April 4, 1974 Pg. 8- April 5, 1974 La Voz Pg. 1 |
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t-THE DAIY COLLEGIAN- Thurs., Apr. 4,1974 T VIOLINIST Robert Edward KazanJIan will give a special ('concert at CSUF Friday In the Little Theatre at 12:15 p.m. The program is being sponsored by Dr. Allan Button and his Humanistic Psychology class. Drugs (Continued from Page I) "That notion results In a ten- h God on behalf The other side types i it the Heal! those whose sensuality and dis a few more women than men use obedience provoked the fall of man and have continued to trip the renter hul II used to lie the other way around. men were under a lot of anxiety These, plus the Idea that wom liecause they were in school to en belong ln the home, are Ihe avoid the drafl and they didn't stereotypes women have labored want to lie In rollece anyway," under for a longtime, and they're she said. Church will host free Easter dinner The public ts Invited to a free of a blue grass band. The Farm Easter dinner. Sunday, Spril 14, ers Daughers. from 1-4 p.m. In the Social Hall Donations are asked from Ihe of the First Christian Church, community of food, money, or 1362 *N" Street. Anyone Is wel your time. For more Informa come to share this meal, visit. tion call 237-3111. rest, sing and listen to the music It's an annual affair that Is Rea will present held either at Thanksgiving, Christmas or Easter and ln some musical recital Sunday years there has been two and three dinners held. The dinners Alan Rea, a part-time Instruc- are totally volunteer. Any food t CSUF will present a program of harpsichord and piano music Sunday, April 7 at 3 p.m. ln the Music Building Recital Hall. Rea will present the program later at the University of Southern CaUfornla as part of his doctoral degree work. The program Includes pieces by Frescobaldl, Bach, Handel and Brahms. Admission Is free, but scholar- wlU b I NOW TADKQ AUDITIONS M foe co.bln.tKHr. Sir.,., „d ■ Ooita»- player. Work llood.r- ■ This.*).. SUO-11.30. C.llH for apfr.omtmer.il J29-1112 or ■ 229-4990 rJshla;. Sfta-5327 ■ d.,s. Applies.! must b. .bl. ■ lo.tMtUnmedJ.t.lr.oo: work ■ Fresno Rescue LONELY? Do something about it! CALL 227-4314 or 431-4041 THE MATCHMAKERS DATING SERVICE 1433 W. SHAW, FRESNO TAN6 SOO DO ACADEMY Of KARATE- STUDENT DISCOUNT (with IJD. Card* 8oas^°Hi^$iooo 2915 TULARE ST. CoH 266-41S./S.35-8974' Oil economist notes industry ON CAMPUS lack of communication .management seminar held yesterday by tire School of Business, the meeting was opened up to questions and answers. C. J. Carlton, ofthe economics department of Standard Oil, said funding for expanded searches for energy would require tremendous According to a report by Chase Manhattan Bank, said M. O. Hill, a staff analyst, the expenses for meeting Increasing energy needs could come to over $4 trillion. Hill defended the great Increase tn profits the otl companies have made In the last '1972 was a year that was very poor," he said. "Our profits went down ln the United States. In 1973, when things really got tight, we took advantage to Increase our prices, which before were really very depressed.* H1U also warned of the outflow of U.S. .'money, and said balance of payments problems wore expected to get worse. Dut, hesald, Europe was in a much Ughter spot. •It's Just a mess outside ofthe He said the Industry has been r^t fault for not attempting tocom- munlcate more with the public. ■The Industry has not communicated with Mr. Public," he TODAY An engineering seminar to discuss the design aspects and structural applications of timber construction will be held at 2 p. m. In the International Room of the said. WORLD NEWS IN BRIEF college community, particularly aWe Of the d^Usfa r*o°n they to the fact that the woman's role In society Is irhanglng. pressure they are under and the reasons for this pressure, so emotionally. were safely transferred yesterday from the British ocean liner Queen Elizabeth II to. a Norwegian cruiser ship and taken to Bermuda. The Quee i Ellzabethll CONSUMER RILL Legal planning, for retirement wlU be discussed by attorney Patrick Turner In CU 308 at 2 The Academic Policy and Planning Committee will meet at 2:15 p.m. In Thomas Administration Vinson Brown will give a sUde show on 'Adventures with Seashore Life on the Fringes of the Pacific* at 4 p.m. in Science 221. A Music Concert will be held at 3 p.m. ln the College Union David Thompson will lecture on 'Northern Ireland* at* p.m. in the CoUege Union Lounge. The College Union.Program's office karate class wtll meet at 8 p.m. tn the College Union. Check the bulletin board for the s-1 OHMS At least 350 people were killed last nlghi or this morning as violent storms hit Canada and the United States. Ohio. Kentucky and passed a bill yesterday which would create a federal agency to represent consumer Interests In government and the courts.