March 6, 1973 Pg. 8- March 7, 1973 Pg. 1 |
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• THE DAILY OOLLBMM Tu**s*a>, ACLU calls for an end to military Vietnam gag order I 1972 Lamont prize CSUF poet honored By Alison Mundy Stan Writer CSUF English professor P first volume of poetry. 'Collecting th* Animal*,* Ih* 1972 Lamont Poetry Selection of Ihe Academy of American Poets. The purpose of th* Lamont award la lo •discover and en- can poet publishing hla flrat Asked about hla poetry, Evwr- wine said. •! wouldn't begin to describe 11. To describe one's own poetry presumes thai you can stand back from It and look •I'm not socially minded; ln aad tan eneral, my poems are more prl- Ueiey, aad to hla sons Chris to- ate, they hsve a sense of soil- ptvsr andDavld.Ev.rywlrse'ssons "**. ar* lha subjects of several of hi* •Moat of th* minis 1 feel vary poena: Kverywine translated durlltf hi* year's slay In Mexico. The poems are selected from *ln the House of Light, ■ a book of A 'tec trans- la I Ion* he published ln I MO. mala which Inhabit It: occupation with my work. If any- Kverwlne's poel relationships between people. •Novelists ar* concerned with people,' he said, citing Saroyan as an example. -I have no novel- •That probably aaya something about my fife.' he said. *If you're simple at leal - the ifv-ai that go evading us . . . prlmttlv* and elemental about lrKi rjul t'resno.* he said. -It'* not eery where exciting socially, which fosters th*y a« *o ijulsH th*y are merely can of why he lives.* duclve to writing poetry.* to CSUF professor Phil l.evlne intm yourself Across the nation •. • OLEEGIAN CALIFORNIA STATE UNIVERSITY. FRESNO s Trustees request reasons for possible sale of Ratcliffe Duck, ihe daughier of missionaries who spent Ihelr lives work- life. Her serond novel. "The Cood Earth,' earned her the Pulitzer prl.-f In 1931. She was awarded the Nobel In 193B. Much of her lime waa spent In charity work, especially lo aid Amer- Aslan children. MUM KIP HUH II. I In violation of the Paris peace agreements, the North Vietnamese have rebuilt a US Marine im. US officials claim. Secretary of Stale William P. Rogers said yesterday In announcing the completion of the demlnlng of Haiphong Harbor he was confident 'al least as far as military operation* war* ISM \\ III MtlNNI ll \ I ION Mure than 100 Indiana of Tuscarona tribe rioted In dot I. N.C. last Hik ing police cars. Th* group was demonstrating Ua aympalhy for the Indiana al Wounded Knee aa wall as protesting Ihelr own lack of Involvement In civil decisions. the Department of General Ser- nr*s io continue appraisal work on the stadium. He said the gen. aral services department should Hrophy expressed doubt lhal the $1 million sale price quoted for the stadium Is actually that high. The figure Is the only estimate received by the university. Poor seating accommodations. Inadequate parking arrangements, improper drainage fixtures, poor lighting towers snd a blow last December when students rejerled Ihe committee's •straw vote,'a preliminary measure that aaked each student to tax himself $3 per semester over a 25-year period. The committee hilled the proposed student contribution al a cost of $1 million: however, including the Interest of the 25-year period the ing and off-set revenue Brophy made the requ« week during a meeting Board of Trustees' on Campus Planning. Building and Grounds He aaked that* CSUF answer the questions at the committee's next meeting (March 27 and EE) In Los An- g*I*s. Brophy reportedly said h* waa not necessarily against th* 1*1* of Ratcliffe. but questioned whether th* decision to 4*11 Ratcliffe may have been premature. •Th* delay hasn't been harmful to th* university, "said Wampler. 'We, frankly, had asked that it he put on th* March 27-28 been listed by a campus steering committee for a new stadium as primary reasons for selling Rat- cliff* Stadium. •Th* number one reason why Ratcliffe Stadlun whether the university could raise private funds necessary to build a new wad wa could raise money for a n*w aald Gene Bourdet. director of stadium on campus that would provide s*atlng accommodations {or approximately 24.000 would coat S3 million. Th* commlttee'sorlginalplans called tor tha stadium to gain needed funds from three areas: th* sale 04* Ratcliffe Stadium, Community College District (SCCCD) would probably rent the stadium It) tba university for a nominal fee if SCCCG were to 1 the committee , fund drlv*throughthacommltt**. . Wampler said lhat $24,000 has 'been Indicated as tha stadium's dperatlng coat, but hss not Hated Eco-Center needs your materials Th* 1970's have been termed the Environmental Decade. t*f* was to be a decade whan we would put pollution ln lis plac*. But In 1973, It'* apparent that CSUF students either never heard the news or once lha glamor wore off, Ihey forgot IL la caae you hadn't noticed (and It's apparent many haven't), CSUF now haa Ita own I The ci Ing an attendance of 15,000, the flgur, for the two-month period ar* downright embarrassing. That I and one part-time volunteer can handle th* full load now being tlal to keep 10 people working around th* clock. malarial* ar*n't th*r*. Th* Administration baa cooperated generously. W* now have a larger area la which to w-o^Thay hav* provided ua with ae. —i to tnicka so necessary tar tta epereltooof tio* <o»oter. la center to BOW open a total of 44 hours s month. It *cc.| CSUF Recycling Cent.r
Object Description
Title | 1973_03 The Daily Collegian March 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 | March 6, 1973 Pg. 8- March 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 |
• THE DAILY OOLLBMM Tu**s*a>,
ACLU calls for an end to
military Vietnam gag order
I
1972 Lamont prize
CSUF poet honored
By Alison Mundy
Stan Writer
CSUF English professor P
first volume of poetry. 'Collecting th* Animal*,* Ih* 1972
Lamont Poetry Selection of Ihe
Academy of American Poets.
