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1111 [>\II.Y COI.LF Friday. December 9. 1966 Editor: Congratulations are to order for Theta Chi Fraternity and Tony *Legs" PereUa. Eighteen campus groups competed against each other a short Ume ago to havo their nominee win tho tlUe of having toe most 'Gorgeous Gam* on campus. Theta Chi en¬ tered into toe fun and contributed a great deal more than any other group. Homan Hall followed to second place. The Class of 1968 would like to thank these two groups and toe others who helped to make this The t i t: k will bo : INTERNATIONALS much more Involved In the Amo The soccer dispute which v. rekindled again last season In request for Inclusion In too lntr mural program, and finally (, two balls, is not ovor; It U stl President, Junior Class 'Up With People' Editor: Somo Reactions to *Up With What ls their avowed purpose? It ls a trifle obscure. Most ofthe media concerning Moral Re- Armament and Its traveling groups *Slng Out '66" aro devoted to pictures and stories of toe great noisy enthusiastic recep¬ tion given them wherever they LETTERS appear, In vastly greater propor¬ tion than to what thoy stand for. They preach very Uttlo and enter¬���tain a lot, In a very competent young-modern format, using and roll bands, pop music, folk songs of tho pastoral variety, and cheerleaders. Lots of noise, en¬ thusiasm, and rhythm. They seem to propose a change In, or revival of, or something to do with moral standards. This they do In a gay lilting way with a perpetual smile and unison gestures, with the precision of a rooting section. and reflections being deep- seated, introspective and ser- profound teachings as these people would give from the busi¬ nesslike vivacity of a rooting Their publicity ls superb.They vast successes and their e described as hits. Not of dissent. It ls strange of people shelling rlumphs. Perhaps soccer team, composedof foreign weekly in tho FresnoClty League, a part of toe California Soccer Last season "America" re- soccer bo Included In the intra¬ mural program. The request was A delegation then went to Coach Coleman. Tho answer? "No.* Stu¬ dents caught up to toe Issue pointed \o Coleman's "uncooper¬ ative spirit* and his "refusal to •Other colleges and universities have It, such as UCLA and Stan¬ ford, but they are quite a bit Asked If the collego could spon¬ sor the city league team, he replied that It would again cntaU the responsibility of the college In scheduling, providing equlp- lnsurance, transportation, etc. ■But until we can officially recognize soccer," the most pop¬ ular spectator sport in tho world, Coleman advises, 'players and spectators should support the league, keeping the enthusiasm alive.* Performers present three parts of love e ofRea a big on, support to the department to warrant Its Inclusion to toe gen¬ eral P.E. classes. When the stu¬ dent body takes a moro active Interest, then soccer stands a good chance of school backing. opening p> Theater, mind - why has It taken 10 years for It to come back to Fres¬ no Stato College? "The Battle of the Sexes,* directed by Ralph Salgado, ls an outstanding presentation of Inter¬ pretative literature. The final performance will be tonight at 8:15 In the Arena Theatre. Eight readers, four men and (our women, presented the whole complicated affair of love In three parts to a near-capacity opening night audience. Beatty says ideal ticket includes many races t Athletic make toe decision. The issue was taken to Student Court only to hear the to Include a new sport to the Intramural program, but only to act in an advisory capacity. The power lies with toe college, specifically with the Men's Physical EducaUon Department, the intramural sponsors, and not But what was the problem and Other new sports are to be In¬ cluded to the collego program? •The Intramural program Is not part of toe association, bulls strlcUy part of the P. E. Instruc¬ tion," explained Coach Coleman. It ls therefore not subject to stu¬ dent revision. "We recognized toe need for soccer but toe lntrsmural pro- or staff to schedule it. And we can't buy equipment for every team sport that FSC students may play to,' Coleman said. He went on to emphasize that even If It could be Included and adequately taught, It first should be an outgrowth of toe general class T-r 11 big c: )t for el a Jew, an Irishman and an Italian. *lf you can get those four to there, you've got a pretty flashy ticket," said Dr. WlUlam Beatty, chair¬ man of tho anthropology-sociol¬ ogy department. Dr. Beatty spoke on 'Minority Relations* yesterday to a meeting of tho California College Repub- Dr. Beatty described toe pre¬ sent status of toe Negro to Amer¬ ican society to terms of anthro¬ pology and sociology. In about half the Negro famUles tho father ls a negative enUty, Dr. Beatty said. 