La Voz de Aztlan, December 7 1976
Item
Title
La Voz de Aztlan, December 7 1976
Creator
Associated Students of Fresno State
Relation
La Voz de Aztlan (Daily Collegian, California State University, Fresno)
Coverage
Fresno, California
Date
12/7/1976
Format
PDF
Identifier
SCUA_lvda_00081
extracted text
LA vaz
I
>
DE AZTLAN
,I
TlJESI).'\¥. -NOVEMBER 23, 1976
LXXXl-21
A special edition of THE COLLEGIAN, California State University, Fresno
Fall 1976 for Raza.
let down?
n========================;:==============1J
i QUE VIVA LA CAUSA
VIV A -LA RAZA!
Starting next semester this art of the Mayan G.od of Rebirth
Kukulcan will appear on the banner of each edition ot La Voz de Atzlan.
Legend has it that Kukulcan is actually Quetzalcoatl, a Toltec god.
When Quetzalcoatl was forced to leave the tribe, in the city of
Tenochtitlan (now Mexico City) he left word saying he would rE>turn.
Shortly after in Mayan History we find tne arrival of Kukulcan who
was worshiped as a God. History tells us that Kukulcan was actually
Quetzalcoatl in new form.
The art work was reproduced by La Voz staff member, Arturo
O'Campo.
La Voz De Aztlan is introducing this concept as a message to La
Gente, that perhaps change must come to us: a rebirth of our own. We
must assert ourselves and be active again on this racist campLlS of
higher education. We hope that we will all come back next year with
an approach such as that of Kukulcan.
Political alterna·tives .
•
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Ill
0
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•
•
or.
• •
Trying to give
Raza's side
• • •
What does it take?
Tuesday' December 7, 19'6
2-THE COLLEGIAN
Bakke to
old
times?
UC action may bring end of speciq/
admissions: shaft for minorities
The Univenity of California
will appeal to the U.S. SUpreme
Court a
lower-court ruling
a1ain1t its medical schooJ's
special admiulons procram for
members of racial minority
IJ'OUPS• the Chronicle of Higher
Education reported lut week.
The Chronicle re~rted~ the
Supreme Court which ordered the
university to let Bakkf in.
Now the UC system is contelting the decision in what the
supporters of special admissions
program feel is actually an attempt to undermine m~ties.
However, the vote to appeal the
lower court ruling was "near
unanimous," a spokesman said.
The university expects a
decision by February on whether
the appeal will be gr~ted.
f
t
.late,. COG' s
causecrisis
.
·for··students .- cAJJ~"~!p;-r
· ~10 meetinp prior to . tbe UC Regents vote to go to the US
.
'
Supreme Court, civil rigbts
university'1 governing Board
made the decision in a cloeed representatives told the regents
door seaioo, despite the ob- that the special minority-group
admissions
program
that
jections of civil rilbta groups.
rejected Bakke WU weak case
The case involves Allan Bakke,
A large number of CSUF
tt:,,,
a wlllte applicant to the for a crucial test for affirmative students were faced with
California medical school at action.
somewhat of a crisis when they
Davis who was not accepted. He
found out that · their College
The university has said Bakke
claimed he was the victim of
Opportunity. Grants were late.
would
have
been
admitted
had
he
discrimination because he felt he
The near-fiasco began in the
come from a minority group.
was more qualified than 16 per
final weeks of August, students
Civil
rilltts
groups
contend
that
cent of the accepted students
if the casl is lost, the Supreme who had been notified they would
from minority groups.
Court would strike down as receive financial aid went to pick
''reverse discrimination'' special up their monthly checks only to 1
programs for minority groups all hear the checks weren't in yetPlaces for those students were
that they would not be ir. !•)T a few
over the country.
reserved under a special adThe Chronicle reported that weeks.
missions
program
for
Those few weeks tu:..rned into .
because the regents met in closed
economically disadvantaged
session, there ~as no public in- months, until the beginning of
blacks and Chicanos.
dication of their reaction to the November. What happened? It
He challenged the decision and
civil rights · group's pleas. seems that technology is the lone
eventually went to the California
culprit of the tardiness, according t(J Financial Aids
Director Joe Houston.
■
"The problem not in our offices," he ~xplaiiled. "The hold-·
up was m the Student Aid
Com,mission."
by Angie Rios
The Student Aid Commission's
office is located in Sacramento,
Yesterday's deadline to file for
along with the program's computer-the root of the whole upcoming municipal elections is
coupled with steps by the Fresno
In Nuclear Energy, Business Administration Naval
problem.
Aviation, Shipboard Operations, Aviation Mainten•
Referring to students' com- chapter of Mexican American
ance. Ship Design, All Engineering Fields.
. plaints that the Financial Aids Political Association (MAPA)
office should be held responsible, will be playing a major role this
~ouston said "We have zero input year.
"This year MAPA is interested
mto the COG's. Our offices are no
more than a verifying agent: we in identifying candidates interested in running for office "
certify that the student is
The Navy offers 14 different Officu Scholarship
said Manuel Perez, president ~f
enrolled
in
CSUF,
and
that
he
has
Programs.
·
·
MAPA.
the required number of units.
In the past, MAPA and the
"Our purpose here is to serve
Mexican community
have
the students, but all we can do is
contributed
to
the
successful
keep calling the Sacramento
candidacies of . some elected
offices to find out if the new
The chaUenge of people management plus
officials.
checks are ready yet."
.~8$p0!,sibility for millions of dollars worth of
"Primarily we are concerned
With this track record, it's
equipment is a .natural way of life to a new officer.
in getting Chicanos to accept
probably easy to guess how
these positions," said Perez. "If
December's checks will fare .
none are available, we will
Students may also take a hand
possibly support those candidates
in matters by writing a grievance
that best represent our views."
to
California
Student
Aid
ComGraduate level training is pro~ided in most programs.
MAP A has not made any
mission,
1415
5th
St.,
• Advanced degrees in 26 different fields can be earned'
committment
to any individual
Sacramento, CA., 95814. Ph. (916)
a~ the Navy's post graduate school.
seeking the positions.
322-2800.
Opportunities for earning advanced degrees from major
colleges and u~~versities are available also.
a
i
:Af't6.~
Stir·: . ·
=====-=-=========================================---•
MAPA to participate
In mu·nicipal elections
MANAGEMENT
DPPDRTUNITIES
SCHDLFIRSHIPS
CHFILLENCiE
.EDUCATION
ADVANTAGES ·
Annual 30 days paid vacation, free medical and dental
care, unlimited sick leave at full pay. space available
no cost travel, guaranteed pay raises at least every
two years.starting salaries f9., 5-00-13., 000.
·N eed Cash for
CHRISTMAS ?•
We are buying used textbooks for spring
semester. Half price for those books we need.
·Dates and times at buyback are listed below:
MEDICAL OPPORTUNITIES
Openings for PHYSICIANS: All specialti .
lo
.
. es,
f
cation 3uaranteed, startinc sAln~ies
~33-40,000, malpractice insuranc e provided.
· .NAVY OFFICER PRO&RAMS
REPRESENTATIVE
AT
Dec. 8-1 0
Dec. 1 l
Dec. 13-16
Dec. 17
Dec. 20-21
Dec. 22
THE .: PlILTON HOTEL ON
G,?,B,
ROOM 209
DECEMBER
NAVY
Kennel
Bookstore
8 a.m. - 4:30 p.m.
9 a.m. -12:30 p.m.
8 a.m. - 6:30 p.m.
8 a.m. - 4:30 p.m.
8 a.m. - · 6:30 p.m.
· 9 a.m. - 2:00 p.m.
"We are interested in supporting a candidate that will
win," said Perez. However, he
noted that the final decisions
would be left to the MAP A
membership.
"MAP A can play an extreme
part in the elections, in
developing a political base for the
Chicano community," said
Perez.
Perez added that Chicanos are
recognizing MAPA's role and are
taking great consideration in it as
a community organization.
MAP A is planning a meeting
for Dec. 13, at 7:30 p.m. at the
Pinedale Community Center.
"The purpose of the meeting is
to have a planning session which
will involve organizations interested in formulating an issues
conference to be held in
January," said Perez.
More information wiU be
available at the meeting. Anyone
interested is encouraged to come
to the meeting.
Editor
Angie Rios
Asst. Editor Tomas Uribes
Staff
Cindy Cabrera .
Miguel
Contreras,
Margaret Esparza, Anna
Noriega, Arturo Ocampo.
Celia
Ponce,
Pedro
Ramirez, Marta Uribes.
Contr.ibutors
Photographer
treras
GaryTell~z
Felix Con-
JOBSOVERSEAS
summer / year-round.
Europe, S. America,
Australia, Asia, etc·. All
fields, $500-$120<r monthly.
Expenses paid, sightseeing. Free inform.Write:
International Job Center,
Dept. CF, ·B ox 4490,
B~rkeley, CA 94704
esday, December 7 , 1976
THE COLLEGIAN-3
U survey; Slapped
in the face again?
UFW let_tuce on campus?
which was then investigating the
Last week, committee member
cafeteria's practice of using Sandy Ramirez said the comRaza ... get the latest:
UFW-label lettuce. A 1972 student mittee planned to look into the
Cesar Chavez' appearance and the rift over it may have contributed
senate resolution asked the food matter at their meeting Wed"minority programming" receiving the highest percentage of
services to provide UFW lettuce nesday (tommorrow) night.
when "economically feasible."
tudents desiring a decrease in the recent College Union survey•
Committee chairman Rosendo
The committee charged the Pena said no specific action was
This was the opinion offered by CU Program Director Gary
cafeteria was not abiding by this planned_as of Mondayother than
. ongiovanni to La Voz upon inquiry of the survey.
resolution but negotiations with discussion. He said no major
In the Collegian article last week, the results were printed stating
Finlay resolved the matter when efforts had been taken on it yet
at 37 pet cent of those polled were minorities.
he agreed to follow the students this semester because the
Despite this, the Collegian reported 16 per cent felt "minority
wishes. The terms agreed upon committee had devoted most of
programming'' should be decreased.
~--· . . ,
were to have a sign 1>9sted in the -its time the Prop. 14 campaign.
The staff reporter who wrote the article for the Collegian· f~iled to
cafeteria when unio1_1 iettuce was
Committee advisors Lea
'ndicate that, at the·same time, there was also an indication for in- ·
being served 1 ·_
Ybarra and Jorge Corralejo said
crease of the "minority programming" of 28.1 per cent.
··
they felt it was not a priority
A present member of the Programming Committee, felt that it was ·
issue at this time but that it was
ot a good survey, that it was too vague, and that it should have been
important to follow it through as
ore in-depth.
a -matter of principle since an
agreement was made last year.
Perhaps this was the intent of the maker of the survey, perhaps that
James Baloian, of the Baloian
erson was showing a bit of racism, something this institution is very
Produce Co., one of CSUF's two
M1ell known for . If you looked at the survey, you would have noticed
produce brokers, said he has
A $5,000 grant available for · according to Ernesto Palomino,
that questions 1-4 pertained mostly to the publicity given to College
been sending UFW-packed letChicana artistas is currently president of Brocha, which is an
Union. When it came to question 5, it states that bearing in mind of
tuce shipped by Noroian Farms
available through La Broche Del organization of Chicano artists.
limited resources, what CU program would you like to see increased.
"We are, specifying that the for the past five weeks.
Valle.
decreased or stay the same? The survey then proceeds to list items
He said he also thought the
The money, is ear-marked for a
money be used by Chicanas
issue
was dead because the
of which the majority are line items in the programming budget, with
mural to be painted by Chicanas
because we wa·nt women to get
'' ALRB matter had been setthe exception of outdoors adventure and of course " minority
here in the valley: A labor camp
involved," said Palomino, "We
tled." He said he will probably be
in Parlier has been chosen as the
programming .''
want to give Chicanas some
sending
UFW-lettuce through site
for
the
mural
according
to
What we assert is that it serves less justice to lump any ethnic
recognition ." He also pointed out
December. For the future, he
Ernesto Palomino, president of
oriented activities into one category. After witnessing recent
that most of La Brocha 's
said students could be assured of
Brocha, which is an organization
members are men.
narrowminded attitudes, it's not difficult to assume some people
rec~iving UFW picked lettuce ''90
of
Chicano
artists
Vetonica Macias and Tomasa
would react "negatively" to anything carrying the label "minority."
per cent of the time if this is the
What did CU mean by "minority programming?"
The money, from the California Cruz, of Fresno, are involved preference."
enlisting· interested
Perhaps the survey was conducted to undermine minorities in
Arts Council, is ear•markecf • with
Matty Matoian, of OK PJ"oduce,
Chicanas
to participate in the
for
a
mural
to
be
painted
by
general. One wouldn't really need to stop and think very hard that if
said
"We've always done the best
Chicanas here in the valley. A mural-painting project.
the Program Director felt that maybe the Chavez appearance caused
we can to obtain UFW lettuce. We
"We will hold an art workshop
labor camp in Parlier has been
buy the best quality -at the best
negative reaction among those polled towards minority programsometime in early January," price."
chosen
as
the
site
for
the
mural
ming, than it would also be a sign that the rest of the 80.8 per cent
said Macia s . "We hope to
Finlay said the sign used last
might have felt the same way.
organize a group of women inyear "disappeared" but he would
terested in promoting cultural
obtain ar;iother by Wednesday.
It should not be said the College Union was the only one to show
interest in the valley."
Specific time and place in·Any Chicana interested may
their " true colors." It is easy for anyone who read the Collegian ·
formation for Wednesda y's
contact Veronica Macias at 264- meeting, UFW Support Comarticle, (11-30-76) , to see what was hinted in stating that while 16.9 per
0065 or Tomasa Cruz at 487-1021. mittee, may be obtained by
cent of the total polled wanted the decrease, 37 per cent of those polled
Chicana poets and writers are phoning .La Raza Studies, 487were of minority background. Are we being told minorities themAngie Cisneros, La Raza
.
Studies secretary, has been also encouraged to inquire.
selves do not want any type of minority programming? It was very
2848
appointed by Governor Brown to ~-IIDIIDIIIIIUIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIDIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII'!
misleading in terms of showing the wrong side of any story.
serve on the 9th District Medical
Quality Review Committee
Think about it Raza ...among many other low blows against us this
Commission.
year, we get attacked because of our political stands, Cesar is treated
The Commission deals with
downright indignantly, La Raza Studies is undergoing cuts, La Voz is
health and medical services
slowly fading ... and now another slap.
delivered by different variables
WHY ARE WE ALLOWING THIS????
in the valley.
The cafeteria will resume its
efforts Wednesday to publicize
the serving of lettuce picked by
the United Farm Workers.
Following up reports ·;that the
MEChA campus support committee of the UFW planned to
investigate the matter, La Voz
learned from Food Services
Manager Richard Finlay that--he
would try to get the UFW sign
back into use. '
The action actually stems from
an agreement made last Spring .
by Finlay and the committee ·
to
$5i000. grdnt Ovailable
- for Chicana m·uralists
LRS sec. on
sta te comm .
i
NOW OPEN!
i
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'BUY AND SELL
new and old comic books
I COMICDEN
Downtown Clovis
Chicanos may be affected I 635 5th
•
·
I
by possible teacher strike
Street
Phone 299-1590
UWIIIUIUIIDIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIDIIIRll~I-
By
by Pete Ramirez
By a wide margin teachers of
the Fresno Unifjed School
District have voted to strike. The
·problem basically centers around
the salaries of teachers.
Jose Luis Barraza, president of
Associacion Educativa de Padres
Mexicanos, says they will more
than likely take a neutral stand.
The reason he says is for the
future welfare of the group, as a
division could occur.
Chicano students in general,
Barraza says, will definitely be
effected by the strike. As it is,
Chicanos are given a poor
education and with second rate
teachers
instructing
the -
CASH for·
CHRISTMAS
Sell your Used
Textbooks
Ke :' n el -B ookstore
Dec. 8-21
Chicanos, they're education may
come to a stand still.
It won't be that bad for
elementary students; says
Barraza, ''because they are
young and most likely the strike
will be over by the time they are
promoted to the next level." Who
we are concerned with is the
Chicano who is going to graduate,
and land a college career. The
=
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EXCITING THINGS ARE HAPPENING
individual most likely will not I
I
receive the best of education.
Barraza says that it is a proven I
fact that Chicanos are given less . I
attention in the classroom I
compared to the Anglo student. I
He says that if the strike does I
,I
occur, it will be a success for
Chicanos in general becaus, lt I
••
insures less classroom . sae and !1
the affirmative action will hire
I
more Chicano teachers.
•I
o,scour:1ces
Navy Bell Bottom _Pants
$8.95 and up
Jackets $9.95 and _up.
Coveralls and Shopcoats
$3.95 · and up
Book Packs 98c a·lid up
WAR SURPLUS
.DEPOT
Army
·
He_
a dquorters for
.· q_n·d Navy Clothingl
602 Broadway at Ventura:
✓
.
I
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AT THE ACADEMY OF ART COLLEGE.
PAINTING!
Exhibit your talent by
learning to paint and draw
from the ground up. Let
our professional instructors
show you how...
IA
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. : To receive detailed information, fill out the bta·nk spaces below, i
1 tear out the complete ad and mail to the office of the Registrar: I
: N a m e - - - - - - - - - - - ' - - - - - - - -·:
: Address----'--------------- :
I College attending _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ :
I Number of semesters completed _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ I
1
• ACADEMY OF ART COLLEGE
·------
:
1 625 Sutter Street, San Francisco, CA 94102, 415/673-4200 1
I
·• • • • • • • • • • • • • ~ • • • • • • • ~
. ..
.
.
.
Edticational awareness seen as
goal of Chicano .Youth Confab
participate in the all-day conference for next month.
Workshops covering a variety
To make Chicano high school
of topics ranging from E.O.P. to
1tudents aware of the opproblems in the barrio will be
portunities--..of entering college
held in the morning. At lunch,
and its benefits is one of the main
free food will be provided along
objectives of the fourth annual
with entertainment by CSUF's
Chicano Youth Conference ·
Comparsa, Los Dan~ntes de
scheduled for Jan. 15 on the
Aztlan, and Te1tro Espll'ito.
CSUE campus.
