Feb 6, 1973 Pg. 4- Feb 7, 1973 Pg. 1 |
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a) THE OAILV COLLEGIAN Tuesday. February 6. 1973 DOUG HANSEN'S MADCAP MARITIME MAMMALS' —*■"■>■- '.IksaUjKMIf FBI seeks informers reflections Smiling faces movement1 is c/ead Hjr Steve Soriano [n j9*57 Timothy Lm*ry and j coupji of his rotViria, who had proclaimed themselves* trie lean1- »--• of the "hippie movement, " f*ot (of ether In San F r mid bco and ■officially" Mir fed thai movement . The production was Latter. an expensl v» bUcjt rofllfi, hun ■ rlreds of flowers. t*ead» and poetitr. and never a1 rho<uan<1 T-iourners I.»ary ilellvered a tr»ar jerklne euloey praiJiIni* hlo ;rte.*. for brlntfinf love into the varoi-ld and nniri'ir tr.** cori'mon per ftnnrioad. Hill -..eld 1 eary, ft.*" world ha*, lead r-'iougfi *»/ ihr iT'Ov-ement. an*1 .v> It »Hs Mmp *t. rnjry U T'»day tn 19*73. following In ■'.«* fo*if *H*»|M» tjf I **a ry _ [ hjyf pro claimed myself Ihf lea'Jer of .1 n'ovfrrtf-n' ilir "smllltit. nap-.*. 1*<-f niove>m*»nr_ ** and I now maki* a ve»rv ImporlatU ..ii.iOUnr*»n,«Mi' itt»» *.i,«lllriff haepfiy fare niovf-ncnl i* PKAI I htirled ir -hi!, morn I'lK ■ i'i turf (nt* Mtilllnt *..»,.11\ Ctrl' r.a*. ifcji.r its juii hrl-wln*. I*i*«* Int.- Iht* wi)j |rl and urM'tr^ Ihe iOld mon personho-td, hut e-rOti|rt, was enoufrr. All rhost* •.ayltif-n at-tHJr ta*>atlriK a |t»MMf horSf ItltO Ihe ft OUIrll. leacfitnt* \?*c point i»f dlmlnishlni: re-turn*, and too mu-'h (»f a (food (Mm:, wit** nn- apfdyltie* tturn - •jt-lvrt <i. thf lliMltuHon .tf .he* «. ml ling happy face, (■: very where you looked, the? happy face was smiling at you Smiling fart? cup*, glasses, note- hooks, pencils, pillows, r*ed- •heeti and t-edspreads. Smiling face posters, buttons, waichcs, di-rals. stlrkrrs there was no A mold Welbtj was us In** the smiling happy fart* and Its "have a nice, day* Slogan 10 spII Honda cars and SuturuA, Frederick* was .••••win'* the smiling far*- on ttt* crotches <if their racy under wear and on tr.** rips (,t their t-r asslerea, San r ranclsco Mi Ipt-er s had thrown away their i. strings and tansies and had replaced then w.'fi smiling hap|ry fare pasties r v*s>ii .* local fMiufrh hail palnto* a giant happy fare tin the* OiU'tOOl placard M used (« adver ti*.e the t| ii>»«*. of Its woi ship Sl<rklrri And as if all that wasn't erKHii*tif •jpUnlei (frt'Upf, iTfan f*»f minic. Snn<e ofl«wnla]s »'f>l \OfiPtln*: and pfirdwed a tup|'\ fa'e with *»la>ii e'l <•.'*'., Scunc ttiiert surfers Irs Sani^ i ru/ ifo. ft(k-v*thi*f .trul |i|n rr-'-r.^! .i happ) fa« »• *»[Kii I In,, a f-n.'i win. the •..ivln.*. •Have .< ■ i app> .lav." ^ihI .. iletneiitml [ii Intri snti'**wT.ere i an (iff hm rlrealw of wlnklliaf »Mp|i*t fai*«*S tt ut ifur i niT vin-a-thl'ii; at-fnii Iijn In a- a rip C n.*M |l ej.i prodaMy Ihji -.in .' niliitfi *'>•< wniild 'Hit rcofitinued from Paf* 1) FBI. at least none that I know of, ■.til early December when B*-ck CaJled me at the Dally Colle-flan Office "Mow come you're not living where you said you would0" he Uked. I had (old him I was going to be livlnir with a certain friend and neck wanted to know his whereabouts A*i always, he spoke In a friend ly manner and asked few llrer. rjuns'inn.*.. Our Ins Ihe converse. tlon, I didn't volunteer ihe Lnfnr matltj*-; he was obviously seeklnic. [Miring the next few wt>eks. I heard nf other people who hail been appn.ached by Beck to bo riiifp inforrT-ers for the bureau. These, of course, had turned Mit ... . Jown but It was ] n'possihle to MIA, never had a nlr*? day ,. _ determine 'hose who had ae*i**-d It was a nightmare There wa*. ». ti. -» - ».._ * '«> cooperate talk or a happy face movie series which would produce such gems l decided I lldn'i have enough a«: (roodbye Mr. Happy Nrr, Information iu write n* story, Mr Happy Face goes to Wash ..,, on !