Sept 24, 1968 Pg. 4- Sept 25, 1968 Pg. 1 |
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OPENING DEFEAT Offense was disappointing -Rogers ByKea t're not as bed I,* asserted Fresno State •I saw some real good signs, ■ Rogers continued, cit¬ ing the "great deal of hustle* uuu Darryl Rogers yes- of the defensive squad, i the aftermath of his "Our biggest disappointment 38-23 shellacking at was the offense,* Rogers ad- »d. The offensive line was of the merest we've had e.They Idaho State Sat. around here for a long I were atrocious.* Rogers expressed disappoint-, roent that the Bulldog runners weren't able to show their po¬ tential because of the offensive line. We v Bulldog —- The third year Bulldog mentor had praise for co-captaln line¬ backer Tom McCall, who was chosen as Player of the Week by the San Joaquin Valley Sports- casters andSportswrlters Assn. McCall was In on 29 tackles. Rogers says he expects the San Jose State squad to use primarily the same plan they used last weekend In losing to Stanford 68-20. "You can't go around making 1968 Water polo DATE Fri., Sept. 27 Sat., Sept. 28 Sat., Oct. 5 Wed., Oct. 16 Thur.,Oct. 17 Frl., Oct. 18 Sat., Oct. 1* Fri., Oct. 25 OPPONENT Univ. of Pacific Alumni Game Univ. of Cal - Davis Sacramento State San Fernando Valley San Francisco State Humboldt State University of Redlands Cai Poly (SLO) Cal Slate - Fullerton Cal State - Los Angeles Cal Poly - Pomona San Diego Slate UC - San Diego Cal State - Long Beach State Tournament TIME PLACE FRESNO FRESNO FRESNO FRESNO 3:30 P.M. FRESNO 3:00 P.M. FRESNO 7:00 P.M. FRESNO 8:00 P.M. FRESNO 5:00 P.M. FRESNO 3:00 P.M. Fullerton 4:00 P.M. Los Angeles 11:00 A.M. Pomona 4:00 P.M. San Diego 11:00 A.M. San Diego 2:00 P.M. FRESNO 3:30 P.M. Hayward All Day ling plays. The weakness In the offensive ie also showed up In the final Kajiwora paces harriers in weekend practice run With the first meet of the 1968 season less than two weeks away, Fresno State's cross country team Is rounding Into near perfect I held last )f the | 10 par¬ ticipated turned In good I The only Bulldog who did not compete was team Captain Joe Dunbar. According to head coach Red Estes, Dunbar was resting a muscle Injury, but Is expected to be ready for the year's first meet on Oct. 5. In that en¬ counter, Fresno will compete against Cal Poly San Luis and Cal Poly Pomona. The t 0+0+0+0+0+0+g WANT ADS ^0+0+0+0+0+m Honda '64-Dream perfect condl - Hon $250. Prof. Opper Art Dept. or 439-6563. "Son In Denmark." WANTED - one or two fellows to occupy a large bedroom with bath, In new bouse wtth pool In N. west Fresno. Phone:229-8641. Book wanted: Hall, "Theories of Personality* needed for Psych 117, call Ed at 229-2366. 4 Bdrm House-1 block from FSC -Pool, 2 car garage, furnished. Ph: 439-4529 after 5. senior John Kajlwara (30:31). Reggie Harris was second (31:44), Al Beymer third (33:- 00), Jim Sughrue fourth (33:- 01), sophomore Jim Dowdle fifth (31:10), Malt Dyer-Bennett sixth (35:45), Richard Torres seventh (37:00), and Ron Conrad eighth (37:40). The only casualty of the Sat. practice was Jim Dowdle. He Injured his leg, but Is expect- Coach Estes stated that Cal Poly Pomona must rate as the favorite In the Oct. 5 meet, as well as the CCAA race. They have everyone returning from a squad that placed second In the NCAA college division last year. Fresno State finished eighth. ' " s PCAA son was caught for 28 yards in losses and Zimmerman for 23. Hudson did manage lo complete 11 of his 25 passes for 11 yards and one touchdown, and Zimmer¬ man followed closely with lOcom- pletlons in 22 tries fox 101 yards. Idaho State Intercepted seven FSC tosses however, five thrown by Zimmerman. Tight end Dave Harris was the leading target, hauling In six for a total of 78 yards and the only touchdown pass. Sophomore Hanker John Sexton was second in the pass-catching department with four for 31 