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6 THE DAILY COLLEGIAN Tuesday, November 26. 1968 Polls inform people of peers' opinions Humanistic Psychology Learning by feelings By Margaret Calkins Opinion polls are an excellent service for informing the citizen¬ ry of his peer's opinions, stated Donald McGrew, executive vice- president of Opinion Research of California, before a joint din¬ ner meeting of the Fresno Press Club and valley newspaper edi¬ tors Friday night. ORC's state-wide poll In the recent presidential election was' only off two tenths of one per- nia. The poll was up seven tenths of one percent on Humphrey's Campus Queen Party An Informal party for Campus Queen finalists and judges will be held tonight, 7-9 p.m., at Dean Phyllis r vote and off 1.3 percent of the Wallace vote. McGrew said "political polls among a group of •In recen tlon of the ii poll slatlve position of ;lven with relative accuracy by nost responsthlepolls,"McGrew emarked. landing In the way of Increasing he poll's accuracy. •First would be the expense of •I'm just stoned (content)." "I'm seeing people differently. Not just looking at ohiecis, but seeing feelings." come down, and lt comes from all of this Hooking •I've been on campus for, eight years and this is the best class I've been In." A class? He Is talking about a class? They all are. They are students participating In Experimental class X121, Humanistic Psychology. Participating, participation, participant. It gets down to that. To you the participant. You can tell that It gets to that. You watch them, and you see them touch each other. Just touch, nothing more, nothing less. A lot Is In that touch. The most Important thing In the class, they say, Is trust. "We work at being honest, at breaking •Awed,' Button says. 'That Is the best word 1 can think of to describe my reaction to these people, this class." He said he found It harder this time, (the second ; classhas existed), togolntothe class, t had gone before In the other class It would happen again. *It involves ird work...and crying...and feeling." yself able to get with them. I climb . ' ' Clim urself. In; They are willing to I Humanness. Humanli Ide e *;n i, ! ihe 9 judges SPECIAL NAVY PEA COATS 895 UP NAVY TURTLENECK SWEATERS Secondly, there are as levices available lhat an ise In estimating actual nost Important, there 5 ulillc opinion, enabling Ihe public. now we do. Each tl ed. Eve hen Ihe people, behind it. That's Ihe Idea. Human. f. Inside humanness. Psych, Psychic, Psychological, Psychology. That's what It is. Humanistic Psychology. It (humanlsllc psychology) derives from philoso¬ phy, primarily existential, and religion Button ex¬ plains. "People feel an emphasis upon themselves as human beings, not so much as being products of their past (Freudian) or as mechanistic organ- ral)." 1 This a marathon at Sweetsmill oi ! tricks and techniques hut 1 fou is semester, that they weren't nee was him speaking": The teacher? raffic of your thoughts? No. II Is humans." Alan D. Button. psychology. PhD Stanford Unlvi of us' they saju_^_ re not reached they tell you. ( s, his friends, his participant: resolving one thing It causes •We were together all the time. Experiencing everything as one.- There is a reading list in Ihe library. There is a textbook, 'Challenges of Humanistic Psychology' by James F. T. Bugenthal. The par¬ ticipants take turns In approaching the academic articles In the book and are responsible for pre¬ senting it to the class. He Is to try for a way to let article through him. There Isanhourlnformalclassaweek, and three hours outside of class, all for three units of credit. In Ihe spring semester the class will no longer be In the Experimental College, hut will be offered as Psych 102 In the department. Perhaps this Is a way to judge It. For you. If you need a way. It has been accepted. Incorporated, established. Bui it Is still a class. And lt will still be a place - for tt the professor, for the participants. Spaghetti bender I the ixills, Mr(,r. i on Ihe fan there i ilmis politicians I Columbus was an Italian Muffler [ALLEY Service 'II 2519 N. Blackstone ^W 222-3049 BankAmerlcard - Master Charge North of Clinton - Behind Zak's Car Wash llv Helen LaBella all kuowwhereChrlstoBliei morning when my rooni- udent teacher, expound- InnjthtM' national origin. Italy. Or do they? When I was In grade school I was taught that Columbus was an Italian. Now, all of a sudden he's changed ARA'S APTS FRESNO'S ONLY TRUE DISCOTHEQUE HAPPY HOUR DAILY COME IN AND ENJOY FRESNO'S BEST. COLLEGIATE ATMOSPHERE. YOU CAN DANCE NIGHTLY. ENJOY YOUR FAVORITE BEVERAGE. AND RELAX IN FRESNO'S BIGGEST GAME ROOM. EVERY WEDNESDAY NIGHT HE FEATURE A LIVE ROCK-.VROLL BAND FOR YOUR PLEASURE ON SUNDAYS WE HAVE THE ONLY JAM SESSION IN FRESNO. 