April 29, 1969 Pg. 4- April 30, 1969 Pg. 1 |
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First entries indicate usual assault on WCR records petition In the 43rd running of the West Coast Relays May 9 and fO In RatcUffe Stadium Indicate the usual assault on the record e little Gerry Llnd Olympian from Washington State, has filed an entry In the two- mile run. LIndgren's best Is 8:- 32.6, a tenth of a second slower than the WCR mark of 8:32.5 set by Tracy Smith two years ago. Challenging the slender runner from the Pacific Northwest will be Tom Von Ruden, another Olympian who competed for the Army team last year. VonRuden will represent Uncle Sam again this year* San Jose State has entered Its flashy 440-yard relay team . of Ronnie Ray Smith, Sam Car¬ los, Kirk Clayton and John Car¬ los, who zipped through the K hallenglng EngUsh WlU be ■xjna freshman Lorenzo Allen, has done 7-1 3/4 andnarrow- rlzona also will be sending cular Javelin thrower Mark ro, who had a best last year 73 feet, considerably better Frank CoveUi's WCR mark mller Jerry Jobski, hurdler Fair Hooker and pole vaulter Dick Rambo. Jay Silvester has entered the Relays and will be competing against former USC star Gary Carlson, now competing for the Southern Cal Stridors, who won the platter event at the Mt. SAC Relays with a spin of 202-4. Silvester's best was a 197-2 for place behind Al Oerter's YOU DON'T SAY Leo (The Lip) Durocher. Santa Clara Unlvi UCLA, USC, Bright Y Univ. of New Mexico, San jj; College Division-Fresno p. clflc College, Humboldt St.,' Idaho State University, g dental CoUege, Sacramen.oX CoUege, San Francisco |2 College, Stanislaus state cm lege, University of cautorax at Santa Barbara, University 0. Nevada, University of Redl^' Junior College Division - ai lan Hancock College, c«rrit<« Junior College, Chabot College t Citrus College, Colleee0fSe' quotas Diablo Valley Collere Glendale College, Lassen Col' lege, Long Beach City College College of Marin, Merrill CoU lege, Modesto Junior College, Moorpark College, PalomarJm. lor College, Pasadena cityCol- lege, Riverside City College Sacramento City College, Sail Jose City CoUege, Sierra Jm- lor CoUege, Ventura College West VaUey CoUege, Yuhi ^ College. J II coach Sal Ti esno State 5-0. Taormlna'o ,-.». ■ h-iin whs o defeat and the SC mentor had plenty to say to the men i. iaormlna's biggest problem s Bulldog pitcher Kay Strable who handcuffed the Broncos iuln Valley Sportsuriters and -Sport: Bulldogs frail Diablos in golf championships PASADENA State CoUege carried Insurmountable 27-stroke going Into today's final 18 holes la Collegiate Ath¬ letic Association golf champion- Defending champion Fresno State was Bulldog team combine ) of 600 strokes the 36 holes played yesterday at the Annandale Golf Club at Pasa¬ dena. Elec Port w/< e*l cond, 6 mo. guar, remaii 224-0697 or ~ last weekend, finishing three shots ahead of the southland ag¬ gregation. Clovis merchants a regular ~£*r-your sh°PP*"9 'our 0 0 0 I MASON QUALITY PAWT5 KAC TIRE SERVICE hli,rl . . I Vlv,u «rriiAHLC | 7Z3 Clow Ave. , 607 «•..,, | . ——_^ J.^^!_f^.Sl- I R«Uroad at Barstow Ave. ■ 1INENBACH AUTO PARTS J EDWIN'S JEWELRY , ~ W&*W5S* ' ^m Clovis Ave. | 619 4|jl S| | BARBER SHOP I BAD-BOY MARKET 745 Clovis Ave. 423 Pollaskj PUNTY OF FREE PARKING The Daily Collegian LXXIV/124 FRESNO STATE COLLEGE, FRESNO, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, APRIL 30,1969 SDS, Resistance speak out against ROTC Cypher asks end to 'outside influences1 By I) nls McCall a Demi iC So- day outUned their case against the Air Force Rwarve Officer Training Corps program at Fresno State CoUege during a rally witnessed by some 200 sun- fits t rich I tl •owd in the free speech ares part of a rally sponsored by the Re Students for a Democratic Society U Ir Force ROTC program on tbe Fresnt Stale campus. Speakers, tors, called for tbe program to be dropped from FSC curriculum. The rally was in conjunction with many speech area. The raUy grew out of a me¬ morandum directed to the Execu¬ tive Committee of the Academic Senate caUlng for abolishing the AFROTC program at FSC. Speakers at the raUy Included the author of the memo, James