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Page 4 The Collegian Wednesday, May 5,1965 Abilene mile relay quartet enters WCR California m Oklahoma will test ^^ 0^k two milers Wildcats M CLii A ,F±3± seek mark By DOUG YAVANIAN The motto of the West Coast Relays has long been "Where World Records are Broken,* and this year If any are to be broken, lt should happen, and rightfully There are five relay events held at toe WCR that show track buffs a true test of teamwork plus colorful Individual perform- Best bets for possible world records are toe mUe, two-mUe and 440 relays, with the 880 and distance medley relays given an outside chance at the record The mUe relay should be a slzzler Saturday night, when Abi¬ lene Christian, Uie latest entry, challenges toe speed of toe Unl- duality ihllilVi itilit! r mpuny Not stoduy. Ihnucli. The Company's growU) pattern in the last ten years is a reflection of keeping up- to-date with the newest ml I mpel If you like the id quality company, a linR proem quality products - you think you'd li stetl in lookin;. arccr before era RON SHIRES Kuver Associates 1295 Wishon Ave. Suite A (PROVIDENT MUTUALeTeTeVi LIFE SEWARD—loet watch Friday, FSC Banquet, Initials CDM- 264-2485. MORGAN GROTH the existing world record of on toe other hand, holds the 19C4 WCR record. Cal has not been beaten ln 20 outings with the same foursome in the past two years. Last year the Bear foursome of Forrest Beatty, Al Cour- chesne, Dave Flshback, and Dave Archibald set the WCR record of 3:08.9. AbUene coach Bill McClure said that his team easily could challenge the Abilene, Tex., school record of 3:07.6, set ln The last Abilene team to appear ln Fresno was during the 1957 WCR when the 440 and 880-yard sprint quartets were anchored by the sensational Bobby Morrow. This year's team ls made up of Lynn Saunders, Doug Thomp¬ son, Charles Chrlstman and Riley Dunn. Saturday night this four¬ some turned to a 3:09.4. Out to chase the AbUene and Cal teams will be Univ. of New Mexico, 3:13, Brlgham Young Univ., 3:10 and San Jose State, 3:11. The two-mUe relay, being fea¬ tured as the big WCR event, will feature Uie National Collegiate Athletic Association 1965 Indoor championship team, Oklahoma State University. The Aggie team turned In an eye-opening 7:21.2, only 2.2 seconds off the world record, 7:19. Oregon State set the record In 1963 and equaled ln 1964 by Vlllanova. San Jose holds the WCR record, 7:22, set ln 1964. On hand to push the Aggies, fea¬ turing JlmmloMetcalf, John Per¬ ry, Tom Van RUden and Dav. Perry, are Oregon State anchor- imI l.y Morgan Groth, Stanford with Paul Schllcke and UCLA led by- Bob Day. The most fan pleasing relay, the 440 sprint, dollar for dollar, shapes up to be a head on battle between three of toe fastest col¬ legiate foursomes ln toe nation. Pre-meet favorite has to be Univ. of New Mexico, with Its talented speedster, anchorman Bernle Rivers. The Lobos are toe 1964 WCR champs with a 40.4 clocking. This year they have sped to a 40.3. Tommy Smith and the San, State Spartans and toe Cal Bears, 40.4 and 40.3 respectively, hope to unseat toe Lobos ln record This may be a tought than lt sounds, ln that toe wUl bring the same that they won wlUi la: Italian Food Served In The Tradition of An Old Italian Garden Di Cicco's Pizzeria FOUR SONS OF ITALY Delivery- Service AD 7-7054 , 530 N. U1 EoTe AvJvjw^-^-t-'t'C-r^v———. J Savo Tlmo.. Save Monoyj ^*~7 VALLEY TYPEWRITER CO. 1929 FRESNO ST. AM 6-9934 MARINE OFFICER Contact: U. S. Marine Corps , Officer Selection Officer ' Rm. 33, Fed. Off. Bldg., Fulton & Leavenworth Sht., San Fronciico-Underhill 1-6264 The Mario* Carp* Builds Confidence/ Fresno State College ActlvlUes Booth 11-12-13 May '65 10 AM - 3 PM GARDNER MOTORS, Inc. VOIKSWAGEN • PORSCHE Specials Held Over For FSC Students Gardner Motors, the ONLY authorized Volkswagen dealer to the Fresno area, has held over some specials