October 2, 1970 Pg 4- October 5, 1970 Pg 1 |
Previous | 7 of 61 | Next |
|
|
This page
All
|
Loading content ...
THE DAILY COLLEGIAN Fr Where is champs' power? Three home events Saturday By Paul Smith The four Eastern and Western division champions of theAmerl- can and National leagues (Baltimore, Minnesota — Pittsburgh and Cincinnati) have, at least, by past performances ln the hitting, gorles (as far as winning league championships) leave a little bit to be desired. The three categories have been charted since 1901. The figures below do not reflect the 1970sea- natted ln championships ie club's formation, e Bird's Robinsons (Frank Brooks) have captured all Frank Robinson has three of e four Utles with his Triple ■own sweep during the 1966 Football, cross country and soccer will be on tap for the Fresno State fans tomorrow. Darryl Rogers' grldders head the slate with an Important PCAA game ivalUOP. Game time ls i. ln R untry . named PCAA "players of the conference running lead Gary Caropreso, who 11 snd ln the PCAA s r Cummlngs, Defensive are llneme: Cleo McCut. er. Tom Flanagan leads the line- heads the defensive secondary. The probable offensive lineup announced by head coach Darryl TE Lyle Buckert. 225 TG Pervi Martin, 203 C Lee Munson, 208 SG Sieve Verry, 218 IT Bob Martin, 220 ST Marshall Doris, 225 SE John Sexton, 180 FL Gary Boreham, 160 RB Henry Woodson, 179 FB Gary Caropreso, 190 QB Karl Francis, 190 and ln the defensive lineup: LE Jack Fisher, 215 LT Cleo McCutcheon MG Dallas CaldweH, RT Elmer Cummlngs, 211 ?:.'. ■ wnmrn Mgr. Ph. I $145. It mo, 5'35. $44 per mo. per man, 4 m-ji rate. 1 2-Bdrm apt. avail. Coral Garden Apartments 1310-1320 E. San Bruno. Dick Walker, Mgr. Tastefully furn. Swimming pool w/carpeted sundeck. PH. 227- 5137 after 5 PM.. Part furn. 2 BR House, Bui It-Ins Manchester Shields area $90 per mo. Reference required. Write L. Borgardt, 1204 Carrell Lane, RE Gene Hanson, 201 LB Tom Flanagan, 210 LB Bob Mejlas, 215 GB Ben Davis, 190 CB Dwayne Crump, 19C FS Carl Ray Harris, l: SS Jay Hawkins, 175 i 1964 v istheot d-ln The Fre: team will e OSt.lli The 46th meeting between the Tigers and the Bulldogs Saturday night will feature two of the top of a leg Injury. Estes expect; Soccer coach Boli Ber malne Playground man The Bulldogs will be looking WEEKEND SPORTS - S A TIRII A Y FOOTBALL-University o( the Pacific vs Fresno State at Rat- (PCAA game) CROSS COUNTRY-Cal Poly of San Luis Obispo vs Fresno State at Woodward Park (.No. of Fresno near the San Joaquin River) SOCCER-F io Stat v.si-'re 55 for Complete Collects Call 465-4821 For Appointment Hours 7:30 a.m. - 3:30 p.m CALIF. BLOOD BANK FOUNDATION 412 F Street - Fresno 3:30 r and UOP 6-0. The probable starting lineup will be: goalie. Bill Walzberg; right fullback. Al Ci fullback, zaven Shlrlkjlan; left fullback, Nicholas Fralre; right halfback. 1 halfback, Rad McCord; left back Kenneth Wong; Fernando Ollveira: inside right, Eric Avenstedt; Inside right, Haakon Roestad, and outside department. The leading teams lnthe American League fdfeach of the three categories are theDetroltTlgers (23 batting titles); New York Yankees (24 te crowns) and the Yankees again ln RBI's with 18 league title wln- tltle with a .332 average which was the highest average. Detroit's Norm Cash hit .361 In 1961. In the National League the Western Division winner, Cincinnati, has won 15 titles ln the three categories (eight batting championships, three home run titles and four RBI crowns) with Pete Rose the last Red player, before the 1970 season, to capture one of the three categories. Rose won a narrow victory ln the batUng race for the 1969 sea- Prior to Johnny Bench's home run explosion this year, the Reds' last round trip leader was Ted Kluszewskl ln 1954. Kluszewskl also has the last Reds' RBI league title. The Pirates have done a Uttle better down through the years. Pittsburgh leads all other contenders ln the batting title race with 18 such glory years. In all the Buccaneers have won or tied r 31 t n the tl a great deal In the SUN STEREO ,STUDENT OWNED) Fresno's most complete STEREO CENTER .■Components "Tapes "Records ■Accessories "Posters Come Inl Let us talk to you about Stereo! "*~ OPEN DAILY 10AM-10PM CEDAR & ASHLAN SHOPPING CENTER / PH: 224-7444 The little man (S) who wasn't there %f QUESTION BOARD ACTIONS By D. R. jSafreno Collegian News Editor The Fresno Guide admitted ln ihls morning's edition that Michael de Angelo does not exist. In an article which carried de Angelo's by-line Itself, It *as admitted that de Angelo was md ls a 'ghost writer*, I.e., i ficticious name. sponse to charges made by the jally Collegian that de Angelo *as a "figment of Guide editor maglnatlon.