'Therefore, too famUy is and black mUitancy. A negaUvo Income tax, whereby the nation's poor would be guar¬ anteed a fixed, minimum salary, a program would ellmtoato our present welfare program, Dr. Beatty said, but "a radical re- wltty during the evening and they demonstrated a needed fresh ap¬ proach to the now-standardized Commendable literary works of nine authors were chosen to the show was organized to set phase. The phases were How the Dattle Began, The Battle Contln- The show opened with Mark Twain's humorous piece entitled •The Diaries of Adam and Eve.' Ken Crabtree and Christine Sar- oyan staged fine performances as Adam and Eve with their good drocles and toe Lion' (Bernard Shaw). Dennis Rlckard and Linda Hayworto wore cast as husband and wife in a pre-Christian era. lUgh points of the show Included Floy Payntor's performance In James Thurber's 'Unicorn in the Garden" and Charlene Smith's reading of a sorrowful poem in The Mess of Love. Jim Clark's portrayals In •What You Don't Know Won't Hurt You "Til Later* and "The Short Happy Life of Francis Ma- t prepared yet I top < Many of toe picture crowds of cheering s at Sing Out '66 concerts. They Imply - that their message Is wholeheartedly taken up by tho mUltary people. Well, parUy: a always ready to drudgery to : of I d tho usual quality of This does not mean that toe soldier ls demonstrating his devotion to their kind of politics, or morality either. Far from It: everywhere the US Army goes, a largo num¬ ber of Indigenous people dlvort their business enterprise to that upplying any k GI < They do a booming business. (Incidentally, since toe GI ls always highly touted as toe "aver¬ age American* and'anybody next door,* the clvUlzed citizenry of any country hosting US troops gets an eye-opening demonstra¬ tion of what "we" are like, Judging from tho red neon fun districts inspired by toe GI, and it Is not surprising that all official co¬ operation ls given to publicizing the Sing Out organization. That's called diplomacy. Neither ls it le US object to mUltary perfidious aversion to regimen¬ tation, or fighting: it's caUed choosing your own company.) Iclty they get ls big on thoy write. For ln- /hat Color ls God's Skin?" Now, in tho days of me¬ dieval theological speculation this would have been a worthy subject for several lifetimes of is the most trifling and insignifi¬ cant attribute of a God that could be thought of, regardless of any conclusions that are reached. pie, ;. These young peo- Duthful e nthe slasm and optimism, a enviable position of I organization (Moral Re-Arma¬ ment) wealthy enough to equip threo large troupes with excellent sound equipment, write, direct and rehearse them to a very slick state of perfection, and send toe m gaily off on a lovely world tour s of applau i In audience they smUe happUy ai tours (a kind of freedom) aren't free, either. Also that toe human tendency ls not to smile and clap HANK BRADLEY Negro males h said, and usuaUy providers. ConsequenUy, ho continued, Negroes aro stUl financially In¬ capable of educating themselves. They still congregate to big cities and tend to look to the Democratic party for assistance, or at least program. "Which Is toe reason, Isn't It, why you've (RepubUcana) taken such beatings," Dr. Beatty said. The voters did not vote against Sinatra stars in Pop Arts movie "Come Blow Your Horn,* a so¬ phisticated comedy about two bachelor brothers who share a luxurious New York penthouse, ls toe Friday Night FUm to be shown free to students In Indus¬ trial Arts 101 today. Frank Sinatra, Lee 'j. Cobb, JU1 St. John and Barbara Rush star to the fllrn based on toe suc¬ cessful Broadway play. Earl Whitfield, program dlrec- ' tor of the sponsoring Senate Board on Arts and Lectures, ex¬ pects standing room only at both performances at 6 and 6 o'clock. Seating ls limited to ISO. -yj-Sxjt Th« Dairy K52S?\ ii'slo* r""ar. a<u- Bualnaaa 333, t.la- EDITOR Gary M. Cooke MANAGING EDITOR Carole Sarklslan ASST. MANAGING EDITOR Katoy Moultorop SPORTS EDITOR Mike Ryan PHOrOGRAPHY EDITOR Gary Daloyan STUDENT GOVERNMENT EDITOR Mary Lou Fleming ADVERTISING MANAGER Phil Young ASST. ADVERTISING MANAGER Dave Gunter CIRCULATION Richard Coddlngton, John Walke EXCHANGE EDITOR Carol Brugmann CLUB NEWS EDITOR LUly Morlshlma DAY EDITORS Monday jorm Gates Tuesday Dick Chang Wednesday Tina Amopole Thursday jjues Stumer Friday Mary Lou Fleming
Object Description
Title | 1966_12 The Daily Collegian December 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 | Dec 9, 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 |
1111 [>\II.Y COI.LF
Friday. December 9. 1966
Editor:
Congratulations are to order
for Theta Chi Fraternity and
Tony *Legs" PereUa. Eighteen
campus groups competed against
each other a short Ume ago to
havo their nominee win tho tlUe
of having toe most 'Gorgeous
Gam* on campus. Theta Chi en¬
tered into toe fun and contributed
a great deal more than any other
group. Homan Hall followed to
second place.
