Lounge at 8 p.m. Hen Cackle Inn will feature Kenny Hall In the College Union Coffee Shop from « p.m. 1111 midnight. Admission Is $1. Andy Goldner of UC Davis will Health Organisation |n CU 319 from 4 to 5 p.m He wtll speak on minority admission and recnilt- (Contlnued from Page 1) President Lon Nol. *12S MILLION Tb'AID CAMBODIA - a Senate foreign relations subcommittee voted Tuesday to grant $125 million additional military assistance to Cambodia, but a House subcommittee was reportedly deadlocked over the Issue and postponed further action until today The $125 million Is a compromise from the $222 million originally requested by President Ford. PLATO 11 sy Engr. E 124. nclude a demonslratl lassroom at 10:10 a lng U.S. diplomatic posts In picked an additional 344 elite m extended to an additional 27 p Africa, Saigon and Buenos Aire College Union positions open Positions are still open on th College Union Board for next se mester and on the Program Com mtttee. The Board governs a: College Union Affairs :ountrles. The Marine Corps haj mmissloned officers for this duty 1,489. Marine protection is being , principally In the Middle East, WORLD CAMPUS .AFLOAT Sexuality courses are still growing students should tie taucht urally defined." Llskey One of Llskey's methods ol role stereotypes cause rernlng sexuality is the usi Jlerns about what men are guest speakers. ! to be and women are They Include a homosex real stereotypes.* he prostitute. The rlass also speakers on abortion and orga a lop- nen In the class. Llskey said he ls glad t ourxe Is so popular pointingc The bill, which passed Ih OPEN DAILY 2 pm — 9 pm FREEMAN'S ARCADE 2371 E. SHAW SPECIAL! EXTRA MOWf urro $13 Mst ¥ WANTED A LIVE SALESPERSON to sell advertising in i THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, j XEROX COPIES NO MINIMUM ORDER COPY SHOP 2135 AMADOR PH. 237-8108 February, with the ship your classroom and the ditedstudy with fascinating visits to the fa¬ bled pr— -"•— - "■ Africa. and the Americas. Over 10, 000 undergraduates Iron- sailed with WCA them! Financial al able. Write today catalog. WOLi Wanted: Female attendant to live in with disabled woman near campus. Contact Weldon Percy 487-2741. LOOKING FOR A CHANGE? NOW..he Friendly People Congregate W "For oGrvof runt" £ . - A fOIlWAFTEJRf Insight and MECHA will meet after protest By Wayne Welch Collegian Staff Writer Barry Wong, co-editor of the journalism Department's Insight newspaper, ts scheduled to meet with MECHA representatives at noon today'followlngWednesday's picketing ol the newspaper office ny ihe Chicano student organlza- The picket was the result of a tour-week long confrontation be¬ tween the two organizations over' j story' and photographic layout which appeared In the Feb. 19 issue of Insight and the subse¬ quent editorial battle concerning Both Wong and Catallno urques, president of MECHA, ...reed that the meeting would be •t e start of a moreposttlverela- ■So far, almost everything said .1. both sides has been nega- I think most of that ls of our systems," Wong said 1 he felt the neettng would I ?sults of •highly ummentlng on whether Insight i m ECHA would begin working i irore positive level Jacques tbout 110 people, mostofthem icano students, formed In the 'o Speech Area at noon dnesday then marched on the tght offices located In the up- level of the Business Btilld- rhay first marched ln a circle side the building for several nutes before going upstairs and m the hallway past Insight hroughout the hour-long pro- t they chanted "down wllh lu¬ lu." and carried placards idlng "Chlcanos condemn In- M ■ "insight ts on the white .- and several other slogans, rhe article and photo essay t: sparked the disagreement - titled "Alcohol: an escape." k-picted the life of several urtedly indigent and liquor ta of the Plne- luwever, a front page picture ■ ting readers to the article I [tiotographs read 'thepeople considered a slur against theen- tlre Plnedale community. One of the writers Identified herself as a Plnedale resident. A four word reply from tha editors read, *Our mistake. Our apologtes.