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Cagers finish on sweet note By Dennis McCall Sport. Editor Auld lang syne was a merry tune for Fresno State-s crowd- pleasing basketball team which bade farewell to the 1968-69 campaign Friday night with a come-from-behlnd 83-71 victory over Cal Poly of San Luis Obis¬ po. Half a dozen Bulldog seniors took their final shots as colle¬ giate cagers but It was junior sensation Lu Davis who came off the bench to provide the spark chilly start. Davis was pressed Into action almost halfway through the open¬ ing half, canned 14 points before Intermission, then came back in the final 20 minutes to toss In 16 more for a game high 30. Golfers trim tough Diablos Fresno State College's sur¬ prising golf team, fresh from a Los Angeles State, will travel with some pretty fast company this weekend In the L.A, State Invitational at Laguna. Larry Pape's Bulldogs, behind Steve Culver's 73, toppled the powerful Diablos 19-8 Friday on the Fort The victory gives FSC : Pape said to beat the •The Diablos right, but they had a 1 For example, their No. Rick Melllck. had an 82.' Behind Culver's low r e Bruce Sanders with a Mike Williamson 81, Greg f 78, Mike Chapman 74 and Jer Thormann 75. Fresno will Jose State In a special match Thursday at the Laguna meet and try to knock off a USC-L.A. State combination 1 n a North-: i Bull¬ dogs left the 3,100 Selland Arena partisans smiling as they over¬ took the Mustangs midway through the second half and Collegiate Athletic Association and 17-3 on the season for Gre¬ gory's fourth consecutive suc¬ cessful campaign. The likable Bulldog cage boss started an all-senior group and It must have been final-game jitters or something as the start¬ ers just couldn't find the bucket. The Bulldogs could find the The Daily Collegian LXXIV/90 FRESNO STATE COLLEGE, FRESNO, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, MARCH 4,1969 Reagan asks approval Bi" fushe,s fo\ eight a cals began to c Frosh sprinter sparkles irofth Fresno whittled away and fin¬ ally had trimmed the margin lo four (38-34) at (he popcorn break. In the first half the Bulldogs shot a cool 27 per cent from the free throw line compared to Poly's 42 from (he floor and sizzling 8G per cent at the line. Fresno reversed things In the second hall, shooting a brisk the floor and 76 per cent at the line. Poly cooled off considerably and could man¬ age only 33 per cent from the floor and a miserable 42 per cent at ihe charity stripe. Fresno took the lead on Ihe strength of 11 straight points after Poly led 51-48. Davis con- three-point play lo give the Bulldogs the lead for the first By Ken Robison Fresnman Clyde Lansing's 9.7 win in Ihe 100 yard dash high¬ lighted Saturday's All-Comers meet held on the Fresno State College track before a small crowd of track enthusiasts. Lansing, who had a best time of 9.6 at Fresno High last year, beat FSC's Don Zimmerman and Erv Hunt's 14.6 in the 120 high hurdles, Dick Newlon's all time best of 47-10 1/2 In the triple jump, and Kenth Svensson's 196- 10 in his first-ever attempt at the javelin In competition. cathlon star, again pulled off his •Mr. Everything* feat, placing In six events. Warkentln was i the intermediate hur- to win his first collegiate com- The meet was primarily a chance for Dutch Warmerdam's crew to get In shape for their first meet of the season Saturday In Palo Alto against Stanford and But It also Included many Hoover High squad mem- race aloi.e and co tance In 30:12.2, I < mile ie dls- Jlm Sughrue in the mile, Newton in the 440, DaVe Warmerdam In the 880, and Dave Farley In the i Heaston, a w; bers did not compete, including Olympic performer ErkklMusta- kari and co-captain Dave Cords. Swimmers tie for last in first PCAA meet dogs pulled d 30 points man scoring record but the Bull- pups dropped a 110-85 decision lo the Cal Poly llmlnary. Jackson finished the with 457 points In 20 ; Sanders mark of Oyer top grappler in CCAA title meet Fresno State heavyweight Kei. Oyer was named co-outstanding tier of the meet in the Call- a Collegiate Athletic championships ; Angeles last weekend. As expected, Cal Poly Luis Obispo on campus crackdown SACRAMENTO - Gov. Reagan Monday urged the Legislature to approve a series of get-tough bills designed to crack down on campus violence. The governor declared California's campuses "must be free of violence, threats and intimida¬ tion.' He added, however, that information obtained by law enforcement officials Indicates that campus disorders probably will continue. In a special message to the Assembly and Sen¬ ate, Reagan said he hoped the strict bills would be approved quickly by making them 'urgency laws," which would take effect Immediately upon his sig- Urgency bills require two-thirds approval by both houses. Some of Ihe Reagan-backed bills already have been Introduced with others expected to follow Four-point program The four-point legislative program is aimed specifically at separating disruptive forces from the campuses, Isolating hard-core