November 18, 1971 Pg 8- November 19, 1971 Pg 1 |
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a TUB DAILY COLLEGIAN Ttmrmdmr, Pacific game 'must-win' •We must win Saturday night to tain a co-champlonshlp of the Pacific Coast Athletic Association,* stated Fresno State College Head Coach Darryl Rogers. The game In question Is the 47th meeting of the FSC Bulldogs and the University of Pacific Tigers, set for Stockton's Memorial Stadium. Came time Is 7:30 •' cum c DuU- nC goalie Chuck Chatten Waterdogs hove title-hopes for PCCA tournament Going in conference play with San Jose Slate at 3-1 and Cal State Long Beach at 5-1. Last week, the Bulldogs gained their sixth victory against three defeats, defeating San Fernando Valley State College 23-7, while the Tigers were dropping a game lo Western Michigan, 21. Next year the Bulldogs Michigan In Ratcllffe Sladlur •Pacific has (o be the best 2-8 team in the country,* Rogers told members of the San Joaquin Valley Sportswrlters and Sports- casters Association. *They have some very fine personnel, such as former Rlverdale High School quarterback Carlos Brown and running back Mitch True from Bakersfleld. ■In our game against San Fernando we were pleased with the win but It was an unemotional iued Rogers. 'Some id a good game. like . Steve Verry, Pat Plummer and Ben Chllders.* In the 46 previous meetings Ihe Bulldogs have won 25 games while dropping 19 and two games ended healthier this i know about Atomic TorosuT Herble Phillips,* »-■-- 3 •Torosian pulled a i late In the fourth periotfiS Saturday night and PhlljjprW been hampered with a thigh? * lem roost of the year. We a™, to have Roger Himttngioo/ii Munson and Larry Mlller7i«T strength, <T„b.,".,*« i Larry Miller at ft [BAXTER OPEN HOUSE TO&AY AT 2:30 Fresno State College President Norman A. Baxter will hold n open House for aU FSC students from 2-3:30 p.ro. today In tie College Union. Baxter will be available for questions during Board to consider parking, birth control measures Phillips, Miller and Torosli. are the Bulldogs' top ^ gainers, having combined foT, total of 1,295 yards of the Boll, dogs' season rushing yardage ». 1559 yards. Phillips Is aljoth, leading scorer with 3$ pouu, Saturday night's game mark, the close of the regular 1971 season for both teams. By Ron Orozco Collegian Sporti First round pairings for Friday's Pacific Coast Athletic Association water polo tournament have not been determined, but Fresno State coach Ara Halra- ready hoping the Bulldogs can meet favored San Jose State In the finals. •If we perform real well, It's conceivable that we will reach the finals Saturday, Halrabedlan. 'We have a o play San Jose.* However, the Bulldogs their opening opal press time waj Foreign student live babysit, Fig Garden—Transpor tatloo - Benefits - VALUABLE COUPON Daily Collegian FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1971 Abortion proponents will march tomorrow in S.F. Tjndlng the repeal of all abortion under the auspices of the Women's National Abortion Action The march Is part of an International effort being conducted by women to repeal all laws which regulate the right to choose If lar marches will take place tomorrow In Washington, D.C., EOP offers tutorial, counseling programs The Educational Opportunity program al Fresno StateCollege will begin sponsoring a series of proerams designed to deal with tutorial as well as counseling DAX charity drive ! -1m Mpha Chi. Fresno Slate .:•-•■ .service fraternity, will -■•: i". annual Thanksgiving Canada; and Nottingham, England. Other demands of the marches are the repeal of restrictive contraception laws and end of forced sterilization. San Francisco marchers will assemble at 10:30 a.m. at Em- barcadero^Plaza for the walk to to the Civic Center. A rally to further stress the march's demands will take place at 2 p.ro. at the Civic Center. According to the San Francisco office of the women's abortion coalition, buses of marchers are expected to arrive In the city from as far away as Denver, Seattle and Salt Lake City. Fresno area pro-abortion and wom- Blrth control, campus parking, and a report on speakers will be some of the topics to be considered at next week's State College Board of Trustees meeting, according to Student Body President Phil Sherwood. The board has been studying the feasibility of allowing birth control Information and medication lo be provided as part of the student health services for several months. Sherwood said that Monday's meeting should settle the question. 