La Voz de Aztlan, April 28 1976
Item
Title
La Voz de Aztlan, April 28 1976
Creator
Associated Students of Fresno State
Relation
La Voz de Aztlan (Daily Collegian, California State University, Fresno)
Coverage
Fresno, California
Date
4/28/1976
Format
PDF
Identifier
SCUA_lvda_00077
extracted text
Board of Supervisors
Semana d_ecla red. an official .week
The ~resno County Board of Supervisors unanimously passed a
re sol uh on yesterday proclaiming the week April 28 through May 5
1976. as Semana de la Raza.
'
Semana has been recognized at CSUF since 1969 with celebrations
takin~ place during the semana (week). The university's fe~tivities
co~rdmated by MEChA: are funded by Associated Students funds. '
\ esterday, CSUF students representing Trabajadores de la Raza
and the Easton Southwest Organization presented the resolution to
the Board with all memhers present.
IN THE MATTER OF
SEMAN A DE LA RAZA
sacrifice - defeated this invading force
in this great battle; and
WHEREAS, Cinco de Mayo has since
RESOLUTION PROCLAIMING WEEK OF
been celebrated the world over as a day
APRIL 28 - MAY 5, 19.76 AS SUCH
symbolizing the opposition of free people to foreign domination and the triumph
WHEREAS, the Republic of Mexico
over oppression; and
· was invaded by foreign troops in 1862;
WHEREAS, this day is now recorded
and
in the annals of history along with the
WHEREAS, this invading foreign army
Fourth of July and Bastille Day as one
was met at Guadalupe Hill near the City
of the great days in the advancement of
of Puebla on the fifth d_ay of May, 1862
human liberty and self-government with
by an outnumbered and untrained Mexican '
· num~rous Chicano organizations and
force, and under the command oflgnacio • Spanish-speaking communities sponsorZaragoza, . the soldiers of Mexico ing appropriate observances during the
through · their great courage and selfweek of Cinco de Mayo; and
ESO director and CSUF student Tomas Reyes spoke to the Board
about the resolution's significance. After the action, he told La Voz,
''This is important for all schools and institutions who do not consider the week as important to the total community."
At CSUF, Semana activities· begin Saturday with a tardeada and
end next Wednesday with a free dance. People attending the dance
are asked to dress in Mexican clothes. A surprise will be given to
the best-dressed.
A schedule of activities is found elsewhere in La Voz.
WHEREAS, during this week, it will be
fitting for all Californians to contemplate
the historical contributions of Mexican
culture and character to the history of
this State which enriched and advanced
our multi-racial culture and to acknowledge the contributions of MexicanAmerican Citizens in areas of education,
labor, industry, government and the professions; and
WHEREAS, Fresno State University
has recognized the contributions of
Mexican culture-to the State of California
and has designated the week of April 28
through May 5 asSEMANADELARAZA;
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RE-
SOLVED that the Fresno County Board
of Supervisors hereby proclaims the
week of Aprlt 28 through May 5, 1976 as
SEMANA DE LA RAZA
and urges all public entities to sponsor
and prepare programs during this week
and take the opportunity to learn the
role that the Mexican culture has played
in the development of the United States,
the State of California, and in the County
of Fresno.
·
·The foregoing resolution was passed
and adopted by the Fresno County Board
of Supervisors this .27th day of April,
1976.
LA VOZ
>
DE AZTLAN
LXXX/121
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 28, 1976
A special edition of THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, California State University, Fresno
Fa_rmworkers get
600,000 names
by Tom Uribes
The United F a r m w o r k e rs
Union may get nearly one million
signatures in its drive to secure
farmworkers rights after reporting 604,772 were obtained statewide as of Sunday.
312,404 signatures were
needed by April 28, to place on
the November 8 ballot the initiative which would force the legislature to keep Agricultural Labor
Relations Board (ALRB) funded
and require a vote of the people
to amend the farm labor law.
It would also place in the California Constitution the controversial access rule which allows
union organizers to go into the
field three times a day to recruit
workers.
However, CSUF MEChA's representative to the U F W, Juan
·perez, said the Selma UFWoffice
reported Fresno County will not
reach its goal in the drive.
Earlier this year, growerbacked state legislators were
able to block emergency appropriations of the act after it ran
out of money halfway through its
fiscal year.
As a result, Cesar Chavez'
UFW took to the people in the effort to overcome the powerful
money interests in the state cap-
Senators pressed
by UFW Initiative?
A vote now leaning in favor of
the United Farm Workers concerning the ALRB funding may
go before the State Senate tomorrow, a change in the complex issue which the UFW is viewing as
a result of their successful initiative drive.
The Associated Press reported
yesterday Sen ate Democratic
i1oor leader David Roberti, DLos Angeles, felt he had 24 of the
27 Senate votes needed to approve
a $2,5 million ALRB funding bill
which has been bottled up in the
Senate by growers and their legsilati ve allies.
Growers contend the board has
been pro-UFW. They say they
want eight changes made before
they'll support the law, including
restrictions on the ALRB's controversial access rule.
Now, the new picture of the
controversial farm labor issue
includes possible reconsideration L,, Sen. George Zenovich, DFresno, who has sided with growers and helped block passage of
earlier ALRB emergency appropriations.
The new bill, drafted by Assemblyman Daniel B. Boatwright,
D-Concord, would provide funds
to revive the ALRB through the
fiscal year.
The Board is the agency that
administers California's landmark farm labor law, the Agricultural Labor Relations Act of
1975.
The board stopped holding farm
labor elections in Febtuary after '
(Continued on Page 3, Col. 1)
FARMWORKER WEEK
Farm laborers throughout
the world will be saluted
during the week of May 2-8
which has been set aside as
"Farmworker Week.• This
commemoration is sponsored by the Secretariat for
the Spanish Speaking, a division of the United States
catholic Conference.
itol.
"We can't rely on the legislature to work for farmworkers,"
Chavez said in Los Angeles when
beginniJ1g the drive April 1. •we
have to take it to the people."
Although the initiative required
312,404 signatures the union set
a goal or 540,000 to guard against
disqualification due to technical
invalidations. Perez said this
allows for 40 per cent invalidation based on the marijuana initiative drive.
Perez also said more signatures have been secured than are
being reported to the media. He
explained the union is screening
all petitions itself and sending
forth only the valid signatures to
avoid any technical faults.
Despite the significant showing
statewide, Fresno County will
reach much less than one-half
of its 12,000 goal set.
Perez said the Selma UFW office reported only 44 petitions
have been turned in for a total of
2,624 in Fresno County as of
Sunday.
•It's not surprising," said Peez. •we weren't depending on
the rural areas for support.•
He said the union set their priori ties in the highly urbanized
areas where a higher percentage
of people are registered Democrats, such as the Sacramento,
San Francisco, Los Angeles and'
San Diego areas.
•There's a more liberal element and viable situation in the
urban areas," he said.
Although it would seem logical
to assume the rural areas would
carry a higher concentration of
people in favor of the drive (such
as farmworkers), Perez said the
problem is that a significant number of these people are not registered voters, which is
requirement for signing the pe titian.
He also said many others do
not have access to the media and
knowledge of the issue as the ur(Continued on Page 3, Col. 1)
a
SEMANA ACTIVITIES next week will include Teatro (above), Comparsa and Danzantes. Semana chairperson MinnieCarrilloextendsan
invitation for the general public to participate in Semana to better
its understanding of the Chicano and our cultura Mexicana. Semana
schedule is on page 4.
Mexican films
here next week
Semana de la Raza chairperson
Minnie Carrillo announced two
Mexican films (in Spanish) will
be shown next week as part of
Cinco de Mayo activities:
"Los Desarraigados•
, This film depicts the Mejicanos' problems of trying to live
separate from those of his race.
It tells of the time when Mejicanos leave Mexico for the United
States in an effort to-make itbig,
by anglocizing and assimilating
into the Anglo culture. The mm
is in Spanish and will be shown
on Tuesday, May 4, 1976, at
8:00 p.m. in the College Union
lounge.
"Macario~
"Macario" stars Ignacio Lopez
Tarso in a film which shows a
poor man who finds himself dealing with the Devil · in order to
survive for his family and himself. Film will be shown onMonday, May 3, at 8:00 p.m. in the
College Union lounge.
SNRP sets drives
Throughout the month of April,
the San Joaquin Voter Registration Project is sponsoring small
rallies throughout the valley.
Last Saturday, Reedley held a
voter registration tardeada.
This Saturday a tardeada at
Kea-rney Park is scheduled.
There will be several community
organizations selling food, beer
and soft drinks. Entertainment
will also be provided. Deputy
registrars will be available for
anyone wishing to register.
A registration rally will be
held in Sanger on May 2, next to
the Royal Theater on the corner
of "L • and 7th Street, where a
Chicano cultural mural . was
painted last year. It is organized
by the Sanger Committee of the
SJVRP, It will be from noon to
7 p.m.
At Sanger, CSUF's Teatro del
Espiritu (5 P,.m.) and Comparsa
(1: 15) will perform along with
Martachi,san Joaquin de la Tierra (12:30) of Fresno. Teatro de
la Tierra (3: 15) of Del Rey•s
Colegio de la Tierra 1s also
scheduled.
For fUrther SJVRP information catl Luis Ambriz, 442-0182.
2-THE -.DAILY COUEGIAN
Wednesday, April 28, 1976-
Chicanos march for solidarity
.Saturday, April ·11, a march of Chicano solidarity was staged followed by a rally in Roeding Park. A large turnout walked from Dick~ _Playground at Divisadero an~
Blackstdne to the park, where they heard speakers and entertainment. The show of unity effort was sponsored by La Raza Unida. (La Voz photos by Ramon Perez antl
Tom Uribes)
-Students may get tutors from departments·
The Office ofTutorialServices
wishes to announce that tutorial
assistance will be available for
most classes during the month of
May. There are several departm~nts which have their own
departmental sessions operating
this semester. If you wish some
tutorial assistance, there are
departmental sessipns available.
We suggest that you try them before you come to -see us. The
following is a listing of which
departments will have active tutorial sessions in MaY,:
MATHEMATICS
Monday:
0910 - 1000 Staff West*
1110 - 1200 SA 26A
1310 - 1400 ss 106
1410 - 1500 s.g 104
Tuesday:
1010 - 1200 Staff West*
Wednesday:
1910 - 1000 Staff West*
1110 - 1200 SA 26A
1310 -, 1500 ss 205
Thursday:
1110 - 1200 IA f23
1410 - 1500 AH 212A
Friday:
1010 - 1200 Staff West*
1410 - 1500IA 125
*Staff West is 1ocated at the west
end of the cafeteria building
(formerly Faculty DintngRoom)
across from the library.
CHEMISTRY
Thursday:
1500 - 1600 S 192
Friday:
1400 - 1500 S 192
BUSINESS (in B 210) .
Monday:
1000 - 1200 A. Hariry, - QM
Tuesday:
1100 - 1400 N_.. Khat - QM,
Computer Science
1400 - 1600 L. Rippee - Accounting, QM, Finance,
Computer Science
Wednesday:
0800 - 1000 L. Rippee - Accounting, QM, Finance, .
Computer Science
1000 - 1200 A. Hariry - QM
1200 - 1400 L. Rippee - Accounting, QM, Finance,
Computer Science
1400 - 1600 A. Hartry - QM
Thursday:
0800 - 1300 N. Khai - QM,
Computer ~cience
1400 - 1600 L. Rippee - Ac-
counting, QM, Finance,
Computer Science
Friday:
1000 - 1100 A. Hariry - QM
1500 - 16Q0 A. Hariry - QM
PSYCHOLOGY
(in Psychology Dept. office EdP 234)
Monday through Friday:
0800 - 1000 (A.M.)
Tuesday and Thursday:
11:00 - 1600 (P.M.)
Also by appointment
ECONOMICS:
In Economics Department office, SS 211E
ALL FOREIGN LANGUAGES:
Check with the department
secretary, SR4-107
SCHOOL OF ENGINEERING:
Check in Department office,
E 122.
BIOLOGY 10 ONLY:
In Biology Department, S 111.
SPEECH:
In Department Office, SA 15.
If the above mentioned departmental tutorial sessions do not
meet your needs, please come in
to see us in the Keats Campus
Building, room 102. Our office
hours are !ram 8 a.m. to 7 p. m.
Monday through Thursday and
8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Friday. If you
are a veteran, we have two
veteran liaisons available Monday through Friday .to service
your needs. Tutorials assistance
is free to all CSUF students so
don't wait until it's too late, call
Manuel Olgin, Coordinator, Tutorial Services, 487-2924/2188.
Initiative finds support
(Continued from Page 1)
ban areas do.
As for the campaign on campus, Perez said although he is
satisfied with the support
MEChA's UFW Committee received, it •could have been better."
· •The initiative didn't have time
to become an issue on campus,•
said Perez.
He attributed this to the short
time with which the union had to
work it, and the fact Easter vacation interrupted the university
life right in the middle of the
drive.
However, Perez said he was
able to personally obtain some
400 signatures and knew of at least
"five or six• other persons also
having full petitions out. He es-
Zenovich
(Continued from Page 1)
announcing its first year appropriation was running out. Since
then, three of the board's five
members and its counsel have
resigned.