>ec. 23. 1 called heck and Ington. Ftapt-y Face Meet* King arranged for a meeting thai Kong and even Beneath the Planet moi nlng nf the Happy Faces, I hjtl >)nr ,fm,(. rr>a#Jr,h whJ It was getting entirely nut of round thai the courts had no! yft hand. Something had to \m if,,,,. Jetem Ine-i ihe validity of ronfl and something wa* done This morning, after I Nad pin r|Aimed myself the gran.] guru of Ihe smiling happy farf* n'Ovt* ment, ] sprav painted an old *<h<»e hoi tslack, lined If with ll*.sue paper gen(l) plared a happi race glass Inside II and < U»se<1 the lid I 'i-iiri rh«* shoe u*x r.ifflr out to a leej. hole r had lug In my bark vard a»d, in tr.e- presern *■ of a shovel I officially buried the smiling happy fa* *■ n n»ernei-' and all 'he idiocies Uiat "ni witi I'. M la rwi longei rhp f.. !e *\vi . Ute-l with the happy f f»»r n>ent. H*. append ag***>. l*»gtr*. . -r Slogan* The smiling happ, !ji «■ -• .*■ men' 1*1 dead \la* I' i e*l |. p«*.it '• N if if el II Pi m - Lassen County offers scholarships I as sen (mint. \s of f e i l ng r resno State Sfiideiits scholar ■hips totaling $1 ?0f). If^e l.aasen i nunly Cowitelles will trake three awarda ■■■■<■'. n each to atudent* from ranching Tan I lies The money n>a)r he used fot any field of siixlv the reclpt enl chOuaea ( me scholarship of $f>on is also available, hui la llmlied to those n ajorlng in agrlculiure or home economics All applicants will be person ally interviewed and lodged on the i .le^-t March l |* rhe appli line Interested atoileni*. should mv I Uudla Mm i iMifi in the } inancia] Aids office or write Mrs. Hetty Johnson, Scholarship ,'hjijni.n. I.assen ( ounty C owbelles. Susan vllle calif •n;\^<i m*m*mk*0a%wk%*m ijentuHty statemenls. 'A *• met in ihe parking lo' T* •il*yl the Fashion r al r *.hopplng center \ gain he di nve the rust. . oloi ■•*! A mhassaitoi. k,f'<'i folnlng Heck In his car. I told him | had decided to SU'ti fie Jocun-enl and T-ecome an In home. '- "aal'l n> leclslon *a> latgeh financial. He "ai!. ■: think I know wM ,.mi Ilsfn '* -4iil to sign the Slate n,e-' before Von wanted 'o write .1 *.1..r i aleml vuur art|i|tirft.* ad-r ltre*l I hi 1 roi.sMeied Ml I'l'lg MK'l .1 Mj't \ Irttl lol I hill : • ail . hanged tvf n tract. He. a sabl, "Y- ■'. hi...**. if . ..i, .-,.-! ii j *rite in. ' -i -.*. -i . ,iU>(,r I'd*-, II Would rj.,5.' all •*....'a of ; r nhlerr-s. 1 might *,ft a redu< (Ion ►sswavajBBiajajBBjp^BSIjajBajaWa. SPECIAL NIGHT FOR THE LADItES AT THE HAYLOFT LOUNGE EVERY WED., THURS., FRI 4 P.M. til 7 P.M. - f HAYLOFT COCKTAIL LOUNGE 6187 N. BLACKSTONE (Just north ol Bullord] t»awsj)ejTejee»>av«*m CUP HERE INOT GOOD FOR TAKE OUT ORDERS) ELEVEN OPEN 24 HRS. CEDAR-SHAW i if': »*iJ*J^..KXi ^^ M.-n-s L\^jl4irts»^'*V/ \ E T C « VCUR BUCK AT Me-N-Ed's >' \\\\\ THIS COUPON WORTH wan i adj 2 BR turn, across Dorms $135 or $43 per ptrion. 439-6481 < Lewt: L-nt SsJr flr-e/ katrewe in *ua Ctty JJsr-al taat rtrare. ftO rewejrtl. tSSS t. Staff Ifetw*, a««. 0, TOWARD THf PURCHASE OF ANY GIANT PIZZA That s Mr - Me-N-Eds PIZZA PARLOR GOOD AT ANY ME-N-ED's S iAVE $ SAVE S SAVE S SAVE S SAVE S SAVE $ SAVE J I in pay and maybe even a disciplinary transfer. ■If that happened, I would have no qualms about having you eliminated," he told me almost matte* -of-factly. I asked him what he meant by eliminate He slowly pointed his right index finger at his tempi- and drew back his thumb In the manner of cocking a pistol. "You know, eliminated." He brought h15 thumb quickly forward and said, "Ka-plowle.