a. SJS Students Invited , To Open House at Zoo Group Could Benefit By GAIL KNIGHT A zoological society has 'wen set Spartan Daily Staff Writer up to further the inteerst of the Another family has moved to zoo and to enlist support for new San Jose. Mr. and Mrs. Peter exhibits. The society includes SJS professors and individuals from From Rift With NSA Batten and the other members of the San Jose business community. By KEN BRYANT The NSA can't possibly he receiv- Speaking as ASG's local repre- their family now reside in tempo- They encourage student involve- tttipurtun Dully Staff Writer ing CIA money for 'educational' sentative. Kleemann said, "I don't rary quarters in Kelly Park. They ment in the society. Those inter- '1 ite financial entanglement be- purposes," White said. belie%e the student laxly of SJS hope to MOve to their new home ested should write to the San Jose tween the National Student Asso- The ASG president concluded, want to partiiipate in this hypo- in June and they invite all SJS Zoological Society, P.O. Box 5477, ciation and the Central Intelli- "It is unfortunate that NSA has crisy in national student affairs. San Jose. students to visit them. gence Agency may produce "in- again violated its cause and pur- I believe the students would direet benefits" to a student gnaw pose by this action. It apparently Mr. Batten is the director of the CREATURE COMFORTS rather have valuable research tools which bloke from NSA three has ignored its own constitution new San Jose Zoo and the 100 The animals compose a happy available to them through an or- years ago. and the students it purports to rep- members of his family are animals and close-knit unit. 'They are ganization which specifically pro- Current nationwide adverse pub- resent. Student ranging from small birds and rep- used to people and crave atten- government has no licity, plus hibits itself from becoming in- tiles to jaguars and lions. tion." A brown sunbear cried until an immediate cessation business whatsoever in politics un- of CIA support, will speed volved with these difficult national SJS Biology and Life Science Batten let the beam n suck his fin- up a less it is openly organized for that "downward spiral" in students will now have close access ger. There was a little quarrel NSA popu- purpose. political issues." larity, according to to observation and research of because the other two bears Gary Klee- man, SJS these animal s. Until now, the were extremely jealous. Batten se- representative to the Associated Student Governments closest zoo was in San Francisco. verely reprimanded them and they Publications Control? quickly made friends again. of the USA IASGUSA I and vice COLLECTION SOLD A full grown jaguar, came over president of the organization. Batten, a mechanical engineer, to the side of the cage so Batten "NSA's popularity has been de- has sold his collection of animals could pet him. "I've had Chris clining for the last five years be- to San Jose with cause of its political activities," Bill the stipulation Compromise Seen since she was eight days old." he that they will be cared for prop- said as she licked his hand. Kleeman said. "Now, with up to A compromise bill may replace over the editorial policies of cam- erly. 80 per cent of its operating funds The animals are in a holding the two different bills before the pus publications. Hollow gone, and the recent controversy, Batten, who has always had a compound next to Happy Student Council establishing an "The question of an Editorial originally built for colleges are going to start looking great love for animals, began col- which was Editorial Board to review and Advisory Board has been discussed lecting They have been in aroundand find ASG." them in Borneo while work- three months. evaluate all publications subsidized unsuccessfully for several years ing months. Bat- Kleeman said ASG, a national for Shell Oil. He bought sev- these quarters for 14 by ASH funds, according to Sen- but no formal action has ever been eral animals the holding com- "non-political" association which back with him and ten describes ior Representative Ken Shackle- taken," Vic Lee ASB Vice-Presi- has "adequate but we're SJS helped to found, has never ac- since continued collecting. He pound as ford, originator of one of the bills dent commented in an interview opened a move into the zoo cepted money from any organ of private zoo in Santa quite anxious to currently before council, last Friday. Cruz in connection with Santa's that I designed for these particu- the federal government. "We cer- Photo by A. J. Dubiel The Currently two bills are before Village. Last year he moved lar animals." tainly are not of interest to the compromise was reported the council, the first introduced by collection to San Jose Batten strives to maintain a PETER BATTEN and Abel, a 3 -year-old sunbear, seem to have a CIA, because we operate only to occur as a result of considerable and turned Shackleford, provides for stronger them over to the city. The sophisticated zoo in which the main compatible relationship. Batten is director of the new San Jose within this country," he said. discussion by various proponents San controls over SJS publications Jose Parks and Recreation will concern is the well-being of the Zoo to be opened at Kelly Park in June and Abel is a member of ASG was founded in 1964 by of both bills as to the extent of than the other bill introduced by administer the zoo. animals. the animal family. students who split from NSA in control which could be executed a disagreement over the scope of the Campus Policy Committee NSA activities. The group last headed by Graduate Representa- week accused NSA of "fraud" for tive Dick Miner. subjecting itself to being a possible Reg Packet Due Shackelford will attend the CIA front while claiming to exist Campus Policy Committee meet- Is the last day students as an agency "through which Today ing Thursday to attempt to com- with classes meeting after 4 American students exchange ideas, bine the two bills into one bill be- p.m. may turn in their registra- express their views, and act on fore it is discussed in council. tion materials and fees without issues which affect them as mem- Shackleford's bill has met oppo- bers of the education community." paying a $5 late fee. sition from Vic Lee who feels that Morris Dailey Auditorium will In a press conference, ASG pres- "the bill infringes on the freedom I LY IS to It tonight. DA from 13ARTAN be open ident Bob White said that infor- of the press in every possible way." Registration materials will not mation surrounding the amounts Dick Miner, also opposing the bill, the CIA has given NSA may ex- be accepted after Thursday. Introduced his substitute bill II SAN JOSE STATE COLLEGE Students taking more than six pose "only a part of the mystery through his Campus Policy Com- of NSA." units pay $51.50 and students mittee. taking less than six units pay "NSA enjoys the same tax bene- If a compromise is not reached foreign Vol. 54 5.'5 SAN JOSE, CALIFORNIA, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1967 No. 71 fits and exemption that churches 827.30. Out-of-state and the council will vote separately on charged an addi- and schools dolisted as a non- students are each bill. The bill is currently political, educational organization. tional non-resident fee. waiting debate from the council. Strike Sanction Sought By Local AFT Rushees Down In Reaction to Proposed Faculty Cut Fraternities See Image Change By JEFF BRENT Roth said the idea of informal of fraternities and their benefit to By JIM WILLS reactions from other faculty or- Some faculty members have said some concrete plans in the near Spartan Daily Staff Writer rush, where rushees only visit a the individual and SJS. Spartan Daily Staff Writer ganization leaders. they believe the current prob- future to determine how we are "The number of fraternity fraternity or fraternities, instead "IFC must take a more active Strike sanction will be sought Dr. Ralph Bohn, SJS local presi- lems will dissolve when the new going to absorb these full time rushees has certainly declined. We of going to every house on cam- role in the whole rushing system by the SJS local of the American dent of the California State Em- budget is put before the state teaching positions." are now in a transitional period, pus as in formal rush, is becoming at SJS if the Greek system wishes Federation of Teachers Monday, ployees Association (CSEA), regis- legislature. But not taking any Commenting on reactions last changing from a party school in the rule rather than the excep- to maintain a high quality of lead- March 6, in reaction to the possi- tered personal disapproval of the chances, they declare they intend week to the cut-back possibility, the 50s to a scholastic one in the tion. "Rush has changed so much ership and influence. It is our job bility of a 110.7 full-time equiva- action and any measure resulting to fight the issues resulting from Pres. Clark said, "In discussing 60s," commented Jim Roth, rush over the years that most of the to see to it that each individual lent faculty cut revealed last week from it. the red-penciled budget. the proposed budget for higher chairman of the Inter-Fraternity present day fraternity members has the opportunity to become ac- by Pres. Robert D. Clark. The SJS prof said he believes Shortly after the AFT decided education it is understandable that Council. have never seen a formal rush in quainted with as many fraternities to seek strike sanction, Dr. Dudley the faculty and the administration as possible before pledging a The decision to seek strike sanc- that the members of the CSEA Roth, who was responsible for the strict sense of the word. If Moorhead, dean of the giant have emphasized the negative ef- house," commented Roth. tion was made Friday afternoon would not approve of the measure the spring semester formal rush each fraternity promoted their of School of Humanities and the Arts, fects." at a campus meeting of the SJS and added that the constitution program at SJS was openly dis- "informal rushees to sign up for striking informed school department heads "However," the president noted, local of the AFT. the CSEA directly forbids appointed with the number that formal rush, it would be better. We Navy On Campus that it would be necessary to lop "no definite decisions have been The motion "to seek strike sanc- of any form. actually went through rush. Of the would then have about 300 going A team of Navy recruiters are James off 35 FTE faculty positions if the made on cutbacks in personnel or tion from the Santa Clara County ACSCP local president Dr. 86 who signed up for formal rush, through formal rush." on the campus today for the Avia- "We (the cut is instituted. programs. Discussions on the Central Labor Council on March Clark stated that only 22 showed up for the rush Defending the Greek system and tion Officer Program. advocate a strike Dr. Moorhead indicated that he budget are continuing." 6 in the event that permanent, ACSCP) do not assembly held Saturday, Feb. 11. the merits of its influence on cam- Anyone between the ages of 17 until we would avoid, if possible, the dis- Of the present budgetary situ- non-tenured faculty members are or sanction of any kind "Of those 22 I don't have any idea pus, Roth said that the IFC is and 27 with 20/20 vision and a the proper missal of full-time probationary ation the president commented, dismissed for budgetary reasons," have fully explored as to how many of them actually now considering the possibility of minimum 2 GPA is eligible for the the faculty members. He hinted at "I hope that the budget will be was passed unanimously by legal channels." went to all the different fraterni- an IFC pre-rush function for next program. of probationary part-time faculty dismissal if the sufficiently improved to make cut- local group. "In the hiring ties. This is quite a decline from fall that would consist of all fra- Information may also be ob- are legal, as well as cutback becomes a reality. backs of regular, non-tenured fac- Dr. John Calm, head of the AFT faculty there fall rush when nearly 500 went ternities on campus pooling their tained from the Naval Air Station, of commitments involved. We, "We will have to come up with ulty unnecessary." local, emphasized that approval moral through informal rush. talents to help stress the merits Alameda (415-522-6600). the sanction would not mean that as a group, certainly Intend to a strike is imminent. Such a sanc- take some sort of action to sup- tion, according to Dr. Gahm, only port the probationary members formally recognizes that the AFT of the faculty," he said. Dr. Clark Engineering Dept. Holds has "legitimate grievance" for did not mention any specific meas- striking. ures which would be taken by his Friday's decision evoked cool organization. Electric Car Symposium George's Birthday Late; Total Shut-Down A national symposium and vint- Both speakers are expected to re- have 11th Street Tow The SJS library, cafeteria, age automobiles, dating back to veal progress their companies made in electric car development. Spartan Bookstore, and all col- 1910, commemorate National Kn- Score One for British sym- lege offices and departments will Keynote address for the gineering Week this week at SJS. Eric So you think you'll be celebrat- made 1752. which meant that be closed tomorrow, Feb. 22, posium will be delivered by Called Legal Hugh C. Ross, president of Ross P. Grant, executive officer of the ing Washington's Birthday tomor- George Washington was 19 on Washington's Birthday. The SJS Engineering Corp. and chairman of Pollu- Feb. 11, 1750 and 20 on Feb. 11, garage and Cal and Roberts California Motor Vehicle row? Did the city of San Jose have the event, reported that a 1910 1752, not 1751. Bookstores will remain open on tion Control Board. Subject of his Unfoitunately, the President's the legal right to have some 63 Rauseh-Lang, a 1920 Milborn, a Needs, Public The reason for the change of the holiday. Regular hours will talk will be "Public birthday occurred two Saturday's cars towed from 10th and 11th 1910 Baker, and an electric motor- Governmental Re- birthday from Feb. 11 to Feb. 22 be resumed on Thursday. Feb. 23. Acceptance and ago, Feb. 11, to be exact. Streets last week? cycle will be featured in the auto- sponse." was due to the vernal equinox (in that we celebrate "Proper notice was made," said mobile display this week in front An article on the development of How is it the spring, when night and day Washington's birthday tomorrow? Captain Mel Hornbeck of the po- of the Engineering building on the electric car appears in the cur- are of equal length). The change Short-Cut Routes on the lice departments' Records