Because the - board was not
augmented additiona1 funding, the
UFW took to the people in an
initiative drive ( see related
story). Boatwright also drafted
legislation to augment but it still
met grower disapproval.
Now Roberti has told reporters
that six.other senators are 'leaning "more than 90 degrees our
way" and that he would rather
wait until Monday to have the Senate vote so Gov. Brown could be
present. Brown is currently campaigning for the presidency in
Maryland.
However, Sen. JohnNejedly, RWalnut Creek, may try to get the
bill up tomorrow because •u
ought to be decided one way or the
other," re.ported AP.
The wirepress aisb reported
that UFW spokesperson Marc
Grossman said the initiative
drive was •unquestionably" the
reason some senators were now
leaning toward voting for the
bill.
•They think that by appropriating some money it will undercut the initiative,• he said. "But
there is no way we're going to
turn back."
He said he didn't think approval
of the bill would hurt the initiative's chances of passage.
Senator Zenovich, who was one
of the authors of the original
ALRB last year but turned
against the - board's emergency
augmentation because he felt it
was biased towards the UFW, .
said he would "probably" vote for
the new measure if growers had
ample input in the selection of
new ALRB members, report_ed
AP.
_ti mated approximately 1,000 signatures have been obtained
through CSUF.
Of his encounters, Perez said
"98 per cent were favorable" and
the other 2 per cent did not sign
because they were "too busy, not
interested, or didn't know enough
about the issue to commlt a signature of support."
Many others asked him, •Don't
you have that right already?"
Perez said they were referring
to last year's enactment of the
ALRA.
•Many people assume farmworkers have the right to pick
our own union," said Perez. •we
do, but now it's unfunctional because the grower-controlled legislature won't let the law Ii ve."
He also mentioned a great majority of , the signers were nonChicano.
The student volunteers also
worked off campus. Perez said
shopping centers, churches and
organization meetings were covered by supporters carrying petitions.
St. Alphonsus, Mt. Carmel, and
St. John Catholic churches in
Fresno were petitioned every
Sunday after Mass. Last montb,
Perez went to the California
Democrati<; Coalition where he
was "received warmly," with a
majority of the members signing
the petitions.
The booth which the UFW ha_s
been using during the drive on
campus will be up until Thursday
with the committee still seeking
signatures;
"We're going strong to the
end," said Perez. "Cesar will
probably want to get one million
signatures to show that the people
support farmworkers rights.•
He said the union announced a
celebration Saturday, May 13, in
Delano. It will start at 9 a.m.
with Mass, followed by a barbecue
and a teatro performance.
Scholarships to be awarded
Qualifications have been determined for scholarships which
will be awarded to four Chicanos
by the Chicano Faculty, Staff and
Student Organization (CFSSO).
Tony Garduque, member of
CFSSO's ScholarshipCommlttee,
said one will be awarded to a
graduate student, two to continuing students and. one to a freshman. The scholarships are $200
each.
To qualify one must have a
2.5 grade point average (G.P.A.)
and be a full time student.
Applications wilf be available
by May 10 at the E.O.P. office,
financial aids and Manuel Olgin's
office (Tutorial Services) in the
Keats Campus Bldg. The deadline is June 18.
For further information con- .
tact Tommie Cruz at 487-1021
or rsabele Mejorado at487-2182.
THE DAILY COLLEGIAN
Published five days a week except holidays
and examination periods by the Associated
Students of California State University,
F resno. Mail subscriptions $12 a semester,
$20 a year. Editorial office: Keats'-campus
Building, telephone 487-2486. Business and
advertising office: Keats-Campus Building,
telephone 487-2266.
Opinions expressed in Collegian editorials
and commentaries are not necessarily those
of California State University, Fresno, or
the student body.
LA \"OZ DI'..
~7. TLA~
Staff . . . .. . . . . Ma rgare t Esparza,
Ernesto Moreno, Anna Nori ega,
Cindy Orona, Angie Rios , Martha
Uribes
Photographer .. . . . .. Ramon Perez
Contributors . . . . .. Cindy Cabrera,
Mi_gueJ Contreras , Munchie Olgin ,
E nc Strom
Edito r . • .. . , . . . .. Tomas Uribe!i
_BIO-FEEDBACK
PRIVATE
INSTRUCTION
ON
E.G.G. MACHINE
by appointment only
266-4151
IN .FRESNO TO STAY!
Wednesday, April 2~, 1976
J~E DAILY COLLEGIAN-3
Letters··to ·the editor_____
Student knocks
MEChA concern
Editor:
In the recent issue of La Voz
de · Aztlan, it was reported that
the Mechistas were coming out
against the Bicentennial.
My first reaction was similar
to the feeling I would ge,.t reading
a •Donnesbary" (sic) comic strip.
Mike Donnesbary talking to Zonker Harris: •What's up?• Zonker:
"We're getting a march together
·to protest the Bicentennial."
Mlke: •oh really, why?" Zonker:
•To protest its commercialization and to stop the Capitalists
from realizing a profit." Mike:
•ought to be good for a week."
It just doesn't seem to me that
anyone would seriously protest
America's 200th birthday.
I'm not much of a flag-waving
star-spangled-banner ~ype, but
I believe that this is getting a
little extreme.
Looking at it another way, why
don't all the non-Mexican Americans protest Cinco de Mayo? I
mean if we recognize the cele-
HELP WANTED
Addressers wanted Immediately!
Work aJ home - no experience
necessary - excellent pay . Write
American Service
1401 Wilson Blvd., Suite 101
Arlington , Va. 22209
bration of another country's indepence. day, what right do the
Mechlstas have in protesting the
Bicentennial? The country in
which they claim citizenship!
Something' seems a little wrong
from my point of view.
Mikel R. M~yer
Rios thanks
students
Editor:
This is to thank all the students
who came out and voted April 7
and 8 on behalf of Angio Rios
for President Slate. Thank you
again.
Angie Rios
Richard Carrillo
Arturo 011 vas
.' DON'T DELAY _
;Book By Phone
New Flights to Europe:(379'!1°),
South America (311+), The Orie~t
(499+), New York (189), Hawaii
( 189). Long duration and o / w
' flights st i ll av a ilable'. Immediate
phone confirmations call collect
Westcoast Student Travel
Counsel, AVCO Center
10850 Wilshire LA 90024
(213) 475•6865
. The· above is not sponsored by CSUf
or the CSUF Associated Students.
4-THE DAILY COLLEGIAN
Wednesday, April 28, 1976
Tardeadas, speakers set for Semana
TARDEADA AT KEARNEY PARK
Pan Dulce y Cafe
9:30 a.m.
MONDAY, MAY 3
FOOD & MUSIC
Children Dancers from
Sanger Elementary
10:00 a.m.
9:30 a.m. - Pan Dulce y Cafe
Sponsored by the San Joaquin
Voter Registration Project
10:00 a.m.
10:30 a.m.
(Presented by CSUF-M.E.C.H.A.
and ' Associated Students)
10:30 a.m.
Proclamation: Honorable
Armando Rodriguez
11:00 a.m.
Clovis High Dancers
11:30 a.m.
Speaker:
Richard Chavez
12 noon
CSUF Comparsa
Mercado begins
•
SUNDAY, MAY 2
11:00 a.m. - Mariachi Zapopan
Masses held in honor of National Farmworker Week:
Mt. Carmel
12:15
st. Johns
12:15
St. Alphonsus
1:15
11:30 a.m. - Speaker:
Dr. Ricardo Romo
12 noon
Speaker:
Jessie De La Cruz
Mariachi ,Zapopan
~
Teatro del Espiritu
Mercado begins
1:00 .p.m.
-
Speaker: Rudy Amada
12 noon
Danzantes de Aztlan
Mercado begins
Speaker:
Theresa Perez
9:0J p.m.
Free Dance
•Mestizo"
College Union Lounge
7:00 p.m.
2:00 p.m •.
Mariachi Santa Cruz
Danzantes de Aztlan
CSUF Comparsa
(Parents Night)
7:30 p.m.
Duet~ Ilusion
Movie:
"Los Desarraigados"
Pedro Armendariz
MANUKIAN'S
FCC plans Cinco Tues.-Wed.
IMPORTED
FOODS
BASTURMA & SOUJOUK CO.
Introducing Foul Falafel • Homus Foods
Retail MnLc~~~gs 'Wholesgl~
· · · --
_ 12:30 p.m. ~ 1:30 p.m.
Lunch and Maria chi
(Student Lounge)
1:30 p.m. - 1:45 p.m.
Guest Speaker (Student Lounge)
3:00 p.m. - 6:00 p.m.
Dance (Student Lounge)
Dried Beef Products
MIDDLE EASTERN F O O ~
- Backgan_imon
Boards
•
Turkish Coffee
·17'20 S. ORANGE AVE.
Arabic Breads
FRESNO, CALIF. 93702
··
268-5944
,
-·.
·
Middle Eastern
Records & Tapes
OPENS. THURSDAY NIGHT!
CSUF UNIVERSITY THEATRE PRESENTS
~-e c r u it m i n or it i e s
CSUF will conduct a "Graduate
Fair" today from 10 a.m. to 2
p.m. on the College Union Veranda to recruit more students into
California graduate programs.
EURIPIDES'
Cancer education
THE BACCHAE
A breast and cervical cancer
education program will be conducted by the League of Mexican
American Women and the People's Acti0n Project Against Cancer tomorrow at 7:30 p.m.
It will take place at the Sunset
Community Center, 1224 S. Channing Center, Fresno. The program, which is free, will include
films, literature, and _the demonstrations fn English and Spanish.
OVEl?SEAS JOBS
11:30 a.m.
7:00 p.m.
Pinatas
Roommate(s) wanted. Very nice
apt., ref., tennis courts / pool /
complete gym. Ladies pref. 1
mi I e to campus. John - 431-4987.
Marisella Dancers and
Marimba
Mariachi Santa Cruz
1:30 p.m.
MAY 4, TUESDAY
10:00 a.m. - 2:00 p.m.
Art Show (Lawn area, next to
cafeteria)
11:00 a.m. - 11:45 a.m.
Marimba Band (Auditorium)
Noon - 1:30 p.m.
Teatro spiritu (Auditorium)
1:45 p.m. - 2:45 p.m.
Marisella's Dancers
(Auditorium)
7:00 p,m. - 10:00 p.m.
Art show (Peer Counseling
Center A-132, refreshments
served)
7:00 p.m. - 8:30 p.m.
Poetry Reading; Music
(Auditorium)
8:30 p.m. - 9:30 p.m.
Los Danzantes de Aztlan
(Auditorium)
11:00 a.m.
2:00 p.m.
TARDEADA AT KEARNEY PARK
(afternoon)
MAY 5, WEDNESDAY
9:30 a.m. - 10:00 a.m.
Chile Eating Contest
(Lawn Area)
10:00 a.m. - 11:00 a.m.
Tortilla Making Contest
(Lawn Area)
10:00 a.m. - 2:00 p.m.
Art Show (Peer Counseling
Center, A-132)
11:00 a.m. - Noon
F'.C.C. Dancers
(Student Loung-e)
Noon - 12:30 p.m.
Pinata (Lawn Area)
Speaker: Toshta
Pinatas
Pinatas
Mariachi Santa Cruz
The following is Fresno City
College's CincodeMayoschedule
of activities for next Tuesday and
Wednesday.
10:30 a.m.
1:30 p.m.
1:30 p.m.
2:00 p.m.
-
Selma Dancers and
Marimba
Speaker:
Dr. Jesus Luna
Speaker:
Dr. Alex Saragoza
8:00 p.m.
10:00 a.m.
1:00 p.m.
1:00 p.m.
8:00 p.m. - Movie: "Macario"
Ignacio Lopez Tarzo
Pan r:>ulce y Cafe
9:30 a.m.
Speaker:
Haydee Chavez
Sponsored by the Alegria y Esperanza
Office of the Spanish-speaking.
Sponsored by
the Comite Civico Mexicano
9:00 p.m.
Comite Civico Mexicano
and CSUFM.E.Ch.A. present a. Free Night Dance
WEDNESDAY, MAY 5
TUESDAY, MAY 4
"Mestizo•
•Sabor de Ritmo"
at the Rainbow Ballroom
SATURDAY, MAY 1
(12:00 noon to 6:00 p.m.)
HELP WANTEU
- summer 1 year-round Europe, S. America, Australia,
Asia, etc. All fields, $500$1200 monthly. Expenses paid,
sightseeing. Free infonn.-Write:
International Job Center, Dept.
CF, Box 4490, Berkeley, CA
COLORADO WYOMING MONTANA
Summertime employees for dude
ranches, Nat. Parks, and U.S . Forest Service. 'For information and
directory send $3 .00 to Outdoor
Services Box 349 Cody, Wyoming
82414.
94704
Neil Simon's smash comedy
ODD COUPLE
, Thursday, Friday and Saturday nights
through ·May 1, except Ap.rll 24
Student Discount $2.00
(Thursday only)
Phone: 486-3381
Cu.rtain: 8:30 p.m.
, Reservations recommended
(:opy plus
Mon.-Fri. 8:30-5:30
Sat. 9:00-1 :00
XEROX COPIES
General
High School
CSUF Activity Card
8:15 p.m.
NO MINIMUM -
Bring Student ID - we run it for you!
