La Voz de Aztlan, September 9 1976

Item

La Voz de Aztlan, September 9 1976

Title

La Voz de Aztlan, September 9 1976

Creator

Associated Students of Fresno State

Relation

La Voz de Aztlan (Daily Collegian, California State University, Fresno)

Coverage

Fresno, California

Date

9/9/1976

Format

PDF

Identifier

SCUA_lvda_00079

extracted text

Farmworke_rs strengthen push
by La Voz Staff

and 81,000 farmworkers m
adopting 16 resolutions endorsing
Local officials of the United several political candidates inFarm Workers of America are eluding Democratic presidential
calling the union's first political hopeful Jimmy Carter.
endorsement convention a
Carter affirmed his support of
success and positive boost for· the farm labor· initiative in a
Proposition 14.
telephone conversation from
Tanis Ybarra, the UFW's Georgia heard over the public
Selma office spokesperson, said address system by ·the cam,.,
the day-long meeting Sunday in · pesinos.
Fresno's Convention Center
Proposition 14 would- give
strengthened the union's pusb for California a new farm labor law
the Nov. 2 ballot fig~t.
similar to one now-in effect and
. Cesar Chavez. led 1,04.7 implemented through the state's
delegates representing 223 farms Agri.c ultural Labor Relations

L

Board (ALRB).
The initiative is in response to
grower ,organizations and their
legislators who conspired to hold
the ALRB hostage
by
withholding . n~ded funds. They
attempted to force Gov. Brown to
appoint
board · members
favorable to the grower's interest..
The proposed law would take
the ALRB -out · of the political
arena and· guarantee funding for
it.
Another major provi.sion would
provide that the grower-opposed

·>

DE AZTLAN
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, _1976

LXXXl-2

A special edition of THE COLLEGIAN, California State University, Fresno

access rule also be written into
the law. Growers and their allied
legislators have opposed the
access rule and used it. as an
excuse for withholding funds.
Carter, a farmer, praised the
farmworker's union for its
committment to non-violence and
quoted Chayez' on that
mittment.
The presidential candidate's
announcement top~ the list of
current office-holders and
aspirants who have.supported the
controversial initiative.
"We feel real good about the
initiative,'' said Ybarra Tuesday.
"It was a real success.,,
Ybarra pointed to the support
_of other politicians presented at
.the convention, in.eluding a
telegram from Gov. Brown and a
speech by U.S. Senator Alan
Cranston for colleague John
Tunney, who is seeking reelection in November.
Among the resolutions Ybarra
noted one praising the City of
Parlier for their city council's
endorsement of Prop. 14.
"_It's significant Parlier is

(Continued on Page 3, Col. 4)

Nikssarian ousts
MEChA office

MECHA has lost its College
Union office space following
major changes made by AS
President David ·Nikssarian
over the summer.
The · Chicano organization
learned of the situation at their
first meeting of the year last
Thursday, and voted to confront

Chavez

praises

MECM
UFWA leader Cesar Chavez
praised statewide MEChA
support for the union at Sunday's
political endorsement convention
in Fresno.
Several CSUF Mechistas did
volunteer work at the convention.
. MEDhA students have always
lent their support by organizing
for UFWA events, Chavez told
the gathering.
(~ontinued on Page 3. Col. 1)

com-

Harry Kubo's hometown,, he
said, referring to the leader'of the
opposition to Prop. 14 and of the
Nisei Farmer's League.
.
Chicano state . Assemblymen
Art Torres and Richard Alatorre
also spoke to_ the delegates, with
To:~• noting that the ~
ec e on Democrats ~~~ ~ll m
support of the UFW mitiative.
"If any Democrat cannot
support Prop. 14, then he is not a
Democrat and does not deserve
our support,,. he told the cheering
crowd after listing other top
party leaders, such as Los
•·Angeles Mayor Tom Bradley and
San _Francisco Mayor George
Moscone in support of the
initiative.
Ybarra said the endorsed
politicians will now have to show
their voiced support through
action.
"We expectto see 'Yes on 14' on
all their campaign matenal "he
said.
·
The Selma campesino said the
convention emphasizes the
political maturity of the union

Nikssarian in his office to
request an explanation.
MEChA then took its concern to
the Student Senate Friday. A
committee was formed to review
the situation and establish
guidelines for a11~cating the
office spaces.
-cu Rooms 304 A, B, C, next to
the AS office, were occupied by
MEChA, Amerasians, Pan
African Union, and Tewaquachi,
before Nikssarian evicted all
but a consumers group·also using
the rooms.
Nikssarian told the Chicanos
notices were sent by former AS
President David Price on May 24
to the occupants informing them
to move out. Sc.hool let out May
28.

However, the consumer's
group was not forced to move out
and still occupy the office .
Nikssarian·, . converted the
MEChA-Amerasian room into a
duplicating center and explained
(Continued on Page 3, Col. 2)

THE UFW'S FIRST Political Endorsement Convention held Sunday in Fresno.
.

Azt/On observes Mexican lndep~_ndenc;;e
Commemoration of Mexico's
Independence from Mexico
begins throughout Fresno County
and Aztlan this weekend, jneluding CSUF's observances on
Thursday, el Dies y Seis de
Septiembre.
The university's fiesta will
begin with a performance by its
own Danzantes de Aztlan who
will perform a repertory of
regional dances from Jalisco,
Ml.choacan ' Vera Cruz ' Yucatan
and the northern states of
Mexico.
The Mexican holiday honors
the anniversary of Mexico's
inqependence from Spain 166
years ago which gave impetus to
the development of Mexican
culture with out European
domination.
·

CSUF
CSUF's CoJlege

Union and
Semana de La Raza, a ME Ch A
subcommittee, are sponsoring
the campus celebrations.
Los Danzantes will perform at
11 a.m. in the CU - Lounge,
followed by El Teatro Espir.itu
(Chicano theater) and La
Comparsa de la Universitaria
(singers).

All are performers from La
Raza Studies Program . Also
there will be several speakers
scheduled throughout the day in
the lounge.

The festivities will culminate
with a free dance from 6 to 8
o'clock in the Student Lounge
Patio,
featuring
The
Fascinations.

The Fresn0-- City College
MEChA is also sponsoring 16th of
September celebrations on its
campus with events scheduled to
begin Wednesday at 8 a.m. wi th
"Pan Dulce" morning refresh:
ments and an art display in the

Citywide commemoration of
16th of September is again being
coordinated by the Mexican Civic
Committee, Inc. and will be
kicked-off by the annual parade .
d
F
. through
owntown
resno
Wednesday, and culminate with
the traditional "Grito _de
Dolores" and -coronation of the
Independence Day queen on
Thursday.
The parade will start at 10 a.m.
at the corner of Inyo and .'E'
Streets in West Fresno and wind
its way through downtown and to
the Fresno Convention Center
where El Grito and coronation
will -be followed by The Queens
Ball Dance at 8 o'clock,
The four-hour program after
the parade will include Los
D
Mixtlatecos, CSUF's Los anzantes de Aztlan, the Mariachi de

fCC-

FCC Art Gallery.
- The above activities will be
repeated Thursday along with a
ceremony from 9-10 a.m. to
present th e Mexican Flag.
Mariachi de la Tierra will per~o;~c~t ~~~~~ime also at the Free
Parlier's Teatro del Barrio will
perform in the New Theatre Arts
building at noon.
Immediately following will be
JAose Torres of the Community
wa~~nessf Educational Project,
spea mg rom 1 to 1: 30.
He wi·11 be fO11owe d bY UF
.
R' h d Ch• W
represen tat1ve 1c ar
avez
·11
k
who wi spea from I: 30-2. The
· 1• D
Mars1e
a s ancers will perform
from 2-3 p.m.
.

Fresno

la Tierra and the Folklorico
Mexicano del Gallo, from Se1ma.
All festivities are free except
for the dance where a $2 ad-

m1ss1on charge 1s asked. There
will be door prizes.

Sanger
" ..

.
Th_e 5th a?,nual Die~ Y Se1s de
Sepbembre celebr~bon ~~nsore_d by El Com1t~ C1v1co
Mexicano de Sa~ger, will be held
Saturday, sta rtmg at 11 a.m. at
th e Sanger Park.
Featured speakers during t~e .
!ardeada from 12 : 30-7 p.m. will
include Alex Saragoza, CSUF La
R
St d' di t
h
ill
aza u ies rec or, w O w
speak on the historical per·
spec t·1ve of Mexican
.. I ndependence; Fresno Mum_c1pal
Court J~dge Armando ~guez
who wll~ ~~k on nghts ~nd
respo?Sibihhes_; Fr.esno City
Councilman Al Villa will speak on
the current meaning of .the
celebrati·on.
Scheduled to perform are the
CSUF Los Danzantes de Aztlan
and Mariachi de la Tierra from 24 p.m. Folkl_orico Mexicano El
Gallo of Selma will dance at 6.
A. parade through downtown
Sanger will open the festivities at
11 and a dance at the Community
Center will be held from 9 p.m. to
advance
1 a.m. Tickets I are $111,50
,g,
and $3.00 at . the ·door.

Thursday, September._9:, 1976

2-LA VOZ

.

\

Editorial
I

·iEsti m.urie.pdO -:.
nuestra callsa;l

'·'I

,

Hello and welc9me back to
another academic year from the
staff of Tutorial Services. We

your course material we suggest
that you-study with classmates,
review your notes together andtrust you· had an enjoyable or see your.professor or graduate
summer and are .f'.eady· to .attack 1 assistant for clarification of
the books again.
course material. 1 If there are .
· We have some good news for special problems relating to your
you· in regards ~ · the tutorial . situation in a class c9me. in and ,
program on campus this see us, we will see what we can
s.emester. After a prolonged do~ For those of yQu who want to
uphill battle we have finally be a tutor you must meet certain
acquired office space and a qualifications to be considered. ·
centralized location for tutoring. First of all you must be a
We are now located i.n the San . currently enrolled student at
Ramon two building, rooms 31 CSUF. A faculty recomand 33: Our tutorial site will also mendation by specific course
be in San Ramon 2 within the number is also required along
confines of the new learning with a minimum 3.0 GPA in the
resource environment con- discipline that you desire to .tutor
struction is still going on there in. Last but certainly not least is
and we are not fully moved into an interview with the coordinator
the rooms yet. We ask that or one of the OTS staff members
students planning to request which· will introduce .you to our
tutorial assistance this semester policies and proce~dures. If you
w~ until the third week of school feel that you meet these
before asking for an interview. If requirements please come in to
you'r having early problems with see us, we need tutors in virtually

Hijos de Aztlan ! Socorro y Ayuda !
La
is drowning in the sea of aJ>athY which has washed ashore to
seemingly engulf the entire campus . .

vrn.

