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The- CSU, Fresno Daily Collegian Vol. LXIV, No. XX Thursday, February 20,1986 Tony Obma/Tha Daily CcSagm ANGELS Jane (Hillary Spector) and Julia (Janine Miskulin) anxiously await the arrival of their former French lover Maurice Dnclos in the CSUF production "Fallen Angels." The Noel Coward pUy and "Butley" by Simon Gray will play intermittently at the Arena Theatre between February 21 through March 8. Simple Minds gig rejected Committee snubs band 8 days for Boomlown and Air according to Niehoff. Guitar. "Bands don't play Sundays," he said. With Boomtown starting at 5:00 p.m. Avalon Attractions, representing Sim- Nationally top-rated rock group Sim¬ ple Minds was rejected as the Vintage Days band because of conflicts with the AirGuitarand Boomtown Carnival events, said Mike Niehoff, concert coordinator with the College Union Programming Committee. "Students are being cheated and don't know it," he claimed. The Vintage Days Committee sets dales for Vintage Days events. Niehoff said, and the C.V. committee finds the acts to fill the dates. Simple Minds, widely known for the hit single "(Don't You) Forget About Me" featured in the movie "The Breakfast Club," could have played Fri¬ day. April 25. Bui Air Guitar is scheduled for that Friday. Niehoff said that because of Simple Minds' popularity, moving Air Guitar to get the band would be justified. them move Air Guitar and put Simple Minds on Friday," Niehoff said. "It was voted down unanimously." ' Niehoff said the Vintage Days Commit¬ tee "somehow last year decided not to have a Friday night concert," instead scheduling Air Guitar on Friday night. "They dont want Air Guitar and the Boomtown Carnival on the same night," Niehoff said. "Simple Minds is a college- type band that's real hot right now." "When Avalon (Attractions) came up "They're 10 people deciding for the whole university what the students are going to be entertained by," Niehoff said. Dave Vigneault, Vintage Days student director, said the Vintage Days Committee only schedules the open date for the con- nothing to do with picking ts for I l date. n the date over to the pro- "Wejil jrammin. Vigneaull said the task at hand is to find i band who will play a Sunday afternoon roncert. He did lend some support to the 6:30, Vigneault said, those arriving "fashionably late" for Boomtown would go right to the gates for Air Guitar. "For some student groups, Boomtown is the only connection wilh Vintage Days," Vigneault said. "If it flops, they lose." Vigneault said the committee suggested that the CU. Programming Committee schedule a pre-Vintage Days concert the Saturday before Vintage Days. The com¬ mittee has also set aside Sunday afternoon for a concert, the band to be selected through the programming committee. Sunday afternoon, with the crafts faire and closing ceremonies, while open for a concert, will not attract a big name band. pie Minds, said the band would play oi Friday. It is scheduled to play San Fran¬ cisco on Saturday and then go north, according to Niehoff. "They will play the amphitheatre," Nie¬ hoff said. "They wont play Selland Arena." According to John Moran of Tower Records in Fresno. Simple Minds cur¬ rently has two songs in the Top 100. Moss Jacobs of Avalon Attractions, called scheduling Simple Minds "a rare opportunity for a top band to play Fresno "From a really neutral position on my part," Jacobs said, "The scheduling just didnt work out." Folk tales bared of secrets Staff Write? What do the lunar landing, folktales and Sigmund Freud have in common? For moskjpeople, probably nothing. But there are many similarities among them for Dr. Alan Dundes, a psycho-analytic folklorist. Dundes, a professor of anthropology and folklore at Uni¬ versity of California, Berkeley, spoke on "Folklore in Psy¬ chology" yesterday as p4rt of the Psychology Speakers Forum sponsored by the Psychology Students Union and Psi Chi, a national honor society for psychology students. "Folklorists are totally anti-psychology, and psycholo¬ gists are totally Ignorant of folklore," Dundes said, at he latcd fields. Dundes said the problem is a historical one, starting with the Brothers Grimm. When they started collecting the folk¬ tales passed along by German peasants, they began combin¬ ing the versions, he said. "Actually, these tales were never told by anybody. These are not from the lips of German peasants," he said. "This isnt folklore, its fakelore."" The problem occurs when psychoanalysts, searching for connections between neuroses and folktales, only study tbe Grimm collection.
