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Page 2 The Collegian Thursday, February 18,1965 Thursday, February 18,4965 The Collegian Page 3 T"Ioe Needle It was the social event of the year, my dears. All simply ALL of Uie Student Leaders were there ('Scotty' WUson, Earl Whltfleld.) The function was a Unnor (orlupper.lfyou prefer) at the homo of President Ness. A llnner(lupper)ls, of course, an afternoon brunch. The President's home ls tastefully furnished with... oh, rugs, and chairs and things. Lupper (Unner) was tastefully furnished by Mrs. Ness. The college president has been distastefully furnished with table¬ ware by Uie Association or Foundation or possibly Uie P.E. depart¬ ment. There are glasses with the FSC seal (arf! arf!) and there arc For those of you whose student leading ls limited to being Uie first one out of class when the bell rings and who have slim, If any, hopes of ever dining with the President, let me describe these Painted a tlred-sweatshlrt maroon (closely allied tobarf-brown), Uie china Is bordered with representations of FSC athletes In action (perspiring into your vegetables.) At the top ls a reminder that Fresno State ls 'Home of uie West Coast Relays,* although now that the coUege no longer owns Ratcllffe Stadium, home ls where you hang your hat. In Uie middle of the plate ls pictured a truly formidable bulldog, which should al least dissuade diners from Insisting upon thirds, Heartwarming scene will aid association Scene: A number of golf courses ln uie Fresno area. Swoosh...Craack (enter gclf (Enter FSC coed) 'You did lt! You did 111 A hole In one!* This heartwarming little scene may be enacted during Uie hole- ln-one tournament sponsored by uie Fresno County Heart Associ¬ ation. One of uie more enjoyable means of contributing to a worth¬ while charity, the tournament allows Fresno golfers to donate a $1 entry fee for the 18-hole tourn¬ ament on allofthecoursosexcept Fort Washington and a $.50 fee a designated short hole at each of the participating clubs: Fort Washington and Riverside golf clubs, Saturday, Feb. 20 and 21, and Belmont, Fig Garden, and mpus vignettes—that ls, vignettes of the City San Joaquin golf clubs, Saturday, "When IFC says 'no wet rushir they mean it." College campus. So, considering that we no longer h: playhouse or administration building, nordo wo own the stadium. It only thing that really represents the college as lt Is today are Ui cows grazing along the bottom. Or arc they steers? Anyway, my dears, it was a lovely afternoon and we only hope th Nesses, being such nice people, have their own china for those oc caslons when Uie house Is not full of Student Leaders. Feb. 27 ai 28. 'Instructor cooperates FSC today Deadline nears for Tokalon bids Applications are due tomor¬ row for membership ln Toka¬ lon, honorary upper division wo¬ men's service organization. Ap¬ plications are available Ln the Student Activities office. To be eligible for membership an applicant must have completed Forum will begin tonight The Catholic inquiry Forum, taught by FaUior Sergio Negro, will begin tonight at the New¬ man Conler, 1572 E. Barstow, Where does the campus culle come ln? A (very) small gallery of (3) girls wUl attend the short holes, registering the partici¬ pants' names and donations, and verifying and recording holes ln Coeds are working through Triple *S* and SWAG, and the co-chairmen are their fall pres¬ idents Joan Pflueger and Pamela 45 t i of ( lege v and non-Catholic adults. Registration for the class be hold tonight at tho first rr have a 2.7 grade point average. Home Ec Club A Dessert Day wUl bo held by the Home Economics Club today at 1 PM ln Art-Homo The d( Economics 118. at the It wUl be a welcoming hour Fob. 20. for new students who want to Only i Join Uie club and for club mom- accepted bers. There wUl bo games and register refreshments. Deadline is set for text refunds Rally committee open from from 1 to Friday. A Monday through manda- schedulod for ioday at 1 PM ln S-121, at which tho hole-ln- one helpers will learn of their assignments. Any girls who would UK- to participate ln Ihe event are urged to attend, and FSC golfers are reminded that the tournaments SIS coffee hour Service for International Stu¬ dents (SIS) wUl hold an Interna¬ tional coffee hour today from 2- 4 PM ln the committee room of the cafeteria. All foreign students are urged of the spring semester today at 1 PM ln Educational-Psychology 119. The public ls Invited. Kappa Delta Pi Kappa Delta PI, honorary ed¬ ucational society, wUl meet to¬ night at 7 