Que Pasa'?
Who is to blame'?
Is it those chingados' de student government'? Or, is it our own gente
who have abandoned nuestra causa fo inform la Raia'? ·
Along with our brothers of the now bi-weekly Daily Collegian, we
have been decimated to a mere shadow of our former selves; to a total
amounting to only two completed pages once a month. Some student
senators use Jnore toilet paper at one sitting than that!.
It appears we must forever remain v·igilante or even those paltry
inches will also be rammed to oblivion into that dark hole e:alled
student government legislation, where La Voz would ·be silenced
forever.
Once again carnales ·we ask for ayuda through direct participation.
Any suggestions, ideas or even pendejadas will be accepted. Direct
them to La Raza Studies. We will get them.
We must prove we can survive; prove we will continue to speak
independently admidst interference from a much too dominant
culture.

La Raza Studies

U_niversity misinterprets 'decline'
A time for change perhaps has
occurred for La Raza Studies.
Throughout the Southwest the
enrollment of students in La Raza
Studies programs has declined in ;

the last two 'years.
This has also been true here at
Fresno State University. As with
other Chicano Studies departments, the reasons for the decline .

YOUCANGO
HOMEAGAIN

are several:
(1) a lessening of financial aid
that results in fewer Chicanos
coming to schools because of
financial difficulties.
(2) a resurgence of hostility to
Chicano Studies programs from
university administrators.
(3) a lack of commitment 9f
universitites · to the active
recruitmentof Chicano students. •

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* *·*

(4) the general enrollment
decline throughout higher
education.
Clearly in an area in which 25
per cent of the population is
Chicano, and only eight per cent
of the CSUF student population is
Chicano, the. potential for greater
Chicano enrollment is indeed
hi2h. ·vet the efforts in this
direction by uni~ersities have
been dismal, token attempts.
Admittedly, La Raza Studies
programs have certain internal
curricular problems. Revisions
in class offerings and i~novative
teaching
approaches,
for
example, will take place in our
program at CSUF next spring.

'l~e 11,m

every discipline on campus. Our
wage rate is $3.15 per hour.·
·One last note of special consideration is · directed to all
veterans OJ?. campus. There are
educational benebits in your G.I.
Bill .which · pertain to , tutorial
assistance. These bennies are
above and beyond your regular
educational allocation and cost
you nothing but the time to check
things out in our office~
Mr. Alfred Alvarado is our
veterans liaison and . works
directly with all veterans who
request tutorial assistance on
camp1,Js. Veterans are eligible to
receive tutorial assistance on the
first day of the semester which
means you can come in today if
you _w ant to. Want to know more?
Come and see Alfred, he'll give
you the specifics.
Our office hours will be:
Mon.d ay through Thursday: 8: 00
A.M. to 7:00 P.M., Fridays 8:00
A.M. to 5:00 P.M ., San Ramon
Number Two Rooms 31 and 33,
487-2924-1052.
Manuel Olgin

Yet the key is the recruitment of
students into La Raza Studies.
Unfortunately university administrators "see" only bodies.
Rather than analyze the
problem, universities have
as·s umed
'that
declining
enrollments mean less student
support for LRS. The best way to
resist the attempts of the
university to cut back La Raza
Studies is for students to enroll in
LRS classes.
In the meantime, LRS faculty
·and student supporters .must
continue the struggle to recruit
new students and to push for the
expansion, not the reduction, of
. LRS at CSUF.

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Thursday, September 9,

1976A

,re-law

Mujeres fashion
show in Odober

club

to·~SJin
Chicanos interested in law are
invited to sign-up for a Chicano .
Pre-Law:Club in La Raza Studies
Office
an announcement
for.the first meeting on Monday is
posted.
.
. For further information contact students Hugo Morales at
487-2848 or Ruth Rodriguez at 4871021.

where

CYC Will

"1eet ·Fri.

The 1976 Chicano Youth Con. ference committee will hold its
first meeting Friday at 1 p.m. in
CU-310. The CYC will be the
fourth year MEChA has sponsored the CYC to recruit Chicano
high .school students to CSUF and
to offer them a view of opportunities available in higher
education .
Students
from
throughout the valley will be
contacted.

CBSA plans
to reorganize
The Chicano Business Students
Association
CCBSA)
is
reorgamzmg for the new
academic year and extends an
invitation to all interested
students to attend its first
meeting Tuesday at 5 p.m. in CU308. CBSA is· an affiliate of the
nati0nal and state chartered
group which provides an important resource of nationwide
information on the current job
market for business students and
graduates. For further information phone Dave Pinuelas
at 291-8090 or leave message in
CBSA mailbox in the School of
Business .

Chavez praise
(Continued from Page 1)

The more than 1,000 delegates
and thousands of visitors showed
their appreciation with a standing ovation.
·· This years MEChA officers are
President Fito Castillo, VicePresident Roger Valverde,
Secretary
Frances
Pena,
Treasurer Elma Mejia and
S~rgent-at -Arms Sam Benevides.
''We hope to push ~owards a
strong student recruitment drive
and help with Proposition 14, the
farm workers ini tia ti ve," said
Castillo, about MEChA's goals
for the year. "We would also like
to see more community involvement.
MEChA will hold it's meetings
on Thursdays at 12 o'clock in the
College · Union. Rooms to be
announced .

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30

LA VOZ-3

·
MAPA . potluck

The League· of MexicanAmerican Women is Sl)Onsoring a
Luncheon< Fashion, Show,
Saturday, Oct. 9, in the Hilton
Hotel. .The theme of the show is,
"V-isions-.of. Holiday Happiness."
A no-host cocktail hour at ll a·.m.
will precede the luricheon at
noon. Donations are $9 per person
and door prizes will be awarded.
Proceeds ar:e to benefit the
League's scholarship fund.

La·s

,

(C1onttnued from Page 1)

and outlines the kind of support it Joe Smith, presented a resolution
is asking for and the kind of drawn by the paper's staff in
support it will give in return.
support of the Fresno Bee Four
In· a message to · students, newsmen in jail for refusing to
The
Mexican
American
Chavez lauded the support reveal a M;RS source.
·Political Association~s Fresno . traditionally given the union by .........................,
Chapter . (MAPA) will hold a MEChA groups throughout the
Social Potluck Friday at 7 p.m. ·at
Voz ..
state and asked them to continue
1012 E. Cambridge in Fresno. The · their efforts on · behalf of the
sociaf
.is to recruit persons cainpesino's rights. He urged the
interested in upcoming elections.
students to register to vote· and
For further information contact
exercise that right at Jhe ballot. Editor
Anoe . .
Angie•Cisneros at 487~2848 or ~
· The · .renewal of the -union's Aal&. Edite:r. ·
Toaa1 Urlbes
1074,
. official newspaper, El Malcraido, . Reporten
a.ty
was also announced by ·the UFW • Caltrera, Margaret ·· Espana,

la

leader-. The paper has been . Mana Urlbel.
inactive for more than a year, but Photog.,.pber ·
Chavez promised it will now •Contribll&or .

will

The . first project

be a

Fellx.Coatreru
·Diane Campos

exert added· effort for la causa.
new editor of Malcraido,

fundraiser at ihe Mexican fn,. · The
dependence Day Festival .in
Sanger Saturday. OtJter plans .
discussed included sponsoring a
Chicana and .Third World
Women's Conference.

Tuesday's meeting will be in
CU-308 at noon.

JD.&A·AutoMoT1vE SPECIALISTS ,INC.

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r.
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Nikssarian

s

phone 442-0840-free pick-up~delivery

(C ontinued from Page 1)

to the Chicanos he wants to
create a "m ultiorganiza tional"
room in the PAU-Tewaquachi
room with "individually-locking
- cabinets for each organization on
campus to permanently store
records."

..

.- de Aztlan

hour

Adelitas ··1undraiser Sat.

The <'hicana organization at
CSUF, Las Adelitas, will meet
Tuesday to elect officers for the
new academic yea-r .
Interim president V~lentina
"Sepulveda announced the group
has listed priorities for ~he first
part of the year at its first
meeting Tuesday attended by 25
Chicanas.

.

College Union by-laws stated the
offices must be aJ}ocated on a
"first-come, first-serve basis."
MEChA has had a College
Union office for the past five
years, while the consumer's
. group came in last year.

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He said he sees no need for the
clubs to have their own office
space.
·However, the Mechistas told
Nikssarian · approximately 20
Chicano groups and sub- .
committees function and rely on
the offices as a center for
meetings and workrooms.

j

A new store hos opened in Fresno to serve you,

After Nikssaria11 ·. refused to
budge to the Chicano concerns,
MEChA took the matter to the
Student Senate on Friday. During
the meeting, a motion by Senator
Gary Nelson asked t.o support
Nicksarrian's plan but university
accountant Robert Vega informed the senate no money was
available to buy the lockers
propose·d
by
the student
president.

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~ ltaias 'I \\t ·
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Mechista Sam Benavides then
pointed out to the so-called
student representatives their own

Thank you fol' thinking heaZ.th.



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In your Fall '7 6 schedule

Thursday, S~ptember 9, 1976

4-LA VOZ

•'

1:J/i

The Wells Fargo Stagecoach, th~t ;~_~Because,· f;r\(
a dollar a month, you can have a student checking ac-'\:

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We'll even send you a statement every month.
·-c 4 ,. ,v,'· need it-a good way to build credit standing. Pl us you
The plan also has a built-in "see you in September" .;J
ca'n have overdraft protection ori your checking accbunt at
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Because every college should have a good coach.

