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Here we go again The President has done It again. We suppose it could be expected but the more optimistic of us somehow believed Nixon would see the little charade he has been playing for the last year and a half was not being bought. We were wrong. Watergate will continue to be tho Nixon nemesis as long as the man Is allowed to remain In office. For the country's sake, we hope It's The recent shun of the Senate committee's demand for presidential papera and tapes Is but another Indication of Nixon's unwillingness tp get to the bottom of the crimes at Watergate. We believe this Is because, If the bottom Is reached In the affair, Richard Nixon will be found firmly bound to 118 floor. This time Nixon hss told us the committee's demands are tantamount to "an overt attempt to Intrude Into the executive to a degree that constitutes an unconstitutional usurpation of power." There he goes again, hiding behind the Constitution.. V the President It Is also unconstitutional to obstruct Justice, criminals and tamper with evidence. While we cannot be absolutely sure Nixon is protecting M Haldeman, Ehrllchman, Stana, etc. or that he had Ihe 18- tape break arranged or that he arranged for the dlsappearanci crucial tapes, we can be certain he Is not making any kind certed effort to try to dissuade us from leaning In What he Is doing Is hiding his unwillingness to solvi.- the lems Watergate presents to this country by throwing up screen of constitutionality. It's a good trick most of the time because It usually dm side all the rednecks who adhere to the "My Coui theory. A lot of Ancient Romans were like that. Nixon figures with these people on his side (there an n Judging by his election plurality) he will no peached. That the country may suffer irreparable damage > cooperate with Investigation appear* to - Cloud actors which through nuclear "We should try to bypass fission and the breeder gather," although Its development Is i problematical right now.* Cloud called the government's reaction to the < of -too little, too late," voluntary limitations ON CAMPUS TODAY An exhibit of Chinese art dating from the nth century will be on display in the Art Building Gallery from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. The exhibit is valued at $150,000 and ia sponsored by an art history class. . - The Merchant of Venice" will be presented st 3 p.m. In Industrial Arta 101. The program la . .being directed by Terry Miller. The Executive Committee ot the Academic Senate will meet at 3 p.m. in Thomas Administration 117. Three faculty members of the Music Department at CSUF will perform 'Gestures and Interludes II" composed by Dr. David Bates, CSUF assistant professor of music, at 8 p.m. In the Music Building Recital Hall. The organization, Social Qualifying Exam, will meet at 8 p.m. inCU 309. The College Union Board will meet at 3 p.m. in CU 308. The board will select a new chairman for next semester. Gary Kinsey and Thomas Hill have been nominated for the position. Dr. Henderson C. Yeung will give a talk entitled 'Symmetry, Quantum Mechanics and Croup Theory* at 4 p.m —=—<-«»-< ence 209B. Mm., Jm. 7, 1974 THE DAILY C0LLE6IA* 3 i. in Social Set- 'Kaiser Bill' wins regional title The . cast of "Kaiser Bill and the Grand Parade,* an original musical by CSUF Professor Edward EmmanuEl, have been n by regional judges to statewide competition In the lean Theater College Fes- The cast will perform before state judges In Sacramento on Jan. 25, competing against other . plays selected In regional compe- competltlon, the cast will travel to Washington, D.C. later thia year to appear in the national festival at the Kennedy Memorial Theater. Ten plays will be selected nationally by the Judges, and travel expenses for the casts will be paid for by festival officials. A , $2500 award will be given to tbe best Individual a EmmanuEl collaborated "Kaiser Bill* with Scott I :e and compiled the music for the play. The cast Includes Terry Burns, PaulBarile, Dennia Pratt, Terry Cermaky Scott Hicks, Hank Webb, Reginald Haggans, Roberta Wilson, Karen Thompson, Patsy MacDonald and Kathy McAweeny. Mother Nature does snow job on Bulldog cagers If you can believe it. there was one consolation foe the Freano State basketball team during their catastrophic weekend . of non- basketball: They