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Tueeday, February Swimmers set four records Bulldogs win 77-74 By Chuck Knox The Fresno State swimmers keep getting faster and the school records keep falling. That's the rehart from coach Ara Halrabe- more FSC aqua standards at the Gold Coast Relays this weekend In Santa Barbara. The relay team of Coleman Montgomery, Tim Ledford, Tom Ettleson and Mike McMlUen set Matmen pin Stanford 27-12 The Fresno State wrestlers easily defeated Stanford 27-12 In a home contest Friday night to snap a six-match losing streak. The Bulldogs outpointed the Indians on pins by SteveCombsand Rey Contreras plus decisions from Vic Robinson,Corky Napier. John Berg, Gene Hansen and Pat McGee. i Combs, a freshman, picked up 11 of the year at 2:56 ;, the s captain, had his pin with 2:12 remaining In the third period. Most of the FSC decision wins were by Impressive margins. Two of coach Dick Francis' freshmen came through with big wins. Berg winning 11-0and Robinson taking a 6-0 triumph. (Want Ads 12-1-1. Francis had special praise for McGee, ajunlor from Clovls. "Pat had his best effort of the year against Stanford,* Francis said, "and can really be a big help to us If he continues his Improvement. As for the team, I think we are slowly coming on.' Fresno, now 3-8 on the year, will have two outstanding opponents wrestle against them this weekend In the Men's gym. Oregon State, the nation's No. 3 ranked team, will appear Friday night, followed Saturday by another top-ten rated squad, Portland State. Results of the Stanford match: 118-double forfeit 126-Combs, F,p. Proctor, 4:04 134-Carnes. S, p. Gerry, 6:03 142-Contreras, F. p. Miller. 7:12 150—Horpel, S p. Johnson, 4:50 158—Robinson, F, d. Ross, 6-0 167-Napler, F, d. Sehultz, 8-2 177-Berg, F. d. Imrle, U-o 190-Hansen, F, d. Tollerud, 9-2 UNL-McGee, F. d. Fair, 9-6 EUROPE JET CHARTER Final score: FSC 27, Stanford 12 FUGHTS(From $268 Round-trip) Capitol International Airways Carrier. Call: Flight Chairman, (213) 839-2401, 4248 Overland Avenue, Culver City, Ca 90230 FOR SALE BY OWNER Pretty 3 bedrm home set on lovely landscaped 1/2 acre lot. Only $3,800 down to assume loan of $15,673. Payments run $146, includes taxes a ins.Phone251-4970. Students, Servicemen.Young Marrieds $200 224-4084 a mark for the 800 yard freestyle relay. Montgomery broke a record for the 400 yard Individual medley while McMlUen added the 1650 and 1000 yard freestyle events to the record book. Montgomery, a sophomore from Hanford, was selected as the college athlete of the week by the San Joaquin Valley sportswrIters and sportscasters for his outstanding weekend. Also a water polo star, Montgomery broke his own 400 yard individual medley record. The old mark was 4:45.2, Coleman swam As a member of the relay, Montgomery had the fastest leg of the 800 yard event as along with Ledford, Ettleson, and McMUlen they broke a 1967 record, one of the oldest on the books. The mark was completely shattered as the group had a 7:39.5 versus the former 7:46.1. "We expect even more fine time from Coleman,* said Hairabedian. 'Anyone who can swim the Individual medley, which is the back, breast, butterfly and shows a fine swimmer,* Montgomery said he has been swimming since he was six, and Is a graduate of Ihe A.A.U. age- group swimming program. McMUlen, a Junior from Lodl and a former athlete of the week, put on a fine performance also according to Hairabedian. Two records fell for McMUlen while competing In one race, the long (G6 LAPS) 1,650 yard free- 1000 yards at 11:05.3 to break Ettleson's old 11:06.7. His 1650 time was 18:10.8,breaklngarec- - ord of 18:49.4 previously held by Montgomery. Overcoming a cold first half, the Fresno State basketball team rallied to defeat Sacramento State 77-74 last night In Sacramento. The Bulldogs shot only 35 per cent In the opening half and fell behind 39-33 at halftlme. The Hornets at one time had a 27-11 lead. ^ Jerry Pender of FSC made a basket with only two minutes left to break a 68-68 tie and the Bulldogs led the rest of the game. r 13-7 o the year, had used their tough zone defense to hamper the Fresno offense. The Bulldogs broke tt In the second half by making 68 per cent (15X22) of their field goals. On the night