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MEMBER f D IC

THE COLLEGIAN
LXXXl-2

CALIFORNIA STATE UNIVERSITY, FRESNO

, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 1976

Bogus Red ·to speak
by Linda Brown
Staff Reporter

A $500 imposter is scheduled to
speak in the College Union lounge
Thursday (Sept. 9) at noon.
The College Union Program
Office has falsely advertised its
first lecturer as "Dr. . Alexei
Alexandrov, assistant editor ·of
Pravda," a well known Russian
newspaper. The man speaking. is
not connected with the Soviet
newspaper, nor is he Russian .
The Collegian was first alerted
to the possibility of a fraud when
a student contacted the paper and
said she had seen the act_before.
,l<'nnifer Henson, a junior
anthropology major, said she had
heard a supposed Russian speak
three years ago at Hoover High
School in Fresno.
Henson said she recognized
' ' Alexandrov'' as being the same
man after seeing his picture in
"Whazhappnin ," t_h e College
Union Program Office's bulletin.
"When I saw that little blurb I
immedia tely thought of t_he guy
who came to Hoover. He was
supposed to have been the
Russian consulate in San
F rancisco," Henson said.
According to Henson, the
supposed Russian gives a speech
compar ing the . defects of
America to .the greatness of
Russia. After getting the
audienc e to hotly defend
America , he then announces he is

not a Russian or Communist,
Henson said.
When Henson heard that
"Alexandrov" was being -paid
$500 for his appearance, she said
she
confronted
Gary
Bongiovanni, College Union
Program Director.
"I told him I would expect an
assistant editor, not someone else
and that I wouldn't waste time
and money on a fake," Henson
said.
She said that Bongiovanni
asked her not to blow the lid on
"Alexandrov" because it could
ruin his act.
"I was looking at it from the
standpoint of misusing College
Union funds. He pointed out that
if the lid was blown then it would
be a total ·waste," Henson said.
In attempting to establish
"Alexand.rov's" identity, '.l'he
Collegian had a check made
through United Press International <UPI). The world- .
wide news organization called ·
Pravda offices in New York,
Washington and Moscow and
reported ,_ that Pravda officials
denied hearing of "Alexandrov." _:
A ·check with the. Russian
consulate in San Francisco also
proved negative.
Russian Vice-Consul Sidorenco
said: he had never ·heard of
"Alexandrov."
, When the Collegian asked
Bongiovanni if "Alexandrov"
was a fake, he responded af-

firmatively.
The program
director and his committee have
never seen the speaker perform,
but hired him to speak after
reading "Alexandrov's"
promotional
material,
Bongiovanni said.
When asked if he thought a
phony was worth $500 of student
money Bongiovanni said, "The
guy is an entertainer. In that
respect $500 is as fair ·as anything
else."
·
He said the value of
"Alexandrov's" speech is to see
how people will react, and if they
have stereotyped images of
Russians.
"He would · lose his effectiveness if it was widely
knowri he was a fake. That's why
I asked people to keep quiet,"
Bongiovanni said.
. He said the news media , in
Fresno was told the 'speaker was
a fake.
Jim Miller, director of public
information, said that the College
Union program office odginally
sent out press releases giving no
hint of "Alexandrov's" true
identity.
"We advised Bongiovanni that
the ·µiedia had to be apprised of
the situation," Miller said.
Miller said that many radio and
television stations in Fresno had
called his . office . because they
were suspicious of the speaker·.
He _said that news releases· were
( Co!1~iuued on Pa~e 2, Col: 1)

FOR $500 "ALEXEI ALEXANDROV" (above) imitates a Russian
newspaper official. In the course of his act "Alexandrov" attempts to
ire his audience by bad-mouthing the U.S. But it is all done in the
name -of fun, says Gary Bongiovanni, College Union Program
Director.

Beei- decision nixed
·because of oversight

Due to a bylaw oversight, last
Tuesday's decision to approve
the selling of beer on campus was
nullified, according to members
by Jon Kawa moto
The hike, approved last May
ne~ded to finance the financial of the CSUF Association Board of
Directors.
Staff Reporter
for this semester, represents as
aid program .
The seven-member board,
1
much as a $15 increase for some
' The change affects the fewest
which approved the measure by
The estimated $44 million students in their registration
number of students,' ► he said. "If
CSUF President Norman A.
gener ated fr om the recently fees .
it was done any other way, the
Baxter by a 3 to 2 vote with two
hiked student services fee will be
To indicate the , number of
increase would have affected all
abstentions, thought it secured
used toward improving the CSUF students affected by the
students because most are fullthe necessary votes to validate its
California State University and change, Registrar Robert Board
time students."
action, according to Jim Miller,
Colleges (CSUC) financial aid pointed to 1975 CSUF statistics
He noted another reason for the director of public information.
program, according to the which stated that 2,064 students,
increased student services fee.
However, a memorandum
system's associate deari of roughly 13 per cent of the student
"It not only funds the financial
dated the next day (Sept. 1), from
student affairs.
body, carried between seven to 11
aid program for better service, Earle Bassett, general manager
units. i-Ie pointed this out as the
but in generating a little more of the College Union, po~nted to a
area most likely to feel the money than needed this year, it · bylaw of the Association which
change.
should prevent any fee increases noted that "every act or decision
In addition to the hike, David for three years," he said.
of a majority of ·the Directors
Travis, associate dean of student
He added cautiously: "Unless
affairs, noted· that · the current funds are needed ·in another· present ... shall be valid as the act
of the Board ·of Directors."
Clarence Becker, an equipment two-tier fee ·schedul~ system was
area."
According
to
Bassett's
technician in the psychology: si!llplified from a four-tier .for- ·
memorandum,
the
Association's
department,. collapsed and died ·mat, both based on the ·n umber of ~ According to Travis, the logic
·
of raising fees now to avoid future legal counsel interepreted the
of an apparent heart attack registered units.
bylaw as meaning that a
None.theless, he emphasized increases goes like this:
Tuesday morning. He was ·51.
majority
of directors present was
. Becker had just stepped from ._ that the hike in the student ser~ Whenever the fee is revised, it
needed to approve the measure.
the department's motorized -cart vices fee was ma~e to fulfill one will generate -more money than
In Tuesday's situation, four votes
near San Ramon building two; _ of the CSUC's _ top budgetary needed in its first year. In its
were
needed.
.
priorities:
improvement
of
second
year;
the
revenues
will
when he fell to the ground
· Concerning Tuesday's vote,
match the money needed to fund
campus police said." He was give~ - financial aid services. ·
"The financial aid area was in the program. In its third year, it both Baxter and Horace 0.
mouth-to-mouth resuscitation by .real
need of an awful lot of ad- will generate less than needed. Schorling, executive viceLynn Mowery, a nursing student
The student services fee is just president, abstained. Baxter
who saw him collapse, according · "ditional assistance," said Travis.
one of six different registration declined, noting that he thought
to a psychology department "The revenues from the inspokesperson.
creased fee will basically be for
fees, but it comprises the bulk of it unfair to vote on his beer
the fees. Under the old schedule, policy. Schorling only votes in the
Paramedics were called to the augmenting staffs to process
a student would have had to pay case of a tie, according to board
scene and Becker was tran- financial aid forms and loans."
According to ·figures Travis
from $51 to $72, depending on the rules.
sported to St. ~gnes Hospital. He
Miller said Sept. 2 that Baxter
died there at 10: 11 a .m .
quoted, a little over $44 million is
number of registered units.
thought the simple majority vote
B_ecker had reportedly been projected from the hike this year,
But according to the new
was sufficient to approve his
taking medication for a heart about $500,000 more than needed.
schedule, a student may have to
policy.
pr ·)lem and was under the care Under the old fee schedule, he pay $6 to $15 more, again
of a physician .
said the amount of revenue
depending on the number of ! The policy Miller referred to
1 was that announced May 7 by
He was an employee of CSUF generated would have been $1.2 registered units.
1
for 10 years.
million short of the $43.5 million
(Continued on P~ge 2, Col. 4) • Baxter. At that monthly press

Fee hike helps financial aids

Heart -attack
proves fatal

conference, Baxter said he would
allow for the on-campus sale of
beer, but only if purchased with
food.
Baxter's policy resulted from a
decision reached by the
California State University and
Colleges (CSUC) trust-ees during
t_heir May 28-29, 1975 meeting. In .
that meeting, the trustees gave
each campus president of the 19member system the authority to
establish a beer policy.
Conferring with Schorling after
the memorandum was released,
Miller said Schorling told him
that the beer issue will be
presented at the next meeting.
JoAnn Johansen, Ba·s sett's
secretary and the person who
schedules
theJ meetings,
speculated that the meeting will
be held in late October.

Notice
What may appear to be a
printing error in today's
edition is actually an attempt to put both The
Collegian and La Voz--one
of two minority editionson equal footing. Readers
need only flip this
newspaper over and turn it
upside down to discover
this month's copy of La
Voz. If all goes well, this
method will be employed
with both minority editions
which are slated to appear
once a month each during
the Fall semester.

"

2.:...THE COLLE()IAN

Thursday, September 9, 1976

N ·elson receives -awQrd

Russian?

