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-The Fresno State College Collegian- Campus Clubs Engaged In Varied Activities -Page Three Social Science Group To Hear Dienstein pr. William Dienstein will be guest speavker at the annual Pi Gam ma Mu, national honorary serial science fraternity, inltla- ti,.,i] banqyet Saturday at Eaaln's Villa Basque. plen stein, pro feasor of social ic|ence and criminology, will •Desk on "An Invitation to Social French Club Meeting Is Scheduled Today ^11 students Interested In the' f-rr-nch language are Invited to mend the third meeting of the frfnrti Club today at 4 PM at the College Religious Center. FOR RENT j letr!room Ivrraihtrtt Apt. — ItKOlid M iitrra Modr. Anllabl* wllhln tw* *•**->. BA 7-6711. Religious Series Continues Today Tom Undeman. associate dlrec tor of the College 'Y'. and Frank Nleman, Inquiry form director, will ill.-,-.-. , "Protestantism to PluralUm—Religion i„ American History" today at a Roman Cath ollc-Protestant .meeting. The meeting, the lecond In a series of sis Catholic-Protestant dialogues, will be at 12:15 PM In Cafeteria Committee Room I. According to Connie Kemalyan. representative of the Planning Committee for the dialogues, tbe speakers will present their ma- Serial between 12:15 and 12:60, followed by questions and group discussion. * The lectur-e will end t o'clock. The discussion period continue until 2 o'clock. Sky Diving Film Tonight "The New Sport of the Space Age." a film on sky diving will be shown.-today al 7.30 PM In I I-I Hall. Church Stkp CEDAR AVENUE BAPTIST CEDAR NEAR BELMONT P JS AM Collar,* ■wli-a*,, Bibl* Clo,. 4 II t>M Coll*Q* flulinm ItOO AM Morninrj Worihip 7 30 PM E-r*»'n9 Wonhip MOWING SEIVICE HlOADCASI — KIHY — DIAL 1510 Irving E. r**nrnrtr.),, O.D., Poator On Campus with (Author of "Ratty Rourulthe Flag. Boytf" and "Barrfoot Boy With Check.") I WAS A TEEN-AGE SLIDE RULE •> In a ntxat learned joumal (Playboy) the distinguished board chairman (Ralph "Hot Lips" Bigafoos) of one of our most important American industrial co**pomtions (the Arf Mechan¬ ical Dor Co.) wrote a trenchant article in which he pinpointed our -inj-li- most serious national problem: the lack of culture among twience -pnduat<--s. Let me hasten to state that Mr. Sipifoos's article was in no sense derogatory. He Raid empirically that the science (p-ad- uatc. what with his gruelling curriculum in plij-sii*)*, math, and chcraistry, can hanily be c-qiccted to find time to study the aarta. too. Wliat dis-i-csses Mr. Si-j-afoos—and, indeed, all of us— is the lopsided remit of today's science cuurwi-: gr-tduatcs who can build a skyemper but can't compose a concerto; who know Newton's Third law but not Beethoven's Fourth Sym- h?sUed mlt of'wfe tdrne phony; who arc familiar with I-'r-niiilmfers linr-s hut not with Shelley's. Mr. Sift-afoot*, can find no solution to Ulta lamentable imbal¬ ance. I, however, believe then* i.« onc-aiid ix very stpiplc one. It is this: if wtudenhi of science don't have time to come to the arts, then tlie urLi must come to students of science. For example, it would be a very way thing to teach poetry and music right along with pliy-.ii-*. Students, instead of Ijeing (■ailed upon merely to recite, would itiste-.td lie fr-r-uircd to rhyme their answers and set them lb familiar tunc*-like, for instance, the t-tirrinjr. Colonel Bogey March. Thus recitatii.ns would not only !*■ clK-ck-ti-bl.