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The Daily CoUeglan tt [jJSS'JIjry r-.T_. Mw •We What know what's under the sheets, Wlrai we'd like to know ls what's under Ui d Shelton. . . e mattress!* Bylaws Explanation Russian Pianist To Perform In Concert Marina Mdlvanl, hailed by pianists ln history, will appear ln concert Nov. 9 at 8:30 p.m. In tho Fresno Memorial Auditorium. The program ls being spon- aored by the Fresno State Col¬ lege Board of Fine Arts. Mrs. Mdlvanl will play "Sonata No. 8* by Molael Weinberg, 'Im¬ promptu ln F Minor, Op 142* by Franz Schubert, 'Spanish Rhapsody' by Franz Liszt and ■Pictures At An Exhibition' by Modeste Moussorgsky. Her international career began first Soviet Musician to win first prize tor piano at the Marguerite Long Competition in Paris ln 1901. The competition was followed by an extensive tour of France ! later that year. She first appeared In the United States ln 1963 at Purdue University. She has been praised by critics for her 'incredibly brlUlant virtuoso technique." Mrs. Mdlvanl, whose husband ls a mathematical linguistics specialist, began her study of music In the Central Music School at the Tbilisi State Conservatory at the age of eight. Upon graduation, she went to the Moscow Conservatory, study¬ ing there with the noted teacher Jacob M llsteln. In 1959, she began Mrs. Mdlvanl was born In Tbilisi, the capital of Georgia, USSR, ln 1936. Her father, Victor Codiodze, ls a graduate of the TbUlsi Conservatory and head of the Chess Sport CoUege In Tbilisi. Her mother ls a teacher. 'Guano' Forms Available Soon Students wUl soon have a chance to express their true feelings toward their instructors. Faculty evaluation sheets tor the spring semester edlUon of "Guano* wUl be distributed be¬ ginning Nov. 2. Evaluation sheets wUl be avaUable in front of the Cafeteria and on Campus bul¬ letin boards, according to Jerry Nutter, "Guano* chairman of the Student PoUUcal Education Action Committee. Collection boxes will be placed on campus the week of Nov. 8-12 for return of the forms. They also may be mailed to 'Guano' headquarters at 2304 E. Indlan- (Cootlnued from Page 1) ot having tbe chairman appointed by the coUege president. The Student CouncU, under the proposed bylaws, would advise the student president and student senate. It would also elect mem¬ bers of the Student Court. The CouncU would have no real power, but would make recommendations to 'appropriate authorities" in matters directly affecting the Dance Group Recital To Be Held At FCC Patricia Sparrow Dance Com¬ pany of Santa Barbara wfll give two performances here Friday. Rona Sando, dance teacher of the University ot CaUtomla at Santa Barbara, wfll give a master lesson ln the FresnoState CoUege Women's Gymnasium at 1 p.m. She wfll be aided by two FSC students. The troupe of artists will appear ln concert Friday at 8:30 p.m. ln the Fresno City CoUege Theatre. Dr. Patricia Sparrow, choreographer-teacher, wfll lead the group ln Its three dance pro¬ gram. Dr. Sparrow ls director of dance on the Santa Barbara cam¬ pus. ■Forms and Versions,* a work of six sections choreographed for six dancers, was premiered by the company ln New York ln 1963. The performance won an appeals- welfare and Interests of the stu¬ dents or the Association. These proposed bylaws are stUl ln a state of flux. Somdal said his committee Is still con¬ sidering additional modifica¬ tions. An ad hoc committee bead- ad by Dr. John A. Crosby, associate professor of geogra¬ phy, ls ln the process of eval¬ uating the bylaws, redefining cer¬ tain vague clauses and searching out legal ramifications. While tbe bylaws are In the hands of the ad hoc committee, ' Somdal said, he ls continuing to Invite suggestions from interest¬ ed students and student groups. Somdal said he sees no date ln the Immediate ftiture when the bylaws wlU be put before the student body tor a vote. 