May 1, 1969 Pg. 6-7 |
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COLLEGIAN Announcing Lower rates effective with the beginning of the '69-'70 school year. Halseth's Apartments — * Saharasl At^acamas — Mojave — 6 buildings, 1 22 apartments, 5 swimming pools, 1 and 2-bedrboms, furnished or partly furnished. Due to the fine work of our social committees, who assist manage¬ ment, and their ability to save us money on repairs, vandalism and theft, we are able to offer these reduced rates. The reductions will range from ,$20.00 per pecso per sc hool year to $100. See us NOW for your reserva¬ tion this summer or fall. V Mr. & Mrs. Doug Cornwell 229-9268 Manager, Sahara i\ 5330 N. 6th Street Apt. A Mr.&Mrs.JonBaker 229-1186 Manager, Sahara I 5318 N. 6th Street Apart. A Mr.&Mrs. Jon Hall 224-3521 Manager, Sahara Annex 5292 N. 6th Street Apt. D Joel Geisten 229-7865 Manager Atacama I 1386 E. San Bruno Apt. A Robert (Yogi) Young 224-3243 Manager Atacama II 1368 E. San Bruno Apt. E George Benoit 222-2245 Manager, Mojave 1394 E. San Ramon Apt. H Aim for 'title ,1969 THE DAILY COLLEGIAN George Brush, sells t religion to the people h (I. to r. row one) Larry Glaemba, Randy Roberts, Botta, Rita Res- plnl, William Walsh; (row two) Jamie Suplnger, Richard Panduk- Rader and Gall Chase. Readers' Theatre adaptation of Thornton Wllder's ' 'Heaven's My Destination Wilder's novel is Readers' Theatre presentation through Saturday Thornton Wllder's novel, •Heaven's My Destination,' will be presented today through Sat- t 8:15 p Theatre. George Brush, the protagonist In the novel, goes through a re¬ ligious conversion during his sophomore year In college and • graduates to become a text-book salesman and evangelist. Described as a 'DonQulxoteln a modern day setting,' he tries anages to antagonize sllef 1 e of his tablished Ideals. The depression-era novel was a failure at the time lt was published In 1935 but lt has recently been re-evaluated as one of the strongest novels of Its a grad- Mrs. Floy Paynt' will direct the presentation. Ralph |'[[ g|JY Salgado, director of Readers' latre will supervise the play. Chase. ^Charter'' I Flights... iF $2951 Faculty groups may merge ^" **^ I Dr. Paul Dale Bush, president soclaUon, the California Colleges ganlzatlons frequently work at I &SZ ■Eppiigy : Rifkti n mitotic ar, n gp«j He» | of the statewide ACSCP, Dr. Alexander Vavoulls, associate editor of 'Voice', the ACSCP publication, Dr. Kenneth H. Ruse- , ell, state council delegate, and Dr. Eugene E. Zurnwalt, ACSCP treasurer, attended the meeting of the state council of the As¬ sociation of California State College Professors recently. A resolution to Investigate the possibility of forming a new or¬ ganization to Include the Cali¬ fornia State Employees As- i MM ! ««<»<»#&*># Universities Faculty As- n, theAmerlcanAssocla- tlon of University Professors and the American Federation of Teachers was passed at a meeting of the ACSCP State Council. The faculty organizations were contacted and AFT was the only one interested. ACSCP and AFT formed a Joint committee to ex¬ plore the posslbllltes of forming a new organization. During the spring meeting, a resolution was passed to poll the members of ACSCP and the entire faculty concerning the efforts to form a new organization. •The five different faculty or- Free speech meeting today The location and possible liml-_ tatlons of the Fresno State College free speech area will be dis¬ cussed at a public hearing Fri¬ day at 3 p.m. In College Union 312. This la the second of two hear¬ ings sponsored by a sub-com¬ mittee of the Student Life Com¬ mittee. After listening to stu¬ dent opinions on the subject, a recommendation will be made to the Student Life Committee concerning the use and authority over the area and the College Union balcony. The recom¬ mendation will be presented to the Academic Senate. cross purposes,* Dr. Vavoulls said. He thinks lt would be to the advantage of all If the five different groups formed one organization. Since only AFT Is Interested, Vavoulls said, •Even going from five organiza¬ tions to four might help.