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2 THE DAILY C0LLE61AH Mo-., Dec. 10, 1973 BOD will meet today to discuss legality of bylaws amendments The FSC Association's Board! of Directors will meet today at 2 p.ro. with lawyer Robert Henry of th* Chancellor's Office, the Student Senate Legal Committee,1 and tbe Student Court to discuss) the legality of proposed amend-1 roents to the Association bylaws. The proposed amendments were prepared by the Legal Committee In consultation with Legislative Vice-President Dave Davenport and approved verbally by Henry TheStudent Senate passed these amendments by a 22-4 vote Tuesday, but elded thi open and needed further revision. At a special meeting Thursday "le Student Senate approved the Association while a faculty-staff member. Another amendment being considered would permit the bylaws to be amended by a three-quarters majority vote of tbe Board of Directors. Association bylaws currently state proposed amendments must be directed to the Student Senate through Its Legal Committee, must be approved by a two-thirds majority of the Student Senate and a three-quarters majority of the Board of Directors, and flnaUy roust be submitted to Association vo^ng members at a regular or special election. Before an amendment becomes part of the bylaws It must receive approval from a two-thirds majority of the total votes cast In an election, then receive the are decided to be legal and the Associated Students must be created by April 15th or the amendments become void and Inopera- Proposed bylaws changes and the creation of a new Association (In which the Student Senate de- spent) requires student approval. Board members differ In their opinions of when such an election should be held (if It is decided Oneproposed amendment states every student and faculty-staff dent body card, shall be a non- shali establish what privileges Board member Dr. Robert Lee disagreed. He said absences In his classes are higher before LETTER TO THE EDITOR Holiday Innkeeper responds to 'offender' picture la legls- 1 budget. Baxter said, was largely due to salary hikes. He said the legislature requires modification of the fee schedule In such In- Thank you for displaying the was accomplished by Ihe follow.' current reminder to the publ Holiday Inn Great Sign trademark on the front page of your dally newspaper. However, we at the light bullis from 100 watts to 40 energy conservation and wewei Holiday Inn must gtvesomofacts probably the first in Kresnotoc and ask you to re-evaluate your so. since the Holiday Inn sign our best form of advertising, i More than three weeks ago the shut II off completely wouldMea to lose revenue, which" in tur duced their enerpry consumption healinc .system for the swimming would cause employee lay-of said t task f COMETS OSMIt allocating positions because a drop In enrollment was expected. "Layoffs are the last thing that The president said the recent materials and services fee hike by the California State University and Colleges Board of Trustees might have the effect of lowering ■oblem worse. The FTE •m to be taking lighter e fee hike may encour- nts to further lower the which Includes student representatives, will decide whether the large increase will provide more money than the system needs. If this Is the case, the president said, the fee may be lowered before the new schedule takes ef- enrollm Ing the j of the Dally Collegian to the university president, Baxter said he Is advocating that he be relieved of any legal responsibility for what the paper prints. He Jthorlty* Jxi ^iflfr: Lemoore Naval Air Station TOUR Fro© for CSUF Students \f you're interested In naval aviation and would like to tour the Naval Air Station, contact the Navy Recruiter at the Placement Center. The tour lasts from 8 A.M. to 4 P.M. December 12. Transportation and lunch will be provided. For details and reservations contact the recruiter at the Placement Center December 10th and 11th. at Fresno ts dotnc a- Wem. and If you then He said a task force h set up by the trustees t. he-material and services YE OLE ENGLISH CYCLERY-MOWERY SALES A SERVICE QUALITY BICYCLES, MOWERS, mm, YARD VACUUMS Ye Ole English Cyclery-Mowery BULLARD & FIRST 5717 North 1st 431-1542 BULLARD * FIRST D* THE GONG'S SHOPPING CENTER of the legal pubUsher, he does not want to be responsible for what the paper prints. In response to a question, Baxter said he Is not advocating the Collegian not be given student funds to operate. Under Its present setup, the Collegian receives roughlK haIf 0( "s $62,000budget ' J ' s.Ad- te up the THE DAILY COLLEGIAN OPEN 24 HOURS