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Student Body Elections Voting Begins For ASB Officers tod*; In the primary election tor student body offices, while plana are being made tor a counting begins, Ik. a run-off Is necessary for the The main poll, in front of the Library, will remain open until 4 p.m. Polls between the Sci¬ ence-Agriculture Buildings and mediately after the main poll closes, If there an not protests filed, according to John Baranek, election committee chairman. If there are any protests filed by the candidates, the protests moat be taken care of before said Mike Case, Junior political sci¬ ence major; Jay Goodwin, Junior •octal welfare major; John F. Ramirez, Junior political science rally will be held Tuesday from major; and Tom Tusan, Junior l-« p.m. at the platform between political science major, the Science and Education-Psy¬ chology Buildings. Gary Yama- moto, student body president, win act as moderator tor the Bannister, Junior public admtnls- (ConUnued on Pace 3, Cot 5) Summer Study Program Is Cut UC Professor To Discuss Russian-Chinese Conflict Dr. Robert Scalaplno, an au¬ thority in Asia, will speak on the •Battle of the Glints-Russia and China,* Tuesday at 1 p.m. In the Little Theatre. Scalaplno, a member of the political science department of the University of California at Berkeley, has traveled through¬ out the Orient and Africa for the past twenty years. He. has n Foundation, the Ford Foundation and the Rockefeller Foundation. He Is a consultant to the Rocke¬ feller Brothers Fund and the Ford Foundation and to the Govern¬ mental Affairs Institute. Scalaplno has also served as research consultant to the Amer¬ ican Assembly at Columbia Uni¬ versity and as a guest lecturer t universities In Korea, Hong He received his masters de¬ gree and doctorate at Harvard University. from a trip through 20 Asian and African countries, at which Urns he worked on a project for the Rockefeller Fc celved grants from the Carnegie Kong, Manila, Malaya and Japan. Noted Cellist Ira Lehn To Perform On Campus a Lehn will perform Tuesday In the Music Building Recital Hall at 8:30 p.m. under the sponsorship of the Fresno State College Senate Board on Tickets are free to students with student body cards and to faculty members, $2 for adults and $1 for students without cards. Tickets are available In the Stu¬ dent Body President's Office. Lehn, a faculty member at the University of California at Santa Barbara, has appeared with the Michigan Civic Orchestra, the Eastman-Rochester Symphony and the Philadelphia Orchestra and with a number of symphony orchestras In California. Among these are tho Santa Barbara Sym¬ phony, the Monterey Symphony and the Santa Maria Symphony. He has taught at the University of Tulsa, the Eastman School of Music In Rochester, N. Y., and at the Texas Christian University In Fort Worth. Tex. Presently he Is on tour and will appear In towns throughout Cal- Due To New Members Word was received Friday that the total funds allocated In the state budget for matching by FSC will be $2,300, as opposed I 117,800 for the 1968-871 Funds this year were matched by the federal government under the Economic Opportunity Act of 1984, with FSC providing 10 per cent of the funds. The matching percentage Is In the process of being revised upward by Con¬ gress 20 or 28 per cent. This means that the most FSC could receive next academic year Is $11,800. The students working under the program,now receive a total of about $12,000 a month. Dr. Raymond Brewer, program administrator, said as a result of the cut, the program will be severely limited tor next year and abolished In the summer. erated on funds supplied by the Research Committee. The sum¬ mer program is separate from that for the academic year. Students qualify to work under the program essentially by fi¬ nancial need. The original pro¬ gram was authorized In 1984 only for students In the low In¬ come bracket families. Financial need is based on a $1,800 Income necessary for liv¬ ing during the school year less resources. The figure was re¬ vised this year from $1,480. Studenl faculty n for various public service or¬ ganizations, not for private In¬ dustry. They include the Boy Scouts of America, the Economic Opportunities Commission, the Trinity Street Youth Opportunity Center and three county school districts. Wages run from $1.30 to $2.60 College Y Lecture: 'Poor Should Unite' DR. BOBERT SCALAPINO By KATHY KIRSCB The poor need a powerful or¬ ganization to represent them so that people will respond to their demands,* said Art Jenkins of the Fresno Tenant's Council In an