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2 THE DAILY COLLEGIAN Monday, March 3. 1969 Belgian lute players to give FSC concert Orchestra plans first performance Friday A concert of lute music will be presented by the Belgian bom duo, Chrtstlane Van Acker and Michael Podolskl In the College Union Lounge, on March 6 at The concert Is part of the artists' eighth tour of North America. A repertoire of music stem¬ ming from the Renaissance to the early Baroque period charac¬ terizes their program. Whether the two perform as soloists or with a small string ensemble, flute, recorder and oboe, they present an unusual mingling of various types of mu¬ sic. French and Elizabethan lute music, solo cantatas, French and Italian dances, English operatic Bach highlight their perform- Miss Van Acker and Podolskl met when they performed at the Pro-Muslca Antlqua In Brussels In 1956. The duo has performed hun¬ dreds of works for voice and lute which had been left untouched In libraries and private collections. They have appeared In recitals and with orchestras, at colleges, and for radio and television net¬ works In Europe, the United States, Canada, the West Indies and Africa. Podolskl has been playing the lute since he was 14 years old. He has recorded over 20 long- playing records, Including an anthology of lute music. Tickets for the concert are available at the College Union Information Window. ASB card holders are entitled to two free tickets, others may purchase them for $1. Resistance sets card turn-in A draft card turn-In, spon¬ sored by the Fresno Resistance, Is planned for Wednesday In front of the College Union. slstance will perform satirical skits In opposition to the draft The Fresno StateCollegeSym- • phony Orchestra will present Its first concert of the se¬ mester March 7, at 8 p.m., in the First Congregational Church, 2131 N. Van Ness Blvd. The ci s FSC rr staff members In solo roles. Leona Burtner, assistant pro¬ fessor of music, will perform gan andChamberOrchestra.Opus 42, No. 2." Dr. Arthur Bryon, professor of music, playing the viola, and Betty Iacovettl, music lecturer, playing the violin, will perform Mozart's 'Symphonic Concertante in E Flat." Dorothy Renzl, music lecturer and soprano soloist will sing Vllla-Lobos' 'Bachlanas Brasll- elras No. 5". Laurel Caskey, graduate i Vllla-Lobos and Hlndemlth, will be performed in Fresno for the first time. This performance Is unique In that it features two organ con¬ certos on an orchestra program. Most concert halls are not equipped with a satisfactory or¬ gan, If they have one at all. The First Congregational Church recently had a Cassavant organ Installed. According to Dr. Arthur C. Berdahl, concert t sentlng organ < an orchestral pro- o be a Fresno first. The < Drug abuse and narcotics are workshop topics Problems of drug abuse and narcotics are the topics for a special one-unit workshopoffer- ed at the College of Sequoias in Vlsalla March 8 and 15. The workshop will be held In the Science Lecture Hall from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Anyone who Is at least 21 years old or a high school graduate may regis¬ ter for the workshop. Those not wanting credit may register on an audit basis. En¬ rollment cost for either credit or audit is $18. Pre-reglstratlon Is available. Registration materials can be ob¬ tained by writing to the Exten¬ sion Division, Fresno State Col¬ lege, Fresno, Calif. 93726. Reg¬ istrants may also sign up for the course at the first workshop ses- Once around the campus... briefly You're old enough to know this... and not too old to know it now! The actual ceremony will begii at noon when Byron Black, wh< spoke at the Nov. 14 rally whei 13 men turned In their draft cards will speak. Paul Dunham, 21 a junior English major attend¬ ing Fresno State College, also speak. Dunham turned draft card last Nov. 14. Rock bands will perform 111 swer their questions at 6 p.m. at the Resistance Center on First Street between Bullard and Hern- don Avenues. At 1 p.m. the group will march to the mall box behind the Health Center and the draft be mailed to General Lewis Steering committee A steering committee for Rep. B.F. Slsk D-Fresno, will meet Monday at 7 p.m. to decide the agenda and map out other plans for the congressman's visit to local colleges next month. representatives of Fresno State College, Fresno City College and Pacific College on a reg¬ ular monthly basis. His meet¬ ing next month will be his first In the new program. Russ Mllnes, who is organiz¬ ing the steering committee, urged students to attend the meeting Monday evening at Alum¬ ni Hall at