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Federal Education Program Proposed -Th« Ftmho Stato CoIUqh Collighi -vHi-p* Tfvrw CollextaA News Service WASHINGTON — A new (130- mllllon-a-yeir federal program to improve ito quality of public school education will be proposed to Congress by the Kennedy ad¬ ministration this year, Informed sources said today. The basic aim would be to pro¬ vide better trained teachers and tbe iscentive to states to) improve their Instructional services.. The proposed new program was described as putting together lo one package a- number ot Ideas that have been advanced in recent months by Secretary.of Welfare Abraham A. Rlblcoff. It also would put emphasis on at least one proposal which waa Included In the general aid bill last year. The general aid bill called for (660 million tor the first year to aid in the construction of class¬ rooms or In paying teachers salar¬ ies, or both. It fatted to get out of tbe House Rules Committee be¬ cause of the controversy over whether federal aid should be ex¬ tended to church and other prl- te schools. Rlblcoff baa said the adroinls- tratlen will go through the effort again of trying to pass a general aid bill but adds It still faces tough sledding. The emphasis will be on feder¬ al aid for higher education. In¬ cluding funds for scholarships and facilities and for medical and dental schools, he has said. Now It Is apparent there will also be a special effort on Im¬ provement of the quality of edu¬ cation In public schools. 10,000 Old Bones Found CoUcclan Kowi Service SANTA BARBARA — Discov¬ ery of human bones 10,000 years old on off-shore Santa Rosa Island was announced by the Santa Barbara Mueseum of Natu¬ ral History. The bones wore found in a 37- :■"!.!..;■ nxeavatlon by Phil C Orr. curator of geology and an¬ thropology at the museum. Orr said there is only one older set of human bones In the West¬ ern hPinlaDliere. They are part of a skeleton 11.200 years old un¬ earthed in Pish Bone Cave near Reno, New. by Orr In 1352. Tbe ago was established by a carbon-dating process for which Dr. Wlllard Libby of the Uni ■ity of California at Los Angeles was awarded the 1961 Nobel Prise. Orr said campslto fragments found a half mile from the human bones on Santa Rosa recently were dated by Libby at 12,620 years. The fragments and the skele¬ ton. Orr said, are "sufficient evl dence that man was In this aree during the close of the Ice Age.' Offspring To Try To Match Sergeant York OoUaclan News Service PALL MALL, Tenn. — "I'll be a Sergeant York, too, before you know it," aaid Mary Elisabeth York. IS, after she was sworn in¬ to the Women's Air Force. The Air Force conducted the ceremony Wednesday at the bed- Hide of her grandfather. World War I sharpshooter Sgt. Alvln York. Now 73, he Is partly para¬ lyzed as the result ot n stroke. "I had planned to Join for a long time." said Miss York, known as Goldlc. "This kind of thing is In our family, you know." Her grandfather won the Medal of Honor after he killed 25 Ger¬ mans and captured 132 more In the Argonne Forest In 1918. He was obviously proud of his graaddaughter'a enlistruent but bis loyally to the Army showed through. "There's still going to be some hard fghtlng lo do," he said, and for that the ultimate weapon la "Tennessee and Kentucky rlfle- r recruit left for basic 1 Lackland Air Force San Antonio. Tex. She become an Air Force The n training stewardess. "I'm glad she's going I as." the old sergeant Bald room crowded with three genera¬ tions of the York family. "Ten nessee made that placo anyway." the m Mcknight chevron service CHEVRON DEALER Pick-Up and Delivery TUNE-UP - BRAKES Phone BA 7-8125 