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► Four- Swim Championships Feature Diving Today Mike Navone. Fresno State Col¬ lege's golden anniversary hopeful [or the state diving champlorsahl Will make his bid to upset tl , great Jim Johnson of San Jo State today. One meter bonrd compciltic will begin with preliminary nolle today at ,1 I'M. The. low board di log *r,n«ir|..r top lilt; SIiiiw At T:80 I'M fans will get I see some ot the. rosiest swim me in the nation compete In Ihe 2t butterfly, 5l\ yard freestyle. 2( yitrd backstroke. 22'i rreestyl 200 breasts! roke and the b mt of the - the rilm style tic final elay .living will be held. Butterfly competition will pit two of the heal dolphin kick swimmers In the business against eacb other. Chuck Bibcock. CCAA champion from Long Beach State. will face Frank Droobs of Cal Poly. Babcock bent Brooks for tbe league title by an "eyelash." Anybody*! ittit-e In the SO-yard freestyle. It'll be Bow Fitzgerald anybody's will try again Ron Milandra Official Loses Argument With Distance Man Truex Rarely does an athlete win an argument with an official. How¬ ever, Max Truex did Just that In the 19GS West Coast Relays. With the officials signalling one lap to go In the 5000-meter run. Truex stopped running, claiming he had completed the race. After a recheek. red-faced officials re¬ versed the results and declared Truex tho winner. Max's explana¬ tion was neat and logical: "1 guess I know when I've run 5000 meters — I've done It often " enough." Beach. Milandra topped Fitzger¬ ald's league record In the event to take the title In the recent looP championships, San Jose State should have superiority In the backstroke events with Its two nationally famed stars. Bob Wegman and Jim Monsees. Ft rut Ik Tomorrow Jack Adam Cal I'oly's star freestyler In the 220 and 440. should be the swimmer to beat la the distance races although Terry McElllot from Los Angeles State lied him in the 220 at the CCAA Tomorrow'si competition will feature tbe medley relay finals along with some of the closest the three-day meet. Iminarles will begin at 10 AM i finals starting in the after- i at 3. Included In the day's u are the 100-yard butterfly, freestyle, 100 breaststroke, backstroke. 440 freestyle and c-meter bourd diving. I isrlll, tonight . with stu- P«te Beiden's oce hurler, Jerry MacDonald 15-0] ii scheduled to pitch tonight at the Bulldogs roar toward the CCAA title agoinit Son Fernando Valley State. Game time is 7;30 PM in John Euless Park. Golf,TrackTeamsEye CCAA Crowns Attempting lo snag two CCAA championships In one weekend's work at Los Angeles. Bulldog track and golf teams will com¬ pete In the CCAA championships. Track coach Cornelius "Dutch" Warmerdam says that despite fine efforts by the Bulldogs in recent competition, till learn has fallen a slim margin hehlnd favored Long Beach State, according to Warmerdam said, however, that Fresno State College tracksters would be going to Los Angeles ihln wtiekentl wlllume filing In "The Fashion Corner" We wonder where C I-'i biend ever tot this far- fet ched + Duone Reidenbach, with hit sparkling 52.4 440 hurdle rec¬ ord lad week, has become one of the top distance hurdlers in the nation. Coach Cornelius Warmerdam ex peels even greater things from this out¬ standing hurdler and runner before he leavei Fresno Slate. Reidenbach ii only a sopho¬ more. The Bulldog star Is one of Ihe favorites in tomorrow's CCAA championships at los Angeles. "I |« i beautiful yellow (dU watch for my birthday. I wore it with a gtuy iport- coat and a friend needled tw, He said yellow fold's only worn with brown, I intrtjfrt he was kxldinx, but he wis :Nowbe'i jotmewon- CLCITHES-ING NOTES — maket our blazer jackets so popular. Onr meat k irt their Ola Bom. rich solid tooea. wit* .saaany practical clothea" ttfsa. It'a yoort two- Aek for Torn Sommers - Bill Young T*# Fathion Corner" ' rlMM .Mt MstfCM "IHE HEAT'S ON" tat I'm pint to ****• ttrrxujh