Pacific College. ie here thinking college FSC e feel It may be for us also." This :he 75 predominantly Chl- cano Woodlake High School seniors visiting Fresno State College. The field trip's purpose was to acquaint them with FSC and the college scene In general. They found that the campus atmosphere wasn't what they had thought It would be. Many said they expected to see an Insti¬ tution wanting them to change their entire lives according to the college's standards. college's purpose was actually to fulfill tl Mayor's problem is too little time ', March 3, 1969 TUB DAILY COLLEGIAN 3 In hopes of promoting a better understanding of the problems which face Fresno today, the new¬ ly installed mayor of Fresno, Ted Wills, discussed •log-jams' in local government Wed. night at Fresno State College. The meeting was sponsored by the Student Committee on Local Affairs. He said that one problem Is that of too little time to hear everyone's problems. 'Every¬ one has problems," said WlUs. If they're not taken care of when they come up, they become big¬ ger and eventually may become unsolvable.* He said that lack of sufficient time has allowed several problems to get out of hand, such as that of an ade¬ quate flood control program. Wills told how Fresno resi¬ dents have lost enough during this year becauseof flood-water dam¬ ages to have paid for the largest Education classes A May 14 deadline has been set for students to receive clearance for enrollment In education classes for the fall semester. Dr. Allen Hasson, teacher ed- lnformatlon concerning the ed¬ ucation classes may be obtained In Education Psychology 120. 'The Zoo Story' •The Zoo Story," a one-act will be read by Bruce Bron- nd Dennis Frost Tuesday at n. In the Arena Theatre, onzan and Frost will ri they portrayed In an play last semester, by Edward Albee In 958, the play Is a dialogue be- ween Peter, a well-dressed bench sitter portrayed by Frost, and Jerry, a loner played by Bronzan. Wednesday, a panel consisting of Bronzan, Frost and two En¬ glish majors, Tom Moradlan and Bruce Boston, play at 4 p.m. in the / Theatre. Gary Dee authority on the ramifications and psychological promise of backseat ping-pong* and not talk¬ ing about the Issues. George Benolt, president of the campus YAF chapter, and Russel Slvlck, a VAF spokesman, were like¬ wise accused of evading issues and of not having an open forum. After trying repeatedly to end the program, the YAF's relin¬ quished the microphone to mem¬ bers of the audience. Randy Walsh replied to Dee's statement that he did not know the cause or solution to student un¬ rest which causes the riots and strikes. The Issue, he said, Is ■What we want to see Is the same opportunity offered to blacks and Chlcanos on campus." CALENDAR portion of a flood control program proposed over three years ago. •Another problem,'said Wills, •Is thaf we're trying to solve today's problems with yester¬ day's answers. It Is even be- day's He expressed his dislike for the customary "bogged-down,* time consuming procedures of government. 'In government, you talk about what you want In terms of ideas. It takes five years for anything to materialize.' He summerlzed, ■There's too much talk and too Utile action." Service center hopes Earl Whitfield for new computer The Office of Institutional Studies, a centralized all-campus service department and com¬ puter center, hopes to be doubling Its staff and getting a new computer by the fall semester. Dr. Patricia Wright, director of Instructional Studies, said that due to increased enrollment this year and the expected In¬ crease for next year, the In¬ stitutional studies staff will prob¬ ably Increase by seven In July, the beginning of the new fiscal Dr. Wright hopes to be adding (Continued from Page 1) Moving to the topic of welfare, Dee said that he was against freeloaders. •I am prejudiced. I'm preju¬ diced against freeloaders, wel¬ fare recipients, people who are born In this world and don't make anything out of themselves," Dee stated. •Welfare recipients are blood¬ suckers on our economy," Dee said. "There is no legitimate ex¬ cuse for being a failure." He later said in response to a question that he was not preju¬ diced against the individual, but the system. Dee was accused by members of the audience of entertaining MAYOR TED WILLS Another problem is contami¬ nation of Fresno water by cess¬ pool seepage. Because Inade¬ quate action has been taken to put all homes on a sewer system, Fresno Is being threatened by fu¬ ture water pollution problems. Wills said that current flood waters are only hastening the a new medium size computer - about the size of an IBM 360 - to the service computer center. She said, It all depends upon the state legislature's allocation of If the computer is added It will be placed In Business 144. It will be for the use of students and faculty. In July, Dr. Irvln Krai, an electrical engineer, will come to FSC to provide faculty training in computer operations. Hewlll also teach a one unit com¬ puter class In the fall. Security office looks for typewriter owner appointed to regional post Earl Whitfield, director of the College Union, has been appoint¬ ed regional representative of Re¬ gion 19 of the Association of College Unions-International. Region IS encompasses about 20 college onions In California and Nevada. The association Is one of the oldest professional organiza¬ tions In higher education. It contains some 800 member col¬ lege unions In the United States, Canada, Japan, and countries In the Brltlshlales, South Ameri¬ ca and the Middle East. Wills commended students by saying, 'They have new and won¬ derful Ideas and realize that this Is a new and changing world we live In.* He added that young people are worried about •people problems* and that stu¬ dents should have the right to Dave Harris (Continued from page 1) sUtutlon can't exist any longer. Harris declared that the key to change lies within the decision of all Americans to take the •broken, maimed lives and make them like jewels at the feet of God." •Until the words 'oppressor' and 'oppressed' are removed from our language misery will continue. We must decide what gives our life meaning and do it," he concluded. Miss Baez, who spoke prior to her husband, said that one of the basic troubles In the United States is that children are brought up to be schizophrenics who are told to do good things and are exposed to unlimited Indecencies. Approximately two months ago, reports the security office, an Oriental coed reported that she had a typewriter stolen by some¬ one posing as an instructor from Fresno City College. The theft occurred off campus and therefore the security office referred the student to the Fres¬ no City Police Department. The police could not locate the student's typewriter. However, the -security office now reports that they have a stolen typewriter that was turned into their office. They think that Conference set on counseling State college directors of counseling and activities from Northern California will meet on campus Tuesday and Wednes- ,- day to discuss problems the di¬ rectors face and to attempt to resolve these problems. The conference Is co-chaired by Dr. Kenneth Blood, director of counseling at Fresno State Col¬ lege, and Dr. Kenneth Kerr, di¬ rector of activities at FSC. The meetings will be held In the Administration Building and the College Union. Prof. Larrabee retires after 21 years at Fresno Dr. Carlton H. Larrabee, pro¬ fessor of English, has retired after teaching at Fresno State CoUege for 21 years. Larrabee, 62, received his A. B. In 1927 from Clark Uni¬ versity, his A.M. in 1930 from Harvard University, and his doc¬ torate in education in 1946 from New York University. Dr. Dallas. A. Tueller, aca¬ demic vice "president who an¬ nounced the retirement, said that the college and community have profited much from Dr. Larrabee. perhaps It is the same typewriter stolen from the female FSC stu¬ dent last semester. But they can¬ not be sure. They do not know the student's name and have not been able to contact her. The security office asks anyone who might know the student who lost her typewriter to contact their office. - TO EUROPE Students - Faculty - Staff 25 DEPARTURES ALL JET CHARTERS . Round-Trip from L.A. or Oakland 1293 One-way from L.A. or Oakland 1148 Round-Trip from New York $210 One-Way Iron New York $110 Call Dr write for flight list and any other travel Information AIR - RAIL - CAR-Etc.. i Mi Calif. State Student Presidents' Ass'n. Jef] International Student Affairs Club W Russ Milnes "^fr>— College Union, Rm. 306 Ph: 487-2657 1969 Europe CHARTERS Colifornia-Lcndon RT Summer departures Saturn Douglas DC-8 Jets $294 Cal State students, faculty, staff, and family ONLY. Earry tsssulm WeresMcy CONTACT: JERRY ROSE f^Aoo^ As modern as her dress.... as bright as her smile... and destined to warm her heartl The "Over and Under," most original ring concept ever created for die Wedding Set. From Proctor's carefully chosen dia¬ mond selection. NO MONEY DOWN • TERMS TO SUIT YOU 1201 FULTON MALL " ▼ Open Friday Nights 'til 9
Object Description
Title | 1969_03 The Daily Collegian March 1969 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1969 |