* The suggested name for the new organization Is "Union of As¬ sociated Professors.' Minority law study given lor summer A special six week course will be held this summer at the Gold¬ en Gate College of Law In San Francisco to prepare minority students for law school. Forty students from California colleges will take part In the class which la open to anyone who will receive a bachelors de¬ gree on or before June of this Students selected for the pro¬ gram will not only receive free books and other necessary equip¬ ment but will be paid an addition¬ al $300. Some space Is available for ring r All minority students who com¬ plete the course will be guaran¬ teed admission to one of eight law schools In California. g All Interested students should contact Jose Ramos in the BSU room of the College Union today between 3 and 5 p.m. Bulldogs head south for tri-meet By KenEoblson. Fresno State's tracksters, having beaten the national cham¬ pions two weeks ago, will travel to sunny Southern California for the second straight weekend to meet the Cal State Long Beach 49ers and the Cal State Los An¬ geles Dlablos In a triple-meet In Long Beach. The Bulldogs are odds-on picks to beat the Dlablos but will have a much rougher time taming the host 49er crew. Fresno coach Dutch Warmerdam said yester¬ day, 'We're better than Long Beach, but we'll have to prove lt. Just saying lt doesn't make lt If the -Dogs win, they will be unofficial dual meet champs in the California Collegiate Athletic Association, having beaten con¬ ference and NCAA college divi¬ sion champ Cal Poly San Luis Obispo two weeks ago. The Bulldogs will be led by their ace pole vaulter Erkkl Mustakarl, who set a new nation- Tie country of Finland ti¬ the seconi e weeks ago ai in the world Also pacing the Fresnans will be distance runner Dave Cords and multi-purpose men John Warkentln and Erv Hunt. Cords leads the CCAA In the two and three mile runs an the mile. Warkentln placed sec¬ ond to UCLA's Rick Sloan In the decathlon portion of the Mt. SAC relays In Pomona last weekend, and Is third In the conference In the 440 intermediate hurdles. Hunt leads the CCAA In the In¬ termediates and is second In the 120 highs and third In the triple Other top Bulldog performers are Dick Newton, the number the 440, second In the long jump and fifth In the triple Jump, and Kenth Svensson, top Bulldog In Netters host 49ers, Aztecs The Fresno State College ten¬ nis team will play host to Long Beach and San Diego State Col¬ leges this weekend. Tomorrow the Bulldogs will play their final California Col¬ legiate Athletic Association match against Long Beach at the Fresno Swim and Racquet Club. the discus and Javelin and second In the shot put. The Dally Collegian -sports staff made a dope sheet with the best times of this season for all three squads and came out with a score of 84 for the Bulldogs, 64 1/2 for the Long Beachers and 36 1/2 for the Dlablos, with FSC taking eight first places, Long Beach tour and LA Ave. - Dope sheets are as vulnerable as human effort, however, as the Poly meet showed, where War- merdam'a doped out 73-72 In favor of the Mustangs came out to be an 83-64 victory tor the FSCers. Los Angeles has some top men In sprinter Stan Allotey, with times of 9.4 and 21 Oat, triple Jumper Chris Watklns, 51-8 1/2, half mller Leon Webster, 1:52.5 and high Jumper Jorma Vesala, 6-9. Long Beach's squad features quartermller Al Carlson, 48.2, hurdler Mike Edelstein, 14.6 and 54.1, and discus thrower Tom Klrkwold, 171-5. Long Beach features the best mile relay squad in the confer¬ ence, led by Carlson and Ed Rlcke, and FSC has the best 440 relay time with the 41.7 they ran in upsetting Poly. Sprinter Lloyd Madden and Clyde Lansing will be ready to go against the southerners this weekend, but two-miler Joe Dun¬ bar is doubtful doe to a leg In¬ jury. MARKET S.E. CORNER OF CEDAR & SHAW OPEN DAILY & SUNDAYS 9 AM TO 11 PM SPECIALS EFFECTIVE THURS.