March 14, 1968 Pg. 2-3 |
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Opinion Still In The Kitchen Frederic V. Ness to have a change of bi art on the | ezey affair came away ee ting a Ml dlsappomt- ed, perhap Dr. Nes. eloquently dellv to the point ment, reinforcing his reas i.'LiUn,; i -asons for not committee and Its supporte easily eve though they sa> he knuckled to making his Indeed, some pro-Mozeyi rather well-received (considering the argely pro- Mezey) st tement. The hea d of tho olleg j r.i 1,. : off a firm and gument to suppo the policy, at Fresno or any othe r college to give out th ls information an d he Isn't abou to yield to pressuro to After commending the Mezey supporters for showing a "re¬ strained* and "mature response" ln their displeasure over Ms decision, Dr. Ness made lt quite clear the decision was Ms and Ms alone. It admittedly was not an easy one. The pressure was heavy from both directions. He summed up his "classical dilemma" by' quoting from the loquacious former president Harry Truman: 'If you can't stand the heat, get out of the kitchen." Dr. Ness Mt at the heart of the issue with Just one word-conjec¬ ture. Every reason handed down by others for a decision that was entirely Ms ls absolute conjecture. Students and other faculty mem¬ bers "do not know and cannot know" the reasons. Even Dr. Dale P. Bush acknowledged that ln a brief "point of information* following There were no raucous outbursts from the gallery of about 400. It reflected the manner ln which the Mezey protest has been carried out thus far and Dr. Ness acknowledged Ms appreciation. But lt clearly appears now that Robert Mezey's lone hope rests ln the grievance filed by the English department. That and that alone holds the only key if he wants to remain at FSC. Frederic Ness, to lo Ms original decision. He ls withstand- :tll) 1: EUROPE One Way CHARTER JET FLIGHTS ^**2feTj!w ^JlTvw^tnr' available for faculty, staff,! State Colleges Fare: $225 one way Office ol 1 International Proitrams 1 1 lbtlO Boltowaj Avenue 1 1 San Francisco, Calif. 94132 1 rOTE,sr,r.:;,E'^r.u"'M,,p Letters to the Editor People Are Different What confronts this college community confronts the world: tho difficult struggle of people at¬ tempting to live with, work with, and understand other people with differing experiences, habits and differences through tho arduous precedent, wh wrong, becorm famlllarlly-oft clety will determine rofoundly their faith ln Ion of that struggle be- } for them dramatically sary postu more expediently t scholarship and objectivity wher we stand with regard to the larg¬ er world-wide conflicts beyond. For some, who will go to the bat¬ tlefields of Vietnam or perhaps Korea, or those who go to teach the face of that uncertain future. That these Issues are a challenge to the integrity of professional educators seems clear. It is "not that a democratically and aca- tmlcally oriented people have e right to question. The ques- >n of whether our college presl- nt acted prudently and wisely traditions. The precedent we set, here, and the reasons and evi¬ dence brought forth supporting that precedent will have lasting r colleagues elsewhere; 't tell hi; personally afraid that r charge to ir c will be enhanced ivllege ofsu K MEMO ft TO MALE STUDENTS JOINING THE SERVICE? STl'BnLEFTELD i ASSOCIATES 2409 Merced Si- Fresno. California s and review Ihe types of 1 mes increasingly unclear sur confidence In them when d as a people Increasingly PATRICK H. POOLE irtment of Advanced Studies School of Education Criticizes Noss of abridging academic freedc that the only possible reason y could have for not rehiring R Infuriated And Sad I Ills name ls used ir Jokes ln a ou have nothing I taking a good at yourself. it with yourself. teacher ls a person who ls to teach us to be lndepen- things that aren't realistic? Don't be sheep. Think of how you would really Uke to live, and go In dying. The pathwa i him. Some believe you d not hesitate to fire anyone e oplMons you strongly ob- furor that has developed this Issue could be quietly cl up If you would simply tel THE DAILY COLLEGIAN r decision. If you h Mental Health Program Will Be Held Saturday 1 Hyglen Kyle on "The Emotionally Disturbed and Neurologlcally Handicapped Child* Saturday at 9 a.m. ln the Cafeteria. The workshop will have three existing programs and services i aid such Indian Music Feature man, Frosno Cou of Mental Health; Darol Sorenson, school psychologist for the King's Canyon Unified School District; Harry Rosenberg, director of special education for the Vlsalla Unified School District; Kenneth L. Wright, director of special education for the Kings Canyon Unified School District; Herbert California State'Department of Mental