Cor. Cedar & Shaw Fresno, Calif. BLUE CHIP STAMPS CEDAR & SHIELDS SHOPPING CENTER FSC's CLOSEST COMPLETE SHOPPING AREA (2 miles envoy) f^ MANOR DRUGS LHTTmTy* Tcr r°or complete if'"l'r!fl*9P nrua and Cosmetic needs If SERVICE BA 9-6575 IIS. Post Office m store - open 7 toys a week NEED . . . Gifts? Jewelry Repairs? ' Now it the time lo get your watch cleaned — here GEORGE E. CHAIN 4331 E. SHIBJH Why go miles when we are next door I • EXPERT WOHXMANSHIP GUARANTEED • Work Done While You Wait Orthopedic Wort a Specialty — Wo-non's Heel. Hssty led CEDAR HEIGHTS SHOE REPAIR 4219 E. SHIEIDS -*A 2-7091 TOURS TAKEN — Member, of the Alpha Kappa Pti profes¬ sional buiine.i fraternity participated in an annual three day field trip fa loi Angeles Dec 16-18. The fraternity viiifed Na¬ tional Broadcasting Company studios. Prudential Life Insurance Co., Douglas Aircraft and General Motors In the San Fernando Volley. Left to right, kneeling, ore Bill Brace, Brent Graham, Jerry Embree, Richard Karle, Harold Dill. Standing are Larry Bitters, Fred Brown, faculty advisor Robert Piertol, Richard Dev- ericks. Robert Dickey, and Blaine Handel!. Spring Semester Program Booklets Available Monday Program booklets tor the 1962 prlng semester will be available Monday In Eho Student Records Ortlce. Students may plcLt up the booklets through Jan. 26. All Hems In the booklet except program listings should be com¬ pleted In Ink before registration ilgnniure must be obtained on card one. PG&E Predicts Population Up In California Col1«frirui News Service SAN FRANCISCO — A 3'A per cent population gain and a 5 per cent Increase In home const tion were forecast today tor Its i 7-county Northern California area by the Pacific Gas & Electric Co. . The utility firm's 1963 outlook report said the population In¬ crease of 272,000 in the year would bring the region's total ti more than eight million. It said two-thirds of the gain will be centered In six metropoli¬ tan areas ol the San Francisco Bay and Central Valley regons R. W. Joyce, vice president! commercial operations, said one the region's greatest assets In . trading new population and in¬ dustry Is Its foremost rank as center of education. The construction of new class¬ rooms and entire college campus cs also Is one of the major Influ¬ ences in the prevailing high leve of construction, the market out¬ look report said. "Massive school enrollment ad' ditlonally Indicates the extent of tho consumer market represented by students and their families Priority registration cards (or students who have completed 90 jUnlts before the beginning of the fall. 1961 semester will also'***' aliablc ni the Records Office. Tho card will entitled tho stu¬ dent to register In the first period in waiting for the regu¬ lar alphabetic distribution. The Student Records Office ill be closed tho week between rm esters (Jan. 29 to Feb. 2) so II business with the office should f taken enro of before thts time. lull the of young people who will bo a able to fill technical Jobs," outlook report said. "Forty-ono per cent of tills year's California state budget Is for public education, the largest single area ot state expendlti "In addition." the study ports, "approximately half of all local property taxes collected the company's 47-county service ares Is for schools. These figures do not Include the voluntary psndltures for privately supported or endowed schools." Real Loyal Fan Collegian News Scrvlco WILLI AMSTOWN, Mass. - football fan who hasn't mlss< Williams College football home game in half a century has been given a gold admission pass t< Nelson W. Domln. G7, began his remarkablo record in 1912 was recovering from an operation □n one occasion and confined to bed. But was able to watch the game through the bedroom dow in his home, which overlooks the football field. By BOB THOMAS HOLLYWOOD —. The death this week of Barbara Bums played a tragic note on a recur¬ ring Hollywood theme—the plight of stars' children. Barbara was the daughter of lb Burns, the baxooka-plsyiog buddy of Bine Crosby on radio and In films. The sage of Van Buren. Ark., died in 1956 when she waa 17. Barbara had her first dope arrest when she was 19. ir the next tour years, aha In and out ot the news with >us troubles, largely her ad¬ diction to narcotics. She tried for a show business career but never got close. Death came In General Hospital from an overdose of bar- bltuates, her third In six months. Many children of the famous manage to lead normal, useful lives. But enough others,get Into serious trouble to make their ac¬ tions a pattern of behavior. Why? I sought an answer from Dr. Mar¬ cel Frym. Dr. Frym's credentials are Im¬ pressive: Member, Commission on State Institutions of Insanity and the Attorney General's Commis¬ sion on Narcotic Addictions; teacher. University of Southern California: staff member. Hacker Clinic. At the clinic he has served psycho-therapist for many film figures and their children. His analysis: "A natural, un- oldable struggle of every ado¬ lescent with a father and mother figure la solved In a satisfactory ler In so-called normal, healthy people. If one parent fig- Is Especially outstanding or famous, the child is even more strained because of competition th the pafcnt. "In the case of the daughter of famous man. her fight for his .'0 an<l for position as the pre¬ ferred child might be intensified." Some children actually admire heir famous parents and try to copy them. Dr. Frym explained, lis can be a problem If the THE COLLEGIAN Publiahod Tr: ■ holiday* and axdmlna-rjon wrlod. by th* Fraano Sinla 1 ...s.—lt~t'-lt (2.7J . Editor! ti I T.l.phon. H Aid-In 2-5161 National Advertising Service, Inc. CtlUf PwUiiitti Ripttmtitirt 4SO MADMOH AVI. NlW YCMK.N.Y. JOEL. SCrtWARZ lim Chi K.nl Tborapaon ton. Tarty C -da Carp. Larry Adaau I, fin Dean >r Don C:barUoo 1 Emla rJ.net Larry Adam., larry b ir Oalyan. Day* Hanna. Miki jn. Bill Honor, Richard Krtkara i Laniranco and lack UeCI.no- PHOTO COPIES WHILE YOU WAIT PRINT LIKE QUALITY 20c per page TERM PAPERS • THESIS COPY QUICK 430 N. Broadway AM 8-8738 m*-N- £&fi for aha* aftor fc-s MC-N-IDS wh»r« y. old (rloeids .HI Ctom Mod* IHuo 4715 N. •lackttor.e ■A 7-4*12 Stars' Children Are Often Under Strain BOOKS GOOD USED BOOKS OUT-OF-PRINT BOOKS BOOK SEARCH SERVICE OPEN WEEKENDS Fri.-Niejht 5 PM lo U) PM - Sal. & Sun. 10 AM to 6 PM THE BOOK HOUSE • 3043 East Tulare Near Fir-I Street children also seek careers In show business, ss a largo percentage of them do. "They will always have to fight the unfair comparison with their famous parents," he said. Students Take Geology Trip Students of historical geology and other interested students will leave the campus tomorrow at 8 AU for an all-day field trip to the west aide of the San Joaquin Valley. Dr. C. Noble Beard, professor of geology and the course Instruc¬ tor, is In charge of the trip. Stu¬ dents will furnish their own transportation. Dr. Beard explained that tho main purpose of the trip Is to see the principal forms ot historical geology and to view geologic structures, folds snd faults. Tho students will collect fossils from e areas visited. The tint part of the trip will be spent In the Coaling* area where moat of the fossils will be collected. The afternoon will be spent in the Tar Canyon area near A venal and In the Kettleman Hills area. Both offer basic views of geologic forms, folds and fossils. CALIFORNIA PREMIERE "BeRQiiuninA pUyfulmooo. whitncsultsisa. ' &eviL-may-came ROmp." -Sohrdot Co To Church *>££* On Sunday CALVARY PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 9:30 Compui Hoar 7.30 Evonlng Worship 9,30 & 11,00 Morning Wor.hip „ - _ . 