Sept 19, 1967 Pg. 4- Sept 20, 1967 Pg. 1 |
Previous | 7 of 23 | Next |
|
|
This page
All
|
Loading content ...
Humiliated In Openctr —THE DAILV COLLEGIAN •m—dav. SentCTiber 19 .1967 'Dogs Look Ahead After Drubbing By LARRY STEWART Sports Editor The Fresno State College Bull¬ dogs are no doubt looking ahead to Saturday's clash with the Uni¬ versity of Idaho Vandals. After playing one of the most forgettable games in recent years In their opener against Santa Clara University, there ls no place else to look but ahead. Although outplaying the Bron¬ cos on paper, the smaU coUege from the north bettered the BuU¬ dogs on the scoreboard, 24-16. What wUl a major university like Idaho, next In line for FSC, do to the -Dogs If they can't get past a small coUege that resumed tootbaU only eight years So far, Coach Darryl Rogers has made two changes in Satur¬ day's line up. Len McNeil wiU switch from defensive end to offensive guard In place of Vern Gambetta and Ron Lelmbach wUl start at defensive end. Rogers attributed the loss to one thing-poor playing. •Mental mistakes and Incon¬ sistency kUled us,* Roger noted. who looked good, but a lot looked The one feUow on the field that was Impressive was Santa Clara's Ray Calcagno, a good scrambler who threw two touch- Stastlcally speaking, the TJogs had SCU beat In every depart¬ ment, Including Intercepted pas- But winning the game on paper pared to Santa Clara's 10, out- gained the Broncos 150 yards to 66, and Bulldog quarterback Danny Robinson hit on 19 of 36 passes for 226 yards whUe Cal¬ cagno connected on 8 of 25 for 134 yards. Robinson was Impressive at Injuries, Illness Hamper Cross Country Training By KEN ROBISON Beset by Injuries and the flu, Fresno State's varsity cross country team will attempt to round Itself Into shape In Ume for Its first meet Sept. 30. Of the top Ave men on the squad, only senior co-captaln Dave Cords U In good health. Junior co-captaln Joe Dunbar ls hampered with a leg Injury, whue juniors Dennis Shanz and Glenn ■ Rick ubln have the flu. •Well be in trouble o ir first Red Estes. "We're behind In Co-captaln Dunbar wiU be out to defendMsCCAAtlUe this year. Fresno State's first league cross country Utle, Dunbar holds school records In the three mile, and last year finished 14th In the NCAA's University Division six mUe run. eight cross country champion- Cords ls way ahead of all the other runners In training. Be¬ sides being in good health, he has the advantage of having at¬ tended a three week experimental camp al Lake Tahoe which gave him pracUce In at high alUtudes. Shanz and Edman are both transfers from Diablo Valley College. Shanz plaeed 15th in California last year In Junior coUege cross country. Rubin ran last fall for FSC and set a school freshman record for the mUe with a clocking of FlghUng for spots on the top five wUl be sophomore Matt Dyer-Bennett, who ran on last year's frosh team, senior letter- man Harry Olsen, sophomore letterman John Mandurrago, who ls recovering from tonslUtls, and ' senior John Bradford, whoCoach Estes says has 'been lmpres- The bulldogs travel to San Luis Obispo Sept. 30 to meet the Cal poly San Luis and Cal Poly Pomona. ON ALL ART SUPPLIES and DRAFTING materials COUPON This coupon worth 10% discount if you do not have your ASB card Arts I Hobbies t^TT^T OPEN NIGHTS »Tlt 8 P.M. times, but lack of consistency hurt the highly touted senior sig¬ nal caller. Robinson had three passes picked off, one resulting In a touchdown, and back-up quar¬ terback Ron Hudson had one In¬ tercepted. Running backs Fred Flgueroa, the game's leading ground gainer with 74 yards In 14 carries, was one of Fresno's top performers. Lloyd Madden, sophomore halfback from Contra Costa showed he can both run and catch Flanker Denny Moulton, who was on the receiving end of five n passes, was Injured In d quarter after catching i touchdown pass. Rogers said Probably the outstanding Bull¬ dog performer, If there was one,, was linebacker Tom McCall.The College transfer showed And later In the second period a fumble was allegedly kicked Into the hands of Steve Sweeters, who raced 55 yards untouched to pay dirt. Following Intermission, the Bulldogs showed some lUe after Roger Young recovered a Bronco a JC t last year with his hard-nosed tackling and heads-up play. A field goal by Hank Corda from four yards out gave Fresno a 3-0 lead, but Santa Clara took 12-3 lead Into the dressing room. A blocked punt by SC's Mike Frletas set up one touchdown and for ting Gary Finch (The Steamer) from 18 yards out after 3 1/2 minutes had elapsed. Later In the third period, the Bulldogs were rolling again when Tom WUllams picked off another Robinson pass In the flat and sprinted 55 yards for six points. After Robinson and Moulton teamed for a Fresno touchdown to make the score 18-16, Calcagno SUZUKI FOR SALE It only takes S300 to own this 150 C.C. 1966 SUZUKI cycle. Only 4900 actual miles. See lt. . drive lt . . 