Career workshops in the fields
According to 1976-77 C.Y.C ..
of Law, Business, Health,
Chairperson David Gomez, the ·
Engineering, Education, and
conference is also intended to
others will be conducted in the
"increase Chicano high school
afternoon.
students awareness of the inThe deans of each of the schools
volvement of Chicano students on
on campus will also be on hand to
campus and as well as to expose
answer any questions.Exhibits
the racism and oppression of
representing job opportunities,
society against Chicanos."
.
as welJ as Junior College and
Over 1,000 Chicano high school
Colejio de La Tierra represenstudents from all parts of the San
tatives, will be included.
Joaquin Valley are expected to
by Cella Ponce
Telephone
180 Shaw Ave.
Clovis, Ca. 93612
(209) 298-7557
Learn to Ski program ·
a complete ski 'p rogram
6 Sundays .
16, 23, 30 Feb. 6, 13 $115.00
BUS TRANSPORTATION (Tr_ansportation
only $6.50 , 6- weeks $39.00)
Jan. 9,
Lake Tahoe Hyatt Lodge Jan. 6,7, 8,
3 nights 3 day lift ticket . Plane
transportation Total cost $142.00
Snowbird Lodge
Feb. 12-19
Utah, Snowbird
7 nights
7 day lift ticket
Total cost $182.00
''The comedy album
of the year/"
All of those incredible
''SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE" ·
features, including special
guest appearances.
It will be held in the Parlier
Community Center, free of
charge, with doors opening at 7
p.m. and the performance at 7:30
p.m.
How long has it been since you
heard Castillan Spanish?Or,
when was the last time you heard
Spanish spoken in the "singsong" way of the Indians of
Mexico?
Opportunities to hear Spanish
spoken in the old ways of Mexico
here in Aztlan are very few. One
of those few chances is presenting itself in Parlier next week.
From Dec. 12-18, El Teatro
Barrio Libre de Parlier will
present the dramatic play, Las
Cuatro Pariciones de la Virgen
del Tepeyac.
$3,000.
According to a Teatro
The Luna Club of Sanger I Del
spokesman, the play, which will
Rey is also sponsoring a funbe conducted in both Castillan
dr aiser shopping spree now
Spanish and the "sing-song"
underway. Eighty per cent of the
dialect de los indios, is about the
club's proceeds is intended for
appearance of La Virgen and
conference expenses.
problems Juan Diego, who saw
Raffle tickets are being sold for
her, experienced in trying to
50 cents each and may be obconvince ot.hers ot his m1racu1ous
tained from Luna club members.
vision.
Other financial aid has also been
The play will be presented all
r~ceived from the community.
next week, beginning Sunday, in
Asked if he felt there would be . honor of el Dia de la Virgen de
any problems due to :_:•~ conGuadalupe (Dec. 12).
ference being he lei during
semester break, Gome-: replied,
"Not as far .as the high school
students are concerned, but a lot
of help will be needed for making
signs, registering students,
reserving ~he rooms in the
college l'Hion and serving as
guides.
If anyone is interested in
helping out, attend the C.Y.C.
meeting .tonight in the College
by Arturo Ocampo
Union at 6: 30 or leave a message
in the mailbox which is located in
"The camera can be your
La Raza Studies.
pencil, it has the ability to make
you see the world for what it is,"
said Ben Garza, a member of the
Chicano Media Association,
(CMA), and author of the book
Cine Aztlan.
The Chicano Media Association
:>egan as a group of professional
Chicano journalists in Fresno.
The Student Movement for Law Under the guidance of Al Reyes,
and Justice will hold its last Channel 30 T. V. reporter, CMA
meeting for this semester, originated a monthly Chicano
tomorrow at ·2:10 p.m. in room newsletter last summer.
220, San Ramon 4.
Recently La Brocha Del Valle,
For more information contact a group of Chicano artists, and
Cindy Cabrera at La Raza the CMA have joined forces with
Studies, 487-2848.
a possible merger in the near
future,, according to Garza. "We
look upon each other as a unit of
collective power: that all media
is more powerful than one media
alone,!' said Garza.
In November the Fresno
Housing Authority gave the CMA
and La Brocha the vacated Boys
Club building on Hamilton Street
east of Cedar Avenue. In return
the Chicano group must provide a
DanAykroyd
service in the community.
John Belushi
The CMA and La Brocha will be
Chevy Chase
using the building as their office
Chicana disco
to be held Fri
Law club
meets Wed.
Jane Curtin
Garrett Morris
LaraineN~n
Gilda Radner
of
of the Trailer of the Film of
and the
,:-<:,,:>;>::;:~,'I~Y'' <':'w·:·=~z,l·'•·····.··,:.::\
MONTY PYTHON & THE HOLY GRAIL
Original Soundtrack Recording
AL 4050
Las Adelitas and the Chicano
Business Student Association is
sponsoring the first "Discolandia
Chicana," disco dance this
Friday, Dec. 10, from 8 p.m. to 1
a.m.
Donation is $1.
For the past several weeks,
candidates for the Adelitas
Consentido have been selling
tickets. The winner will be announced during the dance.
Proceeds from the dance are
intended for a Christmas Party
for Calwa elementary school
children.
Club members with tickets and
money are instructed to return
them by Thursday, Dec. 9, to
Valentina Sepulvecla either at the
EOP Office or La Raza Studies.
For any other information call
226-0851.
C.M.A., Brocha
media center
••• And MONTY PYTHON's Most
Outrageous Album!
The Album the Soundtrack
HOLY GRAIL
Anuncios
'La Virgen' to
play iry Parlier
Concluding the day's program
will be a dance featuring,
Chevere.
Trying to provide more information relevant to Chicanos
today, other than those that are
just school oriented, has increased the amount of workshops
which will be offered at this
year's conference, Go~ez s~id.
Problems in the barrio, which
will deal with Chicano gangs, and
student rights in the educational
system will be two of the additional workshops.
The major financing of this
year's conference will be
provided by two agencies under
the Manpower Commission: the
Youth Manpower Service and
Economics Opportunity Commission, which together allocated
It's more fun than a barrel
of dead monkeys!
MONTY PYTHON
Tuesday, December 7,
1976
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· want this product.
People who care about
people can sell this
product. NEO-LIFE Co.
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and as a center to sponsor
workshops and classes on media
for the community. Among the
classes to be offered include,
photography, journalism, art and
hopefully film presentations, of
CMA and La Brocha 's joint efforts.
· ''Basically, the reason the CMA
and La Brocha came together
was because we had something
very much in common : Commuunication," said Al Reyes.
La Brocha has been in
existence for two years. They
consist of muralists, graphics,
silk screeners, etc., most of
whom are teaching art at different colleges and schools.
The CMA members consist
primarily
of
reporters,
cameramen, and broadcasters.
Along with La Brocha, the CMA
has expanded its newsletter into
a bilingual newspaper with its
first edition due by Christmas.
"There are many people who
are willing to help the Chicano in
areas of agriculture, science, and
education but not in media.
Media is too powerful, it affects
too
many people politically,
economically
and
educationally," said Garza.
If they ( the Anglo), will not hire
or place the Chicano in those
places of power in media (there is
no doubt that there are many
qualified Chicanos in the field of
media), then we must create our
own positions, which the center
will hopefully help bring about,"
said Garza.
"For this to come about the
community has to become involved and lend its support in our
efforts.
.
On Arista Records
6.:
AVJµLABLEAT ~LBECORDSTORES
TRY· THE KENNEL BOOKSTORE
FOR CHRISTMAS GIFTS.
-
....
THE COLLEGIAN
LXXXI-25
l\rlli.i'li ; ·.· ·
.
CALIFORNIA STATE UNIVERSITY. FRESNO
IIMi4iH .
;..,..-.~:::,.~-
TUESDAY. DECEMBER ~ • 19'16
Faculty first .
Baxter wants tenure ·review
by Jeff Evans
Staff Reporter
CSUF President Norman
Baxter believes all tenured
faculty should be · evaluated
regardless -0f the faculty member's length of employment with
the university.
In a press conference Friday,
Baxter said he would approve of
an evaluation of administrators
only after post-tenured faculty
are reviewed.
"It's much more important in
terms of the dollars involved and
the time involved to review a 40year faculty member," Baxter
said. "There's much more
benefit for the taxpayers and
students.
"The product there is much
more important than administrators, whose terms are
much, ·much shorter."
Baxter said if administrators
were evaluated, he would seek
imput from other groups as well
as faculty.
"I don't think it should be
faculty only evaluating administrators," he said. "There
ought to be other administrators
evaluating administrators. and
there ought to be some student
evaluation. If I could take one
and not the other, then I would
obviously take the post-tenured
review of faculty."
Later, Baxter indicated he
would·. favor a renewal of the
controversial NCAA contract
when it expires in 1978. The
current contract guarantees
intercollegiate athletics 33 per
cent of the Associated Student
budget each year.
"I favor a long-term approach
that saves a lot of year-to-year
bickering and gives some continuity to athleti~s and other IRA .
(Instructionly Related Activities)," Baxter said.
But the CSUF president was
unclear on whether he favored
contracts in other IRA programs.
Baxter did say· he would like to
see appropriation's for these
programs.
When asked about the expected
layoffs of part-time faculty,
· (Continued on Page 3, Col. 1)
Buckley likes Carter, fears 'left'
by Linda Brown
Staff Reporter
CHRISTMAS SEASON MAY be a time for cheer, but not for this
Santa who showed up in the Free Speech Area Monday and was
virtually ignored. His appearance was sponsored by the CSUF
Young Farmers who will be charging $1 to persons wishing to
pose with Santa. The offe~ will last today and tomorrow from 10
a.m.-1 p.m. (Photo by Scott Linnett.)
Senate fails override
on food resolution
by Jon Kawamoto
Staff Reporter
The Associated Student (AS)
Senate, which Nov . 19 passed a
vetoed resolution opposing the
recent campus food price increases, Friday afternoon chose
not to override the decision of AS
President David Nikssarian.
Nikssarian, who Nov. 29 made
the resolution his third veto of the
year, recommended that the
senate refer the issue to its AS
Public Affairs Committee. The
senate agreed.
The senate's most recent
s~nce constitutes a complete
Swine Flu shots
set Wednesday
A Swine Flu Shot Clinic
will be held Wednesday
from noon until 2 p.m. in
the College Union Lounge,
second floor.
Those wishing to receive
the shot should enter the
east side of the building.
The free clinic is part of a
nationwide
innoculation
pro.gram
aimed
at
preventing a possible
outbreak of swine flu.
Anne Edwards, chief
nur~·:- of the CSUF Health
Center, warns that persons
who have an allergic
reaction to egg yolks
should avoid the shot.
turnabout from its earlier approval of resolution 2-5.
In that resolution, the senate
noted the following reasons for its
decision: "seemingly" unimproved quality of foods and
beverages since the Nov. 8 price
increase; no change in quantities
served; and the second price
increase in beverages during the
semester.
The resolution and discussion
during the Nov. 19 meeting
stemmed from the price hike by
the CSUF Food Services Advisory Committee.
According to an article in the ·
Nov. 4 issue of The Collegian, the
five cents across-the-board increase was instituted to help
offset an estimated $45,000 loss in
food services.
At the beginning of the Fall
semester. beverage prices were
increased five cents as part of a
budgetary goal of the CSUF
Association Board of Directors,
according to Rick Finlay, administrator of food services.
Ironically, Finlay said at the
time that the goal was to provide
students with the lowest possible
food costs.
But since the recent price hike,
the cost of a small drink has risen
from 15 cents to 25 cents, a 67 per
cent increase from the start of
the semester.
In
his
veto
message,
Nikssarian stated two reasons for
his decision: the lac.k of constructive criticism
in the
resolution; and the senate's
unfamiliarity on the issue.
.
(Continued on Page 3, Col. 3)
President-elect Jimmy Carter
strength's will be tremendous
four years from now if he doesn't
"go jumping off to the left," said
noted conservative William F.
Buckley, Jr. at a recent press
conference in Fresno,
The press conference was held
following Buckley's appearance
at CSUF. The nationally famous
columnist was on campus to
fulfill a speaking engagement he
postponed last year.
Buckley told the local press
that he liked 9arter.
"I don't know that he is moved
by any hard political convictions,
but perhaps that is good," said
the Republican Buckley.
When asked why Ford lost,
Buckley said anytime you lose as
narrowly as Ford did, you can
point to anything.
Buckley spoke optimistically
about ' the future of the
Republican Party. He pointed out
that the majority of the 18-21
year-olds voted for Ford in the
_recent election · and also a
majority
of
the college
graduates.
"I think there is a move to
rejec't all the old endearments of
the populists like Hubert Humphrey." he said.
But Buckley also said that
there is a slight possibility of the
American government becoming
"mechanized," a situation where
.one political party always wins.
.'Fritz' set to return
by Dianne Solis
Everything from a sexy
animated cartoon about a cat
named "Fritz" to ~ drama about
a man called "Horse" will be
included in the CSUF Spring
semester film series.
Along with "The 9 Lives of
Fritz the Cat" and "A Man Called
Horse," the College Union
Program Committee plans to
show "Breakout," "Fist of
Fury," and "Trial of Billy Jack."
At Monday's meeting the
committee also chose: '~2001:
Space Odessey," "Sherlock
Holmes' Smarter Brother,"
"Lady Sings the Blues," "Funny
Lady," "Alice's Restaurant" and
"African Queen."
Committee chairman John
Adams said, "We've been losing
our shorts with this semester's
film series."
According to recent figures, the
films have lost ,about $400 this
semester.
In hopes of cutting losses next
semester, a $5 season pass to the
12-film series was suggested. The
pass would be sold the first two
weeks of the Spring semester and
would be good for any show, the
committee said.
Students could save $1 by
buying the season pass instead of
paying 50 cents to see each film.
The feasibility of this plan will be
examined before any final
proposal is offered, said Gary
Bongiovannj, program director.
In other action, the committee
allotted $300 of a $600 CSUF Jazz
Band request for a concert by two
guest artists in the Spring
semester. However. the full
request was not granted because
of the $400 loss in film revenue.
The committee also considered
a Russian rock group, "Sasha
and Yuri,'' as possible entertainment for next semester.
This group of Russi~n Jews are
asking $400, said Bongiovanni.
In
evaluating
latest
programming, the committee
termed last week's Craft's
Bazaar a "roaring success." Last
Friday's movie "Love and
Death" lost $155.
But the speech by William
Buckley raised $168 by charging
non-students a $3 admission.
Despite this, Adams said he felt
many students couldn't understand Buckley's immense
vocabulary or hear his soft voice.
"Next time I'll bring a dictionary," quipped Jay Sepulveda,
committee member.
_ He attributed the current
Democratic majority in Congress
to many factors, including the
huge black vote and the present
"stink" from the Republican
·label.
Buckley said that currently the
Jeadership of the Republican
Party is up inr grabs.
"My own feeling is that Ronald
Reagan is the most popular living
Republican," he said. "People
think of him as someone who is
genuinely -enthusiastic about the
Republican Party."
Carter named
new announcer
Jeff Carter, who once
was the ballpark announcer for the San
Francisco Giants
at
Candlestick Park, has
accepted the position as
announcer
of
the
remaining
CSUF
basketball games.
In making the announcement Monday,
CSUF athletic Director
Gene Bourdet said, "We
are happy to have a man of
Jeff's background join our
home basketball games."
Carter's background
started in 1948 with the
American
Broadcasting
Company where he served
in the news and sports
departments and hosted a
music program.
,. In addition, he has done
public address work for the
University of San Francisco, the Golden State
Warriors basketball team
and the San Francisco
Seals hockey team, now
called the Cleveland
Barons.
Carter, who moved to
California in 1955, has also
worked on two Bay Area
television stations. He is
currently employed at
McLaughlin Distributing
Co.
_.....
Tuesday, December 7, 1976
i-THE COL~GIAN -
fditoriaf
-Letters to the editor----
Honesty needed
A· humiliating and g·laring challenge .
It is high time for CSUF President Norman Baxter to shed his cloak
Editor:
of virtual anonymity and bring himself and his dealings into the open.
After six and one half years as president of this university, Baxter
The Quran was revealed 1400
has earned himself the reputation of a person who acts in the dark, far
years ago at Mecca and Medine.
from the light of public scrutiny.
The Arabs used to worship idols
His name is known among most students, but that is where the
of which the most important ones
familiarity ends. A mention of his name among many faculty
were enshrined in the Kaaba. The
members brings stories and rumors about Baxter's latest
Arabs lived a simple life, though
shenanigans and criticism over his latest assault on academic
it was savage in many aspects
freedom.
such as the exposure of chUdren
Not that the criticism is unearned.
because of poverty.
Since assuming the presidency here, Baxter has been directly
They were proud of their
responsible for a number of lawsuits brought against the university by
language and justifiably so since
professors who _charged they were illegally fired.
Arabic is a very rich and
These lawsuits have resulted in the awarding of several thousands
sophisticated language. Poets
of dollars in damages to those professors, not to mention the untold
and orators were read and
thousands of dollars taxpayers unwittingly pay state attorneys who
learned by rote and annual
were forced to defend the university.
poetry competitions were held
Baxter's most recent victim was Chester Cole, who was removed
at a place called Sup Ukadh. Thus
from the geography department chairmanship in June, 1975.
the Arabs became past masters
A report which details Baxter's actions during that affair was
at the art of literary competition.
recently ordered destroyed by the Executive Committee of the
The Quran was a challenge,
Academic Senate. It was a terrible decision. So much could have been
challenging them to produce a
learned.
similar Quran.
When Baxter is asked to explain his decision to remove Cole, he
(Say: If the whole of mankind
says that it "is a personnel m-tter and ·t is my policy not to discuss
and Jinn were to gather together
personnel matters."
to produce the kind of this Quran
But othersllave given some insight into the matter. Some say Cole
they could not produce the like
often opposed Baxter during Academic Senate meetings and that he
therefore even though they
was often a thorn in Baxter's side. Cole also is a member of the United
collaborated with each other.)
Professors of california (UPC), a group frowned upon in some cirThe Night Journey: 88. The whole
cles. At one point, Baxter allegedly told Cole that "I can't have any of
of mankind in co-operation just to
my department chairmen belonging to UPC.''
produce one book! It is a
Faculty members are not the only ones subject to Baxter's whims.
humiliating challenge and a
An avid supporter of men's athletics, Baxter has been accused by
glaring one. Still the challenge
some past members of student government of pressuring them into
was reduced to 10 Surahs in order
signing a five-year contract that gives 33 per cent of the Associated
to prove to the whole of mankind
Student (AS) budget to the National Collegia\e Athletic Association . the unique quality if this book,
(NCAA).