- evaluate consumer complaints, gather and distribute Information on products and services, and promote research on c products. 1 Young Farmers Hon willmeelat 7:30p.m. tn the Collegiate Room of the cafeteria. JACK MUNARI pr. _jj2!£*-C0UNiR.y "Rpc\ Xoo*v\ (|9+»H0LEJ) PO^ROBIES GOLF osi O.C. Aptitude test: Chicanos i charge discrimination -ijj. *Los Trabajadoree de La mtniatrative function rather: than jects to the test in tv Trabajadores Rata,* a group of "' 'the School of Social Work al CSUF, have charged that a proposed aptitude teat for undergraduate social-work majors, may be used to discourage Chl- the Social Work program. They said there la no guarantee the teat will not be used specifically to weed out students and that the test can't possibly point out weaknesses ln social work aptitude. •The test is serving as an ad- r evaluation of what should be learned tn social work,* (aid Alfonso Hernandez, a graduate student ln the school. Lo* Trabajadores aald tbe test la not valid because lt lis culturally biased with educational and environmental factors having to do mostly with middle-class non-mlnorlty students. ■A test can't really tell how Anglos can work with Chlcanos or vice-versa,' said Hernandez. •Tests only determine what is Rlcardo Rodriguez aald he ob it la'not a true evaluaUve feet on a person's experiences. "It is only a testoneducattonal experience - on the educational experience of the white middle- class Anglo In particular," he said. The question of whether or not to have such a test and what tt would Include ia up ln the air at this time, according to another aocial work major, Joe Andrade Jr. •The final decision will be op to Richard Ford, dean of the Social Work D ft MOTHER and her two children sit In tbe waiting room of tVuFW Health Center in Sanger, waiting to see the doctor. The clinic was established last May. (See story on Page 2.) Photo by R. Hanashiro. La Vozde Aztlan THE DAILY COLLEGIAN California State University, Fresno LXXVIM/113 FRIDAY, APRIL J, 1974 Indians'we are': first CSUF Native & American culture week Palute-Shoshone reservation In the subjects will, range Fallon, Nevada, Wounded Knee ■anxiously een extended to the 'length and readth ot the San Joaquin Val- •y," according to Rick Heredla, ■resident of the CSUF Natlve- \mer\can Club. Heredla, a palute from the organizations awaiting this event." Slated for the week-long activity are q~ host of speakers, Including Thomas Bunyaca, ja Hopi medicine'man, who will open the event with an Indian blessing. In addition, community speakers will speak on Wednesday and •The students In Tewaquachl, e campus Indian organization, e been working feverishly to a successful dancers, singers and drummers, pudding andlndlan ted. The main dinner of beef, Women's teatro performs Brecht's 'Mother' at C-SUF By Larry Romero A Marxist-Leninist twist to .'emlnlsm was presented by a reatro from San Diego which per- lormed on the closing day of the sup Third World Women's Symposium, last week J/i the College . o,. made up of nine en who refused to give their (dual names and would rath- ! considered as a 'collective * love," called a 'Son e Awakening* wUl be S held Easter Sunday morn- : lng at 10: IS In the Country f Squire Theatre at First". id Ashlan. • e musical festival feature Bob Maddux Tree of Life ln > Chico. The Croup will also appear. spokesman said, "This isn't Just any old • Jam session. It's a rally j with a special theme that iu the audience will par- : ticlpateln, •Never before has there ■ been a festival like this In Fresno, not only' great ut a special kind : of message for a different ; kind of happening." The festival Is free and in to the public. group, performed a Bertolt Brecht play entitled 'Mother,* but adapted to conform not only to the Chlcano's culture, but also to all the working people's — the proletariat. The play depicts the Introduction of a mother into tbe teachings of communism, and revolves around the struggle of the workers versus the bosses, or *bour- Even though the troupe has been together for three years, they don't display the finesse which would be expected of a group that has .been working together that long.' But-tbe mesaage, which they seem to wholeheartedly believe In, is definitely there. Their lack of organization and sophistication of a contrived It ' i they a trying to show that tbey a of the masses and thus their disorganized performance seems to be planned to convey that point. Mixed ln with their Marxist line, waa the obvious message of the way they view the female's role ln the "revolution." 