Nov 6, 1973 Pg. 2-3 |
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2 THE DAILY COLLEGIAN Ties., Nov. 6.1973 <Xt*TtHB> min& etjecr The Richard A4. Nixon voters guide -JOHN IDDINGS Everyone and his Uncle Ned times. consider you very pushy and are saying bad things about Of course, there are more Nixon. How does one determine direct methods of detecting Nlx- It's much more polite to use which of these Nixon critics are some subtle little tricks to de actually Nixon voters In dis person, "Who did you vote for?" tect turncoat Nixon voters.—' guise? There are a few sure Invariably, the answer will be For Instance, have the person fire methods, but they are McCovern. The trtck Is to watch say "Bene Rebozo* three times ancient and very crude. for eye blinking, nervous twitch very quickly. If he doesn't hurst One is to put the suspected es, and other telltale slgnsof ly- Into hysterical laughter and fall Nlxonlte-ln a burlap sack along • ing. If the person says, 'cGa-ga- on the rioor, he's, probably a with a few bricks. Throw the sack ga" or "MmmmMa-mmm," he's Nixon voter. Into a deep body of water. If the a dead giveaway. Sneak Into the person's bed bag floats, the person did NOT (Note: If he says, *I refuse to room late at night. If he sleeps vote for Nixon — rescue this answer on the basis of the fifth person, apologize profusely, and amendment,* ask him to define the fifth amendment.Ifhedoesn't Anyone who names his dog mat. If the sack sinks, there's "Checkers" Is probably a four- no need for you to get wet. or five-time Nixon voter Another method of detection Is it sounds like something Nixon What do you do with a Nixon would say.) for five minutes Touch the blade Although the direct question You could make htm promise not to the questionable voter's tongue approach seems the most logical. for a few seconds. II the tongue It's also considered very rude do much good. sizzles and turns black, this per Perhaps the best thing Is not son is a Nixon voter. Staunch to expose Nixon voters, hut In Democrats have an abundance of lated topics by asking people who stead let them keep saying bad saliva In their mouths at all Ihey voted for, they'll prnhalily things about hlrn. American travellers abroad reflect changing world By Vlckl Kludjlan the scholars as a unique lan- Collegian Staff Writer The Ugly Americans from the Brltlsh (correct) English. farther remove*! Is his language of Henry James, whose European the cafes of Marseille is younger. haps as a result, less mouth. Ills main purpose In going abroad Is opinion of nol the spreading of his wealth on. call COMME us monetary superiority, he was isteented for saving Kuropedur- ng two world wars. The U.S. had proven herself o Europe as being full of bright foung engineers who were hrtng- ng prosperity and the Ideals ol Mildly scorned hwaase of the NTARY J£{jK the iorni oi loans to European nations, she wa.s nonetheless respected for tier help. And after \i2o% Discount Then e; Slowly, the eyes of youth drill- ol rree enterprise and cale proprietor In the 1960's. In spite or this, the Europeans may continue to rook any and all tourists, but without regard to age or nationality. It's 1973 and Americans have made a few names for themselves In other areas. The shopkeepers are no longer obligated to (mil* In hopes of fatter tips. The richest Inhabitants of the world are still rich, but only In their own country. Among the castles or West Germany and chalets of Cha- wlth dally Ufe - that real lire Is not so deeply imbedded under The same "grand enrant,* whtcn is the European Image ol the American tourist, who belonged to the rirst hair of the century Is making headway In Europe these days on a different ships cultivated abroad new criteria for a *gooe|t Of course, the Itallar iCngllsh will continue only on green. But peoi less and less able using the term "mentality." Just as the Americans] now prove themselves lnl ually abroad at every! so the European will prove o time. // You can't pin down a can student abroad to say i he represents as an Amen - but he's likely I dan't speak for the try, It's too big. B opinion . . .* The shrinking o longer based on currency source LETTER TO THE EDITOR ie fifties, although Ih "Your Clome.l FlorUt" f ondits Cedar A Shields Ph. Z27-35M charms as well) was rediscovered. Cougled with low travel rates. "going Europe.