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June 21,1965 Collegian—Summer Session Page 2 Summer Speakers Include Senator, Church Official United States Senator Gale W. McGee of Wyoming and Dr. Sam¬ uel D. Proctor, associate general secretary of the National Council of Churches In New York, will be featured in the 1965SummerSes- ston Campus Speakers'program. Dr. Arne Nixon, coordinator of the FSC Campus Session, said that Dr. Proctor will speak on Wed., June 30, while Senator Mc¬ Gee will speak on Wednesday, July 7, both at 9:50 AM in the Men's Gymnasium. The summer programs will be open to the pub¬ lic, and no admission will be The programs are sponsored by. the Summer Session Student Council at FSC and are planned to bring outstanding speakers to the college and the community, according to Dr. Nixon. The first speaker of the year. Dr. Proctor, Is In charge of the Office of Communications for the National Council of Churches. In 1962 the theologian was named di¬ rector of the Peace Corps pro¬ gram In Nigeria, and the follow¬ ing year he was selected as the associate director of the Peace Corps In Washington with re¬ sponsibility for the divisions of Selection, Training and Overseas Support. In 1953 Dr. Proctor participat¬ ed In a study of Baptist Institu¬ tions in Jordan, Syria, Lebanon, India and Burma for the Ameri¬ can Baptist Foreign Missions So¬ ciety, and In 1958 he studied European Baptist communities In Switzerland, France, Gor- many, Poland, Czechoslovakia and the Soviet Union. The other speaker Senator Mc¬ Gee, has represented Wyoming since 1959, having been re-elect¬ ed to a second term last Novem- Bids On Air Conditioning Buildings To Be Opened Bids will be opened In Sacra- dean at FSC, said that the air mento tomorrow for the furnish- conditioning systems are to be lng and installing of air condl- Installed In the Speech Arts and ttonlng systems In three build- Social Science Buildings and In lngs. on the Fresno State College wing H of the Science Building'. propriatlons. Commerce and the Post Office and Civil Service Committees, and he is the chair¬ man of the Commerce Subcomlt- Clvil Service Subcommittee on A graduate of the University of Chicago with a Ph.D. degree in American history, Senator Mc¬ Gee taught American history and was chairman of the Institute of International Affairs at the Uni¬ versity of Wyoming from 1946 to 1958, when he was elected In his first try for public office. He has taught at the University of Chicago, the University of Notre Dame, Iowa State College, Nebraska Wesleyan University and at high schools In Crofton and Kearney, Nebraska. His teaching career encompasses more than two decades. In 1953,hedlrectedastudytour to eight countries of Western Eu¬ rope on the problem of allied unity, and during 1955-56 he was legislative assistant to Senator Joseph C. 0"Mahor SEN. GALE W. McGEE y ofWyom- DR. SAMUEL D. PROCTOR Estimated c( Is Jl 85,000. CLOVIS "YOUR COLLEGE TOWN" 602 5th Street CY 9-6806 Jewelry FOR ALL YOUR JEWELRY NEEDS FREE GIFT WRAPPING Edwin Welch 619 4th St. CY 9-4124 YOUR FSC BARBER IN CLOVIS Emil's Downtown Barber Shop 423.POUASKY SHOE SHINER OK. TIRE SERVICE QUALITY NEW AND RECAPPED TIRES ARMSTRONG - B. F. Goodrich - Cordovan FRONT END AND BRAKE SPECIALISTS 723 aovfa kmmm CY 9^010 SHOES AND MEN'S WEAR Pfc—CY»-44>0 Oovis, general £c4n Work* Tidyman Chosen For National Board To Check Grad Exams Dr. Clayton R. Tidyman, pro- Business Test, fessor of accounting at Fresno Dr. Tidyman Is the first mem- State College, has been Invited ber of the FSC staff to be appoint- to membership on theCommlttee ed to a GRE Commltteeof Exam- of Examiners for the Graduate iners. He will serve a two-year Record Examinations Advanced term on the committee. GOLF WORLD * PARTY SPECIAL! 