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COLLEGIAN FORUM Opinions expressed In Collegian edltoriala, including feature- fn*l editorials and commentaries by guest writers.are not necessarily those of Fresno State College or the student body. THE DAILY COLuEGIAN COMMENTARY South Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos NEWS FlASHl ...CAPITOL BffTHRooM IS StSSSTuP? NtKOM LABIBS \r "A DfcPLaORABlA Ac.T OP \JiouejsJC£"i I •Fedne.dey, March 3. 1»7I THE DAILY COLLEOtAN CAMPUS FOOTNOTES International Programs rep will visit FSC tomorrow representative for the Cal- „ia State Colleges Interna- al programs will be on cam- e 125. abroad and want to receive ><lll through the California It College system, you must ,. up for an interview. iiudenls applying for the pro- ,n lii Germany, France or iin are required to have had equivalent of two years ofthe uaire (college level) and be le to pass the MLA compre- ision proficiency t will b n In the it 9 a.m. March 13. For further n contact Dr. Cobb In • call Rich Johnsi..., lal senior music recital » held Thursday, March •resno State College. The Miss Lung will play 'Sonata In D Major* by Beethovan and ■Sonata #3 In A Minor* by Serge Prokofleff. Morrlswlllplay'Ar- la and Fanfare' by Paul Vldal and 'Sonata for Trumpet and Piano" by Kent Kennan. Morris will be accompanied on the piano by Barbara Brennan, a graduate assistant in the music depart- open to the public wlthi is presented In partial ol the requirements f gree ol bachelor of a Women's art show Campus Women for Liberation is sponsoring an art exhibition to be shown March 7-12 In the Fresno State College Library. The group Is looking for works by women artists. The art may be In any medium and delivered to the Art Gallery In the Old Bookstore Wednesday through Friday before 4 p.m. and Mon- . For further In- lng formed'to give parents free Ume and children playmates.* A full day-care center is planned for fall aV Fresno State CoUege and the co-op is to 'flll-ln* until It Is established, a spokesman said. Anyone Interested tn the coop should call the Valley Switchboard at 268-7839 or Marilyn Benck at 439-1231. A meeting will be held next Monday at 6 p.m. In CU 305. Interested parties are Invited to bring their holding an ASB card. 'J.C, Superstar' •Jesus Christ, Superstar,* will be featured at the second In a series of Lenten meeUngs sponsored Jointly by several campus ministries at Fresno SUte Col- reo tape performance Is set for Wednesday, March 7, at 8 p.m. in the Pax Del Chapel at the College ReUglous Center, .2311 E. Shaw Ave. Librettos containing the text of the songs will ... be provided to those attending. Law schools Tnere „,,, be brief responses students Interested In In- to the opera by Bill Elsentrager, ■' lawschool FSC student, and Jim White, dl- are urged to attend a meeting —.— -• .».- ~-n-~ atSzas^. Friday irom 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. In the International Room of the Cafeteria. Dan Rodrlquez, Jasper Johns, and Kenneth Price. Gallery hours are 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. weekdays. Noah's Ark Former Fresno SUte CoUege Engllsh Instructor Robert Mezey wlU read bis poetry at this week's Noah's Ark program. Mezey, dismissed from the FSC faculty in 1968 for bis alleged advocacy of marijuana, U currenUy on trial In Fresno Superior Court seeking his reln- >f the College ReUglous For further Information, i e Unl- ■all P t Rank al a Co-op o-op Is now Committee, will speak. Film Series Park' starring Jane Fonda and Robert Redford will be shown next Friday at 6 p.m. and at 8:30 pirn. In the College Union Lounge. The International award win- Gemini graphics An art exhibit entitled'Gemini Prints,* which features 54 graphic prints will be shown through March 26 in the FSC Art Gallery (in the old bookstore). The prints are from Gemini Graphic Editions Ltd., a lithography workshop in Los Angeles. Some ofthe artists represented In the show Include Robert Rauschenberg, Wayne Thlebaud, Joseph Albers, The weekly Noah's Ark wlU Uke place at 9 p.m. tomorrow at the College Religious Center. Women's supplement' Women wishing to contribute articles, essays, poetry, photography or any written work for pubUcaUon in an upcoming special women's supplement of the Dally CoUegian are encouraged to drop material off at the Collegian office (old bookstore) or call Jean Carroll at 229-6298, 2143 E. Shaw Ave. DeadUne for contribuUons Is Friday, March 5. The special women's supplement Is scheduled for publication March 10. Vietnam (Continued from Page 2) ..islnc troops has caused It to lopt the tactic of "pressganglng* ■?crults which results In a high . rcentage of dissidents within ,RVN, The attempt to destroy the raft deferred status of students ad led to numerous bloody clash- i between police and Saigon tudents. In spite of mass ar- osts, detention In tiger cages. n Is de- tlon, regardless of Its r Since Nixon's ability tc to control South Vletna pendent on propping up the puppet Thleu regime, and since Nixon's real Intention is not withdrawal but victory, he and his mlUtary advisers are quite willing to support an escalation of the war Into first Laos and then Into North Vietnam If necessary. This Is h the PRG andtheAmer- Bolh films In the