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Viewpoint 2 THE DAILY COLLEGIAN Tuesday, December 3, 1968 SFs many chiefs Dr. S. I. Hayakawa, named as the new president of San Francisco State ■ jllege after the surprise resignation of President Robert R. Smith begins his difficult tenure with full knowledge of what the obllg. on of the college must be. Wc d expert in the meaning of words, Hayakawa needed no spe- lake clear what he conceives his responsl- r to be. I e also I seem to be forgetting is standing obligation to the 17,500 or more students -- white, black, yellow, red and brown -- who are not oi, strike and have every right to expect continuation of their education." However, Hayakawa did not rush into Ill-considered and rash action. He ordered the strife-grieved campus closed completely un¬ til the end of the Thanksgiving holidays. Nor did he call for police occupation of the campus, although there seems no doubt but that he will ask for as much authority as is necessary to fulfill the goals to which he has committed himself. legitimate rights of the s udents ir tr suppre H (n e non vtole expression ment institut those who j the blackmail ol viol this h of the res Igned Robert R. Smith. Co* Kona Reagan to open th e college by Nov 13. Such an order tr oi SIT VII 1 to c vlolen By this time, cannot Gov. Reagan see that he has presided over the greatest mortality of college and university presidents In the state's history? First to go was President Clark Kerr of Ihe Univer¬ sity of California, one of the most renowned educators In the nation. Then went Dr. John II. Summersklll to be succeeded by Dr. Smith, who has now become a casualty. Certainly these pre-eminent men were not conspiring with the campus militants or devoid of respectable views as to what was needed In their institutions. Dr. Smith did not bow out with callow pretenses of good cheer. Instead, he made constructive criticisms. One of the three main causes of the difficulties which led him to resign, he said, was the "desperate limitation'' Imposed on Ihe college just prior to the as¬ sumption of his presidency. Clearly Smith was referring to the Reagan economies attempted at the expense of higher education. Of course, the fiscal stralljarket tailored by Reagan for the university ami siate colleges exaggerated every problem the educational institutions have had to deal with, especially the issue of student dissent. These problems are mil going lo yield at once to any one college president. The challenge Is to keep education going, weed out the truly destructive elements in (he student bodv and among the faculty without becoming unresponsive to legitimate, student demands and the rights of Ihe minority as well as Ihose of the majority. This will mean finding a rational course Iwtween the punitive at¬ titude of Reagan and the legitimate needs of Ihe majority and minor- THTE COLLEGE PLAN FOR THE COLLEGE MAN |790 W.Shaw-Suite 305 Phone 224-1960 THE DAILY COLLEGIAN ^E2F exhibition & sale ol original graphics lor collectors Fresno State College Hare Book room December 4. 1968 11 AM lo 3 PM Life in Sin City 'A football in my salad' found myself In the heart of what Is fondly referred to as "college life". Since September, apart- •Monday: Today is relatively membered that we're all here to get a college education. It's easy to study on Monday. You are only Interrupted by the girls In apart¬ ment G looking for Ihe German shepherd which they aren't sup¬ posed to have anyway, a vigorous wrestling match In the apartment above or perhaps an obscene phone etting, thrown together .,,. ITALIAN Si OpOT 4 p.ra.