Health; Don Beedle, Ju¬ venile court psychologist, and Mrs. Michael Kershaw, Fresno Mental Health Association. Internationals Set Song Fest at 7:30 p.m ln the Newman Center handed drum of India. Shyamada s Chakraborhty andNav a Kumar Panda, Nava Kamar has taught iclan from India, are o colleges and performed as a change tour sponsored by theUnlve rsltyofCallfor- sltarlsts ln India and Nopal. Tickets for the concert w Shyamada and Friday ln front of the ntrlcate ln strument, has studied muslc since he at the door. l child ln Bengal, Ind FSC Schedules Weekend Lab In Psychology sensitivity ln 1 latlonshlps and group process Joel Grossman, The p will s d the t^ n Isolated c The extension division will offer two uMts of credit (Psychology 302) for the session. Work at the camp will Include contemplation Drive one of these dressed-up Chevrolefs instead of a stripped-down something else. ry ■orl. t: Calendar '68 CHEVROLET prices start lower than any other '68 CHEVELLE prices start lower than any other '68 CHEVY II NOVA KLaJaWU jfT^atai-l prices start lower than any other full-size models. Look at It. Chev¬ mid-size models. Obviously nothing's economy car so generously sized. %C£\ rolet's 4-door sedan is roomier than newer in mid-size cars than Chevelle. Nova Is big enough for a family on va¬ Wr any other American car except one There's fresh styling, the long-hood, cation, yet it slips into parking spaces (DiGicco's^k luxury sedan. Drive it. You tell by Its smooth and silent ride that Chevrolet footed wheelbases now—both on a others pass by. With its new wide stance and compuler-tuned chassis, FOUR SONS Or" tTALTnt A quality runs deep. Buy it! Get a Chev¬ wider, steadier tread. You get big-car Nova rides as silent and steady as cars rolet instead of a medium-priced name power, big-car ride In a quick-sire costing a lot more, and It comes with and you can have, say, power steering, package. No wonder Chevelle outsells Ihe biggest standard V8 In its field. « DINNERS F^rx E Open 4 p.m.-3 a-m. ?H M0 N. BUdcatone !<*&. (oHB^lmont) Ad 7-7054 power brakes and a radio besidesl everything in its field. Nova's the not-too-small car. NOW-IMPALA V8 SALE! Save on specially equipped Sport Coupe, 4-Door Sedan or Station Wagons! /"ffl^mtnT
Object Description
Title | 1968_03 The Daily Collegian March 1968 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1968 |
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 | March 14, 1968 Pg. 2-3 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1968 |
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 | Opinion Still In The Kitchen Frederic V. Ness to have a change of bi art on the | ezey affair came away ee ting a Ml dlsappomt- ed, perhap Dr. Nes. eloquently dellv to the point ment, reinforcing his reas i.'LiUn,; i -asons for not committee and Its supporte easily eve though they sa> he knuckled to making his Indeed, some pro-Mozeyi rather well-received (considering the argely pro- Mezey) st tement. The hea d of tho olleg j r.i 1,. : off a firm and gument to suppo the policy, at Fresno or any othe r college to give out th ls information an d he Isn't abou to yield to pressuro to After commending the Mezey supporters for showing a "re¬ strained* and "mature response" ln their displeasure over Ms decision, Dr. Ness made lt quite clear the decision was Ms and Ms alone. It admittedly was not an easy one. The pressure was heavy from both directions. He summed up his "classical dilemma" by' quoting from the loquacious former president Harry Truman: 'If you can't stand the heat, get out of the kitchen." Dr. Ness Mt at the heart of the issue with Just one word-conjec¬ ture. Every reason handed down by others for a decision that was entirely Ms ls absolute conjecture. Students and other faculty mem¬ bers "do not know and cannot know" the reasons. Even Dr. Dale P. Bush acknowledged that ln a brief "point of information* following There were no raucous outbursts from the gallery of about 400. It reflected the manner ln which the Mezey protest has been carried out thus far and Dr. Ness acknowledged Ms appreciation. But lt clearly appears now that Robert Mezey's lone hope rests ln the grievance filed by the English department. That and that alone holds the only key if he wants to remain at FSC. Frederic Ness, to lo Ms original decision. He ls withstand- :tll) 1: EUROPE One Way CHARTER JET FLIGHTS ^**2feTj!w ^JlTvw^tnr' available for faculty, staff,! State Colleges Fare: $225 one way Office ol 1 International Proitrams 1 1 lbtlO Boltowaj Avenue 1 1 San Francisco, Calif. 