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Wedneidoy, December 2, 1964 Page 6 The Collegian THE TOP FIVE — Fresno State's multl- last night to toe 99-C9 decision over toe Unlvi reading clockwise from 12 o'clock are: Lonnie and Maurice Talbot. I its stuff for toe .home folks Harry Miller's starting five i, John Beicko, Marty Sharp, Mechanics ChaseFlab,Not Dents By JAN WILLIAMS the in¬ structor. 'Remember the ones that wUl help you specHlcally." Miss Annemarle Stclnblss, physical education instructor, was facing 23 girls in a body mechanics class. Their purpose ls to ftrm up flabby muscles, ac¬ cording to Miss Stelnblss, who In tho class tho crlrls plan specific problem areas. Nut tlon ls briefly explained. At the start of the course I girls noted the liody areas tl needed trimming or building. E 1 they h POLICEMEN $646—$G8S Oakland, California High School Graduates, CoU¬ ege Preferred. 21-29 Inclu¬ sive; 20/20 one eye, 20/40 toe other, or 20/30 boto; height 5'9 ln.--6'6 to., 160 lbs.mln.; excelled character. Written test your locaUty. Room 100, City Hall. FLEXIBILITY, redistribution of weight and firmness are the girls* main objectives. To achieve these quickly the girls Slow, rhythmical movements are necessary- for muscle flexl- bUlty. Touching the toes is recommended by the Instructor. Redistribution entails rapid movement that is repetitive for done daily and produce slow re¬ sults. The scissors kick and flut¬ ter kick are good examples. cannot take Firming of the muscles re¬ quires a maximum of 10 repeti¬ tions of the exercise done slowly and a ainsi maximum resistance. Pushups or pushing against a wall will help strengthen lhe up¬ per part of the arm. Results are queU-. seen. II was emphasized that It Is easier to achieve firm weight. •Most girls need erclses," Miss ed. "Jumping jacks are popular. Waistlines are trimmed with bending and twisting IMPORTANT FOR a mothei he shoulder area, which n jo strained when she lifts :arrles her young child. Push- Jk -Pa. merican-f-'aridian oLaundrieA cf (^leant THE AMERICAN-PARISIAN LAUNDRIES AND CLEANERS SAY-USE OUR CASH AND CARRY PLAN AND SAVE 25% ON DRY CLEANED GARMENTS EVERY THURSDAY AT ANY OF OUR LOCATIONS LISTED BELOW STORE NO 1 743 BLACKSTONE AVE. STORE NO 4 1938 E. DAYTON AVE. STORE NO 2 65 N. FULTON MANCHESTER CENTER STORE NO 3 3221 E. TULARE J STORE NO 5 CEDAR LANES SHOPPING CENTER OPEN 7:30 AM TO 6 PM- 6 DAYS A WEEK «irt verdict marked the third straight win for toe e longtime rivalry. Fresno State last doclsloned the >60. Nevada stUl holds toe upperhand to toe series at o Friday night to confront too The 1 Miller expects a real battle to toe Sacramento rumors from Informed sources claim toe Hornets a gUls. "THE PARTY" NOW SEVEN NIGHTS A WEEK FEATURING "THE GO-GO GIRLS" TOP BANDS-TOP RECORDING STARS N. BLACKSTONE. 2 ML NORTH OF SHAW. 439-6011 Wednesday, December 2, 1964 'Dogs 99-59, Hughey-29 On star rose, another faded, but all twinkled brightly last night as the Fresno State Bulldogs opened the cage season on a successful note, outscorlng tho University of Nevada 99-59 ln a non-league Lonnie Hughey was the rising star, and the 6-7 plvotman made toe transition from junior college to FresnoState with all toe finesse of a ballet dancer as he tapped the Irons for 29 markers for game scoring laurels. Maury Talbot, tho all-Amerlcan with an all-Americanbackprob- lem, Is tho fading star. Maurice saw limited action to the lntra- conference breezer and tallied only seven points. Apparently Coach Harry MiUer didn't want to extend his 6-5 star ln a tut that was decided Inside of the opening five minutes. Marty Sharp was mighty sharp as a floor general, and surprised by contributing 14 points ln the offensive column. The Bulldog's slot