1!laff - SDSU Library Digital Collections
Transcription
1!laff - SDSU Library Digital Collections
/ AS ·U rged 'To Consider Revision of Curriculum 1!laff . ,,.. 11 t: , , , PUBUSHEI) BY .) VOl. ~ 47 NO. 115. '., - M a' ". r' He'a'.:.'d ." 5,' 0 .SDS J-I 0 no rs Roster· '. M U 5 Ie ". ', -1 ( By Janey Jo Tubbs A new liberalization in general education 'requirements may be in the offing, but the ball lies in the' hands Qf the students, Dr. AND F:OR THE STUDENTS' OF,SANDIEGO ST~TE • .n' \. Clay .Sharts. associate professor of chemistry, told the AS Council ,.THURSDAY,MAY 23, 1968' ' yesterday., . "Academic featherbedding 'Q' will Viin this one" unless stu· d~nti; influence Faculty Senate . m e m b e r s to decrease the requ ire. .' 'S'DS' ·ues'.t' " ity for reappoint'ment. The. Ombudsman will. be -appointed by, and responsible to, the Presi. de,nts of the College and the Council. ' The recommendation stressed' that all student conferences would, \}e confidential, and ,that the p.osi~ion would entai1.~broad investigatory procedures and ' direct access to, all colIege offi· cials, from the President down." -Fqr lJ nive rsity :;:Y,~;,~;~~;:~i~~~;~~rJ~:~::':~'n Olh:;~:::,~:':::;:e" Ihm --.~---------:-~---;~-::,~-:-:.--':"'--"::'---:,:-;-.---.:.,~.~--,-,-..c..:..:..-,L~~.a.nd'1;Qme !ie'c timnrWUUld:.-~to:~'~wcre--:-allocations~of-$450-to· the .. A SDS: music major head~ thelist of3:254sEmiors~eHgible for ·I,e·.··;d.: .... be;eliminated: . . . ' . . Intercoliegiate' Art Show, $166 graduat~on next month. ' .', Sharts said that the curriculum 'foranetpbossing machine which committee of the Fa'culty Senate would stamp graduatedesigna: . Karen ~oble. wh? ha~ a 3.94 grade poin,t average' overail and ~ 4.0 III her maJor! IS one of119 stUdents who willgradtlSDS Yesterday 'lost a~othet. had al'ready defeated'a resolution 'U'ons'onthe AS cards of gradUate ate With honors June,7 InAnee' BOWl. .. for .Iiberalizations, but student students, $150 for a loan to iura round. in irs battle to win the title· p.r opos~ Is. cou Id'S t'll ." fl uencp. 'I . t atlOn . . Miss Noble l'S t"'easurer of Mor' I In c a II I'or Orten programs,' 1 of university. '. J' f . 1um UeCISlOns ~ . . . $67 .50 t 0 t h e d raft counselor for tar Board' and vice-president 'of mal "' curncu If ,A critical vote, 'of 14·0;' with p\oposals.were'made to the S~n. more~hours ofcourisel ing.' . " Glenn S. Dumke, ':chancellor of~ t b b . Sigma Alpha. Iota, a women's music fraternity. She received . , , a e y;Qcto er:. . The Council: denied a $1,500 ' . state colleges, abstalnil1g, . h;ls: .., 'TA's Supported request from CAB to. underwrite " the C!ut~tandjng music major practical1y'insured the 10ss.ofanY The' Council passed a resolu. a pr,esentation' of the National award and the.. Associated 'Stu. chance to.. be redisignated, ac.·. r . '. . . t--d h II t fM ' dents outstanding service award, 1O~ 'giVing .support 0 gra uate' tla e, 0 ' eXlco"on grou,ods tpat , cording ~o Ray 'FIOren, gra'duate. assistants who are seeking rac. the contingency fund could',not Othets graduating with highesL 'stUdent in economics.' ulty,privilegesin th¢SDS Libralj". ,withstand. such 'a large wit,h. "honors are Gloria Floren, Eng-' The vote cam'e after the ;Co~r. . It also endorsed the first cam, drawal. 9inating Council for Higher' Edu= pus·,Wide meeting' of' graduate. ' : Four organizations were ap' lish;. Robert· Carlton, "German; .' Linda Hillis, French; Gloria cation's procedures cominitte~ . assistants. It will,beh~ld todax ,proved-'by the Council for on. m'embers listened, to arguments in LS2&4 at 11 a.m. There will be 'campus status:- Tuesday the Messick, history; J.ohri Schey,' chemistry; Linda B!r-etton, mathe· presented by Dr. Malcolm A. a' ~iscussion of parking~and Li. 'Nineth Committee, SDS Chapter;, matics; Philip Steed, mathematLove, presldent of SDS, and Dr. brary privileges and the possibil· . Faculty and Students for· Rocke· ks; Gary Brown, ,.engineering; Jan Marjorie Turner and, D"r. wii~' ity of an impending pay I:;ut for feller; Vietnam Student Associa. Eitel, English;_ Sharon Tucker, liam Leasure, professors of eco· graduate students. tion at SDS; and Students for nomics. . Final'" recommendati,on, was, Hals~~d'and BoteL English; Robert"Garcia,' chem: istry; Dorothy Acton, social sci· "Th'e major reason the nam€' made by the Long Range Plan· Terry 'Flannigan, AS President. e,nces; John' ,Dickerson; market.chllnge idea was defeated. is that ning .Board, and' accepted. by, the announced bids had been opened ing; Salley Moffett, microbiology; . ~I' they (members of the' committee)' Council, for the SDS. Ombuds.. yesterday, and one accepted, for Virginia Payrie, social s C i e n c e s ; " thought the ch!jnge, of: njlme man. . " . .. . . the SDS Library construction: He I, Mary ,Welden, s,ocial science; Jo· ," sould involve more money. Now The 'recommendation called said the construction of the build.. anne Shapard, mathematics; 'and •• they're" talking abouttuition," . for a two.year term. with"possibil, 'irig would beginon schedule, Jerry Brooksher, English. . K3ren Noble' Floren said. . • , . . ~ . . , . ,The\'committee,vote su'pported' a recommendation by Dr; Willard .. Spalding, . acting council' direc· . . ..... -. , -.. tor;'advisingGov. ReJlgaliand De~sc,u·SS 'G. d·' LegiS~atur.e against changing the t,he, , colleges' names. ' , .. . , . . Floren claims,thatthe vote will A meeting of all SDS teaChing' Itants should have the same'Iiprevent action by the Legislature, assistants will take place today brary privileges as do fulHaculty Graduate students need to or· students have organized and have "The Chairman of the Council in LS2&l for a discussion con~ members. .' ganize if they. are to have any 'in- channels to protest and to com· will probably submit a ~no' vote', cerning increased status and pri- . The, major problem is granting fluence in currieulum'determina- municate. But" s6 far' as I have . to the Legislature sometime in vileges for graduate students and these prillileges would be the tion, the Dean of the Graduate di· . heard, the Selective 'Service October. I' doubt if the ~ame teaching assistants on campus. ',' greater number of books which vision told about 15 persons' in System ·will ' not be changed,", change will be likely," he said, rne meeting' will be the first. w!>uld be' 'out of the library at any Dumke waged' an unsuccessful . occasion' for all the teaching as- given time, said Dr, Michael Ab· Scripps Cottage yesterday,' " Lemme said. . " The dean, Dr. Maufice Lemme, 011 the question of'teachirig- fight against the suspicion held sistants,to gather for organiza· bot, assistant professor of chem, istry who heads the Library Com· , was participating in the College or work loads far graduate teach- by members of the co·unci!., ' . tional purposes, The, ,students wJll dis~uss t~e mittee. .. "We deserve the title, of uni· "yn sponsored student-adminis." ing_ assistants - Lemme said tration dialogue. ' students return primarly to get versity without any change in our . recenJ denial ~f faculty library , The' action taken by t\,!cco,m· .privileges to graduat~ students. mittee may not be permanent. Responding "tl} ,students criti- their degrees. , existing function," he said. The two trustees for SDS were .;.by the F:aculty Library Commit· he said. eizing the school for' making "What we need is a balance be· . "'Xhe circulation of the peti· " graduatestudentsJ.ake irrelevant tween assistantship and graduate among. those who' voted· against: tee. 'The pr,oposal to tQ!l Committee asked for the period of loan tion is good in that it will insure courses, Leimne said if the stu: ,work.'A heavy teaching load may the name change: for books· to be extended to one that the matter will be brought up dents organized' it would be" delay' your. graduation, What we month'from the regular two·week again in the Committee," ~bbl}t . easier for them 'to be heard. ", . want is for studEmts 'to graduate peribd: ' said. "There should be some "I do think' students need a quickly so they c~n'go out and Teaching ·assistants. in all de· reasonable amount of comprovoice' in 'designing courses, . I work without their earning power' pa'rtments ,are being asked . to mise that we could make," . . ' hope the.Graduate' S~mate will.