(Or do they say He forget it,.
When once asked about the charge, Baxter asked rhetorically,
Say, Bring you then 10 Surahs
"What power do I have over the student budget?" He was reminded
thaf as CSUF president, he must approve all AS budgets. Baxter,
nonetheless, continues to deny the charge.
. It should be noted that Baxter removed Cole from the geography
department chair in June of 1975, not long after the Spring semester
Editor:
had officially ended. Baxter also allegedly coerced AS officials into
signing the NCAA contract in the summer of 1973. Summer is a great
In recent months there have
time for dirty work on a campus; there are few critics around.
With the NCAA contract due to expire in 1978, some think that · been several surveys published
regarding cheating among
should the AS refuse to enter into another, Baxter may try a bit of
college students. I~ all of these .
persuasion during either this summer or the next. .
_By then, perhaps Baxter will have seen the light and take the
studies, the percentages show
considerations of others into account instead of -catering only to
that one third to a half of all
selfish motives.
college ·students engage on some
For as Baxter told a Downtown Rotary Club gathering in 1970, "I
form of fraud. This ratio is apask you to stand with me in maintaining the university as the unique palling.
institution to serve mankind, truth and society."
The student who earns an
-.Joe Ipsaro
honest degree is forced to
. compete for a degree of honor,
one . of which may get him no
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY!
.'EUROPE
where in the job market. The
Stuff envelopes. $50 per 100,
ISRAEL
AFRICA
bachelor's degree no longer has
immediate ·earnings. Send
Student charter flllhta year round '
any meaning, and the master's
stamped addr;ssed envel-
forged like unto it, and call to were filled with fear and could
your aid whomsoever you can not provide a plausible exother than God-if you speak the planation of the irresistable
truth,. Hud:13.
beauty and power of the Quran. ·
The people in Arabia could not However, they had to find some
face the -humiliating challenge way to put people off and justify
again, and it was further reduced their own behavior. They into one Surah only. One Surah may vented lies and falsehoods.
be one line. Still the proud and (Therefore proclaim the praises
eloquent Arabs could not face the of your Lord for by the grace of
divine challenge. (Ordo they say, your Lord, you are no (vular)
He forged it? Say, bring then a soothsayer, nor are you one
Surah like unto it, and call to your possessed. Or do they say a poet! .
aid anyone you can, besides God, we wait for him some calamity
if it be you speak the truth.)
hatched by time. (Tur 29-30).
Yunus. 38.
·
That was the only excuse they
You can see the logic of could find to their failure and
reasoning and the rational ap- helplessness.
proach to convince people of its
A non-Arab may rightly pause .
miraculous quality. A Surah may .and ponder the truth of this
be one line, but the Arabs and claim. He may not grasp what it
non-Arabs cbuld not succeed in . is all about. He cannot read
their efforts to meet this standing Arabic and did not have the
challenge. The beauty of the chance to read the Book. This
Quran, the music, its strength of miracle might not appeal to nonconviction, logic, simplicity, · .Arabs and even to some extent to
depth, and wisdom are much the uneducated Arabs. The
above of what the Arabs and non- reason for the latter case is
Arabs knew or could wholly because of the deterioration of
conceive. When the Quran was spoken Arabic and its deviation
being recited by Muslims, from the classical norms.
idolators usually cloaed their
It is true that we need a miracle
ears; some _produced noise- in science, telling us what is in
whistling and shouting in order · the heavens and ourselves during
not to hear the Quran and be be this era. The Quran although not
witched. Many unbelievers were a scientific text, reveals many
caught by Islam through simple secrets of wonders in the
chance when listening to it while universe as part of its call to
passing by.
believe in the Creator.
The leaders of the unbelievers
Reza Razavi
'Nothing earned is nothing gained'
system has. Perhaps the pendulum will swing back, where the
values placed on education are
bound in pride and respect, for
both the essence of learning, and
those offering their wisdom.
Kathryn M. Hogan
r'
Adress to speak on
in
A student with little interest in
education itself will find the easy
road to a degree; one of fraud. It women
showbiz
takes little effort to copy .
another's work, be it a fellow
Stage, screen and television
student, a note concealed from · actress Angel Tompkins will
the instructor, or plagerism of a ·speak at CSUF Tuesday, Dec. 4,
literary source. The stu4ent who as a guest lecturer in the
this type of degree
·· has no Women's Forum series.
ISCA, 1809 Westwood Blvd. No. 103
earns
·Judith Rosenthal, associate
L.A., Qllif. 90024
ope to LEA-15, P.O. Box ·
has depreciated considerably as use for it in the future, for noth ing professor of -English and coor(213) U6 0955. 826-0955
628.Morro Bay, CA 93442._
well. Granted, the probity vs. earned is no th ing gained. "A dinator of the forum, said .
improbity conflict is only one of student wi thout ·a que5tion to be Tompkins will discuss the topic,
••••••••••••••••••••••••••~••••••••••••••••••••••••: the mariy factors in the lowered answered has no business in "Women in the Entertainment
:
college; he becomes dead w~ight, · In.dus•.'""" at 7 p.m. in room
. 26 of
you
• status of college education, h lding ba k. th
re amb1'tious
":"-.1
• however, the implications of thii ' tud
o
c
e
mo
San
Ramon
Building
·
1.
ts ,, 88
CSUF 1·n
:
one
Tompkins· studied thea
_ tre arts
e1/en begun?
fraud have. J more devastating · s tr en
to ,
ked
· :•
s
uc
r
remar
·
at
the
University
of
Texas,
El
effect
the total picture.
:.
· · One begins to wond~r what the _ Paso, and . the University of
·We're .close :.. ; Convenient :.. Offer
• . It ls argued that colleges are - purj,ose of higher education ·has Illinois, Cha,m~aign-Urbana.
.
. fr•e gift ·wrap_.·
: . accepting , and turnµig out too .' become,. how its · quality.. has
Her films include Disney's • ~
:
:
many students· today. 'lbe 'fact .declined, and wh•t future the "Hang Your _Hat. o~ the . Win~,"
: . Our- Mai·n -Lsevel ~stock's ·O··wide variety' ·-of-~: :____ , .
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Universal_ Studio_'s •!J :Love My ..
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gift
·help 'you·~o·ut. - "-----~- : :-.
;·,.: ·: . . .
Bren'davaccaro; "Walking Tall,
•
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A
Part II;" and "The.Don is.Dead,"
: From c~ndles to iewelry - ·to calculators : ·.
_:.._.;____....;..____________
with Antheny Quinn.
Hove
finishec/
shoppin·g - or
"'- ~
that many students pursue higher
education for a mere document
which will ''open doors in the
business world," and thus have
little interest in learning for the
sake of wisdom, indicates that
the quality of the student is
declining. These are contributing
factors in the problem of
cheating.
:
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your Christmas
on
.,cleas to
.. No·
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D. 1scou·NT. C ....
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We aim to please every b·u dget. ..
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; Our lower Level is _f.illed with enioyable :
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We also have an outstanding collection
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Why not stop in to see us at
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I
1e
Tuesday, December 7, 1976
Baxter: 'no plans to leave' · ~enate· defeats res~i
(Continued from Page 1)
to seek employment at another
school had "no more truth to
Baxter said he expected to see
equal cuts from all departments. _ them now than when I came here
four years ago. I have no plans to
"I would be very surprised if he
leave Fresno," Baxter said.
(Louis Volpp, vice president for
-He would not be opposed to
academic affairs and in charge of
an open-door policy for students,
the cutbacks) made overvisiting him, but indicated it is
whelming cuts in one area,"
unlikely.
Baxter said. "I look tor a general
cut across-the-board, not in one
"If we felt it would be helpful,
school unless there's a great
we'd
bring it back," Baxter said.
imbalance in numbers."
"We had it in the past, and our
Baxter said he expects a cutpast experience was not very
back between 20 and 24 positions.
satisfactory ... we're open to any
In other action at the conpolicy where it would bring me
ference, Baxter said:
into more contact with the
students." Baxter said students
-The CSUF Association Board
who want to see him should write
of Directors should act "prompa letter instead of phoning.
tly " on the beer situation .
Through Thursday, three of the
-He was not "alarmed" at a
four board members required to
recent survey, showing 50 per
visit the Alcohol Beverage
cent of CSUF students admit to
Control Department had not done
cheating.
so. Until they submit a written
''The poll was not done on a
s ta tement and fingerprints,
scientific basis," he said of the
CSUF is unable to proceed with
poll. "I'm not alarmed unless I
its efforts to obtain a beer-selling
see figures (gathered) on a more
license.
reliable basis."
·
- Rumors of his leaving CSUF
Campus calendar
Tuesday, Dec. 7
Wednesday, Dec. 8
10 a .m.-The Young F armers
will sponsor an appearance of
Santa Claus today and Wednesday until 1 p.m. in the Free·
Speech Area. Persons can have
pictures of themselves and others
taken with Santa for $1.
11 a.m.-The First Annual Ski
Swap will be held in the College
Union Lounge.
Noon-John Caudillo, owner of
Professiona l Medical
Laboratory, will give a business
lecture in the Industrial ~rts
Building , r oom 101.
Noon-A Swine F lu Clinic will
be held on the second floor of the
College Union.
3 p.m.-Ved Vatuk will speak
on "Asian Folklore and Indian
Philosophy" in the College Union,
room 312.
8 p.m.-The CSUF Jazz Band
and Concert Band will play in the
College Union Lounge.
12 p.m.-George M. Koch will
speak on the "Impact of the
Carter Administration on the
Food Industry" in the Residence
Dining Hall, east room.
7 p.m.-A movie titled "The
Man Who Skied Down Everest"
will be shown in the College
Union Lounge.
(Continued from Page 1)
questioned as to why I was a
-Referred a req_uest for higher
"It is extremely improbable ·' voting delegate," he said. Brewer rates of the Child Day Care
that a price change will result noted that he was nearly thrown Center to its AS Finance and
from a resolution opposing price out of the conference because of Budget Committee. The request,
increases,'' his message read. the title confusion.
if approved, would institute in"However, a resolution excreases for full cost users of the
plaining why a 'particular raise
N onetheles,s,
Brewer's center in the Spring semester.
was unnecessary and calling for arguments failed to sway the -The increases would be from the
its retraction or a resolution votes of Paulette Boghosian, current $2. 75 to $3.25 for a half
stigge~ting how the service could senator of the School of day and from the current $5.50 to
be changed to allow for lower Professional Studies, and Alan $6 for a full day.
prices would be much more likely Benzler, proxy for Gary Nelson,
-Accepted the resignation of
to result in the desired price senator-at-large post four.
decrease."
Benzler, who calls himself "a FelixMata, senator of the School
He later stated the resolution, good friend" of Brewer, said he of Humaniti~. Mata becomes the
fourth senator to resign this year.
though asserting the need to
cast his "no" vote on Nelson's
oppose the increases, failed to instructions.
.
-Announced that CSUF will
prove that need by its Jack of . Boghosian felt Brewer gave host the monthly meeting of the
factual information and a insufficient, insignificant reasons California State University and
proposed policy change.
to warrant the title change.
Colleges. Student Presidents
Despite his veto, Nikssarian
In other matters, the senate: Association on Dec. 11-12.
said he did not want the senate to
drop the issue.
In another issue, the senate
narrowly defeated a resolution
which would have changed the
title of College Union (CU) Vice
President to Administrative
Vice President of the Associated
Students.
Approval of the resolution,
number 2-3, required two-thirds
of the 15-member body or 10
votes . The vote was 9-2 in favor of
the resolutions.
Brewer, CU vice president,
spoke on behalf of the resolution,
and said the change would not
affect him , but his successors.
"I'll be out of office by the time
th_is change is adopted," he said
before the vote. " But there's
After college, what will I do? . starting salary, a challenging
confusion a bout this title. People
job, promotion opportunities,
ask me whether I'm the College
That's a question a lot of
and a secure future with a
Union Vice President or the Vice
young people ask themselves
modern Air Force. If you have
President of the College Union
these days.
two academic years remaining,
and how can you be if there's no
But a two-year Air Force find out today about the twoROTC scholarship can help
year
Air
Force
ROTC
President of the College Union
provide the answers. SuccesScholarship Program. It's a
and so on."
sful completion of the program
great way to serve your country
Most universities, he·said, have
gets you an Air Force commisand a great way to help pay for
no ties between their College
sion along with an excellent
your college education.
Union and their Associated
Aerospace studies:
Major Stephen Rowe
Students office. Subsequently, he
Galifornia State University, Fresno 222-6400
noted that CSP:L"'s case has
Air 11-trce INtTt~
caused him some problems.
" At one conference, I was
t;;1fe\\'a\• tea a t;reat ll'ay
IAlfe
••f
.Student banking problems are different.
Their bankers should be, too.
/
8 p.m .-The Chinese Student
Club will hold its last meeting of
the year in the College Union,
room 310.
8:15 p.m.-The play ''.Mrs.
Warren's P rofession" will bE:
shown a t this time each night
through Saturday in the John
Wright Thea tre .
:tt~n,
.
CASH for
CHRISTMAS
Sell your Used
Te xt b o oks
Kennel Booknore
Dec. 8-21
. OXFORD MOTORS
3953 N. ILACKITONI
FIISNO, CALIF.
229..;aa1a
TUNE-UP. SPECIAL
for your Voll11wa9011
iJicludos tho fello•i~: .
• Replace sparlc plugs,
• Replace points
• Check compression . ·
. • Boil carburetor (single)
• Adiust valves
• Check fuel pump pressure
• Checlc distributor seal ·
• lubrication
Thia inclu-.los
and labor
~•r~
•2.9
30
That's why Bank of America has Student Representatives close by at offices near major
college campuses in California. They're always students or recent graduates themselves.
So they know all about student banking problems. And how to solve them.
They know all the ways our College Plan® can help you~ too. ~o why not stop by and
talk things over. Our Student Reps can make your banking easier.
Depend on us. More California colles, students do.
At CSU-Fresno, just ask to see
Michael Slonski
Fashion Fair Branch
BANKOFAMERICA
590 East Shaw Avefme · 488-7763
Bank of America
&SA• Member FDIC
m.
sports
Tuesday, December 7, 1976
•
Bulldogs w,n and lose
It was an up-and-down ' Bulldogs still had to come up with
a clutch basket in the closing
weekend for the CSUF basketball
seconds to secure the win. Ahead
team.
just 70-68, CSUF's Ken Barnes
First the Bulldogs won their
put it away with a bucket with 10
third-straight contest, defeating
seconds· to play.
Boise 74-68 behind the excellent
play of David Wear. Then, the
Barnes finished with 14 points
'Dogs suffered their first loss of and 11 rebounds while teammate
the . season by falling to Idaho Doug Streeter also had 14 points.
State 77-64 Saturday.
The Bulldogs connected on 32 of
The 'Dogs will return home for 67 shots from the field (48 per
a game Thursday against Cal cent) and added 10 of 14 free
State Bakersfield at S: 15 p.m. in throws. Boise made 68 per cent of
Selland Arena.
its shots but lost it at the free
In the win over Boise, Wear, a throw line, hitting on just eight of
6-8 freshman center, hit on eight · 20. The 'Dogs made 23 fouls in the
of 11 from the field and added twc game.
free throws for 18 points. He also
In the Idaho game, the Bengals
excelled under the boards, held a massive rebounding edge
pulling down .13 rebounds.
(63-28). They had the lead
Despite Wear's effort, the throughout the foul-plagued
TRY THE KENNEL BOOKSTORE
. FOR CHRISTMAS GIFTS
contest. CSUF was called for 31
fouls while Idaho had 29 infractions.
The Bulldogs made .44 per cent
of their. field goal tries and bit on
20 of 30 free throws. The Bengals
hit 40 per cent from the floor and
21 of 33 from the foul line.
Barnes paced CSUF with 16
points while Streeter added 10.
Parker wins.
Except for Bob Parker, it was a
dismal weekend for the CSUF
wrestling team.
Parker, a 168-pounder, took a
victory in a dual meet against UC
Berkeley Friday and came back
with a second place in the Hugh
Mumby Tournament Saturday to .
be the team's only bright spot.
Parker's win was the only
victory against Cal as the
Bulldogs lost 39-4. And his second
place )lelped the Bulldogs forget
a sixth-place team finish in the
tourney.
take
consolation title
Women
SAN LUIS OBISPO-Getting
impressive play from Cindy
Addicott in the finals, the CSUF
women's basketball team won
consolation honors in the Cal Poly
Invitational Tournament.
Addicott poured in 19 points
and grabbed eight rebounds to
lead the team past Hayward 66-53
Saturday night.
Fresno lost to UC Santa Barbara 49-24 in the first round._
In the game against UCSB,
Fresno trailed 21-12 at halftime
but was outscored 28-7 in the
second half.
-
Je11kel Vavidso11...
"For the Best Loo~in Sight!"
eYEGLASSES .
CONT ACT LENSES
Jenkel Davidson specializ~s in filling your eyeglass and ;:,,
contact tense prescription. We will fit you with the finest quality eyeglass frames
·
that really look great and contact lenses that are very comfortable.
, We'~e located just acro~s from St. John's Cathedral, downtown Fresno.
OVER 50 YEARS EXPERIENCE AND 60 CALI FORNI A OFFICES!
White: Shrine-bound
Becoming the first CSUF
player so honored in 14
years, Del White has been
named to play iri the EastWest Football Classic Jan.
2 in Stanford Stadium.
White, a 6-3, 210
linebacker
for
the
Bulldogs, is the first
Bulldog to be named since
J .R. Williams was chosen
in 1962:
"We feel he is a very able
addition to our (West)
team's set of linebackers,"
said Lynn Wald, who heads
the selection committee for
the West squad.
"We have a lot of confidence he'll do well, based
on my personal observations and the reports
from other scouts who've
been checking him out."
White is a senior and a
two-yf'ar letterman for
CSUF. 'Dog head coach
Jim Sweeney said before
the season that "White has
good size and surprising
speed at the linebacker
position (arid) he has good
football sense."
That size, speed and
sense combined to give
White one of the most
prestigious honors in
college football. It may
also lead to a pro football
career. There will be
dozens of National Football
League scouts in attendance, loo~ing over the
players for future draft
picks. Last year, 58 of the
60 players in the Shrine
game were drafted by pro
clubs.
The first CSUF player to
go to the game was Jack
Mulkey, who got the call in
1941.