-elc with important fact* but would, at the satne time, etpose the students to the aesthetic delight* of great (wetrv and music. Here, Uy it yourself. You all know The Colonel Beeeg Monk. One, sing along with me: Phytic* la trhot ire learn in dose. Einstein Said energy is mm, Ifewtem la high-falultn' AndPascals <i rascal. Sot Boyle. Do you see how much more bnmdi-nitig. how much more up¬ lifting it is to learn physics this way? Of course you do. What? You want another chorus? Hy all means: Lcyden He made the lcyden jar. Trolley Re made the Trolley ear. Curie Rode in a eurrry And Dietel'* a weasel Son Boyle. Once the student lias mastered The Colonel Bogey March, he can go on to more complicated melodies like Death and Trans- figuration. Sixteen Tons, and Boo-lloo. And when the student, loaded not only with science but with culture, leaves his classmotn and lights his Marlboro Cigarette, how much more he will enjoy that filter, that flavor, that pack or box! Because there will no longer be a little voice within him repeating that he is culturally a dolt. He will know -know joyrjtisiy-that he is a complete man, a fulfilled man, and he will bask and revel in the pleasure of his Marlboro as a colt rolb in new gress- exultant and triumphant-a truly "educated human pereon-a credit to his college, to himself, and tohMtobawomsl)! a,,*,™. We, the maker* of Morlooroa and aponaora of thia «'«"?"' ,«■*-#*■ you not to roll colt-wiae in the grosa t/j/aumre """'"' e *ort pack of .Marlboro, in jour pocket. It, houerer. -?" ere carrying the crush-proof bos end weigh let* than 100 —Ji, you mag antelg fling yourtelf about. Poss To Review Trip Dr. Stanley Poss, assistant pro¬ fessor of Engllsh. will talk about his trip to Ireland at a meeting of the Literary Club Monday at 7:30 PM In EdP 114. Dr. Poss, who visited Ireland while on aabbatical leave last year, did research on poets James Joyce and William *Butler Teats. Jim Merxon, president, said all Interested students may attend the meeting. Also on the agenda will be election or officers and discussion about the publication of Backwash, the literary maga- Viticulture Club To See Russian Slides Members of the Viticulture Club will get a look behind the iron Curtain tonight. Robert Malka- lian, club president, announced the guest speaker this week will be Robert Harrison, vocational agriculture Instructor, who spent two weeks thla summer touring Russian and other Communist count rlcn. Harrison made the trip as part of the People to People program and took many still pictures show¬ ing conditions throughout the Soviet zone of Influence. ■ * PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS Engineers Orientation��Group Will See Film A third and last engineering orientation meeting will be held today at 1 o'cloek ln Industrial Arts 101. Dr. Thomas Evans, head of the engineering division, will con¬ duct the orientation with a pres¬ entation of the film: "George Spelvin. Professional Engineer." Retailing Is Club Topic Gerald Rodder, assistant mer¬ chandising manager of Rodder's Mademoiselle, will discuss Retail¬ ing today at a Business Women's meeting. The meeting will be at 1 o'cloek ln Committee Room 1 of the cale- Mrs. Winifred Livingston, a tor. rill b the SMART DRESS FOR FRESNO STATE 5TUDENT5 * CRICKETEER CLOTHES * BOSTONIAN SHOES * ROUGH RIDER SUCKS VftlrSrTY SraOr* 1321 FULTON ST., Downtown — 741 E. OLIVE, Tower Dht. THE COLLEGE PLAN exclusively for THE COLLEGE MAN BILL WALLS—DOUG EATON COtlECE MASTER RETS. a 1-8076 rN IS THIS THE WAY YOU'LL CHOOSE YOUR JOB? ^ If you flip a coin between just a couple of jobs, you're not giving yourself the best odds on real opportunity. Give yourself better than 50-50 by looking at both sides of the coin, with every com pa ny.PacificTelephone, for example. We offer*excellent opportunities for you technical, engineering, business and liberal arts majors to put what you know to work. Plus some unique advantages: immediate responsibility, rapid advancement, and an atmos¬ phere you can grow in. These opportunities are available in such principal California cities as Los Angeles, Pasadena, San Diego, Sacramento and San Francisco. We'll have to be honest about the odds, though. They're just 1 in 7 you'll qualify for a top career with Pacific Telephone. We're looking for the heads-up man. Sign up with your placement office today. . EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYERS -^PacificTelephone ™ TBaaauaaaaaaaTEcaaarAiarjaaATrarva sandia EiaaaaraM aao aaaoaonaaTivi posmoaa rTTl™***-*-*™-* THE Barn. STATE, ||*J TALK TO OUR REPRESENTATIVE ON CAMPUS NOV. 19 & 20