·· being unecessarily delayed, COMMENCEMENT ~ 10 a.m. Friday sign a petition stilting thrit be-. He indicated that a lengthen· become organized SO that gradlF ' "But students needing mon~y June 7, Aztec Bowl: , ate students can have a voice-' must also be able .todo their COMMENCEMENT PRACTICE - 10 'cause research and teaching a're . ing of book loan might be feasi· " . .' . a voice they haVen't had befon~;dutie~' 'properly so they can, a.m. Thursday June .6, Aztec Bowl. major roles' of the gradua'teas- ble, The graduate assistants may reo "Also, departments ought to . earn !omething..while working 8ACCALAUREATE - 4 p;m. Sunday ',sistants, and .tney are considered to' be' part·time faculty by the . quest. additional privileges' in ,. be organized s6 that students can towards' theil' graduation," he June 2, Main Quad. pesonn"el office, graduate, assis· ' counseling, health insurance and , meet and talk. to Uie 'officIals in . said. . 'parking, said Larry Morrison, workin~ out the curricuJ~m," he ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ gradua,te assistan,t i'n Econom,ics, one of the organizing students. said, pratt Board Reasonabie . ' '. J\ Turning to the draft situation, ~.:L\'4 ~I',' Lemme said, "Our local draft' co,!,plled from Associated Press board is very reasonable. So far no graduate student has" come. INTERNATIONAL longer had any marked effect. . lems. The official, The Rev.:James Bevel, said those expelled Were' to tell me about ,problems with PORT AU' PRINCE•.Haiti .,... Haitian' NATIO~ALyo'uths from militant gangs in , the draft board." troops have killed '10 and cap·, Besides providing a draft coUn- tured 16 .members of a 35-man ,WASHIN&TON'::-, 'The se~ate .r,e. ,~hicag,o,,~~~~o,it, aii1totherc'iti~s.Q·.· ~ selor, he said SD.S has sent tele· rebel invasion force, government jectM xesterday a Crlllle ~'i1l T~ey ',~0111~t~&~.~~~nF ,with Students holding keys' or ocgrams to the authorities p·o'inting sou'r!!es said yesterday; amendment that would have pro, - whites, Lh~ saId. ,3";_.,.' cupying. lo'ckers should return' out what the ne~' draft \laws • •• \ , .- ,,~ . ..sTATE,' the keys, to . the ,department vlded a right to counsel at draft wboUld do)o gra~uate students. ',SAIGON _ U,S. Air Force B52 s Q,oard hearings. The amend· SACRAMENTO - A p~oposal to d.j, which issued them by Friday, S S has also tried 'to worK to~ arid Marine fighter· bombers ment's ~~thQr. '-~en., Edward V. vide California in~o' two statt:;'s . June 7, said T.V. Hallahan,: SDS gether with the,Council ort Grad· teamed up yesterday. as they LOIW, D·Mo.,!'.~ald that to deny. was shelved for thiS year yester. r :~hief of plant operations. . ua.te Edu~ationi but he did n'ot pound!!d enemy positions in' ~he young m:n C'ouns~,~ at draft bo~rd . day. The me~sure by Sen. Rich··' . "Lockers- not vacated by frithink Congr.ess "was likely to reo DMZ where growing North Viet· ~ea~in~? makes a mockery of ard. A. Dolwlg,R-Atherton. was· day, June 7, wi!: be opened and considerth~dTaft law; na-m~ser! strength poses a threat Justice, referred to the Senate Rules Comthe -contents turned over'to Stu"So far there is no method of .. In the far north.' , ' mittee for int"rim ~tudy. dent Lost and found," he said. , d action .by yo'u guys * +, * . . . * ... ..,. "Students failjng to return",. or 4"\ . you can ,be heard in the Na· PARIS _ .(\. motion of censure last renew. keys by friday,' June '7, NEW O'RLEANS ~ 'Bla~k Power mili· PASADENA:... A light earthquake ' nal Security Council. There' is'night" against the gover•. nen! of , willmcur ,a two dollar .penalty tant H, 'Rap Brown"drew a. five· centered in northeast Spn Diego charmeiofcommunicatiqn, fee and will be 'unable' to reo "At other· ,colleges; gra~uate pr~rhier Georges pompid'ou ,yeal' prison s~ntence and,a,$2;~OO C'ou'nty was recorded yesterQay register, until their records'are at t'he SeismologicaL Lab of Cali,.' fine last night after a b!racla1 failed to get enough votes to over, ,I;jeared. " ,' .~ , fedel'U1 court jury convicted him fowia Institute of Technology, throw the government. The cen, , Hallahan said building keys , " 'sure vote, backed' ,by leftists and ,of "Vi6lating the' Nation~l. Fire. SACRAMENTO - Asse~blY Sp.cakel~· for the summer sessions are be· ,,;., . most or' one cent~r group, col· arms Act. ing issued from 8 a.m. to 4:30 Jesse: M. Unruh charged yestcr. '., ;Iected 233 votes - ll.short of t1Je p.m. daily (Monday through ,frida~ that 'Gov. Reagan's requ'cst . j. " • Student films by, Ooug Tuthill and required 244'.. ' day) in th'e Plant Opera~ions. OfWASHINGTON - An official of the tpat an antidrafl'-'rally': be can·' * • * Clark will be shown at 4 p.m. fice., , p.oorpeoj)les' campaign said yes." ,celled at Berkeley last week "was LONDON - The, 'price of gola in Scripps Cottage: All keys issued must be propterday that about 200' demon, a' purely political statement de. Warhol's "Super.Artist" will dropped more than $1 on the Lon,. . strators here had been sent home signed tp get .some natiomil erly authorized, he·said. ", shown: A discussion will don free, market yesterday.- Deal- because of disciplinary prob. press." .. ers said the crisis in France no the films. . . " Sta.t'u: s K'"l·I •. T,ea·C,hing" . A's'sista.nts, ,... T' , 0 Meet. Grad 'Studeh-fsShould Organize/'Le~mei Says 'r' .. r'a. Prelvelle'g'es 0 Commencement teo WI~ ' - _ C J Student Films .'To S~ow Tod~y .. Cu,nsu' le r • . ... ' ~ ;, JtJne 7" Is L,:-a.st Day'. . T R t' " K' urn eys ;///'/ -~hdi:6~~U1ce · ', /" cA -, p;Ir~ " ,.: . ,/ , , - .-.:. "1 . '\fP"L·.A.e The Big Step Aged Computer Ed::rth?sa::eA:~e~~mputers, Editor, Daily Aztec: SDS's As another seme,ster' sneaks science curriculum is to an end, 'it strikes me that, - --;- .... as usual, many things have been As of July I, we will be losing . left unsaid, In regards to one, a the IBM 1620 ,computer, This , By Paul Dell' . ~over' the past 10,000 years, he ;.violence and"aggression, and word of praise for this year's machine is slow when compared, nthropologyDept.Chairman has persuaded himself that prov,ide m,eans othe,r thari the Daily Aztec, I know' of many to today's third generation com· , with 'his first· he has become able to arrest "natural"exp'ression of those people who intended to write and puters' but I'S st'll I one 0 f th e' mos t . .: Beginning h a few who did,' useful for instructionalpurposes . .. ' ,e m,p i r ically demonstr'able t, e proces~ of evolution so biogene'tically transmitted I'd like to thapk the staff 'of the . This loss is .cushioned by the reo · success in controllinghis uni· far' as, he is concerned. That drives, we will proba~ly ex- Daily Aztec for ii job well done, ceipt oran IBM 360-Model40, , verse-by-f-orcingdn-a-sense, ~n are. increasingly- abl~ perience. first Apocalypse·' This year's' paper was relevant Who is paying for this machine . . t~e ear:th to yield hiQl food through-~echnol~gyto contro~"':!!..I!.<!...,the~ossi~lY, 'Renais· and representative of a b~g step and, who will q)Vn it ,- might be , ,wqere It had not before men, ,the phYSical environment has sance., ' , -, -~ ~-'" _~_ }~r. SDS: The step was not taken worthy ofinvestigation. ' '.and western qlan in particu, persuaded men that the sele!!Renaissance/Apocalypse, wiThounUrringacontroversy;_ The 360-40 has an·internal mao lar, proce~ded • to ,develop 'tive effect of .environmental And Renaissance may well' The first issue 'Which comes to 'chine- speed..:.J!Pproximately 50 · ce.~~in . const,ructs "about his·· cha~~e has .been .divert~d for . tak~ the ~orm of ~omespecies mind is that of staffing the paper, , times faster than the1620;'bufror~, umvers, e. ,These construC,ts them, an. d, mO,r~.lmportantly, supplantmg us, as has hap· , The Greek communl'ty has ~pical Fortran problems it's only' about four times as quick. fQ.rm premises ..:upon 'Whi~h thaLmanis a consta.nt aro,und' pened many times in the past. naturally resented the fact that Th~ 1620. is currently being systems dfthought, ideologies which, by,s~itabl~ manipula· And Apocalypse' and Ren· control of the paper has been used ab9ut 16 hours a day:' As . " are based, " , ,tion of environment, Utopia· aissallc~,' as literary terms taken. out of their han~s.