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IAILY COLLLl.TAN Monday. November 7. 1966 Editorial listen to student voices. votes, Thursday when the aca t they hear, both in arguments ai lemlc senato deals with tho quostlo ! problem ls this — will thoy havo hoard enough to know ents feol about a reading period? While the Daily Collegian I for letters refloctlng student opinion, nono havo mator- .Ithough the Executive Committee of tho Academic Senato o voluntary, If enough student opinion ls hoard tho faculty will be Of tho approximately 60 officially recognized student clubs on this ay or the other, to offer an opinion on a reading period. Last year about 1,500 signatures were collected In favor of a eadlng porlod. These signatures, coupled with effective student sadorshlp, brought results. A period was offered, If only on a There Is no doobt that tho acadomlc senato will continue studying osslbllltles for reading periods in future semeslors. Thoro is an xeellent chance for a meaningful trial period next somcslor. But Judging by tho silence so far on the question of a reading Women's affairs --'no one cares' lly DOTTIE PF.TRICK making function, which contrc S ls now the Committee on ■n's Affairs, a standing iltteo under the Jurisdlc- >f tho Student Senate. As a ct of the bylaws passed In regard to policy making, the mendatlons to tho StudentSenate. "Pressure group" Is what the purpose "if womor. support it." This feeling Saundra Speers, I ut AWS." "They t the Little Sister Program, a foreign student. Honors Night, a fashion show and the Queen's Ball. proposal to meet lese needs Is tho publishing of pamphlet containing a descrlp- ttire ls appropriate for various As of now, those projects a: stUl In the planning stages. The effectiveness, as with the tot Noted journalist to speak Nov. 18 7 p.m. Nov. 18 in Pardlnl's Restaurant. Dr. Paul Sheenai., chairman of the department of Journalism, said arrangements forBrucker's appearance were made through the department's Advisory' Com- The dinner meeting will follow an afternoon session ofthe news- - men's conference, which will bo highlighted by a panel discussion at 2:30 p.m. In Business 242. Brucker, for many years the He ls an alumnus of Columbia University and Williams College, and has received many national citations for hlv contributions In Journalism. Among them are the John Peter Zenger Award in 1959, and the Sigma Delta Chi and the Kappa Tau Alpha awards^for research In Journalism. He Is also the author of several books. Currently, he ls the director of the Professional Journalism Fellowship program sponsored by the Ford Foundation at CLUB NEWS lly LILLY MOIUSIIIMA Alpha Kappa Psl Alpha Kappa Psl, the pro¬ fessional business fraternity, will hold a business meeting Tuesday at 1 p.m. In Social FSC transit study is requested to ease Fresno traffic The proposed solution to Fresno's mass transit problems may be found in the thesis of a former Fresno State College Gary Ferstonfeld and entitled Edward Bad essor of social work, .peak to the Social Well Cross Currents, sponsored b. the College Y will present lh> meeting Tuesday In Speech Art esus Chrl. ently r ho, Cal- ested by John Simmons, Fresno city manager. thesis In preparing a report foi the City Council on the curren Fresno Municipal Bus Line! situation. He also has toured i number of California cities will laCom l Christ," collecting additional Information Although he has not finished reading Ferstenfeld's study, Simmons said ho considers It •a very good report." Ho also said that some of Ferstenfeld's recommendations are already being used. Tho t 1 Interview earlier this White will talk today on state issues House of Representatives, wll speak behind the activities bootl White's talk ls sponsored by th< California College Republicans. The club's president, Ed Hol- comb, said White will speak or Issues of statewldo Importance J^Sjk Th. Doily ygSp Colloaion |f t£|if« ASST. MANAGING EDITOR PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR STUDENT GOVERNMENT ADVERTISING MANAGER ASST. ADVERTISING MAN CD I' roR. Mary Lou Fleming DAY EDITORS v Bible is voice of God, says Rev. Schale •The Bible In all of Its parts ls the voice of God speaking in man," said Rev. EstU Schale of the Bethany Monnonlte Church, at the last Inter-V»r«irvmeeting. Rev. Schale Initiated tho new series, "Jesus, the Messiah" In talklnp on the topic, "Are the New Testament Documents Re- The menllstedas thoauthorsof the Gospels and the New Testa¬ ment Cannon have been excepted The 22 minute movi originally shown by the testant-Orthodox Center at the different way," he continued. New York Worlds Fair. "The gospels a International Relations works * he said "but are drawn A movie, "The International Irom various sources. The fact Voluntary Service in Asia," will that the Gospels stand apart ls life of the Lord in a llvldual Publications Board seeks directors Students who would like to take Senate Board on Publications. publications0 a't'Tr^no'siat oCo7 Applications may be picked up t the Student Activities Office Se habla esparto, at Lab School Monday. November 7. 