Division. Seventh Street. He also announced rent edition of "Rule" magazine, The blame has to be laid of the calendar systems meant government, "The law requires that signs be May Lead to Injuries that Westinghouse Electric Co. and now on sale in the Engineering British that the vernal equinox had been posted 24 hours in advance the Dynamo Corp. of Sacramento will building lobby for 25 cents. George Washington was born displaced by 11 days. time and date of the tow away," Like to wind up with bumps and display modern versions of elec- on Feb. 11, 1731 to Augustine and To correct this error, Parlia- Hornbeck said. bruises and possibly a cast. Well, tric vehicles. Mary Ball Washington at a farm ment ordered that the difference your luck by "Public Works took care of the just keep pressing A complete semi-conductor con- Business Jobs on Pope's Creek in Westmoreland be removed by the omission of 11 the landscape proj- posting. The signs were put out cutting across trol system for electric cars will County, Virginia. days from Sept. 1752. Thus, there Tower Hall and your 98 hours in advance, and at 6:30 ect around be shown by John Electric, Au- Aired Tonight He celebrated his first 19 birth- were no days dated Sept. 3 to come true. on the morning of the tow aways, dream may born, N.Y., along with a fuel cell The INTRO Program will be days without difficulty, but in Sept. 13, inclusive. The day after personal notice was given to resi- According to Executive Dean C. exhibit by the mechanical engi- discussed tonight at the Ameri- 1750, the British Parliament im- Sept, 2 was Sept. 14. This made dences along the way, Grant Burton, the contractor for neering students at SJS, according can Marketing Association's orien- posed an act that changed dating the autumnal equinox coincide "Besides the proper notice," the Tower Hall landscape project to Ross. tation meeting. from the Julian calendar to the with the calendar, but required the Hornbeck added, "before a tow is rushing ahead as quickly as Featured speakers at the sym- The meeting is at 7:30 in ED100 Gregorian calendar. insertion of 11 days to compensate. away can be effected, there must possible to avoid prolonged inter- posium this Saturday are Edward and AMA officials are encourag- Adoption of the new system GEORGE WASHINGTON So, in 1753 and thereafter, be a city ordinance that allows ference with normal campus pedes- D. Marande, director of Ford MO- ing all business majors to attend. meant that the days of Jan. 1 to . . . blame the Redcoats George Washington celebrated his tow away. trian traffic. tor Company's applied research The INTRO conference brings March 24 were excluded from the birthday on Feb. 22 instead of "Friday morning an emergency In order to provide personal laboratory at Detroit, and Howard recruiters from 60 corporations to year, In the Julian calendar, the calendar changed that to Jan. 1. Feb. 11. resolution was enacted to provide safety, students and faculty are Wilcox, technical director of the campus over a two day period giv- first day of the year was March The period of Jan. 1 to March It takes an act of Parliament for tow sways for road excava- asked to avoid the areas of con- advanced power systems depart- ing students up to 20 job. inter- 25, but in 1751, the Gregorian 24 was not lost, however. It was to do something like that. tions. struction. ment at General Motors Corp. views. It is sponsored by AMA Ntt

2SP D '11it Tuesday, February 21, 1967 Guest Editorial PARTAN DAILY Congressman 11111 SAN JOSE STATE COLLEGE Defends Policy Editor Jerry Townsend Advertising Manager .... Jack Groban By CHARLES GUBSER One of the reasons some Americans are Editorial dubious about our policy in Vietnam is Staff their frustration at not being able to se- cure information in which they have con- fidence. The )) i ll istration has been accused of 'Turn Off the Water' news manipulation and to some extent this is true. On the other hand. some infor- Recent political dev elopments make world. that human beings are far more mation has been withheld because it might prove valuable to the enemy. The present the it lea of div tiling California into two important than property rights and tendency is to err on the side of safety, idea once laughed that adult humans should be granted separate statesan to overelassify and withhold more infor- at in happier daysmuch more ap- enough intelligence to choose any type mation than is necessary. pealing to Northern Californians. of reading material they desire, includ- The recent articles by Harrison Salis- As a separate entity. Northern Cali- ing any dictionary of slang compiled. bury, assistant managing editor of the Neu. fornia could function as its good-old- Opponents of the "two Californias" York Times. which began on Christmas Day have created an impact far beyond liberal self. No longer would it have to proposal insist this half of the state their importance considering that they bend to ultra -conservative. Southern would suffer in any such deal. They were mostly rehashes of Comm llll ist prop- California - oriented leadership. No point out the lower half of the state aganda handouts almost two months old. longer kk (Mid the "better half" of an has all the industry, money and people Salisbury was the first American journal- unhappy geographical marriage have that count to keep California "number ist admitted to North Vietnam, but as Wal- to put up %%all "simple solutions" for one." All upper California has to offer, ter Lippman has said, his statements were news only because they were published in cotnplex problems. they say, is water. asigilaeb V21...errsemi. ex-- : -V. the Times. North- If being number one means eventu- Indeed. running its own show, The first Times report concerned a U.S. ern California could examine these ally becoming, among other things, raid against civilians at Nam-Dinh and car- complex problems as a doctor and not prejudiced as Mississippi, treeless as ried non-attributed statements and sta- as a medicine man. As a doctor, a pro- Mojave, and censored as Spain, this Thrust and Parry tistics provided by the Communists in gressive California would view the writer prefers being number two, three, early November. Contrary to what Salis- United States had symptoms of each state illness care- 50, or not a state at all. bury reported, the named military targets in Nam-Dinh as fully. determine causes, then prescribe Governor Ronald Reagan, his men Graduate School Cut Defined early as last spring. These targets adjoined and State Superintendent of Public a remedy. Dean Tells True Story the civilian installations about which Salk- The new approach to California's Instruction Max Rafferty would go to EDITOR'S NOTE: The Thrust and Parry section of bury wrote. the editorial page offers students and faculty ills would be far better than the cur- the south in any deal, of course. May I On 'Axing Grad School' chance to express their views on campus, local Early in November the North Viet- national or international issues. Space is allowed namese ambassador to Russia released a rent one of using old tribal customs. suggest Lower California then could to encourage written debates on such current affairs. Editor: The new California %timid shift the call itself "Reaganland" in the tradi- Contributions to Thrust and Parry must not exceed 12-page "Report on U.S. War Crimes in May I please comment briefly on the "Grad- 250 words, must be typewritten, double spaced Nam-Dinh City," dated October 1966. They tax burden to the appropriate places tion of Disney, Mouse and company. uate School Axed" article in today's Spartan within 45-space margins and properly signed with khe writer's name and faculty or ASB number. The apparently disregarded it and took it for Californian, Daily. This officio and the one in last Fri- so that taxing students would not be As a native Northern Daily will not print letters which are libelous, in poor it is: Communist propa- day's Mercury upon which it was based are taste or include a personal attack. The editor re- exactly what necessary. this writer cries out to other natives reasonably accurate in detail but entirely mis- fits right to edit or cut letters to conform to ganda. New California could make it clear and friends of same: Let's turn off construe the larger problem. space limitations and to cease publication of letters months later Salisbury dealing with subjects he believes have been exhausted. But about two to the rest of the country, and the the water. DS. To start with, as Dean of Graduate Studies reported: "Almost every house on the I have not urged "outright temporary elim- street was blasted down on April 14 at ination of the highly prized, but expensive, Rockefeller and Field foundations, the AFL- just as the factory shifts graduate school," (San Jose Merucry, CIO and the State Department, and uses this about 6:30 a.m. 2/17/67). What was discussed by a group of money for political purposes, members of Con- were changing. Forty-nine people were Campus Voice Open to All deans was that the financial crisis, pressed gress have urged that NSA's tax-exempt killed, 135 wounded ... , and 240 houses upon us by the proposed budget of Governor status be revoked. collapsed. Eight bombsMK-84’saccom- If Reagan, could be met by several approaches. According to the New Guard Magazine (Oc- The Spartan Daily, representing the The editorial board is comprised of the plished this." Freshmen courses could be eliminated; -'the tober, 1966), "Eugene Groves, who describes The Communist propaganda report de- mountain-top among college newspapers, major editors and faculty advisers. lower division could be eliminated, students himself as a 'left-wing Democrat,' was elected its staff scribed the raid as follows: "At 6:30 a.m. speaks to a student body of approximate- When the Daily "goes to bed," could be limited to taking 10 units, a school the new national president of NSA. A con- goes about its other businessthat of of this college could be closed, three state col- stitutional challenge, observing that Groves when those who haul just come back front ly 22.000. It keeps students abreast of creating the next issue and carrying on leges could be closed, or SJS could suspend had never been a student at the university he a night shift were still sleeping, . . . two contemporary collegiate thought, campus its regular life, while printers take over graduate school." (San Jose Mercury, was supposedly representing, tailed." U.S. planes . . . dropped eight MK-84 year. In other words, a series of possibilities I other news, educat al development and phys- urge that SJS do as colleges b ha, killing 49 people . . . wounding the newspaper. was canvassed and discussed; and in this throughout the country have done and turn 133 people, and destroying 240 houses ..." ical growth of the college. There is apprehension among the staff series was the suggestion that graduate cour- down membership in NSA. In other accounts written by Mr. Salis- The Daily is your newspaper. It is a while the words they wrote are becoming ses could be suspended. Paul Reimers business. supported by advertising revenue lead: Did they do the best job they could? The San Jose Mercury feature writer chose A5926 bury, the Co llllll unist report was followed to "zero in" on the last mentioned proposal. and student body funds. but it is your It's a rather lonely job, making a news- just as precisely as in the above instance. His interviews with the various deans cov- The 12-page C handout had newspaper. paper. But when it is on the stands and eted many topics; but for his article he dealt Student's 'Red Thumb' When iii paid your registration fees, being grabbed up by the readers, it is a with what could happen to the graduate pro- been freely circulated in Moscow, and the Pentagon had a copy. But for some reason you not Isnly paid for the right to read proud and satisfying job. gram if this option were adopted. As an his- Uproots Illarxian Growth the paper. but to speak through it. Was it the best job that could have torian, I would say the Mercury writer was it was classified "secret" and not released. guilty of writing but poor All letters to the editor are asked only been done? No. There was a lot of room good journalistic "THE RED THUMB" If the charges it contained had been an- historical reporting. to be in good taste, free of libel, and signed for improvement. This very issue could Surely Sir, swered openly and frankly in November, To correct a few minor details in the Spar- you must deny by the author with his student body card have been much better. Organization and tan Daily's story: President Clark has not an- Salisbury's rehash of an out-of-date Com- The seed Marx planted munist handout woold have lost its effec- number included. policy are there and there is a hard core nounced that "nearly 400 faculty members" cannot die; If y011 11aVe an idea for a column, pre- of journalism students to make a news- would have to be dismissed. He did say that Another point tiveness Wore it was written. Now because sent it to the editorial board, who will paper possible. But it takes a lot of people 110.7 FrE professors may have to be cut if you must concede it appears that the Atli ll i ll istration had the lowest budget figure allowed by the gov- Is if we spray something to hide, many believe the mi- decide if its printing would be in the best working hard together to make an excel- for ernor becomes a reality. No firm proposal we'll kill that weed plicaliosts of Salisbury's story and think interest of the student body. lent newspaper. P.S. cuts is being presented to President Clark Who cares his mots this nation is wantonly bombing non-com. this Monday. The matter is still being studied. grow underground, The faculty and administrators are still un- We own the trees - batants. Nothing could be further from the decided about the nature of next year's offer- our lives abound. truth. ings. It is entirety possible that a completely Our Defense Department could profit the problem Derrel H. WhItemyer Juxtaprose different approach to meeting from the lesson contained in this incident of a reduced budget will be implemented. Most A2384 Importantly, no one is urging the "axing" or Truth concealed appears as falsity re- By JERRY TOWNSEND onstration. Myerson is a man who believes "wiping out" of the graduate program at this vealed. in paying lip service to his ideals. college. least Affection isn't legal anymore. At It is quite possible, considering the tem- Gerald F.. M'heeler Notable Quotes I on S lay at 9:30 not in San Francisco perament of the Bay Area. that Myerson's Acting Dean of Graduate Studies 11 recently was and Research Eric Hoffer, author and part-time long- a.m. "1 'ming married couple idea could flower and perhaps blossom IfORTAN DAILY cited police for ki-sing in public. shoreman, in his book, "The Temper of Our SAN JOSE STATE COLLEGE into a massive Free Smooch Movement. Time" (Harper & Row): The hit -hand is 10, his wife 16. Student Furnishes Facts The Second class postage paid at San Jose, California. However, such a development smacks too attitude of the intellectual community Member California Newspaper Publishers Association .11ino-t an:fone can see the degrading much of the theatrical to be widely ac- toward America is shaped not by the creative and Audit Bureau of Circulations. Published daily by if -.irk scandalous hod. The cepted. To Protest Joining NSA few but by the many who for one reason or students of San Jos. State College, accept Saturday another cannot transmute their dissatisfaction and Sunday, during collage year. Subscription accept- thi- pe of behavior repre- d only on a We seem to be approaching the point, Editor: into a creative remainder-of-semester basis. Full aca- s,ot- a scrious threat to modern society. impulse, and cannot acquire a demic year, $9; each semester, $4.50. Off.campus today, where the solution to almost any Phil Whitten, graduate representative and sense of uniqueness and of growth by develop- price per copy, 10 cents. National advertising rep- our fons ard-looking lawmakers problem is translated as a (you-fill -in-the- critic of Ameliean foreign policy, has con- ing and expressing their capacities and talents. resentative: National Educational Advertising Service, hair pr'. 