found out what e was to do in Barstow on a snowy Friday - absolutely nothing. Rather than conjuring up waya 10 contain Roscoe and Clifton Pondexter In the scheduled PCAA opener against Long Beach State Saturday afternoon. Coach Ed Gregory and hla Bulldogs were searching for a warm place lo sleep In the middle of the Mojave The 'Dogs and the 49ers, however, weren't the only ones left hurting because of the unpre- dlcted billiard that left roads impassable on the Grapevine. The contest's postponement also nixed Its regional telecast, which would have brought money to the PCAA and eachofitsinstitutions. So Fresno hoop fans Intent on watching Charles Bailey and company end Long Beach's 70- game home winning streak were treated to Alfred Hitchcock, a last-minute replacement on Channel 26. That unfortunate fata still r a distant second to Fresno State's weekend plight, a study In Mother Nature's stubborn ability to whip mortal man on any given day. No date for the rescheduled Long Beach match haa been set, so It looks aa though the two talented squads will meet for the first time February 14 In spa- clous Selland Arena! With all airplane flights out of Fresno to Southern California Carlson loses to perfect game Glenn Carlson will no longer be justV»Uhe guy who runs the bowling alley downatalra at the CU,» but he may not completely approve of the reason for his newly-found popularity Saturday. Carlson, a part-time pro bowler, qualified for the finals in the $100,000 Midas Open held In Alameda, -only to lose to a perfect 300 game by eventual third place finisher Jim Stefan- Stefanlch'a dramatic performance was the third 300 In the 15-year history of the Professional Bowlers Association, and he needed much of that amazing score to defeat Carlson, who manages the bowling lanes at the Fresno State College Union. ' and Stefanlch roll five consecutive strikes, before the Fresno I resident broke his string In the sixth. His fine 243 score would head encounters, but could hardly match the twelve straight big ones rolled by Stefanlch. Carlson, his slow but graceful approach to the foul line not Intimidated by television Jitters, received fourth-place prize money. Stefanlch, on the other hand, pocketed $10,000 from abc-TV for his unblemished Unescore. plus anewautomoblle. This does not Include his $6,000 third place winnings. Dick Rltger of Hartford, Wisconsin, eventually won the tournament by defeating veteran. Bob Strampe it waa the Detroit- based Strampe who dumped Stefanlch In the semi-finals. More trouble for49ers Cal State Long Beach found Itself without a basketball opponent Saturday afternoon, but they will get all the attention they need for the next three yeara from the National CoUeglate Athletic Association (NCAA). An Associated Preaa atory thia morning in the Los Angeles Times says that both the Long Beach State football and basketball teams have been placed on Indefinite probation for no leas than three years by the NCAA. The NCAA haa cited 26 violations regarding Us constitutions bylaws by Long, Beach. elded to head f< relief. Although the It. and were able to bed down In a motel at 3 a.m. The team reportedly made it back to Freano some time yesterday afternoon, now knowing that there la aomethlng In this world that might Indeed be worse than . matching blows with the 49ers in Long Beach. Meanwhile In Long Beach, no.. ~ "" the CSUF entourage real- •d the i r with It The of a three-day NCAA t Uon In San Francisco, where the Long Beach recruiting controversy was to be discussed. The sudden exits of 49er football coach Jtm Stangeland and successful basketball mentor Jerry Tarkanlan several months ago Initiated speculation of alleged recruiting violations regarding certain athletes In the two sports. booked solid, the basketball learn leftiorLong Beach early Friday morning in a caravan of three station wagona. LitMe did they know that the Interatate 5 Ridge Route had been cloaed six hours before, and here la where the 'Saga of the Game That Wasn't* begins. Gregory, upon phone advice from Athletic Director Gene Bourdet, decided to take his Chance8 with theTehachept overpass which would lead the club through the Mojave Desert to Barstow. It would be the long way around, but the possible options were quickly being suffocated by the rapidly falling snow. Equipped with too-small tire chains that were fitted