FSC shot 49 per cent (27X86). Mike Hammock was the leading scorer In the game with 22 points. Fred Warner had 15 while Pender added 14. The Bullpups won the preliminary game over the SSC frosh 85-76 as Charles Bailey scored 34 points. Fresno led at halftlme 41-33. A pair of Sacramento products on the FSC frosh, Brad Duncan and Neal McCoy, had 14 and 18 points respectively in front of the hometown fans. The Bullpups play Thursday in Berkeley against the Cal frosh while the varsity takes a weekend trip to Long Beach and San Dlego. Viiif ou CuMO. Tobacco tar...nave a tu—knomutl m Blended end Imported Toboccot try our ^ . ' tlranc'jS PIPES TOBACCOS ^""nilfc * 1- j t\\nm\\\nW^^unfaaT^AOmnm%%. POUCHES MsJwtJJ-ttaWMatl Apple Jack %P^^ ^**qQf LIGHTERS Cherry 'O ${])( ftf)0P WATER PIPES | 375 W. SHAW (At Marco) j ranmn J*7-*MJ New York Film Critics $ BESTPHnfUREBFTHEBERR BESTBIRECTBRB.n,.i.in. BESTSBPPBRTINBRCTRESS Karan Black ©fp-^ JACK NICHOLSON Ui FIVEERSS PIECES SIGMA NU FRATERNITY (FOUNDED 1869) • FRESNO STATE CHAPTER ESTABLISHED IN 1951 • ACTIVE ON CAMPUS: ■ TWO STUDENT SENATORS ■ MEMBERS IN BLUE KEY ■ IFC. TREASURER ■ GREEK MAN OF THE YEAR 1970 • HONOR PLEDGE PROGRAM ■ NO HAZING ■ THE PLEDGE IS NEVER HUMILIATED NOR IS HIS CHARACTER DEGRADED. ■ EMPHASIS IS ON INDIVIDUAL RESPONSIBILITY AND INITIATIVE. • ONE OF THE LEADING FRATERNITIES IN SCHOLARSHIP • VARIED SOCIAL PROGRAM GO GREEK- GOZN [Jones proposes student control over FSC Association monies By Barbara McDowell CoUegian Staff Writer Student control over the spending of Association funds Is the goal of a proposal made yester- - day by Fresno State CoUege Student President B1U Jones. Jones' proposal calls for a significant shift In jurisdiction over student body funds from the Association's Board of Directors to the Student Senate. The Board of Directors (which Is composed of student government officers, faculty, an administrative representative and the manager of the association) presently has control over all to the final approval and changes by the Board of Directors. Under Jones' proposal the Student Senate would have final say on how and what monies are spent. The Board of Directors will continue to direct the operations of the Cafeteria, Bookstore and College Union, while such programs as athletics, dramatics, forensics, pubUcaUons and the Summer Institute wlU come under direct control of the Student Senate. College Union Programming, now dlrectedby the College Union Board, will also be student financed and controlled. According to Jones the Slo-a- semester Association fee will still be collected to finance stu dent government i programs. Jones cited as reasons for his proposal 'lots of complaints this year about students not controlling their own money.* •If the complaints are valid,* he said, "let's rectify the sltua- Many of the complaints cited by Jones were In connection with Student Senate President Pro Tern.Phil Sherwood's $5000legal aid resolution, which Is now pending before the Board of Directors. Although the measure, designed to provide funds tor court cases concerning student rights, won the support of the StudentSenate, Daily Collegian WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1971 Senate will consider beer on campus measure today A' special referendum election concerning the sale and consumption of alcoholic beverages on cimpus will be discussed and possibly acted upon at today's meeting of the Student Senate. The proposal, authored by President Pro Tern Phil Sherwood, was Introduced at the Jan. C senate meeting, and has been In the Campus Affairs Committee since then. Alcoholic beverages are currently legal for those over 21 living In the Fresno State College dorms. Sherwood said he Is hoping to have beverage sales become a reality for the rest of the campus. Beer and wine are currently legal on other college and university campuses. Including San Dlego State College. A Day Care Center, parking fees, and a student lobbying effort In Sacramento will also be discussed. Dr. Klttredge of the FSC Counseling Center wlU report on the effect of the Student Advisement Center (SAC) during this semester's registration. The Student Senate meets at 3 p.m. In CU 312-313-314. BACKWASH ON SALE — Vince Hovseplan is shown