March 10, 1969 Pg. 4- March 11, 1969 Pg. 1 |
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THE DAILY COLLEGIAN Monday, March 10, 1969 Bulldog batters take three from Waves, face Hornets Fresno State'sbaseballers will play Sacramento State tomorrow for the second time in a week. When the Bulldogs entered last Tuesday's twin bill at Sacramen¬ to, they had an 0-1 record. They will enter tomorrow's double- Pete Belden's rapidly lmprov- polent hilling with some very ef¬ fective pitching to cop both ends of Saturday's double bill. Second-sacker Dave Mello had an outstanding day at the plate with five hils In eight trips, driv¬ ing home half a dozen Bulldog thre om Pepperdlne last weekend, winning Friday's single game 8-2 and capturing both ends of Saturday's twin bill by counts of 7-3 and 11-3. The Bulldogs took two from Sacramento last week. Tomor¬ row's opening game begins at 1 p.m. at Varsity Park. Fresno cracked out a total of 27 base hits in the three games with the visiting Waves and Bel¬ den experimented with eight hurl- Bulldog batters rapped Iheball sharply In all three games, crashing out nine extra base blows Including pitcher Jim Hen¬ derson's towering home run In the second game on Saturday, the first round tripper this sea¬ son by a Bulldog. Ingles in Mello whac nighlcap wilt triple and an Mike Noonan, a senior por slder, showed good early seas form in Ihe opener Saturday. 1 John Balllnger hurled the re¬ maining four Innings for Fresno when he Issued up three bases on balls and was touched for two In the nightcap. Bill Welcher opened on the mound for Ihe Bulldogs and was credited with relieved by Henderson who got credit for the win. Mike Harkness finished up the game. Fresno hopped on two Pepper- dine hurlers early In Ihe second game Saturday, scoring 10 runs in the first three Innings. n Friday, a getting credit f. his fine three-: gave up three h four innings for the Bulldogs, yielding boih Pepperdlne scores while giving up four base raps and striking out three batters. Junior southpaw Gene Speldel hurled Ihe last two frames, giv¬ ing up just one hit. Dave Schmidt banged two dou¬ bles to pace the Bulldog batle > Tony . Jim h also col- Whlnery an* lected two hits. The Bulldogs combined WANT ADS ACROSS FROM DOHMS - Furn. 2 Br. - $125 for 2 or $40 per person. Carpctcd.439-6481. Also furn. City College studio $60. Cords cracks two-mile record, oldest at FSC Dave Cords and Erv Hunt scored the only two wins Saturday as Fresno Slate's Bulldog trackslers lost a triple meet against Stanford University and Occldenlal College In Palo Alto. Cords broke a 27-year-old FSC record in the two mile with a mark of 0:02.0 to nose out Stanford's Greg Brock, and Hunt triple jumped 49 flat, his all-time besl, lo barely nip Broad of Occidental, who jumped 48-11 1/4. Cords' time broke the Fresno State mark of 9:05.2 by Art Cazares in 1942. the oldest record In Bulldog track. Hunt's jump placed him third all-time among FSC triple jumpers. Stanford took the three-way meet with 90 points. Occidental had 62 and the Bulldogs 29. In the dual meet, the Indians beat the 'Dogs 108-40. Fresno's Olympian Erkkl Muslakarl retired from the pole vault competition after clearing IS feet because of soreness in his right thigh. His effort placed him fourth behind three Oxy vaulters. Other Fresnans lo place and score In the meet were freshman sprinter Clyde Lansing, who came In a close third In Ihe 100 yard dash in 9.9; Hunt, who came In third in the high hurdles: John Ed¬ mondson and Dick Newlon. third and fourth In the 440: Lloyd Madden third In the long Jump; Dave Warmerdam fourth In the 880: John Warkentln third In the 440 intermediate hurdles. Kenth Svensson and Dave Farley second and fourth in the discus and Steve Pavlch Golfers do well in rough LA invitational LAGUNA BEACH — Larry pape's fine crop of golfers fared well In the Los Angeles State In¬ vitational last weekend, scoring team competition a e 36-hole tl play. •good finish under terrible nditions" at the long, tough El lei Country Club layout which soggy and windswept, esno also teamed with San win a special North- over Southern Cal id L.A. State 19-17. In winning the best-ball title, Bulldogs combined for a total of 447 strokes, six ahead of run¬ ner-up USC which carded a team Individual scores were Pete Culver-Bruce Sanders 79-70- 149; Mike Williamson-Greg Rose 75-73-148; and Jerry Thor- mann-MIke Chapman78-72-150. Tankers set 