'But,* he added, *I want to see lt passed this semester It lt'sthe last thing I" do." Much needs to be done to shape the proposed bylaws as they now stand Into a workable document. Tomorrow—a closer look. Queen's Ball Applications Due Friday Application tor Campus Queeh and tor Queen's Ball committees must be returned to the Student President's Office by Friday, re¬ ports Carol Brugmann, publicity Two Companies On Campus For Job Interviews Two companies, F.W. Wool- worth and First Western Bank b Trust, will be on campus seeking Interviews with January graduates. wool worth representative, L. Wllklns, will see graduates today wlu business administration or liberal arts degrees for manage¬ ment trainee positions. James A. EUls, First Western training coordinator wfll Inter¬ view graduates Tuesday with one of the foUowlng degrees: BS,BA, MS, MA, MBA, ln business ad¬ ministration, liberal arts or agriculture tor management trainee positions ln Los Angeles, San Francisco, Sacramento and the San Joaquin VaUey. Citizenship and a draft free status are required the placement Students Interested may con¬ tact Mrs. Vlvienne Jordan, Ed¬ ucation-Psychology 122. NEW YORK (UP0--TheAmer- lean AutomobUe Association re¬ ports that Italy ls the only West- ern European country thl provides special gasollni still forth ball. unusually clear kinesthetic ar¬ chitecture" from noted critic Lucia DlugoszewskL To the accompaniment of an original piano score by troupe musician Mrs. Emma Lou O'Brien, •Who Flees the Silken Ties* features three artists In the second dance. proach* ls how New Jersey critic Kay Symchlk described the "Chansongs" number, a series of five dances which completes the program. Orchesls, FSC modern dance club, and the fine arts group of the city coUege are Jointly spon¬ soring the company's Fresno ap¬ pearances. Tickets are on sale tor the evening performance on campus and downtown, with student ad¬ mission set at 75 cents and gen¬ eral admission $1.50. There ls no charge tor tho master lesson ln the afternoon. Queen candidates completed 60 units of credit with a 2.25 grade point average and participated ln five campus ac¬ tivities. Girls must be sponsored by a campus organization. Both men and women are need¬ ed to work on dance committees, added Miss Brugmann. Committees and their chair¬ men are: decorations, Sylvia Smith; arrangements, Llnda Whlte; assembly, JoAnn Port- lock; bids and invitations, Lino- Henderson and SaUy Stocking; election, Jan Anderson; flowers, Sue Goth; publicity, Miss Brug¬ mann; tea, Dolores Enrlquez and Bobbl MaxweU. event are Jane van Zee and Mary Runner Up NEW YORK (UPI) - Mexico came ln second to Canada In terms of money spent by Ameri¬ cans on foreign trips, reports the Mexican National Tourist Coun- DiCicco's Pizzeria Four Sons of Italy Specializing in ITALIAN DOWERS Also Food to Go * Delivery service OPEN 4 PM--3 AM Family BUUards 530 N. Blackstone (off Belmont) 7-7054 T0PpER'S 497 E. SHAW AVE. Next Door to McDonald's Drive-in OPEN 11:00 A.M. TO 9:00 P.M. Phone^222-1834 FAMILY MIGHT AT TQPpEjj'S EVERY MONDAY! 