CEDAR-SHAW MVP to Bailey Mon., Dec. 10,1973 THE DAHY C0UE6IAI 3 'Dogs do it again, win Daffodil Classic Bulldog hoopsters this I Paced once again by the two- mart destruction craw of senior Charles Ballsy, and sophomore Roy Jones, the Bulldogs downed both Portland State (104-71) and Western Washington (59049) to win the Daffodil Classic In Ta- coma, Washington. Fresno's domination of the tourney was made complete when Bailey was voted the most valuable player, and was given a spot on the all- ' " It 6-1 are hardly Intimidating Inures on the court with their lean, angular frames. But the fun starts with their smooth mobility and fine shooting touch, which has caused some unsolvable problems for all four CSUF opponents to be a much tighter contest than the -laugher* over Portland Stats Friday. Although outrebounded 29-33 by the physical Vikings, the Bulldogs bald on to win 59- 49; ss Ballsy poured In 28 points and Jonas 14. A second half rally gavs the 'Dogs s 12 point advantage after working hard throughout tha first 20 minutes to laad by only 32-26. Tha 10 point margin of victory was based by the Bulldogs' 11 of 13 free throws, compared to just a single charity toss by Western Michigan. Jones had a season-high 81 points In the Portland State victory, and he did it by taking a page out ot Bailey's own book. Beginning the game as tuough shot out of a gun, the promising soph had 20 of his points in the first half. He and Bailey were responsible for the torrid 56 per cent figure the "Dogs carved from Fresno was never in trouble Friday night after opening an early 22-4 lead. Junior guard- forward Pat o'Leary coUected 10 points, and was the only other local player to resell double flf- ures other than Bailey and Jones. The big story In Friday's opening round was Western Michigan's upset of highly favored Paget Sound, settlnc up thsWM * final with Fresno. Connecting on Just 25 per cent of their shots, Paget Sound did not have tbe of- , fenslve firepower needed to cope with the 52 per cent made by tbe Vikings. Guards Mark Haddan, Geoff Brandt and Dave Cumberland cannot possible keep up with tbe scoring pecs of their agile forwards, but continue to dish out the assists and effectively pass the ball to the "hot hands.* Cumberland, the transfer from UCLA and Hancock JC, did have eight points against Portland 8tate, proving to be the high polnt producer among the back- Perhaps the close of the "proving stage* for the surprising Bulldogs Is Thursday night, when the University of Colorado comes into Selland Arena to face the 4-0 Ttogs. Wrestlers take second at Chico SOPHOMORE ROY JONES, seen scoring against Texas Tech, was an all-tournament choice In the Daffodil Classic over the weekend in t jcoma. Averaging over 23 points a game In the Bulldogs' four wins, Jones had a season high 31 in Tacoma against Portland State, and continues to be one of the main reasons in the surprising early- success tor Fresno State. Photo by Paul Kuroda. Four Individual champions for Fresno State apparently was not enough, as the wresUers finished . .-ond behind San Francisco State In Chlco State's Dr. Peter- thewi The defending runnerup Bulldogs matched their showing last year, and also came in second for the second consecutive week. It was Cal State Bakersfleld who bettered Fresno In the San Jose tourney. The Gators topped the local matmen by 29 points In the Chlco competition. But none of the five schools could top the four Bulldog champions crowned In the meet. The tltlelsts were David Her- nandei (118). Mtke McGough (150), George Howe (167), and three-year letterman John Berg (190). For Hernandet, and Berg, this was the second straight number one showing' in their weight class, both grapplers coming off first place showings In San Jose. Slowly mending from a deluge of pre-seasoo Injuries, Coach Dick Francis and his wrestlers travel to Westwood this weekend for the UCLA T< -p/2 HELP WANTED NUCLEAR POWER AVIATION fING? MEDICAL DENTAL NURSES LAWYERS MANAGEMENT SPECIALISTS SCHOLARSrtPS STUDENT PROGRAMS AND MORE JOB PROSPECTING? the san francisco navy officer Information team Will IE ON CAMPUS DECEMBER 10 -14,1973 AT _ CAREER PUNNING t PIACEMENT CENTER FROM 9 A.M. TO 4 P.M. DAILY. ASK US WHAT WE HAVE TO OFFER. FUTURE WITH A CHALLENGE
Object Description
Title | 1973_12 The Daily Collegian December 1973 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1973 |
Description | Daily (except weekends) during the school year. Microfilm. Palo Alto, Calif. |
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, 35mm. |
Technical Information | Scanned at 600 dpi; TIFF; Microfilm ScanPro 2000 "E-image data" |