6 new marks Fresno State's swlmmlngteam took third In last weekend's California Collegiate Athletic Associallon championships but established six new school rec- Powerhouse Long Beach State ran away with team honors while San Fernando Valley edged out the Bulldogs for second 261 1/2 to 251 1/2. The Bulldog 400 medley relay team of Ron Dadaml, Phil Jones,. Hal Rogers and Terry Heller eclipsed a school mark by clock¬ ing 3:39.1. The 400 freestyle foursome of Heller, Tim White, Jack Field and Dadaml cracked a mark with a 3:20.2 clocking. Individual marks established by the Bulldogs Included Heller's fine 49.4 effort In the 100 free¬ style and 22.4 clocking in the 50 yard freestyle. Dadaml also shattered a pair of records, tak¬ ing Ihe 200 backstroke in 2:09.2 and the 100 backstroke In 59.3. Rogers lowered the 200 Individ¬ ual medley relay standard with a 2:09 flat clocking. Williamson and Rose carded a 18 to give the Bulldogs runner- > honors In the two-man team rent, two strokes off the win¬ ning pace. USC won medalist play with a 941, L.A. State had a 959 and the Bulldogs scored a 968. Oyer tops all in PCAA match Bulldog heavyweight Ken Oyer was voted the outstanding Individ¬ ual performer and Fresno State _ placed third in the first annual Pacific Coast Athletic Associa¬ tion wrestling championships at San Jose. Oyer scored two pins and a lopsided decision to capture the meet's top award. He pinned San Diego's Willie Jones In 1:29 of the first round, UC Santa Bar¬ bara's Berry Minster in 1:23and then declsloned San Jose's Cleve Holt 18-2 In the finals. The Bulldog strongman was ,- FSC's lone winner. Steve Greene reached the finals in the 155- pound class and was leading in his last match before being pinned. Eddie Moraga and Joe Del Bosque each reached the finals. San Jose won the team trophy with 94 points, Long Beach had 83 and Fresno scored 71. CHARTER FLIGHTS JUNE 18 SEPT. 9...$295.00 JUNE 25 SEPT.14...$295.00 The Daily Collegian LXXIV/95 FRESNO STATE COLLEGE, FRESNO, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, MARCH 11,1969 Nationwide school revolts reported Married c :ouples rent a furn. or part, furn . 2 bdrm apt. <g Coral Gardens. . Call Gary Neit, Mgr., 227-5137. 20 spaces avail, at Halseth Apts. from $43 lo $58 per mo. Call 229-9268 1 or info. ONE BDRM - furn. apt. avail, immed. ©Sahara fi, 5330 N. 6th St. HEATED SWIM POOL. Call Duane Trimble, Mgr, 229-9268. third in t The B hi> high jump. ulldogs will lake on Sacramento Slate In Sacra As GRADUATING SENIORS - TO EUROPE Weslern Gear Corporation, a diversified, rapidly growing, publicly-held designer and manufacturer of industrial and aerospace machinery, will Inter¬ view at Fresno Stale on March 17. There are opportunities on our eight-week orien¬ tation program for Engineers and Technical grad- 25 DEPARTURES Round-Trip Trom L.A. or Oakland $295 One-Way from L.A. or Oakland $148 Round-Trip rrom .New York $210 gram is your opportunity lo see whlc l> functional WITH THIS DYNAMIC ORGANIZATION Call r write for flight list and anv other travel inforn at ion wesTeRn A R| Calif. State Student Presidents' Ass'n. % Wr' RussMilnes '*>'aW College Union, Rm. 306 Ph: 487 -2657 | 2600 E. 1 GEAR CORPORATION mperial Hwy. • Lynwood, C An Equal Opjjortunltr Employ" 11.90262 Student revolt no longer is In Los Angeles Monday, a jun¬ ior high school and a high school were closed and absenteeism vir¬ tually shut down four other schools as militant black students called a it police brutality. In East St. Louis, 111., 500stu- dents at mostly Negro Rock Jun¬ ior High School-half the enroll¬ ment-staged a boycott Monday to demand the firing of principal Richard Snyder and assistant principal Stanley Campbell. Sny¬ der Is white, Campbell, black. Six students at Valparaiso. Ind., High School showed up for classes Monday wearing black arm bands to protest the Vietnam War - a 'peaceful demonstra¬ tion" timed to coincide with a visit by military recruiting of- prlnclpal Clyde Allmon said the boys were within their legal rights, but he sent them home to bring back their parents. Five the sixth returned with his par- i lawyer. Allmon said r high onstratlons. Black junior ai school students In Los Angeles, fed by Ihe Black Students Alli¬ ance, called the strike Monday to demand police be prohibited from entering school grounds. They contended police used nightsticks to clear 200 youthsf R 1 pnri ||j|- Barrel racing, one of the few