Sept 27, 1967 Pg. 2-3 |
Previous | 18 of 23 | Next |
|
|
This page
All
|
Loading content ...
:oMiVfil 2—THE DAILY COLLEGIAN . September 21. 1967 Impressions By Paul Sullivan, Jr. EDITOR'S NOTE: Impressions ls a reprint or an editorial broad¬ cast over KFSR. campus radio. There was a Ume, and not so very long ago, when a new or re¬ turning student would get a cheery heUo and a smile from a book¬ store employee. As a matter of fact you stiU can at the bookstore » City College. Chances books and so does the bookstore. There should be a better method devised for ordering the books. Many of the texts are sold out by the Ume students need them and this ls undoubtedly due to the fact that 1 ents of th be remembered that some of these are specialized and this keeps the price high. Putting aside the cost analysis for a moment, there should be a greater effort on the part of the fuU Ume staff to pass the word to the new and part-time help. Often Umes the clerks are as Ignorant as the shopper when lt comes to the locaUon of various SuggesUons have been passed along that the bookstore should caused' and the seeming lack of customer awareness ls the result of ha¬ rassment and severe fatigue. What puzzles us and Irritates us as well, ls the fact that this seems to be a continuing difficul¬ ty. It is true that the bookstore ls hampered by lack of space and there are always more prob¬ lems than the students ever hear about. The problem seems to be that Whether It's a division captain In Palo Alto, a beat cop In Fresno or a highway patrolman working out of San Diego, It's getting harder to have a conversaUon with a police officer these days wlthouth earing the sound of axes being ground. good chance to come to the defense of tho book- - store as regards the price of scholasUc texts. They are expen¬ sive but there ls good reason.The cost to the bookstore ls high also. jwslng t> o idea wl up ls but we suspect marginal and reasonable. School books are almost always limited producUon Items forpub- Ushers and this ls the reason they are so high In price. prices are a lltUe high In other areas such as paper and asso¬ ciated supplies. Again lt should space problems. There are how¬ ever significant changes and ex¬ pansion planned forthonowbook- store. However, unlike the mUls of the Lord they'll grind slow rather than sure. It would be weU to note that ■ problems of which m this seems to be rather difficult because the new booklists are submitted only to the College bookstore. Perhaps if enough pressure were brought to bear upon the right authorities one of might be able to supplement the store on campus. The only way at the present that this system can be beaten ls to find out ahead of Ume what Patrolman Needs Assistance-? By Eric Gilliam it any Try to talk to subject and soo gab gets around to the tough lot that poUcemen are supposedly facing due to the "Ump-wrlsted, molly-coddling, crlmlnal-orlen- t the average lawman le courts are not so ■ested In putting crlm- leglUmale wrath of society. This nonsense has fathered a number of false Impressions a- bout the nature of police work and Judicial admlnlstraUon. Two of these myths are l)The Idea that a policeman, faced with a situa¬ tion that requires a spUt- second carloads becai Judge decided rights were vt< wUl h I of I and Imprisonment; and 2) That pampered crooks are being l arguments are untrue- re's why. In California, as st, If not all, of the other , a policeman Is protected w from the legal conse- clrcumstances Indicated that As one state court decision put lt, "...It ls not the duty of the poUceman to close his eyes to evidence of crime." There are further safeguards. A policeman may arrestaperson In CalUornla, then and out that the arrest was Ul-founded. This ls not really surprising; j books wUl be needed andthenor- der them through an off campus store. If someone has done this successfully 11 would be Inter¬ esting to make a price comparl- There are many problems bc- selglng the campus bookstore and our cooperation as