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Page Two Editorial Comments Get Up Sleepy Head Resident Hall students were rudely stunned Tuesday night by a loud oooga sound. Tliere was immediate rustle and hustle toward the east parking lot. Over six hundred students, some of them half asleep and still in bed clothes, and others disturbed from their midterm studies, reacted to the fire alarm horn. After standing in the cold for several minutes and having roll call, all the residents paraded back into the halls to try to get back to sleep or to their important studies. There had been no fire. In fact, the fire trucks didn't even arrive on the scene at Homan Hall. After all why should they have. A planned fire drill doesn't need fire trucks. There can be nothing wrong with a fire drill. It is good policy to let the resident students know what the procedures are. But if this were the Elizabethan age, somebody would be beheaded: the housing coordinator, Charles Wheeler, to be sure. Why is it that with 18 weeks during a semester, the housing coordinator decides to pull a fire drill during mid¬ term week. We have to admit that if it had to be pulled this week, it had to be Tuesday. Many students were still up watching the election returns.- But how can we condone this action during midterm week? Many students had already plunked into bed for a good night's sleep before their tests. We all know how hard it is to get back to sleep after a brief visit to the cold outside. Others were busily cramming for exams when the rude interruption took place and broke their concentration. The alarm did not show much consideration for the students of the halls by the higher-ups of the housing office. There are always bound to be gripes when students are lifted from between the lily whites in the middle of the night. But it doesn't hurt the residents a bit under the right circum¬ stances. The students of the three resident halls deserve a little consideration. They payed for it. Bulldog Spirit-(Hie) This is supposed to be the big weekend of the Bulidog- Spar^an tussle at San Jose. Numerous comments have been heard on campus this week in lieu of the expected happen¬ ings. Said one enthusiastic rooter up in the snack bar the other day, 'This is gonna be the all-time weekend!" For a moment I contemplated this statement and thought how great it was to hear this same enthusiasm rocketing around the room. 6ut j"ust then his buddy replied, "Yeah, it's gonna be a won¬ der if I can make it into the game on my own two feet! Boy, will 1 have a head in the morning!" • Well, let's face facts, we all know drinking is going to take place, so let's use some common sense in doing so. Keejj in mind that it will take only one careless act to cast a storm of unwanted ill-feelings on the college or one slight misjudg- ment could send a carload of jubilant rooters on a screaming ride to some strange hospital thus leaving a grim ending to what could have been a wonderful weekend. D. B. | bite tmd hata , By Terry Cress Parking may present a bigger i Francisco Giants. Bach received problem than we thought. Park-1 one wru_-i„ vote for Governor of lug commit tee chairman Larry Layne -was issued a ticket white conducting a meeting of the park¬ ing committee. Park your car inside the committee room next time. Larry. The college patrol only checks lo there once every Congratulations are In store for Jerry Tahajian, student president, and Al Dark, manager of the San California during the campus poll. It's good to see that at least two voters oV campus reallu wl California Is Inheriting Nov. G The Cuban crisis had students on campus pacing up and down like expectant fathers — all of tbem waiting to see what the baby was going to look like and almost afraid to find out. When I asked if you hod a little jock, I didn't mean that kind. We service anything with wheeli — cars, bikes, trucks, sport can. Lei ut keep your "wheeli" running imooihly. AM MrAmm CHEVRON SERVICE Pick-Up and Delivery - ^_^ TUN6-W - MAKES M Phone IA 7-4125 6f. Co Jar g Show Calrf. Tha Frame State Collage Collagian- Poet's Nook FALLACY Ideals flourish, hypocrisy reijrns Morality exists in bigots chains Our egos are clutched in sweaty fists ' with goodness confused in personal twists. We must, we will, all except me I worship myself on bended knee Locked in temptation, we lose the key for man is drowning in a darkening sea. BUCK LEWIS COLLEGE LIFE OF XN INDEPENDENT He ponders his professors and the meaning of what's being said. While his wandering eyes rate each and every coed. He leaves the lecture and questions with surprise How professors speak so long without shutting their eyes. He lives from library, to lecture, to lunch Living on 60rc study and 40% hunch. His life is routine and we realize That he has little time to socialize. But as he gathers the wheat of knowledge we must realize That in the future he'll give the shaft to those who fraternize. BILL TUSAN Sponsor of the Nook 50 dollar scholarship to be given to the writer of the best poem submitted to the Nook this Fall RALPH CROSS MEN'S WEAR—THE BACK ROOM An oRilmmenl lund ol (55.000, ,„, i.rsR.1 RiMia ssemsa etm aim la in. coIIrw.. an °«™ '•" ,o tl, Fre«.