selling a copy of Backwash, FSC's literary magazine, to an unidentified coed In. the Free Speech Area. Backwash contains poetry, art work,' and short stories, and Is available daily for 50.cents at the Backwash table In the Free Speech Area. About 600 copies were printed, and over half of them already have been sold. the "details and procedures* of effecting the change. Members of the commission win be Jones, Student Body First Vice President Nat DIBuduo, Stone and an of the Student Senate. Implementation of the proposal will, In addition, require a new student association constitution and by-laws, and a revision of the FSC Association's current legal documents. The re-wrltlng task will be another responsibility of the commission, which expects to present Its work to a special e In September. Stone, tbe splitting, of tbe FSC Association will create "Innumerable* legal problems. Among such problems are approval of Its non-profit status and tho drawing up ot new contracts for all Association em- FSC Is presently one of only two state coUeges with a student- faculty Board of Directors overseeing student monies. The re- . malnlng 17 state coUeges employ a student-con trolled procedure similar to that proposed by Jones. ltwill not fare as well be fore the Board. Terry Stone, student body second vice president, said Increased student control will •hopefully end apathy of students toward their ASB government.* He suggested that students would be more Interested In student body elections If those they elected would be spending their money; Sherwood, who has opposed Jones on many Issues, credited him with *a gallant try to allow students control over their own money.* Sherwood, however, believes that the proposal should have gone further In allowing students 'total control* over aU enterprises of the FSC Association. To that end, Sherwood recently Introduced a Senate resolution to abolish the Board of Directors. Jones hopes to Introduce his proposal to the Board of Trustees as an Informational Item before the end of his term of office. The transfer In Jurisdiction of the budget will entail the establishment of a new student auxiliary organization. As currently anticipated, the student auxiliary will not come Into being until July 1972. Establishment of the new auxiliary organization will require the support of FSC President Norman A. Baxter, the Board of Trustees and two-thirds of the FSC student body. According to Jones, Baxter has expressed approval of the proposal, although Its specifics have not yet been presented to hire. The first step in the organizational process will be the formation of a four-member student commission designed to examine Marvin X: 'Black history is no myth' Is Black history a myth? No said Marvin X, a Black Muslim and former member of the Fresno State CoUege Ethnic* Studies staff. He spoke yesterday at the Black Recital held In the CoUege Union In honor of Black History Week. The Dally Collegian erroneously published today's schedule of Black History Week events as yesterday's events ( In a front page- bottom photo ). The four bands will perform today In the College Union Lounge as scheduled. die of civilization." He explained that Black Egyptians are the "true authors of Greek philosophy.* During the period of the Ren aissance, he noted, the Black man ruled Spain. 'Medicine, surgery, astronomy and mathematics were all taught while the Black man waa In Spain. Black people were in America before Columbus,* he . added. Following Marvin X's discussion of the Black man's history, Jim Easter sang "revolutionary songs* written by the Black Muslim Including "Chained and Bound* and "Revolution Is not a Pretty Thing.