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2-THE DAILY COLLEGIAN LEJTERS TO THE CSUF basketball Editor: It was noted ln a past article of The Dally Collegian that there was much concern over the atten¬ dance at CSUF's basketball In light of thts fact, lt seems as though there has been little or no attempt at analyzing the It seems as though the current schedule hasbcendlrectedtotally at the community with little re¬ gard to the studentbody.lt should be noted that the majority of the students attending CSUF are either commuting or their per¬ manent residence ls established out of Fre.rao County. It should also be noted that the majority of CSUF's home basketball games have been scheduled either during a period of extended vacation or during a three-day holiday period. It should bo pointed out that the majority of the students whose permanent residences are out of Fresno County will usually period or three-day holiday As noted above, many ol Another conflict with theCSUF basketball schedule would be the schedules of local high schools The continuance or CSUF's basketball program at Selland Arena depends totally on an In¬ creasing attendance of the Asso¬ ciated Student Body The ma¬ jority of the students would not OPEN DAILY 2 pm — 9 pm FREEMAN'S ARCADE Monday, March 3, 1975 EDITOR students not maintaining a resi¬ dence and the community. Al Woston Panhandler* Editor: A acn writing to express my discontent concerning the pan¬ handling and soliciting that frequently takes place ln the Free Speech Area. Hardly a day goes by anymore when I am able to being a< 1 by s hard- rlduals. They cl down, grab you, and plead end¬ lessly for a donation. Practically the only way you can escape them ls to either donate, or physically remove yourself from their clutches. 1 personally know of many people who have donated to these various causes because of I respect the merits c causes represented hy thes disputable, but their activities should he controlled. I propose that these people setupandoper- Thls would people on my own free will would be able to discuss the s receeds a donatl On Israel F.dlttir: own home basketball games: hut to revise the current scheduling totally In the hands cf the CSUF Athletic Scheduling Board Hope- tuUy, they will take a closer u the Middle Past. P.L.O. terrorist r. usUly murder and I - Y.H,r Clnsc-Hl Flon«C CONDITS ROWERS & GinS A Shields Ph. m-C FRESNO STATE IS FOR THE BIRDS The unofficial^"**»»»4k*fJB WJ^^ Rywithusfof state bird, PSA. has ^^»^P^a song to eteveri cities. more flights connectirtg-- WanttocatchaPSAGrinning- nortbern and southern Cali- biro? That's easy. Just catch fornia than any other airline, up with your campus rep. 'Alan help us': Young woman has sweaty problems horseflies. Them omewh.it limited orseflles congregate i the two of you are alone, you still have trouble finding nlng with Raid or Black Flag. about It, but they arc Ju, baffled. They keep telling m two people In 'neutral* I supposed to be able to sue fully engage In such extra rlcular activities. What di think? - All Screwed Up. DEAR A.S.U.: Your friends are right, Yc your wife, logically, shouldi having the good times you'vt having. I understand your .. but nothing DEAR A tent male who has to a frigid female e years. Strangely Obviously you and your wife have been getting your wirej crossed all these years. And It both of you keep getting nightly thrills, then you'll never get My only advice for you would be getting a divorce before mat¬ ters get more complicated than they already are. In the mean¬ time, gel the problem out tn the open; don't Just keep It under CHARTER FLIGHTS EUROPE "PAN AM; and Information call CRAIO AMIOAN **£" 439-8168 or 266-0602 Sharp, all of these gun and bomb laden Arabs simply wanted to shake hands and talk peace with the Jewish people. Instead, their kill every last Israeli man, wom- rast told of what they were going to do. and what their armies tried to do. Even today P.L.O. terror¬ ists shoot and kill pregnant wom¬ en and children at point blank range. Syrian Jewish civilians are terrorized, beaten and some¬ times kidnapped and tortured to death within P.L.O. camps. Anyone who studies In detail Ihe history or WWllwllldlscover that the vast majority of the Arab nations supported Adolt Hitler and his NAZI forces. Anwar Sadat, who Is termed a moderate among Arab leaders today, has repeatedly called Hltler'AGreat man. whom I greatly admire." In contrast to this, several thousand Jewish volunteers from the region of Palestine fought against the NAZI forces In WWII. They earned the reputation as being the most heroic fighters the Allies could throw into spe¬ cial operations against the NAZts. Many Jewish agencies knew at that time what the Ger- (Contlnued on Page 4, Col. 1) THE DAILY COLLEGIAN t Bulldlns. leUphom of dogs.. FOODLAND CENTER SHIELDS AND WEST BE FOOT HAPPY AND FOOT CARE FREE for WORK / or PLAY COME.' Phone 1229-2 508 KATE' SCHOOL, CLOVIS Married couple with no children to be surrogate parents to emotionally dis¬ turbed children. On the-job training, transportation with children, house- plus ex¬ penses all furnished. Salary plus benefits. Opportunity for couple interested in this field to continue college ed¬ ucation. Call (209) 299-0241 Monday through Friday. Victory too late Netmen win season finale By Dave Cuffey Collegian Sports Editor t was the same old story for I CSUF basketball team yes- mrday afternoon tn-Selland Arena, as the 'Dogs nipped the San Diego Aztecs 6S-64 — tt was ninth coroe-from-behlnd < tn the 1974-75 season. i Diego will represent the i next week's Regional s, even though the Aztecs I second to Long Beach The 49ers won thetr fifth Itle ln a row, but they are ineligible to play ln any post on games because of recrult- - rpsno needed that game to tie in Diego for second place In the inference (they would, of course, so have had to win yesterday's ime with the Aztecs); but the leaking Fullerton squad ellml- ned the Bulldogs from the race, Iglng them 65-64. oach Ed Gregory's netmen : he defeat of San Diego by 'esno convinced many prog- Mlcators that Fresno would be presentlng*their conference ln- ■id of the Aztecs who finished nr regular season action 13-12 i-rall, and 6-4 ln the confer- i-1 esno finished the s The lead exchanged hands 16 the first half); and the Bulldogs were once up by eight; but quickly fell behind on a 10 point surge by the Titans. With Fullerton ahead by five (59-54), Fresno regained the'ad¬ vantage at 60-59 with 3:40 left. Fresno had control of the ban twice after they went ahead but missed both shots and the Titans again went ahead, 63-60, and then stalled to preserve the win. A poor 36 per cent from the Door, compared to Fullerton's 50 per cent was the big differ¬ ence In the game. Fresno had a 46-26 edge In the rebounding department. The game was sparked by the exciting play i ln his third I stint. Barnes exited with torn liga¬ ments (he'll be wearlng-acast for three weeks) after a spectacular tlp-ln with 6:03 left. He finished with 17 points, leading all acor- 16lh VICTORY Yesterday's successful finale could have been e Instead of Fresno's fifth t Gregory Joined ln the festivi¬ ties, giving all four players a starting nod In the contest. Roy Jones was the fifth atartlngBuU- dog. Playmaker Rod Shanks, ham¬ pered with a bad leg, elected not to play ln the game, but his re¬ placement Cumberland played an ■ outstanding overall game with fine ball-handling and passing. Hennlng played one of his best games of the year, hitting on 6- of-8 attempts from the Door and 4-for-4 from the charity line. He It wasn't an easy game for CSUF's starting five Jumped to a 6-2 lead In the first four min¬ utes or play, and cold-shooting by the Aztecs enabled the Bulldogs to hold on to the lead until there was 7:04 remaining In the first half. San Diego went ahead 20-19, and maintained the lead through¬ out the first half. It was 36-34 San Diego at hair. Then with 16:35 remaining, - Jones (Roy) hit for a fast-break I layup, putting the Fresnans In " front, 40-39. gj It was nip and tuck the rest of Another Jones layup with 2:53 left, and four clutch free throws id and Hennlng teed SKVENTH LOSS AT HOME In Thursday night's loss to the (ana ln the unfrlendly.conflnes Selland Arena, the law Jbf erages were once again defied an Fresno lost their seventh me (compared to six wins) at "This was the last game and we were not chasing any false Idols," Gregory said. "I told the team they were playing because It was Important to them," he players: Mike Jones, Dave Cum¬ berland, Bruce Hennlng and Pat Jones, the PCAA's No. 2scor¬ er going Into the game, paced all scorers with 27 points. The Junior hoopman also made his presence known under the boards with 14 rebounds. The starting seniors -were paced by Hennlng with 16;' Cum¬ berland had five; O'Leary four; and Jones (Mike) had two points, and grabbed five re- Sophomore forward Henry DEFENSEI-Fresno's Dave Cumberland (on left) closely guards San Diego's Ray Leary in yesterday afternoon's come-from-behind vic¬ tory over the visiting Aztecs. Clark showed that he could play good ball, displaying good mores and adequate derense. Clark had four points and three rebounds. James Robinson's seven points out Fresno's scoring. CSUF was 41 per cent from tbe field In the