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Defense stars Fisher, Crump honored Lugo paces soccer win Two key members of the Fresno State defensive team, which led the Bulldogs to a 17-10 win over powerful San Diego State Saturday have received player of the week recognition. terday from the Valley Sports- writers and Sportscasters while Dwayne Crump got the defensive player award from the pacific Coast Athletic Association. 1 Just can't say enough about lack Fisher," said FSC coach Darryl Rogers. 'Only a second- stringer at Bakersfield College, he has- Improved tremendously to where be Is me leader of our unit as defensive captain.' Fisher, a 6-foot-l, 215 pound every game the last two years. He was awarded the game ball in the San Diego contest after putting a tremendous rush on Brian Slpe and helping limit the SDS rushing to 12 yards. age of Tom Reynolds, the Sports Illustrated's lineman of the week after catching 17 passes against Utah State, was a major factor In the win. Reynolds, rated the second best receiver In the nation by pro scouts, caught one pass for nine yards (no first down) with only 1:01 left In the game. ■For a second-year soccer am, It's really encouraging the >y we are playing," said Fresno ate coach Bob Bereskln. The FSC playing was especially before 300 r~ is field a; Harriers unbeaten in duals last weekend as they smashed UC Santa Barbara, 21-36, for their fourth consecutive Pacific Coast Athletic Association vic- Wlth an unblemished league record of 4-0, coach Red Estes' runners are concentrating their thoughts on the upcoming aU- PCAA meet In San Diego on November 13. •I think we will be fighting for third place between Cal Slate Los Angeles and San Jose State. But. [f we have a good mental effort, we could win the whole thing." said Estes about his The Bulldogs managed to put It all together last Saturday In what Estes termed was "probably Keith Strodl, enjoying his finest year, set another school mark on Woodward Park's slx-mlle course with a time of 30:55. Teammate Kevin Dougherty was just a step behind Strodl with a Both Strodl and Dougherty have marks In every meet the Bulldogs have-participated In this year which has definitely been the key reason for the team's success thus far. Strong support from the remainder of the squad also has contributed greatly, Including strong performances by Curt and Craig Ella, Mike Russler, and Jeff Hill In Ihe win overUCSB. Craig finished In fifth place (31:38). Craig was sixth (31:46), Russler seventh (31:56). and Hill ninth (32:17). Rogers Is worrying about getting enough people healthy for this Friday evening's Pacific Coast Athletic Association clash with e and k ! Injur came heavy from the San Diego •We are going to have to regroup our bodies for Friday," Rogers said al guard Steve Verryai marks for Long Be: "Their back, Terry Metcalfe, the Bulldogs swamped Loyola of Los Angeles 8-0. It was the highest number of goals ever scored In one Fresno If the Bulldogs should get second place In the Southern California Intercollegiate Soccer Association, they could go on to Football pep rally planned Thursday A Send-off rally for the Fresno State football team Is planned for Thursday at noon In the College Union Lounge. The Bulldogs, 17-10 conquerors of San Diego State last week, will have a bid for the Pasadena Bowl riding on the outcome of their Pacific Coast Athletic Association battle Friday with Cal State I.ong Beach In Long Beach. Included on the Thursday schedule Is a 9 a.m. workout at Ratcllffe Stadium, an 11:30 a.m. lunch In the cafeteria, the rally, featuring the team and the FSC band at noon, with the send-off at 12:30 from on-campus. post-season play-off activity. ■We've been passing like pro-. fesslonals,* Boreskln said. «oor forwards broke loose for the eight goals but actually were playing unselfishly. The defense has strengthened considerably." Alonzo Lugo of Mexico figured in on six of the netted shots making three himself and recording three assists. Ignacto Landa also tallied three goals while Ken Wong and BJorn Llv. The Bulldog.soccermen dominated Loyola so much that Ksc goalie Bill Walzberg only had t0 make three saves In getting the shutout. Tomorrow the Bulldogs make the long haul down to San Diego for their finalSCISA contest, with United States International University (formerly Cal Western) at 3 p.m. and return home Friday to get a tough test with a atrong ■ Blola team also at 3 p.m. Trustees propose $29.9 million FSC budget The California State College tactics, and the Legislature be- get we can live wlpi." -academic .rapport,$3.3 mil- -independent opera inisipflc. havp allocated S29.9 fore it Is finally arlnrttori npAh. An iinmiToH Kw.A..i»<MM -#*•,- nrtn. mm *mm. Mike Nichols- Carnal Knowledge Pomona edges Waterdogs i dropped a one-point ;«XEROX COPY rirk&ti lis! 1 *^%&-. THE ■*** HELLSTROM CHRONICLE K ka^ff*"T*Tr>l*SI lose clobbered the Waterdogs '2-4, and Halrabedlan is hoping that his team can cut the deficit ■ onslderably this time out. Last weekend, the Bulldogs Io STUDENTS EARN EXTRA MONEYI CALIF. BLOOD