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2 THE DAILY COLLEGIAN Friday, May 9, 1969 Dorm Week starts tonight Group will discuss revisions in manual held ln the Faculty Dining HaU at 6 p.m., and at 8 p.m. a hootenanny Is planned ln the Com - roons Lounge. Richard Keyes, Black Studies professor, will speak Thursday night for Out-Reach Day ln the Commons Lounge at 8 p.m. The following nlghtM-3hall will spon¬ sor the First Annual Grub-In Residence Hall Week, week- long social and academic ac¬ tivities for both resident and non-resident students starts tonight with the Sadie Hawkins Dance ln the Commons PaUo from 8 p.m. to midnight. Music wlU be provided by the •Accents* and admission Is free. A picnic for residence hall stu¬ dents Is slated for Friday at MUlerton Lake. The foUowlng day Graves HaU will hold open -house from 1-5 p.m. and a fashion show will be held ln the Commons Lounge at 1 p.m. On Monday an all dorm open house Is scheduled from U a.m. to 3 p.m. Games and relay compeution will be highlighted lecte<1 t0 «rve « head v«" Tuesday at Relay Day, on the leader for the 1969-70 season, athletic field from 12-1 p.m. Also on next year's yell lead- A city council dinner wlU be lng squad are Mike Kass, Junior Spanish dancers to perform 9 p.m. to midnight Admission is 50 e •Eastgates* wUl cents a Play. pain Fleagle.headoftheweek'a activities, said the main purpose of Residence Hall Week is "to acquaint the campus and the com¬ munity with the many aspects of dorm Uvlng.' Spirit squads picked thropology n A Spanish dance concert tonight will cUmax LaRaza Week activi¬ ties. The concert, sponsored by the CoUege Union, will be held in the.Amphitheatre and start at 8:30 p^m. The concert will be directed by Amparo O'Sulllvan, who teaches an extension course ln Spanish Performing ln the dance con¬ cert will be Amparo, as she Is known professionally. Every Mother and Grandmother wants with a birthstone for each child BALDWINS JI Wlllll - Mrirnml mjwchestb. of her group, Cuadro Espano, the Fresno Civic Ethnic Dancers and an FSC dance class. The dance producUon will In¬ clude flamenco, classical and regional dances. Amparo Is the daughter of the late tamed pianist Dame Amparo Iturbl. Her company of dancers has appeared nationally ln concert and on television and she spent two years at the Metro- Goldwyn-Mayer Studios. Also appearing that evening will be a featured dancer from San Antonio, Texas, Felipe de la Rosa. He will perform two dances, ■Soleares* and 'Zapate- ado." Ramon Armstrong, a gui¬ tarist, will accompany him. pre dental major; Joan Otomo, freshman biology major; Dennis Louie, freshman speech major and Marilyn Prultt, Junior so¬ ciology major. Masterson and Miss Prultt were also on this year's squad. The pep girls for next season wlU be Prlscllta Lauppe, sophomore home economics major; Linda Fontanllla, freshman social wel¬ fare major; Susan Griffith, Jun¬ ior speech major; Charlene Nich¬ olas, sophomore history major; Ann Pope, freshman biology ma¬ jor and LauraLeeWlUers, fresh¬ man psychology major. This year's yell leaders and pep girls wlU perform at one more game this year, the annual Varsity vs. Alumni game. The game Is May 16 at 8 p.m. ln Rat- cllffe Stadium. Revisions to the student rec¬ ords secUon -of the Student Rights and ResponslbiUUes Man¬ ual, a coUege naming poUcy, and a change ln the wording of the general education document will be considered by the Exec¬ utive Committee of the Aca- denlc Senate at Monday's meet¬ ing. The committee meets at 3 p.m. In Thomas Administration 117. The proposed revisions to the student records document Include a change ln the order of certain sections of the document and the addition of a clause which In¬ cludes restrlcUons on data col¬ lected by theofflce of Instruction¬ al Studies. Under these re¬ strlcUons the research data col¬ lected by the office Is not to be released without the written per¬ mission of the person who Is responsible for the control and content of the data. The college naming poUcy, from the PubUc Affairs Commit¬ tee is intended to estabUsh a policy for naming buildings, rooms, collections, speclalareas or faclUties at Fresno State Col¬ lege. The Academic Policy and Plan¬ ning Committee Is recommending a change ln the wording ln a secUon of the general educa¬ tion program proposal. The original section read: "At least two courses and a minimum of six units shall be selected ln each of the foUowlng areas to make a minimum of 40 units. At least 32 units shall be completed ln the first four areas.