1 Round of Golf . .. . . 1 Big Boy Hamburger . 1 Big Boy Soft Drink . Group of 8 or more Shaw off Blackstone Reg. $1.50 Value nly 99< F hristfinsfin's Summer Housing IDEALLY LOCATED For Fresno State College •2 Pools "Club House 'Shuttle Bus 'Refrigerated Air Conditioning Rates from $7.50 per week |CAMpU5 6ARDEN5 4885 No.Recreation (at Shaw )ust east of the campus) Food, Books Provided On Special Sked Special schedules will be In effect to provide summer stu¬ dents, faculty and staff members with cafeteria, library, book¬ store, health and other services. The Cafeteria will be open Monday through Friday for breakfast from 6:45 to 10AM and lunch will be served each week¬ day from 11 AM until 1:30 PM. Dinner will be served Monday through Thursday from 5 to 6 PM. Snack bar facilities will be pro¬ vided from 10 AM until 3 PM each weekday. All cafeteria services, includ¬ ing the snack bar, will be pro¬ vided in the main dining area. The staff dining room will be In Cafeteria Committee Room 1. The Roundup will be open week¬ days from 10 AM to 5:15 PM. Library service will be provid¬ ed Monday through Saturday. The Library will open each weekday 7:30 AM and from Monday June 21,1965 Collegian—Summer Sessio Page 3 Film Series Offers Top Attractions A Raisin in the Sun, starring academy award winner Sidney Poitler, will be the first In the Campus Session Film Series to be shown tomorrow at 1:30 PM and again at 7:15 PM in the Little The films, which are sponsored by the Summer Session Student Council, are open to all students and their families. Other films scheduled for the June 29 — The Birds, starring Rod Taylor, Suzanne Pleshette and «Tlpplp Hedren. July 6 — Bridge on the River Kwal, featuring Alex Guinness, William Holden, Jack Hawkins and Sessue Hayakawa, and a short, The Pharmacist. July 13! ~ The State of the Union, a classicstarrlngSpencer Tracy, Kakherlne Hepburn and Van Johnson; and the selected short, The Barber Shop. July 20 — Hidden River, a Japanese film, and Ten Recreational Activities Highlight Summer Program There will be recreational op¬ portunities aplenty for summer school students, faculty and staff members with a varied program of activities In the men's gym be¬ ginning June 22 through July 30. Although there will be no even¬ ing activities this year, Myron Anderson, summer Intramural program director, said the pro¬ gram will include swimming, ping pong, badminton, volleyball, bas¬ ketball, trampoline, tennis, golf, handball and weight training, each weekday, 2 - 6 PM. Also scheduled are golf and bowling tourneys. The single-elimination, match play golf tournament begins June 28, at the Airways Golf Course, with a cup awarded to the tournament winner July 23. Entry forms are available on the bulle¬ tin board at noon, 106 In the Men's Gym, and pairings will be posted in the Intramural trophy case. Bowling competition also tx 3 PM, testanta will roll three each Monday thereafter through July 26 at the Blackstone Bowl, with individual prizes for high game, high series and high total. Entries may be made at the Bowl. The golf tourney is open to men and the bowling to men and A hole-ln-one tourney is slated New Facilities Will Greet Foil Students Completion of an addition to the Library, which has doubled the size of the facility, the start of the work on a new parking lot at the Maple Avenue entrance and the Love Lr Ship. park all greet students ri ) FSC ft July 22 — Doris Day and James Garner starring in The Thrill of It AU, and Walt Disney's short, Beaver Valley. July 27 — Bye Bye Birdie, starring