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 | March 3, 1969 Pg. 2-3 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1969 |
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 | 2 THE DAILY COLLEGIAN Monday, March 3. 1969 Belgian lute players to give FSC concert Orchestra plans first performance Friday A concert of lute music will be presented by the Belgian bom duo, Chrtstlane Van Acker and Michael Podolskl In the College Union Lounge, on March 6 at The concert Is part of the artists' eighth tour of North America. A repertoire of music stem¬ ming from the Renaissance to the early Baroque period charac¬ terizes their program. Whether the two perform as soloists or with a small string ensemble, flute, recorder and oboe, they present an unusual mingling of various types of mu¬ sic. French and Elizabethan lute music, solo cantatas, French and Italian dances, English operatic Bach highlight their perform- Miss Van Acker and Podolskl met when they performed at the Pro-Muslca Antlqua In Brussels In 1956. The duo has performed hun¬ dreds of works for voice and lute which had been left untouched In libraries and private collections. They have appeared In recitals and with orchestras, at colleges, and for radio and television net¬ works In Europe, the United States, Canada, the West Indies and Africa. Podolskl has been playing the lute since he was 14 years old. He has recorded over 20 long- playing records, Including an anthology of lute music. Tickets for the concert are available at the College Union Information Window. ASB card holders are entitled to two free tickets, others may purchase them for $1. Resistance sets card turn-in A draft card turn-In, spon¬ sored by the Fresno Resistance, Is planned for Wednesday In front of the College Union. slstance will perform satirical skits In opposition to the draft The Fresno StateCollegeSym- • phony Orchestra will present Its first concert of the se¬ mester March 7, at 8 p.m., in the First Congregational Church, 2131 N. Van Ness Blvd. The ci s FSC rr staff members In solo roles. Leona Burtner, assistant pro¬ fessor of music, will perform gan andChamberOrchestra.Opus 42, No. 2." Dr. Arthur Bryon, professor of music, playing the viola, and Betty Iacovettl, music lecturer, playing the violin, will perform Mozart's 'Symphonic Concertante in E Flat." Dorothy Renzl, music lecturer and soprano soloist will sing Vllla-Lobos' 'Bachlanas Brasll- elras No. 5". Laurel Caskey, graduate i Vllla-Lobos and Hlndemlth, will be performed in Fresno for the first time. This performance Is unique In that it features two organ con¬ certos on an orchestra program. Most concert halls are not equipped with a satisfactory or¬ gan, If they have one at all. The First Congregational Church recently had a Cassavant organ Installed. According to Dr. Arthur C. Berdahl, concert t sentlng organ < an orchestral pro- o be a Fresno first. The < Drug abuse and narcotics are workshop topics Problems of drug abuse and narcotics are the topics for a special one-unit workshopoffer- ed at the College of Sequoias in Vlsalla March 8 and 15. The workshop will be held In the Science Lecture Hall from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Anyone who Is at least 21 years old or a high school graduate may regis¬ ter for the workshop. Those not wanting credit may register on an audit basis. En¬ rollment cost for either credit or audit is $18. Pre-reglstratlon Is available. Registration materials can be ob¬ tained by writing to the Exten¬ sion Division, Fresno State Col¬ lege, Fresno, Calif. 93726. Reg¬ istrants may also sign up for the course at the first workshop ses- Once around the campus... briefly You're old enough to know this... and not too old to know it now! The actual ceremony will begii at noon when Byron Black, wh< spoke at the Nov. 14 rally whei 13 men turned In their draft cards will speak. Paul Dunham, 21 a junior English major attend¬ ing Fresno State College, also speak. Dunham turned draft card last Nov. 14. Rock bands will perform 111 swer their questions at 6 p.m. at the Resistance Center on First Street between Bullard and Hern- don Avenues. At 1 p.m. the group will march to the mall box behind the Health Center and the draft be mailed to General Lewis Steering committee A steering committee for Rep. B.F. Slsk D-Fresno, will meet Monday at 7 p.m. to decide the agenda and map out other plans for the congressman's visit to local colleges next month. representatives of Fresno State College, Fresno City College and Pacific College on a reg¬ ular monthly basis. His meet¬ ing next month will be his first In the new