patrons wUl help. We hope In turn that the same treatment will be rendered by the bookstore employees be¬ cause our money ls Just as green courts to let "vicious criminals" continue their "nefarious activi¬ ties" free from any legal re- What all this lurid prose boUs lown to ls this: The cops are inhappy with the Escobedo- .llranda-Dorado decisions that lave ruled on the admlssabUlty if evidence, the validity of con- esslons and the right to Just Arrived : Sunrise Briar Pipes - $5 Comoy's Featured French Make Choice Shapes - 3 Finishes w PARKER^ PIPES and TOBACCOS plaint (misdemeanor) and. In the process of quieting things down, smells the dlstlncUve odor of burlng majljuana and sees a smoldering roach or smoking h, they then have reasonable le crime walks lr ls being-committed. The opera- They may then bi doors and search th They wUl be prote did HI" Panic? Quick calls to the chief? Hurried conferences with the city attorney? Nah...the citi¬ zen ls released with apologies and told that he had never really been arrested at all...Just "de¬ tained." Legal? You're damn right It's legal. Recourse In the some to police ls the Escobodo decision, the Illinois case that found Its way to the U.S. Supreme Court and resulted In Ihe dictum make wUl be recognized by the courts. This ruling had Its coun¬ terpart In California via the Do¬ rado decision and caused con¬ siderable forelock tugging among Jurists and teeth-gnashing among Most police departments now provide suspects with the Infor¬ mation that they have a right to by tl ^j99 fforeniwe *^^" DIAMOND RINGS BY Superb gold-arUsUcally fashioned to shimmer, glimmer so differently with Proctor's modern florentlne finish. Inspired by another age . . . now the absolute rago! Just part of oux huge Proctor's diamond ring coUectlon. Do see lt soon. Jewele • NO MONEY DOWN! .TERMS TO SUIT YOU! its Then there's the persistent Uluslon that the courts are grant¬ ing Carte Blanche to the under¬ world to carry on thelrbuslness. Much noise Is made by police spokesmen who "view with a- larm" the "grave trends" In the suspect, Is ordlnarUy give Investigation "focuses" on aper¬ son and ls repeated periodically during the prisoner's detention, parUcularly prior to the taking of any statement or confession. CThe second part of "Patrol¬ man Needs Assistance-?" wUl appear next week.) NANCY'S .» FLOWERS )jP FREE I Clovis & Kings Canyon SUNNYSIDE PLAZA PH: Days 251-8441 Nights 255-3013 cept holidays and examination periods by the Fresno State CoUege Association. Mall sub¬ scriptions $8 a semester, $15 a year. Editorial office Busi¬ ness 235, telephone 487-2170. Business office. Agriculture 220, telephone 487-2266. Computer Dating Service Initiated An IBM dating st set up by Phi Mu Alpha Slnfonla, naUonal honorary music frater¬ nity. Funds received from the ser¬ vice will be used to establish the Verne D. Delaney Memorial Scholarship. Delaney, professor of music, died during tho summer. He had taught at FresnoStateCollege for 27 years. The dating service wUl help Interested women may fill out prepared quesUonnalres without charge. Men whofillout the forms will be charged $1 and receive the names, addresses, telephone numbers of five women compaUble dates. Student body card numl being provided for Identlf said Wahlstrom. Data Second Folk Mass Will Rock Tonight Once again the strains of the guitar and the lyrics of the folk song "Today" wUl Invade the Newman Center Chapel as the center sponsors Its second Folk The unique Mass will be cele¬ brated al 7:30 tonight In the New¬ man Center by the Rev. Father Sergio Negro. pends on the response of the students, said Wahlstrom. "It's each other, especially fresh- .