The purpose of th* Lamont
award la lo •discover and en-
can poet publishing hla flrat
Asked about hla poetry, Evwr-
wine said. •! wouldn't begin to
describe 11. To describe one's
own poetry presumes thai you
can stand back from It and look
•I'm not socially minded; ln aad tan
eneral, my poems are more prl- Ueiey, aad to hla sons Chris to-
ate, they hsve a sense of soil- ptvsr andDavld.Ev.rywlrse'ssons
"**. ar* lha subjects of several of hi*
•Moat of th* minis 1 feel vary poena:
Kverywine translated durlltf hi*
year's slay In Mexico. The poems
are selected from *ln the House
of Light, ■ a book of A 'tec trans-
la I Ion* he published ln I MO.
mala which Inhabit It:
occupation with my work. If any-
Kverwlne's poel
relationships between people.
•Novelists ar* concerned with
people,' he said, citing Saroyan
as an example. -I have no novel-
•That probably aaya something
about my fife.' he said. *If you're
simple at leal - the ifv-ai
that go evading us . . .
prlmttlv* and elemental about lrKi rjul
t'resno.* he said. -It'* not eery where
exciting socially, which fosters th*y a« *o ijulsH th*y are merely
can of why he lives.*
duclve to writing poetry.*
to CSUF professor Phil l.evlne intm yourself
Across the nation •. •
OLEEGIAN
CALIFORNIA STATE UNIVERSITY. FRESNO
s
Trustees request reasons
for possible sale of Ratcliffe
Duck, ihe daughier of missionaries who spent Ihelr lives work-
life. Her serond novel. "The
Cood Earth,' earned her the
Pulitzer prl.-f In 1931. She was
awarded the Nobel In 193B. Much
of her lime waa spent In charity
work, especially lo aid Amer-
Aslan children.
MUM KIP HUH II. I
In violation of the Paris peace
agreements, the North Vietnamese have rebuilt a US Marine
im. US officials claim.
Secretary of Stale
William P. Rogers said yesterday
In announcing the completion of
the demlnlng of Haiphong Harbor he was confident 'al least as
far as military operation* war*
ISM \\ III MtlNNI ll \ I ION
Mure than 100 Indiana of
Tuscarona tribe rioted In dot
I. N.C. last Hik
ing police cars. Th* group was
demonstrating Ua aympalhy for
the Indiana al Wounded Knee aa
wall as protesting Ihelr own lack
of Involvement In civil decisions.
the Department of General Ser-
nr*s io continue appraisal work
on the stadium. He said the gen.
aral services department should
Hrophy expressed doubt lhal
the $1 million sale price quoted
for the stadium Is actually that
high. The figure Is the only estimate received by the university.
Poor seating accommodations.
Inadequate parking arrangements, improper drainage fixtures, poor lighting towers snd
a blow last December when students rejerled Ihe committee's
•straw vote,'a preliminary measure that aaked each student to
tax himself $3 per semester over
a 25-year period. The committee hilled the proposed student
contribution al a cost of $1 million: however, including the Interest of the 25-year period the
ing and off-set revenue
Brophy made the requ«
week during a meeting
Board of Trustees'
on Campus Planning. Building
and Grounds He aaked that*
CSUF answer the questions at
the committee's next meeting
(March 27 and EE) In Los An-
g*I*s.
Brophy reportedly said h* waa
not necessarily against th* 1*1*
of Ratcliffe. but questioned
whether th* decision to 4*11 Ratcliffe may have been premature.
•Th* delay hasn't been harmful to th* university, "said Wampler. 'We, frankly, had asked
that it he put on th* March 27-28
been listed by a campus steering
committee for a new stadium as
primary reasons for selling Rat-
cliff* Stadium.
•Th* number one reason why
Ratcliffe Stadlun
whether the university could
raise private funds necessary to
build a new wad
wa could raise money for a n*w
aald Gene Bourdet. director of
stadium on campus that would
provide s*atlng accommodations
{or approximately 24.000 would
coat S3 million.
Th* commlttee'sorlginalplans
called tor tha stadium to gain
needed funds from three areas:
th* sale 04* Ratcliffe Stadium,
Community College District
(SCCCD) would probably rent the
stadium It) tba university for a
nominal fee if SCCCG were to
1 the committee , fund drlv*throughthacommltt**.
. Wampler said lhat $24,000 has
'been Indicated as tha stadium's
dperatlng coat, but hss not Hated
Eco-Center needs your materials
Th* 1970's have been termed the Environmental Decade. t*f*
was to be a decade whan we would put pollution ln lis plac*. But
In 1973, It'* apparent that CSUF students either never heard the
news or once lha glamor wore off, Ihey forgot IL la caae you
hadn't noticed (and It's apparent many haven't), CSUF now haa
Ita own I
The ci
Ing an attendance of 15,000, the flgur,
for the two-month period ar* downright embarrassing. That I
and one part-time volunteer can handle th* full load now being
tlal to keep 10 people working around th* clock.
malarial* ar*n't th*r*.
Th* Administration baa cooperated generously. W* now have
a larger area la which to w-o^Thay hav* provided ua with ae.
—i to tnicka so necessary tar tta epereltooof tio* |