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Ken Rob/son The good fairy is dead! It's a long trip from Fresno to San Diego and back, especially If your team has Just been man¬ handled by the powerful San Diego State Aztecs as they roll to their third straight naUonal title. Although I'm not usually a pessimistic person, I thought lt fair and Just to warn naive, unsuspecUng and Idealistic Fresno State football fans who will be traveling south this Saturday with the hope of an upset in their eyes. Maybe It's where It's at today to still wish on a star, believe in the great pumpkin and wait for the good fairy, but don't forget that McCarthy DID lose the nomination, St. Louis DID win in the National League, Ed Sullivan DID come back on the air this What I'm trying lng and hoping In the world isn't going to alter th fact that unless ail of California south of Bakers s dumped into the sea, San Diego State wll still be undefeated after this Saturday night an< the Bulldogs will lick their wounds and prepare foi Long Bes Don't feel bad, though. A loss to the Aztecs will put Fresno State in a big crowd of the top collegiate ln the country, none of whom have n to dethrone the champ. In fact, the earn to pull the victory the San Diegans ln the past college class Utah State, and It had to behind In the fourth quarter to do It. Granted, this Is a good Bulldog team, probably exactly thrill those Bulldog supporters who have seen powerful Aztec contingents whip their boys for the past seven years. It's anybody's guess, really, how well the Fres- nans will fare against the Big Boys from the South. Comparative scores, in case you haven't realized before, mean nothing. On the one hand you have San Dlego winning 48-6 over the same San Jose State squad that beat the Bulldogs 25-21, but on the other side of the coin you have the fact that both teams beat the Cal State Los Angeles Diablos by almost the same margin, the Aztecs by 24 and the 'Dogs by 22. Saturday's game, although not a conference clash, as the Aztecs retired from the CCAA this ne for FSC. Although lt looks as if the Bulldogs have the cor championship.almost wrapped up, the ne; last week that the Junior Rose Bowl has policy of automatically picking the CCAA champ for Its Western r leat the Eastern representative. This means that the o ably play a big role in whether I they will compete In a post season Bowl gam It Junior Rose or Camella. Sports THE DAILY COLLEGIAN Tueaday, October 29. 1968 Dog footballers to face top-ranked San Diego Fresno State's Bulldog grid- ders, at the high point of their current season, will be up against their stlffest competition of the year this Saturday night as they travel to San Dlego to meet the number one Collegiate team in ry, the San Dlego S The Bulldog 42-20 win o the Cal State Los Angel Diablos gave Rogers some optl Ism but the FSC mentor adn that "We looked p He lauded his te: for *belng able to the big play when \ The Bulldogs, 4-2 on the season and 3-0 ln California Collegiate -elation pi; winning streak and ie straightened out after two early season mishaps. The only hurdle to the CCAA championship for the Bulldogs will be next week against the cal State Long Beach 49ers, pre- the title but now 35 Unl s Blood Urgently Needed. Odd F. lows Rebekah Blood Bank. Nomln. I Fee. 251-5583. I League or In the National Football League. I never thought of playing pro ball until Peter Ustinov. Maggie Smith Karl Maiden sHot Millions** Clovis merchants a regular stop on your shopping tour.. . MAC TIRE SKVICE \ CLOVIS APPLIANCE CLOVIS 5TATI0HERY , 723 Clovis Ave. j 602 5th St. ! 444 Pollasky LMENBACH AUTO PARTS I 604 Clovis Ave. I EDWIN'S JEWELRY 619 4th St. I MIL'S DOWNTOWN { BARBER SHOP . 423 FOIUKy SASSAKO MBTS WEAR | " " "** | 441 PoMisky j BAD-BOY MARKET 745 Clovis Ave OUAUTY PAHTS The Daily Collegian LXXIV/ 33 FRESNO STATE COLLEGE, FRESNO, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 30,1968 FSC education benefits Ponder demands hang on Prop. 3 passage UC activists delay strike as rain dampens boycott California voters wlllbevoting on nine propositions Tuesday, as well as for a president, a U.S. senator, and various other office Proposition 3 on the ballot will provide $200 million for the con¬ tinued growth of higher educa¬ tion In California and $60 million o State College will re- orc than $10 million in Russ pianist to perform in Theatre Soviet pianist AlexanderMobo- dyanlk will present a concert tonight In tho Fresno State Col¬ lege Little Theatre at 8:15. Slobodyanlk, 24, ls making his first tour of the United States under the ausplcles of managers. Hurok. The program will consist of works by Mozart, Schumann, Pro¬ kofiev and Liszt. Specifically, •trolly 1. D Ma . 