* this The entire controversy over the existence of de Angelo came to a head last Friday when Gary Dee of radio station KMAK held an open forum on the topic. At tha} Ume, two people claimed to be de Angelo, one person claimed to be de Angelo's wife, and the Editor of the Guide claimed that de Angelo was ln Los An- On Sept. 12, according to a story that appeared In the Guide under the de Angelo by-line, the non-existent reporter was an eye-witness of the events that- took place during the disruption ,of reglstraUon at Fresno State Daily Collegian MONDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1970 THE 'FRESNO 500* BICYCLE MARATHON was residents of Fresno State College Phase II men's last until Thanksgiving vacation, the 24-hour qircl Quadrangle will be accomplished by 30 cyclists The L.cycle, donated by Green's Cyclery, will ben vated while in motion. As of press time this mt have covered about 700 miles. lunched Friday by tall. Scheduled to igofthe Commons Objection to special editions filed by student senators State College Student Senate have lodged a formal obJecUon with First Vice President Nat DIBuduo over actions taken by the Board on PubUcatlons Thursday ln approving four more special editions for the Dally Collegian. The objection was to DIBuduo by Robert Cate, Senator for the School of Professional Studies, and Mark Zumwalt, senator for the School of Humanities. The filing of such an taken by the Board on PubUcatlons will be reviewed by the senate at this week's meeting. *"* Review by the senate of board actions requires that two senators file an objection with the First Vice President within two school days after a board meeting. The formal objection was handed to DIBuduo Friday. The senate can overrule the board or refer Ihe matter back to the slderatlon of the Board on Publications' decision* al their Oct. 1 meeting, the senate can approve or disapprove actions taken by the board. ■The decision concerning the addition of four more special editions of the CoUegian needs examination. Some of those who were approved stated they will carry no advertising ln their editions, thus endangering the Collegian as a whole. The decisions and formed proper guidelines aa to who should and should not have a paper. Priorities must be de- The Board on PubUcatlons voted Thursday to approve special edlUons for women's Uberatlon, foreign students, athleUcs, and the FresnoStateCoUege Theatre. The black and chicano edlUons were granted at the board'sSept. 24 meeUng. They wlU be pub Ushed every Men and chlcanos alternating every The Freeno State CoUege Theatre edlUons wlU be pubUshed three times a year, women's UberaUon once during tbe academic year, and foreign students and athleUca once every two weeks ln the form of a tour page insert Inside the regular eight- page edlUons of the paper. I by tl LEO GALLEGAS Is one of two chicano st petition petition drive urging students not College President Dr. Norman A. Baxter' dents heading an antl- to back Fresno State policies and actions. Zumwalt said, *I think theStu- dent Senate should decide finally whether or not the CoUegian should be split into unrelated parts for the sake of special Interest groups.* .Terry Stone, second vice president, said the situation now surrounding the Collegian ln terms of the special editions was *ab- •It's time somebody s Anti-pet'rtion petition drive started An antl-petition peUUon was released Friday urging students not to back Fresno State College president Dr. Norman A. Baxter's policies and acUons. Last week a peUUon was Initiated by Carl Hedstrom, a senior geography major, backing the actions and efforts of Baxter. In response to this peUUon, two chicano students, Leo Gal- legas and Cres Hernandes, began circulating a peUUon Friday which stated that Baxter did not have the support of the student The peUUon reads: «We the undersigned who beUeve ln nonviolence, beUeve that through Norman Baxter's acUons and inactions, he ls the one person who ls most responsible for the actions that came about Sept. 12, 1970, at registration.' Gallegas aaid, I'm not really for such peUtlons as these concerning Baxter becauae they wU further polarize the campus. I'm doing this becauae Baxter didn't and won't come out against the polarizing primary peUUon.