May 14, 1970 Pg 8- May 15, 1970 Pg 1 |
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Y COLLEGIAN^. Ttniradsy. Msy 14, 1970 League track fest starts tomorrow Intramural spike meet today One hundred and seventy Ave of the finest track and Held athletes of the West wlU compete, Friday and Saturday, ln the 2nd Annual pacific Coast Athletic AssoclaUon Championships ln Fresno State CoUege's Rat- cUffe Stadium. San Jose State's team, a national track power, Is the favorite to win top honors In the meet for the second straight i Fresno State 3000 as a possible dark horse. FSC has meet victories, during this season, over PCAA members CSCLB, University of CaUfornla at Santa Barbara, University of the Pacific, and Cal State at Los Angeles. Every league record on the books will be threatened by the high quality of competition. CompeUUon will get underway Friday morning at 11 o'clock with five events of the decathlon. Finals scheduled for Friday will be run at 6:50 p.m., the steeplechase, the triple Jump and hammer throw; and at 8:50, the six mile run. During the evening, heats and semi finals, as needed, will be be held. Starting at 7:15 p.m., finals ln the field events are scheduled. A full program of running events will get underway at8:00o'clocl<. Admission will be $1.75 for adults, $.75 for high school students and children. An open Intramural track meet will be staged this afternoon at 3 p.m. on the FSC track. CompeUUon ls open to aU male fraternities, dorm teams or independent squads that wish to compete. The only requirements are that two participants be available d that n person can compete ln m four Is required for the running of the 440 and mile relays. The field events, whlchlnclude competition ln the shot put, discus, broad (long) Jump, triple j and high Jump, will also be- Klnal The r will s h the Golfers enter PGAA tourney A scenic view of the Pacific Ocean and the staggering scene setting of the 1970 Pacific Coast Athletic Association champlon- Thlrty-slx holes of golf will be played today on the Berntham Wood and Valley Club golf cours- of Southern California, Cal State- Los Angeles (a PCAA team) and Stanford University will probably mler golf tournament of the season. The Bulldogs, with a good performance at the PCAA tour- hopefully will be battling to out teams from Oregon and hlngton for one of the other The PCAA championships will, ln part, help determine one. or possibly two, of the golf teams that will receive an Invitation from a three-man National Collegiate Athletic Association committee to compete In the NCAA championships ln Ohio next Oregon, Idaho and Washington state areas will receive applications to attend the June 22-27 FALL LEASING Married Couple only Contact Manager, 2067 E. Shaw, or Phone 224-4642 e NCAy The NCAA tournament will start off with 32 teams competing which are selected by the NCAA committee from eight districts In the nation. Six of the districts Washington andldahostateareas, according to Coach Pape. Washington," Pape stated. Last year FSC received an Invitation to attend the NCAA tour- allow the team to 8-9) Southern intercollegiate tournament played on the Tory pines golf courses ln San Diego. (The Tory' Pines courses are ern sections and ls the annual site for the professional golf tournament, the Andy Williams San Diego Open.) Twenty-seven schools were In the competition. The LA State wood and Irons men had a team score of 578 FSC's (592) fifth place finish. USC was second (534), and UCLA third (587). The LA State 120 yard Intermediate hurdles and the shot put at 3 p.m. Other events ln track competition will follow at ten minute Intervals. In field competition the discus throw will Immediately follow the shot put competition. The broad jump will start at 3:00 and will be followed by the triple jump. High jump competition will start at approximately 4:00, according l of S i lu-Ai- FSC's (592) fifth place finish. At the Southern Intercollegiate tournament FSC's team round average was 74 with Steve Culver carding the I I PCAA championships r the FSC golf coach Larry Pape 1 thought our n did n sort of hurt our prestige when they turned us down. This year, If we are selected, our team will Coach Pape said he expected Los Angeles, San Jose and possibly Santa llarbara (because the championships will be played on with the-Bulldogs le !,■.>•...