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Page 2 The Collegian Thursday, November 5,1964 Here & There Today *\ FSC I CTA Sets Conference Sex On The Camus By TOM BRONZINI From San Jose State CoUege toComptonCoUege, toe battle of toe sexes continues on state college and university campuses. Here are a few of toe major skirmishes, as reported by campus newspapers: The Spartan Dally atSan Jose State reports a breakthrough ln stu¬ dent housing: a coed room and board establishment. That's right, fellows, both sexes are being housed under toe same roof at a board¬ ing house for students located near toe campus. The Integration, however, has proven frustrating to some students. Although 'Kith male and female students occupy toe same buUdlng, they are stationed on separate floors with locked hallway doors separating, toe floors. Students are given a door key for their appropriate floor. (So far there have been no reports of key The owners of toe house switched coed housing to coed housing because of a high vacancy rate. The residence was taken off toe approved housing list of toe college, but toe owners are hopeful toe school wUl set up standards for coed housing by next semester. STUDENTS AT toe University of Santa Clara were asked to define a "husUer* ln an opinion column conducted recently by toe student newspaper. One distraught freshman retorted that a husUer ls a Junior at a freshman mixer. An Individual with a phUosophlcal viewpoint replied there are no hustlers at toe University because "toe Intrinsic nature of toe word husUer necessarily Includes something to hustle.* One freshman let his hair down by concluding that "he must be able to make every girl think she ls number one--and this ls where most of us lose.* A student at Coalinga College, indignant over a proposal that would allow coeds to wear bermudas on campus, fired off a letter to toe college newspaper protesting: (1) The girls would abuse toe privilege and wear short shorts Instead of bermudas. (2) Short shorts and short dresses are very unbecoming on girls. (3) It ls getting to toe point where females leave no Imagination to their dress. (4) Coeds go to the cafeteria with dirty feet. Another student fired off a reply to toe letter saying that shorts are very becoming on women students--at least more so than on men students. He made no comment concerning toe dirty feet. A PRE-HALLOWEEN editorial that appeared ln toe student newspaper of the University of California at Santa Barbara urged male students not to repeat their activities of the previous Hallow- That year, toe newspaper reports, a house mother In one of toe residence halls was knocked down and Injured by 'a group of virile American college men running through a I hundreds of others stood around and lobbed wa The newspaper wryly recommended that planning to attend an organized activity shoul to Berkeley. For those Interested to facts and figures, the Chancellor's Office reports that, as a rule, GO per cent of toe entering freshmen at state Institutions of higher learning are women, but by toe Junior year toe class is GO per cent male. girls generally get better grades than boys ln high school. Where do 20 per cent of toe females go before toey are juniors? I don't really have to tell you, do I? THE COEDS at toe University of Santa CI: proven one myth about toe sexes--the belief that women keep their rooms and apartments cleaner than men do. By some oversight, the university provided only one maid for each residence hall of 96 girls on toe campus. One might believe that toe girls, by their nature, would take up the slack and keep things splc and span. A letter to toe editor sign¬ ed by one of toe dorm residents gives toe real story. At last count the hall and room floors have been mopped once all semester, the showers and tubs have been scrubbed once, the refrigerator has not been cleaned out at all, and toe girls have recently been plagued by an Invasion of ants and spiders. The coed reports that toe girls suffer Insect bites on toe legs, arms, necks, backs and faces. What solution does toe coed advocate to solve tols weighty pro¬ lans? She asks that an additional maid be provided for each dorml- The math club will presei member Grant Labarre discuss lng Euler's Theorum and relate topics today at 1 PM ln SS 210. Niesi Club Will Meet The Nlesl Club wUl meet at 1 PM today to Education-Psy¬ chology 219. Plans for toe annual Thanks¬ giving Bowling Tournament wlto the Chinese Club will be discuss¬ ed. Four Fresno State Student lfornla- Teachers members and tholr faculty ad¬ visor will attend toe California I Teachers Association, Central Section, 17to Annual Halllday, n bershlp contact chairman. According to Loucks toe 01 ference will discuss toe futi of ei en's dorm while balloons.