* Reinstated students charged with breaking campus rules Four students suspended and reinstated by Fresno State College President Dr. Norman A. Baxter for alleged participation ln the Sept. 12demonstration, are now being charged with violating campus rules. Acting Dean of Students Dr. Deryle K. Allen would not specify what campus charges the four face but if convicted the penalties range from a reprimand to expulsion. The accused are Carol Bishop, Julius Brooks, Jr., Steve Santos and Richard Nieto. The students will probably be charged with obstrucUng or disrupting the educational process and physical abuse of coUege property. They also face Municipal Court charges of 'causing a disturbance on a state coUege campus* and 'maUclously obstructing the free movement of the public' by blocking the e to the Men's Gym during registrations Miss Bishop also faces a charge of battery. Notification of the charges against the students appeared ln a memorandum sent to faculty members and student body leaders ln which Baxter said the college 'cannot tolerate* disruption on the campus because'the backlash ls greater than the college •We, the college, are not geared to cope with sporadic outbreaks and riots. If these continue to ' happen, the university will be torn beyond repair. It seems to me that the task of all those who love academla, bothon and off campus, ls to make sure the university continues to func- Uon free from the kinds of Influence that wiU destroy it,* he said. Baxter said that the coUege cannot be a -political football* kicked from one side to the other, •We cannot repeatedly caU poUce. We cannot erect walla. We cannot put up barriers. We cannot control thought. AIT these are Intolerable and unthinkable, but we must find a means whereby we can accommodate change ln a way that will allow the university to continue Its role as a poUtl- cally neutral Institution, not bent on propagandizing, but determined to. further the educaUon of youth for the purpose of their development. •I want you to know, however, that until we learn to accommodate change without unlawful dls- rupUon and | violence/ I folly Intend to use any and all effective measures of prevention of disturbances as weU as prompt dlsclpUnary procedurea for those Involved, both students and faculty.*
Object Description
Title | 1970_10 The Daily Collegian October 1970 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1970 |
Description | Daily (except weedends) during the school year. Microfilm. Palo Alto, Calif.: BMI Library Microfilms, 1986- microfilm reels; 35 mm. Vol.1, no.1 (Feb 8, 1922)- |
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, 35 mm. |
Technical Information | Scanned at 600 dpi; TIFF; Microfilm ScanPro 2000 "E-image data" |
Language | eng |
Description
Title | October 2, 1970 Pg 4- October 5, 1970 Pg 1 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1970 |
Description | Daily (except weedends) during the school year. Microfilm. Palo Alto, Calif.: BMI Library Microfilms, 1986- microfilm reels; 35 mm. Vol.1, no.1 (Feb 8, 1922)- |
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, 35 mm. |
Technical Information | Scanned at 600 dpi; TIFF; Microfilm ScanPro 2000 "E-image data" |
Language | eng |
Full-Text-Search | THE DAILY COLLEGIAN Fr Where is champs' power? Three home events Saturday By Paul Smith The four Eastern and Western division champions of theAmerl- can and National leagues (Baltimore, Minnesota — Pittsburgh and Cincinnati) have, at least, by past performances ln the hitting, gorles (as far as winning league championships) leave a little bit to be desired. The three categories have been charted since 1901. The figures below do not reflect the 1970sea- natted ln championships ie club's formation, e Bird's Robinsons (Frank Brooks) have captured all Frank Robinson has three of e four Utles with his Triple ■own sweep during the 1966 Football, cross country and soccer will be on tap for the Fresno State fans tomorrow. Darryl Rogers' grldders head the slate with an Important PCAA game ivalUOP. Game time ls i. ln R untry . named PCAA "players of the conference running lead Gary Caropreso, who 11 snd ln the PCAA s r Cummlngs, Defensive are llneme: Cleo McCut. er. Tom Flanagan leads the line- heads the defensive secondary. The probable offensive lineup announced by head coach Darryl TE Lyle Buckert. 225 TG Pervi Martin, 203 C Lee Munson, 208 SG Sieve Verry, 218 IT Bob Martin, 220 ST Marshall Doris, 225 SE John Sexton, 180 FL Gary Boreham, 160 RB Henry Woodson, 179 FB Gary Caropreso, 190 QB Karl Francis, 190 and ln the defensive lineup: LE Jack Fisher, 215 LT Cleo McCutcheon MG Dallas CaldweH, RT Elmer Cummlngs, 211 ?:.'