April 29 - May 19
May 4- 89 1976
.G u~rantee Towers
1322 E. Shaw
Staged by Terry Miller
'
+@
John "\Vri2"ht Theatre
(Little Theatre)
Produced in cooperation with the Associated Students.
226-2666
2.50
1.50
Semana d_ecla red. an official .week
The ~resno County Board of Supervisors unanimously passed a
re sol uh on yesterday proclaiming the week April 28 through May 5
1976. as Semana de la Raza.
'
Semana has been recognized at CSUF since 1969 with celebrations
takin~ place during the semana (week). The university's fe~tivities
co~rdmated by MEChA: are funded by Associated Students funds. '
\ esterday, CSUF students representing Trabajadores de la Raza
and the Easton Southwest Organization presented the resolution to
the Board with all memhers present.
IN THE MATTER OF
SEMAN A DE LA RAZA
sacrifice - defeated this invading force
in this great battle; and
WHEREAS, Cinco de Mayo has since
RESOLUTION PROCLAIMING WEEK OF
been celebrated the world over as a day
APRIL 28 - MAY 5, 19.76 AS SUCH
symbolizing the opposition of free people to foreign domination and the triumph
WHEREAS, the Republic of Mexico
over oppression; and
· was invaded by foreign troops in 1862;
WHEREAS, this day is now recorded
and
in the annals of history along with the
WHEREAS, this invading foreign army
Fourth of July and Bastille Day as one
was met at Guadalupe Hill near the City
of the great days in the advancement of
of Puebla on the fifth d_ay of May, 1862
human liberty and self-government with
by an outnumbered and untrained Mexican '
· num~rous Chicano organizations and
force, and under the command oflgnacio • Spanish-speaking communities sponsorZaragoza, . the soldiers of Mexico ing appropriate observances during the
through · their great courage and selfweek of Cinco de Mayo; and
ESO director and CSUF student Tomas Reyes spoke to the Board
about the resolution's significance. After the action, he told La Voz,
''This is important for all schools and institutions who do not consider the week as important to the total community."
At CSUF, Semana activities· begin Saturday with a tardeada and
end next Wednesday with a free dance. People attending the dance
are asked to dress in Mexican clothes. A surprise will be given to
the best-dressed.
A schedule of activities is found elsewhere in La Voz.
WHEREAS, during this week, it will be
fitting for all Californians to contemplate
the historical contributions of Mexican
culture and character to the history of
this State which enriched and advanced
our multi-racial culture and to acknowledge the contributions of MexicanAmerican Citizens in areas of education,
labor, industry, government and the professions; and
WHEREAS, Fresno State University
has recognized the contributions of
Mexican culture-to the State of California
and has designated the week of April 28
through May 5 asSEMANADELARAZA;
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RE-
SOLVED that the Fresno County Board
of Supervisors hereby proclaims the
week of Aprlt 28 through May 5, 1976 as
SEMANA DE LA RAZA
and urges all public entities to sponsor
and prepare programs during this week
and take the opportunity to learn the
role that the Mexican culture has played
in the development of the United States,
the State of California, and in the County
of Fresno.
·
·The foregoing resolution was passed
and adopted by the Fresno County Board
of Supervisors this .27th day of April,
1976.
LA VOZ
>
DE AZTLAN
LXXX/121
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 28, 1976
A special edition of THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, California State University, Fresno
Fa_rmworkers get
600,000 names
by Tom Uribes
The United F a r m w o r k e rs
Union may get nearly one million
signatures in its drive to secure
farmworkers rights after reporting 604,772 were obtained statewide as of Sunday.
312,404 signatures were
needed by April 28, to place on
the November 8 ballot the initiative which would force the legislature to keep Agricultural Labor
Relations Board (ALRB) funded
and require a vote of the people
to amend the farm labor law.
It would also place in the California Constitution the controversial access rule which allows
union organizers to go into the
field three times a day to recruit
workers.
However, CSUF MEChA's representative to the U F W, Juan
·perez, said the Selma UFWoffice
reported Fresno County will not
reach its goal in the drive.
Earlier this year, growerbacked state legislators were
able to block emergency appropriations of the act after it ran
out of money halfway through its
fiscal year.
As a result, Cesar Chavez'
UFW took to the people in the effort to overcome the powerful
money interests in the state cap-
Senators pressed
by UFW Initiative?
A vote now leaning in favor of
the United Farm Workers concerning the ALRB funding may
go before the State Senate tomorrow, a change in the complex issue which the UFW is viewing as
a result of their successful initiative drive.
The Associated Press reported
yesterday Sen ate Democratic
i1oor leader David Roberti, DLos Angeles, felt he had 24 of the
27 Senate votes needed to approve
a $2,5 million ALRB funding bill
which has been bottled up in the
Senate by growers and their legsilati ve allies.
Growers contend the board has
been pro-UFW. They say they
want eight changes made before
they'll support the law, including
restrictions on the ALRB's controversial access rule.
Now, the new picture of the
controversial farm labor issue
includes possible reconsideration L,, Sen. George Zenovich, DFresno, who has sided with growers and helped block passage of
earlier ALRB emergency appropriations.
The new bill, drafted by Assemblyman Daniel B. Boatwright,
D-Concord, would provide funds
to revive the ALRB through the
fiscal year.
The Board is the agency that
administers California's landmark farm labor law, the Agricultural Labor Relations Act of
1975.
The board stopped holding farm
labor elections in Febtuary after '
(Continued on Page 3, Col. 1)
FARMWORKER WEEK
Farm laborers throughout
the world will be saluted
during the week of May 2-8
which has been set aside as
"Farmworker Week.• This
commemoration is sponsored by the Secretariat for
the Spanish Speaking, a division of the United States
catholic Conference.
itol.
"We can't rely on the legislature to work for farmworkers,"
Chavez said in Los Angeles when
beginniJ1g the drive April 1. •we
have to take it to the people."
Although the initiative required
312,404 signatures the union set
a goal or 540,000 to guard against
disqualification due to technical
invalidations. Perez said this
allows for 40 per cent invalidation based on the marijuana initiative drive.
Perez also said more signatures have been secured than are
being reported to the media. He
explained the union is screening
all petitions itself and sending
forth only the valid signatures to
avoid any technical faults.
Despite the significant showing
statewide, Fresno County will
reach much less than one-half
of its 12,000 goal set.
Perez said the Selma UFW office reported only 44 petitions
have been turned in for a total of
2,624 in Fresno County as of
Sunday.
•It's not surprising," said Peez. •we weren't depending on
the rural areas for support.•
He said the union set their priori ties in the highly urbanized
areas where a higher percentage
of people are registered Democrats, such as the Sacramento,
San Francisco, Los Angeles and'
San Diego areas.
•There's a more liberal element and viable situation in the
urban areas," he said.
Although it would seem logical
to assume the rural areas would
carry a higher concentration of
people in favor of the drive (such
as farmworkers), Perez said the
problem is that a significant number of these people are not registered voters, which is
requirement for signing the pe titian.
He also said many others do
not have access to the media and
knowledge of the issue as the ur(Continued on Page 3, Col. 1)
a
SEMANA ACTIVITIES next week will include Teatro (above), Comparsa and Danzantes. Semana chairperson MinnieCarrilloextendsan
invitation for the general public to participate in Semana to better
its understanding of the Chicano and our cultura Mexicana. Semana
schedule is on page 4.
Mexican films
here next week
Semana de la Raza chairperson
Minnie Carrillo announced two
Mexican films (in Spanish) will
be shown next week as part of
Cinco de Mayo activities:
"Los Desarraigados•
, This film depicts the Mejicanos' problems of trying to live
separate from those of his race.
It tells of the time when Mejicanos leave Mexico for the United
States in an effort to-make itbig,
by anglocizing and assimilating
into the Anglo culture. The mm
is in Spanish and will be shown
on Tuesday, May 4, 1976, at
8:00 p.m. in the College Union
lounge.
"Macario~
"Macario" stars Ignacio Lopez
Tarso in a film which shows a
poor man who finds himself dealing with the Devil · in order to
survive for his family and himself. Film will be shown onMonday, May 3, at 8:00 p.m. in the
College Union lounge.
SNRP sets drives
Throughout the month of April,
the San Joaquin Voter Registration Project is sponsoring small
rallies throughout the valley.
Last Saturday, Reedley held a
voter registration tardeada.
This Saturday a tardeada at
Kea-rney Park is scheduled.
There will be several community
organizations selling food, beer
and soft drinks. Entertainment
will also be provided. Deputy
registrars will be available for
anyone wishing to register.
A registration rally will be
held in Sanger on May 2, next to
the Royal Theater on the corner
of "L • and 7th Street, where a
Chicano cultural mural . was
painted last year. It is organized
by the Sanger Committee of the
SJVRP, It will be from noon to
7 p.m.
At Sanger, CSUF's Teatro del
Espiritu (5 P,.m.) and Comparsa
(1: 15) will perform along with
Martachi,san Joaquin de la Tierra (12:30) of Fresno. Teatro de
la Tierra (3: 15) of Del Rey•s
Colegio de la Tierra 1s also
scheduled.
For fUrther SJVRP information catl Luis Ambriz, 442-0182.
2-THE -.DAILY COUEGIAN
Wednesday, April 28, 1976-
Chicanos march for solidarity
.Saturday, April ·11, a march of Chicano solidarity was staged followed by a rally in Roeding Park. A large turnout walked from Dick~ _Playground at Divisadero an~
Blackstdne to the park, where they heard speakers and entertainment. The show of unity effort was sponsored by La Raza Unida. (La Voz photos by Ramon Perez antl
Tom Uribes)
-Students may get tutors from departments·
The Office ofTutorialServices
wishes to announce that tutorial
assistance will be available for
most classes during the month of
May. There are several departm~nts which have their own
departmental sessions operating
this semester. If you wish some
tutorial assistance, there are
departmental sessipns available.
We suggest that you try them before you come to -see us. The
following is a listing of which
departments will have active tutorial sessions in MaY,:
MATHEMATICS
Monday:
0910 - 1000 Staff West*
1110 - 1200 SA 26A
1310 - 1400 ss 106
1410 - 1500 s.g 104
Tuesday:
1010 - 1200 Staff West*
Wednesday:
1910 - 1000 Staff West*
1110 - 1200 SA 26A
1310 -, 1500 ss 205
Thursday:
1110 - 1200 IA f23
1410 - 1500 AH 212A
Friday:
1010 - 1200 Staff West*
1410 - 1500IA 125
*Staff West is 1ocated at the west
end of the cafeteria building
(formerly Faculty DintngRoom)
across from the library.
CHEMISTRY
Thursday:
1500 - 1600 S 192
Friday:
1400 - 1500 S 192
BUSINESS (in B 210) .
Monday:
1000 - 1200 A. Hariry, - QM
Tuesday:
1100 - 1400 N_.. Khat - QM,
Computer Science
1400 - 1600 L. Rippee - Accounting, QM, Finance,
Computer Science
Wednesday:
0800 - 1000 L. Rippee - Accounting, QM, Finance, .
Computer Science
1000 - 1200 A. Hariry - QM
1200 - 1400 L. Rippee - Accounting, QM, Finance,
Computer Science
1400 - 1600 A. Hartry - QM
Thursday:
0800 - 1300 N. Khai - QM,
Computer ~cience
1400 - 1600 L. Rippee - Ac-
counting, QM, Finance,
Computer Science
Friday:
1000 - 1100 A. Hariry - QM
1500 - 16Q0 A. Hariry - QM
PSYCHOLOGY
(in Psychology Dept. office EdP 234)
Monday through Friday:
0800 - 1000 (A.M.)
Tuesday and Thursday:
11:00 - 1600 (P.M.)
Also by appointment
ECONOMICS:
In Economics Department office, SS 211E
ALL FOREIGN LANGUAGES:
Check with the department
secretary, SR4-107
SCHOOL OF ENGINEERING:
Check in Department office,
E 122.
BIOLOGY 10 ONLY:
In Biology Department, S 111.
SPEECH:
In Department Office, SA 15.
If the above mentioned departmental tutorial sessions do not
meet your needs, please come in
to see us in the Keats Campus
Building, room 102. Our office
hours are !ram 8 a.m. to 7 p. m.
Monday through Thursday and
8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Friday. If you
are a veteran, we have two
veteran liaisons available Monday through Friday .to service
your needs. Tutorials assistance
is free to all CSUF students so
don't wait until it's too late, call
Manuel Olgin, Coordinator, Tutorial Services, 487-2924/2188.
Initiative finds support
(Continued from Page 1)
ban areas do.
As for the campaign on campus, Perez said although he is
satisfied with the support
MEChA's UFW Committee received, it •could have been better."
· •The initiative didn't have time
to become an issue on campus,•
said Perez.
He attributed this to the short
time with which the union had to
work it, and the fact Easter vacation interrupted the university
life right in the middle of the
drive.
However, Perez said he was
able to personally obtain some
400 signatures and knew of at least
"five or six• other persons also
having full petitions out. He es-
Zenovich
(Continued from Page 1)
announcing its first year appropriation was running out. Since
then, three of the board's five
members and its counsel have
resigned.
Because the - board was not
augmented additiona1 funding, the
UFW took to the people in an
initiative drive ( see related
story). Boatwright also drafted
legislation to augment but it still
met grower disapproval.