* Insight later received a letter from Mike Vlllanueva, chairman of the PtnedaleCommunltyCoun- cll, accepting the apology. However,it apparently was not enough to satisfy everyone of¬ fended by tbe .story arid photos. A letter from MECHA ap¬ peared ln The Dally Collegian on Feb. 28. It labeled tbe Insight article,as a "sick type of satir¬ ical humor . . .» "The article Is an Injustice to Chlcanos who make up 49 per cent of Plnedale's population and also perpetuates the stereotypes of the 'careless sleeping Mexi¬ can,' " the letter read. , Pointing out that the apology was not given 'maximum vlst- * blllty," MECHA said the regret would not suffice. A nearly Identical letter ap¬ peared In the March 5 Issue of Insight, along with two editorials' and a cartoon concerning the dis¬ agreement. sight Staff, described the 'Chi¬ cano community" as "super¬ sensitive* and said the apology was sufficient. ■The signers (of the MECHA letter) are overreacting. No slur against the Chicano community was Intended. While the rest- dents of Plnedale have a right to complain, the Chicano community of CSUF does not . . .the apology already made Is enough,* the editorial read. tank pointed at a building which had tho words Insight written The second editorial, signed hy Woijg, said the Insight photogra¬ phy staff was "beyond compro¬ mise" and that the paper 'does not submit to threats from any quarter." The remark was apparently ln response to MECHA's warning' ould " accomplish their goal If "re¬ medial actions" were not taken. Other means apparently meant a picket tee. •We warned to let the rest of the student body know how we WORLD NEWS IN BRIEF i.oOD FRIDAY CLOSING ILLEGAL - the state Court of Appeals ■.••J yesterday that the three-hour closing of state offices on Good lav is illegal. The three-judge court, in a unanimous decision, i ■'! that the closing was an 'excessive government entanglement ' religion." * : i the past, state employes have .been granted time off on Good inlay with pay. The state estimated the cost at $816,167 per hour. /IFGLER QUITS - former White House Press Secretary Ronald it-eler has canceled hts campus lecture series, according to Wash- •ton sources. Zlegler Is reported to have canceled because he did " want io be on the "Watergate speaking circuit." I \ WIFE GETS STATE CAB - Assemblyman, Ken Meade (D- Jiland) has been ordered to get the state-leased car he loaned his <-wife In Kansas, back to California ln one week. Meade said It made sense for him to drive the family sports car "1 lei his wife and two children drive the larger state car. How-" ■er, Assembly Speaker Leo McCarthy called the Incident "an stans PLEADS GUILTY — Maurice Stans, former Secretary of immerce. pleaded guilty Wednesday to five violations of campaign i''ws ln 1972. Stans was the third Nixon Cabinet member to be con- icted of a federal crime. Stans said he thought he waa following the. ]"w when he committed the five acts. SECRET PEPPERDtXE Fl'ND - top Pepperdlne University of¬ ficials were paid J247,100. from a secret fund between 1968 and 1973. the Sacramento Bee reported Wednesday. Pepperdlne funneled the money through a dummy organization to compensate then-President Norvel Young,ln lieu of retirementbene- •its. The money was glventoYoung.whols now chancellor, president William Banowsky and three other Pepperdlne administrators. RAISES DELAYED - Merced elementary school teachers voted Tuesday to support a recommendation that salaries for 10 flrst-yaar 'owners receive priority over raises for all Instructors.The school administrators had said there might not be enough money to gira all felt,* said Grace Soils, vice stratlon. "We are here to make was «»0r the people of Plnedale president and spokesperson for ' them aware that we are not happy who the slur was against,* not the Chicano group. wllh that (Feb. 26) apology.