-ated I t time much comment among Ihe stu¬ dents present. Led through the liturgy of the mass by guitar shlpers and igathered closely around the altar. Throughout the Mass several folk songs adapted to fit the Mass were sung. At first hesitant, the singers gained new confidence with each rondlUon until when the popular tune "To¬ day" was played tho words could be heard In the Center's parking Erasable? Irreplaceable/ Corrasable! ^Uffl EATON'S CORRASABLE i BOND " SPECIALIZING IN VOLKSWAGEN AifD SPORTS CAR SERVICE: COME IN SATURDAY OR SUNDAY CALL FOR APPOINTMENT -LUBRICATION *TUNE* BRAKES 'MINOR REPAIRS k^-H Thrifty Green Stamps k^^ VERN ALCORN CHEVRON i'/4 MLEast of FSC on Shaw Ph.299-2994 THR NRWS •H% slmUar personallUes. All men will be matched with all women who have flled forms. Men may purchase as many pames as they wish at Ave for »1. SlmUarly, women may be matched with a number of men, Circle K wUl conduct a busi¬ ness meeting at 4:30 p.m. today in EducaUon-Psychology 219. Recreation Club Beginning tonight the Recrea¬ tion Club wUl sponsor a recrea¬ tion night every Wednesday from 7-9 p.m. Among the many acUvltles are basketball, volleyball, badminton and swimming. the Air Science BuUdlng. Any students desiring further lnformaUon may contact Jeanle Seebohn at 251-6643. Judo Club wUl meet this eve¬ ning from 7:30 to 8:45 upstairs In the Men's Gymnasium/ Lutheran Fellowship Vesper services in the new Pax Del (Peace of God) Chapel have been scheduled for every Wednesday, 9:30-10 p.m., by the Lutheran Student Fellowship. Karl Larson, president, an¬ nounced that everyone ls welcome to attend the services which will be medltaUve In nature and ex¬ perimental In quality. The Pax Del Chapel, which was to the College Religious Centen Mean Machine. Here's the mean one. Honda Scrambler 160. Designed n and rugged for rough riding, sharp and cool for the campus. Clean, perfectly-balanced for easy handling. And Honda's dependable OHC 4-stroke engine delivers up to 116 mpg. Performance? Speeds up to 75 mph. Initial price, upkeep and insurance are impressively low. Parking? No problem. Make the scene at any of Honda's 1,8C dealers. Take a safety demonstration ride. Watch for the Scrambler 160. You'll agree it's a mean machine — at a lowdown price. Shapes the world of wheels
Object Description
Title | 1967_09 The Daily Collegian September 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 | Sept 27, 1967 Pg. 2-3 |
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 | :oMiVfil 2—THE DAILY COLLEGIAN . September 21. 1967 Impressions By Paul Sullivan, Jr. EDITOR'S NOTE: Impressions ls a reprint or an editorial broad¬ cast over KFSR. campus radio. There was a Ume, and not so very long ago, when a new or re¬ turning student would get a cheery heUo and a smile from a book¬ store employee. As a matter of fact you stiU can at the bookstore » City College. Chances books and so does the bookstore. There should be a better method devised for ordering the books. Many of the texts are sold out by the Ume students need them and this ls undoubtedly due to the fact that 1 ents of th be remembered that some of these are specialized and this keeps the price high. Putting aside the cost analysis for a moment, there should be a greater effort on the part of the fuU Ume staff to pass the word to the new and part-time help. Often Umes the clerks are as Ignorant as the shopper when lt comes to the locaUon of various SuggesUons have been passed along that the bookstore should caused' and the seeming lack of customer awareness ls the result of ha¬ rassment and severe fatigue. What puzzles us and Irritates us as well, ls the fact that this seems to be a continuing difficul¬ ty. It is true that the bookstore ls hampered by lack of space and there are always more prob¬ lems than the students ever hear about. The problem seems to be that Whether It's a division captain In Palo Alto, a beat cop In Fresno or a highway patrolman working out of San Diego, It's getting harder to have a conversaUon with a police officer these days wlthouth earing the sound of axes being ground. good chance to come to the defense of tho book- - store as regards the price of scholasUc texts. They are expen¬ sive but there ls good reason.The cost to the bookstore ls high also. jwslng t> o idea wl up ls but we suspect marginal and reasonable. School books