Sept 9, 1968 Pg. 8- Sept 17, 1968 Pg. 1 |
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Bulldogs prepare for Idaho opener A ^ Dai| Co|, ian Fresno State's Bulldog footbal- 1 n I 1^ _l . .u.L.n.n rtttonCO (ho defensive side of the ledger J m '»*^*^ Rogers hopes to shape more explosive offense Darryl Rogers and his staff hope to get a closer look at the 52-man aggregation this week and next and may do some shuffling In an effort to get the maximum effort from each position. Rogers' biggest hope Is that this year's crew packs a little more scoring punch, especially In . the running department where he has some classy performers. ■The Bulldogs, offensively, will be a better football team than In 1967, more running and less passing," he said. "The de¬ fensive In 1968 is a question mark and everything depends on how the kids come around.* The Bulldog skipper, in his third year at the helm, points to s his e line but edges the defensive fr blEgest current problei Juniors dominate the 1968 ros¬ ter with 33. There are 14 seniors and five sophs. Workouts this week have been held on a two-a-day basis. Rogers wants his spuad in top shape and primed for the season's home opener two weeks hence with the Idaho State Bengals. The FSC headmaster expects to Improve on the dismal 3-8 log of last season and If all goes well perhaps a shot at the.Junior Rose Bowl tilt. The Bulldogs will have to wade through a rugged 10-game slate that Includes non-confer¬ ence foes Montana State,- Uni¬ versity of Pacific, San Jose State, Portland State and San Diego State In addition to the Bengals. Rogers was already spread thin In the defensive forward wall before he learned big Wes Rus- DARRVL ROGERS sell decided ti a European and Phil Podsakoff and Ty Parkinson would be shelved with Injuries. On the brighter side of the ledger, he inherited two classy soph grldders In flanker John Sexton of Lakewood, and halfback Fred Parker of Bakersfleld. Sexton is a lanky (6-2)170 ACROSS FROM DORMS $150 or-$40 per perso CARPETED Ph: 439-6481 WANT ADS GIRLI Room for Rent $40.00 per month call mornings only 229-9588 pounder with excellent speed and good hands. Parker, who spent a hitch In the Navy, comes In with Impressive credentials. Five seasons back he established a Kern County prep scoring mark with 148 points, Including 21 touchdowns. Rogers has 18 returning letter played In the shadows of Danny Robinson last season. Robinson was the sixth leading college di¬ vision passer In the nation. Hud¬ son will be pressed by newcomer Don Zimmerman, a fine passer and runner. Other notable returnees In¬ clude ends Ron Remington (207) and Dave Harris (203), guards Hank Corda (212) and Greg Bll- llngton (230). and tackles Dob Inderbleten (250), John Stahl (227), Don Berg (221) and Tony Welch (236). Lettermen in the backfleld In¬ clude halfbacks Bob Dunn and Lloyd Madden. The latter was the Bulldogs' top rusher In '67, but Heading up the prospects on he defensive side of the ledger Is highly-regarded linebacker Tom McCall, a 198-pound bruiser who halls from Los Banos. Overall the bulldogs will be smaller than last season. Size- wise they range fi Bob Gilson, a Reedley College, halfback Walt Jens i 156-pound ofCoallnga. fullback Mike Flores (2OTV SPECIAL NAVY PEA COATS ARMY FIELD JACKETS 395 1968 Bulldog schedule Idaho State Nov. 9 'Long Beach State Valley State Nov. 16 Montana State Cal Poly (SLO) Nov. 23 Univ. of Pacific ON THE ROAD San Jose State Oct. 25 Los Angeles State Portland State Nov. 2 San Diego Slate > UNLIMITED •SERVING* At-L YOt R PARTY NKEI , FJ*EE DELIVERY g [229-6685 I <STONE AVE. - At Barstow MWIMniW/ STUDENTS & FACULTY KJglW / WELCOME BACK -m I TO FSC 2 Locations To Servo You SB BULLDOG BARBER SHOP CAMPUS TOWN (Member of Bulldog Foundation) m * iBmAklJIUM FRESNO : WELCOME BACK, STUDENTS tV FACULTY! • TUNE-UP • FREE PICK-UP • BRAKE SERVICE ♦ AND DELIVERY • LUBRICATION • BLUE CHIP ST AM S —ONE-STOP CAR SERVICE HERE — CAMPUS CHEVRON Ma A WALT CEDAR b SHAW PH: 222-1181 LEVI'S ^imM 5; ■•ijfc1 LXXIV/2 FRESNO STATE COLLEGE, FRESNO, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 17,1968 Enrollment surges to 10,900— problems spice unit registration Fresno State College Initiated announced that 10,904 students students I Its overhauled registration pro¬ cedure amid a few expected de¬ lays and problems as well as an enrolled during the two-day registration period Thursday and Friday. This exceeds by more than 600 the anticipated enrol- Under the newly-adopted unit priority system, 7,040 students enrolled during the first day of registration compared to 5,600 Robert Board, FSC registrar, It. Is also nearly 1,600 more for the initial day laat year. ifc The registration process got off to a rocky start when far more, students than anticipated showed up to have their pictures taken for the new Identification cards that will be Issued this year. Board said more than 11,000 lined up for the photo-taking, and he cameras just did not have trough film to handle that many. A new supply of film has been ihlpped to the campus and the photo-taking operation resumed yesterday. Board said remaining student photos will be taken to¬ day, tomorrow and Thursday from 8 a.m.