Oct 5, 1966 Pg. 4- Oct 6, 1966 Pg. 1 |
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TH. DAUY COLUOIAN SP0RT Rogers plans changes for Conference opener Wrdwewtsy, October >, at halfback and Creed. The 6-foot, 215-pound position guard plays on both the offensive es, then and defensive unite and U con¬ sidered by Wlnnlngham as one of the most outstanding players be leg lots Athletic son against Son Fernando Valley State Collet* to fUtelUfe Ste- There wUl be a few changes and ponibly a few new faces la the FSC starting offensive and defensive unite whon the BuU- dof f take the Held tor their first meeting with Coach Sam Winning - ham's Matadors, who lostatough 24-20 deeUlon to Col 8tate Long Beach last week In their CCAA Rogers wUl coll upon Ed WUson Rogers will coll upon Ed WU¬ son, a ISO-pound Junior from Lo¬ rn oore High School, to start at fullback. Last Saturday against Montana Slats, Wilson picked up 37 yards on 10 carries for a 3.7 yards rushing average and caught two passes for 23 yards. Spelling Wilson at the fullback slot will be Roia Bannister who so far this season has carried the boll IB times for 41 yards, a 2.7 yards rushing average. The quarterback starting Job Is Rogers has been testing quarter- it the flanker spot. Rogers is also planning a few The Bulldogs will be meeting a vastly Improved San Fernando team which nearly pulled an upset against Long Beach's highly re¬ garded 49ers lost Saturday. The Matadors, who own a 1-1-1 sea¬ sonal record and an 0-1 confer¬ ence mark, are led by Junior Bruce Lemmerman, a 6-foot, 180-pound quarterback, and sophomore Mike Vogel, a 5-foot- 10. 215-pound fullback. Leminer- *7/te SfUvUlmaa » hi «e.me MotSlMl ahowwd a «1 per MM Irwrea** In the thick ivi»iUii,M «tnt«rlnc In the cen¬ tral \ alley thU year. Anesllmat- ih* huh»»t Ml) > vnx - fov *»«*> *>v * ACeWftlH (0 iv»v» Selleck, t*m«> mAnagemem nir-enleortor MftO*. 4, *<h* N*. 4w* «-r\>p IM» y-e*r ta a result <vt .-\coll.-t >l**Q*j KNMtttM on the north- *\w W*+M\>t ground*.* Dae »\n the »\irplu» •» NrvU iM* rear, kuntert «tllbealkv**d « N« limit of »•»♦« duck* per 'v with no .1 .•\.-.;it.;u\U>t - .-v» the N* limit em tejl at ttve .i.i.-v« r*r >1*j,or»l> ikreeotwfcfc* t«aM h» *fc* t*-***, »«+. as m»:i»i\t» Ml r«»«atl». T>e .^-;i»1 xalK' t» vine of DM Ur«e*t wtM«r r+Mtnc area* Km waterfowl »Mi* tfce recUk- |-y<» »K .*.v* ol.^v oeja »N.v.< NVW »xMr>** *< ««()»»&*, »*t- »N>* for An-* ooMtm u «* ,>*.- *>** n t* **» **,-*. ,•*««* are E»«M\ v«u>V\ **«* *e* ** ,v«, i* r* »N*».v •» »84S**M e^^ k* IK Ni MM - <%**. *» SS Cs«k if*. YS, %'v, Ae*********** e^ ^Meryrt TV *f*ft- TJWV % » we»> »>evw »<■!-» and feeding area tor waterfowl, if these clubs w»re sold out to farming Interest our waterfowl would have no place to go ex¬ cept the state operated manage¬ ment areas, which could not poaMhly take care of the entire population. The California Department of Fish and Come maintains almost a Jot en waterfowl management area* throughout the central val¬ ley. The main objectives of these areas ore to provide tood and shelter tor waterfowl wintering In California. Hunting Is open to (he public on all of the manage¬ ment areas and sportsmen are allowed to harvest the surplus duck crop each year. tf you are a strucrtlng college xtuJwnt, then <\vi probably cant afford the stiff price of member¬ ship In a private dock club, n this is the case you should con¬ sider fanning a hunt on oae ot the state's waterfowl manage- Rtont areas »>.;->. are open to r*MIc sfeccttoc r-jr permit or a first court first served S*sls» Anpitoet»cci> for permits to Vott H the state ow*ed areas are et^UoMe mbj at the fish awl cast* oS!,-^ baOSnr. ec *.