tta sarnmtr in wg cool fijpw shorts. fir ■ Ism anmwt ttty coal tbl M RAPIE|fSHORTS Adtim totMBntmmxnwehop mind — to WIN their second con¬ secutive CCAA crown. Key to Warmerdatn's hopes of retaining the title lies in the pos¬ sible come-through performance" of his promising sophomores. Duane Reidenbach, who set a school 44 0-yard hurdles record of 52.tl in the Mount San Antonio I1--I.lv:. last week, will lead the sophomore brigade. Defending Individual CCAA lilies are Bill Knocke. last year's 140 winner, and Don Schaefer. who has upped tils pole vault standard to 1,4'S". Warmerdam also has high 'hopes for 880 man ■TeWy Holland end illatHnea men Rich Dalgren nnd Joe Herzog. If the meet title depends on the final race, the 440-yard relay. the foatei i Jui ■ and answer In the league in Hugh Adams, Eugene Marzette. Reidenbach and Knocke. The foursome sped to victory In the Mt. SAC Relays In 3:17.3. Larry Pape's golfers are ready to make a bid to regain the CCAA title. The squad, led by free swinging John Sirman. hasn't recent practices have shown sharp steady golf by all members of the Blx-man traveling team. Fresno State's long ball force of Arnold Klrschenmann, Henry Fogg and Dave Hodge should find ihe Yorba Linda course much lo their liking. The course Is one of Ihe largest In California. Eric Walton and Ed Ross round out the team. San Diego will provide the Bulldogs with their st If rest com¬ petition. Bill Russell Jumped 6'9" Hill Russell has become an all- time basketball great with the Boston Celtics but few remember the ex-L'SF star was once an out¬ standing high Jumper, too, He appear on the list of WCR cham¬ pions as high Jump ca-lltllst In 195G, tying wllh soon-to-be Olym¬ pic champion Charley Dumas at MacDonald To Pitch Opener Scrapping for lta second con utive CCAA championship, the Bulldog baseball team will play a three-game aeries with the San Fernando State Matadors. Jerry MacDonald has been gl' en the nod to pitch In the opener tonight at 7:30 in John Euless Park. MacDonald. a tall right hand speedballer, Is having the best season In his career, having won five In a row without a loss. His earned run average Is 3:02. Ed Hlte (4-1) who pitched a masterful four-hit shutout against Santa Barbara last week, will get the call In the first game of a twin bill Saturday starting at 1 PM. Either Dave Hoover (6-1) or Virgil DeGeorge (5-0) will have the mound duties In the sec- Thc Matadot . while not a Baseball Statz Name All H Hit Rill UA Schiller 38 37 3 29 .378 Banderas US 36 2 20 .375 Hashimoto ...40 15 o 7 .375 Paull 107 3H (l 22 .355 Bledsoe .60 21 4 10 .350 Sommers 49 16 n 5 .327 Crets 32 10 0 7 .213 Bono mini 87 ;s 0 IS .293 Dollar IO 17 3 17 .283 Pritchctt 51 1 1 ii 1 .21E Mehas ., . . 38 7 0 1 .184 Jaoobaen 31 5 i « .1 si Trimble 5 3 n 0 .600 Wolrsberger 2 1 n 0 .50(1 DeGeorge 13 4 0 0 .308 Ruth 28 8 It 5 .28fi Hoover 25 7 0 3 .280 Coronado 11 :t ft 1 .273 Rala IS 4 0 1 250 Dibble 6 10 2 .167 Hlte 21 2 0 2 .095 MacDonald —.16 1 0 1 .063 Garrison 10 0 0 .000 Shaves 2 0 0 0 .000 Totals....901 269 12 157 .299 .BITCHING O W Is ERA DeGeorge 11 5 0 1.41 Hlte .._ .10 4 t 1.79 Todd 3 1 1. 2.46 MacDonald 9 5 0 3.02 Hoover 11 C 1 3.68 Shaves B 1 $ 4.50 Garrison 10 0 6.00 Totals 27 22 6 2,58 the top three teams In the league, bring a strong squad perfectly capable of wrecking the Bulldogs' hopes for the CCAA title. Fresno leads the league by 1 H games and a ihree-garae sweep over the Matadors would clinch the title. Fresno's record la 11-1 in the CCAA compared to runner- up Los Angeles State's mark of 11-4. The lineup for Hie Bulldogs will probably have /a few new faces this weekend^ Sophomore Tom Sommers has \ an Injured knee and will probably be re¬ placed by Tom Jacobsen or Stan Bledsoe. Both Jacobsen and Bled¬ soe have had hot bats In recent Hai Terry Hnnderas. the only two reg¬ ular outfielders, will be given some help by ihe hitting stars of the Fresno Giant game Dick Ruth, Mick