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ANOTHER SPIN WITH THE BEATLES 2 THE DAILY COLLEGIAN Friday. March 13, 1970 'Get Back to Toronto'- exciting new album By George Hlatt In the past year or so, pirating records has become a national or International pastime. Dylan's stolen tapes, released as the now famous 'Great White Wonder* album has been a sore spot ln the side of Columbia Records ever since. In the past few months, a nurhoer of very good releases of the same sort, 1. e., underground productions, have come to Ught. Among these are the Uve recording of the RolUng Stones al the Coliseum and 'Get Back to Toronto* by the •Get Back to Toronto* Is a teaUy exciting album for anyone of many reasons. To begin with, It contains several Beatles songs never before released. It Is of much better sound and production than the above-mentioned Dylan The first side opens with a peace message by John and Yoko. The message itself Is worth listening to and worth having on record. This Is followed by a shortened version of 'Get Back!* The next song Is a delight. It ls a new song called'Teddy Boy.* Paul handles the singing and he ber opens with chords and then McCartney Is heard to mumble some of the lyrics Uke someone cord exemplify the Beatles ability to work songs out In the studio. John comes through during Urt number with Uttle comments here The next song Is the number featured on the Ed Sullivan show ■On t hears- voices in the studio and then John and Paul start their world-famous harmony. The last, song on this side ls 'All 1 Want is You". This ls a typical Beatle number featuring John. The closing of the song ls accompanied by John's comments suggesting another 'Why Don't We Do It In the Road?* The second side opens with ■I've Got a Feeling*, a melodic song which ls a pleasant mixture of John and Paul. It features lyrics Uke: •Everybody's had a bad year, Everybody's had a good time, Everybody's had a wet dream, Everybody's saw the sun- time. 'There wlllbeananswer- let It be*, seems to be one of the most definitive Unes ln the Beatles' lyrics. This song ls followed by an Instrumental opening which Is •Don't Let Me Down.* In the middle of this number John Hells, •Hit It Bill!* and BlUy Preston goes Into a rather nice organ run. This song Is one of the best examples of the excitement felt when listening to this disc. After a warning to 'Be quiet back there* ls given the group goes Into 'Get Back*. This Is followed by a short song called "When You Walk* and then a crazy lnexplalnable example of mas Message.* This album Is worth every cent you pay for It, but It ls rather hard to find. It ls available at Sun-Stereo and perhaps a few small record stores ln the area. The stereo ls good and tbe sound . ls exceptional when one considers the pains taken to record this In a recording studio. If one ls a Beatle fan this at, bum ls a must. Other record fans will find this ls a very worthwhile addition to their collection. This is apparently an album recorded last December, a little after the Altamont tragedy. The producers of this album are most likely studio hands who worked up a recording process of their own while the famed as yet to be released •Get Back*.album. The album features everal Instances of the tape slowing down and 'wow' as the tape ls turned on. However, It ls unlikely that many albums of this sort will appear ) the I t this FOR/MAT EMPHASIZES YOUTH Entertainment magazine bids for under 30 market By Dan Vlnlng AlUgator Entertainment Editor These days everyone is trying According to people who keep statistics, we who are under 30 or 25 or something like that are \ new magazine I. The features- E If sex, love and marriage interest you . • COME HEAR DICK DAY, SUNDAY NIGHT AT 8:30 IN THE COLLEGE UNION. K out to pictorial studies of istory of the performing - are for the most part well n. lively and Informative, ictures are good.Therelsa color work. The typography ■sign is absolutely refresh- nd unique. The editorial I seems to be bright, hu- magazlne, sold locally at Into Ihe special Introductory offer thing. Regular subscription rates are supposed to, be ten The premier issue of 'Show* released ln the middle of December and called the January Issue, shows the magazine's Immediate desires to become a magazine for youth, the youth who, surveys have shown, are the ones who make up about 60 percent of the audience of most movies and who have made the whole entertainment business com? to life ln this country. So. the first Issue had articles on the Beatle's business concerns lnthe Apple Corp., a story on plans to adapt Phillip Roth's