Feb 21, 1950 Pg. 2-3 |
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Editorial: do or die With some 89 organizations on cam¬ pus, and each of them carrying a vote in the student council, there have been few times when a quorum has been pres¬ ent at council meetings to conduct legal business. Each organization, club, fraternity, or sorority has been asked to send one rep¬ resentative to each meeting, either an appointed person or one of the officers, and too few of them have cooperated. It is the duty of the council to handle all student affairs. It is one of the top forms of government in the association and it is gradually but surely losing its power by in-attention and indifference. In an effort to improve attendance a new board for handling the voting card system has been made by the Industrial Arts Club and donated to the assc tion; this board will show at a gl; which clubs arc not represented. The first meeting of the be held tomorrow at 6 p.m. in the n of the again we stand The Collegian again wishes to . the importance of deadlines to the ious publicity agents of the diffe campus groups. All copy for publica tion must be in the Collegian office b; 9 a.m. the day before publi The staff does not feel bound to print any material which may be submitted after that time. - ~~rn ^j/c -The Fresno State College Collegian OCU6 By DOUG STOOT . . . lick hell out of her. Those were the words of Secretary of De¬ fense Johnson in an address to his fellow alumni of the University of Virginia on Feb¬ ruary 2nd. He was referring to Russia (of course), and he meant that we're ready to lick hell out of her if she makes one false "Joe Stalin will know that if he starts something at -1 a.m." Johnson said, fighting power of the U.S. will be on the job Secretary Johnson has some facts to him up. We got this unification problem aboul Whipped, got a stock pile of A bombs, military outposts all over the world, military and industrial programs and pacts in the it-o-the-ciirtain nations, and we've bought ; II I- Theta Chi and PSK frats declare no-fighting war chain reaction: Failure to achie\ peace by international control of the j" along with Russia's successful pro-!" nf the bomb leads to the idea of w : it will take, say two years for re tearch and successful production, then we'l iet up a UN Committee for control and in ipoction of all hydrogen atoms, no one wil se able to agree on the conditions of con will dream up an X bomb 1,000 b, _ times greater, etc.—unless some pfc gets [-so rhi sig« 1* It all has the appearance of a pretty nasty and explosive dog chasing its own "— A bomb did not unite the world out of fear; JJ as many predicted, nor is it likely that;,, threats of greater destruction will force » people to be friendly toward one another. |' Perhaps fear is not the best wa ing feelings of brotherhood. If however, an A bomb or H bomb or X|J Ixsmb can't bring world peace, what c ■■Peaceful" negotiations? UN arbitration? Well, they haven't worked so far. . jPUAHE* ■"Young Republicans Club FWLC applications y to meet Thursday available to women Bulldogs bite Modesto nine in each of openers The Bulldog nine opened ite season successfully with ■ ,| ,f the well-conditioned Modesto JC baseball team i S"Lto Saturday, turning in 4-3 and a 6-3 performances. •'tphomore hurler DoniBaraett, who went all the way i &\ 6-.1 night-cap, probably did more than anyone to meri 1472 NO. VAN NESS Serving at Reasonable Prices BREAKFAST — LUNCH — DINNER Complete Fountain Service 5. AIR FORCE ONLY THE BEST CAN BE AVIATION CADETS! Varsity takes San Diego after defeat by Pepperdine By WAU.Y BOYTER light'* heartbreaking (0-58 |oaa lo '»*. Us* Bulldogs outraced Diego Sute Aateca Battir- played what m ry tempered only by th Frosh five splits in prelim games with FJC Blades th Lis t.nrn a single point behind j •""sh - Chandler f. «; E t Bak. High (M) Freeh (58! M-l'on k. 0: Metler'g. 0. Fl ; Abbott f. 5; Torgerson f. CHRISMAIV'S 1035 Oliv. St. or.okfc-st - lunch - Dinner ol Popular Price. "Cn'tk.n in Ih* Rough" $1.00 Team high scorerl That's Ih Al Cano, who is expected lo Ihe alumni lineup in tonight' ng-jndln'LlneJFrosh baseball begins U., victor.' a "=»,0// ouf Spring operations By rXJNCUHLEE Freshman baseball opened practice in full force yesterda; with the arrival of shortstop Bob Donkersley, second basemai Don George, and first baseman Fred Bartels, who wer previously occupied with basketball duties. The three latecomers add to a "very- impressive" litt of si: Beatty, stompin hat, old timers and kids will renew alum' tilt tonight Coach "Dutch" Warmcrdam's Bulldog cagers will close their home season tonight with a game against an all star alumni team in Roosevelt gym. • The all stars will be handled for tonight's game by alumni iINTERCEPTED , ca""hTpe"e,ne;rdon' Frat cage loop M.wltL3L££ still close, All irsky both wortlng out cj^^ ^ n£)n Qrg anybody's appfe/ln the and a worir. horse in all three years was George ' Whitey" 3ecir.r.9;'., who wil! see action *J Chinese Club to meet .inta Barbara .it IV ;.;>•.• r J ;:•..* ASHLOCK'S d College ot Sequol (Continued on Page 4) <Continued on Pjge 4) ULGIN Ihim ft&m- Q 17 JEWELS! S.ve money during tbo introductory T'uemrtt^.T^:'^°E\]Ja DeLn* VMeke*. K.m*u. Elgio er*ft.snan.hip. And each ha. the am.line DuraPower Mainspring* —'-- .«„«rt that eliminate. 99% *f ".trh repair. Aftor April I MS22 due ^.JSl^SSL IV. NIELSEiV JEWELER 1236 FULTON STREET IF you'r* .lyle con.cou. and if you have fil worri*. ORIGINAL SIZE 9 SHOP Sijc 9 o«ty_ HERES A NAME YOULL WANT to know! take your pick... you can't go wrongl These arc our campus representatives, and they'll keep *ou informed on clothes, us informed on caipTTs trends at Fresno State.
