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Page 4 The Collegian Tuesday, February 9, 1965 agrlcultur Employment with California! State Government as a Junlorr Marketing Specialist. $486 to! start, raises to $536. Pro- nal opportunities. Apply by: FEBRUARY 11,1965 Official application forms ivaUable from your Place- nent Office; or State Person¬ al Board, 801 Capitol Mall, Sacramento, California 95814. Telephone: 445-3033 Convenience Furn. Apts.—2 t S35 a person nex STUDENTS! If you live ln an apartment or close by and can make a few evening appoint¬ ments, you can earn up to $5.00 per hour taking orders ron products. Call 2GC- 5036 for private Interview, or :e 906 No. Clark Ave. FOR RENT OR LEASE Ished house 2 blocks from $68 per month. Phone SWIMMING POOL Furnished 4 & 5 bedro apartments. 237-5000,291 < Early Typewriter Most People NEW YORK (UPI) — ' CLEVELAND, Ohio (UPI) — Cleveland's Municipal Stadium as 1714, according to Encyclo- has the major league's largest pedla International. In that year, seating capacity with 73,811. Queen Anne of England granted a patent to Henry MU1 for t vice to reproduce letters o alphabet *so neat and exact as tc HARTWICKS TEXACO >t be distinguished from print." ■*<» Specialize In W : practical typewriter |Tune-up And Complete Break Bulldogs ,15-5, face road trip By bob McCarthy Fresno State College's high scoring Bulldogs, unbeatable at home but only so-so on the road, wUl Journey to the southland this weekend for a pair of games which could write finis to the California Collegiate Athletic Association championship race. Coach Harry MUler's nation¬ ally eighth ranked quintet will face Los Angeles State Friday night and San Fernando VaUey State Saturday night ln its most Important road tests of tho sea- CCAA Fresno St: champion for the past Uiree; once again Is leading tho confer¬ ence with a 4-1 record, but Los Angeles State, San Fernando, and San Diego State are right be¬ hind with 3-2 marks. WhUo the Bulldogs have en¬ joyed the home court advantage to much success, winning on the road ls another matter. All five Bulldog feats this season were Inflicted away from the friend¬ ly confines of the FSC gym. Coach Bob Oldham's Dlablos CHARTER FLIGHT TO EUROPE $38980 [2 Los Angeles to London Sept. 11 SIERRA TRAVEL OF BEVERLY 9875 Santa Monica Blvd. BR 2 ENJOY. . . ENJOY. spacious, well-designed, 3-bedroom, 2-bath apartments. Fully furnished; draped; wall-to- wall carpets; each apartment Individually air- condltloned. ENJOY. ENJOY. co-educational st $3750 per month, p ENFIELD APARTMENTS 1124 N.Pierce Corner Barstow East of the College Towards Clovis..Ph 299-4076 rebounded from a pair of early season CCAA losses and whipped Long Beach State, San Fernan¬ do, and San Diego State In their last three outings. LA State also counts non conference wins ov¬ er the likes of Colorado State, Boston CoUege and Arizona State. Even more Important ls Uie fact that both Uie Dlablos and San Fernando are tough to beat at home. The Matadors, relatively new to the CCAA, have not been beaten In San Fernando this sea- Should the Bulldogs sweep both games, Miller's cagers wUl be In excellent position to wrap up the league crown. Fresno State's final three CCAA encounters In¬ clude home contests with Long Beach and San Diego, plus a road match with Cal Poly In San Luis Obispo. The Bulldogs Increased their season mark to 15-5 Saturday night with a hard earned 80 to 69 verdict over the Cal Poly (Pomona) Broncos before an¬ other capacity crowd ln Uie FSC gym. Cal Poly upended Fresno In the NCAA college division playoffs last season. Miller's sharpshooters drilled 77 per cent of their shots ln the second half to overwhelm Uie Broncos . John Bocko, enjoying his best shooting night