I
>
DE AZTLAN
,I
TlJESI).'\¥. -NOVEMBER 23, 1976
LXXXl-21
A special edition of THE COLLEGIAN, California State University, Fresno
Fall 1976 for Raza.
let down?
n========================;:==============1J
i QUE VIVA LA CAUSA
VIV A -LA RAZA!
Starting next semester this art of the Mayan G.od of Rebirth
Kukulcan will appear on the banner of each edition ot La Voz de Atzlan.
Legend has it that Kukulcan is actually Quetzalcoatl, a Toltec god.
When Quetzalcoatl was forced to leave the tribe, in the city of
Tenochtitlan (now Mexico City) he left word saying he would rE>turn.
Shortly after in Mayan History we find tne arrival of Kukulcan who
was worshiped as a God. History tells us that Kukulcan was actually
Quetzalcoatl in new form.
The art work was reproduced by La Voz staff member, Arturo
O'Campo.
La Voz De Aztlan is introducing this concept as a message to La
Gente, that perhaps change must come to us: a rebirth of our own. We
must assert ourselves and be active again on this racist campLlS of
higher education. We hope that we will all come back next year with
an approach such as that of Kukulcan.
Political alterna·tives .
•
•
--;;;...c
...
Q,I
C:
0
u
)(
Cl)
Ill
0
0
~
a..
•
•
or.
• •
Trying to give
Raza's side
• • •
What does it take?
Tuesday' December 7, 19'6
2-THE COLLEGIAN
Bakke to
old
times?
UC action may bring end of speciq/
admissions: shaft for minorities
The Univenity of California
will appeal to the U.S. SUpreme
Court a
lower-court ruling
a1ain1t its medical schooJ's
special admiulons procram for
members of racial minority
IJ'OUPS• the Chronicle of Higher
Education reported lut week.
The Chronicle re~rted~ the
Supreme Court which ordered the
university to let Bakkf in.
Now the UC system is contelting the decision in what the
supporters of special admissions
program feel is actually an attempt to undermine m~ties.
However, the vote to appeal the
lower court ruling was "near
unanimous," a spokesman said.
The university expects a
decision by February on whether
the appeal will be gr~ted.
f
t
.late,. COG' s
causecrisis
.
·for··students .- cAJJ~"~!p;-r
· ~10 meetinp prior to . tbe UC Regents vote to go to the US
.
'
Supreme Court, civil rigbts
university'1 governing Board
made the decision in a cloeed representatives told the regents
door seaioo, despite the ob- that the special minority-group
admissions
program
that
jections of civil rilbta groups.
rejected Bakke WU weak case
The case involves Allan Bakke,
A large number of CSUF
tt:,,,
a wlllte applicant to the for a crucial test for affirmative students were faced with
California medical school at action.
somewhat of a crisis when they
Davis who was not accepted. He
found out that · their College
The university has said Bakke
claimed he was the victim of
Opportunity. Grants were late.
would
have
been
admitted
had
he
discrimination because he felt he
The near-fiasco began in the
come from a minority group.
was more qualified than 16 per
final weeks of August, students
Civil
rilltts
groups
contend
that
cent of the accepted students
if the casl is lost, the Supreme who had been notified they would
from minority groups.
Court would strike down as receive financial aid went to pick
''reverse discrimination'' special up their monthly checks only to 1
programs for minority groups all hear the checks weren't in yetPlaces for those students were
that they would not be ir. !•)T a few
over the country.
reserved under a special adThe Chronicle reported that weeks.
missions
program
for
Those few weeks tu:..rned into .
because the regents met in closed
economically disadvantaged
session, there ~as no public in- months, until the beginning of
blacks and Chicanos.
dication of their reaction to the November. What happened? It
He challenged the decision and
civil rights · group's pleas. seems that technology is the lone
eventually went to the California
culprit of the tardiness, according t(J Financial Aids
Director Joe Houston.
■
"The problem not in our offices," he ~xplaiiled. "The hold-·
up was m the Student Aid
Com,mission."
by Angie Rios
The Student Aid Commission's
office is located in Sacramento,
Yesterday's deadline to file for
along with the program's computer-the root of the whole upcoming municipal elections is
coupled with steps by the Fresno
In Nuclear Energy, Business Administration Naval
problem.
Aviation, Shipboard Operations, Aviation Mainten•
Referring to students' com- chapter of Mexican American
ance. Ship Design, All Engineering Fields.
. plaints that the Financial Aids Political Association (MAPA)
office should be held responsible, will be playing a major role this
~ouston said "We have zero input year.
"This year MAPA is interested
mto the COG's. Our offices are no
more than a verifying agent: we in identifying candidates interested in running for office "
certify that the student is
The Navy offers 14 different Officu Scholarship
said Manuel Perez, president ~f
enrolled
in
CSUF,
and
that
he
has
Programs.
·
·
MAPA.
the required number of units.
In the past, MAPA and the
"Our purpose here is to serve
Mexican community
have
the students, but all we can do is
contributed
to
the
successful
keep calling the Sacramento
candidacies of . some elected
offices to find out if the new
The chaUenge of people management plus
officials.
checks are ready yet."
.~8$p0!,sibility for millions of dollars worth of
"Primarily we are concerned
With this track record, it's
equipment is a .natural way of life to a new officer.
in getting Chicanos to accept
probably easy to guess how
these positions," said Perez. "If
December's checks will fare .
none are available, we will
Students may also take a hand
possibly support those candidates
in matters by writing a grievance
that best represent our views."
to
California
Student
Aid
ComGraduate level training is pro~ided in most programs.
MAP A has not made any
mission,
1415
5th
St.,
• Advanced degrees in 26 different fields can be earned'
committment
to any individual
Sacramento, CA., 95814. Ph. (916)
a~ the Navy's post graduate school.
seeking the positions.
322-2800.
Opportunities for earning advanced degrees from major
colleges and u~~versities are available also.
a
i
:Af't6.~
Stir·: . ·
=====-=-=========================================---•
MAPA to participate
In mu·nicipal elections
MANAGEMENT
DPPDRTUNITIES
SCHDLFIRSHIPS
CHFILLENCiE
.EDUCATION
ADVANTAGES ·
Annual 30 days paid vacation, free medical and dental
care, unlimited sick leave at full pay. space available
no cost travel, guaranteed pay raises at least every
two years.starting salaries f9., 5-00-13., 000.
·N eed Cash for
CHRISTMAS ?•
We are buying used textbooks for spring
semester. Half price for those books we need.
·Dates and times at buyback are listed below:
MEDICAL OPPORTUNITIES
Openings for PHYSICIANS: All specialti .
lo
.
. es,
f
cation 3uaranteed, startinc sAln~ies
~33-40,000, malpractice insuranc e provided.
· .NAVY OFFICER PRO&RAMS
REPRESENTATIVE
AT
Dec. 8-1 0
Dec. 1 l
Dec. 13-16
Dec. 17
Dec. 20-21
Dec. 22
THE .: PlILTON HOTEL ON
G,?,B,
ROOM 209
DECEMBER
NAVY
Kennel
Bookstore
8 a.m. - 4:30 p.m.
9 a.m. -12:30 p.m.
8 a.m. - 6:30 p.m.
8 a.m. - 4:30 p.m.
8 a.m. - · 6:30 p.m.
· 9 a.m. - 2:00 p.m.
"We are interested in supporting a candidate that will
win," said Perez. However, he
noted that the final decisions
would be left to the MAP A
membership.
"MAP A can play an extreme
part in the elections, in
developing a political base for the
Chicano community," said
Perez.
Perez added that Chicanos are
recognizing MAPA's role and are
taking great consideration in it as
a community organization.
MAP A is planning a meeting
for Dec. 13, at 7:30 p.m. at the
Pinedale Community Center.
"The purpose of the meeting is
to have a planning session which
will involve organizations interested in formulating an issues
conference to be held in
January," said Perez.
More information wiU be
available at the meeting. Anyone
interested is encouraged to come
to the meeting.
Editor
Angie Rios
Asst. Editor Tomas Uribes
Staff
Cindy Cabrera .
Miguel
Contreras,
Margaret Esparza, Anna
Noriega, Arturo Ocampo.
Celia
Ponce,
Pedro
Ramirez, Marta Uribes.
Contr.ibutors
Photographer
treras
GaryTell~z
Felix Con-
JOBSOVERSEAS
summer / year-round.
Europe, S. America,
Australia, Asia, etc·. All
fields, $500-$120<r monthly.
Expenses paid, sightseeing. Free inform.Write:
International Job Center,
Dept. CF, ·B ox 4490,
B~rkeley, CA 94704
esday, December 7 , 1976
THE COLLEGIAN-3
U survey; Slapped
in the face again?
UFW let_tuce on campus?
which was then investigating the
Last week, committee member
cafeteria's practice of using Sandy Ramirez said the comRaza ... get the latest:
UFW-label lettuce. A 1972 student mittee planned to look into the
Cesar Chavez' appearance and the rift over it may have contributed
senate resolution asked the food matter at their meeting Wed"minority programming" receiving the highest percentage of
services to provide UFW lettuce nesday (tommorrow) night.
when "economically feasible."
tudents desiring a decrease in the recent College Union survey•
Committee chairman Rosendo
The committee charged the Pena said no specific action was
This was the opinion offered by CU Program Director Gary
cafeteria was not abiding by this planned_as of Mondayother than
. ongiovanni to La Voz upon inquiry of the survey.
resolution but negotiations with discussion. He said no major
In the Collegian article last week, the results were printed stating
Finlay resolved the matter when efforts had been taken on it yet
at 37 pet cent of those polled were minorities.
he agreed to follow the students this semester because the
Despite this, the Collegian reported 16 per cent felt "minority
wishes. The terms agreed upon committee had devoted most of
programming'' should be decreased.
~--· . . ,
were to have a sign 1>9sted in the -its time the Prop. 14 campaign.
The staff reporter who wrote the article for the Collegian· f~iled to
cafeteria when unio1_1 iettuce was
Committee advisors Lea
'ndicate that, at the·same time, there was also an indication for in- ·
being served 1 ·_
Ybarra and Jorge Corralejo said
crease of the "minority programming" of 28.1 per cent.
··
they felt it was not a priority
A present member of the Programming Committee, felt that it was ·
issue at this time but that it was
ot a good survey, that it was too vague, and that it should have been
important to follow it through as
ore in-depth.
a -matter of principle since an
agreement was made last year.
Perhaps this was the intent of the maker of the survey, perhaps that
James Baloian, of the Baloian
erson was showing a bit of racism, something this institution is very
Produce Co., one of CSUF's two
M1ell known for . If you looked at the survey, you would have noticed
produce brokers, said he has
A $5,000 grant available for · according to Ernesto Palomino,
that questions 1-4 pertained mostly to the publicity given to College
been sending UFW-packed letChicana artistas is currently president of Brocha, which is an
Union. When it came to question 5, it states that bearing in mind of
tuce shipped by Noroian Farms
available through La Broche Del organization of Chicano artists.
limited resources, what CU program would you like to see increased.
"We are, specifying that the for the past five weeks.
Valle.
decreased or stay the same? The survey then proceeds to list items
He said he also thought the
The money, is ear-marked for a
money be used by Chicanas
issue
was dead because the
of which the majority are line items in the programming budget, with
mural to be painted by Chicanas
because we wa·nt women to get
'' ALRB matter had been setthe exception of outdoors adventure and of course " minority
here in the valley: A labor camp
involved," said Palomino, "We
tled." He said he will probably be
in Parlier has been chosen as the
programming .''
want to give Chicanas some
sending
UFW-lettuce through site
for
the
mural
according
to
What we assert is that it serves less justice to lump any ethnic
recognition ." He also pointed out
December. For the future, he
Ernesto Palomino, president of
oriented activities into one category. After witnessing recent
that most of La Brocha 's
said students could be assured of
Brocha, which is an organization
members are men.
narrowminded attitudes, it's not difficult to assume some people
rec~iving UFW picked lettuce ''90
of
Chicano
artists
Vetonica Macias and Tomasa
would react "negatively" to anything carrying the label "minority."
per cent of the time if this is the
What did CU mean by "minority programming?"
The money, from the California Cruz, of Fresno, are involved preference."
enlisting· interested
Perhaps the survey was conducted to undermine minorities in
Arts Council, is ear•markecf • with
Matty Matoian, of OK PJ"oduce,
Chicanas
to participate in the
for
a
mural
to
be
painted
by
general. One wouldn't really need to stop and think very hard that if
said
"We've always done the best
Chicanas here in the valley. A mural-painting project.
the Program Director felt that maybe the Chavez appearance caused
we can to obtain UFW lettuce. We
"We will hold an art workshop
labor camp in Parlier has been
buy the best quality -at the best
negative reaction among those polled towards minority programsometime in early January," price."
chosen
as
the
site
for
the
mural
ming, than it would also be a sign that the rest of the 80.8 per cent
said Macia s . "We hope to
Finlay said the sign used last
might have felt the same way.
organize a group of women inyear "disappeared" but he would
terested in promoting cultural
obtain ar;iother by Wednesday.
It should not be said the College Union was the only one to show
interest in the valley."
Specific time and place in·Any Chicana interested may
their " true colors." It is easy for anyone who read the Collegian ·
formation for Wednesda y's
contact Veronica Macias at 264- meeting, UFW Support Comarticle, (11-30-76) , to see what was hinted in stating that while 16.9 per
0065 or Tomasa Cruz at 487-1021. mittee, may be obtained by
cent of the total polled wanted the decrease, 37 per cent of those polled
Chicana poets and writers are phoning .La Raza Studies, 487were of minority background. Are we being told minorities themAngie Cisneros, La Raza
.
Studies secretary, has been also encouraged to inquire.
selves do not want any type of minority programming? It was very
2848
appointed by Governor Brown to ~-IIDIIDIIIIIUIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIDIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII'!
misleading in terms of showing the wrong side of any story.
serve on the 9th District Medical
Quality Review Committee
Think about it Raza ...among many other low blows against us this
Commission.
year, we get attacked because of our political stands, Cesar is treated
The Commission deals with
downright indignantly, La Raza Studies is undergoing cuts, La Voz is
health and medical services
slowly fading ... and now another slap.
delivered by different variables
WHY ARE WE ALLOWING THIS????
in the valley.
The cafeteria will resume its
efforts Wednesday to publicize
the serving of lettuce picked by
the United Farm Workers.
Following up reports ·;that the
MEChA campus support committee of the UFW planned to
investigate the matter, La Voz
learned from Food Services
Manager Richard Finlay that--he
would try to get the UFW sign
back into use. '
The action actually stems from
an agreement made last Spring .
by Finlay and the committee ·
to
$5i000. grdnt Ovailable
- for Chicana m·uralists
LRS sec. on
sta te comm .
i
NOW OPEN!
i
I
i
'BUY AND SELL
new and old comic books
I COMICDEN
Downtown Clovis
Chicanos may be affected I 635 5th
•
·
I
by possible teacher strike
Street
Phone 299-1590
UWIIIUIUIIDIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIDIIIRll~I-
By
by Pete Ramirez
By a wide margin teachers of
the Fresno Unifjed School
District have voted to strike. The
·problem basically centers around
the salaries of teachers.
Jose Luis Barraza, president of
Associacion Educativa de Padres
Mexicanos, says they will more
than likely take a neutral stand.
The reason he says is for the
future welfare of the group, as a
division could occur.
Chicano students in general,
Barraza says, will definitely be
effected by the strike. As it is,
Chicanos are given a poor
education and with second rate
teachers
instructing
the -
CASH for·
CHRISTMAS
Sell your Used
Textbooks
Ke :' n el -B ookstore
Dec. 8-21
Chicanos, they're education may
come to a stand still.
It won't be that bad for
elementary students; says
Barraza, ''because they are
young and most likely the strike
will be over by the time they are
promoted to the next level." Who
we are concerned with is the
Chicano who is going to graduate,
and land a college career. The
=
I
i
i
I
i
■---------------------------·
EXCITING THINGS ARE HAPPENING
individual most likely will not I
I
receive the best of education.
Barraza says that it is a proven I
fact that Chicanos are given less . I
attention in the classroom I
compared to the Anglo student. I
He says that if the strike does I
,I
occur, it will be a success for
Chicanos in general becaus, lt I
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the affirmative action will hire
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Navy Bell Bottom _Pants
$8.95 and up
Jackets $9.95 and _up.
Coveralls and Shopcoats
$3.95 · and up
Book Packs 98c a·lid up
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602 Broadway at Ventura:
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AT THE ACADEMY OF ART COLLEGE.
PAINTING!
Exhibit your talent by
learning to paint and draw
from the ground up. Let
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: N a m e - - - - - - - - - - - ' - - - - - - - -·:
: Address----'--------------- :
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1 625 Sutter Street, San Francisco, CA 94102, 415/673-4200 1
I
·• • • • • • • • • • • • • ~ • • • • • • • ~
. ..
.
.
.
Edticational awareness seen as
goal of Chicano .Youth Confab
participate in the all-day conference for next month.
Workshops covering a variety
To make Chicano high school
of topics ranging from E.O.P. to
1tudents aware of the opproblems in the barrio will be
portunities--..of entering college
held in the morning. At lunch,
and its benefits is one of the main
free food will be provided along
objectives of the fourth annual
with entertainment by CSUF's
Chicano Youth Conference ·
Comparsa, Los Dan~ntes de
scheduled for Jan. 15 on the
Aztlan, and Te1tro Espll'ito.
CSUE campus.
Career workshops in the fields
According to 1976-77 C.Y.C ..
of Law, Business, Health,
Chairperson David Gomez, the ·
Engineering, Education, and
conference is also intended to
others will be conducted in the
"increase Chicano high school
afternoon.
students awareness of the inThe deans of each of the schools
volvement of Chicano students on
on campus will also be on hand to
campus and as well as to expose
answer any questions.Exhibits
the racism and oppression of
representing job opportunities,
society against Chicanos."
.
as welJ as Junior College and
Over 1,000 Chicano high school
Colejio de La Tierra represenstudents from all parts of the San
tatives, will be included.