rebels, deter¬ ring participation In violent and unprofessional s by faculty members and restricting the ability of rebel leaders to form mobs for disorder¬ ly and violent conduct. The four measures sought by the goven that institution and shall be ineligible for admission or readmisslon to any slate school or college for a period of at least one year. 3—Any faculty member or other employe of a public educational institution who is convicted of an offense arising out of a campus disturbance shall be dismissed and shall be ineligible for further employment In a state school or college without specific review and authorization by the governing body of such Institution. Loudspeakers forbidden 4—No person may bring or possess a loud¬ speaker system or voice amplifier on the premises of an educational Institution without the permission of the chief campus officer, or his representative. On Feb. 5 the governor Indicated he would ask for such new laws when he proclaimed a "state of extreme emergency" on the UC Berkeley campus and ordered the Highway Patrol to provide 'all necessary manpower" to maintain law and order. Reagan has sent National Guard troops onto the Berkeley campus twice since that time to restore order and disperse demonstrators. In his message Monday to the lawmakers, Rea- •It Is Imperative that an educational atmosphere be maintained If the orderly educational process Is to go forward. •It Is equally Important that the lives and safety of students and faculty, and the property of our students, faculty on college boards Legislation was Introduced Monday, In the CallforniaState Assembly, to place student and faculty representatives on the board of regentsof theUnlverslty of California and the board of trustees of the state colleges. Assemblyman Alan Sleroty, D- Beverly Hills, authored the two bills. He said, 'Students and faculty should have a voice in the policy-making process of the university and state colleges." He stressed the urgent need to reestablish lines of communica¬ tion between administration, stu- •Just as students must realize their goals cannot be achieved through violence, we must under¬ stand Ideas cannot be destroyed with bayonets and Inequities can¬ not be erased with tear gas," Sleroty said. For the slate colleges, Sleroty proposed legislation enabling the president of the California State College President's Association and the chairman of the academic senate to serve as ex-otflclo here are presently members on the board of trus- Councll and the chairman of the assembly be exofflclo members of the board of regents; there are presently 24 members. FSC Student Body President Bruce Bronzan expressed ap¬ proval of the content and purposes of the bills, but he saw little hope of them ever being passed. ■The bill Is an outstanding Idea, and one that's long overdue," Bronzan said. 'But I think there's little chance oi It even etting out of the committee, let alone being passed by the assembly. •However, even If It was pass¬ ed, we have to be realistic about what It is actually giving the students. The student rep¬ resentative will only have one vote out of 22, and that's not much to work with. But still, the Idea is a much needed start in the right direction," he said. Journalists will host conference The Fresno State College Journalism Department will host the 38th annual Scholastic Press Association Conference for 500 San Joaquin Valley high school nailsm students, March 8. The day long conference Is spon- the FSC Journalism Department and the San Joaquin Valley Scholastic Press Assn. The conference will be high¬ lighted by guest speakers from all journalism fields and will of¬ fer eight categories of compo- ;tudents interested in s writing, editorial, feature, sports, copywrlting, layout-year- jk, advertising (open to year¬ book and newsstaffs), and a special photo competition. >* At the conference, Timothy Cox, Dally Collegian editor,will give a welcoming address, and Dr. Paul Sheehan, journalism depart - t chairman, will deliver the keynote talk on the education¬ al aspects of modern Journalism. Later in the conference, stu- wlll vie in the eight cate¬ gories for certificates, plaques, and trophies which will be dis¬ tributed during the luncheon awards assembly. A sweep¬ stakes trophy will be awarded to the school receiving the most cumulative points In competition. Plaques for yearbook and news¬ paper judging will be awarded in an all-valley awards morning Morning and afternoon techni¬ cal sessions are scheduled with experts from the media, year- newspaper fields con¬ ducting the seminars. Don Williams, assistant pro¬ fessor of Journalism, will lead the first session, Effective Ad Sales and Layout for More Prof¬ itable Newspapers and Year¬ books." Paul SuUlvan, KFSR director, will speak on "Greater Opportunities In Radio-TV News Reporting," and several members from the Valley Women's Press Associa-
Object Description
Title | 1969_03 The Daily Collegian March 1969 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1969 |