>0 SUH ColMK JWi»- d.ilo. lo b. »>«»■ <•>' """' RCielinhlp. ol op lo tsAU >" Latin American Study Fellowships Available Former FSC Professor Leaves Endowments tiir'ii 1 in 1313. The late Osla Feurt, former FSC psychology professor, left the -money in the memory of Ihe laie George Frank Feurt, the faiher of the deceased professor. Kenneth Lewi-*, chairman of !he scholarship committee, said that the earnings from the In¬ vested funds, expected to total some J.1,000 for the next year, will be divided Into scholarships of up to * 1.000. Lewis said Ihe scholarships will be available to upper divi¬ sion students or Other students who have completed two or more years of study at FSC for study at any accredited American 01 foreign university Id the fields Ot medicine or life science. Reclpl enls will be selected on the baaii of merit, achievement and poten¬ tial, and the scholarships will be renewable. Miss Feurt, who died last Au- itusi. served on the FSC faculty from 192.1 to 1946. She taught In high schools In the Midwest for nine years and In colleges In Seniors and graduates wilt have an opportunity lo compete for Latin American study fellow¬ ships, according 10 Dr. Gwemlo- lln B. Cobb, associate professor of history and chairman of Ihe FSC committee' on these grants. Under the National Defense Education Act. graduate fellow¬ ships In Latin American Spanish or Brazilian Portuguese will be available to students In tile United States. Last year over 1.000 fellow- Ips were swarded in this field. The NDEA fellowships will be ailable to FSC and other col¬ lege students who have graduate status now or who will be gradu¬ ated In June. The fellowships, which will cover tuition, fees and living allowance, for the 1963 Hummer session and the 1963-64 academic year, will be offered as a part ot the NDEA's Modern Foreign Language Fellowship Program. Dr. Cobb said that applications for the fellowships are now avail- ble and' m;iy be obtained by riling her al FSC or by calling her office. The applications must be returned by January 21, 1963. According to the NDEA. an ap- icant must be a citizen or nu- inal of the United Slates or Biggest Bonfire In State History Sought (Continued from Page I) rganlxatlon lore <Jbwn a barn for their contribution lo the huge Ie. The group spent the rest of e year paying back the Irate rner of the barn. The goal this year Is the "big¬ gest bonfire In the history of the school." said Blumberg. The game is expected to be one of the best of the year and should be the closest game played in RaleIItie date In '62. The bonfire rally ls "guaran¬ teed" to raise the competitive spirit of the student body. Blum- berg said. Throw away the girl collections and gather a few splinters. It's good for Ihe medical center's business. have such Immigrant status personal plans as to provide sonable assurance that he make a continuing contribu to this country; be willing to I scribe la loyalty provisions of NDEA act; be a recipient o baccalaureate degree by the time the fellowship begins: and accepted by a college or unl sity graduate school. He l submit an acceptable prograi study and agree to devote time to study. The maximum stipend for ihe 12-month program is 12,700, al. though' additional funds may be requested for travel and for de¬ pendents. Further details regarding th. program may be obtained from Dr. Cobb. 3 More Coeds Enter Campus Queen Race "(Continued from Page 1) gracious as all other FSC Campus Queens have been." Marjorie Hansen. education major from Caruthers, commenting on the campus queen contest, said. "Running has par¬ ticular meaning to me because Rosaline Obonl, my sorority big sister, was campus queen In 1960. Rosaline was my first friend at Fresno State College end I [eel she truly has the qualities of campus queen. She has gracloui ness and charm, but primarily ha the ability to teach