April 22, 1965 Pg. 2-3 |
Previous | 28 of 45 | Next |
|
|
This page
All
|
Loading content ...
Page 2 The Collegian Thursday, April 22,1965 Thursday, April 22,1965 Free Florida trip offered Looking forward to a vacation in sunny Florida this summer, but having transportation problems? Dean of Activities Gordon WU- cenUy received a letter from a Clearwater, Fla., woman who would like someone to drive her car from Fresno to Florida. According to the letter, the woman drove the car to Fresno and whUe here broke her leg and was forced to fly home leaving Italian Food Served In The Tradition of An Old Di Cicco's Pizzeria FOUR SONS OF ITALY Alfred Hitchcock movie will be shown Friday Alfred Hitchcock's North by Northwest will be shown Friday at 6 PM and 8 PM in Industrial Arts 101. There Is no admission price for tho film. ' Cary Grant, Eva Marie Saint and James Mason are the stars In the film, which concerns a Madison Avenue ad-man whose life Is In continual danger from homicidal foreign agents and a double-dealing female. Reading exam will be given A reading test for freshmen and junior college transfers has been scheduled for May 15 at 8:45 AM In Science 121. Students who have not taken this test, warned Beverly Ald- rlch, psychometrlst at the Test¬ ing Office, wUl not be readmitted next fall. Tickets may be picked up at the Testing Office In Ad¬ ministration 117. No fee wUl be charged. The Collegian Page 3 Artworks will The rvjeecllo be displayed The Frank V. de Bellls collec¬ tion of rare manuscripts, books, phonograph records, musical scores, and graphic arts wUl be on display throughout Inaugura¬ tion Week In the Fresno State CoUege library. The coUectlon, donated to the State CoUege system by d THE GALLERY Folk Center & Coffee House Located on Olive near Palm Open Fri. & Sat. Nites (8 p.m. - 1 a.m.) This week —featuring: GENEBLUESTEIN Next Week: Mark Spoelstra 2 Shows: 9:00 & 11:00 75< cover charge DISTINCTIVE Flout Convention with Dia-Facet rings. Dare to be the dillercnt Oman who chooses the one ring thai makes all the others look ordinary Once you see the Dia-Facet rings you'll agree that they are completely different from all others So convince yourself! Come in and ask to see the Dia-Facet rings. &B& firfU* jSsK Any of The Above-From $125 TTLOctckk OPEN MONDAYS b FRIDAYS TIL 9:00 1 FRESNO AT FULTON STUDENT ACCOUNTS INVrTED generous gifts they have receiv¬ ed,* said Dr. Henry Madden, head librarian at FSC. A reception will be held for Mr. and Mrs. de BelUs, Sunday, Apr. 25 from 7 to 9 PM In tho ti¬ trated lecture, The Earl Book, Apr. 29 In the Little Theater In the Speech Arts BuUdlng. The exhibit wUl feature priz¬ ed selections of the collection which contains over 12,000 rare books, 22,000 phonograph rec¬ ords, and more than 5,000 musi¬ cal scores. The collection will be displayed In cases In the front of the library. A native of Italy, de Bellls lives In San Francisco where he retir¬ ed from business In 1941. San Francisco State College Is the the coUectlon. By THALIA There's an Interesting thing about being a senior In coUege—all your friends who didn't get married over Easter vacation are getting married in June. And you've got to go to four weddings every Saturday night from finals week to the Glorious Fourth, probably rent a tux or skinny Into a size 10 bridesmaid's frock, and come up with an original gift that the happy couple Just won't have the heart to consign to the back of For tho girls there's an exciting round of activities known as the showers. The future groom probably needs a shower too, but most people Just hope his best friend wUl tell him. Anyway, the shower guest trades two towels for a helping of the right to compete for big prizes In several parlor games such as Pln-the-Rap-on-Your- Checkbook, Who's Got the Checkbook, advances to the list of wedding guests, a gooey dessert marrlage-orle Husband and The shower gi dlege which m Right Gift. However, the problems of the guest are nothing compared to those of the lucky pair. Now, the poor guy has no problems: all he has to do Is get through the ceremony and support forever his HtUe bride In a style to which she swore she was unaccustomed before they were married. But pity the poor bride! Not only does she have to plan a wedding, but she has to plan a wedding that wUl outdo her sorority sister's the In some circles, points are made by having the most expensive wedding, In others by having the most unusual wedding. Most girls, to be