for FSC students who may have gone home for toe Easter vacation. For students toe regular maintenance Inspection regularly priced at $13.50 has been reduced to ONLY $10.50 We also have a limited supply of sure, safe Roberk seat belts ln red, blue, grey and beige. The price. In¬ cluding Installation .... $5.95 For those weekend trips ln toe spring sunshine, make sure you have prompt, positive stopping power. A complete brake re-llne, with parts and labor has been reduced to....... $15.95 New convenience to you, we are open 7:30 to 12:00 Mon. thro Fri. open 7:00 sum. , SERVICE MANAGER, FRITZ MLEKUSCH Van Ness & Ventura 268 Art Carter, Steve Camlnltl.Rene Matlson and Rivers. Another sprint relay, the 880, should go about toe same as toe 440 with basically the same San Jose may get the edge, however, on toe strength of Smith's fine showings ln past 220's (880 equals 4 minus 220 legs) and thus, may be hard to Distance medley fans shall not be disappointed either, as Stan- " rd, UCLA and Oregon State could all threaten toe American as well as toe WCR record. Stanford reigns as toe '64 king, 9:43.1, while toe American and WCR records, 9:34.9, were set by the Santa Clara Youth Village ln 1960. The National Collegiate record, held by the Univ. of Ore¬ gon, was set ln '62 ln a time of 9:36.2. UCLA with Bob Day could erase all these standards. Joining Day are Bob Frey, Kurt Klein and Ingles to receive 'outstanding' award Dr. Lloyd C. Ingles, professor and has served of zoology at Fresno State Col- credltatlon teams for toe West- lege wUl receive one of two Out- em Colleges Association. He al- standlng Professor Awards to- so was a member of toe 12 man morrow night at a banquet ln toe Joint committee for toe lmprove- San Francisco HUton Hotel. ment of teacher education lnCal- Dr. Ingles was recommended lfornla. for toe honor along with Dr. MUes Some 80 papers of Dr. Ingles' D. McCarthy, chairman of toe have been published ln toe field division of sciences at California of zoology. State College at Fullerton. The Directors unanimously overrule Pubs decision lzed by Trustees of UieCalUornla State College System. The awards wUl be presented by toe California State CoUege Foundation. CSCF President Ralph Pratter from San Fern¬ ando Valley State College will make the Introductions and pre¬ sent toe awards which carry with lt $1,000. Dr. Ingles was nominated for the honor by his colleagues at FSC. Last year he was selected as toe coUeges first recipient of toe Distinguished Lecturer Dr. Ingles Joined toe FSC ln 1945 after teaching for 11 years at Chlco State College. Before that he taught at Bakersfleld Jun¬ ior College and Redlands High School. He has taught ln the state college system for 31 years. Dr. Ingles ls chairman of Uie FSC biology department and head of tl ■ of 11 written three books on toe m mals of CalUornla and Its Coast¬ al Waters, ls widely used as a Dr. McCarthy, toe other re¬ cipient, has had more than 40 of his works published and holds memberships to many profess¬ ional organizations. Recipients of toe Outstanding Professor Awards are selected on Uie basis of teaching records, distinguished academic back¬ grounds and extraordinary a- chlevements ln research. The Board of Directors has unanimously overruled a recom¬ mendation of toe Board of Pub¬ lications to accept toe American Yearbook Company's bid to print the Campus for the next three years. Tho board, fcw-v.t i iwarde-1 ili;i contract to Plschel Yearbook Company of Pascal, Wash., for a single year. The board's derision came af¬ ter reviewing a second recom¬ mendation by '.he Board of Pub¬ lications to award the contract to American even though toe company's bid was toe highest of three submitted for consid¬ eration. Taylor Publishing Com¬ pany of Covlna also submitted a American's bid for one year was $11,097 plus freight charges. Plschel's bid was $9,527.90 In¬ cluding freight. The Board of