anyone th meaning of friendship. These sr campus queen qualities. "The campus queen represents the FSC public relations aspects. It's a challenge to b tatlve in which the peopt> have pride.' Frosh Camp Photos Ready In Center Pictures taken nt this fall's freshman ennip nre now available in Ihe College RellgtoiM Cent Students who have ordered pic¬ tures should pick them up us soon as possible, a center spokesman BACK THE BULLDOGS HAWAII 1963 UNIVERSITY SUMMER SESSION Dormitory Living on Campus or Apartmenl Residence at WaiViki HOWARD TOURS REPRESENTATIVE ON F.S.C. CAMPUS MRS. DORIS ST1LLMAN 521 East McKinley AD 3-7281 By,,.: AD 3-3698 1963 "BIG SUMMER" TH* Biennial Year of th* World Fdiqovt Yacht Rao* frees lot Angel*. tt> Hawaii. ONLY **5 DEPOSIT COMHITRY HPUNOMU AT ANT TIME Judging Team Try For Another Win The livestock Judclns team, which has won live contests and taken second in one contest di rlnc the past two seasons, wl at letup! to extend lis string l the Golden Spike National Liv stock Kvposltlon In Ogden. Utah this weekend. Two o( the team's victories this season include the Grand Nation¬ al Livestock Exposition in San Francisco and Ihe Pacific Interna¬ Uonal Livestock Exposition In Portland. , Jesse Dell, the team coach, said his team's record Is "unpreced. ented." North and South Dakota been, joining the FSC staff. At f« she waa a sponsor of Tokafc. the upper division women's hct, orary society, and ot Kaan Kappa Gamma. She waa a n,t% ber of the American Associativa of University Women and a pi_j! dent of the Faculty Womens cimj The psychology prof est., earned a BA degree In educaUn the Unlveralty or Missouri j_. i master's degree In psychoid Columbia University __, urt waa 87 when she ggm away In a Fresno rest home U» Fall Fashions Previewed At Ski Club Show A fashion show and door prfcq will highlight the second neetiBj □r the Ski Club Nov. S at ?:i| I'M In the Laboratory School. The fashion show, produced &, a local sporting moods firm i_| modeled by coeds In the clttt, will give students a chance io _, the latest in ski fashions. Club president Bill Ed ho].. said over f25 worth ot door prises will be given away In arfdi lion to a special prize to tin- u,. | the i t allr ski sweater. Edholm said i endar tor the coming year win be discussed and students »iii have an opportunity to slcn nj for various committees. Also -. ihe agenda Is nominations fa club ofNcers. "if the turnout for last wttfi meeting ls any indication." sjij Edholm. "this year's actlviiia should be a tremendous succ»n Over 200 students attended (hi .■■ill. and they all played enthusiasm." A massive club tnenib-rstili drive will end today. Membersfcii cards may be purchased al Ik Activities Booth for (3.50 and u additional 50 cents tor a ski clu The club also Is selling llritn It Ihe team wins in Ogdei will be the first time that a 1 stock team from any college has won the Portland, San Francisco. and Ogden MStfM* in the same Team members who will at¬ tempt to set this record are Ken Heupel. Ed Mesple. Dick Gates, Jim Porter and John Edwards. Patronize Our Advertisers tu Hie Fresno sltowlWfW IBe-r>I ficlnl ISfiO Winter Olympics inoi (es to be presented toiiiurroi night ut H:I5 In ihe Koosev-d High School Auditorium. Ticket may be picked up at the Acllvitlt Booth today and tomorrow lor $1 donation. DI CICCO'S PIZZERIA GOOD ITALIAN FOOD Opan 4:30 p.n. . 3 a.m. Every Nil. Church £r/ep CEDAR AVENUE BAPTIST CEDAR NEAR BaMONT KORNINO SIRVICI ,ROABUST _ <IRV_oi«i „i0 l"l"9 *• R.nbwlliy, 0. D„ Railo, "It Costs So Little To Look So Nice" N0RGE COIN-OPERATED DRY CLEANING A LAUNDRY Don't judge coin-operated dry cleaning until you have Med Norge. ' Convenient Study Tables - S&H Green Stamps BAKERS DOZEN 113Hl load p^., ONLY 2 HUES FROM CAMPUS NOAGE VIILR6E x o£?J?™™J»d™™ ?ZA '^r«.~?op_™^^'!aM_*N JPfawwd CWqIot On D_ty Tc ^ Yo„ ':
Object Description
Title | 1962_11 The Daily Collegian November 1962 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1962 |
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 | November 8, 1962, Page 2 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1962 |
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 |
Page Two
Editorial Comments
Get Up Sleepy Head
Resident Hall students were rudely stunned Tuesday
night by a loud oooga sound. Tliere was immediate rustle
and hustle toward the east parking lot. Over six hundred
students, some of them half asleep and still in bed clothes,
and others disturbed from their midterm studies, reacted to
the fire alarm horn.