* MECHA. •We don't expect another apol- Audrte Klug, Insight cc-edltor, Commencing on whether there ogy,* she said during thedemon- said the apology that was made (Continued on Page 8, Col. 1) I THUFISDAY, MARCH 13t I97S OLLEGrlAN CALIFORNIA1 STATE UNIVERSITY, FRESNO ■ v- ; •* Senate endorses liquor sales; resolution awaits Trustees' OK By Alan Arakelian Collegian Staff Writer The Student Senate yesterday approved a resolution endorsing the sale of alcohol^on the CSUF The resolution will he sent to President Norman Baxter, the Board of Directors and the Board of Trustees. The resolution, which was sub¬ mitted hy the Legal Committee, had a clause struck from It which expressed the opinion that con¬ trols on the amount of beer sold should be constructed If sale be¬ comes legal. The clause was struck from the resolution because the wording was somewhat confusing. It led senate members to believe that students participating In tha pro¬ posed sale would be labeled.as alcoholics hy the wording ot the clause, the senate aald. The senate gave the Music De¬ partment approval to go lo the Finance Committee and ask for $400 lo help pay for a musical recording by CSUF music ma- The recording Is not for money-making purposes but rather for publicity for CSUF. The agreement is that the senate will get Its money back If the record makes enough to make lt possible. In the past, CSUF's recordings have not broken even with tbe amount expended for pro- The proposed revisions of the Senate Election Code will be ana¬ lyzed by the senate next week. Some members said they wish to change a rule which makes It mandatory for a student to have attended CSUF for at least one semester before being eligible for nomination as a senator, president or vice-president. The senate turned down a bid by President Pro TemCruzBus- ' tamante to Increase Ida pay by $ ltxTfor the remaining two months The senate learned that Presi¬ dent Norman Baxter had approved the new Associated Student Con¬ stitution which was sent to him last week after the senate ap¬ proved It. Tbe Constitution will be voted on by the students In a referendum next week. If approved by tbe students, tha Constitution wtll make tha senate Independent of tbe Board ot Di¬ rectors of tha FSC Association under which tbey ara currently operating. Mobile health unit rolls to campus A mobile health .testing'pro¬ gram will be available to the CSUF faculty, student body and their families (agur 13 and above) on Friday and Saturday. The service Isbelngsponsored by the United Professors of call- forniaCUPC). According lo Gerald Johnston, president of the UPC Fresno chapter and an accounting prpfessor, -tbe Individuals par¬ ticipating will be tested In over SO medical areas In the modern mobile testing unit. The unit wtll be staffed with registered nurses and physician- trained technicians. The lime needed for testing ls between 30 and 40 minutes. With the use of sophisticated biolnstrumentatlon and com¬ puters, the staff will attempt to detect Information which will help the Individual's physician locate disorders. The service will pro¬ vide doctors with only background and laboratory Information. Within three weeks after the tests are given a full computer report and the results will be sent to tha patient's doctor. The data can assist the physician tn, detecting heart disease, cancer,! liver disorders and kidney dls- \ orders, lung dtsaasa and other disorders. According to Johnston, the ser¬ vice was originally meant to In¬ clude only CSUF faculty but waa and families. The cost of the service la "lightly more than $50 for adults and $40 for children (13 to 18 years of age). Johnston said tha coat of the service ls small com¬ pared to what comparable ser¬ vices would cost ln a doctor's Tha testing unit will be behind tbe Keats Campus Building on March 14 and IS. Testing boars are from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on March 14 and 9 a.m. to noon on ~Mareb IS. Testing ls by appointment only. To make ■ 487-2068 b
Object Description
Title | 1975_03 The Daily Collegian March 1975 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1975 |
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 | March 12, 1975 Pg. 4- March 13, 1975 Pg. 1 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1975 |