* In addition, Al Calwart, De- Wayne Williams and Carl Harris read poetry, accompanied by Charles Lewis on drums and Easter on flute and drums. Continuing the Black History Week program wlU be Woody MlUer, of radio station KLIP, who wlU speak today at 11 a.m. In CoUege Union 312. Four bands wlU be featured at 3 p.m. In the College Union Lounge. Insight gets Merit Award for Excellence in state contest The FresnoStateCoUegeJour- naUsm Department newspaper. Insight, has won one of the two top awards In the 1970 Better Newspaper Contest sponsored by the California Newspaper Asso- Inslght was awarded the Merit Award for General Excellence among four-year coUeges and universities with an enroUment of 6,000 or more students. The Pepperdlne College's departmental paper. The CNPA runner-up award to FSC waa the second recent honor tor the young weekly newspaper published by Journalism students. The paper received the 1969-70 California Intercollegiate press Association award as the outstanding state coUege weekly Ism Department Chairman Dr. John H. Duke at the CNPA Awards Breakfast during their convention Ui San Francisco. Winning the first-place plaque in tbe category of 6,000 and above was the San Francisco State College JournaUsm Department newspaper. Phoenix. Winner of the first-place award for newspapers at colleges and unlver- Edltor for the fall semester paper entered In the contest was Scott Tompkins, a Junior Journalism major. Other semester editors and assistants were: EUen Wakefield, managing editor; Jim Borcn, news editor; Kathy Quesada, photo editor; Steve BatU, advertising manager; and BobCate, Marjorle O'Clair, Jeff Pappa* and Bob Swofford, editorial assistants. 'Fascist' remark made in jest •The statement that the Collegian is a fascist publication was made In Jest,* said Bob Seney yesterday, commenting'on a Collegian edltoriaL *KFSR was Implied as a party to that state-, ment, and that Is not a policy statement of the station.* The CoUegian editorial was written after a Tuesday Incident - In which a CoUegian reporter •misinterpreted* (according to Seney) some off the cuff remarks made by him. Seney said, "it seems to me. that the CoUegian editorial staff subscribed to their reporter's opinion without giving me a chance to respond. What the editorial relayed to the reading audience was the unsubstantiated opinion of one reporter who is not on Uie editorial staff. Yet, tbe editorial staff signed their name to It.* fairness and accuracy of their reporter's opinions, and felt Justified in writing tbe editorial.*'
Object Description
Title | 1971_02 The Daily Collegian February 1971 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1971 |
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 | February 9, 1971 Pg 4- February 10, 1971 Pg 1 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1971 |
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 | Tueeday, February Swimmers set four records Bulldogs win 77-74 By Chuck Knox The Fresno State swimmers keep getting faster and the school records keep falling. That's the rehart from coach Ara Halrabe- more FSC aqua standards at the Gold Coast Relays this weekend In Santa Barbara. The relay team of Coleman Montgomery, Tim Ledford, Tom Ettleson and Mike McMlUen set Matmen pin Stanford 27-12 The Fresno State wrestlers easily defeated Stanford 27-12 In a home contest Friday night to snap a six-match losing streak. The Bulldogs outpointed the Indians on pins by SteveCombsand Rey Contreras plus decisions from Vic Robinson,Corky Napier. John Berg, Gene Hansen and Pat McGee. i Combs, a freshman, picked up 11 of the year at 2:56 ;, the s captain, had his pin with 2:12 remaining In the third period. Most of the FSC decision wins were by Impressive margins. Two of coach Dick Francis' freshmen came through with big wins. Berg winning 11-0and Robinson taking a 6-0 triumph. (Want Ads 12-1-1. Francis had special praise for McGee, ajunlor from Clovls. "Pat had his best effort of the year against Stanford,* Francis said, "and can really be a big help to us If he continues his Improvement. As for the team, I think we are slowly coming on.' Fresno, now 3-8 on the year, will have two outstanding opponents wrestle against them this weekend In the Men's gym. Oregon State, the nation's No. 3 ranked team, will appear Friday night, followed Saturday by another top-ten rated squad, Portland State. Results of the Stanford match: 118-double forfeit 126-Combs, F,p. Proctor, 4:04 134-Carnes. S, p. Gerry, 6:03 142-Contreras, F. p. Miller. 