The Class of 1968 would like
to thank these two groups and toe
others who helped to make this
The
t i t:
k will bo :
INTERNATIONALS
much more Involved In the Amo
The soccer dispute which v.
rekindled again last season In
request for Inclusion In too lntr
mural program, and finally (,
two balls, is not ovor; It U stl
President, Junior Class
'Up With People'
Editor:
Somo Reactions to *Up With
What ls their avowed purpose?
It ls a trifle obscure. Most ofthe
media concerning Moral Re-
Armament and Its traveling
groups *Slng Out '66" aro devoted
to pictures and stories of toe
great noisy enthusiastic recep¬
tion given them wherever they
LETTERS
appear, In vastly greater propor¬
tion than to what thoy stand for.
They preach very Uttlo and enter¬���tain a lot, In a very competent
young-modern format, using
and roll bands, pop music, folk
songs of tho pastoral variety, and
cheerleaders. Lots of noise, en¬
thusiasm, and rhythm.
They seem to propose a change
In, or revival of, or something to
do with moral standards. This
they do In a gay lilting way with
a perpetual smile and unison
gestures, with the precision of a
rooting section.
and reflections being deep-
seated, introspective and ser-
profound teachings as these
people would give from the busi¬
nesslike vivacity of a rooting
Their publicity ls superb.They
vast successes and their
e described as hits. Not
of dissent. It ls strange
of people shelling
rlumphs. Perhaps
soccer team, composedof foreign
weekly in tho FresnoClty League,
a part of toe California Soccer
Last season "America" re-
soccer bo Included In the intra¬
mural program. The request was
A delegation then went to Coach
Coleman. Tho answer? "No.* Stu¬
dents caught up to toe Issue
pointed \o Coleman's "uncooper¬
ative spirit* and his "refusal to
•Other colleges and universities
have It, such as UCLA and Stan¬
ford, but they are quite a bit
Asked If the collego could spon¬
sor the city league team, he
replied that It would again cntaU
the responsibility of the college
In scheduling, providing equlp-
lnsurance, transportation, etc.
■But until we can officially
recognize soccer," the most pop¬
ular spectator sport in tho world,
Coleman advises, 'players and
spectators should support the
league, keeping the enthusiasm
alive.*
Performers present
three parts of love
e ofRea
a big on,
support to the department to
warrant Its Inclusion to toe gen¬
eral P.E. classes. When the stu¬
dent body takes a moro active
Interest, then soccer stands a
good chance of school backing.
opening p>
Theater,
mind - why has It taken 10
years for It to come back to Fres¬
no Stato College?
"The Battle of the Sexes,*
directed by Ralph Salgado, ls an
outstanding presentation of Inter¬
pretative literature. The final
performance will be tonight at
8:15 In the Arena Theatre.
Eight readers, four men and
(our women, presented the whole
complicated affair of love In
three parts to a near-capacity
opening night audience.
Beatty says ideal ticket
includes many races
t Athletic
make toe
decision. The issue was taken
to Student Court only to hear the
to Include a new sport to the
Intramural program, but only to
act in an advisory capacity.
The power lies with toe college,
specifically with the Men's
Physical EducaUon Department,
the intramural sponsors, and not
But what was the problem and
Other new sports are to be In¬
cluded to the collego program?
•The Intramural program Is
not part of toe association, bulls
strlcUy part of the P. E. Instruc¬
tion," explained Coach Coleman.
It ls therefore not subject to stu¬
dent revision.
"We recognized toe need for
soccer but toe lntrsmural pro-
or staff to schedule it. And we
can't buy equipment for every
team sport that FSC students
may play to,' Coleman said.
He went on to emphasize that
even If It could be Included and
adequately taught, It first should
be an outgrowth of toe general
class
T-r 11
big c:
)t for el
a Jew, an Irishman and an Italian.
*lf you can get those four to there,
you've got a pretty flashy ticket,"
said Dr. WlUlam Beatty, chair¬
man of tho anthropology-sociol¬
ogy department.