Gary W. Nelson of Kingsburg, a

Fee

fraternity foun.ded at CSUF in
1963.

hike irks 'hundreds'

(Continued from Page 1)
wrong fees b~sed on the old
Mix that kind. of increase with
schedule. He did not specify the
conflicting circumstances over
nuinber, but · described it · a~ ·
tne publication of the CSUF
"relatively small, ranging in the
schedule of courses and the.· . few hundreds."
current catalog .and you have.· ' . To help alleviate matters, the
some student · complaints, · ac- · business office in early June sent ·
cording to Board. · ·
postcards notifying students of
Word of the newly adopted
the fee schedule change, acschedule came in · a · letter dated
cordi_n g to Ruth Murral!, business
May 28 from the office of CSUC
office manager.
.
Chancellor Glenn S. Dumke. The
But for· all the discussion of
letter said the CSUC Board ·of · complaints, ·B oard said he djd not
Trustees · passed a resolution
know why the fee increase even
establishing the new schedule for
occurred:
this fall.
"You'd have to'· .ask ·. the·
Unfortunately for students, the
Chancellor's. office,". he said. '-'I
Sunday, Sept. 12 ·
letterarrivedonemonthafterthe · really don't -know why."
· current catalog and schedule of
As for those· affected· students-·
7 p.m.-The camp~ chapter of
courses were printed with lists of
who paid fees based on the for· Blue Key, the national honor the old fee schedule, said Board.
mer s~hedule, Murrall said they
As · a · result, Board said . "a
will be billed in the fourth week of
number" of students sent in the 1 the semester:
·society for men and women, will
meet in San Ramon 1, room 15.

member of the CSUF chapter of
has receiyed
The more than 50 members of
· then
sent,
stating
that the Outstanding Member Award,
.
the
fraternity were also com"~exandrov" was a fake.
the highest award presented to an
mended
for their work with the
individual member._
According to promotional
His chapt_er- also . received an mentally retarded and _their
material, "Alexandrov" has
involvement .with high school
award for the Outstanding
appeared at Caesar's Palace in ·
students _in the annual. Future
Historiap
Book,
\fhich
is
the
Las Vegas, The Americana in
Farmers of. America Field-Day.
Miami Beach, plus numerous highest award·· given a ·19Cal
chapter.
.
The awards were presented at
conventions ~nd school cam·The chapter · is a national ·a fraternity convention held Aug.
puses.
. social-professiona_l ~riculture 15-19· on the CSt,JF campus:
'(Continued from Page 1)

. ~pha .Gamma Rho,

A former Marine Corp officer
and California businessman,
· "Alexandtov," ·. who also performs as "Nik~ Nyetski," says
in his advance material that his
characterization of a visiting
Russian cultural· delegate has
been blasted by .Pravda.

.Camp1s calendar .·
Friday-~ Sept. IO

· 1 p.m.-The Muslim Student
Association will meet in College
He claims that · the Soviet Union room 309. They will meet

newspaper often .pokes fun at every Friday thereafte~.
American institutions and . · 7:30 and 9:50 p.m.-The movie
traditions, but that the Russians "Earthquake" .will be shown · in
the College Union Lounge. Adcan't bear the same treatment.
mission price is 50 cents with a
. Bongiovanni admitted that
CSUF I.D. card.
'' Alexandrov'' is keyed on being a
putqown. He added, "I want to
8 p.m.-The Chinese Overseas
see if this campus has a sense of Students Association will meet in
humor."
·
College Union room 312. Films of
previous activitie·s will be shown.

HELP WANTED

Monday, Sept. 13

For This Winter's
p;m.-_The College Union
Board of CSUF's Association_will
meet in College Union room 308.
3

SEASONAL JOBS
At ·

St~dent sought

IRA
commitee

12:00


·•

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310.·

--llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll

An article in last
Thursday's edition of The
Collegian
er.roneously
stated that 4,000 first time
freshmen had been adversely affected by the
Computer
Assisted
Registration program. In
actuality, the total should
have read 1,600. _ The
Collegian regrets this
error.

APPLY NOW
Applications . Being · Taken _Daily by the Civil ·
Service Commission . for Jobs of .Clerk, Tax·
Examioer, and Data Transcrib~r. * ·

Sµbmit your application to:
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Monday. Sept 13

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A student representative is
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which will allocate the $25,000 in
Instructionally Related Activities
money recently received from
the state.
Interested students may apply.
· in the Associated Students office
in College Union room 306.
Applications clo~e at noon Sept.

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I

THE-COLLEGIAN-3

Thursday; September 9; 1976

City, CSUF split fine revenue
and how the money_ paid out for
campus parking _. violations is
-appropriate~?
Through a California State

by Mike Rot"stan

Staff Reporter

Haveyou e~er wond~red where

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Legislature Act of 1973, 50 per·
cent of the fine money is appropriated to the City and County
of Fresno.
The other half is given back to
th·e university through · the
Chancellor's Office, with 20
percent of that return put into the
state university system, according to Bob Nash, campus
parking coordinator.
A result of -the appropriations
has been c,mstruction projects.
Some of the facilities built with
the return include the new bus
terminal on Barstow Avenue.
It was constructed with 1973-74 ~
appropriations for $13,756.34, ·
according to statistics released
by Marvin Wampler, executive
dean , which also reveal :
-The first returned appropria,tions from April 1973 to
July 1, 1974 netted $37,958. Also
included in the projects for the
1973-74 academic· year was
$17,909.46 for campus sidewalks

and bike paths.
-The bus terminal, sidewalks
and paths, ~nd incidentals
related to their construction,
totaled · $31,665.80, with the
remainder held in lieu for the
. 1974-75 academic year.
~The 1974-75 academic year
appropriation of $36,375 was
spent primari\Y for the construction of bike paths, and the
widening of heavily congested
sidewalks. A break down of this
sum reveals that a total of $9,850
was appropriated for asphalt
bike paths, while a $26,159.74
contract was awarded for the
construction of concrete bike
paths on the west side of Campus
Drive between Barstow and San
Ramon .
The paths also extend on the
south side of :Sarstow between
Jackson and Maple, according to
Alan Johnson, CSUF building
coordinator.
Included in the cost of the

$26,159.74 contract was the
widening of the walkway between
the Bookstore and the O)d .
Science Building, while money
was also appropriated for an
additional 15 bike storage pads.
The pads were placed at high
traffic locations, Johnson said.
There is talk of using future
-appropriations to finance a
tramway system for the parking
lots, according to Carl Levin,
executive business manager. The
vehicles would consist of hooked
passenger wagons towed by an
engine.
Levin said the tramway idea
was still in the talk stage.
"We built that bus terminal on
Barstow. The thing we'd like to
do with it (the appropriation) is
build a tram. We hoped it would
~ more like Disneyland's than
the City of Fresno's (former Mall
Tram) . I don't think anybody's
got an idea of what it would cost,"
he said.

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4-THE .COLLEGIAN

Thursday. September 9, 1976

CCs eye first meet

.Bulldogs ready .
For '76 opener .

byJeffE~s

The returning seniors are Tony
Ramirez and Ned Baird.
Ramirez was the number four
·The CSUF cross country team runner last year while Baird was
wilt blend youth and experience number seven.
_ in 1976.
Four sophomores round out the
Coach Red Estes has 20 run- CSUF lettermen. Richard
ners vying for the top seven Aguirre was number two last
spots, including six lettermen . year while Brian Foley and Jim
and several freshmen . The Telford tied for fifth.
season starts Saturdav morning
Mike Jurkovich, another
with the all-comers watermelon
sophomore, was number two as a
run beginning at 10:30 a.m. from
freshman in 1974, but redshirted
west side of the women's gym . last year after suffering a heel
Estes thinks only two seniors injury.
will break into the top 10, but
Estes thinks four CSUF
early season performances could newcomers could break into the
change that. ·
top seven. George Aguirre, a
"The positions aren't set," he freshman from Santa Barbara
said. "I'm only going by how and Richard's brother, is termed
they've looked in practice instead an "outstanding" runner by
Estes.
of actual competition."
Staff Reporter

With the quarterback question Wender and Keith Bizzle should
answered, the CSUF football get plenty of work.
Wender, 6-1, 204, was a starter
team will travel to Lafayette,
La., Saturday to open its 1976 last year until being sidelined by
season against the University of an injury. Bizzle, 5-11, 174, beat
Southwestern Louisiana.
out Keith Dayton for the tailback
New head coach Jim Sweeney spot. Bizzle rushed for 875 yards
has given the starting QB nod to last season for Pasadena City
1
speedy Dean Jones, a 5-8, 179, College.
·
The
game
will
kickoff
the
junior out of Compton College.
Jones had been in tight battle Bulldogs' 11-game schedule (six
home, five away). It will be
with Ron Anton for the post. ·
The Bulldogs will be starting 12 broadcast on KMJ (58) at 5:05
JC transfers, nine senior let- p.m.
termen and one sophomore
against the more experienced
'Ragin' Cajuns.
BULLDOG BASKETBALLSW Louisiana, which was 6-5 . Preseason practice for the CSUF .
last season, carries 20 lettermen basketball team is going on in the ,
on offense and 21 on d~fense. It men's gym. Anyone interested in _
will be the first time CSUF has trying, out should go to the
faced the Augie Tammarello- basketball office in the men's
coached Cajuns, who compet~ in gym.
the Southland Conference.
ORIGINAL GRAPHIC ART"SALE
With Jones in at QB, the
************
Bulldogs' offense will probably
Friday
September 10, 197 6
center• around the running game.
11 a.m. to 6 p.m.
That means ball-carriers Jack

Hoop sign-ups

Saturday, September 11, 1976
10 a.m. to 4 p.m.

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FRESl'<O,

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Three junior college transfers
have also impressed Estes. They
are David Haake of Santa Barbara City College, Rich Langford
of American River College a-nd
Gary Singer of San Joaquin
Delta.
Estes is optimistic about the
upcoming season. Most runners
reported in good shape, although
Langford wasn't in as good a
shape as the others.
"Rich came in a bit overseight," Estes saiil. "But he's a
seasoned runner who knows what
he has to do. I look for him to be
one of our finer runners by October 1."
The Bulldogs compete in the
five-team Pacific Coast Athletic
Association cross country
program.

CONGRATULATIONS

*
*
*

To Delta Gamma Sorority's

Fall 1976

of

Pledge

Class

'27' GALS!!