· Their scheduled now the 360-40 will 'be ., ·":'That thes,e "premises' are, 'not only can,but should and'con'noting evolutionary reaction has been to accuse this 'run four hours 'a day for student ~,seldom .if ever tested. or even ' will, be achieved and,cJta'nge, change, are probably as ines. yea~s staff?f c~tering to a small, utilization, A,re we Jl.loving ahead? " susceptible to testing, and Le: evolution, will cease. 'capable as the dyriamic uni. ,ra~lcal mlOorlty on ca,mpu~, The way the situation looks. n.e~ce their, rel,iability re·. In particular thi~ .ledto t~e ~erse we :must. in~abit-, !:~~\~~mitt~~:f:\;~::l;fbt: l ,~os~~/w~~s~a:~:~h~i~:oe,,~~t , mams ppen to. dou~t, has conce.pt. thatblOgenetlc mstead of .the statIc un~verse repetition by a different group of Emperor's N.ew Clothes." b~the~e~tnen no more than heredity could ,b~ compe!lsat: we wd ld h~e to have. the $ame thing they were doing, ,. With· improved software (pro. the. Clrcumstance • that·, the ed for by providmg enVlron· we should question ~heir accusa·grams) the 360-40 could be mflde majority of those assumptions ment ()f a certai'n kind. Genes tion as they:liave made it. to process twice the material can bEr pair~<;l .as contradic· were allo,wed to transmitsuch I think; that although the that-it is currently capable or., , tions .. ' Since' space would not, traits as skin color, but not Daily Azt~c' has occasionally Efficiency may even be a substi· permit the, listing 'of .those sl!ch traits as compose. tern· Editor·ln,Chief Doug Tuthill Slipped into a .n~rrow bias,.in tute for inadequate'funds aUoted, ' .. contradictorY premises it' is, per,ament, . Adverlising Manager Rich Leland 'general it. has been respon. ' . Who's in charge here anyway? , Sti\1 Mammal~ Faculty Adviser Dr, Foric Odepdahl . si~e to. the whol.e ca~pus. This sr.,D:::::r~Jg . coilveni~nt to jdEmtify, them under' the concepts of n.orma·, And yet men remam. as they Published daily· by the 'Associated s~c~ 10 my. mlOd 10 con~rat tive and existential pos· have. always been, 'mammals Students of Sanbie&o State Tuesdar', With the past record of t e d .throueh Friday except holidays and Daily Aztec" marred by a gross j , .' " • · tulates, 0 f a certain kin -. and repro· bl'as whl'ch e'arned ¥'.or the p'aper Editor, . , d t' t' t b examinatio,n days. Subscription rales l' 'Daily Aztec: Postulates uc Ion con mues, 0 e 'a are $5,a year. Offices are located in 'in my opinion, a new title, 'The' .- It seems there is' a slight diS. ' An 'existential' pO,stulate is ril~tter of ~he chance coming· SS-135. San Die&o State Colle&e, San IFC N,e~sletter.' a descriptive statement about' ling of genes . from two par· Dieeo 15,Califomia. A second, 'more importan't, agreement with~n the Gt7rmanDe, , , , .' , , ' Who h . partment. ," the universe.,lt need not be a ents,· lC genes 'are gomg point. AIQng with ;the accusa· . There are" those; who, feel "true" statement in' the sense', to be available for these com· tions about the 'hippie' staff,straight-from.the.book learning that iUs empirically verified; bhliltions has already been, came those about its 'inten· 'is t~eonly way_ " . what is important about ids determined' by all the past' . tions, Then there are maybe, a few . ~ that" it is a description ot. generations' of" man's' evolu.. . .':~ - . I can remember - well the' like' Dr. Wes'teryel~' who: ma'ke thing's as mell perceive t~em tion .. in particular, ',over a, Letters to the Editor are ac· . letters to the editor bemoaning' German one a'-stimulating ex, to 'be ..:.. the, so·called "real" period of something lj;ke cepted for publication at the the so-called effort, to Hturn' ,perience, He is enthusiastic', world. , "_ . 231,6{}7 generations, selection Dlealtt'leYrsA~me~eeOtlfl1nlgCe'DSa' iL~yl.35A' zAtelcl . STDtSh.ll·nlto dancoth~r Ber,ketl~y,,, Idf , al'nbtOe,urte'shtiSl'nS:Ubhjel'sct'stHuedetantkses Hane' A normati:ve postulate is a was operating in the direction ' u I an o. were 10 ereste • ,," . . " . ' 'of men ''',s ever more compe. requirements. will be pub· in'doing any 'turning,',it see~li ' knows"his su~j~ctand he makes h · ortatlve st~tement, a ,state· "" lished if at aU possible. Let. to' me that their' efforts were' German a hvmg language, He --merit of ~ow, in a properly tent predators, ters. must be typed on a,60directed towards .improving this . is a superior i.nstruc~r: . 'i ~' con'structed world, things Only a 'short 666 gen~rations space Iine ,and triple 'spaced, 'institution. of higher learning.' ' po you thmk begmmng Ger· ,,' ~ oUgnt to be - the so~called ' ago'did a smj.lll ,portion of the and ·should riot' exceed 260 . Those who defend apathy and man ~tudents s!tould h.ave t,o ~ut , "ideal" world, ,human . population ·begin to, words in length, Letters mus't , J criticize growth are not defend. u~' With a, TA when rIght 10 I~S : , Primitive Stages 'find itself subjected to selec·· be signed' and accompanied ing SDS against any 'FJ;ee Speech , midst the .department ~as' t~IS. " So long as the level. of tech. 'tion, tending against predaby iD number and major or M9vement,' but are . trying to, excellent 1O~t~,cto; who Will' , nology remained "primitive" tion 'and toward so~e other title, An~mymous lettofs will keep this school unaware and teach ~owerdl~lslon. , ' .in the sen'se that men had not 'kind of being which as,yet ~as not be a~cepted. The ,editor unmotivated.' ,/ Who s )earnmg. thIS language, et reached a stage where no label. b, ut which we ·may" reserves ali rightS to edit I think the Dally Aztec was try. / anyway ,....: th~ PhD's or,the stu· Y , le~ters f~r space, good taste, ing to make us aware and to dents?' Is this college for the they could, synthesize in'ate· call a non~predator. But for, ana l i b e l , ' motivate us, with thisaware- students or not? '., '. rials on a massive scale or most of the human population, ness,./" . Your letters' ,to "draft" Dr., transplant organs fro'm· one . until within th~ last, half"pol~ticallY speaking, inteliec.,· Westervett back for lower di· . , body to another or exploit tne dozen or so generations the 'Proposed By·LawChange . tually speaking, or even 'social. vision German (especially Course " power a'val'lable through the' wa,y of.hu,man life continued .lyspeaking','thisisabigstep, ,,' 2) can be taken to the German'l, Aminimum of one percent (1 %) of tlie Russian'Department, AS-I03, atomic ,~evel ,of te~hnology, to. be that of predation, as it monies collected by the Associated Stu· ' Lonnie Rowell,' , Kay, Bennell, I' l' dents forI"membership shall be de' ' popula·' t s' I ' .. an d so Iong as haman 1 . 'IS lor a" su b S t an t'la I posited the Student,fees Faculty Campus' , S~., H'IStory. , ' Fr., Undeclaredti'on remained bet'ow cer-* number. Beautification Control Account. ..:::.... tainlevel in tenDS of rate of All ntndJ remaining at the end of the ' . . ' ", fi~al year shall 'close to. theCaQlPus increase, the tensions !?et up Unrealistic Hopes Beautification Control Aeeount.Thl.. , " .' ' .' by the contradictions be· ~lt seems unrea.Ustic, there·. fIIndmayac:c:umulatewithoutllmlt,' , Funds may only be disbursed from this A gOQd resume will help you in ,.. ' ' tween 'normative and existen· fore, to ~..t,Jh~t the selec· account by the' Executive Board of the J tial postul-ates presented ,t.ive effects Of so' many AS"Counc:il, The Campus,Beautification s~curin9"a better position! . , little danger, . , .: generations of evolution are Control Ac:count shall go into effect in the !969-70 fiScal year, ..::....,--, The circumstance that most to be sO easily and quickly. ~f the world today exists in a .. oveJ'come, and that lions will 'includes development constant feeling of crisis may lie down with lambs in any, and ~O pri~ted .copie$. ,well be evidence.that man has' other fashion than with the , 'reached the threshold at lamb inside the lion,' -, • Unless" men. can reco~nize , : which herilust resolve those· ,1 Bedroom- $125 contradictions. in order to, and accept that evolutio.n has ,I 1101 W; Wa.shington,at Ibis . 