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xniaAN tl UNI VII JAMES HOLMIS End of faculty tenure positive step Explanation still needed Incident In question ha .lerlsinn of the 3rd lllstt Court of Appeals to CSUF's action In le..,. Lord nearly enough. i Record-holder Matzdorf enters WCR high /unip .stent, restored Its credibility office while ..rvlng as Rnglls'i Dapart. than ha. been generally r, ■s dismissal rase has The background mallei fl system has. to some easily disposed of. In Deceit e English Depar.n.erii in a lett- 1. on the faculty. But ther aren't. d lor years, the the his oryofa faculty lounge. To begin with ve.rs the prof becomes a Elizabeth II on ., the throne of F talk of chy in re is of abolish. j The Admlnl l.a.Inn's power colleae presll.ru APPLICATIONS Applications ore available in College Union, Room 311, and College Union, Room 306. The deadline is May 10, LETTER IHE DAILY COLLEGIAN tht California .ttqte university, fresno THREEPENNY OPERA by Kurt Weill and Bertolt Brecht zJiln^rkV1^ Ulcsu-f little theatre Thursday, May 10, 1873 THE OAILY COLLEGIAN 'a World record holder Pat Mali- dorf na. entered tne West Coast R.lay. Open and Intercollegiate high Jump, a field which now In- t.red 7-2. So th.re'. a good chance Ihe WCR record of 1-21 2 will fall Saturday night. f set the record of n Berkeley In May of 1171 a USA-I Also entered In Ihe high Jump are Reynaldo Brown (7-3) of the Pacific Coast Club, Dean Owens .7-2 lTsDofUSC.andRlckFletcher (7-2 1/4) of UCLA. JerryCulp of USC has done 7-1 and could surprise. The high jump will tw- gln at 6 p.m. Saturday. Herb Waahlngton. whose 9.2 ls the best time In the country this year, has entered the WCR Open 100-yard dash. Among those challenging Washington will he Norbert Pay ton of the Bay Area Strlders. and Willie Peckard and Chuck Smith of the International Track Club, both of whom have done 9.4. International, and the foursome of Washington. Deckard. Smith and Stan Whitley rould threaten the world record of 30.6 In the Open 440 relay 17:22 p.m. Saturday). Cal International has officially earn of Willie Turn n relay Brown and Smith c th. world record of 1:20.7. WCR Director Dutch Warmerdam said. -They haven't been to- gether yet. but the) .hould be able to run close to the world record time If they do anything .1 .11.* The first section of lh. .vent will begin at 8:M p.m Saturday night. Fresnan Rand)' William., the 1972 Olympic champ and number four on the all-time 11.1 with . m.rk of 27-4 1 '4, head.th.WCR long jump field Williams, oul for a month earlier thla vear with an Injury, should be stiffly challenged by Whitley. Whitley de- Antonlo Relays, Jumping 26-51 2 to 26-2 12 for Williams. Al Feuerbarh, who last week st the San Jose Invitational broke ihe world record in ihe shoi put wtth a toss of 71-7. Its. publicly stated he could do It again thla competition, but Ihe world record is still tn jeopardy. The shot pui will get underwayat6p.m.Saturday. Other world-class performers competing Include Jay Silvester In the dlsrus (12:30 onSaturday), Olympian Tom Hill of Arkansas In the 120 high hurdles .finals at G:32 "i.m on Saturday), and Broncos trounce Fresno.* San Jose here tomorrow For the first time In Ms year. Santa Clara I. not the WestCoast Athletic Conference lllleholder, but It might be hard to convince the CSUF baseball team of thai after Ihe Brenc* pounded oul eight double. In » 12-4 victory last night St Belden Field. Santa Clara, Is 32-16-1 overall and 10-S In WCAC play, but was never able lo etch up after Loyola of Lo. Angeles took twoof-three from the Bronco, to open conference play. Tuesday night wa. the second time tht. ye.r former San Joaquin Memorial lefthander Tim Ryan has defeated the Bulldog*, having | Ryan went five