Janet Leigh, Dick Van Dyke, Ann-Margret and Bobfcy Rydell, and the brief, The Fatal Glass of Beer. Admission Is free to all staff and students and their families upon presentation of a student activity card. Alumni Slate Friday Fete last si e first tl The $1,034,887 addition, or the new west wing of the Library— when equipped -- will provide space for about 200,000 volumes, more than doubling the size of the original Library. faculty arc s for r. and special the maps and government publi¬ cations section; the ci library; the audlo-vls ltles; special listening i small group and individual study 11,200 lng which will house the dean of students and business offices, the print shop and offices for some 40 faculty members. The building is scheduled for completion by the opening of the fall semester In 1867. _ The new $60,000 baseball park, on the 60-acre site on the south¬ west corner of Cedar and Bar- stow, will feature bleachers for 1,000, a sprinkler system and 8- foot chain link fencing around the entire facility. The park will be ready for use by the 1966 FSC baseball team. Approved for future construc¬ tion on the 1,400 acre campus Is a $3,000,000 coeducational resl- German Consul Donates Books For Library Dr. Henry M. Madden, the head Librarian at Fresno State Col¬ lege, recently announced that the German Consulate General InSan Francisco has presented 38 volumes to the Library. The volumes, selected by FSC Library, Include such titles j as the standard set of the v Recreation Schedule At A Glance SWIMMING 2-6 pm PING PONG ....2-6 pm BADMINTON...2-6 pm VOLLEYBALL 2-6 pm BASKETBALL 2-6 pm TRAMPOLINE (Room 202)..2-6 pm TENNIS 2-6 pm GOLF. 2-6 pm HANDBALL....2-6 pm WE IGHT TRAINING ...2-6 pm Deutsche Kunstdenkmalcr, Ger¬ man Monuments of Art; and many I Individual volumes In Uteratui history and art. date 300 n The parking lot represents the SERRENTO Italian Food WEEK-DAY LUNCHES 85f to $1.35 Closed Monday 4235 Fountain Way Cedar-Shields 222-901; first annual barbecue for Asso¬ ciation "lifers* scheduled for Friday, June 25, starting at 7 PM at the Smlttcamp Wawona Ranch in Clovls. Wallace Henderson, executive director of the FSC Alumni As¬ sociation, said that Mr. and Mrs. Earl Smlttcamp, both FSC grad¬ uates, and the Alumni Association Board of Directors will be hosts for what is planned to be an annual affair for life members and sup¬ porters of the college alumni as- through Thursday will close a 9:30 PM. Friday the library *U making close at 5 PM. sense Facilities will be provided on summer Saturdays from 9 AM The phono-disc library in the nowadays that doesn't Music Building will be open Mon¬ day through Friday from 7:30 AM until 4 PM. The Laboratory close examination. School library will open each weekday from 8 AM until noon Life insurance planning and from 1 to 3 PM. calls for intelligent Limited health service will be thinking, not glib talk. - available as well. The Health Recommendations Center will be open from 8 AM should be made only until noon, and from 1 to 4 PM after a thorough study Monday through Friday. A phy¬ of the client s personal sician and/or nurse will be on duty during those hours. If you'd like to talk with The campus Bookstore will be someone who puts open each weekday from 7:30 AM Ihese principles into to 2:45 PM. The Bookstore will practice, then call us. close at 9 AM July 1 for Inven¬ You'll see for yourself tory and will reopen July 2 at 11 AM. making sense. David Pipes Tradition of An Old Kuver Associates Italian Garden 1295 Wiihon Ave. DiCicco's Pizzeria Suite A FOUR SONS OF ITALY D<mVery it MT%t PROVIDENT MUTUALWHBB LIFE AD 7-7054 •■^l^e-*-- 530 N. Blackstone a century of dedicated sen/ice OTese Caches $iu/lte QJou OT 4^o/ts(uf) OTis Sunday CEDAR AVENUE BAPTIST •YOUR CHURCH AWAY FROM HOME' 535 NO. CEDAR (Near Belmont) — Phone: 237-8301 9:45 AM: College—Business Bible Class. 