La Voz de Aztlan, April 17 1972
Item
Title
La Voz de Aztlan, April 17 1972
Creator
Associated Students of Fresno State
Relation
La Voz de Aztlan (Daily Collegian, California State University, Fresno)
Coverage
Fresno, California
Date
4/17/1972
Format
PDF
Identifier
SCUA_lvda_00029
extracted text
The Dally Colleglan
LAN
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LXXVIl/112 Fresno State College _ Fresno, California Monday, April 17, 1972
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Brown is being in the sun
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Here
we go agam
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Con las manos en la tierra.
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Brown is beauty untold
Con tu corazon de fuerra.
Brown is being him and her
Con tu mente sin usar.
La
l Gen te
Brown is talk, talk, talk
Con tu col ita sin parrar.
Brown is together, funky, and fine
I
Bell sends decision back to court
Bv Gan· Ah.•xand(•r
nature as to preclude adjudica-
C~llegi;n Staff Writer
tion.'"
In a statement to the Student
Court, Dr. David G. Bell, dean of
student affairs, has asked for
"clarification'" of the court decision which reinstated the ESP
slate to the student body election
ballot.
Bell's statement termed the
court's rationale •of such a vague
Con tu r itmo para gozar.
Brown is wisdom through age
Con los jovenes I istos pa' arrancar.
I
Brown is desire without a will
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::~::,:::::,::~~~d~~: jugar•
Brown is the humanism of tomorrow
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Con la gente que a nadien va a-enganar.
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UPI editor to ioin
Journalism staff
The vice president and editor
of United Pre s -s International
(UPI), Roger Tatarian, has been
appointed to the faculty of the
Journalism Department at Fresno State College. He will begin
his teaching duties in September.
The announcement was made by
Dr. Harold Haak, FSC academic
vice president.
Tatarian is an FSC graduate
and a veteran of more than 30
years of U.s. and foreign assignments with the news agency.
Dr. John Duke, chairman of the
Department of Journalism, says
Tatarian will be an important
addition to the faculty because of
his strong background in the field
of news writing and will concentrate his effort in beginning and
advanced writing.
Also, because of his worldwide experience with UPI, he will
teach the department ·s course in
Press and World Affairs. Dr.
Duke says Tatarian is well acquainted with the work of coliege
journalism students through his
judging in recent years of the
journalism competition for students sponsored by the Hearst
newspapers.
Born in Fresno, Tatarian joined
UPI in its local bureau following
his graduation from FSC in 1938.
He was assigned to the Washington staff in 1941, and covered the
United Nations organizational
conference in San Francisco in
1945.
He went to London in 1949
and to Rome in 1951 as manager
of the UPI bureaus in those cities
and became the agency's general
news manager for Europe in
1953. He became managing editor
of UPI in 1959, was elected a vice
president in 1963 and was appointed editor in 1965.
Tatarian was at the scene of
every major diplomatic conference during his tour of duty in
Europe. Also, he directed coverage of other big stories including
the lifting of the Berlin blockade,
the 1956 winter Olympics in Italy,
national elections in Italy, Britain
and France, the Hungarian revolt
and the Suez crisis.
Tatarian's honors include an
honorary Doctor of Letters degree from Wfltldham College in
1967 and a special citation by
Ohio University in 1968 for distinguished service ih journalism.
Legal adviser
begins work
at FSC today
FSC students now have a place
to turn to for free legal advice.
Bill Jolly, a fourth-year student
at Humphrey's College School of
Law in Fresno. was hired last
Wednesday as Legal Advisement
Coordinator for the college. The
student association is providing
the state with funds to operate
the position.
Jolly is available to students
or any other members of the college community for legal advicf
and counseling. He is not able to
give any actual legal service but
can refer people to attorneys if
such service is necessary.
Jolly will be on campus Mondays and Tuesdays from 8 a.m.
to 12 noon for consultation. Appointments can be made in the
Student Activities Office or by
calling 487-2741.
He was selected from a field
of six applicants by a committee
including Woody Brooks, Student
Senate legal committee chairman; Joe Guagliardo, chairman
of the board of directors budget
committee; Dave Collins, ASB
legislative vice president and Bill
Corcoran, assistant dean of student affairs.
Jolly graduated from Fresno
City College with an AA degree.
He worked in sales and public
relations in the Bay Area for 10
years. For the last five years
he has operated his own real
estate business in Fresno as
well as attending law scho~l at
night arid doing research for a
local law firm.
Student Body President Phil
Sherwood said it is possible that
the service will be expanded next
year if there is enough evidence
of student need.
In what is proving to be one of
the most confusing and drawn
out elections in FSC history, the
court overturned the decision of
the election committee's executive committee which disqualified
the ESP ticket. The slate was
disqualified for allegedly exceeding the maximum limit for campaign expenses.
According to Art White, chief
justice, the court will meet tomorrow to revamp their supportive arguments which they
used to reach their decision.
"Bell wants us to specify the
points we used in arriving at our
decision. I believe what he wants
is a more elaborate statement,
as he seems to have found ours
too brief.,.
Bell's introduction into the situation stems from an appeal of
the court decision by recently
resigned election com mitt e e
chairman, Gene Boni,
"I appealed the court decision
because I felt that the ESP slate
did exceed their expense accounts and were rightfully
disqualified. I don't see any
reason why they should be reinstated," Boni said. "The executive committee made a just decision.
"The elections are not valid,
and in fact are fixed if ESP is on
the ballot.
"White isn't going to get out of
this on legitimate grounds," Boni
added.
There has been speculation that
some inch victuals may seek a
court injunction against the elections. Boni has a wait-and-see
attitude but maintains the possibility he may file such an injunction.
The victors, Baltazar Touar,
Andrew Benites and Joe P. Munaz, said their first objective is
to have John Martinez named
Chief of Police.
An all-anglo city council selec-:tion last January of the late
Patrick Carnahan as police chief
over Martinez, touched off the
ethnic trouble that has rocked
the little town of Parlier ever
since.
In the race for city clerk,
Clifford Ifodriguez, also . endorsed by the Fact Finding Committee, defeated incumbent D. J.
Herring. Herring has held the
office for the past 36 years.
It was the first time a person
of Mexican descent has been
elected to office in Parlier even
though · the community population
ROTC protest
set today
According to an anti-war
spokesman, there was a demonstration scheduled at noon today
at the Air Sciences Building.
Citing the recent escalation in
the air war in Southeast Asia
as the reason for the anti-ROTC ·
demonstration, anti-war spokesman Dennis Strand charged, "l"S
air attacks are threatening - to
widen the way beyond possible
containment."
According to Strand, a coalition
of local anti-war groups are involved in the demonstration.
"This is the root of the air
war, these ROTC cadets are still
being trained to fig! t a war that
is continuing into its thirteenth
year," St rand added.
Strand said he is a veteran of
the war, having served in Vietnam with' the US Army.
This week national anti-war
groups are planning demonstrations in a number of major cities
across the country.
Villa, Rodriguez, Baxter,
Kessler speak at EOP rally
By Alex Contreras
La Voz Aztlan Staff Writer
"Chicanos will not return to
the barrio without education." So
declared City Councilman Al
Villa, as he addressed an EOP
rally audience - estimated to
have been 185 people - on the
FrE:sno State College campus,
last Friday afternoon.
The rally was the climax to a
•
Three Chicanos w,n Parlier election
A trio of candidates of Mexican descent, running under the
banner of the Parlier Fact Finding Committee, defeated incumbent Mayor Weldon Byram and
two other councilmen last Tuesday.
"I don't feel it is necessary to
file suit yet. I'm going to wait
until I see what Bell and others
are going to do," he said,
"Some candidates, George Xagel in particular , are seeking an
injunction against the election.
I'm waiting for the Bell decision
because I'd rather it be decided
out of court."
Nagel says he is considerina an
injunction because many qu~stions about the election haven't
been determined.
(Continued on page 2, col. 5)
is approximately 85 per cent
Mexican-American.
Nearly 89 per cent of the
city's registered voters went to
the polls.
·
Arcadro V. viveras, chairman
of the Parlier Fact Finding Committee, said that the election results "have proven the MexicanAmerican people can be united
along with other minorities." ·
The committee is now pointing
to the June 6 recall election of
two other city councilmen.
week in which EOP students
staged a hunger strike to protest
Gov. Ronald Reagan's recent
withdrawal of state EOP funds.
Joining Councilman Villa on the
speakers' platform was FSC
President Norman Baxter, who
commended the leaders of the
hunger strike, but remained uncommitted on the .EOP issue.
United Professors of California local president, Dr. Warren
Kessler, was· warmly received
as he stated UPC support ofEOP
and strongly urged the audience
to write their legislators and ask
them to vote for EOP, not only
the first time around but to also
vote for EOP after the governor's
veto.
Local attorney Armando Rodriguez, also apoke in supp~rt of
the EOP students and mentioned
that he had seen the EOP started
and that the budget was now back
to 1969 standards.
All of the day's speakers applauded the courage and dignity
displayed by the students involved
in the fast and most voiced their
support of EOP.
2
THE DAILY COLLEGIAN
Monday, April 17, 1972
1
LA
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Chicano leadership
..
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Chicanos at Fresno State seem to have fallen into a st9-te of chaos
this- semester.
Everyone seems to be waiting for someone to come along to provide something called leadership. Hell, it just isn't enough that the
..
gavacho continues his oppression, we m,u st also lay inactive and in~
different to the events which concern US!
Remember: be we chicanos, Mexican-Americans or pochos, we
Bell
ourselves, you, I, we are the leadership.
WE ARE THE VANGUARD OF A NEW SCENE, ONE WHERE
THE RAZA WILL NO LONGER REMAIN CONTENT IN ITS
Conspiracy
ROLE OF "'SECONDHAND CITIZENSHIP.•
It remains for the RAZA at FSC to once more mold themselves
into a strong, effective voice. One _that we wil _l all support.
· -Por La Raza todo-Alexandro Contreras
lllE -DAILY COLLEGIAN
Published five days a week except
holidays and examination periods by
the Fresno State College Association.
Mail subscriptions $8 a semester,
$15 a year. Editorial office, Keats
Campus Building, telephone 487-2486.
Business and advertising office, College Union 316, telephone 487-2266 .
Editor-in-chief . . . . . , Bill Follett
Day Editors . . . . • . Alex Contreras
Ricardo Paredes
News Editor .. , . . . .. . . Jim Brock
Sports Editor . . . . . . . .· Ron Orozco
Environmental Editor . Steve Soriano
Business lAanager . . Edward Piston
Advertising \tanager . . Wilbur PauJs
Reporters .. . . . . . Gary Alexander,
Dave Davenport, John Pe·ckler, .
Anne Richards
Photographers .. . . . Larry Nylund,
Steve Soriano , Julie Van Reyper
Opinions expressed in Collegian
editorials, including feature-edit oria ts
and commentaries by guest writers,
are not necessarily those of Fresno
State College or the student body.
Edttor-app lications
Applications are now available for Daily Collegian editor for the Fall semester.
Interested students may pick
up applications •in room 302
of the College Union.
Applications must be returned by April 28.
The Board of Publications
will select the editor May 4.
Editors of La Voz de Aztlan:
I suffered a rather odd kind of
bellyache Friday. It did not comefrom a week of fasting with the
local EOP students; it was instead generated by the sight of
the people at their rally, bent forward with questioning expressions on their faces,. trying to
comprehend the words of the
speakers, sensing that they had
something to say. The crowd
could not miss the problem: the
public address system seemed to
have been designed for classroom
use. Through it, the words of
the enlightenirig speakers could
be understood by a good so per
cent of the audience; the rest
were in the dark.
My anger drove . me to' the Instructional Media Center where
I found a defensive Director Let me apologize for my belly3;ching, Mr. Bathurst. The IMC
Director concluded our chat by
stating that the only imaginable
reason for the inadequacy of the
P.A. system was that the person
Student Handbook assistant editors
The Board on Publications has
announced that applications are
available for two positions as assistant editor$ for a student handLOCKSMITHS
Ali?~~~ b~~~~r&oi:t~;~ -
book. A ~andbook has not been
published for several years but
plans are being made for one next
year. Most of the work for the
publication will be done this summer.
Louie's Lo.ck & Key Shop
Persons seeking further information may call the Student Activities Office at 487-2741 or th·e
Student President's Office, 4872657~ Applications are due April
28 and the selection·is scneduled
for May 4.
WALK ·1. :BLOCK TO .FSC
There is a $200 grant being
proposed for each position.
1-2-3 BDRM. LUXURY APTS.
SELL YOl:JR
student discount, credit ~ards
group and charter rates, U.S.A . .
and Europe . Call Ralph 224-6876
The abqve is not sponsored by the ..
Calif. State Colleges or the Fresno
State College AssociatiQn, Inc. ·
0
Auto-House-Trunks-Stores
-Foreign CarsPH: 227-6263
Cedar Lane Shopping Center
9 am-6 pm Daily - Sun. 10 am-5 pm
USED
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(during Spring Semester)
227-2908
(CORNER
5158 N. 9th,. E. SAN
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OPEN DAILY 11 A.M.-6P.M:
AT
FSC Bookstore
who had requisitioned it had not
specified clearly enough the intended use. He added that he and
Norman Baxter run IMC at what
they consider a reasonable level
of efficiency.
Having been thus reassured by
IMC, I made my way back to .the
EOP Rally where I questioned
ME CHA Chairwoman Grace Solis
as to who had been responsible
for obtaining the P.A. Her reply
caught me off guard. She said that
Pat Gorman of the Activities Office had agreed to take responsibility for the requisition. I cannot
believe that his failure to obtain
an_adequate P.A. can be attributed
to a lack of communication with
IMC.
Alternatively, I must consider
another possibility. Both Gorman
of Activities and Bathurst ofIMC
are res pons i bl e · directly to
President Norman Baxter, who is
in term responsible to the trustees, Chancellor Dumke, and finally Governor Reagan. I would
not think it accurate to' say that
any individual had taken part
knowingly in a conspiracy against
minority ' groups on this campus,
but it does seem as though the
•syste-m" has, in this case,
served as a convenient deterrent
to the EOP students in their
struggles against the heartlessness of the Reagan Administration.
Steven M. Johnson
Sophomore
Back packing
The outings group of the College Union Recreation Committee
is sponsoring a back packing trip
to the Big Meadows area of Sequoia National Forest April 21,
22 and 23.
.
A planning rneefing will be held
today in CU 310 at 7 p.m., 0Qtdoor camping equipment from
Denali Mountaineering will be on
display at the meeting. For additional information call
487-2938.
.IOBS
EUROPE
guaranteed and salaried.
England , Belgium and Switzerland, year-round. Trainees (general help) '1st class
hotels , restaurants, supermarkets, hospitals, department stores, holiday camps.
For details and application
send $1.00 with a stamped
self-addressed business
size envelope to:
Princeton Research. Dept. C
Box 4418
Panorama City, Calif. 91402
(Continued from page 1)
"I'm looking at the possibility
of getting an injunction to postpone the election until all the
questions are answered," he said.
"I think the court's decision is
questionable. Bill Follett 'shearsay testimony was given m'ore
cred.ibility than Gene Boni's. I
wasn't at the court meeting, but
this was the impression I got
from people who were there,"
said Nagel.
According to White, Follett's
testimony was not used in reaching the decision because it was
hearsay evidence.
Nagel added he wants the election postponed because of the
publicity the "ESP slate has received recently."
"The sympathy vote is there
too, more Greeks will now vote
out of sympathy for ESP. ·
"I hope people will look for
candidates' qualifications instead
of their affiliations. If they don't,
we '11 be in real trouble next
year," Nagel said.
ESP presidential candidate
Mark Etcheverry expects Bell to
render a favorable decision on
the student court ruling.
"I hope nothing serious happens but Boni made the decision
and he has to live with it. He
made a mistake and screwedup," Etcheverry said.
The Bell decision may involve
more than a ruling on the court
decision.
According to White, "It is debatable whether or not the de'cision may be appealed.
"I'm not sure if Dean Bell is
aware or not but there are conflicting provisions concerning
appeals.•
White says the election code
states that •the Student Court has
final authority on cahdidate disqualifications," but the FSC Association bylaws stipulate that
"students have the right to appeal
student court decisiops . .,
"I'm not sure what Bell's de- ·
cision will be, but I'm sure the
eourt will abide by his decision,"
White said.