Inning., gave up ,two run. and flv. hit., struck out four, .nd walked three. He', now 9-1 on the year *• Centerflelder Steve Lackey drove In both Fre.no runs off llyan. driving tn f»an Burton wtih a second-Inning sacrifice fly Meld fence In the fourth. Dave Judmck went the last four Innings for Sent. Clara, catcher Dav. Russell's two-run slngl with the bases loaded In th seventh doing the only damag. Besides Lackey and Hussel Burton and Andrew |>yes had h, bats for Fresno. Burton double was Ihree-for-four. Santa Clara look lh* lead try leering four run* In th. fourth off Fresno starter and loser Din Grimm (now 7-5). They added one tn the si sib off WsrrenBrus- star. three In th* seventh off Steve B.hlen, .nd four ln Ih. ninth off Crayg Wattee. Moot* Wood pitched the eighth for Fresno and wa* th* only 'Doc hurlar left untouched by th* Bronco assault. Gene Deylon (all-WCAC last year), Chris Klnsel, RonMosley, Mike Denevt. and Ryan all bad Iwo or more hits for the Broncos. Klnsel blasted a Watte* chang*. CSUF I* Mill In th. hotly- contested PCAA rac*, Had for second with UOP st 9-6. 8*a Jos. ls 8-6-1, ao all tar** have * chance to unseat current leader LA State (lo-S). LA Stale and UOP tangle In Los Angeles IM* of Brad Duncan (off the team A subdued Bob Brandt staled th* obvious- 'We're going lo have lo do well on the mound if we're going to beat San Jose.* lie Indicated Monte Wood may start either the second or third game of the series. Kenn Cunningham might replace Frank net!) seem* especially harmful after last nrght's pounding. Al»o, If lh* "Dog. finish In * tie with LA State, Ih* Diablo* will b» declared th* winner because thay took two-of-three from Fresno earlier Ihla year. Bul UOP I* certainly capable of taking three game* from lh* Diablos, .nd If Ih. Fresno pitchers come through they could sweep the Spartans. In any event, there should be some good baseball played at Belden Field thi* Dog go/fers win third tourney A second-place finish by Mike Watney led the CSUF golfers to victory Monday In the Southern California Intercollegiate tour- for the Bulldogs. This was the third tournament otirney was played victor, of the year for the Bull- the Torrey Pines dogs, having previously taken the i were figured by -nd the FSO Classic Thei'll Iry I four out of sis) 'or four when the PCAA tourna- sn.. and I'SC (led. and Tuesday al the Silverado is awarded first Golf Course in Napa. This week- is fifth man had a end the CSUF golfers will compete In Ihe final 36 holes of ihr a 72-72.144. five Fresm, Clly tournament. ' sec„-nd"Cw,rhaj7m SPORTS CALENDAlT A and Bill Pfarr lilt HSU \\ , rl,v„n il. thar. Other Bulldogs participating were Dan Johnson (76-69-145), Terry Moore (74-74-1411). Skip.' llaugen f72-76-14»>. and Bob F.berle and Bill Trask (|61's>. Johnson's 69 was the best score recorded on the south course. Stadler who also took first place honors In ihe FSU Classic All Comers tennis tourney annual All Comers will be held nn the CSUF tennis courts May 19 and 20. There will be corope- tlon in Men's Singles, Men's Doubles, Women's Singles. Women's Doubles, and Mixed Doubles. The entry fee ls *3 per player in Singles, $4 per team In Doubles Entries must be malledbe- fore 5 p.m. on Tuesday, May IS. Checks should be made payabl* to ihe CSUF Tennis Association. Mall entries and entry fees to: CSUFTA, Jon 4420-A E. Slert Calif. 