Portnoy's Complaint to the screen, and an astrological chart outlining, for those who care, what will happen to Marlon Brando in the next month. Outstanding articles in the first Issue Include a look at Leacock Pennebaker, Ihe underground Although there ls a considerable stress put on the new developments and the pop movements in film, the magazine spends more than enough time working with more sophisticated and scholarly looks at the art of the cinema and, although this particular angle doesn't seem to be the magazine's primary one, some good things get said. A good example of this scholarly and academically sound approach to film can be seen ln the second issue of 'Show,* ln which a long article tracing the history of the •guerilla movie* appears. The guerilla movie Is defined by the article as those films which work for political goals, 'the object ls ' to Incite political ac- " the a Could you get enthusiastic about selling the most salable product in the worktf The product is ideas. The 2600 men u ho -HI ideas lor us are excited abeul what they're doing. We know ih.tt because they're successful al it And many ot them are recent college graduates. In (act, our /.reference is for young college graduates who get a kick out of being self- starters. Bull sessions aside, college students spend at least four years being independent thinkers in the world of ideas. As a member of Ihe Moore sales team, you'd still be pretty much on your own, with responsibility that grows as you grow. Your job would involve you with communication problems People problems. Problems in business logistics. You'd be looking (or ways lo make information more intelligible lo more people To make it impossible for carelessness lo destroy efficiency. Challenging? You bet it is. Come and look us over. Demand specifics. Weigh us as hard as we'll be weighing you. We might turn out lo be your kind of people. One of our Moore men will be on campus *K"JL .. '....Seeyour Placement Director for the time and place. MOORE BUSINESS FORMS. IMC . THE DAILY COLLEGIAN The magazine doesn't deal only with films. The latest Issue also Includes copy on dance, television, commercials, the theatre, and a thing called, "The Editors Bless and the Editors Blast* - an editorial comment feature. Design-wise and typographically, the magazine ls attractive and Interesting. There ls much use of colored paper for special Inatlve type faces and graphic design work. The layout and design is so good that It Isn't even offensive in Its brilliance. So, it looks as If we have a new magazine that Is striving to ~be ours particularly and striving, It seems, ln the right way. -From The Florida Alligator FOREIGN ■CAR PARTSi LUCAS, BOSCH &BAP ELECTRIC Complete line of original equipment replacement parts. SU, SOLEX, WEBER & ZENITH CARB IMPORT PARTS CENTER Ventura at M 233-8861 Businesses slow down FSC grad recruiting THE DAILY COLLEGIAN 3 ' Friday. March 13. «°70 « tttwriftt nai weweamm College recruiting activity, apparently reflecting the naUon'a softening economy, remains ln a downtrend at mid-point ln the 1969-70 season, according toDr. Harold D. Jones, placement dl- Wor critic will speak Tuesday MadeUne Duckies, who during Christmas helped return the names of fifty American POW's from Hanoi, will speak on campus next Tuesday ln Industrial Arts 101 at 3 p.m. She will speak on child casualties In Vietnam, and show a film. Miss Duckies ls a member of theCommltteeofRes- ponslblUty to save war- burned and warlnjuredVlet- namese children, and has made several trips to Vlet- Fretno State College, one of the 141 participating Institutions ln the College Placement Council's Salary Survey. Compared to a year ago, the national statlsUcs reveal a drop ln volume of 16 per cent at the bachelor's level, 26 per cent at the master's level and 14 per cent at the Ph.D. level. These data are Included ln the council's second salary survey report of the season. It Issues three such reports each year, covering actual offers being made students. The final i historically tbe employer group making the most offers. A year ago, for example, there were 2,284 aerospace offers; this year the number is down to 9G2. other major employer groups showing a decline In technical volume are chemicals, electrical machinery, and electronics. While the number of offers to non-technical candidates has gone up 2.8 per cent over those of last March, this figure has been bolstered by an increase ln offers to accounting majors. Two have risen 7.6 per cent tor the comparable period — from $711 to $765 - but, again, thla figure was affected