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THE DAILY PcftJODiCAtS DESK COLLEGIAN FRESNO STATE COLLEGE Weather Mostly fair through Wednesday with some cloudiness. Highs to¬ day 52-57, Fresno 55; lows to¬ night 26-32, Fresno 29. Sierra Nevada mostly fair, possible Tuesday, February a, 1966 'No Exit' Will Begin Film Series The first of a series of Alms will be offered Feb. 10 at 8 p.m. by the Fresno Film Society of Fresno State College. No Exit, Sartre's play in Eng¬ lish, with Vtveca Llndfors and Rita Gam, and two short features, Fall of the House of Usher and A Short History (Roumanla), will be shown In IA 101. Tickets are available at $3 for In any combination during the Spring season. Single admissions will be sold only if the season tickets sold falls short of the 75 cents with a FSC student body The film society lists the fol- March 3, Father Brown, the Detective, starring Alec Culness, with the short features The Gentleman In Room Six and A Visit to Picasso; March 17, The Strange Ones, Jean Cocteau nar¬ rates the fUm version of his novel strong attachment to each other, playing with The Day Manolete Was Killed; April 21, Nana with Martlne Carol and Charles Boyer, The Wind and the River will also be shown. May 19, Wutherlng Heights with Laurence Oliver, Merle Oberon and David Nlven, playing with Eugene Atget and The Tender Game; May 2G, M starring Peter Lorre, with Hurry, Hurry and A Time Out of War, the prize win¬ ning film by University of Cali¬ fornia at Los Angeles cinema The short features will proceed the full-length feature. Tickets may be purchased by mailing a self-addressed stamp¬ ed envelope to H. Ray McKnlght, Fresno FUm Society, % English department, Fresno State Col¬ lege. The checks should be made payable to the Fresno State Col- Tueller Elected President Of Fresno Council Dr. Dallas A. Tualler, Fresno State College acal»mlc vice preslden1., has been elected praslden! o'. the Fresno Com- muilty Cornell. Dr. Tueller liasbeenamcmlier of the council board of directors since >0J3. He served u second vice president and program c.'ialrma.i last year. Parking Decals Still Available Parking decals for the spring Business Office, Administration Decals, costing $13 each, ai required for all general and r< strlcted parking spaces on can 'No One Cares About AWS,' Says Papp A year ago Linda Papp, who has Just stepped down from the pres¬ idency of the Associated Women Students at Fresno State College, would not have uttered these "I don't know If there Is a great enough need for AWS now as when It was formed.' But at the last meeting of the ad s before the 5 p.m. Next Sunday, there will be a reception from 1 to 4 p.m. The exhibits Include works done In oils and water color, photographs, graphics, scupture KAPPA SIGMA SNOW QUEEN - Bunny business major from Inglewood, was naj Sigma Fraternity Winter Ski Carnival Miss Merrill was one of five finalists competing for the honor. Faculty Showing Displays Changing Face Of Art The Art Faculty Show titled Changing Face of Art Is now on exhibit In Room 208 of the Art- Home Economics Building. The gallery Is open Monday through Friday, from B a.m. to Signups Dip Well Below Fall Totals Fresno State College's spring registration, Including 405 regis¬ trants at FSC'sBakorsf.eldcam¬ pus, totaled 8,302 students, a five per cent Increase over the corresponding 1965 semester. First day registration, total¬ ing 4,752, was up 8.6 per cent over last' spring, but the second day total of 3,145 was slightly Exhibitors are Joyce Aiken, Richard Delaney, John Ed Her¬ bert, Heinz Kusol, Frank Laury, Mary Maughelll, William Mlnschow, Darwin Musselman, Adolf Odorfer, Michael Opper, Gayle Smalley, Gene Thompson, Sunshine Williams and Wes Wll- Tho exhibit will be shown from Feb. 7-17 and Is sponsored by the art department and the board of break and admitted that 'no one really seems to care* about the AWS. After a year of work with the AWS, she said, she felt perhaps the organization does not need the standing of a constitutional body. City Council Rejects Shop Center Proposal A shopping center planned for the College Community area was rejected by the FresnoClty Coun¬ cil Jan. 27. The council voted 6-1 not to rezone the 58 acres needed for the proposed shopping center on Shaw Avenue between First and Fresno Streets. If approved, the Fresuo Fashton Square would have In¬ cluded some 60 stores on a shop¬ ping mall. Opponents of the zoning change questioned