are almost always limited producUon Items forpub- Ushers and this ls the reason they are so high In price. prices are a lltUe high In other areas such as paper and asso¬ ciated supplies. Again lt should space problems. There are how¬ ever significant changes and ex¬ pansion planned forthonowbook- store. However, unlike the mUls of the Lord they'll grind slow rather than sure. It would be weU to note that ■ problems of which m this seems to be rather difficult because the new booklists are submitted only to the College bookstore. Perhaps if enough pressure were brought to bear upon the right authorities one of might be able to supplement the store on campus. The only way at the present that this system can be beaten ls to find out ahead of Ume what Patrolman Needs Assistance-? By Eric Gilliam it any Try to talk to subject and soo gab gets around to the tough lot that poUcemen are supposedly facing due to the "Ump-wrlsted, molly-coddling, crlmlnal-orlen- t the average lawman le courts are not so ■ested In putting crlm- leglUmale wrath of society. This nonsense has fathered a number of false Impressions a- bout the nature of police work and Judicial admlnlstraUon. Two of these myths are l)The Idea that a policeman, faced with a situa¬ tion that requires a spUt- second carloads becai Judge decided rights were vt< wUl h I of I and Imprisonment; and 2) That pampered crooks are being l arguments are untrue- re's why. In California, as st, If not all, of the other , a policeman Is protected w from the legal conse- clrcumstances Indicated that As one state court decision put lt, "...It ls not the duty of the poUceman to close his eyes to evidence of crime." There are further safeguards. A policeman may arrestaperson In CalUornla, then and out that the arrest was Ul-founded. This ls not really surprising; j books wUl be needed andthenor- der them through an off campus store. If someone has done this successfully 11 would be Inter¬ esting to make a price comparl- There are many problems bc- selglng the campus bookstore and our cooperation as patrons wUl help. We hope In turn that the same treatment will be rendered by the bookstore employees be¬ cause our money ls Just as green courts to let "vicious criminals" continue their "nefarious activi¬ ties" free from any legal re- What all this lurid prose boUs lown to ls this: The cops are inhappy with the Escobedo- .llranda-Dorado decisions that lave ruled on the admlssabUlty if evidence, the validity of con- esslons and the right to Just Arrived : Sunrise Briar Pipes - $5 Comoy's Featured French Make Choice Shapes - 3 Finishes w PARKER^ PIPES and TOBACCOS plaint (misdemeanor) and. In the process of quieting things down, smells the dlstlncUve odor of burlng majljuana and sees a smoldering roach or smoking h, they then have reasonable le crime walks lr ls being-committed. The opera- They may then bi doors and search th They wUl be prote did HI" Panic? Quick calls to the chief? Hurried conferences with the city attorney? Nah...the citi¬ zen ls released with apologies and told that he had never really been arrested at all...Just "de¬ tained." Legal? You're damn right It's legal. Recourse In the some to police ls the Escobodo decision, the Illinois case that found Its way to the U.S. Supreme Court and resulted In Ihe dictum make wUl be recognized by the courts. This ruling had Its coun¬ terpart In California via the Do¬ rado decision and caused con¬ siderable forelock tugging among Jurists and teeth-gnashing among Most police departments now provide suspects with the Infor¬ mation that they have a right to by tl ^j99 fforeniwe *^^" DIAMOND RINGS BY Superb gold-arUsUcally fashioned to shimmer, glimmer so differently with Proctor's modern florentlne finish. Inspired by another age . . . now the absolute rago! Just part of oux huge Proctor's diamond ring coUectlon. Do see lt soon. Jewele • NO MONEY DOWN! .TERMS TO SUIT YOU! its Then there's the persistent Uluslon that the courts are grant¬ ing Carte Blanche to the under¬ world