Feb 10, 1965 Pg. 2-3 |
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Tho Collegian Wednesday, Fobruory TO, 1965 a point out that •ial ln Berkeley en practice and Really now, Mr. Governor At Uie risk of beating a dead horse, we'd like hundreds of University of Callfornlastudentsgoont this week, and a new facet of the Reality Gap betwi principle comes to light. This Ume Uie schizophrenia ls ln the political arena, as we com¬ pare Uie words of Governor Edmund Brown, then and now. Brown, who authorized the use of state troopers to suppress the otherwise peaceful demonstration, told newsmen at a publishers' convention this weekend that a sudden ban on traditional Sather Gate political acUvlty was 'an abrupt termlnaUon taken ln Uie wrong wr¬ it was a series of errors by everybody.*. He agreed with the students that theia may have been ; what they were trying to achieve but added, «I disagree violently with Its meUiods.* WeU, ln January of last year, the Governor was busy telling Uie Stanford PollUcal Union at that university that politics and Uie cam¬ pus are not and should not be worlds apart. •As Stanford recognized In lifting Uie embargo on political ad¬ dresses on this campus, there are many bridges between politic' Here & There By TOM BRONZDJI To longtime FSC students, a crowded bookstore and a scarcity of parking spaces much a part of Uie r as paying Uie registration fee. As with the weather, much has been said about the parking prob¬ lem. Despite recent Improve¬ ments, there ls little hope of an entirely satisfactory solution un¬ tU the ChanceUor's office re¬ vises Its formula for distributing funds In order to accommodate the true needs of slate college Weci ie thing for an Instructor to brainwash his students. But It mother for him to Inform them, to enter Into blunt and h them, to fire their Imagination and Inspire jmc involved with their times. Dt afford a generation of political sterility. •Colleges sure enough of themselves to plunge Into controversy are fulfUllng their public functions—and fulfUllng them well. Let us keep the pot boUlng ln the future. •What we need more than anything else ls a return to the tradi¬ tional American spirit of controversy. It has never been American to conform or be Intimidated—or yield ln sUence.* Really now, Mr. Governor. e fact that Fresno State CoUege ls not alone ln Its parking quan¬ dary. CoUeges throughout the na¬ tion, large and smaU, are faced with a slmUar shortage of spaces, and they are attacking Uie prob¬ lem ln a variety of ways. that roughly oi te coUege si To The Students A new semester ls upon us. And with Its advent, grand, glor¬ ious spring ls, hopefully, not too far away. May I wish a good se¬ mester to all those students who are returning, and especially to those here at Fresno State for the first time. I'm certain entful this one, with many This semester we can all look with certainty for Increasing aca¬ demic standards. Although to us, this seems an undue restriction on our free time, I feel It only reflects the Increasing competi¬ tion and pace outside of college. Further, Uie demands on a student do not stop here; a graduate doesn't obtain a Job by grades alone. The successful people In business, Industry, government, teaching and almost all other fields, were active ln extra¬ curricular affairs Applications are now available In my office for all Student Body committee for tho Spring semes¬ ter. There Is at least one com¬ mittee which would be Interest¬ ing and rewarding to everyone on campus. If anyone has any questions or comments, the office ls always open. FSC Today Kappa Delta Pi Kappa Delta PI, honor edu Uon society, ls having a lunch hUe ln col- meeting today from 12-1 P\ e per¬ centage ls probably greater ln California. Nevertheless Uie Uni¬ versity ofHoustonhas 14,000 stu¬ dents competing for 5,500 park¬ ing spaces, and Uie University of Georgia harbors more automo- bUes than eight out of 10 towns ln Georgia. UCLA has 10,486 spaces for 40,000 students and Some schools have taken dras- It wUl be a business me- and plans wUl be made foi annual spring banquet and change meeting with the al group. IVCF coffee hour Coffee and cookies \ Italian Food Served In The Tradition of An Old Italian Garden 0i Cicco's Pizzeria FOUR SONS OF ITALY Across from Hoover Hi Barstow at First 227-7220 1 periods by the Fresno State College Association. Mall subscriptions $8.00 a semester, $15.00 a year. Editorial office Business 235, telephone 222-5161, Ext. 441, 444, 448. Business office Agriculture 220, ' telephone 222-5161, ext. 256. Editor .NORMA E.WALLACE Advertising manager PhU Young Assistant advertising mana¬ ger...............David Gunter Sports editor... Bob McCarthy News editor Eva Altlntop Day managing editors........... Harley Becker, Doug De- Lay, Pattye Opdyke, Jim )f Uie tnter- Varslty Christian Fellowship at an informal open coffee hour to¬ morrow from 12 to 2 PM ln Cafe¬ teria Committee Room 1. Five cadets will become officers Five graduating Air Force ROTC cadets wUl be commis¬ sioned as second lieutenants ln the air force at Uie annual mid¬ year Officer Commissioning Ceremony tomorrow at noon ln the LltUe Theatre. Guest speaker for Uie cere¬ mony which ls open to all In¬ terested staff wUl be Lt. Col. John H. Rogers, commander of the 456th Fighter Interceptor Squadron at CasUe AFB. Petitions due for coed award Applications for Uie annual Tokalon Memorial Scholarship of $250 wUl be due tomorrow. They must be submitted to the Activities Office or to Miss Saun¬ dra Speers. The scholarship ls awarded to an upper division woman student on Uie basis of grades, campus activities, and financial need. problem. Michigan Stale Univer¬ sity does not allow the use of automobUes on Its campus, and other universities ln Michigan restrict Uie use of automobUes to upperclassmen or to students who are 21 years of age or older. Louisiana University uses throe-car miniature trains (•Tiger-Trains*) to transport students from dormitories and i apartments to the central cam¬ pus. The University of Washington has buUt garages Into Us dormi¬ tories, and UCLA has spent $2,800,000 on mulUlevel parking garages. By 1970, planners esti¬ mate that 10 to 12 of the struc¬ tures wUl dot Uie UCLA campus. But Uie most common solution ls to limit Uie use of campus parking facilities by charging a fee. This has proved perplexing to many students at FSC, but car owners at San Fernando Valley State CoUege are even more an¬ noyed by the system. The college has Installed a coin operated parking lot, but Uie mechanical equipment has not proven equal to Uie task of policing human According to the San Fernando Valley student newspaper, The Sundial, students drive Into Uie lot only to find that there are no parking spaces open, but lt costs a quarter to leaye Uie lot. It Is pretty difficult to explain to Uie coin collecting ikachlne that you couldn't find a packing space. Motorcycles and motor bikes also throw bugs Into the system. Cyclists often miss the entrance The result is that motorcycles, which did not use an automobUe space to begin with, are counted as cars leaving Uie lot. Whether by accident or out of frustraUon, officials say students have been running Into control boxes and gate arms ln Uie park¬ ing lot. A British engineer, Alex Moulton, has come up with an Invention that he says would liter¬ ally do away with Uie campus parking problem. It ls a new type of bicycle, especially designed for students, that would replace the automobUe as Uie primary mode of campus transportation. The bicycle ls described lnthe Long Beach State Forty-Nlner as having small, flat wheels and high rise handlebars that allow for large baskets, front and rear. The bike features a new type of suspension similar to that qf an automobUe. It ls reputed tc ' to r than Uie traditional English ra and cheaper to buy and maintain. Whether lt be radically differ¬ ent bicycles, 'Tiger-Trains* or high rise parking structures, col¬ leges across the nation have taken elaborate measures to cope with Uie parking problem. And they still have a long way to go. B. GLEN DEL BARBER SHOP STUDENT RATE ( $175 It Is sponsored Jointly Tokalon Alumni Association and Uie Ina Gregg Thomas Scholar¬ ship Board. The applicant need not be a member of Tokalon. CAR RAMOS FCC LICENSED 5EIVICEMEN AUTO RADIO SERVICE CO. lJWH.Wod.il~>. AMI- ENJOY. ENJOY. . spacious, well-designed, 3-bedroom, 2-bath apartments. FuUy furnished; draped; wall-to- waU carpets; each apartment Individually alr- condltloned. ENJOY. . . ENJOY. $3750 aU this for only per month, per student.... ENFIELD APARTMENTS 1124 N. Pierce Corner Barstow East of the College Towards Clovis..Ph 299-4076 Wednesday, February 10, 1965 The Collegian Page 3 CAMPUS COMPANION IMPORTED CASHMERE SWEATER BACK BY REQUEST. YOUR FAVORITE CLASSIC CARDJGAN, IN BUTTERY-SOFT LUXURY CASHMERE! FULL-FASHIONED. EXQUISITELY TAILORED, WITH SMOOTH FITTING TURNED HEM, DOUBLE-LOOPED NECKLINE, REINFORCED BUTTON-HOLES. IN A GAMUT OF SPRING SHADES, WHITE, ROSE PINK, BLUEBELL, FRENCH VANILLA, OATMEAL, BLACK, SIZES 36 TO 40. COME BUY A WARDROBE-FULL WHILE THEY LAST! Fulton Mall at Fresno • Manchester Shopping Center
Object Description
Title | 1965_02 The Daily Collegian February 1965 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1965 |