'Things are changing, people are changing, we are trying to see each other as people, not Just aa a woman or a man,* said one of the members, who aeemed weU versed In Marxism. •Women are taking a' more active voice ln politics, they are realizing that lt la the only way to atop and abolish male chauvinism. Tha only way we are going to abolish that la by abol- istyag the capitalistic system aad the bourgeois classes, and thus establishing the dictatorship of the proletariat,* she said. Another ofthe many characters depicted tn the ten act play, was that of a 'Chlcano studies* professor, named Monteczuma. He was portrayed as the 'opportunist* who did not go along with the communist line because he had already attained and comfortable position, aald one of the performers. Tbe general consensus from the audience was that the play technical polish, but that lt lta message well. •It was good In the respect that it showed what women could do -• that they didn't necessarily to have men to put on a ■ said PVEP Director, Pat One student, who aaked not to be Identified and Is currently the prealdent of MECHA, said: *I guess It was all right, but it's Just the same old play that la performed aU the Ume.* •It waa okay. The only thine monism are probably not weU understood by the majority of the audience," said senior Joe LOCAL ZCOT SUITERS — Edna Gonzalez and tear.*.***' Ben Cruz were pasting through town <**m a La Voz prwtog raphe r snapped their, picture. When aaked to say.something for the paper, all Ben would say waa *Orale Ese* and Edna Just kept chomping her gum. Just JIvmg! In real life Ben and EtW are CSUF aturJenta. They were in costume for a Semana de La Raza Fund-raiser and received first place for the best dressed Zoot Suit couple. Photo by Barry
Object Description
Title | 1974_04 The Daily Collegian April 1974 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1974 |
Description | Daily (except weekends) during the school year. Microfilm. Palo Alto, Calif. |
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, 35mm. |
Technical Information | Scanned at 600 dpi; TIFF; Microfilm ScanPro 2000 "E-image data" |
Language | eng |
Description
Title | April 4, 1974 Pg. 8- April 5, 1974 La Voz Pg. 1 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1974 |
Description | Daily (except weekends) during the school year. Microfilm. Palo Alto, Calif. |
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, 35mm. |
Technical Information | Scanned at 600 dpi; TIFF; Microfilm ScanPro 2000 "E-image data" |
Language | eng |
Full-Text-Search | t-THE DAIY COLLEGIAN- Thurs., Apr. 4,1974 T VIOLINIST Robert Edward KazanJIan will give a special ('concert at CSUF Friday In the Little Theatre at 12:15 p.m. The program is being sponsored by Dr. Allan Button and his Humanistic Psychology class. Drugs (Continued from Page I) "That notion results In a ten- h God on behalf The other side types i it the Heal! those whose sensuality and dis a few more women than men use obedience provoked the fall of man and have continued to trip the renter hul II used to lie the other way around. men were under a lot of anxiety These, plus the Idea that wom liecause they were in school to en belong ln the home, are Ihe avoid the drafl and they didn't stereotypes women have labored want to lie In rollece anyway," under for a longtime, and they're she said. Church will host free Easter dinner The public ts Invited to a free of a blue grass band. The Farm Easter dinner. Sunday, Spril 14, ers Daughers. from 1-4 p.m. In the Social Hall Donations are asked from Ihe of the First Christian Church, community of food, money, or 1362 *N" Street. Anyone Is wel your time. For more Informa come to share this meal, visit. tion call 237-3111. rest, sing and listen to the music It's an annual affair that Is Rea will present held either at Thanksgiving, Christmas or Easter and ln some musical recital Sunday years there has been two and three dinners held. The dinners Alan Rea, a part-time Instruc- are totally volunteer. Any food t CSUF will present a program of harpsichord and piano music Sunday, April 7 at 3 p.m. ln the Music Building Recital Hall. Rea will present the program later at the University of Southern CaUfornla as part of his doctoral degree work. The program Includes pieces by Frescobaldl, Bach, Handel and Brahms. Admission Is free, but scholar- wlU b I NOW TADKQ AUDITIONS M foe co.bln.tKHr. Sir.,., „d ■ Ooita»- player. Work llood.r- ■ This.