■ WANT ADS SUMMER EMPLOYMENT - excellent opportunity college men. Above average earnings. Part- time work available toyouduring college term.Car nee.Interviews held at 3:00 or 4:00 P Al. SHARP Report to student placement office Rm 262. New Administration Bldg. Will trade 4-barrel carb. manifold from 302 V8 Cougar for 2- barrel carb A manifold. 487- 2391/227-8123. SENIORS! 2 positions open for -career Ins. Agents. Training <S expenses supplied. Parttlmelns. Reps, for campus may also apply. Please contact Mr.,. Tognletti or Mr. Bannister at 227-5335. ■LA State Is the favorite,however,* Pape said, "because of their strong team all the way down the line plus their fine All- Amerlcan golfer Boh Clark.* The Dlablos, If they win, could 71-1-1 Panlccla, Culver, Bob Eberle and Gary Christensen. Coach Pape said either Dick Rudolph, Dennis Burns or Jerry this year.) FSC's recor against other eludes a victory over LA State. San Jose, which' including Terry Moster, Steve Bonn and John Adams, tied the FSC llnksmenwnenl earlier ln the year atSanJose. •This conference we are ln Pape said, "ls extremely with talent and almost any four teams ln the league could win the league title. Our chances are good It Panlccia and Culver can shoot some low rounds and The champion of the meet. If a fraternity, dorm or Independent team ls entered, can use the points gathered to go for a trophy which will be awarded ln the dorm, fraternity and Independent sections.'The three groupings have participated ln several football, volleyball, soflball, badminton, etc., throughout the Competition In archery ln FSC Tuesday and Wednesday will con- Anderson slated that'tbe archery event will not be for a team point trophy but rather as Just good open competition. Contestants will shoot 15 arrows at a 24 Inch target from 40, 30 and 20 yards away. Points will be based on five for a bull's-eye and three for a touch of the second circle of the target. Competition ln Softball ls continuing with many of the races ln the Independent, dorm and fraternity leagues coming down to playoffs this week. Two playoff games ln the Independent section were played yesterday between GDI and the Tule Rlber Boys and BHAC meeting the GDI (number two) team. Re- avallable at press time. Last Thursday the lr badminton competition ci with a fraternity team (ThetaChl number four) composed of Robert Stephens and Tom Kerhs winning the doubles fraternity competition. An Independent team composed of Ron Deaver and Greg Hall won the overall volleyball championship. The dorm champs were James Frazler and BUI Wllklns. In the Intramural handball competition Rene Errotabere and Steve Schaaf (Sigma Alpha Epsl- doubles competition. Mexico 70 PUEBLA STUDY PROGRAM LA State w o-day(May LA h For the perfect graduation gift visit . . . IvicDoTiald's Jewelers THE IDEA STORE For traditional and modern erfect prices too! Citizens for Peace will march * tomorrow; lend boycott support and Freedom, Doug Broten, Fresno State CoUege professors Richard Keyes and Bob Allison, Louie Valdez, Director of El Teatro Campaslmo, and individuals from the Fresno Resistance. Seventy students from FSC, Fresno City College, and area high schools will patrol the area as marshals. There wUl be a meeUng at 8 p.m. tonight at the CoUege Y "to Ue up the loose ends,* stated march coordinator Vincent Lavery. ■I feel the parade will not only Include students,* he remarked, "but business and professional men. I beUeve their participation will be due to the statement made by the President of. Bank of America that the economy of the (ConUnued on Page 3, Col. 1) The Fresno Federal Building wlU be the site of a peace march starting at 11 a.m. tomorrow. A brief press conference wlU be conducted before the march begins. A spokesman for Citizens for Peace said, "which Involves national nonviolent civil disobedience on a given date.* The march will leave the Federal Building at 11:15 a.m. and proceed to the mail to lend support to the West Fresnans boycott. From the mall the march wlU go to the Court House, where several speakers will be heard Those scheduled to speak are Kay Camp, President of Women's International League for Peace Two blacks killed, others wounded at Jackson State FRESNO STATE COLLEGE. FRESNO CALIFORNIA Daily Collegian FRIDAY, MAY 15, 1970 Senate supports reorganization plan The controve College appears well on Its way to being broken up. Yesterday the FSC Academic Senate voted 48-26 ln a mall ballot to break the school Into three new and ed by Acting President Karl L. Falk. The resolution approved yesterday was proposed by Dr. PMUp LEGS-An FSC ( ;oed dances to the