game, compared to San Diego's 42 per cent. Fresno special! EXTRA MOW urto US H* WsTOt km Baseball team tops USC, lose to Cal e elation of 1,300 base- is packed Into tiny Beiden st Friday night,theCSUF r resno was brought back down -arth the next day, as they i b once again defeated by the King UC Berkeley nine, 3-2. I earlier defeated the 'Dogs nlng, and the Bulldogs' rlght- rieldar Les Cufaude blasted a i"Id, and Fresno went ln front ! n the seventh Inning the Bull- logs' thlrd-sacker Bob Jacobo lobbered a 360-foot homer with *o men on base, to give Fresno ■< four run cushion(10-6). Fresno grabbed an early first- nlng lead on designated" Hob Dtnges' double. % ill pleased with his team. "If we keep playing ball like we have been, we're going to do all right," he said. Cufaude and Dlnges singled ln both of Fresno's runs In the fifth frame, lo get within one run; but failed to score In the final four The Bulldogs had a rally going In the sixth with the bases loaded and Just one out but Bob Felts grounded Into a double play to end the threat. Coach Bob Bennett started freshman Steve Kala, and also used left-hander Al Cuadros.and Kelley. Kala got the loss. Jacobo paced Fresno with three hits (for four). Tomorrow night the team hosts Cal Poly, San Lull Obispo ln a twonlght er. The game starts at 5:30 p.m, Starling and Kelley are sched- Machine Knitted Garments Custom fitted, highest quality sweaters, pantsults, etc. for people of all ages and sizes, (lessons avail, able). Call 224-7046. n SC h n then r 3-1, Trojans. Cufaude's double, and a USC wild pitch regained the Then Cufaude's doable and Ja- 1 obo's round-tripper put Fresno n the lead for good. Gary Starling looked tmpres- si ve for the 7-7 'Dogs, hurling six Innings for tha win. Brad Kelley, a right-hander . (aa ta starling), finished tbe game, for Fresno gave up Just one hit for Starling gave up six si* .-.its, and struck out s •us third win, against one loss. Fresno lost Saturday, but Fresno's Coach Bob Bennett ts The PEACE CORPS and VISTA are pcrrts of ACTION. Check it out if you're graduating this year. PEACE COUPS/VISTA ON CAMPUS THROUGH FRIDAY. MARCH 7 - 9 A.M.- 3 PJvl. PLACEMENT CENTER, NEW ADMINISTRATION BUILDING
Object Description
Title | 1975_03 The Daily Collegian March 1975 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1975 |
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, 1975 Pg. 2-3 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1975 |
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 | 2-THE DAILY COLLEGIAN LEJTERS TO THE CSUF basketball Editor: It was noted ln a past article of The Dally Collegian that there was much concern over the atten¬ dance at CSUF's basketball In light of thts fact, lt seems as though there has been little or no attempt at analyzing the It seems as though the current schedule hasbcendlrectedtotally at the community with little re¬ gard to the studentbody.lt should be noted that the majority of the students attending CSUF are either commuting or their per¬ manent residence ls established out of Fre.rao County. It should also be noted that the majority of CSUF's home basketball games have been scheduled either during a period of extended vacation or during a three-day holiday period. It should bo pointed out that the majority of the students whose permanent residences are out of Fresno County will usually period or three-day holiday As noted above, many ol Another conflict with theCSUF basketball schedule would be the schedules of local high schools The continuance or CSUF's basketball program at Selland Arena depends totally on an In¬ creasing attendance of the Asso¬ ciated Student Body The ma¬ jority of the students would not OPEN DAILY 2 pm — 9 pm FREEMAN'S ARCADE Monday, March 3, 1975 EDITOR students not maintaining a resi¬ dence and the community. Al Woston Panhandler* Editor: A acn writing to express my discontent concerning the pan¬ handling and soliciting that frequently takes place ln the Free Speech Area. Hardly a day goes by anymore when I am able to being a< 1 by s hard- rlduals. They cl down, grab you, and plead end¬ lessly for a donation. Practically the only way you can escape them ls to either donate, or physically remove yourself from their clutches. 