9,30 Same. Radio Broodco.l *'°° CoM" a"b (KRDU, 1)30) Wm. f. Pltior, Mlnlilar of Mm; BA 7-4913 — CLINTON AT THORNE CEDAR AVENUE BAPTIST CEDAR NEAR BELMONT 9,45 AM Coltogt Rutin*.. Biblo Clou 6:00 Colloga Bailnoii NI 11:00 AM Morning Worship 7:13 Caning Worship EVENING 5EIVICE BROADCAST — KMJ — 7:30-8:30 Irving E. Panborlhy, Pallor TIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH M t, Calaveras St. Dsplksfa Sarvk.i—8,30 & 11,00 Call-ago*. FsllowiriTp—S,30 Church School—°,30 Ennlng Worship—7,30 Dr. Baoarl N. Oorfr, Pester Rav. Welly Drain. Cotlaga PaiKy NOT SOUTHERN BARTIST CHURCH W. Dakata if N. fnH 9,«* Colltgt Sunday School Claim «>15 CoJIag. lYoirilng Union 11,00 Morning Worihip 7,30 Evonlng Worihip (Ye-jlh Choir ting. Erory Sunday NIBhl| Dr. Peel Irons* teeth, Potior PEAC F LUTHERAN CHURCH 4*71 N. Cedar, 4 9ilS Sandey School and tibia Claim Martin Schobotsar, Poster BA 2-2320 bthj. S«. of FIC 10*10 Won hip Sorrk. BA 9-IJ33 TRIHITY LUTHERAN CHURCH Duplies)* J.r.,<.v—9^00 «. 10,30 AM Chare* School—9:00 t 10,30 AM Hiadeat. era ohrny. wakoio ot Trtntl> 3973*. War Urn**,. Coil-a. lather dab—7.00 PM - PALM AVE. CHURCH OF CHRIST 826 Palm Aie.-AM 4-S4Q9 mUSROOK PRESBYTERIAN 3610 N. MtUMOOK AVI. Six Bl«ki W.,, ol Codor •lo Dakota or ShleMi Ave. Worihip «tOO end 11:00 lobart A. Monitor.. Poilor CHURCH OF THE BRETHREN CMrJTOH AT NINTH 5TWT Churth School Co-kg* Clou _.. 9,45 A.M. Morning Worihip 11,00 A.M. Jacob T. Did, Mifiliiar ■a 7-<m ' FOR THIS SFACI CALL DON CULBIITSON BA 2-7194 ST. COVUtBA'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH PALM AND SHAW
Object Description
Title | 1962_01 The Daily Collegian January 1962 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1962 |
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 | January 5, 1962, Page 3 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1962 |
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 |
Federal Education
Program Proposed
-Th« Ftmho Stato CoIUqh Collighi
-vHi-p* Tfvrw
CollextaA News Service
WASHINGTON — A new (130-
mllllon-a-yeir federal program to
improve ito quality of public
school education will be proposed
to Congress by the Kennedy ad¬
ministration this year, Informed
sources said today.
The basic aim would be to pro¬
vide better trained teachers and
tbe iscentive to states to) improve
their Instructional services..
The proposed new program was
described as putting together lo
one package a- number ot Ideas
that have been advanced in recent
months by Secretary.of Welfare
Abraham A. Rlblcoff. It also
would put emphasis on at least
one proposal which waa Included
In the general aid bill last year.
The general aid bill called for
(660 million tor the first year to
aid in the construction of class¬
rooms or In paying teachers salar¬
ies, or both. It fatted to get out of
tbe House Rules Committee be¬
cause of the controversy over
whether federal aid should be ex¬
tended to church and other prl-
te schools.
Rlblcoff baa said the adroinls-
tratlen will go through the effort
again of trying to pass a general
aid bill but adds It still faces
tough sledding.
The emphasis will be on feder¬
al aid for higher education. In¬
cluding funds for scholarships
and facilities and for medical and
dental schools, he has said.
Now It Is apparent there will
also be a special effort on Im¬
provement of the quality of edu¬
cation In public schools.
