Oct 12, 1966 Pg. 4- Oct 13, 1966 Pg. 1 |
Previous | 22 of 54 | Next |
|
|
This page
All
|
Loading content ...
—Till: DAILY COLLEGIA!1 *7f4e S<pxvitA*tuA*v deer, the armed wave who Invaded the Sleri opening day of Uie late Bulipups gird for opener at San Jose nan football bo unveUed tola Friday Bullpups travel to San 'Old-timers' return for alumni polo game aren't even playing, but a Halrabcdlan scheduled n! game for Saturday over had In th that alumni te abodlan. *We tho top Bulldog scorer and a CCAA honorable monUon. Hal Hevenor, MVP and captain in 1964, will play center back and 1963 MVP Vlck French wUl bo at a guard position. game and concludes, "Wo havo the edgo lnphyslcal conditioning but not In skill and ability.' At tho othor guard positions will bo John Edwards, who Is still attending Fresno State but com¬ pleted his ellgibUlty last year, and a formor teammate of Atenclo, Dave McCluro, for whom . 1963. the Shatter captained 1 season. When snow begins to fall Good catches oftrouthavobeen turning linemen. Former McLano Bulldogs of 1965. in tho higher elevations, doer reported at Shaver, Huntington, Highlander Larry Chlcolan, a herds start to migrate to lower and Courtrlght Reservoir. Flies, swift halfback, Is expected to help elevations where food Is more spinners, and live bait havo all reodUy available. valuable players of The deer concentrate at the Eastern brook trout and Ger- In tho BuUpup camp and lt Is lower aroas which are more accessible to tho average hunter, fl:.:il::.; is '.i.su.illy ,:./*; 1 ji:.st prior and the hunting naturally lm- to spawning. Pick a lako that has browns In lt and give lt a try. So far Ihoro havo boon no heavy You may be pleasantly surprised. snows to tore* deer down from Black bass Ashing, which has intramural trac K meet s Hairabedlan s concerned, goodies wUl be uard Stevo Garborson, who ran ut of eligibility but Is still at 'SC; forwards Dennis Bledsoo, . CCAA honorable mention In 963, BUl Whipple, also of 1963 nd conterback Rick Roes, a 1964 'Dogs will be lc ■ the first Frosn signups are underway INSURED INVE5TMEHT5, SAVINGS AND INSURANCE COVERAGE FOR MEN CHECK OUR VALUES AND RETURNS BEFORE INVESTING IN ANY INSURANCE OR INVESTMENT PLAN EXECUTIVE OFFICES: 1413-1423 W. SHAW TELEPHONE 224-1960 aoocooeoooooooocxioo T«f DAILY First of its kind COLLEGIAN F R E S N tl->V> ( AI.1FOR.MA COLLEGE THURSDAY, OCTOBER 13. 1966 Magazine started by college prof f Russ 30 federal employees scheduled to attend 5th annual Career Day CoUege, 1 ! Kres editor and found Friday In Feder sno State College has had such h allows graduating studonts More than 300,000 persons aro mployed by the federal govern- nent in California and spokes¬ men say that as tho state matures r qualified personnel There Is a great domand for students with degrees In forestry, criminology, liberal arts, scl- Persons not holding special¬ ized degrees are ollglble to take the Fedoral Service Entrance Examination, which Alls thous- , The i ■o personnel loral Career help alleviate openings aro avail: positions are In c Bully, bully - CHARGEI! lie Martha Brewster (Barbara Sellers) looks tormance of the comedy hit will bo held in Friday night the play will premiere for the Campus rebels rate tops academically rebels h and protests against Tho results of the study by a team of psychological Asso- ported by a newsletter of tbo As¬ sociation of California StatoCol- lego Professors. lie pollcti A special study was made at tho Unlvorslty of California at Berk¬ eley although tho campus was also among the eight colleges and unl- . versifies covered In the general study. to 3 p.m. th Infor- avallablo, typical training pro¬ grams, opportunities for career development, and graduate ed¬ ucation, careor benefits, and ap¬ plication procedures. of the first Russian language ■Nash student* as lt Is called In English, was originated to pro¬ vide foreign language students with articles In Russian at tho high school and college levol without the political propaganda found In other magazines. Despite only two months of publication, the magazine has reached a circulation of 2,500 with a large number of sub¬ scriptions from foreign such subjects as the Russian Ballet, Sputnik, the University I Washington, vocabulary qulz- is, Russian history, science ctlon, crossword puzzles, on- It to tt - ...'.: ro recorded on tape by Profes- or G. Kalistratoff, chairman of -lo foreign language department t Fresno City College. The three peed tapes (fast, medium, slow) ro then used by Russian classes hroughout the country. Before •Atarj I Student teachers to act on issues lgnaged to deal with them at tho organization's "Welcome Night" mooting on Oct. 5. Probably one of the most Im¬ portant duties ofthe special corn- constant changes and Interpreta¬ tions of stato credontlallng laws ahead progra o bargaining and cultural understanding topt California educators egislators from speeding 1 with Spanish-speaking Mexican-American communities? Perhaps oneofthomostlmpor- ant groups In the SCTA will be :he Student GovornmontCommlt- :ee. Its Job w I candldati ft those < :\v I Idlng Dr. Pronln on tho busl- 5 and academic problems lived in publishing the ;azlne, Is Dr. C. W. Bird, i of tho department of for- i languages at Fresno Stato ho market for •NashStudent" onstantly expanding with more i 1,109 schools now teaching In the foreign language are $4.50 a year for , $6.50 for non-students cents for single copies. onthly (Sept. toMay)a Young says/We can't know if God is dead' Speech team to compete Fresno State College's foren- slcs squad will bogln Its first competition of the year at the annual fall practice tournament this weekend at San Fernando Valloy State College. Sponsored by tho Pacific South¬ west Collegiate Foronslcs Asso¬ ciation (PSCFA), the two-day some 30 to 35 collegiate teams from California, Arizona,Toxas, Nevada and Utah. Ton students, two faculty ad¬ visors and a graduato assistant will make tho trip, according to Dave Natharlus, assistant direc¬ tor of forenslcs. Three debating teams of two members each and .owpotnt on tho contro- ipic, "Is God Dead? "was I by William Young, it tho weekly meeting of Ye J.1.7, library administrator for t ho E esno City Schools, was spe, kers In a series of three Arts 16'J vangellcal agnostic ac- ccpt knowing about God and pros said •It bolls down to the ac- of unknowing, because t thL question of there being Yearbook bargain will end Friday 1967 copies of yearbook, may 1 $2. Starting Mc 'Campus," the tho FSC squad. The s I will c 1 I. : of Ron Capps and Randy Walsh. Pat Prewitt and Choryl Wren will mike up tho Junior women's team and tho novice team members will bo Len Del Carlo and Kevin ■Man has only relative knowl¬ edge and that's all. 'God Is Dead' theologians aro not agnostics," Young stated. "It's traditional In Protestant theology to dabblo In ■If we really accept agnosti¬ cism then we're Intellectually honest," he continued. ■Agnosti¬ cism makes lt posslblo for a man ■An agnostic can't be arrogant or aggressive because ho doesn't ■Campus" editor Bob Jones urges ? largest staff In the history the Yearbook at Fresno State d sail that students will "get
Object Description
Title | 1966_10 The Daily Collegian October 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 | Oct 12, 1966 Pg. 4- Oct 13, 1966 Pg. 1 |
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 |
—Till: DAILY COLLEGIA!1
*7f4e S |