Now Roberti has told reporters
that six.other senators are 'leaning "more than 90 degrees our
way" and that he would rather
wait until Monday to have the Senate vote so Gov. Brown could be
present. Brown is currently campaigning for the presidency in
Maryland.
However, Sen. JohnNejedly, RWalnut Creek, may try to get the
bill up tomorrow because •u
ought to be decided one way or the
other," re.ported AP.
The wirepress aisb reported
that UFW spokesperson Marc
Grossman said the initiative
drive was •unquestionably" the
reason some senators were now
leaning toward voting for the
bill.
•They think that by appropriating some money it will undercut the initiative,• he said. "But
there is no way we're going to
turn back."
He said he didn't think approval
of the bill would hurt the initiative's chances of passage.
Senator Zenovich, who was one
of the authors of the original
ALRB last year but turned
against the - board's emergency
augmentation because he felt it
was biased towards the UFW, .
said he would "probably" vote for
the new measure if growers had
ample input in the selection of
new ALRB members, report_ed
AP.
_ti mated approximately 1,000 signatures have been obtained
through CSUF.
Of his encounters, Perez said
"98 per cent were favorable" and
the other 2 per cent did not sign
because they were "too busy, not
interested, or didn't know enough
about the issue to commlt a signature of support."
Many others asked him, •Don't
you have that right already?"
Perez said they were referring
to last year's enactment of the
ALRA.
•Many people assume farmworkers have the right to pick
our own union," said Perez. •we
do, but now it's unfunctional because the grower-controlled legislature won't let the law Ii ve."
He also mentioned a great majority of , the signers were nonChicano.
The student volunteers also
worked off campus. Perez said
shopping centers, churches and
organization meetings were covered by supporters carrying petitions.
St. Alphonsus, Mt. Carmel, and
St. John Catholic churches in
Fresno were petitioned every
Sunday after Mass. Last montb,
Perez went to the California
Democrati<; Coalition where he
was "received warmly," with a
majority of the members signing
the petitions.
The booth which the UFW ha_s
been using during the drive on
campus will be up until Thursday
with the committee still seeking
signatures;
"We're going strong to the
end," said Perez. "Cesar will
probably want to get one million
signatures to show that the people
support farmworkers rights.•
He said the union announced a
celebration Saturday, May 13, in
Delano. It will start at 9 a.m.
with Mass, followed by a barbecue
and a teatro performance.
Scholarships to be awarded
Qualifications have been determined for scholarships which
will be awarded to four Chicanos
by the Chicano Faculty, Staff and
Student Organization (CFSSO).
Tony Garduque, member of
CFSSO's ScholarshipCommlttee,
said one will be awarded to a
graduate student, two to continuing students and. one to a freshman. The scholarships are $200
each.
To qualify one must have a
2.5 grade point average (G.P.A.)
and be a full time student.
Applications wilf be available
by May 10 at the E.O.P. office,
financial aids and Manuel Olgin's
office (Tutorial Services) in the
Keats Campus Bldg. The deadline is June 18.
For further information con- .
tact Tommie Cruz at 487-1021
or rsabele Mejorado at487-2182.
THE DAILY COLLEGIAN
Published five days a week except holidays
and examination periods by the Associated
Students of California State University,
F resno. Mail subscriptions $12 a semester,
$20 a year. Editorial office: Keats'-campus
Building, telephone 487-2486. Business and
advertising office: Keats-Campus Building,
telephone 487-2266.
Opinions expressed in Collegian editorials
and commentaries are not necessarily those
of California State University, Fresno, or
the student body.
LA \"OZ DI'..
~7. TLA~
Staff . . . .. . . . . Ma rgare t Esparza,
Ernesto Moreno, Anna Nori ega,
Cindy Orona, Angie Rios , Martha
Uribes
Photographer .. . . . .. Ramon Perez
Contributors . . . . .. Cindy Cabrera,
Mi_gueJ Contreras , Munchie Olgin ,
E nc Strom
Edito r . • .. . , . . . .. Tomas Uribe!i
_BIO-FEEDBACK
PRIVATE
INSTRUCTION
ON
E.G.G. MACHINE
by appointment only
266-4151
IN .FRESNO TO STAY!
Wednesday, April 2~, 1976
J~E DAILY COLLEGIAN-3
Letters··to ·the editor_____
Student knocks
MEChA concern
Editor:
In the recent issue of La Voz
de · Aztlan, it was reported that
the Mechistas were coming out
against the Bicentennial.
My first reaction was similar
to the feeling I would ge,.t reading
a •Donnesbary" (sic) comic strip.
Mike Donnesbary talking to Zonker Harris: •What's up?• Zonker:
"We're getting a march together
·to protest the Bicentennial."
Mlke: •oh really, why?" Zonker:
•To protest its commercialization and to stop the Capitalists
from realizing a profit." Mike:
•ought to be good for a week."
It just doesn't seem to me that
anyone would seriously protest
America's 200th birthday.
I'm not much of a flag-waving
star-spangled-banner ~ype, but
I believe that this is getting a
little extreme.
Looking at it another way, why
don't all the non-Mexican Americans protest Cinco de Mayo? I
mean if we recognize the cele-
HELP WANTED
Addressers wanted Immediately!
Work aJ home - no experience
necessary - excellent pay . Write
American Service
1401 Wilson Blvd., Suite 101
Arlington , Va. 22209
bration of another country's indepence. day, what right do the
Mechlstas have in protesting the
Bicentennial? The country in
which they claim citizenship!
Something' seems a little wrong
from my point of view.
Mikel R. M~yer
Rios thanks
students
Editor:
This is to thank all the students
who came out and voted April 7
and 8 on behalf of Angio Rios
for President Slate. Thank you
again.
Angie Rios
Richard Carrillo
Arturo 011 vas
.' DON'T DELAY _
;Book By Phone
New Flights to Europe:(379'!1°),
South America (311+), The Orie~t
(499+), New York (189), Hawaii
( 189). Long duration and o / w
' flights st i ll av a ilable'. Immediate
phone confirmations call collect
Westcoast Student Travel
Counsel, AVCO Center
10850 Wilshire LA 90024
(213) 475•6865
. The· above is not sponsored by CSUf
or the CSUF Associated Students.
4-THE DAILY COLLEGIAN
Wednesday, April 28, 1976
Tardeadas, speakers set for Semana
TARDEADA AT KEARNEY PARK
Pan Dulce y Cafe
9:30 a.m.
MONDAY, MAY 3
FOOD & MUSIC
Children Dancers from
Sanger Elementary
10:00 a.m.
9:30 a.m. - Pan Dulce y Cafe
Sponsored by the San Joaquin
Voter Registration Project
10:00 a.m.
10:30 a.m.
(Presented by CSUF-M.E.C.H.A.
and ' Associated Students)
10:30 a.m.
Proclamation: Honorable
Armando Rodriguez
11:00 a.m.
Clovis High Dancers
11:30 a.m.
Speaker:
Richard Chavez
12 noon
CSUF Comparsa
Mercado begins
•
SUNDAY, MAY 2
11:00 a.m. - Mariachi Zapopan
Masses held in honor of National Farmworker Week:
Mt. Carmel
12:15
st. Johns
12:15
St. Alphonsus
1:15
11:30 a.m. - Speaker:
Dr. Ricardo Romo
12 noon
Speaker:
Jessie De La Cruz
Mariachi ,Zapopan
~
Teatro del Espiritu
Mercado begins
1:00 .p.m.
-
Speaker: Rudy Amada
12 noon
Danzantes de Aztlan
Mercado begins
Speaker:
Theresa Perez
9:0J p.m.
Free Dance
•Mestizo"
College Union Lounge
7:00 p.m.
2:00 p.m •.
Mariachi Santa Cruz
Danzantes de Aztlan
CSUF Comparsa
(Parents Night)
7:30 p.m.
Duet~ Ilusion
Movie:
"Los Desarraigados"
Pedro Armendariz
MANUKIAN'S
FCC plans Cinco Tues.-Wed.
IMPORTED
FOODS
BASTURMA & SOUJOUK CO.
Introducing Foul Falafel • Homus Foods
Retail MnLc~~~gs 'Wholesgl~
· · · --
_ 12:30 p.m. ~ 1:30 p.m.
Lunch and Maria chi
(Student Lounge)
1:30 p.m. - 1:45 p.m.
Guest Speaker (Student Lounge)
3:00 p.m. - 6:00 p.m.
Dance (Student Lounge)
Dried Beef Products
MIDDLE EASTERN F O O ~
- Backgan_imon
Boards
•
Turkish Coffee
·17'20 S. ORANGE AVE.
Arabic Breads
FRESNO, CALIF. 93702
··
268-5944
,
-·.
·
Middle Eastern
Records & Tapes
OPENS. THURSDAY NIGHT!
CSUF UNIVERSITY THEATRE PRESENTS
~-e c r u it m i n or it i e s
CSUF will conduct a "Graduate
Fair" today from 10 a.m. to 2
p.m. on the College Union Veranda to recruit more students into
California graduate programs.
EURIPIDES'
Cancer education
THE BACCHAE
A breast and cervical cancer
education program will be conducted by the League of Mexican
American Women and the People's Acti0n Project Against Cancer tomorrow at 7:30 p.m.
It will take place at the Sunset
Community Center, 1224 S. Channing Center, Fresno. The program, which is free, will include
films, literature, and _the demonstrations fn English and Spanish.
OVEl?SEAS JOBS
11:30 a.m.
7:00 p.m.
Pinatas
Roommate(s) wanted. Very nice
apt., ref., tennis courts / pool /
complete gym. Ladies pref. 1
mi I e to campus. John - 431-4987.
Marisella Dancers and
Marimba
Mariachi Santa Cruz
1:30 p.m.
MAY 4, TUESDAY
10:00 a.m. - 2:00 p.m.
Art Show (Lawn area, next to
cafeteria)
11:00 a.m. - 11:45 a.m.
Marimba Band (Auditorium)
Noon - 1:30 p.m.
Teatro spiritu (Auditorium)
1:45 p.m. - 2:45 p.m.
Marisella's Dancers
(Auditorium)
7:00 p,m. - 10:00 p.m.
Art show (Peer Counseling
Center A-132, refreshments
served)
7:00 p.m. - 8:30 p.m.
Poetry Reading; Music
(Auditorium)
8:30 p.m. - 9:30 p.m.
Los Danzantes de Aztlan
(Auditorium)
11:00 a.m.
2:00 p.m.
TARDEADA AT KEARNEY PARK
(afternoon)
MAY 5, WEDNESDAY
9:30 a.m. - 10:00 a.m.
Chile Eating Contest
(Lawn Area)
10:00 a.m. - 11:00 a.m.
Tortilla Making Contest
(Lawn Area)
10:00 a.m. - 2:00 p.m.
Art Show (Peer Counseling
Center, A-132)
11:00 a.m. - Noon
F'.C.C. Dancers
(Student Loung-e)
Noon - 12:30 p.m.
Pinata (Lawn Area)
Speaker: Toshta
Pinatas
Pinatas
Mariachi Santa Cruz
The following is Fresno City
College's CincodeMayoschedule
of activities for next Tuesday and
Wednesday.
10:30 a.m.
1:30 p.m.
1:30 p.m.
2:00 p.m.
-
Selma Dancers and
Marimba
Speaker:
Dr. Jesus Luna
Speaker:
Dr. Alex Saragoza
8:00 p.m.
10:00 a.m.
1:00 p.m.
1:00 p.m.
8:00 p.m. - Movie: "Macario"
Ignacio Lopez Tarzo
Pan r:>ulce y Cafe
9:30 a.m.
Speaker:
Haydee Chavez
Sponsored by the Alegria y Esperanza
Office of the Spanish-speaking.
Sponsored by
the Comite Civico Mexicano
9:00 p.m.
Comite Civico Mexicano
and CSUFM.E.Ch.A. present a. Free Night Dance
WEDNESDAY, MAY 5
TUESDAY, MAY 4
"Mestizo•
•Sabor de Ritmo"
at the Rainbow Ballroom
SATURDAY, MAY 1
(12:00 noon to 6:00 p.m.)
HELP WANTEU
- summer 1 year-round Europe, S. America, Australia,
Asia, etc. All fields, $500$1200 monthly. Expenses paid,
sightseeing. Free infonn.-Write:
International Job Center, Dept.
CF, Box 4490, Berkeley, CA
COLORADO WYOMING MONTANA
Summertime employees for dude
ranches, Nat. Parks, and U.S . Forest Service. 'For information and
directory send $3 .00 to Outdoor
Services Box 349 Cody, Wyoming
82414.
94704
Neil Simon's smash comedy
ODD COUPLE
, Thursday, Friday and Saturday nights
through ·May 1, except Ap.rll 24
Student Discount $2.00
(Thursday only)
Phone: 486-3381
Cu.rtain: 8:30 p.m.
, Reservations recommended
(:opy plus
Mon.-Fri. 8:30-5:30
Sat. 9:00-1 :00
XEROX COPIES
General
High School
CSUF Activity Card
8:15 p.m.
NO MINIMUM -
Bring Student ID - we run it for you!
