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V FIVE PASS INTERCEPTIONS THE DAILY COLLEGIAN Mond.y. November I Long Beach too much for Bulldogs, 30-13 By Ron Ororco Collegian Sports Writer LONG BEACH-Cal Stale Long Beach's Terry Metcalfe and Terry Conley took turns thrilling a crowd of 10.301 In the 49er's rousing 30-13 victory over Fresno State last Friday which earned them the Pacific Coast Athletic Association's top spot. Metcalfe, the league's premier runner and All-Amerlcan candidate, merely dashed to three touchdowns by jarring through big holes In Fresno's defense In the first half. He was forced to sit a leC ir ury. tentlon whenMetcalfedepartedby picking off three faulty FSC pass- Conley returned the ball 95 yards for a touchdown but a clipping penalty brought the ball back SO "Dogs were hampered by too many petty mistakes. •Everyone's entitled to a bad night and we had ours tonight. We've got lo muster up and beat pacific, so we can at least wind up co-champlons of the PCAA,* said coach DarrylRogers'dlrect- ly after the loss. His team has just two games left on the calendar, a game with San Fernando Valley State here Saturday, and the PCAA finale against University of Pacific on Coach Jim Stangeland of the 49er's mentioned the fact that his offensive line did the best Job It's done all year. He was particularly happy over the 249 yards his team chewed up by carrying the ball on the ground. Long Beach's front line opened style, and Conley, who had radar-like scent for the bau. Many mental mistakes on the part of the Bulldogs also contributed to CSLB's victory. Metcalfe brought the crowd alive when he ran four yards for Long Beach's first touchdown. He took the handoff from quarter- k Randy Drake and headed for ' Fresno on CSLB's eight yard line, Behrens threw to fullback He Phillips, who finished with yards, but Conley stepped In from and had a wide open field ahead. Conley ran 95 yards for the score, but a clipping left but t I around left plugged and h< end and dove li He scored In exactly the sam( manner on the opening play o the second quarter, but this tlm< It was from three yards out. HI: g In l e half w ruined the spectacular runback. His final pass thelt came from a Steve Jacoby pass intended for Ben Chllders. Fresno, who gained 198 yards passing and 175 rushing, was led to most of Its highlights by the running of Phillips. He scored with only 1:16 left In the game on a 25 yard run straight up the Most of the yardage plowed up by Phillips on his 26 carries was earned the hard way. He carried h slippery oil. It took several cess Friday, a showing that probably cost the Bulldogs the PCAA championship and a trip key was the exciting play h Metcalfe, who could run, punt, and pass In a flashy ball. Conley first drew notice when, second half, he stepped In front cepted John Behren's pass and returned It for 15 yards. The five, where Terry Louge booted The Long Beach safety's second interception ruined an FSC threat In the third period. With before halftlme. It lesulted from a Behrens desperation pass lo flanker Mike Harris for 30 yards. It cltmax'ed a 92 yard drive that used up 10 plays. Most of the yardage was gained by Behrens' arm, which was on target 11 of 21 times for the rls on three different plays for 35 yards, and then lost a yard on a short pass to Gene Austin before the TD throw. Mail in Activities Office Berrlnger. Ralph W Bradley, Lawrence Capps, Rod Carroll. Linda Chapman, Earl Chemalt. Hllal Chi Beta Alpha Chi PI Sigma Christlnson. Chester Clark, Gary Don Clark, Mark Coelho, Angelo Collns, Danny Cooksey, Eddie J. Edqulst. Carol Estes. Lawrence Falbo. Clement E. Foote, Ron Fu, Chung Chu Gamma Thela Upsilon Garrett, David A. Getahun. Tessema B. Glassock, Lynn Coltom. Dlsman Guerra, R. (Jr.) Hall', Sue Helen Hallam, Shirley Harbison, Ken McLaln, Charles Mllward, Kathy Morgan, Ted Shields. John Sigma Tau Delta Snow, Ronald C. Spender, L. Stratton, Gaar Suderman, John Theobald, David K. Wallace, John Walsh, James Ward, D. B. Webber. Robert Welez, C. (Mr.) Wlllard. Laura II. William, Dennis Wright. Delrde - orOe Wright. Donald 5c XEROX COPY Reductions 14x18 <S down AL.L SIZES A COLORS 8:30 a.m.- 5:30p.m. Monday - Friday 1230 N. W1SHON Phone 486-4641 i.Bob Cummins, Timothy Davenport, Verdle Davis, Percy DeRose, Sharon A. Dice, James R. Dickey, Jack Dickinson, Lois Dryden, Rlckl Dudley, D. A. Durazo, Bette J. Horton, Charles Hoy. Claude E. Hunt, Janice M. Johson, Torbln Kaludl, Ike Kelley, Ronald Klnmel, Myron La Rosa, David Larson, Gale *±U Assistant Manager and Public Relations. Need immediately! Contact 229-9268 Pilgrim. Edw; Potttus, Myro Poe, Susan Robinson, Lloyd E. Schamuel, Elizabeth Schlecht. Roger Schmidt. I. C. Sherman, Brenda |£0U1ttVI| 2Sll Last 2 hIllstroi ichronicli ! I E^^g4faaaa****d sat t Floor Pillows 45x45, big, bright A comfortable.». 227-8632 Pool man wanted. Salary open. Contact 229-9268. SELL YOUR USED BOOKS EVERY WED. BLUE BOO* PRICES . atFSc , teOOKSTORE LUNCHES - DINNERS BEER -WINE Students: Study and enjoy Hi* tropical atmosphere at our outdoor patio Something different & now in Fresno. DOS AMIGOS 7315 N. BLACK ST ONE 439.4716 North of Herndon Ave.