M. Cypher, a lecturer In eco- Cypher said one out of every three people in America are either directly or Indirectly •totaUy dependent on tbe MU1- tary-lndustrlal complex* and called it a 'Negative thing.' •The mUltary is holding us back from solving our very des¬ perate social problems,*hesaid. •We know the OEO program (re- cattonal Opportunities Program) Is Just about dead. We know the antlballlsUc missile system la very much aUve and there Is not a hell of a lot we can do about Cypher said he saw the attempt to deal with the mUltary problem as a sort of 6tart In cleaning up the campus." •I think the campus should be run by the people within lt, con¬ trolled by students and the faculty and not by the administrators and a group of regents or trustees who U the 1 .1 they a O'Brien spealcs out 'Violence breeds violence' says Deputy Atty. Gen. It la a good poUcy to eUml- nate the outside Influences on the campus an the most obvious out¬ side Influence we have here Is the mUltary.* Cypher said the state coUeges •are supported by regressive taxes. That means the poor people pay more. They (govern¬ ment) turn around the spend this dig into the pockets of the poor." DanSofreno, ajunior sociology major who spoke for SDS, accused students at FSC with support¬ ing and furthering the war In Vietnam and called for abandon¬ ing the ROTC program at FSC. "The academic institution 18 there for the sole purpose of searching for truth and know¬ ledge. We are supposed to learn In order to avoid war, not to further lt. Our campuses and this campus are organized to fur¬ ther war and death. Our univer¬ sities have been recruiting sta¬ tions for butchers. Every second the ROTC stays on campus la a yes vote for our continuing In Vietnam, a yes vote for the per¬ version of the Ideals of Uberty and human dignity." Economics professor Robert J. AUlson, president of the FSC chapter of the American Federa¬ tion of Teachers, said ROTC "Is not such a great damage to us but Is more of a symboUc thing." He said ROTC symboUzes the basic problem of "organized ■It syroboUzes largely what Is wrong wlthAmerlcan hlgheredu- caUon. Good education In my opinion Is where youopenupyour head and you learn to thl nk. ROTC performs the function of train¬ ing and not of education. It's a symbol that the educational pro¬ cess Is a training ground and not a place where you gain edu- AUlson said ROTC further symboUzes "this whole rolU- tary-lndustrlal complex that gob¬ bles up $100 blUlon a year of lot of thlngs--to solve some of the basic social problems In our so¬ ciety.* Gene Hess, a student speak¬ ing on behalf of The Resistance, (Continued on Page 3. Col, 1) By Mike E today's problems in the United States, according to CaUfornla Chief Deputy Attorney General Charles A. O'Brien. The distinguished speaker sup¬ ported his belief that violence Is not the answer by explaining that any system which is violently at¬ tacked is going to protect Itself In Its Instinct for self survival. ■The system will respond and crush those that violently oppose It. Violence breeds violence,* O'Brien said. The Harvard law school grad¬ uate told a group of faculty and students yesterday that only ra¬ tional thought and non-violent protest will gain the required support of the system to change Itself. New laws are not required to end campus outbreaks, he noted, because there are enough laws now to handle any situation, whether lt be at a gas staUon or on the campus. ■We have pubUc outcry to end violence and the outcome Is that wo are now busy passing laws. When 1 got Into this business thore were about 65 laws dealing with campus unrest. There are Last1 day for gown orders graduating si their caps' „UW U.