1966 THE DAILY COLLF.MAN—3 By GAIL BARCUS ■ ls,9 a.m. Everything ls un¬ der control, children screaming, shouting, reading, studying, tho Fossil, found near Fresno 25 years ago, now on display at Berkeley grade class. Tho chatter Is 1 Under rocent education law: I ls a student teacher. From £ 9:15 each morning she drills, axes and draws Spanish from f students, and all with a bot- Thls imply b t poM lack of Oth gro to teach conversational Spanish. The lab school at FSC does not have this problem. In fact, students doing their student teaching with a strong background In languages find tho doors open and excellent surroundings for them to practice teaching. Tho lab school 6th grade class most other student teachers deal Oxford motion to ban miniskirt falls short , England (UPI) - They debate 11. chanting, applauding undergrad¬ uates packed the hall. Another Emma RothschUd, a memborof the famous banking family, wore a granny-length mauve and cher¬ ry evening dross. Shocountodthe By tradition, most Oxford Un¬ ion speakers wear formal evening wear. But Leofranc Holford- Strovens, main speaker for the Even politics got Into the act. Robert Jackson, chief speaker against the motion, praised India Independence horo Mahatma In high schools. And then the) on to their reading groups. Conversations' they learn kept simple, not written down. Tho chUdren will see very few of the words they learn to say written down in this class room. now being used to teach Spanish and other languages. Instead of having only a brief Introduction to tho spoken language and then going immediately Into reading and translating and then not got- lsh until about four or flvo years later, (If the student makes It that far) teachers now try fo teach language, and as early as pos- background In speaking and lis¬ tening In the language ho then goes ■ Into the more tedious work of Engineering school enrollment jumps 25% over last year Enrollment in the school of En¬ gineering ls up 25 per cent this year, according to Dr. Thomas H. Evans, the school's dean. •We had 311 majors at regis¬ tration,* said Dr. Evans, "and this numberhas Increased slight¬ ly." Dr. Evans gives two reasons for tho sharp rise. •First, we have made many contacts with high schools and junior colleges In the San Joa¬ quin Valley i engineering n age-old fossil ofapleslo- was found by Frank Pavli saur, found by a Fresno Stato Panocho Pass west of Fresno CoUego student In 1937,1sgetting Pavla was hunting for commer- a now description sign after hang- clal gypsum when he came acros: ing in tho University of Califor- tho pleslosaur burled In the shale nla at Berkeley science building The cast lies in the exact po for almost 25 years. sltlon In which It was found 70 mllUon-y ■The s engineering last yeai gineorlng Council I sional Development." n Is Phon. 224-1960 |Karsho & john Ev^Rifurter tlriye ir»s 6 LOCATIONS 1. Blackstooe at Santa Ar 2. Cedar at Shaw (—ess 3. Belmont at Chestnut 5. Cedar at Clintoo letfts l arlno re d mysolf stayed >cho Pass throughout the month )( August andpartofSeptember." •We soon reallied that the ex- tralnlng in digging up large fos¬ sils.' Dr. Samuel Welles, an expert In paleontology from Borkeley, finished tho project. Although It ls ration of tho ploslo- ln August, 1937. ! undertaking the dlf- : got full credit Part-time jobs open equipment and a mule," Dr. Beard. «Dr. Tuck head of tho geology dep it avaUable durln, ■mploymont office al THE VILLAGE BOOKSTORE in; GARDEN VILLAGE BOOKS Phone 224-0904 LLAGE BOOKSTORE )1 of OHIO EDISON COMPANY HEADQUARTERS AKRON, OHIO OHIO'S LARGEST ELECTRIC UTILITY will be on campus NOVEMBER 18, 1966 to interview ELECTRICAL & MECHANICAL ENGINEERS (B.5. Degree) After a nine-month training program, assignments for E.E.'s are System Plan¬ ning, Application Engineering, Design, Operations or Construction. For M.E.'s assignments are in Power Production.