Directors to a report following his study, Margoslan stated that 'both Pls¬ chel and the American Yearbook Company are excellent firm- boasting equally exceUent repu- mended that In the future publish¬ ing companies should be Informed that any complaints concerning Board of Directors. The board also expressed an Interest ln establishing a com¬ mittee to consider toe specifi¬ cation rules tor publishers at a later date. In other business, toe board approved a request to appropriate $150 to clean toe band uniforms. It also approved students nom¬ inated for Association Service Awards and Association Lead¬ ership and Service Awards. Chairman Clayton Tldyman ap¬ pointed Dr. Frank Powell, Ernie Kinney, Gall Frlesen and Gary Marlanl to toe budget committee considering toe 1965-66 budget. The College Union Schematic Plan was also approved. ter considering Publications week of Its original The four I of Beatty to conduct summer world tour to A Council approves Association budget By GARY WASHBURN Like a block of Ice setting to toe sun, toe Student CouncU last night slowly dissolved itselfuntU there was barely a quorum to conduct business. ■o were two main rea- uncll steadUy diminished to numbers through toe evening. First, at two hours and fifteen minutes, lt was the longest meet¬ ing of toe year and second, the budget of toe FSC Association for 1965-66 was under consideration. At 9:13 PM, when toe $15,575 budget was approved, exacUy 39 students were at toe meeting. And .this was toe minimum quorum required for approval. The most persistent spokes¬ man against several of toe pro¬ posed budget Increases was Parry Barkalow, toe Young Re¬ publican representative. He first attacked an increase of $170 to toe California State CoUege Student President Asso- claUon dues which Fresno State College pays annuaUy. Herm Howerton, student body president, however, defended toe Increase as necessary so that toe CSCSPA might be able to hire a researcher next year. AU schools, according to How¬ erton, wUl be paying the increas¬ ed costs ln relation to their en¬ rollments. The researcher will be either a senior or graduate political science or public ad¬ ministration major at toe school of the president of toe CSCSPA. Barkalow's move to have the t reduced to $120 fa He also attacked i gets for toe PubUc Relations Committee ($90 to $430); ques¬ tioned toe necessity of hiring a soclated Student Body officers; and riveted toe $900 budget re- The Public Relations Commit- too request was passed unchang¬ ed, as was toe part-Ume secre¬ tarial appropriation, but toe tu¬ torial request was trimmed from $900 to $500. CouncU members felt that $900 was too large a sum to appropri¬ ate, since toe program ls mainly voluntary. It was felt, however, that gas expenses of toe volun- and from West Fresno, superior quality of toe company's work, better consulta¬ tion service, jroi-..i.- educational the closeness of toe American plant, and the support of local Industry. The original recommendation was returned to too Board of Publications upon toe request of Art Margoslan, director of Pub¬ lic relations, for re-evaluatlon. Margoslan's request was prompted by President Frederic W. Ness* concern with the Issue. President Ness became In¬ volved ln the Issue when rep¬ resentatives of Plschel and American complained to him of tho procedures Involved ln the K! paid. that sot participating ln toe program, and lt ls hoped that lt can be expanded She said that reaction at the Lincoln school,whereapUotpro- gram has been established, has been very favorable to both toe Idea of tutors and their teaching of students. d toe Li The Leadership Camp Com¬ mittee bid for $1,725, for next year, was trimmed to $1,000. President Ness notified both companies that toe matter was not his concern but toe respon¬ sibility of toe Board of PubUca- —World wire OAS approves WASHINGTON (UPI>--The Or- ganlzaUon of American States (OAS) voted