with coat- . hangers to work properly, the wagona finally reached Boron tn Kern County, where Gregory de- Friday night. Upon hearing that the TJogs were stranded, Sports Information Director Tom Kane went to work with the Job of notifying the key people Involved of the developments. Kane had arrived In , Long Beach earlier by plane. It waa not long, however, before a decision waa reached to j postpone the' game. An alternative plan to reschedule the match for Saturday night waa rejected. The 49ers were going into the game fresh off their conference- opening 93-76 victory over Cal State Loa Angeles Thursday. In that one Clifton Pondexter meshed nine of 14 from the floor for a game-high 20polnte, pacing the ninth-ranked -Ntnera to their tenth season win against one de- That one loss suffered by Long Beach came In early December at the hands of the University of Colorado, an 80-70 victim of Fresno State last Thursday. The Buffalos are still feeling their lumps from PCAA opposition, having been edged by powerful UC-Santa Barbara Saturday. Instead of having one conference game behind them, the Bulldogs must cope with the Gauchos Saturday night at Selland. Freano will go Into that key confrontation with a 9-1 mark, featuring victories overTexasTech, Colorado State, and a championship in the Daffodil Classic. SALES & SERVICE! QUALITY BICYCLES, H0WEB,| EWERS, YAM VACUUMS Pretciiton tool Sharpening ALL SALES B SERVICE FULLY GUARANTEED. Came tn and acquaint yourself with oar expert tftt. We are- !ookfna< forward to meeting you. . Ye Ole English Cydery-Mowery BULLARD A FIRST 5717 North 1st 431-1542 fc F1MT Ol TVS OOVOI ntoprato CDTfll MOVE IN TODAY — RENT STARTS FEB. 1 COLLEGE GREEN APTS.a 102 units ^5 across from CSUF. Rental office corner of Barton & Shaw. • REDUCED PRICES • NEW MANAGEMENT • COMPLETELY REDECORATED UNITS • STUDENT LOUNGE • PLENTY OF STORAGE • COVERED PARKING AVAILABLE • MONTHLY SKI BUSES LARGE 2-BEDROOM, 1-BATH FURNISHED & UNFURNISHED 47.50 PER PERSON FURNISHED > 42.50 PER PERSON UNFURNISHED SEE TERRY ARGYLL TODAY!
Object Description
Title | 1974_01 The Daily Collegian January 1974 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1974 |
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 | Jan 7, 1974 Pg. 2-3 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1974 |
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 | Here we go again The President has done It again. We suppose it could be expected but the more optimistic of us somehow believed Nixon would see the little charade he has been playing for the last year and a half was not being bought. We were wrong. Watergate will continue to be tho Nixon nemesis as long as the man Is allowed to remain In office. For the country's sake, we hope It's The recent shun of the Senate committee's demand for presidential papera and tapes Is but another Indication of Nixon's unwillingness tp get to the bottom of the crimes at Watergate. We believe this Is because, If the bottom Is reached In the affair, Richard Nixon will be found firmly bound to 118 floor. This time Nixon hss told us the committee's demands are tantamount to "an overt attempt to Intrude Into the executive to a degree that constitutes an unconstitutional usurpation of power." There he goes again, hiding behind the Constitution.. V the President It Is also unconstitutional to obstruct Justice, criminals and tamper with evidence. While we cannot be absolutely sure Nixon is protecting M Haldeman, Ehrllchman, Stana, etc. or that he had Ihe 18- tape break arranged or that he arranged for the dlsappearanci crucial tapes, we can be certain he Is not making any kind certed effort to try to dissuade us from leaning In What he Is doing Is hiding his unwillingness to solvi.- the lems Watergate presents to this country by throwing up screen of constitutionality. It's a good trick most of the time because It usually dm side all the rednecks who adhere to the "My Coui theory. A lot of Ancient Romans were like that. Nixon figures with these people on his side (there an n Judging by his election plurality) he will no peached. That the country may suffer irreparable damage > cooperate with Investigation appear* to - Cloud actors which through nuclear "We should try to bypass fission and the breeder gather," although Its development Is i problematical right now.