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jrara All at Once Not Me, Claude Get^'Em By E. E. Everything seems to c meat vol. xrv COLLEGE JILL HOLD ! THEATRE RALLY FOR rrHiTOMORROff'S GAME ied ! t'Lugh°,'he°cltyh.l,"" l^lyTnou.e'' FRONT OF COLLEGE Wehadnt from the effect of _ the editorial in the Daily Californian whe the news broke of Merriam' possible support of a plan to ta students at the various state teachers colleges. The ' the Collegian and of the ty of the students at State College is adequately handled in an editorial appearing elsewhere in today's Issue so, there is really on need to touch] Meeting upon that. The matter of the ex-, SPARTAN MAY BE PRESENT tra charge for tuition is some-:,. r • -~, • , „ . thing else entirely. Perhaps the Ma>°r.' Coach. Local Business newspaper rivals of Merriam are making a mountain out of a mole hill. As to that, we are in no position to say. But if there M the least bit of truth in the jtory, the Republican candidate for Governor should be informed immedistely of the opposition " will encounter in students at the colleges and, what is perhaps more important, in the parents of the students. A number of persons have commented on the opinior expressed by a member of the Collegian staff in a sports column run last Tuesday. We would like to make it known to all, and especially to the students of the college whose reputation was defamed, that that column is the work of the person whose name is signed to it and does not necessarily represent the opinion of either the Collegian or of the student body of our college. Before we forget it, we just must mention that football game between the Spartans and the Bulldogs. According to information received from the Spartan stronghold, De Groot's men would like nothing better than to upset the Bulldog apple c« and it is quite likely that th have the stuff to do it. Howevi we believe the Staters will cor through with a victory for Coach Harris and their thousands of rooters. COMMITTEE GETS TWO NEW MEMBERS Key Initiates Two As New Members FRESNO, CALIFORNIA. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 2. 1934 Just an Echo From the Valley Gently, and with a paternal "tch, tch," we have been upbraided and called to task for daring to presume that the citizens of the state might receive a college education in localities other than Berkeley or Los Angeli without dire effect upon the educational structure t California. Responding to an editorial printed in a August issue of the Collegian (the mill of the gods grind slow, but they grind exceeding fine) the Daily Californian of the University of California laments the wish of certain portion of the population that a liberal arts college course might be made available in state schools outside Berkeley and Los Angeles, and issues solemn ^ ing. against the consequences of such a change in the present academic hiierarchy. Leaping headlong to the conclusion that the liberal] tion. of state colleges would result in "* • • a flock of small, mediocre schools * * *" the Daily Californian characterizes the movement as an "* • * attempt to wreck the two existing state universities * * *" and applauds what it supposes to be the manifold advantages of an educational status quo, while announcing its regret that the Collegian would" call upon the students to "play poli ties" by urging the election of assemblymen pledged ti support a liberalization plan. With the arguments advanced by the Daily Californian there are only four things wrong. They are (1) a seeming LOCAL HEADS FOR MAGAZINE NAMED Barbara MrKlroy la editor Constitution Adopted By Japanese Club Eugene Murman to Lecture at Forum BARRETT NAMED TO NEW OFFICE Annual Hobo Brawl Planned to Be Held In College Stadium Attention, Students! :e your returning tans. Tot Ajroea Vt. Tobln. Librarian. Merriam Denies Supporting High Tuition Fee Proposa I To Balance State Budget Governor in Favor of Present System of State Teachers' Colleges Without $100 Extra Charge By ELWOOO ENNIS »telegram to the Collegian yesterday, F. A. Cochran, assistant secretary to Governor Merriam, said that <he Governor is in favor of the present system of state teachers colleges and that an absolute denial has been made of the report that his administration is "uniting a $100 tuition fee for all state teachers colleges. The telegram was in reply to one sent by the Collegian earlier in le day in an attempt to get a definite answer to newspaper ,000 AMATEUR RADIO OPERATORS MEETJ FRESNO Code Recption and 5 Meter Distance Records To Be Challenged Noon Dancers to Be Photographed Today Coming Eve I-aat day f 7:.5 o-cl "Tomorrow Siena Alpha Chi da L Tea and lege auditorium. 7:So Monday Math dab. A. W. S. re cm 7 to 19 Pan-Hellenic. 1J to 1 o'clock. assy Union. 11 to 1. Astronomy *■***•
Object Description
Title | 1934_11 The Daily Collegian November 1934 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1934 |
Description | Daily (except weekends) during the school year. Microfilm. Palo Alto, Calif. BMI Library Microfilms, 1986- |
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, 35mm. |
Technical Information | Scanned at 600 dpi; TIFF; Microfilm ScanPro 2000 "E-image data" |
Language | eng |
Description
Title | November 2, 1934 Pg 1 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1934 |
Description | Daily (except weekends) during the school year. Microfilm. Palo Alto, Calif. BMI Library Microfilms, 1986- |
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, 35mm. |
Technical Information | Scanned at 600 dpi; TIFF; Microfilm ScanPro 2000 "E-image data" |
Language | eng |
Full-Text-Search |
jrara
All at Once
Not Me, Claude
Get^'Em
By E. E.