1 personally know of many people who have donated to these various causes because of I respect the merits c causes represented hy thes disputable, but their activities should he controlled. I propose that these people setupandoper- Thls would people on my own free will would be able to discuss the s receeds a donatl On Israel F.dlttir: own home basketball games: hut to revise the current scheduling totally In the hands cf the CSUF Athletic Scheduling Board Hope- tuUy, they will take a closer u the Middle Past. P.L.O. terrorist r. usUly murder and I - Y.H,r Clnsc-Hl Flon«C CONDITS ROWERS & GinS A Shields Ph. m-C FRESNO STATE IS FOR THE BIRDS The unofficial^"**»»»4k*fJB WJ^^ Rywithusfof state bird, PSA. has ^^»^P^a song to eteveri cities. more flights connectirtg-- WanttocatchaPSAGrinning- nortbern and southern Cali- biro? That's easy. Just catch fornia than any other airline, up with your campus rep. 'Alan help us': Young woman has sweaty problems horseflies. Them omewh.it limited orseflles congregate i the two of you are alone, you still have trouble finding nlng with Raid or Black Flag. about It, but they arc Ju, baffled. They keep telling m two people In 'neutral* I supposed to be able to sue fully engage In such extra rlcular activities. What di think? - All Screwed Up. DEAR A.S.U.: Your friends are right, Yc your wife, logically, shouldi having the good times you'vt having. I understand your .. but nothing DEAR A tent male who has to a frigid female e years. Strangely Obviously you and your wife have been getting your wirej crossed all these years. And It both of you keep getting nightly thrills, then you'll never get My only advice for you would be getting a divorce before mat¬ ters get more complicated than they already are. In the mean¬ time, gel the problem out tn the open; don't Just keep It under CHARTER FLIGHTS EUROPE "PAN AM; and Information call CRAIO AMIOAN **£" 439-8168 or 266-0602 Sharp, all of these gun and bomb laden Arabs simply wanted to shake hands and talk peace with the Jewish people. Instead, their kill every last Israeli man, wom- rast told of what they were going to do. and what their armies tried to do. Even today P.L.O. terror¬ ists shoot and kill pregnant wom¬ en and children at point blank range. Syrian Jewish civilians are terrorized, beaten and some¬ times kidnapped and tortured to death within P.L.O. camps. Anyone who studies In detail Ihe history or WWllwllldlscover that the vast majority of the Arab nations supported Adolt Hitler and his NAZI forces. Anwar Sadat, who Is termed a moderate among Arab leaders today, has repeatedly called Hltler'AGreat man. whom I greatly admire." In contrast to this, several thousand Jewish volunteers from the region of Palestine fought against the NAZI forces In WWII. They earned the reputation as being the most heroic fighters the Allies could throw into spe¬ cial operations against the NAZts. Many Jewish agencies knew at that time what the Ger- (Contlnued on Page 4, Col. 1) THE DAILY COLLEGIAN t Bulldlns. leUphom of dogs.. FOODLAND CENTER SHIELDS AND WEST BE FOOT HAPPY AND FOOT CARE FREE for WORK / or PLAY COME.' Phone 1229-2 508 KATE' SCHOOL, CLOVIS Married couple with no children to be surrogate parents to emotionally dis¬ turbed children. On the-job training, transportation with children, house- plus ex¬ penses all furnished. Salary plus benefits. Opportunity for couple interested in this field to continue college ed¬ ucation. Call (209) 299-0241 Monday through Friday. Victory too late Netmen win season finale By Dave Cuffey Collegian Sports Editor t was the same old story for I CSUF basketball team yes- mrday afternoon tn-Selland Arena, as the 'Dogs nipped the San Diego Aztecs 6S-64 — tt was ninth coroe-from-behlnd < tn the 1974-75 season. i Diego will represent the i next week's Regional s, even though the Aztecs I second to Long Beach The 49ers won thetr fifth Itle ln a row, but they are ineligible to play ln any post on games because of recrult- - rpsno needed that game to tie in Diego for second place In the inference (they would, of course, so have had to win yesterday's ime with the Aztecs); but the leaking Fullerton squad ellml- ned the Bulldogs from the race, Iglng them 65-64. oach Ed Gregory's netmen : he defeat of San Diego by 'esno convinced many prog- Mlcators that Fresno would be presentlng*their conference ln- ■id of the Aztecs who finished nr regular season action 13-12 i-rall, and 6-4 ln the confer- i-1 esno finished the s The lead exchanged hands 16 the first half); and the Bulldogs were once up by eight; but quickly fell behind on a 10 point surge by the Titans. With Fullerton ahead by five (59-54), Fresno regained the'ad¬ vantage at 60-59 with 3:40 left. Fresno had control of the ban twice after they went ahead but missed both shots and the Titans again went ahead, 63-60, and then stalled to preserve the win. A poor 36 per cent from the Door, compared to Fullerton's 50 per cent was the big differ¬ ence In the game. Fresno had a 46-26 edge In the rebounding department. The game was sparked by the