safe, plan a high-priced kooky wedding. Like being married In lace. No dress, just lace. By having a kazoo band replace the traditional organist. By serving orange-and-black wedding cake. By dressing the bridesmaids In topless gowns. By- having the candlellghter come out at the end of the ceremony and will 11 Curbs will have little effect Minister speaks here on fall enrollment at FSC The Rev. John D'Aboy, Ameri¬ can Baptist campus minister, will discuss Fundamentalism at today at the College Religious Center. A lunch service Is avail- CHEVRON SERVICE • Lubrication • Arias Tire. and Batteries VVe Give BLUE CHIP STAMPS FRESNO, CALIF. The recent order issued by Chancellor Glenn S. Dumke and the Trustees of the California State CoUeges Umlting college enrollment will nothavoadrastlc effect on Fresno State College's enroUment plans next faU. Dumke declared, 'The colleges wUl have to turn away thousands of qualified students next fallbc- cause of the system's lnabUltyto recruit faculty members.* His statement during a meeting at FSC foUowed on the heels of an executive order establishing for the first time enrolments limits for each of the 18 state colleges. The order set FSC's enroU¬ ment limit at 6,960 full-time equivalent (FTE) students forthe parlson, the 1964-65 FTE figure for the fall semester was set at 6,485. Thus, FSC would have to have an unusually higher enroU¬ ment Increase before any stu¬ dents would be turned away. EnroUment figures at theBak- ersfleld campus and part-"— student enrollment attending FSC. TRY BEFORE YOU BUY RENTanew Oltympia precision - built portable ..* 7~°~ ontol applied to de to buy! Com for home, school STANTON office machine co. Dumke asked the president of each coUege to give him a month¬ ly report on faculty recruitment for the 1965-66 academic year because enroUment Is tied di¬ rectly to the number of teachers avaUable. President Frederic W. Ness said the college so far has been able to recruit only 22 of the 55 new teachers needed In Fresno next September. Dumke explained that some perspective students may not be notified of their acceptance or rejection untU late summer, but he asked the presidents to esti¬ mate their capacity--In terms of faculty avaUabUity - not later than June. Otherwise he said, stu¬ dents may be notified of rejection too late to make other arrange¬ ments and may be discouraged from attending coUege at all. College officials expect the biggest surge of enroUment ap¬ plications In the area of Junior college transfers and freshmen. Donald W. Albright, dean of the college, assumed, 'New entering freshmen will be restricted on the basis of a redirection and di¬ version policy now in effect at other state colleges.* Currently, 1,270 freshmen are enrolled at FSC. Next fall, the estimated admission figure for freshmen Is 13-1400. Albright said, 'Approximately one quarter of the freshman applicants will be eliminated by new admission requirements. Dr. Harry E. Jones, dean of admissions, reported on the basis of figures released from the chancellor's office, that FSC can anticipate a 6-8 per cent enroll- as we know, we wUl be able to admit every qualified student ap¬ plying for fall enroUment by the Aug. 9 deadline. If there Is an unexpected upsurge In applica¬ tions due to enroUment limita¬ tions at other coUeges, qualified students wUl be accepted on a first come, first serve basis.* The enrollment limitation Is¬ sue and other problems confront¬ ing the California State CoUeges the Board of Trustees at a meet¬ ing Thursday and Friday In the Arena Theater. College will study Renewal Agency By JIM TUCKER Fresno City's new mayor, Floyd Hyde, disclosed in an exclusive Interview with The CoUcglan yesterday that ho and college President Fredorlc Ness had met recently to discuss plans for enlisting college aid In a study for the Fresno Redevelop- Uslng college resources for the study, said tho Mayor, Is part of a continuing program of college-community relations for Hyde said the ln-depth study proposal wUl be submitted to a meeting of the city councU to¬ day and a session of the Agency- He said he would thon report back to the coUege with the groups decisions on the feas¬ ibility of the project. Turning to other Secondly, a UC school must add to or Implement the faculties that are now present at FSC.