439-1734 FURN. APT. 2 BR. -S140orJ38 per person. Across from dorms. Carpet. 439-6481. Alsofurn.Clty College studio, $70. STUDENTS & FACULTY 2 Locations To Serve You BULLDOG BARBER SHOP CAMPUS TOWN ir of Bulldog Foundation) Get to know the friendly merchants at your college town Make these 1 £ - 3 1 1 Bullard ■ 1 Barstow |FSC 4 1 Sh w 1 Clovis merchants a regular stop on your shopping tour*. • CLtVLS APDIIAHfF ! to; MAC TIRE SERVICE 723 Clovis Ave. * LlVlS APPLIANCE 402 5th St. I 444 Pollasky LMENBACH AUTO PARTS ♦ 604 Clovis Ave. I SASSANO MEN'S WEAR | 44oPollisky | EDWIN'S JEWELRY 619 4th St. BAD-BOY MARKET 745 Clovis Ave. I EMIL'S DOWNTOWN | BARBER SHOP 423 Polasky | ECONOMY CLEANERS | 632 Clovis Ave. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN FRESNO STATE COLLEGE VOL. L.XXlll, NO. 3 FRESNO. CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 20. 1967 ] New Procedure For Deferments Foreign Enrollment Up student registered with the se- lecttve service has been expanded to a 12 month period by Executive who ls talcing a These requirements have been established to achieve unUormlty in cerUflcaUon by schools and as a guide for local boards In clas¬ sifying students. To be eligible for a U-S defer¬ ment the registrant must make a written request to the local board. SelecUve Service has provided forms requesting deferments as an undergraduate student to the college, and these forms, avail¬ able at registration, may now be obtained at the Records Office. that lt ls the registrant's duty lo li board with evl- osteopathy or optometry wUl be classified as U-S. Graduate stu¬ dents who have enrolled for their first year of post-baccalaureate study In a graduate or profes¬ sional school wUl be deferred for one academic year only. Any registrant who ls entering his second or subsequent year of study without interruption maybe classified as n-S If his school certifies that he is satisfactorily InstrucUon, but he may not be de¬ ferred for a course of study lead¬ ing to a master's degree or the equivalent for more than one additional year or for a doctoral or professional degree for more than a total of five years, In¬ clusive of the years already used Beginning this fall more than 215 foreign students are enrolled for the 1967-68 academic year at Fresno State CoUege. This ls the largest number ever. come from all parts of the world. This Includes Baat, t .■ Kast, and Canada. A few may be de¬ layed by political turmoil In their 1966-6 If th ls any Indication, the foreign students wUl be taking major courses of study In every School and the Division of Social Work. Some 206 students from 53 coun¬ tries enrolled last fall In 35 different major areas. About 20 percent wero graduate students. Approximately 100 of the stu¬ dents wUl be living at FSC's In- ternaUonal Living Center along with an equal number of United States students. All wUl share In an exchange of cultures, un¬ derstanding and co-pxlstence. The Center has Its own student association, a self-governing ln- The FSC International Living Center ls unique among the Cal¬ ifornia State Colleges, the only one of Its kind In the system. The number of foreign students attending FSC has Increased steadlly-from 78 In 1961 to 271 this last academic year. This Is a gain of more than 240 percent. "Many of the students come lo study at Fresno State College the hard way," says Robert C. Knud¬ sen, coordinator of the Foreign Student Program. "Scholarships are provided some, many must earn their expensos. Often their factorlly pur at h- 1-- Folk Mass Rocks Tonight "We're gonna sing,love, laugh, Folk Mass ls simply an'lnform- le, live, sing, for all we're al" liturgical celebraUon featur- orth," says Father Negro, Ing group singing and music haplaln of the Newman Center. furnished by guitars and bongos. religious worship c I this