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Page 2 The Collegian Wednesday, March 3,1965 Wednesday, March 3,1965 The Collegian _PagjL3 I What price ivy? British Welfare is explained by pastor,™* College Y slates birthday party You might say, in the general nature of things, that lt was more or less spring. Even though toe trees haven't leafed out yet, toe grass and bushes are lush enough to give an Impression of life Juices flowing. The best thing about this early-spring look are the flowering trees, one of the loveliest landscaping effects on campus. It's too bad they don't bloom the year around, because toe pink petals de¬ tract some attenUon from a painful fact about Fresno State College- toe buUdlngs look like ceU compounds. This fact has been Impressed upon faculty, students and visitors ever since toe new campus was to toe construcUon stage, and prac¬ tically everyone has taken a swing at the California-State-function- Undeniably, Fresno State puts Its worst foot forward, namely toe residence halls, a veritable Mont St. Michel when toe rainy season turns an expanse of dirt Into a shallow lagoon. Grim, forbidding even to summer, they look like toe last places to which a fond parent would want to sentence his freshman boy or girl. Bakersfield College, a two-year school, has slmUar architec¬ tural woes, but someone (probably an adherent of Uie torow- mushroom-soup-over-toe-burned-hamburger school of cooking) planted quick-grow Ivy all over the campus. The result ls no es¬ thetic marvel, but at least some of the rawness, toe nakedness has been clothed In green leaves. From time to time a Collegian editor or Student CouncU member has launched a lot's-plant-lvy campaign, with meager results. There's some kind of creeping plant crawling up the cafeteria, and lt helps, but does it move fast enough? Be aware, campus! This is just the opening gun. Whenever The Collegian runs out of significant topics, we're going to push Ivy and sh It hard! LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS •Yes we are our brothers keep- Thls ls toe belief of Douglas Cowman, a methodlst pastor from Devonshire, England, who spoke on "A Christians Reaction to The British Welfare State,* at les at toe CoUege Y. He said, 'All men are part of a large fraternal family. If one part of toe family suffers, the whole family suffers. "How¬ ever, * he explained, "I come fare state, I merely come to explain It.* He went on to say, "This cen¬ tury has brought about a rising concern for poverty and toe un¬ employed. But lt wasn't until gram. The worker pays for lt by buying a stamp, (about $1.50). The employer and toe govern¬ ment both pay equal amounts. When he was asked whether toe welfare state tended to low¬ er Incentive on toe parts of its members, Gowman answered, •No, I fail to see that lt lowers Incentive ln any way.* But, to concluding, he called this pro¬ gram highly Christian and said that lt ls following toe principles set in toe American Constitu¬ tion of life, liberty, and toe pursuit of happiness. Dr. Warren Martin, will be toe featured speaker at toe 53rd an¬ nual banquet of toe College Y to¬ morrow at 6:15 PM ln toe cafe¬ teria. The banquet, which ls open to toe public, will commemorate toe 53rd year of service by toe���CoUege Y to students and others to toe college community. Dr. Martin will speak on toe topic, If Not Chastely, At Least PrudenUy. Tickets for toe ban¬ quet may be purchased at toe CoUege Religious Center or from members of the CoUege Y Board. Tickets are $1.50 for/students, $2.75 for adults. r the e Nat- Ofcou^c I saip I wa<? rmu& yoj out-id piNNEe. The Collegian Published five days a week except boUdays and examina¬ tion periods by toe Fresno State College Association. MaU subscriptions $8.00 a semester, $15.00 a year. Editorial office Business 235, telephone 222-5161, Ext. 441, Editor . NORMA E. WALLACE Advertising manager............ .........