appreciably by tbe port for the y< r will be released i June. The council, headquartered ln Bethleham, Pa., ls the non-profit naUonal service organization for the college placement and recruitment field, serving approximately 1,300colleges and 2,100 employers. nlcal candidates are the hardest hit, experiencing a drop of 24 per cent over last March. This substantial decrease ls due, ln large part, to reductions ln activity ln the aerospace Industry, Regents end tradition of tuition-free education By Floyd Norrls College press Service BERKELEY-(CPS)-The University of California Board of s voted to ■old t in of ti Charges at the University wlU double with two years, with fees rising from the current $300 for all resident students to $450 for undergraduates ln 1970-71 and $600 1 1971-7 is will be S4H0 and $660 In the same years. For the first time, fees will be used for educational purposes, not Just student' services. Perhaps the most significant aspect of the new fees ls the provision that students with need can pay the fees after graduation. For the student. It will be Identical to any loan, but the University will not get the money until the student pays. This deferral procedure will result lnthe University getting Its iy later, as opposed to anor- through an additional yearly payment to the Internal Revenue Reagan also thinks that since graduate education is more costly, graduate students should pay more. He sees the new surcharge as being only the first step. The other statewide segment of California's higher education system, the state colleges, where fees are about $150, may also raise tuition. That decision must be made by the state legislators, a clear majority of whom favor tuition. But the Senate Education Committee ls against the proposal and may kill It. Although California's budget cutting has been more drastic than that of other states, many I the University gets Its money immediately from the lending agency. The 16-6 vote climaxedathree year struggle by Governor Ronald in 1967, but new appointments and regental switches accounted (or the large majority for tuition Some regents supported tuition because they felt the University waa ln a financial crisis due to state budget cuts, in 1970-71, there will be no new construction on any campus of the University, due to low funding from the state. One campus, UCLA, wlU lose 161 faculty positions under the new budget. Liberal regents, led by Fred Dutton, who was Bobby Kennedy's campaign manager ln the 1968 primaries, attacked the tuition Plan on the grounds It would drive poor students tothe already overcrowded state colleges and junior colleges. Dutton also said the plan amounted to shifting part ofthe tax burden from businesses to middle income parents whose children cannot qualify for financial aid. . Reagan feels students gain 11- nanclaUy from college education, and therefore should pay the cost of it, preferably from later earnings. Such plans have been proposed by Indiana's Governor Edgar D. Whltcomb, among others. Under the Whltcomb plan, the Social security fund would finance id he s life lng the pinch and have responded by raising tuition for next year. Among these are the Universities of Delaware, Idaho, Illinois, Maryland, New Hampshire,Ohio, ready have large tuitions, are also raiding the student's pocket- books at an ever-Increasing rate. raised tuition for third year ln a row, and Har- I and Brown, among others, I decided to take more money n the students. would pay it back o • TOHE-UP • BRAKE SERVICE • LUBRICATION • FREE PICK-UP • AND DELIVERY • BLUE CHIP STAMPS WE HONOR ■■ WASTER CHARGE s- BANK OF AMERICA m. AMERICAN EXPRESS a-CHEVRON curricula ln the report experienced a decline ln offers, Including general business, the second largest category, which dropped Since March 1967, the peak year In over-all recruiting activity, technical volume has dropped 14 per cent while nontechnical volume has advanced 26 per cent, largely because of accounting offers. The accounting category, the one notable exception lnthe downtrend, ls continuing Its meteoric rise, both ln number of offers and ln percentage Increase ln average dollar value of offers. Accounting majors have received 9 per cent more offers than ln tbe similar period last year, with 80 per cent of them made by public accounting firms. Over the three-year period from March 1967, the volume of offers to graduating accountants has risen 56 per cent. Dollarwlse, accounting has been Increasing at an average rate of approximately 9 per cent a year for the last three years and ls apparently continuing that trend with a