BAN FOUNDATION 412 F Street - Fres WEDNESDAY NIGHT ONLY 'THE PASSION OF ANNA' INGMAR BERGMAN s COLOR MASTERPIECE OF HUMAN RELATIONSHIPS Science'121 7:30 and 9:30 P.M. Adm. $1 Sponsored by The Film Society VTTHVT m Student wanted to live-in —babysit and help with dishes - Bike or ride. Fig Garden 222-0037. COMING TO FRESNO'S CONVENTION CENTER THEATER TUE. & WED., NOV. 9 & 10-8:30 pm DAVID MERRICK in onocioKon wilh Theolre Now preienli THE MUSICAL HIT BURTBACHARAGH HALDAV1D IKSmi S7.J0-*4J0-$J J0-M.30 NOW ON 1*11 CONVINTION CENTER BOX OFFICE TOO M ST. PHONI 313-14M la State College allocated $29.9 illllon for Fresno State College proposed 1972-73 budget recently been completed. the figure for this year. The proposed budget must now fight Its way through the State Finance Department, the Coordinating Council for Higher Education, the governor's blue pencil 'i I the Legislature . fore it is finally adopted, probably next June. Chancellor Glenn S. Dumke emphasized that the budget college system c< t the si ir and I can live wl|h." i Itemized breakdown of the proposed budget for FSC includes: lion; -Instruction, $16.2 million; -Institutional support, $4.5 -organized research,$46,000; million; -student personnel, $3.1 mll- Thls budget does not Include requests for buildings or other capital Improvements. FSC President Norman Baxter approved of the amount slated for Fresno, stating, -it Is a bud- Alex Brown files fifth lawsuit, attacks FCC for television advertising Daily Collegian LXXVII/31 WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 3,1971 DEBBIE GAUSS LLOYD JANSEN e their TWO NEWLY ELECTED freshman class senators wil places today on the Fresno State College Student Senate. Elected to the two positions yesterday from a field of six contenders were Debbie Gauss and Lloyd Jansen. Ms. Gauss, who came to FSC from Concord, was the front-runner with 38 votes. Jansen, from Livermore, was a close second with 35. Trailing the victors were: Bill Plank with 18 votes, Sherri Robison with 14 votes, Vince Mendoza with il votes, and Kirk Piiger with 9 votes. There was one write-in vote. The announcement of election results was made by James Holmes, FSC student body elections committee chairman. By Anne Richards Collegian Staff Writer Alex Brown, already the plaintiff In four lawsuits, Is at It again. The Fresno Stale College graduate Is taking on the Federal Communications Commission, this time asking for the prohibition of sex, violence, and appeals to vanity In television ad- Football boosters plan rally, trip 'Following Saturday's Homecoming game victory, supporters of the Fresno State College football squad are planntngactlvltles to demonstrate spirit for Friday evening's football contest with Cal state Long Beach. A send-off rally for the team Is planned for noon tomorrow In the College Union I ounce. Featured In Ihe program will be the FSC football team, band and pep grdupa. Slgn-ups for persons desiring or offering rides to Long Beach's Veterans Memorial Stadium are currently "being taken In College Union 305. Those wishing to catch the opening minutes of the game are advised to leave FSC by 2 p.m. Friday. ADS returns from SF convention Six members of Alpha Delta Sigma, Fresno State College professional advertising fraternity, returned yesterday from the national convention of that organization In San Francisco. While at the convention, participants heard speeches by such persons as Dr. S. I. Hlyakawa, president of San Francisco State College, and representatives of several major advertising agen- vertlslng. His petition requesting the ban was filed yesterday In persons who cannot nay. The suit Washington. alio contends that the AMA Axes •The content of television ad- prices. Brown says he has re- vertlslng is becoming more and calved tremendous response, ea- more offensive,* contends pectally from the elderly, on this Brown. He feels that advertising action. constantly presents Idealized -A suit la also pending against persons, more powerful, richer, the Educational Testing Service, more beautiful than Is actually ' which owns the Graduate Record the case, i Exam (CRE), the Scholastic Ap- Vlewers compare themselves tltude Test (SAT), and others, to these models and find they do Brown says the service mlsrep- gerous rejection of self, according to Brown. Brown bases bis petition on two arguments: first, women are being denied equal protection of the law because they are subject to sexual exploitation in advertising, and second, the advertising Industry Is making false promises by using such Idealized per- measure of aptitude, when they actually measure only one facet of a person's personality, deduc- •The National Organization of Women (NOW) is suing an airline company over exploitative advertising,* continues Brown, *but their campaign won't work because they are attacking only one source.