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THE NEWS...t% Dance Cancelled Due to production difficuiues toe African dance program si Campos Gardens wUl not be held A weekly study hall, set up by toe department of economics, will meet on Fridays tor toe Newman Club eneral meeting of the New- Journalists Will Represent FSC At National Convention follow the 7:30 p.m. Folk Mass tomorrow In toe Newman Center. Reservations for toe Jan. 24 to 28 snow trip will be taken. A $4 deposit must be made. The total cost for the trip Is $8. Philosophy Students Vats Club The Veterans Club will hold an organizational meeting Thursday at 9p.m.ln Education-Psychology 112. Any United States or foreign veteran may attend. ACE The Association for CbUdhood Education, Student Branch, will meet tomorrow at 4 p.m. In Laboratory School 102. Bulletin boards, reading and math games, music and art will be d Circle K packaged dried fruit will be sold by Circle K, mens ser¬ vice organlzaUon, today and to¬ morrow outside toe Cafeteria from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Fruit will also be sold Mon¬ day, Tuesday and Wednesday next College literary magazine, will accept poetry, fiction and art Friday. Contributions may be turned ln to toe English department office, to 1303 N. Glenn, Fresno. Women's AH airs The CoUege Y Is sponsoring a recreation night Friday from 8 p.m. to midnight at toe CoUege Religious Center. Botswana Talk The Rev. George Swanson wlU speak on his experiences ln Botswana, Africa, before toe Canterbury Club tomorrow. The meeUng wUl be held at St. arch, 5073E.Shaw meeting tomorrow from 4-6 p.m. at 4444 N. Duke. SIS Mooting Service to International Stu¬ dents will meet In Education- Psychology 246 today at 1 p.m. Judo Club Sport Judo and self defense Instruction will be given at toe JUdo Club meeting tomorrow at 7:30 P.m. to the wrestling room of the Men's Gymnasium. Four black-belt holders will be to- i meeUng open to Sail Club A movie will be shown during toe meeUng tomorrow of toe Sailing Club to Social Science 105 at 7 p.m. Insurance Speaker Jack Hanley, an Insurance company representaUve, will speak at a Joint meeUng of Phi Chi Theta and Alpha Kappa psl, tomorrow ln Cafeteria Com¬ mittee Room 2 at B p.m. Sigma Delta CM, mens profes¬ sion Journalism fraternity, will sent two representatives to toe national SDX convention begin¬ ning Thursday ln Minneapolis. Attending the convention wUl be Art Margoslan, co-advisor for SDX, and Alan Austin, fraternity president. Margoslan will also represent toe San Joaquin Valley Professional Chapter of SDX dur¬ ing toe regional meeUng at toe onventlon will be talks by Harrison Salisbury, assistant managing editor for the New YorkTlmes; Vice-President Hubert Humphrey; Otic Chandler, publisher of toe Los Angeles Ties; and Wes Gallagher, general manager of the Associated Press. Also speaking at the convention will be Negro newsman, BUl Matney of NBC who will speak on riot coverage. Roger Tatartan, editor and vice president of Unl- Anti-War Beat At LBJ's Alma Mater SAN MARCOS, Texas (CPS) - The anti-war movement has reached the alma materof Presi¬ dent Lyndon B. Johnson. At Southwest Texas State Col¬ lege last week three students toe coUege press. UC Checks In-Class Drug Use BERKELEY (AP) - A Uni¬ versity of California official has discounted reports toat a woman LSD at a sociology class seminar, although he said toe substance might have been marijuana or a lesser psychdellc drug. The dean of students office on the Berkeley campus confirmed Sunday toat lt Is lnvestigattng the The girl was treated at Cowell Memorial Hospital on campus Thursday and released toe next day. The Incident took place at toe member off campus and toe Wall Street Comes To F.S.C.!! A 20th CENTURY APPROACH - TO A 20th CENTURY PROBLEM Capital Funding Corporation is a financial services corporation offering Insurance to fit your need . . . (not just a package Program). We also offer investment company shares and the professional coordinated ac¬ quisition of each. Our registered representatives possess experience and background in total financial planning for businessmen, professional men and the col¬ lege man. This information might enable you to capitalize on inflation. CASEY JONES CHUCK MARSCHALL KILL SWIESO We urge you to investigate the financial services available thru our Registered Representatives. CAPITAL FUNDING CORP. SUITE 402 - DEL WEBB'S TOWNEHOUSE • TELEPHONE 485-9710 MUTUAL FUNDS... INVESTMENTS .. . INSURANCE Campus Radio Programed For Dormitory Students Tuesday. November 14. 