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How many more? Mr. Nixon ts again asking us to believe a crucial piece of Information relevant to the Watergate scandal does not exist. It has been suggested In this column that the reason the White House seems to "lose" information it has agreed to "turn over" is that this information will prove Mr. Nixon guilty of the high crimes of wWch many suspect him. To prevent this from happening, the White House mokes excuse after excuse about the disappearance of the tapes and, recently, the dictaphone belt. Mr. Nixon is again trying to play theAmeri- can people and the judicial system of this country for fools. Just how naive does he think We are? The answer to this question becomes clearer with each new revelation. Again, we call for the President's resignation or impeachment. WORLD NEWS IN BRIEF WE'VE GOT WHAT YOU NECP till ieesT I Oi| COKESPOONtf HEADSUPFUES Rizla Rolling Machitu OlSCOOfiT fTBCTBOCKS f0*Y CANDY IMS * &> M«5 WOODS, MU rtXJSTOPCAUItJG THE GAP IH THAT TAPe "TflECJXD/BlUT/ GAP?" ON CAMPUS The Behal Club will sponag, 1 David Vlll* who will speak « 2 p.m. In CU 313. The College Union will spon. I sor a Music Festival Day fro* ■ 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. In thecolltfi I Wed., Nov. 14, 1173 THE DAILY C0UE6IAN 3 LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Adviser replies to story on KFSR ws does have a newspaper, se advise your readers that 1 will feature a special pro- i this Thursday on hatchet- nterviewlng techniques en- 1 "Are All Newspaper Re- ■ rs Former Turkey Butch- ■ KFSIt s guest on the pro- . will be Ms. Kludjlan of advise your readers that Larka, the stafr or KFSR, Its frequency of 660 KC, "equal time." and disk Jobkeys (sic) do not exist In reality and are a pure fabrication in the mind ol your reporter. Cancel my rree subscription to your otherwise splendid newspaper. Robert (non-existent) Larka Station Mgr.. Faculty Adviser KFSR Radio Pubs board ad hoc committeo not divided u. headed •Committee to study Collegian Independence.-by your stall writer Kathleen Maclay. The article leaves the Impression Hut the special ad hoc committee Is deeply divided over >f any one group, repre- n acceptable compromise eyes of The Collegian Fresno's year-round esnosyear rental rest resort. (Preview rents from SIM) with all the comforts. Air conditioning. All electric kitchen with self-clean oven, frost-free refrigerator, disposal and dishwasher. Shag carpeting. What's more, there's private patios or deck. Discover Meadow Wood. A beautiful garden apartment community. With everything under the sun. Pools. Tennis courts. Volleyball courts. Parklike landscaping. And more. Each contemporary one and two bedroom garden apartment comes Dgt Meadow Wood is quietly located across from University campus on East Shaw Ave., between Maple and Woodrow. Live where 229-6377. Meadcwtfccd Garden Apartments s and science. The Intervlrti will be held In New Admlnlstra.] Hon 266-267. Burroughs Corporation conduct Interviews for Januarj and June graduates with degrttt] Touche Ross 4 Company sin! conduct Interviews for all Ji>.; uary graduates with degree accounting. The Interviews be held In New Administratis 2G6-2 A The Child Drama Theatre itl| begin Its production of the "Err. peror's New Clothes and Stories" at 4 p.m. In the International Programs meet In the International Rooa of the cafeteria at 3:30 p.m. All returning students from year's program are asked For anyone Interested International Programs, then will be a meeting with retu students from last year l International Room of the terla from 3:30-4:30 p.m. afternoon. Refreshments will t» The Student Chapter of t:-.i American Home Economics Association will meet at 7 p.m. la Art-Home Economics 118. THURSDAY The Department of Spe out after some discussion, It should be noted that It was accepted