• However, I believe we handled
it as well as possible. considering the circumstances," he added.
r
Monday, April 17, 1972
THE DAILY COLLEGIAN
3
FBl's J. Edgar Hoover guilty of conspiracy?
By Mark Brewer
ably result in the charges being
dropped on grounds of entrapment; but more importantly,
When it was revealed last October that the FBI had paid three
Hardy's revelation could possibly be used as grounds for filyoung men to plan and lead bombing criminal charges against the
ings on stateuniversity campuses
in Washington and Alabama, many
FBI!
In the affidavit, Hardy says he
people chose to disbelieve it or
first went to the FBI to try to presimply regard it as a freak ocvent tpe raid from taking place,
currence. The confessions of
but the Bureau induced him to
those three men, broadcast over
stay with the project. T h e y
National Educational Television,
promised him that the raid would
were denied by the Bureau, largebe prevented and that his "coly overlooked by the press, and
conspirators" would be charged
forgotten in a week.
only with conspiracy and would
After all, the realization that
not be jailed. Now, however, the
our federal police employ agents
defendants face a slew of charges
provocateuF and, in effect, comfor breaking and entering, theft
mission their own crimes, is
of government property and indecidedly ·discomforting. That
terfering with the Selective Serrealization, however, became invice laws. Three of the group are
escapable recently when yet anpriests, and one of them, Rev.
other man, Robert W. Hardy,
Michael J. Doyle, once Hardy's
divulged in a sworn affidavit that
he had been employed by the " parish priest, convinced Hardy
to reve~l the FBI' s role in the
Bureau to lead a raid on the Camraid.
den, New Jersey draft board in
At one point, Hardy says, the
August, 1969.
group had lost interest in the
Hardy allowed his confession
projected raid and was about to
to be entered in a New Jersey
abandon the scheme, but he urged
federal court on March 15 as part
them to continue. The Bureau
of a motion to dismiss charges
helped per_suade them by providagainst the 28 defendants he had
ing Hardy with gas, trucks, tools
persuaded to participate in the
and even groceries for the •con"Camden Raid." Since Hardy had
spirators"' to use. - Later, the
previously been a prosecution
Bureau provided him with ladwitness, his testimony will prob-
ders, special drill bits for .glass
and even schematic drawings of
the Selective Service. offices.
As in· other cases, the crime
which the f~deral government is
prosecuting could never have
been committed if not for the active involvement of a government
agent. In 1970, Jeff Desmond,
another Bureau provocate.u r, had
to spend weeks instructing radicals at the University of Washington (Seattle) ·in the sordid art of
bombing before they could engineer the two blasts for which
they were prosecuted in federal
court. Of course, like the "Camden raid," the Bureau had full
knowledge of both bombings in
Seattle before they happened.
As far back as 1920, when a
young J, Edgar Hoover was making a name -for himself directing
the infamous Palmer Raids, the
National Popular Government
League leveled charges in Senate sub-committee hearings that
the Bureau h;id employed provocateurs to gain evidence on which
hundreds of "subversives" were
summarily deported. Even though
the charges were corroborated by
then Secretary of Labor Louis F.
Post in House Rules Committee _
hearings, the Bureau's tactics
were not even censured.
Since there has never been a
formal investigation of the FBI's
activities, it is difficult to guess
how frequently provocateurs have
been employed. However, last
-October at a conference on the
FBI at Princeton University, exSpecial Agents Robert Wall and
William Turner related that the
Bureau's system of •informants"
encouraged fabrication of evidence and instigation of crimes.
As Robert Hardy's case illustrates, they often do mor~ than
simply encourage. Ex-agent
William Turner has written (in
"Hoover's FBI," Sherbourne
Press, 1970) that the FBI paid
two Ku Klux Klan informers
$36,500 in 1968 to persuade Kathy
Ainsworth to born b a Jewish businessman's home in Meridian,
Miss. Th~ police lay waiting for
Miss Airisworth, and shot her to
death.
It is evident that the FBI not
only scores sensational headlines
by •apprehending" bombers and
draft board raiders, but such apparent triumphs also support
Hoover's ever increasing budget
requests and give credence to his
tales of violent subversives
Alternative Features Service
-Rec Committee plans
spring student outings
The College Union Recreation
Committee announced this week
that a new series of student
oriented and initiated activities
will begin.
The new · program of student
initiate(! programs is designed
to increase student interest in
College Union activities.
.
Ideas for trips and activities
are being sought from the general
student body as well as campus
organizations, Bruce Schlegel,
a committee member, said "anything will be considered. Our primary purpose will be to coordinate the planning and arrange for
the use of facilities for the activities."
Mike Barber, another member
of the committee, said that the
emphasis has been placed on
three primary areas: special
events, special interest classes,
and off-campus activities.
In the order of special events,
the "Night on the Delta Queen,"
an annual Monte Carlo style
spring event, has been scheduled
for Thursday, April 27 • .
The committee is co-sponsoring a Cinco de Mayo Charriada,
a Mexican style rodeo, to beheld
in conjunction with Semana de la
Raza, May 1 to 5.
In the· area of special emphasis. classes, Barber indicated
that a pottery and ceramics class
has been organized.
Barber is hopeful that this is
just the first of several such
classes.
"There are a large number of
areas in which students are interested in participating, primarily as a hobby," he said.
Classes in arts and crafts,
guitar playing, scuba diving and
other areas are tentative 1 y
scheduled if enough student interest can be generated.
Barber said that there is "no
limit . to what we could have if
the students respond."
The committee, through the
College Union Programming Office, will handle signups, reservations and attempts to get student discounts for off-campus
activities.
ES t
1920
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The Financial Aids Office has
requested all students who have
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1972-73 academic year, and who
are currently receiving aid this
semester, to report for aninterview.
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DiCic::co's Pizzeria, famous for serving authentic Italian food
in Fresno for over 15 years, now has· a new location, just one
mile from the Fresno State campus, at First and Shaw-across
from Fashion Fair.
\
mu .l l'IIElil ~
OPEN EVERY DA
by mail, preregistration forms
from the Summer Sessions Office. Registration forms can also
be picked up from the Summer
Sessions Office and from the
Records Office.
More than 300 classes will be
offered during the first summer
session at FSC. A tuition fee of
$24 per unit will be charged under the self-financing policies of
tile Summer Sessions Office.
For further information ab~ut.
preregistration and course offerings, contact the Summer Ses- ·
sions Office. Deadline for preregistration form return is May
Dr. James A. Fikes, dean of
Continuing Education and Summer Sessions, has announced that
preregistration for the first summer session will be held April
24 through May 15. Regular registration for the first session will
be held June 19 and classes
will begin June 20.
This year, preregistration will
be handled through the mail only.
Interested students may request,
•
I ICCOI
D·c•·
9:00-4:00
FSC Bookstore Main Level
7700 N. Van Nes~
Fresno 93705 :
Phone 439-2928
Su-mmer registration
dates announced
The DiCicco brothers invite you to visit this new location with
· its relaxing atmosphere and enjoy the food and beverages. If
it's Italian food you want DiCicco's five Fresno locations have
it with the most varied menu served anywhere ••••• and nearly
every location is open until 3 a.m. and don't forget they have
. that delicious food to take out or they'll deliver it to your door
•.•• Just pick up the phone and cal I the one nearest you. There
are other DiCicco locations in Merced, Modesto, Sacramentoand
San Jose.
ig: <RING}DA'YS ~
FIG GARDEN
GOLF COURSE
In a recent scene which see med
like a study in the arr.ogance of
power, a television newswoman
asked Hoover if it was true that
he was considertng retirement.
Befo;re network cameras, the old
Director growled, almost unintelligibly, "The wish is father to
the thought.•
For that very reason, perhaps
stronger, more direct tactics are
required to bring. law and order
to our national law enforcers. For
instance, on the basis of the nationally t e 1e vised.confessions
last October of the three FBIpaid bombers, together with the
affidavit recently signed by Robert Hardy, it appears that Director Hoover is guilty of conspiracy! Think about it.
Finest Corsages & Floral Make-11p
3468.
The game of a lifetime
WEl!'. 'EC DAYS
AFTER 1:30 P . M.
Condits
Ideas for other activities should
be submitted in writing to the
College Union Program ming Office, room 311, or by calling
Roger "Hoot" Ingraham at 487-
PLAY GOLF
at
"Your Closest Florist"
threatening the nation.
Nevertheless, information provided by ex-agents and provocateurs continues to reveal evidence of the Bureau's own crimes,
and an increasing portion of the
public - and even of the Bureau
itself - awaits Hoover's resignation or replacement, since confirmation hearings for a new
Director could give Congress the
chance to conduct a long-overdue
inquiry into Bureau activities.
It's widely said now that Hoover
can't last much longer and that
Nixon might even replace him so
as not to miss the chance to
name his successor. Hoover has
headed the FBI for almost half a
century, though, and he doesn't
appear to be weakening.
-ir
Cedar near Shields #2
Phone: 222-0544
-
Shaw at First #4
Phone: 229-7811
Blackstone near Clinton #3
Phone: 222-3051
Ashlan at Fresno #5
Phone: 224-2755
4
Photograph by Julie Van Reyper
LARRY PRIETO, Bulldog shortstop, forces out a
Pacific runner at second base during Saturday's
doubleheader in Stockton. FSC's Prieto picked up
Out of
three hits in the three-game series which proved
one of the most successful hatting efforts for FSC
players, who mostly held ineffective bats.
title race
'Dogs drop three to UOP
By Ron Orozco
Collegian Sports Editor
Fresno State's hot - and - cold
Bulldogs were . virtually erased
from the Pacific Coast Athletic
Association baseball title race
this past weekend after losing
three games to the University of
Pacific Tigers.
The Bulldogs, co-champions
with San Jose State last year, entered the series on an eight-game
winning streak, but poor overall
playing and ineffective _b atting
caused FSC to leave {rom Stockton with their heads hanging low.
"We played very poorly. We
just didn't hit good at all," said
head coach Bob Bennett, directly
after the 'Dogs dropped a doubleheader Saturday to the Tigers at
Billy Hebert Field by scores of
6-2 (IO innings) and 2-1.
The previous afternoon pitcher
Brad Duncan threw an impressive
three-hitter but still managed to
lose, 3-1, because of his team-
MONDAY
Fresno State College's first spring
football practice, 6;30 p.m. , Ratcliffe
Stadium.
TUESDAY
Varsity baseball vs. Sacramento
State College, doubleheader, 12:00
noon, Sacramento.
Tennis vs. Sacramento State College, 2:00 p.m., Sacramento.
WEDNESDAY
Junior Varsity baseball vs. College
of Sequoias, 3:00 p.m., Visalia.
THURSDAY
Golf vs. Sun Devil Toumam811t
teams, all day, Phoenix, Arizona .
FRIDAY
Varsity baseball vs. San Fernando
Valley State, 7:30 p.m., Pete Beiden
Field.
Golf vs. Sun Devil Tournament
teams, all day, Phoenix, Arizona.
SATURDAY
Golf vs. Sun Devil Tournament
teams, all day, Phoenix, Arizona.
Varsity baseball vs. San Fernando
Valley State, doubleheader, 12;00
noon, Pete Beiden Field.
Junior varsity baseball vs. Cal
Poly (]V's), doubleheader, 12:00
noon, San Luis Obispo.
Track vs. University of Pacific,
1:30 p.m., Ratcliffe Stadium.
want ads ,
H. D. SPORTSTER
Eves. after 6.
291-3965
2 BR furn across from dorms
$160 or $45 person 439-6481
mates' lacking offensive support
with the bat.
"We had been hitting good as a
team before this series, but we
just didn't execute well today,"
continued Bennett, whose Bulldogs slipped to 3-G in the PCAA
championship race. With just
nine league contests remaining on
the schedule, it doesn't appear
FSC will nab first place again;
About the only thirg coach Bennett and company could rave about
after the series was that FSC
third baseman Kirk Wolfe is now
one home run shy of tying the
school record, and ailing Dick
Ruthven is finally able to pitch
ag·ain.
Ruthven, considered the Bulldogs' number one hurler at the
start of the year, had been sideIi ned the past week and a half with
a muscle injury. Bennett said
Ruthven will start against Sacramento State tomorrow afternoon.
Wolfe's tenth homer of the season moves him to within one of
sharing the school HR record (11)
with Ron Schiller. His two-run
clout came in the first game of
yesterday's twinbill and sailed
approximately 360 feet.
At the time. it appeared Wolfe's
blast would provide enough runs
for a Bulldog victory, but after
UOP tied the score at 2-2 in the
seventh inning, the two teams
struggled into extra inning play.
In the tenth, UOP's Rod Beilby
hit a grand slam over the left
field fence off FSC relief pitcher
Roger Hanney. Hanney entered
the game in the ninth inning after
starting pitcher Dan Grimm was
injured by a line-drive that hit
his wrist.
Grimm had not worked up to par
before ~ departed, giving up nine
base hits and three base-onballs. Bennett said that Grimm
suffered a badly bruised wrist
and may miss a week and a half
of playing action.
I~ the first game, Pacific(4-2)
touched FSC starter Monte Wood
with two hits and two runs, which
proved good enough to secure the
win and the clean sweep. Wood
handcuffed the Tigers from g-etting another hit the remaining
six frames of the seven-inning
game.
UOP's Bob ,B loomer singled
after two were out in the opening
canto and scored on a cheap triple
by rightfielder Scott Baras. Boras, the Tigers' top hitter, looped
a high fly in shallow centerfield
which caused problems for FSC 's
outfielders.
Johnson, centerfielder who had
two hits for the Bulldogs, and
Doug Elf raced in on the fly ball
and nudged it forward as it hit
the ground which allowed Boras
to move to third hase. Then,
UOP's Bill Ringer drove in Boras
with a single between third and
shortstop.
FSC tallied its only run in the
third inning when Neal Fragus
hit a double over theleftfielder's
head to drive in teammate Doug
Elf. Elf scored from second base
after forcing out Wood and stE:'aling se_cond.
The Bulldogs could not mount
another scoring threat the remaining innings as Tiger pitcher
Bill Keim limited FSC to just six
hits. Wood suffered the loss. despite throwing a two-hitter.
Wood retired the Tigers in perfect order four of the last five
innings he pitched. "Wood didn't
pitch badly--he looks very promising," said Bennett.
Photograph by William Schiffmann
DAN GRIMM, FSC pitcher, threw to first baseman Larry Shepherd·
(24) in an attempt to pick off a Pacific base runner. Grimm suffered
a badly bruised wrist in Saturday's doubleheader loss to the UOP
Tigers in Stockton and should be · out of action for a week and a half.
FSC's ten outstanding athletes
Ten Fresno State College athletes have been chosen to appear
in the 1972 edition of Outstanding
College Athletes of America.
Selected from FSC were Steve
Verry, football; Ken Wong, soccer; Bruce Henning, basketball;
Mike Paniffia, golf: Mike McMillen, swimming; Marshall Mills;
SPECIALS
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CANDLELIGHT GUILD USED BOOK SALE
All Kinds of Books Available
CAMPING
April 18, 19 and 20 from 9 A,M. to 9 P.M.
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Complete selection of
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tennis; Donn Johnson and Dan
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~:~=~=!=~=~:-:~:•:•:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;=:::::::::::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::;:::;:~:..:
I
»N
~
LXXVIl/112 Fresno State College _ Fresno, California Monday, April 17, 1972
»
«
~
~
~
N
l~;l
Brown is being in the sun
.•.•
~
~ ~!
...
Here
we go agam
N
!~~~
Con las manos en la tierra.
l~~~
Brown is beauty untold
Con tu corazon de fuerra.
Brown is being him and her
Con tu mente sin usar.
La
l Gen te
Brown is talk, talk, talk
Con tu col ita sin parrar.
Brown is together, funky, and fine
I
Bell sends decision back to court
Bv Gan· Ah.•xand(•r
nature as to preclude adjudica-
C~llegi;n Staff Writer
tion.'"
In a statement to the Student
Court, Dr. David G. Bell, dean of
student affairs, has asked for
"clarification'" of the court decision which reinstated the ESP
slate to the student body election
ballot.
Bell's statement termed the
court's rationale •of such a vague
Con tu r itmo para gozar.
Brown is wisdom through age
Con los jovenes I istos pa' arrancar.
I
Brown is desire without a will
~
:.t:~.:.=,.
...
.