1967 THE DAILY COLLEGIAN—i (EDITORS NOTE: This Is toe first of a two part article on toe FSC campus radio.) Deep within the Speech Arts BuUdlng of Fresno State CoUege rests toe kernel, planted yet un- germlnated, of a vast communi¬ cations network. That seed Is toe campus Radio sUUon-KFSR. Each week day, from 3 to 11:15 p.m., toe FSC students who com¬ prise toe radio staff open toe channels of KFSR to present music, news and comment. The broadcasts open wlto 'The Star Spangled Banner,* toUowed���by toe staUon description andlo- alr. But on toe air 11 Is not—exactly. Three 8-watt transmitters lo¬ cated In toe coUege dormitories. Baker, Graves and Homan, draw each day's broadcast Into their halls. There toe *on toe air* transmission ends. It Is confined to toe dorms by carrier current, a «wtred-wlreless* system on 660 kilocycles. KFSR Is a commercial radio staUon patterned after KNBR, an NBC affiliate of San Francisco. KFSR Is staffed enUrely by FSC radio-TV department acting as KFSR programming Is aimed at the coUege student, and consists mosUy of music: Jazz, folk, pop and classical. Ten minutes of news Is presented each hour. The staUon Is operated as a student radio learning experi¬ ence. Campus poUUcal cam¬ paigns, club and organlzaUon ln¬ formaUon are among toe Items presented. Every evening toe staUon con¬ ducts an 'Impression Series* (ConUnued on Page 6, Col. S) Universal National ^ Service In Campus Police Tell Of Parking Problems Evening students are toe most consistent parking offenders ac¬ cording to Campus Police Chief Douglas Bambrldge. •Approximately 50 per cent of the citations given each day are for • " Ordinance 9A forbids parking late ln toe afternoon and take parking spaces for which toey don't have permits, hoping toat we won't catch them." Bambrldge said toat Barking regulations most frequently vio¬ lated are Ordinances 8, 9 and 10. Ordinance 8A requires stu- lng sUcker on toe left side of states toat dally permits must be placed to toe right hand corner of the dashboard wlto toe face up. ■One of toe biggest daytime clUaUon problems Is students trying to use old one day permits Ordinance 10A states toat ve¬ hicles must be parked complete¬ ly within toe parking space and 10C prevents vehicles from being backed ln when parked ln dlag- onol and parallel spaces. 'The second biggest dayUme violation is 9G, parking over¬ time ln toe 30 minute zones,* Bambrldge said. BaU for traffic violations Is set by toe Fresno County Muni¬ cipal Court at S2 for all vio¬ lations except double parking which Is $5. Approximately $1,500 citations "Sorm I give ■We d OPEN 7 a.m.-ll p.m. 7 DAYS A WEEK FOR YOUR SHOPPING CONVENIENCE l-LB. DANISH BUTTER 83: 5-LB. GOLD MEDAL FLOUR 49 GRAY'S MARKET WHERE YOUR DOLLAR BUYS JUST A LITTLE BIT MORE CORNER OF SHAW & CEDAR Sight By WALTER GRANT WASHINGTON (CPS)-A small- scale 'naUonal service* program could be Initiated within toe next few years, if support comes from toe right quarters. Such i 1 give young people toe opportunity to serve their country ln non-mlll- tary endeavors and would meet educational and manpower needs. Interested young people would be matched with service opportuni¬ ties consistent wlto both toe needs of toe nation and with their own were written to October, an all- time monthly high. "We now have an officer on full-time parking duty for 13 hours,* said Bambrldge. He listed another reason for the high rate of evening school parking violations. 