* The areas referred to are the various categories of subjects which the GE program designates. The recommended revision reads: *At least two courses and a minimum of six units shall be selected ln each of the first four areas, to make a minimum of 32 units. Additional elecUves shall be selected from the five areas to make a minimum of 40 The Flick is a western Tonight's Friday FUck, a western comedy entitled "Texas Across the River* wlU be shown at 8 p.m. ln the CoUege Union Lounge. It features Dean Martin, Joey ^ Bishop and Michael Ansara, * The CU popular Arts Com¬ mittee Is presenting the movie free to Student Body Card hold- Students perform opera EUROPE One Way CHARTER JET FLIGHTS A limited number of spaces Is available for faculty, staff, students of Tha California State CoUeges Fare: $225 one way Tbe California State Colleges 1600 Holloway Avenue San Francisco. Calif. 94132 (413) 469-1044 The Fresno State College Opera Workshop will present Paul Hindemith's opera, "There and Back," tonight and Saturday at 8 ln the Recital Hall of the Mu¬ sic Building. When the acUon in the opera has proceeded to a tragic point, a Bearded Sage steps forth and reverses the action. Everything then proceeds back to Its be¬ ginning, Uke a movie being run backwards, —" •The Medium," by Glan Carlo Menottl. This two-act tragic opera was first performed at Columbia University ln 1946. The work was then revised and restaged for a presentation ln New York. A motion picture of the opera was subsequently pro¬ duced starring Marie Powers. The acUon takes place ln Madame Flora's parlor erlals a i conjunction > is e spirits she has contacted for climax of the opera has been called 'one of the high points ln dramatic American musical The performances are under the direction of Rolland Hurst, the head of the Opera Workshop. Tickets are $1 and are avail¬ able from the participants and at the College Union InformaUon Booth, as well as at the door on the nights of performance. It opera will be on as a curtain raiser for the ramatic work of the evening, The Daily Collegian Music department names band director College DAZE 10% DISCOUNT OFF ON ALL BEAUTY SERVICES WITH STUDENT BODY CARD MON-TUES.-WED. Castillian Beauty Solon 2373 E. Shaw at Maple Dr. Wilson Coker, of the music department has an¬ nounced the hiring of Larry Suth¬ erland to direct the Fresno State College marching band next fall. Sutherland Is presently director of bands al the University of Missouri. Coker said the new director was hired after the FSC Board of Performing Arts agreed to support most of the budget re¬ quests for a marching band. The band has been Inactive for nearly one year because of I Sutherland Is credited as being one of the top band direct¬ ors ln the country. Under his direction, The Mlzzou Tigers Marching Band appeared at last season's televlzed Gator Bowl game and at several St. Louis Cardinals games. The new director has also play¬ ed professionally with the Tulsa and Kansas City Philharmonic* and with the Jasz groups of Ralph Marterie, Woody Herman and Les Elgart. Grewal talks about mystics to FSC class Sadhu Balwant Singh Grewal, Indian lecturer on philosophy and comparative religion, spoke on •Eastern and Western Mysti¬ cism-yesterday in Fresno State's only mysticism class. Sadhu described a mystic as *a person who has had exper¬ iences which his senses cannot explain.