Language | eng |
Description
Title | Dec 10, 1973 Pg. 2-3 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1973 |
Description | Daily (except weekends) during the school year. Microfilm. Palo Alto, Calif. |
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, 35mm. |
Technical Information | Scanned at 600 dpi; TIFF; Microfilm ScanPro 2000 "E-image data" |
Language | eng |
Full-Text-Search | 2 THE DAILY C0LLE61AH Mo-., Dec. 10, 1973 BOD will meet today to discuss legality of bylaws amendments The FSC Association's Board! of Directors will meet today at 2 p.ro. with lawyer Robert Henry of th* Chancellor's Office, the Student Senate Legal Committee,1 and tbe Student Court to discuss) the legality of proposed amend-1 roents to the Association bylaws. The proposed amendments were prepared by the Legal Committee In consultation with Legislative Vice-President Dave Davenport and approved verbally by Henry TheStudent Senate passed these amendments by a 22-4 vote Tuesday, but elded thi open and needed further revision. At a special meeting Thursday "le Student Senate approved the Association while a faculty-staff member. Another amendment being considered would permit the bylaws to be amended by a three-quarters majority vote of tbe Board of Directors. Association bylaws currently state proposed amendments must be directed to the Student Senate through Its Legal Committee, must be approved by a two-thirds majority of the Student Senate and a three-quarters majority of the Board of Directors, and flnaUy roust be submitted to Association vo^ng members at a regular or special election. Before an amendment becomes part of the bylaws It must receive approval from a two-thirds majority of the total votes cast In an election, then receive the are decided to be legal and the Associated Students must be created by April 15th or the amendments become void and Inopera- Proposed bylaws changes and the creation of a new Association (In which the Student Senate de- spent) requires student approval. Board members differ In their opinions of when such an election should be held (if It is decided Oneproposed amendment states every student and faculty-staff dent body card, shall be a non- shali establish what privileges Board member Dr. Robert Lee disagreed. He said absences In his classes are higher before LETTER TO THE EDITOR Holiday Innkeeper responds to 'offender' picture la legls- 1 budget. Baxter said, was largely due to salary hikes. He said the legislature requires modification of the fee schedule In such In- Thank you for displaying the was accomplished by Ihe follow.' current reminder to the publ Holiday Inn Great Sign trademark on the front page of your dally newspaper. However, we at the light bullis from 100 watts to 40 energy conservation and wewei Holiday Inn must gtvesomofacts probably the first in Kresnotoc and ask you to re-evaluate your so. since the Holiday Inn sign our best form of advertising, i More than three weeks ago the shut II off completely wouldMea to lose revenue, which" in tur duced their enerpry consumption healinc .system for the swimming would cause employee lay-of said t task f COMETS OSMIt allocating positions because a drop In enrollment was expected. "Layoffs are the last thing that The president said the recent materials and services fee hike by the California State University and Colleges Board of Trustees might have the effect of lowering ■oblem worse. The FTE •m to be taking lighter e fee hike may encour- nts to further lower the which Includes student representatives, will decide whether the large increase will provide more money than the system needs. If this Is the case, the president said, the fee may be lowered before the new schedule takes ef- enrollm Ing the j of the Dally Collegian to the university president, Baxter said he Is advocating that he be relieved of any legal responsibility for what the paper prints. He Jthorlty* Jxi ^iflfr: Lemoore Naval Air Station TOUR Fro© for CSUF Students \f you're interested In naval aviation and would like to tour the Naval Air Station, contact the Navy Recruiter at the Placement Center. The tour lasts from 8 A.M. to 4 P.M. December 12. Transportation and lunch will be provided. For details and reservations contact the recruiter at the Placement Center December 10th and 11th. at Fresno ts dotnc a- Wem. and If you then He said a task force h set up by the trustees t. he-material and services YE OLE ENGLISH CYCLERY-MOWERY SALES A SERVICE QUALITY BICYCLES, MOWERS, mm, YARD VACUUMS Ye Ole English Cyclery-Mowery BULLARD & FIRST 5717 North 1st 431-1542 BULLARD * FIRST D* THE