* The--Fresno City CouncU has gone on record in favor of a UC campus here. Discussing another posslbUty, the name change—from Fresno State CoUege to California State College at Fresno—Hyde said that as an alumnus, he favored keeping the present name. Mayor CAMPUS INTERVIEW-Actres Betty Field (right), who will make her debut tonight In the Fresno State College Production, The House of Bernarda Alba, Is interviewed by Fresno newswoman Nancy Allen In the FSC television studio. Miss Field wUl play the part of a domineering, ow In the play which will run Apt. 22-24 and Aor. 28 to May 1. Tickets are avaUable free to students at the speech arts box office and the Hockett-Cowan box office. today's councU that the body set up four all-day work sessions dealing with the development of the college com¬ munity—the residential area surroudlng the college. News confab set for Inauguration opener -More than 300 newsmen will arrive In Fresno Saturday to at¬ tend the Sigma Delta Chi Journal- Ism conference, the opening event of Fresno State CoUege's Inaug- .a- ural Week program In honor of ' President Frederic W. Ness. Sigma Delta Chi, the national society of journalists, has desig¬ nated the FSC campus and the Hacienda Motel for the Region Highlighting the event, spon¬ sored by the San Joaquin Valley and the FSC undergraduate chap¬ ters of SDX, wUl be James L. Greenfield, assistant united states secretary of state for pub¬ lic affairs, who will speak at an 8 PM banquet Saturday at field wlU be quizzed by a panel of newsmen. The panel wUl In¬ clude Stephen Sanger, Fresno Bureau of the Associated Press; Robert Long, news director of KMJ-TV; John Brackett, man¬ aging editor of the VlsallaTlmes Delta; and Robert Ralson, co- publisher of the Dlnuba Sentinel. Greenfield will be Introduced by Guy T. Ryan, assistant man¬ aging editor of the San Diego Tribune and Region 11 director. Conference delegates will at¬ tend an 8:45 AM breakfast In the FSC Staff Dining Room Sat¬ urday, followed by a panel dis¬ cussion at 10 AM In the Speech Arts Auditorium. The panel topic will be 'Crisis News: Reports From Experts,' and the panel members will be: William B. Glandonl, Copley News Service Latin American editor; William J. Waugh, San Francisco AP Bureau Chief; Edmund L. Auch- ter, an FSC faculty member and former economist with the U.S. Operations Mission In South Viet Nam; and Dr. James M. Brou- wer, FSC, formerly a missionary In Katanga Province In the Congo. The panel will be moderated by Joseph Doctor, editor of the Ex- of the Christian Science Monitor. Ills topic will be New Trends In American Newspapers. The Press In Perspective wUl an afternoon panel. Set for 1:45 Thomas K. Sanford, Jr., city editor of the Arizona Republic of Phoenix, Ariz.; Chet Casselman, news and public affairs director for radio station KFSO In San Francisco; William Rintoul.Bak- ersfleld free lance writer and co- editor of California Crossroads; and John Lowry, Los Angeles bureau manager for United Press International. Russel Hurst, SDX national ex¬ ecutive officer, will act as mod- ofplansbythecitypl: nlng department as well as pro¬ posals by area residents. Hyde said, 'Naturally, the first concrete step Is the augmmUn of the study sessions and to get the council and planners working together.* Referring to the possibility of a University of California cam¬ pus In this area, the Mayor said, •There are two to this Issue. First, we Only a Walk Away! You'U have to hurry If you want to Uve In the best CoUege Com¬ munity Location. Act Nowl Only a few lots left. • LAWNS ' SPRINKLERS • REDWOOD FENCE INCLUDED IN THE PRICE! 7 'Lovely Living* Models from $15,950 Oscar Spano's SUNSET HOMES on First Street North of Shaw Come Out This Eve. OPEN EVES. 'Ul 8 The evening banquet a a will c lellar- Asslsting in registration of delegates will be FSC members of Theta Sigma Phi, the national women's professional Journalism fraternity. Inaugural Week activities will climax Apr. 30 with the formal inauguration of President Ness In campus ceremonies. SERRENTO Italian Food WEEK-DAY LUNCHES 85? to $1.35 Closed Monday 4235 Fountain Way edar-Shlelds 222-9070 BE A BULLDOG Plan to win with the Security Mutual Life Team Interviewing April 26, 27 contact Mrs. Jordan Student Placement Office GANT OF NEW HAVEN Button-Down Oxford Shirts the mainstay of a traditional wardrobe Our Gant button-down oxfords are very special—their flare—their fit— the casual roll of their collars . . . All these attributes are exclusively Gant ... All reasons why we carry this distinctive brand... Come in and see the new color collection. UNIVERSITY SHOP
Object Description
