their lives ended instantly bodies found buried deep in

4
’WS E ,ay 1011 , lose oVo’ lie. Per. ,Vre afternoon. $68.0u. us carried tail year. 2111111111 Cs 4.554, .0W" do. WEN" Mum GA UN allOt" CAN ’A 00N RAIN Cr USED mow 11ƒ111111 tellites rings scussed LANE CRASH KILLS 4 SENIORS Their Lives Ended Instantly By 011.1. LEONARD pr. Emil Lengyel cited an asser- of natienalism as the reason new stirrings behind the satel- curtain in ri speech in Concert I yesteolay. If America can help them the -curtain satellite countries; to themselses, there may, in the ’Ire. be no :satellite countries," nated author and New York foreign correspondent noted. The most oirring thing is that matter what Eastern European try you enter, you will find re complaining in public about regime." Dr. Lengyel pointed t This k camforting, became se.. r, they wouldn’t dare Pl, it KONG STALINIST POLICY I.Prrool, who makes annual ta Europe. told his audience in 1953 the Stalinist policy still strong in the Eastern n countries. ’The feeling was," said Dr. el, "that if the Communist became fragmented, it would According to Dr. Lengyel, the Karim uprising in 1956 was a that Russian denationalization island Kremlin communism" not working in the Iron Cur- countries. %ovirr UNioN AWAKENED ,1 Hungary in 1956 n L. ::... satellite court - Dr. I , . , sad pointed out. .se th. -r.,..iet Union was ,:..iled 1,. ’i, middy that no Itar how stiong the dictator- ,the strongest regime will fail ore public opinion. Aahniugh Russian tanks crushed Hungarians." the speaker con- "it WAS the Russians who , . iareality. crushed. The un- made Russia give a greater UM of freedom to her satel- . REGITATE ECONOMY The speaker noted that Soviet fonts at regulating the econo- s of the nations in the Eastern pearl bloc hase been largely I Cuban Ex -Prime Minister HARRY TURA TONY DEVINE DIANE HANSEN KAREN GASSENBERG VoL 51 SAN JOSE, CALIFORNIA, TUESDAY, MARCH 3, 1964 No. 87 ccessful. ’The countries." he said, "have anted their national currencies te Soviet efforts." The lecture, third in the spring ’,ter lecture series, was jointly ....NI by (*ollege Lecture itee and the San Jose State meat at Political Science, SPUR, PACE To Interview findidates E iris political par- i’AcE, will hold three days this week in tInion for prospective ....I representative ASH mm a two-year :iiiervieW persons ...endive Positions from 3:30 to 5:30. salmis-0 interviews will be Tnurgelay and Friday after- front It; to 5 30. Signori are available in the College ron "I s.ould like to encourage any- it. ate, her Goa*, dorm resident, ilim’’ter or Independent apart - hit dweller interested in progres’ government to apply me- Tuesday, Thursday or Fri- ir slated Frank Barelsley, ft eochairman. PA o, the newly formed can,- Nitical party, will begin its tenisss Thursday, 2:30 to 5:30 it and conclude them during the ’isle on Friday. ’We Would especially like to en- M’Agf, committers to amity for ACK hacking as the ASH has had Y littlerepresentation from this ’if the campus commun- r Frpci hest, PACE chairman PLANE CRASHESA Paradise Airlines Constel- lation like this one crashed Sunday in the Sierra -Nevada Mountains on a flight from San Jose to Lake Tahoe’s south shore. All 85 passen- e s ress oniao nere Manuel Antonio de Varona, ex - prime minister of Cuba, will hold a public press conference at 10:30 a.m, tomorrow in J208. Fifty-two-year-old Varona, co- ordinator-general of the Cuban Democratic Revolutionary Front. held the post of prime minister under the constitutional govern- ment of Dr. Carlos Prio until ii collapsed in 1952. Varona, an attorney, hexiled from Cuba three times and 23 S as been has been imprisoned twice as a rebel. At one time Varona tried to uni- fy all the rebel groups against the Batista regime. Ile managed to get in contact with Fidel Castro and both men agreed to try to unite all the rebel groups. Later, Varona apposed Castro’s government and helped organize the (T)RE in 1960. His interest in politics started YAF Features Tape Of Oswald Debate A tape recording of 1.Ale Ilarvey Oswald, accused assassin of the late President Kennedy. participat- ing in a debate with an anti-Com- munist Cuban, will be featured at the first spring semester meeting of Young Americans for Freedom IYAFI tonight at 8 in ED1.00. Oswald, one time member of the Fair Play for Cuba Committee, appeared in the debate on a New Orleans television station in 1962 Today’s Weather Fair today and tomorrow but char.., of occasional showers. High la -54 with lows of 31-33. Northwest winds from 10-15 I mph. lin 1924 after he was arrested and fined for protest demonstrations. In 1926 he was elected president of the Strident Association of the Camaguey Institute- and founded the Student’s Voice magazine. In 1940 he was elected to Con- gress from Camaguey Province in Cuba and was elected Senator oi the Republic in 1944. part acamp Positions Open For March 14, 15 Positions remain open for 23 men students as Spartacampers for the weekend of March 14 and 15 at Asilomar in Monterey, Spartacamp is planned to be a "think weekend" this year, accord- ing to Bill Erdman, Spartacamp director. Discussion.s will focus on such questions as "Where am I going and why?" or from another per- spective. "What should I like to say I’ve accomplished in life?" David Remington, Spartacamp Committee member, states the camp’s purpose as being "to help students develop and become aware of their views on problems and issues that are important to themselves, their college and their society. Spartacamp seeks to do this by means of serious strident discussions not usually available on campus." Tickets for the 23 remaining spots will he available to men stu- dents at the Student Affairs Busi- ness office, ItI, behind the book- store. Ticket price of $12 includes transportation, meals and lodging. Segovia Andres gers aboard, including four SJS students, were killed instantly. The airline makes regular flights from the Bay Area to Tahoe Valley, which is near ski resorts and Nevada gambling. ...15111 TIM WILSON seat from death High School Friends Die In Tragedy Fate has dealt a cruel blow to Sharon Reilly. Less than a week ago two ot her roommates had been her class- mates since high school. Their names were Karen Gassenherg and Diane Hansen. Now they are gone, victims of the Paradise Airlines plane crash which also took the lives of two other &IS students and 81 other people. Karen and Diane had planned the trip for weeks, Miss Reilly said while appearing remarkably com- posed for her obvious emotional , state. Sharon awl her other two! roommates. Linda Lando and, tonight in Bobbi Zagorin, said they "thought ahout going:" they "thought it Ticket% are available at Student would he fun." , Af fairs 111141111,01 Office, RI. All five girls were from Mercy I Piles’ for students in $1.50, and High School, Burlingame. I 32.50 for the public. Death One Seat Away By RICH ’.RI) DOTY One semi :,.,:f1 death. ’Phis was the situation . rig Tim Wilson, 21, 1567 Loch faine, San Jose. in connection a Ph the crash Sunday of the Paradise Airlines Super