to carry on thelrbuslness. Much noise Is made by police spokesmen who "view with a- larm" the "grave trends" In the suspect, Is ordlnarUy give Investigation "focuses" on aper¬ son and ls repeated periodically during the prisoner's detention, parUcularly prior to the taking of any statement or confession. CThe second part of "Patrol¬ man Needs Assistance-?" wUl appear next week.) NANCY'S .» FLOWERS )jP FREE I Clovis & Kings Canyon SUNNYSIDE PLAZA PH: Days 251-8441 Nights 255-3013 cept holidays and examination periods by the Fresno State CoUege Association. Mall sub¬ scriptions $8 a semester, $15 a year. Editorial office Busi¬ ness 235, telephone 487-2170. Business office. Agriculture 220, telephone 487-2266. Computer Dating Service Initiated An IBM dating st set up by Phi Mu Alpha Slnfonla, naUonal honorary music frater¬ nity. Funds received from the ser¬ vice will be used to establish the Verne D. Delaney Memorial Scholarship. Delaney, professor of music, died during tho summer. He had taught at FresnoStateCollege for 27 years. The dating service wUl help Interested women may fill out prepared quesUonnalres without charge. Men whofillout the forms will be charged $1 and receive the names, addresses, telephone numbers of five women compaUble dates. Student body card numl being provided for Identlf said Wahlstrom. Data Second Folk Mass Will Rock Tonight Once again the strains of the guitar and the lyrics of the folk song "Today" wUl Invade the Newman Center Chapel as the center sponsors Its second Folk The unique Mass will be cele¬ brated al 7:30 tonight In the New¬ man Center by the Rev. Father Sergio Negro. pends on the response of the students, said Wahlstrom. "It's each other, especially fresh- .-ated I t time much comment among Ihe stu¬ dents present. Led through the liturgy of the mass by guitar shlpers and igathered closely around the altar. Throughout the Mass several folk songs adapted to fit the Mass were sung. At first hesitant, the singers gained new confidence with each rondlUon until when the popular tune "To¬ day" was played tho words could be heard In the Center's parking Erasable? Irreplaceable/ Corrasable! ^Uffl EATON'S CORRASABLE i BOND " SPECIALIZING IN VOLKSWAGEN AifD SPORTS CAR SERVICE: COME IN SATURDAY OR SUNDAY CALL FOR APPOINTMENT -LUBRICATION *TUNE* BRAKES 'MINOR REPAIRS k^-H Thrifty Green Stamps k^^ VERN ALCORN CHEVRON i'/4 MLEast of FSC on Shaw Ph.299-2994 THR NRWS •H% slmUar personallUes. All men will be matched with all women who have flled forms. Men may purchase as many pames as they wish at Ave for »1. SlmUarly, women may be matched with a number of men, Circle K wUl conduct a busi¬ ness meeting at 4:30 p.m. today in EducaUon-Psychology 219. Recreation Club Beginning tonight the Recrea¬ tion Club wUl sponsor a recrea¬ tion night every Wednesday from 7-9 p.m. Among the many acUvltles are basketball, volleyball, badminton and swimming. the Air Science BuUdlng. Any students desiring further lnformaUon may contact Jeanle Seebohn at 251-6643. Judo Club wUl meet this eve¬ ning from 7:30 to 8:45 upstairs In the Men's Gymnasium/ Lutheran Fellowship Vesper services in the new Pax Del (Peace of God) Chapel have been scheduled for every Wednesday, 9:30-10 p.m., by the Lutheran Student Fellowship. Karl Larson, president, an¬ nounced that everyone ls welcome to attend the services which will be medltaUve In nature and ex¬ perimental In quality. The Pax Del Chapel, which was to the College Religious Centen Mean Machine. Here's the mean one. Honda Scrambler 160. Designed n and rugged for rough riding, sharp and cool for the campus. Clean, perfectly-balanced for easy handling. And Honda's dependable OHC 4-stroke engine delivers up to 116 mpg. Performance? Speeds up to 75 mph. Initial price, upkeep and insurance are impressively low. Parking? No problem. Make the scene at any of Honda's 1,8C dealers. Take a safety demonstration ride. Watch for the Scrambler 160. You'll agree it's a mean machine — at a lowdown price. Shapes the world of wheels |