gain since last June of 8.5 per cent - from $761 to $826. Other than pubUc accounting firms, theonlylarge-volumeem- ployer groups with substantial Increases ln activity are pubUc utilities and petroleum. Some smaller-volume groups have also increased their activity, but the gains have not been sizable •nough to offset the losses of the previous leaders. In terms of dollar values, average starting salaries at the bachelor's level continue to rise ln the face of reduced employer activity. Offers to technical candidates have gone up 5,1 percent since June - from $819 to $861. Offers to non-technical students The decline ln recruiting activity ls even more appar»at.at- the ma/rter'e level. In three ye*r» the volume has dipped 49 per cent, with all graduate programs affected. MBA volume has decreased 40 per cent since March 1967 and volume for tbe nine technical programs covered ln the survey has declined 60 per cent ln the same period. In terras of dollar value of beginning salary offers, MBAs had been at tbe top ln percentage Increases the last several years, with gains of better than 9 per cent per year. This year, however, the increase ls only 4 per cent since June.Inactualdollars, MBA candidates with a technical undergraduate background bead the Ust with an average of$l,072 a month. Chemical engineering ls next at $1,033. Recruiting activity at the Ph.D. level, which appeared relatively strong ln the fall, has also dropped to the lowest point since March 1967. GeneraUy, the dollar value Increases bear out this depressed market. In those categories with sufficient volume for meaningful data, electrical en- EUROPE ' One Way CHARTER JET FLIGHTS Geneva to San Francisco August 4, 8 and 15 From San Francisco to Frarrkfurt - August 26 Stockholm - August 30 Paris - September 7 California State Colleges Fare: $225 one way For Information: Office of International Programs 1600 Holloway Avenue San Francisco, Calif. 94132 (415) 469-1044 sjwfrgTwCii H mo*** „_ fjasruMi cpRirvwAvisof* CAMPUS | CHEVRON TACO LOCO m COMPLETE HOME COOKED MEXICAN DINNER Buy On* - Oet One Free! 224-7837 SPECIAL GOOD TODAY FRIDAY! SATURDAY AND SUNDAY- March 13, 14 & 15 TACO LOCO
Object Description
Title | 1970_03 The Daily Collegian March 1970 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1970 |
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 13, 1970 Pg 2-3 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1970 |
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 | ANOTHER SPIN WITH THE BEATLES 2 THE DAILY COLLEGIAN Friday. March 13, 1970 'Get Back to Toronto'- exciting new album By George Hlatt In the past year or so, pirating records has become a national or International pastime. Dylan's stolen tapes, released as the now famous 'Great White Wonder* album has been a sore spot ln the side of Columbia Records ever since. In the past few months, a nurhoer of very good releases of the same sort, 1. e., underground productions, have come to Ught. Among these are the Uve recording of the RolUng Stones al the Coliseum and 'Get Back to Toronto* by the •Get Back to Toronto* Is a teaUy exciting album for anyone of many reasons. To begin with, It contains several Beatles songs never before released. It Is of much better sound and production than the above-mentioned Dylan The first side opens with a peace message by John and Yoko. The message itself Is worth listening to and worth having on record. This Is followed by a shortened version of 'Get Back!* The next song Is a delight. It ls a new song called'Teddy Boy.* Paul handles the singing and he ber opens with chords and then McCartney Is heard to mumble some of the lyrics Uke someone cord exemplify the Beatles ability to work songs out In the studio. John comes through during Urt number with Uttle comments here The next song Is the number featured on the Ed Sullivan show ■On t hears- voices in the studio and then John and Paul start their world-famous harmony. The last, song on this side ls 'All 1 Want is You". This ls a typical Beatle number featuring John. The closing of the song ls accompanied by John's comments suggesting another 'Why Don't We Do It In the Road?* The second side opens with ■I've Got a Feeling*, a melodic song which ls a pleasant mixture of John and Paul. It features lyrics Uke: •Everybody's had a bad year, Everybody's had a good time, Everybody's had a wet dream, Everybody's saw the sun- time. 'There wlllbeananswer- let It be*, seems to be one of the most definitive Unes ln the Beatles' lyrics. This song ls followed by an Instrumental opening which Is •Don't Let Me Down.