delight of onlookers 1 0 the haunting beat ot four dr urns In the Free Speech Area. The dr part of a 12 m. m group from New York stranded on th* West Coast. The event was staged to raise money for the drummers to aid In their return home. Photo by Don LeBaron. Beach and approves reorganization with the stipulation that the faculty and departments directly Involved ln the breakup be consulted as tothelrplacementwithin the new schools. The upcoming campus restructuring will divide the School of Arts and Sciences into independent schools specializing ln the areas -6t fine arts, humanities and (Continued on Page 3, Col. 4) By The Associated Press A barrage of police gunfire killed two Negro men and wounded five others today as they stood in front of a women's dormitory at predominantly Negro Jackson State CoUege ln Jackson, Miss. It was not Immediately known whether the victims were students. City police and state troopers had gone to the campus to Investigate complaints from passing motorists that rocks were thrown at their cars. Students said the rocks had been thrown by nonstudents. The deaths brought to six the number of persons fatally shot since protests erupted last week on the nation's campuses over President Nixon's decision to send U.S. troops into Cambodia. Four students were shot to death early last week during a confrontation with Ohio National Guardsmen at Kent State University. Guard officials said a sniper had fired first but students disputed the report. Witnesses ln Jackson today said the policemen confronted a crowd of men standing ln front of the dormitory and opened with a 7 to 10 second barrage after hearing a sound Uke a shot or a firecracker. Neither police nor the college Issued a statement on the shooting or the cause of the rock throwing. There has been discontent on the campus for some time, with many students claiming too many blacks are sent to Vietnam Immediately after graduation. After the shooting, students screamed at the policemen from windows of other dormitories while students ln front of the MEETING FOR CIVIL LIBERTIES UNION Students Interested ln forming a permanent chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union on the Fresno State campus are Invited to attend a meeting next Tuesday night at 7:30 p.m. ln College Union room 30D. Organizers of the chapter also urge all those who helped form the ACLU ad hoc committee at FSC come to sign the charter. building dropped to the ground L. Globs, 21. He said autopsies to take cover. would be performed. National Guard troops ln ar- . A^*L " per,0« *•» mored persccn^ <£r?er. with gg** jg, »»***«? — .30-caUber machine guns on top ££?E££!! !2 J***" "" moved on to the scene on the *** * hU*way, ^rdmm who ^jSZtmTSS, sa* Hinds County Coroner B. R. somebody shot but it was just a BUlock Identified the dead as bottle. It made a popping sound James Earl Green and PhllUp when It hit.* Insight under fire for 'false prefer.se' soliciting CoUegian Staff Writer The Department of Journalism's weekly lab paper, Insight, came under Are yesterday by the Board on PubUcaUons for allegedly soUcltlng advertising under 'false pretenses* and misrepresenting itself as a student body publication. The board, by a 5-2 vote, passed a resolution Introduced by board chairman Dan Safreno charging Insight with 'garnering advertisements without the cooperation or approval of either the Senate Board on PubUcaUons ' or the Office of Information and Printing.* The resoluUon also charged, •There have been numerous Instances where the staff ... of Insight have garnered advertisements under false pretenses . . . not stating that they were not members or representatives of the Dally CoUegian staff. 'Insight ls a lab paper of the Department of JournaUsm and should not: (1) solicit advertising; nor (2) represent itself as a student body publication but rather as an Independent departmental publication." The resolution further stated that the methods of advertising procurement employed bylnslght were 'economically damaging to the Dally CoUegian.* The board urged Insight to maintain the -essence of a lab paper" by no longer soUcltlng advertising. It said Insight should rely Instead upon Independent grants and departmental funds. The board also urged Insight to identify Itself clearly in its ban- the Department of Journalism.* Gary Daloyan, Senator for the School of Professional Studies and a member of the board, attacked the resolution asserting It had "little or no basis for consideration.