Object Description
Title | 1986_02 The Daily Collegian February 1986 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1986 |
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 | Feb 20, 1986 Pg. 1 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1986 |
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- CSU, Fresno Daily Collegian Vol. LXIV, No. XX Thursday, February 20,1986 Tony Obma/Tha Daily CcSagm ANGELS Jane (Hillary Spector) and Julia (Janine Miskulin) anxiously await the arrival of their former French lover Maurice Dnclos in the CSUF production "Fallen Angels." The Noel Coward pUy and "Butley" by Simon Gray will play intermittently at the Arena Theatre between February 21 through March 8. Simple Minds gig rejected Committee snubs band 8 days for Boomlown and Air according to Niehoff. Guitar. "Bands don't play Sundays," he said. With Boomtown starting at 5:00 p.m. Avalon Attractions, representing Sim- Nationally top-rated rock group Sim¬ ple Minds was rejected as the Vintage Days band because of conflicts with the AirGuitarand Boomtown Carnival events, said Mike Niehoff, concert coordinator with the College Union Programming Committee. "Students are being cheated and don't know it," he claimed. The Vintage Days Committee sets dales for Vintage Days events. Niehoff said, and the C.V. committee finds the acts to fill the dates. Simple Minds, widely known for the hit single "(Don't You) Forget About Me" featured in the movie "The Breakfast Club," could have played Fri¬ day. April 25. Bui Air Guitar is scheduled for that Friday. Niehoff said that because of Simple Minds' popularity, moving Air Guitar to get the band would be justified. them move Air Guitar and put Simple Minds on Friday," Niehoff said. "It was voted down unanimously." ' Niehoff said the Vintage Days Commit¬ tee "somehow last year decided not to have a Friday night concert," instead scheduling Air Guitar on Friday night. "They dont want Air Guitar and the Boomtown Carnival on the same night," Niehoff said. "Simple Minds is a college- type band that's real hot right now." "When Avalon (Attractions) came up "They're 10 people deciding for the whole university what the students are going to be entertained by," Niehoff said. Dave Vigneault, Vintage Days student director, said the Vintage Days Committee only schedules the open date for the con- nothing to do with picking ts for I l date. n the date over to the pro- "Wejil jrammin. Vigneaull said the task at hand is to find i band who will play a Sunday afternoon roncert. He did lend some support to the 6:30, Vigneault said, those arriving "fashionably late" for Boomtown would go right to the gates for Air Guitar. "For some student groups, Boomtown is the only connection wilh Vintage Days," Vigneault said. "If it flops, they lose." Vigneault said the committee suggested that the CU. Programming Committee schedule a pre-Vintage Days concert the Saturday before Vintage Days. The com¬ mittee has also set aside Sunday afternoon for a concert, the band to be selected through the programming committee. Sunday afternoon, with the crafts faire and closing ceremonies, while open for a concert, will not attract a big name band. pie Minds, said the band would play oi Friday. It is scheduled to play San Fran¬ cisco on Saturday and then go north, according to Niehoff. "They will play the amphitheatre," Nie¬ hoff said. "They wont play Selland Arena." According to John Moran of Tower Records in Fresno. Simple Minds cur¬ rently has two songs in the Top 100. Moss Jacobs of Avalon Attractions, called scheduling Simple Minds "a rare opportunity for a top band to play Fresno "From a really neutral position on my part," Jacobs said, "The scheduling just didnt work out." Folk tales bared of secrets Staff Write? What do the lunar landing, folktales and Sigmund Freud have in common? For moskjpeople, probably nothing. But there are many similarities among them for Dr. Alan Dundes, a psycho-analytic folklorist. Dundes, a professor of anthropology and folklore at Uni¬ versity of California, Berkeley, spoke on "Folklore in Psy¬ chology" yesterday as p4rt of the Psychology Speakers Forum sponsored by the Psychology Students Union and Psi Chi, a national honor society for psychology students. "Folklorists are totally anti-psychology, and psycholo¬ gists are totally Ignorant of folklore," Dundes said, at he latcd fields. Dundes said the problem is a historical one, starting with the Brothers Grimm. When they started collecting the folk¬ tales passed along by German peasants, they began combin¬ ing the versions, he said. "Actually, these tales were never told by anybody. These are not from the lips of German peasants," he said. "This isnt folklore, its fakelore."" The problem occurs when psychoanalysts, searching for connections between neuroses and folktales, only study tbe Grimm collection. |