* In the middle of this number John Hells, •Hit It Bill!* and BlUy Preston goes Into a rather nice organ run. This song Is one of the best examples of the excitement felt when listening to this disc. After a warning to 'Be quiet back there* ls given the group goes Into 'Get Back*. This Is followed by a short song called "When You Walk* and then a crazy lnexplalnable example of mas Message.* This album Is worth every cent you pay for It, but It ls rather hard to find. It ls available at Sun-Stereo and perhaps a few small record stores ln the area. The stereo ls good and tbe sound . ls exceptional when one considers the pains taken to record this In a recording studio. If one ls a Beatle fan this at, bum ls a must. Other record fans will find this ls a very worthwhile addition to their collection. This is apparently an album recorded last December, a little after the Altamont tragedy. The producers of this album are most likely studio hands who worked up a recording process of their own while the famed as yet to be released •Get Back*.album. The album features everal Instances of the tape slowing down and 'wow' as the tape ls turned on. However, It ls unlikely that many albums of this sort will appear ) the I t this FOR/MAT EMPHASIZES YOUTH Entertainment magazine bids for under 30 market By Dan Vlnlng AlUgator Entertainment Editor These days everyone is trying According to people who keep statistics, we who are under 30 or 25 or something like that are \ new magazine I. The features- E If sex, love and marriage interest you . • COME HEAR DICK DAY, SUNDAY NIGHT AT 8:30 IN THE COLLEGE UNION. K out to pictorial studies of istory of the performing - are for the most part well n. lively and Informative, ictures are good.Therelsa color work. The typography ■sign is absolutely refresh- nd unique. The editorial I seems to be bright, hu- magazlne, sold locally at Into Ihe special Introductory offer thing. Regular subscription rates are supposed to, be ten The premier issue of 'Show* released ln the middle of December and called the January Issue, shows the magazine's Immediate desires to become a magazine for youth, the youth who, surveys have shown, are the ones who make up about 60 percent of the audience of most movies and who have made the whole entertainment business com? to life ln this country. So. the first Issue had articles on the Beatle's business concerns lnthe Apple Corp., a story on plans to adapt Phillip Roth's Portnoy's Complaint to the screen, and an astrological chart outlining, for those who care, what will happen to Marlon Brando in the next month. Outstanding articles in the first Issue Include a look at Leacock Pennebaker, Ihe underground Although there ls a considerable stress put on the new developments and the pop movements in film, the magazine spends more than enough time working with more sophisticated and scholarly looks at the art of the cinema and, although this particular angle doesn't seem to be the magazine's primary one, some good things get said. A good example of this scholarly and academically sound approach to film can be seen ln the second issue of 'Show,* ln which a long article tracing the history of the •guerilla movie* appears. The guerilla movie Is defined by the article as those films which work for political goals, 'the object ls ' to Incite political ac- " the a Could you get enthusiastic about selling the most salable product in the worktf The product is ideas. The 2600 men u ho -HI ideas lor us are excited abeul what they're doing. We know ih.tt because they're successful al it And many ot them are recent college graduates. In (act, our /.reference is for young college graduates who get a kick out of being self- starters. Bull sessions aside, college students spend at least four years being independent thinkers in the world of ideas. As a member of Ihe Moore sales team, you'd still be pretty much on your own, with responsibility that grows as you grow. Your job would involve you with communication problems People problems. Problems in business logistics. You'd be looking (or ways lo make information more intelligible lo more people To make it impossible for carelessness lo destroy efficiency. Challenging? You bet it is. Come and look us over. Demand specifics. Weigh us as hard as we'll be weighing you. We might turn out lo be your kind of people. One of our Moore men will be on campus *K"JL .. '....Seeyour Placement Director for the time and place. MOORE BUSINESS FORMS. IMC . THE DAILY COLLEGIAN The magazine doesn't deal only with films. The latest Issue also Includes copy on dance, television, commercials, the