11:00 AM: Morning Worship. ^ 6:15 PM: College—Business Fellowship. 7:30 PM: Evening Worship, Excellent Music. Irvln E. Penberthy, D.D., Pastor Gerald Cudney, Minister of Education Church of The Brethren CLINTON AT NINTH STREET -- Phone: 22' 9:45 AM: Church School College Class 11:00 AM: Morning Worship J.T. Dick, R.J. Langley, Pastors FIRST METHODIST CHURCH TUOLUMNE & M ST. 9:00 4 11:00 AM: Morning Worship. 9:50 AM: Sunday School. 7:00 PM: Wesley Fellowship. Revs. Robert W. Moon and Phillip B. Kir Sermon: To be ar SECOND CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST 280 WEST SHAW AVE. — Phone: 229-8371 11:00 AM: Sunday Services 9:15 AM: Sunday School 8:00 PM: Wednesday Evening Testimonial Meetings FREE READING ROOM AND LENDING LIBRARY Open 12:00 to 3:30 PM Monday through Friday TRINITY LUTHERAN CHURCH LUTHERAN CHURCH IN AMERICA 3973 N. CEDAR (Near Ashlan) 8,91 10:30 AM: Worship Holy Communion - 1st Sunday Philip A. Jordan, Martin J. Wager, Pastors For rides, Call 229-8581 Go To Church Sunday PEACE LUTHERAN CHURCH 4672 N. CEDAR AT GETTYSBURG 8:00 & 11:00 AM: Worship Service 9:00 & 10:00 AM: Bible Classes Martin Schabacker, Pastor Karl Dunker Gamma Delta Association of Lutheran Students For Transportation, Call 222-2320 or 299-2216 St. Pauls Catholic Chapel at Newman Center 1572 E. BARSTOW AVE. — Phone: 439-4641 MASSES: Sundays, 7 AM, 10 AM & 12 Noon; School Days, 4:45 PM; School Holidays & Sat., 8 AM. CONFESSIONS: Sat., 3-5 PM & 7:30-9 AM; Wed. & Thurs., 4:15 PM; and before Sunday Masses. Rev. Sergio P. Negro, Chaplain CALVARY PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH CLINTON AT THORNE ~ Phone: 222-5659 9:30: Campus Hour 7:30: Evening Worship 9:30 4 11:00 : Morning Worship Alan H. Brown, Minister, Dean F. Rowley, Asst. Minister ST.COLUMBAS EPISCOPAL CHURCH PALM 4 SHAW 5 AM: Holy Communion 10 AM 4 11:00 AM: Morning Service and Sermon 10 PM: Evening Prayer Rev. George Turney, Rector COLLEGE FORUM EVANGELICAL FREE CHURCH, 3438 E. ASHLAN CURRENT TRENDS & CHRISTIAN FAITH 9:30 AM, Sunday Rides: Call 222-8833 Discussion Leaders: Paul Madsen, M.D., Stanley Llndqulst, PhJ3.
Object Description
Title | 1965_06 The Daily Collegian June 1965 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1965 |
Description | Daily (except weedends) during the school year. Microfilm. Palo Alto, Calif.: BMI Library Microfilms, 1986- microfilm reels; 35 mm. Vol.1, no.1 (Feb 8, 1922)- |
Subject | California State University, Fresno -- Periodicals. |
Contributors | Associated Students of Fresno State. |
Coverage | Vol.1 no.1 (Feb 8, 1922)- to present |
Format | Microfilm reels, 35 mm. |
Technical Information | Scanned at 600 dpi; TIFF; Microfilm ScanPro 2000 "E-image data" |
Language | eng |
Description
Title | June 21, 1965 Pg. 2-3 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1965 |
Description | Daily (except weedends) during the school year. Microfilm. Palo Alto, Calif.: BMI Library Microfilms, 1986- microfilm reels; 35 mm. Vol.1, no.1 (Feb 8, 1922)- |
Subject | California State University, Fresno -- Periodicals. |
Contributors | Associated Students of Fresno State. |
Coverage | Vol.1 no.1 (Feb 8, 1922)- to present |
Format | Microfilm reels, 35 mm. |
Technical Information | Scanned at 600 dpi; TIFF; Microfilm ScanPro 2000 "E-image data" |
Language | eng |
Full-Text-Search |
June 21,1965
Collegian—Summer Session
Page 2
Summer Speakers Include
Senator, Church Official
United States Senator Gale W.