1 Monday, November 1, 1985 Published five days a week except holidays and examination periods by the Fresno State College Asso¬ ciation. MaU subscriptions $8.00 a semester, $15.00 a year. Edi¬ torial office Business 235, tele¬ phone 222-5161, Ext. 441, 444, 448. Business office, Agriculture 220, telephone 222-5161, ext. 256. The Dally Collegian FSC This Week; Civil Rights Activity.. .Shish Kebab Dinner.. .And A Hoy ride Monday FRIENDS OF STUDENT NON- VIOLBHT COORDINATING COMMITTEE wUl meet si 7p.m. at 307 West Hampton Way. Plans will be made tor future clvU lights activity ln Fresno. For Tuesday Tl SPURS wlU meet ln Business Administration 111 at 1 p.m. Pictures wiU be taken. CaU Susan | Tlbbs si 439-5922 tor additional ■ Information. at 1 p.m. in Business 204. It ls Important that all members attend, according to club presi¬ dent Jim Shamp. VITICULTURE AND ENOL- OGY CLUB will meet ln Agri¬ culture 239 at 1 pan. Final preparations tor the tail shish If you want your club meeting to be announced ln FSC This Week, be sure youplck up a form ln The Daily Collegian" office. Business 235. The form must be completed and returned by i of the Friday preceding publica¬ tion to Insure printing ln the fol¬ lowing Monday's edition. kebab dinner wiU be made. AU tickets and money should be turn¬ ed ln at this Ume. CaU Stan Lange at 222-7123 tor i TRI BETA wfil have a short meeting at 1 p.m. In Science 225. A film wUl be shown. SERVICE TO INTERNATION¬ AL STUDENTS will meet In Speech Arts 154 at l pun. OMICRON SIGMA PI will meet ln Art-Borne Economics 118 at 1 p.m. Plans tor a forthcoming exchange wiU be discussed. CaU Charla Powell after 8 p.m. si 227-5463 tor more Information. BRIDGE CLUB wUl meet ln Speech Arts 184 at 1 p.m. Call Linda Stone at 222-0591 tor ad- Walker Elected Senate Veep Phillip N. Walker, former . chairman of the Faculty CouncU, was elected vice president of the Academic Senate. In the run-off Thursday, Walktr polled 38 votes. WUUam B. Uphold, Jr., professor of Eng¬ lish and phUosophy, received 25 votes. Edwin J. Rousek, prin¬ cipal vocational Instructor in agriculture, received three Walker ls an associate pro¬ fessor of speech. Nominations tor secretary of the Academic Senate were held Friday. The election ls being held today. If no run-off la necessary, nominations tor the senators at large will start Tuesday. CROSS-CURRENTS will meet at 12:15 pan. In the CoUege Religious Center. Lunch will be served from 11:30 a.m. until 1:30 pan. "The Homosexual" wfll be discussed by Dr. John AlnsUe, psychiatrist and director of re¬ search snd education at KOngs- Wednesday KAPPA PRRATERES will have a pledge meeting at 8:16 pan. In Cafeteria Committee Room 2. PRE -DENT AL CLUB will meet at 7:30 pan. ln Cafeteria Com¬ mittee Room 1. Dr. Norman Bit¬ ter, an alumnus ot use will speak, and plans for trips to USC snd UCLA dental schools wfll at Homan Hall, 222-3317, tor additional Information. NEWMAN CLUB wfll meet at 8 p.m. at the Newman Center. Fr. E. James Petersen wfll dis¬ cuss "The Book of Jonah" and Its MARLINS wfll meet at 6:30 p.m. at the pool. ENCOUNTER wfll meet at 12:15 p.m. ln the College Religious Center. Lunch wfll be served from 11:30 a.m.untUl:30 p.m. "How Do You Tell True From False Prophets?" will be the question considered by the Rev. Chase Stafford, pastor of the Westminster Presbyterian Church. tNTERVARSTTY CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP wfll meet in Speech Arts 179 at 1 pan. Dr. Wayne Colver win discuss •EvangeUcal Christianity As I Sesfi." SKI CLUB wfll meet In the Lab School at 7:30 p.m. An election of officers is slated. BAPTIST STUDENT UNION wfll meet at 6 p.m. at tbe South- era Baptist Religious Center, 2111 East Shaw. Two mission¬ aries wfll speak and show slides. Refreshments wfll be served. ROGER WILLIAMS FELLOW¬ SHIP wUl bold a dinner meeting at 6 p.m. ln the CoUege Re¬ ligious Center. A hayrlde sched¬ uled tor Friday wlU bo discussed. Friday RALLY si 12:30 p.m. in front of the cafeteria wfll feature en- r the Vela. Labor Plight To Be Aired At V Benefit •Grapes ot Wrath-198B,» a benefit tor farm workers, wfll be presented tomorrow at 1 pan. ln Science 121. Tbe concert, arranged by the CoUege Y, wfll feature tolkslng- lng by Dr. Peter Everwlne and Dr. Gene Bluesteln, assistant professors of English. Ceasar Chaves, or another representative of the Farm Worker's Association, wfll speak on tbe plight of farm workers ln the situation behind the Delano strike. A donation of 76 cents tor stu¬ dents and $1 tor adults wfll be collected. Carr Reception Will Be Held A reception to introduce the Rev. James Carr as tho now cam¬ pus advisor for Lutheran students will be held Monday from 3:30 to 5 p.m. The reception, which ls open to all students and faculty, wfll be held ln the Cafeteria Committee The Rev. Carr, a graduate of the University of Iowa, completed his Internship ln campus minis¬ try at San Francisco Stats Col¬ lege. Before coming to Fresno, he was a mission developer ln Sacramento. Tours Up WASHINGTON (UPI) number of approved tours—com¬ plete vacation travel arrange¬ ments to vacation areas planned by a travel agency and approved by the Air Traffic Conference- stands at 500, a 213 per cent in¬ crease over the 160 approved tours ln effect during 1981. The i BULL DOG ROOTERS (left to right) Gary Mariani, Carol Bailey, Art Renney and Kit Jacobson talk over some new routines for the evening game. The men wear new rally clothes from WALTER SMITH, Fresno's downtown men's store. Gary's Tweed stadium coat by H. I. S. 35.00. Wool and orlon Rough Rider slacks available in 8 new fall colors 15.95. Art's lumberjack coat with the new, warm Sherpa lining 27.95. LEVIS STA-PREST slacks 7.98. •8 different types of coffee •13 flavors of milk shakes (Imported syrups) •9 different types ot sand- HOUSE OF CAFFE'ESPRESSO
Object Description
Title | 1965_11 The Daily Collegian November 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 | Nov 1, 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 | The Daily CoUeglan tt [jJSS'JIjry r-.T_. Mw •We What know what's under the sheets, Wlrai we'd like to know ls what's under Ui d Shelton. . . e mattress!* Bylaws Explanation Russian Pianist To Perform In Concert Marina Mdlvanl, hailed by pianists ln history, will appear ln concert Nov. 9 at 8:30 p.m. In tho Fresno Memorial Auditorium. The program ls being spon- aored by the Fresno State Col¬ lege Board of Fine Arts. Mrs. Mdlvanl will play "Sonata No. 8* by Molael Weinberg, 'Im¬ promptu ln F Minor, Op 142* by Franz Schubert, 'Spanish Rhapsody' by Franz Liszt and ■Pictures At An Exhibition' by Modeste Moussorgsky. Her international career began first Soviet Musician to win first prize tor piano at the Marguerite Long Competition in Paris ln 1901. The competition was followed by an extensive tour of France ! later that year. She first appeared In the United States ln 1963 at Purdue University. She has been praised by critics for her 'incredibly brlUlant virtuoso technique." Mrs. Mdlvanl, whose husband ls a mathematical linguistics specialist, began her study of music In the Central Music School at the Tbilisi State Conservatory at the age of eight. Upon graduation, she went to the Moscow Conservatory, study¬ ing there with the noted teacher Jacob M llsteln. In 1959, she began Mrs. Mdlvanl was born In Tbilisi, the capital of Georgia, USSR, ln 1936. Her father, Victor Codiodze, ls a graduate of the TbUlsi Conservatory and head of the Chess Sport CoUege In Tbilisi. Her mother ls a teacher. 