offer an expanded Foreign Student Program which encompasses the total educaUonal effort. Five areas are Included. They wUl be directed by graduate assistants who wUl be living at the Inter¬ national House. Knudsen ls coordinating all these activities. In addlUon, new foreign student counseling wUl be a prime responsibility of Pat Cllne, foreign student counselor. foreign students wUl take special under-graduate educaUon and or- lentaUon In "Problems ln'aCon- temporary American Society." The courses will be taught by Pat Cllne. He wUl be assisted by Philip Starkman. To speed adaptation to the American environment and to own countries are not In a posl- provide the greatest posslbUlty tlon to assist them. of success, the foreign students •A few have even risked their whose naUve language ls not Eng- Uves to attend, as their countries llsh (and who are studying In are at war or embroUed in civil America for the first time) devote war.* half of their Ume during the first Knudsen revealed that the Eng- semester to an appropriate study llsh language Is a barrier to of English and to obtaining an un- many, but the college provides derstandlng of our economic, to overcome political, psychological, socio¬ logical and arUstlc envlron- l citizens of When each foreign graduate provide," he student nears compleUon of his hospitality, program, he undertakes an lnde- t pendent study project In which he using, employ me university, or slmUar In of learning. Graduate students Inn dentistry, veterinary n featuring the Eastgates wUl fc Father Negro explains that I i no n itng solemn. gency lean funds. Not a will begin follow In the Center patio. The way Newman Center Is located at the I 1572 Barstow Avenue, twoblocks ter.' east of Fresno State College. of ih analyzes and applies ) knowledge ne has •Ign students traveling many country I thousands of miles-some half gained here. A by-produi the world—can live at these studies Is lo provld* •national Living Ccn- students with a basis for ir r." pretlng the United States t< For the first time, FSC wUl countrymen. ^ fy =
Object Description
Title | 1967_09 The Daily Collegian September 1967 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1967 |
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 | Sept 19, 1967 Pg. 4- Sept 20, 1967 Pg. 1 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1967 |
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 | Humiliated In Openctr —THE DAILV COLLEGIAN •m—dav. SentCTiber 19 .1967 'Dogs Look Ahead After Drubbing By LARRY STEWART Sports Editor The Fresno State College Bull¬ dogs are no doubt looking ahead to Saturday's clash with the Uni¬ versity of Idaho Vandals. After playing one of the most forgettable games in recent years In their opener against Santa Clara University, there ls no place else to look but ahead. Although outplaying the Bron¬ cos on paper, the smaU coUege from the north bettered the BuU¬ dogs on the scoreboard, 24-16. What wUl a major university like Idaho, next In line for FSC, do to the -Dogs If they can't get past a small coUege that resumed tootbaU only eight years So far, Coach Darryl Rogers has made two changes in Satur¬ day's line up. Len McNeil wiU switch from defensive end to offensive guard In place of Vern Gambetta and Ron Lelmbach wUl start at defensive end. Rogers attributed the loss to one thing-poor playing. •Mental mistakes and Incon¬ sistency kUled us,* Roger noted. who looked good, but a lot looked The one feUow on the field that was Impressive was Santa Clara's Ray Calcagno, a good scrambler who threw two touch- Stastlcally speaking, the TJogs had SCU beat In every depart¬ ment, Including Intercepted pas- But winning the game on paper pared to Santa Clara's 10, out- gained the Broncos 150 yards to 66, and Bulldog quarterback Danny Robinson hit on 19 of 36 passes for 226 yards whUe Cal¬ cagno connected on 8 of 25 for 134 yards. Robinson was Impressive at Injuries, Illness Hamper Cross Country Training By KEN ROBISON Beset by Injuries and the flu, Fresno State's varsity cross country team will attempt to round Itself Into shape In Ume for Its first meet Sept. 30. Of the top Ave men on the squad, only senior co-captaln Dave Cords U In good health. Junior co-captaln Joe Dunbar ls hampered with a leg Injury, whue juniors Dennis Shanz and Glenn ■ Rick ubln have the flu. •Well be in trouble o ir first Red Estes. "We're