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Petje Two •COUSOIAM - The Fresno State College Collegien — Xlt., I Hoi_s,i nsssja t itViow ZJhe Voice iL CJL A S-Oatt* at Peaaae, c\ I ISI Ml **r Jean Casey Clarence Niebuhr Bonnie Beeman Betty Kent Bob Minor and Bruce Farris Science and Society Pcoplc grc often \jm n i though there is an entity >>r personalire in solved in it >One attribute that i* dated with personality is will, thc ability Ditiate activity, and thuvlv, it is often " thought tl. Brill of its own Be cause ef this prevalent nMtconcepfion, it is nee- \ cssary ro re-cxamim the meaning of fht wortt SCli in < Science is dsawijasd btiywiedge, gained through observation and experiment, and it lias I §p will of irs own. Science can do neither harm r nor good by itself, but people constantly speak i of science as a power for good ot evil This is ' IKK to. It is man himself who is a power for good or evil Now that rhe exploitation <>f atomic power has been brought about by the co-operative ef | fotts of many great scientists, it is extremely important that we realize that there is no evil in atomic power or thc knowledge which made ► ir possible, but rather that rhe evil is in the men who will use this power 0 There is resaonablt evidence that man as we i know him has lived on this earth I I 50,000 years. Some 8.000 years ago man began ■ SO be able to record in writing his thoughts and 1 le has come a long u.iv in these Ml from crude stone impli vent of fire, clothes from the skins of animals CO the utilization of energy from the h.isic building blocks of the un Nature pn**,.lr.l the lower (..rms ot life <-«.itli blind instincts ro guide rhcrn in their individual ■ and colk\ti\e struL-il' foi survival In rhe case of man, nature rook a i han ly on his own She eliminated some of thc instincts and in their place substituted the inrelleit snd will. ' Man is now in a potm.in to decide for him self whether he shall «.ur\i\r, and, it he chooses to keep on living and creating, v. kit manm r ot life he shall lead On. •..mutinies wondcis it nature really intended man to havi aseasure of autonomy, but. nestrflidess, both she and we are faced with the situation t.n bet HttfeA* problem ot mankind now v. h.it • ere chey going ro do about if Will they sit oan science as a device of the ; arill tbey loudly proclaim science from ^^^^ By T. Dion Foreman first His * eye* hsve 'ollegian In msny a Ir .r two Tn Introdurlloi >..r or not I n Introdn. ' tL £/it, these palsied hands an.l de at rolumnlng for I rear, aad perhaps a wt the author might be T. glten Foreman, te use th. nam. under which h. li currently registered, is en. of Preene Stlte'i elder BBBWatJ, having entered th. school sometime between the Battle of New Orlesns and Millard Fillmore'i tdmlmitrition ■lemarfcsbtY well preserved snd tprlghtly. the old man suffers from only ■ few minor lilmenti. on. being tn llluilon thst h. is th. lite Aihley^ Pickett, causing him to dash up sny inclined •lop* he encounter* it t fait gallop, under the impremon he ii itlll leading hu fimout charge i Foreman, of course, may actually be the late Gen Pickett but thi* team* doubtful ) Ai a columnist. Foremnn's chief virtue ha* always been that he had nothing whatever to say. and readers wbo missed hi* column were never afraid they'd Inst out on anythlnr Thla Is in attribute the Old Man will undoubtedly continue during hi* present stint * * * "All right. Foreman, are you or aren't you going to tettle that Sic you've owed the book, •tore tince 1SSST We'd like to get thl* off the book! " Signed, Wlnihjr Tbnisllnt this Into ■ pigeonhole with ■ hungi other, like it. we turn to one reading In part: "I thought you'd promised to be my leading man In my next picture, and here you are going to some old rollege Instead You naughty, naughty boy" Signed Theda Bare. * * * Well, there are lots mot.