o'clock ln Uie Labora¬ tory School Library. ^Ala'S CHEVRON SERVICE • Accessories # Lubrication We Give BLUE CHIP STAMPS 4797 E. Clinton at Chestnut FRESNO. CALIF. The Collegian Published Ave days a week except holidays : periods by the Fresno State College Association. MaU sub¬ scriptions $8.00 a semester, $15.00 a year. Editorial office Business 235, telephone 222-51G1, Exl. 441,444,448. Business office Agriculture 220, telephone 222-5161, oxt. 256. A E. WALLACE David Gunter Bob McCarthy Eva Altlntop Day managing editors „ Doug DeLay, Pattye Opdykc, Jim Tucker. Reporters- Gary' Daloyan, MUe Delacruz, Frank Donobedlan, Nlkkl Hoffman, Jeanne Johns, Doug Krlkorlan, Bob McCallum, Dave Paclieco, Darlene Samuelson, Miles Shuper, John Van Horn, Gary Washburn, Jan WUUams. Editor: The following suggested cate¬ gories are offered to assist SPEAC ln their projected faculty and class evaluation sheet. 1. Assignments: Be realists; library and term^papers with their proper word limits are more Important than anything else. This ls more Important than the general examinations ln the course because these entail a proper amount of outside hours designed to supplement class¬ room lectures. Are papers avaUable ln the field? How lazy ls the instructor? Does he check papers ln the li¬ brary? Does he check out foot¬ notes? Does he read English? Can he write English himself? 2. Exams: List amount of es¬ say and objective tests. Indicate whether Instructor repeats examinations (especially Impor¬ tant for physical sciences, ge¬ ography, etc.) j Are exams readily available or limited to fraternity files? (In which case non-Greeks cawe.) Does Instructor have a reader? Who Is the reader? Approachabll- lty of reader? Beer capacity of •fashioned previous teacherorstudent'sown Inadequacies? Is Uie Instructor sympathetic? Is the Instructor nice? Is he a good Joe? Does the student really feel that he has a big brother or does the professor believe his Job to be the effective communication of knowledge? How many A's does he give out ln a semester? How many F's? WUl he sign a drop list hristflns£n o believe that thest eived his initial potty- In the home; does In- fully spoon-feed loc- r ls student expected to tangents that arc Interesting and away from subject which ls dull? Indicate classes to take during tors believe national politics more meaningful than classroom Intent, therefore use pulpit prlv- Uege. Can unread assignments be twisted Into restatement of favor¬ ite political philosophies or here- 4. Instructors: What are In¬ structor's poUtlcs? Does the In¬ structor tolerate Ignorance? Does he blame lack of prepara- A Cooperative Faculty Member Special workshop for graphic aids will start tonight 1 Dr. Leonard Bathurst, coord- center at Fresno State College, will offer a special one-month elementary education workshop In planning and developing graphic Instructional materials starting tonight at 7 o'clock ln the Robinson School ln Fresno. The course, Elementary Edu¬ cation 138, Elementary Educa¬ tion Workshop, will be offered from 7 to 10 PM Wednesdays through March 17. The class ls open to all teachers, and no pre-reglstratlon ls required. Registration for the course ls set for the first meeting tonight. • for 1) will 1. OR NEW GEORGE'S SHOE REPAIRING 4061 E. ASHLAN Ashlan Park Shopping Center 227-7576 OLD WE'LL PARK IT FOR YOU AIRPORT PARKING COMPANY OF CALIFORNIA FRESNO AIR ' TERMINAL Uphold upholds books lZ:°d^ «-'""-' as answer to problems A discussion of the book, The tlngulsh Climate Of Faith In Modern Lit- from the erature by Nathan Scott, was sented by Dr. WUUam Uphold, rent Insinuation Uiat ordained minister and associate does not have a Christian professor of English and phUoso- •Either a : Uie College Religious Dr. Uphold was Uie first speak¬ er at Cross-Currents, College Y lecture series. Dr. Uphold pointed out that this been written lately which attempt leave to define the relationship between ware Christianity and modern lltera- round faculty recital will be pre- Stgma Delta Chi, men's pro- senlod "^W a» 1 PM ln the fesslonal JournaUsm society, wUl rental hall of the Music Build- meet at 6 PM ln Business 242 ln«- le religion of Jesus has somehow become Irrelevant to discuss a campus wide photo slx numbers of Uie faculty am the religion about Jesus. to advise men about very lmpor- contest and uie SDX regional muslc department will perform He also pointed out the recur- tant Issues.