yards. Fullback Mike Flores picked up 72 of the Bulldogs' 98 rush¬ ing yards, carrying the ball 13 Rogers was pleased with Work of the Fresno State punti Norm Wllklns and Jack Erdn The kicking game was a big we The Bulldog coach stressed that the man to watch on the Spar¬ tan squad Is halfback Wall Shock- ley, who had his finest game of the season last year against the Bulldogs, in which he gained ICC yards. "We'll have to stop him,* Rogers admitted. *Stop Shockley and you stop San Jose." Spartan coach Harry Anderson said yesterday from San Jose that the biggest problem he will face lis week will be to get his squad up* for the Bulldog tilt after ic shellacking against Stanford. •Now I know howGeneral Cus- tr must-have felt," Anderson imented, "The Indians mas¬ sacred us. It was a brutal game.* •We're not that bad a foot¬ ball team,* he added, echoetng •Fresno State is always tough against us,* the veteran grid coach commented. «We respect Hudson and Zimmerman. If our boys are still down for the game Fresno will run all over us.* Anderson said that FSC is a bigger rival of the Spartans' than Stanford. Rogers said that Brad Flshel would replace Greg Bllllngton at offensive guard, and that Fritz Allen would be tried In place of Tony Welch on defense for the Bulldogs In practice. 1 u * STUDBKS & FACULTY fiBP7 WELCOME BACK -■ / TO FSC 2 Locations To Serve You BULLDOG BARBER SHOP CAMPUS TOWN Coach Estes said he Knew little about their strength. The PCAA is Ihe Pacific Coast Athletic Assn., a newly form¬ ed conference of which Fresno State Is a member. YOGA New Classes YOGA CENTER 3022 E. OLIVE 486-0780 l Bui s 1 a 1 ■ Barstow 1 ^^ J Get to know the friendly merchants at your college town Make these Clovis merchants a regular stop on your shopping tour. .. t t C10VI5 APPLIANCE CLOVIS STATIONERY MAC TIRE SERVICE j —.„,« -Jl^li'l I 6fJ.ttJ!__ L_JlPollaiy LWBIBACfl AUTO PARTS j EMITS JEWELRY I BwTdOMTOwT" 604 Clovis Ave. . 619 4th St. I BARBS SHOP SASSAMOMETSWEAR I BAD-BOY MARKET ! **1*MII """ 448 Pollasky 745 Clovis Ave. I QUALITY PAWTS ■*ft* The Daily Collegian LXXIV/8 FRESNO STAIE COLLEGE. FRESNO. CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25,1968 $80,000 high Bookstore bid above estimate ART OBJECTS the Christian llr r of the objects of "wine in art" from triers Historical Collection on Christian Brothers 'Wine in the arts' opens e than $80,000 structlon of the n was presented to the Fresno State College Association Board of Directors Tuesday. The directors voted unani¬ mously to take any necessary sleps to proceed with the con¬ struction of the Bookstore. The bid must be approved by the state college board of trustees and the state public works department before construction can begin. The board of trustees ts meet¬ ing today, but It Is unlikely that there will be a vole on the bid, according to Earl Whitfield, the Fresno State assistant manager for association activities. The next meeting of the board will be next month. Yesterday's low bid was for $040,800. submitted by Trl Cen¬ tral Construction of Fresno. The estimate at the time the project was opened for bids was set at $560,000. Other bids were submitted by R. G. Fisher Company of Fresno- ($048,500) and Harris Construc¬ tion of Fresno ($059,800). Although the Trl Central bid was above the estimate, the As¬ sociation can still accept It. It Is permissible to accept a high bid, If It Is not more than 10 per cent above the estimate, plus the ENR. (The ENR Is a cost Index which measures construction cost Increase over a period of time.) The contract for construction of the Bookstore calls for the project to be completed 360 days after the contractor moves his equipment onto the grounds. Therefore, the Bookstore wlU not be open until sometime late In i, the board of $6,000 to 1969. In other m directors— -Voted to slcs budge $7,000, as was recommended In the spring by the student