7:12 150—Horpel, S p. Johnson, 4:50 158—Robinson, F, d. Ross, 6-0 167-Napler, F, d. Sehultz, 8-2 177-Berg, F. d. Imrle, U-o 190-Hansen, F, d. Tollerud, 9-2 UNL-McGee, F. d. Fair, 9-6 EUROPE JET CHARTER Final score: FSC 27, Stanford 12 FUGHTS(From $268 Round-trip) Capitol International Airways Carrier. Call: Flight Chairman, (213) 839-2401, 4248 Overland Avenue, Culver City, Ca 90230 FOR SALE BY OWNER Pretty 3 bedrm home set on lovely landscaped 1/2 acre lot. Only $3,800 down to assume loan of $15,673. Payments run $146, includes taxes a ins.Phone251-4970. Students, Servicemen.Young Marrieds $200 224-4084 a mark for the 800 yard freestyle relay. Montgomery broke a record for the 400 yard Individual medley while McMlUen added the 1650 and 1000 yard freestyle events to the record book. Montgomery, a sophomore from Hanford, was selected as the college athlete of the week by the San Joaquin Valley sportswrIters and sportscasters for his outstanding weekend. Also a water polo star, Montgomery broke his own 400 yard individual medley record. The old mark was 4:45.2, Coleman swam As a member of the relay, Montgomery had the fastest leg of the 800 yard event as along with Ledford, Ettleson, and McMUlen they broke a 1967 record, one of the oldest on the books. The mark was completely shattered as the group had a 7:39.5 versus the former 7:46.1. "We expect even more fine time from Coleman,* said Hairabedian. 'Anyone who can swim the Individual medley, which is the back, breast, butterfly and shows a fine swimmer,* Montgomery said he has been swimming since he was six, and Is a graduate of Ihe A.A.U. age- group swimming program. McMUlen, a Junior from Lodl and a former athlete of the week, put on a fine performance also according to Hairabedian. Two records fell for McMUlen while competing In one race, the long (G6 LAPS) 1,650 yard free- 1000 yards at 11:05.3 to break Ettleson's old 11:06.7. His 1650 time was 18:10.8,breaklngarec- - ord of 18:49.4 previously held by Montgomery. Overcoming a cold first half, the Fresno State basketball team rallied to defeat Sacramento State 77-74 last night In Sacramento. The Bulldogs shot only 35 per cent In the opening half and fell behind 39-33 at halftlme. The Hornets at one time had a 27-11 lead. ^ Jerry Pender of FSC made a basket with only two minutes left to break a 68-68 tie and the Bulldogs led the rest of the game. r 13-7 o the year, had used their tough zone defense to hamper the Fresno offense. The Bulldogs broke tt In the second half by making 68 per cent (15X22) of their field goals. On the night FSC shot 49 per cent (27X86). Mike Hammock was the leading scorer In the game with 22 points. Fred Warner had 15 while Pender added 14. The Bullpups won the preliminary game over the SSC frosh 85-76 as Charles Bailey scored 34 points. Fresno led at halftlme 41-33. A pair of Sacramento products on the FSC frosh, Brad Duncan and Neal McCoy, had 14 and 18 points respectively in front of the hometown fans. The Bullpups play Thursday in Berkeley against the Cal frosh while the varsity takes a weekend trip to Long Beach and San Dlego. Viiif ou CuMO. Tobacco tar...nave a tu—knomutl m Blended end Imported Toboccot try our ^ . ' tlranc'jS PIPES TOBACCOS ^""nilfc * 1- j t\\nm\\\nW^^unfaaT^AOmnm%%. POUCHES MsJwtJJ-ttaWMatl Apple Jack %P^^ ^**qQf LIGHTERS Cherry 'O ${])( ftf)0P WATER PIPES | 375 W. SHAW (At Marco) j ranmn J*7-*MJ New York Film Critics $ BESTPHnfUREBFTHEBERR BESTBIRECTBRB.n,.i.in. BESTSBPPBRTINBRCTRESS Karan Black ©fp-^ JACK NICHOLSON Ui FIVEERSS PIECES SIGMA NU FRATERNITY (FOUNDED 1869) • FRESNO STATE CHAPTER ESTABLISHED IN 1951 • ACTIVE ON CAMPUS: ■ TWO STUDENT SENATORS ■ MEMBERS IN BLUE KEY ■ IFC. TREASURER ■ GREEK MAN OF THE YEAR 1970 • HONOR PLEDGE PROGRAM ■ NO HAZING ■ THE PLEDGE IS NEVER HUMILIATED NOR IS HIS CHARACTER DEGRADED. ■ EMPHASIS IS ON INDIVIDUAL RESPONSIBILITY AND INITIATIVE. • ONE OF THE LEADING FRATERNITIES IN SCHOLARSHIP • VARIED SOCIAL PROGRAM GO GREEK- GOZN [Jones proposes student control over FSC Association monies By Barbara McDowell CoUegian Staff Writer Student control over the spending of Association funds Is the goal of a proposal made yester- - day by Fresno State CoUege Student President B1U Jones. Jones' proposal calls for a significant shift In jurisdiction over student body funds from the Association's Board of Directors to the Student Senate. The Board of Directors (which Is composed of student government officers, faculty, an administrative representative and the manager of the association) presently has control