-J a.m. ":■ 510 N. BUckitone J*- (cCB1moot)Ad7-TC»« p.annlng little RF's washer and dryer a means that at about the dinner hour the manager will jet Into the a few times onhis menacing scoot¬ er. Then he organizes the week¬ ly Wednesday night football game. It Is wise to do some careful meal planning tonight, for there Is always some danger of a foot- Thursday: Tonight, after a week of putting off studying, you plant yourself at the kitchen table, put Son Francisco Floral Co. Dec. 7th is the Queen's Ball. Select your flowers early and have them delivered free. 7600 Fulton - Ph. 268-0111 Once around fhe campus. . .briefly THE DAILY COLLEGIAN 3 Tolcalon Tokalon, the upper-division women's honor society, Is seek¬ ing organizations to provide Christmas gifts for children en¬ rolled In the Teague School Head Start program. Organizations which would like to participate are being asked to provide a wrapped toy to be pre¬ sented to their child at a Christ¬ mas party Dec. 23. make an ornament to be hung on the Tokalon Toy Tree which will be set up In the College Union )f Tokalon Sunday. gers. This will be a long night. To break up the evening you are visited by salesmen from The Fresno Bee, local milk com¬ panies, and little boys selling peanut brittle. The topper is the clean-cut young man who drops In to ask you a few ques¬ tions regarding your premarital Then all Is quiet, until you hear the tidal wave that means a few fellows have come home from pre-weekend celebrating and decided to take a dip in the pool, not always on purpose. Friday: After waking to find lumber piled In front of your door, or your porchllght shot out, you limp through the last day of an¬ other wasted week. At the party later In the evening, you are entertained by the acrobat. After diving Into the pool from the roof in his clothes, he changes Into a transparent plastic bag from the cleaners and mingles among the guests. Saturday and Sunday: The ten¬ ants are slowing down. The girls upstairs spend these days quietly cleaning the hamster's cage and taking the frogs out of the bath¬ tub for some sun. The boys en¬ tertain themselves by floating kit¬ tens In the pool or Jogging around the block. Now you put your nerves back together and maybe you can even study with some success. So what's it Uke to live in a community where every night Is Friday night? Sin City is a real circus, a potpaftrrt. Most of all, It's a nice place to visit, but you wouldn't want to live there. I— - — "NEW„—— - ■ I J?ARI-DELITE ?CsRcOS"mp0"s 10 A.M - 10 P.M. «aCp0leTsS FRENCH FRIES HAMBURGER PEPSI •• M»p;j m.-CHRISTIAN SCIENCE • tor P.rk City .nd C ■J FELLOWSHIP: ( SpMdy S.rvlc. FRESNO AUTO STEREO 2227 E. Belmont r banquet cella Flores, chalrn event. She mij 224-2583. Further Information may be ob¬ tained by calling Susan Nakaglrl at 251-1961. ESP Research In Extrasensory Perception" will be discussed In the experimental college course on mysticism Friday at Speaking on ESP will be Dr. Thema Moss, a researcher In parapsychology In the Neuro¬ psychiatry Institute at the Uni¬ versity of California at Los An- Dr. Moss, the author of My Self and I, a case history of Calendar Tuesday, December 3, 1968 LSD therapy written under the pseudonym of Constance A. New- land worked as a psychology trainee In the Veterans Admin¬ istration Center In Los Angeles before receiving her doctorate in psychology from UCLA lnl966. During this time she also Intern¬ ed at ML Slnal Hospital In LA, and worked as a psychologist for the National Institute of Mental Health In the areas of LSD and alcoholism. Hoi Dr. Howard J. Campbell, pro¬ fessor of speech, will speak at the fall Initiation banquet for the Fresno State College chap¬ ter of Phi Kappa Phi, all cam¬ pus honor society. The dinner will be tonight In the FresnoMasonlcTemple.3444 Campbell's topic will be "Com¬ munication and the Culturally Dis¬ advantaged." Ninety-two stu¬ dents have been Invited to join the society. Exoc-in-rosidenco Phi Chi Theta, women's busi¬ ness fraternity, will honor James E. Patrick, executlve-in-resl- i for the school of busl- at The Luau, 1633 Fulton. the board' of the VaUey National Bank of Arizona, will be guest speaker at a professional meet¬ ing of Phi Chi Theta In College Union 308 at 7:30 p.m. Academy Award film to be shown tonight CCR i President "The Making of I960" will not be shown by the California College Republicans (CCR) tonight as originally plan¬ ned. A spokesman for the group said that the film did not arrive. On Wednesday at 7 p.m. the CCR will show "The Making of a President 1964" in Science 161. The public may attend. "8 1/2", an Academy Award winning foreign language film, will be shown today In In¬ dustrial Arts 101 at 7:30 p.m. Starring Marcello Mastrolan- ni, Claudia Cardlnale and Anouk Almee, the Italian Aim Is spon¬ sored by the College Union and with Dedication Week. The plot centers around a 43- year old movie director, Mastro- lannl, who visits a health re¬ sort to cure an undetermined illness. While at the resort he Is faced with a number of prob¬ lems: he Is about to start work on a major film, but he has no Inspiration; he Is worried about his health; he Is bored by hie mistress; and he is disappointed In hlg wife's failure to under¬ stand him. Miss Cardlnale playsMastrol- annl's 'dream girl.