femln- DARKtLinu jne rode competitions, is shown off in fine form at FSC's 14th annual Intercollegiate -n last weekend in Clovis. (See Inside for o picture coverage.) SF Resistance holds seminar tomorrow A seminar on political Issues will be held by the San Fran- 9 Radical Edu- Manual returned for senate revision Section rn of the Student Rights and Responsibilities Manual was discussed by the ExecutlveCom- mittejk of the Academic Senate and referred back to the Student Affairs Committee for further study. It will again come be¬ fore the Executive Committee following possible revision. Section in establishes rules for faculty and administration handl¬ ing of student records. Objections to the document were frequently aimed at mat¬ ters of wording rather than fun¬ damental philosophy. O'her action of the committee Included approval of a revision of the rules regarding election of faculty members to the Board of Rank and promotion. cation Project tomorrow at the College Religious Center. The first scheduled speaker wni be Art Melville, a Mary- knoU priest, who will speak at noon on former experience about the pattern of United States dom¬ ination in Guatemala. MelvUle spent seven years In Guatemala before his expulsion In December, 1967, for supporting the Guate¬ malan revolutionary movement. Political economy of the cold war will be the topic of Bruce Nelson, a former graduate stu¬ dent In history at the University of California at Berkeley. Nel¬ son Is currently serving as a member of the project staff and will speak from 3-5 p.m. Steve Welssman, a graduate student in Latin American studies at Stanford University, will speak on corporate Internationalism at 7:30 p.m. A panel discussion and a film from North Vietnam, 'Hanoi, Maries 13* will follow Wetsman's speech at 8i*15 p.m. >r High School last Friday when police arrested Black Students Union member Joseph Jones, who had gone to Carver to recruit support for a student strike at Southwest Small fires, broken windows, rock-throwing and assaults on teachers were reported at all 18 Junior and senior high schools In Negro areas of Los Angeles. Demonstrations and Incidents continued Monday at several col¬ leges across the nation. About 50 persons demonstrat¬ ing at Delta Stale College In Cleveland, Miss., to support black student demands were ar¬ rested Minday by Mississippi highway patrolmen on charges of blocking hallways and disturbing |^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ The college — which has a mostly white enrollment of 2,600 tlons by most of Its 100 black students for black Instructors and black history courses. Most of those arrested were black. At Rutgers University's New¬ ark, N.Y., campus, vandals sloshed a mixture of shaving Delta Queen to shove off Gambling and dancing wUI be featured during *A Night on the Delta Queen* Friday night from 7:30 to 12 In the College Union Lounge. Students may buy $250 worth of scrip for 50 cents. This can be used for gambling and as ad¬ mission to the dance, where the •Twelve Miles Out* wUI provide Additional scrip can be bought at a charge booth during the Student Body President Bruce Bronzan will auction prizes later In the evening. The scrip win be used for bidding. Among the prizes are dinners for two and tickets to shows. Ide through Conklln Hall, and the acrid fumes forced students to use other buildings for some About 150 Students for Demo¬ cratic Society members disrup¬ ted recruitment at Cornell Uni¬ versity in Ithaca, N.Y., by Chase Manhattan Bank representatives. At Columbia University In New York City authorities told 100 women students who moved Into men's dormitories over the weekend that they hope to have at least one regular coed dormitory in operation by fall. Black students at the Univer¬ sity of Rochester In New York ended a six-day occupation of two floors of the Frederick Doug¬ lass building. They said the uni¬ versity was meeting their de- and for a black studies program. On other campuses: New York - A sit-in by stu¬ dents at Sarah Lawrence College at BronxvlUe continued for the eighth day today. The girls are demanding more men on campus - the school began admitting men only a year ago — repeal of a grades and admission of enough lower-Income students to make up one-third of the student body of 600. Chicago-Classes at the south¬ east branch of the Chicago City College were canceled Monday while faculty members and rep¬ resentatives of