over all to the final approval and changes by the Board of Directors. Under Jones' proposal the Student Senate would have final say on how and what monies are spent. The Board of Directors will continue to direct the operations of the Cafeteria, Bookstore and College Union, while such programs as athletics, dramatics, forensics, pubUcaUons and the Summer Institute wlU come under direct control of the Student Senate. College Union Programming, now dlrectedby the College Union Board, will also be student financed and controlled. According to Jones the Slo-a- semester Association fee will still be collected to finance stu dent government i programs. Jones cited as reasons for his proposal 'lots of complaints this year about students not controlling their own money.* •If the complaints are valid,* he said, "let's rectify the sltua- Many of the complaints cited by Jones were In connection with Student Senate President Pro Tern.Phil Sherwood's $5000legal aid resolution, which Is now pending before the Board of Directors. Although the measure, designed to provide funds tor court cases concerning student rights, won the support of the StudentSenate, Daily Collegian WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1971 Senate will consider beer on campus measure today A' special referendum election concerning the sale and consumption of alcoholic beverages on cimpus will be discussed and possibly acted upon at today's meeting of the Student Senate. The proposal, authored by President Pro Tern Phil Sherwood, was Introduced at the Jan. C senate meeting, and has been In the Campus Affairs Committee since then. Alcoholic beverages are currently legal for those over 21 living In the Fresno State College dorms. Sherwood said he Is hoping to have beverage sales become a reality for the rest of the campus. Beer and wine are currently legal on other college and university campuses. Including San Dlego State College. A Day Care Center, parking fees, and a student lobbying effort In Sacramento will also be discussed. Dr. Klttredge of the FSC Counseling Center wlU report on the effect of the Student Advisement Center (SAC) during this semester's registration. The Student Senate meets at 3 p.m. In CU 312-313-314. BACKWASH ON SALE — Vince Hovseplan is shown selling a copy of Backwash, FSC's literary magazine, to an unidentified coed In. the Free Speech Area. Backwash contains poetry, art work,' and short stories, and Is available daily for 50.cents at the Backwash table In the Free Speech Area. About 600 copies were printed, and over half of them already have been sold. the "details and procedures* of effecting the change. Members of the commission win be Jones, Student Body First Vice President Nat DIBuduo, Stone and an of the Student Senate. Implementation of the proposal will, In addition, require a new student association constitution and by-laws, and a revision of the FSC Association's current legal documents. The re-wrltlng task will be another responsibility of the commission, which expects to present Its work to a special e In September. Stone, tbe splitting, of tbe FSC Association will create "Innumerable* legal problems. Among such problems are approval of Its non-profit status and tho drawing up ot new contracts for all Association em- FSC Is presently one of only two state coUeges with a student- faculty Board of Directors overseeing student monies. The re- . malnlng 17 state coUeges employ a student-con trolled procedure similar to that proposed by Jones. ltwill not fare as well be fore the Board. Terry Stone, student body second vice president, said Increased student control will •hopefully end apathy of students toward their ASB government.* He suggested that students would be more Interested In student body elections If those they elected would be spending their money; Sherwood, who has opposed Jones on many Issues, credited him with *a gallant try to allow students control over their own money.