* The flaunting of rare, and^the typified reaction rarer. The dollar no longer elicits the familiar handrublitng response so common of the French PLACITA MEXICAN CURIOS NOW OPEN -»T3 1. IHIILOS (NEXT TO ANGEL) fV LEATHER GOODS TYPICAL MEXICAN DRESSES MEXICAN POTTERY MEXICAN PAINTING OIL ON VELVET MEXICAN IRONWARE -STONEWARE POSTERS OF MEXICAN HEROES PLANTERS - HATS - MARACAS COOKING POTTERY Large Selectlorpof Indoor Plants Come & browse around I ANDRE „ KOLE e<MUNC NOV. 9 Trabajadores Estudlanles de La Raza will he having a meeting on Nov. 7. We Invite all Chtcanus t.ho a re Involved with our communities. Social workers and other majors may attend to have a better understanding as to what is happening In the San Joaquin Valley. At this meeting. Los Trabajadores will lie having a guest speaker from mental health. He will he speaking on Jobs and problems pertaining lo the Chicano people. This' meeting will be held In CU 304. The meeting will begin at noon for any Chl- canos who are Interested. This Wednesday: Also, on Saturday, Nov. Trabajadores de La Raza w| meeting to develop an or| zatlon In Fresno. This cha will involve all people who if working In social servl This organization wl corporated Into the redan state and local chapter* In.Cat fornla. We urge all Cti be Involved In this organizing This meeting will be Inner Cities. The location 3779 E. Harvey from B lo For further In tact Alfonso Hernandez a EOP office at CSUF. The I Tits., Nov. 6,1973 THE DAILY C0UE6IAU 3 UFW runs state activities from quiet fLa Paz* KEENE, Calif. fCNS) _ Those cott of grapes and lettuce In New There were. IS buildings on the "Everyone on the)*taff, In The Rev. James Vlzzard, leg ho oppose the cause of Cesar York state. property when actor Steve Mc cluding Cesar, gets S3adaywith . islative analyst for the union, -navez tell wild tales about what Gomez served as a guide one Queen, acting In behalf of the room and board,* he said. "This was taking a brief holiday at La 0es on behind the heavy timber evening last week and showed a United Farm Workers, bought subsistence system Is a rule In Paz during a lull In activities In facilities at the the property from Kern County our organization. The only paid Washington. he hillside headquarters of his place union n embers call *Nues- In 1971 and presented It to Chavez employes are the attorneys.* ■ You'll notice that the main Ira Senora de La Paz" (OurLady on a 99-year lease arrangement The administrative offices are line of the Santa Fe and Southern with an option to buy. housed In a wooden building. Pacific runs adjacent toLapaz," In recent months, stories have is aptly named. Its Chavez has done some modest There Is a reception area and he said. .!■■ ulated that Molotov cocktails 4..1 been martufactured there, location, one mile east ol busy . remodeling of the existing struc numerous small offices In two •When I first moved here, they State 58, is at Ihe 3,000-foot ele tures, and one new building has put me in a bouse with seven oth long with sharp wire barbs that vation In th e rolling foothills been added. Chavez' office Is here. Else er people. They were the gate of the Tehachapl Mountains, 30 "But we really haven't had the where In theadmlnlstratlvecom- plex are offices for the legal guards and were getting up at all vil of these reports were cate- miles southe ast ol Bakersfleld. time or the money to really com hours of the night. „: 11-.illy denied by Jose Gomez,, The buildings , shaded by live oak plete the Job we'd like to do staff, credit union, medical plan •With the trains rumbling past ,-..mber of Chavez' stafr who s, once housed the here," said Gomez. "There Is and the people getting up, it took ,., ,.|itly returned to California Kern County Tuberculosis Sana- still a lot of painting and fixing In another building Is an array me awhile to learn bow to sleep up to be done. And weeds still ol sophisticated data processing through It all.* grow because we haven't had time to pull all of them out." equipment. "When we got the grape contracts In 1970thDelano The farm workers have added a large warehouse building Gomez said about 100 persons and Coachella, we suddenly had to house their newspaper, ' ' *** live at La Paz. Including Chavez 2D,000 members to keep track Malcrtado. The writing and com | and his family, and work In Its or,* said Gomez. 'We hadtohave position are -done at La-Paz, but offices. He said La Paz Is strict the paper Is published In a com ly the headquarters of the Farm He said a volunteer who had mercial plant In Fresno. worked lor International Busi •We hope to print the paper not plotted here, nor are weapons ness Machines Installed the data right here someday, but we don't . of violence and destruction built processing machines. have the equipment we need — by union members. and we aren't a union shop yet. La Paz Is a sort of union head going to obtain a computer," he and we have to be,* Gomez ex quarters and retreat all rolled said. plained. Into one. The place' was relative Another large structure houses A large stucco structure, which ly quiet the night of the tour. A once housed the terminal pa '•^*ZH lone, unarmed .guard stood before "We Inherited the cooking tient ward forthoTB sanatorium, the barrier In a sentry box. As equipment from the days when Is being converted Into an educa he saw car lights approaching, he the place was a sanatorium. tion building. walked to the front or the barrier •It's In as good shape now as •We envision Instruction to and hailed the driver. It was then, but It's really too union members on subjects rang •Who do you know here?" he much for us with the number of people we have to feed.' ing from collective bargaining, rights and privileges of union "Cesar Chavez, Dolores Huer- The single people on the staff membership and other subjects,' ta, Jerry" Cohen, John Bank . . .