McGee of Wyoming and Dr. Sam¬
uel D. Proctor, associate general
secretary of the National Council
of Churches In New York, will be
featured in the 1965SummerSes-
ston Campus Speakers'program.
Dr. Arne Nixon, coordinator of
the FSC Campus Session, said
that Dr. Proctor will speak on
Wed., June 30, while Senator Mc¬
Gee will speak on Wednesday,
July 7, both at 9:50 AM in the
Men's Gymnasium. The summer
programs will be open to the pub¬
lic, and no admission will be
The programs are sponsored
by. the Summer Session Student
Council at FSC and are planned
to bring outstanding speakers to
the college and the community,
according to Dr. Nixon.
The first speaker of the year.
Dr. Proctor, Is In charge of the
Office of Communications for the
National Council of Churches. In
1962 the theologian was named di¬
rector of the Peace Corps pro¬
gram In Nigeria, and the follow¬
ing year he was selected as the
associate director of the Peace
Corps In Washington with re¬
sponsibility for the divisions of
Selection, Training and Overseas
Support.
In 1953 Dr. Proctor participat¬
ed In a study of Baptist Institu¬
tions in Jordan, Syria, Lebanon,
India and Burma for the Ameri¬
can Baptist Foreign Missions So¬
ciety, and In 1958 he studied
European Baptist communities
In Switzerland, France, Gor-
many, Poland, Czechoslovakia
and the Soviet Union.
The other speaker Senator Mc¬
Gee, has represented Wyoming
since 1959, having been re-elect¬
ed to a second term last Novem-
Bids On Air Conditioning
Buildings To Be Opened
Bids will be opened In Sacra- dean at FSC, said that the air
mento tomorrow for the furnish- conditioning systems are to be
lng and installing of air condl- Installed In the Speech Arts and
ttonlng systems In three build- Social Science Buildings and In
lngs. on the Fresno State College wing H of the Science Building'.
propriatlons. Commerce and the
Post Office and Civil Service
Committees, and he is the chair¬
man of the Commerce Subcomlt-
Clvil Service Subcommittee on
A graduate of the University
of Chicago with a Ph.D. degree
in American history, Senator Mc¬
Gee taught American history and
was chairman of the Institute of
International Affairs at the Uni¬
versity of Wyoming from 1946 to
1958, when he was elected In his
first try for public office.
He has taught at the University
of Chicago, the University of
Notre Dame, Iowa State College,
Nebraska Wesleyan University
and at high schools In Crofton
and Kearney, Nebraska. His
teaching career encompasses
more than two decades.
In 1953,hedlrectedastudytour
to eight countries of Western Eu¬
rope on the problem of allied
unity, and during 1955-56 he was
legislative assistant to Senator
Joseph C. 0"Mahor
SEN. GALE W. McGEE
y ofWyom-
DR. SAMUEL D. PROCTOR
Estimated c(
Is Jl 85,000.
CLOVIS
"YOUR COLLEGE TOWN"
602 5th Street
CY 9-6806
Jewelry
FOR ALL YOUR
JEWELRY NEEDS
FREE GIFT WRAPPING
Edwin Welch
619 4th St.
CY 9-4124
YOUR FSC BARBER IN CLOVIS
Emil's Downtown Barber Shop
423.POUASKY
SHOE SHINER
OK. TIRE SERVICE
QUALITY NEW AND RECAPPED TIRES
ARMSTRONG - B. F. Goodrich - Cordovan
FRONT END AND BRAKE SPECIALISTS
723 aovfa kmmm CY 9^010
SHOES AND MEN'S WEAR
Pfc—CY»-44>0 Oovis,
general £c4n Work*
Tidyman Chosen For National
Board To Check Grad Exams
Dr. Clayton R. Tidyman, pro- Business Test,
fessor of accounting at Fresno Dr. Tidyman Is the first mem-
State College, has been Invited ber of the FSC staff to be appoint-
to membership on theCommlttee ed to a GRE Commltteeof Exam-
of Examiners for the Graduate iners. He will serve a two-year
Record Examinations Advanced term on the committee.