since Uie last University of Nevada en¬ counter, Uireaded 25 points whUe senior scoring ace Maurice Tal- Autographs WASHINGTON (UPI)—Ameri¬ can autograph collectors gen¬ erally are willing to pay more for George Washington's handwriting than that of any other President, says the National Geographic So¬ ciety. A four-page letter, written by Washington in 1776 to his cousin Lund Washington, sold for $17,000. • Accessories • Lubrication FRESNO. CALIF. CLOVIS "YOUR COLLEGE TOWN" 622 4th Street CY 9-6806 • Machine Shop Service • Napa Jobber L'menbach Auto Parts 604 CLOVIS AVE. aovis, CAUF. We also have a Phone CY 9-4381 YOUR FSC BARBER IN CLOVIS (Emil's Downtown Barber Shop! 423 POUASKY HAIRCUTS $1.75 O.K. TIRE SERVICE QUALITY NEW AND RECAPPED TIRES ARMSTRONG - B. F. Goodrich - Cordovoo FRONT END AND BRAKE SPECIALISTS 723 Clovb Avenue CY 9-oOIQ SHOES AND MEN'S WEAR 44jNjOlto HwwCY9-4430 Ctovb, Coflron*. | general Scjif Werfo Collision Repair • C^dwii rfeivelry. FOR ALL YOUR JEWELRY NEEDS FREE GIFT WRAPPING Former AMA head *.p»nL-« | Dr. Annis slaps medicare bill By GARY WASHBURN made a dual Ulustratlon of car and fire Insurance. expect an insurance rar everything,* Dr. 'For example, I have I and hurricane Insurance on home ln Florida. During the past ten years, THIS IS OUTSIDE. And Inside It*! goes on ln Uie Bookstore. Page by Dave Allen. Birch member IFC asks rushees to register •H i- i — Medicare was challenged and Uie American Medical At tlon's Insurance program ... elderly was presented ln a speech fir before 60 students and faculty mj members In the Little Theatre yesterday. we Dr. Edward R. Annls, who the resides ln Miami Florida, when hai he Isn't stomping Uie country to re- campaign against government ha! healUilnsurance for Uie elderly, ' outlined tho progress of science ""fed, and medicine during the past sur 26 years. minor aUments and annual mod- As he approached the crucial leal checkups. It would simply question of current medicare be too costly.* proposals before Congress, he Dr. Annls launched a dual ot- i Insurance. However, I have I to repaint, re-carpet, and ■furnish my home. Insurance i covered none of this. 'By the same token,* he add- •we can't expect health ln- tack will speak here The Student Political Education ' and Ulustrated, 1) How nci-r-MUls ls currenUy doing an adequate Job, and 2), How Uie AMA sponsored Doctor's Elder Care plan would provide fc men students Interested ln ncsday and Friday nights, Uie Theta Chi, Alpha Gamma Rho •—-•-- m nfrotornif«rt..rf— -—■-- ——-- •• -( Lambda Chi Alpha, -and Sigma Chi fraternities « rushing a fraternity during spring Sigma asked by Inter-Frater- 1 'needy* among citizens 65 yi Into the Activities Office. Registration cards may 1 talned from any of Uie fri i speech by Ray Barton, a member of the John Birch Society. Barton will speak tomorrow , ehe Actlvl„es of_ in Science 121 at PM con- flce. The applicant must have at- cernlng Pro-American View- tem)ed a( g^ Qne fraternJty points on current Affairs. He nlgh t !? a 11 C^,f I0" Xnlied !£ A studen'' ls e»«lbIe *«• 'ra¬ tions but wUl also discuss do- ernU>. msh „ hfi fcM „ ^ mestlc policies and Internal se- 12 UItfte of coUege cr£Km ^ '"•Members of the John Birch JJJ 0Vera11 grade P0"" aV" ^i1? ^ f de6H T,SB °' stud'en" <"ay attend any house religious beUefs and civic re- ■» sponslbUlty,* ho said. -Pre- Tn?fraiernlUes havebeendlv. senUy we are putting emphasis ...... on attracting youth to our group. ti'ila v, "World wire- Yanks dealt worst defeat in history of Viet war United Press International SAIGON—A series of Communist attacks and ambushes over a 25-mUe front has dealt government troops their worst disaster of Uie war, a U.S. military spokesman said today. He put government losses