1.1 liii to prevent it. Public There is nothing in contemporary America Inc., 18 E. 50th St., N.Y.C. Phone 294-6414 Editorial blank )-in. With this type of think- stantly urged that SJS join the National Stu- Ext. 2383, 2384, 2385, 2386. Advertising that Ext. 2081, kissin;: lie -topped. ing, unhappy members of the SJS student dent Association. can cure or alleviate their chronic frus- 2082, 2083, 2084. Editorial officeJC208, display But now we find out from Ramparts Maga- tration. advertising officeJC207, classified officeJC206. A lieu Mier.oth director of The Com- government could promote an conceivably zine, a publication that leans slightly to the Even if we should banish poverty from the Office hours 2-4:20 p.m. Monday through Friday. mittee. an S.F. repertory group which ASBe-in. And the day may yet come when receiving land, lift up the Negro to true equality, Printed at Globe Printing Co., 1445 S. la St., left, that NSA has been money from with- San Jose. nperialire- in social protest both on and other dissatisfied bottle-fed babies will the CIA, and more recently senators such as draw from Vietnam and give half of the na- off the -lap% doesn't agree. In fact. he is Long of Louisiana and Kuchel of California tional income as foreign aid they will still Editor JERRY TOWNSEND unite in a burp-in. But from all indica- Advertising Manager JACK GROBAN organizing a ki-s-in for LieI couple's court tions, it would appear this form of protest say that they see nothing wrong with the fed- see America as an air-conditioned nightmare Day Editor FRANCINE MILLER supporting unfit for them to live in. Managing Editor --- appearance March 14. and hopes to in- milked of its power. eral government NSA. RICK SKINNER has been Rut who is the National Student Associa- Executive Editor JIM BREWER volve 1.000 pairs love-a-thon in the dem- Labor unions in recent years have used tion? D. A. Rickards of Cleveland, in a letter to Associate Editor CINDY LYLE Copy Editor ...... -..-. ...... MARIE RODRIGUEZ the threat of a walk-out. Social demon- Last fall NSA had its 101h annual National the editor appearing in the Washington Post.: Feature Editor ... DIANE TELESCO strations, in contrast, ean't leave the scene Student Association Congress, At that time "Those who expect. to reap the blessings of Sports Editors LEW ARMISTEAD they had as members about '280 of the 1,700 freedom," the President said in his State of JIM STREET of the crime (?l. The repetie of the Fine Arts Editor BARBARA KYNE Guest Articles schools eligible for niembet ship. This is a sig- the Union add reSS, "MllSi , like men, undergo blank-in is cause-in a problem, however. Campus Life Editor .. PATSY MILLER The Daily will consider and is seeking Guest !di. nifierunt drop in niembership from 191il, when the fatigues of supporting it." Wire Editor RON JAMES kaiak and Guest Rooms from SJS faculty numbers This style of demonstration often results about 350 schools belonged. Mr. Johnson and his speech writers took the Investigation Writers ...... JIM RAUH on matters, affecting the campus and its students. commotion than above quotation, word for SUE HARRIGER Arrangements for writing such materials may be in more disruption and This recent student congress called for such word, from the opening sentence of Thomas Photo Editor DAVE STOUT made with Cindy Lyle, Daily associate editor, between understanding. things as legalization of pot and abolition of Paine's Crisis Staff Photographers Mary Adams, Bill Bayley, 2 and 430 p.m. in the Daily Office. JC2011. Final the draft. Concerning the Vietnam War, it (Number IV.) Larry Bellis, Al Dublel, Ken Jones, Fred Rosenberg of guest articles Viten things need change-in, possibly decisions on use are reserved to the called for the "leinnination i if Ork'ntiiVe mill - May I respectfully suggest that those who Public Relations Director GARY HUBBARD Editor we could get the "IN" crowd to plan a i:11')' 01.14,111. expect to reap the rewards 01 111V1t,l'ic 11111 Business Manoger KFN BECKFR Guest copy ,huuld to typed duolele xpar on a Pf1.1,111L thinkiii It) start Ii .14111.111 111.15 WJt CA121 OrION 40 spa,. lire T111,1111; Ilt I . t,1 I bat N47:A receive-. Illit 111,41, 111141t.WO 1114. 1:1110It I., 'I rionwli.ro Maneyor RIO/ WEI! work-in it out. more than 4600,000 unnuan,y trout the lord, where credo. Lb due, Notional Mn. Mgr. KATHY KALSCHED Tuesday February 21, 19(67 SPARTAN DAIT.Y.-3 'It's Not Playground Work' World Forum I Tower Hall Area Walks Designed For Beauty Say SJS Recreation Majors Reagan Aides Buy Ranch SACRAMENTO GAP) Five assistants to Gov. Reagan, includ- By JEFF BRENT building. The 11C1, plans do not By BOB KENNEY mate 140 undergraduate recreation tional parks, under the Depart- ing his top aide, have helped buy a Nezicia County ranch for more Spartan Daily Staff Writer propose any additional walkways

spartfur Daily staff Writer majors is at "Co-Rev." ment of the Interior, to such local than Si million. Beauty may replace actual con- in the Tower Hall art-a except If you ale under 25 now, organizations as the Girl Scouts, SJS one that will surround Morris chances Wednesday night's Coeducation- This came to light in county records today. venience to those frustrated are that in Little League Baseball and chil- dashing Dailey Auditorium. your lifetime YOU will al-Recreation program constitutes The ranch of 2,000 acres in the Wolf Creek area of the county students who are used to only work 30 dren's theaters. flats in front Replacing the old walkways hours a week. Econ- a laboratory for recreation classes. was purchased from Curtis Bryford and J. D. Williams of Oroville. across the old mud omists example of the growing need construc- which ran from the south winq predict that today's genera- The Saturday afternoon Co-Rec An It was bought in the name of the Grass Valley Land Co. of Tower Hall when the tion will probably work 10 hours a program, although co-ordinated by for professional "recreators" is tion of the Tower Hall Court land- of the science building to the week less than their fathers did, the Recreation Department, is shown by Associate Professor of scaping project is completed In Spartan bookstore will be a new and 30 hours a week less than sponsored by the Associated Stu- Recreation Kenneth Kim, who on Congress Relatives Make Payroll early June. 20-foot wide walkway consisting their grandfathers. sabbatical in the fall semester of Those who have viewed the pro- of contrasted concrete which will dent Body, which pays the super- WASHINGTON (AP) Relatives of at least 51 members of Con- The 1966-67 conducted a study for the posed and approved plans for the be enhanced by rows of fruitless average working man is vising let-iv-talon majors. gress are now on the congressional payroll or were at some time in now faced California State Youth Authority project have come away mulberry trees running on both with more leisure time DEMANDS EXPERIENCE 1966 a year when salaries paid these relative-employes exceeded entire than ever before. CSYA ). with mixed emotions about the sides of the walkway for its entire This is creating The SJS recreation program de- $385.000, an survey disclosed Monday. a heavy demand for recreation ex- mands actual experience from its The CSYA, concerned with de- proposed walkways. The new length. perts, or "recreators," says Donald majors. Seniors must serve a linquent young men and women, "super highways" will follow some- Many students well may find saving Sinn, associate professor of rec- three-month, full-time internship is now forming a recreation pro- Humphrey Speaks at Stanford what the same pattern as the old themselves not actually reation. gram for its institutions, and has sidewalks running from the book- any time getting to class, but worth 15 units before they grad- STANFORD (APP - Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey said opened a new recreational em- store to the library and continuing who cares when you walk in FINEST IN NATION uate. But it is required they have Monday that he was "sure that if President John F. Kennedy were The SJS ployment position as a result of to the south wing of the science beauty. recreation program, 1,200 hours experience prior to alive he would be doing exactly what the Johnson administration is started in a sep- Kim's report. 1945 and now serving their internship. doing at this very hour." arate department, is one of the A wide employment spectrum HEAVY DEMAND Vice President Humphrey, addressing a crowd of more than 1,800 finest in the nation, claims Sinn. opens for the Recreation graduate. "Yet colleges are not beginning in Stanford University's packed Memorial Auditorium, was undisturbed SJS recreation majors agree with Municipal, city and national parks to meet the predicted demands for by an anti-war demonstration. Two small groups totaling about SUNDAY this and add that their major is offer many opportunities. Private the future." says Sinn, pointing to 250 persons walked out during his question-and-answer appearance. often misunderstood, especially by businesses also seek them in large the fact that 3,000 to 4,000 open- FEBRUARY 26 their fellow students. numbers. ings compete for the 600 to 800 "Mostly I get, 'Oh, that's mickey Eastman Kodak and Lockheed, recreation majors who graduate Sukarno Exchanges Power 8 p.m. mouse!'" says Kathy Shields, sen- for example, need supervisors for nationally each year. JAKARTA, Indonesia (API President Sukarno is ready to hand San Jose Civic Auditorium ior, when she tells people her ma- such recreational facilities as the Recreation demands are heavy over his full presidential powers to Gen. Suharto in exchange for not jor. gyms, golf courses and pools they now and will continue to grow as being dismissed, authoritative military sources said yesterday. "They think you teach physical provide for their employees. we move toward the 21st century. The sources, close to Suharto, said barring a last-minute pull-out Adm: $2.75, 3.75, 4.75 education," says Chtis Kinney, "There is literally no limit to As people accumulate more leisure, Sukarno would hand over the powers some time Tuesday. senior. "But recreation has the as- some of the recreational facilities they will pursue many and more Tickets: S.J. Box Office pects of working with people so- some businesses have," says Sinn. diverse forms of recreation. 40 West San Carlos cially, rather than just sports- Rest homes, correctional insti- And this is the challenge for Marines Kill 864 Enemy wise," she declares, adding that tutions and hospitals also need the recreation major, says Dr. SAIGON, South Vietnam (Al' - U.S. Marines and South Viet- CY 5-0888 her own program emphasizes two recreation directors, while the Depart- Mary Wiley, Recreation namese paratroopers Monday reported 864 enemy killed after two SAT. FEB. 25-8,30 p.m. areas besides recreation, psychol- armed services, Slim points out, FRI. FEB. 24-830 p.m. ment chairman. battles along South Vietnam's central coast. That boosted to more Masonic Auditorium, S.F. Berkeley Community Theater ogy and sociology. "have one of the largest recrea- "The challenge and/or the threat than 1,300 the estimate of Communists slain in six days of heavy Tickets: Downtown Confer 1.0. Tickets: Sherman/Clay B.O. John Gatos, senior, is tired of tion systems in the world." Broadway, Oak. HI 4-8575 of the dynamic effects of leisure," fighting in a giant drive against North Vietnamese regulars. 325 Mason St. Pit 5-2021 2135 people saying, "You're the guy on GRADUATE OPPORTUNITIES she says, "heighten the need to the kid's playground who's holding Recreation graduates are found prepare competent young men and the ball and the bat." And Bob In almost any field of commercial women who can help to shape the Pitcher, senior, tells people it's recreation. They may be at Dis- environment and influence and not "like P.E. or playground neyland keeping the rides moving, motivate people to use leisure cre- work," but that recreation offers or on an ocean liner keeping the atively, and to develop the skills, many possible areas to enter. passengers moving. enthusiasm and attitude which ENGINEERING, SCIENCE, MATH MAJORS: FOUR AREAS SJS recreation graduates are could alleviate the problem of The Recreation Department of- now working in such areas as na- boredom, loneliness and anxiety." fers programs concentrating in four different areas: Ever stop to general recreation. medical recreation. correctional institution recrea- We. HAWAII 1967 think that --recreation park administra- tion. UNIVERSITY SUMMER SESSION The closest contact most SJS CAMPUS RESIDENCE OR 9/10 of your talents students have with the approxi- . APARTMENT-HOTEL AT WAIKIKI may lie Common Nutmeg HOWARD TOURS Used as Narcotic THE ORIGINAL STUDY TOUR TO HAWAII UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) underneath Common nutmeg, the aromatic ONLY $25 DEPOSIT spice found atop an eggnog, is a narcotic that "many persons now APPLY: the surface? consume deliberately to escape Mrs. Diane Rogers reality," a U.N. report says. Housemother, Kappa Alpha Theta Andrew T. Well of the Harvard 182 South Tenth Medical School says nutmeg taken Telephone: 294-8516 in large quantities causes many alarming symptoms.