behind In Co-captaln Dunbar wiU be out to defendMsCCAAtlUe this year. Fresno State's first league cross country Utle, Dunbar holds school records In the three mile, and last year finished 14th In the NCAA's University Division six mUe run. eight cross country champion- Cords ls way ahead of all the other runners In training. Be¬ sides being in good health, he has the advantage of having at¬ tended a three week experimental camp al Lake Tahoe which gave him pracUce In at high alUtudes. Shanz and Edman are both transfers from Diablo Valley College. Shanz plaeed 15th in California last year In Junior coUege cross country. Rubin ran last fall for FSC and set a school freshman record for the mUe with a clocking of FlghUng for spots on the top five wUl be sophomore Matt Dyer-Bennett, who ran on last year's frosh team, senior letter- man Harry Olsen, sophomore letterman John Mandurrago, who ls recovering from tonslUtls, and ' senior John Bradford, whoCoach Estes says has 'been lmpres- The bulldogs travel to San Luis Obispo Sept. 30 to meet the Cal poly San Luis and Cal Poly Pomona. ON ALL ART SUPPLIES and DRAFTING materials COUPON This coupon worth 10% discount if you do not have your ASB card Arts I Hobbies t^TT^T OPEN NIGHTS »Tlt 8 P.M. times, but lack of consistency hurt the highly touted senior sig¬ nal caller. Robinson had three passes picked off, one resulting In a touchdown, and back-up quar¬ terback Ron Hudson had one In¬ tercepted. Running backs Fred Flgueroa, the game's leading ground gainer with 74 yards In 14 carries, was one of Fresno's top performers. Lloyd Madden, sophomore halfback from Contra Costa showed he can both run and catch Flanker Denny Moulton, who was on the receiving end of five n passes, was Injured In d quarter after catching i touchdown pass. Rogers said Probably the outstanding Bull¬ dog performer, If there was one,, was linebacker Tom McCall.The College transfer showed And later In the second period a fumble was allegedly kicked Into the hands of Steve Sweeters, who raced 55 yards untouched to pay dirt. Following Intermission, the Bulldogs showed some lUe after Roger Young recovered a Bronco a JC t last year with his hard-nosed tackling and heads-up play. A field goal by Hank Corda from four yards out gave Fresno a 3-0 lead, but Santa Clara took 12-3 lead Into the dressing room. A blocked punt by SC's Mike Frletas set up one touchdown and for ting Gary Finch (The Steamer) from 18 yards out after 3 1/2 minutes had elapsed. Later In the third period, the Bulldogs were rolling again when Tom WUllams picked off another Robinson pass In the flat and sprinted 55 yards for six points. After Robinson and Moulton teamed for a Fresno touchdown to make the score 18-16, Calcagno SUZUKI FOR SALE It only takes S300 to own this 150 C.C. 1966 SUZUKI cycle. Only 4900 actual miles. See lt. . drive lt . . 439-1734 FURN. APT. 2 BR. -S140orJ38 per person. Across from dorms. Carpet. 439-6481. Alsofurn.Clty College studio, $70. STUDENTS & FACULTY 2 Locations To Serve You BULLDOG BARBER SHOP CAMPUS TOWN ir of Bulldog Foundation) Get to know the friendly merchants at your college town Make these 1 £ - 3 1 1 Bullard ■ 1 Barstow |FSC 4 1 Sh w 1 Clovis merchants a regular stop on your shopping tour*. • CLtVLS APDIIAHfF ! to; MAC TIRE SERVICE 723 Clovis Ave. * LlVlS APPLIANCE 402 5th St. I 444 Pollasky LMENBACH AUTO PARTS ♦ 604 Clovis Ave. I SASSANO MEN'S WEAR | 44oPollisky | EDWIN'S JEWELRY 619 4th St. BAD-BOY MARKET 745 Clovis Ave. I EMIL'S DOWNTOWN | BARBER SHOP 423 Polasky | ECONOMY CLEANERS | 632 Clovis Ave. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN FRESNO STATE COLLEGE VOL. L.XXlll, NO. 3 FRESNO. CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 20. 