Encounter lecture at the Collego Y. "People know the problems of the poor,* he said citing the nu¬ merous surveys and polls taken Reagan, Board Compromise The California State Board of Education, which In the past has been a solid wall of opposition to State School Superintendent Max Rafferty, la undergoing poll- Unruh Asks Study Of Higher Education n amendment to the resolution for an ln-depth study of the fi¬ nancing and organization of Cal¬ ifornia's public higher education system has been offered by As¬ sembly Speaker Jesse M. Unruh, originator of the resolution. The suggested changes, ac¬ cording to Unruh, are a result of Governor Ronald Reagan's re- the Junior colleges, together with a study of how efficiently the present system Is organized and operated. Admission policies and poa- and tuition will also be studied by e study of student and faculty unrest at the Univer¬ sity (of California) be eliminat¬ ed.* The study, to be performed by Education which Unruh chairs, will decide how much in state support will be required < next decade tor the University of California, the state colleges and Unruh said he had also taken action to reduce the appropriation for the Joint Commltteeoo Higher Education by $80,000. The committee, according to Unruh, 'should complete a com¬ prehensive study of the financing and organization of higher educa¬ tion in California. A progress re¬ port should be available to the i of the Legislature on r appropriation of $260,000 osopbical changes under Gov¬ ernor Ronald Reagan, according to an education news service bul¬ letin. The release says Rafferty Is encountering fewer board mem¬ bers who openly quarrel with his positions. This Is due primarily to the addition of Dr. Thomas G. Harward, a physician, and How¬ ard Day, an Insurance man. Harward and Day, both Repub¬ licans, are Reagan appointees who replaced Thomas Braden and William Norrls, both Democrats. Braden and Norrls wore promin¬ ent opponents of Rafferty. Both Harward and Day placed themselves on Rafferty'a side with their stand on the Ryan BUI to reorganize teacher Investiga¬ tion practices. Harward opposed the measure and Day abstained. The Mil failed by one vote. The bulletin notes there has ferty. Dorman Commons, board president, who often engaged in heated debates with Rafferty, has The bulletin added the board has eased its "hard-line* sup¬ port of the Fisher BUI setting teacher preparation require¬ ments and the Casey BUI aimed at universal foreign language in¬ struction in the sixth, seventh and eighth grades. Graduation Fees Due By Apr. 21 Students planning to take part in Juno graduation exercises have until Apr. 21 to pay their senior commencement activity fee. The $10.60 fee will cover the cost of the diploma, cap and gown and all senior activities Includ¬ ing the class gift. Students who are unable to at¬ tend commencement need to pay only $3.26 tor the diploma. Any students who order after the deadline will not be mailed their diploma until after Oct. 1, 1987. Students wishing to order a cap and gown by mall must In¬ clude the following Information to the Bookstore: chest I ment, height, head slz< But, In the political sense, peo¬ ple want to know who you are, what you do and how many are in your organization, he said. "In other words, they want to know how many votes you have.* The Fresno Tenant's Council receives funds from the Office of Economic Opportunity. The Council also has an MBlUttoa with the California Center of Community Development. Jenkins said that 988 families live in public housing in Fresno. The Council serves an area In¬ cluding 33,000 people. He accuaed private Industry and businesses of using tokenism in dealing with the employment problem among minority groups. also available in the Bookstore. the United States,* be said. He noted, "The problems of West Fresno are generally the same as the other states In the areas of employment, housing and health problems. "Communication,* he said, "Is a tremendous problem In dealing with the poor. We must get peo¬ ple to express thslr own Ideas and participate.* The major effort of the organi¬ zation was to get people to know each other In their own neigh¬ borhoods, said Jenkins. Jenkins criticized the churches and state agencies in their role of helping the poor person. "No churches In West Fresno are doing more than holding serv¬ ices,* he noted. "And farther, In California there is only one person from a minority group on the Public Housing Board and no poor per¬ son." Jenkins also said that no super- Imposed program could work. "The people must come up with their own Ideas,' he concluded.