2 Bed.rooms - $175 up · contr.ol hiS own evolution, or selected the most of them for . accept the evolutionary se· , . , - - - - - - - - - - -..... Furnish~d, Utilities Paid, " '.' quencevihich will inevitably , CO~TROVERSIAl BOOKSTORE Cab!e TV, D.ishwasher result' from his attempt to '.. '),30~ I UNIVERSITY'AVE:-- . Pool&Sauna pers,ist in living with those ",.,,0-, NORT.., PARK 1 contradictions .. , ,. 4 881 ROLANDO COUR'T ."'-., 296· 1560 , """-',_ ". Arrest Evolution , You Are Welcome 10 Brow'H' . '~ut of all the dang~'rs which • 582-1503 man faces, the greatest "is :::::::::::::::::~::::::~~::::::::::::::::::::::::~ ,that, arising from his lncr~as· ~ ': ingtechnological competence .....,~ .. ',;', ' '. / /, '/' A ICaoCmki~nUg.t,er V: .'~ ~ 1 ' ' ! ing,lnfo L'iv'ing' Lingo ,LETT'ER' S' a' JOB RES'UM'ES SPECIAL PRICE IGADECS (OlLEGE VilLAGE APARTMENTS $1'3.50 The.ftiret Compa.ny 29~'-33'31 ,TOI,lorr.ow's -Fashions . T:oday: I, Ascension Thursday Masses: 11 :05, 12:05, . & 4.30 I, Catholic Newman Center 5855 Hardy Avenue ' (V2 block from campus) , Your Favorit. Bevllrliel in niit lion', Den .. FAMOUS FOR OUR BARBECUED,RIBS, BEEF, PORK HAM, CHICKEN &. SHORT RIBS BARBECUED BEANS - OUR SPECIALlY , r~. ALL ' HWY,'80 ACROSS FROM' MISSiON YA:.LEY CENTER·· ITEMS PACKAGED TO ,GO I 297-0196 , r SUN TO,THUR 11 AM TO 11 ..... fll .. SAT l1·A ... TO 12 MIDHII;HT GROSSMONT CENTER MISSION V ALLEY NORTH PARK ,J . , . . ': ; -, ' . ,. ,\>. " -; ,',; .. . . . . . i , ,1Jailp, \ \ r ' I ',. .' ~ . ,','PUBLI:SHEHBY AND FORHOWARD FISHER . ., VOl. 1 NO.1 '1' 1 . '--"'., ' " . ' ·.l THURSDAY, MAY 2 3 , : 1 9 6 8 / " " 28(1.6977 ADS - ,,---'-- -- . -- . -- '~'" ;;"'". " ~ I _,_ ;" per than' any other,outsider , on. ca'mpus. Howard F.isher; business ni.anager for'the Az· ··tee,. we pay' sPecial tribute to you ,in recognition qfthe ' -' . amount of hard work that you have 'undertaken. . ~ Tha·nlts to'Howie, 'as he i s ' ' /.. ', . " ."" affe~tiof.1~t'eIY 'referred' to by' ' 1 ' ~,•..:"" ..;/ Ii _,', --; his fellow workers; the Az. . . . . . . tee, has turned into a bold,' "oj i/ "" new' journalistic aaventure.' The paper ha's been lauded by' Dr. Rob M. 'Blind,' head of Yale's s~hool of advertising, ' a's the m'osf profitable and fin~ .. ." .an~·iallY· successful ,college ' . '.,." . , paper in the U:S .. Howie has ,~ "added" more to the Aztec ", . than ~P1Y other business 'man. ~ ,-:1IJ __ --'----=~~~__::-;:.,....,..~a~g~e;r-~in;.;r,e:~cent h istoiy, how· , '-.' I ',' :'-'" ,:1':5' a:"paucity" of ads, (Howie ":\ explained· that this, was an " o'ld.' English' word meaning, , I, "too few".) ,'IA recent sur.' , ' .';j ,vey bY,our businessaepart-'. ' ' mell't" showed"tnat'~,the Dajly' ' 'tlztec ads receiv'e2.7 times ~. more .readership than do the '.' . '-stores:' What we' need are ' ..... more' ads!", he stated in cY" rare moment of candor,' ! , 'To' us on ',the Aztec staff, r. . !<'isher is a good 'guy wlhoitasa jon to dO,'and 'does it to the, ' "best of his" ability:' Howa'rd, Fisher, '~e sal u te you! '!."- - , 4. " ..... .}V 1" . I, > ~ . ~>.. . " ,. : "H,owie" " " .. ,f . - In. the so~ring San'Francisco spiri,t-:. Cambri{lge C/ass~cs with, Fortre/® ., . ; . , . Cover up rhose bare walls ~irh big . colorful BSA posters, Four 'groovy 22" x , . 34" posters in full , color lor just $2 , a set, See your , . loco I dealer, . \'~ :.: . Rich. vibrant colors and patterns in a wide range bring traditional classic, Ivy styling alive, Half Fortrel~ half cotton provides th~' perfect blend.of . shape-holding polyester and natural fiber, Never need pressing. $12 and under. At your favorite store. or write us for the store nearest yo'u: Box 2468. Soutli San Francisco. ~alifornia 94080, _ . (~(llllbrldgl" (~I~'iHI-cl';, , ~,q. y ',fo Check the Yellow Pages for your local BS~ pealer." over ~700 cO,ast,to coast '. ':,L-~~~----';----:---;-~------,-' .. :.-" '\ .I L ·'~I .. CACTUS~CASUALS . , 1- MAY 23,"1968 D~lih) ~;trc. "".4,----....:.. THURSDAY. --;----- ._-- -.. _--. ~- "I~ :·YOUR·CO~PllOT , .'., . "FOR,LIFEI ,', .: Thi~i'.,chronograph with stainless steel" waterproof case has been" .especially, designed fdr pilots. It' is shqck resistant and anti mag ' ~ netic. '" "The CEH;tral chr~>nographic hand. , which ,indicates se~onds arid, ' I . 1/5th of second. IS connectE;d, :with two recorders: amim~te' " retorder. up to 15 minutes (at . the 3 o'clock position) and an _ hout ree,order. up to 12 ,hours ' , (at the 6 o'clock position), T~e turning bezel with its, 12· divisions indicates the time si, multaneously in tw.o', or 'more . time' zones as well as making-. jt possible to fix a time to' remember (departure,or arrival ' tjm~)., ' ... , : .This chrpnogr'aph' is all right fl?r "Yachting" ' Enou'gh «;IdS, tlowie?". .." .. ' ,', .,....,J.,' ,,': .., '.',..G ~":;.;;:,;:w."'" ',~'.~,: .. ,:. ~.: i c' or/a AII':llIies, Dept. 208 : .' t· ranu el1t rOIl Statiill!' . ' , : . P..Q. Box 25.Ne-,~\' York, KY. 10017' .: .... 'Sell!' TWA StUt!t';it To' , f ' ,": . : ' ,'. '-' ~r In ormatl\lll, : : '" "nw ," ,.. ~. , ';'" me . ... ' , . ~ .... " · .. V;" . -. "'NIl r,' . '. 'S" (~(}l.l.E(J..:, "Ul '. Aci~ress ..... ~ ~. ~. V.I .. ,..... . Zip' 2/67 . Stale EUROPE. ., On'eWay Fli9ht~ . Paris to 'S<1nFrancisco . Augu~t 6 & August 8,'1968 ' ". . ,[(}"IJIlOI)~:. turried'on by· the Tvlona Lisa-'. fliPI)ed OU~ o\'er th.e l~lajestybfChartres, . ' -:-splashing in exotic swii11ITling' pools on ,rheRiviera-. " . ' , . grooving' on the 'otigina.1 pizza'-'cQnq'llering the· IV! attefhor!l~finding , "\the,real you at. Carnaby Stt'·eer. . ' .' .,": " " ' " . ~(p 'rJ~' ~. Gi\'e you rself'a thrill. 1ake 'One of.TWA's St.l.l.dellt 'lours. ,~ . :: They'conle in all shapes.and si~~~~th ree '\\'e.'t~ks,t6 10 \v~~ks-, .() . a'~e~\"~~ities o.r.·the;whole rOll~e-'fr?nl $695' to$212~.~();.: " , "Call Mr, lnfoflnatlon ' ,(your t.ravel ag~nt). Or rWA;: '. ..~ 'It'IIJ1)~~~,¥~ufeei good o\'~r, . '~._ " _'0' r " 'Think.I~'o\v"dazzledy~uco~Ild'be by all the splendors'of EUfope-' . .t' j Charter Jet , t\,P(l\\\\ ' BREITLI NG , , ,.' ' BreIUmg·Wak'manr:> .i 5 Vfe~! 47th street, New York 36 N,Y .' --- ,,' 'iv· 'Name Cil)'. ::-:7-:-:-:-:---~_....:.-Zip , . .>" o t· "f:' For my inlor."",tion.Please send me. tree: ' G the calal!>gue ot new BreiUing'm,xiels , the address ot Breitling dealers n,earest.me, • ,,' " an , .' --...111 . Son ,Francisco to Pari~ . August 28, 1.9(18 A limited .number: .of·spac~s is. a';ciilabl~ 'for' faculty" staff apd student.s·of ~he C~Jjfprnia State Colleges .. '. Fare,; $225 t;)ne way --".-\ For information: OffiCe of International Program, • Th.e California State College, 1600 Holloway Avenue - , ,SOn Franc:iKo. California 94132 - .' N~ie:" Theie fliSJhtl to Europe, are not round.trip - ,,~ , I. , ; ' '. . , " , . ,I, :" , f. '. ,., ... , ' ,. , . -.-,~.(/ .. , "', '!-_,7'.-'-,--- " " ~ . D.iil)ll1~tr( THURSDAY, MAY 2'3,1968 - 5 This couple is: A. Studying a Greek restaurant menu' , B. Rehearsing lines for a play , a C. Attending college History course, D. ~one of these' " , .. , : -' C Is correct. The couple In the picture are students on a field trip In Athens during the Fall 1966 semesterwlth World'Campus Anoat-Chapman COllege. ' . Rutli Ann Speelman,.from Oakland in' .' northern California, 'a'·sophomore from __ Foothill College; studying liberal arts, has 'transferr'ed credits earned aboard the ' .. floating c~mpus to her home campus and has resumed regular classes. Stan Smith ' lives In Glendora, California, attended the: floating campus while he was a senior Philosophy major at Chapman's main , campus. Now he Is engaged In graduate studies In Chapman. ~ - .