'Guano' Forms Available Soon Students wUl soon have a chance to express their true feelings toward their instructors. Faculty evaluation sheets tor the spring semester edlUon of "Guano* wUl be distributed be¬ ginning Nov. 2. Evaluation sheets wUl be avaUable in front of the Cafeteria and on Campus bul¬ letin boards, according to Jerry Nutter, "Guano* chairman of the Student PoUUcal Education Action Committee. Collection boxes will be placed on campus the week of Nov. 8-12 for return of the forms. They also may be mailed to 'Guano' headquarters at 2304 E. Indlan- (Cootlnued from Page 1) ot having tbe chairman appointed by the coUege president. The Student CouncU, under the proposed bylaws, would advise the student president and student senate. It would also elect mem¬ bers of the Student Court. The CouncU would have no real power, but would make recommendations to 'appropriate authorities" in matters directly affecting the Dance Group Recital To Be Held At FCC Patricia Sparrow Dance Com¬ pany of Santa Barbara wfll give two performances here Friday. Rona Sando, dance teacher of the University ot CaUtomla at Santa Barbara, wfll give a master lesson ln the FresnoState CoUege Women's Gymnasium at 1 p.m. She wfll be aided by two FSC students. The troupe of artists will appear ln concert Friday at 8:30 p.m. ln the Fresno City CoUege Theatre. Dr. Patricia Sparrow, choreographer-teacher, wfll lead the group ln Its three dance pro¬ gram. Dr. Sparrow ls director of dance on the Santa Barbara cam¬ pus. ■Forms and Versions,* a work of six sections choreographed for six dancers, was premiered by the company ln New York ln 1963. The performance won an appeals- welfare and Interests of the stu¬ dents or the Association. These proposed bylaws are stUl ln a state of flux. Somdal said his committee Is still con¬ sidering additional modifica¬ tions. An ad hoc committee bead- ad by Dr. John A. Crosby, associate professor of geogra¬ phy, ls ln the process of eval¬ uating the bylaws, redefining cer¬ tain vague clauses and searching out legal ramifications. While tbe bylaws are In the hands of the ad hoc committee, ' Somdal said, he ls continuing to Invite suggestions from interest¬ ed students and student groups. Somdal said he sees no date ln the Immediate ftiture when the bylaws wlU be put before the student body tor a vote. 'But,* he added, *I want to see lt passed this semester It lt'sthe last thing I" do." Much needs to be done to shape the proposed bylaws as they now stand Into a workable document. Tomorrow—a closer look. Queen's Ball Applications Due Friday Application tor Campus Queeh and tor Queen's Ball committees must be returned to the Student President's Office by Friday, re¬ ports Carol Brugmann, publicity Two Companies On Campus For Job Interviews Two companies, F.W. Wool- worth and First Western Bank b Trust, will be on campus seeking Interviews with January graduates. wool worth representative, L. Wllklns, will see graduates today wlu business administration or liberal arts degrees for manage¬ ment trainee positions. James A. EUls, First Western training coordinator wfll Inter¬ view graduates Tuesday with one of the foUowlng degrees: BS,BA, MS, MA, MBA, ln business ad¬ ministration, liberal arts or agriculture tor management trainee positions ln Los Angeles, San Francisco, Sacramento and the San Joaquin VaUey. Citizenship and a draft free status are required the placement Students Interested may con¬ tact Mrs. Vlvienne Jordan, Ed¬ ucation-Psychology 122. NEW YORK (UP0--TheAmer- lean AutomobUe Association re¬ ports that Italy ls the only West- ern European country thl provides special gasollni still forth ball. unusually clear kinesthetic ar¬ chitecture" from noted critic Lucia DlugoszewskL To the accompaniment of an original piano score by troupe musician Mrs. Emma Lou O'Brien, •Who Flees the Silken Ties* features three artists In the second