program. Russ Mllnes, who is organiz¬ ing the steering committee, urged students to attend the meeting Monday evening at Alum¬ ni Hall at Pacific College. ie here thinking college FSC e feel It may be for us also." This :he 75 predominantly Chl- cano Woodlake High School seniors visiting Fresno State College. The field trip's purpose was to acquaint them with FSC and the college scene In general. They found that the campus atmosphere wasn't what they had thought It would be. Many said they expected to see an Insti¬ tution wanting them to change their entire lives according to the college's standards. college's purpose was actually to fulfill tl Mayor's problem is too little time ', March 3, 1969 TUB DAILY COLLEGIAN 3 In hopes of promoting a better understanding of the problems which face Fresno today, the new¬ ly installed mayor of Fresno, Ted Wills, discussed •log-jams' in local government Wed. night at Fresno State College. The meeting was sponsored by the Student Committee on Local Affairs. He said that one problem Is that of too little time to hear everyone's problems. 'Every¬ one has problems," said WlUs. If they're not taken care of when they come up, they become big¬ ger and eventually may become unsolvable.* He said that lack of sufficient time has allowed several problems to get out of hand, such as that of an ade¬ quate flood control program. Wills told how Fresno resi¬ dents have lost enough during this year becauseof flood-water dam¬ ages to have paid for the largest Education classes A May 14 deadline has been set for students to receive clearance for enrollment In education classes for the fall semester. Dr. Allen Hasson, teacher ed- lnformatlon concerning the ed¬ ucation classes may be obtained In Education Psychology 120. 'The Zoo Story' •The Zoo Story," a one-act will be read by Bruce Bron- nd Dennis Frost Tuesday at n. In the Arena Theatre, onzan and Frost will ri they portrayed In an play last semester, by Edward Albee In 958, the play Is a dialogue be- ween Peter, a well-dressed bench sitter portrayed by Frost, and Jerry, a loner played by Bronzan. Wednesday, a panel consisting of Bronzan, Frost and two En¬ glish majors, Tom Moradlan and Bruce Boston, play at 4 p.m. in the / Theatre. Gary Dee authority on the ramifications and psychological promise of backseat ping-pong* and not talk¬ ing about the Issues. George Benolt, president of the campus YAF chapter, and Russel Slvlck, a VAF spokesman, were like¬ wise accused of evading issues and of not having an open forum. After trying repeatedly to end the program, the YAF's relin¬ quished the microphone to mem¬ bers of the audience. Randy Walsh replied to Dee's statement that he did not know the cause or solution to student un¬ rest which causes the riots and strikes. The Issue, he said, Is ■What we want to see Is the same opportunity offered to blacks and Chlcanos on campus." CALENDAR portion of a flood control program proposed over three years ago. •Another problem,'said Wills, •Is thaf we're trying to solve today's problems with yester¬ day's answers. It Is even be- day's He expressed his dislike for the customary "bogged-down,* time consuming procedures of government. 'In government, you talk about what you want In terms of ideas. It takes five years for anything to materialize.' He summerlzed, ■There's too much talk and too Utile action." Service center hopes Earl Whitfield for new computer The Office of Institutional Studies, a centralized all-campus service department and com¬ puter center, hopes to be doubling Its staff and getting a new computer by the fall semester. Dr. Patricia Wright, director of Instructional Studies, said that due to increased enrollment this year and the expected In¬ crease for next year, the In¬ stitutional studies staff will prob¬ ably Increase by seven In July, the beginning of the new fiscal Dr. Wright hopes to be adding (Continued from Page 1) Moving to the topic of welfare, Dee said that he was against freeloaders. •I am prejudiced. I'm preju¬ diced against freeloaders, wel¬ fare recipients, people who are born In this world and don't make anything out of themselves," Dee stated. •Welfare recipients are blood¬ suckers on our economy," Dee said. "There is no legitimate ex¬ cuse for being a failure." He later said in response to a question that he was not preju¬ diced against the individual, but the system. Dee was accused by members of the audience of entertaining MAYOR TED WILLS Another problem is contami¬ nation of Fresno water by cess¬ pool seepage. Because Inade¬ quate action has been taken to put all homes on a sewer system, Fresno Is being