early today to send an toter-Amerlcan peacekeeping force to police toe Dominican Re- pubUc. Recruiting was expected to begin Immediately. Viet Council ends SAIGON — South Vietnam's powerful Armed Forces CouncU today fbrmaUy dissolved Itself ln a resounding vote of confidence ln toe Saigon government. On toe military front, 50 U.S. Air Force Jets scored a •spectacularly suc¬ cessful* raid against Communist North Vietnam. Birth bill SACRAMENTO—A resolution calling tor toe provision of volun¬ tary birth control services tor toe needy reached the Assembly today after clearing Senate with a new attitude toward family Dr. WUUam C. Beatty, Jr., professor of social science and chairman of the anthropology- sociology department, wUl direct a 'Round toe World" historical tour starting Aug. 4. Dr. Beatty, who returned last August from Moscow where he participated to toe World Con¬ gress of Anthropology and Eth¬ nology, said that toe tour wUl In¬ clude visits to Denmark, Finland, Russia, Burma, Hong Kong, and Japan. Beatty stated that Uie tour ls open to all Interested persons and that there are no prerequi¬ sites. •However, I wish to stress that persons Interested ln making the ethnological and historical tour should contact me as soon as possible ln order that arrange les and consultants, especially those of toe USSR," he said. The tour ls formally listed as Anthropology 102, and Informa¬ tion regarding toe course maybe obtained by calling toe Summer Session Office. Among toe stops too group wUl make ln toe Soviet Union are toe Archives of the Revolution, toe Cathedral of St. Nicholas, Rlm- sky-Korsakov Conservatory ln Leningrad; the Kremlin, toe Grand Kremlin Palace, toe Mu¬ seum of Lenin and toe Academy of Arts and toe Institute of Arts ln Moscow. Other stops Include toe Ar¬ menian Academy of Sciences, toe Philharmonic Society BuUdlng and toe Opera House ln Erevan, Soviet Armenia; and the Im¬ perial Palace Plaza, toe Maljl Interest soars in Lima talk Albert J. Lima, a member of toe American Communist Party, win speak today at 1 PM ln toe Amphitheatre. His speech ls expected to last 30 minutes with an equal amount of Ume reserved for questions from toe audience. Questions are to be written out on 3 x 5 Inch cards ln ad¬ vance of toe speech. The will be coUected by ushers and read Herm How- Shrlne, downtown Tokyo, and tho Outer Garden ln Japan. The group wUl return to Fresno on Sept. 3. SDX photo contest draws to a dose Gary Daloyan, Sigma DeltaChl photo contest chairman, remind¬ ed all campus camera bugs that the contest ls quickly drawing to a - loyan, *the d ls 5 PM to- ond drawing near, many students are waiting untU toe last minute to submit entries.* Entries should be de¬ livered to toe SDX Journalism of¬ fice to Business 237. He urged photo enthusiasts to carefully read toe rule and Infor¬ mation sheet concerning regis¬ tration preparations and fees. "Some entries lack proper Iden¬ tification. ReglstraUon Informa¬ tion should be clearly printed on the reverse side of each print and slide as well as toe entry blank. Entry fee Is $1 per four sUdes and $1 per four prints or •The CoUeglan wUl print a list of toe winners next week. Winners will also be notified by mail. The mailing will Include a score card which lists toe points each picture received and toe Judges' comments. A total of ten points Is possible for each pic¬ ture. They will be scored as to Interest, composition, technique and impact. Contest prizes total $350. Ten prizes will be awarded to all. The sweepstakes award, a Kodak sUde projector, wUl be presented to toe best picture to toe competi¬ tion. The two grand award winners wUl each receive an automatic 8 movie camera for Uie best picture ln toe print and color sUde divisions. Seven other major prizes will be presented to toe winners of each classification ln those two divisions.
Object Description