Title | 1965_04 The Daily Collegian April 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 | April 22, 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, April 22,1965 Thursday, April 22,1965 Free Florida trip offered Looking forward to a vacation in sunny Florida this summer, but having transportation problems? Dean of Activities Gordon WU- cenUy received a letter from a Clearwater, Fla., woman who would like someone to drive her car from Fresno to Florida. According to the letter, the woman drove the car to Fresno and whUe here broke her leg and was forced to fly home leaving Italian Food Served In The Tradition of An Old Di Cicco's Pizzeria FOUR SONS OF ITALY Alfred Hitchcock movie will be shown Friday Alfred Hitchcock's North by Northwest will be shown Friday at 6 PM and 8 PM in Industrial Arts 101. There Is no admission price for tho film. ' Cary Grant, Eva Marie Saint and James Mason are the stars In the film, which concerns a Madison Avenue ad-man whose life Is In continual danger from homicidal foreign agents and a double-dealing female. Reading exam will be given A reading test for freshmen and junior college transfers has been scheduled for May 15 at 8:45 AM In Science 121. Students who have not taken this test, warned Beverly Ald- rlch, psychometrlst at the Test¬ ing Office, wUl not be readmitted next fall. Tickets may be picked up at the Testing Office In Ad¬ ministration 117. No fee wUl be charged. The Collegian Page 3 Artworks will The rvjeecllo be displayed The Frank V. de Bellls collec¬ tion of rare manuscripts, books, phonograph records, musical scores, and graphic arts wUl be on display throughout Inaugura¬ tion Week In the Fresno State CoUege library. The coUectlon, donated to the State CoUege system by d THE GALLERY Folk Center & Coffee House Located on Olive near Palm Open Fri. & Sat. Nites (8 p.m. - 1 a.m.) This week —featuring: GENEBLUESTEIN Next Week: Mark Spoelstra 2 Shows: 9:00 & 11:00 75< cover charge DISTINCTIVE Flout Convention with Dia-Facet rings. Dare to be the dillercnt Oman who chooses the one ring thai makes all the others look ordinary Once you see the Dia-Facet rings you'll agree that they are completely different from all others So convince yourself! Come in and ask to see the Dia-Facet rings. &B& firfU* jSsK Any of The Above-From $125 TTLOctckk OPEN MONDAYS b FRIDAYS TIL 9:00 1 FRESNO AT FULTON STUDENT ACCOUNTS INVrTED generous gifts they have receiv¬ ed,* said Dr. Henry Madden, head librarian at FSC. A reception will be held for Mr. and Mrs. de BelUs, Sunday, Apr. 25 from 7 to 9 PM In tho ti¬ trated lecture, The Earl Book, Apr. 29 In the Little Theater In the Speech Arts BuUdlng. The exhibit wUl feature priz¬ ed selections of the collection which contains over 12,000 rare books, 22,000 phonograph rec¬ ords, and more than 5,000 musi¬ cal scores. The collection will be displayed In cases In the front of the library. A native of Italy, de Bellls lives In San Francisco where he retir¬ ed from business In 1941. San Francisco State College Is the the coUectlon. By THALIA There's an Interesting thing about being a senior In coUege—all your friends who didn't get married over Easter vacation are getting married in June. And you've got to go to four weddings every Saturday night from finals week to the Glorious Fourth, probably rent a tux or skinny Into a size 10 bridesmaid's frock, and come up with an original gift that the happy couple Just won't have the heart to consign to the back of For tho girls there's an exciting round of activities known as the showers. The future groom probably needs a shower too, but most people Just hope his best friend wUl tell him. Anyway, the shower guest trades two towels for a helping of the right to compete for big prizes In several parlor games such as Pln-the-Rap-on-Your- Checkbook, Who's Got the Checkbook, advances to the list of wedding guests, a gooey dessert marrlage-orle Husband and The shower gi dlege which m Right Gift. However, the problems of the guest are nothing compared to those of the lucky pair. Now, the poor guy has no problems: all he has to do Is get through the ceremony and support forever his HtUe bride In a style to which she swore she was unaccustomed before they were married. But pity the poor bride! Not only does she have to plan a wedding, but she has to plan a wedding that wUl outdo her sorority sister's the In some circles, points are made by having the most expensive wedding, In others by having the most unusual