Dr. Beatty spoke on 'Minority
Relations* yesterday to a meeting
of tho California College Repub-
Dr. Beatty described toe pre¬
sent status of toe Negro to Amer¬
ican society to terms of anthro¬
pology and sociology. In about
half the Negro famUles tho father
ls a negative enUty, Dr. Beatty
said. 'Therefore, too famUy is
and black mUitancy.
A negaUvo Income tax, whereby
the nation's poor would be guar¬
anteed a fixed, minimum salary,
a program would ellmtoato our
present welfare program, Dr.
Beatty said, but "a radical re-
wltty during the evening and they
demonstrated a needed fresh ap¬
proach to the now-standardized
Commendable literary works
of nine authors were chosen to
the show was organized to set
phase. The phases were How the
Dattle Began, The Battle Contln-
The show opened with Mark
Twain's humorous piece entitled
•The Diaries of Adam and Eve.'
Ken Crabtree and Christine Sar-
oyan staged fine performances as
Adam and Eve with their good
drocles and toe Lion' (Bernard
Shaw). Dennis Rlckard and Linda
Hayworto wore cast as husband
and wife in a pre-Christian era.
lUgh points of the show Included
Floy Payntor's performance In
James Thurber's 'Unicorn in the
Garden" and Charlene Smith's
reading of a sorrowful poem in
The Mess of Love.
Jim Clark's portrayals In
•What You Don't Know Won't Hurt
You "Til Later* and "The Short
Happy Life of Francis Ma-
t prepared yet I
top <
Many of toe picture
crowds of cheering s
at Sing Out '66 concerts. They
Imply - that their message Is
wholeheartedly taken up by tho
mUltary people. Well, parUy: a
always ready to
drudgery to
: of I
d tho
usual quality of
This
does not mean that toe soldier
ls demonstrating his devotion to
their kind of politics, or morality
either. Far from It: everywhere
the US Army goes, a largo num¬
ber of Indigenous people dlvort
their business enterprise to that
upplying any k
GI <
They do a booming business.
(Incidentally, since toe GI ls
always highly touted as toe "aver¬
age American* and'anybody next
door,* the clvUlzed citizenry of
any country hosting US troops
gets an eye-opening demonstra¬
tion of what "we" are like, Judging
from tho red neon fun districts
inspired by toe GI, and it Is not
surprising that all official co¬
operation ls given to publicizing
the Sing Out organization. That's
called diplomacy. Neither ls it
le US object to mUltary
perfidious aversion to regimen¬
tation, or fighting: it's caUed
choosing your own company.)
Iclty they get ls big on
thoy write. For ln-
/hat Color ls God's
Skin?" Now, in tho days of me¬
dieval theological speculation
this would have been a worthy
subject for several lifetimes of
is the most trifling and insignifi¬
cant attribute of a God that could
be thought of, regardless of any
conclusions that are reached.
pie,
;. These young peo-
Duthful e
nthe
slasm and optimism, a
enviable position of I
organization (Moral Re-Arma¬
ment) wealthy enough to equip
threo large troupes with excellent
sound equipment, write, direct
and rehearse them to a very slick
state of perfection, and send toe m
gaily off on a lovely world tour
s of
applau
i In
audience they smUe happUy ai
tours (a kind of freedom) aren't
free, either. Also that toe human
tendency ls not to smile and clap
HANK BRADLEY
Negro males h
said, and usuaUy
providers.
ConsequenUy, ho continued,
Negroes aro stUl financially In¬
capable of educating themselves.
They still congregate to big cities
and tend to look to the Democratic
party for assistance, or at least
program.
"Which Is toe reason, Isn't It,
why you've (RepubUcana) taken
such beatings," Dr. Beatty said.
The voters did not vote against
Sinatra stars in
Pop Arts movie
"Come Blow Your Horn,* a so¬
phisticated comedy about two
bachelor brothers who share
a luxurious New York penthouse,
ls toe Friday Night FUm to be
shown free to students In Indus¬
trial Arts 101 today.
Frank Sinatra, Lee 'j. Cobb,
JU1 St. John and Barbara Rush
star to the fllrn based on toe suc¬
cessful Broadway play.
Earl Whitfield, program dlrec-
' tor of the sponsoring Senate
Board on Arts and Lectures, ex¬
pects standing room only at both
performances at 6 and 6 o'clock.
Seating ls limited to ISO.
-yj-Sxjt Th« Dairy K52S?\
ii'slo* r""ar. a |