«M S, sa»»» Ave. Di FresaK\ «■ may re oieoxned as stk-ws svtraar-twb actwmx&ed tStlMAT! In bis tour years as head coach at SFVSC, Wlnnlngham has compUed a record of 10-27. Last year, the Matadors finished with This season, Wlnnlngham's fortune has been somewhat bet¬ ter. After fighting to a 7-7 draw against Whlttler CoUege in their season opener, the Matadors camn back to beat Occidental CoUege, 14-10. Lost week's loss to CSLB evened their mark at 1-1-1. Kick off time for Saturday's game Is 8 p;m. Bowling is rolling, clubs are growing Anyone for bowling—lawn bowling that Is? Interest In the sport has been growing, warrentlng the forma¬ tion of two lawn bowling clubs Bart Young, president of the Fig Garden Lawn Bowling Club, and Cliff Baker, president of the Fresno Bowling Club, are In Those Interested should con¬ tact Young at 251-6856, or Joe Redo at 229-6253. FOURS* ■» • specializing In « ■ ITALIAN 5 DINNERS _ . Food to go. sj£ Open 4 p.m.-3 o.m. ■ 530 N. Blockstone Ml (off Belmont) Ad 7-7064 JEFF CLOSE FRESHMAN ClASS SENATOR THURSDAY, OCTOBER 13 rc*orv>«h mbw bnena On this oete ttea will be i .» RIGHT OF WAY Stote Coverniewtit to face* A NEW KIND OF AUTO STEREO r>iv»^ fci: s c«7*-s n Ain-THSfOUUSTS miM.1 Aeneta efttors, &eaie*si AeminstreHe*. Pek- I'.c AownT>i»rr«iiMk. eo>d Ecestoaics wB^n will free] eWte peaiKeeis perricelerry seated ♦e *eit idmin. Ge«! uewy rVliiil ual —that; crcwllcert MOW AT TOW KACOKMT OITltt "AN OLD TO THE DAILY COLLEGIA STATE COLLEGE FRF.SNO. CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, OCTOBER 6. 1966 Homecoming Week events will include rallies, concert, parade 'ollete President Frederic W. Ness wel¬ comed new students to Fresno State CoUege In a convocation speech yesterday morning In the Amphitheater. Approximately 1,200 studdnts attended the event. Preceding the speech was a short band concert conducted by Dr. John II. Martin, assistant professor of music. (Photo By Gary Daloyan) Fresno's fair opens today for 11-day run By DOTT1K PETRICK A lot of enthusiasm added to an equal amount of work and plan¬ ning wUl add up to a successful Homecoming Week. This Is the hope of tho Home¬ coming Committee, headed by Jay F-vans. And lt Is echoed by count¬ less students, organizations, fac¬ ulty members, alumni and friends of the coUege who are working to make Homecoming Week a tradi¬ tion here. To Insure an active week, these groups and students have lined up a full schedule of Homecoming activities In anticipation of the game with Cal Poly on Saturday. Monday the first of three ral- bchind the activities booth. Spe¬ cial entertainment wUl be pro¬ vided by the Sigma Alpha EpsUon fraternity. Another feature ofthe rally wiU be the presentation of the flvo Homecoming Queen con- Voting for the queen candidates will take place from 9:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the activities booth. Monday night the qdeeh will be crowned at the We Five concert. lt Is at 8 p.m. In the Men'sGym- naslum. When the queen Is crowned during Intermission, Fresno Mayor Floyd Hyde wUl issue a proclamation establish¬ ing FSC's Homecoming Week. Tuesday wUl more or loss be quiet actlvlty-wlse — for every¬ one except the queen and her court. They wUl have an appear¬ ance at the County Board of Supervisors and a luncheon dote with Merl Glnsburg at the Down¬ town Fresno Lions. Another rally Is scheduled tor Wednesday at 12:30 |Lm. Thl3 Ume Kappa Alpha Thota sorority wUl handle tho entertainment. A Board of Fine Arts event Is on tho Thursday agenda. Pianist Frledrlch Wuhrer wUl perform in tho Little Theater at 1 