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 | 4-THE DAILY COLLEGIAN r, March 12, 1975 ON CAMPUS WORLD NEWS IN BRIEF Dr. Demetrl Kenallakos will lecture on •Psychopsyslology and ss* In CU 312-314 at UPC department represent: lives will meet at noon In tl Collegiate Room. •La Cenerentola* will be l sented through Saturday in Little Theatre at 1:15 p.m. THURSDAY The Academic Policy and PI ilng Committee will meet In T at 2:15 p.m. Union will sponsor The San Joaquin Valley Export- Import Association will hold an International credit and finance seminar In CU 309 from 10 a.m. •Horse Feathers" and *The Producers* will be shown In the College Union Lounge at 8 p.m. Hen Cackle Inn will feature Kenny Hall In the College Union Coffee Shop from « p.m. 1111 midnight. Admission Is $1. Andy Goldner of UC Davis will Health Organisation |n CU 319 from 4 to 5 p.m He wtll speak on minority admission and recnilt- (Contlnued from Page 1) President Lon Nol. *12S MILLION Tb'AID CAMBODIA - a Senate foreign relations subcommittee voted Tuesday to grant $125 million additional military assistance to Cambodia, but a House subcommittee was reportedly deadlocked over the Issue and postponed further action until today The $125 million Is a compromise from the $222 million originally requested by President Ford. PLATO 11 sy Engr. E 124. nclude a demonslratl lassroom at 10:10 a lng U.S. diplomatic posts In picked an additional 344 elite m extended to an additional 27 p Africa, Saigon and Buenos Aire College Union positions open Positions are still open on th College Union Board for next se mester and on the Program Com mtttee. The Board governs a: College Union Affairs :ountrles. The Marine Corps haj mmissloned officers for this duty 1,489. Marine protection is being , principally In the Middle East, WORLD CAMPUS .AFLOAT Sexuality courses are still growing students should tie taucht urally defined." Llskey One of Llskey's methods ol role stereotypes cause rernlng sexuality is the usi Jlerns about what men are guest speakers. ! to be and women are They Include a homosex real stereotypes.* he prostitute. The rlass also speakers on abortion and orga a lop- nen In the class. Llskey said he ls glad t ourxe Is so popular pointingc The bill, which passed Ih OPEN DAILY 2 pm — 9 pm FREEMAN'S ARCADE 2371 E. SHAW SPECIAL! EXTRA MOWf urro $13 Mst ¥ WANTED A LIVE SALESPERSON to sell advertising in i THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, j XEROX COPIES NO MINIMUM ORDER COPY SHOP 2135 AMADOR PH. 237-8108 February, with the ship your classroom and the ditedstudy with fascinating visits to the fa¬ bled pr— -"•— - "■ Africa. and the Americas. Over 10, 000 undergraduates Iron- sailed with WCA them! Financial al able. Write today catalog. WOLi Wanted: Female attendant to live in with disabled woman near campus. Contact Weldon Percy 487-2741. LOOKING FOR A CHANGE? NOW..he Friendly People Congregate W "For oGrvof runt" £ . - A fOIlWAFTEJRf Insight and MECHA will meet after protest By Wayne Welch Collegian Staff Writer Barry Wong, co-editor of the journalism Department's Insight newspaper, ts scheduled to meet with MECHA representatives at noon today'followlngWednesday's picketing ol the newspaper office ny ihe Chicano student organlza- The picket was the result of a tour-week long confrontation be¬ tween the two organizations over' j story' and photographic layout which appeared In the Feb. 19 issue of Insight and the subse¬ quent editorial battle concerning Both Wong and Catallno urques, president of MECHA, ...reed that the meeting would be •t e start of a moreposttlverela- ■So far, almost everything said .1. both sides has been nega- I think most of that ls of our systems," Wong said 1 he felt the neettng would I ?sults of •highly ummentlng on whether Insight i m ECHA would begin working i irore positive level Jacques tbout 110 people, mostofthem icano students, formed In the 'o Speech Area at noon dnesday then marched on the tght offices located In the up- level of the Business Btilld- rhay first marched ln a circle side the building for several nutes before going upstairs and m the hallway past Insight hroughout the hour-long pro- t they chanted "down wllh lu¬ lu." and carried placards idlng "Chlcanos condemn In- M ■ "insight ts on the white .