-Across street from Nashville Behrens had three passes Intercepted and reserve quarterback Jacoby had two passes picked off. FSC's Nate Butler Intercepted one of Drake's tosses and linebacker Bill Crawford recovered SCORING FSC 0 7 0 6 -13 CSLB 7 16 0 7 -30 LB-Metcalf 4 run (Logue kick) LB-Metcalf 2 run (kick failed) LB-FG, Logue 29 LB-Metcalfe 9 pass from Drake (Logue kick) FSC-Harris 30 pass from Behrens (Stoetzl kick) LB-Klrby 5 run (Logue kick) FSC-Phtlllps 25 run (pass failed) Attendance-10,301 Firs 178 yards lc Net yards rushing 175 238 passes/comp. 36/16 22/10 passing yardage 198 141 Interceptions by 1 5 Fumbles/lost O.'O " 1/1 Penalties 4/39 5/52 punts 6/38.5 4/37.8 SPECIALS CANVAS BAGQC< arrylng books § Sa# NAVY BELL T49 BOTTOMS J WATER BEDS (95 19' STYROFOAM PELLETS for bean bag chaii AIR FORCE SUN GLASSES 2" JACKETS COMPLETE 095 LINE J FOAM RUBBER PADS I95 FOR £l WATER BEDS **^ ■ ARTIST MATERIALS! 20%!nM| WAR SURPLUS DEPOT 602 Broadway 237-3615 OPEN SUNDAYS I 10,000 march for peace in San Francisco By Barbara McDowell Collegian EdItor-ln-Chlef San Francisco. • soldiers continued to fall to the sou of Vietnam. More than 2,000. miles northward, the Cannikin bomb waited to explode beneath Alaska's Am- chttka Island. And In Its Embarcadero Plaza, some 10,000 persons gathered Saturday morning to protest such activities. The plaza was the designated starting point for a seven and one-half mile peach march through the streets of downtown San Francisco. The marchers destination 1 was Golden Gate Park's Polo Field, site of an at-' ternoon rally featuring speakers and musical entertainment. The San Francisco march was one ot 17 sponsored throughout the nation Saturday by the Nation- chief demand of the marchers was the Immediate withdrawal of all United States forces from Indochina. In the hour preceding the 9a.m. march step-off, anti-war demonstrators arrived at the Embarcadero by foot, car and chartered A 35-member Fresno contingent arrived aboard the chartered bus which had departed the Fresno State College campus shortly after 4 a.m. Aboard the bus were such local march organizers as Blanche Nosworthy, president of the Fresno chapter of Women's International League for Peace and Freedom; Wanda Wlmer, W1LPF member and wife of the Fresno Democratic League's president, and Vlnce Lavery, FSC gratuate student and long-time anti-war activist. Also arriving at the plaza were local merchants attempting to capitalize on the peace move- (Continued on Page 7, Col. 1) Daily Collegian TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1971 State UPC president discusses college financing By A Collegian Staff Writer Collective bargaining will not solve the salary problems of California's college professors unless they are reinforced by the muscle of a potential strike. This warning was the conclusion drawn by Art Blerman, state president of United Professors of California (UPC), In a Friday speech at Fresno State CoUege. ■I want to disabuse you of any notion you had that collective bargaining, per se, Is a panacea,* cautioned Blerman. "All It does Is set up certain kinds of rights which you then have to exercise. I don't think they can be exercised unless you are going to strike.' Blerman foresees the possibility of a strike because the faculty in the state college system Is being 'squeezed*. Governor Ronald Reagan refuses to raise taxes for additional revenue, yet the coUeges are expected to educate more students every year. Reagan has met this dilemma by cutting costs. According to Blerman, the teaching staff bears the brunt of these penny-pinching tactics. An example of thlrsitu- atlon has been the recent attack on the tenure system by the State CoUege Board of Trustees. Non-tenured faculty Is cheaper than tenured faculty, pointed out Blerman. He views the extended probation period proposed by the trustees last spring as an attempt to get the same amount of teaching out of the staff for less money by Increasing, the number of lower paid non-tenured persons. Another example of the cost- cutting efforts in the state colleges is the establishment of a standard accounting system and a central automatic data system. These innovations enable the administrators of the state colleges to get fast information comparing the costs of two similar programs g the a ASB president proposes student lobbying course at different schools. Good results may come of these streamlining procedures, continued Blerman, but the net effect Is negative. It reduces the worth of every course to one value, that of unit cost per credit hour. Cost Is the measuring stick for every decision, he said. A. Alan Post, California's legislative analyst, has suggested several ways to carry out Rea- gan'a cost-cutting directive, said Included In these are: extending the hours of instruction, reducing the number of library hours, charging tuition, using closed circuit television and similar means of mechanized teaching, year round operation, better utilization of space, Saturday classes, less free choice on class A proposal to create a class for student lobbying Is currently before the Experimental College. If approved, It would mean that the class would be available to students next semester. Developed by Associated Student Body President Phil Sherwood, the course Is designed to 'develop for the student an awareness of the legislative process and how It affects Ihe State College System and education In CaUfornla.