*).. SUO-11.30. C.llH for apfr.omtmer.il J29-1112 or ■ 229-4990 rJshla;. Sfta-5327 ■ d.,s. Applies.! must b. .bl. ■ lo.tMtUnmedJ.t.lr.oo: work ■ Fresno Rescue LONELY? Do something about it! CALL 227-4314 or 431-4041 THE MATCHMAKERS DATING SERVICE 1433 W. SHAW, FRESNO TAN6 SOO DO ACADEMY Of KARATE- STUDENT DISCOUNT (with IJD. Card* 8oas^°Hi^$iooo 2915 TULARE ST. CoH 266-41S./S.35-8974' Oil economist notes industry ON CAMPUS lack of communication .management seminar held yesterday by tire School of Business, the meeting was opened up to questions and answers. C. J. Carlton, ofthe economics department of Standard Oil, said funding for expanded searches for energy would require tremendous According to a report by Chase Manhattan Bank, said M. O. Hill, a staff analyst, the expenses for meeting Increasing energy needs could come to over $4 trillion. Hill defended the great Increase tn profits the otl companies have made In the last '1972 was a year that was very poor," he said. "Our profits went down ln the United States. In 1973, when things really got tight, we took advantage to Increase our prices, which before were really very depressed.* H1U also warned of the outflow of U.S. .'money, and said balance of payments problems wore expected to get worse. Dut, hesald, Europe was in a much Ughter spot. •It's Just a mess outside ofthe He said the Industry has been r^t fault for not attempting tocom- munlcate more with the public. ■The Industry has not communicated with Mr. Public," he TODAY An engineering seminar to discuss the design aspects and structural applications of timber construction will be held at 2 p. m. In the International Room of the said. WORLD NEWS IN BRIEF college community, particularly aWe Of the d^Usfa r*o°n they to the fact that the woman's role In society Is irhanglng. pressure they are under and the reasons for this pressure, so emotionally. were safely transferred yesterday from the British ocean liner Queen Elizabeth II to. a Norwegian cruiser ship and taken to Bermuda. The Quee i Ellzabethll CONSUMER RILL Legal planning, for retirement wlU be discussed by attorney Patrick Turner In CU 308 at 2 The Academic Policy and Planning Committee will meet at 2:15 p.m. In Thomas Administration Vinson Brown will give a sUde show on 'Adventures with Seashore Life on the Fringes of the Pacific* at 4 p.m. in Science 221. A Music Concert will be held at 3 p.m. ln the College Union David Thompson will lecture on 'Northern Ireland* at* p.m. in the CoUege Union Lounge. The College Union.Program's office karate class wtll meet at 8 p.m. tn the College Union. Check the bulletin board for the s-1 OHMS At least 350 people were killed last nlghi or this morning as violent storms hit Canada and the United States. Ohio. Kentucky and passed a bill yesterday which would create a federal agency to represent consumer Interests In government and the courts.- evaluate consumer complaints, gather and distribute Information on products and services, and promote research on c products. 1 Young Farmers Hon willmeelat 7:30p.m. tn the Collegiate Room of the cafeteria. JACK MUNARI pr. _jj2!£*-C0UNiR.y "Rpc\ Xoo*v\ (|9+»H0LEJ) PO^ROBIES GOLF osi O.C. Aptitude test: Chicanos i charge discrimination -ijj. *Los Trabajadoree de La mtniatrative function rather: than jects to the test in tv Trabajadores Rata,* a group of "' 'the School of Social Work al CSUF, have charged that a proposed aptitude teat for undergraduate social-work majors, may be used to discourage Chl- the Social Work program. They said there la no guarantee the teat will not be used specifically to weed out students and that the test can't possibly point out weaknesses ln social work aptitude. •The test is serving as an ad- r evaluation of what should be learned tn social work,* (aid Alfonso Hernandez, a graduate student ln the school. Lo* Trabajadores aald tbe test la not valid because lt lis culturally biased with educational and environmental factors having to do mostly with middle-class non-mlnorlty students. ■A test can't really tell how Anglos can work with Chlcanos or vice-versa,' said Hernandez. •Tests only determine what is Rlcardo Rodriguez aald he ob it la'not a true evaluaUve feet on a person's experiences. "It is only a testoneducattonal experience - on the educational experience of the white middle- class Anglo In particular," he said. The question of whether or not to have such a test and what tt would Include ia up ln the air at this time, according to another aocial work major, Joe Andrade Jr. •The final decision will be op to Richard Ford, dean of the Social Work D ft MOTHER