Object Description
Title | 1967_04 The Daily Collegian April 1967 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1967 |
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 | April 3, 1967 Pg. 1 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1967 |
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 | Student Body Elections Voting Begins For ASB Officers tod*; In the primary election tor student body offices, while plana are being made tor a counting begins, Ik. a run-off Is necessary for the The main poll, in front of the Library, will remain open until 4 p.m. Polls between the Sci¬ ence-Agriculture Buildings and mediately after the main poll closes, If there an not protests filed, according to John Baranek, election committee chairman. If there are any protests filed by the candidates, the protests moat be taken care of before said Mike Case, Junior political sci¬ ence major; Jay Goodwin, Junior •octal welfare major; John F. Ramirez, Junior political science rally will be held Tuesday from major; and Tom Tusan, Junior l-« p.m. at the platform between political science major, the Science and Education-Psy¬ chology Buildings. Gary Yama- moto, student body president, win act as moderator tor the Bannister, Junior public admtnls- (ConUnued on Pace 3, Cot 5) Summer Study Program Is Cut UC Professor To Discuss Russian-Chinese Conflict Dr. Robert Scalaplno, an au¬ thority in Asia, will speak on the •Battle of the Glints-Russia and China,* Tuesday at 1 p.m. In the Little Theatre. Scalaplno, a member of the political science department of the University of California at Berkeley, has traveled through¬ out the Orient and Africa for the past twenty years. He. has n Foundation, the Ford Foundation and the Rockefeller Foundation. He Is a consultant to the Rocke¬ feller Brothers Fund and the Ford Foundation and to the Govern¬ mental Affairs Institute. Scalaplno has also served as research consultant to the Amer¬ ican Assembly at Columbia Uni¬ versity and as a guest lecturer t universities In Korea, Hong He received his masters de¬ gree and doctorate at Harvard University. from a trip through 20 Asian and African countries, at which Urns he worked on a project for the Rockefeller Fc celved grants from the Carnegie Kong, Manila, Malaya and Japan. Noted Cellist Ira Lehn To Perform On Campus a Lehn will perform Tuesday In the Music Building Recital Hall at 8:30 p.m. under the sponsorship of the Fresno State College Senate Board on Tickets are free to students with student body cards and to faculty members, $2 for adults and $1 for students without cards. Tickets are available In the Stu¬ dent Body President's Office. Lehn, a faculty member at the University of California at Santa Barbara, has appeared with the Michigan Civic Orchestra, the Eastman-Rochester Symphony and the Philadelphia Orchestra and with a number of symphony orchestras In California. Among these are tho Santa Barbara Sym¬ phony, the Monterey Symphony and the Santa Maria Symphony. He has taught at the University of Tulsa, the Eastman School of Music In Rochester, N. Y., and at the Texas Christian University In Fort Worth. Tex. Presently he Is on tour and will appear In towns throughout Cal- Due To New Members Word was received Friday that the total funds allocated In the state budget for matching by FSC will be $2,300, as opposed I 117,800 for the 1968-871 Funds this year were matched by the federal government under the Economic Opportunity Act of 1984, with FSC providing 10 per cent of the funds. The matching percentage Is In the process of being revised upward by Con¬ gress 20 or 28 per cent. This means that the most FSC could receive next academic year Is $11,800. The students working under the program,now receive a total of about $12,000 a month. Dr. Raymond Brewer, program administrator, said as a result of the cut, the program will be severely limited tor next year and abolished In the summer. erated on funds supplied by the Research Committee. The sum¬ mer program is separate from that for the academic year. Students qualify to work under the program essentially by fi¬ nancial need. The original pro¬ gram was authorized In 1984 only for students In the low In¬ come bracket families. Financial need is based on a $1,800 Income necessary for liv¬ ing during the school year less resources. The figure was re¬ vised this year from $1,480. Studenl faculty n for various public service or¬ ganizations, not for private In¬ dustry. They include the Boy Scouts of America, the Economic Opportunities Commission, the Trinity Street Youth Opportunity Center and three county school districts. Wages run from $1.30 to $2.60 College Y Lecture: 'Poor Should Unite' DR. BOBERT SCALAPINO By KATHY KIRSCB The poor need a powerful or¬ ganization to represent them so that people will respond to their demands,* said Art Jenkins of the Fresno Tenant's Council In an Encounter lecture at the Collego Y. "People know the problems of the poor,* he said citing the nu¬ merous surveys and polls taken Reagan, Board Compromise The California State Board of Education, which In the past has been a solid wall of opposition to State School Superintendent Max Rafferty, la undergoing poll- Unruh Asks Study Of Higher Education n amendment to the resolution for an ln-depth study of the fi¬ nancing and organization of Cal¬ ifornia's public higher education system has been offered by As¬ sembly Speaker Jesse M. Unruh, originator of the resolution. The suggested changes, ac¬ cording to Unruh, are a result of Governor Ronald Reagan's re- the Junior colleges, together with a study of how efficiently the present system Is organized and operated. Admission policies and poa- and tuition will also be studied by e study of student and faculty unrest at the Univer¬ sity (of California) be eliminat¬ ed.* The study, to be performed by Education which Unruh chairs, will decide how much in state support will be required < next decade tor the University of California, the state colleges and Unruh said he had also taken action to reduce the appropriation for the Joint Commltteeoo Higher Education by $80,000. The committee, according to Unruh, 'should complete a com¬ prehensive study of the financing and organization of higher educa¬ tion in California. A progress re¬ port should be available to the i of the Legislature on r appropriation of $260,000 osopbical changes under Gov¬ ernor Ronald Reagan, according to an education news service bul¬ letin. The release says Rafferty Is encountering fewer board mem¬ bers who openly quarrel with his positions. This Is due primarily to the addition of Dr. Thomas G. Harward, a physician, and How¬ ard Day, an Insurance man. Harward and Day, both Repub¬ licans, are Reagan appointees who replaced Thomas Braden and William Norrls, both Democrats. Braden and Norrls wore promin¬ ent opponents of Rafferty. Both Harward and Day placed themselves on Rafferty'a side with their stand on the Ryan BUI to reorganize teacher Investiga¬ tion practices. Harward opposed the measure and Day abstained. The Mil failed by one vote. The bulletin notes there has ferty. Dorman Commons, board president, who often engaged in heated debates with Rafferty, has The bulletin added the board has eased its "hard-line* sup¬ port of the Fisher BUI setting teacher preparation require¬ ments and the Casey BUI aimed at universal foreign language in¬ struction in the sixth, seventh and eighth grades. Graduation Fees Due By Apr. 21 Students planning to take part in Juno graduation exercises have until Apr. 21 to pay their senior commencement activity fee. The $10.60 fee will cover the cost of the diploma, cap and gown and all senior activities Includ¬ ing the class gift. Students who are unable to at¬ tend commencement need to pay only $3.26 tor the diploma. Any students who order after the deadline will not be mailed their diploma until after Oct. 1, 1987. Students wishing to order a cap and gown by mall must In¬ clude the following Information to the Bookstore: chest I ment, height, head slz< But, In the political sense, peo¬ ple want to know who you are, what you do and how many are in your organization, he said. "In other words, they want to know how many votes you have.* The Fresno Tenant's Council receives funds from the Office of Economic Opportunity. The Council also has an MBlUttoa with the California Center of Community Development. Jenkins said that 988 families live in public housing in Fresno. The Council serves an area In¬ cluding 33,000 people. He accuaed private Industry and businesses of using tokenism in dealing with the employment problem among minority groups. also available in the Bookstore. the United States,* be said. He noted, "The problems of West Fresno are generally the same as the other states In the areas of employment, housing and health problems. "Communication,* he said, "Is a tremendous problem In dealing with the poor. We must get peo¬ ple to express thslr own Ideas and participate.* The major effort of the organi¬ zation was to get people to know each other In their own neigh¬ borhoods, said Jenkins. Jenkins criticized the churches and state agencies in their role of helping the poor person. "No churches In West Fresno are doing more than holding serv¬ ices,* he noted. "And farther, In California there is only one person from a minority group on the Public Housing Board and no poor per¬ son." Jenkins also said that no super- Imposed program could work. "The people must come up with their own Ideas,' he concluded. |