=« - a l d know how many more there wlU be tomorrow," O'Brien said. He terms the new laws "rabbit bills", because they breed faster than any two animals he has ever •Despite all the laws and the pious dedaraUons, we have not achieved any real opportunity for black Americans. We don't un¬ derstand yet, how to go about lt. We have ambitious federal pro¬ grams, which Is the second great American myth: that by spending enough money, with good wlU, you can solve any social problem, north of the spinal column," the number two ranked lawman In the O'Brien said he shared the feeling of injustice and lndlgna- offered by the poUUcal apparatus In this country and ho shared the lack of action by people who are part of the system. But the U.S. has an amazing ability to deal with problems and solve *em. He cited illustrative instances of revolt in Washing¬ ton's regime and the issue of He cautioned the audience that the system Is not invulnerable to attack. The system that we are trying to change, he said, cannot be changed by hitting lt over the head, because lt Is Uable to over¬ react and move even further to the right. The deputy said he sees defi¬ nite progress in solving this country's problems. He empha¬ sized his point by quoting Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. •I beUeve. I do beUeve,' he said. Two schools elecf six student senators Students of the Schools of Professional Studies and Human¬ ities went to the polls yesterday and elected six senators to represent them on the Student Senate next year. In the School of Professional Studies Gary Daloyan and • Keith Correla each received 20 votes to put them in office. : Daloyan is a JournaUsm major and Correla Is a member of " R.O.T.C. program. Esther Gabriel, a JournaUsm major, third In the balloting with 18 votes voUowed by Gary Balrd j with 12 votes. Balrd la a criminology major. Both Correla Miss Gabriel were write-in candidates. Four senators were elected from the School of Humanities I after 156 students voted. GU Acuna, an incumbent, Vfii top vote getter with 90. Ernesto Trejo, an economics mi received 82 votes and wUl Join Acuna on the Student Senate, i Also elected were sophomore Arlene Pierce and Larry Gasa- way, an anthropology student. They received 69 and 68 \ respecUvely. TralUng In the baUotlng for. Senator from tbe School of I Humanities was senior Rick Torres, Sue Lemalre, a physical I education major and David Whiteside, an elementary educaUon I student. I
Object Description
Title | 1969_04 The Daily Collegian April 1969 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1969 |
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 | April 29, 1969 Pg. 4- April 30, 1969 Pg. 1 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1969 |
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 | First entries indicate usual assault on WCR records petition In the 43rd running of the West Coast Relays May 9 and fO In RatcUffe Stadium Indicate the usual assault on the record e little Gerry Llnd Olympian from Washington State, has filed an entry In the two- mile run. LIndgren's best Is 8:- 32.6, a tenth of a second slower than the WCR mark of 8:32.5 set by Tracy Smith two years ago. Challenging the slender runner from the Pacific Northwest will be Tom Von Ruden, another Olympian who competed for the Army team last year. VonRuden will represent Uncle Sam again this year* San Jose State has entered Its flashy 440-yard relay team . of Ronnie Ray Smith, Sam Car¬ los, Kirk Clayton and John Car¬ los, who zipped through the K hallenglng EngUsh WlU be ■xjna freshman Lorenzo Allen, has done 7-1 3/4 andnarrow- rlzona also will be sending cular Javelin thrower Mark ro, who had a best last year 73 feet, considerably better Frank CoveUi's WCR mark mller Jerry Jobski, hurdler Fair Hooker and pole vaulter Dick Rambo. Jay Silvester has entered the Relays and will be competing against former USC star Gary Carlson, now competing for the Southern Cal Stridors, who won the platter event at the Mt. SAC Relays with a spin of 202-4. Silvester's best was a 197-2 for place behind Al Oerter's YOU DON'T SAY Leo (The Lip) Durocher. Santa Clara Unlvi UCLA, USC, Bright Y Univ. of New Mexico, San jj; College Division-Fresno p. clflc College, Humboldt St.,' Idaho State University, g dental CoUege, Sacramen.oX CoUege, San Francisco |2 College, Stanislaus state cm lege, University of cautorax at Santa Barbara, University 0. Nevada, University of Redl^' Junior College Division - ai lan Hancock College, c«rrit<« Junior College, Chabot College t Citrus College, Colleee0fSe' quotas Diablo Valley Collere Glendale College, Lassen Col' lege, Long Beach City College College of