-,,-~' .. ,-'--~- - ' - - - , As you read this, more than 500 students, representing 200 colleges and universities . throughout the country, accompanled'by a distinguished faculty, already have embarked from New York'for the Fall 1967 ,, • semester which wllltake them to ports in Europe, Africa and Asia, returning, to Los Angeles via Honolulu.' , Students are now enrolling for the Spring 1968 semester which will depart ' fro~ Los Angeles to engage In shipboard study supplemented by visits to por~s In, , Peru,ChUe, Argentina, Uruguay, Brazil, Senegal, Morocco, $paln, Greece, Turkey, ,Yugoslavia, Italy, Portugal, The Netherlands and Great Britain, terminating In May at New York. , , ' _ To discover' how yoti'can lriclude the 'Spring Semester at sea In your' ~olleg~ plans co~plete th«: coupon below and, mall at ~nce. " UNISPHERE@ Is The Official Microphone Of The Association' On Tour They 'know their microjlhones arc their link with their audience, They want, YOII to hear their .voices 3nd the lyrics. naturally, ~lth<;~t howlm!! rc.edback. Wllhout3nnoyin~ close-up. breath pop . without aud,ence sound", !'relly lough,lest ror a microphone, .. routme ror the mcomparable Shure Unisphere. Just - ' ask the beller {(roups. Shur~ Brothers. Inc~; 222 Hartrey Ave., Evanston,- IIi.' 60204 , . j. r~---~-----~--~-~-~ aa W <?rld ,Qlmpus Afloat. Director of Admissions " , ~'Chapman College I1~"" .~ , , Name LA~T I', Name of School , Ir-Campus Address Orange. California 92666 .'.J " FIRST Junior Zlp_'_,,_. Senior i . City , , '" , Campus,Sta~e.t I' Present Slatus: 1 I Freshman· 'DO,. . Sophomore I State' 0 0 0 I· - I S~ate 'Zlp _ _ ' ~--'- I I ~!:~rested In: I 0 Fall 19_' 0 Spring 19_' semester at sea. _ _ __ I , SAFETY INFORMATION: The~s.s: Ry~dam,regl~tered In the "I' , , Netherlands, meets Internatl~nal Safety'Standards for 1 L__ ~,~-.:...!e;::~s!:.v'::p~ 1~9~ _ ~ _ _ -.J. '\ Permanent Address Tel Graduate' Age~ ~ WOl.!ld you believe -~ ~ ~inged Horse ~,J In.Vletnaml .'" .t VIETNAM TRIANGLE: MOSCOW, i Peking, Hanoi' Donald S. Zagoria .' . , Improving prospects· for, a: negollaled settlement of Ihe Vietnam war' make all Ihe more urgenl' a c1arlficallon 'of Ihe relati",nshlps of Ihe different Communlsl facllons Involved. Vielnam Triangle Is perhaps, the' mosl Ihoroughly Informed' and documenled analysis available 0'1 Ihll complex matler. "A pl.a for "nduslanding Ihal Iher. are a .,aridy of pra".ibl. oplion, open for ptau in Viclnam. Few Am~rlcan experls. lire' Dlor~ qualii'lL.d 10 examln~ Ih~ a1temaliv~s 10 pres~nl UnllL.d Slal~s policy In Vietnam Ihan Donald Zagorla,' now Olrecior of th~ Modem' 'Asia Resurch Instilule:at Hunl~r Col1eg~, and aUlhor of The,Sino. Sooitt. Conflicl, a classic on, Ihe crAck-up of Ihe Communis I camp."· , .' -The Wa.h/nglon Po.' 28~ pagts. $6.95, c/olhbound; SI.75, paperbound ~·Ina ~hettol·· THE POLITICS OF POVERl'Y 10hn C. Donovan $ .$$ Il , I • ~In a· Brea~linel YEARS OF PROTEST 'A Collection of American 'Writings of the'1930's' " Ediled by lack Salzman wilh Barry Wallenslein . The excllement, the anger and Ihe anguish of the Depression Era, 115 Issues, struggles and movemenls, are magnificently evoked in Ihls' 1I1uslraled anlhology of slories, songs, poems, plays and r~vlews by leading' writers of the period, amo!,g them Agee, AlgrFn, Anderson, Bene!, Caldwell, Cowley, Cummings:.oos Passos, F.arrel), Gold, Haye., Hemingway, Maclei~h, Maltz, Millay, Miller, Ode Is, Pound, S~.oyan, Slevens, Steinbeck, Wolfe, Wrighl, Vorse, Wesl, and olhers., With phOIOS, carloons, paintings, "nd drawings of Ihe period. "A collector" item . . '. (equlred reading for anyone sludying that period of our hislory.", -Tlte Chicago Tribune "Usef'" and Jailf.,,,' : .. Ihe hearl .of this Iite'ralure lies in Ii. prottst -agalnsl Ihe me", and Institutions Iha"made a national dlsasler out of' greed, Inertia, ,and mendacity." . . ,'. . . .,..Th. Nation . ",.t b;iIlianl anlhology:'-The PJII.burgh PrtU <, , I " Exam Pill, A~d b~fore long yod'refeel. itlg ~o~e <!-lert and with it~gain,... . S-ure you've used NoDoz, to-help y<:,u , You see, NoDoz helps bring .yoU up stay awake the night before an exa~,' 10 yo~r us~al1~vel of alertness, so you, , But have you ever thought of taking sJ.on.:t just sit there'ip a fog; it's got what NoDoz to m~'keyourself a little sharper . it takes to help re~toie 'your perception, during .the exam itself? 'your recall, and even your ability to Well, maybe you should. solve problems, . Le~s....say, you're one of those 9 u ys In fact,"i~oDoz contains'thestrongest who doesn't haye to cram like mad the stimulant for YOlll mind' that· you can night before, (Even so; you're probably take without a pres;ription. Yet it's not not getting your usual amoupt of sleep.) ,h~bit,forming: ' . And let's' say the morning of the big Okay, but what ab,out the guy who_ exam, you find your~elf heading:for goofs offij.ll term, and has to jam everyclass, kind of drowsy and unwound thing in the,night before. ' anci wondering if The Great Brain has Are we saying ~oDoz will keep him deserted you in ihe night. frqm flaming out? ,What do yoti do? Nope. You panic, that's what yuu do: 'We're·just s'aying Or, if you hflppened to read this a'd, , he'11 be alert and awake. you walk coolly over tethe water coqler ~. As he flunks. and wash down a couple of NoDoz~ the (If you fhi,.,k, ~t least 'y~u'n be awake.) ' .. ' \ , "What eoer happened 10 the War on Poverlyr John C. '/Oonovan'" analysiS of Ihe ,oneepllon,· evaluation' .·nd ,evenlual enfeebl~menl of Lyndon Johnso,!'s offenSive leads one 10 believe Ihat nolhlng Is likely 10 revive II. Chairman of Ihe Oeparlmenl ot Governmenl al Bowdoin College and a' former New, Frontiersman, Donovan served as an ald~ la' labor' Secrelary W1l1~rd Wirtz fro", 196.2-65.. • . he communicates .. somelhing of Ihesense of urgency and desperation Ihal was shared by so.manY.of Ihe antl-poverly workers wbo enllsled for whal Ih~y Ihought mlghl be a glorious fight." " ' -The New L,irder "Highly reco";mended. Th~ flames of Oelroil have shown dramatically how vllal il is for us to undersland- witi Ihe N~grQ poor are angry. Mr. - . Donovan's book is one thai will htlp us achieve Ihal underslandlng." -The Library 10urnal \ , 160 pag;,. $5,75, clolhboun,,; $1.45, '"aptrboun,I " _ • ~ Qn ;';~~~:'~~;;~~ THE WAR M¥TH Donald A. We/{s , . , I I Au incisive nttack llpOIi modern war-uHzk-iriS. :In attack aimed not so much againsl ,Ihe melhods as Ihe altitudes o£ the war-(fIakers," . , -The Los A'Jig"" Tjmes "Equally al ',ome willi Dr. Slrallgrlove alld 51. TI.olllas Aq"in';., W~lIs ,quotes pertinently'to pro-ve his point)hat war must be made.megal If Ihe human r.lce is to survive. Perhaps the mos,t appalling pori of this history of 2,500 y'ears. of war is Ihe. demollslration Ihat Christian luders, 'lhroughoul,lhe ages, haVe apologized for and, defended their nations' right 10 wage IVar," . ': " • -Prof.'Ralph Spllzer; University of British Columbia "TCI my' knolVledgf, ,,,'e be51 book' o,! II'" ."bil'(l, especially valuable b.C:lUse of the extensive and ,thorough doculllentation." :'PfOf. Herbert Marcuse, University of California at San Diego "All imporlalll aiM lilllelll'.opL"':'TlIf Library 10llrnal 28S\p~g/s. So.qs, ·rloth"~lwIIL Sl?~, ,;nl'rr'.lo",~d All' available al (inc "ookscllas ~.-·~<GA.S ,A Division 0/ We51trJI Publish inK 8S0 Thi;d Avenue, Ntw Yor/.;, U.-S • COllll'flllll, Inc, t:J,:Y. 100:22 ,', . ' \. \ \ 6 ~ THURSDAY, MAY 23, 1968 Dllih) ~;tr( Abr.lh.,m lincoln spI:.lks ,all Th.: Pc.)c.: Corps: . ,-. "Someday, when I've saved enough money at Security Bank, we can each have our own bowl." .~ "To ~oh.:ct th.: .:vils. ~r<.lt and snull.· ..... hich sprin~ from ......lnt of symp.lthy , .1Od fro rn ,posi!iv.: .:nmity , .lllloilR str.l"g.:rs. , .)s nations as indh'idu.lls. is on.: of .. tho: hiRho:stfunctions 'of civilization." or "The Breakfast Party" by Sir Edwin.La~dseer. An6th~r enduri~g study fsrom Security Bankb~s "kF~mousl Ptainthe~s" series. We'd like you to think of Securlty.Bank as being endunn(~, too. tart a permanent an mg ~e a tons tp 10da~. Make your financial partner SECURITY FIRST NATIONAL BANK , . .-------------------~ '" .. ,. ... i: II CLASS/flEDS House KOUSING 4 bdr. fvrnshed, ova I. " REWARD - ' silver domed' diom9nd ring left in', cafeteria· restroom. r' Generous, reword. Turn into lost'· arid fO.