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An equal opportumty employer 4SPARTAN RAHN Tuesday, February 21. 1967 At Civic Composer Joins Faculty By PAT TOR131.1.0 Guggenheim Foundation Award, opera "Rapunzel" won him first Mexican Ballet Folklorico Spartan Daily Staff Writer me of the highest honors that prize in the International Com- Living proof that diplomacy. can be awarded an American posers Conference in Rome in composer, An aria from his l94. isn't the only way to bridge a To Perform Tomorrow gap between two cultures is at San Jose State, 'IIo SI11.44.1, ;111d 11110.1(.1:in N. currently Lou Harrison, internationally on its fourth North American Ballet Folkloric of Mexico will known composer and authority tour, will offer three new num- th give its sole performance at the Oriental, and primi- bers created especially for the on African, st San Jose Ca it. Auditorium to- tour by Director-Choreographer tive folk music, is teaching "Mu- la morrow night at It Amalia Hernandez. sic in World Cultures" this se- it dancers, The new works "Guelaguet- mester at SJS. za " 'Sugar Harvest in Tamau- 111 0 Harrison has been active in lipas" and "Veracruz Alocambo" 7 tit incorporating eastern musical Tepiesenting a telescoping of 0 styles and instruments into 7he Mexico's many cultures, ranging PETER, PAUL, AND MARY will appear in concert at the San Jose Western music. He traveled to t-cm the ancient Indian civiliza- Civic Auditorium at 8 p.m. Sunday. Tickets are $2.75, $3.75, and SC Korea in 1961 on invitation (MCI S tains present traditional $4.75. ttc to the from the Congress for Cultural (lances characteristic of the ni BILLIARD PARLOR Freedom, the Society for Inter- country's more than 200 provin- national Cultural Exchange, and ces. sen NOW OFFERS A the NIetropoli tan Government of The musk. will be supplied by Peter, Paul, Mary STUDENT Tokyo. There he became well the Ballet Folklorico's own acquainted with Korean Court. DISCOUNT .0tups of Marimbalists, Vera- Music. truzanos, Mariachis and native Upon his return to California, Italian musicians. Sing At Civic Sunday tcct he began teaching interested Tickets are now on sale at 1.-e 50c PER HOUR friends to play the an an- Wendell Watkins Box Offices 11.nit Sit 1 They sang "Macy llad cc 1.11- lu ci cient Korean double-reed flute. PER PERSON m the Sherman Clay stores at 89 Spartan Balks stall 6c ii cr. i le Lamb" for him because it for, /le adapted this and various oth- WITH ASB CARD :4, First St., San Jose and at It was an ey(.11111: was the only song to which they er Asian instruments to the MONDAY -THURSDAY Stevens Creek, 50 N. Winchester 1961 when three young folk knew the same lyties and mel- , Paul ody. Western orchestra. 4th & SANTA CLARA ST. l(lvd.. Santa Clara. Ticket in- singers opc SAN JOSE 297-9657 rmation is also available by Stookey and Mary Travers, met Seven ouinths later they open- Dr. Lee Ilye Ku, director of w t 0honing 293-6252 and 296-7866. in Mary's ed at a Greenwich Village night the Classic Music Department of inc apartment. club ealleil the Bitter End. The the Oillege of Music of Seoul ti-ic They were three because it club was mobbed by discoverers National University, came to to named Albert of the new trio, as was the California in late 1961 to col- CAMPUS NECESSITY... persuasive fellow LOU HARRISON plays one of his oriental instruments. 13. Grossman. who had guided Gate of Horn in Chicago, the laborate with Harrison on a book so the careers of several brilliant hungry i in San Francisco, and on Korean Music which is not 14 folk artists, believed that to- the Blue Angel, back in New yet completed. ROOS/ATKINS' gether they could "make a lot York. Harrison returned to Korea Mrs. William Dusel Appears in Play of music." The word soon spread that in 1962. There he composed a is Peter, Paul and Mary had some- work for an occidental string Mrs. Pauline Dusel, wife of the present social structures. hr thing to say, something new that orchestra with various Sinitic Dr. William .1. Dusel, SJS vice The play is considered one of in LAMBSWOOL CARDIGAN was moving and exciting. the hest of its kind anywhere. (Chinese) instruments. It was president, will appear in Richard tic ci Within three months after performed by the Seoul Phil- Sheridan's "The School for 1 their first album, titled simply harmonic, and Phi solos were cc Scandal," in the Carriage House "Peter, Paul and Mary," was played by the first Pirist of the SJS Appears an issued in the spring of 1962, it Court Orchestra. This was the Theater at Saratoga's Villa Mon- s 011 zoomed to the top of the charts. first time a principal of the tano Saturday night. Other per- On Social Guide itf is coming! A little more than a year Court Orchestra had played formances are scheduled for hi after singing "Mary Had A Lit- with an occidental symphonic March 3, 4, 10 and 11. fly sk 111.05 tle Lamb" in New York apart- orch est ra. Tickets are available at $2 Spartan Daily Staff Writer let ment, Peter, Paul and Mary Why is Harrison so interested each at Sherman and Clay on San Jose State Colleg e, ar found themselves the most ac- First Street. Telephone reserva- in Eastern music? "1 grew up through the special efforts of trt claimed folk singers in the land, in a home filled with fine Chi- tions can be made at 867-0935. Editor Peter M. Sandman and Wouldn't you rather and their popularity has yet to nese art," he explains. "I quick- Mrs. Dusel will portray Mrs. No. 1? the staff of The Daily Prince- be with decline. Do yourself a favor and ly learned that it is among the Condor, a social busybody, as re I) see them Saturday night at Civic world's most beautiful." Sheridan's modern-day satire tonian, has been put on the map. Auditorium. In 1952, Harrison received a attempts to depict hypocrisy in The College has had a very special write-up in a very special social guide to college women in the U.S.A. "Where the Girls Tc Are." a new Dell paperback au- thored by Sandman and his col- leagues. SJS, according to the infam- Tc our. indispensable, Little Black tIc Book, "r anks (academically) do DEAR along with Arizona and Miami. Over a third of the students eli who enter flunk out, leaving the (it 11 other two thirds who will go n 4'J on to become the leading figures t. RE111: *** in greater San Jose. The col- lege also ranks high on Play- boy's annual survey of the na- tion's top party schools. . . ." Through this book we may World War I Ace Snooping Around for a New Car also take great pride in our com- munity, "a metropolis of charm and elegance .. . for fine dining DEAR REB: there is a string of MacDon- I'm a former World War I Air Ace, and when it comes to buy- old's hambur(zer stands and for ing a new car, I can really fly off the handle. Frankly, the whole enteet ainmer I ,-;I. iktc-speccking thing is a dogfight for me. I'm tired of piloting my present car drive-in the and have got my sights set on a performance model that'll let me strut in style. But its price has got to be solo it won't shoot me down. I'm banking on you to help me find one, Reb. MAX, THE RED BARON Ci mipletely DEAR RED BARON: (KS indispensible... Don't be blue, Maxi Tr -winging around in a new Dodge our own full- Coronet R/TRoad/Track. The hottest new performance car fashioned sweater of the year. Standard equipment includes a 440-cubic-inch, 4-barrel Magnum V8. Front bucket seats. Air-scoop hood de- that comes in six 15' sign. High-performance Red Streak nylon tiresand more! great colors, and is Join the Dodge Rebellion in a Coronet R/Tyou can do it for peanuts. And as for your present car: Junker. Kleenex 10c the best little "mixer" 3 Hershey Bars 5c

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Puritan Oil Co. 4th & N THE DODGE REBELLION WANTS YOU 6th & Keyes ROOS/AM 10th & Taylor 13th & Julian SAN JOSE: FIRST AT SANTA CLARA ToesdaN February 21. 19417 SP.ARTAN DAILY-6 'Baron' At Large KSJS To Air Door Fraternity's Mascot Missing P.S.A. Flight to L.A. Its RI IA the Certi ficate Wnwed Mother/ PEDERSEN horionni :warn of 1{4 berts Bookstore i ft spart Bails Staff Writer and neighborhood failed By PATs1( MILLER ..cording and 65 hours of in- The Baron is missing! And 1(1 produce Baron, although AMA Membership Campus many local residents reported Life Editor rview and editing. "Unwed Snoopy had nothing to do with You may know Erica. She is Mother" is the tesult of a class seeing him. it. The Baron, in this case, is a the girl who lives down the assignment to record people and Acacia members miss their 4 -month-old, light beige German street, who won a college scho- sounds. Hoyt went further. He 20-pound bundle of perpetual American Marketing Association larship, or who sits across from was interested in a story which Shorthair-Labrador Retriever be- motion and hope anyone know- SIS's most active business club YOU in English. Erica is one would have meaning and impact. longing to Acacia fraternity. ing his whereabouts will call of 285,000. Erica Ls an unwed After '12 to 15 visits to Brandon Baron was presented to the 293-9611 or drop by their house ff 'ants You mother. officials consented to the House. brothers of Acacia by their at 201 S. 13th St. This increasing problem is ex- interview. "little sisters" last November plored in a frank documentary, Hoyt hopes the documentary Orientation Meeting: Tonight Feb. 21 "The Unwed Mothei," to be pre- will be only the first in a series when the fraternity held its first sented by the campus FM sta- of interesting subjects to be initiation as SJS newest nation- M.A.s Earned tion KSJS, 90.7 mcs., tomorrow aired over the campus station. al fraternal organization, llo ies of ,111A actiN ities night at 8 p.m. Although controversial, the tape "The dog immediately won the Nearly half of SJS' M.A. de- Produced by Howard Hoyt, has been cleared with the ad- hearts of all the brothers," said grees that were awarded at the senior radio-television major, the ministration and to quote Hoyt's Gary Lefmann. Acacia member, end of the academic year, June Cuest Speaker Faculty Cuestsi documentary interviews Erica (a radio- televishin instructor, "even those members who had 30, 1966, were earned by stu- fiet it ious name , Wit h comments "There is a real need for this to clean up after him when he dents in the School of Education. from both an official and social type of story." 'OH WHERE, OH WHERE has messed up the carpets in their There were 7,067 students seek- * * * worker of Brandon House. Bran- my little dog gone?' cry mem- rooms." ing M.A. degrees in the 26 dif- don House, sponsored by Volun- bers of Acac:a Fraternity. Their However, on Wednesday. Feb. ferent academic fields. One hun- .1 1 is itob for all majors. Find out what we have to tem mascot, Baron, pictured above, 8, Baron failed to greet mem- and seventy-three educa- of America, provides a dred offer you. :Membership is just Ki per semester. home and counselling services Top Leaders is missing. Anyone seeing the bers in his characteristic way, tion students earned their M.A. for these women. light-beige German Shorthair- running up to their legs and al- degrees, which accounted for Education 100 DISCUSSES TRANSITION Labrador Retriever is asked to most bending himself over dou- close to ono-half of the MA'S 7:30 p.m. In the taped interview. Erica please contact the fraternity. ble. presented at SJS. s. openly discusses her relations Featured At with the baby's father, her feel- ings toward the baby, and the transition from home and friends PR Seminar to Brandon House. Erica personifies a growing "There has been no original social pioblem. One out of every research in the social sciences 14 children is illegitimate. Bran- as related to public relations in VAUGHN'S don House is an attempt to deal the last 25 years," stated Eat- with this problem. Each woman men B. Druck, president of is treated individually. Many Harshe-Rotman & Druck, Inc., have psychiatric problems rooted New York, in response ot the In childhood of which they are question "How can the social WASHINGTON'S BIRTHDAY not aware. sciences be beneficial to public Hoyt admits that Erica is ex- relations practitioners" ceptional. She is highly skilled This question constituted the and can support herself. Most morning session of the Seven- HATCHET DAY unwed mothers are between the teenth Annual Social Science ages of 15 and 19 years of age, Seminar for Public Relations high school dropouts and un- Leaders held Feb. 15 in Palo skilled. But Erica shales a pmb- Alto. 1 lem with many girls and not all Druck elaborated his state- are from the "wrong side of the ment saying "that a great many DAY DAY tracks," social scientists are not Interest- ONLY CLASS ASSIGNMENTS ed in anything related to public S LE The 28 minute documentary relations or to making a profit." represents three to four hours Druck was joined by over 90 . . top public relations executives from all parts of the nation, Home Ec Club and by Dr. Alex Bavelas, pro- fessor of psychology at Stan- SUITS... SPORTCOATS To Install Officers ford. Havel:is believes that we all Washington's Birthday Hatchet Day Special Installation of officers and a look for patterns and complex special program, "Clothing and rules in everything we do. He Special Textiles" will lie held by the warned that the pit -fall in this 39.50 to 47.50.... now 19.88 Home Economies Club, Thurs- is that rules are difficult in 69.50 to 79.50....now 29.88 day, in ED100. many cases to disprove, thereby Robbie Elf run, new president- making it difficult to see when 49.50 to 62.50... now 24.88 elect, will be installed with the we are wrong. 85.00 to 89.50.... now 39.88 other officers at 6:30 p.m. by Eight SJS students, including the retiring piesident, Carolyn Paul Cohune, Sara Guinn, Gary Wake. The program will begin Hubbard, Frank Landerville, 95.00 to 130.00. now 49.88 at 7 p.m. Gordon Miller, Barbara Parker, Shepard, and Gary All interested girls are invited David J. JACKETS... to attend. Williams, attended the Sportshirts ...Outerwear Wave, Special group Values to 34.50