wedding. Most girls, to be safe, plan a high-priced kooky wedding. Like being married In lace. No dress, just lace. By having a kazoo band replace the traditional organist. By serving orange-and-black wedding cake. By dressing the bridesmaids In topless gowns. By- having the candlellghter come out at the end of the ceremony and will 11 Curbs will have little effect Minister speaks here on fall enrollment at FSC The Rev. John D'Aboy, Ameri¬ can Baptist campus minister, will discuss Fundamentalism at today at the College Religious Center. A lunch service Is avail- CHEVRON SERVICE • Lubrication • Arias Tire. and Batteries VVe Give BLUE CHIP STAMPS FRESNO, CALIF. The recent order issued by Chancellor Glenn S. Dumke and the Trustees of the California State CoUeges Umlting college enrollment will nothavoadrastlc effect on Fresno State College's enroUment plans next faU. Dumke declared, 'The colleges wUl have to turn away thousands of qualified students next fallbc- cause of the system's lnabUltyto recruit faculty members.* His statement during a meeting at FSC foUowed on the heels of an executive order establishing for the first time enrolments limits for each of the 18 state colleges. The order set FSC's enroU¬ ment limit at 6,960 full-time equivalent (FTE) students forthe parlson, the 1964-65 FTE figure for the fall semester was set at 6,485. Thus, FSC would have to have an unusually higher enroU¬ ment Increase before any stu¬ dents would be turned away. EnroUment figures at theBak- ersfleld campus and part-"— student enrollment attending FSC. TRY BEFORE YOU BUY RENTanew Oltympia precision - built portable ..* 7~°~ ontol applied to de to buy! Com for home, school STANTON office machine co. Dumke asked the president of each coUege to give him a month¬ ly report on faculty recruitment for the 1965-66 academic year because enroUment Is tied di¬ rectly to the number of teachers avaUable. President Frederic W. Ness said the college so far has been able to recruit only 22 of the 55 new teachers needed In Fresno next September. Dumke explained that some perspective students may not be notified of their acceptance or rejection untU late summer, but he asked the presidents to esti¬ mate their capacity--In terms of faculty avaUabUity - not later than June. Otherwise he said, stu¬ dents may be notified of rejection too late to make other arrange¬ ments and may be discouraged from attending coUege at all. College officials expect the biggest surge of enroUment ap¬ plications In the area of Junior college transfers and freshmen. Donald W. Albright, dean of the college, assumed, 'New entering freshmen will be restricted on the basis of a redirection and di¬ version policy now in effect at other state colleges.* Currently, 1,270 freshmen are enrolled at FSC. Next fall, the estimated admission figure for freshmen Is 13-1400. Albright said, 'Approximately one quarter of the freshman applicants will be eliminated by new admission requirements. Dr. Harry E. Jones, dean of admissions, reported on the basis of figures released from the chancellor's office, that FSC can anticipate a 6-8 per cent enroll- as we know, we wUl be able to admit every qualified student ap¬ plying for fall enroUment by the Aug. 9 deadline. If there Is an unexpected upsurge In applica¬ tions due to enroUment limita¬ tions at other coUeges, qualified students wUl be accepted on a first come, first serve basis.* The enrollment limitation Is¬ sue and other problems confront¬ ing the California State CoUeges the Board of Trustees at a meet¬ ing Thursday and Friday In the Arena Theater. College will study Renewal Agency By JIM TUCKER Fresno City's new mayor, Floyd Hyde, disclosed in an exclusive Interview with The CoUcglan yesterday that ho and college President Fredorlc Ness had met recently to discuss plans for enlisting college aid In a study for the Fresno Redevelop- Uslng college resources for the study, said tho Mayor, Is part of a continuing program of college-community relations for Hyde said the ln-depth study proposal wUl be submitted to a meeting of the city councU to¬ day and a session of the Agency- He said he would thon report back to the coUege with the groups decisions on the feas¬ ibility of the project. Turning to other Secondly, a UC school must add to or Implement the faculties that are now present at FSC.