'Some students have toe Idea they can park anywhere on cam¬ pus after 5 p.m. wttooutpermlts. •We have opened restricted parking areas to students wlto general permits after 5 p.m. but they sUll have to buy per- Campus police are on duty between 7 a.m. and 8 p.m. Mon¬ day through Thursday and 7 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Friday. They check approximately 5,000 cars during the day and 2,000 at night. The concept of universal na¬ tional service has been widely discussed ln recent years. But, although toe Idea has been sup¬ ported by Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara, lt has never received wide-spread support, prlmarUy because of toe conflict wlto toe draft. But now, a non-profit organi¬ zation called toe NaUonal Service Secretariat Is seeking support for a naUonal service program which would be as far removed from toe SelecUve Service System as pos¬ sible. The secretariat Is support¬ ed by private funds, not by the government. Donald Eberly, execuUve di¬ rector of toe secretariat, said bis organlzaUon Is attempting to set up a network of service opportun¬ ities which would work somewhat like a computer dating system. For Instance, young persons In¬ terested to working for about two years ln some service agency would feed lnformaUon about themselves Into a computer. The computer, to turn, would match each Individual wlto toe service acUvlty best suited for him. Eberly sees toe program sup¬ plying young people to work to such fields as educaUon, health, conservation, com munllyser¬ vice, and overseas assistance. ExlsUng agencies, such as the Peace Corps, toe Job Corps, VISTA, and toe Red Cross may participate In the program and receive volunteers. But toe scope of toe program would be almost unlimited, Eberly said. 'Oppor¬ tunlUes would be open for some¬ one to work ln a hospital ta New York or to teach ln Appalachla, for example.' YOU CAN CUT YOUR STUDY TIME BY 50% The OPT1MATION SPEED READING COURSE teaches a method ol study that will help you cut your total study time by 50%. New classes are beginning next week. Come to a FREE Demonstration Lesson this week and see how it's .FREE Demonstration Lessons TUES.,N0V. 14 - 8 P.M. WED., NOV. 15 - 8 P.M. THURS., NOV. 16 - 8 P.M. 2904 NORTH BLACKSTONE MONEY-BACK GUARANTEE OPT1MATION g clency to AT LEAST FOUR TIMES YOUR BEGINNING LEVEL. OPTIMATION Speed Reading Phone 266-0236
Object Description
Title | 1967_11 The Daily Collegian November 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 | Nov 14, 1967 Pg. 4-5 |
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 | THE NEWS...t% Dance Cancelled Due to production difficuiues toe African dance program si Campos Gardens wUl not be held A weekly study hall, set up by toe department of economics, will meet on Fridays tor toe Newman Club eneral meeting of the New- Journalists Will Represent FSC At National Convention follow the 7:30 p.m. Folk Mass tomorrow In toe Newman Center. Reservations for toe Jan. 24 to 28 snow trip will be taken. A $4 deposit must be made. The total cost for the trip Is $8. Philosophy Students Vats Club The Veterans Club will hold an organizational meeting Thursday at 9p.m.ln Education-Psychology 112. Any United States or foreign veteran may attend. ACE The Association for CbUdhood Education, Student Branch, will meet tomorrow at 4 p.m. In Laboratory School 102. Bulletin boards, reading and math games, music and art will be d Circle K packaged dried fruit will be sold by Circle K, mens ser¬ vice organlzaUon, today and to¬ morrow outside toe Cafeteria from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Fruit will also be sold Mon¬ day, Tuesday and Wednesday next College literary magazine, will accept poetry, fiction and art Friday. Contributions may be turned ln to toe English department office, to 1303 N. Glenn, Fresno. Women's AH airs The CoUege Y Is sponsoring a recreation night Friday from 8 p.m. to midnight at toe CoUege Religious Center. Botswana Talk The Rev. George Swanson wlU speak on his experiences ln Botswana, Africa, before toe Canterbury Club tomorrow. The meeUng wUl be held at St. arch, 5073E.Shaw meeting tomorrow from 4-6 p.m. at 4444 N. Duke. SIS Mooting Service to International Stu¬ dents will meet In Education- Psychology 246 today at 1 p.m. Judo Club Sport Judo and self defense Instruction will be given at toe JUdo Club meeting tomorrow at 7:30 P.m. to the wrestling room of the Men's Gymnasium. Four black-belt holders will be to- i meeUng open to Sail Club A movie will be shown during toe meeUng tomorrow of toe