-7 p.m. In the In¬ structional Media Center located In the basement of the Library. Faculty and staff personnel who have not had their photos taken are scheduled for Friday between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. The next frustration-causing event came on the morning actual registration opened In the Men's Gymnasium. Board said some of the graduate students were con¬ fused by the time-table set-up. They appeared at the wrong times and this created some confusion that sent registration 35 minutes behind schedule. As the afternoon group stepped to the gym, registration had re¬ covered and was back on BOOKSTORE CRUSH ™°™»£!ZZ ^.Ho Fresno State's crackerbox Bookstore this week. .he scramble for books In these tightly packed sur¬ roundings will be a thing of the past come next fall when a spacious three-story Bookstore will open next to the newly-constructed College Union. Bids for the Bookstore will be opened later this month. Until that new one is built, students will just have to take a deep breath, plunge Into the crowd and hope for the best. Cards Misplaced Someone misplaced a batch of permlt-to-reglster cards and the whole works screeched to a halt. By the time the cards were lo¬ cated registration was running an hour and a half behind schedule. Board said many of the fresh¬ man students experienced dif¬ ficulty In obtaining the courses they wanted and had to be assisted by the counseling staff on hand to handle those expected prob- On the whole, Board said the new unit-rule system Is better than the outmoded alphabet war. •1 think the new system Is better. I feel In tatting with some of those who went through registration that It has been ac¬ cepted as a favorable approach," he said. Board said the Initial problems can be corrected to make future registrations work smoothly. Its biggest asset, Board feels, Is thai the new system can be adopted for preregtstering by computer. FSC's enrollment had climbed so rapidly that the old system was no longer useful. By com¬ puterizing much of the procedure the school hopes to step up the pace In an effort to match strides with the bulging enrollment. Another new phase of this semester's enrollment proceed¬ ings was the registration of 85 Negro and Mexican-American students under the college's new Educational Opportunities Pro¬ gram, apian that allows the school to take up to four percent of its enrollment In students who would not normally quality. The EOP students were en¬ rolled along with the graduate students on the first day of registration and given preference because of their Inexperience with college procedures and the need to Insure their placement In some courses specifically Despite the early enrollment, some of the departments bad al¬ ready closed courses,forcing some of the students to postpone classes, particularly In the areas of art, speech, health and psy¬ chology. More students bring more traffic snarls ALIVE AND WELL IN IRAN There are more parking spaces for Fresno Stale College's mo¬ toring students this semester. There are also more motoring students which, coupled with a few changes In parking regula¬ tions, may present some briefly confusing traffic patterns around the campus. The biggest change Is the one¬ way route on Barton Avenue as It enters the campus from Shaw i. Yesterday, It seemed as though this may have been the te onto the campus, for by 8 a.m. all the parking lots I by I i for I full. Some of those In parking managed to rind their way to the biggest lot on campus, the newly-completed one west of the old residence halls. Bob Nash, parking coordinator, said this lot Is open to all stu¬ dents and not merely dorm resl- Nash also said the parking area west of Cedar Avenue and be¬ tween Barstow and San Jose Ave¬ nues is no longer a parking area although that unimproved lot was chocked full yesterday morning. This area, Nash said. Is soon to be improved and grassed-ln tor an athletic field and, although posted, still is being used as a parking area. Nash said no park¬ ing citations were Issued yester¬ day but will be soon If the former lot Is not vacated. 'In the future, all parking will be on the perimeter of the cam¬ pus,* Nash said. "There will be very little parking inside the campus." The reason for this is the pro¬ posed construction under the Master Plan. Nash said in a few years, FSC students will have a little longer walk from parking lot to classroom. In another month, a new lot behind the Administration Build¬ ing will be opened. This one will have about 100 unrestricted park¬ ing spaces. Parking regulations this year will be In force from 7 a.m. to 10 p.m. Monday through Thurs¬ day. This Is a two-hour extension over last year's 8 p.m. closing. On Friday, regulations will be In force from 7 a.m. to 4 p.m. Parking permits may still be purchased In the Business Office. Peace live in Fresno State College concluded Us fourth Peace Corps training program In July tor volunteers going to Iran. Under the leadership of FSC Peace Corps Director Dr. Frank V. Powell, some 43 young peace Corps trainees underwent an In¬ tensive 13-week training pro¬ gram, that Involved trainees tor jobs In the areas of agriculture, home economics and public health. The volunteers studied the na¬ tive language Jot four weeks. Dr. Powell emphasized "Project HILT" - high Intensity language training, which, he said, takes careful and diligent work on the part of tKi trainees to have com¬ plete cou and of the language by the time they report for duty In early October. Corps trainees chicken coops Fresno State was chosen as the training site because the Fresno climate and the FSC pro¬ gram parallel that which the corpsmen will find In Iran. Dr. Powell noted, during a recent trip to Iran, that the crops arget area south of the Caspian Sea is, much like that of the San Joa¬ quin Valley. Rice, oranges, wheat and grapes were a few of the crops grown In the area. The training program Included five married couples. Areas of specialisation found seven train¬ ees In home economics, six in public health (all registered nurses) and 30 In agriculture. Fresnan Jeff Suplnger was among the 43 Peace Corps trainees. All trainees were housed In chicken coops on the FSC cam¬ pus In living conditions much like what they "' their two years of sendee in In self evaluation people they will work with, the mores, morals, religious aspects and Impact of toe area and peo¬ ple of Iran. The home extension volunteers will live In the villages With the people and win attempt to bold bops of teaching sanitation, food preparation, food preservation, family Ufa and family planning and baby care to (he women of the village. The three other FSC Peace Corps training projects sent vol¬ unteers to India, Iran sad Ceylon.