93726. The Tournament Committee may limit the number of participants, to be decided by the postmark of th. entry. Playing lime, will be deter- mlned by a draw th* *v*nlng of May 17. Pl»y*r* can find out - their playing Un**» by eltn-,r consulting th* Fresno Bee Sports page or by calling 222-7377 or 227-6934. s day. Players minutes late. Warmup time Is limited to live minutes. Each player must provide one new Heavy Duty, Yellow Wilson tennis .ball for each match. Matches will be played hyUSTLA rule., best of three sets, with a X-.ll. Archery tournament A. ffilllWTUW, _- Madr.. Fresno. Scheduled Ivf Mity 20 Th. CSVF Archery Club and Impact Archery of Fresno will co-sponsor Ihe first annual Columbia and American Round archery tournament May 20 at Ih* CSUF archery rang.. The n will begin al 8 a.m., with So you plan to spend the Summer in Europe this year. Great. Two things are mandatory. A ticket to Europe. And a Student-Railpass. The first gets you over Ihere, the second gives you unlimited Second Class rail travel for two months for a modest $150 in Austria. Belgium. Denmark, France. Germany. Holland. Italy. Luxembourg. Norway. Portugal. Spain. Sweden, and Switzerland! All you need to qualify is to be a full-time student up to 25 years of age. registered at a North American school, college or university. And the trains of Europe are a sensational way to travel. Over 100.000 miles of track I inks cities. . towns and ports all over Europe. The trains are fast (some over i 00 mph), frequent, modern, clean, convenient and very comfortable. They have to be. So you'll meet us on our trains. It really is the way to get to know Europeans in Europe. But there's one catch. You must buy your Student-Railpass io North America before you go. They're not on sale in Europe because they are meant strictly for visitors to Europe-hence the incredibly low price. Of course if you're loaded you can buy a regular Eurailpass meant for visitors of all - ages.' It gives you First Class travel if that's what you want. Either way if you're going - to zip off to Europe, see a Travel Agent before you go, and in tt-V meantime, rip off the coupon. It X can't hurt and It'll get you a better \ time in Europe than you ever thought: J-
Object Description
Title | 1973_05 The Daily Collegian May 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 | May 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 | xniaAN tl UNI VII JAMES HOLMIS End of faculty tenure positive step Explanation still needed Incident In question ha .lerlsinn of the 3rd lllstt Court of Appeals to CSUF's action In le..,. Lord nearly enough. i Record-holder Matzdorf enters WCR high /unip .stent, restored Its credibility office while ..rvlng as Rnglls'i Dapart. than ha. been generally r, ■s dismissal rase has The background mallei fl system has. to some easily disposed of. In Deceit e English Depar.n.erii in a lett- 1. on the faculty. But ther aren't. d lor years, the the his oryofa faculty lounge. To begin with ve.rs the prof becomes a Elizabeth II on ., the throne of F talk of chy in re is of abolish. j The Admlnl l.a.Inn's power colleae presll.ru APPLICATIONS Applications ore available in College Union, Room 311, and College Union, Room 306. The deadline is May 10, LETTER IHE DAILY COLLEGIAN tht California .ttqte university, fresno THREEPENNY OPERA by Kurt Weill and Bertolt Brecht zJiln^rkV1^ Ulcsu-f little theatre Thursday, May 10, 1873 THE OAILY COLLEGIAN 'a World record holder Pat Mali- dorf na. entered tne West Coast R.lay. Open and Intercollegiate high Jump, a field which now In- t.red 7-2. So th.re'. a good chance Ihe WCR record of 1-21 2 will fall Saturday night. f set the record of n Berkeley In May of 1171 a USA-I Also entered In Ihe high Jump are Reynaldo Brown (7-3) of the Pacific Coast Club, Dean Owens .7-2 lTsDofUSC.andRlckFletcher (7-2 1/4) of UCLA. JerryCulp of USC has done 7-1 and could surprise. The high jump will tw- gln at 6 p.m. Saturday. Herb Waahlngton. whose 9.2 ls the best time In the country this year, has entered the WCR Open 100-yard dash. Among those challenging Washington will he Norbert Pay ton of the Bay Area Strlders. and Willie Peckard and Chuck Smith of the International Track Club, both of whom have done 9.4. International, and the foursome of Washington. Deckard. Smith and Stan Whitley rould threaten the world record of 30.6 In the Open 440 relay 17:22 p.m. Saturday). Cal International has officially earn of Willie Turn n relay Brown and Smith c th. world record of 1:20.7. WCR Director Dutch Warmerdam said. -They haven't been to- gether yet. but the) .hould be able to run close to the world record time If they do anything .1 .11.