* conference scheduled for April •» '">• rec"al **»<* ls spon- Dr. Uphold concluded by say- on campus. sored by uie Board of Fine Arts, g, "If we are Interested ln jim Tucker, SDX president, u wJU •* OP6" ,0 faculty and criticized, coming to grips with real prob- announced that committees wlU s,uden's without charge. Recital a perfect right lems, with real people, and with be asked to give progress re- Performing will be Dr. Arthur of man's most viable, although Inadequate, solu- ports on Uie photo contest. Bryon, professor of music; Phy- >r Christianity lions, then we may well turn to Ills Irwin, assistant professor of the literature of our day for music; Russell Rowland, pro- help.* fessor of music. t hall n rounds their everyday life where- over they might be. •As a percussionist ln a high school band, my enthusiasm for contemporary music was spurred re. First, modern by the fact that the most lnter- wrlters who are Christians ln the estlng drum parts ln band music formal sense: T.S. Elliot, Auden, consistently wore Uie work of Fry, andGrahamGroene.Modern modern composers,*reportedA- writers who are not Christians mlrkhanlan. but make hearty use of Christian 'Since the realm of pcrcus- s, such as William Gold- sion sounds (anything one can i powerful strike) ls Infinite, my develop- in of original sin In Lord ment Into the exploration of new Of The Files. Men who are Chris- uses for common sounds was I tlan ln spirit even If not Chris- - ■ tlan ln content. Fourth are those writers whose Ideas come not dlrecUy out of tho Christian faith but from modern literature and can be helpful to the man of faith, such as Camus's emphasis on In¬ tegrity and authenticity or Kaf¬ ka's emphasis on Irrational guUt. Fifth are Uie spokesmen for Christianity like John Killlnger who hold Uiat modern literature ls far more apt at describing man's predicament than ln show¬ ing a redemption. In his critique of the book he lt unpub] stated that one may be critical of brary S( Its faUure to distinguish beliefs ]ogued . and faiths, and Us faUure to dls- wnicn m •Also,* he said, 'this Inter¬ est has been kindled by the re¬ cent avaUablllty of many phon¬ ograph records and scores of classical and avant-garde per- All of Amlrkhanlan's composi¬ tions are being sent to uie World Library of Percussion Music at Arizona Stale University. The professor ln charge of this library ls attempting to gath- is vacation for yourself this summer? Call Avon Cosmetics. 266-5030 or write 906 N. Clark Ave. FOR SALE—'55 Ford convert. Auto trans, pr. brakes, com. kit, excel, top, vinyl uphol¬ stery. Fine Transp. car $250. 227-6764. first composl- was Fazool r, a percus- qulntet written ln 1961. 1962 he composed a so- qulntet which received first I ln a muslctontest. ! mentioned to a local hat he was working on for Four Base Drums, nposslble—too io be one of iful compositions and was well received by a lo¬ cal audience,* he said. Amlrkhanlan's Trio No. 2, ded¬ icated to President Frederic W. Ness, was presented earlier this year at a recital ln honor of Dr. Ness who, along with vice- president Dallas Tueller, ls him¬ self a member of Phi Mu Alpha Slnfonla. The highlight of the trio's second movement was per¬ formed on three music stands of varying 20, ls of Blue Key, the E t Fine TRY BEFORE YOU BUY RENTanew Oltpnpia, precision -buitt portable ..* 7~°~ ... up to 3 months rental app STANTON OFFICE MACHINE CO. "when can I interview IBM?' March 4 "for what jobs?" Marketing, Systems Engineering, Customer Engineering The IBM Data Processing Representative is a con¬ sultant to his customers. He demonstrates how customers can achieve better business manage¬ ment and control through data processing. IBM Data Processing Systems Engineers are men and women who study customer requirements in depth, devise an approach, define a preferred machine and operational solution, and help the customer implement the solution. The IBM Customer Engineer is a specialist in pre¬ cision data processing machines and systems. He is responsible for installing and maintaining IBM's vast line of electronic and electromechanical. equipment. If you have a major in Liberal Arts, Engineering, the Sciences, or Business Administration, discover what kinds of work IBM has to offer. IBM is an Equal Opportunity Employer. There are challenging assignments in more than 200salesand service offices located coast tocoast. See your placement office for our brochures—and' an appointment with the IBM interviewers. If you cannot attend the interviews, write or visit the nearest IBM office. W. Russell Branch Manager 1821 Fulton St. Fresno, California 93716 IBM DATA PROCESSING