I
~
::~::,:::::,::~~~d~~: jugar•
Brown is the humanism of tomorrow
~:;:.~:
Con la gente que a nadien va a-enganar.
..
,
i:,.1.1.i
: :~:,i:::::: ::I ::::~:~ng
~
r
Enrique Esquivel Figueroa
:.
:i·.i:I
i
,:., ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::_:_:_:-:-:;:;:;:-·;:;:::::::::;:;::::::::::. =~===. ::::. :::::~:::::::::::::::~•=·=•-•~==•=•::::::::~. ~==• ;•:
UPI editor to ioin
Journalism staff
The vice president and editor
of United Pre s -s International
(UPI), Roger Tatarian, has been
appointed to the faculty of the
Journalism Department at Fresno State College. He will begin
his teaching duties in September.
The announcement was made by
Dr. Harold Haak, FSC academic
vice president.
Tatarian is an FSC graduate
and a veteran of more than 30
years of U.s. and foreign assignments with the news agency.
Dr. John Duke, chairman of the
Department of Journalism, says
Tatarian will be an important
addition to the faculty because of
his strong background in the field
of news writing and will concentrate his effort in beginning and
advanced writing.
Also, because of his worldwide experience with UPI, he will
teach the department ·s course in
Press and World Affairs. Dr.
Duke says Tatarian is well acquainted with the work of coliege
journalism students through his
judging in recent years of the
journalism competition for students sponsored by the Hearst
newspapers.
Born in Fresno, Tatarian joined
UPI in its local bureau following
his graduation from FSC in 1938.
He was assigned to the Washington staff in 1941, and covered the
United Nations organizational
conference in San Francisco in
1945.
He went to London in 1949
and to Rome in 1951 as manager
of the UPI bureaus in those cities
and became the agency's general
news manager for Europe in
1953. He became managing editor
of UPI in 1959, was elected a vice
president in 1963 and was appointed editor in 1965.
Tatarian was at the scene of
every major diplomatic conference during his tour of duty in
Europe. Also, he directed coverage of other big stories including
the lifting of the Berlin blockade,
the 1956 winter Olympics in Italy,
national elections in Italy, Britain
and France, the Hungarian revolt
and the Suez crisis.
Tatarian's honors include an
honorary Doctor of Letters degree from Wfltldham College in
1967 and a special citation by
Ohio University in 1968 for distinguished service ih journalism.
Legal adviser
begins work
at FSC today
FSC students now have a place
to turn to for free legal advice.
Bill Jolly, a fourth-year student
at Humphrey's College School of
Law in Fresno. was hired last
Wednesday as Legal Advisement
Coordinator for the college. The
student association is providing
the state with funds to operate
the position.
Jolly is available to students
or any other members of the college community for legal advicf
and counseling. He is not able to
give any actual legal service but
can refer people to attorneys if
such service is necessary.
Jolly will be on campus Mondays and Tuesdays from 8 a.m.
to 12 noon for consultation. Appointments can be made in the
Student Activities Office or by
calling 487-2741.
He was selected from a field
of six applicants by a committee
including Woody Brooks, Student
Senate legal committee chairman; Joe Guagliardo, chairman
of the board of directors budget
committee; Dave Collins, ASB
legislative vice president and Bill
Corcoran, assistant dean of student affairs.
Jolly graduated from Fresno
City College with an AA degree.
He worked in sales and public
relations in the Bay Area for 10
years. For the last five years
he has operated his own real
estate business in Fresno as
well as attending law scho~l at
night arid doing research for a
local law firm.
Student Body President Phil
Sherwood said it is possible that
the service will be expanded next
year if there is enough evidence
of student need.
In what is proving to be one of
the most confusing and drawn
out elections in FSC history, the
court overturned the decision of
the election committee's executive committee which disqualified
the ESP ticket. The slate was
disqualified for allegedly exceeding the maximum limit for campaign expenses.
According to Art White, chief
justice, the court will meet tomorrow to revamp their supportive arguments which they
used to reach their decision.
"Bell wants us to specify the
points we used in arriving at our
decision. I believe what he wants
is a more elaborate statement,
as he seems to have found ours
too brief.,.
Bell's introduction into the situation stems from an appeal of
the court decision by recently
resigned election com mitt e e
chairman, Gene Boni,
"I appealed the court decision
because I felt that the ESP slate
did exceed their expense accounts and were rightfully
disqualified. I don't see any
reason why they should be reinstated," Boni said. "The executive committee made a just decision.
"The elections are not valid,
and in fact are fixed if ESP is on
the ballot.
"White isn't going to get out of
this on legitimate grounds," Boni
added.
There has been speculation that
some inch victuals may seek a
court injunction against the elections. Boni has a wait-and-see
attitude but maintains the possibility he may file such an injunction.
The victors, Baltazar Touar,
Andrew Benites and Joe P. Munaz, said their first objective is
to have John Martinez named
Chief of Police.
An all-anglo city council selec-:tion last January of the late
Patrick Carnahan as police chief
over Martinez, touched off the
ethnic trouble that has rocked
the little town of Parlier ever
since.
In the race for city clerk,
Clifford Ifodriguez, also . endorsed by the Fact Finding Committee, defeated incumbent D. J.
Herring. Herring has held the
office for the past 36 years.
It was the first time a person
of Mexican descent has been
elected to office in Parlier even
though · the community population
ROTC protest
set today
According to an anti-war
spokesman, there was a demonstration scheduled at noon today
at the Air Sciences Building.
Citing the recent escalation in
the air war in Southeast Asia
as the reason for the anti-ROTC ·
demonstration, anti-war spokesman Dennis Strand charged, "l"S
air attacks are threatening - to
widen the way beyond possible
containment."
According to Strand, a coalition
of local anti-war groups are involved in the demonstration.
"This is the root of the air
war, these ROTC cadets are still
being trained to fig! t a war that
is continuing into its thirteenth
year," St rand added.
Strand said he is a veteran of
the war, having served in Vietnam with' the US Army.
This week national anti-war
groups are planning demonstrations in a number of major cities
across the country.
Villa, Rodriguez, Baxter,
Kessler speak at EOP rally
By Alex Contreras
La Voz Aztlan Staff Writer
"Chicanos will not return to
the barrio without education." So
declared City Councilman Al
Villa, as he addressed an EOP
rally audience - estimated to
have been 185 people - on the
FrE:sno State College campus,
last Friday afternoon.
The rally was the climax to a
•
Three Chicanos w,n Parlier election
A trio of candidates of Mexican descent, running under the
banner of the Parlier Fact Finding Committee, defeated incumbent Mayor Weldon Byram and
two other councilmen last Tuesday.
"I don't feel it is necessary to
file suit yet. I'm going to wait
until I see what Bell and others
are going to do," he said,
"Some candidates, George Xagel in particular , are seeking an
injunction against the election.
I'm waiting for the Bell decision
because I'd rather it be decided
out of court."
Nagel says he is considerina an
injunction because many qu~stions about the election haven't
been determined.
(Continued on page 2, col. 5)
is approximately 85 per cent
Mexican-American.
Nearly 89 per cent of the
city's registered voters went to
the polls.
·
Arcadro V. viveras, chairman
of the Parlier Fact Finding Committee, said that the election results "have proven the MexicanAmerican people can be united
along with other minorities." ·
The committee is now pointing
to the June 6 recall election of
two other city councilmen.
week in which EOP students
staged a hunger strike to protest
Gov. Ronald Reagan's recent
withdrawal of state EOP funds.
Joining Councilman Villa on the
speakers' platform was FSC
President Norman Baxter, who
commended the leaders of the
hunger strike, but remained uncommitted on the .EOP issue.
United Professors of California local president, Dr. Warren
Kessler, was· warmly received
as he stated UPC support ofEOP
and strongly urged the audience
to write their legislators and ask
them to vote for EOP, not only
the first time around but to also
vote for EOP after the governor's
veto.
Local attorney Armando Rodriguez, also apoke in supp~rt of
the EOP students and mentioned
that he had seen the EOP started
and that the budget was now back
to 1969 standards.
All of the day's speakers applauded the courage and dignity
displayed by the students involved
in the fast and most voiced their
support of EOP.
2
THE DAILY COLLEGIAN
Monday, April 17, 1972
1
LA
-..
I
Chicano leadership
..
C'-.
••• I
')
~
'·-. ' ...
.. . . ~ttl. ·_;
Chicanos at Fresno State seem to have fallen into a st9-te of chaos
this- semester.
Everyone seems to be waiting for someone to come along to provide something called leadership. Hell, it just isn't enough that the
..
gavacho continues his oppression, we m,u st also lay inactive and in~
different to the events which concern US!
Remember: be we chicanos, Mexican-Americans or pochos, we
Bell
ourselves, you, I, we are the leadership.
WE ARE THE VANGUARD OF A NEW SCENE, ONE WHERE
THE RAZA WILL NO LONGER REMAIN CONTENT IN ITS
Conspiracy
ROLE OF "'SECONDHAND CITIZENSHIP.•
It remains for the RAZA at FSC to once more mold themselves
into a strong, effective voice. One _that we wil _l all support.
· -Por La Raza todo-Alexandro Contreras
lllE -DAILY COLLEGIAN
Published five days a week except
holidays and examination periods by
the Fresno State College Association.
Mail subscriptions $8 a semester,
$15 a year. Editorial office, Keats
Campus Building, telephone 487-2486.
Business and advertising office, College Union 316, telephone 487-2266 .
Editor-in-chief . . . . . , Bill Follett
Day Editors . . . . • . Alex Contreras
Ricardo Paredes
News Editor .. , . . . .. . . Jim Brock
Sports Editor . . . . . . . .· Ron Orozco
Environmental Editor . Steve Soriano
Business lAanager . . Edward Piston
Advertising \tanager . . Wilbur PauJs
Reporters .. . . . . . Gary Alexander,
Dave Davenport, John Pe·ckler, .
Anne Richards
Photographers .. . . . Larry Nylund,
Steve Soriano , Julie Van Reyper
Opinions expressed in Collegian
editorials, including feature-edit oria ts
and commentaries by guest writers,
are not necessarily those of Fresno
State College or the student body.
Edttor-app lications
Applications are now available for Daily Collegian editor for the Fall semester.
Interested students may pick
up applications •in room 302
of the College Union.
Applications must be returned by April 28.
The Board of Publications
will select the editor May 4.
Editors of La Voz de Aztlan:
I suffered a rather odd kind of
bellyache Friday. It did not comefrom a week of fasting with the
local EOP students; it was instead generated by the sight of
the people at their rally, bent forward with questioning expressions on their faces,. trying to
comprehend the words of the
speakers, sensing that they had
something to say. The crowd
could not miss the problem: the
public address system seemed to
have been designed for classroom
use. Through it, the words of
the enlightenirig speakers could
be understood by a good so per
cent of the audience; the rest
were in the dark.
My anger drove . me to' the Instructional Media Center where
I found a defensive Director Let me apologize for my belly3;ching, Mr. Bathurst. The IMC
Director concluded our chat by
stating that the only imaginable
reason for the inadequacy of the
P.A. system was that the person
Student Handbook assistant editors
The Board on Publications has
announced that applications are
available for two positions as assistant editor$ for a student handLOCKSMITHS
Ali?~~~ b~~~~r&oi:t~;~ -
book. A ~andbook has not been
published for several years but
plans are being made for one next
year. Most of the work for the
publication will be done this summer.
Louie's Lo.ck & Key Shop
Persons seeking further information may call the Student Activities Office at 487-2741 or th·e
Student President's Office, 4872657~ Applications are due April
28 and the selection·is scneduled
for May 4.
WALK ·1. :BLOCK TO .FSC
There is a $200 grant being
proposed for each position.
1-2-3 BDRM. LUXURY APTS.
SELL YOl:JR
student discount, credit ~ards
group and charter rates, U.S.A . .
and Europe . Call Ralph 224-6876
The abqve is not sponsored by the ..
Calif. State Colleges or the Fresno
State College AssociatiQn, Inc. ·
0
Auto-House-Trunks-Stores
-Foreign CarsPH: 227-6263
Cedar Lane Shopping Center
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.
WED.
(during Spring Semester)
227-2908
(CORNER
5158 N. 9th,. E. SAN
.OSE)
OPEN DAILY 11 A.M.-6P.M:
AT
FSC Bookstore
who had requisitioned it had not
specified clearly enough the intended use. He added that he and
Norman Baxter run IMC at what
they consider a reasonable level
of efficiency.
Having been thus reassured by
IMC, I made my way back to .the
EOP Rally where I questioned
ME CHA Chairwoman Grace Solis
as to who had been responsible
for obtaining the P.A. Her reply
caught me off guard. She said that
Pat Gorman of the Activities Office had agreed to take responsibility for the requisition. I cannot
believe that his failure to obtain
an_adequate P.A. can be attributed
to a lack of communication with
IMC.
Alternatively, I must consider
another possibility. Both Gorman
of Activities and Bathurst ofIMC
are res pons i bl e · directly to
President Norman Baxter, who is
in term responsible to the trustees, Chancellor Dumke, and finally Governor Reagan. I would
not think it accurate to' say that
any individual had taken part
knowingly in a conspiracy against
minority ' groups on this campus,
but it does seem as though the
•syste-m" has, in this case,
served as a convenient deterrent
to the EOP students in their
struggles against the heartlessness of the Reagan Administration.
Steven M. Johnson
Sophomore
Back packing
The outings group of the College Union Recreation Committee
is sponsoring a back packing trip
to the Big Meadows area of Sequoia National Forest April 21,
22 and 23.
.
A planning rneefing will be held
today in CU 310 at 7 p.m., 0Qtdoor camping equipment from
Denali Mountaineering will be on
display at the meeting. For additional information call
487-2938.
.IOBS
EUROPE
guaranteed and salaried.
England , Belgium and Switzerland, year-round. Trainees (general help) '1st class
hotels , restaurants, supermarkets, hospitals, department stores, holiday camps.
For details and application
send $1.00 with a stamped
self-addressed business
size envelope to:
Princeton Research. Dept. C
Box 4418
Panorama City, Calif. 91402
(Continued from page 1)
"I'm looking at the possibility
of getting an injunction to postpone the election until all the
questions are answered," he said.
"I think the court's decision is
questionable. Bill Follett 'shearsay testimony was given m'ore
cred.ibility than Gene Boni's. I
wasn't at the court meeting, but
this was the impression I got
from people who were there,"
said Nagel.
According to White, Follett's
testimony was not used in reaching the decision because it was
hearsay evidence.
Nagel added he wants the election postponed because of the
publicity the "ESP slate has received recently."
"The sympathy vote is there
too, more Greeks will now vote
out of sympathy for ESP. ·
"I hope people will look for
candidates' qualifications instead
of their affiliations. If they don't,
we '11 be in real trouble next
year," Nagel said.
ESP presidential candidate
Mark Etcheverry expects Bell to
render a favorable decision on
the student court ruling.
"I hope nothing serious happens but Boni made the decision
and he has to live with it. He
made a mistake and screwedup," Etcheverry said.
The Bell decision may involve
more than a ruling on the court
decision.
According to White, "It is debatable whether or not the de'cision may be appealed.
"I'm not sure if Dean Bell is
aware or not but there are conflicting provisions concerning
appeals.•
White says the election code
states that •the Student Court has
final authority on cahdidate disqualifications," but the FSC Association bylaws stipulate that
"students have the right to appeal
student court decisiops . .,
"I'm not sure what Bell's de- ·
cision will be, but I'm sure the
eourt will abide by his decision,"
White said.
• However, I believe we handled
it as well as possible. considering the circumstances," he added.
r
Monday, April 17, 1972
THE DAILY COLLEGIAN
3
FBl's J. Edgar Hoover guilty of conspiracy?
By Mark Brewer
ably result in the charges being
dropped on grounds of entrapment; but more importantly,
When it was revealed last October that the FBI had paid three
Hardy's revelation could possibly be used as grounds for filyoung men to plan and lead bombing criminal charges against the
ings on stateuniversity campuses
in Washington and Alabama, many
FBI!
