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THE DAILY COLLEGIAN Friday, April 2. Bulldog nine hosts UCSB, Long Beach during break By Chuck Knox CoUegian Sports Editor Although tb* week-lc 1 lion from studies should be well- if you are anywhere near Fresno during tb* break you might drop try Varsity Park tonight i what probably are th Th* strong UC -Santa Barbara Gauchos play Coach Bob Bennett's Bulldogs tonight at 7:30 p.m. In a single PCAA gam* and tomorrow in an 12 noon double-. Playing at th* April 9 and 10 here in Fresno are th* defending conference champions Cal State Long Beach Forty-Nlnere'. .As far as tb* ' cerned, things are going w*U for the dlamondmen going into tb* Important conference gam**. FSC, now playing their best ball and featuring a seven gam* winning streak, hav* a record of 21-14-1. They beat Cal Poly, wbo bas lost only six games on the year, twice on Tuesday. Santa Barbara has record of 12-8 whll* Long B*ach is 18-8. Th* Forty-Nln*r* toad Ul* conference standings at 4-2, San Jos* Is 2-1, th* E i game back at 3-3, whll* Cal State LA, San Dlego PCAA Bennett has Indicated he will go wUh *ith*r Gary Forgard or Jer- " tonight. Dick Ruthven and John Moncler, both winning pitchers Tuesday, wUl hurl In t VACATION SPORTS WEDNESDAY, APKIL.7 TRACK-FSC In USTFF Deeilb- loo, Santa Barbara, all day GOLF-FSC In Far Wastern Invitational, Santa Cruz, aU day Studio Apt. furn or couple. 3 1/2 mi. 299-6250 or 227-1053 MARCH, RALLY ARE PLANNED TODAY ' GOLF FSC Classic, Fort Washington Country Club (5 mile* north of college), 6:30 a.m. (first round), 11:30 a.m. (second round) BASEBALL-FSC vs UC Santa Barbara at Varsity Park, 7:30 SATURDAY GOLF-FSC Classic, Fort lngton Country Club, 11:30 a.m. (final round) BASEBALL-FSC. Barbara at Varsity Park, 12 noon, doubleheader, PCAA games bara at RatcUffe Stadium, field ning events at 2:15 p.ro. MONDAY. APRIL 5 TENNIS-FSC In the Cal State Long Beach Invitational, Long Beach, all day TUESDAY. APRIL 6 TENNIS-FSC In the Cal State Long Beach Invitational, Long Beach, all day TRACK-FSC athletes compete In USTFF Decathlon, Santa Barbara, all day Want Ads 'MEN of all trades to NORTH SLOPE, ALASKA around $2800.00 a month. For complete information write to Job Research, P.O. Box 161, Stn-A, Toronto, Ont. Enclose $3.00 to EUROPE One Way CHARTER JET FLIGHTS From Oakland to Madrid & Munich - Aug. 26 Marseille S Pisa - Sept. l Stockholi Sept.6 A limited number are available for faculty, staff, students of'the California State Colleges Fare: $195 one way ' For Information? Office of International Programs The Cal iforrrfa Stale Col leges 1600 HoMoway Avenue San Francisco, Calif. 04132 (418) 468-1044 Massive anti-war protest is scheduled for April 24 in Washington D.C., San Francisco A mass rally to end tne war in Vietnam is being planned for April 24 in San .Francisco. Th* rally, being planned by the Student Mobilization Committee to End tbe War in Southeast Asia, has bean on the drawing board for many months. Organizers say it will be the largest antiwar rally the West Coast has ever seen. Marchers will assemble at California near Market Street beginning at 8 a.m. The group win then march to the Polo Field at Golden Cat* Park, where there wiU be speeches, entertainment, and a peaceful demonstration against U.S. policies in-Southeast Asia. According to The Student Mo- billter (March 20 Issue) 'April 24 represents th* first action •ver to be endorsed, to our knowledge, by a single m*mber of Congress. There are now 15 Congressional endorsers of tbe rally, Including two senators, Vance Hartke, and Ceorg* Mc- This Is also, according to tl the rally. In a speech given at a Wash-, lngton rally in February, Don Curewitz, National Coordinator ot th* Student Mobilization Committee said, 'We're going to organize a Spring offensive that will rock the Nixon administration to i, the fl: ie that tiradeu ion leaders have placed themselves on the side of an antiwar demonstration. The anti-war demonstrations have been growing In size ever sine* Nixon took office, and the re is evidence that this will in fact be the largest ever. A request by the organizers for 8,000 monitors can perhaps be th* best indication of th* expected size of Transportation, has bean planned to take marchers to San Francisco from Los