* The «law of Ufe\ which aU persons are seeking, is unknown to human senses, he said, if we can master them we.can master everything. He differentiated between East¬ ern and Western mysticism. Tb* Western world Is more concerned with tb* mind and the Eastern He said that visions and voices are not mystical experiences but psychic experiences which deal § with the mind. He said that experiences ofthe soul are mystical because they are beyond time and space. "When I become master over my e- motlons, my soul,and I become one." i said U n'tb to a doctor since 1917. "T he power within me doe* all things forme. God 1* always with me," be said. Sadhu will be speaking on mys- -ar tieUm at tbe Yoga Center, JOtt w E. Olive Ave., today at 2 and are open Construction is underway One sure sign of spring Is con¬ struction and the Ubrary on cam¬ pus Is an example ot lt--from top to side. For those who have heard a heUcopter-landlng-type sound recently lt is the east side of the library's roof being ground away ln preparation for a new one. The east half of the root Is part of the original Ubrary and was constructed ln 1950. Since then lt has sprung a few leaks. According to a Ubrary official lt will take aU of May and part of June to get the new The east side of the Ubrary, facing the cafeteria, la being prepared for a seU service postal unit. Hexagonal ln shape, lt will have facilities for dis¬ pensing stamps, weighing pack¬ ages, money changer, bundle and mail slots and have a phone Once around the campus . . . briefly Friday, May 9, 1969 THE DAILY COLLEGIAN 3 been poured and Inspected, a self service building will be furnished by the federal gov¬ ernment. Calendar. Hudson elected Ron Hudson and Tim J. Gar¬ cia topped a field of 16 candidate* ln yesterday's school of science Hudson, a Junior mathematic* major, and Garcia, a senior ln geography and former candidate for student body president, re¬ ceived 90 and 80 votes, respect¬ ively. Leading the write-in candi¬ dates was Andy Ehlin with 48 votes, followed by Wayne Preston with 12. There were 21 votes cast for 14 other write-in can¬ didates. Permit cards The fate of green priority cards used during registration to Insure a student's place ln a class will be decided once again by the Registration Committee Tuesday at 3:40 p.m. ln Admin¬ istration U7. At an open hearing Tuesday, the committee beard requests from six departments request¬ ing that green cards be retain¬ ed, at least for certain classes. The committee had previously passed a reaoluUon completely eliminating green cards. Art rituals •Experiment ln Mixed Media,* will be presented Saturday at 8 p.m. ln the Arena Theatre. The presentation, sponsored and performed by an experiment¬ al coUege art class, wlU be com¬ posed of two art rituals. Tbe first ritual, written by Dawn Simpson, will be a primi¬ tive and modern presentation, portraying how ritual has been lost in modem society and the 111 effects of lt* loss. The other ritual, written by Charles Gain**, assistant pro¬ fessor ot art, wiU Involve a rit¬ ualistic celebration. student* majoring la adrertt*- uala will involve some degree of audience participation. Applications due AppUcaUon* are due today at 5 p.m. ln the Student President'* Office for positions on the Senate Board on CoUege Union and Its committees. Appointments will be made within the next two weeks by to* CoUege Union director and the present CoUege Union Board. The board regulates the ac- dvltles and the spending of the CoUege Union. It Is also In¬ volved in approving and activating the poUcles and procedures con¬ cerning its operation. Master Plan The Academic PoUcy and Plan¬ ning Committee of the Academic Senate will review portions ot the Master Plan next week. The Master Plan was recently re¬ turned from the state coUege chancellor's office. Dr. Warren Blggerstaff, as¬ sociate vice president for aca¬ demic planning, told tha com¬ mittee that some programs had been critically reviewed by the chancellor's office, while other* were passed with Uttlc, lt any, i AFL-CIO .. Tb* public may attend the fes¬ tivities Saturday. Tbe group will meet at 1:30 p.m. at SUB Blair Looney, a Junior Jour- OUve to participate ln a silent nallsm-advertlsing major was protest. There wUl be a dinner elected a* to* fraternity's first at 641 Kearney Boulevard In the president. Vie* president wUl be Carpenter's Union Hall from 5 Included In the Master Plan are new department request*, de¬ gree programs, and building technical equipment authoriza¬ tions. Boycott Day Saturday has been declared In¬ ternational Boycott Day by the United Farm Worker* Organizing march from the Union HaU to the County Court¬ house will take place from 7 to 9 p.m. with the theme 'People Not Machines.