10,000 Old
Bones Found
CoUcclan Kowi Service
SANTA BARBARA — Discov¬
ery of human bones 10,000 years
old on off-shore Santa Rosa
Island was announced by the
Santa Barbara Mueseum of Natu¬
ral History.
The bones wore found in a 37-
:■"!.!..;■ nxeavatlon by Phil C
Orr. curator of geology and an¬
thropology at the museum.
Orr said there is only one older
set of human bones In the West¬
ern hPinlaDliere. They are part of
a skeleton 11.200 years old un¬
earthed in Pish Bone Cave near
Reno, New. by Orr In 1352.
Tbe ago was established by a
carbon-dating process for which
Dr. Wlllard Libby of the Uni
■ity of California at Los Angeles
was awarded the 1961 Nobel
Prise.
Orr said campslto fragments
found a half mile from the human
bones on Santa Rosa recently were
dated by Libby at 12,620 years.
The fragments and the skele¬
ton. Orr said, are "sufficient evl
dence that man was In this aree
during the close of the Ice Age.'
Offspring To
Try To Match
Sergeant York
OoUaclan News Service
PALL MALL, Tenn. — "I'll be
a Sergeant York, too, before you
know it," aaid Mary Elisabeth
York. IS, after she was sworn in¬
to the Women's Air Force.
The Air Force conducted the
ceremony Wednesday at the bed-
Hide of her grandfather. World
War I sharpshooter Sgt. Alvln
York. Now 73, he Is partly para¬
lyzed as the result ot n stroke.
"I had planned to Join for a
long time." said Miss York,
known as Goldlc. "This kind of
thing is In our family, you know."
Her grandfather won the Medal
of Honor after he killed 25 Ger¬
mans and captured 132 more In
the Argonne Forest In 1918.
He was obviously proud of his
graaddaughter'a enlistruent but
bis loyally to the Army showed
through.
"There's still going to be some
hard fghtlng lo do," he said, and
for that the ultimate weapon la
"Tennessee and Kentucky rlfle-
r recruit left for basic
1 Lackland Air Force
San Antonio. Tex. She
become an Air Force
The n
training
stewardess.
"I'm glad she's going I
as." the old sergeant Bald
room crowded with three genera¬
tions of the York family. "Ten
nessee made that placo anyway."
the
m Mcknight chevron service
CHEVRON DEALER
Pick-Up and Delivery
TUNE-UP - BRAKES
Phone BA 7-8125
Cor. Cedar & Shaw Fresno, Calif.
BLUE CHIP STAMPS
CEDAR & SHIELDS
SHOPPING CENTER
FSC's CLOSEST COMPLETE SHOPPING AREA
(2 miles envoy)
f^ MANOR DRUGS
LHTTmTy* Tcr r°or complete
if'"l'r!fl*9P nrua and Cosmetic needs
If SERVICE BA 9-6575
IIS. Post Office m store - open 7 toys a week
NEED . . . Gifts? Jewelry Repairs?
' Now it the time lo get
your watch cleaned — here
GEORGE E. CHAIN
4331 E. SHIBJH
Why go miles when we are next door I
• EXPERT WOHXMANSHIP GUARANTEED •
Work Done While You Wait
Orthopedic Wort a Specialty — Wo-non's Heel. Hssty led
CEDAR HEIGHTS SHOE REPAIR
4219 E. SHIEIDS -*A 2-7091
TOURS TAKEN — Member, of the Alpha Kappa Pti profes¬
sional buiine.i fraternity participated in an annual three day
field trip fa loi Angeles Dec 16-18. The fraternity viiifed Na¬
tional Broadcasting Company studios. Prudential Life Insurance
Co., Douglas Aircraft and General Motors In the San Fernando
Volley. Left to right, kneeling, ore Bill Brace, Brent Graham,
Jerry Embree, Richard Karle, Harold Dill. Standing are Larry
Bitters, Fred Brown, faculty advisor Robert Piertol, Richard Dev-
ericks. Robert Dickey, and Blaine Handel!.