Angeles, and car pools are being formed bar* in Fresno to get as many people as possible to the rally. A large Third World turnout Is •xpected. Chlcanos and Blacks have become Increasingly vocal In protest against what many Third Worldars consider discriminatory procedures in Vietnam. The recant Chlcano march in Fresno, in protest of the large number of San Joaquin Valley Chlcanos killed In tha Southeast Asia war, draw over 1,000 marchers and Is a good Indication of the feelings of many minority groups. Women's- Liberation is atoo expected to have a large contingent at the rally. According to a recent Gallup poll, 78 per cant of the women tn this country want an Immediate and to tha war. According to Nancy Williamson, a representative of tha Boston Female Liberation, women hav* a great deal of power to speed an end to th* war. •When women decld* this war wiU end, this war will end. Thus It Is Imperative,* said Miss Williamson, 'that feminists Join In the struggle to and the war.* Many weU-known figures In an areas of IU* hav* announced their support tor tb* march. Tony RandaU, Norman Mailer, I. F. Stone, Dick Gregory, Linus Paul- . ing, and Joseph Heller are some Of tb* better known personalities who hav* given their support to the movement. Several other events ar* on this spring's antiwar calendar. On May 3, antiwar demonstrations ar* planned on college and university campuses across th* country. The demonstrations wlU atoo be commemorating the deaths of students at Kant SUte and Jackson State tost year. May 16, Armed Forces Day, will be a Solidarity Day with Antiwar Gls. Demonstrators win Join frith tha Gls In peace activities at military bases. Editor applications are available Application" for editorships of tb* Dally Collegian for fall 1071 available In the As- Business Office. Applications are due by 4 p.m. Friday, April 16. Editor selections will b* mad* by th* Board on Publications at Its Aprtl 23 WEDNESDAY, APRIL 21 Election scheduled on bylaw revisions LXXVI/115 TUESDAY, APRIL 13, 1971 Student group hopes to challenge legality ^ of faculty, student disciplinary procedures Students win vote in a special election next week on whether to accept the proposed additions and " e Fresno Stat* Col- toga Association Bylaws. In a special election on AprU 21 studenU will vote whether to accept all of. the bylaw changes with a "yes* vote or accept none of the revisions with a *no* vote. A text oi n pages 4, 5, 6, and 7. Some Of. S^aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa— bylaws Includ* changing the grade point average of elected atixtont" government officers from a 2.25 to a 2.0 and having the FSC Board of Dir*ctora select their own chairman. Tha revisions war* aarU*r ratified by the Student Senate and the Board of Directors and now roust be okayed by tba atudent body before tbey can b* Incorporated Into tba Association By John Jefferles Collegian News Editor There may stlU be hope for students and faculty charged under the new disciplinary procedures. A group known as the Student Legal Aid Fund, still In embryonic form. Is growing steadily at Fresno State and hopes in the near future to b* a potent financial force, capable of legally challenging 116. •What we are doing,* said Janice Wallace, a spokeswoman for the group, *ls asking students month for a period of either six months or one year. This amounts to a potential figure of $1,200 a year, as we have 50 students currently committed.* 'The Teachers' Grievance Hearings In San Francisco are costing thousands of dollars and someone,* said Miss Wallace. •All the lawyers who undertook cases involving students or faculty ar* so bound up that they can no longer accept free cases. Students, especially Blacks and Browns, who are charged under Executive Order 116 must pay lawyers out of their own pockets. This Is usually Impossible as most minority studenU at FSC are already receiving financial aid Just to meet coUege expenses and have no spare money for lengthy court cases and hearings.* Exscutlv* Ord*r 118 waa Instituted Into th* SUt* College system last year with tbe stipulation that U was 'fair and Just to both tha student charged and to tb* institution.