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 18, 1965 Pg. 2-3 |
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 2 The Collegian Thursday, February 18,1965 Thursday, February 18,4965 The Collegian Page 3 T"Ioe Needle It was the social event of the year, my dears. All simply ALL of Uie Student Leaders were there ('Scotty' WUson, Earl Whltfleld.) The function was a Unnor (orlupper.lfyou prefer) at the homo of President Ness. A llnner(lupper)ls, of course, an afternoon brunch. The President's home ls tastefully furnished with... oh, rugs, and chairs and things. Lupper (Unner) was tastefully furnished by Mrs. Ness. The college president has been distastefully furnished with table¬ ware by Uie Association or Foundation or possibly Uie P.E. depart¬ ment. There are glasses with the FSC seal (arf! arf!) and there arc For those of you whose student leading ls limited to being Uie first one out of class when the bell rings and who have slim, If any, hopes of ever dining with the President, let me describe these Painted a tlred-sweatshlrt maroon (closely allied tobarf-brown), Uie china Is bordered with representations of FSC athletes In action (perspiring into your vegetables.) At the top ls a reminder that Fresno State ls 'Home of uie West Coast Relays,* although now that the coUege no longer owns Ratcllffe Stadium, home ls where you hang your hat. In Uie middle of the plate ls pictured a truly formidable bulldog, which should al least dissuade diners from Insisting upon thirds, Heartwarming scene will aid association Scene: A number of golf courses ln uie Fresno area. Swoosh...Craack (enter gclf (Enter FSC coed) 'You did lt! You did 111 A hole In one!* This heartwarming little scene may be enacted during Uie hole- ln-one tournament sponsored by uie Fresno County Heart Associ¬ ation. One of uie more enjoyable means of contributing to a worth¬ while charity, the tournament allows Fresno golfers to donate a $1 entry fee for the 18-hole tourn¬ ament on allofthecoursosexcept Fort Washington and a $.50 fee a designated short hole at each of the participating clubs: Fort Washington and Riverside golf clubs, Saturday, Feb. 20 and 21, and Belmont, Fig Garden, and mpus vignettes—that ls, vignettes of the City San Joaquin golf clubs, Saturday, "When IFC says 'no wet rushir they mean it." College campus. So, considering that we no longer h: playhouse or administration building, nordo wo own the stadium. It only thing that really represents the college as lt Is today are Ui cows grazing along the bottom. Or arc they steers? Anyway, my dears, it was a lovely afternoon and we only hope th Nesses, being such nice people, have their own china for those oc caslons when Uie house Is not full of Student Leaders. Feb. 27 ai 28. 'Instructor cooperates FSC today Deadline nears for Tokalon bids Applications are due tomor¬ row for membership ln Toka¬ lon, honorary upper division wo¬ men's service organization. Ap¬ plications are available Ln the Student Activities office. To be eligible for membership an applicant must have completed Forum will begin tonight The Catholic inquiry Forum, taught by FaUior Sergio Negro, will begin tonight at the New¬ man Conler, 1572 E. Barstow, Where does the campus culle come ln? A (very) small gallery of (3) girls wUl attend the short holes, registering the partici¬ pants' names and donations, and verifying and recording holes ln Coeds are working through Triple *S* and SWAG, and the co-chairmen are their fall pres¬ idents Joan Pflueger and Pamela 45 t i of ( lege v and non-Catholic adults. Registration for the class be hold tonight at tho first rr have a 2.7 grade point average. Home Ec Club A Dessert Day wUl bo held by the Home Economics Club today at 1 PM ln Art-Homo The d( Economics 118. at the It wUl be a welcoming hour Fob. 20. for new students who want to Only i Join Uie club and for club mom- accepted bers. There wUl bo games and register refreshments. Deadline is set for text refunds Rally committee open from from 1 to Friday. A Monday through manda- schedulod for ioday at 1 PM ln S-121, at which tho hole-ln- one helpers will learn of their assignments. Any girls who would UK- to participate ln Ihe event are urged to attend, and FSC golfers are reminded that the tournaments SIS coffee hour Service for International Stu¬ dents (SIS) wUl hold an Interna¬ tional coffee hour today from 2- 4 PM ln the committee room of the cafeteria. All foreign students are urged of the spring semester today at 1 PM ln Educational-Psychology 119. The public ls Invited. Kappa Delta Pi Kappa Delta PI, honorary ed¬ ucational