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 10, 1965 Pg. 2-3 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1965 |
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 | Tho Collegian Wednesday, Fobruory TO, 1965 a point out that •ial ln Berkeley en practice and Really now, Mr. Governor At Uie risk of beating a dead horse, we'd like hundreds of University of Callfornlastudentsgoont this week, and a new facet of the Reality Gap betwi principle comes to light. This Ume Uie schizophrenia ls ln the political arena, as we com¬ pare Uie words of Governor Edmund Brown, then and now. Brown, who authorized the use of state troopers to suppress the otherwise peaceful demonstration, told newsmen at a publishers' convention this weekend that a sudden ban on traditional Sather Gate political acUvlty was 'an abrupt termlnaUon taken ln Uie wrong wr¬ it was a series of errors by everybody.*. He agreed with the students that theia may have been ; what they were trying to achieve but added, «I disagree violently with Its meUiods.* WeU, ln January of last year, the Governor was busy telling Uie Stanford PollUcal Union at that university that politics and Uie cam¬ pus are not and should not be worlds apart. •As Stanford recognized In lifting Uie embargo on political ad¬ dresses on this campus, there are many bridges between politic' Here & There By TOM BRONZDJI To longtime FSC students, a crowded bookstore and a scarcity of parking spaces much a part of Uie r as paying Uie registration fee. As with the weather, much has been said about the parking prob¬ lem. Despite recent Improve¬ ments, there ls little hope of an entirely satisfactory solution un¬ tU the ChanceUor's office re¬ vises Its formula for distributing funds In order to accommodate the true needs of slate college Weci ie thing for an Instructor to brainwash his students. But It mother for him to Inform them, to enter Into blunt and h them, to fire their Imagination and Inspire jmc involved with their times. Dt afford a generation of political sterility. •Colleges sure enough of themselves to plunge Into controversy are fulfUllng their public functions—and fulfUllng them well. Let us keep the pot boUlng ln the future. •What we need more than anything else ls a return to the tradi¬ tional American spirit of controversy. It has never been American to conform or be Intimidated—or yield ln sUence.* Really now, Mr. Governor. e fact that Fresno State CoUege ls not alone ln Its parking quan¬ dary. CoUeges throughout the na¬ tion, large and smaU, are faced with a slmUar shortage of spaces, and they are attacking Uie prob¬ lem ln a variety of ways. that roughly oi te coUege si To The Students A new semester ls upon us. And with Its advent, grand, glor¬ ious spring ls, hopefully, not too far away. May I wish a good se¬ mester to all those students who are returning, and especially to those here at Fresno State for the first time. I'm certain entful this one, with many This semester we can all look with certainty for Increasing aca¬ demic standards. Although to us, this seems an undue restriction on our free time, I feel It only reflects the Increasing competi¬ tion and pace outside of college. Further, Uie demands on a student do not stop here; a graduate doesn't obtain a Job by grades alone. The successful people In business, Industry, government, teaching and almost all other fields, were active ln extra¬ curricular affairs Applications are now available In my office for all Student Body committee for tho Spring semes¬ ter. There Is at least one com¬ mittee which would be Interest¬ ing and rewarding to everyone on campus. If anyone has any questions or comments, the office ls always open. FSC Today Kappa Delta Pi Kappa Delta PI, honor edu Uon society, ls having a lunch hUe ln col- meeting today from 12-1 P\ e per¬ centage ls probably greater ln California. Nevertheless Uie Uni¬ versity ofHoustonhas 14,000 stu¬ dents competing for 5,500 park¬ ing spaces, and Uie University of Georgia harbors more automo- bUes than eight out of 10 towns ln Georgia. UCLA has 10,486 spaces for 40,000 students and Some schools have taken dras- It wUl be a business me- and plans wUl be made foi annual spring banquet and change meeting with the al group. IVCF coffee hour Coffee and cookies \ Italian Food Served In The Tradition of An Old Italian Garden 0i Cicco's Pizzeria FOUR SONS OF ITALY Across from Hoover Hi Barstow at First 227-7220 1 periods by the Fresno State College Association. Mall subscriptions $8.00 a semester, $15.00 a year. Editorial office Business 235, telephone 222-5161, Ext. 441, 444, 448. Business office Agriculture 