at more than 300 dead, wounded or missing. The series of coordinated Communist attacks and ambushes be¬ gan at 4 AM Monday In Blnh Dlnh Province 300 mUes north of Saigon. The U.S. mUItary spokesman disclosed the scope of Uie government defeat after 48 hours of official sUence. Expert says state's domestic labor shortage 'virtually impossible' — — -■" or age and older. Kappa Sigma and Delta Sigma hold their parties on Tuesday, -Under current proposals be- Phl fraternities wUl hold their Thursday and Saturday nights. rorc u,,. Congress," Dr. Annls rush parties. On Sunday night students may sai(]i «(h0 medicare bUl would The Sigma Alpha Epsllon, attend the dinner party by lnvlta- ^ inadequate. For example, Uie Ion only. Monday night ls pref- Kerr-MUls BUI now offers un- rence night and Tuesday the bids limited medical coverage. Ill be avaUable ln the Actlvl- .Medicare would Umlt a es Office. patient's stay In a hospital to 60 The fraternities have booths jays.. ln front of the cafe- He added ^^ doctors would st as soon treat tholr patients at home Instead of having them •rusting* In a hospital. To Illustrate Uie potenUal of Kerr-MUls provisions, he re¬ ferred to Uie state of Texas. •Texas now has 440,000 per¬ sons over Uie age of 65 and 229,000 of these are on relief. The state of Texas has taken available Kerr-MUls money and purchased Blue Cross Insurance Powell will head college union board may ob- police will cite any additional Information, Frank V. PoweU, associate n . , , professor ofpsychology.hasbeen UMVerS DeWOre! elected chairman of the reccnUy formed CoUege Union Board. Other faculty members of Uie CUB are President Frederic W. violators todaV Ness and Robert A. Carr, as- T soclate professor of business ad- The camPus police began lssu- mlnlstratlon. Earle Bassett.dlr- ""• cltatl°ns for parking decal ector of related educational act- vlolaU°ns this morning. Ivltles, is a non-voting member. D°uelas Bambrldge, head of the Em_ Student members of Uie board* securltv department, said that so ^''sT'thls 'melJvidM> "h include Gary Ilda, Alan Robert- £ on^ »«"»* «»»» have been cIu(Jed .„„„„,„. iJjL!^ son, Cathy Bauer, Rick Dahlgren lssueti- *"°wevor,* he pointed ^^ J" £JdT and Charles Walla. out, •students have had amPlo Dr. Annls ^ „,, Ca]Ii0rn|a r*_n -*-~~.k.. ... time to nurchase and properly legislature Is currently^** ™. J ... t slderlng a similar plan to that program for *""»nls are warned that they of Toxas ln 0)e CaseyP!UJ'0 "" completion, said , "„_™° "2zftIH V".n fo.r Woven through Uie speech was a theme that Uie elderly clU- zens resent the 'snooping* done by welfare workers into their fin- (Contlnued on page 8) the Union on _ that tho board solicits comments lmPr°Per display of from all Interested faculty mem- The correct Place for th bers. ls 1" the lower right hand of Uie windshield within a Membership is open for frosh Luncheon Club RIVERSIDE- to obtain domestic farm workers as replacements for Mexican Applications for membership n the Freshmen Women's Lunch- n Club are now avaUable in t Governor says professors face additional pay cut SACRAMENTO (UPI)--Gover- I this will require a agricultural banking specialist Tuesday to - -Supervisors It was v^ally Impossible sTudentActlvlUes Office and the ~>r Edmund G. Brown-agreed TW^^'FZ^lSoT. Student President's Office. yesterday that some state college 66 to balance the books. Charles Harman, a vice president of Security First NaUonal Bank . ,'e<}ulremen's tor membership Professors face an additional pay 'Apparently, neither Chancel - Ud Riverside County crops valued at $145 mUUon and Involving !H DOlng a SeCond Wlnes,0r S? "S ?***' S"ld ne hopes tor Glenn s- DumkenorUietrust- ,m» Mn rwi .