Con. oellat ion that killed illsT people aboard, includini7 SJS seniors. Wilson, an advertising ma- jor, was one at a group ..1 persons sponsored by a local bar to make the flight. He and a friend home on lease from the Army had ticket, numbered 901h, whereas the doomed flight was 901a. They were told the tickets were all right and were in line to board the plane but a - they approached the aircraft door they were told to wait until all the ticket holders at 901a had boarded. The two men, ss.ho planned 1i I do some gambling while al Tahoe, finally reached the plane door when they were in- formed rally one seat was novk vacant. Wilson told a Stpart an Daily reporter he decided to stay with his friend and let the person behind him go. After letting the other per- son on, Wilson rend his ’,anion became disconia.. or. the trip, hut were a. lived when told hy airline i.fficials that another plane would be flown down from Tahoe to accommodate th. some 15 persons in the same predicament as the SJS stn.. .lent. It was while on a holdover in Oakland on the alternate flight that the passengers were told the flight was can- oelled and that they would he returned to San Jose by huis Wilson ’thanked God they were Iiieky," when he found later that the plane had been reported missing. He stared the shock of the disaster only hit lian when he found out tlIr SIM‘ the plane was down The SJS strident stated it would have been his first Hight hut he cuiv, doubts if Ii,’ a’ ill fly for I.c Segavla Here on Ill perform Concert Hall at 8:13 . Bodies Found Buried Deep in Sierra Snow Ry .101’ I 011r -moors Were 1111101Id 1/11 kill’ .1 the cr..-11 of a hair -engine airliner saiiidas ii, \ asada. %s o’ i ir ilisasier in the slate.- Iii-iiiru. reckage of ’he Paradise plaric %.-ier- lat morning. ,caitereil mi -fell, a 111011111l1111-1,1, Hal e.1.1 iol 1/1, P aliforniaNct ail.’ border. ’Ft.t, of the siiiilents. Karen C..,--enherg. 21 -tear -old educa- tion major. and Diane ,lie lb i 21. -ociologt Major. satte ? eceentrtiail’- it Tttit J’ lilt, TIles were both Iron’ classniaic- at \len, High sl111/01 titer.’, Tolls Deallle. 22. -orial -rionee major froni sail I irk". sa- Ilie ’4,11 tel ’71.111fOril -Saint roa, I! itesine. klo. .1 an, II. ol 1/11 Isrl1,11 was Des lot.% roommate. liana lora. 2 f. 1.1’ front N1artinez. I In r,u ss as a lollbark on the 1’0,2 wain. Both men hied ai .121 a. II iii "IA110E-110L ND earning III pacriger- mei 1o,,as hound leer’lliP lii e -hi and gattilding I,,,k,. I iii it snow -toriri as it apple:wiled I dime 1,, -milli shore S unday morning. Search parties had hf-eri held baek irs the -Mlle blinding PnowAortri in which the airliner disappeared. Late reports reseal the plane lou iii 8.701141,o1 1,111 So it tried tie oser the mouritain and land al Ibniglas-Talioe Airport. a It’ ma mile- ats as Impact was not direct. The plane liii the ridge, tail lar-t The hark sertion torn off, shearing trims iii the surroundinr area. ENI:1\11- o NIOKI ti; George Costa of Bijou. firo Ili 111, -11111. Of Ilra-h a lerlday, reported one of the cn::oe- N..1- -1111 -inolsiog. indiratino there mat have been some kind met lire. An Air Force doctor, who was flottri iii to laliroptre. re- ported there- %ere time sursitor-. The bodies are covered still. about four feet of tog attempt- to gel them out difficult ’Iltriff". mate it will take two or three before ilir 111.11,11 Of the bOdil-. letifil. still he taken to \1111.11ii. t’,.. -,,et (if las County_ where ifientfication as ill le atiempied. The bodies are being britic.1111 out Ito snit -cal, tracked te hicles manned h Air Force ...earrli and reoite men .111.1 lice -el aohinteers. FUSEL ACT I \T 11 1 Biggest piece of tnrccisagt V..1. 111, 1 oll-t,11,iti.m.- entitle-reel tail .eetion. The :it-i, reniaimul infant. Other pieces were- -natter...I 1Wer 1,1 saoral hi:mired let Final radii, report- indirated the plaiir approat long fahoe ..%irport from the north. r the lake. tole, .1 la-rnioting snow -tries in and made sotial rim The airport does not 11.1ke 1,1111ilic- I or iircittinetil 1.11111111g.. COI ID 111% P. (.1.1 till It apt. Leroy Alart_ pilot ot the lichi opt, r ’shin -It Iii ’I the orm.ked plane. said that if the plane 1, el IV, If 110 11.11 ii ss,eumlml hal, cleared the ridge and it ’’sir lbe nI, unit (..irsoti iilley. A Cl Aeronautics Board accident Ii) attempt to detcrinine the of the ir British Poet To Discuss Modern Literary Art Stephen Spends’’’. British poet I literary critic, will discuss eon- ;.. wiry authors in a lecture eel "What Is Modern in Mod - Art?" tomorrow. 11:30 am in ’tweet Hall. The distinction between "con- ..rnrstrary" authors such as George Iternard Shaw: arid Sinclair Loss is James Joyce and William Faulkner ASB Execs Oppose Shift Says Larson O.lifornia State Coilege at San James Joyce and Wilimm will he discussed hy Spendr: An intimate ci W It Ailed Cecil Day Lewis sinoe 1.11111eri_. ate days at Unisersity College. Ox- ford. Spender published his first poems at ripproximately thy same time the other two poets beofia publishing. . All three poets became stronglv anti -Fascist in the 1’!10’s, and Spender (aught with the Republi- can forces during the Spanish Mil ’Ilse name -change of California state colleges was discussed at the california State College Strident Presidents’ Association ICSCSPAI at San Diego last weekend. Representing SJS were Steve Larson, ASH president, and Bob, l’isano, vice-president. Speaking before the group in a ,itiestion and answer session Friday night, Chancellor Glenn S. Dumke, said names of all 18 state collesteo would he changed "as soon as thc ’students and faculty! realize i!.. need for a change." Larson speculated S.1S may b. ’hanged to (7SC.S.1 after the nco oillege president replaces Dr. Jr.hi, T Wahlquist next year. Reason for the name change. Dumke, is for recruitment purposes The idea of a unified system carries more weight in the East and other areas of teacher recruitment. At their meeting the strident body presidents were generally op- posed to the new system. Larson reported they feel it restricts in- dividualism of each school. During World War IT. Spender ved in the loom-tan National Fire Service, and edited the review "Horizon." Follawing the war he became a coanselor in the seetinn of letters of UNESCO Presently the co-editor of the ’es eon’ "Encounter." Spender!. has held several teaching posts at American colleges and universities. He has taught at Sarah Lawrence College. the I.’nr.asity of Cincin- nati, the Univer- o of California and Northwesten: Open la the .:! f?Iblie, the lecture is spons... I r r ho College Lecture Commo... :he Assoriateit Strident Body ano the Department f Frolish Audubon Film I aptler lintl 11’ I IIIS own films ta. 1.7 ,.11 "Our ("hanging Heritrom- in the Men’s Gymnasium. The film, part of the Audubon film series, presents a tour of three areas of the West, located pantie- ularly in eastern Utah and south- western Colorad.. Brought to the campus try the Santa Clara Valley Audubon soci- ’ety, the prrigram has been highly acclaimed both for content Allfi presentation.