* Sherwood, however, believes that the proposal should have gone further In allowing students 'total control* over aU enterprises of the FSC Association. To that end, Sherwood recently Introduced a Senate resolution to abolish the Board of Directors. Jones hopes to Introduce his proposal to the Board of Trustees as an Informational Item before the end of his term of office. The transfer In Jurisdiction of the budget will entail the establishment of a new student auxiliary organization. As currently anticipated, the student auxiliary will not come Into being until July 1972. Establishment of the new auxiliary organization will require the support of FSC President Norman A. Baxter, the Board of Trustees and two-thirds of the FSC student body. According to Jones, Baxter has expressed approval of the proposal, although Its specifics have not yet been presented to hire. The first step in the organizational process will be the formation of a four-member student commission designed to examine Marvin X: 'Black history is no myth' Is Black history a myth? No said Marvin X, a Black Muslim and former member of the Fresno State CoUege Ethnic* Studies staff. He spoke yesterday at the Black Recital held In the CoUege Union In honor of Black History Week. The Dally Collegian erroneously published today's schedule of Black History Week events as yesterday's events ( In a front page- bottom photo ). The four bands will perform today In the College Union Lounge as scheduled. die of civilization." He explained that Black Egyptians are the "true authors of Greek philosophy.* During the period of the Ren aissance, he noted, the Black man ruled Spain. 'Medicine, surgery, astronomy and mathematics were all taught while the Black man waa In Spain. Black people were in America before Columbus,* he . added. Following Marvin X's discussion of the Black man's history, Jim Easter sang "revolutionary songs* written by the Black Muslim Including "Chained and Bound* and "Revolution Is not a Pretty Thing.* In addition, Al Calwart, De- Wayne Williams and Carl Harris read poetry, accompanied by Charles Lewis on drums and Easter on flute and drums. Continuing the Black History Week program wlU be Woody MlUer, of radio station KLIP, who wlU speak today at 11 a.m. In CoUege Union 312. Four bands wlU be featured at 3 p.m. In the College Union Lounge. Insight gets Merit Award for Excellence in state contest The FresnoStateCoUegeJour- naUsm Department newspaper. Insight, has won one of the two top awards In the 1970 Better Newspaper Contest sponsored by the California Newspaper Asso- Inslght was awarded the Merit Award for General Excellence among four-year coUeges and universities with an enroUment of 6,000 or more students. The Pepperdlne College's departmental paper. The CNPA runner-up award to FSC waa the second recent honor tor the young weekly newspaper published by Journalism students. The paper received the 1969-70 California Intercollegiate press Association award as the outstanding state coUege weekly Ism Department Chairman Dr. John H. Duke at the CNPA Awards Breakfast during their convention Ui San Francisco. Winning the first-place plaque in tbe category of 6,000 and above was the San Francisco State College JournaUsm Department newspaper. Phoenix. Winner of the first-place award for newspapers at colleges and unlver- Edltor for the fall semester paper entered In the contest was Scott Tompkins, a Junior Journalism major. Other semester editors and assistants were: EUen Wakefield, managing editor; Jim Borcn, news editor; Kathy Quesada, photo editor; Steve BatU, advertising manager; and BobCate, Marjorle O'Clair, Jeff Pappa* and Bob Swofford, editorial assistants. 'Fascist' remark made in jest •The statement that the Collegian is a fascist publication was made In Jest,* said Bob Seney yesterday, commenting'on a Collegian edltoriaL *KFSR was Implied as a party to that state-, ment, and that Is not a policy statement of the station.* The CoUegian editorial was written after a Tuesday Incident - In which a CoUegian reporter •misinterpreted* (according to Seney) some off the cuff remarks made by him. Seney said, "it seems to me. that the CoUegian editorial staff subscribed to their reporter's opinion without giving me a chance to respond. What the editorial relayed to the reading audience was the unsubstantiated opinion of one reporter who is not on Uie editorial staff. Yet, tbe editorial staff signed their name to It.* fairness and accuracy of their reporter's opinions, and felt Justified in writing tbe editorial.*' |