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2 THE DAILY COLLEGIAN Tueaday, September 30, 1969 commentary Lloyd Carter In dubious baffle Good news week It's good news week. More than two million persons have now died of starvation in the two- year Nigerian civil war. Most of the two million were Biafran children. The United Stales has preferred not to Intervene In Albuquerque, Chicano leader Reles TIJerina has been found guilty of destroying Federal property, Tljerlna told the white Jury that the property was stolen from his people by they said that was irrelevant. jur Also In Los Angeles, our re vered Senator George Murph told a senate subcommitte that an estimated one mllllo Callfornlans have drinking prob lems and that alcoholism cost the state a billion dollar, a year. Maybe they should swltci to Pot. Nol much luck then The war on Weed goes on with fervent support from Un tobaccd and liquor industries despite reports from doctor.' that the drought is driving a lo "~"ird drugs. But lsn o anyway? n surrounded by neannc 800 n bam claims she tains adequate ar Our military powe leader Cesar Insurance." Thai Washington today sound iof.ic from a The Chicago Eight support for the grape boycott Meanwhile, the Defense Department has ordered a 40 per cent Increase In grape pur- In Los Angeles, a group of doctors supporting birth control pills, (most of them also have a financial sUke In the pill) told a family planning conference that harmful publicity about the potent preventerorilfewas*gro5s- ly lnadvlsed." This followed a report from the food and drug administration ceptlves have a 4.4 times greater risk of dying from a blood clot than a non-user does... The Daily Collegian ga/,n S. Mohan: The East in the West Listen to me, will you? Every age brings speaking- beings so many things — both good and bad. Brlnglngs of space- age, however, are countless. Out of the countless, the best thing It has gifted lo the biologically supreme oxygen-breathlng-crea- lures is that they have ceased to Uslen to their fellow-beings without becoming hard of hearing. Is It good or had? - can't say anything. Good or tud, In fact, Is determined by the attitude one has > and Its so- attitude toward life. Hope they'll succeed. Why not be checked with the Psychology Department. They might have increased extra credit for Uklng their attitude-Involving tests this Fall. They need speaking-beings, I'm sure. It is good that we know how to speak. But, that's not all we need. We've got to learn listening, too. Communication which U must for all kinds of prob- polltlcs, right I ) to [ to whose bad luck? I don't know, has become everything for the speaklng-belngs in space-age. Concerned with their research work, quite a few growing as well as grown psychologists are quietly busy In surveying human only. It's strictly a speaking and listening process. And this process Is absolutely necessary for human survival. Human survival, I don't think. Is a big worry In the world of speaklng-belngs. Big worry Is their Inability to listen despite having the two ears In working order. Forget those self-sayings recorded In them: 'Don't listen, The entire U.N.O. looks Uke suffering from non-llstentng. These sufferings seem creeping toward Individual nations, sutes, communities, campuses, and individuals. Who will listen to whom? All peace-talks, all understandings, all true relationship, all true loves are stuck at this question. Extreme of helplessness. Bui, wait a minute, why not pin the last hope on a public reUUons man who is especially trained in two-way communication and who Is sincerely engaged In successfully struggling against prejudices and mls-conceptlons. Oh no, he needs help, too. His face U also dusted with rols- The speaklng-belngs have very recenUy turned Into two different groups-pure speaking group and pure Ustenlng group. Each group Is staring at jsach other with anger-extended eyes: •Speak to me!* one roars. •Listen to me!* the other thun- Roars and thunders are flghUng against each other, crushing so many humble voices which very lately have become fed-up with both thunders and roarsand which are tremblingly running around to get hold of some real eyes, not ears, to ask: 'Listen to roe, wiU you?