Object Description
Title | 1963_11 The Daily Collegian November 1963 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1963 |
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 7, 1963, Page 3 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1963 |
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 | -The Fresno State College Collegian- Campus Clubs Engaged In Varied Activities -Page Three Social Science Group To Hear Dienstein pr. William Dienstein will be guest speavker at the annual Pi Gam ma Mu, national honorary serial science fraternity, inltla- ti,.,i] banqyet Saturday at Eaaln's Villa Basque. plen stein, pro feasor of social ic|ence and criminology, will •Desk on "An Invitation to Social French Club Meeting Is Scheduled Today ^11 students Interested In the' f-rr-nch language are Invited to mend the third meeting of the frfnrti Club today at 4 PM at the College Religious Center. FOR RENT j letr!room Ivrraihtrtt Apt. — ItKOlid M iitrra Modr. Anllabl* wllhln tw* *•**->. BA 7-6711. Religious Series Continues Today Tom Undeman. associate dlrec tor of the College 'Y'. and Frank Nleman, Inquiry form director, will ill.-,-.-. , "Protestantism to PluralUm—Religion i„ American History" today at a Roman Cath ollc-Protestant .meeting. The meeting, the lecond In a series of sis Catholic-Protestant dialogues, will be at 12:15 PM In Cafeteria Committee Room I. According to Connie Kemalyan. representative of the Planning Committee for the dialogues, tbe speakers will present their ma- Serial between 12:15 and 12:60, followed by questions and group discussion. * The lectur-e will end t o'clock. The discussion period continue until 2 o'clock. Sky Diving Film Tonight "The New Sport of the Space Age." a film on sky diving will be shown.-today al 7.30 PM In I I-I Hall. Church Stkp CEDAR AVENUE BAPTIST CEDAR NEAR BELMONT P JS AM Collar,* ■wli-a*,, Bibl* Clo,. 4 II t>M Coll*Q* flulinm ItOO AM Morninrj Worihip 7 30 PM E-r*»'n9 Wonhip MOWING SEIVICE HlOADCASI — KIHY — DIAL 1510 Irving E. r**nrnrtr.),, O.D., Poator On Campus with (Author of "Ratty Rourulthe Flag. Boytf" and "Barrfoot Boy With Check.") I WAS A TEEN-AGE SLIDE RULE •> In a ntxat learned joumal (Playboy) the distinguished board chairman (Ralph "Hot Lips" Bigafoos) of one of our most important American industrial co**pomtions (the Arf Mechan¬ ical Dor Co.) wrote a trenchant article in which he pinpointed our -inj-li- most serious national problem: the lack of culture among twience -pnduat<--s. Let me hasten to state that Mr. Sipifoos's article was in no sense derogatory. He Raid empirically that the science (p-ad- uatc. what with his gruelling curriculum in plij-sii*)*, math, and chcraistry, can hanily be c-qiccted to find time to study the aarta. too. Wliat dis-i-csses Mr. Si-j-afoos—and, indeed, all of us— is the lopsided remit of today's science cuurwi-: gr-tduatcs who can build a skyemper but can't compose a concerto; who know Newton's Third law but not Beethoven's Fourth Sym- h?sUed mlt of'wfe tdrne phony; who arc familiar with I-'r-niiilmfers linr-s hut not with Shelley's. Mr. Sift-afoot*, can find no solution to Ulta lamentable imbal¬ ance. I, however, believe then* i.« onc-aiid ix very stpiplc one. It is this: if wtudenhi of science don't have time to come to the arts, then tlie urLi must come to students of science. For example, it would be a very way thing to teach poetry and music right along with pliy-.ii-*. Students, instead of Ijeing (■ailed upon merely to recite, would itiste-.td lie fr-r-uircd to rhyme their answers and set them lb familiar tunc*-like, for instance, the t-tirrinjr. Colonel Bogey March. Thus recitatii.ns would not only !*■ clK-ck-ti-bl.-elc with important fact* but would, at the satne time, etpose the students to the aesthetic delight* of great (wetrv and music. Here, Uy it yourself. You all know The Colonel Beeeg Monk. One, sing along with me: Phytic* la trhot ire learn in dose. Einstein Said energy is mm, Ifewtem la high-falultn' AndPascals |