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JIM STREJT each. as high an IS Vont, betore CM., I, It tlw tempo of II, l'hey couldn't get Spartan Dully I.:parte Editor wrestling team demoralized Chico tory outpointing Spartan 'Nib Sports Editor Wines inserted reverses with three game ; e the Gauchos the most ur fast break and fast-moving Mickey maxweil 8-7 in the opening Crow necer makes its especially, 26-3 Friday to close out its State 123-pound match. "Bill performance in the minutes remaining. tiouble. offense." good meal. but even steak sauce highly successful 1966-67 season. Starling's victory was followed second half wis the difference in Benefiting most from the speed wouldn't have juiced up the Santa. Actually, the season is not quite by decisions for Spartans Dick the game." an elated Spartan bas- ef the Spat tans was guard Rick Barbara basketball team's after- ulcer tor the Spart3ns, who will 130-pound ketball coach. Dan Glints. said Carpenter. He paraded to the foul game dinner Saturday night. Hamm, division: Dan compete in two more tournaments Swensen, 137-pound division; Gary after his team had beaten CC San- line 16 times, and cashed in on After the Friday El Gaucho. wiping off the . . . Lcrenz, 145-pound division; Mike ta Barham Saturday night 89-77. 10 of the free tosses. the official organ of the Santa 152-pound Dave Clegg. a spindly 6-5 reserve, In addition to tallying 14 points, Barbara campus, pronounced that The first of thew IA the Pacific! Brown, division; High, I60-pound division; and eame iiff the bench late in the hist Carpenter held Doug Franklin to the Gauchos would have a waltzing n-urtiument at Andrew Hill lierschfelt, half with the Spartans nursing a only three points. good time at Civic Auditorium,' School on March 4, and the second, ; Mike 167-pound divi- small lead, and calmly scored six Steve Schlink paced the Spar- SJS sent the invaders home crying; is the NC'AA championships on: sion. victory margins were re- quick jcoints before the end of the tan scoring attack with 21 points in their beer. March 23-25. Biggest Allen and Lorenz. Allen first stanza. and 15 eame in the first half. ; El Gaucho Sports Editor Dave' Last Friday's match did com- corded by the Wildcats' Wes Brown. Clines inserted the hustling -Steve is having trouble putting I iyams wrote Friday, "Unless some plete the Spartans' dual match defeated while Lorenz stopped Clegg into the starting five for two wsri seining halves together." unlorseen disaster occurs, Santa: schedule, however, and the win 13-5, Paul NIontgomery, 20-4. the second half and while scoring (Clines cerwit, "but tonight we Barbara's Gauchos should even gave them a 10-4 won, lost mark. Commenting on his team's fine 11 points, also held the Gauchos worked the hall to the opposite their WCAC record at 4-4 at the SJS easily controlled the match SJS Coach Hugh Mumby ace gunner, Dick Kothere, to only expense of San Jose State, one ag:cingt Chico, winning every divi- season. he Was pleased with his five points. or the real embarrassments to sion except heavyweight, where the said well If you expect to get lit to see squad's progress, and singled out "Clegg played a great game and collegiate basketball, tomorrow Spartans' Dick Dixon, wrestling Thursday night's SJS-Santa Cla- Richard Allen and flatting as having made held Kulberg outside," Glines night. In place of the injured ra Inieketball g at Civic Au- progress added. "State's inept quintet has mus- Popejoy, lost a 4-0 decision to particularly outstanding ditorium with yccur ASIS card during the season. Kolbetg managed only two field tered only one win in conference Chico's Roger Lytle. and geoll looksforget it. to Mumby also praised sophomore goal tries in the last half of the outings." Hatling was the only Spartan It will take eahlt, $1 worth. Starling and junior Gary Ram- tenacious Clegg defense, and the Even though the Spartans were win by fall, pinning Don Steinsiek plus your ASB card. their stetter for supplying valuable per- Spartans rapidly moved from a probably trembling in fear with in 6 minutes 45 seconds of Tickets are HOW on sale at the formances this season. slight 45-41 halftime lend into an the invasion of "notorious" Santa 177-pound match. Student Affairs Business Office, impressive 89-77 victory. Barbaric, they battered the Gau- Building IR, and win be available The game was not as close as chos, 89-77. at the Chic Auditor' BOX Of- the final wore indicates. SJS held The win gave SJS a better sea- fice Thursday night, son record than "powerful" Santa Alumni Nine Folds; Barbaric. 7-11 to 7-13. side in the second half and Steve The Gaucho sports editor, who EAST didn't see the ball very often." seems to have as hig a problem spelling as reporting the facts, Only One Hit Gets The noticable height advantage of the Gauchos that iesulted in a continued, "For Danny Glints' By JOHN JACKSON Nave, both of whom Wert, on board Santa Barbara 96-75 win in their Spells, the only real scoring Spartan Daily Sports Writer with walks. first encounter, didn't hamper the threat with any degree of eon- team started Holmes started on the mound Spartans Saturday night. sIstancy (sic) is lanky forward A meager Alumni im- for the Spartans, and went the Paced by Schlink, Clegg and Jim Steve Schlink, who has the frame with a bang Saturday, then and first three innings. Although only WEST Meyer with 11 rebounds apiece, of a giraffe's neck. The Stutemen mediately ran out of gas, Spartan touched for the one hit by Dug- SJS outrebounded the Gauchos also have a not -so-awesome center bowed to the hard hitting ex- gan, he walked three men, and BILL CLEGG in Clarance Islet Denier, but varsity 7-1, in a seven inning 57-56. was it trouble in both the first difference in game neither man should be able to do hibition contest. EUROPE . . . With the win, 5.15 upped their and second innings. 1WCAC league mark to '1-6 and are a whole lot towards beating UCS'B Pat Duggan, a first baseman on Hoskins took over in the fourth, 27 only one game behind Santa Bar- unless the Gauchos take the wrong the 1966 Spartan squad, led off the JUNE 18 to AUG. wind up in Milpitas. and stopped the Alumni chid, fan- SJS will try to setae its turnoff and first inning for the Alumni with a ning three and walking two. second straight upset Thursday "So it oughtta be good times at double down the right-field line, Days Pangborn worked the last two TOUR: 75 JOB OPPORTUNITY night with a return match with S.I for the local cagers." and continued to third as Spartan frames, putting the Alumni down Santa Clara's Broncos is staged We hope that the Santa Bar- rightfielder Bruce Young rumbled in order, and striking out three. CATERPILLAR TRACTOR CO. BSAlt Engineers 1 at Civic Auditorium, The Broncs bara team enjoyed its trip to San the ball. $1.099 Jose, even though it wasn't wise Jim Visher pitched the last three FUEL INJECTION PLANT BA "BSBusiness with Technical Minors !have come out victorious in two But that was virtually the ex- Majors enough to turn off at Milpitas. innings for the Alumni, and al- England France Switzer- SAN LEANDRO, CALIFORNIA BSTechnical pre c e games this season, tent of the Alumni hitting attack. Still though, we have never been though he yielded two hits and land Monaco Italy as Bob Holmes, Pete Hoskins and Denmark able to understand the "fowl" eat- three walks, he kept the Spartans Austria Holland Frank Pangborn combined to keep Sweden Finland West for Manufacturing Operations train- ing habits of some folks, away from the plate, and showed Seeks graduates the challengers hitless the rest of Germany East Germany he still had his strikeout form, Greece Yugoslavia Poland Frosh Baseballers 01111111111111111111111111111111111111111111k1 the way, ing. Program designed to develop technically oriented fanning six. Soviet Union Czechoslovakia 5 Duggan had the closest thing to Hungary Holland and people for responsible positions in Planning, Tool De- a second hit for the Alumni when For the second consecutive year, Belgium: the Alumni failed to come up with sign, Quality ConIrol and Management in the metal Open Play Today Intramurals he lined one down the rightfield line in the second inning that was enough players, and had to bor- $1,498 From Freshman basehallers hope not working industry. Initial assignment at diesel fuel injec- ToNi(airs vitATERNirry grabbed by Young on a fine tum- row starters from the varsity. West Coast I,, "kick-off" the 1967 season to- ciAmt:s bling catch. Spat-tan catcher Ray Valconesi and tion production plant in San Leandro, California. day, as they meet the Stanford shortstop Tom Brandi were both For Free Folders "A" Leicgue While the SJS htulers were drafted to start for the Alumni, and Information Frosh in a 3 p.m. game at Spar- Delta Sigma Phi vs. Sigma Phi throwing goose eggs at the Alumni, Growth opportunities through nine domestic and ten while Pat Garvey. the varsity's tan Field. Epsilon second baseman Tony Hernandez starting third baseman was traded CALL overseas facilities plus subsidiary Companies. The Spartababes, whose booted Alpha Tau Omega vs. Sigma Al- was destroying Bill Ardis' fast- late in the game, and played the grounders and other miscues con- pha Epsilon balls, and putting the game safely the last three innings for the 297-8000 tributed to a 1 won, 22 lost record Pi Kappa Alpha vs. Sigma Pi in the Spartans' hip picket. campus Wednesday, March 1, 1967. in 1966, are hopeful an improved Theta Chi vs. Sigma Chi After Duggan had scored on San Jose Travel Service On defense will pave the way to a Sigma Nu vs. Kappa Sigma Matt Miholovich's grounder to put The Spartans open intercol- 223 S. First St.. San Jose See your placement office for interview arrangements. better record this season. Lambda Chi Alpha vs. Delta Up- the Alumni in front, Hernandez's legiate competition next Saturday Today's game against last year's silon home run over the 365-foot marker against the University of Califor- league champion Stanford begins "B" League in left-center field highlighted a nia at Davis in a double header at a busy week for the SJS frosh, Sigma Alpha Epsilon vs. Kappa five-run Spartan comeback in the Davis. who also meet the University of Sigma bottom of the first. 3E-4 va. -mar x- el xi_ 4et ea San Francisco in a doubleheader Lambda Chi Alpha vs. Alpha Tau The round tripper, the first of Friday, Omega the year for the Spartans, came All three contests are league Delta Upsilon vs. Sigma No one out later than a bases loaded Coach All the Way saiLlcocs 7L-0 EL*. cs rw- games. Sigma Phi Epsilon vs. Theta Chi single by Al Taylor, which had Before taking the coaching CrM..4r - - driven home the first two varsity chores of the SJS frosh baseball UNIVERSITY of CALIFORNIA scores. team, Bill Gustafson served as Livermore, California Hernandez drove in the game's head gymnastic coach at Sparta. OPERATED BY THE UNIVERSITY OF final two runs in the third inning He moved to the baseball job and CALIFORNIA FOR THE UNITED STATES Fine Hair? with a long double to the base of Clair Jennett, the current Spartan ATOMIC ENERGY COMMISSION Coarse Hair? the centerfield fence. The blow gymnastic coach, took over the STATE brought home Taylor and Charlie gymnast reins. Short Hair? kexall2),ugi Long Hair?