* The--Fresno City CouncU has gone on record in favor of a UC campus here. Discussing another posslbUty, the name change—from Fresno State CoUege to California State College at Fresno—Hyde said that as an alumnus, he favored keeping the present name. Mayor CAMPUS INTERVIEW-Actres Betty Field (right), who will make her debut tonight In the Fresno State College Production, The House of Bernarda Alba, Is interviewed by Fresno newswoman Nancy Allen In the FSC television studio. Miss Field wUl play the part of a domineering, ow In the play which will run Apt. 22-24 and Aor. 28 to May 1. Tickets are avaUable free to students at the speech arts box office and the Hockett-Cowan box office. today's councU that the body set up four all-day work sessions dealing with the development of the college com¬ munity—the residential area surroudlng the college. News confab set for Inauguration opener -More than 300 newsmen will arrive In Fresno Saturday to at¬ tend the Sigma Delta Chi Journal- Ism conference, the opening event of Fresno State CoUege's Inaug- .a- ural Week program In honor of ' President Frederic W. Ness. Sigma Delta Chi, the national society of journalists, has desig¬ nated the FSC campus and the Hacienda Motel for the Region Highlighting the event, spon¬ sored by the San Joaquin Valley and the FSC undergraduate chap¬ ters of SDX, wUl be James L. Greenfield, assistant united states secretary of state for pub¬ lic affairs, who will speak at an 8 PM banquet Saturday at field wlU be quizzed by a panel of newsmen. The panel wUl In¬ clude Stephen Sanger, Fresno Bureau of the Associated Press; Robert Long, news director of KMJ-TV; John Brackett, man¬ aging editor of the VlsallaTlmes Delta; and Robert Ralson, co- publisher of the Dlnuba Sentinel. Greenfield will be Introduced by Guy T. Ryan, assistant man¬ aging editor of the San Diego Tribune and Region 11 director. Conference delegates will at¬ tend an 8:45 AM breakfast In the FSC Staff Dining Room Sat¬ urday, followed by a panel dis¬ cussion at 10 AM In the Speech Arts Auditorium. The panel topic will be 'Crisis News: Reports From Experts,' and the panel members will be: William B. Glandonl, Copley News Service Latin American editor; William J. Waugh, San Francisco AP Bureau Chief; Edmund L. Auch- ter, an FSC faculty member and former economist with the U.S. Operations Mission In South Viet Nam; and Dr. James M. Brou- wer, FSC, formerly a missionary In Katanga Province In the Congo. The panel will be moderated by Joseph Doctor, editor of the Ex- of the Christian Science Monitor. Ills topic will be New Trends In American Newspapers. The Press In Perspective wUl an afternoon panel. Set for 1:45 Thomas K. Sanford, Jr., city editor of the Arizona Republic of Phoenix, Ariz.; Chet Casselman, news and public affairs director for radio station KFSO In San Francisco; William Rintoul.Bak- ersfleld free lance writer and co- editor of California Crossroads; and John Lowry, Los Angeles bureau manager for United Press International. Russel Hurst, SDX national ex¬ ecutive officer, will act as mod- ofplansbythecitypl: nlng department as well as pro¬ posals by area residents. Hyde said, 'Naturally, the first concrete step Is the augmmUn of the study sessions and to get the council and planners working together.* Referring to the possibility of a University of California cam¬ pus In this area, the Mayor said, •There are two to this Issue. First, we Only a Walk Away! You'U have to hurry If you want to Uve In the best CoUege Com¬ munity Location. Act Nowl Only a few lots left. • LAWNS ' SPRINKLERS • REDWOOD FENCE INCLUDED IN THE PRICE! 7 'Lovely Living* Models from $15,950 Oscar Spano's SUNSET HOMES on First Street North of Shaw Come Out This Eve. OPEN EVES. 'Ul 8 The evening banquet a a will c lellar- Asslsting in registration of delegates will be FSC members of Theta Sigma Phi, the national women's professional Journalism fraternity. Inaugural Week activities will climax Apr. 30 with the formal inauguration of President Ness In campus ceremonies. SERRENTO Italian Food WEEK-DAY LUNCHES 85? to $1.35 Closed Monday 4235 Fountain Way edar-Shlelds 222-9070 BE A BULLDOG Plan to win with the Security Mutual Life Team Interviewing April 26, 27 contact Mrs. Jordan Student Placement Office GANT OF NEW HAVEN Button-Down Oxford Shirts the mainstay of a traditional wardrobe Our Gant button-down oxfords are very special—their flare—their fit— the casual roll of their collars . . . All these attributes are exclusively Gant ... All reasons why we carry this distinctive brand... Come in and see the new color collection. UNIVERSITY SHOP |