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Page 2 The Collegian Wednesday, March 10,1965 Wednesday, March 10,1965 The Collegian Page 3 STciariiies Here & There Berkeley's FSM issues On several occasions I have heard lt said recenUy that free speech was not an Issue ln toe FSM at U. of Cal.; rather lt was��that the student on toe large mod¬ ern university campus has be¬ come a lost entity. This assertion ls partially true and partially false. Since logically any state¬ ment of this kind that ls partly false must be considered false to Its entirety, I am sending you this reply. in too light of less The female threat FSC today Encounter plans last of series Galaxy Ball queen finalists named \\Qm economist MormOnS disCUSS Five finalists tor rmioen nf Hi> ».ln»H f~.~ -«~i » « >-•' By TOM BRONZINI A British journalist who re¬ cenUy discussed 'Sex to toe U- nlted States' before a group of San Jose State College students had high praise He described them as 'toe besl dressed, best made up and mosl shapely women to toe world," and he added that 'even super¬ ficially they are the most charm¬ ing.* toe female situation. The SCU newspaper recenUy asked a group of campus males what type of coed they would admit to toe un- /erslty If they were registrar. d Adam added a note of ca at should 1 the n SHE'S UGLY, MAN! JlmDuPratt, glamorous winner of the annual Ugly Man contest sponsored by Homan Hall, displays his ... . ugly features. Photo By Dave Allen Hall has homely hero/heroine (?) Homan Hall i what they b< leugliest ir should we say woman, on The unfortunate campus repre¬ sentative, honored as a member of the socially elite group of past ugly men, by dorm residents, was selected Monday night at a resi¬ dence hall meeting. Jim DuPratt, junior English major, won toe dubious honor over five other contestants, each representing a wing of Homan Hall. Contestants wero made up by fellow wing residents. Assort¬ ed makeup Items such as poster paint, fingernail polish, lipstick, cotton, eyebrow pencUs and a variety of clothing materials were used to UGLIFY the con¬ testants. Participants ln the contest were DuPratt, George Yeh, Den¬ nis Nelson, David VUelle, Jim Gage, and runner-up Jim Stuck- enberg. The winner, naturaUy, received an Ugly Man trophy. appears that there w three causes of toe at Cal last fall. First, there wastoe'faceless- noss* (referred to above) which besets toe student on the huge, IBM oriented modern campus. He came to college to meet some Intelligent and i They are busy ls taught by T.A.'s. Second, the students did have a valid charge that traditional free speech prlvUeges had been ar- bltrarUy taken away. As A.M. Ross, chairman of toe campus' emergency executive committee recenUy said, the search for •deeper meanings* of the protest •should not obscure this principal fact.* (The faculty of Uie world's greatest university supported Uie essential Tightness of the stu¬ dents' position by a vote of al- Thlrd, early last fall the low¬ er echelons of too Berkeley ad¬ ministration were guUty of In¬ credible bad judgment, so bad, ln fact, Uiat the top time hard put to redress toe dam- Of course, any complete analy¬ sis of toe situation would have to Include the melancholy roles played by Mr. Knowland and that portion of the Goldwater high command which seomed bentona kind of pathological destruction of anything which they took to be ln opposition to their enterprise. As the Student Court has ruled, what happened at Berkeley does have a bearing on toe welfare of our campus. It ls to be hoped that those aspects of toe furor at Cal which are Instructive for us at Fresno wUl receive due re- Dr. W.B. Uphold, professor of English and phUosophy that U.S. females are calculating ln pursuit i, ln keeping up with ting their husbands and chUdren.* In view of this toe writer feels that the following commentary- should be given to all campus The San Joso State College newspaper, too Spartan DaUy, took an Informal poll of coeds at the college recenUy to determine their reasons for being there. Forty per cent placed a check be¬ side toe reply: «to catch a man.* •to work and make money," and only 20 per cent checked the re¬ sponse, 'personal satisfaction.