94132 1 rOTE,sr,r.:;,E'^r.u"'M,,p Letters to the Editor People Are Different What confronts this college community confronts the world: tho difficult struggle of people at¬ tempting to live with, work with, and understand other people with differing experiences, habits and differences through tho arduous precedent, wh wrong, becorm famlllarlly-oft clety will determine rofoundly their faith ln Ion of that struggle be- } for them dramatically sary postu more expediently t scholarship and objectivity wher we stand with regard to the larg¬ er world-wide conflicts beyond. For some, who will go to the bat¬ tlefields of Vietnam or perhaps Korea, or those who go to teach the face of that uncertain future. That these Issues are a challenge to the integrity of professional educators seems clear. It is "not that a democratically and aca- tmlcally oriented people have e right to question. The ques- >n of whether our college presl- nt acted prudently and wisely traditions. The precedent we set, here, and the reasons and evi¬ dence brought forth supporting that precedent will have lasting r colleagues elsewhere; 't tell hi; personally afraid that r charge to ir c will be enhanced ivllege ofsu K MEMO ft TO MALE STUDENTS JOINING THE SERVICE? STl'BnLEFTELD i ASSOCIATES 2409 Merced Si- Fresno. California s and review Ihe types of 1 mes increasingly unclear sur confidence In them when d as a people Increasingly PATRICK H. POOLE irtment of Advanced Studies School of Education Criticizes Noss of abridging academic freedc that the only possible reason y could have for not rehiring R Infuriated And Sad I Ills name ls used ir Jokes ln a ou have nothing I taking a good at yourself. it with yourself. teacher ls a person who ls to teach us to be lndepen- things that aren't realistic? Don't be sheep. Think of how you would really Uke to live, and go In dying. The pathwa i him. Some believe you d not hesitate to fire anyone e oplMons you strongly ob- furor that has developed this Issue could be quietly cl up If you would simply tel THE DAILY COLLEGIAN r decision. If you h Mental Health Program Will Be Held Saturday 1 Hyglen Kyle on "The Emotionally Disturbed and Neurologlcally Handicapped Child* Saturday at 9 a.m. ln the Cafeteria. The workshop will have three existing programs and services i aid such Indian Music Feature man, Frosno Cou of Mental Health; Darol Sorenson, school psychologist for the King's Canyon Unified School District; Harry Rosenberg, director of special education for the Vlsalla Unified School District; Kenneth L. Wright, director of special education for the Kings Canyon Unified School District; Herbert California State'Department of Mental Health; Don Beedle, Ju¬ venile court psychologist, and Mrs. Michael Kershaw, Fresno Mental Health Association. Internationals Set Song Fest at 7:30 p.m ln the Newman Center handed drum of India. Shyamada s Chakraborhty andNav a Kumar Panda, Nava Kamar has taught iclan from India, are o colleges and performed as a change tour sponsored by theUnlve rsltyofCallfor- sltarlsts ln India and Nopal. Tickets for the concert w Shyamada and Friday ln front of the ntrlcate ln strument, has studied muslc since he at the door. l child ln Bengal, Ind FSC Schedules Weekend Lab In Psychology sensitivity ln 1 latlonshlps and group process Joel Grossman, The p will s d the t^ n Isolated c The extension division will offer two uMts of credit (Psychology 302) for the session. Work at the camp will Include contemplation Drive one of these dressed-up Chevrolefs instead of a stripped-down something else. ry ■orl. t: Calendar '68 CHEVROLET prices start lower than any other '68 CHEVELLE prices start lower than any other '68 CHEVY II NOVA KLaJaWU jfT^atai-l prices start lower than any other full-size models. Look at It. Chev¬ mid-size models. Obviously nothing's economy car so generously sized. %C£\ rolet's 4-door sedan is roomier than newer in mid-size cars than Chevelle. Nova Is big enough for a family on va¬ Wr any other American car except one There's fresh styling, the long-hood, cation, yet it slips into parking spaces (DiGicco's^k luxury sedan. Drive it. You tell by Its smooth and silent ride that Chevrolet footed wheelbases now—both on a others pass by. With its new wide stance and compuler-tuned chassis, FOUR SONS Or" tTALTnt A quality runs deep. Buy it! Get a Chev¬ wider, steadier tread. You get big-car Nova rides as silent and steady as cars rolet instead of a medium-priced name power, big-car ride In a quick-sire costing a lot more, and It comes with and you can have, say, power steering, package. No wonder Chevelle outsells Ihe biggest standard V8 In its field. « DINNERS F^rx E Open 4 p.m.-3 a-m. ?H M0 N. BUdcatone !<*&. (oHB^lmont) Ad 7-7054 power brakes and a radio besidesl everything in its field. Nova's the not-too-small car. NOW-IMPALA V8 SALE! Save on specially equipped Sport Coupe, 4-Door Sedan or Station Wagons! /"ffl^mtnT |