* eat In the dining hall and live In Gomez said. «We would also hope The visitor listed names or union dormltory-*tyle housing In one of to Include language Instruction, officials he knew personally or the buildings. some history of the Mexican- had contacted In the course of Married stair members live American and some political scl- gathering news stories. with their ramllles In several The sentry nodded. He picked bungalows and trailers that have Ile added that he did not think up a two-way radio and called the been moved onto the property. the subjects would be revolution- ■BBSS.' ^H office. Gomez appeared, greeted Chavez lives In a small, white the visitor, and then began the frame house with his wife and two of his eight children. The only Gomez stressed that the La Paz Is not a fortress. It has no jr-anything was hidden, It was thing that distinguishes his home fence. The only security pro not apparent. Gomez spoke openly from ihe rest Is a six-foot chain vision Is the gate and the guard. of La Paz and the people wholive link fence that surrounds the •We welcome visitors,* he and work there. properly. said. "We have nothing to hide.* '—Dr. Wilbur Ball, professor of International aqricul- i.i. and Kebede Gashaw, a graduate student in animal science, ii voiay an ox drawn plow, shovel and pitchlork. photo by Erik Primitive tools, international methods featured in ag class Ml nations the world over have All the Implements, plus hun dreds of slides taken all over Ihe world, are used by Dr. Hall to thing In common — agrtcul- -. tools, crops 1 VILLA CINDERELLA 1 Latest Styles For Fashionable Young Women \j/' ^ Lanz Patricia Fair Tfcstt/ PhaseH Kristie Lou Jrs. ' 'XeSfe Ardce GorkyCraig K# GunneSax Sir,Je' "Always A Perfect Fif' Bankamericard—Master Charge Cores' Fresno and Show—Phone 27.6-5606 Ramoda Plaxa Center Fresno, California Weeks Days 10-6 Fri. 'til 9 Sua noon - 5 p.m. | ik- soil. V methods may dllft ilns the common denominate all men-a lesson quickly >ed In International Agrlcul- a course taught by Dr. Wll- nall at CSUF. help bridge the gap between ins and show students at i Instruments used for cen- s in Ethiopia, Kebede Ga- , a graduate,student In anl- presented ex- illcas of a plow, yoke, and fork used In his id to Dr. Ball, a professor -national agriculture and primitive tools, no longer in Ethiopia, were handmade •nt to CSUF by Gashaw's The plow is a scaled-down drawn by oxen for cen- n Ethiopia. Implements, now on dls- the foyer of the School of Sciences, are only nail part of, the manyprlml- tristruments collected by Dr. ir the world. Adorning Dr. Ball's office In nculture 107 are native po- o digging sticks, reed fish >g birds and pigs, handheld > c.ed for harvesting rice primitive shovel made from trum of International agriculture. Last summer Dr. Ball traveled more than 26,000 miles, visiting ' the FIJI Islands, the I New Zealand and Australia. •1 travel so that I can be a better teacher,* said Dr.Ball. 'This class is not an agriculture class, but Is more like an anthropology Dr. Ball said many students In the class come from different departments all over the campus. "We want as many students from as many different disciplines Involved as possible," said Dr. Ball. Involving students is Dr.Ball's specialty and student participation also encompasses eating exotic roods from all over the world. Foods like kangaroosoup and sea week are served by Dr. Ball so that students can taste foods from different cultures. • The class has been offered for four years and Dr. Ball gives roost of the credit for Its beginning to 'three very Interested . students* who pushed for a class that would present a better understanding of developing nations.*.. _ Next summer Dr. Ball plans to travel toLatlnAmericatodoeon- sultlng work for missions as they relate to the rural development of primitive areas. When you say Budweiser-, you've said it.all! ' «"Htuu«-»uscH. mc . st. ioms
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 6, 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 |
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2 THE DAILY COLLEGIAN Ties.,
Nov. 6.1973
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