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 | March 3, 1969 Pg. 4- March 4, 1969 Pg. 1 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1969 |
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 | Cagers finish on sweet note By Dennis McCall Sport. Editor Auld lang syne was a merry tune for Fresno State-s crowd- pleasing basketball team which bade farewell to the 1968-69 campaign Friday night with a come-from-behlnd 83-71 victory over Cal Poly of San Luis Obis¬ po. Half a dozen Bulldog seniors took their final shots as colle¬ giate cagers but It was junior sensation Lu Davis who came off the bench to provide the spark chilly start. Davis was pressed Into action almost halfway through the open¬ ing half, canned 14 points before Intermission, then came back in the final 20 minutes to toss In 16 more for a game high 30. Golfers trim tough Diablos Fresno State College's sur¬ prising golf team, fresh from a Los Angeles State, will travel with some pretty fast company this weekend In the L.A, State Invitational at Laguna. Larry Pape's Bulldogs, behind Steve Culver's 73, toppled the powerful Diablos 19-8 Friday on the Fort The victory gives FSC : Pape said to beat the •The Diablos right, but they had a 1 For example, their No. Rick Melllck. had an 82.' Behind Culver's low r e Bruce Sanders with a Mike Williamson 81, Greg f 78, Mike Chapman 74 and Jer Thormann 75. Fresno will Jose State In a special match Thursday at the Laguna meet and try to knock off a USC-L.A. State combination 1 n a North-: i Bull¬ dogs left the 3,100 Selland Arena partisans smiling as they over¬ took the Mustangs midway through the second half and Collegiate Athletic Association and 17-3 on the season for Gre¬ gory's fourth consecutive suc¬ cessful campaign. The likable Bulldog cage boss started an all-senior group and It must have been final-game jitters or something as the start¬ ers just couldn't find the bucket. The Bulldogs could find the The Daily Collegian LXXIV/90 FRESNO STATE COLLEGE, FRESNO, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, MARCH 4,1969 Reagan asks approval Bi" fushe,s fo\ eight a cals began to c Frosh sprinter sparkles irofth Fresno whittled away and fin¬ ally had trimmed the margin lo four (38-34) at (he popcorn break. In the first half the Bulldogs shot a cool 27 per cent from the free throw line compared to Poly's 42 from (he floor and sizzling 8G per cent at the line. Fresno reversed things In the second hall, shooting a brisk the floor and 76 per cent at the line. Poly cooled off considerably and could man¬ age only 33 per cent from the floor and a miserable 42 per cent at ihe charity stripe. Fresno took the lead on Ihe strength of 11 straight points after Poly led 51-48. Davis con- three-point play lo give the Bulldogs the lead for the first By Ken Robison Fresnman Clyde Lansing's 9.7 win in Ihe 100 yard dash high¬ lighted Saturday's All-Comers meet held on the Fresno State College track before a small crowd of track enthusiasts. Lansing, who had a best time of 9.6 at Fresno High last year, beat FSC's Don Zimmerman and Erv Hunt's 14.6 in the 120 high hurdles, Dick Newlon's all time best of 47-10 1/2 In the triple jump, and Kenth Svensson's 196- 10 in his first-ever attempt at the javelin In competition. cathlon star, again pulled off his •Mr. Everything* feat, placing In six events. Warkentln was i the intermediate hur- to win his first collegiate com- The meet was primarily a chance for Dutch Warmerdam's crew to get In shape for their first meet of the season Saturday In Palo Alto against Stanford and But It also Included many Hoover High squad mem- race aloi.e and co tance In 30:12.2, I < mile ie dls- Jlm Sughrue in the mile, Newton in the 440, DaVe Warmerdam In the 880, and Dave Farley In the i Heaston, a w; bers did not compete, including Olympic performer ErkklMusta- kari and co-captain Dave Cords. Swimmers tie for last in first PCAA meet dogs pulled d 30 points man scoring record but the Bull- pups dropped a 110-85 decision lo the Cal Poly llmlnary. Jackson finished the with 457 points In 20 ; Sanders mark of Oyer top grappler in CCAA title meet Fresno State heavyweight Kei. Oyer was named co-outstanding tier of the meet in the Call- a Collegiate Athletic championships ; Angeles last weekend. As expected, Cal Poly Luis Obispo on campus crackdown SACRAMENTO - Gov. Reagan Monday urged the Legislature to approve a series of get-tough bills designed to crack down on campus violence. The governor declared California's campuses "must be free of violence, threats and intimida¬ tion.' He added, however, that information obtained by law enforcement officials Indicates that campus disorders probably will continue. In a special message to the Assembly and Sen¬ ate, Reagan said he hoped the strict bills would be approved quickly by making them 'urgency laws," which would take effect Immediately upon his sig- Urgency bills require two-thirds approval by both houses. Some of Ihe Reagan-backed bills already have been Introduced with others expected to follow Four-point