dance. proach* ls how New Jersey critic Kay Symchlk described the "Chansongs" number, a series of five dances which completes the program. Orchesls, FSC modern dance club, and the fine arts group of the city coUege are Jointly spon¬ soring the company's Fresno ap¬ pearances. Tickets are on sale tor the evening performance on campus and downtown, with student ad¬ mission set at 75 cents and gen¬ eral admission $1.50. There ls no charge tor tho master lesson ln the afternoon. Queen candidates completed 60 units of credit with a 2.25 grade point average and participated ln five campus ac¬ tivities. Girls must be sponsored by a campus organization. Both men and women are need¬ ed to work on dance committees, added Miss Brugmann. Committees and their chair¬ men are: decorations, Sylvia Smith; arrangements, Llnda Whlte; assembly, JoAnn Port- lock; bids and invitations, Lino- Henderson and SaUy Stocking; election, Jan Anderson; flowers, Sue Goth; publicity, Miss Brug¬ mann; tea, Dolores Enrlquez and Bobbl MaxweU. event are Jane van Zee and Mary Runner Up NEW YORK (UPI) - Mexico came ln second to Canada In terms of money spent by Ameri¬ cans on foreign trips, reports the Mexican National Tourist Coun- DiCicco's Pizzeria Four Sons of Italy Specializing in ITALIAN DOWERS Also Food to Go * Delivery service OPEN 4 PM--3 AM Family BUUards 530 N. Blackstone (off Belmont) 7-7054 T0PpER'S 497 E. SHAW AVE. Next Door to McDonald's Drive-in OPEN 11:00 A.M. TO 9:00 P.M. Phone^222-1834 FAMILY MIGHT AT TQPpEjj'S EVERY MONDAY! 1 Monday, November 1, 1985 Published five days a week except holidays and examination periods by the Fresno State College Asso¬ ciation. MaU subscriptions $8.00 a semester, $15.00 a year. Edi¬ torial office Business 235, tele¬ phone 222-5161, Ext. 441, 444, 448. Business office, Agriculture 220, telephone 222-5161, ext. 256. The Dally Collegian FSC This Week; Civil Rights Activity.. .Shish Kebab Dinner.. .And A Hoy ride Monday FRIENDS OF STUDENT NON- VIOLBHT COORDINATING COMMITTEE wUl meet si 7p.m. at 307 West Hampton Way. Plans will be made tor future clvU lights activity ln Fresno. For Tuesday Tl SPURS wlU meet ln Business Administration 111 at 1 p.m. Pictures wiU be taken. CaU Susan | Tlbbs si 439-5922 tor additional ■ Information. at 1 p.m. in Business 204. It ls Important that all members attend, according to club presi¬ dent Jim Shamp. VITICULTURE AND ENOL- OGY CLUB will meet ln Agri¬ culture 239 at 1 pan. Final preparations tor the tail shish If you want your club meeting to be announced ln FSC This Week, be sure youplck up a form ln The Daily Collegian" office. Business 235. The form must be completed and returned by i of the Friday preceding publica¬ tion to Insure printing ln the fol¬ lowing Monday's edition. kebab dinner wiU be made. AU tickets and money should be turn¬ ed ln at this Ume. CaU Stan Lange at 222-7123 tor i TRI BETA wfil have a short meeting at 1 p.m. In Science 225. A film wUl be shown. SERVICE TO INTERNATION¬ AL STUDENTS will meet In Speech Arts 154 at l pun. OMICRON SIGMA PI will meet ln Art-Borne Economics 118 at 1 p.m. Plans tor a forthcoming exchange wiU be discussed. CaU Charla Powell after 8 p.m. si 227-5463 tor more Information. BRIDGE CLUB wUl meet ln Speech Arts 184 at 1 p.m. Call Linda Stone at 222-0591 tor ad- Walker Elected Senate Veep Phillip N. Walker, former . chairman of the Faculty CouncU, was elected vice president of the Academic Senate. In the run-off Thursday, Walktr polled 38 votes. WUUam B. Uphold, Jr., professor of Eng¬ lish and phUosophy, received 25 votes. Edwin J. Rousek, prin¬ cipal vocational Instructor in agriculture, received three Walker ls an associate pro¬ fessor