* Ecumenical Wor¬ ship services will be held at the Brotherhood Statue. A fiesta at the Carpenter's Union Hall will follow from 9 to midnight. Tickets for the dinner and the fiesta wlU be $1.50 for adult* and 75 cents for students. UCP benefit Two special benefit perform¬ ances on May 15 and 1G will pro¬ ceed the regular showings of The Roar of the Greasepaint and the Smell of theCrowd,* the final, drama department play of the which will begin May The Little Theatre producUon will be performed May 15 for the United Cerebral Palsy organiza¬ tion. AU proceeds will go to that group. Tickets for this per¬ formance are available by calling Mrs. Ed Sturgeon at 485-0971.. The May 16 performance 1* sponsored by the East Fresno Rotary Club. urer wlU be Marilyn Moore. Both are Journalism-advertising ma¬ jor*. AU ot to* officer* wlti serve tor to* remainder of this and ADS meeting Members of the newly-formed Fresno State College chapter ot Alpha Delta Sigma, the national professional advertising fra¬ ternity, met Wednesday to elect officers and begin organizing a constitution. The fraternity will ■» MASTER CHARGE am BANK OF AMERICA mm AMERICAN EXPRESS mfCHEVRON CAMPUS CHEVRON| sfEL * WALT Cedar* Shaw Ph. 22*-1181 I g Tanya grooves on your body. The older folks have their own tanning products. Tanya is new. It turns on a new breed of sun worshipers. That's you. You want a natural Hawaiian tan —deeper, faster. Only Tanya can give it to you. Because Tanya has Hawaii's favorite tanning agents — coconut oil and cocoa butter. So Tanya boosts the sun's natural tanning rays. Make today happen... your way... get with Tanya. A full line of suntan products for today's sun children — at your bookstore. Tanya COCONUT Oil. AND COCOA BUTTER
Object Description
Title | 1969_05 The Daily Collegian May 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 | May 9, 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 Friday, May 9, 1969 Dorm Week starts tonight Group will discuss revisions in manual held ln the Faculty Dining HaU at 6 p.m., and at 8 p.m. a hootenanny Is planned ln the Com - roons Lounge. Richard Keyes, Black Studies professor, will speak Thursday night for Out-Reach Day ln the Commons Lounge at 8 p.m. The following nlghtM-3hall will spon¬ sor the First Annual Grub-In Residence Hall Week, week- long social and academic ac¬ tivities for both resident and non-resident students starts tonight with the Sadie Hawkins Dance ln the Commons PaUo from 8 p.m. to midnight. Music wlU be provided by the •Accents* and admission Is free. A picnic for residence hall stu¬ dents Is slated for Friday at MUlerton Lake. The foUowlng day Graves HaU will hold open -house from 1-5 p.m. and a fashion show will be held ln the Commons Lounge at 1 p.m. On Monday an all dorm open house Is scheduled from U a.m. to 3 p.m. Games and relay compeution will be highlighted lecte<1 t0 «rve « head v«" Tuesday at Relay Day, on the leader for the 1969-70 season, athletic field from 12-1 p.m. Also on next year's yell lead- A city council dinner wlU be lng squad are Mike Kass, Junior Spanish dancers to perform 9 p.m. to midnight Admission is 50 e •Eastgates* wUl cents a Play. pain Fleagle.headoftheweek'a activities, said the main purpose of Residence Hall Week is "to acquaint the campus and the com¬ munity with the many aspects of dorm Uvlng.' Spirit squads picked thropology n A Spanish dance concert tonight will cUmax LaRaza Week activi¬ ties. The concert, sponsored by the CoUege Union, will be held in the.Amphitheatre and start at 8:30 p^m. The concert will be directed by Amparo O'Sulllvan, who teaches an extension course ln Spanish Performing ln the dance con¬ cert will be Amparo, as she Is known professionally. Every Mother and Grandmother wants with a birthstone for each child BALDWINS JI Wlllll - Mrirnml mjwchestb. of her group, Cuadro Espano, the