Feb 24, 1950 Pg. 2-3 |
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Editorial: and they're off Probably one of the wisest moves of student council this year was made last Wednesday when it passed the ruling oft attendance. Under the new ruling any group which is not represented at student council one out of three times, would be eliminated from the association. What does elimination mean? First, it means that the group, as far as the administration is concerned, cannot le¬ gally meet, cannot requisition rooms, cannot hold any all-school affair, is elim¬ inated from participation in such things as the Blue Key Carnival, and cannot have anything published in the Colle¬ gian. We feci that the ruling was rather harsh, in that it made it impossible for any group which is dropped to become re-instated until the following semester.*, Some alternatives were offered land vetoed by the council. One of these was the imposing of a fine, about $25. on any org which is "kicked-out." and wish- One thing is certain, however. If the ruling is enforced and representatives come to the council meetings, a larger room is going to be needed. Why? There are now 91 orgs on campus. J^ClC}(Jcll's ejjuj, By DICE DAGGETT Just heard, from an old friend back i South Dakota. Seems he has just finished master's thesis in psychology, devoting it t an investigation of the possibility of and need for psychological examinations of teach- ■ Th* Fresno State College Collegian Bangin On The Wall W He i- e that it .Mil e r get ti popular procedure. Too many people afraid of it. He says it would never be prac¬ tical since it would require wcedin of a fourth of high school lege teachers. There aren't enough of tin m onywtvy, and with I quarter of them "' qualified at the l>egijining, it would just a wreck the educational system in many pli This does not mean that 25 percent of i .—>. psychopathic cases; many of j II teachers ai iuited to their « peace begins at home tave mild neuroses which have a tendency o rub off on children, although adults would lever be bothered. But it gives students a fresh insight """ -■*-—"—-ll system to realize that 87 peri My friend says that man viously frightened. Others with such procedures that they are suspicious. One rural grade school teacher said that sh< refused because he might hypnotise her; psy etiology was black magic anywuv. A higl school teacher, apparently much frightened at •1: pin poet of being found out, resigned These cases are not isolated ones. Ralph says these attitudes were rather wid. He suggested that M.D.'s are required to pass physical examinations to detenu they will not pass any communicable disease to a patient, yet there exists no means to ::.'if., ally examine a teacher to see if small | children are even safe in their classes, much less to see if they are suits " - - - their jobs. If these attitudes startle one. one should inquire of teacher training students if thev I would be will;, itions of this' sort instituted in this state. Mast of them don't. People just aren't that secure in their! belief that they could laration of Independen to make it a practical e life. B and actually! try-day rule of A return to peace and ham men, like ciiarity, begins at modern world is an unhappy too many people, including n cans, are suffering from mai nomic, racial, and religious tensions. tnterr Although at first thought, removal of ious i these tensions may seem completely quix- blindi otic and Utopian, let us suppose that we arise. Americans were to resolve to reaffirm our faith in the philosophy of the Dec- Jew..—Ed. If from this moment we were to deter¬ mine all our actions in the.light of the! ony among fatherhood of God and the brotherhood I home. The of man, to become as scrupulous in our ne because duties as wc are zealous of our rights, we tny Ameri- could do much, this Brotherhood Week made eco- of 1950, to help shatter the barriers of inderstanding that man in his or perversity has permitted m-pollce editorial people today speak of ProUms •By PENELOPE PERKINS Jimmy Roosevelt to arrive in Fresno By DOUG STOUT Rev. John ]. Cavanaugh, C.S.C. President, Notre Dame Brahms, Beethoven we got —but no bop! By DICK MOORE ir college must •clashes only." Nor Three FSC profs i volunteer for duty art Lyon, Engll.h'. tehler, psychology, s