* ipus rowdies not Angel's Flight Members of Angel's Flight wUl complete and turn to the 15,000 envelopes they have hand ad- Bulldlng. Morning Television This Morning ln Fresno, seen at 8 AM'on KJEO-TV, tomorrow wUl feature Prof. Louis Le- Valley, senior vocaUonal In¬ structor ln agriculture, to a dis¬ cussion of Saturday's Shade Tree Conference. Pat Ogle wlU be pro- Phi Chi Theta Phi Chi Theta, business sorority, will meet today for a professional meeting ln Business 113 at 1 PM. Mrs. MUdred Hud- dleston, vice-president of a local savings and loan association, will speak on Management-Office Ad- Pledges are tovlt- At 8 PM tonight, toe sorority will conduct a pledge ceremony ln toe Cafeteria Committee Test Will Be Given The Federal Service Entrance Examination will be given on campus Saturday, Nov. 21. Interested students should register now ln toe Placement Office, Education-Psychology 125. - last problems ln ei Phyllis Herman and MlkoFar¬ ley, SCTA members, will travel The conference which wUl be to San Francisco to attend the held Friday through Sunday at toe California Advisory CouncU on AsUomar Camp Grounds, near Educational Reserach, also to be PacUlc Grove, wUl be attendedby held tols weekend. The annual Don Loucks, SCTA president, conference deals wlto research James B. Lundberg, faculty ad- ln all fields of education. Enrollment Increases Enrollment ln California's col¬ legiate nursing programs year. Figures compiled by Lulu Wolf Hassenplug, dean of toe Schoolof Nursing at toe University of Cal¬ ifornia at Los Angeles Center for Health Sciences, shows that 3,318 students are enroUed ln nursing programs in CalUornia coUeges and universities com¬ pared to 2,781 ln toe fall of 1963, Election Postnote Barry got a beating, So did Mr. Keating. The Republicans lost, LBJ's Texas brand WUl again rule toe land. In 1964, 483 baccalaureate de¬ grees were awarded against 45-1 State supported colleges and universities — Fresno State, Chlco State, Los Angeles State, Sacramento State, San Diego State, San Francisco State, San Jose State, UCLA and University of CalUornia ln San Franclso ; degree this - Lomi Linda College, Mount Saint Mary's CoUege, Stanford Uni¬ versity and toe University of San Franclsco--awarded 140 BS de¬ grees to 1964. The Constitution unquoted. AWARD WINNING PHOTOGRAPHY COLOR OR BLACK & WHITE PORTRAITURE WEDDINGS GROUPS 270 N. Fulton Fresno 485-1810 have dis- SWA(S Will Meet BILLIARDS •THE BEST TABLES IN THE VALLEY* Carpeted - Refrigerated Ladles Welcome Free Instruction ADVANCE DESIGN BILLIARDS 538 N. Blackstonf Dean To Attend Annual Confab Dean Lloyd Dowler, headof toe agriculture division at Fresno State CoUege, wttl attend toe 78to annual meeting ofthe Land-Grant CoUeges this weekend ln Wash¬ ington, DC. Dowler ls president of toe Na¬ tional. Association of CoUeges and Teachers of Agriculture. The Freshman Women's Social Activities group (SWAG) will meet today at 1 o'clock ln Social Science 162. There will be a pre-meettog In¬ volving officers and committee chairmen at 12:50 PM,according to President Pamela Dugan. Encounter Speaker Dr. Roger Chlttick, professor of English, wUl speak on A Com¬ parison and Contrast of Augustine and Aquinas at the weekly meeting of Encounter, CoUege Y lecture series, today at 12:15 PM at toe College Religious Center. Chit- tick's speech will be toeslxth ln a series on the history of the Christian Church. Dancers Will Meet "THE PARTY" NOW SEVEN NIGHTS A WEEK FEATURING "THE GO-GO GIRLS" TOP BANDS-TOP RECORDING STARS N. BLACKSTONE 2 ML NORTH OF SHAW. 439-8011 HELP WANTED FEMALE Iris (3) part time. 4 hr dally ln convlently located o in Blackstone Ave. No ei perlence necessary, but must leas ant to work with ing for part time r« tlonlst who Is able to follow Instructions. Call 227-0863, 9 AM - 9 PM. Homomakers Library League Inc. Studies piling up? Pause. Have a Coke. Coca-Cola—with a lively lift and never too sweet, refreshes best. better,! Cote COCA-COLA BOTTLING COMPANY OP Fresno, California Thursday, November 5, 1964 The Collegian Page 3 Menial Health Workshop Set Dr. Thomas M. Brlgham, The special study commission chairman of toe department of was established by toe leglsla- soclal work, and Dr. Benjamin ture to recommend policies and B. Burton, associate professor programs for' care, treatment, of psychology, will participate rehabilitation and research ln ls a 'reaction symposium* at toe field of mental retardation. a mental retardation workshop The commission will report to Saturday from 8:30 AM to 5 the legislature on Jan. 15. PM to toe Fresno State Col- The workshop wUl be toe last lege Laboratory School. ln a series of six all-day coo- The workshop, sponsored by ferences being held throughout toe