\jnd .a~d leave nome an(' address or call 232·56P, .os.!< for Ifene .. FOR SALE ._.~fl}:?/3 $110 uti!, pd. 282·4259. . ; BACKv~:r---depo~i;.-·Carp!!t cleaning special. 1 bd. opt. $15 2 bd. $20. Pnone now 279·8833. • C HOUSING MUST SEll iin"';ediotely; Beautiful 8 Bdrm., 3 both converted frat house. Slightly· damaged. but reparable. Walk to Stole, ~·582. 001. ;i=all 'rental reservations now being accepted. Quiet, .walk to school, parking I' & 2 br. 'choice fur~ished opts. 6181' Montezuma. 286-1339. . ., ------------ -_._-,.-. -- ; ., , 1 BDR.· at Corinthian' opls. New. swim'ming pool, !oauna, rec room . w/calor Will rent for summer "Tv ma June, Jufy, &-Auc;} ot$l4.0/mo, 583-7.229, • . 4;30. ' i PERSONALS HAROLD. STASSEN supporters con· . tact Chuck Bourmonn, Bill Gri. maud, or lorry Sherry. WANT Block briefcase with notes taken from .Iibrary lost Tue·s. No questioru. asked, reword, Call Glenn at 453-1128 or 582·3785. HELP WANTED Full Time sitter·fQr 2 school bge children wonted for summer. Coli evenings only 422 -2595. ~- '. • . MUST SEll immedialei;: Be~utiful like new ~ Sdr"l. 2 bath home. family room & fi,eplace. Sepa'·..lte . dining' ,oom, ~uiltins, new co, . pets, 'd,apes. Walk 10 State. 582. 5800· Realty Center. ~60·5400. ANNOUNCEMENTS W,ith·this improved roller and Rol1-Ez-ee shred cut tobacco YO\1 can make. mi~d, tasty and satisfying cigarettes tba.t will probably better fit your sm~king taste. " . '65 VW Conv. White w/block vinyl top, red interior. Bloupunckt ra· dio w/short & long wove bonds. 34,000 mil;$. Im'totion wood steering wheel .& other extras. lik~: · new. $1395. Call 28'9·8772 after Males over 21 as research suI> jKtS in long. term' bed rest prol' i Kt, St.peFJd $5.75 - $1.$.75/d~y J • Approved alternate service for Female roommate wonted ','for r conscientious objectors. Write: summer to shore 1 bedroom opt. Box 96 U.S PfiS Hosp tal, Son, . 'near' campus. '$4250/me Call . frci;'cisc~ 9,4118. Normo. 583·0229, after 3 ~ . 1965 '-CB-16Q HONDA, w/luggoge rock $350. Call Gory 46O~3287, WILL PAY REWARD for return c;>f health text, Full in the Sun,also would like ·to 'nove bock 10 speed hike and Nodar field glosses . Wanted:sJmmer dog siller, friendstolen from 'in front' of library ly boxer 582·161 2 after 6 p.~ 2S6.383 TYPEWRITER rental and' repair service Portable - 8o. >tandard $7· per. mo .. up, ·elecrric·$15 pel mo .. ~int 3 months rental will apply to purchase. Three days . service on· repairs. AZTEC SHOPS BOOKSTORE. . , 286-6979 after midnight, GEf SPECIAL RATE carpet cleaning. $10 1 bdrm., $15 2 bdrm, 582·2207 after 5. ,~ . items at a VefJ low price. Call \ TYPING AT HOME- .reasonable rates, 422·8918 after 5 p.m. TYPING at hom, 'resonoble rots, splKa,lize in turn" repOf"IS, col 792·926 aftre- 5 p.m. . ANNOUNCEMENTS I FIL TER TIP Or REGULAR FOR SALE - a health text, Fun in 'the Sun, also w,1I sell a 10 speed bike and Nadar field glosses. I am in a p<?sition to sell these FURNISHED house for rent· easy walk to college. 276-3705. SERVICES LOST AND FOUND ,,. ? ttU Secuflt1 Fin. N"!lonal Sana .,b====:::::=;;::,;;;;:::::::::--=========::::::~=======--.=-~._._~_=_._=-=,.=._.=-_=_=-=-:_.=-,~ DAILY AZTEC -. -. _ SAVE MONEY In ma-;t,stales cigarettes are selling lor 35c, 40c and 45c a pack, $350 to $4.59 a carton. 2 packages Halls ET.:ec tobaceo, which will make 3 cartons o~' more, and . Express or Ajusla-BcUa roller will cost you about lhe same' as you are 'now paying for a single carlon. Easy to see the • g,•• 1 <oo~mY i" rolli"g You, own. $ 'I '67 MONTESA 250ccScorpion, $500. · or best offer, 5838 Hor~y ~ve. 4. ST.ERED tope 'rKorder - Cheap, ~ust sell. Call 583·9450 ask for Pete. Enterp';a~a, '56 Chev. 2 dr. 3--speed, stick V8 460·1697 or 444· 3273 . Ruobtab Inc. Chev '60 Corvair .. clean Radio, heat $375. 46~-3697 JAMAICA. NEW. YORK 11432 " . ~30 PARSO~S BOULEVARD 4-dr. ______ ____ __--------_L------~ ~ '55 MGTF ·(classic).· }500. series New tires, w re wheels, top, pan els, leathe~ interior ex. condo Must sell qui(;k, only $850 454. 6429. Must Sell 1966 Triumph spit. fire, Exc. condo $1450 Call 281. 0421 eves. '. Must sell 1965 VW Bux. 1500 en· . gine top' condo $15507 Call 281 .. 0421 eves. '67 BMW R60 ExCSO:c\..$995. 295. .' '. 7631. ' - '; ,_-, FORGIVE ,ME GEORGE, bUI I hove· found another love I wdl reo 'PROFESSIONAl or EXEC. by OWNER 3 BR (lorE/e)' or 2 BR 'and den . member you always Meet yay 10· 1730 ft. custom·built. beomed, n'ght, j. Bdl, ~ame I,me. some ceil; huge' fireplace. Plenty &tor· .place, Mil age. One' acre; lorge trees, Se' cluded. On sewer, 10 mins. to HAPPY 'BIRTHDAY Dr Odendohl 'downtown or to College. 1m· from the entire stoff maculate. $28,000. 582·2654. THE GENOME wonts Candy ·bock . Remington Quiet Have sWQets, ~andles, and p'n Typewriter , riler $50. Call Gory ~60·328!. read,Y. t~s time it is for ~eeps., . I "Howie" f . i),lilp ~~trc h THURSDAY, MAY 23,1968-...:. 7 Cotton Maid S~()cked by ,rritle ' · -. ' , m · nc . - : ' T e r r i Linn Luedtke, SDSsong- beforeanaU dIC ~c()fabout600. in the national Maid of Cotton ' leader and Best Dressed Coed of "I d ' vcn kn , ' . " comp~tition. to be held Jan. 2 in , . 1968. says she is in a"state of 0!lt~'I real,tloW'whatlsald, 'Memph·is. I·' " ' " ( shock. . . she ~ald. t that'lilY eel t entirely Last year's California's Maid of -~' But the Cotton Wives of Fresno O!' inferior. bu s a ;1 I had to go on Cot·ton.Vickie Palmer, an art maJ'' because I wa .... Ir"'" d 't don't care what state of confusion d ~, "" ",a y' comml - or. here, was a runner-up .to na- . the 18-year~0Id freshman physical te. tional crown. and Miss Luedtke education major is in. after they TKECean~.diilOlle· \ hopes to get valuable tips' fr!>'m desigt;luted her California's Maid Miss Luedtk ,~ad' been asked her predecessor. of Cotton for 1968-69 last Saturday by the membcrs ?:::oftbe Tau Kappa " Going in Training. night. .' Epsilon fraternl~ llY to be' their . . "It's g~ing itO, be a busy year. Winning various beauty awargs candidate In the ~Coll1petition and and' the. n~?!t six months will be Is not particularly new' to the was notified ca~ {-Uel:" this month direct~y ~eared to the ~ationa~s." " . tanned, blue-eyed blOllde. but that. she .hadSh~en selected a . she ~ald. .,: .. ' , the Cotton Crown was certainly semi· finalist. k~e was flown to MISS Luedtke w~n'be prepa~lDg c . one she didn't expect. . • Fresno last wc '~enc::l tiy the com- for the national crown, under the "I never thought I had'a chance' petition sponsors. ,: supervision of..the Fresn~ Cotton . - just no hope at all." Miss. cal i. •. . , Wives. with' the intensity of a ' LUedtke said. "The other girls As the 1968 auJ ifol:"ni~'sMaid,of' fighter training for a -title bou!.. were just so s.uperior to me that cotton. sh ep rt ~ tornahcally b~ She eXplained that the finalists I stm can't figure out how it hap- com~s Miss ~ ,,\)Of San pie?,o ~nd~.: were tol<i,"oDce one' or us was "'(J pened .. I'm still, in II state of receives a$J. uon "-scbolarshIP-and--s el ec ted-:1he-Colton"Maid,she-isshock.'.' a. ~2,OO~ C~thi~Q wardrobe by ···theirs (the Cotton Wives)" to .do Miss Luedtke was the youngest' CahforDla cl ~rs.., with as they want. .. , ' of the 11 semi·finalists for the ,The wardrobCr; will be us~d by -Immediat~h~ on the ag~tida for annual competition. The young Miss LuedtkC a~:or sum'mer and the· new MaId of Cotton IS to let women were judged on' beauty, weekend tours 0 ~ro\lnd the state. he~ shor~IY cropped. str~~ky poise: personality.. and their from June tM '.ugh next April haIr grow out. ,It IS a tradltlon ability to handte' impromptu and will be her ~ own after she re: of the national competition that speeches and questions. 'linquishes hcrc!'\'roW'n ." the' contestants have "hair that's Miss'Luedtke was the youngest ~ illl! ~ '" ..' ." ·long enough to move.". of the 11 semi-finalists for the . WhIle tour mod \ th~ state she WIll. Mfs~': L~edtke s8td _ that t~e annual competition.' The 'young not only be will 'tIelt~g c?tton ~p., Cotton WI\::es have already,wntwomen were judged on beauty. parel. b~t lI u be dls<;ussmg ten the national committee to see poise. 