Mehas and Jerry Pritehett. Suds & Jazz JOLLY INN E. Ventura A 9th AD 3-9578 Career Cues—-? "Cure for job boredom: I made my favorite pastime my career!" Richard Bortntm, President Bertram YachtCo., Division of JVauloc Corp. "When you stop to think what percent of our total waking hours ia spent bread-winning, you realize how tragic it is for any man to work at an occupation he doesn't enjoy. Besides frittering away life, it reduces chances of success to just about zero. I know... because it almost happened tomel After college; I did what I thought was expected of me and joined a solid, Manhattan-based insurance firm, I soon found office routine wasn't for me. I lived only for lunch hour when I could walk to the Battery and mentally sail with the ships that stood out in the Narrows . . . and for the summer weekends when I could go sailing. Fortu¬ nately, the company I worked for is one of the leading insurers of yachts and after two years I was transferred to their Yacht Underwriting Department Enjoyment and interest in my work improved immediately 100%. After World War II, I started my own yacht brokerage firm and yacht insurance agency in Miami, combining my marine insurance background with an even closer rela¬ tionship with boats. My only problem ever since has been a feeling of guilt that my work was too easy. I love boats and boating people. That affection has paid me rewards way beyond, the financial security it has also provided. The moral's obvious. You have an odds-on chance for success and happiness working at what you enjoy most — what comes naturally! And if it's not just frivolous, your life's work could well be what you now consider just a pastime. It's certainly worth thinking about, anyway!" And to make any time pass more enjoyably... Have a rea! cigarette-Camel TH£ BEST TOBACCO MAKES THE BEST SMOKE. «
Object Description
Title | 1962_05 The Daily Collegian May 1962 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1962 |
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 4, 1962, Page 4 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1962 |
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 | ► Four- Swim Championships Feature Diving Today Mike Navone. Fresno State Col¬ lege's golden anniversary hopeful [or the state diving champlorsahl Will make his bid to upset tl , great Jim Johnson of San Jo State today. One meter bonrd compciltic will begin with preliminary nolle today at ,1 I'M. The. low board di log *r,n«ir|..r top lilt; SIiiiw At T:80 I'M fans will get I see some ot the. rosiest swim me in the nation compete In Ihe 2t butterfly, 5l\ yard freestyle. 2( yitrd backstroke. 22'i rreestyl 200 breasts! roke and the b mt of the - the rilm style tic final elay .living will be held. Butterfly competition will pit two of the heal dolphin kick swimmers In the business against eacb other. Chuck Bibcock. CCAA champion from Long Beach State. will face Frank Droobs of Cal Poly. Babcock bent Brooks for tbe league title by an "eyelash." Anybody*! ittit-e In the SO-yard freestyle. It'll be Bow Fitzgerald anybody's will try again Ron Milandra Official Loses Argument With Distance Man Truex Rarely does an athlete win an argument with an official. How¬ ever, Max Truex did Just that In the 19GS West Coast Relays. With the officials signalling one lap to go In the 5000-meter run. Truex stopped running, claiming he had completed the race. After a recheek. red-faced officials re¬ versed the results and declared Truex tho winner. Max's explana¬ tion was neat and logical: "1 guess I know when I've run 5000 meters — I've done It often " enough." Beach. Milandra topped Fitzger¬ ald's league record In the event to take the title In the recent looP championships, San Jose State should have superiority In the backstroke events with Its two nationally famed stars. Bob Wegman and Jim Monsees. Ft rut Ik Tomorrow Jack Adam Cal I'oly's star freestyler In the 220 and 440. should be the swimmer to beat la the distance races although Terry McElllot from Los Angeles State lied him in the 220 at the CCAA Tomorrow'si competition will feature tbe medley relay finals along with some of the closest the three-day meet. Iminarles will begin at 10 AM i finals starting in the after- i at 3. Included In the day's u are the 100-yard butterfly, freestyle, 100 breaststroke, backstroke. 