In the affidavit, Hardy says he
people chose to disbelieve it or
first went to the FBI to try to presimply regard it as a freak ocvent tpe raid from taking place,
currence. The confessions of
but the Bureau induced him to
those three men, broadcast over
stay with the project. T h e y
National Educational Television,
promised him that the raid would
were denied by the Bureau, largebe prevented and that his "coly overlooked by the press, and
conspirators" would be charged
forgotten in a week.
only with conspiracy and would
After all, the realization that
not be jailed. Now, however, the
our federal police employ agents
defendants face a slew of charges
provocateuF and, in effect, comfor breaking and entering, theft
mission their own crimes, is
of government property and indecidedly ·discomforting. That
terfering with the Selective Serrealization, however, became invice laws. Three of the group are
escapable recently when yet anpriests, and one of them, Rev.
other man, Robert W. Hardy,
Michael J. Doyle, once Hardy's
divulged in a sworn affidavit that
he had been employed by the " parish priest, convinced Hardy
to reve~l the FBI' s role in the
Bureau to lead a raid on the Camraid.
den, New Jersey draft board in
At one point, Hardy says, the
August, 1969.
group had lost interest in the
Hardy allowed his confession
projected raid and was about to
to be entered in a New Jersey
abandon the scheme, but he urged
federal court on March 15 as part
them to continue. The Bureau
of a motion to dismiss charges
helped per_suade them by providagainst the 28 defendants he had
ing Hardy with gas, trucks, tools
persuaded to participate in the
and even groceries for the •con"Camden Raid." Since Hardy had
spirators"' to use. - Later, the
previously been a prosecution
Bureau provided him with ladwitness, his testimony will prob-
ders, special drill bits for .glass
and even schematic drawings of
the Selective Service. offices.
As in· other cases, the crime
which the f~deral government is
prosecuting could never have
been committed if not for the active involvement of a government
agent. In 1970, Jeff Desmond,
another Bureau provocate.u r, had
to spend weeks instructing radicals at the University of Washington (Seattle) ·in the sordid art of
bombing before they could engineer the two blasts for which
they were prosecuted in federal
court. Of course, like the "Camden raid," the Bureau had full
knowledge of both bombings in
Seattle before they happened.
As far back as 1920, when a
young J, Edgar Hoover was making a name -for himself directing
the infamous Palmer Raids, the
National Popular Government
League leveled charges in Senate sub-committee hearings that
the Bureau h;id employed provocateurs to gain evidence on which
hundreds of "subversives" were
summarily deported. Even though
the charges were corroborated by
then Secretary of Labor Louis F.
Post in House Rules Committee _
hearings, the Bureau's tactics
were not even censured.
Since there has never been a
formal investigation of the FBI's
activities, it is difficult to guess
how frequently provocateurs have
been employed. However, last
-October at a conference on the
FBI at Princeton University, exSpecial Agents Robert Wall and
William Turner related that the
Bureau's system of •informants"
encouraged fabrication of evidence and instigation of crimes.
As Robert Hardy's case illustrates, they often do mor~ than
simply encourage. Ex-agent
William Turner has written (in
"Hoover's FBI," Sherbourne
Press, 1970) that the FBI paid
two Ku Klux Klan informers
$36,500 in 1968 to persuade Kathy
Ainsworth to born b a Jewish businessman's home in Meridian,
Miss. Th~ police lay waiting for
Miss Airisworth, and shot her to
death.
It is evident that the FBI not
only scores sensational headlines
by •apprehending" bombers and
draft board raiders, but such apparent triumphs also support
Hoover's ever increasing budget
requests and give credence to his
tales of violent subversives
Alternative Features Service
-Rec Committee plans
spring student outings
The College Union Recreation
Committee announced this week
that a new series of student
oriented and initiated activities
will begin.
The new · program of student
initiate(! programs is designed
to increase student interest in
College Union activities.
.
Ideas for trips and activities
are being sought from the general
student body as well as campus
organizations, Bruce Schlegel,
a committee member, said "anything will be considered. Our primary purpose will be to coordinate the planning and arrange for
the use of facilities for the activities."
Mike Barber, another member
of the committee, said that the
emphasis has been placed on
three primary areas: special
events, special interest classes,
and off-campus activities.
In the order of special events,
the "Night on the Delta Queen,"
an annual Monte Carlo style
spring event, has been scheduled
for Thursday, April 27 • .
The committee is co-sponsoring a Cinco de Mayo Charriada,
a Mexican style rodeo, to beheld
in conjunction with Semana de la
Raza, May 1 to 5.
In the· area of special emphasis. classes, Barber indicated
that a pottery and ceramics class
has been organized.
Barber is hopeful that this is
just the first of several such
classes.
"There are a large number of
areas in which students are interested in participating, primarily as a hobby," he said.
Classes in arts and crafts,
guitar playing, scuba diving and
other areas are tentative 1 y
scheduled if enough student interest can be generated.
Barber said that there is "no
limit . to what we could have if
the students respond."
The committee, through the
College Union Programming Office, will handle signups, reservations and attempts to get student discounts for off-campus
activities.
ES t
1920
FLOWERS & GIRS
Cedar & Shields Ph. 227-3564
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Aid interviews
The Financial Aids Office has
requested all students who have
applied for financial · aid for the
1972-73 academic year, and who
are currently receiving aid this
semester, to report for aninterview.
15.
·sPECIAUZING IN
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Box 15071,
San Diego, CA. 92115
4370 N. BLACKSTONE AVE.
FIESNO
ACROSS FIIOM CONTINENTAL MAIIKET
DiCicco•s
Now at First and Shaw
PIZZERIA
CITYWIDE DELI-VERY SERVICI;
Blackstone near Belmont #1
fhone: 237-705~
GOL<DEN
c%If;~U~
Your signature included absolu1ely tree ms,de
each John Roberts rmg purchased durmg R1r1g Days.
OFFER GOOO ONLY ON DATES SHOWN
DiCic::co's Pizzeria, famous for serving authentic Italian food
in Fresno for over 15 years, now has· a new location, just one
mile from the Fresno State campus, at First and Shaw-across
from Fashion Fair.
\
mu .l l'IIElil ~
OPEN EVERY DA
by mail, preregistration forms
from the Summer Sessions Office. Registration forms can also
be picked up from the Summer
Sessions Office and from the
Records Office.
More than 300 classes will be
offered during the first summer
session at FSC. A tuition fee of
$24 per unit will be charged under the self-financing policies of
tile Summer Sessions Office.
For further information ab~ut.
preregistration and course offerings, contact the Summer Ses- ·
sions Office. Deadline for preregistration form return is May
Dr. James A. Fikes, dean of
Continuing Education and Summer Sessions, has announced that
preregistration for the first summer session will be held April
24 through May 15. Regular registration for the first session will
be held June 19 and classes
will begin June 20.
This year, preregistration will
be handled through the mail only.
Interested students may request,
•
I ICCOI
D·c•·
9:00-4:00
FSC Bookstore Main Level
7700 N. Van Nes~
Fresno 93705 :
Phone 439-2928
Su-mmer registration
dates announced
The DiCicco brothers invite you to visit this new location with
· its relaxing atmosphere and enjoy the food and beverages. If
it's Italian food you want DiCicco's five Fresno locations have
it with the most varied menu served anywhere ••••• and nearly
every location is open until 3 a.m. and don't forget they have
. that delicious food to take out or they'll deliver it to your door
•.•• Just pick up the phone and cal I the one nearest you. There
are other DiCicco locations in Merced, Modesto, Sacramentoand
San Jose.
ig: <RING}DA'YS ~
FIG GARDEN
GOLF COURSE
In a recent scene which see med
like a study in the arr.ogance of
power, a television newswoman
asked Hoover if it was true that
he was considertng retirement.
Befo;re network cameras, the old
Director growled, almost unintelligibly, "The wish is father to
the thought.•
For that very reason, perhaps
stronger, more direct tactics are
required to bring. law and order
to our national law enforcers. For
instance, on the basis of the nationally t e 1e vised.confessions
last October of the three FBIpaid bombers, together with the
affidavit recently signed by Robert Hardy, it appears that Director Hoover is guilty of conspiracy! Think about it.
Finest Corsages & Floral Make-11p
3468.
The game of a lifetime
WEl!'. 'EC DAYS
AFTER 1:30 P . M.
Condits
Ideas for other activities should
be submitted in writing to the
College Union Program ming Office, room 311, or by calling
Roger "Hoot" Ingraham at 487-
PLAY GOLF
at
"Your Closest Florist"
threatening the nation.
Nevertheless, information provided by ex-agents and provocateurs continues to reveal evidence of the Bureau's own crimes,
and an increasing portion of the
public - and even of the Bureau
itself - awaits Hoover's resignation or replacement, since confirmation hearings for a new
Director could give Congress the
chance to conduct a long-overdue
inquiry into Bureau activities.
It's widely said now that Hoover
can't last much longer and that
Nixon might even replace him so
as not to miss the chance to
name his successor. Hoover has
headed the FBI for almost half a
century, though, and he doesn't
appear to be weakening.
-ir
Cedar near Shields #2
Phone: 222-0544
-
Shaw at First #4
Phone: 229-7811
Blackstone near Clinton #3
Phone: 222-3051
Ashlan at Fresno #5
Phone: 224-2755
4
Photograph by Julie Van Reyper
LARRY PRIETO, Bulldog shortstop, forces out a
Pacific runner at second base during Saturday's
doubleheader in Stockton. FSC's Prieto picked up
Out of
three hits in the three-game series which proved
one of the most successful hatting efforts for FSC
players, who mostly held ineffective bats.
title race
'Dogs drop three to UOP
By Ron Orozco
Collegian Sports Editor
Fresno State's hot - and - cold
Bulldogs were . virtually erased
from the Pacific Coast Athletic
Association baseball title race
this past weekend after losing
three games to the University of
Pacific Tigers.
The Bulldogs, co-champions
with San Jose State last year, entered the series on an eight-game
winning streak, but poor overall
playing and ineffective _b atting
caused FSC to leave {rom Stockton with their heads hanging low.
"We played very poorly. We
just didn't hit good at all," said
head coach Bob Bennett, directly
after the 'Dogs dropped a doubleheader Saturday to the Tigers at
Billy Hebert Field by scores of
6-2 (IO innings) and 2-1.
The previous afternoon pitcher
Brad Duncan threw an impressive
three-hitter but still managed to
lose, 3-1, because of his team-
MONDAY
Fresno State College's first spring
football practice, 6;30 p.m. , Ratcliffe
Stadium.
TUESDAY
Varsity baseball vs. Sacramento
State College, doubleheader, 12:00
noon, Sacramento.
Tennis vs. Sacramento State College, 2:00 p.m., Sacramento.
WEDNESDAY
Junior Varsity baseball vs. College
of Sequoias, 3:00 p.m., Visalia.
THURSDAY
Golf vs. Sun Devil Toumam811t
teams, all day, Phoenix, Arizona .
FRIDAY
Varsity baseball vs. San Fernando
Valley State, 7:30 p.m., Pete Beiden
Field.
Golf vs. Sun Devil Tournament
teams, all day, Phoenix, Arizona.
SATURDAY
Golf vs. Sun Devil Tournament
teams, all day, Phoenix, Arizona.
Varsity baseball vs. San Fernando
Valley State, doubleheader, 12;00
noon, Pete Beiden Field.
Junior varsity baseball vs. Cal
Poly (]V's), doubleheader, 12:00
noon, San Luis Obispo.
Track vs. University of Pacific,
1:30 p.m., Ratcliffe Stadium.
want ads ,
H. D. SPORTSTER
Eves. after 6.
291-3965
2 BR furn across from dorms
$160 or $45 person 439-6481
mates' lacking offensive support
with the bat.
"We had been hitting good as a
team before this series, but we
just didn't execute well today,"
continued Bennett, whose Bulldogs slipped to 3-G in the PCAA
championship race. With just
nine league contests remaining on
the schedule, it doesn't appear
FSC will nab first place again;
About the only thirg coach Bennett and company could rave about
after the series was that FSC
third baseman Kirk Wolfe is now
one home run shy of tying the
school record, and ailing Dick
Ruthven is finally able to pitch
ag·ain.
Ruthven, considered the Bulldogs' number one hurler at the
start of the year, had been sideIi ned the past week and a half with
a muscle injury. Bennett said
Ruthven will start against Sacramento State tomorrow afternoon.
Wolfe's tenth homer of the season moves him to within one of
sharing the school HR record (11)
with Ron Schiller. His two-run
clout came in the first game of
yesterday's twinbill and sailed
approximately 360 feet.
At the time. it appeared Wolfe's
blast would provide enough runs
for a Bulldog victory, but after
UOP tied the score at 2-2 in the
seventh inning, the two teams
struggled into extra inning play.
In the tenth, UOP's Rod Beilby
hit a grand slam over the left
field fence off FSC relief pitcher
Roger Hanney. Hanney entered
the game in the ninth inning after
starting pitcher Dan Grimm was
injured by a line-drive that hit
his wrist.
Grimm had not worked up to par
before ~ departed, giving up nine
base hits and three base-onballs. Bennett said that Grimm
suffered a badly bruised wrist
and may miss a week and a half
of playing action.
I~ the first game, Pacific(4-2)
touched FSC starter Monte Wood
with two hits and two runs, which
proved good enough to secure the
win and the clean sweep. Wood
handcuffed the Tigers from g-etting another hit the remaining
six frames of the seven-inning
game.
UOP's Bob ,B loomer singled
after two were out in the opening
canto and scored on a cheap triple
by rightfielder Scott Baras. Boras, the Tigers' top hitter, looped
a high fly in shallow centerfield
which caused problems for FSC 's
outfielders.
Johnson, centerfielder who had
two hits for the Bulldogs, and
Doug Elf raced in on the fly ball
and nudged it forward as it hit
the ground which allowed Boras
to move to third hase. Then,
UOP's Bill Ringer drove in Boras
with a single between third and
shortstop.
FSC tallied its only run in the
third inning when Neal Fragus
hit a double over theleftfielder's
head to drive in teammate Doug
Elf. Elf scored from second base
after forcing out Wood and stE:'aling se_cond.
The Bulldogs could not mount
another scoring threat the remaining innings as Tiger pitcher
Bill Keim limited FSC to just six
hits. Wood suffered the loss. despite throwing a two-hitter.
Wood retired the Tigers in perfect order four of the last five
innings he pitched. "Wood didn't
pitch badly--he looks very promising," said Bennett.
Photograph by William Schiffmann
DAN GRIMM, FSC pitcher, threw to first baseman Larry Shepherd·
(24) in an attempt to pick off a Pacific base runner. Grimm suffered
a badly bruised wrist in Saturday's doubleheader loss to the UOP
Tigers in Stockton and should be · out of action for a week and a half.
FSC's ten outstanding athletes
Ten Fresno State College athletes have been chosen to appear
in the 1972 edition of Outstanding
College Athletes of America.
Selected from FSC were Steve
Verry, football; Ken Wong, soccer; Bruce Henning, basketball;
Mike Paniffia, golf: Mike McMillen, swimming; Marshall Mills;
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The Dally Colleglan
LAN
~:~=~=!=~=~:-:~:•:•:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;=:::::::::::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::;:::;:~:..:
I
»N
~
LXXVIl/112 Fresno State College _ Fresno, California Monday, April 17, 1972
»
«
~
~
~
N
l~;l
Brown is being in the sun
.•.•
~
~ ~!
...
Here
we go agam
N
!~~~
Con las manos en la tierra.
l~~~
Brown is beauty untold
Con tu corazon de fuerra.
Brown is being him and her
Con tu mente sin usar.
La
l Gen te
Brown is talk, talk, talk
Con tu col ita sin parrar.
Brown is together, funky, and fine
I
Bell sends decision back to court
Bv Gan· Ah.•xand(•r
nature as to preclude adjudica-
C~llegi;n Staff Writer
tion.'"
In a statement to the Student
Court, Dr. David G. Bell, dean of
student affairs, has asked for
"clarification'" of the court decision which reinstated the ESP
slate to the student body election
ballot.
Bell's statement termed the
court's rationale •of such a vague
Con tu r itmo para gozar.
Brown is wisdom through age
Con los jovenes I istos pa' arrancar.
I
Brown is desire without a will
~
:.t:~.:.=,.
...
.
I
~
::~::,:::::,::~~~d~~: jugar•
Brown is the humanism of tomorrow
~:;:.~:
Con la gente que a nadien va a-enganar.
..
,
i:,.1.1.i
: :~:,i:::::: ::I ::::~:~ng
~
r
Enrique Esquivel Figueroa
:.