* After this last meeting. Beck was to check with his superiors to get permission to use me as an Informer "T * PLAY GOLF '/><■ /|aTnme of m titrlln-.r ■ FIG GARDEN GOLF COURSE "-'...t all v.-'.r sjolt «-.,ii'r—■<*r\t stl LOMBARDO GOLF SHOP f 7700 N . Vo n Ness' USED CLUBS at all prlcpn SLACKS Iw SI J STUDWT GOLF RATE WEKK HAYS A r T S » 1IJ0 P U SPECIALS CANVAS BAG 05* -"yr-ij book5 m %nW NAVY pw BOnOMS ■* STYROFOAM PELLETS lor beon bag chairs AIR FORGE SUN 979 GLASSES A ( orr-Dlete sc'ectiori of ARTIST MATERIALS 20% DISCOUNT ■w /» on rvrrythinq. Canvas - brushes 'racric*, - oil S ARMY & NAVY CLOTHING WOOL -£, SHIRTS 3 SHREDDED FOAM 50*1 RUBBER JACKETS $093 Ss <• ui ALL STYLES WAR SURPLUS DEPOT 602 Broadway 237-3615 Lost and Found Office: 'Many unclaimed items' By BUI Follttt Staff Writer Have you lost your yellow. a-reen-Mlled cap with patch Inscribed: 1971 Tomato it Melon shippers Golf Tournament? Or ho* about your ten-speed** What about your Bold Alpha Kappa Psl fraternity pin'1 If you've lost these or any one at a couple hundred other eoodles you mteht Inquire at the campus lost and found located IntheState I diversity Police offices on Bar- stow Avenue Downs of card- r-oard boxes stacked In the cor- [ioration yard hold various lost ,i!"l found articles which have T'e-.-n plllru; up for nearly two v e a r a Many of Ihe Items are marked ..'.th names yet the owners eliher tiave not been contacted or for sm-po reason decided not to pick up their belongings According to Officer F!d Cheek .. new policy now requires that ihe owners be notified If an aril rle marked with a name is '(Hind. But much of the material wTiich la still being stored **■■ found before this policy went Into effect and some owners evtdently were never notified. Foremost in the number of found articles are text books and notebooks. Binders with the following names written Inside hive been found within the past few months and can be claimed at the police office: Robert A. Trlppel, Jeanle KsaJLan, Jerry Martin Brown, Leon Stanglln and Steve Carter. Neither the above list nor any of the following ones should be considered complete, as the articles are too numerous to mention them all. J. H. Rowe's English hook,Ted Marchlnt's business law book, Maurice Van Gerpen's "Major Foreign Power,* Steve lkeda's ■Introduction to Business,* and Jeff Wooten's •College physics" are among the most recently found books. There are several sets of gym clothes (one with handball gloves); about a half dozen pairs of glasses; wrist watches (including a girls" Mickey Mouse modeli, rings tone Is a lOfifl high school mode .-belonging to someone with the Initials B. S. and th* first letter of the school Is p); dozens of sets of keys and 14 umbrelUs among the recently foundltems. There are also several jackets, coats, shawls, sunglasses, slide rules and clipboards. According toCheek the articles are kept in the office for six months and then boxed and stored. Blue Key Honorary Service Fraternity has traditionally been given the items to be sold on campus. Proceeds from the sales are used for scholarships and charity. Last year Blue Key auctioned unclaimed bicycles and raised more than $400. The smaller items are usually placed on tables tn the Free Speech Area and sold to students. Blue Key Is reportedly planning another sale sometime within the next month. State law prohibits the material from being thrown away. When asked whal percentage