CHRISMM'S 3>,t„3. R.sLuearst Rough" $1.00 n itself 2AM. Recap Those Slippery Tires RUSS CLEMENTS YOUR CHEVRON DEALER 2740 VAN NESS BIVD. POPE TIRE CO.' . KEUY-SPRINGFIELD I TOES "SKID CHAIN KNTAl" | I 1709 Broodwoy L VARSITY LUNCH 1472 NO. VAN NESS ' Serving at Reasonable Prices BREAKFAST - LUNCH - DINNER Complete Fountain Service AWS Installs new officers for Spring semester ■Ullcd and preliminary ptatu h Carolyn Palmer, secretary; ! COLLEGIAN NaUonalAuYwtJsuigSerrice.lnc. Court House r,rk grrt. Awls. rwCu£? r,=. :.;=:: M. ELGIN (A%-(imMicaM> cse new Elgin nsoJr „. »alue-17.jeweJ Hi DeLuae Watches. Famous Elf Isnsanship. And each ha. I •injDnraPowerMain.prin Regular Pries* am.,i„gDnr.Fow«Mai*.pri. Affe April, *45SQ Z^^&Ztj? w. nielseF JEWEUjR 1236 FULTON STREET From fryin' pan to fire go hoopsters for last CCAA tilts roach Dutch Warmerdam's Bulldog cagers make the pro- ,, : ,„ni|. from the frying pan into the fire this weekend V n'thcy journey south to Los Angeles and San Diego. i„ law Angeles, the Fresnans will stop off at Pcpperdincn ln '. ...™ ono.TOm«nt with Duck Powell's striped | Varsity nine will open home season tomorrow Fresno State's baseball fans get their first look at the varsity in action tomorrow when the Pirates from Modesto JC drop in at the FSC ball park for a return doable header, starting at 1 p.m. The Bulldogs hold two wins over the junior collegians last Saturday, when they In- Height, backboard I control give alums annual hoop tilt » FSC archers head 29 school teams in national tourney '» , Bounding Wes Slade. aggressive Bulldog sturdy, who has shown his ability as a rebounder and hustler under the bucket, and has contributed his share ol counlers from his forward spot. Yearlings close out one season, open another Cagers play Tulare Tulare Aztecs open for benefit finale season for Frosh nine ind saeker Franny O of Waahlngton. Oregon | • Teacher* College. d place Pepperdtne ■espectlrely. Pepper- I probably work tbe second Meeting scheduled .— MARIPOSA & BROADWAY
Object Description
Title | 1950_02 The Daily Collegian February 1950 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1950 |
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 | Feb 24, 1950 Pg. 2-3 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1950 |
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 | Editorial: and they're off Probably one of the wisest moves of student council this year was made last Wednesday when it passed the ruling oft attendance. Under the new ruling any group which is not represented at student council one out of three times, would be eliminated from the association. What does elimination mean? First, it means that the group, as far as the administration is concerned, cannot le¬ gally meet, cannot requisition rooms, cannot hold any all-school affair, is elim¬ inated from participation in such things as the Blue Key Carnival, and cannot have anything published in the Colle¬ gian. We feci that the ruling was rather harsh, in that it made it impossible for any group which is dropped to become re-instated until the following semester.*, Some alternatives were offered land vetoed by the council. One of these was the imposing of a fine, about $25. on any org which is "kicked-out." and wish- One thing is certain, however. If the ruling is enforced and representatives come to the council meetings, a larger room is going to be needed. Why? There are now 91 orgs on campus. J^ClC}(Jcll's ejjuj, By DICE DAGGETT Just heard, from an old friend back i South Dakota. Seems he has just finished master's thesis in psychology, devoting it t an investigation of the possibility of and need for psychological examinations of teach- ■ Th* Fresno State College Collegian Bangin On The Wall W He i- e that it .Mil e r get ti popular procedure. Too many people afraid of it. He says it would never be prac¬ tical since it would require wcedin of a fourth of high school lege teachers. There aren't enough of tin m onywtvy, and with I quarter of them "' qualified at the l>egijining, it would just a wreck the educational system in many pli This does not mean that 25 percent of i .