Sailing Club to Social Science 105 at 7 p.m. Insurance Speaker Jack Hanley, an Insurance company representaUve, will speak at a Joint meeUng of Phi Chi Theta and Alpha Kappa psl, tomorrow ln Cafeteria Com¬ mittee Room 2 at B p.m. Sigma Delta CM, mens profes¬ sion Journalism fraternity, will sent two representatives to toe national SDX convention begin¬ ning Thursday ln Minneapolis. Attending the convention wUl be Art Margoslan, co-advisor for SDX, and Alan Austin, fraternity president. Margoslan will also represent toe San Joaquin Valley Professional Chapter of SDX dur¬ ing toe regional meeUng at toe onventlon will be talks by Harrison Salisbury, assistant managing editor for the New YorkTlmes; Vice-President Hubert Humphrey; Otic Chandler, publisher of toe Los Angeles Ties; and Wes Gallagher, general manager of the Associated Press. Also speaking at the convention will be Negro newsman, BUl Matney of NBC who will speak on riot coverage. Roger Tatartan, editor and vice president of Unl- Anti-War Beat At LBJ's Alma Mater SAN MARCOS, Texas (CPS) - The anti-war movement has reached the alma materof Presi¬ dent Lyndon B. Johnson. At Southwest Texas State Col¬ lege last week three students toe coUege press. UC Checks In-Class Drug Use BERKELEY (AP) - A Uni¬ versity of California official has discounted reports toat a woman LSD at a sociology class seminar, although he said toe substance might have been marijuana or a lesser psychdellc drug. The dean of students office on the Berkeley campus confirmed Sunday toat lt Is lnvestigattng the The girl was treated at Cowell Memorial Hospital on campus Thursday and released toe next day. The Incident took place at toe member off campus and toe Wall Street Comes To F.S.C.!! A 20th CENTURY APPROACH - TO A 20th CENTURY PROBLEM Capital Funding Corporation is a financial services corporation offering Insurance to fit your need . . . (not just a package Program). We also offer investment company shares and the professional coordinated ac¬ quisition of each. Our registered representatives possess experience and background in total financial planning for businessmen, professional men and the col¬ lege man. This information might enable you to capitalize on inflation. CASEY JONES CHUCK MARSCHALL KILL SWIESO We urge you to investigate the financial services available thru our Registered Representatives. CAPITAL FUNDING CORP. SUITE 402 - DEL WEBB'S TOWNEHOUSE • TELEPHONE 485-9710 MUTUAL FUNDS... INVESTMENTS .. . INSURANCE Campus Radio Programed For Dormitory Students Tuesday. November 14. 1967 THE DAILY COLLEGIAN—i (EDITORS NOTE: This Is toe first of a two part article on toe FSC campus radio.) Deep within the Speech Arts BuUdlng of Fresno State CoUege rests toe kernel, planted yet un- germlnated, of a vast communi¬ cations network. That seed Is toe campus Radio sUUon-KFSR. Each week day, from 3 to 11:15 p.m., toe FSC students who com¬ prise toe radio staff open toe channels of KFSR to present music, news and comment. The broadcasts open wlto 'The Star Spangled Banner,* toUowed���by toe staUon description andlo- alr. But on toe air 11 Is not—exactly. Three 8-watt transmitters lo¬ cated In toe coUege dormitories. Baker, Graves and Homan, draw each day's broadcast Into their halls. There toe *on toe air* transmission ends. It Is confined to toe dorms by carrier current, a «wtred-wlreless* system on 660 kilocycles. KFSR Is a commercial radio staUon patterned after KNBR, an NBC affiliate of San Francisco. KFSR Is staffed enUrely by FSC radio-TV department acting as KFSR programming Is aimed at the coUege student, and consists mosUy of music: Jazz, folk, pop and classical. Ten minutes of news Is presented each hour. The staUon Is operated as a student radio learning experi¬ ence. Campus poUUcal cam¬ paigns, club and organlzaUon ln¬ formaUon are among toe Items presented. Every evening toe staUon con¬ ducts an 'Impression Series* (ConUnued on Page 6, Col. S) Universal National ^ Service In Campus Police Tell Of Parking Problems Evening students are toe most consistent parking offenders ac¬ cording to Campus Police Chief Douglas Bambrldge. •Approximately 50 per cent of the citations given each day are for • " Ordinance 