„„. of farnTland were at Sffi^WlSorSS? tTeShmen "" haVlng aggrade the legislature will remedy the ees have Informed the faculty of crisis. point average. Candidates are situation. U^ latest development,' Stan- Judged on Uie basis of parilclpa- "l really hope Uie legislature ton said. This is consistent with tlon ln campus and community ac- *M take care of ... these col- Mr. Dumke's poUcy of keeping UvlUes. lege professors,* Brown said af- the professors ln the dark on Applications are due Feb. 12. ter being asked to comment on matters affecting their welfare.* a statement Monday from As- The trouble began when the ... semblyman William F. Stanton. coUege administration spent Weather The San Josa Dem°<:rat said more than the legislature had Uie coUege administration's approved on a salary Increase Fair weather through tomor- •blunder,* which caused a 1.8 tor professors. Later, the ln- row- P*"" cent pay cut tor about 3,000 crease was cut back to make up Highs today 52 to 56. professors this year, ls car- tor the deficit. The legislature Lows tonight 24 to 26; Fresno rt«» ever ln tho coUege budget has been asked to approve emer- J9, tor U"6 nel[» 1*cal year. He gency funds to restore the cur. Upon consideration of Uie testimony, supervisors maa w uar. Labor Secretary WUlard Wlrtz to reinstate Uie bracero program which made Mexican nationals avaUable for farm Jobs, Faculty pay cut rumor denied LOS ANGELES—John F. Richardson, vice chancellor for business affairs of the state coUege system, Tuesday denied that state coUege faculties would face additional pay cuts. Richardson said Assemblyman William F. Stanton was 'misin¬ formed* when he said that Gov. Edmund G. Brown's budget request for Uie state colleges was Insufficient to maintain present faculty
Object Description
Title | 1965_02 The Daily Collegian February 1965 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1965 |
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 | Feb 9, 1965 Pg. 4- Feb 10, 1965 Pg. 1 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1965 |
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 | Page 4 The Collegian Tuesday, February 9, 1965 agrlcultur Employment with California! State Government as a Junlorr Marketing Specialist. $486 to! start, raises to $536. Pro- nal opportunities. Apply by: FEBRUARY 11,1965 Official application forms ivaUable from your Place- nent Office; or State Person¬ al Board, 801 Capitol Mall, Sacramento, California 95814. Telephone: 445-3033 Convenience Furn. Apts.—2 t S35 a person nex STUDENTS! If you live ln an apartment or close by and can make a few evening appoint¬ ments, you can earn up to $5.00 per hour taking orders ron products. Call 2GC- 5036 for private Interview, or :e 906 No. Clark Ave. FOR RENT OR LEASE Ished house 2 blocks from $68 per month. Phone SWIMMING POOL Furnished 4 & 5 bedro apartments. 237-5000,291 < Early Typewriter Most People NEW YORK (UPI) — ' CLEVELAND, Ohio (UPI) — Cleveland's Municipal Stadium as 1714, according to Encyclo- has the major league's largest pedla International. In that year, seating capacity with 73,811. Queen Anne of England granted a patent to Henry MU1 for t vice to reproduce letters o alphabet *so neat and exact as tc HARTWICKS TEXACO >t be distinguished from print." ■*<» Specialize In W : practical typewriter |Tune-up And Complete Break Bulldogs ,15-5, face road trip By bob McCarthy Fresno State College's high scoring Bulldogs, unbeatable at home but only so-so on the road, wUl Journey to the southland this weekend for a pair of games which could write finis to the California Collegiate Athletic Association championship race. Coach Harry MUler's nation¬ ally eighth ranked quintet will face Los Angeles State Friday night and San Fernando VaUey State Saturday night ln