* Executive Or--' der 113, a similar procedure pertaining to faculty waa put Into effect soon afterward. However, sine* than, both 'orders* hav* been challenged sUtewlde by students, faculty and their lawyers for what Miss WaUace calls «IU alleged ruthlessness, masterful ambiguity, and Its flagrant dental of due process of law.* - The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) has filed an action In a San FranclscoFederalCourt In an attempt to have the proceedings declared unconstitutional for their violation of the 1st, 5th, and 14th Amendments to the U.S. Constitution. •The prosecutors In 116 and 113 cases have the entire financial and legal resources of tha sUte college system at their disposal and spend thousands of dollars to prosecute students accused of minor infractions,* according to Miss Wallace. "The Student Legal Aid Fund has set up an account with the Fresno Free College and w* are hoping to hi a test c e (Involving a charged under'Executive Order 116) as far as the Supreme •The crucial allowance In the disciplinary procedures Is that no allowance Is made for aiding the charged student with funds or legal counsel. The Student Legal Aid Fund (SLAF) seeks to alleviate this through contributions from the studenU themselves,* said Miss Wallace. Tha $2 per month commitment entitles the student to draw from tha fund If ha or she U arrested and charged under ExecuUve Order ,116. Presently th* group's funds are sparse but leaders feel Interest is mounting and their treasury wlU soon enable legal aid and the supreme Court test case to become a reality. Interested studenU may conUct Jan- Ice Wallace at 227-0294, or Ar- lene Pierce at 229-6481. Staff Personnel Manager John Bartram is dead at 31 Flags were flown at half-mast yesterday on tha Fresno SUU College campus for John L. Bar- tram, 31. who died early yesterday in a local hospital following a brief Illness. Bartram, who waa admitted to the hospital Sunday suffering from pneumonia and other complications, waa manager of staff personnel. H* had served In this position at FSC since Feb. 19, 1968. He was Industrial relation* manager for Sprecktoa Sugar Company near MandoU for two years. Bartram also taught In the FSC School of Business and at Fresno fjity CoUeg*. A native of Huntington, W. va., he attended the University of Alabama and Marshal University In Weat Virginia. Ha received hla B.A. tn business administration from FSC In 1966 and Ma M.A. In business from FSC in 1968. Bartram was a member of th* CoUeg* andUnlvaratty Personnel Association, American Society for Personnel Admlnlstr; tlon. Industrial Relations Research Association, American Society for Training and Development and Phi EpeUon. Survivors Include hla widow, Virginia, and son Brad. Funeral services wiU be at 1 p.ro. tomorrow at Lisle Funeral Horn*. Workshop on cancer set at FSC tomorrow An educational workshop on cancer designed 'to form habiu and attitudes that will keep students and faculty from being cancer statistics In th* future* ts scheduled tomorrow at Fresno SUt* College. Th* workabop, which Is sponsored by D*1U Alpha Chi in conjunction with tha American Can- car Society, wUt b* h*ld In Selene* 121 from 3 p.ro.-4:30 p.ro. Featured speakers In panel. format wUl b* Dr. B. P*ck Lau, a leading CaUfornU radiologist and vice chairman In charg* of program* for tha AmartcanCan- cer Society; Dr. Rub*n Sprangd, O.B.G.V.N., a local phyalcian and th* society's Pro fessional Education < Randy GrIJalva, a» cured Hodg- Mns Disease patient; Mr. Jerald Jones, a colon cancer patient; Mrs. Nancy Okkerse, breast cancer pattont; Mlaa AUc* Buttray, brain tumor patient; D/- Donald C. Caaparson, panel moderator and Public Education Committee mamb*r, chairman for schools and colleges; Mrs. Peggy SUfano, chairman of the American Cancer Soctoty'* PubUc EducaUon Committee. program coordinators ar*Ron Luna, an.FSC student. Dr. Caaparson, and Barry Humprey, program director for th* cancer Tba workabop la opan to th* student body and faculty. DAY CARE CENTER I If you are interested in using a day car* center to bo operated by tho student association, ploaso return this coupon to tho student president's office, CU 306 This information will help in planning by showing noed. | NAME: I . | ADDRESS: _ ■ CHILDREN'SAGES: __: ;
Object Description
Title | 1971_04 The Daily Collegian April 1971 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1971 |