* At Santa Clara University, coeds are using one of the most advanced technological Instru¬ ments of the 20th century ln their man-hunting efforts. The junior class at SCU plans to sponsor a computer dance early ln AprU at which coeds wUl be paired with likely marital prospects by an electronic computer. In order to be triply sure that toe right divided into three parts, and each coed wUl be paired with three different partners. Couples will be selected with tho aid of quest- lonairos Indicating a person's Interests, major, famUy back¬ ground and, of all things, plans for marriage. But the men at Santa Clara are not remaining sUent about French Club elects spring term officers Members of Le Cencle Fran- cals, toe campus French language club, has elected spring semestei officers. Robert Hughes was elected president; Jean Butler, vice president; Kathy Plttman, secre¬ tary-treasurer and John Van Meter and Terrl Weaver, student councU representatives. really didn't need,* said one dlsgrunUed student. Another young man, worried a- bout his grades, said he would lower too academic qualifica¬ tions for women, since coeds seem to be the curve-raisers. The University of Arlzonastu- dent newspaper, The WUdcat, sports a genuine column for toe lovelorn entitled, Dear DoUy. Each week, Dolly counsels dis¬ traught females who close their letters with alarming pleas like, •Desperately yours." One young lady confessed that she had been seeing her room¬ mate's boy friend for quite a while even through she felt rot¬ ten about lt. In true female form, Dolly sided with her distressed advisee. She labeled toe boy¬ friend a 'two-faced flnk* and added that anyone should feel rotten about seeing such acrumb. At VUlanova University, toe men stUl reign supreme. Only Alex Vavouils, assistant pro- .��fessor of Chemistry, will present"* toe last of a series of reviews of toe book, Honest to God, at tomorrow's Encounter luncheon program. Encounter meets ln Arakellan Hall at toe CoUege Religious Cen¬ ter, 2311 East Shaw Ave. at 12 noon. Lunch Is avaUable from 11:30 AM. Jordanian will talk Ahmad TawU, a Jordanian stu¬ dent, will lead a discussion of Aspects of Arab Nationalism to¬ night at 7:30 o'clock to the'col- lege Religious Center. The meet¬ ing wUl be sponsored by toe World Relatodness Commission. Applications due Today ls toe last day to turn* to appUcatlons for Freshman Class Blue Koy Carnival Booto Committee. Artists and people with creative talents are needed. General types of help are also coeds recenUy win the right to Applications for fourAssocla- partlclpate with men as varsity ted Women Students offices are rs. The measure was available at the Student Activl- Student Congress by «°s Office now for the Fall, 1965 6 1/2 to ■1 1/2 VI a The openings are fo true Indication of female strength Went, secretary, el at toe university. A different pic- aeer and historian. ture might emerge from check- Associated Women Students tog toe marriage statistics ln wU1 meet '^ay at 3:15 PM ln toe local newspaper. Cafeteria committee room 1. It will be a social meeting. Furn. Apts.—2 br. $135 or $35 a person next to Lester- burger. 439-6461. FOR SALE—'63 Chev. II Nova. 2 dr. Hard top, stick, R4H WW, excell. condlt. $1695. Phone 229-1327oftor 5:30 PM. Open yy). , yj C&> 7 Days f f like S J-'izzeria. <gv£0 Specializing In Italian Foods 1316 W. SHIELDS TOGO-GO 229-2635 LOOK WHAT A BUCK WILL BUY 11 WEEKS OF TIME MAGAZINE Here ls my dollar (bUl or check or money order)—enter a new subscription □ or extend my present subscription □ to TIME. The Weekly Newsmagazine for 11 weekly issues. I am enrolled as an undergraduate 3 a graduate studentn at Fresno State College. MaU, phone, or give your order to your FSC TIME Rep- resentaUvo (since 1962): Angelo Aless Andro, 2350 Au¬ gusta, Fresno, California, 222-3198. Offer expires March 31, 1965. Students, Enjoy Luxury Apt. Living at: THE OAK TREE APARTMENTS Now Renting - BRAND NEW 2 Bedroom-Unfurnished 4107.50 2 Bedroom-Furnished 4127.50 Conditioned - Po< -Easy Bus A 15 N. Cedar All Electric I PROM CORSAGES at SPECIAL rates LOU GENTILE'S FLOWER BASKET 268-6643 722 E. OLIVE AVENUE TOWER DISTRICT S Business Machines Rent to own plan NOW YOU MAY THY BEFORE YOU BUY-RENTTHE FAM¬ OUS HERMES 3000 PORT¬ ABLE TYPEWRITER AND SEE WHY CONSUMERS RATE THIS MACHINE THEIR FIRST CHOICE See us soon Five finalists for queen of toe annual Galaxy BaU were chosen Sunday at toe Arnold AlrSoclety- Angels' Flight Tea. Chris Jansen, JUi Smith, Lin¬ da Papp, Catherine Babcock and Sandy Sawyer are