Last eGarden' Tickets Drop Deadline the speech and Tickets te ((((( rreh laid day to Mareh lb. rer prow depairtineitt's drop classes hitheut penalty, It ',reduc(ion of Enid and 21-24 has announced by the regis- 17 corned), "The- asenolde English trar's office. Forms, which are are on sale in es thee Garden." available at the registrar's of- Oiliest. Theater Inn lure of Oir fice, must lw out and hand- and son Fernando sts., 'mimed Fifth ed In by that time by anyone p. M. Admission Is delstroni contemplating a drop erellent ernt...tollrot atoll 1/11 entail norning auds SAN JOSE STATE COLLEGE vie be eefes VOL 49 SAN JOSE, CALIFORNIA, TUESDAY, MARCH 13, 1962 No. 82 ssotiate ill Cover Sponsors looks at TAS_ C
Stied ta wady to Chancellor Delegates mistiest Silent Abbreviated Peace ly urges . Vigil San Jose Attorney Lee Reports to Closed Session Begins at Noon Today peace 1 I g II, last- ..\ Iditary." To View Problems r, ....,..,, .,, George Collais, pastor ot Grace , ,,.. ,,eta midnight tonight, will A representative of Stanford Baptist church, will deliver a pre-T. 'No Statement Now' kegin at neon in the Inner Quad university's scientists' committee closing address at 10 p.m. ,.,aer the direction of TASC. (To- for information on radiation will In case of bad weather, the Of Expanding Si Ety JOHN FARMER A Spartan Daily reporter, orig- bound to agreements in Los An- Student Community), tell of the "Biological ! Actee Effects of vigil will take place in Memorial "Facing Problems in a Growing Promises to "keep quiet," made inally invited to the local AFT geles." libteel political group. Radiation" at 8-30 p in The Rev. Chapel, according ,es to Rubacher. Community" will be the topic of in Los Angeles Saturday after meeting, was asked to leave and L.A. MEETING the vigil is "Turn To- of Wester Sweet, San Jose attorney meetings concerning the selection a member of the SJS radio-TV Dr. Carter, associate professor
,td Genoa." and candidate for San Jose City of a new chancellor for the state center staff was not admitted. of elementary education, described purpose is to support the sour council, when he speaks today at colleges, were honored yesterday NO STATEMENT the Los Angeles meetings as "very the hope that the 7,ET esnats in 1:30 p.m. in cafeteria rooms A by the five men who represented Dr. Lee's corn- useful," and commented that the be Ambassador statement of "no conference will Applicants ornament , and B. San Jose State College. meat" concerned a resolution trustees "showed every evidence successful, and concrete agree- Political and civic affairs are The five, from the SJS admin- adopted by the state's faculty or- of good faith concerning the fac- on a nuclear test ban will ments part of Sweet's current interests. istration, the faculty council and ganizations Friday night. The ulty suggest ions." s eschetle said TASC coordina- Must File Dr. William J. Thisel. vice presi- Tomorrow resolution, according to the SJS Ile presently serves on the San teachers' organizations, reported echard Rubacher, junior so- Jose city housing board, the San only that "no statement would be associate professor, is the groups' dent of SJS. who representts1 the 'rime'. major. Tomorro%A, is the I inal day to ;oat application torn is. Jose NAACP executive board and made at this time" concerning the stand on the selection of a chan. school's administration at the ...,SC has invited students and submit preliminary applications Preliminary interviews will take serves as western regiona I officer meetings with trustees. cellor. meetings, also stated he could not ,es war-like people to partici- for the role of ambassador to a place March 19-20. Final applica- comment on what transpired at of the Congress of Racial Equality. A report by one professor, Dr. Dr. Charles Carter, SJS repre- ', in the sigil. Specifically in- foreign country in the Experiment tions must be filed before March the sessions. "The trustees have Sweet chose to speak on the Roland F. Lee, to the American sentative for the local chapter of seise members of the San Jose in International Living program. 