-FRI.-SAT. SUN.-MON. Dick Murray' San Diego In : Joust Saturday morning The Bulldogs are 5- 2:30 p.rr m will h< is asking as he nears the finish or the three-mile ran. A senior chem¬ istry major from Livingston, Kajlwara has a best of 15 minutes flat In the three-miler and 9:35 In the two-mile event. Me will be compet¬ ing for the Bulldogs in a triangular meet with Los Angeles and Long Beach State. Sports menu FRIDAY ■ Baseball -- Fresno State vs San Fernando Valley State at Varsity Park, 7:30 p.m. California Collegiate Athletic Association Game. Tennis — Fresno State vs Long Beach State at the Fresno Swim and Racquet Club, 2:30 p.m. CCAA match. SATURDAY Baseball — Fresno State vs Valley State, doubleheader, 12:30 p.m. Varsity Park. CCAA games. Tennis — Fresno State vs San Diego State at the Fresno Swim and Racquet Club, 10 a. m. Frosh Baseball -- Fresno State vs Stanislaus State at the Frosh Field, 12 noon, doubleheader. Track — Fresno State vs Long Beach State and Los Angeles State at Long Beach, 1:30 p.m. CCAA tri-meet." WHERE YOU BUY FOR LESS EVERY DAY first onjrourshopplng^ USDA CHOICE T-B0NE $139 STEAKS I USDA CHOICE STEAKS £_ .g SIRLOIN BONELESS I LB. USDA CHOICE STEAKS f" /*- C CHUCK 59 TOMATO ™* I JUICE •« 4s 99 REG. OR DIET GAINA wsi DETERGENT A SUNTAN LOTION 19 $105 1 BURDHTS ICE CREAM & 69' CHIOUITA BANANAS 10: SANITARY NAPKINS K0TEX 39 WHERE YOUR DOLLAR BUYS JUST A LITTLE BIT MORE J
Object Description
Title | 1969_05 The Daily Collegian May 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 | May 1, 1969 Pg. 6-7 |
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 | COLLEGIAN Announcing Lower rates effective with the beginning of the '69-'70 school year. Halseth's Apartments — * Saharasl At^acamas — Mojave — 6 buildings, 1 22 apartments, 5 swimming pools, 1 and 2-bedrboms, furnished or partly furnished. Due to the fine work of our social committees, who assist manage¬ ment, and their ability to save us money on repairs, vandalism and theft, we are able to offer these reduced rates. The reductions will range from ,$20.00 per pecso per sc hool year to $100. See us NOW for your reserva¬ tion this summer or fall. V Mr. & Mrs. Doug Cornwell 229-9268 Manager, Sahara i\ 5330 N. 6th Street Apt. A Mr.&Mrs.JonBaker 229-1186 Manager, Sahara I 5318 N. 6th Street Apart. A Mr.&Mrs. Jon Hall 224-3521 Manager, Sahara Annex 5292 N. 6th Street Apt. D Joel Geisten 229-7865 Manager Atacama I 1386 E. San Bruno Apt. A Robert (Yogi) Young 224-3243 Manager Atacama II 1368 E. San Bruno Apt. E George Benoit 222-2245 Manager, Mojave 1394 E. San Ramon Apt. H Aim for 'title ,1969 THE DAILY COLLEGIAN George Brush, sells t religion to the people h (I. to r. row one) Larry Glaemba, Randy Roberts, Botta, Rita Res- plnl, William Walsh; (row two) Jamie Suplnger, Richard Panduk- Rader and Gall Chase. Readers' Theatre adaptation of Thornton Wllder's ' 'Heaven's My Destination Wilder's novel is Readers' Theatre presentation through Saturday Thornton Wllder's novel, •Heaven's My Destination,' will be presented today through Sat- t 8:15 p Theatre. George Brush, the protagonist In the novel, goes through a re¬ ligious conversion during his sophomore year In college and • graduates to become a text-book salesman and evangelist. Described as a 'DonQulxoteln a modern day setting,' he tries anages to antagonize sllef 1 e of his tablished Ideals. The