- like that, all very heart warming Oen V S Ortnt ***Jt a nice meeaage laying "I Intend to fight It out on this line If It take* all summer" hut the Western 1'nlon people ire miking some kind of s fuss, claiming It wis misdirected tnd should hsve gone to Washington They'll never get It from me now Then there ire notes from lir Thomas Meaete. Ctar rharoti. Piston. Stalin Or Townsend. Dean Baker Tokyo Rose, and a host of other*, but t won't go Into them all no. You'd think I was shoeing off. ami >*n ,| BS right. Anyway. If you know where you stand as this column Is concerned Ws ran all go home no. 0 benefactor el the hun will fhev consciously .in>l aetivtlv rc.ili/t that Bss pruhle-tii and its solution rists KBaatfl Iv u|x>n flic shoulders of mankind and its I.ic k of a "ip.ir.iblt ro tin extent of its know I edge Ir is in the eolli its iln heart is .it mir great • uvili/.ition and culture, that tin world looks for in.' Mcofiar rving rsa tin srruggfi They look rtoi just for .hi drsifti ,m<l build ftCW mn hints of distriKfion and construe fion. nut Im nun and wiKiiiti of wisdom thar ..utn ley .ind insight ni.ni Siir.lv tins obligation is pisr as i m umlietil upon the men and women of IRC . is i? a military duty upon an antsy and its soldiers NX , 11 ,l„ human race look in vain till the da-A of its i filiation or will its search be rcwaid. I* I In mswer lies with Yo$sl The farther down thi. "dang i lie tougher il gel* Neal Jensen his staff \lser. Kail Mil. km.in They haven't been a* dormant a. I implied In layed in lata* Betas thl«,*eene-i ouncll. - ■ ■ The count, t between th. important ra.le organlxatin be more tli > th* Rear View Mirror Friday. However, I wish lo pa I mentioned in ls-t Friday's col umn that "my hou-. CSTA to Give Tea For Education Majors The i Teachers ■l a tea for .Mil IllllstllOII- of air tniiM'tidiiu- one of > oni »ecm* thst the «... I mean 'Candy Idea's") had a long seance » mu* and trtaa bs tb.- *nr|.| that FSC would tags my boned ..- Veil, gag * t i I. (we know th.it his fa lie number |g 11, ha lakes _«lr|s high school fis.nl. ii: . '.king them in through i.Hk- iin.-.l In in ll.ii hi. Improper lighting is just os bod for your eye* os the crazy idea showri here Use Bg bulbs in proper fixtures for your study ond work Keep your bulbs cleon ona you'll be surprised bow much better you con sew, BETTER LIGHT MEANS BETTER SIGHT •••• i In th.' I r»ii.!y — 1 mt* »; th. * {Mhuknecht i tag hsstsl -THE MUSIC BAR" House Appliance Co. 1470 North Vsn N.t. RECORDS All Littit Popular and Clinical Prompt Radio Service Popular Sheet Music PHONE 2-35SS Since 1910 Fresno's House of Finer Jewelry V !•'. .iliiiililim ll!UI'll\ l.ll. 1134 Fulton Phone 2-3197 "Sweetheart" Diamonds Gruen, Bulova, Longines, Tavannes, Hamilton, Elgin. Waltham * Watches Distinctive Jewelry SPECIAL RATES TO ALL COLLEGE STUDENTS AND FACULTY MEMBERS Headquarters for FRATERNITY PINS SORORITY PINS TROPHIES Maurice "Red" Silverman Varsity "F" Sociaty Alpha Fraternity Short Shavings By Candy Lags w*r* .cored in the flr*t h«lf of the FSC Poly gam* a* Candy Leg. predicted but by the Bulldog. Cindy Legi hu given up working th. dope .heet and will Mick to pok.r and crap The gam. The Muslins, were s.ampe.1 by II.- Plsy spd rauel daxtel backfiel.1 ol th.- Iliillilogs .bo out scored, out charged, and he-it soundly thr I >rson worked all his men. and aaw for the fltsi nm. jii.t .bat many at their capablll • ''tin Shaffer. "Ihe one man track team of Hanner'* '45 ■quad, ran for hi* second touch down. In two game*. Saturday Louie Papac Laurence Nelton. Hob Wlleon. Ilerk Coleman showed up well In the backfield Stolen . . Reno. Nov.