May 9, 1968 Pg. 6-7 |
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Y COLLEQIAN Thuraday, May 9, 1968 Tokalon Awards ,..: WCR —— A Congregation Of Class The West Coast Relays are "Where Records are id this weekend's competition should prove tc here are five world record holders and many other potential mark-breakers on the 42nd Annual Relays' list of performers. Ralph Boston, above left, holds the world long Jump record of 27 feet 4 3/4 Inches, and last year set the West Coast Relays record of 27-2 1/4. Paul Wilson, above center, Is the world record holder In the pole vault with a 17 feet 7 3/4 Inch vault. The USC star broke the old record of 17-51/2 set at the 1966 West Coast Relays by his teammate Bob Seagren, lower right, Seagren has the world's top vault thus far this year. Another USC star, Earl 'the Pearl* McCullouch, above right, Is Ihe world king In the 120 high hurdles with a clocking of 13.2. He has run a 13.3 this year. Tommle Smith, lower left,is world record holder In the 220 yard dash and ran on the San Jose State 880 yard relay team that set the world mark of 1:22.1 In last year's WCR. Smith will be performing this Ume for the Santa Clara Youth Village. The other world record holder In this year's meet Is Jim Ryun, who holds the unofficial mark of 1:44.9 In the 880, the mile with 3:51.1 and the American two-mile record of 8:25.2. * i Officers, Editors Honored The presentation of awards president; Bill Enns, first vice hlghUgbted last night's annual president; Rod Bannister, second Tokalon Banquet held In the Ca- vice president; Mike Ryan, spring feterla Snack Bar. editor of the Dally Collegian; AssodaUon awards went to Carole Sarklslan, fall semester three student body officers and editor of the Dally Collegian; five publications editors. They Colleen Leman, editor of the Included Mike Case, student Campus; Nell Marks, editor of Library Assistants Begin Wage Probe gain documented pi t-flndlng committees l! AssodaUon to ROBERT E. HAMPTON Top Faculty Award Goes To Hampton Dr. Robert Hampton and the Alpha Mu chapter of PI Sigma Epsilon, professional marketing fraternity, received top awards at the fraternity's national conven¬ tion In Atlanta, Georgia. Hampton, associate professor of management at F r e s n o State College, received "The Top Fac¬ ulty Adviser A-ward" and Alpha Mu received the "Top SMESpon- sor Award." A "Lamp of Knowledge" elec¬ tric clock and$100waspresented to Hampton at the fraternity's last regularly scheduled business meeting. He has been adviser to the group since lt was granted a charter In 1965. Sigma Chi se IFC to enforce restrictions such as no parties or exchanges," he said. •However, the college has sus¬ pended us and there Is nothing they can do to regulate our ac¬ tlvlUes off-campus." Buchanan said that the fra¬ ternity's "Derby Day" was held completely off-campus except for ihe Derby Chase, which was held on the lawn in front of the Art-Home Economics Building. •We notified Dr. Kenneth Kerr (assistant to-the dean of stu¬ dents) that we were going to have t and he came out to h for a1 ie right lo wear the derbies on campus as Individual students and the girls had the right to tackle them on the lawn.* The Sigma Chi president said that none of the advertising for Derby Day connected Sigma Chi with FSC. "This was one of ourbestDer- by Days," be said. "I felt that It guilty for not In Greek Week 11 out for us In the Derby Day." College Library. One s to contact student workers at other colleges In the state system to find out how far below average are the wages received by student work¬ ers at FSC. Library assistants at San Francisco State College receive $1.50 per hour, and those at the University of CaUfornla Davis campus, $2.02. Fresno College's Library's wage >t 31.31 The c The Library's student assis¬ tants are organizing in an effort to gain a wage Increase. With the present rate of Increase, lt takes a student 2,400 hours (usually six years) <o reach the federal minimum of $1.60. Wagesareln- creased four cents after the first 400 hours, and then five cents for every 400 hours thereafter. Library student assistants are currently receiving the lowest beginning wage scale of all stu¬ dents employed on campus. The FSC Business Office suggests that the beginning wage be at least $1.40 per hour. The last wage Increase for library workers was In August, . 1967. It was Increased from $1.30 to $1.36, by order of Ihe State College Chancellor's Office. Retreat To Center On Viet War Topics Registrations for the Chris¬ tianity and Communism retreat this weekend In Yosemlte are sUll being accepted at the Col- the cussed at the retreat, sponsored' by the College Y, will be the religious and idealoglcal back¬ grounds of the Vietnam War. A College Y planning com¬ mittee retreat member said the discussion will give 13 Vietna¬ mese students, who have regis¬ tered for the retreat, an oppor¬ tunity to present their opinions on Ihe Vietnam conflict. The College Y needs volun¬ teers wllh cars to provide trans¬ portation to Yosemlte Saturday morning. the Crib Sheet; and Larry Levis, editor of Backwash. Awards also went to repre- sentaUves of FSC in "Who's Who Among Students in Universities and Colleges." Reclplepts In¬ cluded Kay Anderson, Carol Bailey, Bannister, BonnleBenck, Dave Bradford, Case, John Ce¬ derqulst, John Cochrane, Dave Cords, Enns, Donna Flint. Mike Freeman, Mike Gallego, Larry Gonsalves, Jay Goodwin, Jerry Heard, Robert Helnrlchs, Miss Leman, Donna Lobdell, Charles Oliver, Howard Parker, Pat Prewltt.