The College Plan:

12 months of checking for the price of 9.
The College Plan gi~ you a lot of bank. You get
unlimited checkwriting all year long. But you only pay for .
nine months.
There's no minimum balance required. You get our
monthly Timesaver® Statement. And at many offices near
major college campuses ~u get Student Representatives
to help ·solve your banking problems.
You pay just $1 a month for the nine-month
school year. And theres no service charge at all for June,
July, August, or for any month a balance of $300 or more
is maintained.
During the summer it's absolutely &ee. Write all
the checks you want. Your account stays open through the
summer, even with a zero balance, saving you the trouble
of having to dose it in June and reopen it in the fall.
You get more. You get overdraft protection and
Student BankArnericard~ if you qualify. We offer educa-

tional loans and many different savings plans to choose
from. And we serve you with more than twice as many
offices as any other California bank So if ~ou mo~e, your
account can move with you, to a new office thats more
convenient. We also offer several free booklets including
helpful information on saving money, establishing credit,
and finding a job after graduation.
.
The College Plan Checking Account ts wh~t you
want. Why not stop by and find out more about it. And

let $1 a month buy all the bank you need.

Depend on us.
More California college students do.

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*
*
*
Farmworke_rs strengthen push
by La Voz Staff

and 81,000 farmworkers m
adopting 16 resolutions endorsing
Local officials of the United several political candidates inFarm Workers of America are eluding Democratic presidential
calling the union's first political hopeful Jimmy Carter.
endorsement convention a
Carter affirmed his support of
success and positive boost for· the farm labor· initiative in a
Proposition 14.
telephone conversation from
Tanis Ybarra, the UFW's Georgia heard over the public
Selma office spokesperson, said address system by ·the cam,.,
the day-long meeting Sunday in · pesinos.
Fresno's Convention Center
Proposition 14 would- give
strengthened the union's pusb for California a new farm labor law
the Nov. 2 ballot fig~t.
similar to one now-in effect and
. Cesar Chavez. led 1,04.7 implemented through the state's
delegates representing 223 farms Agri.c ultural Labor Relations

L

Board (ALRB).
The initiative is in response to
grower ,organizations and their
legislators who conspired to hold
the ALRB hostage
by
withholding . n~ded funds. They
attempted to force Gov. Brown to
appoint
board · members
favorable to the grower's interest..
The proposed law would take
the ALRB -out · of the political
arena and· guarantee funding for
it.
Another major provi.sion would
provide that the grower-opposed

·>

DE AZTLAN
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, _1976

LXXXl-2

A special edition of THE COLLEGIAN, California State University, Fresno

access rule also be written into
the law. Growers and their allied
legislators have opposed the
access rule and used it. as an
excuse for withholding funds.
Carter, a farmer, praised the
farmworker's union for its
committment to non-violence and
quoted Chayez' on that
mittment.
The presidential candidate's
announcement top~ the list of
current office-holders and
aspirants who have.supported the
controversial initiative.
"We feel real good about the
initiative,'' said Ybarra Tuesday.
"It was a real success.,,
Ybarra pointed to the support
_of other politicians presented at
.the convention, in.eluding a
telegram from Gov. Brown and a
speech by U.S. Senator Alan
Cranston for colleague John
Tunney, who is seeking reelection in November.
Among the resolutions Ybarra
noted one praising the City of
Parlier for their city council's
endorsement of Prop. 14.
"_It's significant Parlier is

(Continued on Page 3, Col. 4)

Nikssarian ousts
MEChA office

MECHA has lost its College
Union office space following
major changes made by AS
President David ·Nikssarian
over the summer.
The · Chicano organization
learned of the situation at their
first meeting of the year last
Thursday, and voted to confront

Chavez

praises

MECM
UFWA leader Cesar Chavez
praised statewide MEChA
support for the union at Sunday's
political endorsement convention
in Fresno.
Several CSUF Mechistas did
volunteer work at the convention.
. MEDhA students have always
lent their support by organizing
for UFWA events, Chavez told
the gathering.
(~ontinued on Page 3. Col. 1)

com-

Harry Kubo's hometown,, he
said, referring to the leader'of the
opposition to Prop. 14 and of the
Nisei Farmer's League.
.
Chicano state . Assemblymen
Art Torres and Richard Alatorre
also spoke to_ the delegates, with
To:~• noting that the ~
ec e on Democrats ~~~ ~ll m
support of the UFW mitiative.
"If any Democrat cannot
support Prop. 14, then he is not a
Democrat and does not deserve
our support,,. he told the cheering
crowd after listing other top
party leaders, such as Los
•·Angeles Mayor Tom Bradley and
San _Francisco Mayor George
Moscone in support of the
initiative.
Ybarra said the endorsed
politicians will now have to show
their voiced support through
action.
"We expectto see 'Yes on 14' on
all their campaign matenal "he
said.
·
The Selma campesino said the
convention emphasizes the
political maturity of the union

Nikssarian in his office to
request an explanation.
MEChA then took its concern to
the Student Senate Friday. A
committee was formed to review
the situation and establish
guidelines for a11~cating the
office spaces.
-cu Rooms 304 A, B, C, next to
the AS office, were occupied by
MEChA, Amerasians, Pan
African Union, and Tewaquachi,
before Nikssarian evicted all
but a consumers group·also using
the rooms.
Nikssarian told the Chicanos
notices were sent by former AS
President David Price on May 24
to the occupants informing them
to move out. Sc.hool let out May
28.

However, the consumer's
group was not forced to move out
and still occupy the office .
Nikssarian·, . converted the
MEChA-Amerasian room into a
duplicating center and explained
(Continued on Page 3, Col. 2)

THE UFW'S FIRST Political Endorsement Convention held Sunday in Fresno.
.

Azt/On observes Mexican lndep~_ndenc;;e
Commemoration of Mexico's
Independence from Mexico
begins throughout Fresno County
and Aztlan this weekend, jneluding CSUF's observances on
Thursday, el Dies y Seis de
Septiembre.
The university's fiesta will
begin with a performance by its
own Danzantes de Aztlan who
will perform a repertory of
regional dances from Jalisco,
Ml.choacan ' Vera Cruz ' Yucatan
and the northern states of
Mexico.
The Mexican holiday honors
the anniversary of Mexico's
inqependence from Spain 166
years ago which gave impetus to
the development of Mexican
culture with out European
domination.
·

CSUF
CSUF's CoJlege

Union and
Semana de La Raza, a ME Ch A
subcommittee, are sponsoring
the campus celebrations.
Los Danzantes will perform at
11 a.m. in the CU - Lounge,
followed by El Teatro Espir.itu
(Chicano theater) and La
Comparsa de la Universitaria
(singers).

All are performers from La
Raza Studies Program . Also
there will be several speakers
scheduled throughout the day in
the lounge.

The festivities will culminate
with a free dance from 6 to 8
o'clock in the Student Lounge
Patio,
featuring
The
Fascinations.

The Fresn0-- City College
MEChA is also sponsoring 16th of
September celebrations on its
campus with events scheduled to
begin Wednesday at 8 a.m. wi th
"Pan Dulce" morning refresh:
ments and an art display in the

Citywide commemoration of
16th of September is again being
coordinated by the Mexican Civic
Committee, Inc. and will be
kicked-off by the annual parade .
d
F
. through
owntown
resno
Wednesday, and culminate with
the traditional "Grito _de
Dolores" and -coronation of the
Independence Day queen on
Thursday.
The parade will start at 10 a.m.
at the corner of Inyo and .'E'
Streets in West Fresno and wind
its way through downtown and to
the Fresno Convention Center
where El Grito and coronation
will -be followed by The Queens
Ball Dance at 8 o'clock,
The four-hour program after
the parade will include Los
D
Mixtlatecos, CSUF's Los anzantes de Aztlan, the Mariachi de

fCC-

FCC Art Gallery.
- The above activities will be
repeated Thursday along with a
ceremony from 9-10 a.m. to
present th e Mexican Flag.
Mariachi de la Tierra will per~o;~c~t ~~~~~ime also at the Free
Parlier's Teatro del Barrio will
perform in the New Theatre Arts
building at noon.
Immediately following will be
JAose Torres of the Community
wa~~nessf Educational Project,
spea mg rom 1 to 1: 30.
He wi·11 be fO11owe d bY UF
.
R' h d Ch• W
represen tat1ve 1c ar
avez
·11
k
who wi spea from I: 30-2. The
· 1• D
Mars1e
a s ancers will perform
from 2-3 p.m.
.

Fresno

la Tierra and the Folklorico
Mexicano del Gallo, from Se1ma.
All festivities are free except
for the dance where a $2 ad-

m1ss1on charge 1s asked. There
will be door prizes.

Sanger
" ..

.
Th_e 5th a?,nual Die~ Y Se1s de
Sepbembre celebr~bon ~~nsore_d by El Com1t~ C1v1co
Mexicano de Sa~ger, will be held
Saturday, sta rtmg at 11 a.m. at
th e Sanger Park.
Featured speakers during t~e .
!ardeada from 12 : 30-7 p.m. will
include Alex Saragoza, CSUF La
R
St d' di t
h
ill
aza u ies rec or, w O w
speak on the historical per·
spec t·1ve of Mexican
.. I ndependence; Fresno Mum_c1pal
Court J~dge Armando ~guez
who wll~ ~~k on nghts ~nd
respo?Sibihhes_; Fr.esno City
Councilman Al Villa will speak on
the current meaning of .the
celebrati·on.
Scheduled to perform are the
CSUF Los Danzantes de Aztlan
and Mariachi de la Tierra from 24 p.m. Folkl_orico Mexicano El
Gallo of Selma will dance at 6.
A. parade through downtown
Sanger will open the festivities at
11 and a dance at the Community
Center will be held from 9 p.m. to
advance
1 a.m. Tickets I are $111,50
,g,
and $3.00 at . the ·door.

Thursday, September._9:, 1976

2-LA VOZ

.