Fine Arts Series and Popular Arts Series are Iree uponpresentationofstudent ID cards. Concert Series Jeanne Garson, soprano and teacher at SanJose State College, will be the guest artist at the Second Annual Statewide Concert Series Thursday at 8:30 p.m. In the Recital Hall (M100). i win t Therefoi itudei lt becomes clear tt •ilRon Student Union remains a base of opposition to Thleu. At ■ho same time, opposition of the Huddhist Church has again bourne mlUtant and In response to a non-violent sit-in to protest the nntinuatlon of the war, government troops massacred 40 young nonks. Similarly, disabled army .eierans have felt the repression of the Thleu regime as their peaceful march to the presidential palace was Intercepted by government troops and this time the unprecedented picture of wheelchair bound ARVN veterans fighting Thleu's private mercenaries broke through the U.S. press blackout. Both the moderatenatureofthe I'RG's 8-polnt peace proposal and the increasing domestic, non- communist opposition to the Thleu/Ky dictatorship are Intimately tied up with the decision io Invade Laos. The only which Thleu and Ky can which would Inevitably involve the American government to recognize the fairness and legitimacy of the PRG's proposal and to Immediately disengage all military activity in South East Asia, thus leaving the futures of South Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos In the hands of the peoples of those to be ab- t play y pianist in Delevoryas, a Julllard graduate and also a member of the San Jose State faculty. Miss Garson specializes In Italian opera and German lleder. ^Selections of each will be ln- The concerts, sponsored by the Chancellor's Office, are free and open to the public. esigned to enable ^k 1J mil Incteased V>«^^ <f- «J elicial changes VV* p.X^ the teaching- \^^ V V V nbyiden- Ov^ X^ - V ^S> THE ingwlh rV<^ BIG "** V<V)\X^ GAMBLE ^kV' in our V> NF„ schools learning tying and helping liminate the Educa- onal Malpt Did you know: 7 - That most teachers n sale "The'Ca e in America of the essential getting the news of wnat is actually happening there, In Paris and In Washington to the American people and working with them to put enormous pressure of the government to Immediately get out of Indo-Chlna and begin responding to the needs of the peo ple al -Reprinted from The New Tickets Tickets are nc Little Theater Chalk Circle.* "The Caucasian Circle" Is legend. It reveals the author's mysUc and religious compulsion battling with his agnosUc nature. Brecht Is one of Germany's great avant-garde playwrights. The production, directed by Gaylord Graham, will be shown March 11-13 and March 16-20 at 8:15 p.m. in th General adml $2.50 and 50 c >uld tail almost every student ould pass every student regard » objectives or of how smart or h the %ikOif MANCHESTER' CENTER *" - That by next June, Vver one million high school students and over halt of a million college freshmen will become "drop-outs" (push- outs) primarily because of 41 EDUCATIONAL MALPRACTICES found in most schools. - That the majority of students who really need academic help are promoted becausi age (social promotion) regardle s of the lack 29-That if the EDUCATIONAL MALPRACTICES were eliminated, most students now getting C's, D's, and F's could be achieving A's and B's? 34-That students and/or parents will be suing teachers and schools for losses incurred by students because of these MALPRACTICES? 'tlon Stewart has wiitten a very liightening book-a very piova- cative book--a veiy hopeful book. Fiightening because it contains thteats. Piovacative because all the majoi concepts ol education aie questioned. Hopeful because specific suggestions lot impiovt ment aie given." -Dl. D. Deckel, Piovost, No. Cotoiado Uni ,/This book is only ovalloble direct from the publ.sher SLATeY ttHO ALL OTHER ARTIST MATERIALS 20%? CANVAS - BRUSHES MEDIUMS OIL PAINTS WAR SURPLUS) DEPOT 602 Broadway at Ventura PH: 237r361f> vices, Depl. D-l p Box 456 r. Col I lorn io N2683 PRACTICES: THE or"s4.C95*or<'ih«",ioit e< age and handling). * „... „. EDUCATIONAL MAL- IG GAMBLE IN OUR SCHOOLS. check lor $ (S6.95 for the $.55 for po.log. and handling vat edition plus $.55 for poit- Home (pleas 'Caliromlor ssidents add soles lax c rvond $.25 per.-copy for f $.35 per copy for each hard 1 'A
Object Description
Title | 1971_03 The Daily Collegian March 1971 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1971 |
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 | March 3, 1971 Pg 2-3 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1971 |
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 |
COLLEGIAN FORUM
Opinions expressed In Collegian
edltoriala, including feature- fn*l
editorials and commentaries by
guest writers.are not necessarily those of Fresno State College
or the student body.
THE DAILY COLuEGIAN
COMMENTARY
South Vietnam,
Cambodia, Laos
NEWS FlASHl ...CAPITOL BffTHRooM IS StSSSTuP?
NtKOM LABIBS \r "A DfcPLaORABlA Ac.T OP \JiouejsJC£"i I
•Fedne.dey, March 3. 1»7I THE DAILY COLLEOtAN
CAMPUS FOOTNOTES
International Programs rep will visit FSC tomorrow
representative for the Cal-
„ia State Colleges Interna-
al programs will be on cam-
e 125.
abroad and want to receive
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