2-7 THAT'S ARA'S APTS 2250 N. WEBER (ACROSS FROM MIDSTATE BOWL) The only true COLLEGIATE meeting place in Fresno sides? All day long, the thought that Columbus may not have been of grand and noble Italian heritage gnawed al me. The very Idea! The Italians boasl Sergio Franchi, Yogi Berra, Sophia Loren and Francis Albert Sinatra. It follows that Columbus must have come from the same sturdy- Out of sheer curiosity, I asked a number of kids in my classes if they knew Columbus' nationality and the poor misguided products of our educational sys¬ tem Insisted that he was Por¬ tuguese. This was too much to take. How could anybody live in this country and not know who 1 it? Hypocrite get i ong. I 1. biography of C in a cloak of mystery though he didn't do man things he said he accept the theorj brate Columl Long live Italian Nationalism! *nd tomorrow I'm applying for a ■eat on the Student Senate. Fan appreciation night ovem6er 26. 1968 THE DAILY COLLEGIAN 7 Varsity, frosh cagers will battle tonight Head FSC basketball coach Ed Gregory will unveil his 1968 cage squad for the first time tonight as the Bulldogs prepare for their season opener this week- Basketball fan appreciation night In the men's gym, high¬ lighted by a game between the coached by Dick Murray. The evening will begin at 7:30 and will Include an Introduction of look and explanation of Basket¬ ball FSC Style by coach Gregory. The frosh-varslty match will take place at 8 p.m. probable starting lineup for the varsity Is Bill Winston and Lucius Davis at forwards, Rob Stephens and Bob Vasllovlch at guards COACH ED GREGORY and Ron Relgel at center. Murray Is expected to start Sam Jackson and Rich Delgado at guards, Bob Klelnholz at cen¬ ter and Steve Norcross and Pat Mitchell at the forward spots. Gregory Is readying the Bull¬ dogs for two big games this week¬ end. FSC will meet St. Marys College InMoragaSaturdaynJght. The Fresnans beat the Gaels 81-62 last season. Then on Monday the 'Dogs will meet San Jose State's Spartans In San Jose. The first home game will be agalnstSantaClara The Bulldog coach expressed concern this week over his team's possible lack of physical size, which may hamper the rebound¬ ing game. "I just don't know tf Bulldog Basketballers Starting at the forward spot for the Bulldog n this s (right) a I Bill ing lettermen, Winston (left). Davis, a 6-4, 182-pound junior, was the lead¬ ing scorer and second leading rebounder on the Bulldog squad last season. He averaged 17.6 points and 7.3 rebounds a game and was given honorable mention In All-CCAA honors. Davis, who played his high school basketball In Berke- the •Dogs valuable bench strength spots last year In both the forward and center positions. The 6-6, 198-pound senior was used very effectively for FSC during the last half of the season, and averaged 4.2 points and re¬ bounds a gane. Winston was a three-year All- League performer for Bakersfleld High School before going to Bakersfleld College, where' won All-Metropolitan ' Camellia Bowl tickets now on sale Tickets for the Camellia Bowl game between Fresno State and Humboldt State In Sacramento on Dec. 14 go on sale beginning to¬ day al the College Union ticket office, at Mld-VaKeySportsCen- ter on Blackstone, and at the Varsity Shop on Olive. Tickets for the game, which will be played In Sacramento's Hughes Stadium, will cost S4 and *5. Thsre will be 1000 tickets sold In Fresno for anyone, not Just students. Students do not get a discount at NCAA-sponsored See the Dally Collegian in ttt future for Information on bus i train transportation to the gam COACH DICK MURRAY we are physical enough to com¬ pete on the boards with the good big men we will be