\

Editorial
I

·iEsti m.urie.pdO -:.
nuestra callsa;l

'·'I

,

Hello and welc9me back to
another academic year from the
staff of Tutorial Services. We

your course material we suggest
that you-study with classmates,
review your notes together andtrust you· had an enjoyable or see your.professor or graduate
summer and are .f'.eady· to .attack 1 assistant for clarification of
the books again.
course material. 1 If there are .
· We have some good news for special problems relating to your
you· in regards ~ · the tutorial . situation in a class c9me. in and ,
program on campus this see us, we will see what we can
s.emester. After a prolonged do~ For those of yQu who want to
uphill battle we have finally be a tutor you must meet certain
acquired office space and a qualifications to be considered. ·
centralized location for tutoring. First of all you must be a
We are now located i.n the San . currently enrolled student at
Ramon two building, rooms 31 CSUF. A faculty recomand 33: Our tutorial site will also mendation by specific course
be in San Ramon 2 within the number is also required along
confines of the new learning with a minimum 3.0 GPA in the
resource environment con- discipline that you desire to .tutor
struction is still going on there in. Last but certainly not least is
and we are not fully moved into an interview with the coordinator
the rooms yet. We ask that or one of the OTS staff members
students planning to request which· will introduce .you to our
tutorial assistance this semester policies and proce~dures. If you
w~ until the third week of school feel that you meet these
before asking for an interview. If requirements please come in to
you'r having early problems with see us, we need tutors in virtually

Hijos de Aztlan ! Socorro y Ayuda !
La
is drowning in the sea of aJ>athY which has washed ashore to
seemingly engulf the entire campus . .

vrn.

Que Pasa'?
Who is to blame'?
Is it those chingados' de student government'? Or, is it our own gente
who have abandoned nuestra causa fo inform la Raia'? ·
Along with our brothers of the now bi-weekly Daily Collegian, we
have been decimated to a mere shadow of our former selves; to a total
amounting to only two completed pages once a month. Some student
senators use Jnore toilet paper at one sitting than that!.
It appears we must forever remain v·igilante or even those paltry
inches will also be rammed to oblivion into that dark hole e:alled
student government legislation, where La Voz would ·be silenced
forever.
Once again carnales ·we ask for ayuda through direct participation.
Any suggestions, ideas or even pendejadas will be accepted. Direct
them to La Raza Studies. We will get them.
We must prove we can survive; prove we will continue to speak
independently admidst interference from a much too dominant
culture.

La Raza Studies

U_niversity misinterprets 'decline'
A time for change perhaps has
occurred for La Raza Studies.
Throughout the Southwest the
enrollment of students in La Raza
Studies programs has declined in ;

the last two 'years.
This has also been true here at
Fresno State University. As with
other Chicano Studies departments, the reasons for the decline .

YOUCANGO
HOMEAGAIN

are several:
(1) a lessening of financial aid
that results in fewer Chicanos
coming to schools because of
financial difficulties.
(2) a resurgence of hostility to
Chicano Studies programs from
university administrators.
(3) a lack of commitment 9f
universitites · to the active
recruitmentof Chicano students. •

PSA has more low fare California
flights than any other airline. Call
your Campus Rep or
----+,;:~
PSA to make your
reservations.

.YOUNG
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LEADERS
NEED.ED!

WITHPSNS
WWAIR FARES.

* *·*

(4) the general enrollment
decline throughout higher
education.
Clearly in an area in which 25
per cent of the population is
Chicano, and only eight per cent
of the CSUF student population is
Chicano, the. potential for greater
Chicano enrollment is indeed
hi2h. ·vet the efforts in this
direction by uni~ersities have
been dismal, token attempts.
Admittedly, La Raza Studies
programs have certain internal
curricular problems. Revisions
in class offerings and i~novative
teaching
approaches,
for
example, will take place in our
program at CSUF next spring.

'l~e 11,m

every discipline on campus. Our
wage rate is $3.15 per hour.·
·One last note of special consideration is · directed to all
veterans OJ?. campus. There are
educational benebits in your G.I.
Bill .which · pertain to , tutorial
assistance. These bennies are
above and beyond your regular
educational allocation and cost
you nothing but the time to check
things out in our office~
Mr. Alfred Alvarado is our
veterans liaison and . works
directly with all veterans who
request tutorial assistance on
camp1,Js. Veterans are eligible to
receive tutorial assistance on the
first day of the semester which
means you can come in today if
you _w ant to. Want to know more?
Come and see Alfred, he'll give
you the specifics.
Our office hours will be:
Mon.d ay through Thursday: 8: 00
A.M. to 7:00 P.M., Fridays 8:00
A.M. to 5:00 P.M ., San Ramon
Number Two Rooms 31 and 33,
487-2924-1052.
Manuel Olgin

Yet the key is the recruitment of
students into La Raza Studies.
Unfortunately university administrators "see" only bodies.
Rather than analyze the
problem, universities have
as·s umed
'that
declining
enrollments mean less student
support for LRS. The best way to
resist the attempts of the
university to cut back La Raza
Studies is for students to enroll in
LRS classes.
In the meantime, LRS faculty
·and student supporters .must
continue the struggle to recruit
new students and to push for the
expansion, not the reduction, of
. LRS at CSUF.

house

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Thursday, September 9,

1976A

,re-law

Mujeres fashion
show in Odober

club

to·~SJin
Chicanos interested in law are
invited to sign-up for a Chicano .
Pre-Law:Club in La Raza Studies
Office
an announcement
for.the first meeting on Monday is
posted.
.
. For further information contact students Hugo Morales at
487-2848 or Ruth Rodriguez at 4871021.

where

CYC Will

"1eet ·Fri.

The 1976 Chicano Youth Con. ference committee will hold its
first meeting Friday at 1 p.m. in
CU-310. The CYC will be the
fourth year MEChA has sponsored the CYC to recruit Chicano
high .school students to CSUF and
to offer them a view of opportunities available in higher
education .
Students
from
throughout the valley will be
contacted.

CBSA plans
to reorganize
The Chicano Business Students
Association
CCBSA)
is
reorgamzmg for the new
academic year and extends an
invitation to all interested
students to attend its first
meeting Tuesday at 5 p.m. in CU308. CBSA is· an affiliate of the
nati0nal and state chartered
group which provides an important resource of nationwide
information on the current job
market for business students and
graduates. For further information phone Dave Pinuelas
at 291-8090 or leave message in
CBSA mailbox in the School of
Business .

Chavez praise
(Continued from Page 1)

The more than 1,000 delegates
and thousands of visitors showed
their appreciation with a standing ovation.
·· This years MEChA officers are
President Fito Castillo, VicePresident Roger Valverde,
Secretary
Frances
Pena,
Treasurer Elma Mejia and
S~rgent-at -Arms Sam Benevides.
''We hope to push ~owards a
strong student recruitment drive
and help with Proposition 14, the
farm workers ini tia ti ve," said
Castillo, about MEChA's goals
for the year. "We would also like
to see more community involvement.
MEChA will hold it's meetings
on Thursdays at 12 o'clock in the
College · Union. Rooms to be
announced .

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30

LA VOZ-3

·
MAPA . potluck

The League· of MexicanAmerican Women is Sl)Onsoring a
Luncheon< Fashion, Show,
Saturday, Oct. 9, in the Hilton
Hotel. .The theme of the show is,
"V-isions-.of. Holiday Happiness."
A no-host cocktail hour at ll a·.m.
will precede the luricheon at
noon. Donations are $9 per person
and door prizes will be awarded.
Proceeds ar:e to benefit the
League's scholarship fund.

La·s

,

(C1onttnued from Page 1)

and outlines the kind of support it Joe Smith, presented a resolution
is asking for and the kind of drawn by the paper's staff in
support it will give in return.
support of the Fresno Bee Four
In· a message to · students, newsmen in jail for refusing to
The
Mexican
American
Chavez lauded the support reveal a M;RS source.
·Political Association~s Fresno . traditionally given the union by .........................,
Chapter . (MAPA) will hold a MEChA groups throughout the
Social Potluck Friday at 7 p.m. ·at
Voz ..
state and asked them to continue
1012 E. Cambridge in Fresno. The · their efforts on · behalf of the
sociaf
.is to recruit persons cainpesino's rights. He urged the
interested in upcoming elections.
students to register to vote· and
For further information contact
exercise that right at Jhe ballot. Editor
Anoe . .
Angie•Cisneros at 487~2848 or ~
· The · .renewal of the -union's Aal&. Edite:r. ·
Toaa1 Urlbes
1074,
. official newspaper, El Malcraido, . Reporten
a.ty
was also announced by ·the UFW • Caltrera, Margaret ·· Espana,

la

leader-. The paper has been . Mana Urlbel.
inactive for more than a year, but Photog.,.pber ·
Chavez promised it will now •Contribll&or .

will

The . first project

be a

Fellx.Coatreru
·Diane Campos

exert added· effort for la causa.
new editor of Malcraido,

fundraiser at ihe Mexican fn,. · The
dependence Day Festival .in
Sanger Saturday. OtJter plans .
discussed included sponsoring a
Chicana and .Third World
Women's Conference.

Tuesday's meeting will be in
CU-308 at noon.

JD.&A·AutoMoT1vE SPECIALISTS ,INC.

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r.
I

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Nikssarian

s

phone 442-0840-free pick-up~delivery

(C ontinued from Page 1)

to the Chicanos he wants to
create a "m ultiorganiza tional"
room in the PAU-Tewaquachi
room with "individually-locking
- cabinets for each organization on
campus to permanently store
records."

..

.- de Aztlan

hour

Adelitas ··1undraiser Sat.

The <'hicana organization at
CSUF, Las Adelitas, will meet
Tuesday to elect officers for the
new academic yea-r .
Interim president V~lentina
"Sepulveda announced the group
has listed priorities for ~he first
part of the year at its first
meeting Tuesday attended by 25
Chicanas.

.

College Union by-laws stated the
offices must be aJ}ocated on a
"first-come, first-serve basis."
MEChA has had a College
Union office for the past five
years, while the consumer's
. group came in last year.

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He said he sees no need for the
clubs to have their own office
space.
·However, the Mechistas told
Nikssarian · approximately 20
Chicano groups and sub- .
committees function and rely on
the offices as a center for
meetings and workrooms.

j

A new store hos opened in Fresno to serve you,

After Nikssaria11 ·. refused to
budge to the Chicano concerns,
MEChA took the matter to the
Student Senate on Friday. During
the meeting, a motion by Senator
Gary Nelson asked t.o support
Nicksarrian's plan but university
accountant Robert Vega informed the senate no money was
available to buy the lockers
propose·d
by
the student
president.