9A forbids parking late ln toe afternoon and take parking spaces for which toey don't have permits, hoping toat we won't catch them." Bambrldge said toat Barking regulations most frequently vio¬ lated are Ordinances 8, 9 and 10. Ordinance 8A requires stu- lng sUcker on toe left side of states toat dally permits must be placed to toe right hand corner of the dashboard wlto toe face up. ■One of toe biggest daytime clUaUon problems Is students trying to use old one day permits Ordinance 10A states toat ve¬ hicles must be parked complete¬ ly within toe parking space and 10C prevents vehicles from being backed ln when parked ln dlag- onol and parallel spaces. 'The second biggest dayUme violation is 9G, parking over¬ time ln toe 30 minute zones,* Bambrldge said. BaU for traffic violations Is set by toe Fresno County Muni¬ cipal Court at S2 for all vio¬ lations except double parking which Is $5. Approximately $1,500 citations "Sorm I give ■We d OPEN 7 a.m.-ll p.m. 7 DAYS A WEEK FOR YOUR SHOPPING CONVENIENCE l-LB. DANISH BUTTER 83: 5-LB. GOLD MEDAL FLOUR 49 GRAY'S MARKET WHERE YOUR DOLLAR BUYS JUST A LITTLE BIT MORE CORNER OF SHAW & CEDAR Sight By WALTER GRANT WASHINGTON (CPS)-A small- scale 'naUonal service* program could be Initiated within toe next few years, if support comes from toe right quarters. Such i 1 give young people toe opportunity to serve their country ln non-mlll- tary endeavors and would meet educational and manpower needs. Interested young people would be matched with service opportuni¬ ties consistent wlto both toe needs of toe nation and with their own were written to October, an all- time monthly high. "We now have an officer on full-time parking duty for 13 hours,* said Bambrldge. He listed another reason for the high rate of evening school parking violations. 'Some students have toe Idea they can park anywhere on cam¬ pus after 5 p.m. wttooutpermlts. •We have opened restricted parking areas to students wlto general permits after 5 p.m. but they sUll have to buy per- Campus police are on duty between 7 a.m. and 8 p.m. Mon¬ day through Thursday and 7 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Friday. They check approximately 5,000 cars during the day and 2,000 at night. The concept of universal na¬ tional service has been widely discussed ln recent years. But, although toe Idea has been sup¬ ported by Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara, lt has never received wide-spread support, prlmarUy because of toe conflict wlto toe draft. But now, a non-profit organi¬ zation called toe NaUonal Service Secretariat Is seeking support for a naUonal service program which would be as far removed from toe SelecUve Service System as pos¬ sible. The secretariat Is support¬ ed by private funds, not by the government. Donald Eberly, execuUve di¬ rector of toe secretariat, said bis organlzaUon Is attempting to set up a network of service opportun¬ ities which would work somewhat like a computer dating system. For Instance, young persons In¬ terested to working for about two years ln some service agency would feed lnformaUon about themselves Into a computer. The computer, to turn, would match each Individual wlto toe service acUvlty best suited for him. Eberly sees toe program sup¬ plying young people to work to such fields as educaUon, health, conservation, com munllyser¬ vice, and overseas assistance. ExlsUng agencies, such as the Peace Corps, toe Job Corps, VISTA, and toe Red Cross may participate In the program and receive volunteers. But toe scope of toe program would be almost unlimited, Eberly said. 'Oppor¬ tunlUes would be open for some¬ one to work ln a hospital ta New York or to teach ln Appalachla, for example.' YOU CAN CUT YOUR STUDY TIME BY 50% The OPT1MATION SPEED READING COURSE teaches a method ol study that will help you cut your total study time by 50%. New classes are beginning next week. Come to a FREE Demonstration Lesson this week and see how it's .FREE Demonstration Lessons TUES.,N0V. 14 - 8 P.M. WED., NOV. 15 - 8 P.M. THURS., NOV. 16 - 8 P.M. 2904 NORTH BLACKSTONE MONEY-BACK GUARANTEE OPT1MATION g clency to AT LEAST FOUR TIMES YOUR BEGINNING LEVEL. OPTIMATION Speed Reading Phone 266-0236 |