April 29 - May 19
May 4- 89 1976
.G u~rantee Towers
1322 E. Shaw
Staged by Terry Miller
'
+@
John "\Vri2"ht Theatre
(Little Theatre)
Produced in cooperation with the Associated Students.
226-2666
2.50
1.50
Board of Supervisors
Semana d_ecla red. an official .week
The ~resno County Board of Supervisors unanimously passed a
re sol uh on yesterday proclaiming the week April 28 through May 5
1976. as Semana de la Raza.
'
Semana has been recognized at CSUF since 1969 with celebrations
takin~ place during the semana (week). The university's fe~tivities
co~rdmated by MEChA: are funded by Associated Students funds. '
\ esterday, CSUF students representing Trabajadores de la Raza
and the Easton Southwest Organization presented the resolution to
the Board with all memhers present.
IN THE MATTER OF
SEMAN A DE LA RAZA
sacrifice - defeated this invading force
in this great battle; and
WHEREAS, Cinco de Mayo has since
RESOLUTION PROCLAIMING WEEK OF
been celebrated the world over as a day
APRIL 28 - MAY 5, 19.76 AS SUCH
symbolizing the opposition of free people to foreign domination and the triumph
WHEREAS, the Republic of Mexico
over oppression; and
· was invaded by foreign troops in 1862;
WHEREAS, this day is now recorded
and
in the annals of history along with the
WHEREAS, this invading foreign army
Fourth of July and Bastille Day as one
was met at Guadalupe Hill near the City
of the great days in the advancement of
of Puebla on the fifth d_ay of May, 1862
human liberty and self-government with
by an outnumbered and untrained Mexican '
· num~rous Chicano organizations and
force, and under the command oflgnacio • Spanish-speaking communities sponsorZaragoza, . the soldiers of Mexico ing appropriate observances during the
through · their great courage and selfweek of Cinco de Mayo; and
ESO director and CSUF student Tomas Reyes spoke to the Board
about the resolution's significance. After the action, he told La Voz,
''This is important for all schools and institutions who do not consider the week as important to the total community."
At CSUF, Semana activities· begin Saturday with a tardeada and
end next Wednesday with a free dance. People attending the dance
are asked to dress in Mexican clothes. A surprise will be given to
the best-dressed.
A schedule of activities is found elsewhere in La Voz.
WHEREAS, during this week, it will be
fitting for all Californians to contemplate
the historical contributions of Mexican
culture and character to the history of
this State which enriched and advanced
our multi-racial culture and to acknowledge the contributions of MexicanAmerican Citizens in areas of education,
labor, industry, government and the professions; and
WHEREAS, Fresno State University
has recognized the contributions of
Mexican culture-to the State of California
and has designated the week of April 28
through May 5 asSEMANADELARAZA;
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RE-
SOLVED that the Fresno County Board
of Supervisors hereby proclaims the
week of Aprlt 28 through May 5, 1976 as
SEMANA DE LA RAZA
and urges all public entities to sponsor
and prepare programs during this week
and take the opportunity to learn the
role that the Mexican culture has played
in the development of the United States,
the State of California, and in the County
of Fresno.
·
·The foregoing resolution was passed
and adopted by the Fresno County Board
of Supervisors this .27th day of April,
1976.
LA VOZ
>
DE AZTLAN
LXXX/121
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 28, 1976
A special edition of THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, California State University, Fresno
Fa_rmworkers get
600,000 names
by Tom Uribes
The United F a r m w o r k e rs
Union may get nearly one million
signatures in its drive to secure
farmworkers rights after reporting 604,772 were obtained statewide as of Sunday.
312,404 signatures were
needed by April 28, to place on
the November 8 ballot the initiative which would force the legislature to keep Agricultural Labor
Relations Board (ALRB) funded
and require a vote of the people
to amend the farm labor law.
It would also place in the California Constitution the controversial access rule which allows
union organizers to go into the
field three times a day to recruit
workers.
However, CSUF MEChA's representative to the U F W, Juan
·perez, said the Selma UFWoffice
reported Fresno County will not
reach its goal in the drive.
Earlier this year, growerbacked state legislators were
able to block emergency appropriations of the act after it ran
out of money halfway through its
fiscal year.
As a result, Cesar Chavez'
UFW took to the people in the effort to overcome the powerful
money interests in the state cap-
Senators pressed
by UFW Initiative?
A vote now leaning in favor of
the United Farm Workers concerning the ALRB funding may
go before the State Senate tomorrow, a change in the complex issue which the UFW is viewing as
a result of their successful initiative drive.
The Associated Press reported
yesterday Sen ate Democratic
i1oor leader David Roberti, DLos Angeles, felt he had 24 of the
27 Senate votes needed to approve
a $2,5 million ALRB funding bill
which has been bottled up in the
Senate by growers and their legsilati ve allies.
Growers contend the board has
been pro-UFW. They say they
want eight changes made before
they'll support the law, including
restrictions on the ALRB's controversial access rule.
Now, the new picture of the
controversial farm labor issue
includes possible reconsideration L,, Sen. George Zenovich, DFresno, who has sided with growers and helped block passage of
earlier ALRB emergency appropriations.
The new bill, drafted by Assemblyman Daniel B. Boatwright,
D-Concord, would provide funds
to revive the ALRB through the
fiscal year.
The Board is the agency that
administers California's landmark farm labor law, the Agricultural Labor Relations Act of
1975.
The board stopped holding farm
labor elections in Febtuary after '
(Continued on Page 3, Col. 1)
FARMWORKER WEEK
Farm laborers throughout
the world will be saluted
during the week of May 2-8
which has been set aside as
"Farmworker Week.• This
commemoration is sponsored by the Secretariat for
the Spanish Speaking, a division of the United States
catholic Conference.
itol.
"We can't rely on the legislature to work for farmworkers,"
Chavez said in Los Angeles when
beginniJ1g the drive April 1. •we
have to take it to the people."
Although the initiative required
312,404 signatures the union set
a goal or 540,000 to guard against
disqualification due to technical
invalidations. Perez said this
allows for 40 per cent invalidation based on the marijuana initiative drive.
Perez also said more signatures have been secured than are
being reported to the media. He
explained the union is screening
all petitions itself and sending
forth only the valid signatures to
avoid any technical faults.
Despite the significant showing
statewide, Fresno County will
reach much less than one-half
of its 12,000 goal set.
Perez said the Selma UFW office reported only 44 petitions
have been turned in for a total of
2,624 in Fresno County as of
Sunday.
•It's not surprising," said Peez. •we weren't depending on
the rural areas for support.•
He said the union set their priori ties in the highly urbanized
areas where a higher percentage
of people are registered Democrats, such as the Sacramento,
San Francisco, Los Angeles and'
San Diego areas.
•There's a more liberal element and viable situation in the
urban areas," he said.
Although it would seem logical
to assume the rural areas would
carry a higher concentration of
people in favor of the drive (such
as farmworkers), Perez said the
problem is that a significant number of these people are not registered voters, which is
requirement for signing the pe titian.
He also said many others do
not have access to the media and
knowledge of the issue as the ur(Continued on Page 3, Col. 1)
a
SEMANA ACTIVITIES next week will include Teatro (above), Comparsa and Danzantes. Semana chairperson MinnieCarrilloextendsan
invitation for the general public to participate in Semana to better
its understanding of the Chicano and our cultura Mexicana. Semana
schedule is on page 4.
Mexican films
here next week
Semana de la Raza chairperson
Minnie Carrillo announced two
Mexican films (in Spanish) will
be shown next week as part of
Cinco de Mayo activities:
"Los Desarraigados•
, This film depicts the Mejicanos' problems of trying to live
separate from those of his race.
It tells of the time when Mejicanos leave Mexico for the United
States in an effort to-make itbig,
by anglocizing and assimilating
into the Anglo culture. The mm
is in Spanish and will be shown
on Tuesday, May 4, 1976, at
8:00 p.m. in the College Union
lounge.
"Macario~
"Macario" stars Ignacio Lopez
Tarso in a film which shows a
poor man who finds himself dealing with the Devil · in order to
survive for his family and himself. Film will be shown onMonday, May 3, at 8:00 p.m. in the
College Union lounge.
SNRP sets drives
Throughout the month of April,
the San Joaquin Voter Registration Project is sponsoring small
rallies throughout the valley.
Last Saturday, Reedley held a
voter registration tardeada.
This Saturday a tardeada at
Kea-rney Park is scheduled.
There will be several community
organizations selling food, beer
and soft drinks. Entertainment
will also be provided. Deputy
registrars will be available for
anyone wishing to register.
A registration rally will be
held in Sanger on May 2, next to
the Royal Theater on the corner
of "L • and 7th Street, where a
Chicano cultural mural . was
painted last year. It is organized
by the Sanger Committee of the
SJVRP, It will be from noon to
7 p.m.
At Sanger, CSUF's Teatro del
Espiritu (5 P,.m.) and Comparsa
(1: 15) will perform along with
Martachi,san Joaquin de la Tierra (12:30) of Fresno. Teatro de
la Tierra (3: 15) of Del Rey•s
Colegio de la Tierra 1s also
scheduled.
For fUrther SJVRP information catl Luis Ambriz, 442-0182.
2-THE -.DAILY COUEGIAN
Wednesday, April 28, 1976-
Chicanos march for solidarity
.Saturday, April ·11, a march of Chicano solidarity was staged followed by a rally in Roeding Park. A large turnout walked from Dick~ _Playground at Divisadero an~
Blackstdne to the park, where they heard speakers and entertainment. The show of unity effort was sponsored by La Raza Unida. (La Voz photos by Ramon Perez antl
Tom Uribes)
-Students may get tutors from departments·
The Office ofTutorialServices
wishes to announce that tutorial
assistance will be available for
most classes during the month of
May. There are several departm~nts which have their own
departmental sessions operating
this semester. If you wish some
tutorial assistance, there are
departmental sessipns available.
We suggest that you try them before you come to -see us. The
following is a listing of which
departments will have active tutorial sessions in MaY,:
MATHEMATICS
Monday:
0910 - 1000 Staff West*
1110 - 1200 SA 26A
1310 - 1400 ss 106
1410 - 1500 s.g 104
Tuesday:
1010 - 1200 Staff West*
Wednesday:
1910 - 1000 Staff West*
1110 - 1200 SA 26A
1310 -, 1500 ss 205
Thursday:
1110 - 1200 IA f23
1410 - 1500 AH 212A
Friday:
1010 - 1200 Staff West*
1410 - 1500IA 125
*Staff West is 1ocated at the west
end of the cafeteria building
(formerly Faculty DintngRoom)
across from the library.
CHEMISTRY
Thursday:
1500 - 1600 S 192
Friday:
1400 - 1500 S 192
BUSINESS (in B 210) .
Monday:
1000 - 1200 A. Hariry, - QM
Tuesday:
1100 - 1400 N_.. Khat - QM,
Computer Science
1400 - 1600 L. Rippee - Accounting, QM, Finance,
Computer Science
Wednesday:
0800 - 1000 L. Rippee - Accounting, QM, Finance, .
Computer Science
1000 - 1200 A. Hariry - QM
1200 - 1400 L. Rippee - Accounting, QM, Finance,
Computer Science
1400 - 1600 A. Hartry - QM
Thursday:
0800 - 1300 N. Khai - QM,
Computer ~cience
1400 - 1600 L. Rippee - Ac-
counting, QM, Finance,
Computer Science
Friday:
1000 - 1100 A. Hariry - QM
1500 - 16Q0 A. Hariry - QM
PSYCHOLOGY
(in Psychology Dept. office EdP 234)
Monday through Friday:
0800 - 1000 (A.M.)
Tuesday and Thursday:
11:00 - 1600 (P.M.)
Also by appointment
ECONOMICS:
In Economics Department office, SS 211E
ALL FOREIGN LANGUAGES:
Check with the department
secretary, SR4-107
SCHOOL OF ENGINEERING:
Check in Department office,
E 122.
BIOLOGY 10 ONLY:
In Biology Department, S 111.
SPEECH:
In Department Office, SA 15.
If the above mentioned departmental tutorial sessions do not
meet your needs, please come in
to see us in the Keats Campus
Building, room 102. Our office
hours are !ram 8 a.m. to 7 p. m.
Monday through Thursday and
8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Friday. If you
are a veteran, we have two
veteran liaisons available Monday through Friday .to service
your needs. Tutorials assistance
is free to all CSUF students so
don't wait until it's too late, call
Manuel Olgin, Coordinator, Tutorial Services, 487-2924/2188.
Initiative finds support
(Continued from Page 1)
ban areas do.
As for the campaign on campus, Perez said although he is
satisfied with the support
MEChA's UFW Committee received, it •could have been better."
· •The initiative didn't have time
to become an issue on campus,•
said Perez.
He attributed this to the short
time with which the union had to
work it, and the fact Easter vacation interrupted the university
life right in the middle of the
drive.
However, Perez said he was
able to personally obtain some
400 signatures and knew of at least
"five or six• other persons also
having full petitions out. He es-
Zenovich
(Continued from Page 1)
announcing its first year appropriation was running out. Since
then, three of the board's five
members and its counsel have
resigned.
Because the - board was not
augmented additiona1 funding, the
UFW took to the people in an
initiative drive ( see related
story). Boatwright also drafted
legislation to augment but it still
met grower disapproval.
