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M 6t(JS 'nieDanyCoU^^ RECALL from page 1 I Kasabiaitaaid she is no longer involved in the election at all. A simple majority of votes is needed to recall Montoya. Kasabian would not comment on whether she would take the job if Mon¬ toya is recalled. "I'm not really even thinking about the recall campaign too much/' said Montoya. "It's the students' right to recall me and I support that right and I'm willing to take the responsibility for whatever they think I'm responsible for." The election Will be held March 17 and 18 from 8a.m. to 7p.m. with two booths to vote in; one in the free speech area and one at the Satellite Stu¬ dent Union. Please recycle all recyclable materials, especially The Daily Collegian. Kennel Bookstore Attention May Graduates ! You can now place your order for Personalized Graduation Announcements at Kennel Copy Center located on the Lower Level. 278-3945 SEX from page 1 younger male. The model was expected to arouse admiration, love and gratitude from the younger male. Males dominated Greek society, Dover said. All decisions were made by males exclusively. "In general, the sphere of the male was outside the home, and the sphere of the female was inside the Jiome," Dover said. "It was a system of gen¬ der segregation." In Greek society it was difficult for a boy to meet a girl. "Of course the girl next door is not going to be away from the house by herself," Dover said. The only time boys and girls saw each other was at festivals or when a group of girls went to a spring to get water. "Any girl who lags behind or strays from the group immediately arouses suspicion — the suspicion that she is going tQ meet a man, sai$. Dover In Greek society social contact between men and women was based on social class. If a family was rich, it was easy for women to be confined to the house because slaves did most of the work. If the family was poor, women were , forced to interact in soci¬ ety by selling bread or performing other tasks, Dover said. Another aspect of so¬ cial class was slavery. Athens was a slave- owning society and the rich could buy attractive slaves. Those that were not as rich could buy prostitutes. A man who had found a sexual object was thought of differently than men who tried to get to know a woman who woulcf accept him for himself and not for how much he was willing to .pay, Dover said. J 'The fact that purchas¬ able sex is readily avail¬ able has something to do with the moral attitude toward young men who seem to be alternately asking about sex," Dover said. Dover talked about the two levels on which a man could be criticized. The first was a man who wished to waste inherited wealth on pas¬ sionate matters. The sec¬ ond moral attitude was the normal assumption that men had a strong resistance to the external forces acting upon them such as fear, and that men could endure hunger, sleeplessness and pain. Women were not re¬ garded as ha ving the kind of endurance or resistance men nad, Dover said. Dover, who has writ¬ ten "Greek Work Older," "Aristophanic.Comedy," and "Greek Homosexu¬ ality" was the guest of the CSUF classical studies program and the Classi¬ cal Society. His most recent work is a text and commentary on Aristophanes titled 'Trods." Dover has been a visiting lecturer at Har¬ vard, UC Berkeley, Cor¬ nell University, and has been a professor of clas¬ sics at Stanford during the winter quarter sirtce 1987. Family Fitness Center Sfudent Special 3 months for $49 no enrollment fee • calfTravis 323-5068 I require only three handsome, ruthless things in a man. He must be and Stupid.-- Dorothy Parker Free money! ASI Budget requests for Campus wide Cultural & Misc. are due in the ASI office by 4HK) p.m» March 9 )p.i —. Budget requests for All School Joint Councils are due In the AS! Office Jjyjyggjjjjm^Marclil^ RESUMES $20 Done right by professional writers and graphic artists at Resume In A Day Free copies with your resume" Free Lifetime Updates Many Styles to choose from or create your own Term papers done for $1.50 a page ' ' Call 299-0467 s 205W.Buflanf Ave. #6 corner of BuUard and Villa y
Object Description
Title | 1992_03 The Daily Collegian March 1992 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1992 |
Description | Daily (except weedends) during the school year. Microfilm. Palo Alto, Calif.: BMI Library Microfilms, 1986- microfilm reels; 35 mm. Vol.1, no.1 (Feb 8, 1922)- |
Subject | California State University, Fresno -- Periodicals. |
Contributors | Associated Students of Fresno State. |
Coverage | Vol.1 no.1 (Feb 8, 1922)- to present |
Format | Microfilm reels, 35 mm. |
Technical Information | Scanned at 600 dpi; TIFF; Microfilm ScanPro 2000 "E-image data" |