~^^-...Pbil Young Assistant advertising mana¬ ger...............David Guntor Sports editor... Bob McCarthy ... Eva Altlntop Day ...Harley B It Doesn't Cost to Go First Class, lt Pays. . GLEN DEL BARBER SHOP STUDENT RATE Q $175 tonal Party and toe rise of toe Labor Party Uiat toe country nationalized coal, steel, electri¬ city, and more Important toe wel¬ fare program which Includes health Insurance." "The womb to toe tomb,* sys¬ tem as he Jestingly refered to toe health services, is so called ^fM 2 they : of their death. It even pro¬ vides for toe funeral. He pointed out that everyone who ls working pays for toepro- Horse show is slated for arena The Fresno State College Ro- The s v will b (1 In tl fChest- nut and Bullard and wUl be open lo any school (grammar school, high school or college). Entry deadline is 11 AM Saturday. Competition wUl Include traU horse, western equitation, bare¬ back qultatlon, pleasure class, stock horse (dry work), and gym- kana. GymkanawLU Include ares- cue race, clover-leaf racing around barrels, key hole race, Be The Best Dressed In Formals For The Jr-Sr iflU Prom From . . . THE HOUSE OF SAMPLES formal sizes 5-16 LAYAWAY 729 East Olive 266-9293 OPEN FRIDAYS TIL 9 PM (interviews for)si MARCH 8, 9, 10 Representatives of California State Government will be on Campus to ditcuu with Seniors and Graduate Students employment opportunities In Stat* service, including the fields of: Investigations Research and Statistics Real Estate Appraisal and Acquisition Correctional Rehabilitation Vocational Rehabilitation Accounting-Auditing Programmers MAKE AN APPOINTMENT NOW AT YOUR PLACEMENT OFFICE Foreign culture impact described FSC ,odav The Impact of cultural shock and China (Nationalist) — toe was described by three Fresno panel members discussed their State CoUege students and a relations and reactions to toe Peace Corps returnee, ln a panel cultures to which they found discussion before members of toe themselves. Service to International Students Ganesh Kamah, a former res- committee yesterday. ldent ot India, said he found toe Representing- toe major ge- lack of family life to toe United ographlcal areas of too world — States very 'unusual.* toe United States, Africa, India, *It appears,* Kamah said,'that 7 Days ff/ike 5 J-^izzeria Specializing In Italian Foods 1316 W. SHIELDS TOGO-GO 229-26351 each member of toe family Lt an Independent agent.* Kamah said that he also found lt hard to believe that persons raised ln one religious denomin¬ ation could change churches and beliefs so easUy. Another feature of American life which Kamah found hard to accept was what he described as a 'morbid* fear of communism. He said American-style antl- Featuring These Hair Stylists for the Jr.-Sr. Prom March 12 Harry Rollf Rose Franco Carol Machado Carol Shepherd Claudette McKalian Eva Anderson (Manager) Charm Elegance 733 E. Olive rear parking 233-57 strange ln his country. James Obbanya, a student from Kenya, said that he found toe most unusual aspect of Amerl- Obbanya added Uiat even toe chUdren of divorcees were shamed within the community life of Kenya. He also noted that respect for adults was more widely prac¬ ticed ln his home culture than to the United States. An engineering major and former resident of Hong Kong, Eugene Wu based his discussion along toe same lines as toe former speakers. Wu added, however, that com¬ parisons between American and Hong Kong culture was difficult because Kong Kong has become •extremely* westernized within toe last ten years. One*6t-the prevailing themes which all toe speakers mention¬ ed, was a fear by Americans to general that they were not liked* abroad. The students said that toe most frequenUy asked question was Lf they liked* America. The fourth panelist was Ron Turner who served with toe Peace Corps on toe east coast of Cey¬ lon. He said that the cultural shock to students to toe United States usually occurs ln one year. The shock was described as an extremely depressed frame of Turner added that cultural shock usually strikes Peace Corps members some four months after they have arrived Dr. Harry Hale, an assistant professor of sociology, was toe panel moderator. Mathematics expert will discuss Variants Dr. Marvin Marcus, chairman of toe mathematics department at the University of California at Santa Barbara, wUl discuss Uie Classical Variants Thursday at 1 PM ln Science 162. Christianity in Africa? Dr. James Brouwer, associate professor of history, will discuss Can Christianity Survive In Africa? at toe Newman Club meeting tonight. Brouwer served as a missionary ln Africa tor The meeting will be held at the Newman Center, 1572 East Bar¬ stow Avenue. Father Sergio Negro will dis¬ tribute ashes and begin a series of special Lenten devotions dur¬ ing chapel services at 7:30 PM. The business