311," Moza "Carnival, Op. 9," by Robert Major, Op. 82," by Prokofiev, and 'Hungarian Rhapsody No. 6 ln D Flat Major,* by Liszt. Admission for students with student body cards will be free. General admission will be $2.50. Tickets are available In the FSC Student President's Office, or may be purchased at the door. In 8 countries for construction projects on the campus If Proposition 3 passes. The major share of the money will go for science, industrial arts and business classrooms and laboratory facilities. Proposition 3 will also pro- Ion and replacement of substand¬ ard elementary and high school buildings ln urban areas. The Fresno City Unified School Dlst. qualifies for a portion of the $50 million proposed for public school construction. The California State Colleges and University of California sys¬ tems are scheduled to share l the $200 million pro- higher education con- In the proposition. Because FSC would benefit by passage of the proposal, a group of faculty and alumni have form¬ ed Friends For Higher Educa¬ tion as an Information agency for Proposition 3. The commit¬ tee was formed to spotlight the needs of education ln California today: classrooms, laboratories, equipment and safe schools. FSC ls scheduled to receive $10,131,000, which Includes $2 million ln Federal matching funds, If Proposition 3 passes, according to Harold E. Greene, director of community relations. The I science building will receive $5,19G,000 and the In¬ dustrial arts building $1,596,000 for construction lnI9G9-70. Funds of $3,035,000 will be allocated for the construction ofabusiness classroom building in 1970-71. The rest of the FSC funds will provide equipment for the art and science buildings, and for various other Items of con¬ struction. The 6 Forum today on computers "Computers and Political Cam¬ paigns* will be discussed today at California Polytechnic College at Pomona, as the third In a series of lecture-forums on the 1968 election campaign. n the Little T 1 lee m the > of computers ln political < palgns, the extent to which com¬ puters can affect voting pat¬ terns, and the ethical Implica¬ tions of computers for e i Dala- matlcs, a data processing firm ln Los Angeles. The lecture-forum, part of Experimental College course X138, will be co-sponsored by the Collge Union Forum Arts Room of the Cafe¬ teria to explain the criteria for qulrements. Students may sign up ln the Dean of Students Office, Admin¬ istration 298, for a personal interview by a member of the staff of the San Francisco office ofCSIP. CSIP now offers students an opportunity lo study at one of 13 different study centers In eight countries from Scandinavia to the Far East. Students are not required to speak a foreign language fluently to apply. There are no language requirements in five of the eight Financial problems can also Financial Aids Office. Most stu¬ dents who study abroad do so through the assistance of schol¬ arships or loans. Two new study centers have been opened this year ln Israel and Italy. Other coun¬ tries offered ln the program are France, Germany, Spain, Sweden, Japan, and Nationalist China. Centers which do not re¬ quire a command of the language are Sweden, Japan, Nationalist China, Italy and Israel. More Information can be ob¬ tained from the Dean of Students > got Tuesday night to suspend their general strike for one week to consider further demands on administrators of the Berkeley enthusiastic 3,000 students when the boycott of classes was proposed Monday, saw that enthusiasm dampened Tuesday by rain. Earl F. Chelt said the general Council for exceptional children will meet today to elect officers The Fresno State College branch of the Student Council for Exceptional Children" will meet today at 4 o'clock ln the Facul¬ ty Dining Room of the Cafeteria. Officers will be elected. Dr. Glen Johnson, faculty ad¬ viser of SCEC said the purpose of the organization ls "to give students who plan to teach ex¬ ceptional children the experience of visiting areas where thero are programs for the education¬ ally and emotionally handicapped persons ln their areas of speclal- •Programs for the educational¬ ly handicapped have been slow In coming, said Johnson, ■ they're getting lots of a because ofIhegrowing Int Parent groups of the student organization Include the National Education Association's Council for Exceptional Children, the California Association, of Neuro- loglcally Handicapped Children and the National Association for Retarded Children. Johnson said these organ¬ izations have Influenced legis¬ lation in California, as well as the nation and now there ls a tremendous amount of federal money to finance programs In this strike failed, there was only scattered absenteeism and •classes are proceeding normal¬ ly.