the effect of the center on the rest of Shaw Avenue and present plans to maintain the area for professional and resi¬ dential Since the beginning of the cur¬ rent attempt to rewrite the As¬ sociation bylaws there have been many voices, both Independent and collective, bent toward ex¬ cluding the AWS from the bylaw*. If the AWS is excluded from the bylaws, It will mean the campus group will be unqualified tor membership In the national or¬ ganization, the Intercollegiate Associated Women Students. Further, the local AWS would probably lose some of Its func¬ tions, resulting In turn In amor* limited budget. ly realized In the last AWS •lec¬ tion, where the new president, Susan Carr, was awarded her office on the strength of 39 write- in votes. No one ran tor treasur¬ er, historian or election mana¬ ger. BUI Bettlnelll, a student mem¬ ber of the ad hoc committee which Is reviewing the proposed bylaws, is among those opposed to includ¬ ing the AWS In the bylaws. He cites the lack of Interest as one factor, as well as his view that the AWS 'seems not to be a constitutional organization," but should be considered a separate entity on the level of a club or of the ad hoc i present at the meeting agreed that women students have other means available to carry out what are now AWS functions, such as the Queen's Ball, tho Big - Little Sister program and other Gordon Wilson, associate dean of students and member of the ad hoc committee, proposed the AWS be made a standing committee. Continued on Page 3, Col. 4) for tl 1965 spring The flrsl lay enrollment fig¬ ures Include all students who pre- reglstered as well as 300 registration workers, which ac¬ counts for tho difference In the two dally totals. Although tho spring enrollment Is below the fall 1965 total of 8,213 at the Fresno campus alone, Registrar Robert R. Board ex¬ plained Oils Is traditional for the spring term. He attributes the de¬ crease to tho mid-year gradua¬ tion of students, disqualification on the basis of scholastic per¬ formance, dropouts caused by financial difficulties aud the transfer of students to other colleges and unlvercl.ies. Disqualification because of poor scholastic performance prevented 500 students from registering for tho new semester. Among mis group wore 80 fresh¬ men, 73 sophomores, 193 Juniors, 106 seniors and 20 graduate stu- ASB Associate Card Sale Starts The Fresno State CoUege Association Office announced to¬ day that associate student body cards are now on sale In the association office. Those eligible to purchase BFA Speaker Will Talk On Gettysburg Address Dr. R. Gerald McMurtry will In 1957, President Dwlght D. speak on 'Lincoln's Address at Elsenhower appointed Dr. Mc- Gettysburg' Wednesday at Murtry to the National Lincoln U a.m. In the Little Theatre. The lecture by the director of the Lincoln National Life Founda¬ tion Is being sponsored by the Fresno State College Board of Fine Arts. Since 1931 Dr. McMurtry has wives of FSC students. The cards sell for $5 and include all rights and privileges of regular student body cards, with the exception that those holding this type of card are not given a vote In ASB elections, nor are they given a copy of The Campus. Dean Fisk Attend? School Convention Dr. McKee Flsk, dean of the school of business, Is attending a special one-day meeting of the American Association of Collegi¬ ate Schools of Business today in St. Louis, Mo. The deans will discuss the fu¬ ture goals and objectives of aacsb and procedures relative to the new and revised standards. life ai He Is the author of about 25 books and pamphlets and some 200 magazine articles on Lincoln and his contemporaries. He is currently editor of the monthly "Lincoln Lore,' which deals ex¬ clusively with Llncolnlana. Dr. McMurtry has lectured extensively on Lincoln and In 1959 was sent to Southeastern Asia by the International Educational Exchange Service as an American specialist to lecture on Lincoln. He has gathered at Lincoln Memorial University what is said to be the largest collection of literature on the Civil War period found at any college or university. He has added to this collection various rare Lincoln Items. DR. MCMURTRY Sesqulcentennlal Commission to commemorate the 150th anni¬ versary of Lincoln's birth in Frosh Bids Due The deadline for return of pe¬ titions for the spring semester freshman class executive board is Feb. 14. Petitions are available this week in the Stu Office in the Bookstore.