black students discussed a list of demands pre- Californla -San Francisco State College's acting President, S. I. Hayakawa, suspended pub¬ lication of a student newspaper, «Tiie Gator." The newspaper, which has backed a minority students' strike, Is supported by the associated students. Haya¬ kawa said he was suspending It because It had no board of publi¬ cations to supervise. The paper's editor said he would continue publication. Wisconsin - About 12ofBeIolt College's 35 black students set up an Afro-American culture Faculty members ■ personnel wUI officiate at the gambling tables. Black jack, roulette, btogo, sad wheel of for¬ tune are some of the games which win test the players' luck. The second annual "Night on the Delta Queen* Is being spon¬ sored by the College Union Recreation Committee). Student body cards will be checked at the entrance. |T^H buUding of the 1,760-student school. President Miller Upton wanred them he might call police and the students took their signs, pictures and art displays down. Vermont-Students and faculty members of Goddard CoUege, displeased with a method for se¬ lecting a new president, submit¬ ted a list of demands to the board of trustees, saying they wanted to be consulted about the appolnt- Even Boy Scouts SANTIAGO, ChUe(UPI)-Rebel Boy Scouts holding a 'sit-in* ai Scout headquarters vowed Mon¬ day to continue their protest movement until their demands for a 'reorganization* of the Chilean scout movement are met. The rebels have cabled Inter¬ national Scout headquarters In Geneva asking that an 'arbitra¬ tor* be sent to settle the con¬ troversy. The rebels want a voice In naming directors of the move¬ ment and have cited alleged de¬ ficient structure, low quality pro¬ grams, lack of human and finan¬ cial resources and loss of International prestige.
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 10, 1969 Pg. 4- March 11, 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 |
THE DAILY COLLEGIAN Monday, March 10, 1969
Bulldog batters take three
from Waves, face Hornets
Fresno State'sbaseballers will
play Sacramento State tomorrow
for the second time in a week.
When the Bulldogs entered last
Tuesday's twin bill at Sacramen¬
to, they had an 0-1 record. They
will enter tomorrow's double-
Pete Belden's rapidly lmprov-
polent hilling with some very ef¬
fective pitching to cop both ends
of Saturday's double bill.
Second-sacker Dave Mello had
an outstanding day at the plate
with five hils In eight trips, driv¬
ing home half a dozen Bulldog
thre
om Pepperdlne last
weekend, winning Friday's single
game 8-2 and capturing both ends
of Saturday's twin bill by counts
of 7-3 and 11-3.
The Bulldogs took two from
Sacramento last week. Tomor¬
row's opening game begins at
1 p.m. at Varsity Park.
Fresno cracked out a total of
27 base hits in the three games
with the visiting Waves and Bel¬
den experimented with eight hurl-
Bulldog batters rapped Iheball
sharply In all three games,
crashing out nine extra base
blows Including pitcher Jim Hen¬
derson's towering home run In
the second game on Saturday,
the first round tripper this sea¬
son by a Bulldog.
Ingles in
Mello whac
nighlcap wilt
triple and an
Mike Noonan, a senior por
slder, showed good early seas
form in Ihe opener Saturday. 1
John Balllnger hurled the re¬
maining four Innings for Fresno
when he Issued up three bases
on balls and was touched for two
In the nightcap. Bill Welcher
opened on the mound for Ihe
Bulldogs and was credited with
relieved by Henderson who got
credit for the win. Mike Harkness
finished up the game.
Fresno hopped on two Pepper-
dine hurlers early In Ihe second
game Saturday, scoring 10 runs
in the first three Innings.
n Friday, a
getting credit f.
his fine three-:
gave up three h
four innings for the Bulldogs,
yielding boih Pepperdlne scores
while giving up four base raps
and striking out three batters.
Junior southpaw Gene Speldel
hurled Ihe last two frames, giv¬
ing up just one hit.
Dave Schmidt banged two dou¬
bles to pace the Bulldog batle
> Tony
. Jim
h also col-
Whlnery an*
lected two hits.
The Bulldogs combined
WANT ADS
ACROSS FROM DOHMS - Furn.
2 Br. - $125 for 2 or $40 per
person. Carpctcd.439-6481. Also
furn. City College studio $60.
Cords cracks two-mile
record, oldest at FSC
Dave Cords and Erv Hunt scored the only two wins Saturday as
Fresno Slate's Bulldog trackslers lost a triple meet against Stanford
University and Occldenlal College In Palo Alto.