theatre, and a thing called, "The Editors Bless and the Editors Blast* - an editorial comment feature. Design-wise and typographically, the magazine ls attractive and Interesting. There ls much use of colored paper for special Inatlve type faces and graphic design work. The layout and design is so good that It Isn't even offensive in Its brilliance. So, it looks as If we have a new magazine that Is striving to ~be ours particularly and striving, It seems, ln the right way. -From The Florida Alligator FOREIGN ■CAR PARTSi LUCAS, BOSCH &BAP ELECTRIC Complete line of original equipment replacement parts. SU, SOLEX, WEBER & ZENITH CARB IMPORT PARTS CENTER Ventura at M 233-8861 Businesses slow down FSC grad recruiting THE DAILY COLLEGIAN 3 ' Friday. March 13. «°70 « tttwriftt nai weweamm College recruiting activity, apparently reflecting the naUon'a softening economy, remains ln a downtrend at mid-point ln the 1969-70 season, according toDr. Harold D. Jones, placement dl- Wor critic will speak Tuesday MadeUne Duckies, who during Christmas helped return the names of fifty American POW's from Hanoi, will speak on campus next Tuesday ln Industrial Arts 101 at 3 p.m. She will speak on child casualties In Vietnam, and show a film. Miss Duckies ls a member of theCommltteeofRes- ponslblUty to save war- burned and warlnjuredVlet- namese children, and has made several trips to Vlet- Fretno State College, one of the 141 participating Institutions ln the College Placement Council's Salary Survey. Compared to a year ago, the national statlsUcs reveal a drop ln volume of 16 per cent at the bachelor's level, 26 per cent at the master's level and 14 per cent at the Ph.D. level. These data are Included ln the council's second salary survey report of the season. It Issues three such reports each year, covering actual offers being made students. The final i historically tbe employer group making the most offers. A year ago, for example, there were 2,284 aerospace offers; this year the number is down to 9G2. other major employer groups showing a decline In technical volume are chemicals, electrical machinery, and electronics. While the number of offers to non-technical candidates has gone up 2.8 per cent over those of last March, this figure has been bolstered by an increase ln offers to accounting majors. Two have risen 7.6 per cent tor the comparable period — from $711 to $765 - but, again, thla figure was affected appreciably by tbe port for the y< r will be released i June. The council, headquartered ln Bethleham, Pa., ls the non-profit naUonal service organization for the college placement and recruitment field, serving approximately 1,300colleges and 2,100 employers. nlcal candidates are the hardest hit, experiencing a drop of 24 per cent over last March. This substantial decrease ls due, ln large part, to reductions ln activity ln the aerospace Industry, Regents end tradition of tuition-free education By Floyd Norrls College press Service BERKELEY-(CPS)-The University of California Board of s voted to ■old t in of ti Charges at the University wlU double with two years, with fees rising from the current $300 for all resident students to $450 for undergraduates ln 1970-71 and $600 1 1971-7 is will be S4H0 and $660 In the same years. For the first time, fees will be used for educational purposes, not Just student' services. Perhaps the most significant aspect of the new fees ls the provision that students with need can pay the fees after graduation. For the student. It will be Identical to any loan, but the University will not get the money until the student pays. This deferral procedure will result lnthe University getting Its iy later, as opposed to anor- through an additional yearly payment to the Internal Revenue Reagan also thinks that since graduate education is more costly, graduate students should pay more. He sees the new surcharge as being only the first step. The other statewide segment of California's higher education system, the state colleges, where fees are about $150, may also raise tuition. That decision must be made by the state legislators, a clear majority of whom favor tuition. But the Senate Education Committee ls against the proposal and may kill It. Although California's budget cutting has been more drastic than that of other states, many I the University gets Its money immediately from the lending agency. The 16-6 vote climaxedathree year struggle by Governor Ronald in 1967, but new appointments and regental switches accounted (or the large majority for tuition Some regents supported tuition because they felt the University waa