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THE DAILY COLLEGIAN Friday, April 11, 1969 Car rally will start week Ad hoc group studies need for speciol dean post By David Mitzroan Mayor Ted WlUs, signed a proclamation deslgnaUng April 13-18, Greek Week. During this time, the fraternities and soror¬ ities of Fresno State College will engage in numerous activities and services to further Greek unity and purpose. Th* week** actlvtUes begin Sunday at 10 a.m. with a Poker car rally. Registration for the event will be from 10-11 a.m. and the cost Is 50 cents. There 1* no pre-registraUon, and all cars are eUglble to enter toe rally. A fraternity and Indepen¬ dent division will be offered. Cars wlU leave from the cor¬ ner of MUlbrook and Joyal ave¬ nues for the four and a half hour rally. The rally has seven check points during the event. At each point, the driver will be given a card and at the end of the rally the car with the highest poker drawing will be hold to determine Prizes for the winners Include three trophies for each division nt receives a raUy pl.q "acuity afternoon will also be I Sunday from 11 a.m. to 4 ., In the College Union recre¬ ation area. Bowling, pool and other recreational facilities will be free to faculty members and their families. Members from the different fraternlUea and so¬ rorities will serve a* hosts and hostesses. Housemothers' night will be Tuesday night at the Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority bouse. The fra¬ ternity and sorority housemoth¬ ers win compete In a bridge tournament beginning at 7:30 p.m. Palm Lakes Country Club wlU be the site of the Greeks' annual banquet Thursday night. A cock- tall hour, dinner, speakers and awards will be featured. Lee Alexander, the executive secre¬ tary of Phi Sigma Kappa frater¬ nity, wlU be guest speaker. Awards will be presented to the Greek Man and Woman of the Year and scholarship awards to the pledges and actives for spring and fall 1968. Rounding out the week's func¬ tions are Activities Day and a dance Friday evening. Activities day begins at 4 p.m. at the Sigma Alpha Epsilon fra¬ ternity house. Coed Greek teams will participate In events, which Include cake eating, tug-of-war, an obstacle course and pyramid building. Trophies will be award¬ ed to all members of the winning team and plaques to members on the second and third teams. That eventng, an all school dance will be held in the FSC laboratory school from 8 to mid¬ night. Music wiU be provided by the L*dd Wyndow and The Emer¬ gency Exit. Tickets can be pur¬ chased during the week at the booth in front of the Cafeteria for $1. Tickets can be purchased at toe dance for $1.25. During the week, a children's book drive will be held for the CecU B. Hlnton Center Library. Located throughout the campus will be boxes where books may be deposited. A special ad hoc committee of the Academic PoUcy and Plan¬ ning Committee of the Academic Senate was charged with Investi¬ gating the need for a dean of special studies. Three members of the APP committee will work with two members of the EducaUonal Op¬ portunity program and two rep- resentaUves from toe Experi¬ mental College In the study. The post was caUed for by President Frederic W. Ness in a letter to the APP. Ness said that he thought a half-time dean could handle the assignment but committee members decided to Investigate the posslblUty of a full time assignment if the po- Russian student gets fellowship Rae Goldstein, senior Russian and music major, was awarded a full fellowship to Stanford Uni¬ versity to study Slavic languages Miss Goldstein expects to ob¬ tain both her master's and doc¬ torate degrees In Slavic lan¬ guages with a linguistics em¬ phasis at Stanford through the fellowship. Miss Goldstein has studied every language offered at Fres¬ no State College Including Chi¬ nese and Japanese. Her minor Is Latin. She is the second Russian major at FSC to receive a National Defense Education As¬ sociation grant. Last year Christopher Bordagaray receiv¬ ed a three year fellowship toDuke University. sltlon is deemed necessary. In other action, the app de¬ cided to forward a memo to all faculty members asking them for opinions on changing the col¬ lege calendar. Th* answers to the memo should give an in¬ dication of whether the faculty definitely feels a calendar change Is necessary. Detail* were discussed for changing the current two se¬ mester academic year to the quarter aystem. it was re¬ ported that many of the state colleges