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Tuesday. Fehrnary SPARTAN ' Study in covet 14 Conte Guadalajara, By JIM STREET Mexico Spartan Daily Sports Editor Swimmers Set 3 Tommie Smith doesn't break world records- he annihilates them. The Guadalajara Suer "There is just can go and what he School, a fuliy accredited U vic- no telling how far Tommie varsity of Arizona program. , can do," commented. ming Spartan head track coach Bud Winter ducted in cooperation with When ning Tommie started his string of world records last year that fessors from Stanford University. have built up to six, he clipped one full second off the former 220 For Tough Dual U n iv ars it y of California. and will offer July 3 to yards and 200 meter world record on a straightaway. Guadalajara, owed Ity DENNIS ANSTINE and John Kocal also grabbed firsts August 12, art, folklore, geog- He was clocked at 19.5 which track officials once termed "im- end liter- Dick Spartan Daily Sports Writer for SJS. raphy, history, language Dan possible." ature courses. Tuition, board and Saturday night at the Mason-Dixon Games, Tommie again not Readying for their toughest dual Coach Tom Gallagher's frosh room is $290. Write Prof. Juan Gary only "broke" the world indoor 440-yard record, but demolished it. competition of the season against swimmers will meet the California B. Reel, P.O. BOX 7227. Stanford, Mike freshman squad in a prelim match California 94305. Dave And, again, breaking all expectations of topping a world record California Saturday in Spartan by a impossible. before Saturday's varsity contest and full nine-tenths of a second, Tommie was classed as Pool, SJS' swimmers throttled Cal They were right. Tommie is impossible. divi- Poly and Fresno in a triangular The Clemson coach from South Carolina expressed the beliefs of IT MEANS MONEY IN YOUR POCKET held last Saturday at Fresno. TO READ THIS CAREFULLY r.e re- most opposing track coaches around the country, "The guy shouldn't The meeting with the Bears AMERICAN SUPERSTITIONS. Cures FINE ART OF CHINESE COOKING Alloa be alive. He belongs in another league." for illness, charma, taboos, etc. (Orig. Over 200 recipes menus. etc (r_.’ i Tommie is well known on the East Coast and West Coast, and will be the first between the two $2.75) . . -. $1 $3.95) SI VII, I Saturday he became well known in the midwest- Louisville, Ky., squads this year and should prove SEA FOOD COOKERY. 500 tantaliz. AMERICA & ITS INDIANS. E , ,ol- particularly. to test how much the Spartans ing recipes for all types of fish & orful fact-filled book on IA . ',-ms The the Univer- hake improved since the campaign shellfish. ($2) . 81 & leaders of No. America, :.an fine Kentuckians are usually more concerned about AMERICA & ITS PRESIDENTS. Wash- tribes ($4.95) . ... $7.98 a m by sity of Kentucky Wildcat basketball team, but Tommie took the began. Coach Tom O'Neil's mer- ington to Johnson. Full color portrait MAGIC AS A' HOBBY. N. h his town with force. men have not met any rugged plus biography of each president, for amateurs & experts. (0, $1.98 $3.50) . ... . St OUT "The people were really excited," Winter said. dual meet competition since Ore- ($4.95) gon State Jan. FAMILIAR QUOTATIONS by Bart- CHINESE ART: Bronzes, pottery, par. made "In fact, the meet director was so excited he could hardly talk." 7. left. Facsimile printing of first edi celain, painting, etc. 48 color plates. gress When the Spartan crossed the finish line in 46.2, nine-tenths of Sparked by double wins by Ron lion. (Orig. $2.75) . $1 $2.98 a second better than the former indoor world record, the crowd went Coffman, Steve Williams, and GUNS THROUGH THE AGES. WEBSTER'S DICTIONARY. Over 50,- wild, but the track had become so disorganized, Tommie didn't take Steve Hoberg the Spartans American, English, European, with 000 entries, over 445 pager, go des. more com- photos & drawings. (Orig. $3) $1 etc...... $1 Rum- the customary victory lap. pletely dominated the Fresno HUNDREDS MORE TO SELECT FROM per- "Tommie ran such an easy race it didn't look like he was even meet, Although swimmers from the Travel, Biography. Children's book , Religion,Fiction, Music, Art, etc. Get these new -Photo by Fred Rosenberg book at Bargain Prices Now at San Jose Book Shop. Come Early for Good Choice. trying," Winter added. three schools competed in all of IF YOU WANT A BOOK, ANY BOOK Tommie has often criticized the 440 indoor race because of the SOPHOMORE ACE Junior college import Greg Shepherd the races at the same time, scor- ask us about it-chances are we can give you immediate information as to price, exact it, we can get it for you promptly. high banked corners. Last year in San Francisco, he slipped and fell will lead the Spartan tennis team this season. The Spark open ing was tabulated its in a dual title and availability. If we don't have Open until Best Seller on the Cow Palace boards and that fall has remained entrenched tomorrow in the Northern California Intercollegiate Tournament. meet. SJS downed Fresno 68-35 Reprints in his mind. and Cal Poly 81-22. 9 p.m. 11 ose for Less But in Louisville, Tommie praised the longer 220-yard track. Coffman set a pool record with Thursday 295-5513 Most indoor tracks mile, but at OK SHOP consist of 11 times around to the Racketeers Open Season his clocking of 11:04.9 in the 1,000- 111 E. Son Fernando between 3rd and 4th Ms. the Louisville meet, eight ovals constituted the mile, and the bank- yard free and took his second gold _ ing on the curves was not as great as the conventional track. medal with a 5:18.5 time in the - tgyjk fin,0),,,IVii41091,t9zAINA4nlI.$1,1 t 'I "He told me that he was going to run the race in 46.9 because 500 yard free. VIIV4UZUKZUENEZILKW2WAU board he liked the track so well," Winter said. "It was the first time since With Tourney Tomorrow Williams stroked to victory in LIT., I've been coaching him that he predicted a world record." the 100 and 200 yard free races, Parsons played at San Jose City f., BIGGEST SALE IN OUR round Ron Clarke, perhaps the best distance runner in the world today, The Spartan tennis team romps while Hoberg won the 200 yard College last season and should .a...% L the Is another of the track stars awed by Tommie. into its first activity tomorrow, individual medley and the 200 help once he 18 YEAR HISTORY only "There are only two supermen in track," Clarke said. "Jim Ryun and hopes that will still be romp- give the Spartans yard butterfly. gets some experience. Dray and Tommie Smith." ing afterwards. Dennis Spanek won the diving Complete selection ,,-- Butch Krikorian's racketeers "We have had good teams in the !IN arid * * * title for the Spartans with a point Ideal for decorations or gifts c- could see their toughest competi- past few years," Krikorian ex- 411).: first It was only the second of two world records the SJS indoor track total of 231.15. Ted Mathewson tion of the season right away to- plained, "but I expect we will drop IY, PRINTS-25c to $1 team brought home with them over the weekend. morrow when they play host to the off a bit this season." til girth, The mile relay team turned in an equal performance In racing to Northern California Intercollegiate ALWAYS GOOD (formerly up to $15) ,-- fair - , a 3:14.1 time Friday night in San Francisco. Tournament. The Spans lost four of last 1.?) Many of the the sportswriters are looking to Southern Univer- The three-day action opens to- year's top five men -Raul Contre- 14 FRAMES-25c to $1 ,-- two sity's 3:10.2 world indoor record Saturday in Louisville, most but the eyes morrow morning and will start at ras, Bob Murio, Rodney Kop and I). .., complete framing facilities down should turn to the Golden Gate Invitational. 1 p.m. Thursday and Friday. Yit Louie, - three. The Spartans cut one-half second off the former mark held by Two of the strongest teams toseitilis ready made Stanford is the strong favorite

three Morgan State, and this was done on the more difficult 160-yard Cow with single stars Brian Lock and entered in the three-day tourna- custom made d at - Palace track. Dean, Schlobohm, contenders for ment are California and Stanford, t; and At the same time, Southern University was running a 3:16.2 the singles crown. who always boast good tennis Oleg MINI -,---; DECORATIONS rtans mile relay in a New York meet and finished third. DARLEY FAVORED teams...... ,.. lowed Winter commenteed that the Southern University coach felt that Favored in individual play is the This will be the third time the ilY form, issa ._ his team would beat the Spartans in a head-to-head match. Bring University of California's Chuck Spartans have played host to this Wouldn't you rather ).-- PARKS FRAME SHOP c 'em on! Darley, the defending titlist. meet since the south campus be with No. 1? 411 A year, * * * Spartan hopes in singles will be courts have been completed. Nor- 332 E. Santa Clara 293-1793 .,-- soon) with The biggest track extravaganza of the season will be staged on carried by junior college transfer mally the Nor-Cal Intercollegiates (Coming (one block from campus) '41$ IP ... bor. the Spartan track Saturday at the annual SJS interclass meet. Greg Shepherd. The City College are rotated between Stanford, Call irsity. IP 1141114\ ((a iliii\il i II*11311i & iirii)94\iin.i , or\omii ,i)litlyv,W,' it co/ iviw, \t Formerly held on Friday, the Spartans decided. o .move.i.k..bAck of San Francisco product won the and SJS. si and a day so the students and public could get an early preview of the Northern California JC title last both strong Spartans. year. umni, Runners like Lee Evans, Ken Shackelford, Bob Talmadge and .SJS will also enter last season's :*sity's Tommie Smith will be out to collect some of the hardware in the number-two man, Gordon Miller, raded way of trophies. junior college import Mary Par- al the They, of course, will be competing in the varsity category, while sons and '66 alternates Steve ;. the the "amateurs" will compete in the novice segment of the meet. Jones and Mike Price. Anyone who has not competed in collegiate track and is en- Shepherd, who boasts a strong ercol- rolled at SJS are invited to enter. serve and backhand and volleying urday In one of the features of the day, Chris Papanicolaou will jump game, will carry Spartan hopes ilifor- in the pole vault. For the first time in two weeks, he can concen- this season. Engineering senior ler at trate on his jumping. "He will definitely be our out- The guy shows a lot of class, especially when he was one of the standing player as a sophomore," first SJS trackmen out on the field for early workouts Saturday, Krikorian said. "He's as good as when he should have been in Louisville. anyone we lost from last season's The long-standing rivalry of the Greeks at SJS gets another team." fay boost in the interclass meet in the Greek Relay that will consist, STRONG GAME not only of fraternities but any teams wishing to enter. Miller, who is the only member iching of last season's 15-3 team playing, seball Winter said that entries for the meet should be in his office by tomorrow. has a strong all-around game and 4d as makes rise or his fine speed. turns down the parta. The Greek rivalry is not the only one that will be in existence. b and When such teams as Griffin's "Mighty Midgeets," Rogers' "Pafliacci rartan Elites," Shackelfcird's "GT's," Evans' "High Steppers," and Klera- ? the mer's "Katups" meet, watch out. moon!