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 2, 1971 Pg 4- April 13, 1971 Pg 1 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1971 |
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 2. Bulldog nine hosts UCSB, Long Beach during break By Chuck Knox CoUegian Sports Editor Although tb* week-lc 1 lion from studies should be well- if you are anywhere near Fresno during tb* break you might drop try Varsity Park tonight i what probably are th Th* strong UC -Santa Barbara Gauchos play Coach Bob Bennett's Bulldogs tonight at 7:30 p.m. In a single PCAA gam* and tomorrow in an 12 noon double-. Playing at th* April 9 and 10 here in Fresno are th* defending conference champions Cal State Long Beach Forty-Nlnere'. .As far as tb* ' cerned, things are going w*U for the dlamondmen going into tb* Important conference gam**. FSC, now playing their best ball and featuring a seven gam* winning streak, hav* a record of 21-14-1. They beat Cal Poly, wbo bas lost only six games on the year, twice on Tuesday. Santa Barbara has record of 12-8 whll* Long B*ach is 18-8. Th* Forty-Nln*r* toad Ul* conference standings at 4-2, San Jos* Is 2-1, th* E i game back at 3-3, whll* Cal State LA, San Dlego PCAA Bennett has Indicated he will go wUh *ith*r Gary Forgard or Jer- " tonight. Dick Ruthven and John Moncler, both winning pitchers Tuesday, wUl hurl In t VACATION SPORTS WEDNESDAY, APKIL.7 TRACK-FSC In USTFF Deeilb- loo, Santa Barbara, all day GOLF-FSC In Far Wastern Invitational, Santa Cruz, aU day Studio Apt. furn or couple. 3 1/2 mi. 299-6250 or 227-1053 MARCH, RALLY ARE PLANNED TODAY ' GOLF FSC Classic, Fort Washington Country Club (5 mile* north of college), 6:30 a.m. (first round), 11:30 a.m. (second round) BASEBALL-FSC vs UC Santa Barbara at Varsity Park, 7:30 SATURDAY GOLF-FSC Classic, Fort lngton Country Club, 11:30 a.m. (final round) BASEBALL-FSC. Barbara at Varsity Park, 12 noon, doubleheader, PCAA games bara at RatcUffe Stadium, field ning events at 2:15 p.ro. MONDAY. APRIL 5 TENNIS-FSC In the Cal State Long Beach Invitational, Long Beach, all day TUESDAY. APRIL 6 TENNIS-FSC In the Cal State Long Beach Invitational, Long Beach, all day TRACK-FSC athletes compete In USTFF Decathlon, Santa Barbara, all day Want Ads 'MEN of all trades to NORTH SLOPE, ALASKA around $2800.00 a month. For complete information write to Job Research, P.O. Box 161, Stn-A, Toronto, Ont. Enclose $3.00 to EUROPE One Way CHARTER JET FLIGHTS From Oakland to Madrid & Munich - Aug. 26 Marseille S Pisa - Sept. l Stockholi Sept.6 A limited number are available for faculty, staff, students of'the California State Colleges Fare: $195 one way ' For Information? Office of International Programs The Cal iforrrfa Stale Col leges 1600 HoMoway Avenue San Francisco, Calif. 04132 (418) 468-1044 Massive anti-war protest is scheduled for April 24 in Washington D.C., San Francisco A mass rally to end tne war in Vietnam is being planned for April 24 in San .Francisco. Th* rally, being planned by the Student Mobilization Committee to End tbe War in Southeast Asia, has bean on the drawing board for many months. Organizers say it will be the largest antiwar rally the West Coast has ever seen. Marchers will assemble at California near Market Street beginning at 8 a.m. The group win then march to the Polo Field at Golden Cat* Park, where there wiU be speeches, entertainment, and a peaceful demonstration against U.S. policies in-Southeast Asia. According to The Student Mo- billter (March 20 Issue) 'April 24 represents th* first action •ver to be endorsed, to our knowledge, by a single m*mber of Congress. There are now 15 Congressional endorsers of tbe rally, Including two senators, Vance Hartke, and Ceorg* Mc- This Is also, according to tl the rally. In a speech given at a Wash-, lngton rally in February, Don Curewitz, National Coordinator ot th* Student Mobilization Committee said, 'We're going to organize a Spring offensive that will rock the Nixon administration to i, the fl: ie that tiradeu ion leaders have placed themselves on the side of an antiwar demonstration. The anti-war demonstrations have been growing In size ever sine* Nixon took office, and the re is evidence that this will in fact be the largest ever. A request by the organizers for 8,000 monitors can perhaps be