Title | 1965_05 The Daily Collegian May 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 | May 5, 1965 Pg. 4- May 6, 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 Wednesday, May 5,1965 Abilene mile relay quartet enters WCR California m Oklahoma will test ^^ 0^k two milers Wildcats M CLii A ,F±3± seek mark By DOUG YAVANIAN The motto of the West Coast Relays has long been "Where World Records are Broken,* and this year If any are to be broken, lt should happen, and rightfully There are five relay events held at toe WCR that show track buffs a true test of teamwork plus colorful Individual perform- Best bets for possible world records are toe mUe, two-mUe and 440 relays, with the 880 and distance medley relays given an outside chance at the record The mUe relay should be a slzzler Saturday night, when Abi¬ lene Christian, Uie latest entry, challenges toe speed of toe Unl- duality ihllilVi itilit! r mpuny Not stoduy. Ihnucli. The Company's growU) pattern in the last ten years is a reflection of keeping up- to-date with the newest ml I mpel If you like the id quality company, a linR proem quality products - you think you'd li stetl in lookin;. arccr before era RON SHIRES Kuver Associates 1295 Wishon Ave. Suite A (PROVIDENT MUTUALeTeTeVi LIFE SEWARD—loet watch Friday, FSC Banquet, Initials CDM- 264-2485. MORGAN GROTH the existing world record of on toe other hand, holds the 19C4 WCR record. Cal has not been beaten ln 20 outings with the same foursome in the past two years. Last year the Bear foursome of Forrest Beatty, Al Cour- chesne, Dave Flshback, and Dave Archibald set the WCR record of 3:08.9. AbUene coach Bill McClure said that his team easily could challenge the Abilene, Tex., school record of 3:07.6, set ln The last Abilene team to appear ln Fresno was during the 1957 WCR when the 440 and 880-yard sprint quartets were anchored by the sensational Bobby Morrow. This year's team ls made up of Lynn Saunders, Doug Thomp¬ son, Charles Chrlstman and Riley Dunn. Saturday night this four¬ some turned to a 3:09.4. Out to chase the AbUene and Cal teams will be Univ. of New Mexico, 3:13, Brlgham Young Univ., 3:10 and San Jose State, 3:11. The two-mUe relay, being fea¬ tured as the big WCR event, will feature Uie National Collegiate Athletic Association 1965 Indoor championship team, Oklahoma State University. The Aggie team turned In an eye-opening 7:21.2, only 2.2 seconds off the world record, 7:19. Oregon State set the record In 1963 and equaled ln 1964 by Vlllanova. San Jose holds the WCR record, 7:22, set ln 1964. On hand to push the Aggies, fea¬ turing JlmmloMetcalf, John Per¬ ry, Tom Van RUden and Dav. Perry, are Oregon State anchor- imI l.y Morgan Groth, Stanford with Paul Schllcke and UCLA led by- Bob Day. The most fan pleasing relay, the 440 sprint, dollar for dollar, shapes up to be a head on battle between three of toe fastest col¬ legiate foursomes ln toe nation. Pre-meet favorite has to be Univ. of New Mexico, with Its talented speedster, anchorman Bernle Rivers. The Lobos are toe 1964 WCR champs with a 40.4 clocking. This year they have sped to a 40.3. Tommy Smith and the San, State Spartans and toe Cal Bears, 40.4 and 40.3 respectively, hope to unseat toe Lobos ln record This may be a tought than lt sounds, ln that toe wUl bring the same that they won wlUi la: Italian Food Served In The Tradition of An Old Italian Garden Di Cicco's Pizzeria FOUR SONS OF ITALY Delivery- Service AD 7-7054 , 530 N. U1 EoTe AvJvjw^-^-t-'t'C-r^v———. J Savo Tlmo.. Save Monoyj ^*~7 VALLEY TYPEWRITER CO. 1929 FRESNO ST. AM 6-9934 MARINE OFFICER Contact: U. S. Marine Corps , Officer Selection Officer ' Rm. 33, Fed. Off. Bldg., Fulton & Leavenworth Sht., San Fronciico-Underhill 1-6264 The Mario* Carp* Builds Confidence/ Fresno State College ActlvlUes Booth 11-12-13 May '65 10 AM - 3 PM GARDNER MOTORS, Inc. VOIKSWAGEN • PORSCHE Specials Held Over For FSC Students Gardner Motors, the ONLY authorized Volkswagen