'If they agree to allow the addition to Title V of birth control Information and medication, the cost will probably have to be paid by Ihe Individual student, rather than by student health fees as ls_ the case with other types of medi- expected to attend the march. According to Helen Meyers, western regional coordinator of the Women's National Abortion Action Coalition, about one out of every four women seeks abortion at one or more times during her life. "Yet,* added Ms. Meyers, *ln all 50 states there are restrictive abortion laws; In 31 states there are restrictive contraceptive laws; and In many cases where abortions are performed on poor and minority women, sterilization Is often the unknown addition to (he operation." As a result, she concluded, from 5 000-10,000 women reportedly die yearly at the hands of Illegal abortionists. Persons wishing further Information on transportation to the march may contact the women's abortion coalition In San Francisco at (415) 864-0500. approved by the board on September 22 of this year, makes It necessary for the 19 state colleges to send In quarterly reports listing all speakers paid more than $100 In student body fees. The reports must Include each speaker's name, biography, speech topic, and the total expenses Incurred for his appearance, including travel and lodging. The Issue waa originally touched off by the large feci paid to Stokely Carmlcbael, which amounted to $4500 from three State campuses. An interim report on parking will also be presented. It will contain some novel Ideas on the parking situation, including special privileges for car pools and compact cars. The meeting begins at 8:30 a|m. this Monday at 5760 WlUhlre Blvd. in Los Angeles. In addition to Sherwood, four student senators will be attending. These are Senate President Pro Tem Lupe Da La Cruz, Senator-at-large for the College Union Joe Guagllardo, School of Natural Sciences Senator Woody Brooks and School of Professional Studies Senator Jenny Bailey. American Indian Festival will be hostednext week by College Union In addition to birth control, VD and cancer exams would also be part of the board's decision. The California State College Student Presidents Association (CSCSPA) will present a report to the board expressing Its displeasure with Ihe new provisions which make It necessary to report on campus speakers. The policy, Three hundred fifty years ago, the Pilgrims and Indians first got together over Thanksgiving dinner to exchange aspects of one another's cultures. During the three days preceding Thanksgiving 1971, Fresno State College students will be treated to an American Indian Festival designed "to educate the public on American Indian history and the realization of what Thanksgiving Is all about.* The festival will begin at noon Monday with a speech by Larry Martin, a member of the FSC ethnic studies faculty. The address, and all other Indian Festival events, wlU take place In 1 Pag. 3, Col. 1) Phillipine journalist urges Americans to leave his nation By Lee Trachtenberg Collegian Staff Writer America ought to move out of his country 'lock, stock and barrel," according to a Philippine Journalist, so that the economic oligarchy in that Asian land can no longer demean the lives of •Why should the United States be a party to the degradation of the Philippine workers?" asked F. Slonll Jose, an editor-publisher-author from that country speaking In the College Union lasl night under the auspices of Ihe World Affairs Council of Fresno and the College Union At Ihe laboring level of the Philippine -sugar Industry are found "the worst forms of human degradation," Jose said. He pointed to sugar quotas and those for wheal and coffee from which the oligarchy profits tremendously. The wealthy structure depends on American friendship as it commits Its "atrocities" against the poor class, he said. All American aid should concern Itself with agrarian reform, Jose said, and If need be the sugar quota should be cut off to bring about those changes. He said the workers are earning 70 cents a day, barely enough to feed a family of six, and not enough for medical, educational and clothing costs. ' Jose chlded the American attitude toward foreign aid, stating that the United States uses 70 per cent of the world's resources and that for each dollar Invested In the Philippines there Is a $3 re- It came from." American