unanimously by the Senate Board on Publications. Thomas R. Hill Mario Galvan David Dozler AAUW book sale The annual UnH look Sale t old books, paper- e sheets, puzzles or art prints? Drop them by air Fresno Are station. The bo' sale will be held Nov. 14-17 Fresno Shaw Plaza. All proceed! will go to the AAUW Scholarship Fellowship Fund. Injuries take toll, soccermen finish poorly By Ron Agostlnl Collegian Sports Editor Fresno State's soccer coach (and geology prcfessor) Bob Bereskin will be leaving for Spain later this month on a geological expedition, and ball be happy to get away following the collapse or his kickers in the second half of the season. The Bulldogs downed Free university ot Berlin and South-1 "I plan to use a lot of the younger payers, and maybe or the American players,* beet soccer , — 'Doc* only trailed 1-0 at the half. Bereskin sincerely believed that a healthy Fresno crew would have made trouble for the Bruins that day. The casualty list: Youeef Al- . —_~ ...» nmrmmiii, baseerl-only available for on* bat before lone they'll be helping gam* In the last half of the sea- us, too. In the meantime, 111 be (on; Ricardo Crespo-qult the looking around Ihe area for soc- team In mid-season, than re- car player* when I can.* Joined, not himself mentally or On* of the more frustrating physically coming off hi* MVP factor* proved vary bothersome year last fall; javierGarcla-the lo Bereskin even when the club acrobatic goalkeeper was both- was winning. That Fresno Stat* ered throughout the 13 game* was never rated among the top with a bad ankle, never reached team* on the coast aftor taking his potential: AlonzoLugo,Roger six of their first seven contests Kemeur,' and assorted bumps 1* a mystery to the outspoken soccer headman. The rating (am* Is kind of funny. In soccer, coaches some- become quite flakey. Tb*y What the future has in *tor« for the CSUF soccer program ' remains to be seen. The kickers receive littler If ax regardless of team ability," be •«"• «W* weald h Bereikln pointed out that develop a eetsj i dub that Fresno " not a MUNDO RODRIGUEZ, atransfer from Porte rvi lie, has been a starter this season for the Bulldog soccermen. He's seen In action during victory over Biola. -rn California <ames In early October,.giving them a fine 6-1 mark, easily the lUgh-water plateau of their campaign. What happened after that should not be wished on any ath- as Injuries sidelined nearly every talented player on the team, Fresno stumbled home comparison to their 7-4-1 pro- ■ squad. The Fresnans wer "hopping around on one leg,*ai rordlng to Bereskin. Although seriously hand capped against one of the n and bruises suffered by Gary Wlckman and Fayez Shahln. Kerneur's story Is a poignant one. He was ordered to bed before the UCLA game because of ustioD, carrying 23 units a Job while playing soccer. rne bad news for the campus kickers will persist through 1974, for they will lose such established players as Oyvln Rasmussen, Kerneur, Lugo, Francisco "Klko* Nuno, and possibly team captain Danny Cerna and Mundo Rodriguez. On paper, the soccermen appeared ready to top last fall's representative that made It to the NCAA regionals, but the multitude of Injuries took Its toll. •When we defeated a team of Berlin's caliber, and beat them % soundly 4-1, it Indicated to me that we did have a super team. That was the only loss suffered by Berlin In their 16 game tour,* Bereskin said. "I thought for sure we'd top last year's record, but with the misfortune we had. It Just couldn't be expected," he said. "It was Uke someone was In the bleachers shooting down our players one by one, one game at a time. Our tough schedule also The consistent play of Nuno, however, was one of the bright spots of the season. An excellent scorer and assist-maker blessed with uncanny speed, "Klko* was often a marked man with opposing teams because of his