* This ta, therefore, surely a fact that nourishment of any organization, Improvement of any dialogue depends on communication. And communication doesn't always mean speaking or writing. It has much more sophisticated But, O God, if you, too, are not only a speaking-being, give the epeaklng-beinge on earth a gone habit of listening. They wiU not die of shortage food; they wiU die of non-Ustenlng. I'm crying In my prayer, God. Listen to me, wlU you? DISTRIBUTOR OF 'THE JOHN BIRCH SOCIETY 'EAstolivk PUBLICATIONS letters 'Clear cist' ART SUPPLIES AND DRAFTING MATERIALS j tl- coupon-—: ■ 5 0 Phone mm\ | V ExW/'* 229-7744 J ■ Arts % Hobbies > ■ CIDAR « SHIELDS SHOPPING CENTER m "-■■■■■■ig. NEXT TO U.ORARy J OPEN NIGHTS 'TIL sTm." In a recent article in the Collegian. Professor Flkes hit new heights in ignorance and faculty Irresponsibility. His display of apathy leaves every student who governmei totally disillusioned Hon, Is clear racist. It Is Impossible to think that this man, whose faclst authoritarianism pervaded his whole Interview, any weight in faculty Questions Collegian In response to the article In the Sept. 26 Issue of the Collegian enUtled 'E.O.P. rumors officially squelched by administration", " r faculty. octal t attend the convocation. Do not agree with him - actually have the guts to think for yourselves. DANIEL R. SAFRENO SPECIAL BURGER 5 r99« rloT DOGS TACOS CORN DOG CHICKEN IN BASKET SHAKES CONES SUNDAES For.Faster PHONE ORDER 229-1620 Idctta-deJite distortion of facto on an issue as that article detailed. Dear editor, who are you trying to kid? We realize that there aren't 2,000 E.O.P students on the campus (the number Is closer to 300), but when you try to make ■ people believe that -only certain entering freshmen and transfer students" registered in Time Zone 1, you have got to be kidding yourself. You. forget that students, yes, readers of your tabloid, worked at registration and saw the 'select few' multiply and multiply until there were more than a few registering In that Ume zone. These people are not going to be fooled by your apology. I know several students on the E.O.P. program who took basic courses such as lower division psychology, English, and other competitive classes who registered in that time slot and were given preferential treat- Thls Is what the rumors e bulk :. Why s of the student body h »•-». 2 And this o fight ir the classes while this group s first grabs? Maple & Show new $tatd t ■ ■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■I •core classes" for E.O.P. is as phony an excuse as one could think up. if these ethnic study courses are only for the E.O.P. (ConUnued on Page 4, Col. 2) "1 Tuesday, September 30, 1969 THE DAILY COLLEGIAN 3 Fresno takes second win 28-20 Bulldogs score three touchdowns H in first quarter against Montana DEFENSIVE END GENE SUGLIAN was t "Bulldog ol thc Week* for his line action during last week's win ovei Montana. Suglian is a returning letterman from last year's team. Water polo team wins first game The Fresno SUte Bulldogs scored 21 points In the first quarter and then managed to hang on for a thrill-packed 28-20 win over Montana SUte University last weekend. It was their second win of the season and now the Bulldogs will travel to Stockton to tangle with the University of Pacific this coming Saturday night. The Montana game was unusual in the tact that the Bulldogs scored any official time had started. With Montana winning the toss of the coin, F.S.C. kicked off to the Bobcats. Kicker Kenth Svennson put the ball deep Into their end zone and when no player from Montana fell on II, the Bulldog's Atomic Toroslan recovered the loose ball to give Fresno an early score. They came right back with their second score of the quarter after Ervln Hunt recovered a fumble on the Fresno 43. With quarterback Ron Hudson doing the signal canine, the F.S.C. offense went to work. Hudson tossed a long pass to John Sexton U I went to Mon- i 19. utes later running back Fred Parker carried lt over for the touchdown. With 4:20 showing to pUy in the first quarter, Fresno scored their third touchdown of the period. Starting on their own 21, the Bulldogs marched down to the Bobcats 37. Hudson hit end Mike White on a 37-yard TD strike to give the Bulldogs a 21-0 lead. Montana came right back when Ebenezer Edmon returned F.S.C. kickoff 71 yards before he was stopped on Fresno's own 22. The Bobcats went down to the Fresno one but then they ran into a stubborn defensive wall. They failed to •core and Freeno took over on their own one. The Bulldogs were unable to move the ball on their flrat two downs so Toroslan booted a 71-yard quick-kick. Tbe fourth and final Fresno touchdown came In the third quarter when Hudson again teamed up with Sexton on a 28 -yard scoring strike. Hudson had nine completions In 14 attempts for 190 yards and two touchdowns. Sexton brought down five passes for 94 yards and White three for 57. Parker and Walt Jensen each picked up 51 yards on the ground. The