p.m. and 8:30 p.m. Thursday night tho queen and her court will be Interviewed by Al Radka on his KFRE-TV Late Friday activities wUl include a third rally featuring Coach Dor- ryl Rogers and team co-captains. Another appearance will be made by the queen and her court. They are also tentatively scheduled to appear on the Nancy Allen Show on KMJ-TV between 2-4 p.m. The Queen's Brunch Is Satur¬ day at 10:30 a.m. at Grandma's Pantry. Parade dignitaries wUl also attend the brunch. Leon Peters,grand marshaUot the Homecoming parade, wUl be among the guests. He Is presi¬ dent ot Valley Foundry and Ma¬ chine Works and of Fresno Com¬ munity Hospital. Peters is also chairman of the Fresno State Advisory Board. Judging of the floats wUl begin In the parade formation area at 11 a.m. Floats are based on the theme 'San Luis Blues.* Twelve are entered In the parade. The Homecoming parade wUl begin at 1 p.m. Parade entries wUl form on Van Ness between Ventura and Inyo Streets. The parade wttl go north on Van Ness to Merced. At Merced a right turn will be made and the parade wUl continue down to Tulare. The football game wUl start at 8 p.m. at Rotcllffe Stadium. Half-time actlvlUos will Include an appearance by the queen and her court. The queen will be pre¬ sented a gift from the alumni. Featuring the music of the Roadrunners, the Homecoming dance will be from 10:30 p.m. to 1 a.m. at the Marigold Ballroom. Alumni wUl participate in the Homecoming activities with a party and dinner at Del Webb's TowneHouse before the game. A bus will take them directly Into the stadium. Exhibits, professional enter¬ tainers, and midway rides take the spotlight today In Fresno as the annual Fresno District Fair begins Its 11-dayrun. Officials ore hopeful that 410,000 persons wUl have visited the eight exhibit departments and 240 commercial exhibits when the fair closes Sunday, Oct. 16. Last year's attendance was 402,000. The fair wUl feature two free shows daily In the outdoor am¬ phitheater at 3 and 6:30 p.m. First to perform wUl be the dinger Sisters from tho Danny Kaye television program. On Saturday, Bobby Burgess and Barbara Boylan of the Law- Casts completed for two theatrical productions The drama department has an¬ nounced tentative casts for this semester's two ma)or theatrical productions. •Oh Dad, Poor Dad, Mama's Hung You In the Closet and I'm Feelln' So Sod* wUl appear from Nov. 10-19 In the Little Theatre. The pl»y wiU be directed by Charles Randall. Dorms combine efforts for Homecoming float The approaching Homecoming Week has found the men and women of Homan, Graves and Baker halls working toward one goal—a prize winning float, Linda Bauer of Graves Hall sold, "This year the three halls are working together and we hope to win the sweepstakes trophy.' There have been several ex¬ changes between the halls with an activities night planned for each week. Float buUdlng has been the subject of the first two activ¬ ity nights held In Homan Hall. •Christmas Carol' Is being staged by Dr. Janet Lorlng. Per¬ formances of this Yuletlde class¬ ic have been set tor Dec. 8-17, also In the Llttlo Theatre. Title roles tor 'Oh Dad' In¬ clude Elayne Culp as Madame RosepetUe, Fred Berllng as Jon¬ athan, Dlanne Crane as Rosalie, and PhU Freer as the Com¬ modore. Malcom McGregor wUl play the head _ bellboy; Jim Boshears wUl be the first bell¬ boy and TeU Hall the second. The major characters In •Christmas Carol" will be Ron Headlee In the title role of Scrooge, Jack Gelger as Bob Cratchlt, Dora Christian as Mrs. Cratchlt, Thomas Cook as Mar- ley's Ghost and Jeff Wolfe as Fred. In supporting roles are Linda