- and several other slogans, rhe article and photo essay t: sparked the disagreement - titled "Alcohol: an escape." k-picted the life of several urtedly indigent and liquor ta of the Plne- luwever, a front page picture ■ ting readers to the article I [tiotographs read 'thepeople considered a slur against theen- tlre Plnedale community. One of the writers Identified herself as a Plnedale resident. A four word reply from tha editors read, *Our mistake. Our apologtes.* Insight later received a letter from Mike Vlllanueva, chairman of the PtnedaleCommunltyCoun- cll, accepting the apology. However,it apparently was not enough to satisfy everyone of¬ fended by tbe .story arid photos. A letter from MECHA ap¬ peared ln The Dally Collegian on Feb. 28. It labeled tbe Insight article,as a "sick type of satir¬ ical humor . . .» "The article Is an Injustice to Chlcanos who make up 49 per cent of Plnedale's population and also perpetuates the stereotypes of the 'careless sleeping Mexi¬ can,' " the letter read. , Pointing out that the apology was not given 'maximum vlst- * blllty," MECHA said the regret would not suffice. A nearly Identical letter ap¬ peared In the March 5 Issue of Insight, along with two editorials' and a cartoon concerning the dis¬ agreement. sight Staff, described the 'Chi¬ cano community" as "super¬ sensitive* and said the apology was sufficient. ■The signers (of the MECHA letter) are overreacting. No slur against the Chicano community was Intended. While the rest- dents of Plnedale have a right to complain, the Chicano community of CSUF does not . . .the apology already made Is enough,* the editorial read. tank pointed at a building which had tho words Insight written The second editorial, signed hy Woijg, said the Insight photogra¬ phy staff was "beyond compro¬ mise" and that the paper 'does not submit to threats from any quarter." The remark was apparently ln response to MECHA's warning' ould " accomplish their goal If "re¬ medial actions" were not taken. Other means apparently meant a picket tee. •We warned to let the rest of the student body know how we WORLD NEWS IN BRIEF i.oOD FRIDAY CLOSING ILLEGAL - the state Court of Appeals ■.••J yesterday that the three-hour closing of state offices on Good lav is illegal. The three-judge court, in a unanimous decision, i ■'! that the closing was an 'excessive government entanglement ' religion." * : i the past, state employes have .been granted time off on Good inlay with pay. The state estimated the cost at $816,167 per hour. /IFGLER QUITS - former White House Press Secretary Ronald it-eler has canceled hts campus lecture series, according to Wash- •ton sources. Zlegler Is reported to have canceled because he did " want io be on the "Watergate speaking circuit." I \ WIFE GETS STATE CAB - Assemblyman, Ken Meade (D- Jiland) has been ordered to get the state-leased car he loaned his <-wife In Kansas, back to California ln one week. Meade said It made sense for him to drive the family sports car "1 lei his wife and two children drive the larger state car. How-" ■er, Assembly Speaker Leo McCarthy called the Incident "an stans PLEADS GUILTY — Maurice Stans, former Secretary of immerce. pleaded guilty Wednesday to five violations of campaign i''ws ln 1972. Stans was the third Nixon Cabinet member to be con- icted of a federal crime. Stans said he thought he waa following the. ]"w when he committed the five acts. SECRET PEPPERDtXE Fl'ND - top Pepperdlne University of¬ ficials were paid J247,100. from a secret fund between 1968 and 1973. the Sacramento Bee reported Wednesday. Pepperdlne funneled the money through a dummy organization to compensate then-President Norvel Young,ln lieu of retirementbene- •its. The money was glventoYoung.whols now chancellor, president William Banowsky and three other Pepperdlne administrators. RAISES DELAYED - Merced elementary school teachers voted Tuesday to support a recommendation that salaries for 10 flrst-yaar 'owners receive priority over raises for all Instructors.The school administrators had said there might not be enough money to gira all felt,* said Grace Soils, vice stratlon. "We are here to make was «»0r the people of Plnedale president and spokesperson for ' them aware that we are not happy who the slur was against,* not the Chicano group. wllh that (Feb. 26) apology.