Object Description
Title | 1966_11 The Daily Collegian November 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 | Nov 7, 1966 Pg. 2-3 |
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 | IAILY COLLLl.TAN Monday. November 7. 1966 Editorial listen to student voices. votes, Thursday when the aca t they hear, both in arguments ai lemlc senato deals with tho quostlo ! problem ls this — will thoy havo hoard enough to know ents feol about a reading period? While the Daily Collegian I for letters refloctlng student opinion, nono havo mator- .Ithough the Executive Committee of tho Academic Senato o voluntary, If enough student opinion ls hoard tho faculty will be Of tho approximately 60 officially recognized student clubs on this ay or the other, to offer an opinion on a reading period. Last year about 1,500 signatures were collected In favor of a eadlng porlod. These signatures, coupled with effective student sadorshlp, brought results. A period was offered, If only on a There Is no doobt that tho acadomlc senato will continue studying osslbllltles for reading periods in future semeslors. Thoro is an xeellent chance for a meaningful trial period next somcslor. But Judging by tho silence so far on the question of a reading Women's affairs --'no one cares' lly DOTTIE PF.TRICK making function, which contrc S ls now the Committee on ■n's Affairs, a standing iltteo under the Jurisdlc- >f tho Student Senate. As a ct of the bylaws passed In regard to policy making, the mendatlons to tho StudentSenate. "Pressure group" Is what the purpose "if womor. support it." This feeling Saundra Speers, I ut AWS." "They t the Little Sister Program, a foreign student. Honors Night, a fashion show and the Queen's Ball. proposal to meet lese needs Is tho publishing of pamphlet containing a descrlp- ttire ls appropriate for various As of now, those projects a: stUl In the planning stages. The effectiveness, as with the tot Noted journalist to speak Nov. 18 7 p.m. Nov. 18 in Pardlnl's Restaurant. Dr. Paul Sheenai., chairman of the department of Journalism, said arrangements forBrucker's appearance were made through the department's Advisory' Com- The dinner meeting will follow an afternoon session ofthe news- - men's conference, which will bo highlighted by a panel discussion at 2:30 p.m. In Business 242. Brucker, for many years the He ls an alumnus of Columbia University and Williams College, and has received many national citations for hlv contributions In Journalism. Among them are the John Peter Zenger Award in 1959, and the Sigma Delta Chi and the Kappa Tau Alpha awards^for research In Journalism. He Is also the author of several books. Currently, he ls the director of the Professional Journalism Fellowship program sponsored by the Ford Foundation at CLUB NEWS lly LILLY MOIUSIIIMA Alpha Kappa Psl Alpha Kappa Psl, the pro¬ fessional business fraternity, will hold a business meeting Tuesday at 1 p.m. In Social FSC transit study is requested to ease Fresno traffic The proposed solution to Fresno's mass transit problems may be found in the thesis of a former Fresno State College Gary Ferstonfeld and entitled Edward Bad essor of social work, .peak to the Social Well Cross Currents, sponsored b. the College Y will present lh> meeting Tuesday In Speech Art esus Chrl. ently r ho, Cal- ested by John Simmons, Fresno city manager. thesis In preparing a report foi the City Council on the curren Fresno Municipal Bus Line! situation. He also has toured i number of California cities will laCom l Christ," collecting additional Information Although he has not finished reading Ferstenfeld's study, Simmons said ho considers It •a very good report." Ho also said that some of Ferstenfeld's recommendations are already being used. Tho t 1 Interview earlier this White will talk today on state issues House of Representatives, wll speak behind the activities bootl White's talk ls sponsored by th< California College Republicans. The club's president, Ed Hol- comb, said White will speak or Issues of statewldo Importance J^Sjk Th. Doily ygSp Colloaion |f t£|if« ASST. MANAGING EDITOR PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR STUDENT GOVERNMENT ADVERTISING MANAGER ASST. ADVERTISING MAN CD I' roR. Mary Lou Fleming DAY EDITORS v Bible is voice of God, says Rev. Schale •The Bible In all of Its parts ls the voice of God speaking in man," said Rev. EstU Schale of the Bethany Monnonlte Church, at the last Inter-V»r«irvmeeting. Rev. Schale Initiated tho new series, "Jesus, the Messiah" In talklnp on the topic, "Are the New Testament Documents Re- The menllstedas thoauthorsof the Gospels and the New Testa¬ ment Cannon have been excepted The 22 minute movi originally shown by the testant-Orthodox Center at the different way," he continued. New York Worlds Fair. "The gospels a International Relations works * he said "but are drawn A movie, "The International Irom various sources. The fact Voluntary Service in Asia," will that the Gospels stand apart ls life of the Lord in a llvldual Publications Board seeks directors Students who would like to take Senate Board on Publications. publications0 a't'Tr^no'siat oCo7 Applications may be picked up t the Student Activities Office Se habla esparto, at Lab School Monday. November 7. 