society, wUl meet to¬ night at 7 o'clock ln Uie Labora¬ tory School Library. ^Ala'S CHEVRON SERVICE • Accessories # Lubrication We Give BLUE CHIP STAMPS 4797 E. Clinton at Chestnut FRESNO. CALIF. The Collegian Published Ave days a week except holidays : periods by the Fresno State College Association. MaU sub¬ scriptions $8.00 a semester, $15.00 a year. Editorial office Business 235, telephone 222-51G1, Exl. 441,444,448. Business office Agriculture 220, telephone 222-5161, oxt. 256. A E. WALLACE David Gunter Bob McCarthy Eva Altlntop Day managing editors „ Doug DeLay, Pattye Opdykc, Jim Tucker. Reporters- Gary' Daloyan, MUe Delacruz, Frank Donobedlan, Nlkkl Hoffman, Jeanne Johns, Doug Krlkorlan, Bob McCallum, Dave Paclieco, Darlene Samuelson, Miles Shuper, John Van Horn, Gary Washburn, Jan WUUams. Editor: The following suggested cate¬ gories are offered to assist SPEAC ln their projected faculty and class evaluation sheet. 1. Assignments: Be realists; library and term^papers with their proper word limits are more Important than anything else. This ls more Important than the general examinations ln the course because these entail a proper amount of outside hours designed to supplement class¬ room lectures. Are papers avaUable ln the field? How lazy ls the instructor? Does he check papers ln the li¬ brary? Does he check out foot¬ notes? Does he read English? Can he write English himself? 2. Exams: List amount of es¬ say and objective tests. Indicate whether Instructor repeats examinations (especially Impor¬ tant for physical sciences, ge¬ ography, etc.) j Are exams readily available or limited to fraternity files? (In which case non-Greeks cawe.) Does Instructor have a reader? Who Is the reader? Approachabll- lty of reader? Beer capacity of •fashioned previous teacherorstudent'sown Inadequacies? Is Uie Instructor sympathetic? Is the Instructor nice? Is he a good Joe? Does the student really feel that he has a big brother or does the professor believe his Job to be the effective communication of knowledge? How many A's does he give out ln a semester? How many F's? WUl he sign a drop list hristflns£n o believe that thest eived his initial potty- In the home; does In- fully spoon-feed loc- r ls student expected to tangents that arc Interesting and away from subject which ls dull? Indicate classes to take during tors believe national politics more meaningful than classroom Intent, therefore use pulpit prlv- Uege. Can unread assignments be twisted Into restatement of favor¬ ite political philosophies or here- 4. Instructors: What are In¬ structor's poUtlcs? Does the In¬ structor tolerate Ignorance? Does he blame lack of prepara- A Cooperative Faculty Member Special workshop for graphic aids will start tonight 1 Dr. Leonard Bathurst, coord- center at Fresno State College, will offer a special one-month elementary education workshop In planning and developing graphic Instructional materials starting tonight at 7 o'clock ln the Robinson School ln Fresno. The course, Elementary Edu¬ cation 138, Elementary Educa¬ tion Workshop, will be offered from 7 to 10 PM Wednesdays through March 17. The class ls open to all teachers, and no pre-reglstratlon ls required. Registration for the course ls set for the first meeting tonight. • for 1) will 1. OR NEW GEORGE'S SHOE REPAIRING 4061 E. ASHLAN Ashlan Park Shopping Center 227-7576 OLD WE'LL PARK IT FOR YOU AIRPORT PARKING COMPANY OF CALIFORNIA FRESNO AIR ' TERMINAL Uphold upholds books lZ:°d^ «-'""-' as answer to problems A discussion of the book, The tlngulsh Climate Of Faith In Modern Lit- from the erature by Nathan Scott, was sented by Dr. WUUam Uphold, rent Insinuation Uiat ordained minister and associate does not have a Christian professor of English and phUoso- •Either a : Uie College Religious Dr. Uphold was Uie first speak¬ er at Cross-Currents, College Y lecture series. Dr. Uphold pointed out that this been written lately which attempt leave to define the relationship between ware Christianity and modern lltera- round faculty recital will be pre- Stgma Delta Chi, men's pro- senlod "^W a» 1 PM ln the fesslonal JournaUsm society, wUl rental hall of the Music Build- meet at 6 PM ln Business 242 ln«- le religion of Jesus has somehow become Irrelevant to discuss a campus wide photo slx numbers of Uie faculty am the religion about Jesus. to advise men about very lmpor- contest and uie SDX regional muslc department will perform He also pointed out the recur- tant Issues.