* and Mt«* Almee plays the frigid wife. Directed by Federlco Felllnl, the film also won an Academy Award for best costume design and the New York Film Critics Circle Award. Students, faculty and staff may attend the showing free with stu¬ dent body or staff identification Agape An agape (ah-gah-pay) will take Ihe place of this week's Newman Center Folk mass Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. The Latin expres¬ sion refers to a group dinner with Bible readings and general dis¬ cussion. The dinner Is open to the Anyone Interested In going to Madera next week for a folk mass should sign up Wednesday. FOR THE QUEEN'S BALL l0UGENT1LE's FLOWER BASKET Phone 268-6643 Help feed the world. A surprising amount of the world's food is produced right here in California. And one half of California's food production is financed by Bank of America. If business and agri-business are as important to you as they are to us, we'd like to talk to you. We offer starting salaries that are attrac¬ tive. You train on the job. You're given responsibility early. And you'll be working directly with California farmers and busi¬ nessmen to help them produce the food a hungry world needs. You don't hare to be an agricultural spe¬ cialist right now. We want to talk with you regardless of your major. Interested? Make an appointment to sec Dennis L. Elder, College Relations Representative. He'll be at your placement office soon. BANK OF AMERICA An Equal Opportunity Employer.
Object Description
Title | 1968_12 The Daily Collegian December 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 | Dec 3, 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 | Viewpoint 2 THE DAILY COLLEGIAN Tuesday, December 3, 1968 SFs many chiefs Dr. S. I. Hayakawa, named as the new president of San Francisco State ■ jllege after the surprise resignation of President Robert R. Smith begins his difficult tenure with full knowledge of what the obllg. on of the college must be. Wc d expert in the meaning of words, Hayakawa needed no spe- lake clear what he conceives his responsl- r to be. I e also I seem to be forgetting is standing obligation to the 17,500 or more students -- white, black, yellow, red and brown -- who are not oi, strike and have every right to expect continuation of their education." However, Hayakawa did not rush into Ill-considered and rash action. He ordered the strife-grieved campus closed completely un¬ til the end of the Thanksgiving holidays. Nor did he call for police occupation of the campus, although there seems no doubt but that he will ask for as much authority as is necessary to fulfill the goals to which he has committed himself. legitimate rights of the s udents ir tr suppre H (n e non vtole expression ment institut those who j the blackmail ol viol this h of the res Igned Robert R. Smith. Co* Kona Reagan to open th e college by Nov 13. Such an order tr oi SIT VII 1 to c vlolen By this time, cannot Gov. Reagan see that he has presided over the greatest mortality of college and university presidents In the state's history? First to go was President Clark Kerr of Ihe Univer¬ sity of California, one of the most renowned educators In the nation. Then went Dr. John II. Summersklll to be succeeded by Dr. Smith, who has now become a casualty. Certainly these pre-eminent men were not conspiring with the campus militants or devoid of respectable views as to what was needed In their institutions. Dr. Smith did not bow out with callow pretenses of good cheer. Instead, he made constructive criticisms. One of the three main causes of the difficulties which led him to resign, he said, was the "desperate