Bulldog Water Polo team finally got off the ground with their first win of the season, 13-7 over Sacramento State College. Coach Ara Halra- bedian's tankers also played San Jose SUte, the number one team In the nation last year, and lost 14-7 In a well played Fresno SUte had 4-1, 6-3, and 11-4 quarter advantages In celebraUng their lnlUal victory. Big Steve Heaston paced FSC scoring with five goals while Hon Dadaml and Rick Milling - ton each tossed In two. Tim Harabedlan reported his Bull- | dogs played well against the outclassed Hornets and looked good >n defense. Fresno outshot Sacramento 25- 4 from the field. Freshman goal- e Chuck ChaUen earned special >rai5e for his five saves. It was a case of too much to landle for the Bulldogs as they | dropped their second PCAA con- to the Spartans. >C played Its' best game against San Jose but sUU led the enUre game 3-1, 9-5, 11-6 before losing 14-7. ?aston along with Sanborn scored three timos with White adding the other goal. SJS had the upper band in shots from tho field at 24-18. Harabedlan noted that the game was actually closer than tbe seven point spread indicated. The coach was pleased with his team's performance and says he looks for even more Improvement from his poloists. The Bulldogs now are 1-3 oh the season and 0-2 In the tough PCAA. • r Facfory Shoe Repair sVDt3.fi * aich surrons * whiu you wait service We Do Good Work ON DIAMOND RINGS IT 10% OFF i anyd.mmmdby ( otjmnge blotwom ATTENTION SENIORS! Sign up NOW for SENIOR PHOTOGRAPHS in Room 309 .. . College Union PROFESSIONAL STUDIO PORTRAITS FOR 'CAMPUS* YEARBOOK NOW BEING TAKEN AT THE COLLEGE UNION Pttssas t "ILL TRAM TOO 'ORKDIO HOUMAIIAMQIO Bayly Manufacturing m AnnadaleAve., Sanger opportunity .mploy.r.' DO YOUR CHRISTMAS SHOPPING WITH THE MONEY YOU'LL SAVE ON PAYMENTS PEAS! $1962 DELIVERED INfRESNO. S199 DOWN PAYMENT PLUS TAX AND LICENSE. '60 ,72 A v J GARDNER@VOLKSWAGEN $399.00 To the girl who knows what she wants but not where to find it. Match your style with our many distinctive designs. And ask us about our famous Orange Blossom guarantee. f}altitWti FRESNO'S LARGEST JEWELERS DOWNTOWN MANCHESTER 1107 FULTON MALL 237-2101 Open Frl Nttee 'til 9 3540 BLACKSTONE 229-8511 * Frl Nttee'til 9
Object Description
Title | 1969_09 The Daily Collegian September 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 | September 30, 1969 Pg 2-3 |
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 | 2 THE DAILY COLLEGIAN Tueaday, September 30, 1969 commentary Lloyd Carter In dubious baffle Good news week It's good news week. More than two million persons have now died of starvation in the two- year Nigerian civil war. Most of the two million were Biafran children. The United Stales has preferred not to Intervene In Albuquerque, Chicano leader Reles TIJerina has been found guilty of destroying Federal property, Tljerlna told the white Jury that the property was stolen from his people by they said that was irrelevant. jur Also In Los Angeles, our re vered Senator George Murph told a senate subcommitte that an estimated one mllllo Callfornlans have drinking prob lems and that alcoholism cost the state a billion dollar, a year. Maybe they should swltci to Pot. Nol much luck then The war on Weed goes on with fervent support from Un tobaccd and liquor industries despite reports from doctor.' that the drought is driving a lo "~"ird drugs. But lsn o anyway? n surrounded by neannc 800 n bam claims she tains adequate ar Our military powe leader Cesar Insurance." Thai Washington today sound iof.ic from a The Chicago Eight support for the grape boycott Meanwhile, the Defense Department has ordered a 40 per cent Increase In grape pur- In Los Angeles, a group of doctors supporting birth control pills, (most of them also have a financial sUke In the pill) told a family planning conference that harmful publicity about the potent preventerorilfewas*gro5s- ly lnadvlsed." This followed a report from the food and drug administration ceptlves have a 4.4 times greater risk of dying from a blood clot than a non-user does... The Daily Collegian ga/,n S. Mohan: The East in the West Listen to me, will you? Every age brings speaking- beings so many things — both good and bad. Brlnglngs of space- age, however, are countless. Out of the countless, the best thing It has gifted lo the biologically supreme oxygen-breathlng-crea- lures is that they have ceased to Uslen to their fellow-beings without becoming hard of hearing. Is It good or had? - can't say anything. Good or tud, In fact, Is determined by the attitude one has > and Its so- attitude toward life. Hope they'll