scheduled to go on the quarter system have been told by the ChanceUor's office to -ft hold up their plans. Two other plans, a 4-4.1 and a 3-3-3, were also Intro¬ duced. The 4-4-1 gives the stu¬ dents four-month semesters with a month of Independent study separaUng them, plus the regular The 3-3-3 plan offers classes to two-thirds of the stu¬ dent body each semester with the other third doing Independent - research for three months. The "^ regular summer session would not be changed. The faculty wlU be asked to note any changes beneficial to a calendar change. Friday, April 11, 1969 E DAILY COLLBQIAN 3 East-West cultural exchange is course topic Students will be questioned Teens show is tonight regarding fall course desires A student quesUonarire to de¬ termine class needs for fall, 1960, wiU be distributed in all MWF 10 a.m. classes Monday. Dr. Warren Btggerstaff, as¬ sociate vice president for aca¬ demic planning, said that data obtained from this survey wlU be incorporated with in¬ formation from new student* and will act as a general guide in program planning. The quesUonalre wlU indicate generally the total number of units (especially lower division) required by the student body, as well as class preferences. In toe questionalre, students are asked to specify which classes by departments, descrip¬ tion, catalogue number and units they would Uke to take in the fall, assuming that thee are no class conflicts. •Students are offered the op¬ portunity to choose anything In any category,' Biggerstaff ex¬ plained. 'There are no re- 'A new stadium for FSC is turning tbe wheels of progress' Eject J Julius 'AC Aluisi Councilman #6 There is i ever, that student preferences will be met unconditionally. Even If the results Indicate a desire for certain classes, this will not mean necessarily that the classes will be offered. The time and place of distri¬ bution were arbitrarily selected when it was determined tha was a busy time; there a instructors teaching 3,915 The Fresno tlty Panhellenlc will sponsor the second annual Teens Terrific Talent Show April 11 and 12 at 8 p.m. In the Fresno High School Auditorium. Students from Queen of the Valley Academy, Bullard, Ho¬ over, Fresno, Roosevelt, Clovis, McLane, Edison, CentralUnlon, Washington Union, and Sanger high schools will provide the talent. Tickets for the show are $1 and profits will be distributed to various youth activities and to each participating school's student body fund. The Fresno City Panhellenlc iscomprlir-. .'soro .tyalumnae representing '7 national soror¬ ities. This organization spon¬ sors various Fresno youth ac¬ tivities. It provides for a 'Play- Lady' to work In the pediatrics ward at toe Fresno General Hos¬ pital, it also donates games, puzzles, television sets and other recreaUonal equipment for tbe children in toe ward. Fresno City Panhellenlc spon¬ sors scholarships to two city and two county high schools and provides two >250 scholarships for Fr**no Stat* CoUege women. City PanheUenlc sponsors the Mayor's Youth Sanrjee Committee. Course offers talks by professionals Businessmen b Administration 50, „ ie them an insight into he problems they will m He added that the speakers usually concentrate on organiza¬ tion, control, personnel, pro¬ duction, markeUng and financing. EnroUment for the class varies from 100 to 175, with the larger number usually attending In the fall. Students come from a vari¬ ety of major fields although most are business majors. The course is not open to freshmen. The class sessions usually con¬ sist of 30 to 40 minute talks by featured businessmen followed by a 15 to 20 minute quesrton- and answer period. Some of the more prominent speakers for this, semester and their companies Include Joseph Dale, Jr., Dale Bros. Coffee; Thomas Carmody, McGraw-Hill Publications, and James Smith, Eastman Kodak. Th* Daily Collegian East-West cultural exchanges through the centuries will be tho topic of an extension class that wlU end East-West Week ac- tlvlUes. The course will be offered today from 4 to U p.m. and on Saturday from 8 a.m. to S p.m. In Agriculture loo. informal discussion will follow each lec- The workshop 1* entitled Geog¬ raphy 128T and toe schedule num¬ ber 1* SU83. Registration ma¬ terials can be obtained from toe extension office. Th* course Is for one unit of credit and tha cost is $18. Four university professors will lecture on subjects ranging from China to Southeast Asia'* relations with the Western world. Dr. L. A. Peter Gosling, chair¬ man of the geography department at the University of Michigan, will begin toe lectures today at 4 p.m. He wiU speak on 'The Southeast Asian Crossroads.