senate. -Voted to approve the amend¬ ment of the PubUc Employees Retirement System to Include hourly employees of the asso- -Voted a lifetime pass to re¬ tired association employee Louis LeValley. •Wine IjUhe Arts'-, an exhibit of old and'rare objects from the Christian Brothers Historical Collection, will be on display In the College Art Gallery, located In the Library foyer, through An arrangement of drawings, prints, sculptures, crafts, and other rare tools compose a unique and unusual story of the history of wine making. All of the drawings and prints which are predominantly Euro¬ pean In content, are connected with grapes and wine. Several works depict the Joshua and Caleb legend. Joshua and Caleb, according to the Bible, carried grape vines from Palestine to other lands. The story sym¬ bolizes wine's migration to all countries on the.globe. Several lithographs by Pi¬ casso and Chagall will show mod¬ ern Interpretations of the theme. Facility acquisition policies changed Student-police gun battles continue in Mexico strife Dr. Kennet r, dean ofstu- MEXICO CITY (UPI) - Scat¬ tered sniper fire today crackled across Mexico City where at least five were dead and 16 wounded in the latest battles of a student Insurrection. Olympic Games workmen strung upamil¬ lion lights spelling 'All Things Are Possible With Peace." provincial universities as the Insurrection spreading nat campuses in under government control.^—■>-*••■ Student leaders »*pealed to Ihe International Red Cross to send K Both major In rescue teams and hid their wounded In private houses and school buildings to keep them out of government hands. They Insisted the toll of dead and wounded was much higher from gunflghts at Polytechnic Institute and the Tlaleloco hous¬ ing project Tuesday and suggest¬ ed police were making student casualties "disappear." Hospital o 1 f I c 1 a 1 s confirmed five dead, including two police¬ men, and 16 wounded, Including three policemen in critical con- Rush continues Fraternity rush began Monday and will continue, through Thursday night. To' be eligible for rush a man must have completed 12units of college work with a 2.0 grade point average. There are ten fraternities on cam¬ pus and their rush functions are from 7-11 p.m. Rush will conclude with preference night Thursday and bids will be Issued Friday. dliio... Arm.v troops occupied Mexico • City's second hugh university complex, the Polytechnic Insti¬ tute, after a nine-hour battle Monday night and Tuesday that saw government machine guns, rifles and teargas bombs aligned against student rifles, Molotov cocktails and a bazooka. Truckloads of rifle-armed Hot police surrounded the sprawling Tlatelolco project, where the second major battle raged Mon¬ day and Tuesday. Police said about 15 sniper shots Issued from the 20-story buildings today. Bands of students surged along the .nearby thoroughfare of In¬ surgents Avenue, burning three buses and shaking down passen¬ gers for money. Troops Tuesday took over the State University ol Guerrero In Chllpanclngo, 175 miles south of Mexico City, and the University of Juarez In Oaxaca. Police or army units have put down demon¬ strations In at least five other provincial cities, Including some where prel I mlnary Olympics events are scheduled. The games start In -Mexico City Oct. 12.