succeed. Why not be checked with the Psychology Department. They might have increased extra credit for Uklng their attitude-Involving tests this Fall. They need speaking-beings, I'm sure. It is good that we know how to speak. But, that's not all we need. We've got to learn listening, too. Communication which U must for all kinds of prob- polltlcs, right I ) to [ to whose bad luck? I don't know, has become everything for the speaklng-belngs in space-age. Concerned with their research work, quite a few growing as well as grown psychologists are quietly busy In surveying human only. It's strictly a speaking and listening process. And this process Is absolutely necessary for human survival. Human survival, I don't think. Is a big worry In the world of speaklng-belngs. Big worry Is their Inability to listen despite having the two ears In working order. Forget those self-sayings recorded In them: 'Don't listen, The entire U.N.O. looks Uke suffering from non-llstentng. These sufferings seem creeping toward Individual nations, sutes, communities, campuses, and individuals. Who will listen to whom? All peace-talks, all understandings, all true relationship, all true loves are stuck at this question. Extreme of helplessness. Bui, wait a minute, why not pin the last hope on a public reUUons man who is especially trained in two-way communication and who Is sincerely engaged In successfully struggling against prejudices and mls-conceptlons. Oh no, he needs help, too. His face U also dusted with rols- The speaklng-belngs have very recenUy turned Into two different groups-pure speaking group and pure Ustenlng group. Each group Is staring at jsach other with anger-extended eyes: •Speak to me!* one roars. •Listen to me!* the other thun- Roars and thunders are flghUng against each other, crushing so many humble voices which very lately have become fed-up with both thunders and roarsand which are tremblingly running around to get hold of some real eyes, not ears, to ask: 'Listen to roe, wiU you?* This ta, therefore, surely a fact that nourishment of any organization, Improvement of any dialogue depends on communication. And communication doesn't always mean speaking or writing. It has much more sophisticated But, O God, if you, too, are not only a speaking-being, give the epeaklng-beinge on earth a gone habit of listening. They wiU not die of shortage food; they wiU die of non-Ustenlng. I'm crying In my prayer, God. Listen to me, wlU you? DISTRIBUTOR OF 'THE JOHN BIRCH SOCIETY 'EAstolivk PUBLICATIONS letters 'Clear cist' ART SUPPLIES AND DRAFTING MATERIALS j tl- coupon-—: ■ 5 0 Phone mm\ | V ExW/'* 229-7744 J ■ Arts % Hobbies > ■ CIDAR « SHIELDS SHOPPING CENTER m "-■■■■■■ig. NEXT TO U.ORARy J OPEN NIGHTS 'TIL sTm." In a recent article in the Collegian. Professor Flkes hit new heights in ignorance and faculty Irresponsibility. His display of apathy leaves every student who governmei totally disillusioned Hon, Is clear racist. It Is Impossible to think that this man, whose faclst authoritarianism pervaded his whole Interview, any weight in faculty Questions Collegian In response to the article In the Sept. 26 Issue of the Collegian enUtled 'E.O.P. rumors officially squelched by administration", " r faculty. octal t attend the convocation. Do not agree with him - actually have the guts to think for yourselves. DANIEL R. SAFRENO SPECIAL BURGER 5 r99« rloT DOGS TACOS CORN DOG CHICKEN IN BASKET SHAKES CONES SUNDAES For.Faster PHONE ORDER 229-1620 Idctta-deJite distortion of facto on an issue as that article detailed. Dear editor, who are you trying to kid? We realize that there aren't 2,000 E.O.P students on the campus (the number Is closer to 300), but when you try to make ■ people believe that -only certain entering freshmen and transfer students" registered in Time Zone 1, you have got to be kidding yourself. You. forget that students, yes, readers of your tabloid, worked at registration and saw the 'select few' multiply and multiply until there were more than a few registering In that Ume zone. These people are not going to be fooled by your apology. I know several students on the E.O.P. program who took basic courses such as lower division psychology, English, and other competitive classes who registered in that time slot and were given preferential treat- Thls Is what the rumors e bulk :. Why s of the student body h »•-». 