* A vast majority of the 28,000 Berkeley students seemed more Interested In the tact their foot¬ ball team moved up to the top 10 The proposed boycott was the latest development ln a dispute over academic freedom that re¬ sulted ln the arests of nearly 200 persons ln two separate campus sit-ins last week. The main Issue is an experi¬ mental course on racism featur¬ ing 10 lectures by Black Panther leader Eldridge Cleaver. Univer¬ sity authorities ruled the course could not carry academic credit, and the demonstrators demanded that credit be restored. Cleaver, an author-exconvlct- black militant currently facing trial on charges of assault with Intent to commit murder, gave his fourth lecture Tuesday to about 400 persons ln the student union building. The Black Panther leader again refrained from the o which have characterized speaking appearances on o California campuses. Foreign study to be ottered Alioto asks prosecution for Murray's gun call SAN FRANCISCO (UPI)-Mayor Joseph Allolo said Tuesday Black panther official George Murray, an Instructor at San Francisco State College, should be prose¬ cuted for urging black students to bring guns to the campus for a Alioto said the district attorney should Investigate the remarks and find out If the law was broken. If no such law exists, Alioto said, then one should be passed. ■I hope something is done about this situation," Alioto said. This ls the kind of wild ex- goof for anybody." The strike was urged by Mur¬ ray Monday at a campus com¬ memoration of the first adver¬ sary of the Oakland gun battle between Panther Huey Newton and Oakland Police ln which one of¬ ficer was killed and another wounded. . He said the strike should take place Nov. 6. It would demand admission ot more Negro and Mexican-American students to the college. Nov. 6 ls the anniversary of an attack on the student newspaper bers of the Black Students Union. The editor of the paper was beaten and the office left In Murray's remarks came after he led 125 black students on a romp through the campus ad¬ ministration building shouting "black ls beautiful* and •free Huey." It was the first an¬ niversary of an Oakland gun battle between Panther Huey Newton and police in which one officer was killed and another wounded. Newton, the Panther's minis¬ ter of defense, was convicted of
Object Description
Title | 1968_10 The Daily Collegian October 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 | Oct 29, 1968 Pg. 8- Oct 30, 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 | Ken Rob/son The good fairy is dead! It's a long trip from Fresno to San Diego and back, especially If your team has Just been man¬ handled by the powerful San Diego State Aztecs as they roll to their third straight naUonal title. Although I'm not usually a pessimistic person, I thought lt fair and Just to warn naive, unsuspecUng and Idealistic Fresno State football fans who will be traveling south this Saturday with the hope of an upset in their eyes. Maybe It's where It's at today to still wish on a star, believe in the great pumpkin and wait for the good fairy, but don't forget that McCarthy DID lose the nomination, St. Louis DID win in the National League, Ed Sullivan DID come back on the air this What I'm trying lng and hoping In the world isn't going to alter th fact that unless ail of California south of Bakers s dumped into the sea, San Diego State wll still be undefeated after this Saturday night an< the Bulldogs will lick their wounds and prepare foi Long Bes Don't feel bad, though. A loss to the Aztecs will put Fresno State in a big crowd of the top collegiate ln the country, none of whom have n to dethrone the champ. In fact, the earn to pull the victory the San Diegans ln the past college class Utah State, and It had to behind In the fourth quarter to do It. Granted, this Is a good Bulldog team, probably exactly thrill those Bulldog supporters who have seen powerful Aztec contingents whip their boys for the past seven years. It's anybody's guess, really, how well the Fres- nans will fare against the Big Boys from the South. Comparative scores, in case you haven't realized before, mean nothing. On the one hand you have San Dlego winning 48-6 over the same San Jose State squad that beat the Bulldogs 25-21, but on the other side of the coin you have the fact that both teams beat the Cal State Los Angeles Diablos by almost the same margin, the Aztecs by 24 and the 'Dogs by 22. Saturday's game, although not a conference clash, as the Aztecs retired from the CCAA this ne for FSC. Although lt looks as if the Bulldogs have the cor championship.almost wrapped up, the ne; last week that the Junior Rose Bowl has policy of automatically picking the CCAA champ for Its Western r leat the Eastern representative. This means that the o ably play a big role in whether I they will compete In a post season Bowl gam It Junior Rose or Camella. Sports THE DAILY COLLEGIAN Tueaday, October 29. 