machine offense hit tho jackpot early and often ln too first half and authored a commanding 51-33 popcorn time ad¬ vantage, thanks to a fine tlplnby reserve Bob Jensen just before toe Sharp and Hughey were the main cogs ln toe Initial minutes, Marty putting the first Bulldog basket of tho year on toe board via a smooth outside Jumper. From Uien on the Bulldogs had easy wheeling. Fouls momentarily put a damper on the attack and forced Hughey and Talbot to toe side- f By MIKE DE LA CRUZ Glnsburg was president of the aP_- Associated Men Students and Stu- S An outstanding all-around ath- dent Body President. Other ac- lete and an outstanding student, tlvltlos Included athletic editor versatUe Erwln Glnsburg es- of the Campus yearbook, reporter of for The Collegian newspaper, and The Collegian Poge 7 Remember When Intramural Hoop Chase Tightens, 3 Tied For Lead Bocko Barrels .. for a layup Lanky Lonnie .. Hughey tanks against Nevada. an easy goal. lines, but the violations couldn't provide the Wolfpack wlto the equalizer. The gambling city boys finished a distant second to toe height department and as the game wore on tho measurements took toelr toll under the boards. FSC's bench strength also penned a premier performance. Bob Blanchard, the Contra Costa comet, picked up for Sharp to the waning minutes of toe first half, hit his first shot ln Bulldog livery and rang up three two pointers by halftlme. Jensen, playing fairly stoadUy at the forward post, meshed 13 counts and shone on the boards and defensively. Returnee John Bocko alternated between tho forward and guard posts, but was off his mark. Smooth and slick, but cold from the floor, John could manage only 10 points, off from his 16 per aver- ago of last season. Big Loren Thomsen whipped Ln 10 and supplied some board mus¬ cle to go along with Jensen and Hughey. Hughey, performing llko a human octopus from his center slot, gobbled up everything ln sight as he stuffed through fielders from all angles. The Fresno City CoUege phenom lived up to all of his advance billing, though he wavered a bit at first, garnering three quick infractions. Short hook shots and jumpers were the key weapons ln the Hughey arsenal, but toe ambidextrous giant countered on foUowups and hustle plays with equal authority. Hughey tacked 15 dots on the board to toe first half, trailed by Sharp wlto eight, and Bocxo and Blanchard with six apiece. A jampacked audience viewed the onslaught with obvious delight, but the cheers could change to tears If Talbot's back does not come himself Frosno St ate College's all time ire than three decades Entering FSC to the fall of 1925, he graduated fo a total of te letters ln three sports- -football, i playhouse produc uccessful for Glnsburg. Superb n toe gridiron and captain-elect i the basketball team, he over- ooked track to try his hand at shortstop on toe baseball team. I During his senior year the grid ■ squad got off to a bad start. The lng down the regular tackle spot Bulldogs faced a heavy schedule on toe varsity. which Included Stanford, Santa In toe 1925-2G basketball Clara, and the powerful St. Ig- squad, which won toe school's natlus (now University of San first Far Western Conference Francisco). The squad was con- Wasting i i 1 . **_P _H^^^ •_ WJa_f*i£< _S__-ir3_-,- '" ■' By TOM After two weeks of competi¬ tion, the race for the Independent league Intramural basketball crown Is still wide open with three teams tied for first place. The Campus Kings, the Raiders and the Gunners rolled to their second straight victories Monday to remain in contention for the American League lead. The Squires and the Nisei Club pace the National League with two The American League champ- Ion will compete wlto the tope fraternity quintet at