1966 THE DAILY COLLF.MAN—3 By GAIL BARCUS ■ ls,9 a.m. Everything ls un¬ der control, children screaming, shouting, reading, studying, tho Fossil, found near Fresno 25 years ago, now on display at Berkeley grade class. Tho chatter Is 1 Under rocent education law: I ls a student teacher. From £ 9:15 each morning she drills, axes and draws Spanish from f students, and all with a bot- Thls imply b t poM lack of Oth gro to teach conversational Spanish. The lab school at FSC does not have this problem. In fact, students doing their student teaching with a strong background In languages find tho doors open and excellent surroundings for them to practice teaching. Tho lab school 6th grade class most other student teachers deal Oxford motion to ban miniskirt falls short , England (UPI) - They debate 11. chanting, applauding undergrad¬ uates packed the hall. Another Emma RothschUd, a memborof the famous banking family, wore a granny-length mauve and cher¬ ry evening dross. Shocountodthe By tradition, most Oxford Un¬ ion speakers wear formal evening wear. But Leofranc Holford- Strovens, main speaker for the Even politics got Into the act. Robert Jackson, chief speaker against the motion, praised India Independence horo Mahatma In high schools. And then the) on to their reading groups. Conversations' they learn kept simple, not written down. Tho chUdren will see very few of the words they learn to say written down in this class room. now being used to teach Spanish and other languages. Instead of having only a brief Introduction to tho spoken language and then going immediately Into reading and translating and then not got- lsh until about four or flvo years later, (If the student makes It that far) teachers now try fo teach language, and as early as pos- background In speaking and lis¬ tening In the language ho then goes ■ Into the more tedious work of Engineering school enrollment jumps 25% over last year Enrollment in the school of En¬ gineering ls up 25 per cent this year, according to Dr. Thomas H. Evans, the school's dean. •We had 311 majors at regis¬ tration,* said Dr. Evans, "and this numberhas Increased slight¬ ly." Dr. Evans gives two reasons for tho sharp rise. •First, we have made many contacts with high schools and junior colleges In the San Joa¬ quin Valley i engineering n age-old fossil ofapleslo- was found by Frank Pavli saur, found by a Fresno Stato Panocho Pass west of Fresno CoUego student In 1937,1sgetting Pavla was hunting for commer- a now description sign after hang- clal gypsum when he came acros: ing in tho University of Califor- tho pleslosaur burled In the shale nla at Berkeley science building The cast lies in the exact po for almost 25 years. sltlon In which It was found 70 mllUon-y ■The s engineering last yeai gineorlng Council I sional Development." n Is Phon. 224-1960 |Karsho & john Ev^Rifurter tlriye ir»s 6 LOCATIONS 1. Blackstooe at Santa Ar 2. Cedar at Shaw (—ess 3. Belmont at Chestnut 5. Cedar at Clintoo letfts l arlno re d mysolf stayed >cho Pass throughout the month )( August andpartofSeptember." •We soon reallied that the ex- tralnlng in digging up large fos¬ sils.' Dr. Samuel Welles, an expert In paleontology from Borkeley, finished tho project. Although It ls ration of tho ploslo- ln August, 1937. ! undertaking the dlf- : got full credit Part-time jobs open equipment and a mule," Dr. Beard. «Dr. Tuck head of tho geology dep it avaUable durln, ■mploymont office al THE VILLAGE BOOKSTORE in; GARDEN VILLAGE BOOKS Phone 224-0904 LLAGE BOOKSTORE )1 of OHIO EDISON COMPANY HEADQUARTERS AKRON, OHIO OHIO'S LARGEST ELECTRIC UTILITY will be on campus NOVEMBER 18, 1966 to interview ELECTRICAL & MECHANICAL ENGINEERS (B.5. Degree) After a nine-month training program, assignments for E.E.'s are System Plan¬ ning, Application Engineering, Design, Operations or Construction. For M.E.'s assignments are in Power Production. |