After standing in the cold for several minutes and having
roll call, all the residents paraded back into the halls to try
to get back to sleep or to their important studies.
There had been no fire. In fact, the fire trucks didn't even
arrive on the scene at Homan Hall. After all why should
they have. A planned fire drill doesn't need fire trucks.
There can be nothing wrong with a fire drill. It is good
policy to let the resident students know what the procedures
are.
But if this were the Elizabethan age, somebody would be
beheaded: the housing coordinator, Charles Wheeler, to be
sure. Why is it that with 18 weeks during a semester, the
housing coordinator decides to pull a fire drill during mid¬
term week. We have to admit that if it had to be pulled
this week, it had to be Tuesday. Many students were still
up watching the election returns.-
But how can we condone this action during midterm week?
Many students had already plunked into bed for a good
night's sleep before their tests. We all know how hard it is
to get back to sleep after a brief visit to the cold outside.
Others were busily cramming for exams when the rude
interruption took place and broke their concentration. The
alarm did not show much consideration for the students of
the halls by the higher-ups of the housing office.
There are always bound to be gripes when students are
lifted from between the lily whites in the middle of the night.
But it doesn't hurt the residents a bit under the right circum¬
stances.
The students of the three resident halls deserve a little
consideration. They payed for it.
Bulldog Spirit-(Hie)
This is supposed to be the big weekend of the Bulidog-
Spar^an tussle at San Jose. Numerous comments have been
heard on campus this week in lieu of the expected happen¬
ings.
Said one enthusiastic rooter up in the snack bar the other
day, 'This is gonna be the all-time weekend!" For a moment
I contemplated this statement and thought how great it was
to hear this same enthusiasm rocketing around the room.
6ut j"ust then his buddy replied, "Yeah, it's gonna be a won¬
der if I can make it into the game on my own two feet! Boy,
will 1 have a head in the morning!" •
Well, let's face facts, we all know drinking is going to take
place, so let's use some common sense in doing so. Keejj in
mind that it will take only one careless act to cast a storm
of unwanted ill-feelings on the college or one slight misjudg-
ment could send a carload of jubilant rooters on a screaming
ride to some strange hospital thus leaving a grim ending to
what could have been a wonderful weekend.
D. B.
| bite tmd hata
, By Terry Cress
Parking may present a bigger i Francisco Giants. Bach received
problem than we thought. Park-1 one wru_-i„ vote for Governor of
lug commit tee chairman Larry
Layne -was issued a ticket white
conducting a meeting of the park¬
ing committee. Park your car
inside the committee room next
time. Larry. The college patrol
only checks lo there once every
Congratulations are In store for
Jerry Tahajian, student president,
and Al Dark, manager of the San
California during the campus poll.
It's good to see that at least two
voters oV campus reallu wl
California Is Inheriting Nov. G
The Cuban crisis had students
on campus pacing up and down
like expectant fathers — all of
tbem waiting to see what the
baby was going to look like and
almost afraid to find out.