* He said Insight la a separate entity of the journalism department and the board bad no Jurisdiction over It. Safreno told the board members that Wilbur Pauls of the Printing and Information Office had told him advertising representatives of Insight bad on certain occasions posed as soUcltors from the Dally CoUegian. Pauls also allegedly charged that Insight representatives had told some potential CoUegian advertisers they represented *the school paper* or had shown advertisers copies of the Chicano special editions of the CoUegian ln an attampt to play on their racial and ethnic prejudices. Pauls was not present at the board meeting. Safreno told the board the existence of the Dally CoUegian as a student body publication was •threatened." He said U present practices by the JournaUsm department were not curtailed, the Collegian may be "dead" a year or two from now. Chuck Dick, of the Community Relations Offlce, differed with those on the board who blamed Insight for the Collegian's economic woes. He said what was really hurting the Collegian was its editorial policy. The chairman of the journal- (Contlnued on Page 3, CoL 1) Military establishment's ability to wage war hit by anti-ROTC drive (Editor's Note: This ls the conclusion of a two-part series on ROTC programs at coUeges ln the United States. Written by researchers at the pacific Studies Center, it ls reprinted from the Stanford Chaparral.) During Wdrld War II, more than 100,000 ROTC graduates served as commissioned officers ln the Army. But four-year ROTC training program was found to be too slow and Officer Candidate Schools on mlUtary bases were estabUshed, as ln World War I, to assure the rapid training of officers. Since the Korean War the number of officers produced by ROTC has consistently exceeded the output of Officer Candidate Schools. Nevertheless, ROTC recruitment had lagged by 1964 to the point where the mlUtary realized something had to be done. The ROTC VitaUzatlon Act Ot 1964 was designed to make tbe program more attractive. It Included, among other measures, such •material incentives* as a pay dltlonal four-year program. F ull - tulUon scholarships were offered to cadets. The curriculum was broadened to Include more courses ln disciplines other than Military Science. More recently, the Army has begun a two-year program which permits a student who haa two years of coUege remaining to quaUfy for the advanced course by attending and completing a six- week basic summer camp. A big recruiting drive started for the two-year program, aimed at graduate students who were threatened by the draft. These measures helped to keep ROTC enrollment at a steady level up through the 1966-67 school year with 266,000 students participating. During the next year, 1967-66, however, enrollment fell 12 per cent to 234,000. Last year, the number of students participating declined another 9 per cent to 213,000. PreUmlnary samplings for the current year totals 250, down from 346 last year. Last fall, the Army managed to sign up only six freshmen. Army ROTC holds their own only by Importing students from nearby junior coUeges. What lies behind the fact that ROTC ls declining despite the fact that it offers substantial' •material Incentives?" First, students are gambUng that they wlU not be taken from the draft pool this year for mlUtary service. In other words, students are taking their chances with the draft rather than enroU- lnglnROTC. ,. Second, ROTC enrollment ls falling at schools mat have made ROTC voluntary rather than mandatory. When the regents at Art- Arizona State universl- ellm lated ROTC this year, tbe nomber of freshmen and sophomores ln the program skidded from 5,412 !c reason why ROTC has fallen on hard times. Student struggles be- j against tbe pro- «f on Page 3, Cat. I)
Object Description
Title | 1970_05 The Daily Collegian May 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 | May 14, 1970 Pg 8- May 15, 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 |
Y COLLEGIAN^. Ttniradsy. Msy 14, 1970
League track fest starts tomorrow
Intramural spike meet today
One hundred and seventy Ave
of the finest track and Held
athletes of the West wlU compete, Friday and Saturday, ln the
2nd Annual pacific Coast Athletic AssoclaUon Championships
ln Fresno State CoUege's Rat-
cUffe Stadium.
San Jose State's team, a national track power, Is the favorite to win top honors In the
meet for the second straight
i Fresno State 3000
as a possible dark horse.