220, ' telephone 222-5161, ext. 256. Editor .NORMA E.WALLACE Advertising manager PhU Young Assistant advertising mana¬ ger...............David Gunter Sports editor... Bob McCarthy News editor Eva Altlntop Day managing editors........... Harley Becker, Doug De- Lay, Pattye Opdyke, Jim )f Uie tnter- Varslty Christian Fellowship at an informal open coffee hour to¬ morrow from 12 to 2 PM ln Cafe¬ teria Committee Room 1. Five cadets will become officers Five graduating Air Force ROTC cadets wUl be commis¬ sioned as second lieutenants ln the air force at Uie annual mid¬ year Officer Commissioning Ceremony tomorrow at noon ln the LltUe Theatre. Guest speaker for Uie cere¬ mony which ls open to all In¬ terested staff wUl be Lt. Col. John H. Rogers, commander of the 456th Fighter Interceptor Squadron at CasUe AFB. Petitions due for coed award Applications for Uie annual Tokalon Memorial Scholarship of $250 wUl be due tomorrow. They must be submitted to the Activities Office or to Miss Saun¬ dra Speers. The scholarship ls awarded to an upper division woman student on Uie basis of grades, campus activities, and financial need. problem. Michigan Stale Univer¬ sity does not allow the use of automobUes on Its campus, and other universities ln Michigan restrict Uie use of automobUes to upperclassmen or to students who are 21 years of age or older. Louisiana University uses throe-car miniature trains (•Tiger-Trains*) to transport students from dormitories and i apartments to the central cam¬ pus. The University of Washington has buUt garages Into Us dormi¬ tories, and UCLA has spent $2,800,000 on mulUlevel parking garages. By 1970, planners esti¬ mate that 10 to 12 of the struc¬ tures wUl dot Uie UCLA campus. But Uie most common solution ls to limit Uie use of campus parking facilities by charging a fee. This has proved perplexing to many students at FSC, but car owners at San Fernando Valley State CoUege are even more an¬ noyed by the system. The college has Installed a coin operated parking lot, but Uie mechanical equipment has not proven equal to Uie task of policing human According to the San Fernando Valley student newspaper, The Sundial, students drive Into Uie lot only to find that there are no parking spaces open, but lt costs a quarter to leaye Uie lot. It Is pretty difficult to explain to Uie coin collecting ikachlne that you couldn't find a packing space. Motorcycles and motor bikes also throw bugs Into the system. Cyclists often miss the entrance The result is that motorcycles, which did not use an automobUe space to begin with, are counted as cars leaving Uie lot. Whether by accident or out of frustraUon, officials say students have been running Into control boxes and gate arms ln Uie park¬ ing lot. A British engineer, Alex Moulton, has come up with an Invention that he says would liter¬ ally do away with Uie campus parking problem. It ls a new type of bicycle, especially designed for students, that would replace the automobUe as Uie primary mode of campus transportation. The bicycle ls described lnthe Long Beach State Forty-Nlner as having small, flat wheels and high rise handlebars that allow for large baskets, front and rear. The bike features a new type of suspension similar to that qf an automobUe. It ls reputed tc ' to r than Uie traditional English ra and cheaper to buy and maintain. Whether lt be radically differ¬ ent bicycles, 'Tiger-Trains* or high rise parking structures, col¬ leges across the nation have taken elaborate measures to cope with Uie parking problem. And they still have a long way to go. B. GLEN DEL BARBER SHOP STUDENT RATE ( $175 It Is sponsored Jointly Tokalon Alumni Association and Uie Ina Gregg Thomas Scholar¬ ship Board. The applicant need not be a member of Tokalon. CAR RAMOS FCC LICENSED 5EIVICEMEN AUTO RADIO SERVICE CO. lJWH.Wod.il~>. AMI- ENJOY. ENJOY. . spacious, well-designed, 3-bedroom, 2-bath apartments. FuUy furnished; draped; wall-to- waU carpets; each apartment Individually alr- condltloned. ENJOY. . . ENJOY. $3750 aU this for only per month, per student.... ENFIELD APARTMENTS 1124 N. Pierce Corner Barstow East of the College Towards Clovis..Ph 299-4076 Wednesday, February 10, 1965 The Collegian Page 3 CAMPUS COMPANION IMPORTED CASHMERE SWEATER BACK BY REQUEST. YOUR FAVORITE CLASSIC CARDJGAN, IN BUTTERY-SOFT LUXURY CASHMERE! FULL-FASHIONED. EXQUISITELY TAILORED, WITH SMOOTH FITTING TURNED HEM, DOUBLE-LOOPED NECKLINE, REINFORCED BUTTON-HOLES. IN A GAMUT OF SPRING SHADES, WHITE, ROSE PINK, BLUEBELL, FRENCH VANILLA, OATMEAL, BLACK, SIZES 36 TO 40. COME BUY A WARDROBE-FULL WHILE THEY LAST! Fulton Mall at Fresno • Manchester Shopping Center |