A job at '399 inc. tax Walk in now for Southern California Jet Round Trip Hofbrau-Style Food Moderate Prices Chartered Flight Edison oilers Complete Dinners From San Jo,/ June 13. Roast Eastern Beef 1.70 to London: Sept. 5 Virginia Baked liam 1.70 via /07 Jet more excitement. Kosher Style Corned Beef 1.70 From Los Angeles June 27- Roast Tom Turkey 1.70 to London: Aug. 7 Jet The race to the moon almost seems lor's or advanced degree Chicago Style Pastrami 1.70 via 70/ in electrical tame to Edison. engineering, mechanical From San JOSO June 16- engineering, Roast Turkey Leg 1.55 We're racing Southern California. civil engineering, industrial to London, Sept. 10 engineering In the next 10 years, we'll serve an or chemistry, you may be our via Jet Prop ($444) man. COMBINATION PLATES estimated 2,/2 million more people. Phone (213) 624-7111 or write: (for 00.. 'orients and The race to keep pace, electrically, Mr. H. T. Jurewitz Any 2 meats 1.95 Any 3 meats 2.25 1 demands creative engineering of the Southern California Edison Co. highest order. Slab of nutty Swiss cheese .3:; Call or Write P.O. Box 351, Los Angclqs Edison is completing a nuclear gen- California 90053 orders include choice of Barbecued Beaus, Prof. David Mage erating plant at San noire, California. Then when somebody offers you or Macaroni. Bread and Butter 1526 Arbutus Dr., S.J. In fact, our staff is already making plans the moon, you can tell him you have a 264-9275 after 9 P.M. 20 years ahead. Under study: thermi- better offer. onics, thermoelectrics, rnagnetohydro- Visit the Gaslite Room for Fun. Banquet Facilities. Air and Land arrangements by: dynamics, and other methods of direct Ballroom Leasing. Hotel Rooms from $85 per month. SAN JOSE TRAVEL SERVICE conversion that show promise for 223 S. First Street tomorrow's power systems. 297.8000 Sound excitinti. eti,),1 ii tor v(,,i7 Southern California Edison SAN CARLOS at MARKET STS. 295.2626 II ),,,(1.1. .1 (.111410th ,,,r Are ust apportu,ill empioor .i1,1 ihn 111--SPARTAN DAILY Tuesday, /February 21, 1W Spartaguide i515 Alumnus Spurs Drive

EDITOR'S NOTE: Publicity Brown, will speak on "The Dent h cheirmen fur all organization, of Mist." For Educational Excellence rrniested to inehide the full C'hentleal Engineering Societ. Job Interviews are "It takes much more money to their combined contribution three- programming, industrial engineer- club name,, and title of all hpeak- 7:30 p.m., E230 Dr. Kenneth Ar- June and 11111111er graduate, Commbision. Accounting, construe- operate a state college than the. to-one to help raise FEE's goal of ing programs in Califmnia. club meeting,. The nold of the Shell Development ma a sign lip I or 3111/01111111ellt, rion engineering, electrical, civil. ere for state allocates," said Glenn A. $20,000. United Air Lines. Aeronautical, Spartan Daily cannot nut sin- Corporation %%al Peak on "Whitt dada in the l'Iiiiiement enter, ,rei-hanielll. and chemical engi- George, vice president of Joseph According to George, "Private mechanical, electrical and indus- ncementa if Information is the Engineer Should Expect in in- ADa1131. iring, and metallurgy majors llllll Distributors and a "challenger" for support is needed to provide extras majors wanted complete. Int, ll lion should dustry." 'h BS degrees may apply. Nu- trial engineering not the Alumni Association's drive for for excellence like increased li- THURSDAY, FEB 13 e.ic engineering positions in San typed or printed on Sparta- Neanvrm Club, 3 p.m., Newman engineering, nuclear science, for be the Fund for Excellence in Edu- brary holdings, sponsored scholar- Chidcaga guide At llllll incement slip avail- Center. Gertrude Amos will review Hughes Aircraft Company. Elec- physics, management, literal arts, Francisco an cation (FEE,. ly chairs, an annual fund for fi- Spartan Daily office. "That the World May lielime," trical engineers and plia nes ma- personnel aml finance majors with Atomic Energy Commission. able in the George is one of 10 "challen- nancial support and a substantial to be returned by Hans Kung. jors wanted tor field engineering, MS degrees may apply. Students with "B" averages who Deadline for slip. gers" who have each pledged $500 endowment fund on which the col- the day before the Hume Economies Club, 7 p.m., enginesming wt it in g, technical will receive Bachelor's, Master's is 1:30 on to FEE and are asking alumni and lege can rely. This is what FEE Kaiser Steel Corporation. Engi- ED100. The program, on clothing training, instructing, research, de- or Doctorate degrees in 1967 in event Is scheduled. friends if the college to match is trying to accomplish." neering majors wanted for pioduc- and textiles, is open to new mem- sign development, analysis of elec- the field of management, engineer- tion management, maintenance, TODAY bers. Officers will be installed ut . tronics cinnponents and systems in ing and physical sciences may and engineering staff. Math ma- American Marketing Associa- 6:30 before the meeting. the Los Angeles area. apply. jors wanted for systems analysis, tion, 7:30 p.m., ED 100. Orientation FRIDAY. FEB. 24 UNITED CAREERS Southern California Edison Com- programming, industrial engineer- meeting. Door prizes will be given, IEEE, 1:30. ENG Lobby. Tour pany. Electrical. mechanical, civil, ing programs in California. officers introduced, and a guest of Ames Research Center. Sign- and chemicalengineering, and AFROTC Promotes speaker will lecture. FOR ENGINEERS ' The 'Franc Company. All engi- up sheet is in the engineering lob- chemistry majors wanted for jun- Nu Alpha (Nursing), 3:30 neers majors wanted for produc- Sigina by. Tour is limited to 50. AE - ME - EE - IE engineers in the Los Angeles ior tion management, maintenance, p.m., HB 407. Slides of nursing stu- area. and engineering staff. Math ma. Student Colonel dents in clinical areas will be United is big airline-the world's largest, in fart. And United ncerla nun who are willing to take on a big job. UnIt(s1 Stitt..., Atomic Etiergy ors wanted for systems analysis, shown. German Club, 3:30 p.m., ED414. KAM To Sponsor Graduate engineers will work wills management in economic feasibility To Commander Organizational meeting. All inter- medics., analysiw ronsulting. adaising and in some cases ... reseenii. From nine to time they will base to travel. ested students welcome. A change in student command Photo Lecturer Extenders: Agnew Volunteers, Headquarters in Army ROTC promoted Cadet Freelance magazine photogra- he United man aid be on campus Spartan Ski 3:30 p.m., CH236. Information Major Bob Ward to cadet colonel. pher Jack Fields of Cupertino Thursday. February 23 meeting. With this new promotion he be- will speak to members of Kappa is Holiday Sports Rentals Congress of Honorary Orgiudza- from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. comes brigade commander, replac- Alpha Mu, photohturnahsm fra- D mons, 12:30, Cafeteria A. All eligi- Just Minutes Away from Campus ing C Col. Ben Forsythe, who ternity, at 7:30 tonight in JC101. ble members invited to attetat. COMP and talk to him. You, too, may was graduated. The talk is open to all SJS stu- Circle K International, 1:30 join the people who ... Ward entered the two year pro- dents and faculty. All New Equipment p.m.. 11E1. "FLY THE FRIENDLY gram and took his basic training Fields, whose work has appeared SKIES" o grade wood/plastic and metal Personal Management Assoeia- at Ft. Knox, Ky. and advanced regularly in such national maga- Contact die student placement office for an appointment. . A Ski Free safety bindings. Don, 7 p.m., Garden City Hof- training at Et. Lewis, Wash. He zines as Saturday Evening Post brat'. All interested are invited. is a member of the Boots: The latest buckle ski boots by such has received his branch assign- and Argosy, American Society of Magazine famous makers as KOFLACH, RIEKER, and ment in the armor division and THURSDAY, Feb. 23. Photographers. UNITED AIRLINES TYROL. has been accepted into the Army Inter-Varsity Christian Fellow- An equal ROTC flight training Program. ship, 9 p.m., HE Lounge. Local The talk will be illustrated with opportunity employer Ski Clothes, Chains, Ski Racks and Tobog- According to Bill Riley, public high schi s teacher. Merri t t color photographs. gans Are Also Available. information officer for the SJS - - - - Army ROTC, C/Col. Ward was IDISCOUNTS TO ALL designated a Distinguished Mili- RECOGNIZED GROUPS tary Student (DMS) due to his outstanding performance in the Spartan Daily Classifieds , program. This special recognition WE RENT HONDAS TOO! will enable him to receive a regu- lar army commission upon com- PART TIME SALES. some experience. For FEMALE ROOMMATE for 2 bedroom, 2 1 OR 2 FEMALE roommates wanted. 90s 160s 305s ANNOUNCEMENTS pletion of the program. Only 5.9 Mondays and Sat. Martin Jewelers, 1605 bath, 4 person apartment. $50. 287.0570 Modern, spacious apt., pool. Contact Ho.aly Daily -Weekends-Weekly Meridian. 