depression-era novel was a failure at the time lt was published In 1935 but lt has recently been re-evaluated as one of the strongest novels of Its a grad- Mrs. Floy Paynt' will direct the presentation. Ralph |'[[ g|JY Salgado, director of Readers' latre will supervise the play. Chase. ^Charter'' I Flights... iF $2951 Faculty groups may merge ^" **^ I Dr. Paul Dale Bush, president soclaUon, the California Colleges ganlzatlons frequently work at I &SZ ■Eppiigy : Rifkti n mitotic ar, n gp«j He» | of the statewide ACSCP, Dr. Alexander Vavoulls, associate editor of 'Voice', the ACSCP publication, Dr. Kenneth H. Ruse- , ell, state council delegate, and Dr. Eugene E. Zurnwalt, ACSCP treasurer, attended the meeting of the state council of the As¬ sociation of California State College Professors recently. A resolution to Investigate the possibility of forming a new or¬ ganization to Include the Cali¬ fornia State Employees As- i MM ! ««<»<»#&*># Universities Faculty As- n, theAmerlcanAssocla- tlon of University Professors and the American Federation of Teachers was passed at a meeting of the ACSCP State Council. The faculty organizations were contacted and AFT was the only one interested. ACSCP and AFT formed a Joint committee to ex¬ plore the posslbllltes of forming a new organization. During the spring meeting, a resolution was passed to poll the members of ACSCP and the entire faculty concerning the efforts to form a new organization. •The five different faculty or- Free speech meeting today The location and possible liml-_ tatlons of the Fresno State College free speech area will be dis¬ cussed at a public hearing Fri¬ day at 3 p.m. In College Union 312. This la the second of two hear¬ ings sponsored by a sub-com¬ mittee of the Student Life Com¬ mittee. After listening to stu¬ dent opinions on the subject, a recommendation will be made to the Student Life Committee concerning the use and authority over the area and the College Union balcony. The recom¬ mendation will be presented to the Academic Senate. cross purposes,* Dr. Vavoulls said. He thinks lt would be to the advantage of all If the five different groups formed one organization. Since only AFT Is Interested, Vavoulls said, •Even going from five organiza¬ tions to four might help.* The suggested name for the new organization Is "Union of As¬ sociated Professors.' Minority law study given lor summer A special six week course will be held this summer at the Gold¬ en Gate College of Law In San Francisco to prepare minority students for law school. Forty students from California colleges will take part In the class which la open to anyone who will receive a bachelors de¬ gree on or before June of this Students selected for the pro¬ gram will not only receive free books and other necessary equip¬ ment but will be paid an addition¬ al $300. Some space Is available for ring r All minority students who com¬ plete the course will be guaran¬ teed admission to one of eight law schools In California. g All Interested students should contact Jose Ramos in the BSU room of the College Union today between 3 and 5 p.m. Bulldogs head south for tri-meet By KenEoblson. Fresno State's tracksters, having beaten the national cham¬ pions two weeks ago, will travel to sunny Southern California for the second straight weekend to meet the Cal State Long Beach 49ers and the Cal State Los An¬ geles Dlablos In a triple-meet In Long Beach. The Bulldogs are odds-on picks to beat the Dlablos but will have a much rougher time taming the host 49er crew. Fresno coach Dutch Warmerdam said yester¬ day, 'We're better than Long Beach, but we'll have to prove lt. Just saying lt doesn't make lt If the -Dogs win, they will be unofficial dual meet champs in the California Collegiate Athletic Association, having beaten con¬ ference and NCAA