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’WS

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Per.

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afternoon.

$68.0u.

us carried tail year.

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LANE CRASH KILLS 4 SENIORS Their Lives Ended Instantly

By 011.1. LEONARD

pr. Emil Lengyel cited an asser-

of natienalism as the reason

new stirrings behind the satel-

curtain in ri speech in Concert

I yesteolay.

If America can help them the

-curtain satellite countries; to

themselses, there may, in the

’Ire. be no :satellite countries,"

nated author and New York

foreign correspondent noted.

The most oirring thing is that

matter what Eastern European

try you enter, you will find

�re complaining in public about

regime." Dr. Lengyel pointed

t This k camforting, became

se.. r, they wouldn’t dare

Pl, it

KONG STALINIST POLICY

I.Prrool, who makes annual

ta Europe. told his audience

in 1953 the Stalinist policy

still strong in the Eastern

n countries.

’The feeling was," said Dr.

el, "that if the Communist

became fragmented, it would

According to Dr. Lengyel, the

Karim uprising in 1956 was a

that Russian denationalization

island Kremlin communism"

not working in the Iron Cur-

countries.

%ovirr UNioN AWAKENED

� ,1 Hungary in 1956 n L. ::... satellite court-

Dr. I , . , sad pointed out. �

.se th.� -r.,..iet Union was

,:..iled 1,. ’i,� middy that no

Itar how stiong the dictator-,the strongest regime will fail

ore public opinion.

�Aahniugh Russian tanks crushed Hungarians." the speaker con-

"it WAS the Russians who , . iareality. crushed. The un-

made Russia give a greater UM of freedom to her satel- .

REGITATE ECONOMY

The speaker noted that Soviet fonts at regulating the econo-s of the nations in the Eastern

pearl bloc hase been largely I

Cuban Ex-Prime Minister

HARRY TURA TONY DEVINE DIANE HANSEN KAREN GASSENBERG

VoL 51 SAN JOSE, CALIFORNIA, TUESDAY, MARCH 3, 1964 No. 87

ccessful.

’The countries." he said, "have anted their national currencies te Soviet efforts."

The lecture, third in the spring ’,ter lecture series, was jointly ....NI by (*ollege Lecture

itee and the San Jose State meat at Political Science,

SPUR, PACE To Interview findidates

E

iris political par-i’AcE, will hold

three days this week in tInion for prospective

....I representative ASH

’ mm a two-year :iiiervieW persons ...endive Positions

from 3:30 to 5:30. salmis-0 interviews will be Tnurgelay and Friday after-

front It; to 5 30. Signori are available in the College ron

"I s.ould like to encourage any-it. ate, her Goa*, dorm resident, ilim’’ter or Independent apart-hit dweller interested in progres’

government to apply me- Tuesday, Thursday or Fri-ir slated Frank Barelsley, ft eochairman. PA o, the newly formed can,-Nitical party, will begin its tenisss Thursday, 2:30 to 5:30 it and conclude them during the ’isle on Friday.

’We Would especially like to en-M’Agf, committers to amity for ACK hacking as the ASH has had Y littlerepresentation from this ’if the campus commun-r Frpci hest, PACE chairman

PLANE CRASHES�A Paradise Airlines Constel-

lation like this one crashed Sunday in the

Sierra -Nevada Mountains on a flight from San

Jose to Lake Tahoe’s south shore. All 85 passen-

e s ress oniao nere Manuel Antonio de Varona, ex-

prime minister of Cuba, will hold

a public press conference at 10:30

a.m, tomorrow in J208.

Fifty-two-year-old Varona, co-

ordinator-general of the Cuban

Democratic Revolutionary Front.

held the post of prime minister

under the constitutional govern-

ment of Dr. Carlos Prio until ii

collapsed in 1952.

Varona, an attorney, hexiled from Cuba three times and 23 S as been

has been imprisoned twice as a

rebel.

At one time Varona tried to uni-

fy all the rebel groups against the

Batista regime. Ile managed to get

in contact with Fidel Castro and

both men agreed to try to unite

all the rebel groups.

Later, Varona apposed Castro’s

government and helped organize

the (T)RE in 1960.

His interest in politics started

YAF Features Tape Of Oswald Debate

A tape recording of 1.Ale Ilarvey

Oswald, accused assassin of the

late President Kennedy. participat-

ing in a debate with an anti-Com-

munist Cuban, will be featured at

the first spring semester meeting

of Young Americans for Freedom

IYAFI tonight at 8 in ED1.00.

Oswald, one time member of the

Fair Play for Cuba Committee,

appeared in the debate on a New

Orleans television station in 1962

Today’s Weather Fair today and tomorrow but

char.., of occasional showers.

High la-54 with lows of 31-33.

Northwest winds from 10-15

I mph.

lin 1924 after he was arrested and

fined for protest demonstrations.

In 1926 he was elected president

of the Strident Association of the

Camaguey Institute- and founded

the Student’s Voice magazine.

In 1940 he was elected to Con-

gress from Camaguey Province in

Cuba and was elected Senator oi

the Republic in 1944.

part acamp Positions Open For March 14, 15

Positions remain open for 23 men

students as Spartacampers for the

weekend of March 14 and 15 at

Asilomar in Monterey,

Spartacamp is planned to be a "think weekend" this year, accord-ing to Bill Erdman, Spartacamp director.

Discussion.s will focus on such questions as "Where am I going and why?" or from another per-spective. "What should I like to say I’ve accomplished in life?"

David Remington, Spartacamp Committee member, states the camp’s purpose as being "to help students develop and become aware of their views on problems and issues that are important to themselves, their college and their society. Spartacamp seeks to do this by means of serious strident discussions not usually available on campus."

Tickets for the 23 remaining spots will he available to men stu-dents at the Student Affairs Busi-ness office, ItI, behind the book-store. Ticket price of $12 includes transportation, meals and lodging.

Segovia Andres

gers aboard, including four SJS students, were killed instantly. The airline makes regular flights from the Bay Area to Tahoe Valley, which is near ski resorts and Nevada gambling.

...�����������15111

TIM WILSON seat from death

High School Friends Die In Tragedy

Fate has dealt a cruel blow to

Sharon Reilly. Less than a week ago two ot her

roommates had been her class-mates since high school. Their names were Karen Gassenherg and

Diane Hansen. Now they are gone, victims of the Paradise Airlines plane crash which also took the lives of two other &IS students and 81 other people.

Karen and Diane had planned the trip for weeks, Miss Reilly said while appearing remarkably com-posed for her obvious emotional , state. Sharon awl her other two! roommates. Linda Lando and, tonight in Bobbi Zagorin, said they "thought ahout going:" they "thought it

Ticket% are available at Student

would he fun." , Af fairs 111141111,01 Office, RI.

All five girls were from Mercy I Piles’ for students in $1.50, and

High School, Burlingame. I 32.50 for the public.

Death�One Seat Away

By RICH ’.RI) DOTY One semi :,.,:f1 death. ’Phis was the situation .

rig Tim Wilson, 21, 1567 Loch faine, San Jose. in connection a Ph the crash Sunday of the

Paradise Airlines Super Con.

oellat ion that killed illsT people aboard, includini7 SJS seniors.

Wilson, an advertising ma-jor, was one at� a group ..1

persons sponsored by a local bar to make the flight. He and a friend home on lease

from the Army had ticket, numbered 901h, whereas the

doomed flight was 901a. They were told the tickets

were all right and were in

line to board the plane but a -they approached the aircraft

door they were told to wait

until all the ticket holders at 901a had boarded.

The two men, ss.ho planned 1i I do some gambling while al

Tahoe, finally reached the

plane door when they were in-formed rally one seat was novk

vacant. Wilson told a Stpart an

Daily reporter he decided to

stay with his friend and let the person behind him go.