:i·.i:I
i
,:., ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::_:_:_:-:-:;:;:;:-·;:;:::::::::;:;::::::::::. =~===. ::::. :::::~:::::::::::::::~•=·=•-•~==•=•::::::::~. ~==• ;•:
UPI editor to ioin
Journalism staff
The vice president and editor
of United Pre s -s International
(UPI), Roger Tatarian, has been
appointed to the faculty of the
Journalism Department at Fresno State College. He will begin
his teaching duties in September.
The announcement was made by
Dr. Harold Haak, FSC academic
vice president.
Tatarian is an FSC graduate
and a veteran of more than 30
years of U.s. and foreign assignments with the news agency.
Dr. John Duke, chairman of the
Department of Journalism, says
Tatarian will be an important
addition to the faculty because of
his strong background in the field
of news writing and will concentrate his effort in beginning and
advanced writing.
Also, because of his worldwide experience with UPI, he will
teach the department ·s course in
Press and World Affairs. Dr.
Duke says Tatarian is well acquainted with the work of coliege
journalism students through his
judging in recent years of the
journalism competition for students sponsored by the Hearst
newspapers.
Born in Fresno, Tatarian joined
UPI in its local bureau following
his graduation from FSC in 1938.
He was assigned to the Washington staff in 1941, and covered the
United Nations organizational
conference in San Francisco in
1945.
He went to London in 1949
and to Rome in 1951 as manager
of the UPI bureaus in those cities
and became the agency's general
news manager for Europe in
1953. He became managing editor
of UPI in 1959, was elected a vice
president in 1963 and was appointed editor in 1965.
Tatarian was at the scene of
every major diplomatic conference during his tour of duty in
Europe. Also, he directed coverage of other big stories including
the lifting of the Berlin blockade,
the 1956 winter Olympics in Italy,
national elections in Italy, Britain
and France, the Hungarian revolt
and the Suez crisis.
Tatarian's honors include an
honorary Doctor of Letters degree from Wfltldham College in
1967 and a special citation by
Ohio University in 1968 for distinguished service ih journalism.
Legal adviser
begins work
at FSC today
FSC students now have a place
to turn to for free legal advice.
Bill Jolly, a fourth-year student
at Humphrey's College School of
Law in Fresno. was hired last
Wednesday as Legal Advisement
Coordinator for the college. The
student association is providing
the state with funds to operate
the position.
Jolly is available to students
or any other members of the college community for legal advicf
and counseling. He is not able to
give any actual legal service but
can refer people to attorneys if
such service is necessary.
Jolly will be on campus Mondays and Tuesdays from 8 a.m.
to 12 noon for consultation. Appointments can be made in the
Student Activities Office or by
calling 487-2741.
He was selected from a field
of six applicants by a committee
including Woody Brooks, Student
Senate legal committee chairman; Joe Guagliardo, chairman
of the board of directors budget
committee; Dave Collins, ASB
legislative vice president and Bill
Corcoran, assistant dean of student affairs.
Jolly graduated from Fresno
City College with an AA degree.
He worked in sales and public
relations in the Bay Area for 10
years. For the last five years
he has operated his own real
estate business in Fresno as
well as attending law scho~l at
night arid doing research for a
local law firm.
Student Body President Phil
Sherwood said it is possible that
the service will be expanded next
year if there is enough evidence
of student need.
In what is proving to be one of
the most confusing and drawn
out elections in FSC history, the
court overturned the decision of
the election committee's executive committee which disqualified
the ESP ticket. The slate was
disqualified for allegedly exceeding the maximum limit for campaign expenses.
According to Art White, chief
justice, the court will meet tomorrow to revamp their supportive arguments which they
used to reach their decision.
"Bell wants us to specify the
points we used in arriving at our
decision. I believe what he wants
is a more elaborate statement,
as he seems to have found ours
too brief.,.
Bell's introduction into the situation stems from an appeal of
the court decision by recently
resigned election com mitt e e
chairman, Gene Boni,
"I appealed the court decision
because I felt that the ESP slate
did exceed their expense accounts and were rightfully
disqualified. I don't see any
reason why they should be reinstated," Boni said. "The executive committee made a just decision.
"The elections are not valid,
and in fact are fixed if ESP is on
the ballot.
"White isn't going to get out of
this on legitimate grounds," Boni
added.
There has been speculation that
some inch victuals may seek a
court injunction against the elections. Boni has a wait-and-see
attitude but maintains the possibility he may file such an injunction.
The victors, Baltazar Touar,
Andrew Benites and Joe P. Munaz, said their first objective is
to have John Martinez named
Chief of Police.
An all-anglo city council selec-:tion last January of the late
Patrick Carnahan as police chief
over Martinez, touched off the
ethnic trouble that has rocked
the little town of Parlier ever
since.
In the race for city clerk,
Clifford Ifodriguez, also . endorsed by the Fact Finding Committee, defeated incumbent D. J.
Herring. Herring has held the
office for the past 36 years.
It was the first time a person
of Mexican descent has been
elected to office in Parlier even
though · the community population
ROTC protest
set today
According to an anti-war
spokesman, there was a demonstration scheduled at noon today
at the Air Sciences Building.
Citing the recent escalation in
the air war in Southeast Asia
as the reason for the anti-ROTC ·
demonstration, anti-war spokesman Dennis Strand charged, "l"S
air attacks are threatening - to
widen the way beyond possible
containment."
According to Strand, a coalition
of local anti-war groups are involved in the demonstration.
"This is the root of the air
war, these ROTC cadets are still
being trained to fig! t a war that
is continuing into its thirteenth
year," St rand added.
Strand said he is a veteran of
the war, having served in Vietnam with' the US Army.
This week national anti-war
groups are planning demonstrations in a number of major cities
across the country.
Villa, Rodriguez, Baxter,
Kessler speak at EOP rally
By Alex Contreras
La Voz Aztlan Staff Writer
"Chicanos will not return to
the barrio without education." So
declared City Councilman Al
Villa, as he addressed an EOP
rally audience - estimated to
have been 185 people - on the
FrE:sno State College campus,
last Friday afternoon.
The rally was the climax to a
•
Three Chicanos w,n Parlier election
A trio of candidates of Mexican descent, running under the
banner of the Parlier Fact Finding Committee, defeated incumbent Mayor Weldon Byram and
two other councilmen last Tuesday.
"I don't feel it is necessary to
file suit yet. I'm going to wait
until I see what Bell and others
are going to do," he said,
"Some candidates, George Xagel in particular , are seeking an
injunction against the election.
I'm waiting for the Bell decision
because I'd rather it be decided
out of court."
Nagel says he is considerina an
injunction because many qu~stions about the election haven't
been determined.
(Continued on page 2, col. 5)
is approximately 85 per cent
Mexican-American.
Nearly 89 per cent of the
city's registered voters went to
the polls.
·
Arcadro V. viveras, chairman
of the Parlier Fact Finding Committee, said that the election results "have proven the MexicanAmerican people can be united
along with other minorities." ·
The committee is now pointing
to the June 6 recall election of
two other city councilmen.
week in which EOP students
staged a hunger strike to protest
Gov. Ronald Reagan's recent
withdrawal of state EOP funds.
Joining Councilman Villa on the
speakers' platform was FSC
President Norman Baxter, who
commended the leaders of the
hunger strike, but remained uncommitted on the .EOP issue.
United Professors of California local president, Dr. Warren
Kessler, was· warmly received
as he stated UPC support ofEOP
and strongly urged the audience
to write their legislators and ask
them to vote for EOP, not only
the first time around but to also
vote for EOP after the governor's
veto.
Local attorney Armando Rodriguez, also apoke in supp~rt of
the EOP students and mentioned
that he had seen the EOP started
and that the budget was now back
to 1969 standards.
All of the day's speakers applauded the courage and dignity
displayed by the students involved
in the fast and most voiced their
support of EOP.
2
THE DAILY COLLEGIAN
Monday, April 17, 1972
1
LA
-..
I
Chicano leadership
..
C'-.
••• I
')
~
'·-. ' ...
.. . . ~ttl. ·_;
Chicanos at Fresno State seem to have fallen into a st9-te of chaos
this- semester.
Everyone seems to be waiting for someone to come along to provide something called leadership. Hell, it just isn't enough that the
..
gavacho continues his oppression, we m,u st also lay inactive and in~
different to the events which concern US!
Remember: be we chicanos, Mexican-Americans or pochos, we
Bell
ourselves, you, I, we are the leadership.
WE ARE THE VANGUARD OF A NEW SCENE, ONE WHERE
THE RAZA WILL NO LONGER REMAIN CONTENT IN ITS
Conspiracy
ROLE OF "'SECONDHAND CITIZENSHIP.•
It remains for the RAZA at FSC to once more mold themselves
into a strong, effective voice. One _that we wil _l all support.
· -Por La Raza todo-Alexandro Contreras
lllE -DAILY COLLEGIAN
Published five days a week except
holidays and examination periods by
the Fresno State College Association.
Mail subscriptions $8 a semester,
$15 a year. Editorial office, Keats
Campus Building, telephone 487-2486.
Business and advertising office, College Union 316, telephone 487-2266 .
Editor-in-chief . . . . . , Bill Follett
Day Editors . . . . • . Alex Contreras
Ricardo Paredes
News Editor .. , . . . .. . . Jim Brock
Sports Editor . . . . . . . .· Ron Orozco
Environmental Editor . Steve Soriano
Business lAanager . . Edward Piston
Advertising \tanager . . Wilbur PauJs
Reporters .. . . . . . Gary Alexander,
Dave Davenport, John Pe·ckler, .
Anne Richards
Photographers .. . . . Larry Nylund,
Steve Soriano , Julie Van Reyper
Opinions expressed in Collegian
editorials, including feature-edit oria ts
and commentaries by guest writers,
are not necessarily those of Fresno
State College or the student body.
Edttor-app lications
Applications are now available for Daily Collegian editor for the Fall semester.
Interested students may pick
up applications •in room 302
of the College Union.
Applications must be returned by April 28.
The Board of Publications
will select the editor May 4.
Editors of La Voz de Aztlan:
I suffered a rather odd kind of
bellyache Friday. It did not comefrom a week of fasting with the
local EOP students; it was instead generated by the sight of
the people at their rally, bent forward with questioning expressions on their faces,. trying to
comprehend the words of the
speakers, sensing that they had
something to say. The crowd
could not miss the problem: the
public address system seemed to
have been designed for classroom
use. Through it, the words of
the enlightenirig speakers could
be understood by a good so per
cent of the audience; the rest
were in the dark.
My anger drove . me to' the Instructional Media Center where
I found a defensive Director Let me apologize for my belly3;ching, Mr. Bathurst. The IMC
Director concluded our chat by
stating that the only imaginable
reason for the inadequacy of the
P.A. system was that the person
Student Handbook assistant editors
The Board on Publications has
announced that applications are
available for two positions as assistant editor$ for a student handLOCKSMITHS
Ali?~~~ b~~~~r&oi:t~;~ -
book. A ~andbook has not been
published for several years but
plans are being made for one next
year. Most of the work for the
publication will be done this summer.
Louie's Lo.ck & Key Shop
Persons seeking further information may call the Student Activities Office at 487-2741 or th·e
Student President's Office, 4872657~ Applications are due April
28 and the selection·is scneduled
for May 4.
WALK ·1. :BLOCK TO .FSC
There is a $200 grant being
proposed for each position.
1-2-3 BDRM. LUXURY APTS.
SELL YOl:JR
student discount, credit ~ards
group and charter rates, U.S.A . .
and Europe . Call Ralph 224-6876
The abqve is not sponsored by the ..
Calif. State Colleges or the Fresno
State College AssociatiQn, Inc. ·
0
Auto-House-Trunks-Stores
-Foreign CarsPH: 227-6263
Cedar Lane Shopping Center
9 am-6 pm Daily - Sun. 10 am-5 pm
USED
FURNISHED .N[YUNFURNISHED
RATES START AT $14e
• ·FEATURING MAXIMUM PRIVACY
Outside entries
Private patio or balcony
On site parking
2 pools - 5 laundries
• ALL ~PTS. EQUIPPED WITH
Range, refrigerator, dishwashers,
disp als, shag carpets, drapes
"""""-~.:::,._ _·.- -
=-:::-,.___ _-:.- . ..
BOOKS
EVERY
.
WED.
(during Spring Semester)
227-2908
(CORNER
5158 N. 9th,. E. SAN
.OSE)
OPEN DAILY 11 A.M.-6P.M:
AT
FSC Bookstore
who had requisitioned it had not
specified clearly enough the intended use. He added that he and
Norman Baxter run IMC at what
they consider a reasonable level
of efficiency.
Having been thus reassured by
IMC, I made my way back to .the
EOP Rally where I questioned
ME CHA Chairwoman Grace Solis
as to who had been responsible
for obtaining the P.A. Her reply
caught me off guard. She said that
Pat Gorman of the Activities Office had agreed to take responsibility for the requisition. I cannot
believe that his failure to obtain
an_adequate P.A. can be attributed
to a lack of communication with
IMC.
Alternatively, I must consider
another possibility. Both Gorman
of Activities and Bathurst ofIMC
are res pons i bl e · directly to
President Norman Baxter, who is
in term responsible to the trustees, Chancellor Dumke, and finally Governor Reagan. I would
not think it accurate to' say that
any individual had taken part
knowingly in a conspiracy against
minority ' groups on this campus,
but it does seem as though the
•syste-m" has, in this case,
served as a convenient deterrent
to the EOP students in their
struggles against the heartlessness of the Reagan Administration.
Steven M. Johnson
Sophomore
Back packing
The outings group of the College Union Recreation Committee
is sponsoring a back packing trip
to the Big Meadows area of Sequoia National Forest April 21,
22 and 23.
.
A planning rneefing will be held
today in CU 310 at 7 p.m., 0Qtdoor camping equipment from
Denali Mountaineering will be on
display at the meeting. For additional information call
487-2938.
.IOBS
EUROPE
guaranteed and salaried.
England , Belgium and Switzerland, year-round. Trainees (general help) '1st class
hotels , restaurants, supermarkets, hospitals, department stores, holiday camps.
For details and application
send $1.00 with a stamped
self-addressed business
size envelope to:
Princeton Research. Dept. C
Box 4418
Panorama City, Calif. 91402
(Continued from page 1)
"I'm looking at the possibility
of getting an injunction to postpone the election until all the
questions are answered," he said.
"I think the court's decision is
questionable. Bill Follett 'shearsay testimony was given m'ore
cred.ibility than Gene Boni's. I
wasn't at the court meeting, but
this was the impression I got
from people who were there,"
said Nagel.
According to White, Follett's
testimony was not used in reaching the decision because it was
hearsay evidence.
Nagel added he wants the election postponed because of the
publicity the "ESP slate has received recently."
"The sympathy vote is there
too, more Greeks will now vote
out of sympathy for ESP. ·
"I hope people will look for
candidates' qualifications instead
of their affiliations. If they don't,
we '11 be in real trouble next
year," Nagel said.
ESP presidential candidate
Mark Etcheverry expects Bell to
render a favorable decision on
the student court ruling.
"I hope nothing serious happens but Boni made the decision
and he has to live with it. He
made a mistake and screwedup," Etcheverry said.
The Bell decision may involve
more than a ruling on the court
decision.
According to White, "It is debatable whether or not the de'cision may be appealed.
"I'm not sure if Dean Bell is
aware or not but there are conflicting provisions concerning
appeals.•
White says the election code
states that •the Student Court has
final authority on cahdidate disqualifications," but the FSC Association bylaws stipulate that
"students have the right to appeal
student court decisiops . .,
"I'm not sure what Bell's de- ·
cision will be, but I'm sure the
eourt will abide by his decision,"
White said.
• However, I believe we handled
it as well as possible. considering the circumstances," he added.
r
Monday, April 17, 1972
THE DAILY COLLEGIAN
3
FBl's J. Edgar Hoover guilty of conspiracy?
By Mark Brewer
ably result in the charges being
dropped on grounds of entrapment; but more importantly,
When it was revealed last October that the FBI had paid three
Hardy's revelation could possibly be used as grounds for filyoung men to plan and lead bombing criminal charges against the
ings on stateuniversity campuses
in Washington and Alabama, many
FBI!