of the material is eventually (Continued on Page 4, Col. 3) VSEUNESOAY. FERMUAHY T 1971 toe _^_J OLLEGIAN 1 CALIFORNIA STATE UNIVERSITY. FRESNO SARAGOZA ON OEO Nixon's 'political mistake' By Hon {irozco ^|> Staff Writer \W*sander Sarajco/J, Coordlna- •■ r of -.Sir's La Kau Studies I'-ogreim, said yesterday the ['«>m<H"ratic party must gather -..ipl-orr to override president N Lion'a choice to dlsri>anrle t htr- ifflce of Economic Opportunity saragou .ilso said Nixon made j "political mistake* when he hose to eliminate federal funds Un otto, a cornerstone of the late President Lyndon Johnson's * teat Society." OEO, an antl- ;«.*e*ty agency, cannot operate ♦ I'tiiioi federal financial leader- -.hip [■emocratlr leaders recently '■t-.arged Nixon with breaking the law roncernlng his decision to l.-.solve OEO funds. The state's -outpoverty directors are also • urrently lobbying the state's • 'niteresslonal delegation to save the program "The legislature Is the ultimate say as to where the funds will be distributed," saidSaragoza."The [democratic Party must get enough support and override the President It definitely will come rlown to a partisan issue. "Nixon has made a political mistake. He feels that he has the people's support. But this support Is just apathy because It (OEO) does not concern them. The overwhelming majority of people In this country are not poor. Because of this, most people have an uncaring attitude about the poor," he said. Saragoxa felt lhat If Congress was unable to override Nlion, local governmental agencies would not continue the antlpoverty programs under other types of federal grants. •No. I don'l see local government being effective liecause of the OEO dismantling. What OEO revealed was lhat today's social Issues had an economic and political origin. Because this fact was exposed, there was a reaction of local government against OEO. It was just Intolerable for the people In local government," said Saragou. Suragoza said lhat OEO had more failures lhan successes because "the funds were being channeled through groups that were not grassroots. "Too much money went Into (Continued on Pace 2. Col. 3) SAC staff sign-up schodulod this week Students who wish to staff the Student AdvlsementCen- ter :SAC) for the fall 1973 semester should sign upthls week. Contact Bob Klttredge or Ralph Sigala (Extension 2732, Room AD 224 of the Counseling Center). About 100 students conduct small group-orlentatlon sessions and provide an Information-advisement service during registration wa k each semester. All students on campus are invited to apply. t»hoto by P.ul Kurod. PL EASE PICK UP your lost Items! Sophomore Bev Newton, clerk In the CSUF police office, holds a pair of * m e I I y tennis shoes which are amono. hundreds of Hems stacked in the campus lost and found. items may be claimed at police department on Rarstow Avenue. UPC defeats proposed MSA salary schedule Ily John Peckler .staff Writer Members of Unlied Professors of California (UPC) are re)olr- Ing over the Initial defeat of a new salary schedule lor faculty o( the CSUC system. The proposed Merit Salary Adjustment (MSA) provided for a review of professors prior lo almost every promotion durlnR their careers and has been a "pet scheme of Chancellor Glenn S. Dumke since the 19G0's.' UPC opposed the new salary schedule since It was adopted by the Hoard of Trustees In 1070, and was Instrumental In killing the new salary structure even though it had lieen Implemented throughout the CSUC system since last July. ■We managed to slop this scheme at the elevenlh hour," said UPC