After letting the other per-son on, Wilson rend his ’,anion became disconia..�

or. the trip, hut were a.� lived when told hy airline i.fficials that another plane would be flown down from

Tahoe to accommodate th.� some 15 persons in the same

predicament as the SJS stn..

.lent.

It was while on a holdover

in Oakland on the alternate flight that the passengers were told the flight was can-oelled and that they would he returned to San Jose by huis

Wilson �’thanked God they were Iiieky," when he found later that the plane had been reported missing. He stared the shock of the disaster only hit lian when he found out

tlIr SIM‘ the plane was down The SJS strident stated it

would have been his first

Hight hut he cuiv, doubts if Ii,’ a’ ill fly for I.c

Segavla

Here on Ill perform

Concert Hall at 8:13 .

Bodies Found Buried Deep in Sierra Snow

Ry .10�1’ I 011r -moors Were 1111101Id 1/11� kill’ .1 the

cr..-11 of a hair-engine airliner saiiidas ii, \ asada. %s o’ i ir ilisasier in the slate.- Iii-iiiru.

reckage of ’he Paradise plaric %.�-ier-lat morning. ,caitereil mi -fell, a 111011111l1111-1,1, Hal e.1.1 iol

1/1, P alifornia�Nct ail.’ border. ’Ft.t, of the siiiilents. Karen C..,--enherg. 21 -tear-old educa-

tion major. and Diane ,lie lb i 21. -ociologt Major. sat�te

?eceentrtiail’- it Tttit J’ lilt, TIles were both Iron’ classniaic- at \len, High sl111/01 titer.’,

Tolls Deallle. 22. -orial -rionee major froni sail I irk". �sa-Ilie ’4,11 tel ’71.111fOril -Saint roa, I! itesine. klo. .1 an, II. ol

1/11� Isrl1,11 was Des lot.% roommate. liana lora. 2 f. 1.1’ front N1artinez. I In r,u ss as a lollbark on the 1’0,2 wain. Both men hied ai .121 a. II iii

"IA110E-110L ND earning III pa�criger- mei 1o,,as

hound leer’lliP lii e

-hi and gattilding I,,,k,. I

iii it snow -toriri as it apple:wiled I dime 1,, -milli shore S unday morning.

Search parties had hf-eri held baek irs the -Mlle blinding PnowAortri in which the airliner disappeared.

Late reports reseal the plane lou iii 8.701141,o1 1,111

So it tried tie oser the mouritain and land al Ibniglas-Talioe Airport. a It’ ma mile- ats as

Impact was not direct. The plane liii the ridge, tail lar-t The hark sertion torn off, shearing trims iii the surroundinr area.

ENI:1\11- o NIOKI ti; George Costa of Bijou. firo Ili 111, -11�111. Of Ilra-h a

lerlday, reported one of the cn::oe�- N..1- -1111 -inolsiog. indiratino there mat have been some kind met lire.

An Air Force doctor, who was flottri iii to la�liroptre. re-ported there- %ere time sursitor-.

The bodies are covered still. about four feet of tog attempt- to gel them out difficult ’Ilt�riff". mate it will take two or three before ilir 1�11�.11,�11

Of the bOdil�-.

letifil. still he taken to \1111.11ii. t’,.. -,,et (if las County_ where ifientfication as ill le� atiempied.

The bodies are being britic.1111 out Ito snit -cal, tracked te� hicles manned h Air Force ...earrli and reo�ite men .111.1 lice -el aohinteers.

FUSEL ACT I \T 11 1 Biggest piece of tnrccisagt� V..1. 111, 1 oll-t,�11,iti.m.-

entitle-reel tail .eetion. The :it-i, reniaimul infant. Other pieces were- -natter...I 1Wer 1,1 sao�ral hi:mired let

Final radii, report- indirated the plaiir approat long fahoe ..%irport from the north. r the lake. tole, .1

la-rnioting snow -tries in and made sotial rim The airport does not 11.1ke 1,11�11ilic- I or iirc�ittine�til

1.11111111g..

COI ID 111% P. (.1.1 till It apt. Leroy Alart_ pilot ot the lichi opt, r ’shin -It Iii ’I the

orm.ked plane. said that if the plane 1, el IV, If 110 11.1�1

ii ss,eumlml hal, cleared the ridge and it ’’sir lbe nI, unit (..irsoti iilley.

A Cl Aeronautics Board accident Ii) attempt to detcrinine the of the ir

British Poet To Discuss Modern Literary Art

Stephen Spends’’’. British poet I literary critic, will discuss eon-

;.. wiry authors in a lecture eel "What Is Modern in Mod -

Art?" tomorrow. 11:30 am in ’tweet Hall. The distinction between "con-

�..rnrstrary" authors such as George Iternard Shaw: arid Sinclair Loss is James Joyce and William Faulkner

ASB Execs Oppose Shift Says Larson

O.lifornia State Coilege at San

James Joyce and Wilimm will he discussed hy Spendr:

An intimate ci W It Ailed Cecil Day Lewis sinoe 1.11111eri_.

ate days at Unisersity College. Ox-ford. Spender published his first poems at ripproximately thy same time the other two poets beofia publishing.

. All three poets became stronglv anti -Fascist in the 1’!�10’s, and Spender (aught with the Republi-can forces during the Spanish Mil

’Ilse name-change of California state colleges was discussed at the california State College Strident Presidents’ Association ICSCSPAI at San Diego last weekend.

Representing SJS were Steve Larson, ASH president, and Bob, l’isano, vice-president.

Speaking before the group in a ,itiestion and answer session Friday night, Chancellor Glenn S. Dumke, said names of all 18 state collesteo would he changed "as soon as thc ’students and faculty! realize i!.. need for a change."

Larson speculated S.1S may b. ’hanged to (7SC.S.1 after the nco oillege president replaces Dr. Jr.hi, T Wahlquist next year.

Reason for the name change. � Dumke, is for recruitment purposes The idea of a unified system carries more weight in the East and other areas of teacher recruitment.

At their meeting the strident body presidents were generally op-posed to the new system. Larson reported they feel it restricts in-dividualism of each school.

During World War IT. Spender ved in the loom-tan National

Fire Service, and edited the review

"Horizon." Follawing the war he became a coanselor in the seetinn of letters of UNESCO

Presently the co-editor of the ’es eon’ "Encounter." Spender!. has

held several teaching posts at American colleges and universities.

He has taught at Sarah Lawrence

College. the I.’nr.asity of Cincin-nati, the Univer- o of California

and Northwesten: Open la the .:!�� � f?Iblie, the

lecture is spons..�.� I r r ho College

Lecture Commo...� :he Assoriateit Strident Body ano the Department

f Frolish

Audubon Film

I aptler lintl 11’

I IIIS own films ta. 1.7 ’ ,.11

"Our ("hanging Heritrom- in the Men’s Gymnasium.

The film, part of the Audubon film series, presents a tour of three areas of the West, located pantie-ularly in eastern Utah and south-western Colorad..

Brought to the campus try the

Santa Clara Valley Audubon soci-

’ety, the prrigram has been highly

acclaimed both for content Allfi

� presentation.