widespread reputation. Bereskin said that Nuno did handle the extra attention very well, yet even he was hampered by a minor knee Injury against UCLA. Tall, slender, and Intimidating Oyvln Rasmussen also played well throughout most of the games, as did Cema, the talkative Kerneur, and BenAnyene. What's going to happen next fall, when all the experienced starters have gone their separate USF. We could try to help the players a little UU Most of them are foreigners carrying gigantic ■It's Just ridiculous, but really study load*. We could make their _i» Immaterial to me,* ha said, stay a little nicer." RENT MINI REFRIGERATORS SPECIAL RATES F0RSTUDBITS I FREE !% CALL RENT-A-WASH 439-4210 PUBLISHERS' REMAINDERS SPECIAL SAVINGS THE LATE JOHN MARQUAND: A Biography, by Stephen Birmingham. Extraordinarily detailed and intimate portrait of a brilliant, complex writer. Pub. at $10.00 Sale 2.98 GREAT AMERICANS SPEAK. Selected by John Pomtret. Facsimiles of important statements made by great Americans. Pub. at $5.95. Sale 2.98 5238. UNDER THEMOONSOFMARS-AHistory A Anthology of the Science Fiction "Romance.* Nine of the best stories, complete, from the early "pulps.* Pub. at $7.95. Sale 2.98 Why Women Are Superlor-THE FIRST SEX. By Elizabeth Gould Davis. Traces woman's contribution to civilization rrom ancient times to the present. Pub. at $7.95. Sale 2.98 j'THE AGE OF ENERGY: Varieties ol American Experience, 1865-1915. Outstanding study of American cultural history that delves into every aspect ol human endeavor. Pub. at $12.50. Sale 2.98 THE COMPLETE TURKEYCOOKBOOK.ByS.l. Reese. Hundreds or exciting, imaginative, year round recipes. Pub. at $6.95. Sale 2.98 AMERICA THE VIOLENT. By Ovid Demaris. Perceptive appraisal ol the people and events that have shaped our turbulent society. Pub. at $7.95. Sale 2.98 TR A WILL: A Friendship That Split The Republican Party. By William Manners. Dramatic, highly human retelling of the split between Teddy Roosevelt and William Howard Taft. Pub. at $7.95. Sale 2.98 Jacques Plccarrfs THE SUN BENEATH THE SEA. Fascinating account of a 30»day drift of 1500 miles in the depths of the Gulf Stream observing the mysteries of the ocean bottom. Pub. at $12.50. Sale 3.98 •OLD BRUIN* CCWMOOORE MATTHEW CALBRAITH PERRY. By Samuel EliotMorlion. Colorful, stirring blolgraphy of the UJS. Naval Offloer who helped found Liberia. Pub. at $12.50. Sale 3.98 Wright Morris' GOD'S COUNTRY AND MY PEOPLE. 83 full-page b.Sw. photos and text in a down-home American idiom present the vanishing culture of our.towns and farmland. Pub. at $10.00.- Sale 3.98 THE RUSSIAN REVOLUTION. By Marcel Lleb- man. Vivid, exciting and highly readable study of the most Important event of the 20th century. Pub. at $10.00. Sale 4.98 ARCHITECTURAL STYLES. By Herbert Pot- horn. Concise history, beautifully Illustrated with over 300 drawings covering every important building style. Pub. at $7.95. Sale 4.98 HUNTING A SHOOTING: From,Earliest Time* to the Present Day. By Michael Brander. Rousing history crammed with information about hunting past and present In every area ofthc world. Pub. at $13.95. Sale 7.98 THE WORLD OF ZOOS. By Rosl Kirchshofer. 128 superb.photos, 20 In color. Delightful book for all animal lovers, showing some of the most exotic, as well as the most popular animal*. Pub. at $12.95. Sale 6.98 CALIFORNIA: An Illustrated History. By D. Fehrenbacher A N. Tutorow. Recounts the California story from the period of Spanish rule, through the Westward trek. Pub. at $12.50. Sale 7.98*1 THE PRAEGER ENCYCLOPEDIA OF ANCIENT GREEK CIVILIZATION.Over 750 essayentrles covering the arts, literature, myths, philosophy, customs, personages, heroes, etc of ancient Greece. More than 400 lllus. Pur/, at $15.00. Sale 5.98 PENCIL TECHNIQUES IN MODERN DESIGN. By William W. Atkin, et al. Comprehensive visual presentation on the art of rendering — i materials and equipment used are listed and analyzed; fundamental strokes and the uses of shades and shadows Illustrated; composition and perspective are explained. Profusely lllus. 