CSUSB Scholarworks May 28 1976

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CSUSB Scholarworks May 28 1976 California State University, San Bernardino CSUSB ScholarWorks Friday Bulletin Arthur E. Nelson University Archives 5-28-1976 May 28 1976 Friday Bulletin Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.lib.csusb.edu/fridaybulletin Recommended Citation Friday Bulletin, "May 28 1976" (1976). Friday Bulletin. 393. https://scholarworks.lib.csusb.edu/fridaybulletin/393 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Arthur E. Nelson University Archives at CSUSB ScholarWorks. It has been accepted for inclusion in Friday Bulletin by an authorized administrator of CSUSB ScholarWorks. For more information, please contact [email protected]. BUILDING PROGRAM STUDENT UNION - Bids fnr i-h^ rr-,- . 28, 1976 PLANS PROGRESS • I f" . today, with hid opening scheduled in four weeks. £2™s~—^ s- s:ri252 r central atrium and three meeting rooms. offices, two darkrooms, a iTcTtlZ^f Trust^es,at its Letlng last Wednesday, approved the re- E^3:5£H an twice the size of the area now occupied by the Bookstore. s'fess^„„'? '7^ 'srsrr/" "• m^f=Eis~s~. s: sV "St if ssMiilaCOMPMfTfAlsSL -I?"® " Professional Food-Service Management (PFM) ?jrr;i5s-.£fs js sr PAVVAV IS TOVAV. (Continued on page 2) FOOD SERVICE rently in effect, operating through the summer until August 1. The Continued from page 1 facility will re-open September 15. Leonard Farwell, Business Manager, states that the College has been extremely fortunate to have had the services of Mrs. Doherty as Food Service Direc­ tor. "She cares about us and has been conscientious beyond the call of duty in meet­ ing our needs. The students especially have liked her. Her many friends on campus will miss her." Mrs. Doherty, entering her 13th year with Service Systems Corp., will be assigned to another location by the company. « kiCkiADIAI l\AV UAi IhAV Monday, May 31, is an academic-administrative holi- r'lCr^wfllAL UAI llvLIIrAI day for the College. The Library and P.E. Facili­ ties will be closed on that day, also, but open as usual on Saturday and Sunday, May 29 and 30. MUJICAL EVENTS A full range of musical events is offered on campus, tonight through Sunday, June 6. Opera, a string quartet concert, a chamber orchestra concert, a music ensemble and two student recitals will be presented in performances open to the College and the public. ^ Tickets may be purchased for tonight's performance of "PATIENCE" at the performance, beginning at 7 p.m. on the Commons Patio. General admission, $1.50; students and children admitted free. + THE HARRIS STRING QUARTET Sunday evening. May 30 program of the Leslie I. Harris String Quartet will perform the music of IN CONCERT Joseph Haydn, Alexander Borodin and Ernest Bloch at 7:30 in PS-10. To some members nf the audience the music may have a familiar ring because of the well-known melodies contained in the selections which are the source for more popular tunes, such as the theme of "Kis­ met" from Borodin's "Quartet No. 2 in D Major." Admission is $1.50; children and students with I.D. cards admitted free. + ^ THE NEW MUSIC ENSEMBLE will perform in the small outdoor ampUtheatre north of the AD Bldg., Tuesday, June 1 at noon. Admission free. + WEDNESDAY NOON MUSICALE - June 2, FA''104, Student Recital featuring Candi Mitchell, Sarah Nesbit, Cathy Loustaunau, recoiders; Sylvia Silva, piano; Becky Bellinger, so­ prano; Candi Mitchell, flute; Michael Tachia, piano; Jeannell La Mance, piano, Fran­ cisco Silva, baritone; Burt Griswold, piano; Vicky Harnitchek, piano; Robert Kuehn, viola. + ^ FRIDAY NOON MUSICALS - June 4, FA-102, Student Recital with Joan Simonek, soprano; David Hatt, piano; April Osmer, piano; Roger Brooks, bassoon; Debbie Johnston, cello. + THE CHAMBER ORCHESTRA Anrold Schoenberg's expressionistic "Five Pieces for Richakd SAYI.OR, conductor orchestra, opus 16" will be featured in the Chamber —, _ —— Orchestra concert, Sunday evening, June 6. Walter Pis- BrossdUi c^llo soiotst ton's, * Mr\*Divertimento ^ ^ u and Hindemith's*^1^1 'Trauermusik,nm 'it** con­ ducted by Michael Tachia, with the cello solo by Michele.Brosseau, complete the program, beginning at'7:30 in PS-10. Richard Saylor will conduct. Admission is $1.50. Children and students with I.D. are admitted without charge. WOMEN'S CELEBRATION The way it was, the way it is and the way TELLS IT LIKE IT WAS, it may be going for women will be covered I n IS AND SHOULD BE! a two-day Women's Celebration on campus Tuesday and Wednesday, June 1 and 2, Men and women of the College and public are invited to share, with students and faculty. In the variety of scheduled events in­ cluding a historial stage presentation, talks on current women's issues, films, po­ etry and music. All events will be in the Lower Commons and adjoining Patio. See this week's It's Happening in this Issue of the Bulletin for complete proqram. * 