-Davlna Price, Art Wahlberg, Paul Waklm, and Jim Waldron. Twenty students received as¬ sociation service awards for 1967-68. They were John Car¬ penter, Sue Briton, Janice Slsk, Linda Shew, Mary Ann Casarez, Doran Ross, Chrlstin Haley, Gil Acuna, Bob Foelder, Miss Price, Kathleen Rader, Miss Lobdell, Bob Braltman, Cheryl Chase, Jay Donlon, Gary Daloyan, Mike Lasslter, Dennis McCall, Paul Sullivan and Stewart McGee. Association leadership awards for 1967-68 were presented to Bob Tapia, chairman of the senate board on publications; Bruce Bronzan, senator of arts and sciences; Dave Brodle, Crlstando, Junior c tutorials committee; Georgia Lund, chairman of women's af¬ fairs committee; Jim Miller, cMef JusUce of the student court; and Douglas Broten, for leader- Oonditsf Cedar <a Shields Ph. 227-3384 FIOWSS 6113 EUROPE CHARTER JET FLIGHTS Umlted number of spaces Is available tor faculty, staff, students of The California State CoUeges Far*: $225 on* way omce of International Programs he California State College*. 1600 Holloway Avenue an Francisco. Calif. 94132 SUMMERTIME BLUES? HALSETH APARTMENTS HAVE THE CURE! - Summer Low Rates - Pool - Refrigeration - CarpeUng - Exclusively College - and happiness you have your ;eth Apartment complex. * CORAL GARDENS * MOJAVE * ATACAMA No. I A No. 2 To further Insure your healtl choice of living In any Ha * SAHARA No. 1 & No. 2 * SAHARA ANNEX * KAHALAR1 Dick Birbeck, General Manager 5330 NORTirSIXTH, APT. A Phone 229-9268 Reservation, For Fall An SUll Balng Takan Activities Office Taking Sorority Rush Sign-Ups Women students of Fresno State CoUege Interested in go¬ ing through sorority rush in the fall may leave their names In the Student AcUvlUes Office. These girls will then receive all Information on rush sent dur¬ ing the summer. This Informa¬ tion is also sent to all fresh men and transfer students wh will be entering FSC In th fall. Rush dates are Sept. 3-8. Ap pUcaUons must be received b Panhellenlc no later than Aug nator; FROM THE HALLS OF PROTOZOA This column, normally a treasure house of twinkly quips and slapdash japery, has now been appearing in your campus newspaper for fourteen years, and if I have learned one thing in these fourteen long years, it is not to try to be funny in the last column of the semester. With s looming obscenely close, you don't want jokes; it help. o today, foregoing levity, I give you a quick cram course in the subject you are all flunking. I refer, of course, to biology. Biology is divided into several phylla, or classes. First is the protozoa, or one-celled animal. Protozoa can be taught simple things like bringing in the newspaper, but when shopping for pets it is best to look for animals with at least two cells, or even four if your yard has a fence around it. Take, for example, the sponge. The sponge is definitely an animal. The wash-cloth, on the other hand, is definitely not Next we come to the arthropoda, or insects. Most people find insects unattractive, but actually there is exquisite beauty in the insect world if you trouble to look. Take, for instance, the lovely insect poems of William Cullen Caught Ue. Mr. Sigafoos, alas, has been inactive si invention of DDT. Our next category is the mollusca-lobsters, shrimp, and the like. Lobsters are generally found under rocky projec¬ tions on the ocean bottom. Shrimps are generally found in a circle around a Bmall bowl containing cocktail sauce. Personna Super Stainless Steel Blades are generally found at any counter where Personna Super Stainless Steel Blades are sold. I mention Personna Blades because the makers of Per¬ sonna Blades pay me to write this column, and they are inclined to get edgy if I neglect to mention their product Some get double edgy and some single, for Personna Blades come both in double edge style and Injector style. Mind you, it is no burden for me to mention Personna, for it is a blade that shaves quickly and cleanly, slickly and keenly, scratchlesaly and matchlessly. It is a distinct pleas¬ ure to shave with Personna Blades and to write about them but sometimes, I confess, I find it difficult to work the commercial into a column. Some years ago, for ex¬ ample, I had the devil's own time working a Personna plug into a column about Alexander the Great The way I finally managed it was to have Alexander say to the Oracle at Delphi, "Oracle, I have tasted all the world's pleasures, yet I am not content Somehow I know there is a joy I have missed." To which the Oracle replied, "Yea, Alexander, there is such a joy-namely Personna Blades-but, alas for you, they will not be invented for another 2600 years." Whereupon Alexander fell into such a fit of weeping that Zeus finally took pity and turned him into a hydrant... Well sir, there is no question I sold a lot of Personnas with this ingenious commercial-, but the gang down at the American Academy of Arts and Letters gave me a mighty good razzing, you may be sure. But I digress. Back to biology and the most advanced phyllum of all-the chordata, or vertebrates. There are two kinds of vertebrates: those with vertical backbones and those with horizontal. Generally it is easy to tell them apart. A fish, for instance, has a horizontal backbone, and a man has a vertical backbone. But what if you run into a fish that swims upright or a man who never gets out of the sack? How do you tell them apart? Science struggled with this sticky question for years before Sigafoos of M.I.T came up with his brilliant solution: offer the crea¬ ture a pack of Personna Blades. If it is a fish, it will refuse. If it is homo sapiens, it will accept-and the more sapient, the quicker. And now you know biology. And now, for the fourteenth • • • *uaa. urn SkaSaaaaa The makeri of Penonna, The Eleetro-Coaled blade, have enjoyed bringing you another year of Old Max. From us too, aloha.