meeting will be¬ gin at 8 PM, and at 8:30 PM Dr. Brouwer will speak. A card party will foUow the discussion period. Death will be topic at Center Students, Enjoy Luxury Apt. Living at: THE OAK TREE APARTMENTS Now Renting - BRAND NEW Air Conditioned - Pool - All Electric Kitchens -Easy Bus Access to FSC- 3695 N. Cedar 229-1436 Now SAVE 20% on DIAMONDS ! ALL DIAMOND RINGS & DIAMOND JEWELRY REDUCED DURING PROCTOR'S annual spring DIAMOND SALE This is our regular merchandise from stock. at our regular advertised prices--less 20%! This ls toe sale you can trust. No special purchases, no phony marked-up prices... every Item plainly marked--Just subtract 20%!. Now $4 does toe work of $5: a $250 ring costs only $200, a $100 diamond ls only $60! If you've planned a diamond purchase...now ls the time to save—at Proctors! Save 20% on mountings, too ! Have old diamonds remounted ln up-to-date settings, or re-made Into dinner rlngs...no charge, of course, for re-setttog your diamond! NO MONEY DOWN . . . TERMS TO SUIT YOU HURRY ! Sale for a limited time on ,y' \9u*tggP^ OPEN MONDAYS & FRIDAYS TIL 9:00 STUDENT ACCOUNTS INVITED FRESNO at FULTON Dr. Nathan Shenfeld, at professor of psychology, will dis¬ cuss The Significance of Death at a special program tonight at 8 PM ln toe College Religious Center. * The talk will be a part of A Seminar on Death being sponsor¬ ed by toe Methodist Student Move¬ ment at Fresno State CoUege. The program wUl also feature a reading of The Time My Father Died. The seminar is open to the pub- Encounter series Roger Chlttlck, associate pro¬ fessor of English, will present The Reactions of a Conserva¬ tive Protestant to the contro¬ versial book Honest to God at tomorrow's Encounter program. The program Is scheduled from 12:15 to 1 PM, in toe College Religious Center. A lunch ser¬ vice ls avaUable. Speaker will discuss versatility of cotton The many faces of cotton fab¬ rics will be described tomorrow by Miss Lawanna Walker, home economist for Uie National Cotton Miss Walker wUl speak to toe Home Economics Club at 1:40 PM in Art and Home Economics 118. liMfHtfj 1233-6166 * 944VANNCSS1. NOW PLAY'NG s£ Tim u Robertson O'breanI ar
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 3, 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 3,1965 Wednesday, March 3,1965 The Collegian _PagjL3 I What price ivy? British Welfare is explained by pastor,™* College Y slates birthday party You might say, in the general nature of things, that lt was more or less spring. Even though toe trees haven't leafed out yet, toe grass and bushes are lush enough to give an Impression of life Juices flowing. The best thing about this early-spring look are the flowering trees, one of the loveliest landscaping effects on campus. It's too bad they don't bloom the year around, because toe pink petals de¬ tract some attenUon from a painful fact about Fresno State College- toe buUdlngs look like ceU compounds. This fact has been Impressed upon faculty, students and visitors ever since toe new campus was to toe construcUon stage, and prac¬ tically everyone has taken a swing at the California-State-function- Undeniably, Fresno State puts Its worst foot forward, namely toe residence halls, a veritable Mont St. Michel when toe rainy season turns an expanse of dirt Into a shallow lagoon. Grim, forbidding even to summer, they look like toe last places to which a fond parent would want to sentence his freshman boy or girl. Bakersfield College, a two-year school, has slmUar architec¬ tural woes, but someone (probably an adherent of Uie torow- mushroom-soup-over-toe-burned-hamburger school of cooking) planted quick-grow Ivy all over the campus. The result ls no es¬ thetic marvel, but at least some of the rawness, toe nakedness has been clothed In green leaves. From time to time a Collegian editor or Student CouncU member has launched a lot's-plant-lvy campaign, with meager results. There's some kind of creeping plant crawling up the cafeteria, and lt helps, but does it move fast enough? Be aware, campus! This is just the opening gun. Whenever The Collegian runs out of significant topics, we're going to push Ivy and sh It hard! LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS •Yes we are our brothers keep- Thls ls toe belief of Douglas Cowman, a methodlst pastor from Devonshire, England, who spoke on "A Christians Reaction to The British Welfare State,* at les at toe CoUege Y. He said, 'All men are part of a large fraternal family. If one part of toe family suffers, the whole family suffers. "How¬ ever, * he explained, "I come fare state, I merely come to explain It.