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 21, 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:
do or die
With some 89 organizations on cam¬
pus, and each of them carrying a vote
in the student council, there have been
few times when a quorum has been pres¬
ent at council meetings to conduct legal
business.
Each organization, club, fraternity, or
sorority has been asked to send one rep¬
resentative to each meeting, either an
appointed person or one of the officers,
and too few of them have cooperated.
It is the duty of the council to handle
all student affairs. It is one of the top
forms of government in the association
and it is gradually but surely losing its
power by in-attention and indifference.
In an effort to improve attendance a
new board for handling the voting card
system has been made by the Industrial
Arts Club and donated to the assc
tion; this board will show at a gl;
which clubs arc not represented.
The first meeting of the
be held tomorrow at 6 p.m. in the
n of the
again we stand
The Collegian again wishes to .
the importance of deadlines to the
ious publicity agents of the diffe
campus groups. All copy for publica
tion must be in the Collegian office b;
9 a.m. the day before publi
The staff does not feel bound to print
any material which may be submitted
after that time. -
~~rn ^j/c
-The Fresno State College Collegian
OCU6
By DOUG STOOT
. . . lick hell out of her.
Those were the words of Secretary of De¬
fense Johnson in an address to his fellow
alumni of the University of Virginia on Feb¬
ruary 2nd. He was referring to Russia (of
course), and he meant that we're ready to
lick hell out of her if she makes one false
"Joe Stalin will know that if he starts
something at -1 a.m." Johnson said,
fighting power of the U.S. will be on the job
Secretary Johnson has some facts to
him up. We got this unification problem
aboul Whipped, got a stock pile of A bombs,
military outposts all over the world, military
and industrial programs and pacts in the
it-o-the-ciirtain nations, and we've bought
; II I-
Theta Chi and
PSK frats declare
no-fighting war
chain reaction: Failure to achie\
peace by international control of the j"
along with Russia's successful pro-!"
nf the bomb leads to the idea of w
: it will take, say two years for re
tearch and successful production, then we'l
iet up a UN Committee for control and in
ipoction of all hydrogen atoms, no one wil
se able to agree on the conditions of con
will dream up an X bomb 1,000 b, _
times greater, etc.—unless some pfc gets [-so rhi sig« 1*
It all has the appearance of a pretty nasty
and explosive dog chasing its own "—
A bomb did not unite the world out of fear; JJ
as many predicted, nor is it likely that;,,
threats of greater destruction will force »
people to be friendly toward one another. |'
Perhaps fear is not the best wa
ing feelings of brotherhood.
If however, an A bomb or H bomb or X|J
Ixsmb can't bring world peace, what c
■■Peaceful" negotiations? UN arbitration?
Well, they haven't worked so far.
. jPUAHE*
■"Young Republicans Club FWLC applications
y to meet Thursday available to women
Bulldogs bite Modesto
nine in each of openers
The Bulldog nine opened ite season successfully with
■ ,| ,f the well-conditioned Modesto JC baseball team i
S"Lto Saturday, turning in 4-3 and a 6-3 performances.
•'tphomore hurler DoniBaraett, who went all the way i
&\ 6-.1 night-cap, probably did more than anyone to meri
1472 NO. VAN NESS
Serving at Reasonable Prices
BREAKFAST — LUNCH — DINNER
Complete Fountain Service
5. AIR FORCE
ONLY THE BEST CAN BE AVIATION CADETS!
Varsity takes San
Diego after defeat
by Pepperdine
By WAU.Y BOYTER
light'* heartbreaking (0-58 |oaa lo
'»*. Us* Bulldogs outraced
Diego Sute Aateca Battir-
played what m
ry tempered only by th
Frosh five splits
in prelim games
with FJC Blades
th Lis t.nrn a single point behind j
•""sh - Chandler f. «; E
t Bak. High (M) Freeh (58!
M-l'on k. 0: Metler'g. 0. Fl
; Abbott f. 5; Torgerson f.
CHRISMAIV'S
1035 Oliv. St.
or.okfc-st - lunch - Dinner
ol Popular Price.
"Cn'tk.n in Ih* Rough" $1.00
Team high scorerl That's Ih
Al Cano, who is expected lo
Ihe alumni lineup in tonight'
ng-jndln'LlneJFrosh baseball begins
U., victor.' a "=»,0// ouf Spring operations
By rXJNCUHLEE
Freshman baseball opened practice in full force yesterda;
with the arrival of shortstop Bob Donkersley, second basemai
Don George, and first baseman Fred Bartels, who wer
previously occupied with basketball duties.
The three latecomers add to a "very- impressive" litt of si:
Beatty, stompin hat,
old timers and kids will
renew alum' tilt tonight
Coach "Dutch" Warmcrdam's Bulldog cagers will close
their home season tonight with a game against an all star
alumni team in Roosevelt gym. •
The all stars will be handled for tonight's game by alumni
iINTERCEPTED
, ca""hTpe"e,ne;rdon' Frat cage loop
M.wltL3L££ still close, All
irsky both wortlng out cj^^ ^ n£)n Qrg
anybody's appfe/ln the
and a worir. horse in all three
years was George ' Whitey"
3ecir.r.9;'., who wil! see action
*J Chinese Club to meet
.inta Barbara .it IV ;.;>•.• r J ;:•..*
ASHLOCK'S
d College ot Sequol
(Continued on Page 4) |