Object Description
Title | 1968_05 The Daily Collegian May 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 | May 9, 1968 Pg. 6-7 |
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 |
Y COLLEQIAN Thuraday, May 9, 1968
Tokalon Awards
,..:
WCR —— A Congregation Of Class
The West Coast Relays are "Where Records are
id this weekend's competition should prove tc
here are five world record holders
and many other potential mark-breakers on the 42nd
Annual Relays' list of performers.
Ralph Boston, above left, holds the world long Jump
record of 27 feet 4 3/4 Inches, and last year set the West
Coast Relays record of 27-2 1/4.
Paul Wilson, above center, Is the world record holder
In the pole vault with a 17 feet 7 3/4 Inch vault. The USC
star broke the old record of 17-51/2 set at the 1966 West
Coast Relays by his teammate Bob Seagren, lower right,
Seagren has the world's top vault thus far this year.
Another USC star, Earl 'the Pearl* McCullouch, above
right, Is Ihe world king In the 120 high hurdles with a
clocking of 13.2. He has run a 13.3 this year.
Tommle Smith, lower left,is world record holder In
the 220 yard dash and ran on the San Jose State 880
yard relay team that set the world mark of 1:22.1 In
last year's WCR. Smith will be performing this Ume for
the Santa Clara Youth Village.
The other world record holder In this year's meet Is
Jim Ryun, who holds the unofficial mark of 1:44.9 In
the 880, the mile with 3:51.1 and the American two-mile
record of 8:25.2.
* i
Officers, Editors Honored
The presentation of awards president; Bill Enns, first vice
hlghUgbted last night's annual president; Rod Bannister, second
Tokalon Banquet held In the Ca- vice president; Mike Ryan, spring
feterla Snack Bar. editor of the Dally Collegian;
AssodaUon awards went to Carole Sarklslan, fall semester
three student body officers and editor of the Dally Collegian;
five publications editors. They Colleen Leman, editor of the
Included Mike Case, student Campus; Nell Marks, editor of
Library Assistants
Begin Wage Probe
gain documented pi
t-flndlng committees
l! AssodaUon to
ROBERT E. HAMPTON
Top Faculty
Award Goes
To Hampton
Dr. Robert Hampton and the
Alpha Mu chapter of PI Sigma
Epsilon, professional marketing
fraternity, received top awards at
the fraternity's national conven¬
tion In Atlanta, Georgia.
Hampton, associate professor
of management at F r e s n o State
College, received "The Top Fac¬
ulty Adviser A-ward" and Alpha
Mu received the "Top SMESpon-
sor Award."
A "Lamp of Knowledge" elec¬
tric clock and$100waspresented
to Hampton at the fraternity's
last regularly scheduled business
meeting. He has been adviser to
the group since lt was granted a
charter In 1965.
Sigma Chi
se IFC to
enforce restrictions such as no
parties or exchanges," he said.
•However, the college has sus¬
pended us and there Is nothing
they can do to regulate our ac¬
tlvlUes off-campus."
Buchanan said that the fra¬
ternity's "Derby Day" was held
completely off-campus except
for ihe Derby Chase, which was
held on the lawn in front of the
Art-Home Economics Building.
•We notified Dr. Kenneth Kerr
(assistant to-the dean of stu¬
dents) that we were going to have
t and he came out to
h for a1
ie right lo wear the
derbies on campus as Individual
students and the girls had the
right to tackle them on the lawn.*
The Sigma Chi president said
that none of the advertising for
Derby Day connected Sigma Chi
with FSC.
"This was one of ourbestDer-
by Days," be said. "I felt that
It guilty for not
In Greek Week
11 out for us In the Derby Day."
College Library.
One
s to contact
student workers at other colleges
In the state system to find out
how far below average are the
wages received by student work¬
ers at FSC. Library assistants
at San Francisco State College
receive $1.50 per hour, and those
at the University of CaUfornla
Davis campus, $2.02. Fresno
College's Library's wage
>t 31.31
The c
The Library's student assis¬
tants are organizing in an effort
to gain a wage Increase. With the
present rate of Increase, lt takes
a student 2,400 hours (usually
six years) |