ln a financial crisis due to state budget cuts, in 1970-71, there will be no new construction on any campus of the University, due to low funding from the state. One campus, UCLA, wlU lose 161 faculty positions under the new budget. Liberal regents, led by Fred Dutton, who was Bobby Kennedy's campaign manager ln the 1968 primaries, attacked the tuition Plan on the grounds It would drive poor students tothe already overcrowded state colleges and junior colleges. Dutton also said the plan amounted to shifting part ofthe tax burden from businesses to middle income parents whose children cannot qualify for financial aid. . Reagan feels students gain 11- nanclaUy from college education, and therefore should pay the cost of it, preferably from later earnings. Such plans have been proposed by Indiana's Governor Edgar D. Whltcomb, among others. Under the Whltcomb plan, the Social security fund would finance id he s life lng the pinch and have responded by raising tuition for next year. Among these are the Universities of Delaware, Idaho, Illinois, Maryland, New Hampshire,Ohio, ready have large tuitions, are also raiding the student's pocket- books at an ever-Increasing rate. raised tuition for third year ln a row, and Har- I and Brown, among others, I decided to take more money n the students. would pay it back o • TOHE-UP • BRAKE SERVICE • LUBRICATION • FREE PICK-UP • AND DELIVERY • BLUE CHIP STAMPS WE HONOR ■■ WASTER CHARGE s- BANK OF AMERICA m. AMERICAN EXPRESS a-CHEVRON curricula ln the report experienced a decline ln offers, Including general business, the second largest category, which dropped Since March 1967, the peak year In over-all recruiting activity, technical volume has dropped 14 per cent while nontechnical volume has advanced 26 per cent, largely because of accounting offers. The accounting category, the one notable exception lnthe downtrend, ls continuing Its meteoric rise, both ln number of offers and ln percentage Increase ln average dollar value of offers. Accounting majors have received 9 per cent more offers than ln tbe similar period last year, with 80 per cent of them made by public accounting firms. Over the three-year period from March 1967, the volume of offers to graduating accountants has risen 56 per cent. Dollarwlse, accounting has been Increasing at an average rate of approximately 9 per cent a year for the last three years and ls apparently continuing that trend with a gain since last June of 8.5 per cent - from $761 to $826. Other than pubUc accounting firms, theonlylarge-volumeem- ployer groups with substantial Increases ln activity are pubUc utilities and petroleum. Some smaller-volume groups have also increased their activity, but the gains have not been sizable •nough to offset the losses of the previous leaders. In terms of dollar values, average starting salaries at the bachelor's level continue to rise ln the face of reduced employer activity. Offers to technical candidates have gone up 5,1 percent since June - from $819 to $861. Offers to non-technical students The decline ln recruiting activity ls even more appar»at.at- the ma/rter'e level. In three ye*r» the volume has dipped 49 per cent, with all graduate programs affected. MBA volume has decreased 40 per cent since March 1967 and volume for tbe nine technical programs covered ln the survey has declined 60 per cent ln the same period. In terras of dollar value of beginning salary offers, MBAs had been at tbe top ln percentage Increases the last several years, with gains of better than 9 per cent per year. This year, however, the increase ls only 4 per cent since June.Inactualdollars, MBA candidates with a technical undergraduate background bead the Ust with an average of$l,072 a month. Chemical engineering ls next at $1,033. Recruiting activity at the Ph.D. level, which appeared relatively strong ln the fall, has also dropped to the lowest point since March 1967. GeneraUy, the dollar value Increases bear out this depressed market. In those categories with sufficient volume for meaningful data, electrical en- EUROPE ' One Way CHARTER JET FLIGHTS Geneva to San Francisco August 4, 8 and 15 From San Francisco to Frarrkfurt - August 26 Stockholm - August 30 Paris - September 7 California State Colleges Fare: $225 one way For Information: Office of International Programs 1600 Holloway Avenue San Francisco, Calif. 94132 (415) 469-1044 sjwfrgTwCii H mo*** „_ fjasruMi cpRirvwAvisof* CAMPUS | CHEVRON TACO LOCO m COMPLETE HOME COOKED MEXICAN DINNER Buy On* - Oet One Free! 224-7837 SPECIAL GOOD TODAY FRIDAY! SATURDAY AND SUNDAY- March 13, 14 & 15 TACO LOCO |