Fresno Civic Ethnic Dancers and an FSC dance class. The dance producUon will In¬ clude flamenco, classical and regional dances. Amparo Is the daughter of the late tamed pianist Dame Amparo Iturbl. Her company of dancers has appeared nationally ln concert and on television and she spent two years at the Metro- Goldwyn-Mayer Studios. Also appearing that evening will be a featured dancer from San Antonio, Texas, Felipe de la Rosa. He will perform two dances, ■Soleares* and 'Zapate- ado." Ramon Armstrong, a gui¬ tarist, will accompany him. pre dental major; Joan Otomo, freshman biology major; Dennis Louie, freshman speech major and Marilyn Prultt, Junior so¬ ciology major. Masterson and Miss Prultt were also on this year's squad. The pep girls for next season wlU be Prlscllta Lauppe, sophomore home economics major; Linda Fontanllla, freshman social wel¬ fare major; Susan Griffith, Jun¬ ior speech major; Charlene Nich¬ olas, sophomore history major; Ann Pope, freshman biology ma¬ jor and LauraLeeWlUers, fresh¬ man psychology major. This year's yell leaders and pep girls wlU perform at one more game this year, the annual Varsity vs. Alumni game. The game Is May 16 at 8 p.m. ln Rat- cllffe Stadium. Revisions to the student rec¬ ords secUon -of the Student Rights and ResponslbiUUes Man¬ ual, a coUege naming poUcy, and a change ln the wording of the general education document will be considered by the Exec¬ utive Committee of the Aca- denlc Senate at Monday's meet¬ ing. The committee meets at 3 p.m. In Thomas Administration 117. The proposed revisions to the student records document Include a change ln the order of certain sections of the document and the addition of a clause which In¬ cludes restrlcUons on data col¬ lected by theofflce of Instruction¬ al Studies. Under these re¬ strlcUons the research data col¬ lected by the office Is not to be released without the written per¬ mission of the person who Is responsible for the control and content of the data. The college naming poUcy, from the PubUc Affairs Commit¬ tee is intended to estabUsh a policy for naming buildings, rooms, collections, speclalareas or faclUties at Fresno State Col¬ lege. The Academic Policy and Plan¬ ning Committee Is recommending a change ln the wording ln a secUon of the general educa¬ tion program proposal. The original section read: "At least two courses and a minimum of six units shall be selected ln each of the foUowlng areas to make a minimum of 40 units. At least 32 units shall be completed ln the first four areas.* The areas referred to are the various categories of subjects which the GE program designates. The recommended revision reads: *At least two courses and a minimum of six units shall be selected ln each of the first four areas, to make a minimum of 32 units. Additional elecUves shall be selected from the five areas to make a minimum of 40 The Flick is a western Tonight's Friday FUck, a western comedy entitled "Texas Across the River* wlU be shown at 8 p.m. ln the CoUege Union Lounge. It features Dean Martin, Joey ^ Bishop and Michael Ansara, * The CU popular Arts Com¬ mittee Is presenting the movie free to Student Body Card hold- Students perform opera EUROPE One Way CHARTER JET FLIGHTS A limited number of spaces Is available for faculty, staff, students of Tha California State CoUeges Fare: $225 one way Tbe California State Colleges 1600 Holloway Avenue San Francisco. Calif. 94132 (413) 469-1044 The Fresno State College Opera Workshop will present Paul Hindemith's opera, "There and Back," tonight and Saturday at 8 ln the Recital Hall of the Mu¬ sic Building. When the acUon in the opera has proceeded to a tragic point, a Bearded Sage steps forth and reverses the action. Everything then proceeds back to Its be¬ ginning, Uke a movie being run backwards, —" •The Medium," by Glan Carlo Menottl. This two-act tragic opera was first performed at Columbia University ln 1946. The work was then revised and restaged for a presentation ln New York. A motion picture of the opera was subsequently pro¬ duced starring Marie Powers. The acUon takes place ln Madame Flora's parlor erlals a i conjunction > is e spirits she has contacted for climax of the opera has been called 'one of the high points ln dramatic American musical The performances are under the direction of Rolland Hurst, the head of the Opera Workshop. Tickets are $1 and are avail¬ able from the participants and at the College Union InformaUon Booth, as well as at the door on the nights of performance. It opera will be on as a curtain raiser for the ramatic work of the evening, The Daily Collegian Music department names band director College DAZE 10% DISCOUNT OFF ON ALL BEAUTY SERVICES WITH STUDENT BODY CARD MON-TUES.