Object Description
Title | 1966_02 The Daily Collegian February 1966 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1966 |
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 8, 1966 Pg. 1 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1966 |
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 DAILY PcftJODiCAtS DESK COLLEGIAN FRESNO STATE COLLEGE Weather Mostly fair through Wednesday with some cloudiness. Highs to¬ day 52-57, Fresno 55; lows to¬ night 26-32, Fresno 29. Sierra Nevada mostly fair, possible Tuesday, February a, 1966 'No Exit' Will Begin Film Series The first of a series of Alms will be offered Feb. 10 at 8 p.m. by the Fresno Film Society of Fresno State College. No Exit, Sartre's play in Eng¬ lish, with Vtveca Llndfors and Rita Gam, and two short features, Fall of the House of Usher and A Short History (Roumanla), will be shown In IA 101. Tickets are available at $3 for In any combination during the Spring season. Single admissions will be sold only if the season tickets sold falls short of the 75 cents with a FSC student body The film society lists the fol- March 3, Father Brown, the Detective, starring Alec Culness, with the short features The Gentleman In Room Six and A Visit to Picasso; March 17, The Strange Ones, Jean Cocteau nar¬ rates the fUm version of his novel strong attachment to each other, playing with The Day Manolete Was Killed; April 21, Nana with Martlne Carol and Charles Boyer, The Wind and the River will also be shown. May 19, Wutherlng Heights with Laurence Oliver, Merle Oberon and David Nlven, playing with Eugene Atget and The Tender Game; May 2G, M starring Peter Lorre, with Hurry, Hurry and A Time Out of War, the prize win¬ ning film by University of Cali¬ fornia at Los Angeles cinema The short features will proceed the full-length feature. Tickets may be purchased by mailing a self-addressed stamp¬ ed envelope to H. Ray McKnlght, Fresno FUm Society, % English department, Fresno State Col¬ lege. The checks should be made payable to the Fresno State Col- Tueller Elected President Of Fresno Council Dr. Dallas A. Tualler, Fresno State College acal»mlc vice preslden1., has been elected praslden! o'. the Fresno Com- muilty Cornell. Dr. Tueller liasbeenamcmlier of the council board of directors since >0J3. He served u second vice president and program c.'ialrma.i last year. Parking Decals Still Available Parking decals for the spring Business Office, Administration Decals, costing $13 each, ai required for all general and r< strlcted parking spaces on can 'No One Cares About AWS,' Says Papp A year ago Linda Papp, who has Just stepped down from the pres¬ idency of the Associated Women Students at Fresno State College, would not have uttered these "I don't know If there Is a great enough need for AWS now as when It was formed.' But at the last meeting of the ad s before the 5 p.m. Next Sunday, there will be a reception from 1 to 4 p.m. The exhibits Include works done In oils and water color, photographs, graphics, scupture KAPPA SIGMA SNOW QUEEN - Bunny business major from Inglewood, was naj Sigma Fraternity Winter Ski Carnival Miss Merrill was one of five finalists competing for the honor. Faculty Showing Displays Changing Face Of Art The Art Faculty Show titled Changing Face of Art Is now on exhibit In Room 208 of the Art- Home Economics Building. The gallery Is open Monday through Friday, from B a.m. to Signups Dip Well Below Fall Totals Fresno State College's spring registration, Including 405 regis¬ trants at FSC'sBakorsf.eldcam¬ pus, totaled 8,302 students, a five per cent Increase over the corresponding 1965 semester. First day registration, total¬ ing 4,752, was up 8.6 per cent over last' spring, but the second day total of 3,145 was slightly Exhibitors are Joyce Aiken, Richard Delaney, John Ed Her¬ bert, Heinz Kusol, Frank Laury, Mary Maughelll, William Mlnschow, Darwin Musselman, Adolf Odorfer, Michael Opper, Gayle Smalley, Gene Thompson, Sunshine Williams and Wes Wll- Tho exhibit will be shown from Feb. 7-17 and Is sponsored by the art department and the board of break and admitted that 'no one really seems to care* about the AWS. After a year of work with the AWS, she said, she felt perhaps the organization does not need the standing of a constitutional body. City Council Rejects Shop Center Proposal A shopping center planned for the College Community area was rejected by the FresnoClty Coun¬ cil Jan. 27. The council voted 6-1 not to rezone the 58 acres needed for the proposed shopping center on Shaw Avenue between First and Fresno Streets. If approved, the