* An informal discussion will foUow in toe International Room of toe Cafeteria. A Ford Foundation Fellowship and a Smith Mundt visiting pro¬ fessorship at toe University of Malaya has enabled Gosling to complete research In Malaya, Borneo and Indonesia. Gosling has published ar¬ ticles concerning his main re¬ search Interest in rural devel- ant at toe Hoover Institution on War, Revolution, and Peace at Stanford University, and to surveys and research corpora¬ tions for the United States govern- Wn ha* received ten awards and grants, including a Ford Foundation Faculty Research Fellowship. He has written fly* books, in¬ cluding to* Spatial Economy ' of Communist China, and the Economy of Communist china, DR. DAVID STEIN BERO opment. He has served as director of the Center forSouthandSoutheaat Asian studies, as chalrmanofthe area center directors, and on toe National Academy of Science National Research Council Com¬ mittee Advisory on Geography. He Is also a member of toe Southeast Asian Development Advisory Group and as the secretary of the Association for Asian Studies. At 7:30 tonight Dr. David J. Steinberg, associate professor of Southeast Asian History at the University of Michigan, wUl speak on The U.S. and Southeast Asia: Its Historical Perspec- Stelnberg is secretary of the DR. LIANG-YEN CHOW Association for Asian Studies, and has received many research grant*. Th* National Defense Education Act Area CenterGrant allowed him to study In the Phili¬ ppines. He also received the Cen¬ ter for South and Southeast Asia Research Award. Ha has written two books, with two In progress, as well as re¬ views, magazine articles and toe Philippines section of Collier's Encyclopedia. A panel discussion at 8 a.m. will begin Saturday's workshop. Dr. Liang-yen Chow, chairman of the department of politics and diplomacy at the Monterey Insti¬ tute of Foreign Studies, will speak at 10:30 a.m. on 'China's Re- DR. L. A. GOSLING mora than 50 article* dealing with China and to* Far East. Dr. Chlng Wong of th* soci¬ ology department and Dr. Orient Lee of tn* history department wlU participate In a panel dis¬ cussion following the lector*. chairman of to* Ministry of For¬ eign Affair* of the RepubUc of He was born In Peking, China and has written articles pubUshed in toe Journal of Asian Studies. He has a forthcoming book called Sun Yat-sen and Great Britain 1917-1924. The final speaker win be Dr. Yuan-U Wu, professor of eco¬ nomics at the University of San Francisco. He will speak on 'China's Ex¬ perience for Underdeveloped Countries* at 1 p.m. Plan would allow faculty aid to EOP V plan that would allow Fres¬ no Stat* College faculty and staff to contribute to toe ftoan- teachlng schedules. The committee will meet at 3 p.m. in Thomas Administra¬ tion 117. Woody Miller needs one vote. Yours! COUNCIL POST © Opportunity Program students wlU be considered by the Exec¬ utive Committee of to* Aca¬ demic Senate at Monday'* Th* motion waa originally submitted by Dr. Leonard Bath¬ urst, a member of toe commit¬ tor providing financial support to deserving students who will ' participate In the EducaUonal Opportunities program during the 1969-70 school year. A recommendation that May 26 and May 27 be designated as reading days preceding final ex¬ aminations is also on Monday's agenda. The recommendation, from the Academic PoUcy and Planning Committee, would allow this to be done at the discretion of the respective departments. A similar recommendation was turned down by the Execu¬ tive Committee on Feb. 21 be- e of possible conflicts with Ad'Sftlsllsl M.n.jsr [CHARTER FLIGHTS! EII SEPT. 9. .595.00 E25 SEPT.14. .$295.00 cuiiy£7BtBdsnt,C7*u«£7 Putting you first, keeps us first Instant vacation. Camaro-the Hugger A lot of people have the idea that a vacation begins only when you get where you're going. Obviously, they haven't vaca¬ tioned in Camaro, the Hugger You start relaxing the moment you come in contact with Camaro'* contoured bucket Beat*. You fcel snug without its way. feeling stuffed in. , Start your vacation early tt Now you're Retting in the right year. The minute you slep in frame of mind to consider some a Camaro. Your Chevrolet dr other attractions. Like Astro Ventilation in every rnodeL And. road sense that gives you the feeling this is one car that know*
Object Description