In the affidavit, Hardy says he
people chose to disbelieve it or
first went to the FBI to try to presimply regard it as a freak ocvent tpe raid from taking place,
currence. The confessions of
but the Bureau induced him to
those three men, broadcast over
stay with the project. T h e y
National Educational Television,
promised him that the raid would
were denied by the Bureau, largebe prevented and that his "coly overlooked by the press, and
conspirators" would be charged
forgotten in a week.
only with conspiracy and would
After all, the realization that
not be jailed. Now, however, the
our federal police employ agents
defendants face a slew of charges
provocateuF and, in effect, comfor breaking and entering, theft
mission their own crimes, is
of government property and indecidedly ·discomforting. That
terfering with the Selective Serrealization, however, became invice laws. Three of the group are
escapable recently when yet anpriests, and one of them, Rev.
other man, Robert W. Hardy,
Michael J. Doyle, once Hardy's
divulged in a sworn affidavit that
he had been employed by the " parish priest, convinced Hardy
to reve~l the FBI' s role in the
Bureau to lead a raid on the Camraid.
den, New Jersey draft board in
At one point, Hardy says, the
August, 1969.
group had lost interest in the
Hardy allowed his confession
projected raid and was about to
to be entered in a New Jersey
abandon the scheme, but he urged
federal court on March 15 as part
them to continue. The Bureau
of a motion to dismiss charges
helped per_suade them by providagainst the 28 defendants he had
ing Hardy with gas, trucks, tools
persuaded to participate in the
and even groceries for the •con"Camden Raid." Since Hardy had
spirators"' to use. - Later, the
previously been a prosecution
Bureau provided him with ladwitness, his testimony will prob-
ders, special drill bits for .glass
and even schematic drawings of
the Selective Service. offices.
As in· other cases, the crime
which the f~deral government is
prosecuting could never have
been committed if not for the active involvement of a government
agent. In 1970, Jeff Desmond,
another Bureau provocate.u r, had
to spend weeks instructing radicals at the University of Washington (Seattle) ·in the sordid art of
bombing before they could engineer the two blasts for which
they were prosecuted in federal
court. Of course, like the "Camden raid," the Bureau had full
knowledge of both bombings in
Seattle before they happened.
As far back as 1920, when a
young J, Edgar Hoover was making a name -for himself directing
the infamous Palmer Raids, the
National Popular Government
League leveled charges in Senate sub-committee hearings that
the Bureau h;id employed provocateurs to gain evidence on which
hundreds of "subversives" were
summarily deported. Even though
the charges were corroborated by
then Secretary of Labor Louis F.
Post in House Rules Committee _
hearings, the Bureau's tactics
were not even censured.
Since there has never been a
formal investigation of the FBI's
activities, it is difficult to guess
how frequently provocateurs have
been employed. However, last
-October at a conference on the
FBI at Princeton University, exSpecial Agents Robert Wall and
William Turner related that the
Bureau's system of •informants"
encouraged fabrication of evidence and instigation of crimes.
As Robert Hardy's case illustrates, they often do mor~ than
simply encourage. Ex-agent
William Turner has written (in
"Hoover's FBI," Sherbourne
Press, 1970) that the FBI paid
two Ku Klux Klan informers
$36,500 in 1968 to persuade Kathy
Ainsworth to born b a Jewish businessman's home in Meridian,
Miss. Th~ police lay waiting for
Miss Airisworth, and shot her to
death.
It is evident that the FBI not
only scores sensational headlines
by •apprehending" bombers and
draft board raiders, but such apparent triumphs also support
Hoover's ever increasing budget
requests and give credence to his
tales of violent subversives
Alternative Features Service
-Rec Committee plans
spring student outings
The College Union Recreation
Committee announced this week
that a new series of student
oriented and initiated activities
will begin.
The new · program of student
initiate(! programs is designed
to increase student interest in
College Union activities.
.
Ideas for trips and activities
are being sought from the general
student body as well as campus
organizations, Bruce Schlegel,
a committee member, said "anything will be considered. Our primary purpose will be to coordinate the planning and arrange for
the use of facilities for the activities."
Mike Barber, another member
of the committee, said that the
emphasis has been placed on
three primary areas: special
events, special interest classes,
and off-campus activities.
In the order of special events,
the "Night on the Delta Queen,"
an annual Monte Carlo style
spring event, has been scheduled
for Thursday, April 27 • .
The committee is co-sponsoring a Cinco de Mayo Charriada,
a Mexican style rodeo, to beheld
in conjunction with Semana de la
Raza, May 1 to 5.
In the· area of special emphasis. classes, Barber indicated
that a pottery and ceramics class
has been organized.
Barber is hopeful that this is
just the first of several such
classes.
"There are a large number of
areas in which students are interested in participating, primarily as a hobby," he said.
Classes in arts and crafts,
guitar playing, scuba diving and
other areas are tentative 1 y
scheduled if enough student interest can be generated.
Barber said that there is "no
limit . to what we could have if
the students respond."
The committee, through the
College Union Programming Office, will handle signups, reservations and attempts to get student discounts for off-campus
activities.
ES t
1920
FLOWERS & GIRS
Cedar & Shields Ph. 227-3564
I I 9FFICIAL \ j
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JOHN ROBERTS
ASK ABOUT
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FOUR-WEEK
SHIPMENT
USED CLUBS
at all prices
SLACKS from $12
STUDENT GOLF RATE
S2 oo I
.
Aid interviews
The Financial Aids Office has
requested all students who have
applied for financial · aid for the
1972-73 academic year, and who
are currently receiving aid this
semester, to report for aninterview.
15.
·sPECIAUZING IN
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VOLKSWAGEN
DATSUN-lOYOTA-DOMESllC CARS'
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OVERSEAS JOBS
FOR STUDENTS
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sight seeing . . ·
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JOBS OVERSEAS, Dept. G8
Box 15071,
San Diego, CA. 92115
4370 N. BLACKSTONE AVE.
FIESNO
ACROSS FIIOM CONTINENTAL MAIIKET
DiCicco•s
Now at First and Shaw
PIZZERIA
CITYWIDE DELI-VERY SERVICI;
Blackstone near Belmont #1
fhone: 237-705~
GOL<DEN
c%If;~U~
Your signature included absolu1ely tree ms,de
each John Roberts rmg purchased durmg R1r1g Days.
OFFER GOOO ONLY ON DATES SHOWN
DiCic::co's Pizzeria, famous for serving authentic Italian food
in Fresno for over 15 years, now has· a new location, just one
mile from the Fresno State campus, at First and Shaw-across
from Fashion Fair.
\
mu .l l'IIElil ~
OPEN EVERY DA
by mail, preregistration forms
from the Summer Sessions Office. Registration forms can also
be picked up from the Summer
Sessions Office and from the
Records Office.
More than 300 classes will be
offered during the first summer
session at FSC. A tuition fee of
$24 per unit will be charged under the self-financing policies of
tile Summer Sessions Office.
For further information ab~ut.
preregistration and course offerings, contact the Summer Ses- ·
sions Office. Deadline for preregistration form return is May
Dr. James A. Fikes, dean of
Continuing Education and Summer Sessions, has announced that
preregistration for the first summer session will be held April
24 through May 15. Regular registration for the first session will
be held June 19 and classes
will begin June 20.
This year, preregistration will
be handled through the mail only.
Interested students may request,
•
I ICCOI
D·c•·
9:00-4:00
FSC Bookstore Main Level
7700 N. Van Nes~
Fresno 93705 :
Phone 439-2928
Su-mmer registration
dates announced
The DiCicco brothers invite you to visit this new location with
· its relaxing atmosphere and enjoy the food and beverages. If
it's Italian food you want DiCicco's five Fresno locations have
it with the most varied menu served anywhere ••••• and nearly
every location is open until 3 a.m. and don't forget they have
. that delicious food to take out or they'll deliver it to your door
•.•• Just pick up the phone and cal I the one nearest you. There
are other DiCicco locations in Merced, Modesto, Sacramentoand
San Jose.
ig: <RING}DA'YS ~
FIG GARDEN
GOLF COURSE
In a recent scene which see med
like a study in the arr.ogance of
power, a television newswoman
asked Hoover if it was true that
he was considertng retirement.
Befo;re network cameras, the old
Director growled, almost unintelligibly, "The wish is father to
the thought.•
For that very reason, perhaps
stronger, more direct tactics are
required to bring. law and order
to our national law enforcers. For
instance, on the basis of the nationally t e 1e vised.confessions
last October of the three FBIpaid bombers, together with the
affidavit recently signed by Robert Hardy, it appears that Director Hoover is guilty of conspiracy! Think about it.
Finest Corsages & Floral Make-11p
3468.
The game of a lifetime
WEl!'. 'EC DAYS
AFTER 1:30 P . M.
Condits
Ideas for other activities should
be submitted in writing to the
College Union Program ming Office, room 311, or by calling
Roger "Hoot" Ingraham at 487-
PLAY GOLF
at
"Your Closest Florist"
threatening the nation.
Nevertheless, information provided by ex-agents and provocateurs continues to reveal evidence of the Bureau's own crimes,
and an increasing portion of the
public - and even of the Bureau
itself - awaits Hoover's resignation or replacement, since confirmation hearings for a new
Director could give Congress the
chance to conduct a long-overdue
inquiry into Bureau activities.
It's widely said now that Hoover
can't last much longer and that
Nixon might even replace him so
as not to miss the chance to
name his successor. Hoover has
headed the FBI for almost half a
century, though, and he doesn't
appear to be weakening.
-ir
Cedar near Shields #2
Phone: 222-0544
-
Shaw at First #4
Phone: 229-7811
Blackstone near Clinton #3
Phone: 222-3051
Ashlan at Fresno #5
Phone: 224-2755
4
Photograph by Julie Van Reyper
LARRY PRIETO, Bulldog shortstop, forces out a
Pacific runner at second base during Saturday's
doubleheader in Stockton. FSC's Prieto picked up
Out of
three hits in the three-game series which proved
one of the most successful hatting efforts for FSC
players, who mostly held ineffective bats.
title race
'Dogs drop three to UOP
By Ron Orozco
Collegian Sports Editor
Fresno State's hot - and - cold
Bulldogs were . virtually erased
from the Pacific Coast Athletic
Association baseball title race
this past weekend after losing
three games to the University of
Pacific Tigers.
The Bulldogs, co-champions
with San Jose State last year, entered the series on an eight-game
winning streak, but poor overall
playing and ineffective _b atting
caused FSC to leave {rom Stockton with their heads hanging low.
"We played very poorly. We
just didn't hit good at all," said
head coach Bob Bennett, directly
after the 'Dogs dropped a doubleheader Saturday to the Tigers at
Billy Hebert Field by scores of
6-2 (IO innings) and 2-1.
The previous afternoon pitcher
Brad Duncan threw an impressive
three-hitter but still managed to
lose, 3-1, because of his team-
MONDAY
Fresno State College's first spring
football practice, 6;30 p.m. , Ratcliffe
Stadium.
TUESDAY
Varsity baseball vs. Sacramento
State College, doubleheader, 12:00
noon, Sacramento.
Tennis vs. Sacramento State College, 2:00 p.m., Sacramento.
WEDNESDAY
Junior Varsity baseball vs. College
of Sequoias, 3:00 p.m., Visalia.
THURSDAY
Golf vs. Sun Devil Toumam811t
teams, all day, Phoenix, Arizona .
FRIDAY
Varsity baseball vs. San Fernando
Valley State, 7:30 p.m., Pete Beiden
Field.
Golf vs. Sun Devil Tournament
teams, all day, Phoenix, Arizona.
SATURDAY
Golf vs. Sun Devil Tournament
teams, all day, Phoenix, Arizona.
Varsity baseball vs. San Fernando
Valley State, doubleheader, 12;00
noon, Pete Beiden Field.
Junior varsity baseball vs. Cal
Poly (]V's), doubleheader, 12:00
noon, San Luis Obispo.
Track vs. University of Pacific,
1:30 p.m., Ratcliffe Stadium.
want ads ,
H. D. SPORTSTER
Eves. after 6.
291-3965
2 BR furn across from dorms
$160 or $45 person 439-6481
mates' lacking offensive support
with the bat.
"We had been hitting good as a
team before this series, but we
just didn't execute well today,"
continued Bennett, whose Bulldogs slipped to 3-G in the PCAA
championship race. With just
nine league contests remaining on
the schedule, it doesn't appear
FSC will nab first place again;
About the only thirg coach Bennett and company could rave about
after the series was that FSC
third baseman Kirk Wolfe is now
one home run shy of tying the
school record, and ailing Dick
Ruthven is finally able to pitch
ag·ain.
Ruthven, considered the Bulldogs' number one hurler at the
start of the year, had been sideIi ned the past week and a half with
a muscle injury. Bennett said
Ruthven will start against Sacramento State tomorrow afternoon.
Wolfe's tenth homer of the season moves him to within one of
sharing the school HR record (11)
with Ron Schiller. His two-run
clout came in the first game of
yesterday's twinbill and sailed
approximately 360 feet.
At the time. it appeared Wolfe's
blast would provide enough runs
for a Bulldog victory, but after
UOP tied the score at 2-2 in the
seventh inning, the two teams
struggled into extra inning play.
In the tenth, UOP's Rod Beilby
hit a grand slam over the left
field fence off FSC relief pitcher
Roger Hanney. Hanney entered
the game in the ninth inning after
starting pitcher Dan Grimm was
injured by a line-drive that hit
his wrist.
Grimm had not worked up to par
before ~ departed, giving up nine
base hits and three base-onballs. Bennett said that Grimm
suffered a badly bruised wrist
and may miss a week and a half
of playing action.
I~ the first game, Pacific(4-2)
touched FSC starter Monte Wood
with two hits and two runs, which
proved good enough to secure the
win and the clean sweep. Wood
handcuffed the Tigers from g-etting another hit the remaining
six frames of the seven-inning
game.
UOP's Bob ,B loomer singled
after two were out in the opening
canto and scored on a cheap triple
by rightfielder Scott Baras. Boras, the Tigers' top hitter, looped
a high fly in shallow centerfield
which caused problems for FSC 's
outfielders.
Johnson, centerfielder who had
two hits for the Bulldogs, and
Doug Elf raced in on the fly ball
and nudged it forward as it hit
the ground which allowed Boras
to move to third hase. Then,
UOP's Bill Ringer drove in Boras
with a single between third and
shortstop.
FSC tallied its only run in the
third inning when Neal Fragus
hit a double over theleftfielder's
head to drive in teammate Doug
Elf. Elf scored from second base
after forcing out Wood and stE:'aling se_cond.
The Bulldogs could not mount
another scoring threat the remaining innings as Tiger pitcher
Bill Keim limited FSC to just six
hits. Wood suffered the loss. despite throwing a two-hitter.
Wood retired the Tigers in perfect order four of the last five
innings he pitched. "Wood didn't
pitch badly--he looks very promising," said Bennett.
Photograph by William Schiffmann
DAN GRIMM, FSC pitcher, threw to first baseman Larry Shepherd·
(24) in an attempt to pick off a Pacific base runner. Grimm suffered
a badly bruised wrist in Saturday's doubleheader loss to the UOP
Tigers in Stockton and should be · out of action for a week and a half.
FSC's ten outstanding athletes
Ten Fresno State College athletes have been chosen to appear
in the 1972 edition of Outstanding
College Athletes of America.
Selected from FSC were Steve
Verry, football; Ken Wong, soccer; Bruce Henning, basketball;
Mike Paniffia, golf: Mike McMillen, swimming; Marshall Mills;
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I
»N
~
LXXVIl/112 Fresno State College _ Fresno, California Monday, April 17, 1972
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Brown is being in the sun
.•.•
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Here
we go agam
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Con las manos en la tierra.
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Brown is beauty untold
Con tu corazon de fuerra.
Brown is being him and her
Con tu mente sin usar.
La
l Gen te
Brown is talk, talk, talk
Con tu col ita sin parrar.
Brown is together, funky, and fine
I
Bell sends decision back to court
Bv Gan· Ah.•xand(•r
nature as to preclude adjudica-
C~llegi;n Staff Writer
tion.'"
In a statement to the Student
Court, Dr. David G. Bell, dean of
student affairs, has asked for
"clarification'" of the court decision which reinstated the ESP
slate to the student body election
ballot.
Bell's statement termed the
court's rationale •of such a vague
Con tu r itmo para gozar.
Brown is wisdom through age
Con los jovenes I istos pa' arrancar.
I
Brown is desire without a will
~
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...
.