. ■ wnmrn Mgr. Ph. I $145. It mo, 5'35. $44 per mo. per man, 4 m-ji rate. 1 2-Bdrm apt. avail. Coral Garden Apartments 1310-1320 E. San Bruno. Dick Walker, Mgr. Tastefully furn. Swimming pool w/carpeted sundeck. PH. 227- 5137 after 5 PM.. Part furn. 2 BR House, Bui It-Ins Manchester Shields area $90 per mo. Reference required. Write L. Borgardt, 1204 Carrell Lane, RE Gene Hanson, 201 LB Tom Flanagan, 210 LB Bob Mejlas, 215 GB Ben Davis, 190 CB Dwayne Crump, 19C FS Carl Ray Harris, l: SS Jay Hawkins, 175 i 1964 v istheot d-ln The Fre: team will e OSt.lli The 46th meeting between the Tigers and the Bulldogs Saturday night will feature two of the top of a leg Injury. Estes expect; Soccer coach Boli Ber malne Playground man The Bulldogs will be looking WEEKEND SPORTS - S A TIRII A Y FOOTBALL-University o( the Pacific vs Fresno State at Rat- (PCAA game) CROSS COUNTRY-Cal Poly of San Luis Obispo vs Fresno State at Woodward Park (.No. of Fresno near the San Joaquin River) SOCCER-F io Stat v.si-'re 55 for Complete Collects Call 465-4821 For Appointment Hours 7:30 a.m. - 3:30 p.m CALIF. BLOOD BANK FOUNDATION 412 F Street - Fresno 3:30 r and UOP 6-0. The probable starting lineup will be: goalie. Bill Walzberg; right fullback. Al Ci fullback, zaven Shlrlkjlan; left fullback, Nicholas Fralre; right halfback. 1 halfback, Rad McCord; left back Kenneth Wong; Fernando Ollveira: inside right, Eric Avenstedt; Inside right, Haakon Roestad, and outside department. The leading teams lnthe American League fdfeach of the three categories are theDetroltTlgers (23 batting titles); New York Yankees (24 te crowns) and the Yankees again ln RBI's with 18 league title wln- tltle with a .332 average which was the highest average. Detroit's Norm Cash hit .361 In 1961. In the National League the Western Division winner, Cincinnati, has won 15 titles ln the three categories (eight batting championships, three home run titles and four RBI crowns) with Pete Rose the last Red player, before the 1970 season, to capture one of the three categories. Rose won a narrow victory ln the batUng race for the 1969 sea- Prior to Johnny Bench's home run explosion this year, the Reds' last round trip leader was Ted Kluszewskl ln 1954. Kluszewskl also has the last Reds' RBI league title. The Pirates have done a Uttle better down through the years. Pittsburgh leads all other contenders ln the batting title race with 18 such glory years. In all the Buccaneers have won or tied r 31 t n the tl a great deal In the SUN STEREO ,STUDENT OWNED) Fresno's most complete STEREO CENTER .■Components "Tapes "Records ■Accessories "Posters Come Inl Let us talk to you about Stereo! "*~ OPEN DAILY 10AM-10PM CEDAR & ASHLAN SHOPPING CENTER / PH: 224-7444 The little man (S) who wasn't there %f QUESTION BOARD ACTIONS By D. R. jSafreno Collegian News Editor The Fresno Guide admitted ln ihls morning's edition that Michael de Angelo does not exist. In an article which carried de Angelo's by-line Itself, It *as admitted that de Angelo was md ls a 'ghost writer*, I.e., i ficticious name. sponse to charges made by the jally Collegian that de Angelo *as a "figment of Guide editor maglnatlon.* this The entire controversy over the existence of de Angelo came to a head last Friday when Gary Dee of radio station KMAK held an open forum on the topic. At tha} Ume, two people claimed to be de Angelo, one person claimed to be de Angelo's wife, and the Editor of the Guide claimed that de Angelo was ln Los An- On Sept. 12, according to a story that appeared In the Guide under the de Angelo by-line, the non-existent reporter was an eye-witness of the events that- took place during the disruption ,of reglstraUon at Fresno State Daily Collegian MONDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1970 THE 'FRESNO 500* BICYCLE MARATHON was residents of Fresno State College Phase II men's last until Thanksgiving vacation, the 24-hour qircl Quadrangle will be accomplished by 30 cyclists The L.cycle, donated by Green's Cyclery, will ben vated while in motion. As of press time this mt have covered about 700 miles. lunched Friday by tall. Scheduled to igofthe Commons Objection to special editions filed by student senators State College Student Senate have lodged a formal obJecUon with First Vice President Nat DIBuduo over actions taken by the Board on PubUcatlons Thursday ln approving four more special editions for the Dally Collegian. The objection was to DIBuduo by Robert Cate, Senator for the School of Professional Studies, and Mark Zumwalt, senator for the School of Humanities. The filing of such an taken by the Board on PubUcatlons will be reviewed by the senate at this week's meeting. *"* Review by the senate of board actions requires that two senators file an objection with the First Vice President within two school days after a board meeting. The formal objection was handed to DIBuduo Friday. The senate can overrule the board or refer Ihe matter back to the slderatlon of the Board on Publications' decision* al their Oct. 1 meeting, the senate can approve or disapprove actions taken by the board. ■The decision concerning the addition of four more special editions of the CoUegian needs examination. Some of those who were approved stated they will carry no advertising ln their editions, thus endangering the Collegian as a whole. The decisions and formed proper guidelines aa to who should and should not have a paper. Priorities must be de- The Board on PubUcatlons voted Thursday to approve special edlUons for women's Uberatlon, foreign students, athleUcs, and the FresnoStateCoUege Theatre. The black and chicano edlUons were granted at the board'sSept. 