GOLF WORLD *
PARTY SPECIAL!
1 Round of Golf . .. . .
1 Big Boy Hamburger .
1 Big Boy Soft Drink .
Group of 8 or more
Shaw off Blackstone
Reg. $1.50 Value
nly 99< F
hristfinsfin's
Summer Housing
IDEALLY LOCATED
For Fresno State College
•2 Pools "Club House
'Shuttle Bus 'Refrigerated
Air Conditioning
Rates from $7.50 per week
|CAMpU5
6ARDEN5
4885 No.Recreation
(at Shaw )ust east of the campus)
Food, Books
Provided On
Special Sked
Special schedules will be In
effect to provide summer stu¬
dents, faculty and staff members
with cafeteria, library, book¬
store, health and other services.
The Cafeteria will be open
Monday through Friday for
breakfast from 6:45 to 10AM and
lunch will be served each week¬
day from 11 AM until 1:30 PM.
Dinner will be served Monday
through Thursday from 5 to 6 PM.
Snack bar facilities will be pro¬
vided from 10 AM until 3 PM
each weekday.
All cafeteria services, includ¬
ing the snack bar, will be pro¬
vided in the main dining area.
The staff dining room will be In
Cafeteria Committee Room 1.
The Roundup will be open week¬
days from 10 AM to 5:15 PM.
Library service will be provid¬
ed Monday through Saturday. The
Library will open each weekday
7:30 AM and from Monday
June 21,1965
Collegian—Summer Sessio
Page 3
Film Series
Offers Top
Attractions
A Raisin in the Sun, starring
academy award winner Sidney
Poitler, will be the first In the
Campus Session Film Series to be
shown tomorrow at 1:30 PM and
again at 7:15 PM in the Little
The films, which are sponsored
by the Summer Session Student
Council, are open to all students
and their families.
Other films scheduled for the
June 29 — The Birds, starring
Rod Taylor, Suzanne Pleshette
and «Tlpplp Hedren.
July 6 — Bridge on the River
Kwal, featuring Alex Guinness,
William Holden, Jack Hawkins
and Sessue Hayakawa, and a
short, The Pharmacist.
July 13! ~ The State of the
Union, a classicstarrlngSpencer
Tracy, Kakherlne Hepburn and
Van Johnson; and the selected
short, The Barber Shop.
July 20 — Hidden River, a
Japanese film, and
Ten Recreational Activities
Highlight Summer Program
There will be recreational op¬
portunities aplenty for summer
school students, faculty and staff
members with a varied program
of activities In the men's gym be¬
ginning June 22 through July 30.
Although there will be no even¬
ing activities this year, Myron
Anderson, summer Intramural
program director, said the pro¬
gram will include swimming, ping
pong, badminton, volleyball, bas¬
ketball, trampoline, tennis, golf,
handball and weight training, each
weekday, 2 - 6 PM.
Also scheduled are golf and
bowling tourneys.
The single-elimination, match
play golf tournament begins
June 28, at the Airways Golf
Course, with a cup awarded to the
tournament winner July 23. Entry
forms are available on the bulle¬
tin board at noon, 106 In the Men's
Gym, and pairings will be posted
in the Intramural trophy case.
Bowling competition also tx
3 PM,
testanta will roll three
each Monday thereafter through
July 26 at the Blackstone Bowl,
with individual prizes for high
game, high series and high total.
Entries may be made at the Bowl.
The golf tourney is open to men
and the bowling to men and
A hole-ln-one tourney is slated
New Facilities Will
Greet Foil Students
Completion of an addition to the
Library, which has doubled the
size of the facility, the start of
the work on a new parking lot at
the Maple Avenue entrance and
the
Love
Lr Ship.
park all greet students ri
) FSC ft
July 22 — Doris Day and James
Garner starring in The Thrill of
It AU, and Walt Disney's short,
Beaver Valley.