When I asked if you hod a little jock,
I didn't mean that kind.
We service anything with wheeli — cars, bikes, trucks, sport
can. Lei ut keep your "wheeli" running imooihly.
AM MrAmm CHEVRON SERVICE
Pick-Up and Delivery - ^_^
TUN6-W - MAKES M
Phone IA 7-4125
6f. Co Jar g Show
Calrf.
Tha Frame State Collage Collagian-
Poet's Nook
FALLACY
Ideals flourish, hypocrisy reijrns
Morality exists in bigots chains
Our egos are clutched in sweaty fists
' with goodness confused in personal twists.
We must, we will, all except me
I worship myself on bended knee
Locked in temptation, we lose the key
for man is drowning in a darkening sea.
BUCK LEWIS
COLLEGE LIFE OF XN INDEPENDENT
He ponders his professors and the meaning of what's being
said.
While his wandering eyes rate each and every coed.
He leaves the lecture and questions with surprise
How professors speak so long without shutting their eyes.
He lives from library, to lecture, to lunch
Living on 60rc study and 40% hunch.
His life is routine and we realize
That he has little time to socialize.
But as he gathers the wheat of knowledge we must realize
That in the future he'll give the shaft to those who fraternize.
BILL TUSAN
Sponsor of the Nook 50 dollar scholarship to be given to
the writer of the best poem submitted to the Nook this Fall
RALPH CROSS MEN'S WEAR—THE BACK ROOM
An oRilmmenl lund ol (55.000,
,„, i.rsR.1 RiMia ssemsa etm
aim la in. coIIrw.. an °«™ '•"
,o tl, Fre«.>0 SUH ColMK JWi»-
d.ilo. lo b. »>«»■ <•>' """'
RCielinhlp. ol op lo tsAU >"
Latin American Study
Fellowships Available
Former FSC Professor
Leaves Endowments
tiir'ii
1 in 1313.
The late Osla Feurt, former
FSC psychology professor, left
the -money in the memory of Ihe
laie George Frank Feurt, the
faiher of the deceased professor.
Kenneth Lewi-*, chairman of
!he scholarship committee, said
that the earnings from the In¬
vested funds, expected to total
some J.1,000 for the next year,
will be divided Into scholarships
of up to * 1.000.
Lewis said Ihe scholarships
will be available to upper divi¬
sion students or Other students
who have completed two or more
years of study at FSC for study
at any accredited American 01
foreign university Id the fields Ot
medicine or life science. Reclpl
enls will be selected on the baaii
of merit, achievement and poten¬
tial, and the scholarships will be
renewable.
Miss Feurt, who died last Au-
itusi. served on the FSC faculty
from 192.1 to 1946. She taught
In high schools In the Midwest
for nine years and In colleges In
Seniors and graduates wilt
have an opportunity lo compete
for Latin American study fellow¬
ships, according 10 Dr. Gwemlo-
lln B. Cobb, associate professor
of history and chairman of Ihe
FSC committee' on these grants.
Under the National Defense
Education Act. graduate fellow¬
ships In Latin American Spanish
or Brazilian Portuguese will be
available to students In tile
United States.
Last year over 1.000 fellow-
Ips were swarded in this field.
The NDEA fellowships will be
ailable to FSC and other col¬
lege students who have graduate
status now or who will be gradu¬
ated In June. The fellowships,
which will cover tuition, fees and
living allowance, for the 1963
Hummer session and the 1963-64
academic year, will be offered as
a part ot the NDEA's Modern
Foreign Language Fellowship
Program.
Dr. Cobb said that applications
for the fellowships are now avail-
ble and' m;iy be obtained by
riling her al FSC or by calling
her office. The applications must
be returned by January 21, 1963.
According to the NDEA. an ap-
icant must be a citizen or nu-
inal of the United Slates or
Biggest Bonfire In
State History Sought
(Continued from Page I)
rganlxatlon lore |