24 meeUng. They wlU be pub Ushed every Men and chlcanos alternating every The Freeno State CoUege Theatre edlUons wlU be pubUshed three times a year, women's UberaUon once during tbe academic year, and foreign students and athleUca once every two weeks ln the form of a tour page insert Inside the regular eight- page edlUons of the paper. I by tl LEO GALLEGAS Is one of two chicano st petition petition drive urging students not College President Dr. Norman A. Baxter' dents heading an antl- to back Fresno State policies and actions. Zumwalt said, *I think theStu- dent Senate should decide finally whether or not the CoUegian should be split into unrelated parts for the sake of special Interest groups.* .Terry Stone, second vice president, said the situation now surrounding the Collegian ln terms of the special editions was *ab- •It's time somebody s Anti-pet'rtion petition drive started An antl-petition peUUon was released Friday urging students not to back Fresno State College president Dr. Norman A. Baxter's policies and acUons. Last week a peUUon was Initiated by Carl Hedstrom, a senior geography major, backing the actions and efforts of Baxter. In response to this peUUon, two chicano students, Leo Gal- legas and Cres Hernandes, began circulating a peUUon Friday which stated that Baxter did not have the support of the student The peUUon reads: «We the undersigned who beUeve ln nonviolence, beUeve that through Norman Baxter's acUons and inactions, he ls the one person who ls most responsible for the actions that came about Sept. 12, 1970, at registration.' Gallegas aaid, I'm not really for such peUtlons as these concerning Baxter becauae they wU further polarize the campus. I'm doing this becauae Baxter didn't and won't come out against the polarizing primary peUUon.* Reinstated students charged with breaking campus rules Four students suspended and reinstated by Fresno State College President Dr. Norman A. Baxter for alleged participation ln the Sept. 12demonstration, are now being charged with violating campus rules. Acting Dean of Students Dr. Deryle K. Allen would not specify what campus charges the four face but if convicted the penalties range from a reprimand to expulsion. The accused are Carol Bishop, Julius Brooks, Jr., Steve Santos and Richard Nieto. The students will probably be charged with obstrucUng or disrupting the educational process and physical abuse of coUege property. They also face Municipal Court charges of 'causing a disturbance on a state coUege campus* and 'maUclously obstructing the free movement of the public' by blocking the e to the Men's Gym during registrations Miss Bishop also faces a charge of battery. Notification of the charges against the students appeared ln a memorandum sent to faculty members and student body leaders ln which Baxter said the college 'cannot tolerate* disruption on the campus because'the backlash ls greater than the college •We, the college, are not geared to cope with sporadic outbreaks and riots. If these continue to ' happen, the university will be torn beyond repair. It seems to me that the task of all those who love academla, bothon and off campus, ls to make sure the university continues to func- Uon free from the kinds of Influence that wiU destroy it,* he said. Baxter said that the coUege cannot be a -political football* kicked from one side to the other, •We cannot repeatedly caU poUce. We cannot erect walla. We cannot put up barriers. We cannot control thought. AIT these are Intolerable and unthinkable, but we must find a means whereby we can accommodate change ln a way that will allow the university to continue Its role as a poUtl- cally neutral Institution, not bent on propagandizing, but determined to. further the educaUon of youth for the purpose of their development. •I want you to know, however, that until we learn to accommodate change without unlawful dls- rupUon and | violence/ I folly Intend to use any and all effective measures of prevention of disturbances as weU as prompt dlsclpUnary procedurea for those Involved, both students and faculty.* |