imperialism in Southeast Asia "is a fact," he said, and five wars nave bean fought maintaining It. They ar. the Spanish-American War, th. Philippine Insurrection, World War II against Japan, the Korean War and the current conflict in Vietnam and the rest of Indo- "Amerlcan Imperialism in the Philippines has had some benign manifestations,* he said, specifically noting the public school system which reaches out to even remote villages. Yet today 50 per cent of the children drop out by the fifth grade, mainly to do •Foreign aid Is at all," he said. "It's just: bit of the gravy going back Phillipine Institutions are crumbling,* Jose said, and the foreign aid government Is "corrupt.* lust a little 'There Is no law and order for (Continued on Page 3, Col. 1) Gaston Lachaise sculptures and drawings now on exhibit in FSC Art Gallery By Anne Richards CoUeglan Staff Writer An exhibit of 38 sculptures and 20 drawings by French-born American artist Gaston Lachaise opened last night with a public preview at the Fresno State College Art Gallery. Lachaise, according to gallery director David Dangelo, was primarily a sculptor of the female form, Interested In the delineation of a single figure rather than a group of figures. One critic points out that Lachaise has "an affinity with both the vltallat ideal of the Fauvlst style and the purity and elegance of form that nearly always accompanied It.* He goes on to say .that Lachalse's image of the mature female nude Is linked with the watercolor drawings of Rodin, and with Matisse's 'Blue Nude,* and his later odalisques. Lachaise was bornlnFrancein . 1882. He was trained at the noted Ecole Bernard Pallssy in Paris, taking courses in carving stone, wood, and Ivory, drawing, painting and history of art. At 18 ha 1 to the Natlonale des Beaux-Arts. He emigrated to the United States when he was 24 at the urging of his Canadian-American Isabel Dutaud Nagle. 1 for n y of his sculptures. The drawings in the exhibit are included both because they served as studies for later sculptures and because they stand on their own. Often the drawings were a manifestation of an artistic problem Lachaise was working out in his mind. The exhibit is circulated by the Lachaise Foundation. Dangelo said that this is the first time It has ben shown on a state college •It took a year to convince the Foundation that we could Install and light the show properly,* he said. 'The new art building and gallery was a big selling point.* The exhibit sponsored by the FSC Association, wlU continue through Sunday, Dec. 12. Gallery hours are Monday through Friday from 10a.m.-5p.m., Wednesday evenings from 7-9, and Sun-
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 18, 1971 Pg 8- November 19, 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 |
a TUB DAILY COLLEGIAN Ttmrmdmr,
Pacific game 'must-win'
•We must win Saturday night to
tain a co-champlonshlp of the
Pacific Coast Athletic Association,* stated Fresno State College Head Coach Darryl Rogers.
The game In question Is the
47th meeting of the FSC Bulldogs
and the University of Pacific
Tigers, set for Stockton's Memorial Stadium. Came time Is
7:30
•' cum
c DuU-
nC goalie Chuck Chatten
Waterdogs hove title-hopes
for PCCA tournament
Going
in conference play with San Jose
Slate at 3-1 and Cal State Long
Beach at 5-1.
Last week, the Bulldogs gained
their sixth victory against three
defeats, defeating San Fernando
Valley State College 23-7, while
the Tigers were dropping a
game lo Western Michigan,
21. Next year the Bulldogs
Michigan In Ratcllffe Sladlur
•Pacific has (o be the best 2-8
team in the country,* Rogers told
members of the San Joaquin Valley Sportswrlters and Sports-
casters Association. *They have
some very fine personnel, such
as former Rlverdale High School
quarterback Carlos Brown and
running back Mitch True from
Bakersfleld.
■In our game against San Fernando we were pleased with the
win but It was an unemotional
iued Rogers. 'Some
id a good game. like
. Steve Verry, Pat
Plummer and Ben Chllders.*
In the 46 previous meetings Ihe
Bulldogs have won 25 games while
dropping 19 and two games ended
healthier this i
know about Atomic TorosuT
Herble Phillips,* »-■-- 3
•Torosian pulled a i
late In the fourth periotfiS
Saturday night and PhlljjprW
been hampered with a thigh? *
lem roost of the year. We a™,
to have Roger Himttngioo/ii
Munson and Larry Mlller7i«T
strength,
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