IIPP""

1�SPARTAN DAILY Tuesda> .11Iarch 3, 19t34

Spattati214 Entered as second class rmett�r April 24, 1934. al San Joss, California,

under th� act of March 3 ,I179 Member California Newspapers Publishers Association and Aim:1;f Bureau 04 Circulations Published daily by Associated Stud�nts of San Jose Stat� College eac�pt Saturday and Sunday, during coll�g� y��r. Subscription �ccept�d only on � r�rn�inder-of-sernester basis. Full aca-demic y�ar. $9: such sernastar. $4.50. Ofbcampus price per copy, 10 cants. CY 4-6414 � Editorial Ex. 2383, 2384, 2385, 2386. Advertising Est. 2081, 2082, 2003, 2084. Press of Globs Printing Co Officio hours I:45-4:20 p.m. Monday through Friday. Editor RON BOTTINI News Editor ALLAN RISDON Adv. Mgr. GARY GREATHOUSE Day Editor .� BOB PETERSON

Prof Analyzes Student BERKELEY, Calif.

The next time you see a "colleee kid" in sandals, or a bea-d or sloppy clothes, don’t laueh. He is a product of YOUR society

That in essence is the col-lu sion of Dr. Alex C. She�iffs, vice chancellor for student If-fairs on the Berkeley caren’s of the University of CaHorn’)

"If students are atte.y’ !n some areas, the chances 1-^ "-vo society is. too. Students sMply express it in some other e.ay than society.

"Most of today’s college stu-dents are the bumper grin of World War II babies. Thee tived in a family which experienced the struggles and tensions of not knowing whether loved ones would come back from the war.

"The lucky ones experienced being united but even they grew up in homes where pa-ents wanted to make up for lost time. In early childhood the parents’

model was self-centered. Too, a majority of families withdrew

from the political arena after the war.

"It took time for communica-tions to be re-established and �he majority to take over again. in the process, parents became cautious about what children said at the table. Teachers, too, %’ore afraid to be controversial.

"So, the campus extremists ’eft< over, and not the ones to

’he right as in their parents’ day, but those to the left.

"Although it (the mental health movement) did a lot of needed good, it also did a lot of harm," he said. Some twisted Freud’s theories, especially the one in which Freud said ’neu-roses grow out of conflict.’ This was twisted to say ’Don’t let your child have conflicts, he might become neurotic.’"

The natural outgrowth of this misconception. Sherriffs said, was the rise of progressive schools where students were al-lowed to "do whatever they wanted.-

112Mth Max aulman

1.4 tither of "Rolls Round Oa FUN li.!" uu,1 borr

EVOI., SPELLED BACKWARDS IS LOVE

’II (’V n.;�t. His )wart leapt. "I love you Ile cried.

"M, toe, hey!" she cried.

"Tell me," he cried, "are you a girl of expensive tastes71

’No, hey," she cried. "I am a girl of simple tastes."

Ile cried, "for my cruel father sends me an allowance baril, ,rr:,� enough to support life."

"Nloncy does not matter to me," ,’lie eried. "My tastes are simple; my wants are few. Just take me riding in a long, new, yellow convertible and I am content."

"Goodbye," he cried, and ran sway as fast :La his little stumpy legs would carry him, for he had Ile yellow convertible, nor the money to buy one, nor the means to get the money�short of picking up his stingy father by the ankles and shak-ing him till his wallet fell out.

"

* ,iciyazired

He knew he must forget this girl, but lying on hi, pallet at the dormitory, whimpering and moaning, he knew he could not..At

last an idea carne to him: though 1,, did not. have the rnoney to buy a eonvertible. perhaps � to rent one!

Hope reborn, he rushed on his little � . lece, (curious to tell, he was six feet tall, but all his In. .P:.�rial from little stumpy legs) he rushed, I say, to an r. littti company and rented a vidllow convertible for an, ten rents a mile. Then, with ninny it laugh and i�i r, Mose away to pick rip the girl.

"Oh, bully!" she cried when -be ,-17V. 1Ia� suits my simple taste, to a ’T.’ Conn.. 1r ,lt -rot r riling highroads and through bosky dells."

Away they drove. All that day and night. they drove and finally, find but happy, they parked high on a wind-swept

"Marlboro?" he said.

yurn," she said.

They lit their Marlborns. They puffed with deep re-intent-anent. "You know." he said, "you are like a Marlboro�clean end fre.-h and relaxing."

I trri ’lean and fresh and relaxing," she admitted. "Nit an it,- -,r,ie, there is a big differeme between Marlbono.1 and in) , ii.., I do not have an efficacious white Sclectrate filter.

They laughed. They kissed. He screamed.

!What it, h’’"’’ ’lie asked, her attention arMecoi.

"took t , f,’’,’’ I,,,, lie said. "14re liave driven 200 ,t.ol ii r co-t � len writ, a mile, and I have only

$20 I,�tt.

t1,1 o�nr,11.21..- -he aid.

It , ,..,t al� -till it kJ driVU home."

gloom. He started

’ you al.

It frog Troy pro PM, Fr, I a II will regi-I, r oon II. -1.11,1r t

to nay!"

’I think that BC(ta.USP frod:ty our I ,.r. t

ing, and lodging an i r’it’d is is piling up so fret enough trainey tat’ la -

r Mt ITIfeVe alien

Lanka’ Is o�rlod "That .4olteis ,r, rt � ,�r -r Then no more miles

I %fill have enough money

ale! ,la� Ha right. when, food, eloot.h-

I re, I�I rue, and 111,- ellriwanfr is,. 0.r thro., year, he %ill haw: oolong again, oa lett 1,16,111.71.1�11

’Star/horn rionrrlIrti, your/ not they ore. el Id nnf he smoked horktrorde. He, the rtonl,,,re of Ilarlhoro. n,osl enrneally urge you to light only the tobacco end. enhertritte gout smoking pleasure will be MA bolardially diminished.

-0!

Purpose of Press Explained to Student Editor:

I was most amused by the subtle irony exhibited by Hamid Hussain in his Thrust and Parry of Friday.

Briefly, he put forth the fol-lowing suggestiellti regarding Spartan Daily editing policy:

1. Dedicating an advertisement calling the students to drop the idea of discrimination.

2. Support the Civil Rights Movement with articles, pic-tures, etc.

3. Dropping any anti-Civil Rights editorials from the paper.

The latter suggestion con-vinced me that Mr. Hussain was certainly not writing in earnest. This must be the case because by following the above sugges-tions (especially No. 31, the Daily would reduce itself to a biased, lifeless propaganda me-dium and would thereby present the Civil Rights Movement in an intellectually distasteful light.

If there is a possibility that Mr. Hussain is being serious, I suggest that he leVleW the rea-sons and principles behind a free press. I lurther recommend that he contemplate on a more rational level, the dangers of reverse discrimination.

Conrad W. Heckniek ASH A64n3

Agosta is Windy, Says Student Critic Editor:

Steve Agosta on Monday, March 2, lived up to the title of his column. What he wrote was a "Gust o’ Wind." Statements like "The Negro, if he has initia-tive, can get out of his chair and look for honest employment on his own" and "There are very few white men %%far will refuse employment to Negro if he is capable and willing to work" are unfounded.

This either is complete naivete on Mr. Agosta’s part, combined with a gross misunderstanding of ’the situation. or it is a poor

I OPEN TONIGHT ’TIL 9:00

Roberts Book Store 10th St. across from men’s dorms

here is a hook

Mai is

helping us

find ourselves

You, like many of , :4:. ht.

rearhing out, in an effort Io iden-tify yourself properly, I learn who you are and where pal are going. We believe we ha:,’ found the answers to these ions in the Christian Seieriee textbook, Science and !health with Key to the Seriptures by Mary Baker Eddy. You ran find I hem, too.

WP invite you to come to our meetings and tit hear how we are working out our problems hrough applying the truths of

Christian Science.