Language | eng |
Description
Title | March 2, 1992, Page 5 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1992 |
Description | Daily (except weedends) during the school year. Microfilm. Palo Alto, Calif.: BMI Library Microfilms, 1986- microfilm reels; 35 mm. Vol.1, no.1 (Feb 8, 1922)- |
Subject | California State University, Fresno -- Periodicals. |
Contributors | Associated Students of Fresno State. |
Coverage | Vol.1 no.1 (Feb 8, 1922)- to present |
Format | Microfilm reels, 35 mm. |
Technical Information | Scanned at 600 dpi; TIFF; Microfilm ScanPro 2000 "E-image data" |
Language | eng |
Full-Text-Search | M 6t(JS 'nieDanyCoU^^ RECALL from page 1 I Kasabiaitaaid she is no longer involved in the election at all. A simple majority of votes is needed to recall Montoya. Kasabian would not comment on whether she would take the job if Mon¬ toya is recalled. "I'm not really even thinking about the recall campaign too much/' said Montoya. "It's the students' right to recall me and I support that right and I'm willing to take the responsibility for whatever they think I'm responsible for." The election Will be held March 17 and 18 from 8a.m. to 7p.m. with two booths to vote in; one in the free speech area and one at the Satellite Stu¬ dent Union. Please recycle all recyclable materials, especially The Daily Collegian. Kennel Bookstore Attention May Graduates ! You can now place your order for Personalized Graduation Announcements at Kennel Copy Center located on the Lower Level. 278-3945 SEX from page 1 younger male. The model was expected to arouse admiration, love and gratitude from the younger male. Males dominated Greek society, Dover said. All decisions were made by males exclusively. "In general, the sphere of the male was outside the home, and the sphere of the female was inside the Jiome," Dover said. "It was a system of gen¬ der segregation." In Greek society it was difficult for a boy to meet a girl. "Of course the girl next door is not going to be away from the house by herself," Dover said. The only time boys and girls saw each other was at festivals or when a group of girls went to a spring to get water. "Any girl who lags behind or strays from the group immediately arouses suspicion — the suspicion that she is going tQ meet a man, sai$. Dover In Greek society social contact between men and women was based on social class. If a family was rich, it was easy for women to be confined to the house because slaves did most of the work. If the family was poor, women were , forced to interact in soci¬ ety by selling bread or performing other tasks, Dover said. Another aspect of so¬ cial class was slavery. Athens was a slave- owning society and the rich could buy attractive slaves. Those that were not as rich could buy prostitutes. A man who had found a sexual object was thought of differently than men who tried to get to know a woman who woulcf accept him for himself and not for how much he was willing to .pay, Dover said. J 'The fact that purchas¬ able sex is readily avail¬ able has something to do with the moral attitude toward young men who seem to be alternately asking about sex," Dover said. Dover talked about the two levels on which a man could be criticized. The first was a man who wished to waste inherited wealth on pas¬ sionate matters. The sec¬ ond moral attitude was the normal assumption that men had a strong resistance to the external forces acting upon them such as fear, and that men could endure hunger, sleeplessness and pain. Women were not re¬ garded as ha ving the kind of endurance or resistance men nad, Dover said. Dover, who has writ¬ ten "Greek Work Older," "Aristophanic.Comedy," and "Greek Homosexu¬ ality" was the guest of the CSUF classical studies program and the Classi¬ cal Society. His most recent work is a text and commentary on Aristophanes titled 'Trods." Dover has been a visiting lecturer at Har¬ vard, UC Berkeley, Cor¬ nell University, and has been a professor of clas¬ sics at Stanford during the winter quarter sirtce 1987. Family Fitness Center Sfudent Special 3 months for $49 no enrollment fee • calfTravis 323-5068 I require only three handsome, ruthless things in a man. He must be and Stupid.-- Dorothy Parker Free money! ASI Budget requests for Campus wide Cultural & Misc. are due in the ASI office by 4HK) p.m» March 9 )p.i —. Budget requests for All School Joint Councils are due In the AS! Office Jjyjyggjjjjm^Marclil^ RESUMES $20 Done right by professional writers and graphic artists at Resume In A Day Free copies with your resume" Free Lifetime Updates Many Styles to choose from or create your own Term papers done for $1.50 a page ' ' Call 299-0467 s 205W.Buflanf Ave. #6 corner of BuUard and Villa y |