Spring Semester Program
Booklets Available Monday
Program booklets tor the 1962
prlng semester will be available
Monday In Eho Student Records
Ortlce. Students may plcLt up the
booklets through Jan. 26.
All Hems In the booklet except
program listings should be com¬
pleted In Ink before registration
ilgnniure must
be obtained on card one.
PG&E Predicts
Population Up
In California
Col1«frirui News Service
SAN FRANCISCO — A 3'A per
cent population gain and a 5 per
cent Increase In home const
tion were forecast today tor Its
i 7-county Northern California
area by the Pacific Gas & Electric
Co. .
The utility firm's 1963 outlook
report said the population In¬
crease of 272,000 in the year
would bring the region's total ti
more than eight million.
It said two-thirds of the gain
will be centered In six metropoli¬
tan areas ol the San Francisco
Bay and Central Valley regons
R. W. Joyce, vice president!
commercial operations, said one
the region's greatest assets In .
trading new population and in¬
dustry Is Its foremost rank as
center of education.
The construction of new class¬
rooms and entire college campus
cs also Is one of the major Influ¬
ences in the prevailing high leve
of construction, the market out¬
look report said.
"Massive school enrollment ad'
ditlonally Indicates the extent of
tho consumer market represented
by students and their families
Priority registration cards (or
students who have completed 90
jUnlts before the beginning of the
fall. 1961 semester will also'***'
aliablc ni the Records Office.
Tho card will entitled tho stu¬
dent to register In the first period
in waiting for the regu¬
lar alphabetic distribution.
The Student Records Office
ill be closed tho week between
rm esters (Jan. 29 to Feb. 2) so
II business with the office should
f taken enro of before thts time.
lull
the
of
young people who will bo a
able to fill technical Jobs,"
outlook report said.
"Forty-ono per cent of tills
year's California state budget Is
for public education, the largest
single area ot state expendlti
"In addition." the study
ports, "approximately half of all
local property taxes collected
the company's 47-county service
ares Is for schools. These figures
do not Include the voluntary
psndltures for privately supported
or endowed schools."
Real Loyal Fan
Collegian News Scrvlco
WILLI AMSTOWN, Mass. -
football fan who hasn't mlss<
Williams College football home
game in half a century has been
given a gold admission pass t<
Nelson W. Domln. G7, began
his remarkablo record in 1912
was recovering from an operation
□n one occasion and confined to
bed. But was able to watch the
game through the bedroom
dow in his home, which overlooks
the football field.
By BOB THOMAS
HOLLYWOOD —. The death
this week of Barbara Bums
played a tragic note on a recur¬
ring Hollywood theme—the plight
of stars' children.
Barbara was the daughter of
lb Burns, the baxooka-plsyiog
buddy of Bine Crosby on radio
and In films. The sage of Van
Buren. Ark., died in 1956 when
she waa 17. Barbara had her first
dope arrest when she was 19.
ir the next tour years, aha
In and out ot the news with
>us troubles, largely her ad¬
diction to narcotics. She tried for
a show business career but never
got close. Death came In General
Hospital from an overdose of bar-
bltuates, her third In six months.
Many children of the famous
manage to lead normal, useful
lives. But enough others,get Into
serious trouble to make their ac¬
tions a pattern of behavior. Why?
I sought an answer from Dr. Mar¬
cel Frym.
Dr. Frym's credentials are Im¬
pressive: Member, Commission on
State Institutions of Insanity and
the Attorney General's Commis¬
sion on Narcotic Addictions;
teacher. University of Southern
California: staff member. Hacker
Clinic. At the clinic he has served
psycho-therapist for many film
figures and their children.
His analysis: "A natural, un-
oldable struggle of every ado¬
lescent with a father and mother
figure la solved In a satisfactory
ler In so-called normal,
healthy people. If one parent fig-
Is Especially outstanding or
famous, the child is even more
strained because of competition
th the pafcnt.
"In the case of the daughter of
famous man. her fight for his
.'0 an |