Object Description
Title | 1968_09 The Daily Collegian September 1968 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1968 |
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 9, 1968 Pg. 8- Sept 17, 1968 Pg. 1 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1968 |
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 |
Bulldogs prepare for Idaho opener A ^ Dai| Co|, ian
Fresno State's Bulldog footbal- 1 n I 1^ _l . .u.L.n.n rtttonCO (ho defensive side of the ledger J m '»*^*^
Rogers hopes to shape more explosive offense
Darryl Rogers and his staff
hope to get a closer look at the
52-man aggregation this week and
next and may do some shuffling
In an effort to get the maximum
effort from each position.
Rogers' biggest hope Is that
this year's crew packs a little
more scoring punch, especially In
. the running department where he
has some classy performers.
■The Bulldogs, offensively,
will be a better football team
than In 1967, more running and
less passing," he said. "The de¬
fensive In 1968 is a question mark
and everything depends on how the
kids come around.*
The Bulldog skipper, in his
third year at the helm, points to
s his
e line but
edges the defensive fr
blEgest current problei
Juniors dominate the 1968 ros¬
ter with 33. There are 14 seniors
and five sophs.
Workouts this week have been
held on a two-a-day basis. Rogers
wants his spuad in top shape and
primed for the season's home
opener two weeks hence with the
Idaho State Bengals.
The FSC headmaster expects
to Improve on the dismal 3-8 log
of last season and If all goes well
perhaps a shot at the.Junior Rose
Bowl tilt. The Bulldogs will have
to wade through a rugged 10-game
slate that Includes non-confer¬
ence foes Montana State,- Uni¬
versity of Pacific, San Jose State,
Portland State and San Diego State
In addition to the Bengals.
Rogers was already spread
thin In the defensive forward wall
before he learned big Wes Rus-
DARRVL ROGERS
sell decided ti
a European
and Phil
Podsakoff and Ty Parkinson
would be shelved with Injuries.
On the brighter side of the
ledger, he inherited two classy
soph grldders In flanker John
Sexton of Lakewood, and halfback
Fred Parker of Bakersfleld.
Sexton is a lanky (6-2)170
ACROSS
FROM DORMS
$150
or-$40 per perso
CARPETED
Ph: 439-6481
WANT ADS
GIRLI Room for Rent $40.00
per month call mornings only
229-9588
pounder with excellent speed and
good hands. Parker, who spent
a hitch In the Navy, comes In
with Impressive credentials.
Five seasons back he established
a Kern County prep scoring mark
with 148 points, Including 21
touchdowns.
Rogers has 18 returning letter
played In the shadows of Danny
Robinson last season. Robinson
was the sixth leading college di¬
vision passer In the nation. Hud¬
son will be pressed by newcomer
Don Zimmerman, a fine passer
and runner.
Other notable returnees In¬
clude ends Ron Remington (207)
and Dave Harris (203), guards
Hank Corda (212) and Greg Bll-
llngton (230). and tackles Dob
Inderbleten (250), John Stahl
(227), Don Berg (221) and Tony
Welch (236).
Lettermen in the backfleld In¬
clude halfbacks Bob Dunn and
Lloyd Madden. The latter was the
Bulldogs' top rusher In '67, but
Heading up the prospects on
he defensive side of the ledger
Is highly-regarded linebacker
Tom McCall, a 198-pound bruiser
who halls from Los Banos.
Overall the bulldogs will be
smaller than last season. Size-
wise they range fi
Bob Gilson, a
Reedley College,
halfback Walt Jens
i 156-pound
ofCoallnga.
fullback
Mike Flores (2OTV
SPECIAL
NAVY
PEA COATS
ARMY
FIELD JACKETS
395
1968 Bulldog schedule
Idaho State Nov. 9 'Long Beach State
Valley State Nov. 16 Montana State
Cal Poly (SLO) Nov. 23 Univ. of Pacific
ON THE ROAD
San Jose State Oct. 25 Los Angeles State
Portland State Nov. 2 San Diego Slate
> UNLIMITED
•SERVING* At-L YOt R PARTY NKEI
, FJ*EE DELIVERY g
[229-6685 I
|