* He went on to say, "This cen¬ tury has brought about a rising concern for poverty and toe un¬ employed. But lt wasn't until gram. The worker pays for lt by buying a stamp, (about $1.50). The employer and toe govern¬ ment both pay equal amounts. When he was asked whether toe welfare state tended to low¬ er Incentive on toe parts of its members, Gowman answered, •No, I fail to see that lt lowers Incentive ln any way.* But, to concluding, he called this pro¬ gram highly Christian and said that lt ls following toe principles set in toe American Constitu¬ tion of life, liberty, and toe pursuit of happiness. Dr. Warren Martin, will be toe featured speaker at toe 53rd an¬ nual banquet of toe College Y to¬ morrow at 6:15 PM ln toe cafe¬ teria. The banquet, which ls open to toe public, will commemorate toe 53rd year of service by toe���CoUege Y to students and others to toe college community. Dr. Martin will speak on toe topic, If Not Chastely, At Least PrudenUy. Tickets for toe ban¬ quet may be purchased at toe CoUege Religious Center or from members of the CoUege Y Board. Tickets are $1.50 for/students, $2.75 for adults. r the e Nat- Ofcou^c I saip I wa rmu& yoj out-id piNNEe. The Collegian Published five days a week except boUdays and examina¬ tion periods by toe Fresno State College Association. MaU subscriptions $8.00 a semester, $15.00 a year. Editorial office Business 235, telephone 222-5161, Ext. 441, Editor . NORMA E. WALLACE Advertising manager............ .........~^^-...Pbil Young Assistant advertising mana¬ ger...............David Guntor Sports editor... Bob McCarthy ... Eva Altlntop Day ...Harley B It Doesn't Cost to Go First Class, lt Pays. . GLEN DEL BARBER SHOP STUDENT RATE Q $175 tonal Party and toe rise of toe Labor Party Uiat toe country nationalized coal, steel, electri¬ city, and more Important toe wel¬ fare program which Includes health Insurance." "The womb to toe tomb,* sys¬ tem as he Jestingly refered to toe health services, is so called ^fM 2 they : of their death. It even pro¬ vides for toe funeral. He pointed out that everyone who ls working pays for toepro- Horse show is slated for arena The Fresno State College Ro- The s v will b (1 In tl fChest- nut and Bullard and wUl be open lo any school (grammar school, high school or college). Entry deadline is 11 AM Saturday. Competition wUl Include traU horse, western equitation, bare¬ back qultatlon, pleasure class, stock horse (dry work), and gym- kana. GymkanawLU Include ares- cue race, clover-leaf racing around barrels, key hole race, Be The Best Dressed In Formals For The Jr-Sr iflU Prom From . . . THE HOUSE OF SAMPLES formal sizes 5-16 LAYAWAY 729 East Olive 266-9293 OPEN FRIDAYS TIL 9 PM (interviews for)si MARCH 8, 9, 10 Representatives of California State Government will be on Campus to ditcuu with Seniors and Graduate Students employment opportunities In Stat* service, including the fields of: Investigations Research and Statistics Real Estate Appraisal and Acquisition Correctional Rehabilitation Vocational Rehabilitation Accounting-Auditing Programmers MAKE AN APPOINTMENT NOW AT YOUR PLACEMENT OFFICE Foreign culture impact described FSC ,odav The Impact of cultural shock and China (Nationalist) — toe was described by three Fresno panel members discussed their State CoUege students and a relations and reactions to toe Peace Corps returnee, ln a panel cultures to which they found discussion before members of toe themselves. Service to International Students Ganesh Kamah, a former res- committee yesterday. ldent ot India, said he found toe Representing- toe major ge- lack of family life to toe United ographlcal areas of too world — States very 'unusual.* toe United States, Africa, India, *It appears,* Kamah said,'that 7 Days ff/ike 5 J-^izzeria Specializing In Italian Foods 1316 W. SHIELDS TOGO-GO 229-26351 each member of toe family Lt an Independent agent.* Kamah said that he also found lt hard to believe that persons raised ln one religious denomin¬ ation could change churches and beliefs so easUy. Another feature of American life which Kamah found hard to accept was what he described as a 'morbid* fear of communism. He said American-style antl- Featuring These Hair Stylists for the Jr.