FSC has meet victories, during
this season, over PCAA members
CSCLB, University of CaUfornla
at Santa Barbara, University of
the Pacific, and Cal State at
Los Angeles.
Every league record on the
books will be threatened by the
high quality of competition.
CompeUUon will get underway
Friday morning at 11 o'clock
with five events of the decathlon.
Finals scheduled for Friday
will be run at 6:50 p.m., the
steeplechase, the
triple Jump and hammer throw;
and at 8:50, the six mile run.
During the evening, heats and
semi finals, as needed, will be
be held.
Starting at 7:15 p.m., finals
ln the field events are scheduled.
A full program of running events
will get underway at8:00o'clocl<.
Admission will be $1.75 for
adults, $.75 for high school students and children.
An open Intramural track meet
will be staged this afternoon at
3 p.m. on the FSC track. CompeUUon ls open to aU male fraternities, dorm teams or independent squads that wish to compete. The only requirements are
that two participants be available
d that n
person can compete ln m
four Is required for the running
of the 440 and mile relays.
The field events, whlchlnclude
competition ln the shot put, discus, broad (long) Jump, triple
j and high Jump, will also be-
Klnal
The r
will s
h the
Golfers enter PGAA tourney
A scenic view of the Pacific
Ocean and the staggering scene
setting of the 1970 Pacific Coast
Athletic Association champlon-
Thlrty-slx holes of golf will be
played today on the Berntham
Wood and Valley Club golf cours-
of Southern California, Cal State-
Los Angeles (a PCAA team) and
Stanford University will probably
mler golf tournament of the season. The Bulldogs, with a good
performance at the PCAA tour-
hopefully will be battling to
out teams from Oregon and
hlngton for one of the other
The PCAA championships will,
ln part, help determine one. or
possibly two, of the golf teams
that will receive an Invitation
from a three-man National Collegiate Athletic Association committee to compete In the NCAA
championships ln Ohio next
Oregon, Idaho and Washington
state areas will receive applications to attend the June 22-27
FALL LEASING
Married Couple only
Contact Manager,
2067 E. Shaw, or
Phone 224-4642
e NCAy
The NCAA tournament will
start off with 32 teams competing
which are selected by the NCAA
committee from eight districts In
the nation. Six of the districts
Washington andldahostateareas,
according to Coach Pape.
Washington," Pape stated.
Last year FSC received an Invitation to attend the NCAA tour-
allow the team to
8-9) Southern intercollegiate
tournament played on the Tory
pines golf courses ln San Diego.
(The Tory' Pines courses are
ern sections and ls the annual
site for the professional golf
tournament, the Andy Williams
San Diego Open.) Twenty-seven
schools were In the competition.
The LA State wood and Irons
men had a team score of 578
FSC's (592) fifth place finish.
USC was second (534), and UCLA
third (587).
The LA State
120 yard Intermediate hurdles
and the shot put at 3 p.m. Other
events ln track competition will
follow at ten minute Intervals.
In field competition the discus
throw will Immediately follow
the shot put competition. The
broad jump will start at 3:00 and
will be followed by the triple
jump. High jump competition will
start at approximately 4:00, according
l of S
i lu-Ai-
FSC's (592) fifth place finish.
At the Southern Intercollegiate
tournament FSC's team round average was 74 with Steve Culver
carding the I
I PCAA championships
r the
FSC golf coach Larry Pape
1 thought our
n did n
sort of hurt our prestige when
they turned us down. This year, If
we are selected, our team will
Coach Pape said he expected
Los Angeles, San Jose and possibly Santa llarbara (because the
championships will be played on
with the-Bulldogs le
!,■.>•...■
WANT ADS
SUMMER EMPLOYMENT - excellent opportunity college men.
Above average earnings. Part-
time work available toyouduring
college term.Car nee.Interviews
held at 3:00 or 4:00 P Al. SHARP
Report to student placement office Rm 262. New Administration
Bldg.
Will trade 4-barrel carb. manifold from 302 V8 Cougar for 2-
barrel carb A manifold. 487-
2391/227-8123.
SENIORS! 2 positions open for
-career Ins. Agents. Training |