Everything seems to c
meat
vol. xrv
COLLEGE JILL HOLD
! THEATRE RALLY FOR
rrHiTOMORROff'S GAME
ied ! t'Lugh°,'he°cltyh.l,"" l^lyTnou.e''
FRONT OF COLLEGE
Wehadnt
from the effect of _ the editorial
in the Daily Californian whe
the news broke of Merriam'
possible support of a plan to ta
students at the various state
teachers colleges. The '
the Collegian and of the
ty of the students at
State College is adequately
handled in an editorial appearing
elsewhere in today's Issue so,
there is really on need to touch] Meeting
upon that. The matter of the ex-, SPARTAN MAY BE PRESENT
tra charge for tuition is some-:,. r • -~, • , „ .
thing else entirely. Perhaps the Ma>°r.' Coach. Local Business
newspaper rivals of Merriam are
making a mountain out of a
mole hill. As to that, we are in
no position to say. But if there
M the least bit of truth in the
jtory, the Republican candidate
for Governor should be informed
immedistely of the opposition "
will encounter in students at the
colleges and, what is perhaps
more important, in the parents
of the students.
A number of persons have
commented on the opinior expressed by a member of the Collegian staff in a sports column
run last Tuesday. We would like
to make it known to all, and especially to the students of the
college whose reputation was defamed, that that column is the
work of the person whose name
is signed to it and does not necessarily represent the opinion of
either the Collegian or of the
student body of our college.
Before we forget it, we just
must mention that football game
between the Spartans and the
Bulldogs. According to information received from the Spartan
stronghold, De Groot's men
would like nothing better than
to upset the Bulldog apple c«
and it is quite likely that th
have the stuff to do it. Howevi
we believe the Staters will cor
through with a victory for
Coach Harris and their thousands of rooters.
COMMITTEE GETS
TWO NEW MEMBERS
Key Initiates Two
As New Members
FRESNO, CALIFORNIA. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 2. 1934
Just an Echo From the Valley
Gently, and with a paternal "tch, tch," we have been
upbraided and called to task for daring to presume that
the citizens of the state might receive a college education in localities other than Berkeley or Los Angeli
without dire effect upon the educational structure t
California. Responding to an editorial printed in a
August issue of the Collegian (the mill of the gods grind
slow, but they grind exceeding fine) the Daily Californian
of the University of California laments the wish of
certain portion of the population that a liberal arts college course might be made available in state schools outside Berkeley and Los Angeles, and issues solemn ^
ing. against the consequences of such a change in the
present academic hiierarchy.
Leaping headlong to the conclusion that the liberal]
tion. of state colleges would result in "* • • a flock of
small, mediocre schools * * *" the Daily Californian characterizes the movement as an "* • * attempt to wreck
the two existing state universities * * *" and applauds
what it supposes to be the manifold advantages of an
educational status quo, while announcing its regret that
the Collegian would" call upon the students to "play poli
ties" by urging the election of assemblymen pledged ti
support a liberalization plan.
With the arguments advanced by the Daily Californian
there are only four things wrong. They are (1) a seeming
LOCAL HEADS FOR
MAGAZINE NAMED
Barbara MrKlroy la editor
Constitution Adopted
By Japanese Club
Eugene Murman to
Lecture at Forum
BARRETT NAMED
TO NEW OFFICE
Annual Hobo Brawl
Planned to Be Held
In College Stadium
Attention, Students!
:e your returning tans. Tot
Ajroea Vt. Tobln. Librarian.
Merriam Denies Supporting
High Tuition Fee Proposa I
To Balance State Budget
Governor in Favor of Present System of State
Teachers' Colleges Without $100
Extra Charge
By ELWOOO ENNIS
»telegram to the Collegian yesterday, F. A. Cochran, assistant
secretary to Governor Merriam, said that |