* He feels-he is attacking the problem at Its root. If the FCC turns him down, he plans to take his argument to federal court. Questioned about his other suits. Brown gave this rundown of pending actions: -The 'equal time* suit against .the Federal Communications Commission to allow all candidates equal time in campaigns is 'progressing nicely." Hearings are being set up now. -His filing fee suit, charging that requiring a filing fee for political candidates Is unconstitutional, was lost in Fresno court. A similar suit In San Francisco decided that filing fees were, in fact, unconstitutional. Brown is fairly certain that the state will not appeal the San Francisco de- 12 Democrats will vie in presidential poll A preference poll of Democratic presidential candidates will be conducted today and tomorrow by the Fresno State College McGovern for President Club. AU FSC students are eligible to participate In the voting. Among the 12 candidates or potential candidates to be included In the poll are: Sen. George McGovern (t)-South Dakota), Sen- Fred Harris CD-Oklahoma), Sen. Edmund Musklc CD-Maine), Sao. Edward Kennedy (D-Msasaehu- setts), Sen. Hubert Humphrey CD-Minnesota), Sen. Henry Jackson (D-Washlogton), Eugene McCarthy, Rep. Shirley chlsholm (D-New York) and Rep. Wilbur Mills CD-Arkansas). Voting will take place from 11 a.m.-l p.m. both days at the McGovern table In the Free Speech Area. Ballots will be counted publicly beginning at 1 NEWS ANALYSIS Murray's contributions to campus crisis Last Wednesday, a federal grand Jury wound up the most impressive (and least publicized) games of the Athletic Department's 1969-70 season. Dick Murray, former Fresno State College tennis coach, was fined $200 for embezzling from the student payroll, and was placed on a one year probation. As a point of information, this fact Is only interesting In that it marks the end of a long and startling series of events which helped to shape the present plight of FSC. Precisely because he helped to put us where we are, all FSC faculty members and students should know ihls man's Dick Murray, Jim Flkes, former FSC executive vice president, and Cecil Coleman, former dlrec'.r of athletics, were the principle figures In a series of maneuvers which precipitated FSC's first racial crisis, and in troduced citizen vigilante groups and vigilante tactics onto campus during the May 1970 demonstra- Murray was the chief. witness against you, because Murray saw and remembered everybody, at ^all times, no matter where they were or how many buildings and trees blocked his vision. Murray and Flkes were responsible for the creation of the Bull Dog Party, a political party organized two years ago through a coalition of the Bull Dog Club and fraternity groups. The chief plank of this party was the elimination of EOP.funds from the FSC Association budget. Ness era To understand this development, let OS go back two7e*«. when Fredrtc Ness was president, to that period of deceptive calm before the firing of former English Professor Robert Mezey. At this time, the Impact of social- revolutions, the youth revolt, the Black and Brown i all the emotions, fea: controversy which surround them, were impinging upon the surface solidarity (under the Ness Administration) of what had been (or ten years one of the most politically polarized faculties In the state of California. The pressure-cooker exploded with terrifying violence, destroying the career of one man, when Mezey's statements, like a magnet, drew toward nun the totality of the associations surrounding the campus and youth revolutions. Mezey became the "scapegoat" for the accumulated hate and hysteria characterizing the controversy over the Hippie phenomenon, marijuana, and the anti-draft and "New left" protests. udlce localized Itself quite logically In the Physical Education Department. Logically, because this was the department most lm- celeratlng racial drive into the colleges and universities. Afraid of the Incursions of EOP into the athletic bucket, this department vote had eliminated student fond' lng of athletic activities tn order for EOP. Bull Dog Party In March. 1969, Dick Murray and Jim Flkes organized theBull Dog Party, a coalition of 50 student organizations. In a page- long Collegian advertisement, they styled themselves the'Good Guys" and declared their Intention to 'Save Our School" from In the party's < form, the fc competition between EOP (The Fresno State College Association began funding the EOP program with matching federal Formerly, this been used principally by athletes. Now, an Increasing - EOP students were usinglLCon- fUct was Inevitable. cut the EOP out of his (tats budget.) When the Bull Dog Convention was held, a scuffle broke out be- and/M i. Tom McCor- (ConUnued on Page 3, Col. 3)
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 2, 1971 Pg 8- November 3, 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 |
Defense stars Fisher, Crump honored
Lugo paces soccer win
Two key members of the Fresno State defensive team, which
led the Bulldogs to a 17-10 win
over powerful San Diego State
Saturday have received player of
the week recognition.
terday from the Valley Sports-
writers and Sportscasters while
Dwayne Crump got the defensive
player award from the pacific
Coast Athletic Association.