—An in. ipiring .sampl. for wounded war vet.rant It little_Bobby Raven. Jutt .even /rnontmr^afttr hi* hand w*i blown off (turoV, a bat tl* Iw-^Prsrwe the plucVy e> doughboy- f* playing i hangup gam. of college /ootb.ll at u of Nevtrli. In f*ct. Reno fan* vatuldn't be a bit *urpri**d to see him wondu p with selection on I 15S | - The Fresno State College Collegian - Bulldog Gridders Defeat Shaffer Leads Cal Poly Team Here, 24-0 FSC in Yardage mJ ham Pat Ited 15 jftt.l- the llnll.loKs the ball on I .a* no good STOP DRIVES ___________ triple- threat.r it Reno High School Ht not only called the pliyt. but sicked, plunged ind pitted H* wss a unanimous choice for th. ill Nevids prep elevsn. • Intent I tn , • ity of Nevada, but the Army hid priority and th. fast stepp gridder found himself in Prii ever hill, he ran sfoul a Germin land mine ana the explosion tor. off hit l.ft hand and part of hit wrut. From hi. hospital bed River* wrote Coach Jim Aiken: "III be playing fullback for you thi* fall." He kept that promlee Nevada beat the Santa Barbara Marine. II It Saturday The Bull dog* meet the Marine! Saturday afternoon In Santa Barbara Lift *v*r . card tricks work nit nicely at Ihe game 11.Ih committee slaving before the game Alice Mazman Elected Faraday Club Proxy ■ •I baS Faraday Club. composed of major* ind students other officer* cho.en were Mil In- 1'iilhberti !.<.rrslne Putrcll. secretary, and • liker. ■ Kelley raced around end for ■ neit play Presno was off aide, but aaSBSSBSa fired a pa*, to Shropshire. » all Ihe .ay to the 5 yard line from ami hi- way •HAPPER SPRINTS Ijite In the SSSSSH j of the evening . hell s»lve\hJLed Olenn Shaffer took off rt.irB.SSW,- M„«tang 45, reverse.! tran th* en in lo score without * hand touching blm Tins ended the scoring for Ihe fir*t half, but in Ihe second half with the second and third »trlng •r» playing a good part of the time he Iliilldogs pinned ., score. Oiurd Wesley Wlpf blocked Si and fell on the ball lie 1 fool Un.- from WbWbw, tin. scoring .-.I rat Sewial ui IlillldOgl passe*, pen 't.lfbark Bob I Poly attack, but Be Mustang ha. | against the big Bag lag w and .tiitm-t I and Mill. *|| turn.d in good de scoring* twice and making olhet galna. played end on Ihe de •si tackle* tad Ikm Bolt ah.I nters Boyd and Skochko .err- so immovable MEET MARINES Nett week the Bulldogs will l%r rn,•r,, «ien they travel to Santa Barbara play the Santa Barbara Ma irerage. I even hark* ... action for >ne finished with mlnua average Joe Palco wag third Shaffer and Kelley Irf yardi aSS bavins gained SI ymls In eight plays, a 4 H yard* i day average Papac. who gained IS yardi In four play*, s S.S ysrds play average was fourth In the a erase department Onl» Singleton of the all Ct >ly bark* carrying the ball could finish with a plus average, an. d just a 1.4 yard* a play ■ Signing Deadline for >een's Ball Work Set Tomorrok laat day that . Be taken for commit ee work on tbe Queen'i Ball, de lared Maralou Onelo. publicity clean up. election p I ceremonies The gfrls to be chosen from the list, wtll he noiinrd of Childhood Education Meeting Scheduled A meeting of the I'sllfiunis A. oclatlon for t hlldhood Kdn.alioii ' I Ihe «tii.lent lounge Dr Im inllon t.. *. anil nww . the itudy of child-parent tearh relationships .hleh she Is mak ing for the association Kducatlnnal leader* .III panic! ite in a discussion l- n Daly, president of the elev Bf tli. i-.lifornla ton of Parent* and Teachers English Course Scheduled > evenlnc business Kng llsh class is being ea I'i I'-.nl V Sheehan of tbe Jour uallsm division, from 7 to t o'clock hi Itootn Ilia of the ||hrat> Spanish Club to Wan Semi-annual Party Kurth.-t pi.,,. f„, >IM be/ discussed tt the meeting of W flub lloll»«r. SpaaJeh ilub. to be held lomorro. I M pm In Ihe men', lounge ,n «• She. pnblirlly nhalrman Editor Says Handbook To Be Ready Next Week The Han.IN. be available lor distribution neit week Benoy Phillip. "leading I* now being done by Phillip* and member* of the staff When the booklet I* ready for dlstrlbutinn. It .ill be glvun out lo all student bod) card hol.l.i, b) staff members In the 1 Ore. upstairs In the uiii.ii, f-^atroni: .Or -^IJt'ertiierA LOST In Kalcllffe Stadliin Gold Link grtceket » Amethytt gtonei Keturn to Association I Heward SHELBURNE'S STATIONERY Phone 4-5007 1931 Mariposa St. FULL ZIPPER 3-RING All