-WED. Castillian Beauty Solon 2373 E. Shaw at Maple Dr. Wilson Coker, of the music department has an¬ nounced the hiring of Larry Suth¬ erland to direct the Fresno State College marching band next fall. Sutherland Is presently director of bands al the University of Missouri. Coker said the new director was hired after the FSC Board of Performing Arts agreed to support most of the budget re¬ quests for a marching band. The band has been Inactive for nearly one year because of I Sutherland Is credited as being one of the top band direct¬ ors ln the country. Under his direction, The Mlzzou Tigers Marching Band appeared at last season's televlzed Gator Bowl game and at several St. Louis Cardinals games. The new director has also play¬ ed professionally with the Tulsa and Kansas City Philharmonic* and with the Jasz groups of Ralph Marterie, Woody Herman and Les Elgart. Grewal talks about mystics to FSC class Sadhu Balwant Singh Grewal, Indian lecturer on philosophy and comparative religion, spoke on •Eastern and Western Mysti¬ cism-yesterday in Fresno State's only mysticism class. Sadhu described a mystic as *a person who has had exper¬ iences which his senses cannot explain.* The «law of Ufe\ which aU persons are seeking, is unknown to human senses, he said, if we can master them we.can master everything. He differentiated between East¬ ern and Western mysticism. Tb* Western world Is more concerned with tb* mind and the Eastern He said that visions and voices are not mystical experiences but psychic experiences which deal § with the mind. He said that experiences ofthe soul are mystical because they are beyond time and space. "When I become master over my e- motlons, my soul,and I become one." i said U n'tb to a doctor since 1917. "T he power within me doe* all things forme. God 1* always with me," be said. Sadhu will be speaking on mys- -ar tieUm at tbe Yoga Center, JOtt w E. Olive Ave., today at 2 and are open Construction is underway One sure sign of spring Is con¬ struction and the Ubrary on cam¬ pus Is an example ot lt--from top to side. For those who have heard a heUcopter-landlng-type sound recently lt is the east side of the library's roof being ground away ln preparation for a new one. The east half of the root Is part of the original Ubrary and was constructed ln 1950. Since then lt has sprung a few leaks. According to a Ubrary official lt will take aU of May and part of June to get the new The east side of the Ubrary, facing the cafeteria, la being prepared for a seU service postal unit. Hexagonal ln shape, lt will have facilities for dis¬ pensing stamps, weighing pack¬ ages, money changer, bundle and mail slots and have a phone Once around the campus . . . briefly Friday, May 9, 1969 THE DAILY COLLEGIAN 3 been poured and Inspected, a self service building will be furnished by the federal gov¬ ernment. Calendar. Hudson elected Ron Hudson and Tim J. Gar¬ cia topped a field of 16 candidate* ln yesterday's school of science Hudson, a Junior mathematic* major, and Garcia, a senior ln geography and former candidate for student body president, re¬ ceived 90 and 80 votes, respect¬ ively. Leading the write-in candi¬ dates was Andy Ehlin with 48 votes, followed by Wayne Preston with 12. There were 21 votes cast for 14 other write-in can¬ didates. Permit cards The fate of green priority cards used during registration to Insure a student's place ln a class will be decided once again by the Registration Committee Tuesday at 3:40 p.m. ln Admin¬ istration U7. At an open hearing Tuesday, the