toe close of the season to determine toe win¬ ner of the basketball trophy. If a strong team emerges In toe National League, lt may compete for third place points ln a play- champlonshlp Ln any sport, Glns¬ burg easUy clinched a starting guard position. On Lhe track field he closed his freshman year by grabbing off the Far Western Conference title ln the broad jump. Switching from tackle to end for Lhe 1926-27 grid season, Glnsburg played outstanding ball and earned his second letter ln football. He starred ln basketball and was rated the outstanding de¬ fensive player on the team. However, his achievements were not confined to the athletic field. During his Junior year stantly plagued by Injuries and ln the final game against the Cal Aggies with most of the players recovering from the flu, Fresno the Bulldogs. They )f The P .-nu- Italian Food Served In The TradlUon of An Old Italian Garden Di Cicco's Pizzeria FOUR SONS OF ITALY Delivery ?f it Service -_--«-"_y. AD 7-7054 '-SVR^- dumplng College 45-43 and 45-20 to win the con¬ ference championship. Glnsburg and teammates George Telonlch- er and Leo Wetland were named to the All-Conference team. Ills remarkable athletic career at FSC oi His outstanding protege was Les Rlchter, All-Amerlcanguard st Cal and all-pro linebacker for ;he Los Angeles Rams. He also outstanding ath- Martln, and Bob team, according to Intramural director Myron Anderson. The Campus Kings scored a rugged, 33 to 32, victory over the Big Eight to an American League game Monday. BUl Hlmes paced toe winners wlto 14 points, and Jim Ballngerscored 10points The Rald_ers slipped past too Falcons, 38 to 32, behind toe 13 point performance of Ron Pal - lvghl, and the Gunners clipped Alpha Kappa Psl, 54 to 39, sparked by the sharpshoottog of Lloyd Talbot. Talbot flipped to 21 points on 10 field goals and a free Uirow, and Pete Conrad added 15 markers. In toe National League, toe Chemistry Club bombed tho Cel- INTRAMURAL BASKETBALL SCHEDULE Thursday -- North Court: Delta Sigma Phi vs. Lambda Chl Alpha, 7 PM Thota Chl vs. Sigma Nu, 8 PM Sigma Alpha EpsUon vs. Sigma Chl, 9 PM Thursday — South Court: Sigma Chl 2 vs. Delta Sigma Phi 2, 7 PM Theta Chl 2 vs. Alpha Gamma Rho, 8 PM Kappa Sigma vs. Sigma Alpha EpsUon 2, 9 PM Monday -- North Court: Falcons vs. Alpha Kappa Psl, 7 PM Gunners vs. Campus Kings, 8 PM Raiders vs. Big Eight, 9 PM Monday -- South Court: AFROTC vs. Homan 3, 7 PM Chemistry Club vs. Nisei Club, 8 PM Celtics vs. Squires, 9 PM tics, 43 to 29, finding a potent scoring combination ln Rick Clawson and Larry Parker. Parker sank nine field goals and a foul shot for 19 points, and Clawson added 17 markers on s4ven field goals and three free The Squires downed Homan 3, 39 to 34 as football standouts Jim Kross and Mike Ansolabe¬ here scored 15 to 12 respectively. In another National League game, toe Nisei Club spanked toe Air Force ROTC, 48 to 40. The Standings: American League W L Campus Kings 2 0 Gunners 2 0 Alpha Kappa Psl 0 2 Big Eight 0 2 Falcons 0 2 National League W L Squires 2 0 Chemistry Club 2 0 Nlsol Club 2 0 Celtics 1 1 • Q DON'S fl BARBER 2 SHOP m When Gordie Howe goes boating... 'Chap Stick'goes along! "Sure I use 'Chap Stick' during the hockey sea- aside. It's just as necessary during the summer, son," says the Detroit Red Wing star. "With my When I'm on my boat, the hot sun is rough on my lips exposed to that ice and cold, it's a must! lips-burns them up, dries them out.'Chap Stick" But alter the season,'Chap Stick'doesn't get put helps soothe and heal th DONT LET DRY, SORE LIPS SPOIL YOUR FUN-WHEREVER YOU GO, GO WITH 'CHAP STICK'
Object Description
Title | 1964_12 The Daily Collegian December 1964 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1964 |