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~
::~::,:::::,::~~~d~~: jugar•
Brown is the humanism of tomorrow
~:;:.~:
Con la gente que a nadien va a-enganar.
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Enrique Esquivel Figueroa
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UPI editor to ioin
Journalism staff
The vice president and editor
of United Pre s -s International
(UPI), Roger Tatarian, has been
appointed to the faculty of the
Journalism Department at Fresno State College. He will begin
his teaching duties in September.
The announcement was made by
Dr. Harold Haak, FSC academic
vice president.
Tatarian is an FSC graduate
and a veteran of more than 30
years of U.s. and foreign assignments with the news agency.
Dr. John Duke, chairman of the
Department of Journalism, says
Tatarian will be an important
addition to the faculty because of
his strong background in the field
of news writing and will concentrate his effort in beginning and
advanced writing.
Also, because of his worldwide experience with UPI, he will
teach the department ·s course in
Press and World Affairs. Dr.
Duke says Tatarian is well acquainted with the work of coliege
journalism students through his
judging in recent years of the
journalism competition for students sponsored by the Hearst
newspapers.
Born in Fresno, Tatarian joined
UPI in its local bureau following
his graduation from FSC in 1938.
He was assigned to the Washington staff in 1941, and covered the
United Nations organizational
conference in San Francisco in
1945.
He went to London in 1949
and to Rome in 1951 as manager
of the UPI bureaus in those cities
and became the agency's general
news manager for Europe in
1953. He became managing editor
of UPI in 1959, was elected a vice
president in 1963 and was appointed editor in 1965.
Tatarian was at the scene of
every major diplomatic conference during his tour of duty in
Europe. Also, he directed coverage of other big stories including
the lifting of the Berlin blockade,
the 1956 winter Olympics in Italy,
national elections in Italy, Britain
and France, the Hungarian revolt
and the Suez crisis.
Tatarian's honors include an
honorary Doctor of Letters degree from Wfltldham College in
1967 and a special citation by
Ohio University in 1968 for distinguished service ih journalism.
Legal adviser
begins work
at FSC today
FSC students now have a place
to turn to for free legal advice.
Bill Jolly, a fourth-year student
at Humphrey's College School of
Law in Fresno. was hired last
Wednesday as Legal Advisement
Coordinator for the college. The
student association is providing
the state with funds to operate
the position.
Jolly is available to students
or any other members of the college community for legal advicf
and counseling. He is not able to
give any actual legal service but
can refer people to attorneys if
such service is necessary.
Jolly will be on campus Mondays and Tuesdays from 8 a.m.
to 12 noon for consultation. Appointments can be made in the
Student Activities Office or by
calling 487-2741.
He was selected from a field
of six applicants by a committee
including Woody Brooks, Student
Senate legal committee chairman; Joe Guagliardo, chairman
of the board of directors budget
committee; Dave Collins, ASB
legislative vice president and Bill
Corcoran, assistant dean of student affairs.
Jolly graduated from Fresno
City College with an AA degree.
He worked in sales and public
relations in the Bay Area for 10
years. For the last five years
he has operated his own real
estate business in Fresno as
well as attending law scho~l at
night arid doing research for a
local law firm.
Student Body President Phil
Sherwood said it is possible that
the service will be expanded next
year if there is enough evidence
of student need.
In what is proving to be one of
the most confusing and drawn
out elections in FSC history, the
court overturned the decision of
the election committee's executive committee which disqualified
the ESP ticket. The slate was
disqualified for allegedly exceeding the maximum limit for campaign expenses.
According to Art White, chief
justice, the court will meet tomorrow to revamp their supportive arguments which they
used to reach their decision.
"Bell wants us to specify the
points we used in arriving at our
decision. I believe what he wants
is a more elaborate statement,
as he seems to have found ours
too brief.,.
Bell's introduction into the situation stems from an appeal of
the court decision by recently
resigned election com mitt e e
chairman, Gene Boni,
"I appealed the court decision
because I felt that the ESP slate
did exceed their expense accounts and were rightfully
disqualified. I don't see any
reason why they should be reinstated," Boni said. "The executive committee made a just decision.
"The elections are not valid,
and in fact are fixed if ESP is on
the ballot.
"White isn't going to get out of
this on legitimate grounds," Boni
added.
There has been speculation that
some inch victuals may seek a
court injunction against the elections. Boni has a wait-and-see
attitude but maintains the possibility he may file such an injunction.
The victors, Baltazar Touar,
Andrew Benites and Joe P. Munaz, said their first objective is
to have John Martinez named
Chief of Police.
An all-anglo city council selec-:tion last January of the late
Patrick Carnahan as police chief
over Martinez, touched off the
ethnic trouble that has rocked
the little town of Parlier ever
since.
In the race for city clerk,
Clifford Ifodriguez, also . endorsed by the Fact Finding Committee, defeated incumbent D. J.
Herring. Herring has held the
office for the past 36 years.
It was the first time a person
of Mexican descent has been
elected to office in Parlier even
though · the community population
ROTC protest
set today
According to an anti-war
spokesman, there was a demonstration scheduled at noon today
at the Air Sciences Building.
Citing the recent escalation in
the air war in Southeast Asia
as the reason for the anti-ROTC ·
demonstration, anti-war spokesman Dennis Strand charged, "l"S
air attacks are threatening - to
widen the way beyond possible
containment."
According to Strand, a coalition
of local anti-war groups are involved in the demonstration.
"This is the root of the air
war, these ROTC cadets are still
being trained to fig! t a war that
is continuing into its thirteenth
year," St rand added.
Strand said he is a veteran of
the war, having served in Vietnam with' the US Army.
This week national anti-war
groups are planning demonstrations in a number of major cities
across the country.
Villa, Rodriguez, Baxter,
Kessler speak at EOP rally
By Alex Contreras
La Voz Aztlan Staff Writer
"Chicanos will not return to
the barrio without education." So
declared City Councilman Al
Villa, as he addressed an EOP
rally audience - estimated to
have been 185 people - on the
FrE:sno State College campus,
last Friday afternoon.
The rally was the climax to a
•
Three Chicanos w,n Parlier election
A trio of candidates of Mexican descent, running under the
banner of the Parlier Fact Finding Committee, defeated incumbent Mayor Weldon Byram and
two other councilmen last Tuesday.
"I don't feel it is necessary to
file suit yet. I'm going to wait
until I see what Bell and others
are going to do," he said,
"Some candidates, George Xagel in particular , are seeking an
injunction against the election.
I'm waiting for the Bell decision
because I'd rather it be decided
out of court."
Nagel says he is considerina an
injunction because many qu~stions about the election haven't
been determined.
(Continued on page 2, col. 5)
is approximately 85 per cent
Mexican-American.
Nearly 89 per cent of the
city's registered voters went to
the polls.
·
Arcadro V. viveras, chairman
of the Parlier Fact Finding Committee, said that the election results "have proven the MexicanAmerican people can be united
along with other minorities." ·
The committee is now pointing
to the June 6 recall election of
two other city councilmen.
week in which EOP students
staged a hunger strike to protest
Gov. Ronald Reagan's recent
withdrawal of state EOP funds.
Joining Councilman Villa on the
speakers' platform was FSC
President Norman Baxter, who
commended the leaders of the
hunger strike, but remained uncommitted on the .EOP issue.
United Professors of California local president, Dr. Warren
Kessler, was· warmly received
as he stated UPC support ofEOP
and strongly urged the audience
to write their legislators and ask
them to vote for EOP, not only
the first time around but to also
vote for EOP after the governor's
veto.
Local attorney Armando Rodriguez, also apoke in supp~rt of
the EOP students and mentioned
that he had seen the EOP started
and that the budget was now back
to 1969 standards.
All of the day's speakers applauded the courage and dignity
displayed by the students involved
in the fast and most voiced their
support of EOP.
2
THE DAILY COLLEGIAN
Monday, April 17, 1972
1
LA
-..
I
Chicano leadership
..
C'-.
••• I
')
~
'·-. ' ...
.. . . ~ttl. ·_;
Chicanos at Fresno State seem to have fallen into a st9-te of chaos
this- semester.
Everyone seems to be waiting for someone to come along to provide something called leadership. Hell, it just isn't enough that the
..
gavacho continues his oppression, we m,u st also lay inactive and in~
different to the events which concern US!
Remember: be we chicanos, Mexican-Americans or pochos, we
Bell
ourselves, you, I, we are the leadership.
WE ARE THE VANGUARD OF A NEW SCENE, ONE WHERE
THE RAZA WILL NO LONGER REMAIN CONTENT IN ITS
Conspiracy
ROLE OF "'SECONDHAND CITIZENSHIP.•
It remains for the RAZA at FSC to once more mold themselves
into a strong, effective voice. One _that we wil _l all support.
· -Por La Raza todo-Alexandro Contreras
lllE -DAILY COLLEGIAN
Published five days a week except
holidays and examination periods by
the Fresno State College Association.
Mail subscriptions $8 a semester,
$15 a year. Editorial office, Keats
Campus Building, telephone 487-2486.
Business and advertising office, College Union 316, telephone 487-2266 .
Editor-in-chief . . . . . , Bill Follett
Day Editors . . . . • . Alex Contreras
Ricardo Paredes
News Editor .. , . . . .. . . Jim Brock
Sports Editor . . . . . . . .· Ron Orozco
Environmental Editor . Steve Soriano
Business lAanager . . Edward Piston
Advertising \tanager . . Wilbur PauJs
Reporters .. . . . . . Gary Alexander,
Dave Davenport, John Pe·ckler, .
Anne Richards
Photographers .. . . . Larry Nylund,
Steve Soriano , Julie Van Reyper
Opinions expressed in Collegian
editorials, including feature-edit oria ts
and commentaries by guest writers,
are not necessarily those of Fresno
State College or the student body.
Edttor-app lications
Applications are now available for Daily Collegian editor for the Fall semester.
Interested students may pick
up applications •in room 302
of the College Union.
Applications must be returned by April 28.
The Board of Publications
will select the editor May 4.
Editors of La Voz de Aztlan:
I suffered a rather odd kind of
bellyache Friday. It did not comefrom a week of fasting with the
local EOP students; it was instead generated by the sight of
the people at their rally, bent forward with questioning expressions on their faces,. trying to
comprehend the words of the
speakers, sensing that they had
something to say. The crowd
could not miss the problem: the
public address system seemed to
have been designed for classroom
use. Through it, the words of
the enlightenirig speakers could
be understood by a good so per
cent of the audience; the rest
were in the dark.
My anger drove . me to' the Instructional Media Center where
I found a defensive Director Let me apologize for my belly3;ching, Mr. Bathurst. The IMC
Director concluded our chat by
stating that the only imaginable
reason for the inadequacy of the
P.A. system was that the person
Student Handbook assistant editors
The Board on Publications has
announced that applications are
available for two positions as assistant editor$ for a student handLOCKSMITHS
Ali?~~~ b~~~~r&oi:t~;~ -
book. A ~andbook has not been
published for several years but
plans are being made for one next
year. Most of the work for the
publication will be done this summer.
Louie's Lo.ck & Key Shop
Persons seeking further information may call the Student Activities Office at 487-2741 or th·e
Student President's Office, 4872657~ Applications are due April
28 and the selection·is scneduled
for May 4.
WALK ·1. :BLOCK TO .FSC
There is a $200 grant being
proposed for each position.
1-2-3 BDRM. LUXURY APTS.
SELL YOl:JR
student discount, credit ~ards
group and charter rates, U.S.A . .
and Europe . Call Ralph 224-6876
The abqve is not sponsored by the ..
Calif. State Colleges or the Fresno
State College AssociatiQn, Inc. ·
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AT
FSC Bookstore
who had requisitioned it had not
specified clearly enough the intended use. He added that he and
Norman Baxter run IMC at what
they consider a reasonable level
of efficiency.
Having been thus reassured by
IMC, I made my way back to .the
EOP Rally where I questioned
ME CHA Chairwoman Grace Solis
as to who had been responsible
for obtaining the P.A. Her reply
caught me off guard. She said that
Pat Gorman of the Activities Office had agreed to take responsibility for the requisition. I cannot
believe that his failure to obtain
an_adequate P.A. can be attributed
to a lack of communication with
IMC.
Alternatively, I must consider
another possibility. Both Gorman
of Activities and Bathurst ofIMC
are res pons i bl e · directly to
President Norman Baxter, who is
in term responsible to the trustees, Chancellor Dumke, and finally Governor Reagan. I would
not think it accurate to' say that
any individual had taken part
knowingly in a conspiracy against
minority ' groups on this campus,
but it does seem as though the
•syste-m" has, in this case,
served as a convenient deterrent
to the EOP students in their
struggles against the heartlessness of the Reagan Administration.
Steven M. Johnson
Sophomore
Back packing
The outings group of the College Union Recreation Committee
is sponsoring a back packing trip
to the Big Meadows area of Sequoia National Forest April 21,
22 and 23.
.
A planning rneefing will be held
today in CU 310 at 7 p.m., 0Qtdoor camping equipment from
Denali Mountaineering will be on
display at the meeting. For additional information call
487-2938.
.IOBS
EUROPE
guaranteed and salaried.
England , Belgium and Switzerland, year-round. Trainees (general help) '1st class
hotels , restaurants, supermarkets, hospitals, department stores, holiday camps.
For details and application
send $1.00 with a stamped
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size envelope to:
Princeton Research. Dept. C
Box 4418
Panorama City, Calif. 91402
(Continued from page 1)
"I'm looking at the possibility
of getting an injunction to postpone the election until all the
questions are answered," he said.
"I think the court's decision is
questionable. Bill Follett 'shearsay testimony was given m'ore
cred.ibility than Gene Boni's. I
wasn't at the court meeting, but
this was the impression I got
from people who were there,"
said Nagel.
According to White, Follett's
testimony was not used in reaching the decision because it was
hearsay evidence.
Nagel added he wants the election postponed because of the
publicity the "ESP slate has received recently."
"The sympathy vote is there
too, more Greeks will now vote
out of sympathy for ESP. ·
"I hope people will look for
candidates' qualifications instead
of their affiliations. If they don't,
we '11 be in real trouble next
year," Nagel said.
ESP presidential candidate
Mark Etcheverry expects Bell to
render a favorable decision on
the student court ruling.
"I hope nothing serious happens but Boni made the decision
and he has to live with it. He
made a mistake and screwedup," Etcheverry said.
The Bell decision may involve
more than a ruling on the court
decision.
According to White, "It is debatable whether or not the de'cision may be appealed.
"I'm not sure if Dean Bell is
aware or not but there are conflicting provisions concerning
appeals.•
White says the election code
states that •the Student Court has
final authority on cahdidate disqualifications," but the FSC Association bylaws stipulate that
"students have the right to appeal
student court decisiops . .,
"I'm not sure what Bell's de- ·
cision will be, but I'm sure the
eourt will abide by his decision,"
White said.
• However, I believe we handled
it as well as possible. considering the circumstances," he added.
r
Monday, April 17, 1972
THE DAILY COLLEGIAN
3
FBl's J. Edgar Hoover guilty of conspiracy?
By Mark Brewer
ably result in the charges being
dropped on grounds of entrapment; but more importantly,
When it was revealed last October that the FBI had paid three
Hardy's revelation could possibly be used as grounds for filyoung men to plan and lead bombing criminal charges against the
ings on stateuniversity campuses
in Washington and Alabama, many
FBI!
In the affidavit, Hardy says he
people chose to disbelieve it or
first went to the FBI to try to presimply regard it as a freak ocvent tpe raid from taking place,
currence. The confessions of
but the Bureau induced him to
those three men, broadcast over
stay with the project. T h e y
National Educational Television,
promised him that the raid would
were denied by the Bureau, largebe prevented and that his "coly overlooked by the press, and
conspirators" would be charged
forgotten in a week.
only with conspiracy and would
After all, the realization that
not be jailed. Now, however, the
our federal police employ agents
defendants face a slew of charges
provocateuF and, in effect, comfor breaking and entering, theft
mission their own crimes, is
of government property and indecidedly ·discomforting. That
terfering with the Selective Serrealization, however, became invice laws. Three of the group are
escapable recently when yet anpriests, and one of them, Rev.
other man, Robert W. Hardy,
Michael J. Doyle, once Hardy's
divulged in a sworn affidavit that
he had been employed by the " parish priest, convinced Hardy
to reve~l the FBI' s role in the
Bureau to lead a raid on the Camraid.
den, New Jersey draft board in
At one point, Hardy says, the
August, 1969.
group had lost interest in the
Hardy allowed his confession
projected raid and was about to
to be entered in a New Jersey
abandon the scheme, but he urged
federal court on March 15 as part
them to continue. The Bureau
of a motion to dismiss charges
helped per_suade them by providagainst the 28 defendants he had
ing Hardy with gas, trucks, tools
persuaded to participate in the
and even groceries for the •con"Camden Raid." Since Hardy had
spirators"' to use. - Later, the
previously been a prosecution
Bureau provided him with ladwitness, his testimony will prob-
ders, special drill bits for .glass
and even schematic drawings of
the Selective Service. offices.