Marin, Merrill CoU lege, Modesto Junior College, Moorpark College, PalomarJm. lor College, Pasadena cityCol- lege, Riverside City College Sacramento City College, Sail Jose City CoUege, Sierra Jm- lor CoUege, Ventura College West VaUey CoUege, Yuhi ^ College. J II coach Sal Ti esno State 5-0. Taormlna'o ,-.». ■ h-iin whs o defeat and the SC mentor had plenty to say to the men i. iaormlna's biggest problem s Bulldog pitcher Kay Strable who handcuffed the Broncos iuln Valley Sportsuriters and -Sport: Bulldogs frail Diablos in golf championships PASADENA State CoUege carried Insurmountable 27-stroke going Into today's final 18 holes la Collegiate Ath¬ letic Association golf champion- Defending champion Fresno State was Bulldog team combine ) of 600 strokes the 36 holes played yesterday at the Annandale Golf Club at Pasa¬ dena. Elec Port w/< e*l cond, 6 mo. guar, remaii 224-0697 or ~ last weekend, finishing three shots ahead of the southland ag¬ gregation. Clovis merchants a regular ~£*r-your sh°PP*"9 'our 0 0 0 I MASON QUALITY PAWT5 KAC TIRE SERVICE hli,rl . . I Vlv,u «rriiAHLC | 7Z3 Clow Ave. , 607 «•..,, | . ——_^ J.^^!_f^.Sl- I R«Uroad at Barstow Ave. ■ 1INENBACH AUTO PARTS J EDWIN'S JEWELRY , ~ W&*W5S* ' ^m Clovis Ave. | 619 4|jl S| | BARBER SHOP I BAD-BOY MARKET 745 Clovis Ave. 423 Pollaskj PUNTY OF FREE PARKING The Daily Collegian LXXIV/124 FRESNO STATE COLLEGE, FRESNO, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, APRIL 30,1969 SDS, Resistance speak out against ROTC Cypher asks end to 'outside influences1 By I) nls McCall a Demi iC So- day outUned their case against the Air Force Rwarve Officer Training Corps program at Fresno State CoUege during a rally witnessed by some 200 sun- fits t rich I tl •owd in the free speech ares part of a rally sponsored by the Re Students for a Democratic Society U Ir Force ROTC program on tbe Fresnt Stale campus. Speakers, tors, called for tbe program to be dropped from FSC curriculum. The rally was in conjunction with many speech area. The raUy grew out of a me¬ morandum directed to the Execu¬ tive Committee of the Academic Senate caUlng for abolishing the AFROTC program at FSC. Speakers at the raUy Included the author of the memo, James M. Cypher, a lecturer In eco- Cypher said one out of every three people in America are either directly or Indirectly •totaUy dependent on tbe MU1- tary-lndustrlal complex* and called it a 'Negative thing.' •The mUltary is holding us back from solving our very des¬ perate social problems,*hesaid. •We know the OEO program (re- cattonal Opportunities Program) Is Just about dead. We know the antlballlsUc missile system la very much aUve and there Is not a hell of a lot we can do about Cypher said he saw the attempt to deal with the mUltary problem as a sort of 6tart In cleaning up the campus." •I think the campus should be run by the people within lt, con¬ trolled by students and the faculty and not by the administrators and a group of regents or trustees who U the 1 .1 they a O'Brien spealcs out 'Violence breeds violence' says Deputy Atty. Gen. It la a good poUcy to eUml- nate the outside Influences on the campus an the most obvious out¬ side Influence we have here Is the mUltary.* Cypher said the state coUeges •are supported by regressive taxes. That means the poor people pay more. They (govern¬ ment) turn around the spend this dig into the pockets of the poor." DanSofreno, ajunior sociology major who spoke for SDS, accused students at FSC with support¬ ing and furthering the war In Vietnam and called for abandon¬ ing the ROTC program at FSC. "The academic institution 18 there for the sole purpose of searching for truth and know¬ ledge. We are supposed to learn In order to avoid war, not to further lt. Our campuses and this campus are organized to fur¬ ther war and death. Our univer¬ sities have been recruiting sta¬ tions for butchers. Every second the ROTC stays on campus la a yes vote for our continuing In Vietnam, a yes vote for the per¬ version of the Ideals of Uberty and human dignity." Economics professor Robert J. AUlson, president of the FSC chapter of the American Federa¬ tion of Teachers, said ROTC "Is not such a great damage to us but Is more of a symboUc thing." He said ROTC symboUzes the basic problem of "organized ■It syroboUzes largely what Is wrong wlthAmerlcan hlgheredu- caUon. Good education In my opinion Is where youopenupyour head and you learn to thl nk. ROTC performs the function of train¬ ing and not of education. It's a symbol that the educational pro¬ cess Is a training ground and not a place where you gain edu- AUlson said ROTC further symboUzes "this whole rolU- tary-lndustrlal complex that gob¬ bles up $100 blUlon a year of lot of thlngs--to solve some of the basic social problems In our so¬ ciety.