9"x1t»^Pub.at$9.95. Sale 5.98 -WILDERNESS KINGDOM: Indian Life In the Rocky Mountains, 1840-1847. The Journal* and Paintings of Father Nicolas Point. Pub. at $21.95. Sale 8.95 INDIAN COOKING FORPLEASURE.ByPremlla Lai. Hurjdreds of savory recipes by India's leading cookery writer, ranging from delicious currl*s and sweetmeats to. spiced chicken kebab*. 100 photos, 23 In color. Only 3.93 ITALIAN COOKING FOR PLEASURE. By Mary Reynolds. Tested recipes of the great Italian dishes - Illustrated In full color. All with American Ingredient*. Uses of herbs, and spices, choice of wines, etc. Only 3.95 BUY NOW AND SAVE AS NEVER BEFORE MANY ADDITIONAL TITLES AVAILABLE JhIMnnelBOOKSTORE (IN THE HEART OF THE CAMPUS) LOWER LEVEL
Object Description
Title | 1973_11 The Daily Collegian November 1973 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1973 |
Description | Daily (except weekends) during the school year. Microfilm. Palo Alto, Calif. |
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, 35mm. |
Technical Information | Scanned at 600 dpi; TIFF; Microfilm ScanPro 2000 "E-image data" |
Language | eng |
Description
Title | Nov 14, 1973 Pg. 2-3 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1973 |
Description | Daily (except weekends) during the school year. Microfilm. Palo Alto, Calif. |
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, 35mm. |
Technical Information | Scanned at 600 dpi; TIFF; Microfilm ScanPro 2000 "E-image data" |
Language | eng |
Full-Text-Search |
How many more?
Mr. Nixon ts again asking us to believe a
crucial piece of Information relevant to the
Watergate scandal does not exist.
It has been suggested In this column that the
reason the White House seems to "lose" information it has agreed to "turn over" is that
this information will prove Mr. Nixon guilty of
the high crimes of wWch many suspect him.
To prevent this from happening, the White
House mokes excuse after excuse about the
disappearance of the tapes and, recently, the
dictaphone belt.
Mr. Nixon is again trying to play theAmeri-
can people and the judicial system of this
country for fools.
Just how naive does he think We are? The
answer to this question becomes clearer with
each new revelation. Again, we call for the
President's resignation or impeachment.
WORLD NEWS IN BRIEF
WE'VE GOT
WHAT YOU NECP till
ieesT I Oi|
COKESPOONtf
HEADSUPFUES
Rizla Rolling Machitu
OlSCOOfiT
fTBCTBOCKS
f0*Y
CANDY
IMS *
&>
M«5 WOODS, MU rtXJSTOPCAUItJG THE GAP
IH THAT TAPe "TflECJXD/BlUT/ GAP?"
ON CAMPUS
The Behal Club will sponag, 1
David Vlll* who will speak «
2 p.m. In CU 313.
The College Union will spon. I
sor a Music Festival Day fro* ■
11 a.m. to 10 p.m. In thecolltfi I
Wed., Nov. 14, 1173 THE DAILY C0UE6IAN 3
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Adviser replies to story on KFSR
ws does have a newspaper,
se advise your readers that
1 will feature a special pro-
i this Thursday on hatchet-
nterviewlng techniques en-
1 "Are All Newspaper Re-
■ rs Former Turkey Butch-
■ KFSIt s guest on the pro-
. will be Ms. Kludjlan of
advise your readers that Larka,
the stafr or KFSR, Its frequency
of 660 KC, "equal time." and
disk Jobkeys (sic) do not exist
In reality and are a pure fabrication in the mind ol your reporter. Cancel my rree subscription to your otherwise splendid
newspaper.
Robert (non-existent) Larka
Station Mgr.. Faculty Adviser
KFSR Radio
Pubs board ad hoc committeo not divided
u. headed •Committee to study
Collegian Independence.-by your
stall writer Kathleen Maclay.
The article leaves the Impression Hut the special ad hoc
committee Is deeply divided over
>f any one group, repre-
n acceptable compromise
eyes of The Collegian
Fresno's year-round
esnosyear
rental rest
resort.