its most Important road tests of tho sea- CCAA Fresno St: champion for the past Uiree; once again Is leading tho confer¬ ence with a 4-1 record, but Los Angeles State, San Fernando, and San Diego State are right be¬ hind with 3-2 marks. WhUo the Bulldogs have en¬ joyed the home court advantage to much success, winning on the road ls another matter. All five Bulldog feats this season were Inflicted away from the friend¬ ly confines of the FSC gym. Coach Bob Oldham's Dlablos CHARTER FLIGHT TO EUROPE $38980 [2 Los Angeles to London Sept. 11 SIERRA TRAVEL OF BEVERLY 9875 Santa Monica Blvd. BR 2 ENJOY. . . ENJOY. spacious, well-designed, 3-bedroom, 2-bath apartments. Fully furnished; draped; wall-to- wall carpets; each apartment Individually air- condltloned. ENJOY. ENJOY. co-educational st $3750 per month, p ENFIELD APARTMENTS 1124 N.Pierce Corner Barstow East of the College Towards Clovis..Ph 299-4076 rebounded from a pair of early season CCAA losses and whipped Long Beach State, San Fernan¬ do, and San Diego State In their last three outings. LA State also counts non conference wins ov¬ er the likes of Colorado State, Boston CoUege and Arizona State. Even more Important ls Uie fact that both Uie Dlablos and San Fernando are tough to beat at home. The Matadors, relatively new to the CCAA, have not been beaten In San Fernando this sea- Should the Bulldogs sweep both games, Miller's cagers wUl be In excellent position to wrap up the league crown. Fresno State's final three CCAA encounters In¬ clude home contests with Long Beach and San Diego, plus a road match with Cal Poly In San Luis Obispo. The Bulldogs Increased their season mark to 15-5 Saturday night with a hard earned 80 to 69 verdict over the Cal Poly (Pomona) Broncos before an¬ other capacity crowd ln Uie FSC gym. Cal Poly upended Fresno In the NCAA college division playoffs last season. Miller's sharpshooters drilled 77 per cent of their shots ln the second half to overwhelm Uie Broncos . John Bocko, enjoying his best shooting night since Uie last University of Nevada en¬ counter, Uireaded 25 points whUe senior scoring ace Maurice Tal- Autographs WASHINGTON (UPI)—Ameri¬ can autograph collectors gen¬ erally are willing to pay more for George Washington's handwriting than that of any other President, says the National Geographic So¬ ciety. A four-page letter, written by Washington in 1776 to his cousin Lund Washington, sold for $17,000. • Accessories • Lubrication FRESNO. CALIF. CLOVIS "YOUR COLLEGE TOWN" 622 4th Street CY 9-6806 • Machine Shop Service • Napa Jobber L'menbach Auto Parts 604 CLOVIS AVE. aovis, CAUF. We also have a Phone CY 9-4381 YOUR FSC BARBER IN CLOVIS (Emil's Downtown Barber Shop! 423 POUASKY HAIRCUTS $1.75 O.K. TIRE SERVICE QUALITY NEW AND RECAPPED TIRES ARMSTRONG - B. F. Goodrich - Cordovoo FRONT END AND BRAKE SPECIALISTS 723 Clovb Avenue CY 9-oOIQ SHOES AND MEN'S WEAR 44jNjOlto HwwCY9-4430 Ctovb, Coflron*. | general Scjif Werfo Collision Repair • C^dwii rfeivelry. FOR ALL YOUR JEWELRY NEEDS FREE GIFT WRAPPING Former AMA head *.p»nL-« | Dr. Annis slaps medicare bill By GARY WASHBURN made a dual Ulustratlon of car and fire Insurance. expect an insurance rar everything,* Dr. 'For example, I have I and hurricane Insurance on home ln Florida. During the past ten years, THIS IS OUTSIDE. And Inside It*! goes on ln Uie Bookstore. Page by Dave Allen. Birch member IFC asks rushees to register •H i- i — Medicare was challenged and Uie American Medical At tlon's Insurance program ... elderly was presented ln a speech fir before 60 students and faculty mj members In the Little Theatre yesterday. we Dr. Edward R. Annls, who the resides ln Miami Florida, when hai he Isn't stomping Uie country to re- campaign against government ha! healUilnsurance for Uie elderly, ' outlined tho progress of science ""fed, and medicine during the past sur 26 years. minor aUments and annual mod- As he approached the crucial leal checkups. It would simply question of current medicare be too costly.