440 freestyle and c-meter bourd diving. I isrlll, tonight . with stu- P«te Beiden's oce hurler, Jerry MacDonald 15-0] ii scheduled to pitch tonight at the Bulldogs roar toward the CCAA title agoinit Son Fernando Valley State. Game time is 7;30 PM in John Euless Park. Golf,TrackTeamsEye CCAA Crowns Attempting lo snag two CCAA championships In one weekend's work at Los Angeles. Bulldog track and golf teams will com¬ pete In the CCAA championships. Track coach Cornelius "Dutch" Warmerdam says that despite fine efforts by the Bulldogs in recent competition, till learn has fallen a slim margin hehlnd favored Long Beach State, according to Warmerdam said, however, that Fresno State College tracksters would be going to Los Angeles ihln wtiekentl wlllume filing In "The Fashion Corner" We wonder where C I-'i biend ever tot this far- fet ched + Duone Reidenbach, with hit sparkling 52.4 440 hurdle rec¬ ord lad week, has become one of the top distance hurdlers in the nation. Coach Cornelius Warmerdam ex peels even greater things from this out¬ standing hurdler and runner before he leavei Fresno Slate. Reidenbach ii only a sopho¬ more. The Bulldog star Is one of Ihe favorites in tomorrow's CCAA championships at los Angeles. "I |« i beautiful yellow (dU watch for my birthday. I wore it with a gtuy iport- coat and a friend needled tw, He said yellow fold's only worn with brown, I intrtjfrt he was kxldinx, but he wis :Nowbe'i jotmewon- CLCITHES-ING NOTES — maket our blazer jackets so popular. Onr meat k irt their Ola Bom. rich solid tooea. wit* .saaany practical clothea" ttfsa. It'a yoort two- Aek for Torn Sommers - Bill Young T*# Fathion Corner" ' rlMM .Mt MstfCM "IHE HEAT'S ON" tat I'm pint to ****• ttrrxujh tta sarnmtr in wg cool fijpw shorts. fir ■ Ism anmwt ttty coal tbl M RAPIE|fSHORTS Adtim totMBntmmxnwehop mind — to WIN their second con¬ secutive CCAA crown. Key to Warmerdatn's hopes of retaining the title lies in the pos¬ sible come-through performance" of his promising sophomores. Duane Reidenbach, who set a school 44 0-yard hurdles record of 52.tl in the Mount San Antonio I1--I.lv:. last week, will lead the sophomore brigade. Defending Individual CCAA lilies are Bill Knocke. last year's 140 winner, and Don Schaefer. who has upped tils pole vault standard to 1,4'S". Warmerdam also has high 'hopes for 880 man ■TeWy Holland end illatHnea men Rich Dalgren nnd Joe Herzog. If the meet title depends on the final race, the 440-yard relay. the foatei i Jui ■ and answer In the league in Hugh Adams, Eugene Marzette. Reidenbach and Knocke. The foursome sped to victory In the Mt. SAC Relays In 3:17.3. Larry Pape's golfers are ready to make a bid to regain the CCAA title. The squad, led by free swinging John Sirman. hasn't recent practices have shown sharp steady golf by all members of the Blx-man traveling team. Fresno State's long ball force of Arnold Klrschenmann, Henry Fogg and Dave Hodge should find ihe Yorba Linda course much lo their liking. The course Is one of Ihe largest In California. Eric Walton and Ed Ross round out the team. San Diego will provide the Bulldogs with their st If rest com¬ petition. Bill Russell Jumped 6'9" Hill Russell has become an all- time basketball great with the Boston Celtics but few remember the ex-L'SF star was once an out¬ standing high Jumper, too, He appear on the list of WCR cham¬ pions as high Jump ca-lltllst In 195G, tying wllh soon-to-be Olym¬ pic champion Charley Dumas at MacDonald To Pitch Opener Scrapping for lta second con utive CCAA championship, the Bulldog baseball team will