president Dr Arnold Mechanic. *We believe that we have performed no more Important service to the faculties in the history of this union." * Mechanic acknowledged thai Ihe MSA was resisted by all organized faculty groups In the state Including the slate wide academic senate. All CSUF faculty groups supported a local academic senate referendum opposing the proposed salary schedule which passed by a 401-80 vote. The proposed MSA required as many as 17 additional faculty and/or administrative reviews to decide if a faculty member should he (ranted wllhln-rank salary- step Increases. The old salary schedule, which will remain In effect, granted de facto salary- step Increases although advancement through the ranks of Instructor , assistant professor, assistant professor, full professor and the granting of tenure are based on Intensive merit reviews. Faculty groups questioned whether the proposed MSA would receive adequate funding lo advance each deserving faculty member routinely and the sort of criteria which would be used In (Continued on Page 4, Col. 1) /' Mobley sponsors bill to make student body fees voluntary A bill has been. Introduced In the State Assembly which, if passed, would make tha payment of the $10 Associated Student Body fee voluntary. Currently, all students automatically pay the $10 fee at registration. The bill. Introduced by Assemblyman Ray E. Johnson of Butts County sod co-sponsored by a number of other assemblymen, Including Fresno Assemblyman Ernie Mobley, would 'prohibit Imposition of any mandatory student body organization membership fee." The bill would also limit the amount of voluntary membership fees to no more then $20 s ysar. It would delete a portion of Section 23801 of the Education Code which makes payment of student body fees s prerequisite to enrollment In any state university or college. Payment of the presently mta- dstory $10 fee entitles s CSV Fresno student to membership In the FSC Association. This mem bership entitles thewtudent to admission to all association activities 'subject to available seating and conditions ss sst down by the Board of Directors,* participation In college activities sod swards, a dally copy of the Dally Collegian sod a yearbook. CSUF student body president Lupe De La Crux said he la opposed to the bill. He said he is la favor of student elections to determine If ASB fees should be Imposed. The required fee can currently be changed by a student vote upon presentation to the president of the college a petition containing the signatures of 20 per cent of the regularly enrolled students at the college. Student government activities are funded solely through the ASB fee. De La Crux ssld if th. fee becomes voluntary, the trustees of Ihe stste university and college trtttni sod th. stmts legislature would determine whst association activities would receive fop priority.
Object Description
Title | 1973_02 The Daily Collegian February 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 | Feb 6, 1973 Pg. 4- Feb 7, 1973 Pg. 1 |
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 |
a) THE OAILV COLLEGIAN Tuesday. February 6. 1973
DOUG HANSEN'S MADCAP MARITIME MAMMALS'
—*■"■>■- '.IksaUjKMIf
FBI seeks informers
reflections
Smiling faces movement1 is c/ead
Hjr Steve Soriano
[n j9*57 Timothy Lm*ry and j
coupji of his rotViria, who had
proclaimed themselves* trie lean1-
»--• of the "hippie movement, " f*ot
(of ether In San F r mid bco and
■officially" Mir fed thai movement .
The production was Latter.
an expensl v» bUcjt rofllfi, hun ■
rlreds of flowers. t*ead» and
poetitr. and never a1 rho |