* proposals before Congress, he Dr. Annls launched a dual ot- i Insurance. However, I have I to repaint, re-carpet, and ■furnish my home. Insurance i covered none of this. 'By the same token,* he add- •we can't expect health ln- tack will speak here The Student Political Education ' and Ulustrated, 1) How nci-r-MUls ls currenUy doing an adequate Job, and 2), How Uie AMA sponsored Doctor's Elder Care plan would provide fc men students Interested ln ncsday and Friday nights, Uie Theta Chi, Alpha Gamma Rho •—-•-- m nfrotornif«rt..rf— -—■-- ——-- •• -( Lambda Chi Alpha, -and Sigma Chi fraternities « rushing a fraternity during spring Sigma asked by Inter-Frater- 1 'needy* among citizens 65 yi Into the Activities Office. Registration cards may 1 talned from any of Uie fri i speech by Ray Barton, a member of the John Birch Society. Barton will speak tomorrow , ehe Actlvl„es of_ in Science 121 at PM con- flce. The applicant must have at- cernlng Pro-American View- tem)ed a( g^ Qne fraternJty points on current Affairs. He nlgh t !? a 11 C^,f I0" Xnlied !£ A studen'' ls e»«lbIe *«• 'ra¬ tions but wUl also discuss do- ernU>. msh „ hfi fcM „ ^ mestlc policies and Internal se- 12 UItfte of coUege cr£Km ^ '"•Members of the John Birch JJJ 0Vera11 grade P0"" aV" ^i1? ^ f de6H T,SB °' stud'en" <"ay attend any house religious beUefs and civic re- ■» sponslbUlty,* ho said. -Pre- Tn?fraiernlUes havebeendlv. senUy we are putting emphasis ...... on attracting youth to our group. ti'ila v, "World wire- Yanks dealt worst defeat in history of Viet war United Press International SAIGON—A series of Communist attacks and ambushes over a 25-mUe front has dealt government troops their worst disaster of Uie war, a U.S. military spokesman said today. He put government losses at more than 300 dead, wounded or missing. The series of coordinated Communist attacks and ambushes be¬ gan at 4 AM Monday In Blnh Dlnh Province 300 mUes north of Saigon. The U.S. mUItary spokesman disclosed the scope of Uie government defeat after 48 hours of official sUence. Expert says state's domestic labor shortage 'virtually impossible' — — -■" or age and older. Kappa Sigma and Delta Sigma hold their parties on Tuesday, -Under current proposals be- Phl fraternities wUl hold their Thursday and Saturday nights. rorc u,,. Congress," Dr. Annls rush parties. On Sunday night students may sai(]i «(h0 medicare bUl would The Sigma Alpha Epsllon, attend the dinner party by lnvlta- ^ inadequate. For example, Uie Ion only. Monday night ls pref- Kerr-MUls BUI now offers un- rence night and Tuesday the bids limited medical coverage. Ill be avaUable ln the Actlvl- .Medicare would Umlt a es Office. patient's stay In a hospital to 60 The fraternities have booths jays.. ln front of the cafe- He added ^^ doctors would st as soon treat tholr patients at home Instead of having them •rusting* In a hospital. To Illustrate Uie potenUal of Kerr-MUls provisions, he re¬ ferred to Uie state of Texas. •Texas now has 440,000 per¬ sons over Uie age of 65 and 229,000 of these are on relief. The state of Texas has taken available Kerr-MUls money and purchased Blue Cross Insurance Powell will head college union board may ob- police will cite any additional Information, Frank V. PoweU, associate n . , , professor ofpsychology.hasbeen UMVerS DeWOre! elected chairman of the reccnUy formed CoUege Union Board. Other faculty members of Uie CUB are President Frederic W. violators todaV Ness and Robert A. Carr, as- T soclate professor of business ad- The camPus police began lssu- mlnlstratlon. Earle Bassett.dlr- ""• cltatl°ns for parking decal ector of related educational act- vlolaU°ns this morning. Ivltles, is a non-voting member. D°uelas Bambrldge, head of the Em_ Student members of Uie board* securltv department, said that so ^''sT'thls 'melJvidM> "h include Gary Ilda, Alan Robert- £ on^ »«"»* «»»» have been cIu(Jed .