26 and final interviews will be a statement that will eventually SJS campus because he believes Federation of l'etichers, Local the California State Employees 1,. center. the Women's Inter- Students selected for the Ex- held March 31. be released," he explained. SCO Peace and peismens will eve with a young people should know some- 1362, was closed to the press Mon- association, said he would only tell sational League for family Students selected to represent According to Dr. John Ballard, thing about politics and local civic day after a vote by the members. of his suggestions concerning cri- Freedom and the Women for in a foreign country for one month the San Jose community will be , secretary of the faculty council, government. Dr. Lee. associate professor of teria for selecting a chancellor. Peace. as ambassador from the San Jose faced with a three-part respon- his journey to Los Angeles was Present zoning laws of the col- English, who represented the AFT that the new chan- WHITE ARMBANDS community, sibility outlined by the Experiment ei suggested to reaffirm a set of earlier cri- lege and the proposed Seventh at, local in Los Angeles would only cello'. should be a man fair to all e White armbands will be fur- Applications must be submitted committee. y the council hear during the vigil closing will be the III trill topics of say "The AFT does not wish to fields of academic endeavor," he! 'eria'.. . established b- . Osheil fur to Dr. Raymond W. Stanley, as. The first part involves gather- p ela,es, according his talk. make a statement at this time." commented. "Beyond that I ant ed in to Ru- suciate professor of geography, by ing information needed for a back- iBuell Gallagher as chancellor. iLl 12-hour vigil will be hater The tomorrow. He Ls located in CH229. ground on economics, government, i The fifth SJS representative, writing letters to govern- spent The local community ambassa- education and social customs of I Willard J. Saunders, professor of 20 officials and personal ac- meet dor committee of the World Af- the country to be visited, as well real estate and insurance, was to support non-violent quaintances fairs council of San Jose will as on the U.S. Model United Nations Adopts 7 unavailable for comment. He is the to peace. approaches award one or more partial scholar- president of the local chapter of TASC has scheduled six speak- It includes presenting this back- ships of up to $750 to the repre- ground information to the host the Association of California State er, to address the vigil partic- sentatives, community, while sending home to College Professors. ipants. Tom Roland, member of Bills at Western Dr. Gallagher's recent resigna- Dr. Stanley Regional Institute said selections will local newspapers reports of the the Young People's Soc i a list be made on the basis of interviews Experiment. tion and speculation by many of League of Berkeley and a former In a slow-starting but wild-fin- resented, including two Communist "The United States would have th possible appointment of Dr. freedom rider, will speak at noon eeeees,seses-esesseeessee,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,eses,W,’,..ce:,’,e’r,s-e -se ishing General Assembly meeting, bloc nations. Delegates patterned been forced to buy a fixed amount Gleenn as a. thesystem' vice a -Non-Violence - the Thirei e e. the Model United Nations adopted their actions after those of the na- of market goods from under-devel- chancellor, replacement. has Camp PositiOtl." His talk replaces :: seven bills at its western area re- lions they chose to represent. oped countries each year, no mat- Gorgeous Gams ..s.. provoked comment across the he scheduled for United Work, ss ss Leonal institute here Saturday. San Jose State, with chairman ter what their condition," Cooper state, e Federalist, Ross Flanagan, who is ss More than 200 delegates from Sharon Holly, Fred Karlsen and added. FACULTY DELAY unable to appear. \ 15 northern California colleges at- Efraim Gugel, entered delegations , NO OPPOSITION Faculty organizations asked for At 12::;0 p.m., Dr. Bruce C s, e tended the institute, described by from Russia, India and Israel. The bill, supported by Guatemala a delay before trustees selected (..SiP. associate professor t,t . Secretaiy-General Sam Obregon as RUSSIANS INSERT *BOMB' Russia without opposition ,.another chancellor, and requested esse. will speak on "Iii.- ss. "one of the best we've ever had and Russian delegate Mark Cooper any U.N. nation, passed the Gen- ,consideration of faculty sugges- ., , e Twenty-six countries were rep- provided the day's "bombshell" by eral Assembly by a 13-0 vote. !eons' : I The Trustees formed a special sPEECH persuading the General Assembly MUN had earlier supported a The flea. .1. e committee. which included faculty Benton White.' to pass a bill calling for "improve- resolution calling for debate on; Methoclist director Dr. Jones To Tell [representation, to help select a of .the Wesley admission of Red China to the ..eition. will :: chancellor within 30 days. deliver a religious e United Nations. A stronger bill, ess at 2:30 The Los Angeles meetings, in- p.m. At 3 p.m s iss calling for Red China's admission . sit instructor Theologian's Views volving educators from all the Mark Sheehan e to the body, lost in the committee, Teak iin state colleges, acted as a sub-com- "The Problem of the :` 5-12. In Next Book Talk mittee of the special committee. 