* •A bill would be assigned to a' student,' Sherwood explained, and he would foUow It from conception right uptotheGovernor's •This class would allow more students to come In contact with their legislators,'Sherwoodcon- student might even be the one to propose an Important piece ot legislation to one of his representatives.* The student would also be given experience in actual lobbying for a bill which he might be Interested In, by direct contact with the Involved representatives. A chance to develop an effective technique to present arguments would also be stressed. Lobbying would be restricted to non-partisan, educational Issues. e class would spend I! Sacramento observing and talking to selected representatives. The proposal requests that the class be scheduled for Wednesday from 9 a.m. to 12 noon, which Is when the State Senate Education Committee meats. •This whole proposal goes along with my Idea of academic credit for student Involvement,* Sherwood said. *lt Is done In other schools, and there is no reason why we con't have this kind of class here In Fresno,* Currently, Cal State Los Angeles and Sacramento State College both offer classes in student lobbying. The final decision on a program for FSC should be made Attempts underway to reestablish Fresno States tutorial program definition of lower division requirements, and more work with high schools on advanced accep- *The UPC representative saw the role of Ms group as that of weighing the merits of these cost- cutting efforts and offering alternatives. He termed the Academic Senate Ineffective in this capacity.' •No hope Ues In government for preserving, let alone Improving, the somewhat sheltered Uvea to which you have become accustomed,* warned Blerman. He charged the UPC membership to cease being a «left-llber- fact as weU aa In name. .The California Labor Federation has Indicated that It will support the alms of the faculty group If they are serious In their Intention to strike, Blerman concluded. By Lee Trachtenberg CoUeglan Staff Writer Chlco State College has a'fantastic* student tutorial program, according to Phil Sherwood, Fresno State CoUege atudent president. Even small Stanislaus State CoUege has a program going, Sherwood said but not FSC. The enough to reorganize It. Last year $2,330 waa allocated to tutoring, according to Earle Bassett, FSC eliminated for the current college year, largely because of the lack of toby 'ha tiny > ot available •A lot of people think there Is an existing program or think we can't have it,* Sherwood said, attributing their error to •Inetttu- ttonal Ignorance* which he said Is present tn most bureaucracies. Dr s Jamas Lundberg, associate . releasor of education, expressed to Sherwood his concern over the apparent ending of the tutor- Ins; program which existed In the past. Sponsor of the FSC chapter of Student California Teachers willingly assist those who care to organize the program once again. ■I think that we can help because this Is our business,* Lundberg said. ■It worked quite well for a number of years,* the associate pro- said of the tutoring program. He said he program died 1 student leaders failed to push for its contlnueance. •The thing la kind of to Umbo at the moment,* Lundberg (aid. • there la a Job to dents desire a proceedings In January as far a illocatlons for the 1972-73 tan "If we could put togetker a pro- Sherwood pointed to the Child Day Care center which will soon be to operation aa an example of fully organized by students. tor FSC,* Sherwood said of the aid given younger students. 'The community does not cessity of FSC gaining about 2,000 mora fuU-Ume students next fail If hoary bud get cuts are members of the group' would crucial factor to trying to renew the student tutorial program. The student president said at least (Continued on Page S.CoL 2)
Object Description
Title | 1971_11 The Daily Collegian November 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 | November 5, 1971 Pg 4- November 9, 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 |
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V
FIVE PASS INTERCEPTIONS
THE DAILY COLLEGIAN Mond.y. November I
Long Beach too much for Bulldogs, 30-13
By Ron Ororco
Collegian Sports Writer
LONG BEACH-Cal Stale Long
Beach's Terry Metcalfe and Terry Conley took turns thrilling a
crowd of 10.301 In the 49er's
rousing 30-13 victory over Fresno State last Friday which earned
them the Pacific Coast Athletic
Association's top spot.