„„„„,„. iJjL!^ son, Cathy Bauer, Rick Dahlgren lssueti- *"°wevor,* he pointed ^^ J" £JdT and Charles Walla. out, •students have had amPlo Dr. Annls ^ „,, Ca]Ii0rn|a r*_n -*-~~.k.. ... time to nurchase and properly legislature Is currently^** ™. J ... t slderlng a similar plan to that program for *""»nls are warned that they of Toxas ln 0)e CaseyP!UJ'0 "" completion, said , "„_™° "2zftIH V".n fo.r Woven through Uie speech was a theme that Uie elderly clU- zens resent the 'snooping* done by welfare workers into their fin- (Contlnued on page 8) the Union on _ that tho board solicits comments lmPr°Per display of from all Interested faculty mem- The correct Place for th bers. ls 1" the lower right hand of Uie windshield within a Membership is open for frosh Luncheon Club RIVERSIDE- to obtain domestic farm workers as replacements for Mexican Applications for membership n the Freshmen Women's Lunch- n Club are now avaUable in t Governor says professors face additional pay cut SACRAMENTO (UPI)--Gover- I this will require a agricultural banking specialist Tuesday to - -Supervisors It was v^ally Impossible sTudentActlvlUes Office and the ~>r Edmund G. Brown-agreed TW^^'FZ^lSoT. Student President's Office. yesterday that some state college 66 to balance the books. Charles Harman, a vice president of Security First NaUonal Bank . ,'e<}ulremen's tor membership Professors face an additional pay 'Apparently, neither Chancel - Ud Riverside County crops valued at $145 mUUon and Involving !H DOlng a SeCond Wlnes,0r S? "S ?***' S"ld ne hopes tor Glenn s- DumkenorUietrust- ,m» Mn rwi .„„. of farnTland were at Sffi^WlSorSS? tTeShmen "" haVlng aggrade the legislature will remedy the ees have Informed the faculty of crisis. point average. Candidates are situation. U^ latest development,' Stan- Judged on Uie basis of parilclpa- "l really hope Uie legislature ton said. This is consistent with tlon ln campus and community ac- *M take care of ... these col- Mr. Dumke's poUcy of keeping UvlUes. lege professors,* Brown said af- the professors ln the dark on Applications are due Feb. 12. ter being asked to comment on matters affecting their welfare.* a statement Monday from As- The trouble began when the ... semblyman William F. Stanton. coUege administration spent Weather The San Josa Dem°<:rat said more than the legislature had Uie coUege administration's approved on a salary Increase Fair weather through tomor- •blunder,* which caused a 1.8 tor professors. Later, the ln- row- P*"" cent pay cut tor about 3,000 crease was cut back to make up Highs today 52 to 56. professors this year, ls car- tor the deficit. The legislature Lows tonight 24 to 26; Fresno rt«» ever ln tho coUege budget has been asked to approve emer- J9, tor U"6 nel[» 1*cal year. He gency funds to restore the cur. Upon consideration of Uie testimony, supervisors maa w uar. Labor Secretary WUlard Wlrtz to reinstate Uie bracero program which made Mexican nationals avaUable for farm Jobs, Faculty pay cut rumor denied LOS ANGELES—John F. Richardson, vice chancellor for business affairs of the state coUege system, Tuesday denied that state coUege faculties would face additional pay cuts. Richardson said Assemblyman William F. Stanton was 'misin¬ formed* when he said that Gov. Edmund G. Brown's budget request for Uie state colleges was Insufficient to maintain present faculty |