266.6341, after 5. Jeri, Royal Lanai Apt. 258-8876. per cent of the cadets are offered $399.50 JET Los Angeles to Paris June PART TIME sales, $200.500 per month NEW, 2 BEDROOM apt. near SJS. Wall- CALL 739-2163 TODAY a DMS, according to Riley. 15, return Sept. 7 from London, includes MUST SELL MEN'S Dorm contract at re- 4-wk, study course at Alliance Francais commission, with Bestline Products, Call towall caroet, disposal, water/garbage duced price of $154 or best offer. Call Reservations Gladly Accepted Members of C/Col. Ward's staff Paris. Alternate flight to Amsterdam 264-7389 5-7 cm. pd. 706 S. 9th. 294-9170, 248.1926. 286-0814 any time. include John Everett, executive June 26/Sept. 5. Dr. French (4151 LA WANTED: FEMALE roommate. $42 per officer; Ken Manuel. personnel; 6.9122 or write c/o Sierra Travel Inc., HOUSING 151 month, Grant Hall, 598 S. 9th, apt. 13. 1 GIRL WANTED to share 2 bed apt. with 3 others. Grant Hall, 287-0518. HOLIDAY SPORTS RENTALS Platte, planning and training and 9875 Santa Monica Blvd., Beverly Hills, WE NEED YOU and you for the 2 ve FURNISHED ROOMS, male students. ... SUNNYVALE John Hornby, awards; Richard cancies at Wee Terace girls' boarding MEN, LARGE, cheerful rooms, single or 1283 W. EL CAMINO AUTOMOTIVE 12) Kitchen privileges. No smoking or drink- house, 177 S. 12th. 295-9619. double, wall to well carpet. Private en- Next to Honda Peninsula 1/4 Mile East of Stevens Creek Freeway John Rockhill, sup plies and ing. $10 & $15. 293-3088. FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted to share trance. 406 S. 1 Ith St. weapons. '63 VOLKSWAGEN. Radio, heater, en- RENT. Unfurnished. 1 apartment with I girl. 2 blocks from SJS. DUPLEX FOR GALS ONLY, gine just overhauled. $975. 371-3313. $50 per month. Cell 286-5095. Swimming room & board, $75/mo. bedroom, water/garbage paid. $75 mo. Unapproved house: Evenings: 377-4289. Yard & Carport. Comfortable, 298-5709 pool. near campus. 565 S. 5th, Phone 297-9742. CONTRACT. For approved women cen '60 CHEVY BEL AIRE 4 dr. Ht. V-8 Auto- GIRL WANTS ROOM- WORKING ter. Reduced price ,call Marsha at 252- 1 AND 2 bedroom matic, new tires, R/H, $500 or best of- MATE. Nice apt. with pool. Call Liz: apartments, pool. Two E027. blocks from fer. Call 286-5995. Days 297-1686; Evenings 296-4897. campus. 576 S. 5th St. 293- in, FEMALE ROOMMATES NEEDED. Also I 1445. '59 VOLVO, very clean, black, radio, new MALE ROOMMATE needed. 2 blocks apt. for rent, 2 bedroom, fort., close to tires, overhauled engine. new muffler, $45 per month. 294-7669. campus. Call 286-9351. MUST SELL girls' dorm contract, Hoover Sentry Reports from campus. Hall, battery. Asking $575, call 225-4314 or Contact Paula Carnasso at 294- 2922. 286-9103 after 4 p.m. Good News ( at last!) About HONDA 160 '66. Excellent condition, LOST AND FOUND (61 $400 or best offer. 294-2922, ask for [ULE&k- ON CAMPUS Kathy King. 1 LOST: CREAM COLORED female toy poodle on 12th & San Carlos. Res Car Insurance Savings '69 MORRIS Minor, 4 speed, good ward. Call 294-3326 after 4 p.m. cond., good tires, 35 mpg. Call 294.6019, ask for Larry Plummer. $250 or offer. LOST: BLACK CHIHUAHUA. Male. Reward. Vicinity of 15th & William. Call For Young Men FORD '59, stick, good condition. new Mrs. Oviatt, 294-1787. radiator and brakes, $300 or best offer. Phone 297-8884. LOST: CHECKBOOK with blue cover. Reward. Vicinity Speech & Drama Bldg. '64 VW, stereo tape player, wood dash, Call Bob, 251-1913, heavy duty clutch, & more. Excellent con. dition. Must see. License pd. 287-6710. SERVICES 181 You can lwnef it from our four years of research after 5. 294-4871. VW BUS, '64, radio, heater, 10 passen RENT A TV. Free delivery, Fres Service. into auto accidents and driver attitudes. ger, 50 hp, excellent condition, $1507. No contract, call Esche's, 251-2598. Call 377-5476 after 5 p.m. QUALITY TYPING done in my home. Westgate area. Telephone '41 CHEVY pick up with camper, rebuilt 379-8723. '52 engine, four speed, good tires, $275. TYPING. Thesis, term papers, etc., ex- Sentry found that young men under 25 with mature, responsible driving 294-96 I 7. perienced & fast. Phone 269-8674. TV'S FOR RENT. Special student rates. attitudes don't have as many aecidents as those with i tttt nature, irrespon- GRAN SPORT, '66 Buick Yellow with 88 per month. 377-2935. vinyl top, 445, 4.speed stick. positrac- bon. 15.000 mi. Factory warranty. Excel- 21 & MARRIED. Liability, properly dam- sible attitudes. lent shape, must sacrifice. 244.5418 or age & uninsured motorist coverage on 294.5707 at night. auto insurance. $21 for 3 months. Dave Towle, 244-9600. RED '65 VOLKSWAGEN. Radio, heater. OVERWEIGHT? FLABBY? New women's to find men %ith die right at- Sunroof & very clean. Asking $1450. Call exercise classes. 3 per class. 50c I/2 hour, We then developed a short questionnaire after 8 p.m. 292.2359. 75c hour. 294-0585. insurance. We '62 FORD GALAX1E, 2 door hardtop. QUALITY TYPING done in my home. titudes. and we gave them a 15% discount on their auto V.8, std, transmission, radio & heater. Reasonable rates. Call 269-2953. $975 or best offer. 967-2615. RENT STEREO phonograph. No contract. also give discounts for passing an approved driver education course, free 1954 OLDSMOBILE, 2 door hardtop; all delivery and service. 251-2598. power, radio. heater, new battery, 382 S. Esche's. AAY ARE hieing a safe drker and being married. All told you can save as much as 10th. 287-0934. CLA55k5 BABYSITTING DONE for student mother FULL..T Wi5H 1 HAP P2OFE55012 SNARf '5 KNACK F09. on regular basis. 52 S. 8th St. Phone 286- 90, '66, with I year free insur- TURNING AWAY TI-105E EXTKA 5TIVEN1'S WHO premium car insurance. HONDA WI5/4 ID ENROL-L..4 2919. of that big extra young men pay for ance. $300. Call 287.4378 after 5 p.m. FREE IABYSITTING. Join Club. Time: 2 FOR SALE 131 p.m., Saturday, February 25. Place: 269 N. 7th St., Apt. No. 3. DRAFTING EQUIPMENT. 2348 board CLASSIFIED RATES end accessories. $12.50. Compass set, To buy, sell, rent or TRANSPORTATION IS) $7.50. 378.0706. announce anything, Minimum The questionnaire only takes 30 minutes. It doesn't measure driving skill, Three lines One time Three just fill out and clip limes Five times CAR POOL from Santa Cruz daily 8-5 I MAGNIN empire wedding gown. veil, One time to SJS Contact Bill Lawrence at 426- handy order knowledge or mechanical ability. There is nothing to study and the ques- gloves worn once. Was $230, now $130. this 3 lines 1.50 E454 after 6 p.m. Size 8, call 286-3711. blank. 2.25 2.50 4 lines 2.00 2.75 3.00 CAR POOL TO SJS from Monterey tions are all true or false. Results are kept strictly confidential. There is DESK, very good condition. $35 or best area daytime, female. Monday, Wednes- offer. Call John. 294.0675. 5 lines 2.50 3.25 3.50 day, Friday. Call Teti, 373-0989. Send to: Spartan Daily no penalty if you don't qualify and you are under no obligation. The test KASTLE SKIS, 210 cm., Giant Slalom, 6 lines 3.00 3.75 4.00 RIDE NEEDED to Menlo Perk after Mon- CLASSIFIEDS. day night class. Phone 854-5390. Marker Toe and Heel. Excellent cond., Add this $70. 287-0276. 1206, San lose State amount for RIDE WANTED from Hayward, Tues. & is given free. Thurs. for 8:30 class. 538-1227 after 6 U.S. DIVERS' SCUBA tank and back- College, San lose each addi- .50 .50 .50 P.m. pack. 2-stage, single hose regulator. Calif. 95114. tonal line $110. Call 967-2164, Ken. WOMAN'S WHITE blazer, size 12, $10; Print you ad here: chrcl. blazer, 10. $10; charcoal pullover, CHECK A (Count approximately 33 Letters and Spaces To place an ad: Don't he lumped aa it h the immature and irresponsible. 36. $5; blli. cardigan, 36 $7; sleeveless for Each Line) blue sweater. $2. All exc. cond. 294-6364 CLASSIFICATION Do Not Abbreviate Call at 6 p.m. or before 10 a.m. 0 Announcements (I) No refunds possible on canceled ads Classified Adv. Office -J206 HELP WANTED 141 [1 Automotive (2)

C.) For Sale (3) Monday, Wednesday & Friday TODAY. GIRL ENJOYABLE part-time work. Flex- Help Wanted (4) 10:30 a.m.-I 2:30 p.m. & ACT NOW. CALL 245-4093 OR DROP US A CARD ible hours. Attractive phone voice. No selling. Phone 371-3918. Lj Housing (5) 1:15 p.m. -3:45 pm. HASHER WANTED for girls' boarding [T] Lost and Found (6) house. Call 297-6860. Li Personals (7) Tuesday & Thursday CREW MANAGERS. Part time. Hope 13 Services (8) 10:00 a.m.-1 2:30 p.m. & Chest Plan. Salary & commission. Apply: 1:1 Transportation (9) IS p.m. -3:45 p.m. 1060 Willow, Room 3. 286-3193, 2 GIRLS, part time work in nursery school. Room, board. and salary. Close Nemo Address to SJS. Phone 286.0883. (Please P, MI DISPLAY & DELIVERY work. Approx. 20 Send In handy order blank. Enclose SENTRY.T1 INSURANCE Far days. Enclosed is $ hours per week. $240 month, salary or cash or check. Make chock out te The tome,. Car necessary. 286.4745. Hardware Mutuals Organization CHI Phone Start ad on Spartan Daily Classifieds. CARTOONIST, interested in $$ making 10.5.1 idea. Call Ron L., 2974754 7-II p.m. If Phone 294-6414, fat. 2468 not home, leave number.

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