Cords broke a 27-year-old FSC record in the two mile with a
mark of 0:02.0 to nose out Stanford's Greg Brock, and Hunt triple
jumped 49 flat, his all-time besl, lo barely nip Broad of Occidental,
who jumped 48-11 1/4.
Cords' time broke the Fresno State mark of 9:05.2 by Art Cazares
in 1942. the oldest record In Bulldog track. Hunt's jump placed him
third all-time among FSC triple jumpers.
Stanford took the three-way meet with 90 points. Occidental had
62 and the Bulldogs 29. In the dual meet, the Indians beat the 'Dogs
108-40.
Fresno's Olympian Erkkl Muslakarl retired from the pole vault
competition after clearing IS feet because of soreness in his right
thigh. His effort placed him fourth behind three Oxy vaulters.
Other Fresnans lo place and score In the meet were freshman
sprinter Clyde Lansing, who came In a close third In Ihe 100 yard
dash in 9.9; Hunt, who came In third in the high hurdles: John Ed¬
mondson and Dick Newlon. third and fourth In the 440: Lloyd Madden
third In the long Jump; Dave Warmerdam fourth In the 880: John
Warkentln third In the 440 intermediate hurdles. Kenth Svensson
and Dave Farley second and fourth in the discus and Steve Pavlch
Golfers do well in
rough LA invitational
LAGUNA BEACH — Larry
pape's fine crop of golfers fared
well In the Los Angeles State In¬
vitational last weekend, scoring
team competition a
e 36-hole
tl play.
•good finish under terrible
nditions" at the long, tough El
lei Country Club layout which
soggy and windswept,
esno also teamed with San
win a special North-
over Southern Cal
id L.A. State 19-17.
In winning the best-ball title,
Bulldogs combined for a total
of 447 strokes, six ahead of run¬
ner-up USC which carded a team
Individual scores were Pete
Culver-Bruce Sanders 79-70-
149; Mike Williamson-Greg Rose
75-73-148; and Jerry Thor-
mann-MIke Chapman78-72-150.
Tankers set 6
new marks
Fresno State's swlmmlngteam
took third In last weekend's
California Collegiate Athletic
Associallon championships but
established six new school rec-
Powerhouse Long Beach State
ran away with team honors while
San Fernando Valley edged out
the Bulldogs for second 261 1/2
to 251 1/2.
The Bulldog 400 medley relay
team of Ron Dadaml, Phil Jones,.
Hal Rogers and Terry Heller
eclipsed a school mark by clock¬
ing 3:39.1. The 400 freestyle
foursome of Heller, Tim White,
Jack Field and Dadaml cracked a
mark with a 3:20.2 clocking.
Individual marks established
by the Bulldogs Included Heller's
fine 49.4 effort In the 100 free¬
style and 22.4 clocking in the 50
yard freestyle. Dadaml also
shattered a pair of records, tak¬
ing Ihe 200 backstroke in 2:09.2
and the 100 backstroke In 59.3.
Rogers lowered the 200 Individ¬
ual medley relay standard with
a 2:09 flat clocking.
Williamson and Rose carded a
18 to give the Bulldogs runner-
> honors In the two-man team
rent, two strokes off the win¬
ning pace.
USC won medalist play with a
941, L.A. State had a 959 and
the Bulldogs scored a 968.
Oyer tops all
in PCAA match
Bulldog heavyweight Ken Oyer
was voted the outstanding Individ¬
ual performer and Fresno State _
placed third in the first annual
Pacific Coast Athletic Associa¬
tion wrestling championships at
San Jose.
Oyer scored two pins and a
lopsided decision to capture the
meet's top award. He pinned San
Diego's Willie Jones In 1:29 of
the first round, UC Santa Bar¬
bara's Berry Minster in 1:23and
then declsloned San Jose's Cleve
Holt 18-2 In the finals.
The Bulldog strongman was ,-
FSC's lone winner. Steve Greene
reached the finals in the 155-
pound class and was leading in
his last match before being
pinned.
Eddie Moraga and Joe Del
Bosque each reached the finals.
San Jose won the team trophy
with 94 points, Long Beach had
83 and Fresno scored 71.
CHARTER FLIGHTS
JUNE 18 SEPT. 9...$295.00
JUNE 25 SEPT.14...$295.00
The Daily Collegian
LXXIV/95 FRESNO STATE COLLEGE, FRESNO, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, MARCH 11,1969
Nationwide school
revolts reported
Married c
:ouples rent a furn. or
part, furn
. 2 bdrm apt. |