play a three-game aeries with the San Fernando State Matadors. Jerry MacDonald has been gl' en the nod to pitch In the opener tonight at 7:30 in John Euless Park. MacDonald. a tall right hand speedballer, Is having the best season In his career, having won five In a row without a loss. His earned run average Is 3:02. Ed Hlte (4-1) who pitched a masterful four-hit shutout against Santa Barbara last week, will get the call In the first game of a twin bill Saturday starting at 1 PM. Either Dave Hoover (6-1) or Virgil DeGeorge (5-0) will have the mound duties In the sec- Thc Matadot . while not a Baseball Statz Name All H Hit Rill UA Schiller 38 37 3 29 .378 Banderas US 36 2 20 .375 Hashimoto ...40 15 o 7 .375 Paull 107 3H (l 22 .355 Bledsoe .60 21 4 10 .350 Sommers 49 16 n 5 .327 Crets 32 10 0 7 .213 Bono mini 87 ;s 0 IS .293 Dollar IO 17 3 17 .283 Pritchctt 51 1 1 ii 1 .21E Mehas ., . . 38 7 0 1 .184 Jaoobaen 31 5 i « .1 si Trimble 5 3 n 0 .600 Wolrsberger 2 1 n 0 .50(1 DeGeorge 13 4 0 0 .308 Ruth 28 8 It 5 .28fi Hoover 25 7 0 3 .280 Coronado 11 :t ft 1 .273 Rala IS 4 0 1 250 Dibble 6 10 2 .167 Hlte 21 2 0 2 .095 MacDonald —.16 1 0 1 .063 Garrison 10 0 0 .000 Shaves 2 0 0 0 .000 Totals....901 269 12 157 .299 .BITCHING O W Is ERA DeGeorge 11 5 0 1.41 Hlte .._ .10 4 t 1.79 Todd 3 1 1. 2.46 MacDonald 9 5 0 3.02 Hoover 11 C 1 3.68 Shaves B 1 $ 4.50 Garrison 10 0 6.00 Totals 27 22 6 2,58 the top three teams In the league, bring a strong squad perfectly capable of wrecking the Bulldogs' hopes for the CCAA title. Fresno leads the league by 1 H games and a ihree-garae sweep over the Matadors would clinch the title. Fresno's record la 11-1 in the CCAA compared to runner- up Los Angeles State's mark of 11-4. The lineup for Hie Bulldogs will probably have /a few new faces this weekend^ Sophomore Tom Sommers has \ an Injured knee and will probably be re¬ placed by Tom Jacobsen or Stan Bledsoe. Both Jacobsen and Bled¬ soe have had hot bats In recent Hai Terry Hnnderas. the only two reg¬ ular outfielders, will be given some help by ihe hitting stars of the Fresno Giant game Dick Ruth, Mick Mehas and Jerry Pritehett. Suds & Jazz JOLLY INN E. Ventura A 9th AD 3-9578 Career Cues—-? "Cure for job boredom: I made my favorite pastime my career!" Richard Bortntm, President Bertram YachtCo., Division of JVauloc Corp. "When you stop to think what percent of our total waking hours ia spent bread-winning, you realize how tragic it is for any man to work at an occupation he doesn't enjoy. Besides frittering away life, it reduces chances of success to just about zero. I know... because it almost happened tomel After college; I did what I thought was expected of me and joined a solid, Manhattan-based insurance firm, I soon found office routine wasn't for me. I lived only for lunch hour when I could walk to the Battery and mentally sail with the ships that stood out in the Narrows . . . and for the summer weekends when I could go sailing. Fortu¬ nately, the company I worked for is one of the leading insurers of yachts and after two years I was transferred to their Yacht Underwriting Department Enjoyment and interest in my work improved immediately 100%. After World War II, I started my own yacht brokerage firm and yacht insurance agency in Miami, combining my marine insurance background with an even closer rela¬ tionship with boats. My only problem ever since has been a feeling of guilt that my work was too easy. I love boats and boating people. That affection has paid me rewards way beyond, the financial security it has also provided. The moral's obvious. You have an odds-on chance for success and happiness working at what you enjoy most — what comes naturally! And if it's not just frivolous, your life's work could well be what you now consider just a pastime. It's certainly worth thinking about, anyway!" And to make any time pass more enjoyably... Have a rea! cigarette-Camel TH£ BEST TOBACCO MAKES THE BEST SMOKE. « |