Title | 1969_04 The Daily Collegian April 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 | April 11, 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 | THE DAILY COLLEGIAN Friday, April 11, 1969 Car rally will start week Ad hoc group studies need for speciol dean post By David Mitzroan Mayor Ted WlUs, signed a proclamation deslgnaUng April 13-18, Greek Week. During this time, the fraternities and soror¬ ities of Fresno State College will engage in numerous activities and services to further Greek unity and purpose. Th* week** actlvtUes begin Sunday at 10 a.m. with a Poker car rally. Registration for the event will be from 10-11 a.m. and the cost Is 50 cents. There 1* no pre-registraUon, and all cars are eUglble to enter toe rally. A fraternity and Indepen¬ dent division will be offered. Cars wlU leave from the cor¬ ner of MUlbrook and Joyal ave¬ nues for the four and a half hour rally. The rally has seven check points during the event. At each point, the driver will be given a card and at the end of the rally the car with the highest poker drawing will be hold to determine Prizes for the winners Include three trophies for each division nt receives a raUy pl.q "acuity afternoon will also be I Sunday from 11 a.m. to 4 ., In the College Union recre¬ ation area. Bowling, pool and other recreational facilities will be free to faculty members and their families. Members from the different fraternlUea and so¬ rorities will serve a* hosts and hostesses. Housemothers' night will be Tuesday night at the Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority bouse. The fra¬ ternity and sorority housemoth¬ ers win compete In a bridge tournament beginning at 7:30 p.m. Palm Lakes Country Club wlU be the site of the Greeks' annual banquet Thursday night. A cock- tall hour, dinner, speakers and awards will be featured. Lee Alexander, the executive secre¬ tary of Phi Sigma Kappa frater¬ nity, wlU be guest speaker. Awards will be presented to the Greek Man and Woman of the Year and scholarship awards to the pledges and actives for spring and fall 1968. Rounding out the week's func¬ tions are Activities Day and a dance Friday evening. Activities day begins at 4 p.m. at the Sigma Alpha Epsilon fra¬ ternity house. Coed Greek teams will participate In events, which Include cake eating, tug-of-war, an obstacle course and pyramid building. Trophies will be award¬ ed to all members of the winning team and plaques to members on the second and third teams. That eventng, an all school dance will be held in the FSC laboratory school from 8 to mid¬ night. Music wiU be provided by the L*dd Wyndow and The Emer¬ gency Exit. Tickets can be pur¬ chased during the week at the booth in front of the Cafeteria for $1. Tickets can be purchased at toe dance for $1.25. During the week, a children's book drive will be held for the CecU B. Hlnton Center Library. Located throughout the campus will be boxes where books may be deposited. A special ad hoc committee of the Academic PoUcy and Plan¬ ning Committee of the Academic Senate was charged with Investi¬ gating the need for a dean of special studies. Three members of the APP committee will work with two members of the EducaUonal Op¬ portunity program and two rep- resentaUves from toe Experi¬ mental College In the study. The post was caUed for by President Frederic W. Ness in a letter to the APP. Ness said that he thought a half-time dean could handle the assignment but committee members decided to Investigate the posslblUty of a full time assignment if the po- Russian student gets fellowship Rae Goldstein, senior Russian and music major, was awarded a full fellowship to Stanford Uni¬ versity to study Slavic languages Miss Goldstein expects to ob¬ tain both her master's and doc¬ torate degrees In Slavic lan¬ guages with a linguistics em¬ phasis at Stanford through the fellowship. Miss Goldstein has studied every language offered at Fres¬ no State College Including Chi¬ nese and Japanese. Her minor Is Latin. She is the second Russian major at FSC to receive a National Defense Education As¬ sociation grant. Last year Christopher Bordagaray receiv¬ ed a three year fellowship toDuke University. sltlon is deemed necessary. In other action, the app de¬ cided to forward a memo to all faculty members asking them for opinions on changing the col¬ lege calendar. Th* answers to the memo should give an in¬ dication of whether the faculty definitely feels a calendar change Is necessary. Detail* were discussed for changing the current two se¬ mester academic year to the quarter