program The four-point legislative program is aimed specifically at separating disruptive forces from the campuses, Isolating hard-core rebels, deter¬ ring participation In violent and unprofessional s by faculty members and restricting the ability of rebel leaders to form mobs for disorder¬ ly and violent conduct. The four measures sought by the goven that institution and shall be ineligible for admission or readmisslon to any slate school or college for a period of at least one year. 3—Any faculty member or other employe of a public educational institution who is convicted of an offense arising out of a campus disturbance shall be dismissed and shall be ineligible for further employment In a state school or college without specific review and authorization by the governing body of such Institution. Loudspeakers forbidden 4—No person may bring or possess a loud¬ speaker system or voice amplifier on the premises of an educational Institution without the permission of the chief campus officer, or his representative. On Feb. 5 the governor Indicated he would ask for such new laws when he proclaimed a "state of extreme emergency" on the UC Berkeley campus and ordered the Highway Patrol to provide 'all necessary manpower" to maintain law and order. Reagan has sent National Guard troops onto the Berkeley campus twice since that time to restore order and disperse demonstrators. In his message Monday to the lawmakers, Rea- •It Is Imperative that an educational atmosphere be maintained If the orderly educational process Is to go forward. •It Is equally Important that the lives and safety of students and faculty, and the property of our students, faculty on college boards Legislation was Introduced Monday, In the CallforniaState Assembly, to place student and faculty representatives on the board of regentsof theUnlverslty of California and the board of trustees of the state colleges. Assemblyman Alan Sleroty, D- Beverly Hills, authored the two bills. He said, 'Students and faculty should have a voice in the policy-making process of the university and state colleges." He stressed the urgent need to reestablish lines of communica¬ tion between administration, stu- •Just as students must realize their goals cannot be achieved through violence, we must under¬ stand Ideas cannot be destroyed with bayonets and Inequities can¬ not be erased with tear gas," Sleroty said. For the slate colleges, Sleroty proposed legislation enabling the president of the California State College President's Association and the chairman of the academic senate to serve as ex-otflclo here are presently members on the board of trus- Councll and the chairman of the assembly be exofflclo members of the board of regents; there are presently 24 members. FSC Student Body President Bruce Bronzan expressed ap¬ proval of the content and purposes of the bills, but he saw little hope of them ever being passed. ■The bill Is an outstanding Idea, and one that's long overdue," Bronzan said. 'But I think there's little chance oi It even etting out of the committee, let alone being passed by the assembly. •However, even If It was pass¬ ed, we have to be realistic about what It is actually giving the students. The student rep¬ resentative will only have one vote out of 22, and that's not much to work with. But still, the Idea is a much needed start in the right direction," he said. Journalists will host conference The Fresno State College Journalism Department will host the 38th annual Scholastic Press Association Conference for 500 San Joaquin Valley high school nailsm students, March 8. The day long conference Is spon- the FSC Journalism Department and the San Joaquin Valley Scholastic Press Assn. The conference will be high¬ lighted by guest speakers from all journalism fields and will of¬ fer eight categories of compo- ;tudents interested in s writing, editorial, feature, sports, copywrlting, layout-year- jk, advertising (open to year¬ book and newsstaffs), and a special photo competition. >* At the conference, Timothy Cox, Dally Collegian editor,will give a welcoming address, and Dr. Paul Sheehan, journalism depart - t chairman, will deliver the keynote talk on the education¬ al aspects of modern Journalism. Later in the conference, stu- wlll vie in the eight cate¬ gories for certificates, plaques, and trophies which will be dis¬ tributed during the luncheon awards assembly. A sweep¬ stakes trophy will be awarded to the school receiving the most cumulative points In competition. Plaques for yearbook and news¬ paper judging will be awarded in an all-valley awards morning Morning and afternoon techni¬ cal sessions are scheduled with experts from the media, year- newspaper fields con¬ ducting the seminars. Don Williams, assistant pro¬ fessor of Journalism, will lead the first session, Effective Ad Sales and Layout for More Prof¬ itable Newspapers and Year¬ books." Paul SuUlvan, KFSR director, will speak on "Greater Opportunities In Radio-TV News Reporting," and several members from the Valley Women's Press Associa- |