'personality, and their and fieldingCcolt estions on. every if long ha,ir is mandatory for 'tIon I U' ability' to handle impromptu aspectofth ,eligibility. speechesandquestions.· "I'll be Cotton at Miss Luedtke found the .im. every stop," ~ said' "THe' real oW,eve~, IS n~ ura ·co ore .. aIr. o.' . . promptti speaking especially dif· urpose IS toJl~sb -Uo' to the' and .whtle MISS Luedtke. 1.S not -I ficult, after giv'ing a number of, Public" co n lookmg forward to revertmg het:', rintervi~ws d several two·min- p .' r' . sun·streaked coif back to its ria~. ~'ec . A very big ~tra, besides the tural "gray-ash' b~own" color. Two quartets, ~he Diplomats A~ one of five fina ts. she had tour,s •. clothl~S'r~nd money Miss, she feels ·the training, period will ... The' Aztec Ambassadors and the· SDS Jazz Ensemble will pre· and The Four Ambassadors will to glv.e a speech on cultural cen- Lue~~~e wi rp,t;;!ceive,.is the op· we.1l be worth the p"ossible re. orese·otCalif0t:nia. ward, se I ec t"d e. s h 0 rt" su bJ'ects.P'I' sorshlp • on the college campus portl¥Wty to r -,...; _ _ _ _ _.;...;...._____________ --, sent Ii free concert at 11 a.m. smg anlst Pamela Ogdin will accom· tomorrow in the Greek Bowl. :-:. '. , Under the direCtiori'ofi>a~~d M. pany the Ambassadors: The 2().member Jazz Ensemble. l . oomis, assistant professor of under the ,direction of Russell G. " . music,. ihe'42"Ambassadors will Estes, assistant prof~ssor of ~u \ sing ."Ec.ho' Song" by Di Lasso. sic. 'will present, the, "Passacag· hbuse. 5734 Monl"·"~~1 Rd, . AS; 12. All new ~ember~must tum in ~ STUDENT GOVERNMENT "Serenade" by Schubert., "Hal- .lia ... · "Purple Onion," "Medita· . lIe~tlng 7 p,m. Thurs:, . Initiation fee. . \ .: HOMECOMING COMMITTEE - Meeting 11 n.m. CHRISTIAN SCI(~ lelujah, Amen" by Handel, ·col· tion." "Reflections of a Theme." Thurs.. STUDENTS FUR ADEMOCRATIC soclm - Film SS136. All members must attend. M206, Open to'''\V.. '. lege songs. "Oliver' de Lancy'" "Bluesette." "Milestones," and Title suggestions can be brought' to the CIRCLE K - £It(ld II.. _(or next semester's of· . of interview with Malcolm X 11' a.m. Thurs., . LS300; Ste.ve Tarin, New York SDS organiz.er. Activities Omce, AD226, until Frl. Free fieers will be h< st" r-. ~ m. Thurs., BA338. by Gail Kubik •.and "Black is the "Leah." , will speak about the Columbia University tickets 'wlII be given to the person whose GERMAN ClUJ - (;,,1 ! ,~meeting with maps to Color of My True Love's Hair" by Both the Aztec Ambassadors title Is chosen. coming ''Thank Ol's Over" party. 11 a.m. rebellion cifwhich he was a participant, noon Niles·Diss. ' Thurs., SS245 " Frl., Free Speech Area. .' and the Jazz Ensemble will ·con· GROUI'S AND ORGANIZATIONS GRADUATE ASSISI~, ; _ :Meeting of all TA's STUDENT NURSE'S ,ASSOCIATION,... All 'nurSing AIESEC :.. Meeting 11 a.m. Thurs .. BA34l. rrll David' Ward·Steinman·s "The elude the concert with "Imagin· ANTHROPOlOGY thel .' aand prl.vllegesand pos·' majors are Invited to a question and answer soclm - Meeting and elec· todlscUIS sible action to pl<I"'.osed pay cuts, 11 a.m.. ,.program 11 a.m. Thurs.;LSI34. • Creatil)I}" and arrangements of ation" by Van Heusen-Greeno tion of omcers 11 a.m. Thurs., 5S149. Thurs., LS284., "Shenandoah" by Bartholomew and "Blues in the Night" by Ar· ASIAN STUDIES CLUB - Two Japanese cultY.!'al LUTlI£RAN elMII 6.\ .... "Something Every Fri· ntms, "No Play" and "Kimono" will be shown day" - last blo' d ;t of the year. There will len-Green. will also be presented. . at 11 a.m. Thurs., 5S247. AZTEC YOUNG REPUBliCANS - "Dialogue: be B·BQ chick'· ,.~Jancing, swimming: etc. will!>t :'. ~'ed from 6 p.m, on, and Black. Brown and White," 11 a.m, Thurs.. Supper dancing start., • 'JO ...~ p.m. to a rock band. SS145. ' ""2001: A Space Odyssey,' p~oviue5 Open t~ Wllh, • ~ cent donation per peCAMPUS CRUSADE FOR CHRIST - College Life son, The all ·eye nt I ., p.(Il. tUl 'midnight, Frl., meeting-S p.!p. Fri., Alpha Gamma Delta ·thescreen with some of,tbe most 5863 Hardy Ayt MODERN IWICl C!\I/'L~ AND THEATRE _ Meeting, . dazzling visual happeni!,9 sand . II a,m. Thur" ~; dance theatre 7 to . . ot e t ,n . JaZl:."Gro''. . p M·,.en. s G ' Iee,', indu~trte~: rroh~~ti~g h.Ol)ever~ matndatl~ryIPrOdvishiO.n.. .,T'o''. P'.er'form- n Co'Poe. ert - New5" B' r.,Ief's English' 'Class v'" technical achievements In the history.of the motion .picture!/~/~ __ : ' , .' ::M;~'80RH009 ~~l.t. U. ASSOCIATI~N ~ Firs~ SPRING PREVIEW SWIM WEAR ading' Vers ~ ~ , : annual jau (t" ~.":' Including the SDS jazz dance band 2'" '" ~_.m. Sun .. Recital '1all in Balboa Park. Th' :~rposc is to raise funds' "Club will present a mid-, fOT music equI~P I ~ nl and instruments for night'reading of verse on June 7'underprivile,tJ , ::\.;UQg music students. at the Unicorn Theater. 7456 La. There will !>t, ~,;;'\ nation of $1 for ~dultsJ Jolla Blvd.. . . 50 cents forchll r" . ' PHI ALPHA 1'II(IA·~I&C ""'rofessor Albert O'Briend , The club is Dr. John R. Theo'... will speak on . 11 .....""'vatican Attitude towar . balde's section of English ,260. italian Fascl. J1I ", • -,,-a.m. Thurs., AS207B, a course in' creative writing. SINAWIK - ImP" t:ll mecting for all memo Theobalde. professor of En· bers to votc on ,,,, "It'unlforms. 11 a.m. Thurs.. ' glish. said the rea,ding was t~e ASI05. u' . SPURS - Imp"' ,.]t, meeting 3 p.m. Thurs .. : second of its ,kind. The first was presented last 'summer .with .. very favorable results. .' HeY Gu ~.ys "& Girls! Members of the class partici· ....' - - - - pating in the reading are Ahmad Have I') "):ceived your own Azarmi. Mrs. Ruth Dirks. Donna key I. \ 'The Church" . Gordon. ,Robert Stewart, Jack AvailJ: :, - FREE - at Thomas, . George Harter, Christopher Graham. Patricia John60fi,g 1.:lCajon BI,vd., son. Harry Polkenhorn, Milton corn:'i':~ e"Come all to Sava·ge ••. Lee Richards, .and. ~eChurch" Margar Scarborough. ~ Offer el~ ~~s May 31. 1968Camus' Stranger and "Gospels in Matthew will be shown before 6 '!1g this ad the readings,ThElObalde said, .j, AMeli. -; Ticket Agenc~: ' :'There is no admission charge for the readings. ' ' 260" {j-~-- BlIY AT FACTORY DISCOUNT PRICES· , Newest in Swimwear . and Ycirdage --- fACtO . . SECONDS DilCONliNUED STOCK . 5]-Sl()'5 VAU'" to UJ., ••0 " LkfUto. Of ""U. \un COIIONADO SUR. SHOP 7~-J n. - SAN OlIGO (OIIIM , ..... , OItH MONDAY f)tMJ 1A1U10A" 10-4. So .m~thing for yo~r Mother. .3'814 - 5~h Avenue San Diego ,92 1,03 ' STUDENT SPECIAL Gr~phics, J e~elrr, 'Stit~hery, P~ottery, Furniture,Prinis, ~ ~ater~.Coi~rs.& Oils, etc'. ,~ W s~ld on consigllmen~ - with this ad Fish & Chips 75 c Dinner includes Cole Slaw, Sour Dough ' , Garlic Bread, and a beautiful view oJ the oce')n . . . , Overlooking the OeMn • , , at the Foot Bril1g:'u~ dH~ something .. of Grand Avenue in PaCIfiC '. , uS~$:s:sS:S;SSSS;S:S'sStS:SSSS:$,s:~ ($ . ' i ' ;z tS$SSS< sSts: ,,' CoJllt' " " cll2 we:U'find the motb~r . . ~ hi or~an 27 4.'9594 _~vcl~ill~~ 8- D,lill':fI,trc THURSDAY, MAY 23, 1968 ".,- ',Choc Sportsman 'Now Head: Of Greek Track and Field ' ", Charles (Choc) Sportsman, and 1950; Jack Razetto Na- hurdles in 1965; and Donald who retired in January ailer tional Amateur Ath'letic Shy•. second place in the 12020 years as head coach of Union champion high jumper yard hurdles at'the NAAU SDS's track and field team, in 1950; Larry Godfrey, NCAA championships in 1966. · The decisions of the Athletics Board this year regarding the is now serving as national ad· champion of the 44O.yard "The highlights of my ca· sending of teams to post·seasonchampionship competition isa viser to the Greek track and reer," Choc said, "came in , classic example ofa failure to commtinicate. field program in Athem~. 1965 and 1966 when my Aztec At a meeting Tuesday the board decided to Selected by the AssoCiation cross country and track and field teams were NCAA'cham. send five of coach Dick'Wells' track'and field Helenique D'Athletisme pions. Until 1965," he said, performers to the NCAA college'division'fin. Amateur, Choc' was to reor· ','no team had ever won chamalsJunc,Htat Hayward: California, and the' ganize the trackaitd f~eld p.ro· pionships in bQth sports." NCAA university'dlvlsTonfinalS 'hi-Berkeley- ,_gram of Greec.