Now Roberti has told reporters
that six.other senators are 'leaning "more than 90 degrees our
way" and that he would rather
wait until Monday to have the Senate vote so Gov. Brown could be
present. Brown is currently campaigning for the presidency in
Maryland.
However, Sen. JohnNejedly, RWalnut Creek, may try to get the
bill up tomorrow because •u
ought to be decided one way or the
other," re.ported AP.
The wirepress aisb reported
that UFW spokesperson Marc
Grossman said the initiative
drive was •unquestionably" the
reason some senators were now
leaning toward voting for the
bill.
•They think that by appropriating some money it will undercut the initiative,• he said. "But
there is no way we're going to
turn back."
He said he didn't think approval
of the bill would hurt the initiative's chances of passage.
Senator Zenovich, who was one
of the authors of the original
ALRB last year but turned
against the - board's emergency
augmentation because he felt it
was biased towards the UFW, .
said he would "probably" vote for
the new measure if growers had
ample input in the selection of
new ALRB members, report_ed
AP.
_ti mated approximately 1,000 signatures have been obtained
through CSUF.
Of his encounters, Perez said
"98 per cent were favorable" and
the other 2 per cent did not sign
because they were "too busy, not
interested, or didn't know enough
about the issue to commlt a signature of support."
Many others asked him, •Don't
you have that right already?"
Perez said they were referring
to last year's enactment of the
ALRA.
•Many people assume farmworkers have the right to pick
our own union," said Perez. •we
do, but now it's unfunctional because the grower-controlled legislature won't let the law Ii ve."
He also mentioned a great majority of , the signers were nonChicano.
The student volunteers also
worked off campus. Perez said
shopping centers, churches and
organization meetings were covered by supporters carrying petitions.
St. Alphonsus, Mt. Carmel, and
St. John Catholic churches in
Fresno were petitioned every
Sunday after Mass. Last montb,
Perez went to the California
Democrati<; Coalition where he
was "received warmly," with a
majority of the members signing
the petitions.
The booth which the UFW ha_s
been using during the drive on
campus will be up until Thursday
with the committee still seeking
signatures;
"We're going strong to the
end," said Perez. "Cesar will
probably want to get one million
signatures to show that the people
support farmworkers rights.•
He said the union announced a
celebration Saturday, May 13, in
Delano. It will start at 9 a.m.
with Mass, followed by a barbecue
and a teatro performance.
Scholarships to be awarded
Qualifications have been determined for scholarships which
will be awarded to four Chicanos
by the Chicano Faculty, Staff and
Student Organization (CFSSO).
Tony Garduque, member of
CFSSO's ScholarshipCommlttee,
said one will be awarded to a
graduate student, two to continuing students and. one to a freshman. The scholarships are $200
each.
To qualify one must have a
2.5 grade point average (G.P.A.)
and be a full time student.
Applications wilf be available
by May 10 at the E.O.P. office,
financial aids and Manuel Olgin's
office (Tutorial Services) in the
Keats Campus Bldg. The deadline is June 18.
For further information con- .
tact Tommie Cruz at 487-1021
or rsabele Mejorado at487-2182.
THE DAILY COLLEGIAN
Published five days a week except holidays
and examination periods by the Associated
Students of California State University,
F resno. Mail subscriptions $12 a semester,
$20 a year. Editorial office: Keats'-campus
Building, telephone 487-2486. Business and
advertising office: Keats-Campus Building,
telephone 487-2266.
Opinions expressed in Collegian editorials
and commentaries are not necessarily those
of California State University, Fresno, or
the student body.
LA \"OZ DI'..
~7. TLA~
Staff . . . .. . . . . Ma rgare t Esparza,
Ernesto Moreno, Anna Nori ega,
Cindy Orona, Angie Rios , Martha
Uribes
Photographer .. . . . .. Ramon Perez
Contributors . . . . .. Cindy Cabrera,
Mi_gueJ Contreras , Munchie Olgin ,
E nc Strom
Edito r . • .. . , . . . .. Tomas Uribe!i
_BIO-FEEDBACK
PRIVATE
INSTRUCTION
ON
E.G.G. MACHINE
by appointment only
266-4151
IN .FRESNO TO STAY!
Wednesday, April 2~, 1976
J~E DAILY COLLEGIAN-3
Letters··to ·the editor_____
Student knocks
MEChA concern
Editor:
In the recent issue of La Voz
de · Aztlan, it was reported that
the Mechistas were coming out
against the Bicentennial.
My first reaction was similar
to the feeling I would ge,.t reading
a •Donnesbary" (sic) comic strip.
Mike Donnesbary talking to Zonker Harris: •What's up?• Zonker:
"We're getting a march together
·to protest the Bicentennial."
Mlke: •oh really, why?" Zonker:
•To protest its commercialization and to stop the Capitalists
from realizing a profit." Mike:
•ought to be good for a week."
It just doesn't seem to me that
anyone would seriously protest
America's 200th birthday.
I'm not much of a flag-waving
star-spangled-banner ~ype, but
I believe that this is getting a
little extreme.
Looking at it another way, why
don't all the non-Mexican Americans protest Cinco de Mayo? I
mean if we recognize the cele-
HELP WANTED
Addressers wanted Immediately!
Work aJ home - no experience
necessary - excellent pay . Write
American Service
1401 Wilson Blvd., Suite 101
Arlington , Va. 22209
bration of another country's indepence. day, what right do the
Mechlstas have in protesting the
Bicentennial? The country in
which they claim citizenship!
Something' seems a little wrong
from my point of view.
Mikel R. M~yer
Rios thanks
students
Editor:
This is to thank all the students
who came out and voted April 7
and 8 on behalf of Angio Rios
for President Slate. Thank you
again.
Angie Rios
Richard Carrillo
Arturo 011 vas
.' DON'T DELAY _
;Book By Phone
New Flights to Europe:(379'!1°),
South America (311+), The Orie~t
(499+), New York (189), Hawaii
( 189). Long duration and o / w
' flights st i ll av a ilable'. Immediate
phone confirmations call collect
Westcoast Student Travel
Counsel, AVCO Center
10850 Wilshire LA 90024
(213) 475•6865
. The· above is not sponsored by CSUf
or the CSUF Associated Students.
4-THE DAILY COLLEGIAN
Wednesday, April 28, 1976
Tardeadas, speakers set for Semana
TARDEADA AT KEARNEY PARK
Pan Dulce y Cafe
9:30 a.m.
MONDAY, MAY 3
FOOD & MUSIC
Children Dancers from
Sanger Elementary
10:00 a.m.
9:30 a.m. - Pan Dulce y Cafe
Sponsored by the San Joaquin
Voter Registration Project
10:00 a.m.
10:30 a.m.
(Presented by CSUF-M.E.C.H.A.
and ' Associated Students)
10:30 a.m.
Proclamation: Honorable
Armando Rodriguez
11:00 a.m.
Clovis High Dancers
11:30 a.m.
Speaker:
Richard Chavez
12 noon
CSUF Comparsa
Mercado begins
•
SUNDAY, MAY 2
11:00 a.m. - Mariachi Zapopan
Masses held in honor of National Farmworker Week:
Mt. Carmel
12:15
st. Johns
12:15
St. Alphonsus
1:15
11:30 a.m. - Speaker:
Dr. Ricardo Romo
12 noon
Speaker:
Jessie De La Cruz
Mariachi ,Zapopan
~
Teatro del Espiritu
Mercado begins
1:00 .p.m.
-
Speaker: Rudy Amada
12 noon
Danzantes de Aztlan
Mercado begins
Speaker:
Theresa Perez
9:0J p.m.
Free Dance
•Mestizo"
College Union Lounge
7:00 p.m.
2:00 p.m •.
Mariachi Santa Cruz
Danzantes de Aztlan
CSUF Comparsa
(Parents Night)
7:30 p.m.
Duet~ Ilusion
Movie:
"Los Desarraigados"
Pedro Armendariz
MANUKIAN'S
FCC plans Cinco Tues.-Wed.
IMPORTED
FOODS
BASTURMA & SOUJOUK CO.
Introducing Foul Falafel • Homus Foods
Retail MnLc~~~gs 'Wholesgl~
· · · --
_ 12:30 p.m. ~ 1:30 p.m.
Lunch and Maria chi
(Student Lounge)
1:30 p.m. - 1:45 p.m.
Guest Speaker (Student Lounge)
3:00 p.m. - 6:00 p.m.
Dance (Student Lounge)
Dried Beef Products
MIDDLE EASTERN F O O ~
- Backgan_imon
Boards
•
Turkish Coffee
·17'20 S. ORANGE AVE.
Arabic Breads
FRESNO, CALIF. 93702
··
268-5944
,
-·.
·
Middle Eastern
Records & Tapes
OPENS. THURSDAY NIGHT!
CSUF UNIVERSITY THEATRE PRESENTS
~-e c r u it m i n or it i e s
CSUF will conduct a "Graduate
Fair" today from 10 a.m. to 2
p.m. on the College Union Veranda to recruit more students into
California graduate programs.
EURIPIDES'
Cancer education
THE BACCHAE
A breast and cervical cancer
education program will be conducted by the League of Mexican
American Women and the People's Acti0n Project Against Cancer tomorrow at 7:30 p.m.
It will take place at the Sunset
Community Center, 1224 S. Channing Center, Fresno. The program, which is free, will include
films, literature, and _the demonstrations fn English and Spanish.
OVEl?SEAS JOBS
11:30 a.m.
7:00 p.m.
Pinatas
Roommate(s) wanted. Very nice
apt., ref., tennis courts / pool /
complete gym. Ladies pref. 1
mi I e to campus. John - 431-4987.
Marisella Dancers and
Marimba
Mariachi Santa Cruz
1:30 p.m.
MAY 4, TUESDAY
10:00 a.m. - 2:00 p.m.
Art Show (Lawn area, next to
cafeteria)
11:00 a.m. - 11:45 a.m.
Marimba Band (Auditorium)
Noon - 1:30 p.m.
Teatro spiritu (Auditorium)
1:45 p.m. - 2:45 p.m.
Marisella's Dancers
(Auditorium)
7:00 p,m. - 10:00 p.m.
Art show (Peer Counseling
Center A-132, refreshments
served)
7:00 p.m. - 8:30 p.m.
Poetry Reading; Music
(Auditorium)
8:30 p.m. - 9:30 p.m.
Los Danzantes de Aztlan
(Auditorium)
11:00 a.m.
2:00 p.m.
TARDEADA AT KEARNEY PARK
(afternoon)
MAY 5, WEDNESDAY
9:30 a.m. - 10:00 a.m.
Chile Eating Contest
(Lawn Area)
10:00 a.m. - 11:00 a.m.
Tortilla Making Contest
(Lawn Area)
10:00 a.m. - 2:00 p.m.
Art Show (Peer Counseling
Center, A-132)
11:00 a.m. - Noon
F'.C.C. Dancers
(Student Loung-e)
Noon - 12:30 p.m.
Pinata (Lawn Area)
Speaker: Toshta
Pinatas
Pinatas
Mariachi Santa Cruz
The following is Fresno City
College's CincodeMayoschedule
of activities for next Tuesday and
Wednesday.
10:30 a.m.
1:30 p.m.
1:30 p.m.
2:00 p.m.
-
Selma Dancers and
Marimba
Speaker:
Dr. Jesus Luna
Speaker:
Dr. Alex Saragoza
8:00 p.m.
10:00 a.m.
1:00 p.m.
1:00 p.m.
8:00 p.m. - Movie: "Macario"
Ignacio Lopez Tarzo
Pan r:>ulce y Cafe
9:30 a.m.
Speaker:
Haydee Chavez
Sponsored by the Alegria y Esperanza
Office of the Spanish-speaking.
Sponsored by
the Comite Civico Mexicano
9:00 p.m.
Comite Civico Mexicano
and CSUFM.E.Ch.A. present a. Free Night Dance
WEDNESDAY, MAY 5
TUESDAY, MAY 4
"Mestizo•
•Sabor de Ritmo"
at the Rainbow Ballroom
SATURDAY, MAY 1
(12:00 noon to 6:00 p.m.)
HELP WANTEU
- summer 1 year-round Europe, S. America, Australia,
Asia, etc. All fields, $500$1200 monthly. Expenses paid,
sightseeing. Free infonn.-Write:
International Job Center, Dept.
CF, Box 4490, Berkeley, CA
COLORADO WYOMING MONTANA
Summertime employees for dude
ranches, Nat. Parks, and U.S . Forest Service. 'For information and
directory send $3 .00 to Outdoor
Services Box 349 Cody, Wyoming
82414.
94704
Neil Simon's smash comedy
ODD COUPLE
, Thursday, Friday and Saturday nights
through ·May 1, except Ap.rll 24
Student Discount $2.00
(Thursday only)
Phone: 486-3381
Cu.rtain: 8:30 p.m.
, Reservations recommended
(:opy plus
Mon.-Fri. 8:30-5:30
Sat. 9:00-1 :00
XEROX COPIES
General
High School
CSUF Activity Card
8:15 p.m.
NO MINIMUM -
Bring Student ID - we run it for you!
April 29 - May 19
May 4- 89 1976
.G u~rantee Towers
1322 E. Shaw
Staged by Terry Miller
'
+@
John "\Vri2"ht Theatre
(Little Theatre)
Produced in cooperation with the Associated Students.