* The first section of lh. .vent will begin at 8:M p.m Saturday night. Fresnan Rand)' William., the 1972 Olympic champ and number four on the all-time 11.1 with . m.rk of 27-4 1 '4, head.th.WCR long jump field Williams, oul for a month earlier thla vear with an Injury, should be stiffly challenged by Whitley. Whitley de- Antonlo Relays, Jumping 26-51 2 to 26-2 12 for Williams. Al Feuerbarh, who last week st the San Jose Invitational broke ihe world record in ihe shoi put wtth a toss of 71-7. Its. publicly stated he could do It again thla competition, but Ihe world record is still tn jeopardy. The shot pui will get underwayat6p.m.Saturday. Other world-class performers competing Include Jay Silvester In the dlsrus (12:30 onSaturday), Olympian Tom Hill of Arkansas In the 120 high hurdles .finals at G:32 "i.m on Saturday), and Broncos trounce Fresno.* San Jose here tomorrow For the first time In Ms year. Santa Clara I. not the WestCoast Athletic Conference lllleholder, but It might be hard to convince the CSUF baseball team of thai after Ihe Brenc* pounded oul eight double. In » 12-4 victory last night St Belden Field. Santa Clara, Is 32-16-1 overall and 10-S In WCAC play, but was never able lo etch up after Loyola of Lo. Angeles took twoof-three from the Bronco, to open conference play. Tuesday night wa. the second time tht. ye.r former San Joaquin Memorial lefthander Tim Ryan has defeated the Bulldog*, having | Ryan went five Inning., gave up ,two run. and flv. hit., struck out four, .nd walked three. He', now 9-1 on the year *• Centerflelder Steve Lackey drove In both Fre.no runs off llyan. driving tn f»an Burton wtih a second-Inning sacrifice fly Meld fence In the fourth. Dave Judmck went the last four Innings for Sent. Clara, catcher Dav. Russell's two-run slngl with the bases loaded In th seventh doing the only damag. Besides Lackey and Hussel Burton and Andrew |>yes had h, bats for Fresno. Burton double was Ihree-for-four. Santa Clara look lh* lead try leering four run* In th. fourth off Fresno starter and loser Din Grimm (now 7-5). They added one tn the si sib off WsrrenBrus- star. three In th* seventh off Steve B.hlen, .nd four ln Ih. ninth off Crayg Wattee. Moot* Wood pitched the eighth for Fresno and wa* th* only 'Doc hurlar left untouched by th* Bronco assault. Gene Deylon (all-WCAC last year), Chris Klnsel, RonMosley, Mike Denevt. and Ryan all bad Iwo or more hits for the Broncos. Klnsel blasted a Watte* chang*. CSUF I* Mill In th. hotly- contested PCAA rac*, Had for second with UOP st 9-6. 8*a Jos. ls 8-6-1, ao all tar** have * chance to unseat current leader LA State (lo-S). LA Stale and UOP tangle In Los Angeles IM* of Brad Duncan (off the team A subdued Bob Brandt staled th* obvious- 'We're going lo have lo do well on the mound if we're going to beat San Jose.