toe finalists. One wUl be crowned at toe ball, which ls Mar. 20. The Elks Lodge, at 5080 E. Kings Canyon Rd., wUl be toe site which ls open to toe student body. Bids are $3.50 a couple for toe dance and $10 a couple for the dinner-dance. They may be ob¬ tained from members of Arnold' Air Society,-Angels' Flight and toe Reserve Officers Training Corps. Next week they wlU be sold ln the acUvltles booto. Tho dinner will begin at 7 PM, with dancing from 9 PM. Ralph Manfredo and his slx-plece or¬ chestra wUl provide the music. Eidson is Rose Girl Judy Eidson, a sophomore his lory major, was crowned Ptol Rose Girl by toe Alpha Gamm; Rho Fraternity at their annua formal held recenUy. stresses cotton Sin, Responsibility leather, stretch lace, velveteen quUts—all made of cot¬ ton are some of toe newest fab¬ rics promoted by toe National Cotton CouncU of America. Miss Lawanna Walker, toe cussed new textures, different chemical treatments and fin¬ ishes while visiting toe Fresno State College home department. a five v EMIL'S DOWNTOWN BARBER SHOP Welcomes You To ... ^sjj TheFSCN.I.R.A. K Rodeo in Clovis * '$ March 13 & 14 Emil's-423 Pollasky - Clovis e Cot- representing ton CouncU of Memphis, Tonn. ■Cotton ls over 7,000 years old but certainly not outdated," em¬ phasized Miss Walker. I toe C onomlc educ JR.-SR.PROM SPECIAL CORSAGE OFFER FOR ALL FSC STUDENTS BRING THIS COUPON AND GET OUR DISCOUNT From FSC's Closest Florist CONDITS 3329 N.Cedar 227-3564 Wearing a chic black and white cotton suit, Miss Walker related her other activities are part of an over-all CouncU effort to in¬ crease toe consumption of cotton and Its products. •Man has inherited toe free¬ dom to choose between good and bad and as such he has toe ca¬ pacity to 'lolate as well as obey.* Dr. Wayne Pace, assistant pro¬ fessor of speech, discussed What Do Mormons Teach About Sin and ResponslbUlty. The talk was toe first ln a series of lectures pre¬ senting toe Mormon point of view on current Issues. The series, The Challenge of Mormanlsm sponsored by toe LDS Institute of Religion, ls scheduled for alternate Fridays at noon at toe CoUege Religious •The Mormon concept of sin ls a transgression of law, by acting or faUlng to act. It to too knowing and wUlful transgress¬ ion of toe law of God,* Dr. Pace said. When we sin we suffer moral consequences as well as phy¬ sical punishment, he viewed. We lose self-respect and have a Man's responsibility Is to know and understand toe laws of God so that he can obey them, com- To toe Mormon, religion means faith, love, fellowship, and a search for truth and know- Kerr i TIRED OF LONG STUDY HOURS? Learn speed reading — IMPROVE GRADESI Read 1500-2500 words per T^% mln. with 90% comprehension. Numer¬ ous profs, and students have success¬ fully completed courses tripling read- tog speed. For how you too can do m\wft\ ^^ this, caU 237-9101. CMUfomation clinic Evening TyT m*L •*'"*"» \J\J Fr.,... Clif. tog NOW1 The HENLEY collarless SPORT SHIRT From the historically famous crew shirt of the Henley-on-the-Thames Regatta comes comfortably collarless styling to dress today's man in his leisure moments. There's an extra masculine appeal in the choice of textured fabrics for an added dimension — rich Oxford and highly favored seersucker. Authentic traditional styling includes box pleat in back, locker loop, and tapered body. Varied colors and stripes make selecting a pleasure. 716 EAST 0UVE TOWER DISTRICT n for his acUon, nor did he disclose his future plans. He frequently was menUoned last fall asaUke- ly choice by President Johnson for secretary of Ik-alto, Educa¬ tion and Welfare. However, toe Governor con¬ ferred with Kerr late Tuesday and Issued a statement which In¬ dicated that turmoU on toe Berk¬ eley campus was one of toe fac¬ tors to toe president's decision. •1 think It's a terrible shame that a few thoughtless students led by a handful of troublemakers can hurt toe reputation of toe greatest public university to toe world, and cause Its brUUant president and a hard-working new chancellor to resign,* Brown The resignations of Kerr and campus police for carrying a sign displaying one, four-letter, ob- veloped a; and displayed the word and pass¬ ed collection cans labeled as de¬ fense funds for toe 'Obscenity Movement.