226-2666
2.50
1.50
Semana d_ecla red. an official .week
The ~resno County Board of Supervisors unanimously passed a
re sol uh on yesterday proclaiming the week April 28 through May 5
1976. as Semana de la Raza.
'
Semana has been recognized at CSUF since 1969 with celebrations
takin~ place during the semana (week). The university's fe~tivities
co~rdmated by MEChA: are funded by Associated Students funds. '
\ esterday, CSUF students representing Trabajadores de la Raza
and the Easton Southwest Organization presented the resolution to
the Board with all memhers present.
IN THE MATTER OF
SEMAN A DE LA RAZA
sacrifice - defeated this invading force
in this great battle; and
WHEREAS, Cinco de Mayo has since
RESOLUTION PROCLAIMING WEEK OF
been celebrated the world over as a day
APRIL 28 - MAY 5, 19.76 AS SUCH
symbolizing the opposition of free people to foreign domination and the triumph
WHEREAS, the Republic of Mexico
over oppression; and
· was invaded by foreign troops in 1862;
WHEREAS, this day is now recorded
and
in the annals of history along with the
WHEREAS, this invading foreign army
Fourth of July and Bastille Day as one
was met at Guadalupe Hill near the City
of the great days in the advancement of
of Puebla on the fifth d_ay of May, 1862
human liberty and self-government with
by an outnumbered and untrained Mexican '
· num~rous Chicano organizations and
force, and under the command oflgnacio • Spanish-speaking communities sponsorZaragoza, . the soldiers of Mexico ing appropriate observances during the
through · their great courage and selfweek of Cinco de Mayo; and
ESO director and CSUF student Tomas Reyes spoke to the Board
about the resolution's significance. After the action, he told La Voz,
''This is important for all schools and institutions who do not consider the week as important to the total community."
At CSUF, Semana activities· begin Saturday with a tardeada and
end next Wednesday with a free dance. People attending the dance
are asked to dress in Mexican clothes. A surprise will be given to
the best-dressed.
A schedule of activities is found elsewhere in La Voz.
WHEREAS, during this week, it will be
fitting for all Californians to contemplate
the historical contributions of Mexican
culture and character to the history of
this State which enriched and advanced
our multi-racial culture and to acknowledge the contributions of MexicanAmerican Citizens in areas of education,
labor, industry, government and the professions; and
WHEREAS, Fresno State University
has recognized the contributions of
Mexican culture-to the State of California
and has designated the week of April 28
through May 5 asSEMANADELARAZA;
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RE-
SOLVED that the Fresno County Board
of Supervisors hereby proclaims the
week of Aprlt 28 through May 5, 1976 as
SEMANA DE LA RAZA
and urges all public entities to sponsor
and prepare programs during this week
and take the opportunity to learn the
role that the Mexican culture has played
in the development of the United States,
the State of California, and in the County
of Fresno.
·
·The foregoing resolution was passed
and adopted by the Fresno County Board
of Supervisors this .27th day of April,
1976.
LA VOZ
>
DE AZTLAN
LXXX/121
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 28, 1976
A special edition of THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, California State University, Fresno
Fa_rmworkers get
600,000 names
by Tom Uribes
The United F a r m w o r k e rs
Union may get nearly one million
signatures in its drive to secure
farmworkers rights after reporting 604,772 were obtained statewide as of Sunday.
312,404 signatures were
needed by April 28, to place on
the November 8 ballot the initiative which would force the legislature to keep Agricultural Labor
Relations Board (ALRB) funded
and require a vote of the people
to amend the farm labor law.
It would also place in the California Constitution the controversial access rule which allows
union organizers to go into the
field three times a day to recruit
workers.
However, CSUF MEChA's representative to the U F W, Juan
·perez, said the Selma UFWoffice
reported Fresno County will not
reach its goal in the drive.
Earlier this year, growerbacked state legislators were
able to block emergency appropriations of the act after it ran
out of money halfway through its
fiscal year.
As a result, Cesar Chavez'
UFW took to the people in the effort to overcome the powerful
money interests in the state cap-
Senators pressed
by UFW Initiative?
A vote now leaning in favor of
the United Farm Workers concerning the ALRB funding may
go before the State Senate tomorrow, a change in the complex issue which the UFW is viewing as
a result of their successful initiative drive.
The Associated Press reported
yesterday Sen ate Democratic
i1oor leader David Roberti, DLos Angeles, felt he had 24 of the
27 Senate votes needed to approve
a $2,5 million ALRB funding bill
which has been bottled up in the
Senate by growers and their legsilati ve allies.
Growers contend the board has
been pro-UFW. They say they
want eight changes made before
they'll support the law, including
restrictions on the ALRB's controversial access rule.
Now, the new picture of the
controversial farm labor issue
includes possible reconsideration L,, Sen. George Zenovich, DFresno, who has sided with growers and helped block passage of
earlier ALRB emergency appropriations.
The new bill, drafted by Assemblyman Daniel B. Boatwright,
D-Concord, would provide funds
to revive the ALRB through the
fiscal year.
The Board is the agency that
administers California's landmark farm labor law, the Agricultural Labor Relations Act of
1975.
The board stopped holding farm
labor elections in Febtuary after '
(Continued on Page 3, Col. 1)
FARMWORKER WEEK
Farm laborers throughout
the world will be saluted
during the week of May 2-8
which has been set aside as
"Farmworker Week.• This
commemoration is sponsored by the Secretariat for
the Spanish Speaking, a division of the United States
catholic Conference.
itol.
"We can't rely on the legislature to work for farmworkers,"
Chavez said in Los Angeles when
beginniJ1g the drive April 1. •we
have to take it to the people."
Although the initiative required
312,404 signatures the union set
a goal or 540,000 to guard against
disqualification due to technical
invalidations. Perez said this
allows for 40 per cent invalidation based on the marijuana initiative drive.
Perez also said more signatures have been secured than are
being reported to the media. He
explained the union is screening
all petitions itself and sending
forth only the valid signatures to
avoid any technical faults.
Despite the significant showing
statewide, Fresno County will
reach much less than one-half
of its 12,000 goal set.
Perez said the Selma UFW office reported only 44 petitions
have been turned in for a total of
2,624 in Fresno County as of
Sunday.
•It's not surprising," said Peez. •we weren't depending on
the rural areas for support.•
He said the union set their priori ties in the highly urbanized
areas where a higher percentage
of people are registered Democrats, such as the Sacramento,
San Francisco, Los Angeles and'
San Diego areas.
•There's a more liberal element and viable situation in the
urban areas," he said.
Although it would seem logical
to assume the rural areas would
carry a higher concentration of
people in favor of the drive (such
as farmworkers), Perez said the
problem is that a significant number of these people are not registered voters, which is
requirement for signing the pe titian.
He also said many others do
not have access to the media and
knowledge of the issue as the ur(Continued on Page 3, Col. 1)
a
SEMANA ACTIVITIES next week will include Teatro (above), Comparsa and Danzantes. Semana chairperson MinnieCarrilloextendsan
invitation for the general public to participate in Semana to better
its understanding of the Chicano and our cultura Mexicana. Semana
schedule is on page 4.
Mexican films
here next week
Semana de la Raza chairperson
Minnie Carrillo announced two
Mexican films (in Spanish) will
be shown next week as part of
Cinco de Mayo activities:
"Los Desarraigados•
, This film depicts the Mejicanos' problems of trying to live
separate from those of his race.
It tells of the time when Mejicanos leave Mexico for the United
States in an effort to-make itbig,
by anglocizing and assimilating
into the Anglo culture. The mm
is in Spanish and will be shown
on Tuesday, May 4, 1976, at
8:00 p.m. in the College Union
lounge.
"Macario~
"Macario" stars Ignacio Lopez
Tarso in a film which shows a
poor man who finds himself dealing with the Devil · in order to
survive for his family and himself. Film will be shown onMonday, May 3, at 8:00 p.m. in the
College Union lounge.
SNRP sets drives
Throughout the month of April,
the San Joaquin Voter Registration Project is sponsoring small
rallies throughout the valley.
Last Saturday, Reedley held a
voter registration tardeada.
This Saturday a tardeada at
Kea-rney Park is scheduled.
There will be several community
organizations selling food, beer
and soft drinks. Entertainment
will also be provided. Deputy
registrars will be available for
anyone wishing to register.
A registration rally will be
held in Sanger on May 2, next to
the Royal Theater on the corner
of "L • and 7th Street, where a
Chicano cultural mural . was
painted last year. It is organized
by the Sanger Committee of the
SJVRP, It will be from noon to
7 p.m.
At Sanger, CSUF's Teatro del
Espiritu (5 P,.m.) and Comparsa
(1: 15) will perform along with
Martachi,san Joaquin de la Tierra (12:30) of Fresno. Teatro de
la Tierra (3: 15) of Del Rey•s
Colegio de la Tierra 1s also
scheduled.
For fUrther SJVRP information catl Luis Ambriz, 442-0182.
2-THE -.DAILY COUEGIAN
Wednesday, April 28, 1976-
Chicanos march for solidarity
.Saturday, April ·11, a march of Chicano solidarity was staged followed by a rally in Roeding Park. A large turnout walked from Dick~ _Playground at Divisadero an~
Blackstdne to the park, where they heard speakers and entertainment. The show of unity effort was sponsored by La Raza Unida. (La Voz photos by Ramon Perez antl
Tom Uribes)
-Students may get tutors from departments·
The Office ofTutorialServices
wishes to announce that tutorial
assistance will be available for
most classes during the month of
May. There are several departm~nts which have their own
departmental sessions operating
this semester. If you wish some
tutorial assistance, there are
departmental sessipns available.
We suggest that you try them before you come to -see us. The
following is a listing of which
departments will have active tutorial sessions in MaY,:
MATHEMATICS
Monday:
0910 - 1000 Staff West*
1110 - 1200 SA 26A
1310 - 1400 ss 106
1410 - 1500 s.g 104
Tuesday:
1010 - 1200 Staff West*
Wednesday:
1910 - 1000 Staff West*
1110 - 1200 SA 26A
1310 -, 1500 ss 205
Thursday:
1110 - 1200 IA f23
1410 - 1500 AH 212A
Friday:
1010 - 1200 Staff West*
1410 - 1500IA 125
*Staff West is 1ocated at the west
end of the cafeteria building
(formerly Faculty DintngRoom)
across from the library.
CHEMISTRY
Thursday:
1500 - 1600 S 192
Friday:
1400 - 1500 S 192
BUSINESS (in B 210) .
Monday:
1000 - 1200 A. Hariry, - QM
Tuesday:
1100 - 1400 N_.. Khat - QM,
Computer Science
1400 - 1600 L. Rippee - Accounting, QM, Finance,
Computer Science
Wednesday:
0800 - 1000 L. Rippee - Accounting, QM, Finance, .
Computer Science
1000 - 1200 A. Hariry - QM
1200 - 1400 L. Rippee - Accounting, QM, Finance,
Computer Science
1400 - 1600 A. Hartry - QM
Thursday:
0800 - 1300 N. Khai - QM,
Computer ~cience
1400 - 1600 L. Rippee - Ac-
counting, QM, Finance,
Computer Science
Friday:
1000 - 1100 A. Hariry - QM
1500 - 16Q0 A. Hariry - QM
PSYCHOLOGY
(in Psychology Dept. office EdP 234)
Monday through Friday:
0800 - 1000 (A.M.)
Tuesday and Thursday:
11:00 - 1600 (P.M.)
Also by appointment
ECONOMICS:
In Economics Department office, SS 211E
ALL FOREIGN LANGUAGES:
Check with the department
secretary, SR4-107
SCHOOL OF ENGINEERING:
Check in Department office,
E 122.
BIOLOGY 10 ONLY:
In Biology Department, S 111.
SPEECH:
In Department Office, SA 15.
If the above mentioned departmental tutorial sessions do not
meet your needs, please come in
to see us in the Keats Campus
Building, room 102. Our office
hours are !ram 8 a.m. to 7 p. m.
Monday through Thursday and
8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Friday. If you
are a veteran, we have two
veteran liaisons available Monday through Friday .to service
your needs. Tutorials assistance
is free to all CSUF students so
don't wait until it's too late, call
Manuel Olgin, Coordinator, Tutorial Services, 487-2924/2188.
Initiative finds support
(Continued from Page 1)
ban areas do.
As for the campaign on campus, Perez said although he is
satisfied with the support
MEChA's UFW Committee received, it •could have been better."
· •The initiative didn't have time
to become an issue on campus,•
said Perez.
He attributed this to the short
time with which the union had to
work it, and the fact Easter vacation interrupted the university
life right in the middle of the
drive.
However, Perez said he was
able to personally obtain some
400 signatures and knew of at least
"five or six• other persons also
having full petitions out. He es-
Zenovich
(Continued from Page 1)
announcing its first year appropriation was running out. Since
then, three of the board's five
members and its counsel have
resigned.
Because the - board was not
augmented additiona1 funding, the
UFW took to the people in an
initiative drive ( see related
story). Boatwright also drafted
legislation to augment but it still
met grower disapproval.
Now Roberti has told reporters
that six.other senators are 'leaning "more than 90 degrees our
way" and that he would rather
wait until Monday to have the Senate vote so Gov. Brown could be
present. Brown is currently campaigning for the presidency in
Maryland.