* lie Indicated Monte Wood may start either the second or third game of the series. Kenn Cunningham might replace Frank net!) seem* especially harmful after last nrght's pounding. Al»o, If lh* "Dog. finish In * tie with LA State, Ih* Diablo* will b» declared th* winner because thay took two-of-three from Fresno earlier Ihla year. Bul UOP I* certainly capable of taking three game* from lh* Diablos, .nd If Ih. Fresno pitchers come through they could sweep the Spartans. In any event, there should be some good baseball played at Belden Field thi* Dog go/fers win third tourney A second-place finish by Mike Watney led the CSUF golfers to victory Monday In the Southern California Intercollegiate tour- for the Bulldogs. This was the third tournament otirney was played victor, of the year for the Bull- the Torrey Pines dogs, having previously taken the i were figured by -nd the FSO Classic Thei'll Iry I four out of sis) 'or four when the PCAA tourna- sn.. and I'SC (led. and Tuesday al the Silverado is awarded first Golf Course in Napa. This week- is fifth man had a end the CSUF golfers will compete In Ihe final 36 holes of ihr a 72-72.144. five Fresm, Clly tournament. ' sec„-nd"Cw,rhaj7m SPORTS CALENDAlT A and Bill Pfarr lilt HSU \\ , rl,v„n il. thar. Other Bulldogs participating were Dan Johnson (76-69-145), Terry Moore (74-74-1411). Skip.' llaugen f72-76-14»>. and Bob F.berle and Bill Trask (|61's>. Johnson's 69 was the best score recorded on the south course. Stadler who also took first place honors In ihe FSU Classic All Comers tennis tourney annual All Comers will be held nn the CSUF tennis courts May 19 and 20. There will be corope- tlon in Men's Singles, Men's Doubles, Women's Singles. Women's Doubles, and Mixed Doubles. The entry fee ls *3 per player in Singles, $4 per team In Doubles Entries must be malledbe- fore 5 p.m. on Tuesday, May IS. Checks should be made payabl* to ihe CSUF Tennis Association. Mall entries and entry fees to: CSUFTA, Jon 4420-A E. Slert Calif. 93726. The Tournament Committee may limit the number of participants, to be decided by the postmark of th. entry. Playing lime, will be deter- mlned by a draw th* *v*nlng of May 17. Pl»y*r* can find out - their playing Un**» by eltn-,r consulting th* Fresno Bee Sports page or by calling 222-7377 or 227-6934. s day. Players minutes late. Warmup time Is limited to live minutes. Each player must provide one new Heavy Duty, Yellow Wilson tennis .ball for each match. Matches will be played hyUSTLA rule., best of three sets, with a X-.ll. Archery tournament A. ffilllWTUW, _- Madr.. Fresno. Scheduled Ivf Mity 20 Th. CSVF Archery Club and Impact Archery of Fresno will co-sponsor Ihe first annual Columbia and American Round archery tournament May 20 at Ih* CSUF archery rang.. The n will begin al 8 a.m., with So you plan to spend the Summer in Europe this year. Great. Two things are mandatory. A ticket to Europe. And a Student-Railpass. The first gets you over Ihere, the second gives you unlimited Second Class rail travel for two months for a modest $150 in Austria. Belgium. Denmark, France. Germany. Holland. Italy. Luxembourg. Norway. Portugal. Spain. Sweden, and Switzerland! All you need to qualify is to be a full-time student up to 25 years of age. registered at a North American school, college or university. And the trains of Europe are a sensational way to travel. Over 100.000 miles of track I inks cities. . towns and ports all over Europe. The trains are fast (some over i 00 mph), frequent, modern, clean, convenient and very comfortable. They have to be. So you'll meet us on our trains. It really is the way to get to know Europeans in Europe. But there's one catch. You must buy your Student-Railpass io North America before you go. They're not on sale in Europe because they are meant strictly for visitors to Europe-hence the incredibly low price. Of course if you're loaded you can buy a regular Eurailpass meant for visitors of all - ages.' It gives you First Class travel if that's what you want. Either way if you're going - to zip off to Europe, see a Travel Agent before you go, and in tt-V meantime, rip off the coupon. It X can't hurt and It'll get you a better \ time in Europe than you ever thought: J- |