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Mechista Sam Benavides then
pointed out to the so-called
student representatives their own

Thank you fol' thinking heaZ.th.



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In your Fall '7 6 schedule

Thursday, S~ptember 9, 1976

4-LA VOZ

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a dollar a month, you can have a student checking ac-'\:

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if there isn 't any money in it.

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· Charge credit plan for sophomores, juniors, seniors
required and you can write as many checks as you want. . , d'i:l;i:l!;f t
and grad students. It provides extra money when you
We'll even send you a statement every month.
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The plan also has a built-in "see you in September" .;J
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MEMBER f D IC

THE COLLEGIAN
LXXXl-2

CALIFORNIA STATE UNIVERSITY, FRESNO

, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 1976

Bogus Red ·to speak
by Linda Brown
Staff Reporter

A $500 imposter is scheduled to
speak in the College Union lounge
Thursday (Sept. 9) at noon.
The College Union Program
Office has falsely advertised its
first lecturer as "Dr. . Alexei
Alexandrov, assistant editor ·of
Pravda," a well known Russian
newspaper. The man speaking. is
not connected with the Soviet
newspaper, nor is he Russian .
The Collegian was first alerted
to the possibility of a fraud when
a student contacted the paper and
said she had seen the act_before.
,l<'nnifer Henson, a junior
anthropology major, said she had
heard a supposed Russian speak
three years ago at Hoover High
School in Fresno.
Henson said she recognized
' ' Alexandrov'' as being the same
man after seeing his picture in
"Whazhappnin ," t_h e College
Union Program Office's bulletin.
"When I saw that little blurb I
immedia tely thought of t_he guy
who came to Hoover. He was
supposed to have been the
Russian consulate in San
F rancisco," Henson said.
According to Henson, the
supposed Russian gives a speech
compar ing the . defects of
America to .the greatness of
Russia. After getting the
audienc e to hotly defend
America , he then announces he is

not a Russian or Communist,
Henson said.
When Henson heard that
"Alexandrov" was being -paid
$500 for his appearance, she said
she
confronted
Gary
Bongiovanni, College Union
Program Director.
"I told him I would expect an
assistant editor, not someone else
and that I wouldn't waste time
and money on a fake," Henson
said.
She said that Bongiovanni
asked her not to blow the lid on
"Alexandrov" because it could
ruin his act.
"I was looking at it from the
standpoint of misusing College
Union funds. He pointed out that
if the lid was blown then it would
be a total ·waste," Henson said.
In attempting to establish
"Alexand.rov's" identity, '.l'he
Collegian had a check made
through United Press International <UPI). The world- .
wide news organization called ·
Pravda offices in New York,
Washington and Moscow and
reported ,_ that Pravda officials
denied hearing of "Alexandrov." _:
A ·check with the. Russian
consulate in San Francisco also
proved negative.
Russian Vice-Consul Sidorenco
said: he had never ·heard of
"Alexandrov."
, When the Collegian asked
Bongiovanni if "Alexandrov"
was a fake, he responded af-

firmatively.
The program
director and his committee have
never seen the speaker perform,
but hired him to speak after
reading "Alexandrov's"
promotional
material,
Bongiovanni said.
When asked if he thought a
phony was worth $500 of student
money Bongiovanni said, "The
guy is an entertainer. In that
respect $500 is as fair ·as anything
else."
·
He said the value of
"Alexandrov's" speech is to see
how people will react, and if they
have stereotyped images of
Russians.
"He would · lose his effectiveness if it was widely
knowri he was a fake. That's why
I asked people to keep quiet,"
Bongiovanni said.
. He said the news media , in
Fresno was told the 'speaker was
a fake.
Jim Miller, director of public
information, said that the College
Union program office odginally
sent out press releases giving no
hint of "Alexandrov's" true
identity.
"We advised Bongiovanni that
the ·µiedia had to be apprised of
the situation," Miller said.
Miller said that many radio and
television stations in Fresno had
called his . office . because they
were suspicious of the speaker·.
He _said that news releases· were
( Co!1~iuued on Pa~e 2, Col: 1)

FOR $500 "ALEXEI ALEXANDROV" (above) imitates a Russian
newspaper official. In the course of his act "Alexandrov" attempts to
ire his audience by bad-mouthing the U.S. But it is all done in the
name -of fun, says Gary Bongiovanni, College Union Program
Director.

Beei- decision nixed
·because of oversight

Due to a bylaw oversight, last
Tuesday's decision to approve
the selling of beer on campus was
nullified, according to members
by Jon Kawa moto
The hike, approved last May
ne~ded to finance the financial of the CSUF Association Board of
Directors.
Staff Reporter
for this semester, represents as
aid program .
The seven-member board,
1
much as a $15 increase for some
' The change affects the fewest
which approved the measure by
The estimated $44 million students in their registration
number of students,' ► he said. "If
CSUF President Norman A.
gener ated fr om the recently fees .
it was done any other way, the
Baxter by a 3 to 2 vote with two
hiked student services fee will be
To indicate the , number of
increase would have affected all
abstentions, thought it secured
used toward improving the CSUF students affected by the
students because most are fullthe necessary votes to validate its
California State University and change, Registrar Robert Board
time students."
action, according to Jim Miller,
Colleges (CSUC) financial aid pointed to 1975 CSUF statistics
He noted another reason for the director of public information.
program, according to the which stated that 2,064 students,
increased student services fee.
However, a memorandum
system's associate deari of roughly 13 per cent of the student
"It not only funds the financial
dated the next day (Sept. 1), from
student affairs.
body, carried between seven to 11
aid program for better service, Earle Bassett, general manager
units. i-Ie pointed this out as the
but in generating a little more of the College Union, po~nted to a
area most likely to feel the money than needed this year, it · bylaw of the Association which
change.
should prevent any fee increases noted that "every act or decision
In addition to the hike, David for three years," he said.
of a majority of ·the Directors
Travis, associate dean of student
He added cautiously: "Unless
affairs, noted· that · the current funds are needed ·in another· present ... shall be valid as the act
of the Board ·of Directors."
Clarence Becker, an equipment two-tier fee ·schedul~ system was
area."
According
to
Bassett's
technician in the psychology: si!llplified from a four-tier .for- ·
memorandum,
the
Association's
department,. collapsed and died ·mat, both based on the ·n umber of ~ According to Travis, the logic
·
of raising fees now to avoid future legal counsel interepreted the
of an apparent heart attack registered units.
bylaw as meaning that a
None.theless, he emphasized increases goes like this:
Tuesday morning. He was ·51.
majority
of directors present was
. Becker had just stepped from ._ that the hike in the student ser~ Whenever the fee is revised, it
needed to approve the measure.
the department's motorized -cart vices fee was ma~e to fulfill one will generate -more money than
In Tuesday's situation, four votes
near San Ramon building two; _ of the CSUC's _ top budgetary needed in its first year. In its
were
needed.
.
priorities:
improvement
of
second
year;
the
revenues
will
when he fell to the ground
· Concerning Tuesday's vote,
match the money needed to fund
campus police said." He was give~ - financial aid services. ·
"The financial aid area was in the program. In its third year, it both Baxter and Horace 0.
mouth-to-mouth resuscitation by .real
need of an awful lot of ad- will generate less than needed. Schorling, executive viceLynn Mowery, a nursing student
The student services fee is just president, abstained. Baxter
who saw him collapse, according · "ditional assistance," said Travis.
one of six different registration declined, noting that he thought
to a psychology department "The revenues from the inspokesperson.
creased fee will basically be for
fees, but it comprises the bulk of it unfair to vote on his beer
the fees. Under the old schedule, policy. Schorling only votes in the
Paramedics were called to the augmenting staffs to process
a student would have had to pay case of a tie, according to board
scene and Becker was tran- financial aid forms and loans."
According to ·figures Travis
from $51 to $72, depending on the rules.
sported to St. ~gnes Hospital. He
Miller said Sept. 2 that Baxter
died there at 10: 11 a .m .
quoted, a little over $44 million is
number of registered units.
thought the simple majority vote
B_ecker had reportedly been projected from the hike this year,
But according to the new
was sufficient to approve his
taking medication for a heart about $500,000 more than needed.
schedule, a student may have to
policy.
pr ·)lem and was under the care Under the old fee schedule, he pay $6 to $15 more, again
of a physician .
said the amount of revenue
depending on the number of ! The policy Miller referred to
1 was that announced May 7 by
He was an employee of CSUF generated would have been $1.2 registered units.
1
for 10 years.
million short of the $43.5 million
(Continued on P~ge 2, Col. 4) • Baxter. At that monthly press

Fee hike helps financial aids

Heart -attack
proves fatal

conference, Baxter said he would
allow for the on-campus sale of
beer, but only if purchased with
food.
Baxter's policy resulted from a
decision reached by the
California State University and
Colleges (CSUC) trust-ees during
t_heir May 28-29, 1975 meeting. In .
that meeting, the trustees gave
each campus president of the 19member system the authority to
establish a beer policy.
Conferring with Schorling after
the memorandum was released,
Miller said Schorling told him
that the beer issue will be
presented at the next meeting.
JoAnn Johansen, Ba·s sett's
secretary and the person who
schedules
theJ meetings,
speculated that the meeting will
be held in late October.

Notice
What may appear to be a
printing error in today's
edition is actually an attempt to put both The
Collegian and La Voz--one
of two minority editionson equal footing. Readers
need only flip this
newspaper over and turn it
upside down to discover
this month's copy of La
Voz. If all goes well, this
method will be employed
with both minority editions
which are slated to appear
once a month each during
the Fall semester.

"

2.:...THE COLLE()IAN

Thursday, September 9, 1976

N ·elson receives -awQrd

Russian?