threatened by fu¬ ture water pollution problems. Wills said that current flood waters are only hastening the a new medium size computer - about the size of an IBM 360 - to the service computer center. She said, It all depends upon the state legislature's allocation of If the computer is added It will be placed In Business 144. It will be for the use of students and faculty. In July, Dr. Irvln Krai, an electrical engineer, will come to FSC to provide faculty training in computer operations. Hewlll also teach a one unit com¬ puter class In the fall. Security office looks for typewriter owner appointed to regional post Earl Whitfield, director of the College Union, has been appoint¬ ed regional representative of Re¬ gion 19 of the Association of College Unions-International. Region IS encompasses about 20 college onions In California and Nevada. The association Is one of the oldest professional organiza¬ tions In higher education. It contains some 800 member col¬ lege unions In the United States, Canada, Japan, and countries In the Brltlshlales, South Ameri¬ ca and the Middle East. Wills commended students by saying, 'They have new and won¬ derful Ideas and realize that this Is a new and changing world we live In.* He added that young people are worried about •people problems* and that stu¬ dents should have the right to Dave Harris (Continued from page 1) sUtutlon can't exist any longer. Harris declared that the key to change lies within the decision of all Americans to take the •broken, maimed lives and make them like jewels at the feet of God." •Until the words 'oppressor' and 'oppressed' are removed from our language misery will continue. We must decide what gives our life meaning and do it," he concluded. Miss Baez, who spoke prior to her husband, said that one of the basic troubles In the United States is that children are brought up to be schizophrenics who are told to do good things and are exposed to unlimited Indecencies. Approximately two months ago, reports the security office, an Oriental coed reported that she had a typewriter stolen by some¬ one posing as an instructor from Fresno City College. The theft occurred off campus and therefore the security office referred the student to the Fres¬ no City Police Department. The police could not locate the student's typewriter. However, the -security office now reports that they have a stolen typewriter that was turned into their office. They think that Conference set on counseling State college directors of counseling and activities from Northern California will meet on campus Tuesday and Wednes- ,- day to discuss problems the di¬ rectors face and to attempt to resolve these problems. The conference Is co-chaired by Dr. Kenneth Blood, director of counseling at Fresno State Col¬ lege, and Dr. Kenneth Kerr, di¬ rector of activities at FSC. The meetings will be held In the Administration Building and the College Union. Prof. Larrabee retires after 21 years at Fresno Dr. Carlton H. Larrabee, pro¬ fessor of English, has retired after teaching at Fresno State CoUege for 21 years. Larrabee, 62, received his A. B. In 1927 from Clark Uni¬ versity, his A.M. in 1930 from Harvard University, and his doc¬ torate in education in 1946 from New York University. Dr. Dallas. A. Tueller, aca¬ demic vice "president who an¬ nounced the retirement, said that the college and community have profited much from Dr. Larrabee. perhaps It is the same typewriter stolen from the female FSC stu¬ dent last semester. But they can¬ not be sure. They do not know the student's name and have not been able to contact her. The security office asks anyone who might know the student who lost her typewriter to contact their office. - TO EUROPE Students - Faculty - Staff 25 DEPARTURES ALL JET CHARTERS . Round-Trip from L.A. or Oakland 1293 One-way from L.A. or Oakland 1148 Round-Trip from New York $210 One-Way Iron New York $110 Call Dr write for flight list and any other travel Information AIR - RAIL - CAR-Etc.. i Mi Calif. State Student Presidents' Ass'n. Jef] International Student Affairs Club W Russ Milnes "^fr>— College Union, Rm. 306 Ph: 487-2657 1969 Europe CHARTERS Colifornia-Lcndon RT Summer departures Saturn Douglas DC-8 Jets $294 Cal State students, faculty, staff, and family ONLY. Earry tsssulm WeresMcy CONTACT: JERRY ROSE f^Aoo^ As modern as her dress.... as bright as her smile... and destined to warm her heartl The "Over and Under," most original ring concept ever created for die Wedding Set. From Proctor's carefully chosen dia¬ mond selection. NO MONEY DOWN • TERMS TO SUIT YOU 1201 FULTON MALL " ▼ Open Friday Nights 'til 9 |