Joaquin Valley are expected to
by Cella Ponce
Telephone
180 Shaw Ave.
Clovis, Ca. 93612
(209) 298-7557
Learn to Ski program ·
a complete ski 'p rogram
6 Sundays .
16, 23, 30 Feb. 6, 13 $115.00
BUS TRANSPORTATION (Tr_ansportation
only $6.50 , 6- weeks $39.00)
Jan. 9,
Lake Tahoe Hyatt Lodge Jan. 6,7, 8,
3 nights 3 day lift ticket . Plane
transportation Total cost $142.00
Snowbird Lodge
Feb. 12-19
Utah, Snowbird
7 nights
7 day lift ticket
Total cost $182.00
''The comedy album
of the year/"
All of those incredible
''SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE" ·
features, including special
guest appearances.
It will be held in the Parlier
Community Center, free of
charge, with doors opening at 7
p.m. and the performance at 7:30
p.m.
How long has it been since you
heard Castillan Spanish?Or,
when was the last time you heard
Spanish spoken in the "singsong" way of the Indians of
Mexico?
Opportunities to hear Spanish
spoken in the old ways of Mexico
here in Aztlan are very few. One
of those few chances is presenting itself in Parlier next week.
From Dec. 12-18, El Teatro
Barrio Libre de Parlier will
present the dramatic play, Las
Cuatro Pariciones de la Virgen
del Tepeyac.
$3,000.
According to a Teatro
The Luna Club of Sanger I Del
spokesman, the play, which will
Rey is also sponsoring a funbe conducted in both Castillan
dr aiser shopping spree now
Spanish and the "sing-song"
underway. Eighty per cent of the
dialect de los indios, is about the
club's proceeds is intended for
appearance of La Virgen and
conference expenses.
problems Juan Diego, who saw
Raffle tickets are being sold for
her, experienced in trying to
50 cents each and may be obconvince ot.hers ot his m1racu1ous
tained from Luna club members.
vision.
Other financial aid has also been
The play will be presented all
r~ceived from the community.
next week, beginning Sunday, in
Asked if he felt there would be . honor of el Dia de la Virgen de
any problems due to :_:•~ conGuadalupe (Dec. 12).
ference being he lei during
semester break, Gome-: replied,
"Not as far .as the high school
students are concerned, but a lot
of help will be needed for making
signs, registering students,
reserving ~he rooms in the
college l'Hion and serving as
guides.
If anyone is interested in
helping out, attend the C.Y.C.
meeting .tonight in the College
by Arturo Ocampo
Union at 6: 30 or leave a message
in the mailbox which is located in
"The camera can be your
La Raza Studies.
pencil, it has the ability to make
you see the world for what it is,"
said Ben Garza, a member of the
Chicano Media Association,
(CMA), and author of the book
Cine Aztlan.
The Chicano Media Association
:>egan as a group of professional
Chicano journalists in Fresno.
The Student Movement for Law Under the guidance of Al Reyes,
and Justice will hold its last Channel 30 T. V. reporter, CMA
meeting for this semester, originated a monthly Chicano
tomorrow at ·2:10 p.m. in room newsletter last summer.
220, San Ramon 4.
Recently La Brocha Del Valle,
For more information contact a group of Chicano artists, and
Cindy Cabrera at La Raza the CMA have joined forces with
Studies, 487-2848.
a possible merger in the near
future,, according to Garza. "We
look upon each other as a unit of
collective power: that all media
is more powerful than one media
alone,!' said Garza.
In November the Fresno
Housing Authority gave the CMA
and La Brocha the vacated Boys
Club building on Hamilton Street
east of Cedar Avenue. In return
the Chicano group must provide a
DanAykroyd
service in the community.
John Belushi
The CMA and La Brocha will be
Chevy Chase
using the building as their office
Chicana disco
to be held Fri
Law club
meets Wed.
Jane Curtin
Garrett Morris
LaraineN~n
Gilda Radner
of
of the Trailer of the Film of
and the
,:-<:,,:>;>::;:~,'I~Y'' <':'w·:·=~z,l·'•·····.··,:.::\
MONTY PYTHON & THE HOLY GRAIL
Original Soundtrack Recording
AL 4050
Las Adelitas and the Chicano
Business Student Association is
sponsoring the first "Discolandia
Chicana," disco dance this
Friday, Dec. 10, from 8 p.m. to 1
a.m.
Donation is $1.
For the past several weeks,
candidates for the Adelitas
Consentido have been selling
tickets. The winner will be announced during the dance.
Proceeds from the dance are
intended for a Christmas Party
for Calwa elementary school
children.
Club members with tickets and
money are instructed to return
them by Thursday, Dec. 9, to
Valentina Sepulvecla either at the
EOP Office or La Raza Studies.
For any other information call
226-0851.
C.M.A., Brocha
media center
••• And MONTY PYTHON's Most
Outrageous Album!
The Album the Soundtrack
HOLY GRAIL
Anuncios
'La Virgen' to
play iry Parlier
Concluding the day's program
will be a dance featuring,
Chevere.
Trying to provide more information relevant to Chicanos
today, other than those that are
just school oriented, has increased the amount of workshops
which will be offered at this
year's conference, Go~ez s~id.
Problems in the barrio, which
will deal with Chicano gangs, and
student rights in the educational
system will be two of the additional workshops.
The major financing of this
year's conference will be
provided by two agencies under
the Manpower Commission: the
Youth Manpower Service and
Economics Opportunity Commission, which together allocated
It's more fun than a barrel
of dead monkeys!
MONTY PYTHON
Tuesday, December 7,
1976
Opportunity unlimited.
Any one who car es _
~'bout good health wi II
· want this product.
People who care about
people can sell this
product. NEO-LIFE Co.
of America. Call collect
(209) 383-2649
(209) 226-847 4
and as a center to sponsor
workshops and classes on media
for the community. Among the
classes to be offered include,
photography, journalism, art and
hopefully film presentations, of
CMA and La Brocha 's joint efforts.
· ''Basically, the reason the CMA
and La Brocha came together
was because we had something
very much in common : Commuunication," said Al Reyes.
La Brocha has been in
existence for two years. They
consist of muralists, graphics,
silk screeners, etc., most of
whom are teaching art at different colleges and schools.
The CMA members consist
primarily
of
reporters,
cameramen, and broadcasters.
Along with La Brocha, the CMA
has expanded its newsletter into
a bilingual newspaper with its
first edition due by Christmas.
"There are many people who
are willing to help the Chicano in
areas of agriculture, science, and
education but not in media.
Media is too powerful, it affects
too
many people politically,
economically
and
educationally," said Garza.
If they ( the Anglo), will not hire
or place the Chicano in those
places of power in media (there is
no doubt that there are many
qualified Chicanos in the field of
media), then we must create our
own positions, which the center
will hopefully help bring about,"
said Garza.
"For this to come about the
community has to become involved and lend its support in our
efforts.
.
On Arista Records
6.:
AVJµLABLEAT ~LBECORDSTORES
TRY· THE KENNEL BOOKSTORE
FOR CHRISTMAS GIFTS.
-
....
THE COLLEGIAN
LXXXI-25
l\rlli.i'li ; ·.· ·
.
CALIFORNIA STATE UNIVERSITY. FRESNO
IIMi4iH .
;..,..-.~:::,.~-
TUESDAY. DECEMBER ~ • 19'16
Faculty first .
Baxter wants tenure ·review
by Jeff Evans
Staff Reporter
CSUF President Norman
Baxter believes all tenured
faculty should be · evaluated
regardless -0f the faculty member's length of employment with
the university.
In a press conference Friday,
Baxter said he would approve of
an evaluation of administrators
only after post-tenured faculty
are reviewed.
"It's much more important in
terms of the dollars involved and
the time involved to review a 40year faculty member," Baxter
said. "There's much more
benefit for the taxpayers and
students.
"The product there is much
more important than administrators, whose terms are
much, ·much shorter."
Baxter said if administrators
were evaluated, he would seek
imput from other groups as well
as faculty.
"I don't think it should be
faculty only evaluating administrators," he said. "There
ought to be other administrators
evaluating administrators. and
there ought to be some student
evaluation. If I could take one
and not the other, then I would
obviously take the post-tenured
review of faculty."
Later, Baxter indicated he
would·. favor a renewal of the
controversial NCAA contract
when it expires in 1978. The
current contract guarantees
intercollegiate athletics 33 per
cent of the Associated Student
budget each year.
"I favor a long-term approach
that saves a lot of year-to-year
bickering and gives some continuity to athleti~s and other IRA .
(Instructionly Related Activities)," Baxter said.
But the CSUF president was
unclear on whether he favored
contracts in other IRA programs.
Baxter did say· he would like to
see appropriation's for these
programs.
When asked about the expected
layoffs of part-time faculty,
· (Continued on Page 3, Col. 1)
Buckley likes Carter, fears 'left'
by Linda Brown
Staff Reporter
CHRISTMAS SEASON MAY be a time for cheer, but not for this
Santa who showed up in the Free Speech Area Monday and was
virtually ignored. His appearance was sponsored by the CSUF
Young Farmers who will be charging $1 to persons wishing to
pose with Santa. The offe~ will last today and tomorrow from 10
a.m.-1 p.m. (Photo by Scott Linnett.)
Senate fails override
on food resolution
by Jon Kawamoto
Staff Reporter
The Associated Student (AS)
Senate, which Nov . 19 passed a
vetoed resolution opposing the
recent campus food price increases, Friday afternoon chose
not to override the decision of AS
President David Nikssarian.
Nikssarian, who Nov. 29 made
the resolution his third veto of the
year, recommended that the
senate refer the issue to its AS
Public Affairs Committee. The
senate agreed.
The senate's most recent
s~nce constitutes a complete
Swine Flu shots
set Wednesday
A Swine Flu Shot Clinic
will be held Wednesday
from noon until 2 p.m. in
the College Union Lounge,
second floor.
Those wishing to receive
the shot should enter the
east side of the building.
The free clinic is part of a
nationwide
innoculation
pro.gram
aimed
at
preventing a possible
outbreak of swine flu.
Anne Edwards, chief
nur~·:- of the CSUF Health
Center, warns that persons
who have an allergic
reaction to egg yolks
should avoid the shot.
turnabout from its earlier approval of resolution 2-5.
In that resolution, the senate
noted the following reasons for its
decision: "seemingly" unimproved quality of foods and
beverages since the Nov. 8 price
increase; no change in quantities
served; and the second price
increase in beverages during the
semester.
The resolution and discussion
during the Nov. 19 meeting
stemmed from the price hike by
the CSUF Food Services Advisory Committee.
According to an article in the ·
Nov. 4 issue of The Collegian, the
five cents across-the-board increase was instituted to help
offset an estimated $45,000 loss in
food services.
At the beginning of the Fall
semester. beverage prices were
increased five cents as part of a
budgetary goal of the CSUF
Association Board of Directors,
according to Rick Finlay, administrator of food services.
Ironically, Finlay said at the
time that the goal was to provide
students with the lowest possible
food costs.
But since the recent price hike,
the cost of a small drink has risen
from 15 cents to 25 cents, a 67 per
cent increase from the start of
the semester.
In
his
veto
message,
Nikssarian stated two reasons for
his decision: the lac.k of constructive criticism
in the
resolution; and the senate's
unfamiliarity on the issue.
.
(Continued on Page 3, Col. 3)
President-elect Jimmy Carter
strength's will be tremendous
four years from now if he doesn't
"go jumping off to the left," said
noted conservative William F.
Buckley, Jr. at a recent press
conference in Fresno,
The press conference was held
following Buckley's appearance
at CSUF. The nationally famous
columnist was on campus to
fulfill a speaking engagement he
postponed last year.
Buckley told the local press
that he liked 9arter.
"I don't know that he is moved
by any hard political convictions,
but perhaps that is good," said
the Republican Buckley.
When asked why Ford lost,
Buckley said anytime you lose as
narrowly as Ford did, you can
point to anything.
Buckley spoke optimistically
about ' the future of the
Republican Party. He pointed out
that the majority of the 18-21
year-olds voted for Ford in the
_recent election · and also a
majority
of
the college
graduates.
"I think there is a move to
rejec't all the old endearments of
the populists like Hubert Humphrey." he said.
But Buckley also said that
there is a slight possibility of the
American government becoming
"mechanized," a situation where
.one political party always wins.
.'Fritz' set to return
by Dianne Solis
Everything from a sexy
animated cartoon about a cat
named "Fritz" to ~ drama about
a man called "Horse" will be
included in the CSUF Spring
semester film series.
Along with "The 9 Lives of
Fritz the Cat" and "A Man Called
Horse," the College Union
Program Committee plans to
show "Breakout," "Fist of
Fury," and "Trial of Billy Jack."
At Monday's meeting the
committee also chose: '~2001:
Space Odessey," "Sherlock
Holmes' Smarter Brother,"
"Lady Sings the Blues," "Funny
Lady," "Alice's Restaurant" and
"African Queen."
Committee chairman John
Adams said, "We've been losing
our shorts with this semester's
film series."
According to recent figures, the
films have lost ,about $400 this
semester.
In hopes of cutting losses next
semester, a $5 season pass to the
12-film series was suggested. The
pass would be sold the first two
weeks of the Spring semester and
would be good for any show, the
committee said.
Students could save $1 by
buying the season pass instead of
paying 50 cents to see each film.
The feasibility of this plan will be
examined before any final
proposal is offered, said Gary
Bongiovannj, program director.
In other action, the committee
allotted $300 of a $600 CSUF Jazz
Band request for a concert by two
guest artists in the Spring
semester. However. the full
request was not granted because
of the $400 loss in film revenue.
The committee also considered
a Russian rock group, "Sasha
and Yuri,'' as possible entertainment for next semester.
This group of Russi~n Jews are
asking $400, said Bongiovanni.
In
evaluating
latest
programming, the committee
termed last week's Craft's
Bazaar a "roaring success." Last
Friday's movie "Love and
Death" lost $155.
But the speech by William
Buckley raised $168 by charging
non-students a $3 admission.
Despite this, Adams said he felt
many students couldn't understand Buckley's immense
vocabulary or hear his soft voice.
"Next time I'll bring a dictionary," quipped Jay Sepulveda,
committee member.
_ He attributed the current
Democratic majority in Congress
to many factors, including the
huge black vote and the present
"stink" from the Republican
·label.
Buckley said that currently the
Jeadership of the Republican
Party is up inr grabs.
"My own feeling is that Ronald
Reagan is the most popular living
Republican," he said. "People
think of him as someone who is
genuinely -enthusiastic about the
Republican Party."
Carter named
new announcer
Jeff Carter, who once
was the ballpark announcer for the San
Francisco Giants
at
Candlestick Park, has
accepted the position as
announcer
of
the
remaining
CSUF
basketball games.
In making the announcement Monday,
CSUF athletic Director
Gene Bourdet said, "We
are happy to have a man of
Jeff's background join our
home basketball games."
Carter's background
started in 1948 with the
American
Broadcasting
Company where he served
in the news and sports
departments and hosted a
music program.
,. In addition, he has done
public address work for the
University of San Francisco, the Golden State
Warriors basketball team
and the San Francisco
Seals hockey team, now
called the Cleveland
Barons.
Carter, who moved to
California in 1955, has also
worked on two Bay Area
television stations. He is
currently employed at
McLaughlin Distributing
Co.
_.....
Tuesday, December 7, 1976
i-THE COL~GIAN -
fditoriaf
-Letters to the editor----
Honesty needed
A· humiliating and g·laring challenge .
It is high time for CSUF President Norman Baxter to shed his cloak
Editor:
of virtual anonymity and bring himself and his dealings into the open.
After six and one half years as president of this university, Baxter
The Quran was revealed 1400
has earned himself the reputation of a person who acts in the dark, far
years ago at Mecca and Medine.
from the light of public scrutiny.
The Arabs used to worship idols
His name is known among most students, but that is where the
of which the most important ones
familiarity ends. A mention of his name among many faculty
were enshrined in the Kaaba. The
members brings stories and rumors about Baxter's latest
Arabs lived a simple life, though
shenanigans and criticism over his latest assault on academic
it was savage in many aspects
freedom.
such as the exposure of chUdren
Not that the criticism is unearned.
because of poverty.
Since assuming the presidency here, Baxter has been directly
They were proud of their
responsible for a number of lawsuits brought against the university by
language and justifiably so since
professors who _charged they were illegally fired.
Arabic is a very rich and
These lawsuits have resulted in the awarding of several thousands
sophisticated language. Poets
of dollars in damages to those professors, not to mention the untold
and orators were read and
thousands of dollars taxpayers unwittingly pay state attorneys who
learned by rote and annual
were forced to defend the university.
poetry competitions were held
Baxter's most recent victim was Chester Cole, who was removed
at a place called Sup Ukadh. Thus
from the geography department chairmanship in June, 1975.
the Arabs became past masters
A report which details Baxter's actions during that affair was
at the art of literary competition.
recently ordered destroyed by the Executive Committee of the
The Quran was a challenge,
Academic Senate. It was a terrible decision. So much could have been
challenging them to produce a
learned.
similar Quran.
When Baxter is asked to explain his decision to remove Cole, he
(Say: If the whole of mankind
says that it "is a personnel m-tter and ·t is my policy not to discuss
and Jinn were to gather together
personnel matters."
to produce the kind of this Quran
But othersllave given some insight into the matter. Some say Cole
they could not produce the like
often opposed Baxter during Academic Senate meetings and that he
therefore even though they
was often a thorn in Baxter's side. Cole also is a member of the United
collaborated with each other.)
Professors of california (UPC), a group frowned upon in some cirThe Night Journey: 88. The whole
cles. At one point, Baxter allegedly told Cole that "I can't have any of
of mankind in co-operation just to
my department chairmen belonging to UPC.''
produce one book! It is a
Faculty members are not the only ones subject to Baxter's whims.
humiliating challenge and a
An avid supporter of men's athletics, Baxter has been accused by
glaring one. Still the challenge
some past members of student government of pressuring them into
was reduced to 10 Surahs in order
signing a five-year contract that gives 33 per cent of the Associated
to prove to the whole of mankind
Student (AS) budget to the National Collegia\e Athletic Association . the unique quality if this book,
(NCAA).
(Or do they say He forget it,.
When once asked about the charge, Baxter asked rhetorically,
Say, Bring you then 10 Surahs
"What power do I have over the student budget?" He was reminded
thaf as CSUF president, he must approve all AS budgets. Baxter,
nonetheless, continues to deny the charge.
. It should be noted that Baxter removed Cole from the geography
department chair in June of 1975, not long after the Spring semester
Editor:
had officially ended. Baxter also allegedly coerced AS officials into
signing the NCAA contract in the summer of 1973. Summer is a great
In recent months there have
time for dirty work on a campus; there are few critics around.