CHRISTIAN SCIENCE ORGANIZATION

SAN JOSE STATE COLLEGE

7 10 p Tug-Mei,

6.4,�ta.,pIo. CnIlrie Chapel

::,,,..,,,d 11,n1.0 nwrIbthle. al nil It,nriong Woon,, and at many

roller b.okolorrn. Pop�rha,k Edition j1.5.5,

fam�m����

&,#/tletr MACY

fhiLwitae nil Parry attempt as sarcasm, or it is a reflection of bigotry. The facts belie what Mr. Agosta wrote. As an editor of the school pa-per he should investigate such matters further before he enters his mistaken opinions as state-ments of truth.

David Zucker ASH 12234

Writer Puts Bigot Label on Columnist FAH or :

Steve Agosta evidently recog-nizes the existence of a racial problem. Who is to blame for this problem, according to Steve? Not the white man, surely; "There are very few white men who will refuse employment to the Negro," says Steve.

Obviously, the Negro is to blame, because he is a Negro. He lacks initiative; he is in-capable of being profitably em-

ployed by any businessman who wants to get ahead in the world; he is not "willing to work." Just ask Steve. His answer will be identical to that of any good bigot, North or South, who knows to his own satisfactoin what the loot of the Negro problem is: the Negro is men-tally and physically different from the %%line man: he is in-herently lazy, and all he wants to to is to eat watermelon and lie around them old cotton fields at home. Except when we need him to build highways and ilia-roads. Then he gets real strong and husky, and sings about John Henry, the idol of every blond, crew-cut college boy.

With this in mind, one cannot blame CORE for using every tactic at hand to cram civil rights down the throats of peo-ple like Steve Agosta, who gripe about shop-ins while homes are

Today’s Moral Crisis By

RICHARD REEB

What De Gaulle Wants Since he took power in General liarles de Gaulle of

France has been pursuing a foreign itul it’s that appears - iii the

eyes of the West � to he totally inexplicable.

De Gaulle’s first major foreign policy decision was to dump

Algeria, long an integral part of tile French liar i m.0 the hands

of Ben Bella and the terrorist VIA I National Liberation Front).

According to Jacques Soustelle %%110, for It,,, decades, ssas one of

De Gaulle’s closest associates. the ITN, with IN’ (;ittille’S tom.

plicity. used "inhuman methods of colha tis,� 1,lio-sion against

the people of Algiers and Oran � killing and

wmmding women and children ..."

The result of Algeria’s abandonment has been Ilif. loss of a xital link in the N1 est’. s�stent of military alliances and a foothold for international communism iii III.’ :Mediterranean Sea.

The decision to akimbo!’ Algeria is part and parcel a ith De Gaulle’s gclicial iodic\ of disentanglement froom all of Vrance’s colonies in Aft ’Ica. k1 lus is De Liu& doing litit.? "Bectlitet�,.. as Mr. Soustelle peints out. "France 11111,1 keep her hands free, and must be disencumlocied of an) le-ponsibilit) 14 Europe in the c�ent of war between Hus,ia and thv :�Itates."

Do Gaulle also has embarked on an ambitious irrograin littildieg an arm) equipped atilt ;Mimi, sseapons and a inwlear striking force, It is doulothil that l/c Gaulle Ilan ails inincrialintie ambition.. ’Filen why is he 1 rat.112 I.! 111e-elk, Frailo -fiecoloom oof choice- in case a Nan lucid.. out kisser!’ Ilii-sia ui,l he I idled dates. esen to the point of prooclisiming licutta10.

Placing his reliance on thin Frendi striking limey. Ite Gaulle is also attempting to teali/e a future reoorganitatioon of En. rope "front the Atlantic to the I!al,- lia-ed mom limicoi-Gelmati domination of the continent and a tapploaclictm nt ith the :��otiet t Mon.

The latest steps in Dr Gaulle’s foreign stiatcg a ha, been the fall for a "neutralization"’ of Smith last sia dud thi� of Communist Iliac, De taken an i.�eitls 111�11-1raliA 111,Sili1/11. TIle1,1� al eldaile.toI I alllorlIg the llatiells that make up the noo.o allcol " Hold N1 odd.- c.. the Attie \slim bloc in the I oiled \atioilin.

The question still iiminnsseiml is us:is IL. 1;a1Ille purniiing a policy that, in its totalit, isdi-iiiplit,� accommodation with rominiuninnt. and in itentialist. The minsscr can lie found in the chat tinter 1iiiern all IC4(111-11111 of the free world.

Some of the "accomplishments- of Aincrieat. folee,....1 policy since 1933 include the recognition of the sm iet I 111,oli. Illf� :1110111-

donment of Eastern Europe and ina to inkt nal ion,’ I 000liiiiitininni, a stalemate in Korea. the partial neutralization of smith I.ad the betra)al of the Hungarian freedom fightein. the I,. hack the lititish and l’rench in the !sin ,a211111111111/d111.111 of Cuba. the I Nat- against halaiig.0. dool a 1,01,11 toe bar to-nt Ian treat). American foteign polo s. them It, Ilk 41 I ,ti . commodation and irieexistrnic hither thaii % tor% toyer this

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being dynamited and lives are being lost.

As James Baldwin has repeat-edly emphasized. there is no Ne-gro problem, II is it white prob-lem. The white man is respon-sible for it, and now lie in nurtur-ing the consequences.

Page Brimiftoti ASH A1138:1

’Spirit of Spardi’ Again Discussed

Editor: The Spirit of Spardi statue

has attracted attention to the never-ending cunt roverv be-tween the advocates of abstract art and the unimpressed ma-jority. The statue has even been publicized in the San Jose Mer-cury and News. Therefore, let us consider some of the basic causes of this controversy be-tween most of the experts and most of the general public.

Artists and art professors are definitely experts in the produc-tion of art. llowever, I do not be-lieve that it is necessary to be an expert in the production of works of all in order to be competent to evaluate such works, any MOre than one need be an expert cook in order to tell whether

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Airline Changed ifor Eur New plans have been made for

ihe group flight to Europe organ-ized by Robert UColhns. pro-

or English �er�ording to Dr. Collins. the

w mill lease San Francisco ’gional director of Air s id return Irian London given special interest to the

r.: s by Air sIndia. group. aid the group svill Professors and students is

’ 3

KUA KW.=

- Opens Friday -

HENRY INT. PART ONE by Shakespeare

A Drama Department Producton

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY, MARCH 6 and 7 Also March 11 through 14

50c SJS Students $1.25 General

Curtain 8:15 p.m. College Theatre

Box Office - 5th and E. San Fernando Sts. Open 1-5 p.m. Daly

SENIORS ON

March 4, 5, 6

Representatives of California State Government will be on Campus to discuss with Seniors and Graduate Students employment opportunities in State service, including the fields of:

Accounting

Statistical Research

Real Estate and Property Management

Personnel and Fiscal Management

Vocational Rehabilitation

Correctional Rehabilitation

Insurance

MAKE AN APPOINTMENT

NOW

AT YOUR PLACEMENT OFFICE

BUY DAILY CLASSIFIEDS! To buy, rent, or sell a cymbidium, a Didus ineptus. a frangipanni, or any other sensible thing, just fill out this handy order form, clip it, and send if with a check OF cash to the Spartan Daily Advertising Office, J206, San Jose State College, Son Jose 14, California. Ads must be in by 2:31) PM. two days prior to publication.