facing this season,* Gregory admitted. The Bulldogs lost last year's leading rebounder, center Wes Russell, as well as the third man, forward Ken Patton.Butthe 'Dogs received a break when It was revealed that Ron Relgel, starting center and top rebound¬ er two seasons ago and Injured most of last season, will be ell- bigle to play this year. Along with Relgel Is Davis, who was second In rebounds last season besides being top scorer, and Winston, who came on strong at the end of lasl year, and who at 6-6 and 198 pounds has the size to battle the stronger op- aad Winston and Relgel have also bad varsity experience. Guard Harry Maloney Is starting his third year as a Bulldog, and was an Honorable Mention All-Conference selection two years ago as a sophomore. Forward Tom Smith Is expect¬ ed to see a lot of action. He and Greg Warmerdam both played on last year's squad, and should help out on the forward spots. Up from the freshman team are 6-8 center Ben Hill, forward Brad Leonard and guard Jack Sanders. Sanders broke the FSC freshman scoring record last Forward Larry Hendricksoo sat out last season with Injuries and sickness after starring on tbe same frosh team with Stephens, Vasllovlch and Davis two years ago, and Bob Cummlngs was on the squad last year but saw sparse action. The only newcomer on the team Is Jeff Flaming, a forward who was leading player on the Reedley College squad last The Bulldogs will have more than their hands full against Santa Clara In the home opener at Sel- land arena. The Northerners are expected to be one of the country's top-ranked University Division e Bulldogs ponents. are loaded this season. Davis, Stephens and Vasllovlch have played together for the past SPORTS and FOREIGN CAR SERVICE § JOINT VENTURE PRESENTS • : Joan Baez: ♦ Tomorrow night-8:30 pjn.# 2 at the Convention Center 2 • Tickets at: VILLAGE RECORDS (Flf Garden) 222-6169 jj* • and CONVENTION CENTER BOX OFFICE, 233-8368 J» DARE'S BARBER SHOP $2 for Students 7 Days a Week 2 Barbers 488 E. Shaw EUROPEAN AUTOMOTIVE WESTERN BOOT & SHOE CO.
Object Description
Title | 1968_11 The Daily Collegian November 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 | Nov 26, 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 | 6 THE DAILY COLLEGIAN Tuesday, November 26. 1968 Polls inform people of peers' opinions Humanistic Psychology Learning by feelings By Margaret Calkins Opinion polls are an excellent service for informing the citizen¬ ry of his peer's opinions, stated Donald McGrew, executive vice- president of Opinion Research of California, before a joint din¬ ner meeting of the Fresno Press Club and valley newspaper edi¬ tors Friday night. ORC's state-wide poll In the recent presidential election was' only off two tenths of one per- nia. The poll was up seven tenths of one percent on Humphrey's Campus Queen Party An Informal party for Campus Queen finalists and judges will be held tonight, 7-9 p.m., at Dean Phyllis r vote and off 1.3 percent of the Wallace vote. McGrew said "political polls among a group of •In recen tlon of the ii poll slatlve position of ;lven with relative accuracy by nost responsthlepolls,"McGrew emarked. landing In the way of Increasing he poll's accuracy. •First would be the expense of •I'm just stoned (content)." "I'm seeing people differently. Not just looking at ohiecis, but seeing feelings." come down, and lt comes from all of this Hooking •I've been on campus for, eight years and this is the best class I've been In." A class? He Is talking about a class? They all are. They are students participating In Experimental class X121, Humanistic Psychology. Participating, participation, participant. It gets down to that. To you the participant. You can tell that It gets to that. You watch them, and you see them touch each other. Just touch, nothing more, nothing less. A lot Is In that touch. The most Important thing In the class, they say, Is trust. "We work at being honest, at breaking •Awed,' Button says. 