With the NCAA contract due to expire in 1978, some think that · been several surveys published
regarding cheating among
should the AS refuse to enter into another, Baxter may try a bit of
college students. I~ all of these .
persuasion during either this summer or the next. .
_By then, perhaps Baxter will have seen the light and take the
studies, the percentages show
considerations of others into account instead of -catering only to
that one third to a half of all
selfish motives.
college ·students engage on some
For as Baxter told a Downtown Rotary Club gathering in 1970, "I
form of fraud. This ratio is apask you to stand with me in maintaining the university as the unique palling.
institution to serve mankind, truth and society."
The student who earns an
-.Joe Ipsaro
honest degree is forced to
. compete for a degree of honor,
one . of which may get him no
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY!
.'EUROPE
where in the job market. The
Stuff envelopes. $50 per 100,
ISRAEL
AFRICA
bachelor's degree no longer has
immediate ·earnings. Send
Student charter flllhta year round '
any meaning, and the master's
stamped addr;ssed envel-
forged like unto it, and call to were filled with fear and could
your aid whomsoever you can not provide a plausible exother than God-if you speak the planation of the irresistable
truth,. Hud:13.
beauty and power of the Quran. ·
The people in Arabia could not However, they had to find some
face the -humiliating challenge way to put people off and justify
again, and it was further reduced their own behavior. They into one Surah only. One Surah may vented lies and falsehoods.
be one line. Still the proud and (Therefore proclaim the praises
eloquent Arabs could not face the of your Lord for by the grace of
divine challenge. (Ordo they say, your Lord, you are no (vular)
He forged it? Say, bring then a soothsayer, nor are you one
Surah like unto it, and call to your possessed. Or do they say a poet! .
aid anyone you can, besides God, we wait for him some calamity
if it be you speak the truth.)
hatched by time. (Tur 29-30).
Yunus. 38.
·
That was the only excuse they
You can see the logic of could find to their failure and
reasoning and the rational ap- helplessness.
proach to convince people of its
A non-Arab may rightly pause .
miraculous quality. A Surah may .and ponder the truth of this
be one line, but the Arabs and claim. He may not grasp what it
non-Arabs cbuld not succeed in . is all about. He cannot read
their efforts to meet this standing Arabic and did not have the
challenge. The beauty of the chance to read the Book. This
Quran, the music, its strength of miracle might not appeal to nonconviction, logic, simplicity, · .Arabs and even to some extent to
depth, and wisdom are much the uneducated Arabs. The
above of what the Arabs and non- reason for the latter case is
Arabs knew or could wholly because of the deterioration of
conceive. When the Quran was spoken Arabic and its deviation
being recited by Muslims, from the classical norms.
idolators usually cloaed their
It is true that we need a miracle
ears; some _produced noise- in science, telling us what is in
whistling and shouting in order · the heavens and ourselves during
not to hear the Quran and be be this era. The Quran although not
witched. Many unbelievers were a scientific text, reveals many
caught by Islam through simple secrets of wonders in the
chance when listening to it while universe as part of its call to
passing by.
believe in the Creator.
The leaders of the unbelievers
Reza Razavi
'Nothing earned is nothing gained'
system has. Perhaps the pendulum will swing back, where the
values placed on education are
bound in pride and respect, for
both the essence of learning, and
those offering their wisdom.
Kathryn M. Hogan
r'
Adress to speak on
in
A student with little interest in
education itself will find the easy
road to a degree; one of fraud. It women
showbiz
takes little effort to copy .
another's work, be it a fellow
Stage, screen and television
student, a note concealed from · actress Angel Tompkins will
the instructor, or plagerism of a ·speak at CSUF Tuesday, Dec. 4,
literary source. The stu4ent who as a guest lecturer in the
this type of degree
·· has no Women's Forum series.
ISCA, 1809 Westwood Blvd. No. 103
earns
·Judith Rosenthal, associate
L.A., Qllif. 90024
ope to LEA-15, P.O. Box ·
has depreciated considerably as use for it in the future, for noth ing professor of -English and coor(213) U6 0955. 826-0955
628.Morro Bay, CA 93442._
well. Granted, the probity vs. earned is no th ing gained. "A dinator of the forum, said .
improbity conflict is only one of student wi thout ·a que5tion to be Tompkins will discuss the topic,
••••••••••••••••••••••••••~••••••••••••••••••••••••: the mariy factors in the lowered answered has no business in "Women in the Entertainment
:
college; he becomes dead w~ight, · In.dus•.'""" at 7 p.m. in room
. 26 of
you
• status of college education, h lding ba k. th
re amb1'tious
":"-.1
• however, the implications of thii ' tud
o
c
e
mo
San
Ramon
Building
·
1.
ts ,, 88
CSUF 1·n
:
one
Tompkins· studied thea
_ tre arts
e1/en begun?
fraud have. J more devastating · s tr en
to ,
ked
· :•
s
uc
r
remar
·
at
the
University
of
Texas,
El
effect
the total picture.
:.
· · One begins to wond~r what the _ Paso, and . the University of
·We're .close :.. ; Convenient :.. Offer
• . It ls argued that colleges are - purj,ose of higher education ·has Illinois, Cha,m~aign-Urbana.
.
. fr•e gift ·wrap_.·
: . accepting , and turnµig out too .' become,. how its · quality.. has
Her films include Disney's • ~
:
:
many students· today. 'lbe 'fact .declined, and wh•t future the "Hang Your _Hat. o~ the . Win~,"
: . Our- Mai·n -Lsevel ~stock's ·O··wide variety' ·-of-~: :____ , .
'.
Universal_ Studio_'s •!J :Love My ..
.Wife " c.. Wlth--Ell1ott Gould and
:
gift
·help 'you·~o·ut. - "-----~- : :-.
;·,.: ·: . . .
Bren'davaccaro; "Walking Tall,
•
·
..
· :
A
Part II;" and "The.Don is.Dead,"
: From c~ndles to iewelry - ·to calculators : ·.
_:.._.;____....;..____________
with Antheny Quinn.
Hove
finishec/
shoppin·g - or
"'- ~
that many students pursue higher
education for a mere document
which will ''open doors in the
business world," and thus have
little interest in learning for the
sake of wisdom, indicates that
the quality of the student is
declining. These are contributing
factors in the problem of
cheating.
:
=
:
your Christmas
on
.,cleas to
.. No·
·2 0
D. 1scou·NT. C ....
. ·o·
NICE.ss·· ..." •· y~~
.-.
We aim to please every b·u dget. ..
I
·
; Our lower Level is _f.illed with enioyable :
:
• books appealing to all ages and many :•
i
i
individuals. From cookbooks
~.
to photographs - to sports
•
We also have an outstanding collection
•
of reasonaby priced
children's literature.
i
Why not stop in to see us at
•
o· :. -.~
=
:
"THE KENNEL BOOKSTORE"
•••
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$AV.INGS
~~~-.-.-.·.- .•-·.,_-
o" A~l
COLOR, I& W ·PHOTO
PAPIR &. CHEM
. ISTRY
.
She also has appeared on
numerous tele~ision series ineluding Search, Bonanza, Police .
Woman, and Love American
f:~..c.A··s·H···f·o·r···.·,.
st
OUR CAM.ERAS ARE
INEXPENSIVE, TOO I
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1
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I
CHRISTMAS
Sell your Used
I
Textbooks
K
k
enne 1 8 00 st~re
Dec. 8-21
I
I
I
I
1e
Tuesday, December 7, 1976
Baxter: 'no plans to leave' · ~enate· defeats res~i
(Continued from Page 1)
to seek employment at another
school had "no more truth to
Baxter said he expected to see
equal cuts from all departments. _ them now than when I came here
four years ago. I have no plans to
"I would be very surprised if he
leave Fresno," Baxter said.
(Louis Volpp, vice president for
-He would not be opposed to
academic affairs and in charge of
an open-door policy for students,
the cutbacks) made overvisiting him, but indicated it is
whelming cuts in one area,"
unlikely.
Baxter said. "I look tor a general
cut across-the-board, not in one
"If we felt it would be helpful,
school unless there's a great
we'd
bring it back," Baxter said.
imbalance in numbers."
"We had it in the past, and our
Baxter said he expects a cutpast experience was not very
back between 20 and 24 positions.
satisfactory ... we're open to any
In other action at the conpolicy where it would bring me
ference, Baxter said:
into more contact with the
students." Baxter said students
-The CSUF Association Board
who want to see him should write
of Directors should act "prompa letter instead of phoning.
tly " on the beer situation .
Through Thursday, three of the
-He was not "alarmed" at a
four board members required to
recent survey, showing 50 per
visit the Alcohol Beverage
cent of CSUF students admit to
Control Department had not done
cheating.
so. Until they submit a written
''The poll was not done on a
s ta tement and fingerprints,
scientific basis," he said of the
CSUF is unable to proceed with
poll. "I'm not alarmed unless I
its efforts to obtain a beer-selling
see figures (gathered) on a more
license.
reliable basis."
·
- Rumors of his leaving CSUF
Campus calendar
Tuesday, Dec. 7
Wednesday, Dec. 8
10 a .m.-The Young F armers
will sponsor an appearance of
Santa Claus today and Wednesday until 1 p.m. in the Free·
Speech Area. Persons can have
pictures of themselves and others
taken with Santa for $1.
11 a.m.-The First Annual Ski
Swap will be held in the College
Union Lounge.
Noon-John Caudillo, owner of
Professiona l Medical
Laboratory, will give a business
lecture in the Industrial ~rts
Building , r oom 101.
Noon-A Swine F lu Clinic will
be held on the second floor of the
College Union.
3 p.m.-Ved Vatuk will speak
on "Asian Folklore and Indian
Philosophy" in the College Union,
room 312.
8 p.m.-The CSUF Jazz Band
and Concert Band will play in the
College Union Lounge.
12 p.m.-George M. Koch will
speak on the "Impact of the
Carter Administration on the
Food Industry" in the Residence
Dining Hall, east room.
7 p.m.-A movie titled "The
Man Who Skied Down Everest"
will be shown in the College
Union Lounge.
(Continued from Page 1)
questioned as to why I was a
-Referred a req_uest for higher
"It is extremely improbable ·' voting delegate," he said. Brewer rates of the Child Day Care
that a price change will result noted that he was nearly thrown Center to its AS Finance and
from a resolution opposing price out of the conference because of Budget Committee. The request,
increases,'' his message read. the title confusion.
if approved, would institute in"However, a resolution excreases for full cost users of the
plaining why a 'particular raise
N onetheles,s,
Brewer's center in the Spring semester.
was unnecessary and calling for arguments failed to sway the -The increases would be from the
its retraction or a resolution votes of Paulette Boghosian, current $2. 75 to $3.25 for a half
stigge~ting how the service could senator of the School of day and from the current $5.50 to
be changed to allow for lower Professional Studies, and Alan $6 for a full day.
prices would be much more likely Benzler, proxy for Gary Nelson,
-Accepted the resignation of
to result in the desired price senator-at-large post four.
decrease."
Benzler, who calls himself "a FelixMata, senator of the School
He later stated the resolution, good friend" of Brewer, said he of Humaniti~. Mata becomes the
fourth senator to resign this year.
though asserting the need to
cast his "no" vote on Nelson's
oppose the increases, failed to instructions.
.
-Announced that CSUF will
prove that need by its Jack of . Boghosian felt Brewer gave host the monthly meeting of the
factual information and a insufficient, insignificant reasons California State University and
proposed policy change.
to warrant the title change.
Colleges. Student Presidents
Despite his veto, Nikssarian
In other matters, the senate: Association on Dec. 11-12.
said he did not want the senate to
drop the issue.
In another issue, the senate
narrowly defeated a resolution
which would have changed the
title of College Union (CU) Vice
President to Administrative
Vice President of the Associated
Students.
Approval of the resolution,
number 2-3, required two-thirds
of the 15-member body or 10
votes . The vote was 9-2 in favor of
the resolutions.
Brewer, CU vice president,
spoke on behalf of the resolution,
and said the change would not
affect him , but his successors.
"I'll be out of office by the time
th_is change is adopted," he said
before the vote. " But there's
After college, what will I do? . starting salary, a challenging
confusion a bout this title. People
job, promotion opportunities,
ask me whether I'm the College
That's a question a lot of
and a secure future with a
Union Vice President or the Vice
young people ask themselves
modern Air Force. If you have
President of the College Union
these days.
two academic years remaining,
and how can you be if there's no
But a two-year Air Force find out today about the twoROTC scholarship can help
year
Air
Force
ROTC
President of the College Union
provide the answers. SuccesScholarship Program. It's a
and so on."
sful completion of the program
great way to serve your country
Most universities, he·said, have
gets you an Air Force commisand a great way to help pay for
no ties between their College
sion along with an excellent
your college education.
Union and their Associated
Aerospace studies:
Major Stephen Rowe
Students office. Subsequently, he
Galifornia State University, Fresno 222-6400
noted that CSP:L"'s case has
Air 11-trce INtTt~
caused him some problems.
" At one conference, I was
t;;1fe\\'a\• tea a t;reat ll'ay
IAlfe
••f
.Student banking problems are different.
Their bankers should be, too.
/
8 p.m .-The Chinese Student
Club will hold its last meeting of
the year in the College Union,
room 310.
8:15 p.m.-The play ''.Mrs.
Warren's P rofession" will bE:
shown a t this time each night
through Saturday in the John
Wright Thea tre .
:tt~n,
.
CASH for
CHRISTMAS
Sell your Used
Te xt b o oks
Kennel Booknore
Dec. 8-21
. OXFORD MOTORS
3953 N. ILACKITONI
FIISNO, CALIF.
229..;aa1a
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30
That's why Bank of America has Student Representatives close by at offices near major
college campuses in California. They're always students or recent graduates themselves.
So they know all about student banking problems. And how to solve them.
They know all the ways our College Plan® can help you~ too. ~o why not stop by and
talk things over. Our Student Reps can make your banking easier.
Depend on us. More California colles, students do.
At CSU-Fresno, just ask to see
Michael Slonski
Fashion Fair Branch
BANKOFAMERICA
590 East Shaw Avefme · 488-7763
Bank of America
&SA• Member FDIC
m.
sports
Tuesday, December 7, 1976
•
Bulldogs w,n and lose
It was an up-and-down ' Bulldogs still had to come up with
a clutch basket in the closing
weekend for the CSUF basketball
seconds to secure the win. Ahead
team.
just 70-68, CSUF's Ken Barnes
First the Bulldogs won their
put it away with a bucket with 10
third-straight contest, defeating
seconds· to play.
Boise 74-68 behind the excellent
play of David Wear. Then, the
Barnes finished with 14 points
'Dogs suffered their first loss of and 11 rebounds while teammate
the . season by falling to Idaho Doug Streeter also had 14 points.
State 77-64 Saturday.
The Bulldogs connected on 32 of
The 'Dogs will return home for 67 shots from the field (48 per
a game Thursday against Cal cent) and added 10 of 14 free
State Bakersfield at S: 15 p.m. in throws. Boise made 68 per cent of
Selland Arena.
its shots but lost it at the free
In the win over Boise, Wear, a throw line, hitting on just eight of
6-8 freshman center, hit on eight · 20. The 'Dogs made 23 fouls in the
of 11 from the field and added twc game.
free throws for 18 points. He also
In the Idaho game, the Bengals
excelled under the boards, held a massive rebounding edge
pulling down .13 rebounds.
(63-28). They had the lead
Despite Wear's effort, the throughout the foul-plagued
TRY THE KENNEL BOOKSTORE
. FOR CHRISTMAS GIFTS
contest. CSUF was called for 31
fouls while Idaho had 29 infractions.
The Bulldogs made .44 per cent
of their. field goal tries and bit on
20 of 30 free throws. The Bengals
hit 40 per cent from the floor and
21 of 33 from the foul line.
Barnes paced CSUF with 16
points while Streeter added 10.
Parker wins.
Except for Bob Parker, it was a
dismal weekend for the CSUF
wrestling team.
Parker, a 168-pounder, took a
victory in a dual meet against UC
Berkeley Friday and came back
with a second place in the Hugh
Mumby Tournament Saturday to .
be the team's only bright spot.
Parker's win was the only
victory against Cal as the
Bulldogs lost 39-4. And his second
place )lelped the Bulldogs forget
a sixth-place team finish in the
tourney.
take
consolation title
Women
SAN LUIS OBISPO-Getting
impressive play from Cindy
Addicott in the finals, the CSUF
women's basketball team won
consolation honors in the Cal Poly
Invitational Tournament.
Addicott poured in 19 points
and grabbed eight rebounds to
lead the team past Hayward 66-53
Saturday night.
Fresno lost to UC Santa Barbara 49-24 in the first round._
In the game against UCSB,
Fresno trailed 21-12 at halftime
but was outscored 28-7 in the
second half.
-
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, We'~e located just acro~s from St. John's Cathedral, downtown Fresno.
OVER 50 YEARS EXPERIENCE AND 60 CALI FORNI A OFFICES!
White: Shrine-bound
Becoming the first CSUF
player so honored in 14
years, Del White has been
named to play iri the EastWest Football Classic Jan.
2 in Stanford Stadium.
White, a 6-3, 210
linebacker
for
the
Bulldogs, is the first
Bulldog to be named since
J .R. Williams was chosen
in 1962:
"We feel he is a very able
addition to our (West)
team's set of linebackers,"
said Lynn Wald, who heads
the selection committee for
the West squad.
"We have a lot of confidence he'll do well, based
on my personal observations and the reports
from other scouts who've
been checking him out."
White is a senior and a
two-yf'ar letterman for
CSUF. 'Dog head coach
Jim Sweeney said before
the season that "White has
good size and surprising
speed at the linebacker
position (arid) he has good
football sense."
That size, speed and
sense combined to give
White one of the most
prestigious honors in
college football. It may
also lead to a pro football
career. There will be
dozens of National Football
League scouts in attendance, loo~ing over the
players for future draft
picks. Last year, 58 of the
60 players in the Shrine
game were drafted by pro
clubs.
The first CSUF player to
go to the game was Jack
Mulkey, who got the call in
1941.
LA vaz
I
>
DE AZTLAN
,I
TlJESI).'\¥. -NOVEMBER 23, 1976
LXXXl-21
A special edition of THE COLLEGIAN, California State University, Fresno
Fall 1976 for Raza.
let down?
n========================;:==============1J
i QUE VIVA LA CAUSA
VIV A -LA RAZA!