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 | Dec 2, 1964 Pg. 6-7 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1964 |
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 | Wedneidoy, December 2, 1964 Page 6 The Collegian THE TOP FIVE — Fresno State's multl- last night to toe 99-C9 decision over toe Unlvi reading clockwise from 12 o'clock are: Lonnie and Maurice Talbot. I its stuff for toe .home folks Harry Miller's starting five i, John Beicko, Marty Sharp, Mechanics ChaseFlab,Not Dents By JAN WILLIAMS the in¬ structor. 'Remember the ones that wUl help you specHlcally." Miss Annemarle Stclnblss, physical education instructor, was facing 23 girls in a body mechanics class. Their purpose ls to ftrm up flabby muscles, ac¬ cording to Miss Stelnblss, who In tho class tho crlrls plan specific problem areas. Nut tlon ls briefly explained. At the start of the course I girls noted the liody areas tl needed trimming or building. E 1 they h POLICEMEN $646—$G8S Oakland, California High School Graduates, CoU¬ ege Preferred. 21-29 Inclu¬ sive; 20/20 one eye, 20/40 toe other, or 20/30 boto; height 5'9 ln.--6'6 to., 160 lbs.mln.; excelled character. Written test your locaUty. Room 100, City Hall. FLEXIBILITY, redistribution of weight and firmness are the girls* main objectives. To achieve these quickly the girls Slow, rhythmical movements are necessary- for muscle flexl- bUlty. Touching the toes is recommended by the Instructor. Redistribution entails rapid movement that is repetitive for done daily and produce slow re¬ sults. The scissors kick and flut¬ ter kick are good examples. cannot take Firming of the muscles re¬ quires a maximum of 10 repeti¬ tions of the exercise done slowly and a ainsi maximum resistance. Pushups or pushing against a wall will help strengthen lhe up¬ per part of the arm. Results are queU-. seen. II was emphasized that It Is easier to achieve firm weight. •Most girls need erclses," Miss ed. "Jumping jacks are popular. Waistlines are trimmed with bending and twisting IMPORTANT FOR a mothei he shoulder area, which n jo strained when she lifts :arrles her young child. Push- Jk -Pa. merican-f-'aridian oLaundrieA cf (^leant THE AMERICAN-PARISIAN LAUNDRIES AND CLEANERS SAY-USE OUR CASH AND CARRY PLAN AND SAVE 25% ON DRY CLEANED GARMENTS EVERY THURSDAY AT ANY OF OUR LOCATIONS LISTED BELOW STORE NO 1 743 BLACKSTONE AVE. STORE NO 4 1938 E. DAYTON AVE. STORE NO 2 65 N. FULTON MANCHESTER CENTER STORE NO 3 3221 E. TULARE J STORE NO 5 CEDAR LANES SHOPPING CENTER OPEN 7:30 AM TO 6 PM- 6 DAYS A WEEK «irt verdict marked the third straight win for toe e longtime rivalry. Fresno State last doclsloned the >60. Nevada stUl holds toe upperhand to toe series at o Friday night to confront too The 1 Miller expects a real battle to toe Sacramento rumors from Informed sources claim toe Hornets a gUls. "THE PARTY" NOW SEVEN NIGHTS A WEEK FEATURING "THE GO-GO GIRLS" TOP BANDS-TOP RECORDING STARS N. BLACKSTONE. 2 ML NORTH OF SHAW. 439-6011 Wednesday, December 2, 1964 'Dogs 99-59, Hughey-29 On star rose, another faded, but all twinkled brightly last night as the Fresno State Bulldogs opened the cage season on a successful note, outscorlng tho University of Nevada 99-59 ln a non-league Lonnie Hughey was the rising star, and the 6-7 plvotman made toe transition from junior college to FresnoState with all toe finesse of a ballet dancer as he tapped the Irons for 29 markers for game scoring laurels. Maury Talbot, tho all-Amerlcan with an all-Americanbackprob- lem, Is tho fading star. Maurice saw limited action to the lntra- conference breezer and tallied only seven points. Apparently Coach Harry MiUer didn't want to extend his 6-5 star ln a tut that was decided Inside of the opening five minutes. Marty