limitation'' Imposed on Ihe college just prior to the as¬ sumption of his presidency. Clearly Smith was referring to the Reagan economies attempted at the expense of higher education. Of course, the fiscal stralljarket tailored by Reagan for the university ami siate colleges exaggerated every problem the educational institutions have had to deal with, especially the issue of student dissent. These problems are mil going lo yield at once to any one college president. The challenge Is to keep education going, weed out the truly destructive elements in (he student bodv and among the faculty without becoming unresponsive to legitimate, student demands and the rights of Ihe minority as well as Ihose of the majority. This will mean finding a rational course Iwtween the punitive at¬ titude of Reagan and the legitimate needs of Ihe majority and minor- THTE COLLEGE PLAN FOR THE COLLEGE MAN |790 W.Shaw-Suite 305 Phone 224-1960 THE DAILY COLLEGIAN ^E2F exhibition & sale ol original graphics lor collectors Fresno State College Hare Book room December 4. 1968 11 AM lo 3 PM Life in Sin City 'A football in my salad' found myself In the heart of what Is fondly referred to as "college life". Since September, apart- •Monday: Today is relatively membered that we're all here to get a college education. It's easy to study on Monday. You are only Interrupted by the girls In apart¬ ment G looking for Ihe German shepherd which they aren't sup¬ posed to have anyway, a vigorous wrestling match In the apartment above or perhaps an obscene phone etting, thrown together .,,. ITALIAN Si OpOT 4 p.ra.-J a.m. ":■ 510 N. BUckitone J*- (cCB1moot)Ad7-TC»« p.annlng little RF's washer and dryer a means that at about the dinner hour the manager will jet Into the a few times onhis menacing scoot¬ er. Then he organizes the week¬ ly Wednesday night football game. It Is wise to do some careful meal planning tonight, for there Is always some danger of a foot- Thursday: Tonight, after a week of putting off studying, you plant yourself at the kitchen table, put Son Francisco Floral Co. Dec. 7th is the Queen's Ball. Select your flowers early and have them delivered free. 7600 Fulton - Ph. 268-0111 Once around fhe campus. . .briefly THE DAILY COLLEGIAN 3 Tolcalon Tokalon, the upper-division women's honor society, Is seek¬ ing organizations to provide Christmas gifts for children en¬ rolled In the Teague School Head Start program. Organizations which would like to participate are being asked to provide a wrapped toy to be pre¬ sented to their child at a Christ¬ mas party Dec. 23. make an ornament to be hung on the Tokalon Toy Tree which will be set up In the College Union )f Tokalon Sunday. gers. This will be a long night. To break up the evening you are visited by salesmen from The Fresno Bee, local milk com¬ panies, and little boys selling peanut brittle. The topper is the clean-cut young man who drops In to ask you a few ques¬ tions regarding your premarital Then all Is quiet, until you hear the tidal wave that means a few fellows have come home from pre-weekend celebrating and decided to take a dip in the pool, not always on purpose. Friday: After waking to find lumber piled In front of your door, or your porchllght shot out, you limp through the last day of an¬ other wasted week. At the party later In the evening, you are entertained by the acrobat. After diving Into the pool from the roof in his clothes, he changes Into a transparent plastic bag from the cleaners and mingles among the guests. Saturday and Sunday: The ten¬ ants are slowing down. The girls upstairs spend these days quietly cleaning the hamster's cage and taking the frogs out of the bath¬ tub for some sun. The boys en¬ tertain themselves by floating kit¬ tens In the pool or Jogging around the block. Now you put your nerves back together and maybe you can even study with some success. So what's it Uke to live in a community where every night Is Friday night? Sin City is a real circus, a potpaftrrt. Most of all, It's a nice place to visit, but you wouldn't want to live there. I— - — "NEW„—— - ■ I J?ARI-DELITE ?CsRcOS"mp0"s 10 A.M - 10 P.M. «aCp0leTsS FRENCH FRIES HAMBURGER PEPSI •• M»p;j m.