dealer to the Fresno area, has held over some specials for FSC students who may have gone home for toe Easter vacation. For students toe regular maintenance Inspection regularly priced at $13.50 has been reduced to ONLY $10.50 We also have a limited supply of sure, safe Roberk seat belts ln red, blue, grey and beige. The price. In¬ cluding Installation .... $5.95 For those weekend trips ln toe spring sunshine, make sure you have prompt, positive stopping power. A complete brake re-llne, with parts and labor has been reduced to....... $15.95 New convenience to you, we are open 7:30 to 12:00 Mon. thro Fri. open 7:00 sum. , SERVICE MANAGER, FRITZ MLEKUSCH Van Ness & Ventura 268 Art Carter, Steve Camlnltl.Rene Matlson and Rivers. Another sprint relay, the 880, should go about toe same as toe 440 with basically the same San Jose may get the edge, however, on toe strength of Smith's fine showings ln past 220's (880 equals 4 minus 220 legs) and thus, may be hard to Distance medley fans shall not be disappointed either, as Stan- " rd, UCLA and Oregon State could all threaten toe American as well as toe WCR record. Stanford reigns as toe '64 king, 9:43.1, while toe American and WCR records, 9:34.9, were set by the Santa Clara Youth Village ln 1960. The National Collegiate record, held by the Univ. of Ore¬ gon, was set ln '62 ln a time of 9:36.2. UCLA with Bob Day could erase all these standards. Joining Day are Bob Frey, Kurt Klein and Ingles to receive 'outstanding' award Dr. Lloyd C. Ingles, professor and has served of zoology at Fresno State Col- credltatlon teams for toe West- lege wUl receive one of two Out- em Colleges Association. He al- standlng Professor Awards to- so was a member of toe 12 man morrow night at a banquet ln toe Joint committee for toe lmprove- San Francisco HUton Hotel. ment of teacher education lnCal- Dr. Ingles was recommended lfornla. for toe honor along with Dr. MUes Some 80 papers of Dr. Ingles' D. McCarthy, chairman of toe have been published ln toe field division of sciences at California of zoology. State College at Fullerton. The Directors unanimously overrule Pubs decision lzed by Trustees of UieCalUornla State College System. The awards wUl be presented by toe California State CoUege Foundation. CSCF President Ralph Pratter from San Fern¬ ando Valley State College will make the Introductions and pre¬ sent toe awards which carry with lt $1,000. Dr. Ingles was nominated for the honor by his colleagues at FSC. Last year he was selected as toe coUeges first recipient of toe Distinguished Lecturer Dr. Ingles Joined toe FSC ln 1945 after teaching for 11 years at Chlco State College. Before that he taught at Bakersfleld Jun¬ ior College and Redlands High School. He has taught ln the state college system for 31 years. Dr. Ingles ls chairman of Uie FSC biology department and head of tl ■ of 11 written three books on toe m mals of CalUornla and Its Coast¬ al Waters, ls widely used as a Dr. McCarthy, toe other re¬ cipient, has had more than 40 of his works published and holds memberships to many profess¬ ional organizations. Recipients of toe Outstanding Professor Awards are selected on Uie basis of teaching records, distinguished academic back¬ grounds and extraordinary a- chlevements ln research. The Board of Directors has unanimously overruled a recom¬ mendation of toe Board of Pub¬ lications to accept toe American Yearbook Company's bid to print the Campus for the next three years. Tho board, fcw-v.t i iwarde-1 ili;i contract to Plschel Yearbook Company of Pascal, Wash., for a single year. The board's derision came af¬ ter reviewing a second recom¬ mendation by '.he Board of Pub¬ lications to award the contract to American even though toe company's bid was toe highest of three submitted for consid¬ eration. Taylor Publishing Com¬ pany of Covlna also submitted a American's bid for one year was $11,097 plus freight charges. Plschel's