~, saId DICk , ' Coach olthe Year onJune 13·15, and Wells is dissatisfied. ,Wells1- SDS-tl'ack-e.oach-,_ ~1966 Sportsman was se· . "The board has been extremely' inconsist. "Greece uses a club system," lected track and field coach ent in its policy concerning national cham~ Wells said, "and in past years of the yea'r by the NCAA. pionship com,lletition," said Wells. "Coaches' has ,su~ere~ from a lack ofor· Previously; he had been cited · work toward the national-championshios:lt's gan.Izatlon. . for the Helms Hall of Fame the culmination of the season, I'm prejudiced"of course, but 1 Since Sportsman has taken for track arid field. While the feel my kids rate with anyone and I'm not satisfied;" over, ~he. Gr~ek ~thletes have Aztecs were members of the . The h'angup appear~ to be that at the start of this year the' ~e.en 10 .1Oternatl,?nal compe· National Association of Inter· . '. board had no se~ policy concerning post.season travel to cham. bt~on ,~Ith good success, he . collegiate Athletics, he was, pionships .because this is the (irst -year we've had enough' said. My - ~th.letes hav~s~~ chairman of the association's money to do it. • . . . s~men~tlOnal records,_ national ti"ack and field ,com· . The swimming team got a trip to the nationals earlier this . Sports~an~aid in a ~etter t? . mittee. year after the board, had initi.llly turned them down. The W~Il.s, and} am qu~te opt!· Choc maae the All·Texas -reversal cam.e in a series of telephone calls after the meeting mIstlC· that Greec~ wIll have intercollegiate football team which didn't include all the members of the board.. ~ome representa~Ive"athletes as fullback in his sophomore The swimming team didn't win the confer;Emce, yet it took a 1O.the 1968 OlympIcs, '_ . year at North .Texas State i4man team to the finals in Atlanta. .' . '. . . In Charge of European Games University., He also was a , . The track team has 22 i.ndividuals whoinet the qualifying With -between yo an.d. 80 . . sprinter on tlie 'track team . ~ standards for the college· division finals .along with both reo athl~tes under hiS traIn1Og, and at one time held the ." lay teamsan~ Wells asked the board to send 15. '. .' Sportsma!1 heads a staff of school record in the 100·yard . _ Track Finals Held In California . . SIX. coaches ~nd a docto~. .. ..'" _ -" . _ . _. There aI:e five Greek coaches:' dash eften seconds flat. Wells saId he felt- he would have no problem taking his 15 and - one A . , men to the finals, especially af1er the swimming team":got.ifs --W'lli ."},encanl - fW~I~ trip and since the track finals are held in California. "I went P~l ~ms~n,. ~~ff!er y -0 ~ to the Board and gave them the facts, and Ithought they were y an UIS .ISpO. . satisfi~d, DUt then 1 ~oui1aout I co~ld t~ke ~v~'. And they ~ent Ch~~~:~~~~e ~~!9 a~Orobe 10 five because, four had met the unIversity dIVISIon champIOn· Game 'Ath dUh' petahn ship qualifying' standards, which again is no set policy;" said 'letes ~ 10 ex ents dant diS a '. Wells. ,"-' ." '.. . re. pec e 0 0 very EVERYDAY LOW PRICES "W' th I t t b fi h . ' . well 10 thIS meet. . Reg. Soundsville .. e re e as ones· 0 come e ore t e Board thIS year, Su h .'. t 45 RPM ..... $ .98 .69 and I just'don't know what to expect. They've been,consistent t c ~n ;ss~nmen whas in their inconsistency," he said. . : no~ew or . pp sman, as e LP ......... 3.79 . 2.59 Wells also co'uldn't be blamed for being 'dissatisfied with had been a Del?a~ment of LP. . . . . . . .. 4.49 3.39 -the total aHotment of scholarships 'giveri>tto track and field.. It's ~tagte rel?res~ntaGt1ve 10 coaMch. .............-4 LP .. .. .. ... 5.79 3.99 LP . .. . . . ... 6.79 4.89 true that, football and basketball are' the money.mcikers· and Ilanys' 1~ I nICS, 1o. deMrmar,ty, a· . ...-a, J apan an eXlco 4639 College Ave.~ S.D. 286·0201 should get, the l1l a]Oflty; but one wonders whether track has While at 50S S ts· .,been fairly dealt with. Trac~. i~ one o~ the.major sp0rts;a:good . ,guided a long list ~~r w~r~~ .' ,.track team keeps the .pubhcIty c~m1Og. In the spring. Meets and national champions The ~uch ~s the West Coast Relays and the M~: ~AC .Relays are big list includes-William Steele events aS'far a~ track goes, and good sho'wY1O~s In,these meets the 01 .. b d' ' , are good for a school's program. I ' . .. • y.~P"c. roa Jump ., .... '. . . "champIon 10 '1948; Robert " . . ' 12 Gra~ts SUffiCient - Wells .' '. Smith, a ,:two·winner of the <. USC ~ track program IS probably the best in the nation and, NCAA pole vault title in 1949 '. Isa~a]o~partofthatsc~oQl~athleticprogramh~ellshassaid ,_ that with :12 full grants his team co.uId run with anybody. He' may not get that many, however,'as hi's share will come out of , .the 20 general grants which. Al Olsen,athletic director,.will di· vide among all the other sports beside football and basket· · ball. , / ' ~Wells said that he asked the Athletics Board for some dire~. tion ~s to where the track program should go, but they 'didn't tell him anything. .. With the' athletic situat(on up in the air. like it is the Ath· . ·letics Board can't be blamed f01"'·not ,knowing what'to do in a situation where there is no precedent. But we'think the man's ..got a legitimate gripe.. . .~-'~,~.~~~.~--~~-~--.~~~~~.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ . • r-." :- 'Are you"iriformed, uninformed or li1isinform~d about '~ -COMMUNISM? Plan now to attend the HOUSE? of Kahmirlndian Imports :. - , NO SCHOOL' '.' .,4226 Adams Kensington , .. ", .' 283-0698 " . ~ONQAY ., .'. .. .' ....... ' .. ' , . • . ": .. ,", SAN'DJEGO LEADERSHIP TRAINING SCHOOL OF ANTI-COMMUNISM . . . .. ' 4 QAYS-JULY 16-19, 1968 .... . . HANALEI HOTEL, 2270 HOTEL CIRCLE, SAN .DIEGO For 0\.\' kind~ of Ir.Jia Boy Shirts. . : Nehr~ Jackets, Rare, e~clusive, . personai gifts . A Faculty of Specia!ists will instruct on Theoretic,al and Pra'ctical Problems ~J, .' ' . ··F:.·'~E""'E" RPS,E ~r,CARNAT/O.N ... . " '.',: ~ '. '. .,'·BO.,UTONNIERIE , .- p' . .>-:.,' ,- . It.. I "'CR Rl S'.DEL;'~(~iERR0·. FLORIS'T . . ~6358' De(:·terr~-BI~d.. ..'. ,286-452'2 ", " ·U, ' '. -. ,.. ~ . • • .,.: . . FACULTY INCLUDES .................................... - REGISTRATION FORM . <, ,.. , Free Rose or Carnation', Boutonn;ere' ~. ·Incluc;l~d.·with e!3ch~'Cor:~t;lge :o'ver, $2 .50 '.: 'All-you. have to do isle" us. I.'. . .<, w"ic,?.~ne you ~ontl \: . ') ' ,: .... " I·. .. THE SCHOOL IS FREE TO All Fred SchwarzrM.D. Analyst of Com,muriist thought and practice. WaMer Judd, M.O;, . natiQnally recognized alJthority .on U. S. foreign policy. J. D/Ba~e~, Ph.D., Profess~r of . Christian Doctrine, Harding College. Authored 20 books,.on religIon an~ cor:nmuOlsm: .~ Joost Sluis,·M.D., Assistant Clinical Professor of Orthopedic Stlrgery, UnIversIty of Call· forriia.~ Recently returned from Vietnam. Serafin Menocal, Executive of Amencan and Foreign Power Co. Ref""gee frdm Cuba. .., ,. I ':fROM:" " " A limited 'n,..mber of scl'tolarships will be given to students who wish to attend the school and stay ilt'the HANALEI, HOTEL. Scholarship will cover cost of the room and some imeals . Please register me in the San Die'go leadership Traini", School of Anti·Com· munism' to be held in' . the Hanalei Hotel. \ Address C't I y-~--- .. :_____ State _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Zone- - - ................ ...........•.... ..~ , Name ___ :.. ______ -------------~---.-- Ju!y 16·19. 1968. . D I wish to apply for I5choJa,.hlp.· ~ . ~' . ' .. ~.~ Please send your regi~tration form to: San Diego leadership Training Sc;bool of Antl·Communls m, , Spreckels Bldg., Room 328, 121 Broadway, San Diego, California 92101. 'P~~ohe233.064~. . :!' 'OFFER GOOD UNT1l)U~E 30, 1968 1_' ... ___ ~ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ - . - - - - - - - - - - - ...... - - - - - - - .-----~---:I -":- ._--'