aystem. it was re¬ ported that many of the state colleges scheduled to go on the quarter system have been told by the ChanceUor's office to -ft hold up their plans. Two other plans, a 4-4.1 and a 3-3-3, were also Intro¬ duced. The 4-4-1 gives the stu¬ dents four-month semesters with a month of Independent study separaUng them, plus the regular The 3-3-3 plan offers classes to two-thirds of the stu¬ dent body each semester with the other third doing Independent - research for three months. The "^ regular summer session would not be changed. The faculty wlU be asked to note any changes beneficial to a calendar change. Friday, April 11, 1969 E DAILY COLLBQIAN 3 East-West cultural exchange is course topic Students will be questioned Teens show is tonight regarding fall course desires A student quesUonarire to de¬ termine class needs for fall, 1960, wiU be distributed in all MWF 10 a.m. classes Monday. Dr. Warren Btggerstaff, as¬ sociate vice president for aca¬ demic planning, said that data obtained from this survey wlU be incorporated with in¬ formation from new student* and will act as a general guide in program planning. The quesUonalre wlU indicate generally the total number of units (especially lower division) required by the student body, as well as class preferences. In toe questionalre, students are asked to specify which classes by departments, descrip¬ tion, catalogue number and units they would Uke to take in the fall, assuming that thee are no class conflicts. •Students are offered the op¬ portunity to choose anything In any category,' Biggerstaff ex¬ plained. 'There are no re- 'A new stadium for FSC is turning tbe wheels of progress' Eject J Julius 'AC Aluisi Councilman #6 There is i ever, that student preferences will be met unconditionally. Even If the results Indicate a desire for certain classes, this will not mean necessarily that the classes will be offered. The time and place of distri¬ bution were arbitrarily selected when it was determined tha was a busy time; there a instructors teaching 3,915 The Fresno tlty Panhellenlc will sponsor the second annual Teens Terrific Talent Show April 11 and 12 at 8 p.m. In the Fresno High School Auditorium. Students from Queen of the Valley Academy, Bullard, Ho¬ over, Fresno, Roosevelt, Clovis, McLane, Edison, CentralUnlon, Washington Union, and Sanger high schools will provide the talent. Tickets for the show are $1 and profits will be distributed to various youth activities and to each participating school's student body fund. The Fresno City Panhellenlc iscomprlir-. .'soro .tyalumnae representing '7 national soror¬ ities. This organization spon¬ sors various Fresno youth ac¬ tivities. It provides for a 'Play- Lady' to work In the pediatrics ward at toe Fresno General Hos¬ pital, it also donates games, puzzles, television sets and other recreaUonal equipment for tbe children in toe ward. Fresno City Panhellenlc spon¬ sors scholarships to two city and two county high schools and provides two >250 scholarships for Fr**no Stat* CoUege women. City PanheUenlc sponsors the Mayor's Youth Sanrjee Committee. Course offers talks by professionals Businessmen b Administration 50, „ ie them an insight into he problems they will m He added that the speakers usually concentrate on organiza¬ tion, control, personnel, pro¬ duction, markeUng and financing. EnroUment for the class varies from 100 to 175, with the larger number usually attending In the fall. Students come from a vari¬ ety of major fields although most are business majors. The course is not open to freshmen. The class sessions usually con¬ sist of 30 to 40 minute talks by featured businessmen followed by a 15 to 20 minute quesrton- and answer period. Some of the more prominent speakers for this, semester and their companies Include Joseph Dale, Jr., Dale Bros. Coffee; Thomas Carmody, McGraw-Hill Publications, and James Smith, Eastman Kodak. Th* Daily Collegian East-West cultural exchanges through the centuries will be tho topic of an extension class that wlU end East-West Week ac- tlvlUes. The course will be offered today from 4 to U p.m. and on Saturday from 8 a.m. to S p.m. In Agriculture loo. informal discussion will follow each lec- The workshop 1* entitled Geog¬ raphy 128T and toe schedule num¬ ber 1* SU83. Registration ma¬ terials can be obtained from toe extension office. Th* course Is for one unit of credit and tha cost is $18. Four university professors will lecture on subjects ranging from China to Southeast Asia'* relations with the Western world. Dr. L. A. Peter Gosling, chair¬ man of the geography department at the University of Michigan, will begin toe lectures today at 4 p.m. He wiU speak on 'The Southeast Asian Crossroads.