Metcalfe, the league's premier
runner and All-Amerlcan candidate, merely dashed to three
touchdowns by jarring through big
holes In Fresno's defense In the
first half. He was forced to sit
a leC ir
ury.
tentlon whenMetcalfedepartedby
picking off three faulty FSC pass-
Conley returned the ball 95 yards
for a touchdown but a clipping
penalty brought the ball back SO
"Dogs were hampered by too many
petty mistakes.
•Everyone's entitled to a bad
night and we had ours tonight.
We've got lo muster up and beat
pacific, so we can at least wind
up co-champlons of the PCAA,*
said coach DarrylRogers'dlrect-
ly after the loss.
His team has just two games
left on the calendar, a game with
San Fernando Valley State here
Saturday, and the PCAA finale
against University of Pacific on
Coach Jim Stangeland of the
49er's mentioned the fact that his
offensive line did the best Job
It's done all year. He was particularly happy over the 249 yards
his team chewed up by carrying
the ball on the ground.
Long Beach's front line opened
style, and Conley, who had
radar-like scent for the bau.
Many mental mistakes on the part
of the Bulldogs also contributed
to CSLB's victory.
Metcalfe brought the crowd
alive when he ran four yards for
Long Beach's first touchdown. He
took the handoff from quarter-
k Randy Drake and headed for
'
Fresno on CSLB's eight yard line,
Behrens threw to fullback He
Phillips, who finished with
yards, but Conley stepped In from
and had a wide open field ahead.
Conley ran 95 yards for the
score, but a clipping
left
but t
I around left
plugged and h<
end and dove li
He scored In exactly the sam(
manner on the opening play o
the second quarter, but this tlm<
It was from three yards out. HI:
g In l
e half w
ruined the spectacular runback.
His final pass thelt came from a
Steve Jacoby pass intended for
Ben Chllders.
Fresno, who gained 198 yards
passing and 175 rushing, was led
to most of Its highlights by the
running of Phillips. He scored
with only 1:16 left In the game
on a 25 yard run straight up the
Most of the yardage plowed up
by Phillips on his 26 carries was
earned the hard way. He carried
h slippery oil. It took several
cess Friday, a showing that
probably cost the Bulldogs the
PCAA championship and a trip
key was the exciting play
h Metcalfe, who could run,
punt, and pass In a flashy
ball.
Conley first drew notice when,
second half, he stepped In front
cepted John Behren's pass and
returned It for 15 yards. The
five, where Terry Louge booted
The Long Beach safety's second interception ruined an FSC
threat In the third period. With
before halftlme. It lesulted from
a Behrens desperation pass lo
flanker Mike Harris for 30 yards.
It cltmax'ed a 92 yard drive that
used up 10 plays.
Most of the yardage was gained
by Behrens' arm, which was on
target 11 of 21 times for the
rls on three different plays for
35 yards, and then lost a yard
on a short pass to Gene Austin
before the TD throw.
Mail in Activities Office
Berrlnger. Ralph W
Bradley, Lawrence
Capps, Rod
Carroll. Linda
Chapman, Earl
Chemalt. Hllal
Chi Beta Alpha
Chi PI Sigma
Christlnson. Chester
Clark, Gary Don
Clark, Mark
Coelho, Angelo
Collns, Danny
Cooksey, Eddie J.
Edqulst. Carol
Estes. Lawrence
Falbo. Clement E.
Foote, Ron
Fu, Chung Chu
Gamma Thela Upsilon
Garrett, David A.
Getahun. Tessema B.
Glassock, Lynn
Coltom. Dlsman
Guerra, R. (Jr.)
Hall', Sue Helen
Hallam, Shirley
Harbison, Ken
McLaln, Charles
Mllward, Kathy
Morgan, Ted
Shields. John
Sigma Tau Delta
Snow, Ronald C.
Spender, L.
Stratton, Gaar
Suderman, John
Theobald, David K.
Wallace, John
Walsh, James
Ward, D. B.
Webber. Robert
Welez, C. (Mr.)
Wlllard. Laura II.
William, Dennis
Wright. Delrde - orOe
Wright. Donald
5c XEROX
COPY
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