* Gene Hess, a student speak¬ ing on behalf of The Resistance, (Continued on Page 3. Col, 1) By Mike E today's problems in the United States, according to CaUfornla Chief Deputy Attorney General Charles A. O'Brien. The distinguished speaker sup¬ ported his belief that violence Is not the answer by explaining that any system which is violently at¬ tacked is going to protect Itself In Its Instinct for self survival. ■The system will respond and crush those that violently oppose It. Violence breeds violence,* O'Brien said. The Harvard law school grad¬ uate told a group of faculty and students yesterday that only ra¬ tional thought and non-violent protest will gain the required support of the system to change Itself. New laws are not required to end campus outbreaks, he noted, because there are enough laws now to handle any situation, whether lt be at a gas staUon or on the campus. ■We have pubUc outcry to end violence and the outcome Is that wo are now busy passing laws. When 1 got Into this business thore were about 65 laws dealing with campus unrest. There are Last1 day for gown orders graduating si their caps' „UW U.=« - a l d know how many more there wlU be tomorrow," O'Brien said. He terms the new laws "rabbit bills", because they breed faster than any two animals he has ever •Despite all the laws and the pious dedaraUons, we have not achieved any real opportunity for black Americans. We don't un¬ derstand yet, how to go about lt. We have ambitious federal pro¬ grams, which Is the second great American myth: that by spending enough money, with good wlU, you can solve any social problem, north of the spinal column," the number two ranked lawman In the O'Brien said he shared the feeling of injustice and lndlgna- offered by the poUUcal apparatus In this country and ho shared the lack of action by people who are part of the system. But the U.S. has an amazing ability to deal with problems and solve *em. He cited illustrative instances of revolt in Washing¬ ton's regime and the issue of He cautioned the audience that the system Is not invulnerable to attack. The system that we are trying to change, he said, cannot be changed by hitting lt over the head, because lt Is Uable to over¬ react and move even further to the right. The deputy said he sees defi¬ nite progress in solving this country's problems. He empha¬ sized his point by quoting Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. •I beUeve. I do beUeve,' he said. Two schools elecf six student senators Students of the Schools of Professional Studies and Human¬ ities went to the polls yesterday and elected six senators to represent them on the Student Senate next year. In the School of Professional Studies Gary Daloyan and • Keith Correla each received 20 votes to put them in office. : Daloyan is a JournaUsm major and Correla Is a member of " R.O.T.C. program. Esther Gabriel, a JournaUsm major, third In the balloting with 18 votes voUowed by Gary Balrd j with 12 votes. Balrd la a criminology major. Both Correla Miss Gabriel were write-in candidates. Four senators were elected from the School of Humanities I after 156 students voted. GU Acuna, an incumbent, Vfii top vote getter with 90. Ernesto Trejo, an economics mi received 82 votes and wUl Join Acuna on the Student Senate, i Also elected were sophomore Arlene Pierce and Larry Gasa- way, an anthropology student. They received 69 and 68 \ respecUvely. TralUng In the baUotlng for. Senator from tbe School of I Humanities was senior Rick Torres, Sue Lemalre, a physical I education major and David Whiteside, an elementary educaUon I student. I |