- The student petition to the Red Cross was delivered to Interna¬ tional news agency offices for ■Our companions have serious (Continued on Page 2, Col. I) , today asked that the presidents of all campus or¬ ganizations obtain an Information packet from his office. The packet contains Informa¬ tion each campus organization will need regarding the functions or the Student Activities Office and holding on-campus functions. Dr. Kerr pointed out that the activities office has streamlined the procedure for securing facil¬ ities for organizational events. In the past, students repre¬ senting recognized student or¬ ganizations who wished to requi¬ sition space In the Speech-Arts Building, CafeteriaandtheMusic Building were required to secure written permission from appro¬ priate officials In those buildings prior to approval from the ac- Because this written permis¬ sion usually necessitated a trip is campus and the signature of the faculty advisor, thus cre¬ ating an inconvenience, Dr. Kerr said verbal permission Is all that Is needed. He said students who wish to use the Cafeteria, Music or Speech Arts buildings will be able to receive verbal permission vis. a telephone call from the activi¬ ties office to the building coor¬ dinator. Written permission will still be required, however, If the stu¬ dents' plans necessitate any ape- services or special furniture. Written permission roost be ob- . talned (or any functlon other than I closed meeting. ackets are specifically tailored ADULTS ONLY Curtain falls on nude 'Peter Pan i it « 1. But folded after one performance. It was "Peler Pan,* James M. Barrle's classic for children," with an «adults only* tag. The University of Wisconsin's Experimental Theater production closed Tuesday because It dressed up the musical with six coeds In the altogether. But perhaps the show will go on again. shown again to faculty and law¬ yers - and perhaps even Wis¬ consin President Fred Harring¬ ton - to decide If the play Is •aesthetic* If they go along with the union theater program director Wil¬ liam Dawson's judgment that 'It's not nudity for nudity's sake,* the play may continue. The play portrays the fero¬ cious Captain Hook and his pt- Stuart A. Gordon, a drama senior from Chicago, produced the play, which opened Monday night only to student* and facul¬ ty. Gordon said he hoped Bar- rlngton and others "who are re¬ spected by the straight world,* would review the production. A quick meeting between Daw- (Conttnued on page 2, Col. 1)
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 24, 1968 Pg. 4- Sept 25, 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 | OPENING DEFEAT Offense was disappointing -Rogers ByKea t're not as bed I,* asserted Fresno State •I saw some real good signs, ■ Rogers continued, cit¬ ing the "great deal of hustle* uuu Darryl Rogers yes- of the defensive squad, i the aftermath of his "Our biggest disappointment 38-23 shellacking at was the offense,* Rogers ad- »d. The offensive line was of the merest we've had e.They Idaho State Sat. around here for a long I were atrocious.* Rogers expressed disappoint-, roent that the Bulldog runners weren't able to show their po¬ tential because of the offensive line. We v Bulldog —- The third year Bulldog mentor had praise for co-captaln line¬ backer Tom McCall, who was chosen as Player of the Week by the San Joaquin Valley Sports- casters andSportswrlters Assn. McCall was In on 29 tackles. Rogers says he expects the San Jose State squad to use primarily the same plan they used last weekend In losing to Stanford 68-20. "You can't go around making 1968 Water polo DATE Fri., Sept. 27 Sat., Sept. 28 Sat., Oct. 5 Wed., Oct. 16 Thur.,Oct. 17 Frl., Oct. 18 Sat., Oct. 1* Fri., Oct. 25 OPPONENT Univ. of Pacific Alumni Game Univ. of Cal - Davis Sacramento State San Fernando Valley San Francisco State Humboldt State University of Redlands Cai Poly (SLO) Cal Slate - Fullerton Cal State - Los Angeles Cal Poly - Pomona San Diego Slate UC - San Diego Cal State - Long Beach State Tournament TIME PLACE FRESNO FRESNO FRESNO FRESNO 3:30 P.M. FRESNO 3:00 P.M. FRESNO 7:00 P.M. FRESNO 8:00 P.M. FRESNO 5:00 P.M. FRESNO 3:00 P.M. Fullerton 4:00 P.M. Los Angeles 11:00 A.M. Pomona 4:00 P.M. San Diego 11:00 A.M. San Diego 2:00 P.M. FRESNO 3:30 P.M. Hayward All Day ling plays. The weakness In the offensive ie also showed up In the final Kajiwora paces harriers in weekend practice run With the first meet of the 1968 season less