GONG'S SHOPPING CENTER of the legal pubUsher, he does not want to be responsible for what the paper prints. In response to a question, Baxter said he Is not advocating the Collegian not be given student funds to operate. Under Its present setup, the Collegian receives roughlK haIf 0( "s $62,000budget ' J ' s.Ad- te up the THE DAILY COLLEGIAN OPEN 24 HOURS CEDAR-SHAW MVP to Bailey Mon., Dec. 10,1973 THE DAHY C0UE6IAI 3 'Dogs do it again, win Daffodil Classic Bulldog hoopsters this I Paced once again by the two- mart destruction craw of senior Charles Ballsy, and sophomore Roy Jones, the Bulldogs downed both Portland State (104-71) and Western Washington (59049) to win the Daffodil Classic In Ta- coma, Washington. Fresno's domination of the tourney was made complete when Bailey was voted the most valuable player, and was given a spot on the all- ' " It 6-1 are hardly Intimidating Inures on the court with their lean, angular frames. But the fun starts with their smooth mobility and fine shooting touch, which has caused some unsolvable problems for all four CSUF opponents to be a much tighter contest than the -laugher* over Portland Stats Friday. Although outrebounded 29-33 by the physical Vikings, the Bulldogs bald on to win 59- 49; ss Ballsy poured In 28 points and Jonas 14. A second half rally gavs the 'Dogs s 12 point advantage after working hard throughout tha first 20 minutes to laad by only 32-26. Tha 10 point margin of victory was based by the Bulldogs' 11 of 13 free throws, compared to just a single charity toss by Western Michigan. Jones had a season-high 81 points In the Portland State victory, and he did it by taking a page out ot Bailey's own book. Beginning the game as tuough shot out of a gun, the promising soph had 20 of his points in the first half. He and Bailey were responsible for the torrid 56 per cent figure the "Dogs carved from Fresno was never in trouble Friday night after opening an early 22-4 lead. Junior guard- forward Pat o'Leary coUected 10 points, and was the only other local player to resell double flf- ures other than Bailey and Jones. The big story In Friday's opening round was Western Michigan's upset of highly favored Paget Sound, settlnc up thsWM * final with Fresno. Connecting on Just 25 per cent of their shots, Paget Sound did not have tbe of- , fenslve firepower needed to cope with the 52 per cent made by tbe Vikings. Guards Mark Haddan, Geoff Brandt and Dave Cumberland cannot possible keep up with tbe scoring pecs of their agile forwards, but continue to dish out the assists and effectively pass the ball to the "hot hands.* Cumberland, the transfer from UCLA and Hancock JC, did have eight points against Portland 8tate, proving to be the high polnt producer among the back- Perhaps the close of the "proving stage* for the surprising Bulldogs Is Thursday night, when the University of Colorado comes into Selland Arena to face the 4-0 Ttogs. Wrestlers take second at Chico SOPHOMORE ROY JONES, seen scoring against Texas Tech, was an all-tournament choice In the Daffodil Classic over the weekend in t jcoma. Averaging over 23 points a game In the Bulldogs' four wins, Jones had a season high 31 in Tacoma against Portland State, and continues to be one of the main reasons in the surprising early- success tor Fresno State. Photo by Paul Kuroda. Four Individual champions for Fresno State apparently was not enough, as the wresUers finished . .-ond behind San Francisco State In Chlco State's Dr. Peter- thewi The defending runnerup Bulldogs matched their showing last year, and also came in second for the second consecutive week. It was Cal State Bakersfleld who bettered Fresno In the San Jose tourney. The Gators topped the local matmen by 29 points In the Chlco competition. But none of the five schools could top the four Bulldog champions crowned In the meet. The tltlelsts were David Her- nandei (118). Mtke McGough (150), George Howe (167), and three-year letterman John Berg (190). For Hernandet, and Berg, this was the second straight number one showing' in their weight class, both grapplers coming off first place showings In San Jose. Slowly mending from a deluge of pre-seasoo Injuries, Coach Dick Francis and his wrestlers travel to Westwood this weekend for the UCLA T< -p/2 HELP WANTED NUCLEAR POWER AVIATION fING? MEDICAL DENTAL NURSES LAWYERS MANAGEMENT SPECIALISTS SCHOLARSrtPS STUDENT PROGRAMS AND MORE JOB PROSPECTING? the san francisco navy officer Information team Will IE ON CAMPUS DECEMBER 10 -14,1973 AT _ CAREER PUNNING t PIACEMENT CENTER FROM 9 A.M. TO 4 P.M. DAILY. ASK US WHAT WE HAVE TO OFFER. FUTURE WITH A CHALLENGE |