leather! binders and portfolios VBrief apses ► with ho^dJesJ Olenii Shatter ltd. a pis thanka to his i.'j.rd run The s|»edy Modesto grlggti netted 57 yards In sit plays for S.S Jack Kelley ind Bob Wilson were made 31 yard, in five Plays tor a * • yards averaaw ind M for an average pf t yard* a play by netting 5S yards In eight try. Page Three Over 15Q0 Enroll For FSC Courses I Mrs wilm* Wight, regi.irsr. has ...nourrceaiSSl student. h..e en rolled at Preeno State, sn Increase of approtlmately SO per cent o.er a comparable period laat pear. Th* figure doe* not Include lag' 1 itudent* who myi speclsj ,sor1 turm e ed by the college <»f 'hetoui regirtrailon l.irTara reailUr full thr,* .,„„„„„ ,„,, JJ die-Tor^,n ""■jun,or c-»-* arks sversged S.S s a whole, a* against ' S yard lost s plsy irds ■ play > average i ■ ^^^^^^^^ Passing for Slate wa* shmed bv four backs their combined eifor'. re.ultlng In .even completion* in tosses for US ysrds Prsnk Valarello led with three coniple tlona In three pssses. Custafson completed two out of four. Robert Coleman completed one out of one. ind Palro connected on one of his wn aerials Poly romrdeted thrre of nine tosses for SO ysrd«. FBC Intercepted three toeee* snl poly ioe Aropthire led la paaa r*. •IWng by .itching two tor 64 vitds. in.lu.llng one forces yarda. tifeon mid* rhw mo*tVytrdage 4" yarfli. on a ■rreen pass/*arily Ih the gaate. Bop Tiylor csokhl ta* most, three SS yard*. *Usajr eaaght one pass fc ysrws. AlaSTROM & WIEBETS COLLEGE PHARMACY rrestei In regiitrttioa music Industrlil * ci. iri geology Journal Ism Frosh Activities Will Discuss Oispley Cage bin orihe bot.nk.i gardeae hf he Fre.hm«n Waa**.'. AeUwt- tiee Club awtwSs* BSekaar I. pr ■* I I tlv | I.o*t dsy of brawl by union If fi.iiiid teturn to HANK WHITE !.*. t tim ______ SSS sts> rwgularly enroll**) sag 111 were .igned up for cou/sm ta the junior rollege division. The limited itudent* thl* semester totsl 124 In e •on to 110 last year Ptrticulsrly larg* i place In Ih* g*Ma I science, education, sag biology. physical aelaasi Justesens Food Stofeg, Inc. 9ua,iry Ecotromy "Friendly, Coorteoiig Sorvica" •TORE NUMBER SS: SIS Ollv*. Dial S-TOIS •TORE NUMBER g4: **** *• Taiara, ofsl S-rggg . STORE NUMBER gg- S10 eistksssiia oiai sarss •TORE NUMBER gg: SOS N. Vsn Nsaa, Dial A1S3J VtgstShl** S11 N. Van Nses, Olsl tgiag »• N. Van Nat Dial aepgg STORE NUMBER g7i ,z» N. Preaa* Olel S.74g7 •TORE NUMBER SB: S*SS Ventura, Dial gagpg OPPICE AND WAREHOUSE •SS H, Dial Veggg INTER-VARSITY CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP URGES YOU TO HEAR DR HARRY RIMMER, Sc D., LL D., DD. President, Research Science Bureau MODERN SCIENCE and the GENESIS RECORD" WEDNESDAY NITE — 8 P. M. FSC AUDITORIUM Sponsorad By CHRISTIAN BUSINESS MEWS COKOeTTTEE
Object Description
Title | 1945_10 The Daily Collegian October 1945 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1945 |
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 | October 16, 1945 Pg 2-3 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1945 |
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 |
Petje Two
•COUSOIAM
- The Fresno State College Collegien —
Xlt.,
I Hoi_s,i
nsssja t
itViow
ZJhe Voice
iL CJL
A
S-Oatt* at Peaaae, c\
I ISI Ml **r
Jean Casey
Clarence Niebuhr
Bonnie Beeman
Betty Kent
Bob Minor and Bruce Farris
Science and Society
Pcoplc grc often \jm n i
though there is an entity >>r personalire in
solved in it >One attribute that i*
dated with personality is will, thc ability
Ditiate activity, and thuvlv, it is often
" thought tl. Brill of its own Be
cause ef this prevalent nMtconcepfion, it is nee-
\ cssary ro re-cxamim the meaning of fht wortt
SCli in <
Science is dsawijasd btiywiedge, gained
through observation and experiment, and it lias
I §p will of irs own. Science can do neither harm
r nor good by itself, but people constantly speak
i of science as a power for good ot evil This is
' IKK to. It is man himself who is a power for