bid was $9,527.90 In¬ cluding freight. The Board of Directors to a report following his study, Margoslan stated that 'both Pls¬ chel and the American Yearbook Company are excellent firm- boasting equally exceUent repu- mended that In the future publish¬ ing companies should be Informed that any complaints concerning Board of Directors. The board also expressed an Interest ln establishing a com¬ mittee to consider toe specifi¬ cation rules tor publishers at a later date. In other business, toe board approved a request to appropriate $150 to clean toe band uniforms. It also approved students nom¬ inated for Association Service Awards and Association Lead¬ ership and Service Awards. Chairman Clayton Tldyman ap¬ pointed Dr. Frank Powell, Ernie Kinney, Gall Frlesen and Gary Marlanl to toe budget committee considering toe 1965-66 budget. The College Union Schematic Plan was also approved. ter considering Publications week of Its original The four I of Beatty to conduct summer world tour to A Council approves Association budget By GARY WASHBURN Like a block of Ice setting to toe sun, toe Student CouncU last night slowly dissolved itselfuntU there was barely a quorum to conduct business. ■o were two main rea- uncll steadUy diminished to numbers through toe evening. First, at two hours and fifteen minutes, lt was the longest meet¬ ing of toe year and second, the budget of toe FSC Association for 1965-66 was under consideration. At 9:13 PM, when toe $15,575 budget was approved, exacUy 39 students were at toe meeting. And .this was toe minimum quorum required for approval. The most persistent spokes¬ man against several of toe pro¬ posed budget Increases was Parry Barkalow, toe Young Re¬ publican representative. He first attacked an increase of $170 to toe California State CoUege Student President Asso- claUon dues which Fresno State College pays annuaUy. Herm Howerton, student body president, however, defended toe Increase as necessary so that toe CSCSPA might be able to hire a researcher next year. AU schools, according to How¬ erton, wUl be paying the increas¬ ed costs ln relation to their en¬ rollments. The researcher will be either a senior or graduate political science or public ad¬ ministration major at toe school of the president of toe CSCSPA. Barkalow's move to have the t reduced to $120 fa He also attacked i gets for toe PubUc Relations Committee ($90 to $430); ques¬ tioned toe necessity of hiring a soclated Student Body officers; and riveted toe $900 budget re- The Public Relations Commit- too request was passed unchang¬ ed, as was toe part-Ume secre¬ tarial appropriation, but toe tu¬ torial request was trimmed from $900 to $500. CouncU members felt that $900 was too large a sum to appropri¬ ate, since toe program ls mainly voluntary. It was felt, however, that gas expenses of toe volun- and from West Fresno, superior quality of toe company's work, better consulta¬ tion service, jroi-..i.- educational the closeness of toe American plant, and the support of local Industry. The original recommendation was returned to too Board of Publications upon toe request of Art Margoslan, director of Pub¬ lic relations, for re-evaluatlon. Margoslan's request was prompted by President Frederic W. Ness* concern with the Issue. President Ness became In¬ volved ln the Issue when rep¬ resentatives of Plschel and American complained to him of tho procedures Involved ln the K! paid. that sot participating ln toe program, and lt ls hoped that lt can be expanded She said that reaction at the Lincoln school,whereapUotpro- gram has been established, has been very favorable to both toe Idea of tutors and their teaching of students. d toe Li The Leadership Camp Com¬ mittee bid for $1,725, for next year, was trimmed to $1,000. President Ness notified both companies that toe matter was not his concern but toe respon¬ sibility of toe Board of PubUca- —World wire OAS approves