'The Structuie it Nations and TEST RAN PASSES The Spartan Daily did learn Empires," written by the theolo- After Cooper's "shocker," the from one representative yesterday Prof Explains gian Reinhold Niebuhr, will be re- 'Western bloc barely failed to block I that several lists of manse; were iewed tomorrow at 12:30 by Dr a resolution calling rm. a ?wiper submitted to the trustees. (Seorge Jones. assistant professor test ban agreement between the These lists, the SJS representa- Nucicar et philcsophy. United States and Russia. tive said, were of trustee candi- Dating Dr. Jones' talk, third in the The bill passed by a 9-8 majority, dates other than Dr. Glenn I eimke. .-active material- )ring semester book talk series, but Western nations attached a No list was given by the SJS rep- , livinine geologic ages will be e di take place in rooms A and B two-month moratorium on condi- resentatives, the source said. sned tonight at 7:30 in S142 1 the cafeteria. Students may tion that the Geneva disarmament :0 Anhui* W. Fairhall, profes- tiling their lunches to the talk. talks fail. nuclear chemistry at the Dr. Niebuhr, theologian, author, Western nations had, howeves Hoover eesity of Washington. Instructor and philosopher, is "an gathered enough strength to pass Scholars Fairhall's lecture is in con- undeservedly prominent American the day's final resolution. calling ' eon with a National Science theologian who has spent his life , ter easing of tensions in the Congo Win Top Honors alatinn institute, "Chemistry doing battle with the New Testa- SAM OBREGON , It passed, 17-3, despite a mocking Universe," being conducted ment passage (Matt. 6251 in . . . secretary-general I shoe-pounding demonstration by in GPA Standings d:ea high school ehich the Man from Nazareth , the Russian and Albanian delega- teachers. The students of Hoover hall Fairhall. in gees counselled: 'Do not be anxious ment of trade between the indus- tions. expert in earned a higher grade point aver- sology and the about your life . . .'," Dr. Jones trial and less-developed countries." Other resolutions receiving Gen- application ot age than the iesidents t if any other s ;eases age explains. Actually, the bill would have eral Assembly support included dating of ma- dorm. it was learned yesterday. . 'elan He characterizes Niebuhr as the helped create an international so- bonds for the U.N. Congo opera- of the nuclear The 200 Hoover scholars earned 'bugged theologian." cialistic trade economy by impos- eon, examination of the strife in alum of the Gor- an average of 2.504. leses,-eli e,mferenee. "What bugs him is the ill- ing import quotas upon all U.N. Southwest Africa and direct nego- Plating second was Washburn founded fear that his fellow cit- Industrialized states, Cooper tiations in the Arab tefugee prob- hall with a 2.425. Allen hall was : , s.ens may take seriously the ethic plained later. lem. third at 2.355, Royce hall fourth wo NuFF?_ gorgeous Gams ' contestant Tom Dosla.K .` if the Sermon on the Mount, with Seniors Win :: PRETTY that the security with a 2.312, Moulder fifth at 2.239, ::. gets a helping hand from Gini Irving with putting the iHishing :: the consequence sf our 'Christian' nations will be and Markham sixth with 2.201. touches on his entry. Students may vote for the choicest "gams- `. ss imperiled," Dr. Jones de- The all-residence hall average, S100Scholarships Z: at polling tables in front of the Spartan bookstore and cafe- :` gravely was i. }1.,1. 11.11 s. vlares. which includes 1200 students, - I.i.., world wire
.1,1i1 .1164. Association of In- teria. Z.. After disposing of the ethic of 2.40. This puts the dorms below den1 ALGERIAN PEACE TALKS IIIT SNAGS Insurance Agents an- f . Jesus as a guide for life and put- the all-soroi ity average 12.5031 and e ieeently EVIAN, France (UPD The French-Algerian that two senlo ting it in its "proper place, Nie- Peace (elks slowed above the all -fraternity average of ..,satet, down sharply after hitting a series of snags yesterday. Conference ss; and insurance majors :,, t on Display Iiiihr sets about to provide for Tlie all-college CPA was e; lc ures sources said a will cease-fire agreement now may be delayed by several receive $100 scholar- se mankind what he feels Jesus has days. But delegates still expres.sed optimism that the end of the \ /:: failed to provide, a social ethic. recipients, 7'e -year-old conflict will be proclaimed before the end of the week Ibibert Q. Niese purpose of his social ethic F "The Secrecy Fourth st., and Joseph S s' Gorgeous Gams ..:: shrouds the six-day-old talks, but informed sources any the Revelries Tryouts or to guide the behavior of collec-