—>. psychopathic cases; many of j II teachers ai iuited to their « peace begins at home tave mild neuroses which have a tendency o rub off on children, although adults would lever be bothered. But it gives students a fresh insight """ -■*-—"—-ll system to realize that 87 peri My friend says that man viously frightened. Others with such procedures that they are suspicious. One rural grade school teacher said that sh< refused because he might hypnotise her; psy etiology was black magic anywuv. A higl school teacher, apparently much frightened at •1: pin poet of being found out, resigned These cases are not isolated ones. Ralph says these attitudes were rather wid. He suggested that M.D.'s are required to pass physical examinations to detenu they will not pass any communicable disease to a patient, yet there exists no means to ::.'if., ally examine a teacher to see if small | children are even safe in their classes, much less to see if they are suits " - - - their jobs. If these attitudes startle one. one should inquire of teacher training students if thev I would be will;, itions of this' sort instituted in this state. Mast of them don't. People just aren't that secure in their! belief that they could laration of Independen to make it a practical e life. B and actually! try-day rule of A return to peace and ham men, like ciiarity, begins at modern world is an unhappy too many people, including n cans, are suffering from mai nomic, racial, and religious tensions. tnterr Although at first thought, removal of ious i these tensions may seem completely quix- blindi otic and Utopian, let us suppose that we arise. Americans were to resolve to reaffirm our faith in the philosophy of the Dec- Jew..—Ed. If from this moment we were to deter¬ mine all our actions in the.light of the! ony among fatherhood of God and the brotherhood I home. The of man, to become as scrupulous in our ne because duties as wc are zealous of our rights, we tny Ameri- could do much, this Brotherhood Week made eco- of 1950, to help shatter the barriers of inderstanding that man in his or perversity has permitted m-pollce editorial people today speak of ProUms •By PENELOPE PERKINS Jimmy Roosevelt to arrive in Fresno By DOUG STOUT Rev. John ]. Cavanaugh, C.S.C. President, Notre Dame Brahms, Beethoven we got —but no bop! By DICK MOORE ir college must •clashes only." Nor Three FSC profs i volunteer for duty art Lyon, Engll.h'. tehler, psychology, s CHRISMM'S 3>,t„3. R.sLuearst Rough" $1.00 n itself 2AM. Recap Those Slippery Tires RUSS CLEMENTS YOUR CHEVRON DEALER 2740 VAN NESS BIVD. POPE TIRE CO.' . KEUY-SPRINGFIELD I TOES "SKID CHAIN KNTAl" | I 1709 Broodwoy L VARSITY LUNCH 1472 NO. VAN NESS ' Serving at Reasonable Prices BREAKFAST - LUNCH - DINNER Complete Fountain Service AWS Installs new officers for Spring semester ■Ullcd and preliminary ptatu h Carolyn Palmer, secretary; ! COLLEGIAN NaUonalAuYwtJsuigSerrice.lnc. Court House r,rk grrt. Awls. rwCu£? r,=. :.;=:: M. ELGIN (A%-(imMicaM> cse new Elgin nsoJr „. »alue-17.jeweJ Hi DeLuae Watches. Famous Elf Isnsanship. And each ha. I •injDnraPowerMain.prin Regular Pries* am.,i„gDnr.Fow«Mai*.pri. Affe April, *45SQ Z^^&Ztj? w. nielseF JEWEUjR 1236 FULTON STREET From fryin' pan to fire go hoopsters for last CCAA tilts roach Dutch Warmerdam's Bulldog cagers make the pro- ,, : ,„ni|. from the frying pan into the fire this weekend V n'thcy journey south to Los Angeles and San Diego. i„ law Angeles, the Fresnans will stop off at Pcpperdincn ln '. ...™ ono.TOm«nt with Duck Powell's striped | Varsity nine will open home season tomorrow Fresno State's baseball fans get their first look at the varsity in action tomorrow when the Pirates from Modesto JC drop in at the FSC ball park for a return doable header, starting at 1 p.m. The Bulldogs hold two wins over the junior collegians last Saturday, when they In- Height, backboard I control give alums annual hoop tilt » FSC archers head 29 school teams in national tourney '» , Bounding Wes Slade. aggressive Bulldog sturdy, who has shown his ability as a rebounder and hustler under the bucket, and has contributed his share ol counlers from his forward spot. Yearlings close out one season, open another Cagers play Tulare Tulare Aztecs open for benefit finale season for Frosh nine ind saeker Franny O of Waahlngton. Oregon | • Teacher* College. d place Pepperdtne ■espectlrely. Pepper- I probably work tbe second Meeting scheduled .— MARIPOSA & BROADWAY |