WASHINGTON (UPI>--The Or- ganlzaUon of American States (OAS) voted early today to send an toter-Amerlcan peacekeeping force to police toe Dominican Re- pubUc. Recruiting was expected to begin Immediately. Viet Council ends SAIGON — South Vietnam's powerful Armed Forces CouncU today fbrmaUy dissolved Itself ln a resounding vote of confidence ln toe Saigon government. On toe military front, 50 U.S. Air Force Jets scored a •spectacularly suc¬ cessful* raid against Communist North Vietnam. Birth bill SACRAMENTO—A resolution calling tor toe provision of volun¬ tary birth control services tor toe needy reached the Assembly today after clearing Senate with a new attitude toward family Dr. WUUam C. Beatty, Jr., professor of social science and chairman of the anthropology- sociology department, wUl direct a 'Round toe World" historical tour starting Aug. 4. Dr. Beatty, who returned last August from Moscow where he participated to toe World Con¬ gress of Anthropology and Eth¬ nology, said that toe tour wUl In¬ clude visits to Denmark, Finland, Russia, Burma, Hong Kong, and Japan. Beatty stated that Uie tour ls open to all Interested persons and that there are no prerequi¬ sites. •However, I wish to stress that persons Interested ln making the ethnological and historical tour should contact me as soon as possible ln order that arrange les and consultants, especially those of toe USSR," he said. The tour ls formally listed as Anthropology 102, and Informa¬ tion regarding toe course maybe obtained by calling toe Summer Session Office. Among toe stops too group wUl make ln toe Soviet Union are toe Archives of the Revolution, toe Cathedral of St. Nicholas, Rlm- sky-Korsakov Conservatory ln Leningrad; the Kremlin, toe Grand Kremlin Palace, toe Mu¬ seum of Lenin and toe Academy of Arts and toe Institute of Arts ln Moscow. Other stops Include toe Ar¬ menian Academy of Sciences, toe Philharmonic Society BuUdlng and toe Opera House ln Erevan, Soviet Armenia; and the Im¬ perial Palace Plaza, toe Maljl Interest soars in Lima talk Albert J. Lima, a member of toe American Communist Party, win speak today at 1 PM ln toe Amphitheatre. His speech ls expected to last 30 minutes with an equal amount of Ume reserved for questions from toe audience. Questions are to be written out on 3 x 5 Inch cards ln ad¬ vance of toe speech. The will be coUected by ushers and read Herm How- Shrlne, downtown Tokyo, and tho Outer Garden ln Japan. The group wUl return to Fresno on Sept. 3. SDX photo contest draws to a dose Gary Daloyan, Sigma DeltaChl photo contest chairman, remind¬ ed all campus camera bugs that the contest ls quickly drawing to a - loyan, *the d ls 5 PM to- ond drawing near, many students are waiting untU toe last minute to submit entries.* Entries should be de¬ livered to toe SDX Journalism of¬ fice to Business 237. He urged photo enthusiasts to carefully read toe rule and Infor¬ mation sheet concerning regis¬ tration preparations and fees. "Some entries lack proper Iden¬ tification. ReglstraUon Informa¬ tion should be clearly printed on the reverse side of each print and slide as well as toe entry blank. Entry fee Is $1 per four sUdes and $1 per four prints or •The CoUeglan wUl print a list of toe winners next week. Winners will also be notified by mail. The mailing will Include a score card which lists toe points each picture received and toe Judges' comments. A total of ten points Is possible for each pic¬ ture. They will be scored as to Interest, composition, technique and impact. Contest prizes total $350. Ten prizes will be awarded to all. The sweepstakes award, a Kodak sUde projector, wUl be presented to toe best picture to toe competi¬ tion. The two grand award winners wUl each receive an automatic 8 movie camera for Uie best picture ln toe print and color sUde divisions. Seven other major prizes will be presented to toe winners of each classification ln those two divisions. |