* Nine persons wore arrested for displaying or using Uie word at campus rallies. The raw for enlty parently wa Meyerson. •I call your attention to toe state of student conduct at Berk¬ eley,* Uie chancellor said. "The most recent flagrant vio¬ lation of accepted behavior was toe display of obscenity which assailed Uie campus and toe public last week. •The four-letter word signs and utterances had a significance beyond their shock Impact; they also symbolized Intolerance for toe rights and feelings of others.* There was no immediate com¬ ment on the resignations from leaders of toe Free Speech Move¬ ment. Mario Savlo flew to Selma, Ala., Monday night to take part ln voting registration activities ln that state. Delivery Service AD 7-7054 530 N. Blackstone Frank E.Wilber COMPANY — OFFICE EQUIPMENT — Standard Duplicators! TYPEWRITERS, AND ADDING MACHINE RENTALS 1105 E. BELMONT ST. FRESNO, CALIFORNIA TELEPHONE 268-o228
Object Description
Title | 1965_03 The Daily Collegian March 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 | March 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 |
Page 2
The Collegian
Wednesday, March 10,1965
Wednesday, March 10,1965
The Collegian
Page 3
STciariiies Here & There
Berkeley's
FSM issues
On several occasions I have
heard lt said recenUy that free
speech was not an Issue ln toe
FSM at U. of Cal.; rather lt was��that the student on toe large mod¬
ern university campus has be¬
come a lost entity. This assertion
ls partially true and partially
false. Since logically any state¬
ment of this kind that ls partly
false must be considered false
to Its entirety, I am sending you
this reply.
in too light of less
The female threat
FSC today
Encounter plans
last of series
Galaxy Ball queen finalists named \\Qm economist MormOnS disCUSS
Five finalists tor rmioen nf Hi> ».ln»H f~.~ -«~i » « >-•'
By TOM BRONZINI
A British journalist who re¬
cenUy discussed 'Sex to toe U-
nlted States' before a group of
San Jose State College students
had high praise
He described them as 'toe besl
dressed, best made up and mosl
shapely women to toe world,"
and he added that 'even super¬
ficially they are the most charm¬
ing.*
toe female situation. The SCU
newspaper recenUy asked a group
of campus males what type of
coed they would admit to toe un-
/erslty If they were registrar.
d Adam
added a note of ca
at should
1 the n
SHE'S UGLY, MAN! JlmDuPratt,
glamorous winner of the annual
Ugly Man contest sponsored by
Homan Hall, displays his ... .
ugly features.
Photo By Dave Allen
Hall has homely
hero/heroine (?)
Homan Hall i
what they b<
leugliest
ir should we say woman, on
The unfortunate campus repre¬
sentative, honored as a member
of the socially elite group of past
ugly men, by dorm residents, was
selected Monday night at a resi¬
dence hall meeting.
Jim DuPratt, junior English
major, won toe dubious honor
over five other contestants, each
representing a wing of Homan
Hall. Contestants wero made up
by fellow wing residents. Assort¬
ed makeup Items such as poster
paint, fingernail polish, lipstick,
cotton, eyebrow pencUs and a
variety of clothing materials
were used to UGLIFY the con¬
testants.
Participants ln the contest
were DuPratt, George Yeh, Den¬
nis Nelson, David VUelle, Jim
Gage, and runner-up Jim Stuck-
enberg. The winner, naturaUy,
received an Ugly Man trophy.
appears that there w
three causes of toe
at Cal last fall.
First, there wastoe'faceless-
noss* (referred to above) which
besets toe student on the huge,
IBM oriented modern campus.
He came to college to meet some
Intelligent and i
They are busy
ls taught by T.A.'s.
Second, the students did have a
valid charge that traditional free
speech prlvUeges had been ar-
bltrarUy taken away. As A.M.
Ross, chairman of toe campus'
emergency executive committee
recenUy said, the search for
•deeper meanings* of the protest
•should not obscure this principal
fact.* (The faculty of Uie world's
greatest university supported Uie
essential Tightness of the stu¬
dents' position by a vote of al-
Thlrd, early last fall the low¬
er echelons of too Berkeley ad¬
ministration were guUty of In¬
credible bad judgment, so bad, ln
fact, Uiat the top
time hard put to redress toe dam-
Of course, any complete analy¬
sis of toe situation would have to
Include the melancholy roles
played by Mr. Knowland and that
portion of the Goldwater high
command which seomed bentona
kind of pathological destruction of
anything which they took to be ln
opposition to their enterprise.