* Cloud called the government's reaction to the < of -too little, too late," voluntary limitations ON CAMPUS TODAY An exhibit of Chinese art dating from the nth century will be on display in the Art Building Gallery from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. The exhibit is valued at $150,000 and ia sponsored by an art history class. . - The Merchant of Venice" will be presented st 3 p.m. In Industrial Arta 101. The program la . .being directed by Terry Miller. The Executive Committee ot the Academic Senate will meet at 3 p.m. in Thomas Administration 117. Three faculty members of the Music Department at CSUF will perform 'Gestures and Interludes II" composed by Dr. David Bates, CSUF assistant professor of music, at 8 p.m. In the Music Building Recital Hall. The organization, Social Qualifying Exam, will meet at 8 p.m. inCU 309. The College Union Board will meet at 3 p.m. in CU 308. The board will select a new chairman for next semester. Gary Kinsey and Thomas Hill have been nominated for the position. Dr. Henderson C. Yeung will give a talk entitled 'Symmetry, Quantum Mechanics and Croup Theory* at 4 p.m —=—<-«»-< ence 209B. Mm., Jm. 7, 1974 THE DAILY C0LLE6IA* 3 i. in Social Set- 'Kaiser Bill' wins regional title The . cast of "Kaiser Bill and the Grand Parade,* an original musical by CSUF Professor Edward EmmanuEl, have been n by regional judges to statewide competition In the lean Theater College Fes- The cast will perform before state judges In Sacramento on Jan. 25, competing against other . plays selected In regional compe- competltlon, the cast will travel to Washington, D.C. later thia year to appear in the national festival at the Kennedy Memorial Theater. Ten plays will be selected nationally by the Judges, and travel expenses for the casts will be paid for by festival officials. A , $2500 award will be given to tbe best Individual a EmmanuEl collaborated "Kaiser Bill* with Scott I :e and compiled the music for the play. The cast Includes Terry Burns, PaulBarile, Dennia Pratt, Terry Cermaky Scott Hicks, Hank Webb, Reginald Haggans, Roberta Wilson, Karen Thompson, Patsy MacDonald and Kathy McAweeny. Mother Nature does snow job on Bulldog cagers If you can believe it. there was one consolation foe the Freano State basketball team during their catastrophic weekend . of non- basketball: They found out what e was to do in Barstow on a snowy Friday - absolutely nothing. Rather than conjuring up waya 10 contain Roscoe and Clifton Pondexter In the scheduled PCAA opener against Long Beach State Saturday afternoon. Coach Ed Gregory and hla Bulldogs were searching for a warm place lo sleep In the middle of the Mojave The 'Dogs and the 49ers, however, weren't the only ones left hurting because of the unpre- dlcted billiard that left roads impassable on the Grapevine. The contest's postponement also nixed Its regional telecast, which would have brought money to the PCAA and eachofitsinstitutions. So Fresno hoop fans Intent on watching Charles Bailey and company end Long Beach's 70- game home winning streak were treated to Alfred Hitchcock, a last-minute replacement on Channel 26. That unfortunate fata still r a distant second to Fresno State's weekend plight, a study In Mother Nature's stubborn ability to whip mortal man on any given day. No date for the rescheduled Long Beach match haa been set, so It looks aa though the two talented squads will meet for the first time February 14 In spa- clous Selland Arena! With all airplane flights out of Fresno to Southern California Carlson loses to perfect game Glenn Carlson will no longer be justV»Uhe guy who runs the bowling alley downatalra at the CU,» but he may not completely approve of the reason for his newly-found popularity Saturday. Carlson, a part-time pro bowler, qualified for the finals in the $100,000 Midas Open held In Alameda, -only to lose to a perfect 300 game by eventual third place finisher Jim Stefan- Stefanlch'a dramatic performance was the third 300 In the 15-year history of the Professional Bowlers Association, and he needed much of that amazing score to defeat Carlson, who manages the bowling lanes at the Fresno State College Union. ' and Stefanlch roll five consecutive strikes, before the Fresno I resident broke his string In the sixth. His fine 243 score would head encounters, but could hardly match the twelve straight big ones rolled by Stefanlch. Carlson, his