Starting next semester this art of the Mayan G.od of Rebirth
Kukulcan will appear on the banner of each edition ot La Voz de Atzlan.
Legend has it that Kukulcan is actually Quetzalcoatl, a Toltec god.
When Quetzalcoatl was forced to leave the tribe, in the city of
Tenochtitlan (now Mexico City) he left word saying he would rE>turn.
Shortly after in Mayan History we find tne arrival of Kukulcan who
was worshiped as a God. History tells us that Kukulcan was actually
Quetzalcoatl in new form.
The art work was reproduced by La Voz staff member, Arturo
O'Campo.
La Voz De Aztlan is introducing this concept as a message to La
Gente, that perhaps change must come to us: a rebirth of our own. We
must assert ourselves and be active again on this racist campLlS of
higher education. We hope that we will all come back next year with
an approach such as that of Kukulcan.
Political alterna·tives .
•
•
--;;;...c
...
Q,I
C:
0
u
)(
Cl)
Ill
0
0
~
a..
•
•
or.
• •
Trying to give
Raza's side
• • •
What does it take?
Tuesday' December 7, 19'6
2-THE COLLEGIAN
Bakke to
old
times?
UC action may bring end of speciq/
admissions: shaft for minorities
The Univenity of California
will appeal to the U.S. SUpreme
Court a
lower-court ruling
a1ain1t its medical schooJ's
special admiulons procram for
members of racial minority
IJ'OUPS• the Chronicle of Higher
Education reported lut week.
The Chronicle re~rted~ the
Supreme Court which ordered the
university to let Bakkf in.
Now the UC system is contelting the decision in what the
supporters of special admissions
program feel is actually an attempt to undermine m~ties.
However, the vote to appeal the
lower court ruling was "near
unanimous," a spokesman said.
The university expects a
decision by February on whether
the appeal will be gr~ted.
f
t
.late,. COG' s
causecrisis
.
·for··students .- cAJJ~"~!p;-r
· ~10 meetinp prior to . tbe UC Regents vote to go to the US
.
'
Supreme Court, civil rigbts
university'1 governing Board
made the decision in a cloeed representatives told the regents
door seaioo, despite the ob- that the special minority-group
admissions
program
that
jections of civil rilbta groups.
rejected Bakke WU weak case
The case involves Allan Bakke,
A large number of CSUF
tt:,,,
a wlllte applicant to the for a crucial test for affirmative students were faced with
California medical school at action.
somewhat of a crisis when they
Davis who was not accepted. He
found out that · their College
The university has said Bakke
claimed he was the victim of
Opportunity. Grants were late.
would
have
been
admitted
had
he
discrimination because he felt he
The near-fiasco began in the
come from a minority group.
was more qualified than 16 per
final weeks of August, students
Civil
rilltts
groups
contend
that
cent of the accepted students
if the casl is lost, the Supreme who had been notified they would
from minority groups.
Court would strike down as receive financial aid went to pick
''reverse discrimination'' special up their monthly checks only to 1
programs for minority groups all hear the checks weren't in yetPlaces for those students were
that they would not be ir. !•)T a few
over the country.
reserved under a special adThe Chronicle reported that weeks.
missions
program
for
Those few weeks tu:..rned into .
because the regents met in closed
economically disadvantaged
session, there ~as no public in- months, until the beginning of
blacks and Chicanos.
dication of their reaction to the November. What happened? It
He challenged the decision and
civil rights · group's pleas. seems that technology is the lone
eventually went to the California
culprit of the tardiness, according t(J Financial Aids
Director Joe Houston.
■
"The problem not in our offices," he ~xplaiiled. "The hold-·
up was m the Student Aid
Com,mission."
by Angie Rios
The Student Aid Commission's
office is located in Sacramento,
Yesterday's deadline to file for
along with the program's computer-the root of the whole upcoming municipal elections is
coupled with steps by the Fresno
In Nuclear Energy, Business Administration Naval
problem.
Aviation, Shipboard Operations, Aviation Mainten•
Referring to students' com- chapter of Mexican American
ance. Ship Design, All Engineering Fields.
. plaints that the Financial Aids Political Association (MAPA)
office should be held responsible, will be playing a major role this
~ouston said "We have zero input year.
"This year MAPA is interested
mto the COG's. Our offices are no
more than a verifying agent: we in identifying candidates interested in running for office "
certify that the student is
The Navy offers 14 different Officu Scholarship
said Manuel Perez, president ~f
enrolled
in
CSUF,
and
that
he
has
Programs.
·
·
MAPA.
the required number of units.
In the past, MAPA and the
"Our purpose here is to serve
Mexican community
have
the students, but all we can do is
contributed
to
the
successful
keep calling the Sacramento
candidacies of . some elected
offices to find out if the new
The chaUenge of people management plus
officials.
checks are ready yet."
.~8$p0!,sibility for millions of dollars worth of
"Primarily we are concerned
With this track record, it's
equipment is a .natural way of life to a new officer.
in getting Chicanos to accept
probably easy to guess how
these positions," said Perez. "If
December's checks will fare .
none are available, we will
Students may also take a hand
possibly support those candidates
in matters by writing a grievance
that best represent our views."
to
California
Student
Aid
ComGraduate level training is pro~ided in most programs.
MAP A has not made any
mission,
1415
5th
St.,
• Advanced degrees in 26 different fields can be earned'
committment
to any individual
Sacramento, CA., 95814. Ph. (916)
a~ the Navy's post graduate school.
seeking the positions.
322-2800.
Opportunities for earning advanced degrees from major
colleges and u~~versities are available also.
a
i
:Af't6.~
Stir·: . ·
=====-=-=========================================---•
MAPA to participate
In mu·nicipal elections
MANAGEMENT
DPPDRTUNITIES
SCHDLFIRSHIPS
CHFILLENCiE
.EDUCATION
ADVANTAGES ·
Annual 30 days paid vacation, free medical and dental
care, unlimited sick leave at full pay. space available
no cost travel, guaranteed pay raises at least every
two years.starting salaries f9., 5-00-13., 000.
·N eed Cash for
CHRISTMAS ?•
We are buying used textbooks for spring
semester. Half price for those books we need.
·Dates and times at buyback are listed below:
MEDICAL OPPORTUNITIES
Openings for PHYSICIANS: All specialti .
lo
.
. es,
f
cation 3uaranteed, startinc sAln~ies
~33-40,000, malpractice insuranc e provided.
· .NAVY OFFICER PRO&RAMS
REPRESENTATIVE
AT
Dec. 8-1 0
Dec. 1 l
Dec. 13-16
Dec. 17
Dec. 20-21
Dec. 22
THE .: PlILTON HOTEL ON
G,?,B,
ROOM 209
DECEMBER
NAVY
Kennel
Bookstore
8 a.m. - 4:30 p.m.
9 a.m. -12:30 p.m.
8 a.m. - 6:30 p.m.
8 a.m. - 4:30 p.m.
8 a.m. - · 6:30 p.m.
· 9 a.m. - 2:00 p.m.
"We are interested in supporting a candidate that will
win," said Perez. However, he
noted that the final decisions
would be left to the MAP A
membership.
"MAP A can play an extreme
part in the elections, in
developing a political base for the
Chicano community," said
Perez.
Perez added that Chicanos are
recognizing MAPA's role and are
taking great consideration in it as
a community organization.
MAP A is planning a meeting
for Dec. 13, at 7:30 p.m. at the
Pinedale Community Center.
"The purpose of the meeting is
to have a planning session which
will involve organizations interested in formulating an issues
conference to be held in
January," said Perez.
More information wiU be
available at the meeting. Anyone
interested is encouraged to come
to the meeting.
Editor
Angie Rios
Asst. Editor Tomas Uribes
Staff
Cindy Cabrera .
Miguel
Contreras,
Margaret Esparza, Anna
Noriega, Arturo Ocampo.
Celia
Ponce,
Pedro
Ramirez, Marta Uribes.
Contr.ibutors
Photographer
treras
GaryTell~z
Felix Con-
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Dept. CF, ·B ox 4490,
B~rkeley, CA 94704
esday, December 7 , 1976
THE COLLEGIAN-3
U survey; Slapped
in the face again?
UFW let_tuce on campus?
which was then investigating the
Last week, committee member
cafeteria's practice of using Sandy Ramirez said the comRaza ... get the latest:
UFW-label lettuce. A 1972 student mittee planned to look into the
Cesar Chavez' appearance and the rift over it may have contributed
senate resolution asked the food matter at their meeting Wed"minority programming" receiving the highest percentage of
services to provide UFW lettuce nesday (tommorrow) night.
when "economically feasible."
tudents desiring a decrease in the recent College Union survey•
Committee chairman Rosendo
The committee charged the Pena said no specific action was
This was the opinion offered by CU Program Director Gary
cafeteria was not abiding by this planned_as of Mondayother than
. ongiovanni to La Voz upon inquiry of the survey.
resolution but negotiations with discussion. He said no major
In the Collegian article last week, the results were printed stating
Finlay resolved the matter when efforts had been taken on it yet
at 37 pet cent of those polled were minorities.
he agreed to follow the students this semester because the
Despite this, the Collegian reported 16 per cent felt "minority
wishes. The terms agreed upon committee had devoted most of
programming'' should be decreased.
~--· . . ,
were to have a sign 1>9sted in the -its time the Prop. 14 campaign.
The staff reporter who wrote the article for the Collegian· f~iled to
cafeteria when unio1_1 iettuce was
Committee advisors Lea
'ndicate that, at the·same time, there was also an indication for in- ·
being served 1 ·_
Ybarra and Jorge Corralejo said
crease of the "minority programming" of 28.1 per cent.
··
they felt it was not a priority
A present member of the Programming Committee, felt that it was ·
issue at this time but that it was
ot a good survey, that it was too vague, and that it should have been
important to follow it through as
ore in-depth.
a -matter of principle since an
agreement was made last year.
Perhaps this was the intent of the maker of the survey, perhaps that
James Baloian, of the Baloian
erson was showing a bit of racism, something this institution is very
Produce Co., one of CSUF's two
M1ell known for . If you looked at the survey, you would have noticed
produce brokers, said he has
A $5,000 grant available for · according to Ernesto Palomino,
that questions 1-4 pertained mostly to the publicity given to College
been sending UFW-packed letChicana artistas is currently president of Brocha, which is an
Union. When it came to question 5, it states that bearing in mind of
tuce shipped by Noroian Farms
available through La Broche Del organization of Chicano artists.
limited resources, what CU program would you like to see increased.
"We are, specifying that the for the past five weeks.
Valle.
decreased or stay the same? The survey then proceeds to list items
He said he also thought the
The money, is ear-marked for a
money be used by Chicanas
issue
was dead because the
of which the majority are line items in the programming budget, with
mural to be painted by Chicanas
because we wa·nt women to get
'' ALRB matter had been setthe exception of outdoors adventure and of course " minority
here in the valley: A labor camp
involved," said Palomino, "We
tled." He said he will probably be
in Parlier has been chosen as the
programming .''
want to give Chicanas some
sending
UFW-lettuce through site
for
the
mural
according
to
What we assert is that it serves less justice to lump any ethnic
recognition ." He also pointed out
December. For the future, he
Ernesto Palomino, president of
oriented activities into one category. After witnessing recent
that most of La Brocha 's
said students could be assured of
Brocha, which is an organization
members are men.
narrowminded attitudes, it's not difficult to assume some people
rec~iving UFW picked lettuce ''90
of
Chicano
artists
Vetonica Macias and Tomasa
would react "negatively" to anything carrying the label "minority."
per cent of the time if this is the
What did CU mean by "minority programming?"
The money, from the California Cruz, of Fresno, are involved preference."
enlisting· interested
Perhaps the survey was conducted to undermine minorities in
Arts Council, is ear•markecf • with
Matty Matoian, of OK PJ"oduce,
Chicanas
to participate in the
for
a
mural
to
be
painted
by
general. One wouldn't really need to stop and think very hard that if
said
"We've always done the best
Chicanas here in the valley. A mural-painting project.
the Program Director felt that maybe the Chavez appearance caused
we can to obtain UFW lettuce. We
"We will hold an art workshop
labor camp in Parlier has been
buy the best quality -at the best
negative reaction among those polled towards minority programsometime in early January," price."
chosen
as
the
site
for
the
mural
ming, than it would also be a sign that the rest of the 80.8 per cent
said Macia s . "We hope to
Finlay said the sign used last
might have felt the same way.
organize a group of women inyear "disappeared" but he would
terested in promoting cultural
obtain ar;iother by Wednesday.
It should not be said the College Union was the only one to show
interest in the valley."
Specific time and place in·Any Chicana interested may
their " true colors." It is easy for anyone who read the Collegian ·
formation for Wednesda y's
contact Veronica Macias at 264- meeting, UFW Support Comarticle, (11-30-76) , to see what was hinted in stating that while 16.9 per
0065 or Tomasa Cruz at 487-1021. mittee, may be obtained by
cent of the total polled wanted the decrease, 37 per cent of those polled
Chicana poets and writers are phoning .La Raza Studies, 487were of minority background. Are we being told minorities themAngie Cisneros, La Raza
.
Studies secretary, has been also encouraged to inquire.
selves do not want any type of minority programming? It was very
2848
appointed by Governor Brown to ~-IIDIIDIIIIIUIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIDIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII'!
misleading in terms of showing the wrong side of any story.
serve on the 9th District Medical
Quality Review Committee
Think about it Raza ...among many other low blows against us this
Commission.
year, we get attacked because of our political stands, Cesar is treated
The Commission deals with
downright indignantly, La Raza Studies is undergoing cuts, La Voz is
health and medical services
slowly fading ... and now another slap.
delivered by different variables
WHY ARE WE ALLOWING THIS????
in the valley.
The cafeteria will resume its
efforts Wednesday to publicize
the serving of lettuce picked by
the United Farm Workers.
Following up reports ·;that the
MEChA campus support committee of the UFW planned to
investigate the matter, La Voz
learned from Food Services
Manager Richard Finlay that--he
would try to get the UFW sign
back into use. '
The action actually stems from
an agreement made last Spring .
by Finlay and the committee ·
to
$5i000. grdnt Ovailable
- for Chicana m·uralists
LRS sec. on
sta te comm .
i
NOW OPEN!
i
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'BUY AND SELL
new and old comic books
I COMICDEN
Downtown Clovis
Chicanos may be affected I 635 5th
•
·
I
by possible teacher strike
Street
Phone 299-1590
UWIIIUIUIIDIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIDIIIRll~I-
By
by Pete Ramirez
By a wide margin teachers of
the Fresno Unifjed School
District have voted to strike. The
·problem basically centers around
the salaries of teachers.
Jose Luis Barraza, president of
Associacion Educativa de Padres
Mexicanos, says they will more
than likely take a neutral stand.
The reason he says is for the
future welfare of the group, as a
division could occur.
Chicano students in general,
Barraza says, will definitely be
effected by the strike. As it is,
Chicanos are given a poor
education and with second rate
teachers
instructing
the -
CASH for·
CHRISTMAS
Sell your Used
Textbooks
Ke :' n el -B ookstore
Dec. 8-21
Chicanos, they're education may
come to a stand still.
It won't be that bad for
elementary students; says
Barraza, ''because they are
young and most likely the strike
will be over by the time they are
promoted to the next level." Who
we are concerned with is the
Chicano who is going to graduate,
and land a college career. The
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EXCITING THINGS ARE HAPPENING
individual most likely will not I
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receive the best of education.
Barraza says that it is a proven I
fact that Chicanos are given less . I
attention in the classroom I
compared to the Anglo student. I
He says that if the strike does I
,I
occur, it will be a success for
Chicanos in general becaus, lt I
••
insures less classroom . sae and !1
the affirmative action will hire
I
more Chicano teachers.
•I
o,scour:1ces
Navy Bell Bottom _Pants
$8.95 and up
Jackets $9.95 and _up.
Coveralls and Shopcoats
$3.95 · and up
Book Packs 98c a·lid up
WAR SURPLUS
.DEPOT
Army
·
He_
a dquorters for
.· q_n·d Navy Clothingl
602 Broadway at Ventura:
✓
.
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AT THE ACADEMY OF ART COLLEGE.
PAINTING!
Exhibit your talent by
learning to paint and draw
from the ground up. Let
our professional instructors
show you how...
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. : To receive detailed information, fill out the bta·nk spaces below, i
1 tear out the complete ad and mail to the office of the Registrar: I
: N a m e - - - - - - - - - - - ' - - - - - - - -·:
: Address----'--------------- :
I College attending _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ :
I Number of semesters completed _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ I
1
• ACADEMY OF ART COLLEGE
·------
:
1 625 Sutter Street, San Francisco, CA 94102, 415/673-4200 1
I
·• • • • • • • • • • • • • ~ • • • • • • • ~
. ..
.
.
.
Edticational awareness seen as
goal of Chicano .Youth Confab
participate in the all-day conference for next month.
Workshops covering a variety
To make Chicano high school
of topics ranging from E.O.P. to
1tudents aware of the opproblems in the barrio will be
portunities--..of entering college
held in the morning. At lunch,
and its benefits is one of the main
free food will be provided along
objectives of the fourth annual
with entertainment by CSUF's
Chicano Youth Conference ·
Comparsa, Los Dan~ntes de
scheduled for Jan. 15 on the
Aztlan, and Te1tro Espll'ito.
CSUE campus.
Career workshops in the fields
According to 1976-77 C.Y.C ..
of Law, Business, Health,
Chairperson David Gomez, the ·
Engineering, Education, and
conference is also intended to
others will be conducted in the
"increase Chicano high school
afternoon.
students awareness of the inThe deans of each of the schools
volvement of Chicano students on
on campus will also be on hand to
campus and as well as to expose
answer any questions.Exhibits
the racism and oppression of
representing job opportunities,
society against Chicanos."
.
as welJ as Junior College and
Over 1,000 Chicano high school
Colejio de La Tierra represenstudents from all parts of the San
tatives, will be included.