exciting play i ln his third I stint. Barnes exited with torn liga¬ ments (he'll be wearlng-acast for three weeks) after a spectacular tlp-ln with 6:03 left. He finished with 17 points, leading all acor- 16lh VICTORY Yesterday's successful finale could have been e Instead of Fresno's fifth t Gregory Joined ln the festivi¬ ties, giving all four players a starting nod In the contest. Roy Jones was the fifth atartlngBuU- dog. Playmaker Rod Shanks, ham¬ pered with a bad leg, elected not to play ln the game, but his re¬ placement Cumberland played an ■ outstanding overall game with fine ball-handling and passing. Hennlng played one of his best games of the year, hitting on 6- of-8 attempts from the Door and 4-for-4 from the charity line. He It wasn't an easy game for CSUF's starting five Jumped to a 6-2 lead In the first four min¬ utes or play, and cold-shooting by the Aztecs enabled the Bulldogs to hold on to the lead until there was 7:04 remaining In the first half. San Diego went ahead 20-19, and maintained the lead through¬ out the first half. It was 36-34 San Diego at hair. Then with 16:35 remaining, - Jones (Roy) hit for a fast-break I layup, putting the Fresnans In " front, 40-39. gj It was nip and tuck the rest of Another Jones layup with 2:53 left, and four clutch free throws id and Hennlng teed SKVENTH LOSS AT HOME In Thursday night's loss to the (ana ln the unfrlendly.conflnes Selland Arena, the law Jbf erages were once again defied an Fresno lost their seventh me (compared to six wins) at "This was the last game and we were not chasing any false Idols," Gregory said. "I told the team they were playing because It was Important to them," he players: Mike Jones, Dave Cum¬ berland, Bruce Hennlng and Pat Jones, the PCAA's No. 2scor¬ er going Into the game, paced all scorers with 27 points. The Junior hoopman also made his presence known under the boards with 14 rebounds. The starting seniors -were paced by Hennlng with 16;' Cum¬ berland had five; O'Leary four; and Jones (Mike) had two points, and grabbed five re- Sophomore forward Henry DEFENSEI-Fresno's Dave Cumberland (on left) closely guards San Diego's Ray Leary in yesterday afternoon's come-from-behind vic¬ tory over the visiting Aztecs. Clark showed that he could play good ball, displaying good mores and adequate derense. Clark had four points and three rebounds. James Robinson's seven points out Fresno's scoring. CSUF was 41 per cent from tbe field In the game, compared to San Diego's 42 per cent. Fresno special! EXTRA MOW urto US H* WsTOt km Baseball team tops USC, lose to Cal e elation of 1,300 base- is packed Into tiny Beiden st Friday night,theCSUF r resno was brought back down -arth the next day, as they i b once again defeated by the King UC Berkeley nine, 3-2. I earlier defeated the 'Dogs nlng, and the Bulldogs' rlght- rieldar Les Cufaude blasted a i"Id, and Fresno went ln front ! n the seventh Inning the Bull- logs' thlrd-sacker Bob Jacobo lobbered a 360-foot homer with *o men on base, to give Fresno ■< four run cushion(10-6). Fresno grabbed an early first- nlng lead on designated" Hob Dtnges' double. % ill pleased with his team. "If we keep playing ball like we have been, we're going to do all right," he said. Cufaude and Dlnges singled ln both of Fresno's runs In the fifth frame, lo get within one run; but failed to score In the final four The Bulldogs had a rally going In the sixth with the bases loaded and Just one out but Bob Felts grounded Into a double play to end the threat. Coach Bob Bennett started freshman Steve Kala, and also used left-hander Al Cuadros.and Kelley. Kala got the loss. Jacobo paced Fresno with three hits (for four). Tomorrow night the team hosts Cal Poly, San Lull Obispo ln a twonlght er. The game starts at 5:30 p.m, Starling and Kelley are sched- Machine Knitted Garments Custom fitted, highest quality sweaters, pantsults, etc. for people of all ages and sizes, (lessons avail, able). Call 224-7046. n SC h n then r 3-1, Trojans. Cufaude's double, and a USC wild pitch regained the Then Cufaude's doable and Ja- 1 obo's round-tripper put Fresno n the lead for good. Gary Starling looked tmpres- si ve for the 7-7 'Dogs, hurling six Innings for tha win. Brad Kelley, a right-hander . (aa ta starling), finished tbe game, for Fresno gave up Just one hit for Starling gave up six si* .-.its, and struck out s •us third win, against one loss. Fresno lost Saturday, but Fresno's Coach Bob Bennett ts The PEACE CORPS and VISTA are pcrrts of ACTION. Check it out if you're graduating this year. PEACE COUPS/VISTA ON CAMPUS THROUGH FRIDAY. MARCH 7 - 9 A.M.- 3 PJvl. PLACEMENT CENTER, NEW ADMINISTRATION BUILDING |