-Sr. Prom March 12 Harry Rollf Rose Franco Carol Machado Carol Shepherd Claudette McKalian Eva Anderson (Manager) Charm Elegance 733 E. Olive rear parking 233-57 strange ln his country. James Obbanya, a student from Kenya, said that he found toe most unusual aspect of Amerl- Obbanya added Uiat even toe chUdren of divorcees were shamed within the community life of Kenya. He also noted that respect for adults was more widely prac¬ ticed ln his home culture than to the United States. An engineering major and former resident of Hong Kong, Eugene Wu based his discussion along toe same lines as toe former speakers. Wu added, however, that com¬ parisons between American and Hong Kong culture was difficult because Kong Kong has become •extremely* westernized within toe last ten years. One*6t-the prevailing themes which all toe speakers mention¬ ed, was a fear by Americans to general that they were not liked* abroad. The students said that toe most frequenUy asked question was Lf they liked* America. The fourth panelist was Ron Turner who served with toe Peace Corps on toe east coast of Cey¬ lon. He said that the cultural shock to students to toe United States usually occurs ln one year. The shock was described as an extremely depressed frame of Turner added that cultural shock usually strikes Peace Corps members some four months after they have arrived Dr. Harry Hale, an assistant professor of sociology, was toe panel moderator. Mathematics expert will discuss Variants Dr. Marvin Marcus, chairman of toe mathematics department at the University of California at Santa Barbara, wUl discuss Uie Classical Variants Thursday at 1 PM ln Science 162. Christianity in Africa? Dr. James Brouwer, associate professor of history, will discuss Can Christianity Survive In Africa? at toe Newman Club meeting tonight. Brouwer served as a missionary ln Africa tor The meeting will be held at the Newman Center, 1572 East Bar¬ stow Avenue. Father Sergio Negro will dis¬ tribute ashes and begin a series of special Lenten devotions dur¬ ing chapel services at 7:30 PM. The business meeting will be¬ gin at 8 PM, and at 8:30 PM Dr. Brouwer will speak. A card party will foUow the discussion period. Death will be topic at Center Students, Enjoy Luxury Apt. Living at: THE OAK TREE APARTMENTS Now Renting - BRAND NEW Air Conditioned - Pool - All Electric Kitchens -Easy Bus Access to FSC- 3695 N. Cedar 229-1436 Now SAVE 20% on DIAMONDS ! ALL DIAMOND RINGS & DIAMOND JEWELRY REDUCED DURING PROCTOR'S annual spring DIAMOND SALE This is our regular merchandise from stock. at our regular advertised prices--less 20%! This ls toe sale you can trust. No special purchases, no phony marked-up prices... every Item plainly marked--Just subtract 20%!. Now $4 does toe work of $5: a $250 ring costs only $200, a $100 diamond ls only $60! If you've planned a diamond purchase...now ls the time to save—at Proctors! Save 20% on mountings, too ! Have old diamonds remounted ln up-to-date settings, or re-made Into dinner rlngs...no charge, of course, for re-setttog your diamond! NO MONEY DOWN . . . TERMS TO SUIT YOU HURRY ! Sale for a limited time on ,y' \9u*tggP^ OPEN MONDAYS & FRIDAYS TIL 9:00 STUDENT ACCOUNTS INVITED FRESNO at FULTON Dr. Nathan Shenfeld, at professor of psychology, will dis¬ cuss The Significance of Death at a special program tonight at 8 PM ln toe College Religious Center. * The talk will be a part of A Seminar on Death being sponsor¬ ed by toe Methodist Student Move¬ ment at Fresno State CoUege. The program wUl also feature a reading of The Time My Father Died. The seminar is open to the pub- Encounter series Roger Chlttlck, associate pro¬ fessor of English, will present The Reactions of a Conserva¬ tive Protestant to the contro¬ versial book Honest to God at tomorrow's Encounter program. The program Is scheduled from 12:15 to 1 PM, in toe College Religious Center. A lunch ser¬ vice ls avaUable. Speaker will discuss versatility of cotton The many faces of cotton fab¬ rics will be described tomorrow by Miss Lawanna Walker, home economist for Uie National Cotton Miss Walker wUl speak to toe Home Economics Club at 1:40 PM in Art and Home Economics 118. liMfHtfj 1233-6166 * 944VANNCSS1. NOW PLAY'NG s£ Tim u Robertson O'breanI ar |