th* best indication of th* expected size of Transportation, has bean planned to take marchers to San Francisco from Los Angeles, and car pools are being formed bar* in Fresno to get as many people as possible to the rally. A large Third World turnout Is •xpected. Chlcanos and Blacks have become Increasingly vocal In protest against what many Third Worldars consider discriminatory procedures in Vietnam. The recant Chlcano march in Fresno, in protest of the large number of San Joaquin Valley Chlcanos killed In tha Southeast Asia war, draw over 1,000 marchers and Is a good Indication of the feelings of many minority groups. Women's- Liberation is atoo expected to have a large contingent at the rally. According to a recent Gallup poll, 78 per cant of the women tn this country want an Immediate and to tha war. According to Nancy Williamson, a representative of tha Boston Female Liberation, women hav* a great deal of power to speed an end to th* war. •When women decld* this war wiU end, this war will end. Thus It Is Imperative,* said Miss Williamson, 'that feminists Join In the struggle to and the war.* Many weU-known figures In an areas of IU* hav* announced their support tor tb* march. Tony RandaU, Norman Mailer, I. F. Stone, Dick Gregory, Linus Paul- . ing, and Joseph Heller are some Of tb* better known personalities who hav* given their support to the movement. Several other events ar* on this spring's antiwar calendar. On May 3, antiwar demonstrations ar* planned on college and university campuses across th* country. The demonstrations wlU atoo be commemorating the deaths of students at Kant SUte and Jackson State tost year. May 16, Armed Forces Day, will be a Solidarity Day with Antiwar Gls. Demonstrators win Join frith tha Gls In peace activities at military bases. Editor applications are available Application" for editorships of tb* Dally Collegian for fall 1071 available In the As- Business Office. Applications are due by 4 p.m. Friday, April 16. Editor selections will b* mad* by th* Board on Publications at Its Aprtl 23 WEDNESDAY, APRIL 21 Election scheduled on bylaw revisions LXXVI/115 TUESDAY, APRIL 13, 1971 Student group hopes to challenge legality ^ of faculty, student disciplinary procedures Students win vote in a special election next week on whether to accept the proposed additions and " e Fresno Stat* Col- toga Association Bylaws. In a special election on AprU 21 studenU will vote whether to accept all of. the bylaw changes with a "yes* vote or accept none of the revisions with a *no* vote. A text oi n pages 4, 5, 6, and 7. Some Of. S^aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa— bylaws Includ* changing the grade point average of elected atixtont" government officers from a 2.25 to a 2.0 and having the FSC Board of Dir*ctora select their own chairman. Tha revisions war* aarU*r ratified by the Student Senate and the Board of Directors and now roust be okayed by tba atudent body before tbey can b* Incorporated Into tba Association By John Jefferles Collegian News Editor There may stlU be hope for students and faculty charged under the new disciplinary procedures. A group known as the Student Legal Aid Fund, still In embryonic form. Is growing steadily at Fresno State and hopes in the near future to b* a potent financial force, capable of legally challenging 116. •What we are doing,* said Janice Wallace, a spokeswoman for the group, *ls asking students month for a period of either six months or one year. This amounts to a potential figure of $1,200 a year, as we have 50 students currently committed.* 'The Teachers' Grievance Hearings In San Francisco are costing thousands of dollars and someone,* said Miss Wallace. •All the lawyers who undertook cases involving students or faculty ar* so bound up that they can no longer accept free cases. Students, especially Blacks and Browns, who are charged under Executive Order 116 must pay lawyers out of their own pockets. This Is usually Impossible as most minority studenU at FSC are already receiving financial aid Just to meet coUege expenses and have no spare money for lengthy court cases and hearings.* Exscutlv* Ord*r 118 waa Instituted Into th* SUt* College system last year with tbe stipulation that U was 'fair and Just to both tha student charged and to tb* institution.