'That Is the best word 1 can think of to describe my reaction to these people, this class." He said he found It harder this time, (the second ; classhas existed), togolntothe class, t had gone before In the other class It would happen again. *It involves ird work...and crying...and feeling." yself able to get with them. I climb . ' ' Clim urself. In; They are willing to I Humanness. Humanli Ide e *;n i, ! ihe 9 judges SPECIAL NAVY PEA COATS 895 UP NAVY TURTLENECK SWEATERS Secondly, there are as levices available lhat an ise In estimating actual nost Important, there 5 ulillc opinion, enabling Ihe public. now we do. Each tl ed. Eve hen Ihe people, behind it. That's Ihe Idea. Human. f. Inside humanness. Psych, Psychic, Psychological, Psychology. That's what It is. Humanistic Psychology. It (humanlsllc psychology) derives from philoso¬ phy, primarily existential, and religion Button ex¬ plains. "People feel an emphasis upon themselves as human beings, not so much as being products of their past (Freudian) or as mechanistic organ- ral)." 1 This a marathon at Sweetsmill oi ! tricks and techniques hut 1 fou is semester, that they weren't nee was him speaking": The teacher? raffic of your thoughts? No. II Is humans." Alan D. Button. psychology. PhD Stanford Unlvi of us' they saju_^_ re not reached they tell you. ( s, his friends, his participant: resolving one thing It causes •We were together all the time. Experiencing everything as one.- There is a reading list in Ihe library. There is a textbook, 'Challenges of Humanistic Psychology' by James F. T. Bugenthal. The par¬ ticipants take turns In approaching the academic articles In the book and are responsible for pre¬ senting it to the class. He Is to try for a way to let article through him. There Isanhourlnformalclassaweek, and three hours outside of class, all for three units of credit. In Ihe spring semester the class will no longer be In the Experimental College, hut will be offered as Psych 102 In the department. Perhaps this Is a way to judge It. For you. If you need a way. It has been accepted. Incorporated, established. Bui it Is still a class. And lt will still be a place - for tt the professor, for the participants. Spaghetti bender I the ixills, Mr(,r. i on Ihe fan there i ilmis politicians I Columbus was an Italian Muffler [ALLEY Service 'II 2519 N. Blackstone ^W 222-3049 BankAmerlcard - Master Charge North of Clinton - Behind Zak's Car Wash llv Helen LaBella all kuowwhereChrlstoBliei morning when my rooni- udent teacher, expound- InnjthtM' national origin. Italy. Or do they? When I was In grade school I was taught that Columbus was an Italian. Now, all of a sudden he's changed ARA'S APTS FRESNO'S ONLY TRUE DISCOTHEQUE HAPPY HOUR DAILY COME IN AND ENJOY FRESNO'S BEST. COLLEGIATE ATMOSPHERE. YOU CAN DANCE NIGHTLY. ENJOY YOUR FAVORITE BEVERAGE. AND RELAX IN FRESNO'S BIGGEST GAME ROOM. EVERY WEDNESDAY NIGHT HE FEATURE A LIVE ROCK-.VROLL BAND FOR YOUR PLEASURE ON SUNDAYS WE HAVE THE ONLY JAM SESSION IN FRESNO. 2-7 THAT'S ARA'S APTS 2250 N. WEBER (ACROSS FROM MIDSTATE BOWL) The only true COLLEGIATE meeting place in Fresno sides? All day long, the thought that Columbus may not have been of grand and noble Italian heritage gnawed al me. The very Idea! The Italians boasl Sergio Franchi, Yogi Berra, Sophia Loren and Francis Albert Sinatra. It follows that Columbus must have come from the same sturdy- Out of sheer curiosity, I asked a number of kids in my classes if they knew Columbus' nationality and the poor misguided products of our educational sys¬ tem Insisted that he was Por¬ tuguese. This was too much to take. How could anybody live in this country and not know who 1 it? Hypocrite get i ong. I 1. biography of C in a cloak of mystery though he didn't do man things he said he accept the theorj brate Columl Long live Italian Nationalism! *nd tomorrow I'm applying for a ■eat on the Student Senate. Fan appreciation night ovem6er 26. 