of speech. Nominations tor secretary of the Academic Senate were held Friday. The election ls being held today. If no run-off la necessary, nominations tor the senators at large will start Tuesday. CROSS-CURRENTS will meet at 12:15 pan. In the CoUege Religious Center. Lunch will be served from 11:30 a.m. until 1:30 pan. "The Homosexual" wfll be discussed by Dr. John AlnsUe, psychiatrist and director of re¬ search snd education at KOngs- Wednesday KAPPA PRRATERES will have a pledge meeting at 8:16 pan. In Cafeteria Committee Room 2. PRE -DENT AL CLUB will meet at 7:30 pan. ln Cafeteria Com¬ mittee Room 1. Dr. Norman Bit¬ ter, an alumnus ot use will speak, and plans for trips to USC snd UCLA dental schools wfll at Homan Hall, 222-3317, tor additional Information. NEWMAN CLUB wfll meet at 8 p.m. at the Newman Center. Fr. E. James Petersen wfll dis¬ cuss "The Book of Jonah" and Its MARLINS wfll meet at 6:30 p.m. at the pool. ENCOUNTER wfll meet at 12:15 p.m. ln the College Religious Center. Lunch wfll be served from 11:30 a.m.untUl:30 p.m. "How Do You Tell True From False Prophets?" will be the question considered by the Rev. Chase Stafford, pastor of the Westminster Presbyterian Church. tNTERVARSTTY CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP wfll meet in Speech Arts 179 at 1 pan. Dr. Wayne Colver win discuss •EvangeUcal Christianity As I Sesfi." SKI CLUB wfll meet In the Lab School at 7:30 p.m. An election of officers is slated. BAPTIST STUDENT UNION wfll meet at 6 p.m. at tbe South- era Baptist Religious Center, 2111 East Shaw. Two mission¬ aries wfll speak and show slides. Refreshments wfll be served. ROGER WILLIAMS FELLOW¬ SHIP wUl bold a dinner meeting at 6 p.m. ln the CoUege Re¬ ligious Center. A hayrlde sched¬ uled tor Friday wlU bo discussed. Friday RALLY si 12:30 p.m. in front of the cafeteria wfll feature en- r the Vela. Labor Plight To Be Aired At V Benefit •Grapes ot Wrath-198B,» a benefit tor farm workers, wfll be presented tomorrow at 1 pan. ln Science 121. Tbe concert, arranged by the CoUege Y, wfll feature tolkslng- lng by Dr. Peter Everwlne and Dr. Gene Bluesteln, assistant professors of English. Ceasar Chaves, or another representative of the Farm Worker's Association, wfll speak on tbe plight of farm workers ln the situation behind the Delano strike. A donation of 76 cents tor stu¬ dents and $1 tor adults wfll be collected. Carr Reception Will Be Held A reception to introduce the Rev. James Carr as tho now cam¬ pus advisor for Lutheran students will be held Monday from 3:30 to 5 p.m. The reception, which ls open to all students and faculty, wfll be held ln the Cafeteria Committee The Rev. Carr, a graduate of the University of Iowa, completed his Internship ln campus minis¬ try at San Francisco Stats Col¬ lege. Before coming to Fresno, he was a mission developer ln Sacramento. Tours Up WASHINGTON (UPI) number of approved tours—com¬ plete vacation travel arrange¬ ments to vacation areas planned by a travel agency and approved by the Air Traffic Conference- stands at 500, a 213 per cent in¬ crease over the 160 approved tours ln effect during 1981. The i BULL DOG ROOTERS (left to right) Gary Mariani, Carol Bailey, Art Renney and Kit Jacobson talk over some new routines for the evening game. The men wear new rally clothes from WALTER SMITH, Fresno's downtown men's store. Gary's Tweed stadium coat by H. I. S. 35.00. Wool and orlon Rough Rider slacks available in 8 new fall colors 15.95. Art's lumberjack coat with the new, warm Sherpa lining 27.95. LEVIS STA-PREST slacks 7.98. •8 different types of coffee •13 flavors of milk shakes (Imported syrups) •9 different types ot sand- HOUSE OF CAFFE'ESPRESSO |