However, Sen. JohnNejedly, RWalnut Creek, may try to get the
bill up tomorrow because •u
ought to be decided one way or the
other," re.ported AP.
The wirepress aisb reported
that UFW spokesperson Marc
Grossman said the initiative
drive was •unquestionably" the
reason some senators were now
leaning toward voting for the
bill.
•They think that by appropriating some money it will undercut the initiative,• he said. "But
there is no way we're going to
turn back."
He said he didn't think approval
of the bill would hurt the initiative's chances of passage.
Senator Zenovich, who was one
of the authors of the original
ALRB last year but turned
against the - board's emergency
augmentation because he felt it
was biased towards the UFW, .
said he would "probably" vote for
the new measure if growers had
ample input in the selection of
new ALRB members, report_ed
AP.
_ti mated approximately 1,000 signatures have been obtained
through CSUF.
Of his encounters, Perez said
"98 per cent were favorable" and
the other 2 per cent did not sign
because they were "too busy, not
interested, or didn't know enough
about the issue to commlt a signature of support."
Many others asked him, •Don't
you have that right already?"
Perez said they were referring
to last year's enactment of the
ALRA.
•Many people assume farmworkers have the right to pick
our own union," said Perez. •we
do, but now it's unfunctional because the grower-controlled legislature won't let the law Ii ve."
He also mentioned a great majority of , the signers were nonChicano.
The student volunteers also
worked off campus. Perez said
shopping centers, churches and
organization meetings were covered by supporters carrying petitions.
St. Alphonsus, Mt. Carmel, and
St. John Catholic churches in
Fresno were petitioned every
Sunday after Mass. Last montb,
Perez went to the California
Democrati<; Coalition where he
was "received warmly," with a
majority of the members signing
the petitions.
The booth which the UFW ha_s
been using during the drive on
campus will be up until Thursday
with the committee still seeking
signatures;
"We're going strong to the
end," said Perez. "Cesar will
probably want to get one million
signatures to show that the people
support farmworkers rights.•
He said the union announced a
celebration Saturday, May 13, in
Delano. It will start at 9 a.m.
with Mass, followed by a barbecue
and a teatro performance.
Scholarships to be awarded
Qualifications have been determined for scholarships which
will be awarded to four Chicanos
by the Chicano Faculty, Staff and
Student Organization (CFSSO).
Tony Garduque, member of
CFSSO's ScholarshipCommlttee,
said one will be awarded to a
graduate student, two to continuing students and. one to a freshman. The scholarships are $200
each.
To qualify one must have a
2.5 grade point average (G.P.A.)
and be a full time student.
Applications wilf be available
by May 10 at the E.O.P. office,
financial aids and Manuel Olgin's
office (Tutorial Services) in the
Keats Campus Bldg. The deadline is June 18.
For further information con- .
tact Tommie Cruz at 487-1021
or rsabele Mejorado at487-2182.
THE DAILY COLLEGIAN
Published five days a week except holidays
and examination periods by the Associated
Students of California State University,
F resno. Mail subscriptions $12 a semester,
$20 a year. Editorial office: Keats'-campus
Building, telephone 487-2486. Business and
advertising office: Keats-Campus Building,
telephone 487-2266.
Opinions expressed in Collegian editorials
and commentaries are not necessarily those
of California State University, Fresno, or
the student body.
LA \"OZ DI'..
~7. TLA~
Staff . . . .. . . . . Ma rgare t Esparza,
Ernesto Moreno, Anna Nori ega,
Cindy Orona, Angie Rios , Martha
Uribes
Photographer .. . . . .. Ramon Perez
Contributors . . . . .. Cindy Cabrera,
Mi_gueJ Contreras , Munchie Olgin ,
E nc Strom
Edito r . • .. . , . . . .. Tomas Uribe!i
_BIO-FEEDBACK
PRIVATE
INSTRUCTION
ON
E.G.G. MACHINE
by appointment only
266-4151
IN .FRESNO TO STAY!
Wednesday, April 2~, 1976
J~E DAILY COLLEGIAN-3
Letters··to ·the editor_____
Student knocks
MEChA concern
Editor:
In the recent issue of La Voz
de · Aztlan, it was reported that
the Mechistas were coming out
against the Bicentennial.
My first reaction was similar
to the feeling I would ge,.t reading
a •Donnesbary" (sic) comic strip.
Mike Donnesbary talking to Zonker Harris: •What's up?• Zonker:
"We're getting a march together
·to protest the Bicentennial."
Mlke: •oh really, why?" Zonker:
•To protest its commercialization and to stop the Capitalists
from realizing a profit." Mike:
•ought to be good for a week."
It just doesn't seem to me that
anyone would seriously protest
America's 200th birthday.
I'm not much of a flag-waving
star-spangled-banner ~ype, but
I believe that this is getting a
little extreme.
Looking at it another way, why
don't all the non-Mexican Americans protest Cinco de Mayo? I
mean if we recognize the cele-
HELP WANTED
Addressers wanted Immediately!
Work aJ home - no experience
necessary - excellent pay . Write
American Service
1401 Wilson Blvd., Suite 101
Arlington , Va. 22209
bration of another country's indepence. day, what right do the
Mechlstas have in protesting the
Bicentennial? The country in
which they claim citizenship!
Something' seems a little wrong
from my point of view.
Mikel R. M~yer
Rios thanks
students
Editor:
This is to thank all the students
who came out and voted April 7
and 8 on behalf of Angio Rios
for President Slate. Thank you
again.
Angie Rios
Richard Carrillo
Arturo 011 vas
.' DON'T DELAY _
;Book By Phone
New Flights to Europe:(379'!1°),
South America (311+), The Orie~t
(499+), New York (189), Hawaii
( 189). Long duration and o / w
' flights st i ll av a ilable'. Immediate
phone confirmations call collect
Westcoast Student Travel
Counsel, AVCO Center
10850 Wilshire LA 90024
(213) 475•6865
. The· above is not sponsored by CSUf
or the CSUF Associated Students.
4-THE DAILY COLLEGIAN
Wednesday, April 28, 1976
Tardeadas, speakers set for Semana
TARDEADA AT KEARNEY PARK
Pan Dulce y Cafe
9:30 a.m.
MONDAY, MAY 3
FOOD & MUSIC
Children Dancers from
Sanger Elementary
10:00 a.m.
9:30 a.m. - Pan Dulce y Cafe
Sponsored by the San Joaquin
Voter Registration Project
10:00 a.m.
10:30 a.m.
(Presented by CSUF-M.E.C.H.A.
and ' Associated Students)
10:30 a.m.
Proclamation: Honorable
Armando Rodriguez
11:00 a.m.
Clovis High Dancers
11:30 a.m.
Speaker:
Richard Chavez
12 noon
CSUF Comparsa
Mercado begins
•
SUNDAY, MAY 2
11:00 a.m. - Mariachi Zapopan
Masses held in honor of National Farmworker Week:
Mt. Carmel
12:15
st. Johns
12:15
St. Alphonsus
1:15
11:30 a.m. - Speaker:
Dr. Ricardo Romo
12 noon
Speaker:
Jessie De La Cruz
Mariachi ,Zapopan
~
Teatro del Espiritu
Mercado begins
1:00 .p.m.
-
Speaker: Rudy Amada
12 noon
Danzantes de Aztlan
Mercado begins
Speaker:
Theresa Perez
9:0J p.m.
Free Dance
•Mestizo"
College Union Lounge
7:00 p.m.
2:00 p.m •.
Mariachi Santa Cruz
Danzantes de Aztlan
CSUF Comparsa
(Parents Night)
7:30 p.m.
Duet~ Ilusion
Movie:
"Los Desarraigados"
Pedro Armendariz
MANUKIAN'S
FCC plans Cinco Tues.-Wed.
IMPORTED
FOODS
BASTURMA & SOUJOUK CO.
Introducing Foul Falafel • Homus Foods
Retail MnLc~~~gs 'Wholesgl~
· · · --
_ 12:30 p.m. ~ 1:30 p.m.
Lunch and Maria chi
(Student Lounge)
1:30 p.m. - 1:45 p.m.
Guest Speaker (Student Lounge)
3:00 p.m. - 6:00 p.m.
Dance (Student Lounge)
Dried Beef Products
MIDDLE EASTERN F O O ~
- Backgan_imon
Boards
•
Turkish Coffee
·17'20 S. ORANGE AVE.
Arabic Breads
FRESNO, CALIF. 93702
··
268-5944
,
-·.
·
Middle Eastern
Records & Tapes
OPENS. THURSDAY NIGHT!
CSUF UNIVERSITY THEATRE PRESENTS
~-e c r u it m i n or it i e s
CSUF will conduct a "Graduate
Fair" today from 10 a.m. to 2
p.m. on the College Union Veranda to recruit more students into
California graduate programs.
EURIPIDES'
Cancer education
THE BACCHAE
A breast and cervical cancer
education program will be conducted by the League of Mexican
American Women and the People's Acti0n Project Against Cancer tomorrow at 7:30 p.m.
It will take place at the Sunset
Community Center, 1224 S. Channing Center, Fresno. The program, which is free, will include
films, literature, and _the demonstrations fn English and Spanish.
OVEl?SEAS JOBS
11:30 a.m.
7:00 p.m.
Pinatas
Roommate(s) wanted. Very nice
apt., ref., tennis courts / pool /
complete gym. Ladies pref. 1
mi I e to campus. John - 431-4987.
Marisella Dancers and
Marimba
Mariachi Santa Cruz
1:30 p.m.
MAY 4, TUESDAY
10:00 a.m. - 2:00 p.m.
Art Show (Lawn area, next to
cafeteria)
11:00 a.m. - 11:45 a.m.
Marimba Band (Auditorium)
Noon - 1:30 p.m.
Teatro spiritu (Auditorium)
1:45 p.m. - 2:45 p.m.
Marisella's Dancers
(Auditorium)
7:00 p,m. - 10:00 p.m.
Art show (Peer Counseling
Center A-132, refreshments
served)
7:00 p.m. - 8:30 p.m.
Poetry Reading; Music
(Auditorium)
8:30 p.m. - 9:30 p.m.
Los Danzantes de Aztlan
(Auditorium)
11:00 a.m.
2:00 p.m.
TARDEADA AT KEARNEY PARK
(afternoon)
MAY 5, WEDNESDAY
9:30 a.m. - 10:00 a.m.
Chile Eating Contest
(Lawn Area)
10:00 a.m. - 11:00 a.m.
Tortilla Making Contest
(Lawn Area)
10:00 a.m. - 2:00 p.m.
Art Show (Peer Counseling
Center, A-132)
11:00 a.m. - Noon
F'.C.C. Dancers
(Student Loung-e)
Noon - 12:30 p.m.
Pinata (Lawn Area)
Speaker: Toshta
Pinatas
Pinatas
Mariachi Santa Cruz
The following is Fresno City
College's CincodeMayoschedule
of activities for next Tuesday and
Wednesday.
10:30 a.m.
1:30 p.m.
1:30 p.m.
2:00 p.m.
-
Selma Dancers and
Marimba
Speaker:
Dr. Jesus Luna
Speaker:
Dr. Alex Saragoza
8:00 p.m.
10:00 a.m.
1:00 p.m.
1:00 p.m.
8:00 p.m. - Movie: "Macario"
Ignacio Lopez Tarzo
Pan r:>ulce y Cafe
9:30 a.m.
Speaker:
Haydee Chavez
Sponsored by the Alegria y Esperanza
Office of the Spanish-speaking.
Sponsored by
the Comite Civico Mexicano
9:00 p.m.
Comite Civico Mexicano
and CSUFM.E.Ch.A. present a. Free Night Dance
WEDNESDAY, MAY 5
TUESDAY, MAY 4
"Mestizo•
•Sabor de Ritmo"
at the Rainbow Ballroom
SATURDAY, MAY 1
(12:00 noon to 6:00 p.m.)
HELP WANTEU
- summer 1 year-round Europe, S. America, Australia,
Asia, etc. All fields, $500$1200 monthly. Expenses paid,
sightseeing. Free infonn.-Write:
International Job Center, Dept.
CF, Box 4490, Berkeley, CA
COLORADO WYOMING MONTANA
Summertime employees for dude
ranches, Nat. Parks, and U.S . Forest Service. 'For information and
directory send $3 .00 to Outdoor
Services Box 349 Cody, Wyoming
82414.
94704
Neil Simon's smash comedy
ODD COUPLE
, Thursday, Friday and Saturday nights
through ·May 1, except Ap.rll 24
Student Discount $2.00
(Thursday only)
Phone: 486-3381
Cu.rtain: 8:30 p.m.
, Reservations recommended
(:opy plus
Mon.-Fri. 8:30-5:30
Sat. 9:00-1 :00
XEROX COPIES
General
High School
CSUF Activity Card
8:15 p.m.
NO MINIMUM -
Bring Student ID - we run it for you!
April 29 - May 19
May 4- 89 1976
.G u~rantee Towers
1322 E. Shaw
Staged by Terry Miller
'
+@
John "\Vri2"ht Theatre
(Little Theatre)
Produced in cooperation with the Associated Students.
226-2666
2.50
1.50