Sharp was mighty sharp as a floor general, and surprised by contributing 14 points ln the offensive column. The Bulldog's slot machine offense hit tho jackpot early and often ln too first half and authored a commanding 51-33 popcorn time ad¬ vantage, thanks to a fine tlplnby reserve Bob Jensen just before toe Sharp and Hughey were the main cogs ln toe Initial minutes, Marty putting the first Bulldog basket of tho year on toe board via a smooth outside Jumper. From Uien on the Bulldogs had easy wheeling. Fouls momentarily put a damper on the attack and forced Hughey and Talbot to toe side- f By MIKE DE LA CRUZ Glnsburg was president of the aP_- Associated Men Students and Stu- S An outstanding all-around ath- dent Body President. Other ac- lete and an outstanding student, tlvltlos Included athletic editor versatUe Erwln Glnsburg es- of the Campus yearbook, reporter of for The Collegian newspaper, and The Collegian Poge 7 Remember When Intramural Hoop Chase Tightens, 3 Tied For Lead Bocko Barrels .. for a layup Lanky Lonnie .. Hughey tanks against Nevada. an easy goal. lines, but the violations couldn't provide the Wolfpack wlto the equalizer. The gambling city boys finished a distant second to toe height department and as the game wore on tho measurements took toelr toll under the boards. FSC's bench strength also penned a premier performance. Bob Blanchard, the Contra Costa comet, picked up for Sharp to the waning minutes of toe first half, hit his first shot ln Bulldog livery and rang up three two pointers by halftlme. Jensen, playing fairly stoadUy at the forward post, meshed 13 counts and shone on the boards and defensively. Returnee John Bocko alternated between tho forward and guard posts, but was off his mark. Smooth and slick, but cold from the floor, John could manage only 10 points, off from his 16 per aver- ago of last season. Big Loren Thomsen whipped Ln 10 and supplied some board mus¬ cle to go along with Jensen and Hughey. Hughey, performing llko a human octopus from his center slot, gobbled up everything ln sight as he stuffed through fielders from all angles. The Fresno City CoUege phenom lived up to all of his advance billing, though he wavered a bit at first, garnering three quick infractions. Short hook shots and jumpers were the key weapons ln the Hughey arsenal, but toe ambidextrous giant countered on foUowups and hustle plays with equal authority. Hughey tacked 15 dots on the board to toe first half, trailed by Sharp wlto eight, and Bocxo and Blanchard with six apiece. A jampacked audience viewed the onslaught with obvious delight, but the cheers could change to tears If Talbot's back does not come himself Frosno St ate College's all time ire than three decades Entering FSC to the fall of 1925, he graduated fo a total of te letters ln three sports- -football, i playhouse produc uccessful for Glnsburg. Superb n toe gridiron and captain-elect i the basketball team, he over- ooked track to try his hand at shortstop on toe baseball team. I During his senior year the grid ■ squad got off to a bad start. The lng down the regular tackle spot Bulldogs faced a heavy schedule on toe varsity. which Included Stanford, Santa In toe 1925-2G basketball Clara, and the powerful St. Ig- squad, which won toe school's natlus (now University of San first Far Western Conference Francisco). The squad was con- Wasting i i 1 . **_P _H^^^ •_ WJa_f*i£< _S__-ir3_-,- '" ■' By TOM After two weeks of competi¬ tion, the race for the Independent league Intramural basketball crown Is still wide open with three teams tied for first place. The Campus Kings, the Raiders and the Gunners rolled to their second straight victories Monday to remain in contention for the American League lead. The Squires