Fresuo Fashton Square would have In¬ cluded some 60 stores on a shop¬ ping mall. Opponents of the zoning change questioned the effect of the center on the rest of Shaw Avenue and present plans to maintain the area for professional and resi¬ dential Since the beginning of the cur¬ rent attempt to rewrite the As¬ sociation bylaws there have been many voices, both Independent and collective, bent toward ex¬ cluding the AWS from the bylaw*. If the AWS is excluded from the bylaws, It will mean the campus group will be unqualified tor membership In the national or¬ ganization, the Intercollegiate Associated Women Students. Further, the local AWS would probably lose some of Its func¬ tions, resulting In turn In amor* limited budget. ly realized In the last AWS •lec¬ tion, where the new president, Susan Carr, was awarded her office on the strength of 39 write- in votes. No one ran tor treasur¬ er, historian or election mana¬ ger. BUI Bettlnelll, a student mem¬ ber of the ad hoc committee which Is reviewing the proposed bylaws, is among those opposed to includ¬ ing the AWS In the bylaws. He cites the lack of Interest as one factor, as well as his view that the AWS 'seems not to be a constitutional organization," but should be considered a separate entity on the level of a club or of the ad hoc i present at the meeting agreed that women students have other means available to carry out what are now AWS functions, such as the Queen's Ball, tho Big - Little Sister program and other Gordon Wilson, associate dean of students and member of the ad hoc committee, proposed the AWS be made a standing committee. Continued on Page 3, Col. 4) for tl 1965 spring The flrsl lay enrollment fig¬ ures Include all students who pre- reglstered as well as 300 registration workers, which ac¬ counts for tho difference In the two dally totals. Although tho spring enrollment Is below the fall 1965 total of 8,213 at the Fresno campus alone, Registrar Robert R. Board ex¬ plained Oils Is traditional for the spring term. He attributes the de¬ crease to tho mid-year gradua¬ tion of students, disqualification on the basis of scholastic per¬ formance, dropouts caused by financial difficulties aud the transfer of students to other colleges and unlvercl.ies. Disqualification because of poor scholastic performance prevented 500 students from registering for tho new semester. Among mis group wore 80 fresh¬ men, 73 sophomores, 193 Juniors, 106 seniors and 20 graduate stu- ASB Associate Card Sale Starts The Fresno State CoUege Association Office announced to¬ day that associate student body cards are now on sale In the association office. Those eligible to purchase BFA Speaker Will Talk On Gettysburg Address Dr. R. Gerald McMurtry will In 1957, President Dwlght D. speak on 'Lincoln's Address at Elsenhower appointed Dr. Mc- Gettysburg' Wednesday at Murtry to the National Lincoln U a.m. In the Little Theatre. The lecture by the director of the Lincoln National Life Founda¬ tion Is being sponsored by the Fresno State College Board of Fine Arts. Since 1931 Dr. McMurtry has wives of FSC students. The cards sell for $5 and include all rights and privileges of regular student body cards, with the exception that those holding this type of card are not given a vote In ASB elections, nor are they given a copy of The Campus. Dean Fisk Attend? School Convention Dr. McKee Flsk, dean of the school of business, Is attending a special one-day meeting of the American Association of Collegi¬ ate Schools of Business today in St. Louis, Mo. The deans will discuss the fu¬ ture goals and objectives of aacsb and procedures relative to the new and revised standards. life ai He Is the author of about 25 books and pamphlets and some 200 magazine articles on Lincoln and his contemporaries. He is currently editor of the monthly "Lincoln Lore,' which deals ex¬ clusively with Llncolnlana. Dr. McMurtry has lectured extensively on Lincoln and In 1959 was sent to Southeastern Asia by the International Educational Exchange Service as an American specialist to lecture on Lincoln. He has gathered at Lincoln Memorial University what is said to be the largest collection of literature on the Civil War period found at any college or university. He has added to this collection various rare Lincoln Items. DR. MCMURTRY Sesqulcentennlal Commission to commemorate the 150th anni¬ versary of Lincoln's birth in Frosh Bids Due The deadline for return of pe¬ titions for the spring semester freshman class executive board is Feb. 14. Petitions are available this week in the Stu Office in the Bookstore. |