1968 Dog footballers to face top-ranked San Diego Fresno State's Bulldog grid- ders, at the high point of their current season, will be up against their stlffest competition of the year this Saturday night as they travel to San Dlego to meet the number one Collegiate team in ry, the San Dlego S The Bulldog 42-20 win o the Cal State Los Angel Diablos gave Rogers some optl Ism but the FSC mentor adn that "We looked p He lauded his te: for *belng able to the big play when \ The Bulldogs, 4-2 on the season and 3-0 ln California Collegiate -elation pi; winning streak and ie straightened out after two early season mishaps. The only hurdle to the CCAA championship for the Bulldogs will be next week against the cal State Long Beach 49ers, pre- the title but now 35 Unl s Blood Urgently Needed. Odd F. lows Rebekah Blood Bank. Nomln. I Fee. 251-5583. I League or In the National Football League. I never thought of playing pro ball until Peter Ustinov. Maggie Smith Karl Maiden sHot Millions** Clovis merchants a regular stop on your shopping tour.. . MAC TIRE SKVICE \ CLOVIS APPLIANCE CLOVIS 5TATI0HERY , 723 Clovis Ave. j 602 5th St. ! 444 Pollasky LMENBACH AUTO PARTS I 604 Clovis Ave. I EDWIN'S JEWELRY 619 4th St. I MIL'S DOWNTOWN { BARBER SHOP . 423 FOIUKy SASSAKO MBTS WEAR | " " "** | 441 PoMisky j BAD-BOY MARKET 745 Clovis Ave OUAUTY PAHTS The Daily Collegian LXXIV/ 33 FRESNO STATE COLLEGE, FRESNO, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 30,1968 FSC education benefits Ponder demands hang on Prop. 3 passage UC activists delay strike as rain dampens boycott California voters wlllbevoting on nine propositions Tuesday, as well as for a president, a U.S. senator, and various other office Proposition 3 on the ballot will provide $200 million for the con¬ tinued growth of higher educa¬ tion In California and $60 million o State College will re- orc than $10 million in Russ pianist to perform in Theatre Soviet pianist AlexanderMobo- dyanlk will present a concert tonight In tho Fresno State Col¬ lege Little Theatre at 8:15. Slobodyanlk, 24, ls making his first tour of the United States under the ausplcles of managers. Hurok. The program will consist of works by Mozart, Schumann, Pro¬ kofiev and Liszt. Specifically, •trolly 1. D Ma . 311," Moza "Carnival, Op. 9," by Robert Major, Op. 82," by Prokofiev, and 'Hungarian Rhapsody No. 6 ln D Flat Major,* by Liszt. Admission for students with student body cards will be free. General admission will be $2.50. Tickets are available In the FSC Student President's Office, or may be purchased at the door. In 8 countries for construction projects on the campus If Proposition 3 passes. The major share of the money will go for science, industrial arts and business classrooms and laboratory facilities. Proposition 3 will also pro- Ion and replacement of substand¬ ard elementary and high school buildings ln urban areas. The Fresno City Unified School Dlst. qualifies for a portion of the $50 million proposed for public school construction. The California State Colleges and University of California sys¬ tems are scheduled to share l the $200 million pro- higher education con- In the proposition. Because FSC would benefit by passage of the proposal, a group of faculty and alumni have form¬ ed Friends For Higher Educa¬ tion as an Information agency for Proposition 3. The commit¬ tee was formed to spotlight the needs of education ln California today: classrooms, laboratories, equipment and safe schools. FSC ls scheduled to receive $10,131,000, which Includes $2 million ln Federal matching funds, If Proposition 3 passes, according to Harold E. Greene, director of community relations. The I science building will receive $5,19G,000 and the In¬ dustrial arts building $1,596,000 for construction lnI9G9-70. Funds of $3,035,000 will be allocated for the construction ofabusiness classroom building in 1970-71. The rest of the FSC funds will provide equipment for the art and science buildings, and for various other Items of con¬ struction. The 6 Forum today on computers "Computers and Political Cam¬ paigns* will be discussed today at California Polytechnic College at Pomona, as the third In a series of lecture-forums on the 1968 election campaign. n the Little T 1 lee m the > of computers ln political < palgns, the extent to which com¬ puters can affect voting pat¬ terns, and the ethical Implica¬ tions of computers for e i Dala- matlcs, a data processing firm ln Los Angeles. The lecture-forum, part of Experimental College course X138, will be co-sponsored by the Collge Union Forum Arts Room of the Cafe¬ teria to explain the criteria for qulrements. Students may sign up ln the Dean of Students Office, Admin¬ istration 298, for a personal interview by a member of the staff of the San Francisco office ofCSIP. CSIP now offers students an opportunity lo study at one of 13 different study centers In eight countries from Scandinavia to the Far East. Students are not required to speak a foreign language fluently to apply. There are no language requirements in five of the eight Financial problems can also Financial Aids Office. Most stu¬ dents who study abroad do so through the assistance of schol¬ arships or loans. Two new study centers have been opened this year ln Israel and Italy. Other coun¬ tries offered ln the program are France, Germany, Spain, Sweden, Japan, and Nationalist China. Centers which do not re¬ quire a command of the language are Sweden, Japan, Nationalist China, Italy and Israel. More Information can be ob¬ tained from the Dean of Students > got Tuesday night to suspend their general strike for one week to consider further demands on administrators of the Berkeley enthusiastic 3,000 students when the boycott of classes was proposed Monday, saw that enthusiasm dampened Tuesday by rain. Earl F. Chelt said the general Council for exceptional children will meet today to elect officers The Fresno State College branch of the Student Council for Exceptional Children" will meet today at 4 o'clock ln the Facul¬ ty Dining Room of the Cafeteria. Officers will be elected. Dr. Glen Johnson, faculty ad¬ viser of SCEC said the purpose of the organization ls "to give students who plan to teach ex¬ ceptional children the experience of visiting areas where thero are programs for the education¬ ally and emotionally handicapped persons ln their areas of speclal- •Programs for the educational¬ ly handicapped have been slow In coming, said Johnson, ■ they're getting lots of a because ofIhegrowing Int Parent groups of the student organization Include the National Education Association's Council for Exceptional Children, the California Association, of Neuro- loglcally Handicapped Children and the National Association for Retarded Children. Johnson said these organ¬ izations have Influenced legis¬ lation in California, as well as the nation and now there ls a tremendous amount of federal money to finance programs In this strike failed, there was only scattered absenteeism and •classes are proceeding normal¬ ly.* A vast majority of the 28,000 Berkeley students seemed more Interested In the tact their foot¬ ball team moved up to the top 10 The proposed boycott was the latest development ln a dispute over academic freedom that re¬ sulted ln the arests of nearly 200 persons ln two separate campus sit-ins last week. The main Issue is an experi¬ mental course on racism featur¬ ing 10 lectures by Black Panther leader Eldridge Cleaver. Univer¬ sity authorities ruled the course could not carry academic credit, and the demonstrators demanded that credit be restored. Cleaver, an author-exconvlct- black militant currently facing trial on charges of assault with Intent to commit murder, gave his fourth lecture Tuesday to about 400 persons ln the student union building. The Black Panther leader again refrained from the o which have characterized speaking appearances on o California campuses. Foreign study to be ottered Alioto asks prosecution for Murray's gun call SAN FRANCISCO (UPI)-Mayor Joseph Allolo said Tuesday Black panther official George Murray, an Instructor at San Francisco State College, should be prose¬ cuted for urging black students to bring guns to the campus for a Alioto said the district attorney should Investigate the remarks and find out If the law was broken. If no such law exists, Alioto said, then one should be passed. ■I hope something is done about this situation," Alioto said. This ls the kind of wild ex- goof for anybody." The strike was urged by Mur¬ ray Monday at a campus com¬ memoration of the first adver¬ sary of the Oakland gun battle between Panther Huey Newton and Oakland Police ln which one of¬ ficer was killed and another wounded. . He said the strike should take place Nov. 6. It would demand admission ot more Negro and Mexican-American students to the college. Nov. 6 ls the anniversary of an attack on the student newspaper bers of the Black Students Union. The editor of the paper was beaten and the office left In Murray's remarks came after he led 125 black students on a romp through the campus ad¬ ministration building shouting "black ls beautiful* and •free Huey." It was the first an¬ niversary of an Oakland gun battle between Panther Huey Newton and police in which one officer was killed and another wounded. Newton, the Panther's minis¬ ter of defense, was convicted of |