1 Just can't say enough about
lack Fisher," said FSC coach
Darryl Rogers. 'Only a second-
stringer at Bakersfield College,
he has- Improved tremendously
to where be Is me leader of our
unit as defensive captain.'
Fisher, a 6-foot-l, 215 pound
every game the last two years.
He was awarded the game ball
in the San Diego contest after
putting a tremendous rush on
Brian Slpe and helping limit the
SDS rushing to 12 yards.
age of Tom Reynolds, the Sports
Illustrated's lineman of the week
after catching 17 passes against
Utah State, was a major factor
In the win. Reynolds, rated the
second best receiver In the nation
by pro scouts, caught one pass
for nine yards (no first down)
with only 1:01 left In the game.
■For a second-year soccer
am, It's really encouraging the
>y we are playing," said Fresno
ate coach Bob Bereskln.
The FSC playing was especially
before 300 r~
is field a;
Harriers unbeaten in duals
last weekend as they smashed
UC Santa Barbara, 21-36, for
their fourth consecutive Pacific
Coast Athletic Association vic-
Wlth an unblemished league
record of 4-0, coach Red Estes'
runners are concentrating their
thoughts on the upcoming aU-
PCAA meet In San Diego on November 13.
•I think we will be fighting for
third place between Cal Slate
Los Angeles and San Jose State.
But. [f we have a good mental
effort, we could win the whole
thing." said Estes about his
The Bulldogs managed to put
It all together last Saturday In
what Estes termed was "probably
Keith Strodl, enjoying his finest
year, set another school mark on
Woodward Park's slx-mlle
course with a time of 30:55.
Teammate Kevin Dougherty was
just a step behind Strodl with a
Both Strodl and Dougherty have
marks In every meet the Bulldogs have-participated In this
year which has definitely been the
key reason for the team's success thus far.
Strong support from the remainder of the squad also has
contributed greatly, Including
strong performances by Curt and
Craig Ella, Mike Russler, and
Jeff Hill In Ihe win overUCSB.
Craig finished In fifth place
(31:38). Craig was sixth (31:46),
Russler seventh (31:56). and Hill
ninth (32:17).
Rogers Is worrying about getting
enough people healthy for this
Friday evening's Pacific Coast
Athletic Association clash with
e and k
! Injur
came heavy from the San Diego
•We are going to have to regroup our bodies for Friday,"
Rogers said al
guard Steve Verryai
marks for Long Be:
"Their back, Terry Metcalfe,
the Bulldogs swamped Loyola of
Los Angeles 8-0.
It was the highest number of
goals ever scored In one Fresno
If the Bulldogs should get second place In the Southern California Intercollegiate Soccer Association, they could go on to
Football pep rally
planned Thursday
A Send-off rally for the Fresno
State football team Is planned for
Thursday at noon In the College
Union Lounge.
The Bulldogs, 17-10 conquerors of San Diego State last week,
will have a bid for the Pasadena
Bowl riding on the outcome of
their Pacific Coast Athletic Association battle Friday with Cal
State I.ong Beach In Long Beach.
Included on the Thursday
schedule Is a 9 a.m. workout at
Ratcllffe Stadium, an 11:30 a.m.
lunch In the cafeteria, the rally,
featuring the team and the FSC
band at noon, with the send-off
at 12:30 from on-campus.
post-season play-off activity.
■We've been passing like pro-.
fesslonals,* Boreskln said. «oor
forwards broke loose for the eight
goals but actually were playing
unselfishly. The defense has
strengthened considerably."
Alonzo Lugo of Mexico figured
in on six of the netted shots
making three himself and recording three assists. Ignacto
Landa also tallied three goals
while Ken Wong and BJorn Llv.
The Bulldog.soccermen dominated Loyola so much that Ksc
goalie Bill Walzberg only had t0
make three saves In getting the
shutout.
Tomorrow the Bulldogs make
the long haul down to San Diego
for their finalSCISA contest, with
United States International University (formerly Cal Western)
at 3 p.m. and return home Friday
to get a tough test with a atrong ■
Blola team also at 3 p.m.
Trustees propose $29.9 million FSC budget
The California State College tactics, and the Legislature be- get we can live wlpi." -academic .rapport,$3.3 mil- -independent opera
inisipflc. havp allocated S29.9 fore it Is finally arlnrttori npAh. An iinmiToH Kw.A..i» |