* Executive Or--' der 113, a similar procedure pertaining to faculty waa put Into effect soon afterward. However, sine* than, both 'orders* hav* been challenged sUtewlde by students, faculty and their lawyers for what Miss WaUace calls «IU alleged ruthlessness, masterful ambiguity, and Its flagrant dental of due process of law.* - The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) has filed an action In a San FranclscoFederalCourt In an attempt to have the proceedings declared unconstitutional for their violation of the 1st, 5th, and 14th Amendments to the U.S. Constitution. •The prosecutors In 116 and 113 cases have the entire financial and legal resources of tha sUte college system at their disposal and spend thousands of dollars to prosecute students accused of minor infractions,* according to Miss Wallace. "The Student Legal Aid Fund has set up an account with the Fresno Free College and w* are hoping to hi a test c e (Involving a charged under'Executive Order 116) as far as the Supreme •The crucial allowance In the disciplinary procedures Is that no allowance Is made for aiding the charged student with funds or legal counsel. The Student Legal Aid Fund (SLAF) seeks to alleviate this through contributions from the studenU themselves,* said Miss Wallace. Tha $2 per month commitment entitles the student to draw from tha fund If ha or she U arrested and charged under ExecuUve Order ,116. Presently th* group's funds are sparse but leaders feel Interest is mounting and their treasury wlU soon enable legal aid and the supreme Court test case to become a reality. Interested studenU may conUct Jan- Ice Wallace at 227-0294, or Ar- lene Pierce at 229-6481. Staff Personnel Manager John Bartram is dead at 31 Flags were flown at half-mast yesterday on tha Fresno SUU College campus for John L. Bar- tram, 31. who died early yesterday in a local hospital following a brief Illness. Bartram, who waa admitted to the hospital Sunday suffering from pneumonia and other complications, waa manager of staff personnel. H* had served In this position at FSC since Feb. 19, 1968. He was Industrial relation* manager for Sprecktoa Sugar Company near MandoU for two years. Bartram also taught In the FSC School of Business and at Fresno fjity CoUeg*. A native of Huntington, W. va., he attended the University of Alabama and Marshal University In Weat Virginia. Ha received hla B.A. tn business administration from FSC In 1966 and Ma M.A. In business from FSC in 1968. Bartram was a member of th* CoUeg* andUnlvaratty Personnel Association, American Society for Personnel Admlnlstr; tlon. Industrial Relations Research Association, American Society for Training and Development and Phi EpeUon. Survivors Include hla widow, Virginia, and son Brad. Funeral services wiU be at 1 p.ro. tomorrow at Lisle Funeral Horn*. Workshop on cancer set at FSC tomorrow An educational workshop on cancer designed 'to form habiu and attitudes that will keep students and faculty from being cancer statistics In th* future* ts scheduled tomorrow at Fresno SUt* College. Th* workabop, which Is sponsored by D*1U Alpha Chi in conjunction with tha American Can- car Society, wUt b* h*ld In Selene* 121 from 3 p.ro.-4:30 p.ro. Featured speakers In panel. format wUl b* Dr. B. P*ck Lau, a leading CaUfornU radiologist and vice chairman In charg* of program* for tha AmartcanCan- cer Society; Dr. Rub*n Sprangd, O.B.G.V.N., a local phyalcian and th* society's Pro fessional Education < Randy GrIJalva, a» cured Hodg- Mns Disease patient; Mr. Jerald Jones, a colon cancer patient; Mrs. Nancy Okkerse, breast cancer pattont; Mlaa AUc* Buttray, brain tumor patient; D/- Donald C. Caaparson, panel moderator and Public Education Committee mamb*r, chairman for schools and colleges; Mrs. Peggy SUfano, chairman of the American Cancer Soctoty'* PubUc EducaUon Committee. program coordinators ar*Ron Luna, an.FSC student. Dr. Caaparson, and Barry Humprey, program director for th* cancer Tba workabop la opan to th* student body and faculty. DAY CARE CENTER I If you are interested in using a day car* center to bo operated by tho student association, ploaso return this coupon to tho student president's office, CU 306 This information will help in planning by showing noed. | NAME: I . | ADDRESS: _ ■ CHILDREN'SAGES: __: ; |