good or evil
Now that rhe exploitation <>f atomic power
has been brought about by the co-operative ef
| fotts of many great scientists, it is extremely
important that we realize that there is no evil
in atomic power or thc knowledge which made
► ir possible, but rather that rhe evil is in the men
who will use this power 0
There is resaonablt evidence that man as we
i know him has lived on this earth I
I 50,000 years. Some 8.000 years ago man began
■ SO be able to record in writing his thoughts and
1 le has come a long u.iv in these Ml
from crude stone impli
vent of fire, clothes from the skins of animals
CO the utilization of energy from the h.isic
building blocks of the un
Nature pn**,.lr.l the lower (..rms ot life <-«.itli
blind instincts ro guide rhcrn in their individual
■ and colk\ti\e struL-il' foi survival In rhe case
of man, nature rook a i han
ly on his own She eliminated some of thc
instincts and in their place substituted the
inrelleit snd will. '
Man is now in a potm.in to decide for him
self whether he shall «.ur\i\r, and, it he chooses
to keep on living and creating, v. kit manm r ot
life he shall lead On. •..mutinies wondcis it
nature really intended man to havi
aseasure of autonomy, but. nestrflidess, both
she and we are faced with the situation t.n bet
HttfeA* problem ot mankind now v. h.it
• ere chey going ro do about if Will they sit
oan science as a device of the
; arill tbey loudly proclaim science
from ^^^^
By T. Dion Foreman
first His
* eye* hsve
'ollegian In msny a Ir
.r two Tn Introdurlloi
>..r or not I
n Introdn. '
tL £/it,
these palsied hands an.l
de at rolumnlng for I
rear, aad perhaps a wt
the author might be
T. glten Foreman, te use th. nam. under
which h. li currently registered, is en. of Preene Stlte'i elder BBBWatJ, having entered th.
school sometime between the Battle of New
Orlesns and Millard Fillmore'i tdmlmitrition
■lemarfcsbtY well preserved snd tprlghtly. the
old man suffers from only ■ few minor lilmenti.
on. being tn llluilon thst h. is th. lite Aihley^
Pickett, causing him to dash up sny inclined
•lop* he encounter* it t fait gallop, under the
impremon he ii itlll leading hu fimout charge
i Foreman, of course, may actually be the late
Gen Pickett but thi* team* doubtful )
Ai a columnist. Foremnn's chief virtue ha* always
been that he had nothing whatever to say. and readers wbo missed hi* column were never afraid they'd
Inst out on anythlnr Thla Is in attribute the Old
Man will undoubtedly continue during hi* present
stint
* * *
"All right. Foreman, are you or aren't you
going to tettle that Sic you've owed the book,
•tore tince 1SSST We'd like to get thl* off the
book! " Signed, Wlnihjr
Tbnisllnt this Into ■ pigeonhole with ■ hungi
other, like it. we turn to one reading In part:
"I thought you'd promised to be my leading man
In my next picture, and here you are going to some
old rollege Instead You naughty, naughty boy"
Signed Theda Bare.
* * *
Well, there are lots mot.- like that, all very heart
warming Oen V S Ortnt ***Jt a nice meeaage laying "I Intend to fight It out on this line If It take*
all summer" hut the Western 1'nlon people ire miking some kind of s fuss, claiming It wis misdirected tnd should hsve gone to Washington They'll
never get It from me now Then there ire notes
from lir Thomas Meaete. Ctar rharoti.
Piston. Stalin Or Townsend. Dean Baker Tokyo
Rose, and a host of other*, but t won't go Into them
all no. You'd think I was shoeing off. ami >*n ,| BS
right.
Anyway. If you know where you stand
as this column Is concerned Ws ran all go home no.
0 benefactor el the hun
will fhev consciously .in>l aetivtlv rc.ili/t that
Bss pruhle-tii and its solution rists KBaatfl Iv u|x>n
flic shoulders of mankind and its I.ic k of a
"ip.ir.iblt ro tin extent of its know I
edge
Ir is in the eolli its iln heart is .it mir great
• uvili/.ition and culture, that tin
world looks for in.' Mcofiar
rving rsa tin srruggfi They look rtoi just for
.hi drsifti ,m |