1968 THE DAILY COLLEGIAN 7 Varsity, frosh cagers will battle tonight Head FSC basketball coach Ed Gregory will unveil his 1968 cage squad for the first time tonight as the Bulldogs prepare for their season opener this week- Basketball fan appreciation night In the men's gym, high¬ lighted by a game between the coached by Dick Murray. The evening will begin at 7:30 and will Include an Introduction of look and explanation of Basket¬ ball FSC Style by coach Gregory. The frosh-varslty match will take place at 8 p.m. probable starting lineup for the varsity Is Bill Winston and Lucius Davis at forwards, Rob Stephens and Bob Vasllovlch at guards COACH ED GREGORY and Ron Relgel at center. Murray Is expected to start Sam Jackson and Rich Delgado at guards, Bob Klelnholz at cen¬ ter and Steve Norcross and Pat Mitchell at the forward spots. Gregory Is readying the Bull¬ dogs for two big games this week¬ end. FSC will meet St. Marys College InMoragaSaturdaynJght. The Fresnans beat the Gaels 81-62 last season. Then on Monday the 'Dogs will meet San Jose State's Spartans In San Jose. The first home game will be agalnstSantaClara The Bulldog coach expressed concern this week over his team's possible lack of physical size, which may hamper the rebound¬ ing game. "I just don't know tf Bulldog Basketballers Starting at the forward spot for the Bulldog n this s (right) a I Bill ing lettermen, Winston (left). Davis, a 6-4, 182-pound junior, was the lead¬ ing scorer and second leading rebounder on the Bulldog squad last season. He averaged 17.6 points and 7.3 rebounds a game and was given honorable mention In All-CCAA honors. Davis, who played his high school basketball In Berke- the •Dogs valuable bench strength spots last year In both the forward and center positions. The 6-6, 198-pound senior was used very effectively for FSC during the last half of the season, and averaged 4.2 points and re¬ bounds a gane. Winston was a three-year All- League performer for Bakersfleld High School before going to Bakersfleld College, where' won All-Metropolitan ' Camellia Bowl tickets now on sale Tickets for the Camellia Bowl game between Fresno State and Humboldt State In Sacramento on Dec. 14 go on sale beginning to¬ day al the College Union ticket office, at Mld-VaKeySportsCen- ter on Blackstone, and at the Varsity Shop on Olive. Tickets for the game, which will be played In Sacramento's Hughes Stadium, will cost S4 and *5. Thsre will be 1000 tickets sold In Fresno for anyone, not Just students. Students do not get a discount at NCAA-sponsored See the Dally Collegian in ttt future for Information on bus i train transportation to the gam COACH DICK MURRAY we are physical enough to com¬ pete on the boards with the good big men we will be facing this season,* Gregory admitted. The Bulldogs lost last year's leading rebounder, center Wes Russell, as well as the third man, forward Ken Patton.Butthe 'Dogs received a break when It was revealed that Ron Relgel, starting center and top rebound¬ er two seasons ago and Injured most of last season, will be ell- bigle to play this year. Along with Relgel Is Davis, who was second In rebounds last season besides being top scorer, and Winston, who came on strong at the end of lasl year, and who at 6-6 and 198 pounds has the size to battle the stronger op- aad Winston and Relgel have also bad varsity experience. Guard Harry Maloney Is starting his third year as a Bulldog, and was an Honorable Mention All-Conference selection two years ago as a sophomore. Forward Tom Smith Is expect¬ ed to see a lot of action. He and Greg Warmerdam both played on last year's squad, and should help out on the forward spots. Up from the freshman team are 6-8 center Ben Hill, forward Brad Leonard and guard Jack Sanders. Sanders broke the FSC freshman scoring record last Forward Larry Hendricksoo sat out last season with Injuries and sickness after starring on tbe same frosh team with Stephens, Vasllovlch and Davis two years ago, and Bob Cummlngs was on the squad last year but saw sparse action. The only newcomer on the team Is Jeff Flaming, a forward who was leading player on the Reedley College squad last The Bulldogs will have more than their hands full against Santa Clara In the home opener at Sel- land arena. The Northerners are expected to be one of the country's top-ranked University Division e Bulldogs ponents. are loaded this season. Davis, Stephens and Vasllovlch have played together for the past SPORTS and FOREIGN CAR SERVICE § JOINT VENTURE PRESENTS • : Joan Baez: ♦ Tomorrow night-8:30 pjn.# 2 at the Convention Center 2 • Tickets at: VILLAGE RECORDS (Flf Garden) 222-6169 jj* • and CONVENTION CENTER BOX OFFICE, 233-8368 J» DARE'S BARBER SHOP $2 for Students 7 Days a Week 2 Barbers 488 E. Shaw EUROPEAN AUTOMOTIVE WESTERN BOOT & SHOE CO. |