and her two children sit In tbe waiting room of tVuFW Health Center in Sanger, waiting to see the doctor. The clinic was established last May. (See story on Page 2.) Photo by R. Hanashiro. La Vozde Aztlan THE DAILY COLLEGIAN California State University, Fresno LXXVIM/113 FRIDAY, APRIL J, 1974 Indians'we are': first CSUF Native & American culture week Palute-Shoshone reservation In the subjects will, range Fallon, Nevada, Wounded Knee ■anxiously een extended to the 'length and readth ot the San Joaquin Val- •y," according to Rick Heredla, ■resident of the CSUF Natlve- \mer\can Club. Heredla, a palute from the organizations awaiting this event." Slated for the week-long activity are q~ host of speakers, Including Thomas Bunyaca, ja Hopi medicine'man, who will open the event with an Indian blessing. In addition, community speakers will speak on Wednesday and •The students In Tewaquachl, e campus Indian organization, e been working feverishly to a successful dancers, singers and drummers, pudding andlndlan ted. The main dinner of beef, Women's teatro performs Brecht's 'Mother' at C-SUF By Larry Romero A Marxist-Leninist twist to .'emlnlsm was presented by a reatro from San Diego which per- lormed on the closing day of the sup Third World Women's Symposium, last week J/i the College . o,. made up of nine en who refused to give their (dual names and would rath- ! considered as a 'collective * love," called a 'Son e Awakening* wUl be S held Easter Sunday morn- : lng at 10: IS In the Country f Squire Theatre at First". id Ashlan. • e musical festival feature Bob Maddux Tree of Life ln > Chico. The Croup will also appear. spokesman said, "This isn't Just any old • Jam session. It's a rally j with a special theme that iu the audience will par- : ticlpateln, •Never before has there ■ been a festival like this In Fresno, not only' great ut a special kind : of message for a different ; kind of happening." The festival Is free and in to the public. group, performed a Bertolt Brecht play entitled 'Mother,* but adapted to conform not only to the Chlcano's culture, but also to all the working people's — the proletariat. The play depicts the Introduction of a mother into tbe teachings of communism, and revolves around the struggle of the workers versus the bosses, or *bour- Even though the troupe has been together for three years, they don't display the finesse which would be expected of a group that has .been working together that long.' But-tbe mesaage, which they seem to wholeheartedly believe In, is definitely there. Their lack of organization and sophistication of a contrived It ' i they a trying to show that tbey a of the masses and thus their disorganized performance seems to be planned to convey that point. Mixed ln with their Marxist line, waa the obvious message of the way they view the female's role ln the "revolution." 'Things are changing, people are changing, we are trying to see each other as people, not Just aa a woman or a man,* said one of the members, who aeemed weU versed In Marxism. •Women are taking a' more active voice ln politics, they are realizing that lt la the only way to atop and abolish male chauvinism. Tha only way we are going to abolish that la by abol- istyag the capitalistic system aad the bourgeois classes, and thus establishing the dictatorship of the proletariat,* she said. Another ofthe many characters depicted tn the ten act play, was that of a 'Chlcano studies* professor, named Monteczuma. He was portrayed as the 'opportunist* who did not go along with the communist line because he had already attained and comfortable position, aald one of the performers. Tbe general consensus from the audience was that the play technical polish, but that lt lta message well. •It was good In the respect that it showed what women could do -• that they didn't necessarily to have men to put on a ■ said PVEP Director, Pat One student, who aaked not to be Identified and Is currently the prealdent of MECHA, said: *I guess It was all right, but it's Just the same old play that la performed aU the Ume.* •It waa okay. The only thine monism are probably not weU understood by the majority of the audience," said senior Joe LOCAL ZCOT SUITERS — Edna Gonzalez and tear.*.***' Ben Cruz were pasting through town <**m a La Voz prwtog raphe r snapped their, picture. When aaked to say.something for the paper, all Ben would say waa *Orale Ese* and Edna Just kept chomping her gum. Just JIvmg! In real life Ben and EtW are CSUF aturJenta. They were in costume for a Semana de La Raza Fund-raiser and received first place for the best dressed Zoot Suit couple. Photo by Barry |