and the Nisei Club pace the National League with two The American League champ- Ion will compete wlto the tope fraternity quintet at toe close of the season to determine toe win¬ ner of the basketball trophy. If a strong team emerges In toe National League, lt may compete for third place points ln a play- champlonshlp Ln any sport, Glns¬ burg easUy clinched a starting guard position. On Lhe track field he closed his freshman year by grabbing off the Far Western Conference title ln the broad jump. Switching from tackle to end for Lhe 1926-27 grid season, Glnsburg played outstanding ball and earned his second letter ln football. He starred ln basketball and was rated the outstanding de¬ fensive player on the team. However, his achievements were not confined to the athletic field. During his Junior year stantly plagued by Injuries and ln the final game against the Cal Aggies with most of the players recovering from the flu, Fresno the Bulldogs. They )f The P .-nu- Italian Food Served In The TradlUon of An Old Italian Garden Di Cicco's Pizzeria FOUR SONS OF ITALY Delivery ?f it Service -_--«-"_y. AD 7-7054 '-SVR^- dumplng College 45-43 and 45-20 to win the con¬ ference championship. Glnsburg and teammates George Telonlch- er and Leo Wetland were named to the All-Conference team. Ills remarkable athletic career at FSC oi His outstanding protege was Les Rlchter, All-Amerlcanguard st Cal and all-pro linebacker for ;he Los Angeles Rams. He also outstanding ath- Martln, and Bob team, according to Intramural director Myron Anderson. The Campus Kings scored a rugged, 33 to 32, victory over the Big Eight to an American League game Monday. BUl Hlmes paced toe winners wlto 14 points, and Jim Ballngerscored 10points The Rald_ers slipped past too Falcons, 38 to 32, behind toe 13 point performance of Ron Pal - lvghl, and the Gunners clipped Alpha Kappa Psl, 54 to 39, sparked by the sharpshoottog of Lloyd Talbot. Talbot flipped to 21 points on 10 field goals and a free Uirow, and Pete Conrad added 15 markers. In toe National League, toe Chemistry Club bombed tho Cel- INTRAMURAL BASKETBALL SCHEDULE Thursday -- North Court: Delta Sigma Phi vs. Lambda Chl Alpha, 7 PM Thota Chl vs. Sigma Nu, 8 PM Sigma Alpha EpsUon vs. Sigma Chl, 9 PM Thursday — South Court: Sigma Chl 2 vs. Delta Sigma Phi 2, 7 PM Theta Chl 2 vs. Alpha Gamma Rho, 8 PM Kappa Sigma vs. Sigma Alpha EpsUon 2, 9 PM Monday -- North Court: Falcons vs. Alpha Kappa Psl, 7 PM Gunners vs. Campus Kings, 8 PM Raiders vs. Big Eight, 9 PM Monday -- South Court: AFROTC vs. Homan 3, 7 PM Chemistry Club vs. Nisei Club, 8 PM Celtics vs. Squires, 9 PM tics, 43 to 29, finding a potent scoring combination ln Rick Clawson and Larry Parker. Parker sank nine field goals and a foul shot for 19 points, and Clawson added 17 markers on s4ven field goals and three free The Squires downed Homan 3, 39 to 34 as football standouts Jim Kross and Mike Ansolabe¬ here scored 15 to 12 respectively. In another National League game, toe Nisei Club spanked toe Air Force ROTC, 48 to 40. The Standings: American League W L Campus Kings 2 0 Gunners 2 0 Alpha Kappa Psl 0 2 Big Eight 0 2 Falcons 0 2 National League W L Squires 2 0 Chemistry Club 2 0 Nlsol Club 2 0 Celtics 1 1 • Q DON'S fl BARBER 2 SHOP m When Gordie Howe goes boating... 'Chap Stick'goes along! "Sure I use 'Chap Stick' during the hockey sea- aside. It's just as necessary during the summer, son," says the Detroit Red Wing star. "With my When I'm on my boat, the hot sun is rough on my lips exposed to that ice and cold, it's a must! lips-burns them up, dries them out.'Chap Stick" But alter the season,'Chap Stick'doesn't get put helps soothe and heal th DONT LET DRY, SORE LIPS SPOIL YOUR FUN-WHEREVER YOU GO, GO WITH 'CHAP STICK' |