-CHRISTIAN SCIENCE • tor P.rk City .nd C ■J FELLOWSHIP: ( SpMdy S.rvlc. FRESNO AUTO STEREO 2227 E. Belmont r banquet cella Flores, chalrn event. She mij 224-2583. Further Information may be ob¬ tained by calling Susan Nakaglrl at 251-1961. ESP Research In Extrasensory Perception" will be discussed In the experimental college course on mysticism Friday at Speaking on ESP will be Dr. Thema Moss, a researcher In parapsychology In the Neuro¬ psychiatry Institute at the Uni¬ versity of California at Los An- Dr. Moss, the author of My Self and I, a case history of Calendar Tuesday, December 3, 1968 LSD therapy written under the pseudonym of Constance A. New- land worked as a psychology trainee In the Veterans Admin¬ istration Center In Los Angeles before receiving her doctorate in psychology from UCLA lnl966. During this time she also Intern¬ ed at ML Slnal Hospital In LA, and worked as a psychologist for the National Institute of Mental Health In the areas of LSD and alcoholism. Hoi Dr. Howard J. Campbell, pro¬ fessor of speech, will speak at the fall Initiation banquet for the Fresno State College chap¬ ter of Phi Kappa Phi, all cam¬ pus honor society. The dinner will be tonight In the FresnoMasonlcTemple.3444 Campbell's topic will be "Com¬ munication and the Culturally Dis¬ advantaged." Ninety-two stu¬ dents have been Invited to join the society. Exoc-in-rosidenco Phi Chi Theta, women's busi¬ ness fraternity, will honor James E. Patrick, executlve-in-resl- i for the school of busl- at The Luau, 1633 Fulton. the board' of the VaUey National Bank of Arizona, will be guest speaker at a professional meet¬ ing of Phi Chi Theta In College Union 308 at 7:30 p.m. Academy Award film to be shown tonight CCR i President "The Making of I960" will not be shown by the California College Republicans (CCR) tonight as originally plan¬ ned. A spokesman for the group said that the film did not arrive. On Wednesday at 7 p.m. the CCR will show "The Making of a President 1964" in Science 161. The public may attend. "8 1/2", an Academy Award winning foreign language film, will be shown today In In¬ dustrial Arts 101 at 7:30 p.m. Starring Marcello Mastrolan- ni, Claudia Cardlnale and Anouk Almee, the Italian Aim Is spon¬ sored by the College Union and with Dedication Week. The plot centers around a 43- year old movie director, Mastro- lannl, who visits a health re¬ sort to cure an undetermined illness. While at the resort he Is faced with a number of prob¬ lems: he Is about to start work on a major film, but he has no Inspiration; he Is worried about his health; he Is bored by hie mistress; and he is disappointed In hlg wife's failure to under¬ stand him. Miss Cardlnale playsMastrol- annl's 'dream girl.* and Mt«* Almee plays the frigid wife. Directed by Federlco Felllnl, the film also won an Academy Award for best costume design and the New York Film Critics Circle Award. Students, faculty and staff may attend the showing free with stu¬ dent body or staff identification Agape An agape (ah-gah-pay) will take Ihe place of this week's Newman Center Folk mass Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. The Latin expres¬ sion refers to a group dinner with Bible readings and general dis¬ cussion. The dinner Is open to the Anyone Interested In going to Madera next week for a folk mass should sign up Wednesday. FOR THE QUEEN'S BALL l0UGENT1LE's FLOWER BASKET Phone 268-6643 Help feed the world. A surprising amount of the world's food is produced right here in California. And one half of California's food production is financed by Bank of America. If business and agri-business are as important to you as they are to us, we'd like to talk to you. We offer starting salaries that are attrac¬ tive. You train on the job. You're given responsibility early. And you'll be working directly with California farmers and busi¬ nessmen to help them produce the food a hungry world needs. You don't hare to be an agricultural spe¬ cialist right now. We want to talk with you regardless of your major. Interested? Make an appointment to sec Dennis L. Elder, College Relations Representative. He'll be at your placement office soon. BANK OF AMERICA An Equal Opportunity Employer. |