As the Student Court has ruled,
what happened at Berkeley does
have a bearing on toe welfare
of our campus. It ls to be hoped
that those aspects of toe furor at
Cal which are Instructive for us
at Fresno wUl receive due re-
Dr. W.B. Uphold,
professor of English and
phUosophy
that U.S. females are
calculating ln pursuit
i, ln keeping up with
ting their husbands and chUdren.*
In view of this toe writer feels
that the following commentary-
should be given to all campus
The San Joso State College
newspaper, too Spartan DaUy,
took an Informal poll of coeds at
the college recenUy to determine
their reasons for being there.
Forty per cent placed a check be¬
side toe reply: «to catch a man.*
•to work and make money," and
only 20 per cent checked the re¬
sponse, 'personal satisfaction.*
At Santa Clara University,
coeds are using one of the most
advanced technological Instru¬
ments of the 20th century ln their
man-hunting efforts. The junior
class at SCU plans to sponsor a
computer dance early ln AprU
at which coeds wUl be paired with
likely marital prospects by an
electronic computer. In order
to be triply sure that toe right
divided into three parts, and each
coed wUl be paired with three
different partners. Couples will
be selected with tho aid of quest-
lonairos Indicating a person's
Interests, major, famUy back¬
ground and, of all things, plans
for marriage.
But the men at Santa Clara
are not remaining sUent about
French Club elects
spring term officers
Members of Le Cencle Fran-
cals, toe campus French language
club, has elected spring semestei
officers.
Robert Hughes was elected
president; Jean Butler, vice
president; Kathy Plttman, secre¬
tary-treasurer and John Van
Meter and Terrl Weaver, student
councU representatives.
really didn't need,* said one
dlsgrunUed student.
Another young man, worried a-
bout his grades, said he would
lower too academic qualifica¬
tions for women, since coeds
seem to be the curve-raisers.
The University of Arlzonastu-
dent newspaper, The WUdcat,
sports a genuine column for toe
lovelorn entitled, Dear DoUy.
Each week, Dolly counsels dis¬
traught females who close their
letters with alarming pleas like,
•Desperately yours."
One young lady confessed that
she had been seeing her room¬
mate's boy friend for quite a
while even through she felt rot¬
ten about lt. In true female form,
Dolly sided with her distressed
advisee. She labeled toe boy¬
friend a 'two-faced flnk* and
added that anyone should feel
rotten about seeing such acrumb.
At VUlanova University, toe
men stUl reign supreme. Only
Alex Vavouils, assistant pro- .��fessor of Chemistry, will present"*
toe last of a series of reviews
of toe book, Honest to God, at
tomorrow's Encounter luncheon
program.
Encounter meets ln Arakellan
Hall at toe CoUege Religious Cen¬
ter, 2311 East Shaw Ave. at 12
noon. Lunch Is avaUable from
11:30 AM.
Jordanian will talk
Ahmad TawU, a Jordanian stu¬
dent, will lead a discussion of
Aspects of Arab Nationalism to¬
night at 7:30 o'clock to the'col-
lege Religious Center. The meet¬
ing wUl be sponsored by toe
World Relatodness Commission.
Applications due
Today ls toe last day to turn*
to appUcatlons for Freshman
Class Blue Koy Carnival Booto
Committee. Artists and people
with creative talents are needed.
General types of help are also
coeds recenUy win the right to Applications for fourAssocla-
partlclpate with men as varsity ted Women Students offices are
rs. The measure was available at the Student Activl-
Student Congress by «°s Office now for the Fall, 1965
6 1/2 to
■1 1/2 VI
a The openings are fo
true Indication of female strength Went, secretary, el
at toe university. A different pic- aeer and historian.
ture might emerge from check- Associated Women Students
tog toe marriage statistics ln wU1 meet '^ay at 3:15 PM ln
toe local newspaper. Cafeteria committee room 1. It
will be a social meeting.
Furn. Apts.—2 br. $135 or
$35 a person next to Lester-
burger. 439-6461.
FOR SALE—'63 Chev. II Nova.
2 dr. Hard top, stick, R4H
WW, excell. condlt. $1695.
Phone 229-1327oftor 5:30 PM.
Open yy). , yj C&>
7 Days f f like S J-'izzeria. |