* conference scheduled for April •» '">• rec"al **»<* ls spon- Dr. Uphold concluded by say- on campus. sored by uie Board of Fine Arts, g, "If we are Interested ln jim Tucker, SDX president, u wJU •* OP6" ,0 faculty and criticized, coming to grips with real prob- announced that committees wlU s,uden's without charge. Recital a perfect right lems, with real people, and with be asked to give progress re- Performing will be Dr. Arthur of man's most viable, although Inadequate, solu- ports on Uie photo contest. Bryon, professor of music; Phy- >r Christianity lions, then we may well turn to Ills Irwin, assistant professor of the literature of our day for music; Russell Rowland, pro- help.* fessor of music. t hall n rounds their everyday life where- over they might be. •As a percussionist ln a high school band, my enthusiasm for contemporary music was spurred re. First, modern by the fact that the most lnter- wrlters who are Christians ln the estlng drum parts ln band music formal sense: T.S. Elliot, Auden, consistently wore Uie work of Fry, andGrahamGroene.Modern modern composers,*reportedA- writers who are not Christians mlrkhanlan. but make hearty use of Christian 'Since the realm of pcrcus- s, such as William Gold- sion sounds (anything one can i powerful strike) ls Infinite, my develop- in of original sin In Lord ment Into the exploration of new Of The Files. Men who are Chris- uses for common sounds was I tlan ln spirit even If not Chris- - ■ tlan ln content. Fourth are those writers whose Ideas come not dlrecUy out of tho Christian faith but from modern literature and can be helpful to the man of faith, such as Camus's emphasis on In¬ tegrity and authenticity or Kaf¬ ka's emphasis on Irrational guUt. Fifth are Uie spokesmen for Christianity like John Killlnger who hold Uiat modern literature ls far more apt at describing man's predicament than ln show¬ ing a redemption. In his critique of the book he lt unpub] stated that one may be critical of brary S( Its faUure to distinguish beliefs ]ogued . and faiths, and Us faUure to dls- wnicn m •Also,* he said, 'this Inter¬ est has been kindled by the re¬ cent avaUablllty of many phon¬ ograph records and scores of classical and avant-garde per- All of Amlrkhanlan's composi¬ tions are being sent to uie World Library of Percussion Music at Arizona Stale University. The professor ln charge of this library ls attempting to gath- is vacation for yourself this summer? Call Avon Cosmetics. 266-5030 or write 906 N. Clark Ave. FOR SALE—'55 Ford convert. Auto trans, pr. brakes, com. kit, excel, top, vinyl uphol¬ stery. Fine Transp. car $250. 227-6764. first composl- was Fazool r, a percus- qulntet written ln 1961. 1962 he composed a so- qulntet which received first I ln a muslctontest. ! mentioned to a local hat he was working on for Four Base Drums, nposslble—too io be one of iful compositions and was well received by a lo¬ cal audience,* he said. Amlrkhanlan's Trio No. 2, ded¬ icated to President Frederic W. Ness, was presented earlier this year at a recital ln honor of Dr. Ness who, along with vice- president Dallas Tueller, ls him¬ self a member of Phi Mu Alpha Slnfonla. The highlight of the trio's second movement was per¬ formed on three music stands of varying 20, ls of Blue Key, the E t Fine TRY BEFORE YOU BUY RENTanew Oltpnpia, precision -buitt portable ..* 7~°~ ... up to 3 months rental app STANTON OFFICE MACHINE CO. "when can I interview IBM?' March 4 "for what jobs?" Marketing, Systems Engineering, Customer Engineering The IBM Data Processing Representative is a con¬ sultant to his customers. He demonstrates how customers can achieve better business manage¬ ment and control through data processing. IBM Data Processing Systems Engineers are men and women who study customer requirements in depth, devise an approach, define a preferred machine and operational solution, and help the customer implement the solution. The IBM Customer Engineer is a specialist in pre¬ cision data processing machines and systems. He is responsible for installing and maintaining IBM's vast line of electronic and electromechanical. equipment. If you have a major in Liberal Arts, Engineering, the Sciences, or Business Administration, discover what kinds of work IBM has to offer. IBM is an Equal Opportunity Employer. There are challenging assignments in more than 200salesand service offices located coast tocoast. See your placement office for our brochures—and' an appointment with the IBM interviewers. If you cannot attend the interviews, write or visit the nearest IBM office. W. Russell Branch Manager 1821 Fulton St. Fresno, California 93716 IBM DATA PROCESSING |