* MECHA. •We don't expect another apol- Audrte Klug, Insight cc-edltor, Commencing on whether there ogy,* she said during thedemon- said the apology that was made (Continued on Page 8, Col. 1) I THUFISDAY, MARCH 13t I97S OLLEGrlAN CALIFORNIA1 STATE UNIVERSITY, FRESNO ■ v- ; •* Senate endorses liquor sales; resolution awaits Trustees' OK By Alan Arakelian Collegian Staff Writer The Student Senate yesterday approved a resolution endorsing the sale of alcohol^on the CSUF The resolution will he sent to President Norman Baxter, the Board of Directors and the Board of Trustees. The resolution, which was sub¬ mitted hy the Legal Committee, had a clause struck from It which expressed the opinion that con¬ trols on the amount of beer sold should be constructed If sale be¬ comes legal. The clause was struck from the resolution because the wording was somewhat confusing. It led senate members to believe that students participating In tha pro¬ posed sale would be labeled.as alcoholics hy the wording ot the clause, the senate aald. The senate gave the Music De¬ partment approval to go lo the Finance Committee and ask for $400 lo help pay for a musical recording by CSUF music ma- The recording Is not for money-making purposes but rather for publicity for CSUF. The agreement is that the senate will get Its money back If the record makes enough to make lt possible. In the past, CSUF's recordings have not broken even with tbe amount expended for pro- The proposed revisions of the Senate Election Code will be ana¬ lyzed by the senate next week. Some members said they wish to change a rule which makes It mandatory for a student to have attended CSUF for at least one semester before being eligible for nomination as a senator, president or vice-president. The senate turned down a bid by President Pro TemCruzBus- ' tamante to Increase Ida pay by $ ltxTfor the remaining two months The senate learned that Presi¬ dent Norman Baxter had approved the new Associated Student Con¬ stitution which was sent to him last week after the senate ap¬ proved It. Tbe Constitution will be voted on by the students In a referendum next week. If approved by tbe students, tha Constitution wtll make tha senate Independent of tbe Board ot Di¬ rectors of tha FSC Association under which tbey ara currently operating. Mobile health unit rolls to campus A mobile health .testing'pro¬ gram will be available to the CSUF faculty, student body and their families (agur 13 and above) on Friday and Saturday. The service Isbelngsponsored by the United Professors of call- forniaCUPC). According lo Gerald Johnston, president of the UPC Fresno chapter and an accounting prpfessor, -tbe Individuals par¬ ticipating will be tested In over SO medical areas In the modern mobile testing unit. The unit wtll be staffed with registered nurses and physician- trained technicians. The lime needed for testing ls between 30 and 40 minutes. With the use of sophisticated biolnstrumentatlon and com¬ puters, the staff will attempt to detect Information which will help the Individual's physician locate disorders. The service will pro¬ vide doctors with only background and laboratory Information. Within three weeks after the tests are given a full computer report and the results will be sent to tha patient's doctor. The data can assist the physician tn, detecting heart disease, cancer,! liver disorders and kidney dls- \ orders, lung dtsaasa and other disorders. According to Johnston, the ser¬ vice was originally meant to In¬ clude only CSUF faculty but waa and families. The cost of the service la "lightly more than $50 for adults and $40 for children (13 to 18 years of age). Johnston said tha coat of the service ls small com¬ pared to what comparable ser¬ vices would cost ln a doctor's Tha testing unit will be behind tbe Keats Campus Building on March 14 and IS. Testing boars are from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on March 14 and 9 a.m. to noon on ~Mareb IS. Testing ls by appointment only. To make ■ 487-2068 b |