1967 ] New Procedure For Deferments Foreign Enrollment Up student registered with the se- lecttve service has been expanded to a 12 month period by Executive who ls talcing a These requirements have been established to achieve unUormlty in cerUflcaUon by schools and as a guide for local boards In clas¬ sifying students. To be eligible for a U-S defer¬ ment the registrant must make a written request to the local board. SelecUve Service has provided forms requesting deferments as an undergraduate student to the college, and these forms, avail¬ able at registration, may now be obtained at the Records Office. that lt ls the registrant's duty lo li board with evl- osteopathy or optometry wUl be classified as U-S. Graduate stu¬ dents who have enrolled for their first year of post-baccalaureate study In a graduate or profes¬ sional school wUl be deferred for one academic year only. Any registrant who ls entering his second or subsequent year of study without interruption maybe classified as n-S If his school certifies that he is satisfactorily InstrucUon, but he may not be de¬ ferred for a course of study lead¬ ing to a master's degree or the equivalent for more than one additional year or for a doctoral or professional degree for more than a total of five years, In¬ clusive of the years already used Beginning this fall more than 215 foreign students are enrolled for the 1967-68 academic year at Fresno State CoUege. This ls the largest number ever. come from all parts of the world. This Includes Baat, t .■ Kast, and Canada. A few may be de¬ layed by political turmoil In their 1966-6 If th ls any Indication, the foreign students wUl be taking major courses of study In every School and the Division of Social Work. Some 206 students from 53 coun¬ tries enrolled last fall In 35 different major areas. About 20 percent wero graduate students. Approximately 100 of the stu¬ dents wUl be living at FSC's In- ternaUonal Living Center along with an equal number of United States students. All wUl share In an exchange of cultures, un¬ derstanding and co-pxlstence. The Center has Its own student association, a self-governing ln- The FSC International Living Center ls unique among the Cal¬ ifornia State Colleges, the only one of Its kind In the system. The number of foreign students attending FSC has Increased steadlly-from 78 In 1961 to 271 this last academic year. This Is a gain of more than 240 percent. "Many of the students come lo study at Fresno State College the hard way," says Robert C. Knud¬ sen, coordinator of the Foreign Student Program. "Scholarships are provided some, many must earn their expensos. Often their factorlly pur at h- 1-- Folk Mass Rocks Tonight "We're gonna sing,love, laugh, Folk Mass ls simply an'lnform- le, live, sing, for all we're al" liturgical celebraUon featur- orth," says Father Negro, Ing group singing and music haplaln of the Newman Center. furnished by guitars and bongos. religious worship c I this offer an expanded Foreign Student Program which encompasses the total educaUonal effort. Five areas are Included. They wUl be directed by graduate assistants who wUl be living at the Inter¬ national House. Knudsen ls coordinating all these activities. In addlUon, new foreign student counseling wUl be a prime responsibility of Pat Cllne, foreign student counselor. foreign students wUl take special under-graduate educaUon and or- lentaUon In "Problems ln'aCon- temporary American Society." The courses will be taught by Pat Cllne. He wUl be assisted by Philip Starkman. To speed adaptation to the American environment and to own countries are not In a posl- provide the greatest posslbUlty tlon to assist them. of success, the foreign students •A few have even risked their whose naUve language ls not Eng- Uves to attend, as their countries llsh (and who are studying In are at war or embroUed in civil America for the first time) devote war.* half of their Ume during the first Knudsen revealed that the Eng- semester to an appropriate study llsh language Is a barrier to of English and to obtaining an un- many, but the college provides derstandlng of our economic, to overcome political, psychological, socio¬ logical and arUstlc envlron- l citizens of When each foreign graduate provide," he student nears compleUon of his hospitality, program, he undertakes an lnde- t pendent study project In which he using, employ me university, or slmUar In of learning. Graduate students Inn dentistry, veterinary n featuring the Eastgates wUl fc Father Negro explains that I i no n itng solemn. gency lean funds. Not a will begin follow In the Center patio. The way Newman Center Is located at the I 1572 Barstow Avenue, twoblocks ter.' east of Fresno State College. of ih analyzes and applies ) knowledge ne has •Ign students traveling many country I thousands of miles-some half gained here. A by-produi the world—can live at these studies Is lo provld* •national Living Ccn- students with a basis for ir r." pretlng the United States t< For the first time, FSC wUl countrymen. ^ fy = |