Gary W. Nelson of Kingsburg, a

Fee

fraternity foun.ded at CSUF in
1963.

hike irks 'hundreds'

(Continued from Page 1)
wrong fees b~sed on the old
Mix that kind. of increase with
schedule. He did not specify the
conflicting circumstances over
nuinber, but · described it · a~ ·
tne publication of the CSUF
"relatively small, ranging in the
schedule of courses and the.· . few hundreds."
current catalog .and you have.· ' . To help alleviate matters, the
some student · complaints, · ac- · business office in early June sent ·
cording to Board. · ·
postcards notifying students of
Word of the newly adopted
the fee schedule change, acschedule came in · a · letter dated
cordi_n g to Ruth Murral!, business
May 28 from the office of CSUC
office manager.
.
Chancellor Glenn S. Dumke. The
But for· all the discussion of
letter said the CSUC Board ·of · complaints, ·B oard said he djd not
Trustees · passed a resolution
know why the fee increase even
establishing the new schedule for
occurred:
this fall.
"You'd have to'· .ask ·. the·
Unfortunately for students, the
Chancellor's. office,". he said. '-'I
Sunday, Sept. 12 ·
letterarrivedonemonthafterthe · really don't -know why."
· current catalog and schedule of
As for those· affected· students-·
7 p.m.-The camp~ chapter of
courses were printed with lists of
who paid fees based on the for· Blue Key, the national honor the old fee schedule, said Board.
mer s~hedule, Murrall said they
As · a · result, Board said . "a
will be billed in the fourth week of
number" of students sent in the 1 the semester:
·society for men and women, will
meet in San Ramon 1, room 15.

member of the CSUF chapter of
has receiyed
The more than 50 members of
· then
sent,
stating
that the Outstanding Member Award,
.
the
fraternity were also com"~exandrov" was a fake.
the highest award presented to an
mended
for their work with the
individual member._
According to promotional
His chapt_er- also . received an mentally retarded and _their
material, "Alexandrov" has
involvement .with high school
award for the Outstanding
appeared at Caesar's Palace in ·
students _in the annual. Future
Historiap
Book,
\fhich
is
the
Las Vegas, The Americana in
Farmers of. America Field-Day.
Miami Beach, plus numerous highest award·· given a ·19Cal
chapter.
.
The awards were presented at
conventions ~nd school cam·The chapter · is a national ·a fraternity convention held Aug.
puses.
. social-professiona_l ~riculture 15-19· on the CSt,JF campus:
'(Continued from Page 1)

. ~pha .Gamma Rho,

A former Marine Corp officer
and California businessman,
· "Alexandtov," ·. who also performs as "Nik~ Nyetski," says
in his advance material that his
characterization of a visiting
Russian cultural· delegate has
been blasted by .Pravda.

.Camp1s calendar .·
Friday-~ Sept. IO

· 1 p.m.-The Muslim Student
Association will meet in College
He claims that · the Soviet Union room 309. They will meet

newspaper often .pokes fun at every Friday thereafte~.
American institutions and . · 7:30 and 9:50 p.m.-The movie
traditions, but that the Russians "Earthquake" .will be shown · in
the College Union Lounge. Adcan't bear the same treatment.
mission price is 50 cents with a
. Bongiovanni admitted that
CSUF I.D. card.
'' Alexandrov'' is keyed on being a
putqown. He added, "I want to
8 p.m.-The Chinese Overseas
see if this campus has a sense of Students Association will meet in
humor."
·
College Union room 312. Films of
previous activitie·s will be shown.

HELP WANTED

Monday, Sept. 13

For This Winter's
p;m.-_The College Union
Board of CSUF's Association_will
meet in College Union room 308.
3

SEASONAL JOBS
At ·

St~dent sought

IRA
commitee

12:00


·•

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310.·

--llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll

An article in last
Thursday's edition of The
Collegian
er.roneously
stated that 4,000 first time
freshmen had been adversely affected by the
Computer
Assisted
Registration program. In
actuality, the total should
have read 1,600. _ The
Collegian regrets this
error.

APPLY NOW
Applications . Being · Taken _Daily by the Civil ·
Service Commission . for Jobs of .Clerk, Tax·
Examioer, and Data Transcrib~r. * ·

Sµbmit your application to:
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A student representative is
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Instructionally Related Activities
money recently received from
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Interested students may apply.
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in College Union room 306.
Applications clo~e at noon Sept.

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THE-COLLEGIAN-3

Thursday; September 9; 1976

City, CSUF split fine revenue
and how the money_ paid out for
campus parking _. violations is
-appropriate~?
Through a California State

by Mike Rot"stan

Staff Reporter

Haveyou e~er wond~red where

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Legislature Act of 1973, 50 per·
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of Fresno.
The other half is given back to
th·e university through · the
Chancellor's Office, with 20
percent of that return put into the
state university system, according to Bob Nash, campus
parking coordinator.
A result of -the appropriations
has been c,mstruction projects.
Some of the facilities built with
the return include the new bus
terminal on Barstow Avenue.
It was constructed with 1973-74 ~
appropriations for $13,756.34, ·
according to statistics released
by Marvin Wampler, executive
dean , which also reveal :
-The first returned appropria,tions from April 1973 to
July 1, 1974 netted $37,958. Also
included in the projects for the
1973-74 academic· year was
$17,909.46 for campus sidewalks

and bike paths.
-The bus terminal, sidewalks
and paths, ~nd incidentals
related to their construction,
totaled · $31,665.80, with the
remainder held in lieu for the
. 1974-75 academic year.
~The 1974-75 academic year
appropriation of $36,375 was
spent primari\Y for the construction of bike paths, and the
widening of heavily congested
sidewalks. A break down of this
sum reveals that a total of $9,850
was appropriated for asphalt
bike paths, while a $26,159.74
contract was awarded for the
construction of concrete bike
paths on the west side of Campus
Drive between Barstow and San
Ramon .
The paths also extend on the
south side of :Sarstow between
Jackson and Maple, according to
Alan Johnson, CSUF building
coordinator.
Included in the cost of the

$26,159.74 contract was the
widening of the walkway between
the Bookstore and the O)d .
Science Building, while money
was also appropriated for an
additional 15 bike storage pads.
The pads were placed at high
traffic locations, Johnson said.
There is talk of using future
-appropriations to finance a
tramway system for the parking
lots, according to Carl Levin,
executive business manager. The
vehicles would consist of hooked
passenger wagons towed by an
engine.
Levin said the tramway idea
was still in the talk stage.
"We built that bus terminal on
Barstow. The thing we'd like to
do with it (the appropriation) is
build a tram. We hoped it would
~ more like Disneyland's than
the City of Fresno's (former Mall
Tram) . I don't think anybody's
got an idea of what it would cost,"
he said.

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I

4-THE .COLLEGIAN

Thursday. September 9, 1976

CCs eye first meet

.Bulldogs ready .
For '76 opener .

byJeffE~s

The returning seniors are Tony
Ramirez and Ned Baird.
Ramirez was the number four
·The CSUF cross country team runner last year while Baird was
wilt blend youth and experience number seven.
_ in 1976.
Four sophomores round out the
Coach Red Estes has 20 run- CSUF lettermen. Richard
ners vying for the top seven Aguirre was number two last
spots, including six lettermen . year while Brian Foley and Jim
and several freshmen . The Telford tied for fifth.
season starts Saturdav morning
Mike Jurkovich, another
with the all-comers watermelon
sophomore, was number two as a
run beginning at 10:30 a.m. from
freshman in 1974, but redshirted
west side of the women's gym . last year after suffering a heel
Estes thinks only two seniors injury.
will break into the top 10, but
Estes thinks four CSUF
early season performances could newcomers could break into the
change that. ·
top seven. George Aguirre, a
"The positions aren't set," he freshman from Santa Barbara
said. "I'm only going by how and Richard's brother, is termed
they've looked in practice instead an "outstanding" runner by
Estes.
of actual competition."
Staff Reporter

With the quarterback question Wender and Keith Bizzle should
answered, the CSUF football get plenty of work.
Wender, 6-1, 204, was a starter
team will travel to Lafayette,
La., Saturday to open its 1976 last year until being sidelined by
season against the University of an injury. Bizzle, 5-11, 174, beat
Southwestern Louisiana.
out Keith Dayton for the tailback
New head coach Jim Sweeney spot. Bizzle rushed for 875 yards
has given the starting QB nod to last season for Pasadena City
1
speedy Dean Jones, a 5-8, 179, College.
·
The
game
will
kickoff
the
junior out of Compton College.
Jones had been in tight battle Bulldogs' 11-game schedule (six
home, five away). It will be
with Ron Anton for the post. ·
The Bulldogs will be starting 12 broadcast on KMJ (58) at 5:05
JC transfers, nine senior let- p.m.
termen and one sophomore
against the more experienced
'Ragin' Cajuns.
BULLDOG BASKETBALLSW Louisiana, which was 6-5 . Preseason practice for the CSUF .
last season, carries 20 lettermen basketball team is going on in the ,
on offense and 21 on d~fense. It men's gym. Anyone interested in _
will be the first time CSUF has trying, out should go to the
faced the Augie Tammarello- basketball office in the men's
coached Cajuns, who compet~ in gym.
the Southland Conference.
ORIGINAL GRAPHIC ART"SALE
With Jones in at QB, the
************
Bulldogs' offense will probably
Friday
September 10, 197 6
center• around the running game.
11 a.m. to 6 p.m.
That means ball-carriers Jack

Hoop sign-ups

Saturday, September 11, 1976
10 a.m. to 4 p.m.

Y3Lairu. <Wil.1-on
§alie1ty
1520 EAST SHAW
FRESl'<O,

AVE.; NO, Ill

CALIFORNIA . 93710

(209) 431-3432

Three junior college transfers
have also impressed Estes. They
are David Haake of Santa Barbara City College, Rich Langford
of American River College a-nd
Gary Singer of San Joaquin
Delta.
Estes is optimistic about the
upcoming season. Most runners
reported in good shape, although
Langford wasn't in as good a
shape as the others.
"Rich came in a bit overseight," Estes saiil. "But he's a
seasoned runner who knows what
he has to do. I look for him to be
one of our finer runners by October 1."
The Bulldogs compete in the
five-team Pacific Coast Athletic
Association cross country
program.

CONGRATULATIONS

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To Delta Gamma Sorority's

Fall 1976

of

Pledge

Class

'27' GALS!!

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