2 And this o fight ir the classes while this group s first grabs? Maple & Show new $tatd t ■ ■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■I •core classes" for E.O.P. is as phony an excuse as one could think up. if these ethnic study courses are only for the E.O.P. (ConUnued on Page 4, Col. 2) "1 Tuesday, September 30, 1969 THE DAILY COLLEGIAN 3 Fresno takes second win 28-20 Bulldogs score three touchdowns H in first quarter against Montana DEFENSIVE END GENE SUGLIAN was t "Bulldog ol thc Week* for his line action during last week's win ovei Montana. Suglian is a returning letterman from last year's team. Water polo team wins first game The Fresno SUte Bulldogs scored 21 points In the first quarter and then managed to hang on for a thrill-packed 28-20 win over Montana SUte University last weekend. It was their second win of the season and now the Bulldogs will travel to Stockton to tangle with the University of Pacific this coming Saturday night. The Montana game was unusual in the tact that the Bulldogs scored any official time had started. With Montana winning the toss of the coin, F.S.C. kicked off to the Bobcats. Kicker Kenth Svennson put the ball deep Into their end zone and when no player from Montana fell on II, the Bulldog's Atomic Toroslan recovered the loose ball to give Fresno an early score. They came right back with their second score of the quarter after Ervln Hunt recovered a fumble on the Fresno 43. With quarterback Ron Hudson doing the signal canine, the F.S.C. offense went to work. Hudson tossed a long pass to John Sexton U I went to Mon- i 19. utes later running back Fred Parker carried lt over for the touchdown. With 4:20 showing to pUy in the first quarter, Fresno scored their third touchdown of the period. Starting on their own 21, the Bulldogs marched down to the Bobcats 37. Hudson hit end Mike White on a 37-yard TD strike to give the Bulldogs a 21-0 lead. Montana came right back when Ebenezer Edmon returned F.S.C. kickoff 71 yards before he was stopped on Fresno's own 22. The Bobcats went down to the Fresno one but then they ran into a stubborn defensive wall. They failed to •core and Freeno took over on their own one. The Bulldogs were unable to move the ball on their flrat two downs so Toroslan booted a 71-yard quick-kick. Tbe fourth and final Fresno touchdown came In the third quarter when Hudson again teamed up with Sexton on a 28 -yard scoring strike. Hudson had nine completions In 14 attempts for 190 yards and two touchdowns. Sexton brought down five passes for 94 yards and White three for 57. Parker and Walt Jensen each picked up 51 yards on the ground. The Bulldog Water Polo team finally got off the ground with their first win of the season, 13-7 over Sacramento State College. Coach Ara Halra- bedian's tankers also played San Jose SUte, the number one team In the nation last year, and lost 14-7 In a well played Fresno SUte had 4-1, 6-3, and 11-4 quarter advantages In celebraUng their lnlUal victory. Big Steve Heaston paced FSC scoring with five goals while Hon Dadaml and Rick Milling - ton each tossed In two. Tim Harabedlan reported his Bull- | dogs played well against the outclassed Hornets and looked good >n defense. Fresno outshot Sacramento 25- 4 from the field. Freshman goal- e Chuck ChaUen earned special >rai5e for his five saves. It was a case of too much to landle for the Bulldogs as they | dropped their second PCAA con- to the Spartans. >C played Its' best game against San Jose but sUU led the enUre game 3-1, 9-5, 11-6 before losing 14-7. ?aston along with Sanborn scored three timos with White adding the other goal. SJS had the upper band in shots from tho field at 24-18. Harabedlan noted that the game was actually closer than tbe seven point spread indicated. The coach was pleased with his team's performance and says he looks for even more Improvement from his poloists. The Bulldogs now are 1-3 oh the season and 0-2 In the tough PCAA. • r Facfory Shoe Repair sVDt3.fi * aich surrons * whiu you wait service We Do Good Work ON DIAMOND RINGS IT 10% OFF i anyd.mmmdby ( otjmnge blotwom ATTENTION SENIORS! Sign up NOW for SENIOR PHOTOGRAPHS in Room 309 .. . College Union PROFESSIONAL STUDIO PORTRAITS FOR 'CAMPUS* YEARBOOK NOW BEING TAKEN AT THE COLLEGE UNION Pttssas t "ILL TRAM TOO 'ORKDIO HOUMAIIAMQIO Bayly Manufacturing m AnnadaleAve., Sanger opportunity .mploy.r.' DO YOUR CHRISTMAS SHOPPING WITH THE MONEY YOU'LL SAVE ON PAYMENTS PEAS! $1962 DELIVERED INfRESNO. S199 DOWN PAYMENT PLUS TAX AND LICENSE. '60 ,72 A v J GARDNER@VOLKSWAGEN $399.00 To the girl who knows what she wants but not where to find it. Match your style with our many distinctive designs. And ask us about our famous Orange Blossom guarantee. f}altitWti FRESNO'S LARGEST JEWELERS DOWNTOWN MANCHESTER 1107 FULTON MALL 237-2101 Open Frl Nttee 'til 9 3540 BLACKSTONE 229-8511 * Frl Nttee'til 9 |