5V * JOE MORAN £ STUDENTS A CSCSB art professor and seven students have been invited to TO CREATE MURAL IN create a mural in the new San Bernardino City Hall. Joe Moran, FOYER OF CITY HALL Asst. Prof., Art, and his students, assisted by Leo G. Doyle, Asst. Prof., Art, will design and paint a mural depicting the history of the San Bernardino Valley, as their gift to the City of San Bernardino in honor of the Bicentennial. Funding is provided by the Villa Hermosa/Mexicali Sister Cities, donated to the citv in honor of the celebration. The pictoral narrative will be located on the balcony of the Council Office. CSCSB student artists are Juan Esqueda, Peter Rodri- quez, Dan Vasquez, Nick Bashaw, Rudy Ramirez, Shirley Bowers, and Babette Mayor. Student artists will offer their works to the College and the public in a two-day sale, June 2 and 3, Wednesday and Thurs^y of next week. Prints, ceramics, glass, vases, bowls, cups, mugs and planters will be on sale on the south side of the Library, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m., both days. FACULTY-STAFF SOCIAL or STAFF-FACULTY SOCIAL will take place 4 to 6 p.m. Thurs- day, June 3, in the Lower Commons. ACCOUNTING SCHOLARSHIPS - The California Citrus Belt Chapter No. 70 of American So­ ciety of Women Accountants offers $100 scholarships to accounting students who in­ tend to follow an accounting career. Awarded in June for the Fall Quarter, checks must be used for fees or books at college. Henry Custer, AD-174, has forms and in­ formation. Deadline is May 30. * * * EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES & PROMOTIONS are listed on back page of It's Happening. LECTURES ISRAELI SCHOLAR - Dr. Efraim Shmuell, Visiting Lecturer in Philosophy here, will speak on "The Moral and Political Significance of the Emergence of Israel" In a talk scheduled for Wednesday, June 2, LC-500, at 6 p.m. The renowned Israeli scholar Is presented through the Distinguished Lecturer Series and sponsored by the Philosophy Department. Dr. Shmuell's background includes 30 years of teaching at U of Haifa prior to joining the Cleveland State U in 1967. Since then he has writ­ ten more than 25 papers in English, Hebrew and German in phenomenology, existential­ ism, metaphysics, history of modern philosophy, philosophy of social science and Marxism and Jewish philosophy and literature. Lecture is free and open to all. + OCEAN POLICY Prof. Don Walsh, Dir. of the Institute for Marine £ Coastal Studies at use, will present a seminar on "The Navy, National Ocean Policy & the Uses of Ocean Space," in Richard Ackley's Pol. Sci. Class, 3 p.m. June 2,LC-5. EARTHQUAKE PREDICTION - Dr. Floyd Williams, Asst. Prof,, Geology at Valley College, . , „ will speak to the Economics Club on "An Economic Analysis of Earthquake rrediction and hold a discussion afterwards. Talk begins at 2 p.m. today in LC-500. Guests are invited. 3 Q ^ I-i ^-y im Richard Ackley (Aca. Admin,) spoke to the Yucaipa ^P« Valley Republican Women's Club, May 21, on "U.S. Military Commitments Abroad." + Elliott Barkan (History) gave slide-illustrated talks "Life and Times During the Years of the American Revolution," and handed out parchment copies of the Declaration of Independence to first, third and fourth grade students at Wright- vrood Elementary School May 3 and 1?. + Dominic Bulgarella (Sociology) addressed the Horthe'nd Rotary Club of San Bernar­ dino on "The Socialization of Marine Recruits," May 20, + John Craig (Chemistry) spoke to a biology class at Riverside City College on "The Role of Science in Our Society: Friend or Foe?" May 24. + G. Keith Dolan (Education) recently spoke on "Project Evaluation" at the Demonstration Programs in Reading and Mathematics Conference in Palm Springs. + Kenneth Mantei (Chemistry) spoke to the League of Women's Voters during a pro and con discussion of Proposition 15 on May 25. * * * PUBLICATIONS Anand Bhatia (Administration) has been notified that his "Linear Programming Applications to Administrative Problems— A Work Book" has been locally published and is in the College Bookstore and other local bookstores for sale. It is under consideration for nationwide publication. + Bill Aussieker (Administration) has had his article "Students and Bargaining at Public and Private Colleges" published in the April, 1976 issue of the Monthly Labor Review. PRnFFcjc.nMAi attix/'i'tifs I -Ahraf (Health Sci. & Human Ecology) was PROFESSIONAL ACTIVITIES honore ' in a testimonial dinner held by the Con­ ference of Calif. Dir. of Environme tal Health, in San Diego, May 13. + Denis Lichtman (Math) will present paper, "AComputer Unification of Spectro- photometric Methods in Determining Formulas of Complexes," June 14f at the 31st Annual Northwest Regional Meet -ng of the American Chemical Society. Co­ authors are Lee Kalbus (Chemistry) and Gene Kalbus (Chemistry, Long Beach State).
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