July 27 — Bye Bye Birdie,
starring Janet Leigh, Dick Van
Dyke, Ann-Margret and Bobfcy
Rydell, and the brief, The Fatal
Glass of Beer.
Admission Is free to all staff
and students and their families
upon presentation of a student
activity card.
Alumni Slate
Friday Fete
last si
e first tl
The $1,034,887 addition, or the
new west wing of the Library—
when equipped -- will provide
space for about 200,000 volumes,
more than doubling the size of the
original Library.
faculty arc
s for r.
and special
the maps and government publi¬
cations section; the ci
library; the audlo-vls
ltles; special listening i
small group and individual study
11,200
lng which will house the dean of
students and business offices, the
print shop and offices for some
40 faculty members. The building
is scheduled for completion by the
opening of the fall semester In
1867. _
The new $60,000 baseball park,
on the 60-acre site on the south¬
west corner of Cedar and Bar-
stow, will feature bleachers for
1,000, a sprinkler system and 8-
foot chain link fencing around the
entire facility.
The park will be ready for use
by the 1966 FSC baseball team.
Approved for future construc¬
tion on the 1,400 acre campus Is
a $3,000,000 coeducational resl-
German Consul
Donates Books
For Library
Dr. Henry M. Madden, the head
Librarian at Fresno State Col¬
lege, recently announced that the
German Consulate General InSan
Francisco has presented 38
volumes to the Library.
The volumes, selected by
FSC Library, Include such titles j
as the standard set of the v
Recreation
Schedule At
A Glance
SWIMMING 2-6 pm
PING PONG ....2-6 pm
BADMINTON...2-6 pm
VOLLEYBALL 2-6 pm
BASKETBALL 2-6 pm
TRAMPOLINE
(Room 202)..2-6 pm
TENNIS 2-6 pm
GOLF. 2-6 pm
HANDBALL....2-6 pm
WE IGHT
TRAINING ...2-6 pm
Deutsche Kunstdenkmalcr, Ger¬
man Monuments of Art; and many I
Individual volumes In Uteratui
history and art.
date 300 n
The parking lot represents the
SERRENTO
Italian Food
WEEK-DAY LUNCHES
85f to $1.35
Closed Monday
4235 Fountain Way
Cedar-Shields 222-901;
first annual barbecue for Asso¬
ciation "lifers* scheduled for
Friday, June 25, starting at 7 PM
at the Smlttcamp Wawona Ranch
in Clovls.
Wallace Henderson, executive
director of the FSC Alumni As¬
sociation, said that Mr. and Mrs.
Earl Smlttcamp, both FSC grad¬
uates, and the Alumni Association
Board of Directors will be hosts
for what is planned to be an annual
affair for life members and sup¬
porters of the college alumni as-
through Thursday will close a
9:30 PM. Friday the library *U
making
close at 5 PM.
sense
Facilities will be provided on
summer Saturdays from 9 AM
The phono-disc library in the
nowadays that doesn't
Music Building will be open Mon¬
day through Friday from 7:30 AM
until 4 PM. The Laboratory
close examination.
School library will open each
weekday from 8 AM until noon
Life insurance planning
and from 1 to 3 PM.
calls for intelligent
Limited health service will be
thinking, not glib talk. -
available as well. The Health
Recommendations
Center will be open from 8 AM
should be made only
until noon, and from 1 to 4 PM
after a thorough study
Monday through Friday. A phy¬
of the client s personal
sician and/or nurse will be on
duty during those hours.
If you'd like to talk with
The campus Bookstore will be
someone who puts
open each weekday from 7:30 AM
Ihese principles into
to 2:45 PM. The Bookstore will
practice, then call us.
close at 9 AM July 1 for Inven¬
You'll see for yourself
tory and will reopen July 2 at
11 AM.
making sense.
David Pipes
Tradition of An Old
Kuver Associates
Italian Garden
1295 Wiihon Ave.
DiCicco's Pizzeria
Suite A
FOUR SONS OF ITALY
D |