committee beard requests from six departments request¬ ing that green cards be retain¬ ed, at least for certain classes. The committee had previously passed a reaoluUon completely eliminating green cards. Art rituals •Experiment ln Mixed Media,* will be presented Saturday at 8 p.m. ln the Arena Theatre. The presentation, sponsored and performed by an experiment¬ al coUege art class, wlU be com¬ posed of two art rituals. Tbe first ritual, written by Dawn Simpson, will be a primi¬ tive and modern presentation, portraying how ritual has been lost in modem society and the 111 effects of lt* loss. The other ritual, written by Charles Gain**, assistant pro¬ fessor ot art, wiU Involve a rit¬ ualistic celebration. student* majoring la adrertt*- uala will involve some degree of audience participation. Applications due AppUcaUon* are due today at 5 p.m. ln the Student President'* Office for positions on the Senate Board on CoUege Union and Its committees. Appointments will be made within the next two weeks by to* CoUege Union director and the present CoUege Union Board. The board regulates the ac- dvltles and the spending of the CoUege Union. It Is also In¬ volved in approving and activating the poUcles and procedures con¬ cerning its operation. Master Plan The Academic PoUcy and Plan¬ ning Committee of the Academic Senate will review portions ot the Master Plan next week. The Master Plan was recently re¬ turned from the state coUege chancellor's office. Dr. Warren Blggerstaff, as¬ sociate vice president for aca¬ demic planning, told tha com¬ mittee that some programs had been critically reviewed by the chancellor's office, while other* were passed with Uttlc, lt any, i AFL-CIO .. Tb* public may attend the fes¬ tivities Saturday. Tbe group will meet at 1:30 p.m. at SUB Blair Looney, a Junior Jour- OUve to participate ln a silent nallsm-advertlsing major was protest. There wUl be a dinner elected a* to* fraternity's first at 641 Kearney Boulevard In the president. Vie* president wUl be Carpenter's Union Hall from 5 Included In the Master Plan are new department request*, de¬ gree programs, and building technical equipment authoriza¬ tions. Boycott Day Saturday has been declared In¬ ternational Boycott Day by the United Farm Worker* Organizing march from the Union HaU to the County Court¬ house will take place from 7 to 9 p.m. with the theme 'People Not Machines.* Ecumenical Wor¬ ship services will be held at the Brotherhood Statue. A fiesta at the Carpenter's Union Hall will follow from 9 to midnight. Tickets for the dinner and the fiesta wlU be $1.50 for adult* and 75 cents for students. UCP benefit Two special benefit perform¬ ances on May 15 and 1G will pro¬ ceed the regular showings of The Roar of the Greasepaint and the Smell of theCrowd,* the final, drama department play of the which will begin May The Little Theatre producUon will be performed May 15 for the United Cerebral Palsy organiza¬ tion. AU proceeds will go to that group. Tickets for this per¬ formance are available by calling Mrs. Ed Sturgeon at 485-0971.. The May 16 performance 1* sponsored by the East Fresno Rotary Club. urer wlU be Marilyn Moore. Both are Journalism-advertising ma¬ jor*. AU ot to* officer* wlti serve tor to* remainder of this and ADS meeting Members of the newly-formed Fresno State College chapter ot Alpha Delta Sigma, the national professional advertising fra¬ ternity, met Wednesday to elect officers and begin organizing a constitution. The fraternity will ■» MASTER CHARGE am BANK OF AMERICA mm AMERICAN EXPRESS mfCHEVRON CAMPUS CHEVRON| sfEL * WALT Cedar* Shaw Ph. 22*-1181 I g Tanya grooves on your body. The older folks have their own tanning products. Tanya is new. It turns on a new breed of sun worshipers. That's you. You want a natural Hawaiian tan —deeper, faster. Only Tanya can give it to you. Because Tanya has Hawaii's favorite tanning agents — coconut oil and cocoa butter. So Tanya boosts the sun's natural tanning rays. Make today happen... your way... get with Tanya. A full line of suntan products for today's sun children — at your bookstore. Tanya COCONUT Oil. AND COCOA BUTTER |