* An informal discussion will foUow in toe International Room of toe Cafeteria. A Ford Foundation Fellowship and a Smith Mundt visiting pro¬ fessorship at toe University of Malaya has enabled Gosling to complete research In Malaya, Borneo and Indonesia. Gosling has published ar¬ ticles concerning his main re¬ search Interest in rural devel- ant at toe Hoover Institution on War, Revolution, and Peace at Stanford University, and to surveys and research corpora¬ tions for the United States govern- Wn ha* received ten awards and grants, including a Ford Foundation Faculty Research Fellowship. He has written fly* books, in¬ cluding to* Spatial Economy ' of Communist China, and the Economy of Communist china, DR. DAVID STEIN BERO opment. He has served as director of the Center forSouthandSoutheaat Asian studies, as chalrmanofthe area center directors, and on toe National Academy of Science National Research Council Com¬ mittee Advisory on Geography. He Is also a member of toe Southeast Asian Development Advisory Group and as the secretary of the Association for Asian Studies. At 7:30 tonight Dr. David J. Steinberg, associate professor of Southeast Asian History at the University of Michigan, wUl speak on The U.S. and Southeast Asia: Its Historical Perspec- Stelnberg is secretary of the DR. LIANG-YEN CHOW Association for Asian Studies, and has received many research grant*. Th* National Defense Education Act Area CenterGrant allowed him to study In the Phili¬ ppines. He also received the Cen¬ ter for South and Southeast Asia Research Award. Ha has written two books, with two In progress, as well as re¬ views, magazine articles and toe Philippines section of Collier's Encyclopedia. A panel discussion at 8 a.m. will begin Saturday's workshop. Dr. Liang-yen Chow, chairman of the department of politics and diplomacy at the Monterey Insti¬ tute of Foreign Studies, will speak at 10:30 a.m. on 'China's Re- DR. L. A. GOSLING mora than 50 article* dealing with China and to* Far East. Dr. Chlng Wong of th* soci¬ ology department and Dr. Orient Lee of tn* history department wlU participate In a panel dis¬ cussion following the lector*. chairman of to* Ministry of For¬ eign Affair* of the RepubUc of He was born In Peking, China and has written articles pubUshed in toe Journal of Asian Studies. He has a forthcoming book called Sun Yat-sen and Great Britain 1917-1924. The final speaker win be Dr. Yuan-U Wu, professor of eco¬ nomics at the University of San Francisco. He will speak on 'China's Ex¬ perience for Underdeveloped Countries* at 1 p.m. Plan would allow faculty aid to EOP V plan that would allow Fres¬ no Stat* College faculty and staff to contribute to toe ftoan- teachlng schedules. The committee will meet at 3 p.m. in Thomas Administra¬ tion 117. Woody Miller needs one vote. Yours! COUNCIL POST © Opportunity Program students wlU be considered by the Exec¬ utive Committee of to* Aca¬ demic Senate at Monday'* Th* motion waa originally submitted by Dr. Leonard Bath¬ urst, a member of toe commit¬ tor providing financial support to deserving students who will ' participate In the EducaUonal Opportunities program during the 1969-70 school year. A recommendation that May 26 and May 27 be designated as reading days preceding final ex¬ aminations is also on Monday's agenda. The recommendation, from the Academic PoUcy and Planning Committee, would allow this to be done at the discretion of the respective departments. A similar recommendation was turned down by the Execu¬ tive Committee on Feb. 21 be- e of possible conflicts with Ad'Sftlsllsl M.n.jsr [CHARTER FLIGHTS! EII SEPT. 9. .595.00 E25 SEPT.14. .$295.00 cuiiy£7BtBdsnt,C7*u«£7 Putting you first, keeps us first Instant vacation. Camaro-the Hugger A lot of people have the idea that a vacation begins only when you get where you're going. Obviously, they haven't vaca¬ tioned in Camaro, the Hugger You start relaxing the moment you come in contact with Camaro'* contoured bucket Beat*. You fcel snug without its way. feeling stuffed in. , Start your vacation early tt Now you're Retting in the right year. The minute you slep in frame of mind to consider some a Camaro. Your Chevrolet dr other attractions. Like Astro Ventilation in every rnodeL And. road sense that gives you the feeling this is one car that know* |