University of CalUornia Ex- California on toe councU's re- tenslon Service and FSC, wlU commendations, consider tentative conclusions Study Commission on mental re. The workshop schedule to- Feature Speakers eludes an opening report by the study commission, a reaction Weekly DmneTS following a luncheon, NSF Grant Deadline The Theta Chi Fraternity has Initiated a new program for its dinner meetings. The traditional Monday evening meetings Join pledges and actives for dinner and business meetings. The fraternity will Invite a special guest to each of the din- dents Inter ence Foundation grants forgrad- ™s">ess uate study to apply for toe neces- p1"3 Arc' sary Graduate Record Examlna- W.» tlon Advanced Test and Aptitude •*»«*'» Dr. Edward it professor of Tost. it must be applied for to¬ day and taken before Jan. 1,1965, ln order for a student to be eligi¬ ble for an NSF grant. The NSF members. m Backwash Seeks Gfaudate Fellowship Appllca- $tucJent WfiterS The fellowships are; toe basis of abUlty a undertake study leading el Students wishing to have their poems, short stories and essays published to Backwash, the cam- r to pus literary magazine, havei il degree ln Nov. 27 to torn ln their material, one of toe following fields: mathe- Material can be submitted to matlcs, physics, medicine,blolo- Business 147. Also accepted are gy, engineering, anthropology, line drawings and photographs, economics, geography, history "The response up to now has and philosophy of science, lln- been typically slow,* according gulstlcs, political science, psy- to George Kastner, the editor, etiology, or sociology. "but toe amount of material sub- Tho annual stipend for NSF mltted usuaUy picks up as the Fellowships are $2,400 for first deadline nears.* year fellows, $2,600 for Inter- The completed publication ls mediate level fellows, and$2,800 expected to appear ln mld- for terminal year level fellows. January. Thoughtful, magnetic, forceful scientic minds prefer Valley Ford...new Mustang $61 per month. Atomic powered models optional WHAT/5 f SOUK V SECRET \ KOMALDf ^ 5ECRET? ) ^4 c J2f 26— VES/HOW VO voo ALWAYS MANAGE TO LOOK SO ELEOANT PUKING TME - MOULTING SEASON? IrMefcF/^gJIJH n Fresno: Fulton Mall at Fresno • Manchester Shopping Center
Object Description
Title | 1964_11 The Daily Collegian November 1964 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1964 |
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 | Nov 5, 1964 Pg. 2-3 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1964 |
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 2 The Collegian Thursday, November 5,1964 Here & There Today *\ FSC I CTA Sets Conference Sex On The Camus By TOM BRONZINI From San Jose State CoUege toComptonCoUege, toe battle of toe sexes continues on state college and university campuses. Here are a few of toe major skirmishes, as reported by campus newspapers: The Spartan Dally atSan Jose State reports a breakthrough ln stu¬ dent housing: a coed room and board establishment. That's right, fellows, both sexes are being housed under toe same roof at a board¬ ing house for students located near toe campus. The Integration, however, has proven frustrating to some students. Although 'Kith male and female students occupy toe same buUdlng, they are stationed on separate floors with locked hallway doors separating, toe floors. Students are given a door key for their appropriate floor. (So far there have been no reports of key The owners of toe house switched coed housing to coed housing because of a high vacancy rate. The residence was taken off toe approved housing list of toe college, but toe owners are hopeful toe school wUl set up standards for coed housing by next semester. STUDENTS AT toe University of Santa Clara were asked to define a "husUer* ln an opinion column conducted recently by toe student newspaper. One distraught freshman retorted that a husUer ls a Junior at a freshman mixer. An Individual with a phUosophlcal viewpoint replied there are no hustlers at toe University because "toe Intrinsic nature of toe word husUer necessarily Includes something to hustle.* One freshman let his hair down by concluding that "he must be able to make every girl think she ls number one--and this ls where most of us lose.