than two weeks away, Fresno State's cross country team Is rounding Into near perfect I held last )f the | 10 par¬ ticipated turned In good I The only Bulldog who did not compete was team Captain Joe Dunbar. According to head coach Red Estes, Dunbar was resting a muscle Injury, but Is expected to be ready for the year's first meet on Oct. 5. In that en¬ counter, Fresno will compete against Cal Poly San Luis and Cal Poly Pomona. The t 0+0+0+0+0+0+g WANT ADS ^0+0+0+0+0+m Honda '64-Dream perfect condl - Hon $250. Prof. Opper Art Dept. or 439-6563. "Son In Denmark." WANTED - one or two fellows to occupy a large bedroom with bath, In new bouse wtth pool In N. west Fresno. Phone:229-8641. Book wanted: Hall, "Theories of Personality* needed for Psych 117, call Ed at 229-2366. 4 Bdrm House-1 block from FSC -Pool, 2 car garage, furnished. Ph: 439-4529 after 5. senior John Kajlwara (30:31). Reggie Harris was second (31:44), Al Beymer third (33:- 00), Jim Sughrue fourth (33:- 01), sophomore Jim Dowdle fifth (31:10), Malt Dyer-Bennett sixth (35:45), Richard Torres seventh (37:00), and Ron Conrad eighth (37:40). The only casualty of the Sat. practice was Jim Dowdle. He Injured his leg, but Is expect- Coach Estes stated that Cal Poly Pomona must rate as the favorite In the Oct. 5 meet, as well as the CCAA race. They have everyone returning from a squad that placed second In the NCAA college division last year. Fresno State finished eighth. ' " s PCAA son was caught for 28 yards in losses and Zimmerman for 23. Hudson did manage lo complete 11 of his 25 passes for 11 yards and one touchdown, and Zimmer¬ man followed closely with lOcom- pletlons in 22 tries fox 101 yards. Idaho State Intercepted seven FSC tosses however, five thrown by Zimmerman. Tight end Dave Harris was the leading target, hauling In six for a total of 78 yards and the only touchdown pass. Sophomore Hanker John Sexton was second in the pass-catching department with four for 31 yards. Fullback Mike Flores picked up 72 of the Bulldogs' 98 rush¬ ing yards, carrying the ball 13 Rogers was pleased with Work of the Fresno State punti Norm Wllklns and Jack Erdn The kicking game was a big we The Bulldog coach stressed that the man to watch on the Spar¬ tan squad Is halfback Wall Shock- ley, who had his finest game of the season last year against the Bulldogs, in which he gained ICC yards. "We'll have to stop him,* Rogers admitted. *Stop Shockley and you stop San Jose." Spartan coach Harry Anderson said yesterday from San Jose that the biggest problem he will face lis week will be to get his squad up* for the Bulldog tilt after ic shellacking against Stanford. •Now I know howGeneral Cus- tr must-have felt," Anderson imented, "The Indians mas¬ sacred us. It was a brutal game.* •We're not that bad a foot¬ ball team,* he added, echoetng •Fresno State is always tough against us,* the veteran grid coach commented. «We respect Hudson and Zimmerman. If our boys are still down for the game Fresno will run all over us.* Anderson said that FSC is a bigger rival of the Spartans' than Stanford. Rogers said that Brad Flshel would replace Greg Bllllngton at offensive guard, and that Fritz Allen would be tried In place of Tony Welch on defense for the Bulldogs In practice. 1 u * STUDBKS & FACULTY fiBP7 WELCOME BACK -■ / TO FSC 2 Locations To Serve You BULLDOG BARBER SHOP CAMPUS TOWN Coach Estes said he Knew little about their strength. The PCAA is Ihe Pacific Coast Athletic Assn., a newly form¬ ed conference of which Fresno State Is a member. YOGA New Classes YOGA CENTER 3022 E. OLIVE 486-0780 l Bui s 1 a 1 ■ Barstow 1 ^^ J Get to know the friendly merchants at your college town Make these Clovis merchants a regular stop on your shopping tour. .. t t C10VI5 APPLIANCE CLOVIS STATIONERY MAC TIRE SERVICE j —.„,« -Jl^li'l I 6fJ.ttJ!__ L_JlPollaiy LWBIBACfl AUTO PARTS j EMITS JEWELRY I BwTdOMTOwT" 604 Clovis Ave. . 