(Preview rents from SIM)
with all the comforts. Air
conditioning. All electric
kitchen with self-clean
oven, frost-free refrigerator, disposal and dishwasher. Shag carpeting.
What's more, there's
private patios or deck.
Discover Meadow
Wood. A beautiful garden apartment community. With everything
under the sun. Pools.
Tennis courts. Volleyball
courts. Parklike landscaping. And more.
Each contemporary
one and two bedroom
garden apartment comes
Dgt
Meadow Wood is
quietly located across
from University campus
on East Shaw Ave., between Maple and
Woodrow. Live where
229-6377.
Meadcwtfccd
Garden Apartments
s and science. The Intervlrti
will be held In New Admlnlstra.]
Hon 266-267.
Burroughs Corporation
conduct Interviews for Januarj
and June graduates with degrttt]
Touche Ross 4 Company sin!
conduct Interviews for all Ji>.;
uary graduates with degree
accounting. The Interviews
be held In New Administratis
2G6-2
A
The Child Drama Theatre itl|
begin Its production of the "Err.
peror's New Clothes and
Stories" at 4 p.m. In the
International Programs
meet In the International Rooa
of the cafeteria at 3:30 p.m. All
returning students from
year's program are asked
For anyone Interested
International Programs, then
will be a meeting with retu
students from last year l
International Room of the
terla from 3:30-4:30 p.m.
afternoon. Refreshments will t»
The Student Chapter of t:-.i
American Home Economics Association will meet at 7 p.m. la
Art-Home Economics 118.
THURSDAY
The Department of Spe
out after
some discussion, It should be
noted that It was accepted unanimously by the Senate Board on
Publications. Thomas R. Hill
Mario Galvan
David Dozler
AAUW book sale
The annual UnH
look Sale
t old books, paper-
e sheets, puzzles or
art prints? Drop them by air
Fresno Are station. The bo'
sale will be held Nov. 14-17
Fresno Shaw Plaza. All proceed!
will go to the AAUW Scholarship
Fellowship Fund.
Injuries take toll, soccermen finish poorly
By Ron Agostlnl
Collegian Sports Editor
Fresno State's soccer coach
(and geology prcfessor) Bob
Bereskin will be leaving for
Spain later this month on a geological expedition, and ball be
happy to get away following the
collapse or his kickers in the
second half of the season.
The Bulldogs downed Free
university ot Berlin and South-1
"I plan to use a lot of the
younger payers, and maybe
or the American players,*
beet soccer , —
'Doc* only trailed 1-0 at the
half. Bereskin sincerely believed
that a healthy Fresno crew would
have made trouble for the Bruins
that day.
The casualty list: Youeef Al- . —_~ ...» nmrmmiii,
baseerl-only available for on* bat before lone they'll be helping
gam* In the last half of the sea- us, too. In the meantime, 111 be
(on; Ricardo Crespo-qult the looking around Ihe area for soc-
team In mid-season, than re- car player* when I can.*
Joined, not himself mentally or On* of the more frustrating
physically coming off hi* MVP factor* proved vary bothersome
year last fall; javierGarcla-the lo Bereskin even when the club
acrobatic goalkeeper was both- was winning. That Fresno Stat*
ered throughout the 13 game* was never rated among the top
with a bad ankle, never reached team* on the coast aftor taking
his potential: AlonzoLugo,Roger six of their first seven contests
Kemeur,' and assorted bumps
1* a mystery to the outspoken
soccer headman.
The rating (am* Is kind of
funny. In soccer, coaches some-
become quite flakey. Tb*y
What the future has in *tor«
for the CSUF soccer program '
remains to be seen. The kickers
receive littler If ax
regardless of team ability," be
•«"• «W* weald h
Bereikln pointed out that develop a eetsj
i dub that Fresno "
not a
MUNDO RODRIGUEZ, atransfer
from Porte rvi lie, has been a
starter this season for the Bulldog soccermen. He's seen In
action during victory over Biola.
-rn California
|