* A student at Coalinga College, indignant over a proposal that would allow coeds to wear bermudas on campus, fired off a letter to toe college newspaper protesting: (1) The girls would abuse toe privilege and wear short shorts Instead of bermudas. (2) Short shorts and short dresses are very unbecoming on girls. (3) It ls getting to toe point where females leave no Imagination to their dress. (4) Coeds go to the cafeteria with dirty feet. Another student fired off a reply to toe letter saying that shorts are very becoming on women students--at least more so than on men students. He made no comment concerning toe dirty feet. A PRE-HALLOWEEN editorial that appeared ln toe student newspaper of the University of California at Santa Barbara urged male students not to repeat their activities of the previous Hallow- That year, toe newspaper reports, a house mother In one of toe residence halls was knocked down and Injured by 'a group of virile American college men running through a I hundreds of others stood around and lobbed wa The newspaper wryly recommended that planning to attend an organized activity shoul to Berkeley. For those Interested to facts and figures, the Chancellor's Office reports that, as a rule, GO per cent of toe entering freshmen at state Institutions of higher learning are women, but by toe Junior year toe class is GO per cent male. girls generally get better grades than boys ln high school. Where do 20 per cent of toe females go before toey are juniors? I don't really have to tell you, do I? THE COEDS at toe University of Santa CI: proven one myth about toe sexes--the belief that women keep their rooms and apartments cleaner than men do. By some oversight, the university provided only one maid for each residence hall of 96 girls on toe campus. One might believe that toe girls, by their nature, would take up the slack and keep things splc and span. A letter to toe editor sign¬ ed by one of toe dorm residents gives toe real story. At last count the hall and room floors have been mopped once all semester, the showers and tubs have been scrubbed once, the refrigerator has not been cleaned out at all, and toe girls have recently been plagued by an Invasion of ants and spiders. The coed reports that toe girls suffer Insect bites on toe legs, arms, necks, backs and faces. What solution does toe coed advocate to solve tols weighty pro¬ lans? She asks that an additional maid be provided for each dorml- The math club will presei member Grant Labarre discuss lng Euler's Theorum and relate topics today at 1 PM ln SS 210. Niesi Club Will Meet The Nlesl Club wUl meet at 1 PM today to Education-Psy¬ chology 219. Plans for toe annual Thanks¬ giving Bowling Tournament wlto the Chinese Club will be discuss¬ ed. Four Fresno State Student lfornla- Teachers members and tholr faculty ad¬ visor will attend toe California I Teachers Association, Central Section, 17to Annual Halllday, n bershlp contact chairman. According to Loucks toe 01 ference will discuss toe futi of ei en's dorm while balloons.* ipus rowdies not Angel's Flight Members of Angel's Flight wUl complete and turn to the 15,000 envelopes they have hand ad- Bulldlng. Morning Television This Morning ln Fresno, seen at 8 AM'on KJEO-TV, tomorrow wUl feature Prof. Louis Le- Valley, senior vocaUonal In¬ structor ln agriculture, to a dis¬ cussion of Saturday's Shade Tree Conference. Pat Ogle wlU be pro- Phi Chi Theta Phi Chi Theta, business sorority, will meet today for a professional meeting ln Business 113 at 1 PM. Mrs. MUdred Hud- dleston, vice-president of a local savings and loan association, will speak on Management-Office Ad- Pledges are tovlt- At 8 PM tonight, toe sorority will conduct a pledge ceremony ln toe Cafeteria Committee Test Will Be Given The Federal Service Entrance Examination will be given on campus Saturday, Nov. 21. Interested students should register now ln toe Placement Office, Education-Psychology 125. - last problems ln ei Phyllis Herman and MlkoFar¬ ley, SCTA members, will travel The conference which wUl be to San Francisco to attend the held Friday through Sunday at toe California Advisory CouncU on AsUomar Camp Grounds, near Educational Reserach, also to be PacUlc Grove, wUl be attendedby held tols weekend. The annual Don Loucks, SCTA president, conference deals wlto research James B. Lundberg, faculty ad- ln all fields of education. Enrollment Increases Enrollment ln California's col¬ legiate nursing programs year. Figures compiled by Lulu Wolf Hassenplug, dean of toe Schoolof Nursing at toe University of Cal¬ ifornia at Los Angeles Center for Health Sciences, shows that 3,318 students are enroUed ln nursing programs in CalUornia coUeges and universities com¬ pared to 2,781 ln toe fall of 1963, Election Postnote Barry got a beating, So did Mr. Keating. The Republicans lost, LBJ's Texas brand WUl again rule toe land. In 1964, 483 baccalaureate de¬ grees were awarded against 45-1 State supported colleges and universities — Fresno State, Chlco State, Los Angeles State, Sacramento State, San Diego State, San Francisco State, San Jose State, UCLA and University of CalUornia ln San Franclso ; degree this - Lomi Linda College, Mount Saint Mary's CoUege, Stanford Uni¬ versity and toe University of San