619 4th St. I BARBS SHOP SASSAMOMETSWEAR I BAD-BOY MARKET ! **1*MII """ 448 Pollasky 745 Clovis Ave. I QUALITY PAWTS ■*ft* The Daily Collegian LXXIV/8 FRESNO STAIE COLLEGE. FRESNO. CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25,1968 $80,000 high Bookstore bid above estimate ART OBJECTS the Christian llr r of the objects of "wine in art" from triers Historical Collection on Christian Brothers 'Wine in the arts' opens e than $80,000 structlon of the n was presented to the Fresno State College Association Board of Directors Tuesday. The directors voted unani¬ mously to take any necessary sleps to proceed with the con¬ struction of the Bookstore. The bid must be approved by the state college board of trustees and the state public works department before construction can begin. The board of trustees ts meet¬ ing today, but It Is unlikely that there will be a vole on the bid, according to Earl Whitfield, the Fresno State assistant manager for association activities. The next meeting of the board will be next month. Yesterday's low bid was for $040,800. submitted by Trl Cen¬ tral Construction of Fresno. The estimate at the time the project was opened for bids was set at $560,000. Other bids were submitted by R. G. Fisher Company of Fresno- ($048,500) and Harris Construc¬ tion of Fresno ($059,800). Although the Trl Central bid was above the estimate, the As¬ sociation can still accept It. It Is permissible to accept a high bid, If It Is not more than 10 per cent above the estimate, plus the ENR. (The ENR Is a cost Index which measures construction cost Increase over a period of time.) The contract for construction of the Bookstore calls for the project to be completed 360 days after the contractor moves his equipment onto the grounds. Therefore, the Bookstore wlU not be open until sometime late In i, the board of $6,000 to 1969. In other m directors— -Voted to slcs budge $7,000, as was recommended In the spring by the student senate. -Voted to approve the amend¬ ment of the PubUc Employees Retirement System to Include hourly employees of the asso- -Voted a lifetime pass to re¬ tired association employee Louis LeValley. •Wine IjUhe Arts'-, an exhibit of old and'rare objects from the Christian Brothers Historical Collection, will be on display In the College Art Gallery, located In the Library foyer, through An arrangement of drawings, prints, sculptures, crafts, and other rare tools compose a unique and unusual story of the history of wine making. All of the drawings and prints which are predominantly Euro¬ pean In content, are connected with grapes and wine. Several works depict the Joshua and Caleb legend. Joshua and Caleb, according to the Bible, carried grape vines from Palestine to other lands. The story sym¬ bolizes wine's migration to all countries on the.globe. Several lithographs by Pi¬ casso and Chagall will show mod¬ ern Interpretations of the theme. Facility acquisition policies changed Student-police gun battles continue in Mexico strife Dr. Kennet r, dean ofstu- MEXICO CITY (UPI) - Scat¬ tered sniper fire today crackled across Mexico City where at least five were dead and 16 wounded in the latest battles of a student Insurrection. Olympic Games workmen strung upamil¬ lion lights spelling 'All Things Are Possible With Peace." provincial universities as the Insurrection spreading nat campuses in under government control.