CLASSIFIED RATES

Two lines One time

One time 50c a line

2 lines $1.00 3 lines 1.50 4 lines 2.00 5 lines 2.50

Add this amount for each oddtl line

.50

Three times 250 a line

Five times 200 a line

$1.50 $2.00 2.25 3.00 3.75

.75

3.00 4.00 5.00

1.00

opean Trip Job Interviews collegiaterv

l’ite:ht’alt:in:l’;, 41

go Ili’ India, not Air France as have been at SJS since the fall se -originally planned, and the price mester. and their spouses or im-is $473 round trip.

Dr. C’ollins said he is pleased thoise, are eligible lor the group mediate family if living in the same Dates Announced

istration Building. Sign-ups will st�rt on Tuesday, a week prior to th

pi..tbm.Inntterovifeiveics....R(1.1.br: 2i741d, .A.dt::::.. 1 t�i,:,:t:’.1;eir.,:d41:ei:Fitik.1..ilfessiu:::::::::tnk.- fop

pany visit.

chanical, electrical engineering; the school’s histoty, win

’iimmerce-Const

’ mP-- , complete Spartan cinder scite4u I regarded as 0

meets al San Jose this � -

-

spring. Tn. Iv

:with the change, and that the re- fare

’11’0%11(HtitOW:

citizenship required: male only tiiiiinetvl msin.

India has ! Dr Collins emphasizes that this ED")4. students Planning to eur°11 ’" c irimi state P e r is o is ne I

Elementary St.ltnnl Viir-

IED ALVA al= ZU k atkYW4 V.40,4114 -16k - id 1 ’ k); - _

rictilum and (16sta-sailor’ or ED- riii. iti,iir�nee. pmpel. research, Huard: re�al t’siatit In’ any major:

� !sz-. AARiv

. SJS

ho

- !

FOR DISPLAY A DVERTISING RATES, CALL CV 44414, EXT. 2465, FROM 1:20 TO 4:20, MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY.

CHECK A CLASSIFICATION:

o Announcements (11"] Nolo Woofed (4) 0 Personals (7)

171 Automotive 121 ’1 liciesleg CID Sorvieos

El For Sole( 31 [] Lost and Fogad (co Traosportotios (1)

Print your ad korai.

’Count 33 Letter, and Spaces fee Each I 4001

Starting Date Pun Ad For 2/3/4/5 D�ys (Circlo One)

Enclosed I - Chock No

N�m�

City Plion�

Address

is a "legitimate" group flight, hut not a formal tour. Hinvever, Dr. Collins will help plan tours for those interested.

March 8 is the deadline to sign III In F0211.

Swimming Tests Given This Week

Enrollment Meeting

electrical. mechanical engineering,

physics, chemistry: citizenship re-

This meeting is a basic require-

quire& Fibreboard Paper Products Corp.:

ment for elementary education iyiminkti.�tion; for general :IC-

Ziccounting. marketing, business

majors who plan to enroll in the courses during fall 1964, spring

,einintine. building materials salt’-.’

The swimming exempt ion test , 19(15, or fan 1965 semesters. citizenship required: male only.

will be given this semester on’ . Nfarathon Oil Company: chemis-

liry. ehemicial engineering. M.S. in

lig:lay. tomorrow, and Tuesday, 1 spartaguide ..,,,,,�..y: citizenship require&

Standard Oil Company of( 311i -

in the women’s pool. Tornio: B.S. acctitinting, 13.S. tir

All women students must either ’TM)." ’ i M.S. chemical engineering, civil.

pass this test or take beginning i p illi.ititheran Student Association, 7

100 S. 10th St.

mechanical, electrical engineering;

swimming before they can gradu-

for iiimeinting assistant, research

Social Affairs, 2:30 p.m., ADNI- and ili��.elopment. 1 i�!inery tech.

Nlarch 10, from 4:50 to 530 p.m.

�!!�::!1. and towels will be pro-Students taking the test

,Ist provide their own swimming and soap.

NOW. WHO CALLS PLATS?

Ken Berry, San Jose State soph-omore quarterback, was married Jan. 4 to high school sweetheart,

Chrisman.

INSTANT BICYCLE! FROM THIS TO THISIN 30 SEC.!

PORTA-CYCLE Ideal for all Spartan cyclists. You can fold it down to 27" square and can be put into your closet or even into the trunk of your sports car. Take it with you on your week-end outings: Picnics, beach trips, or vacation spots.

Nationally advertised for $89.50 (Playboy)

PAUL’S special price is only $72.95

PAUL’S CYCLES 1435 The Alameda

San Jose

Phone: 293-9766

105. Early Childhood Education, right-of-way trainee; citizen_ For Especially Fine Italian Foods Mina rep011 to Clay S. Andrews, shit, recomed. male only.

professor of elementary education. Professor Andrew’s will be avail-

able to prospective students in E333. 12 to 4 p.m.. Thursday, and

1 to 4 10.m.. Friday.

Asr VTSTTS sPARTAX� 401w Arizona State and ’ t’,. Ness’ Ness: Mexico, two 01 trH.

111,11 engineer: ell 1,renThip requmul, teams, will meet the spart,leil

7:30 p.m.. Memorial Chapel.

Satin’ Work Club, 3.30 p.m., C11164.

Sigma Della Chi, 12 noon. 4101.

Indust Hal Relations and Per-sannvi managvnient, 330 p.m. and

;7 p.m., El /4:13.

Pershing Rifles, 2:30 p.m.. Per-shing Rifles Room, staff meetinv. all officers are to attend.

Young Americans for Freedom, p.m.. ED100.

Democratic (’Iub, 3:30 p.m., cafe-teria rooms A and B.

Chi Alpha, 3:30 p.m., CH239. I Spartan Shields, 6:15 p.m.. cafe-

ieria rOoM A. 1

Spartan Sabers. 7 p.m., Chi sigma Epsiinn, -1 p.m m-

Mty tearoom.

229.

Circle K, 1:30 pot. SJS Math Group room A.

Spartan Christian F1�1111WNollip, Plans Two Films p.m.. M250. I The college mathematics study

Math i Club, 12:30 p.m., F.0241. ’group will present two more films

Christian Science Organization, .m teaching techniques in mathe-

matics. The films will be shossn in

C11235 at 1:30 p.m. today. Through the National Science

Foundation, 30 films have been made available for the studenis and faculty this semester.

’rhe series of movies are beim’ run under the title, "A Brie’ Ciiiirse in Mathematics for Eh.-inentiiry School Teachers."

The films will continue to run � on the same day. time, and place until the series has ended. All in-terested persons are invited.

TOMORROW: - Sangho Club, 8 p.m.. 64 N. Ninth

,St., organizational meeting. 1 Extramural Fencing, 430 p.m IWG101.

W ttttt en’s Recreation Association! rrin,i�t iv., .1:30 p.n.. PERM).

NCV1 ChM, 4!:’,0 moral issues emir-, p.m. N’s’. - man meeto. 1’��11 ter.

Novel Evening Course Offered

A novel evening course, "Di-lemmas of the Metropolis" is tie-ing offered by the &ICC Extensitio Services at the Peter Burneit Junior High School, San Jose.

MISS WATER POLO Water polo coach Lee Walton

is taking applications now for a women’s water polo team in the

, fall of 1981. Heading the e� his own daughter, Shawn Ann.