Solo, Ann Wallace and Cissy Garabedlan as BeUe, Belinda and Martha Cratchlt respectively. Terry Burns Is Old Joe and Thomas Cook Is an apprentice to Scrooge. rence Welk show wUl be on stage. On the lost Ave days the Osmond Brothers from the Andy Williams Show will perform. Fair gates will open at 10 a.m. and close at 11 or 12 p.m., depending on the size of the New cotton maid will be selected The Fresno State College Mold of Cotton will be selected tonight at a formal dessert hour at the home of David Groonborg, 740 E. Vossor Ave. The queen wUl be chosen on the basis ot appearance, personality, intelligence and her campus ac¬ tivities. She^must be willing and able to meet people and speak before an audience. Judges wUl be Donna Mehas, Gottschalk fashion buyer; Fred Tldyman, photographer; and Charles Sanf Agata, FSC men's activities adviser. Contestants are Pamela Dugan, Kappa Kappa Gamma; Linda Her¬ man; Ruth Vogel, Phi Mu; Ann Kovick, Delta Gamma; and PhyK Us Day, Kappa Kappa Gamma. Deadline to drop classes is Friday Friday Is the last day to drop a course without prejudice to one's standing or to change a class from audit to credit. Beginning next week and con¬ tinuing until the last six weeks of the season, the Instructor must assign a grade of pass or fall. During the lost six weeks of the semester, a grade of Incomplete or fail wiU bo given. Change of program forms may be picked up In the Administration BuUdlng at the Admissions and Records Office windows.
Object Description
Title | 1966_10 The Daily Collegian October 1966 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1966 |
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 | Oct 5, 1966 Pg. 4- Oct 6, 1966 Pg. 1 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1966 |
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 |
TH. DAUY COLUOIAN
SP0RT
Rogers plans changes
for Conference opener
Wrdwewtsy, October >,
at halfback and Creed. The 6-foot, 215-pound
position guard plays on both the offensive
es, then and defensive unite and U con¬
sidered by Wlnnlngham as one of
the most outstanding players be
leg lots Athletic
son against Son Fernando Valley
State Collet* to fUtelUfe Ste-
There wUl be a few changes
and ponibly a few new faces la
the FSC starting offensive and
defensive unite whon the BuU-
dof f take the Held tor their first
meeting with Coach Sam Winning -
ham's Matadors, who lostatough
24-20 deeUlon to Col 8tate Long
Beach last week In their CCAA
Rogers wUl coll upon Ed WUson
Rogers will coll upon Ed WU¬
son, a ISO-pound Junior from Lo¬
rn oore High School, to start at
fullback. Last Saturday against
Montana Slats, Wilson picked up
37 yards on 10 carries for a
3.7 yards rushing average and
caught two passes for 23 yards.
Spelling Wilson at the fullback
slot will be Roia Bannister who
so far this season has carried
the boll IB times for 41 yards,
a 2.7 yards rushing average.
The quarterback starting Job Is
Rogers has been testing quarter-
it the
flanker spot.
Rogers is also planning a few
The Bulldogs will be meeting a
vastly Improved San Fernando
team which nearly pulled an upset
against Long Beach's highly re¬
garded 49ers lost Saturday. The
Matadors, who own a 1-1-1 sea¬
sonal record and an 0-1 confer¬
ence mark, are led by Junior
Bruce Lemmerman, a 6-foot,
180-pound quarterback, and
sophomore Mike Vogel, a 5-foot-
10. 215-pound fullback. Leminer-
*7/te SfUvUlmaa
» hi «e.me MotSlMl ahowwd a «1
per MM Irwrea** In the thick
ivi»iUii,M «tnt«rlnc In the cen¬
tral \ alley thU year. Anesllmat-
ih* huh»»t
Ml) >
vnx - fov *»«*> *>v *
ACeWftlH (0 iv»v» Selleck,
t*m«> mAnagemem nir-enleortor
MftO*. 4, * |