^—■>-*••■ Student leaders »*pealed to Ihe International Red Cross to send K Both major In rescue teams and hid their wounded In private houses and school buildings to keep them out of government hands. They Insisted the toll of dead and wounded was much higher from gunflghts at Polytechnic Institute and the Tlaleloco hous¬ ing project Tuesday and suggest¬ ed police were making student casualties "disappear." Hospital o 1 f I c 1 a 1 s confirmed five dead, including two police¬ men, and 16 wounded, Including three policemen in critical con- Rush continues Fraternity rush began Monday and will continue, through Thursday night. To' be eligible for rush a man must have completed 12units of college work with a 2.0 grade point average. There are ten fraternities on cam¬ pus and their rush functions are from 7-11 p.m. Rush will conclude with preference night Thursday and bids will be Issued Friday. dliio... Arm.v troops occupied Mexico • City's second hugh university complex, the Polytechnic Insti¬ tute, after a nine-hour battle Monday night and Tuesday that saw government machine guns, rifles and teargas bombs aligned against student rifles, Molotov cocktails and a bazooka. Truckloads of rifle-armed Hot police surrounded the sprawling Tlatelolco project, where the second major battle raged Mon¬ day and Tuesday. Police said about 15 sniper shots Issued from the 20-story buildings today. Bands of students surged along the .nearby thoroughfare of In¬ surgents Avenue, burning three buses and shaking down passen¬ gers for money. Troops Tuesday took over the State University ol Guerrero In Chllpanclngo, 175 miles south of Mexico City, and the University of Juarez In Oaxaca. Police or army units have put down demon¬ strations In at least five other provincial cities, Including some where prel I mlnary Olympics events are scheduled. The games start In -Mexico City Oct. 12.- The student petition to the Red Cross was delivered to Interna¬ tional news agency offices for ■Our companions have serious (Continued on Page 2, Col. I) , today asked that the presidents of all campus or¬ ganizations obtain an Information packet from his office. The packet contains Informa¬ tion each campus organization will need regarding the functions or the Student Activities Office and holding on-campus functions. Dr. Kerr pointed out that the activities office has streamlined the procedure for securing facil¬ ities for organizational events. In the past, students repre¬ senting recognized student or¬ ganizations who wished to requi¬ sition space In the Speech-Arts Building, CafeteriaandtheMusic Building were required to secure written permission from appro¬ priate officials In those buildings prior to approval from the ac- Because this written permis¬ sion usually necessitated a trip is campus and the signature of the faculty advisor, thus cre¬ ating an inconvenience, Dr. Kerr said verbal permission Is all that Is needed. He said students who wish to use the Cafeteria, Music or Speech Arts buildings will be able to receive verbal permission vis. a telephone call from the activi¬ ties office to the building coor¬ dinator. Written permission will still be required, however, If the stu¬ dents' plans necessitate any ape- services or special furniture. Written permission roost be ob- . talned (or any functlon other than I closed meeting. ackets are specifically tailored ADULTS ONLY Curtain falls on nude 'Peter Pan i it « 1. But folded after one performance. It was "Peler Pan,* James M. Barrle's classic for children," with an «adults only* tag. The University of Wisconsin's Experimental Theater production closed Tuesday because It dressed up the musical with six coeds In the altogether. But perhaps the show will go on again. shown again to faculty and law¬ yers - and perhaps even Wis¬ consin President Fred Harring¬ ton - to decide If the play Is •aesthetic* If they go along with the union theater program director Wil¬ liam Dawson's judgment that 'It's not nudity for nudity's sake,* the play may continue. The play portrays the fero¬ cious Captain Hook and his pt- Stuart A. Gordon, a drama senior from Chicago, produced the play, which opened Monday night only to student* and facul¬ ty. Gordon said he hoped Bar- rlngton and others "who are re¬ spected by the straight world,* would review the production. A quick meeting between Daw- (Conttnued on page 2, Col. 1) |