slow but graceful approach to the foul line not Intimidated by television Jitters, received fourth-place prize money. Stefanlch, on the other hand, pocketed $10,000 from abc-TV for his unblemished Unescore. plus anewautomoblle. This does not Include his $6,000 third place winnings. Dick Rltger of Hartford, Wisconsin, eventually won the tournament by defeating veteran. Bob Strampe it waa the Detroit- based Strampe who dumped Stefanlch In the semi-finals. More trouble for49ers Cal State Long Beach found Itself without a basketball opponent Saturday afternoon, but they will get all the attention they need for the next three yeara from the National CoUeglate Athletic Association (NCAA). An Associated Preaa atory thia morning in the Los Angeles Times says that both the Long Beach State football and basketball teams have been placed on Indefinite probation for no leas than three years by the NCAA. The NCAA haa cited 26 violations regarding Us constitutions bylaws by Long, Beach. elded to head f< relief. Although the It. and were able to bed down In a motel at 3 a.m. The team reportedly made it back to Freano some time yesterday afternoon, now knowing that there la aomethlng In this world that might Indeed be worse than . matching blows with the 49ers in Long Beach. Meanwhile In Long Beach, no.. ~ "" the CSUF entourage real- •d the i r with It The of a three-day NCAA t Uon In San Francisco, where the Long Beach recruiting controversy was to be discussed. The sudden exits of 49er football coach Jtm Stangeland and successful basketball mentor Jerry Tarkanlan several months ago Initiated speculation of alleged recruiting violations regarding certain athletes In the two sports. booked solid, the basketball learn leftiorLong Beach early Friday morning in a caravan of three station wagona. LitMe did they know that the Interatate 5 Ridge Route had been cloaed six hours before, and here la where the 'Saga of the Game That Wasn't* begins. Gregory, upon phone advice from Athletic Director Gene Bourdet, decided to take his Chance8 with theTehachept overpass which would lead the club through the Mojave Desert to Barstow. It would be the long way around, but the possible options were quickly being suffocated by the rapidly falling snow. Equipped with too-small tire chains that were fitted with coat- . hangers to work properly, the wagona finally reached Boron tn Kern County, where Gregory de- Friday night. Upon hearing that the TJogs were stranded, Sports Information Director Tom Kane went to work with the Job of notifying the key people Involved of the developments. Kane had arrived In , Long Beach earlier by plane. It waa not long, however, before a decision waa reached to j postpone the' game. An alternative plan to reschedule the match for Saturday night waa rejected. The 49ers were going into the game fresh off their conference- opening 93-76 victory over Cal State Loa Angeles Thursday. In that one Clifton Pondexter meshed nine of 14 from the floor for a game-high 20polnte, pacing the ninth-ranked -Ntnera to their tenth season win against one de- That one loss suffered by Long Beach came In early December at the hands of the University of Colorado, an 80-70 victim of Fresno State last Thursday. The Buffalos are still feeling their lumps from PCAA opposition, having been edged by powerful UC-Santa Barbara Saturday. Instead of having one conference game behind them, the Bulldogs must cope with the Gauchos Saturday night at Selland. Freano will go Into that key confrontation with a 9-1 mark, featuring victories overTexasTech, Colorado State, and a championship in the Daffodil Classic. SALES & SERVICE! QUALITY BICYCLES, H0WEB,| EWERS, YAM VACUUMS Pretciiton tool Sharpening ALL SALES B SERVICE FULLY GUARANTEED. Came tn and acquaint yourself with oar expert tftt. We are- !ookfna< forward to meeting you. . Ye Ole English Cydery-Mowery BULLARD A FIRST 5717 North 1st 431-1542 fc F1MT Ol TVS OOVOI ntoprato CDTfll MOVE IN TODAY — RENT STARTS FEB. 1 COLLEGE GREEN APTS.a 102 units ^5 across from CSUF. Rental office corner of Barton & Shaw. • REDUCED PRICES • NEW MANAGEMENT • COMPLETELY REDECORATED UNITS • STUDENT LOUNGE • PLENTY OF STORAGE • COVERED PARKING AVAILABLE • MONTHLY SKI BUSES LARGE 2-BEDROOM, 1-BATH FURNISHED & UNFURNISHED 47.50 PER PERSON FURNISHED > 42.50 PER PERSON UNFURNISHED SEE TERRY ARGYLL TODAY! |