� born to his wife, Susan, Jan. 4, in Fremont. The yoi n t er weigher’ 7 pounds, 11 ounce,-

AN

UNUSUAL

MANAGEMENT TRAINING PROGRAM

INTERVIEWS

MARCH 12

ARRANGE FOR AN INTERVIEW

WITH THE PLACEMENT OFFICE

OPEN TONIGHT ’TIL 9:00

Roberts Book Store RA St. across from men’s dorms

ANNOUNCEMENTS

IHE BROTHERS C.!

AUTOMOTIVE 12)

’55 CHEV.

4 BBL

Filet:tiro-Optical Systems, Inc.: Sal g’ �L’ � -�� - 1 ZZeri(1!

Including. Pond Spaghetti, Lasagne. Horria�Mad� Raviolis, and Sandwiches

Tuesday’s Super

Spaghetti and

Limmrsimmtitrarmrpt IMP? Pt 01 Pt

9011

552 SOUTH BASCOM CC 5-7215

"GOOD SOLDIER SCHWEIN" "OPERATION BULLSHINE"

-STUDENTS $I 00 -

Special

Meat Balls

400 SOUTH FiRST STREET CY 4 S544 "LOVE ON A PILLOW"

with Brldgptte Bard°, "PASSIONATE SUMMER"

- STUDENTS Si Sc -

0 0

TOWNE SARATOGA-1433 THE ALAMEDA CT 74040

"BILLY LIAR" C.,,,,,termy

- STUDENTS II 00-

14502 BIG BASIN WA fIS 7I5 "MURDER AT THE GALLOP"

"SCAPEGOAT’ - :1L1DENIS Si Lc -

EL RANCHO TROPICAIR ALMA AND ALMADEN ROAD

"AloCLINTOCK" "TOYS IN THE ATTlx. ’

"ROCK�A-11YE BABY"

FIRST SAN SALVADOR CS 2.4775 "CHILDREN OF THE DAMNED"

"GLADIATORS SEVEN" Selected Short Subiects

lISt ALUM ROC MENUS

south sCroM, "AMERICAN. AMERICAN"

"A MOUSE ON THE MOON

Spartan Daily Classifieds BUY ’EM!

2’04

59 MGA. $850. ma No -repair. 292.5872.

63 HILLMAN Super Mint. R/H. ow

od 4 dr. Sedan, Etc.. � 1 k "-�e’ 5_9064 MI. 3_p.^

’60 PLYMOUTH Cornmeleck 2 1. � � - � � � 1 264.7485. $104i. ’59 VOLKSWAGEN. 1,. cond.. P !.

’54 CHEV

54 BUICK

56 YOLKS

62 N.S.U. . I!. 4

.54 RED Al-I, I r.,-1

64 SPRITF�

FOR SALE (3)

BEATLE WIGS (SI. Boa 16143, San Fran ’1�-ro 95 � or money order

BOOKSHELVES: 6 half doors. veneered � � 297.1432. RIFLE 30.6 � ’port. Scope ;,in,�

her 7. 261-9061. TYPEWRITER. standard. S35. U1.

good, $12. CV 7

KNEISSI. Skis 1210) good coed $60 ,� rr7 6539,

CLASSICAL ’" .’’ar: Rosewood, 2 m.

SJS Student Nurses-Uniform like new � 7 4 192-21399.

TAPE RECORDER, transistor, best map, I . � tor -min 378.5452. after S.

HELP WANTED 141

PT/T KITCHEN � � i� � t 12

CAN YOU

NEED -I ��,

� - .i�-�1

�i � ro � 7,4 ,

I IS n, � , 1,

HOUSING

$TO MONTH: Pm. 1/2 blk. SJS. (P -pd. Kitchen, phone, showers, CY 2.11//

north

"SOLDIER IN THE RAIN" "DEVIL AT 4 O’CLOCK"

’BLUE HAWAII ’

GIRLS: 3 bdrrn. furn. apt. $140. 2 bdrrn. LOST � 5�10 - Danish modern. V7 bla’k �

.irnpus. Ni, lease ner.. 292.1327. LOST . APPR. APT, for men. Swim pool, rec. h yol

TN.. 2 Wis. from campus. 794.4951. 620 S. 0.5.

ROOMS TO SHARE: $38.50. Living rrn.. �rn kitchen privileges. 390 E

Apr 3.

NEED 2 or 3 men to fill modern �--ended apts. $40 mo. per man.

� ", 292.3846.

$125 BUYS A $225 mono eri/PIcv41

MEN’S Appr. boarding house ... e1: -(no board) with kit/priv. 295.

MEN S Contract. $70 per month. Block �- 1-epus. 295.7220, I BDRM. to sub -rent. 410 Marge°.

576, Sleeps 2 or 3.293’2969 QUIET ro�an. dbl. for 2 ser,o, AUTO INSURANCE

� -lento. $70 per mo. 297-6079. Bailey. 248-242 TV RENTALS

FURNISHED APARTMENT - Married $10 month Sxn Carla& � .i � � ’AS S. I I.h Street.

PERSONALS (1)

UNWANTED Fa � ysis. NANTELLE R 44,4 FEMALE i��

HELP!! 0.

COME BACK

YOUR

1,522,4�

WANTED.

SERVICES IV

3 ROOM 4o. 460 So, 6th. Attr. clear EXPERIENCED TvFoST . � I � 490 292-2250 foe appt. UNAPPROVED apt. I girl needed. 405

- 10. 292.6398. ONE � ^ reate neede.-I

N I $4 NEED ".� �

NEED P �

WANTED

GIRL ROOMMATE

ARGE

I GIRL

RENTALS -- 57 50 per week

"...eels Apt_ I First 3 me rent nor � 293.2523, I Prores; sea? T V ‘.,��

2 bd.., E-CECTR1C 797.154/

ADULT, � Yu �, ap� 145 N. 6th, apt. No.?

WANTED- .s male roommate to . � with I other. 171 E.

, 1,943. $37.50. NEED ’.� ; -me - I bedroom ic � , I. I 1 � $42.50. 2864108 $100 BUYS , 3275 mon s approved

. con -

’.7’s: 0/5

APPROVED ’� � remold. Kitchen priv� 293.8401.

GIRLS . 2 roommates 330

2 BED130.0-M’ For,: Apt..9fo1rreanftet nr 6 oor ;if E Reed Street. 294.2698. "LV::9,FaT R’ ,c, 11i ,

FURN APT. -very large, 2 bdrm. sleeps � � � .dents, 294.3668. $130/na� CR-01,E-39ArA

NEED JID:

� 30,!

,v

7

, share asp" -

NEED ," �

oruer 41’

� Call at Classilioend;Ardieb.

� Send in handy

k

J206, I:30.3:30

lo

- Enclosed casN. pkoie

h o

EXCELLENT

AUTO, LIFE, EIRE INS

ALTERATIONS.

ELECTRONIC WESTERN CO.

SWAHILI I.

TV RENTALS

LARGE I and 2 bedroom furnished � 295-3968.

M"I � ’ ’ ’’’� 3 bedroom same. 292.0651.

BEDROOM --’shed apartment for 3 I ir No 7, 797.7161.

LOST AND FOUND lot

LOST - Dark brown briefcase between Stki St, ein ’inn Fernando. Vol.

�� es’s material mr 318907. PICK . ,arrinr 550,7 Unevenly Vnit

’,.. CH 3.9508.

Prrifot. � , ,� �

CENT. A T.V. A 2 Call 251 2590.

WILL DO TYPING295

HOUSE ro’ r do it for 286,0442 ,-, - � �

IN MY HOME

TRANSPORTATION Ill