Franclsco--awarded 140 BS de¬ grees to 1964. The Constitution unquoted. AWARD WINNING PHOTOGRAPHY COLOR OR BLACK & WHITE PORTRAITURE WEDDINGS GROUPS 270 N. Fulton Fresno 485-1810 have dis- SWA(S Will Meet BILLIARDS •THE BEST TABLES IN THE VALLEY* Carpeted - Refrigerated Ladles Welcome Free Instruction ADVANCE DESIGN BILLIARDS 538 N. Blackstonf Dean To Attend Annual Confab Dean Lloyd Dowler, headof toe agriculture division at Fresno State CoUege, wttl attend toe 78to annual meeting ofthe Land-Grant CoUeges this weekend ln Wash¬ ington, DC. Dowler ls president of toe Na¬ tional. Association of CoUeges and Teachers of Agriculture. The Freshman Women's Social Activities group (SWAG) will meet today at 1 o'clock ln Social Science 162. There will be a pre-meettog In¬ volving officers and committee chairmen at 12:50 PM,according to President Pamela Dugan. Encounter Speaker Dr. Roger Chlttick, professor of English, wUl speak on A Com¬ parison and Contrast of Augustine and Aquinas at the weekly meeting of Encounter, CoUege Y lecture series, today at 12:15 PM at toe College Religious Center. Chit- tick's speech will be toeslxth ln a series on the history of the Christian Church. Dancers Will Meet "THE PARTY" NOW SEVEN NIGHTS A WEEK FEATURING "THE GO-GO GIRLS" TOP BANDS-TOP RECORDING STARS N. BLACKSTONE 2 ML NORTH OF SHAW. 439-8011 HELP WANTED FEMALE Iris (3) part time. 4 hr dally ln convlently located o in Blackstone Ave. No ei perlence necessary, but must leas ant to work with ing for part time r« tlonlst who Is able to follow Instructions. Call 227-0863, 9 AM - 9 PM. Homomakers Library League Inc. Studies piling up? Pause. Have a Coke. Coca-Cola—with a lively lift and never too sweet, refreshes best. better,! Cote COCA-COLA BOTTLING COMPANY OP Fresno, California Thursday, November 5, 1964 The Collegian Page 3 Menial Health Workshop Set Dr. Thomas M. Brlgham, The special study commission chairman of toe department of was established by toe leglsla- soclal work, and Dr. Benjamin ture to recommend policies and B. Burton, associate professor programs for' care, treatment, of psychology, will participate rehabilitation and research ln ls a 'reaction symposium* at toe field of mental retardation. a mental retardation workshop The commission will report to Saturday from 8:30 AM to 5 the legislature on Jan. 15. PM to toe Fresno State Col- The workshop wUl be toe last lege Laboratory School. ln a series of six all-day coo- The workshop, sponsored by ferences being held throughout toe University of CalUornia Ex- California on toe councU's re- tenslon Service and FSC, wlU commendations, consider tentative conclusions Study Commission on mental re. The workshop schedule to- Feature Speakers eludes an opening report by the study commission, a reaction Weekly DmneTS following a luncheon, NSF Grant Deadline The Theta Chi Fraternity has Initiated a new program for its dinner meetings. The traditional Monday evening meetings Join pledges and actives for dinner and business meetings. The fraternity will Invite a special guest to each of the din- dents Inter ence Foundation grants forgrad- ™s">ess uate study to apply for toe neces- p1"3 Arc' sary Graduate Record Examlna- W.» tlon Advanced Test and Aptitude •*»«*'» Dr. Edward it professor of Tost. it must be applied for to¬ day and taken before Jan. 1,1965, ln order for a student to be eligi¬ ble for an NSF grant. The NSF members. m Backwash Seeks Gfaudate Fellowship Appllca- $tucJent WfiterS The fellowships are; toe basis of abUlty a undertake study leading el Students wishing to have their poems, short stories and essays published to Backwash, the cam- r to pus literary magazine, havei il degree ln Nov. 27 to torn ln their material, one of toe following fields: mathe- Material can be submitted to matlcs, physics, medicine,blolo- Business 147. Also accepted are gy, engineering, anthropology, line drawings and photographs, economics, geography, history "The response up to now has and philosophy of science, lln- been typically slow,* according gulstlcs, political science, psy- to George Kastner, the editor, etiology, or sociology. "but toe amount of material sub- Tho annual stipend for NSF mltted usuaUy picks up as the Fellowships are $2,400 for first deadline nears.* year fellows, $2,600 for Inter- The completed publication ls mediate level fellows, and$2,800 expected to appear ln mld- for terminal year level fellows. January. Thoughtful, magnetic, forceful scientic minds prefer Valley Ford...new Mustang $61 per month. Atomic powered models optional WHAT/5 f SOUK V SECRET \ KOMALDf ^ 5ECRET? ) ^4 c J2f 26— VES/HOW VO voo ALWAYS MANAGE TO LOOK SO ELEOANT PUKING TME - MOULTING SEASON? IrMefcF/^gJIJH n Fresno: Fulton Mall at Fresno • Manchester Shopping Center |