As in· other cases, the crime
which the f~deral government is
prosecuting could never have
been committed if not for the active involvement of a government
agent. In 1970, Jeff Desmond,
another Bureau provocate.u r, had
to spend weeks instructing radicals at the University of Washington (Seattle) ·in the sordid art of
bombing before they could engineer the two blasts for which
they were prosecuted in federal
court. Of course, like the "Camden raid," the Bureau had full
knowledge of both bombings in
Seattle before they happened.
As far back as 1920, when a
young J, Edgar Hoover was making a name -for himself directing
the infamous Palmer Raids, the
National Popular Government
League leveled charges in Senate sub-committee hearings that
the Bureau h;id employed provocateurs to gain evidence on which
hundreds of "subversives" were
summarily deported. Even though
the charges were corroborated by
then Secretary of Labor Louis F.
Post in House Rules Committee _
hearings, the Bureau's tactics
were not even censured.
Since there has never been a
formal investigation of the FBI's
activities, it is difficult to guess
how frequently provocateurs have
been employed. However, last
-October at a conference on the
FBI at Princeton University, exSpecial Agents Robert Wall and
William Turner related that the
Bureau's system of •informants"
encouraged fabrication of evidence and instigation of crimes.
As Robert Hardy's case illustrates, they often do mor~ than
simply encourage. Ex-agent
William Turner has written (in
"Hoover's FBI," Sherbourne
Press, 1970) that the FBI paid
two Ku Klux Klan informers
$36,500 in 1968 to persuade Kathy
Ainsworth to born b a Jewish businessman's home in Meridian,
Miss. Th~ police lay waiting for
Miss Airisworth, and shot her to
death.
It is evident that the FBI not
only scores sensational headlines
by •apprehending" bombers and
draft board raiders, but such apparent triumphs also support
Hoover's ever increasing budget
requests and give credence to his
tales of violent subversives
Alternative Features Service
-Rec Committee plans
spring student outings
The College Union Recreation
Committee announced this week
that a new series of student
oriented and initiated activities
will begin.
The new · program of student
initiate(! programs is designed
to increase student interest in
College Union activities.
.
Ideas for trips and activities
are being sought from the general
student body as well as campus
organizations, Bruce Schlegel,
a committee member, said "anything will be considered. Our primary purpose will be to coordinate the planning and arrange for
the use of facilities for the activities."
Mike Barber, another member
of the committee, said that the
emphasis has been placed on
three primary areas: special
events, special interest classes,
and off-campus activities.
In the order of special events,
the "Night on the Delta Queen,"
an annual Monte Carlo style
spring event, has been scheduled
for Thursday, April 27 • .
The committee is co-sponsoring a Cinco de Mayo Charriada,
a Mexican style rodeo, to beheld
in conjunction with Semana de la
Raza, May 1 to 5.
In the· area of special emphasis. classes, Barber indicated
that a pottery and ceramics class
has been organized.
Barber is hopeful that this is
just the first of several such
classes.
"There are a large number of
areas in which students are interested in participating, primarily as a hobby," he said.
Classes in arts and crafts,
guitar playing, scuba diving and
other areas are tentative 1 y
scheduled if enough student interest can be generated.
Barber said that there is "no
limit . to what we could have if
the students respond."
The committee, through the
College Union Programming Office, will handle signups, reservations and attempts to get student discounts for off-campus
activities.
ES t
1920
FLOWERS & GIRS
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$15.00
DEPOSIT!!!
JOHN ROBERTS
ASK ABOUT
LIFETIME
GUARANTEE
FOUR-WEEK
SHIPMENT
USED CLUBS
at all prices
SLACKS from $12
STUDENT GOLF RATE
S2 oo I
.
Aid interviews
The Financial Aids Office has
requested all students who have
applied for financial · aid for the
1972-73 academic year, and who
are currently receiving aid this
semester, to report for aninterview.
15.
·sPECIAUZING IN
I
VOLKSWAGEN
DATSUN-lOYOTA-DOMESllC CARS'
COMPLETE
OVERSEAS JOBS
FOR STUDENTS
• IODY WOii
AUSTRALIA, EUROPE,
SO . A'VIERICA, AFRICA, t•tc.
All professions and occupations,
$700 to $3,000 monthly.
Expenses paid, overtime.
sight seeing . . ·
.
• PAINTING
• lliUIANCE
ESTIMATES
• TOWING SERVIC
Mike Garabedian-0wner-20 Years Experience
MICHAEL~S
INTERNATIONAL BODY' REPAIRS
Free informationWrite
re;-=;1222-111 ◄1~•
JOBS OVERSEAS, Dept. G8
Box 15071,
San Diego, CA. 92115
4370 N. BLACKSTONE AVE.
FIESNO
ACROSS FIIOM CONTINENTAL MAIIKET
DiCicco•s
Now at First and Shaw
PIZZERIA
CITYWIDE DELI-VERY SERVICI;
Blackstone near Belmont #1
fhone: 237-705~
GOL<DEN
c%If;~U~
Your signature included absolu1ely tree ms,de
each John Roberts rmg purchased durmg R1r1g Days.
OFFER GOOO ONLY ON DATES SHOWN
DiCic::co's Pizzeria, famous for serving authentic Italian food
in Fresno for over 15 years, now has· a new location, just one
mile from the Fresno State campus, at First and Shaw-across
from Fashion Fair.
\
mu .l l'IIElil ~
OPEN EVERY DA
by mail, preregistration forms
from the Summer Sessions Office. Registration forms can also
be picked up from the Summer
Sessions Office and from the
Records Office.
More than 300 classes will be
offered during the first summer
session at FSC. A tuition fee of
$24 per unit will be charged under the self-financing policies of
tile Summer Sessions Office.
For further information ab~ut.
preregistration and course offerings, contact the Summer Ses- ·
sions Office. Deadline for preregistration form return is May
Dr. James A. Fikes, dean of
Continuing Education and Summer Sessions, has announced that
preregistration for the first summer session will be held April
24 through May 15. Regular registration for the first session will
be held June 19 and classes
will begin June 20.
This year, preregistration will
be handled through the mail only.
Interested students may request,
•
I ICCOI
D·c•·
9:00-4:00
FSC Bookstore Main Level
7700 N. Van Nes~
Fresno 93705 :
Phone 439-2928
Su-mmer registration
dates announced
The DiCicco brothers invite you to visit this new location with
· its relaxing atmosphere and enjoy the food and beverages. If
it's Italian food you want DiCicco's five Fresno locations have
it with the most varied menu served anywhere ••••• and nearly
every location is open until 3 a.m. and don't forget they have
. that delicious food to take out or they'll deliver it to your door
•.•• Just pick up the phone and cal I the one nearest you. There
are other DiCicco locations in Merced, Modesto, Sacramentoand
San Jose.
ig: <RING}DA'YS ~
FIG GARDEN
GOLF COURSE
In a recent scene which see med
like a study in the arr.ogance of
power, a television newswoman
asked Hoover if it was true that
he was considertng retirement.
Befo;re network cameras, the old
Director growled, almost unintelligibly, "The wish is father to
the thought.•
For that very reason, perhaps
stronger, more direct tactics are
required to bring. law and order
to our national law enforcers. For
instance, on the basis of the nationally t e 1e vised.confessions
last October of the three FBIpaid bombers, together with the
affidavit recently signed by Robert Hardy, it appears that Director Hoover is guilty of conspiracy! Think about it.
Finest Corsages & Floral Make-11p
3468.
The game of a lifetime
WEl!'. 'EC DAYS
AFTER 1:30 P . M.
Condits
Ideas for other activities should
be submitted in writing to the
College Union Program ming Office, room 311, or by calling
Roger "Hoot" Ingraham at 487-
PLAY GOLF
at
"Your Closest Florist"
threatening the nation.
Nevertheless, information provided by ex-agents and provocateurs continues to reveal evidence of the Bureau's own crimes,
and an increasing portion of the
public - and even of the Bureau
itself - awaits Hoover's resignation or replacement, since confirmation hearings for a new
Director could give Congress the
chance to conduct a long-overdue
inquiry into Bureau activities.
It's widely said now that Hoover
can't last much longer and that
Nixon might even replace him so
as not to miss the chance to
name his successor. Hoover has
headed the FBI for almost half a
century, though, and he doesn't
appear to be weakening.
-ir
Cedar near Shields #2
Phone: 222-0544
-
Shaw at First #4
Phone: 229-7811
Blackstone near Clinton #3
Phone: 222-3051
Ashlan at Fresno #5
Phone: 224-2755
4
Photograph by Julie Van Reyper
LARRY PRIETO, Bulldog shortstop, forces out a
Pacific runner at second base during Saturday's
doubleheader in Stockton. FSC's Prieto picked up
Out of
three hits in the three-game series which proved
one of the most successful hatting efforts for FSC
players, who mostly held ineffective bats.
title race
'Dogs drop three to UOP
By Ron Orozco
Collegian Sports Editor
Fresno State's hot - and - cold
Bulldogs were . virtually erased
from the Pacific Coast Athletic
Association baseball title race
this past weekend after losing
three games to the University of
Pacific Tigers.
The Bulldogs, co-champions
with San Jose State last year, entered the series on an eight-game
winning streak, but poor overall
playing and ineffective _b atting
caused FSC to leave {rom Stockton with their heads hanging low.
"We played very poorly. We
just didn't hit good at all," said
head coach Bob Bennett, directly
after the 'Dogs dropped a doubleheader Saturday to the Tigers at
Billy Hebert Field by scores of
6-2 (IO innings) and 2-1.
The previous afternoon pitcher
Brad Duncan threw an impressive
three-hitter but still managed to
lose, 3-1, because of his team-
MONDAY
Fresno State College's first spring
football practice, 6;30 p.m. , Ratcliffe
Stadium.
TUESDAY
Varsity baseball vs. Sacramento
State College, doubleheader, 12:00
noon, Sacramento.
Tennis vs. Sacramento State College, 2:00 p.m., Sacramento.
WEDNESDAY
Junior Varsity baseball vs. College
of Sequoias, 3:00 p.m., Visalia.
THURSDAY
Golf vs. Sun Devil Toumam811t
teams, all day, Phoenix, Arizona .
FRIDAY
Varsity baseball vs. San Fernando
Valley State, 7:30 p.m., Pete Beiden
Field.
Golf vs. Sun Devil Tournament
teams, all day, Phoenix, Arizona.
SATURDAY
Golf vs. Sun Devil Tournament
teams, all day, Phoenix, Arizona.
Varsity baseball vs. San Fernando
Valley State, doubleheader, 12;00
noon, Pete Beiden Field.
Junior varsity baseball vs. Cal
Poly (]V's), doubleheader, 12:00
noon, San Luis Obispo.
Track vs. University of Pacific,
1:30 p.m., Ratcliffe Stadium.
want ads ,
H. D. SPORTSTER
Eves. after 6.
291-3965
2 BR furn across from dorms
$160 or $45 person 439-6481
mates' lacking offensive support
with the bat.
"We had been hitting good as a
team before this series, but we
just didn't execute well today,"
continued Bennett, whose Bulldogs slipped to 3-G in the PCAA
championship race. With just
nine league contests remaining on
the schedule, it doesn't appear
FSC will nab first place again;
About the only thirg coach Bennett and company could rave about
after the series was that FSC
third baseman Kirk Wolfe is now
one home run shy of tying the
school record, and ailing Dick
Ruthven is finally able to pitch
ag·ain.
Ruthven, considered the Bulldogs' number one hurler at the
start of the year, had been sideIi ned the past week and a half with
a muscle injury. Bennett said
Ruthven will start against Sacramento State tomorrow afternoon.
Wolfe's tenth homer of the season moves him to within one of
sharing the school HR record (11)
with Ron Schiller. His two-run
clout came in the first game of
yesterday's twinbill and sailed
approximately 360 feet.
At the time. it appeared Wolfe's
blast would provide enough runs
for a Bulldog victory, but after
UOP tied the score at 2-2 in the
seventh inning, the two teams
struggled into extra inning play.
In the tenth, UOP's Rod Beilby
hit a grand slam over the left
field fence off FSC relief pitcher
Roger Hanney. Hanney entered
the game in the ninth inning after
starting pitcher Dan Grimm was
injured by a line-drive that hit
his wrist.
Grimm had not worked up to par
before ~ departed, giving up nine
base hits and three base-onballs. Bennett said that Grimm
suffered a badly bruised wrist
and may miss a week and a half
of playing action.
I~ the first game, Pacific(4-2)
touched FSC starter Monte Wood
with two hits and two runs, which
proved good enough to secure the
win and the clean sweep. Wood
handcuffed the Tigers from g-etting another hit the remaining
six frames of the seven-inning
game.
UOP's Bob ,B loomer singled
after two were out in the opening
canto and scored on a cheap triple
by rightfielder Scott Baras. Boras, the Tigers' top hitter, looped
a high fly in shallow centerfield
which caused problems for FSC 's
outfielders.
Johnson, centerfielder who had
two hits for the Bulldogs, and
Doug Elf raced in on the fly ball
and nudged it forward as it hit
the ground which allowed Boras
to move to third hase. Then,
UOP's Bill Ringer drove in Boras
with a single between third and
shortstop.
FSC tallied its only run in the
third inning when Neal Fragus
hit a double over theleftfielder's
head to drive in teammate Doug
Elf. Elf scored from second base
after forcing out Wood and stE:'aling se_cond.
The Bulldogs could not mount
another scoring threat the remaining innings as Tiger pitcher
Bill Keim limited FSC to just six
hits. Wood suffered the loss. despite throwing a two-hitter.
Wood retired the Tigers in perfect order four of the last five
innings he pitched. "Wood didn't
pitch badly--he looks very promising," said Bennett.
Photograph by William Schiffmann
DAN GRIMM, FSC pitcher, threw to first baseman Larry Shepherd·
(24) in an attempt to pick off a Pacific base runner. Grimm suffered
a badly bruised wrist in Saturday's doubleheader loss to the UOP
Tigers in Stockton and should be · out of action for a week and a half.
FSC's ten outstanding athletes
Ten Fresno State College athletes have been chosen to appear
in the 1972 edition of Outstanding
College Athletes of America.
Selected from FSC were Steve
Verry, football; Ken Wong, soccer; Bruce Henning, basketball;
Mike Paniffia, golf: Mike McMillen, swimming; Marshall Mills;
SPECIALS
CANVAS
~:,!A~.95~
NAVY
BE[L 549
BOTTOMS
STYROFOAM
PELLETS
for bean bag chairs
AIR FORCE
219
GLASSES
SUN
COMPLETE STOCK
CANDLELIGHT GUILD USED BOOK SALE
All Kinds of Books Available
CAMPING
April 18, 19 and 20 from 9 A,M. to 9 P.M.
FIRST CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH
2131 Van Ness Blvd.
Complete selection of
EQUIPMENT
ARTIST
MATERIALS
.2 0%~1~~9yt~~g~
STUDENTS - EARN
EXTRA MONEY
up to $40 per month
Need donors for Plasma
-9an sell twice a weekalso Whole Blood every
8 weeks - $5 each time
Cal I 485-4821
for appointment
Hours: 7 a.m.-3 p.m.
CALIFORNIA BLOOD BANK
FOUNDATION
412 F Street ·- Fresno
tennis; Donn Johnson and Dan
Grimm, basebaU: Keith Tice,
track and Vic Gonzales, wrestling.
Canvas - brushes
Liauetex - frames - oils
FREE
Parking
WAR SURPLUS
DEPOT
DAILY MATINEES
$1.50 'TllCHILDREN
3:30 P,M.
50•
602- Broadway.
CITY TRANSIT BUS
STOPS ADJACENT
TO THEATRE
237-36.15