college divi¬ sion champ Cal Poly San Luis Obispo two weeks ago. The Bulldogs will be led by their ace pole vaulter Erkkl Mustakarl, who set a new nation- Tie country of Finland ti¬ the seconi e weeks ago ai in the world Also pacing the Fresnans will be distance runner Dave Cords and multi-purpose men John Warkentln and Erv Hunt. Cords leads the CCAA In the two and three mile runs an the mile. Warkentln placed sec¬ ond to UCLA's Rick Sloan In the decathlon portion of the Mt. SAC relays In Pomona last weekend, and Is third In the conference In the 440 intermediate hurdles. Hunt leads the CCAA In the In¬ termediates and is second In the 120 highs and third In the triple Other top Bulldog performers are Dick Newton, the number the 440, second In the long jump and fifth In the triple Jump, and Kenth Svensson, top Bulldog In Netters host 49ers, Aztecs The Fresno State College ten¬ nis team will play host to Long Beach and San Diego State Col¬ leges this weekend. Tomorrow the Bulldogs will play their final California Col¬ legiate Athletic Association match against Long Beach at the Fresno Swim and Racquet Club. the discus and Javelin and second In the shot put. The Dally Collegian -sports staff made a dope sheet with the best times of this season for all three squads and came out with a score of 84 for the Bulldogs, 64 1/2 for the Long Beachers and 36 1/2 for the Dlablos, with FSC taking eight first places, Long Beach tour and LA Ave. - Dope sheets are as vulnerable as human effort, however, as the Poly meet showed, where War- merdam'a doped out 73-72 In favor of the Mustangs came out to be an 83-64 victory tor the FSCers. Los Angeles has some top men In sprinter Stan Allotey, with times of 9.4 and 21 Oat, triple Jumper Chris Watklns, 51-8 1/2, half mller Leon Webster, 1:52.5 and high Jumper Jorma Vesala, 6-9. Long Beach's squad features quartermller Al Carlson, 48.2, hurdler Mike Edelstein, 14.6 and 54.1, and discus thrower Tom Klrkwold, 171-5. Long Beach features the best mile relay squad in the confer¬ ence, led by Carlson and Ed Rlcke, and FSC has the best 440 relay time with the 41.7 they ran in upsetting Poly. Sprinter Lloyd Madden and Clyde Lansing will be ready to go against the southerners this weekend, but two-miler Joe Dun¬ bar is doubtful doe to a leg In¬ jury. MARKET S.E. CORNER OF CEDAR & SHAW OPEN DAILY & SUNDAYS 9 AM TO 11 PM SPECIALS EFFECTIVE THURS.-FRI.-SAT. SUN.-MON. Dick Murray' San Diego In : Joust Saturday morning The Bulldogs are 5- 2:30 p.rr m will h< is asking as he nears the finish or the three-mile ran. A senior chem¬ istry major from Livingston, Kajlwara has a best of 15 minutes flat In the three-miler and 9:35 In the two-mile event. Me will be compet¬ ing for the Bulldogs in a triangular meet with Los Angeles and Long Beach State. Sports menu FRIDAY ■ Baseball -- Fresno State vs San Fernando Valley State at Varsity Park, 7:30 p.m. California Collegiate Athletic Association Game. Tennis — Fresno State vs Long Beach State at the Fresno Swim and Racquet Club, 2:30 p.m. CCAA match. SATURDAY Baseball — Fresno State vs Valley State, doubleheader, 12:30 p.m. Varsity Park. CCAA games. Tennis — Fresno State vs San Diego State at the Fresno Swim and Racquet Club, 10 a. m. Frosh Baseball -- Fresno State vs Stanislaus State at the Frosh Field, 12 noon, doubleheader. Track — Fresno State vs Long Beach State and Los Angeles State at Long Beach, 1:30 p.m. CCAA tri-meet." WHERE YOU BUY FOR LESS EVERY DAY first onjrourshopplng^ USDA CHOICE T-B0NE $139 STEAKS I USDA CHOICE STEAKS £_ .g SIRLOIN BONELESS I LB. USDA CHOICE STEAKS f" /*- C CHUCK 59 TOMATO ™* I JUICE •« 4s 99 REG. OR DIET GAINA wsi DETERGENT A SUNTAN LOTION 19 $105 1 BURDHTS ICE CREAM & 69' CHIOUITA BANANAS 10: SANITARY NAPKINS K0TEX 39 WHERE YOUR DOLLAR BUYS JUST A LITTLE BIT MORE J |