Joaquin Valley are expected to
by Cella Ponce
Telephone
180 Shaw Ave.
Clovis, Ca. 93612
(209) 298-7557
Learn to Ski program ·
a complete ski 'p rogram
6 Sundays .
16, 23, 30 Feb. 6, 13 $115.00
BUS TRANSPORTATION (Tr_ansportation
only $6.50 , 6- weeks $39.00)
Jan. 9,
Lake Tahoe Hyatt Lodge Jan. 6,7, 8,
3 nights 3 day lift ticket . Plane
transportation Total cost $142.00
Snowbird Lodge
Feb. 12-19
Utah, Snowbird
7 nights
7 day lift ticket
Total cost $182.00
''The comedy album
of the year/"
All of those incredible
''SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE" ·
features, including special
guest appearances.
It will be held in the Parlier
Community Center, free of
charge, with doors opening at 7
p.m. and the performance at 7:30
p.m.
How long has it been since you
heard Castillan Spanish?Or,
when was the last time you heard
Spanish spoken in the "singsong" way of the Indians of
Mexico?
Opportunities to hear Spanish
spoken in the old ways of Mexico
here in Aztlan are very few. One
of those few chances is presenting itself in Parlier next week.
From Dec. 12-18, El Teatro
Barrio Libre de Parlier will
present the dramatic play, Las
Cuatro Pariciones de la Virgen
del Tepeyac.
$3,000.
According to a Teatro
The Luna Club of Sanger I Del
spokesman, the play, which will
Rey is also sponsoring a funbe conducted in both Castillan
dr aiser shopping spree now
Spanish and the "sing-song"
underway. Eighty per cent of the
dialect de los indios, is about the
club's proceeds is intended for
appearance of La Virgen and
conference expenses.
problems Juan Diego, who saw
Raffle tickets are being sold for
her, experienced in trying to
50 cents each and may be obconvince ot.hers ot his m1racu1ous
tained from Luna club members.
vision.
Other financial aid has also been
The play will be presented all
r~ceived from the community.
next week, beginning Sunday, in
Asked if he felt there would be . honor of el Dia de la Virgen de
any problems due to :_:•~ conGuadalupe (Dec. 12).
ference being he lei during
semester break, Gome-: replied,
"Not as far .as the high school
students are concerned, but a lot
of help will be needed for making
signs, registering students,
reserving ~he rooms in the
college l'Hion and serving as
guides.
If anyone is interested in
helping out, attend the C.Y.C.
meeting .tonight in the College
by Arturo Ocampo
Union at 6: 30 or leave a message
in the mailbox which is located in
"The camera can be your
La Raza Studies.
pencil, it has the ability to make
you see the world for what it is,"
said Ben Garza, a member of the
Chicano Media Association,
(CMA), and author of the book
Cine Aztlan.
The Chicano Media Association
:>egan as a group of professional
Chicano journalists in Fresno.
The Student Movement for Law Under the guidance of Al Reyes,
and Justice will hold its last Channel 30 T. V. reporter, CMA
meeting for this semester, originated a monthly Chicano
tomorrow at ·2:10 p.m. in room newsletter last summer.
220, San Ramon 4.
Recently La Brocha Del Valle,
For more information contact a group of Chicano artists, and
Cindy Cabrera at La Raza the CMA have joined forces with
Studies, 487-2848.
a possible merger in the near
future,, according to Garza. "We
look upon each other as a unit of
collective power: that all media
is more powerful than one media
alone,!' said Garza.
In November the Fresno
Housing Authority gave the CMA
and La Brocha the vacated Boys
Club building on Hamilton Street
east of Cedar Avenue. In return
the Chicano group must provide a
DanAykroyd
service in the community.
John Belushi
The CMA and La Brocha will be
Chevy Chase
using the building as their office
Chicana disco
to be held Fri
Law club
meets Wed.
Jane Curtin
Garrett Morris
LaraineN~n
Gilda Radner
of
of the Trailer of the Film of
and the
,:-<:,,:>;>::;:~,'I~Y'' <':'w·:·=~z,l·'•·····.··,:.::\
MONTY PYTHON & THE HOLY GRAIL
Original Soundtrack Recording
AL 4050
Las Adelitas and the Chicano
Business Student Association is
sponsoring the first "Discolandia
Chicana," disco dance this
Friday, Dec. 10, from 8 p.m. to 1
a.m.
Donation is $1.
For the past several weeks,
candidates for the Adelitas
Consentido have been selling
tickets. The winner will be announced during the dance.
Proceeds from the dance are
intended for a Christmas Party
for Calwa elementary school
children.
Club members with tickets and
money are instructed to return
them by Thursday, Dec. 9, to
Valentina Sepulvecla either at the
EOP Office or La Raza Studies.
For any other information call
226-0851.
C.M.A., Brocha
media center
••• And MONTY PYTHON's Most
Outrageous Album!
The Album the Soundtrack
HOLY GRAIL
Anuncios
'La Virgen' to
play iry Parlier
Concluding the day's program
will be a dance featuring,
Chevere.
Trying to provide more information relevant to Chicanos
today, other than those that are
just school oriented, has increased the amount of workshops
which will be offered at this
year's conference, Go~ez s~id.
Problems in the barrio, which
will deal with Chicano gangs, and
student rights in the educational
system will be two of the additional workshops.
The major financing of this
year's conference will be
provided by two agencies under
the Manpower Commission: the
Youth Manpower Service and
Economics Opportunity Commission, which together allocated
It's more fun than a barrel
of dead monkeys!
MONTY PYTHON
Tuesday, December 7,
1976
Opportunity unlimited.
Any one who car es _
~'bout good health wi II
· want this product.
People who care about
people can sell this
product. NEO-LIFE Co.
of America. Call collect
(209) 383-2649
(209) 226-847 4
and as a center to sponsor
workshops and classes on media
for the community. Among the
classes to be offered include,
photography, journalism, art and
hopefully film presentations, of
CMA and La Brocha 's joint efforts.
· ''Basically, the reason the CMA
and La Brocha came together
was because we had something
very much in common : Commuunication," said Al Reyes.
La Brocha has been in
existence for two years. They
consist of muralists, graphics,
silk screeners, etc., most of
whom are teaching art at different colleges and schools.
The CMA members consist
primarily
of
reporters,
cameramen, and broadcasters.
Along with La Brocha, the CMA
has expanded its newsletter into
a bilingual newspaper with its
first edition due by Christmas.
"There are many people who
are willing to help the Chicano in
areas of agriculture, science, and
education but not in media.
Media is too powerful, it affects
too
many people politically,
economically
and
educationally," said Garza.
If they ( the Anglo), will not hire
or place the Chicano in those
places of power in media (there is
no doubt that there are many
qualified Chicanos in the field of
media), then we must create our
own positions, which the center
will hopefully help bring about,"
said Garza.
"For this to come about the
community has to become involved and lend its support in our
efforts.
.
On Arista Records
6.:
AVJµLABLEAT ~LBECORDSTORES
TRY· THE KENNEL BOOKSTORE
FOR CHRISTMAS GIFTS.
-
....
THE COLLEGIAN
LXXXI-25
l\rlli.i'li ; ·.· ·
.
CALIFORNIA STATE UNIVERSITY. FRESNO
IIMi4iH .
;..,..-.~:::,.~-
TUESDAY. DECEMBER ~ • 19'16
Faculty first .
Baxter wants tenure ·review
by Jeff Evans
Staff Reporter
CSUF President Norman
Baxter believes all tenured
faculty should be · evaluated
regardless -0f the faculty member's length of employment with
the university.
In a press conference Friday,
Baxter said he would approve of
an evaluation of administrators
only after post-tenured faculty
are reviewed.
"It's much more important in
terms of the dollars involved and
the time involved to review a 40year faculty member," Baxter
said. "There's much more
benefit for the taxpayers and
students.
"The product there is much
more important than administrators, whose terms are
much, ·much shorter."
Baxter said if administrators
were evaluated, he would seek
imput from other groups as well
as faculty.
"I don't think it should be
faculty only evaluating administrators," he said. "There
ought to be other administrators
evaluating administrators. and
there ought to be some student
evaluation. If I could take one
and not the other, then I would
obviously take the post-tenured
review of faculty."
Later, Baxter indicated he
would·. favor a renewal of the
controversial NCAA contract
when it expires in 1978. The
current contract guarantees
intercollegiate athletics 33 per
cent of the Associated Student
budget each year.
"I favor a long-term approach
that saves a lot of year-to-year
bickering and gives some continuity to athleti~s and other IRA .
(Instructionly Related Activities)," Baxter said.
But the CSUF president was
unclear on whether he favored
contracts in other IRA programs.
Baxter did say· he would like to
see appropriation's for these
programs.
When asked about the expected
layoffs of part-time faculty,
· (Continued on Page 3, Col. 1)
Buckley likes Carter, fears 'left'
by Linda Brown
Staff Reporter
CHRISTMAS SEASON MAY be a time for cheer, but not for this
Santa who showed up in the Free Speech Area Monday and was
virtually ignored. His appearance was sponsored by the CSUF
Young Farmers who will be charging $1 to persons wishing to
pose with Santa. The offe~ will last today and tomorrow from 10
a.m.-1 p.m. (Photo by Scott Linnett.)
Senate fails override
on food resolution
by Jon Kawamoto
Staff Reporter
The Associated Student (AS)
Senate, which Nov . 19 passed a
vetoed resolution opposing the
recent campus food price increases, Friday afternoon chose
not to override the decision of AS
President David Nikssarian.
Nikssarian, who Nov. 29 made
the resolution his third veto of the
year, recommended that the
senate refer the issue to its AS
Public Affairs Committee. The
senate agreed.
The senate's most recent
s~nce constitutes a complete
Swine Flu shots
set Wednesday
A Swine Flu Shot Clinic
will be held Wednesday
from noon until 2 p.m. in
the College Union Lounge,
second floor.
Those wishing to receive
the shot should enter the
east side of the building.
The free clinic is part of a
nationwide
innoculation
pro.gram
aimed
at
preventing a possible
outbreak of swine flu.
Anne Edwards, chief
nur~·:- of the CSUF Health
Center, warns that persons
who have an allergic
reaction to egg yolks
should avoid the shot.
turnabout from its earlier approval of resolution 2-5.
In that resolution, the senate
noted the following reasons for its
decision: "seemingly" unimproved quality of foods and
beverages since the Nov. 8 price
increase; no change in quantities
served; and the second price
increase in beverages during the
semester.
The resolution and discussion
during the Nov. 19 meeting
stemmed from the price hike by
the CSUF Food Services Advisory Committee.
According to an article in the ·
Nov. 4 issue of The Collegian, the
five cents across-the-board increase was instituted to help
offset an estimated $45,000 loss in
food services.
At the beginning of the Fall
semester. beverage prices were
increased five cents as part of a
budgetary goal of the CSUF
Association Board of Directors,
according to Rick Finlay, administrator of food services.
Ironically, Finlay said at the
time that the goal was to provide
students with the lowest possible
food costs.
But since the recent price hike,
the cost of a small drink has risen
from 15 cents to 25 cents, a 67 per
cent increase from the start of
the semester.
In
his
veto
message,
Nikssarian stated two reasons for
his decision: the lac.k of constructive criticism
in the
resolution; and the senate's
unfamiliarity on the issue.
.
(Continued on Page 3, Col. 3)
President-elect Jimmy Carter
strength's will be tremendous
four years from now if he doesn't
"go jumping off to the left," said
noted conservative William F.
Buckley, Jr. at a recent press
conference in Fresno,
The press conference was held
following Buckley's appearance
at CSUF. The nationally famous
columnist was on campus to
fulfill a speaking engagement he
postponed last year.
Buckley told the local press
that he liked 9arter.
"I don't know that he is moved
by any hard political convictions,
but perhaps that is good," said
the Republican Buckley.
When asked why Ford lost,
Buckley said anytime you lose as
narrowly as Ford did, you can
point to anything.
Buckley spoke optimistically
about ' the future of the
Republican Party. He pointed out
that the majority of the 18-21
year-olds voted for Ford in the
_recent election · and also a
majority
of
the college
graduates.
"I think there is a move to
rejec't all the old endearments of
the populists like Hubert Humphrey." he said.
But Buckley also said that
there is a slight possibility of the
American government becoming
"mechanized," a situation where
.one political party always wins.
.'Fritz' set to return
by Dianne Solis
Everything from a sexy
animated cartoon about a cat
named "Fritz" to ~ drama about
a man called "Horse" will be
included in the CSUF Spring
semester film series.
Along with "The 9 Lives of
Fritz the Cat" and "A Man Called
Horse," the College Union
Program Committee plans to
show "Breakout," "Fist of
Fury," and "Trial of Billy Jack."
At Monday's meeting the
committee also chose: '~2001:
Space Odessey," "Sherlock
Holmes' Smarter Brother,"
"Lady Sings the Blues," "Funny
Lady," "Alice's Restaurant" and
"African Queen."
Committee chairman John
Adams said, "We've been losing
our shorts with this semester's
film series."
According to recent figures, the
films have lost ,about $400 this
semester.
In hopes of cutting losses next
semester, a $5 season pass to the
12-film series was suggested. The
pass would be sold the first two
weeks of the Spring semester and
would be good for any show, the
committee said.
Students could save $1 by
buying the season pass instead of
paying 50 cents to see each film.
The feasibility of this plan will be
examined before any final
proposal is offered, said Gary
Bongiovannj, program director.
In other action, the committee
allotted $300 of a $600 CSUF Jazz
Band request for a concert by two
guest artists in the Spring
semester. However. the full
request was not granted because
of the $400 loss in film revenue.
The committee also considered
a Russian rock group, "Sasha
and Yuri,'' as possible entertainment for next semester.
This group of Russi~n Jews are
asking $400, said Bongiovanni.
In
evaluating
latest
programming, the committee
termed last week's Craft's
Bazaar a "roaring success." Last
Friday's movie "Love and
Death" lost $155.
But the speech by William
Buckley raised $168 by charging
non-students a $3 admission.
Despite this, Adams said he felt
many students couldn't understand Buckley's immense
vocabulary or hear his soft voice.
"Next time I'll bring a dictionary," quipped Jay Sepulveda,
committee member.
_ He attributed the current
Democratic majority in Congress
to many factors, including the
huge black vote and the present
"stink" from the Republican
·label.
Buckley said that currently the
Jeadership of the Republican
Party is up inr grabs.
"My own feeling is that Ronald
Reagan is the most popular living
Republican," he said. "People
think of him as someone who is
genuinely -enthusiastic about the
Republican Party."
Carter named
new announcer
Jeff Carter, who once
was the ballpark announcer for the San
Francisco Giants
at
Candlestick Park, has
accepted the position as
announcer
of
the
remaining
CSUF
basketball games.
In making the announcement Monday,
CSUF athletic Director
Gene Bourdet said, "We
are happy to have a man of
Jeff's background join our
home basketball games."
Carter's background
started in 1948 with the
American
Broadcasting
Company where he served
in the news and sports
departments and hosted a
music program.
,. In addition, he has done
public address work for the
University of San Francisco, the Golden State
Warriors basketball team
and the San Francisco
Seals hockey team, now
called the Cleveland
Barons.
Carter, who moved to
California in 1955, has also
worked on two Bay Area
television stations. He is
currently employed at
McLaughlin Distributing
Co.
_.....
Tuesday, December 7, 1976
i-THE COL~GIAN -
fditoriaf
-Letters to the editor----
Honesty needed
A· humiliating and g·laring challenge .
It is high time for CSUF President Norman Baxter to shed his cloak
Editor:
of virtual anonymity and bring himself and his dealings into the open.
After six and one half years as president of this university, Baxter
The Quran was revealed 1400
has earned himself the reputation of a person who acts in the dark, far
years ago at Mecca and Medine.
from the light of public scrutiny.
The Arabs used to worship idols
His name is known among most students, but that is where the
of which the most important ones
familiarity ends. A mention of his name among many faculty
were enshrined in the Kaaba. The
members brings stories and rumors about Baxter's latest
Arabs lived a simple life, though
shenanigans and criticism over his latest assault on academic
it was savage in many aspects
freedom.
such as the exposure of chUdren
Not that the criticism is unearned.
because of poverty.
Since assuming the presidency here, Baxter has been directly
They were proud of their
responsible for a number of lawsuits brought against the university by
language and justifiably so since
professors who _charged they were illegally fired.
Arabic is a very rich and
These lawsuits have resulted in the awarding of several thousands
sophisticated language. Poets
of dollars in damages to those professors, not to mention the untold
and orators were read and
thousands of dollars taxpayers unwittingly pay state attorneys who
learned by rote and annual
were forced to defend the university.
poetry competitions were held
Baxter's most recent victim was Chester Cole, who was removed
at a place called Sup Ukadh. Thus
from the geography department chairmanship in June, 1975.
the Arabs became past masters
A report which details Baxter's actions during that affair was
at the art of literary competition.
recently ordered destroyed by the Executive Committee of the
The Quran was a challenge,
Academic Senate. It was a terrible decision. So much could have been
challenging them to produce a
learned.
similar Quran.
When Baxter is asked to explain his decision to remove Cole, he
(Say: If the whole of mankind
says that it "is a personnel m-tter and ·t is my policy not to discuss
and Jinn were to gather together
personnel matters."
to produce the kind of this Quran
But othersllave given some insight into the matter. Some say Cole
they could not produce the like
often opposed Baxter during Academic Senate meetings and that he
therefore even though they
was often a thorn in Baxter's side. Cole also is a member of the United
collaborated with each other.)
Professors of california (UPC), a group frowned upon in some cirThe Night Journey: 88. The whole
cles. At one point, Baxter allegedly told Cole that "I can't have any of
of mankind in co-operation just to
my department chairmen belonging to UPC.''
produce one book! It is a
Faculty members are not the only ones subject to Baxter's whims.
humiliating challenge and a
An avid supporter of men's athletics, Baxter has been accused by
glaring one. Still the challenge
some past members of student government of pressuring them into
was reduced to 10 Surahs in order
signing a five-year contract that gives 33 per cent of the Associated
to prove to the whole of mankind
Student (AS) budget to the National Collegia\e Athletic Association . the unique quality if this book,
(NCAA).
(Or do they say He forget it,.
When once asked about the charge, Baxter asked rhetorically,
Say, Bring you then 10 Surahs
"What power do I have over the student budget?" He was reminded
thaf as CSUF president, he must approve all AS budgets. Baxter,
nonetheless, continues to deny the charge.
. It should be noted that Baxter removed Cole from the geography
department chair in June of 1975, not long after the Spring semester
Editor:
had officially ended. Baxter also allegedly coerced AS officials into
signing the NCAA contract in the summer of 1973. Summer is a great
In recent months there have
time for dirty work on a campus; there are few critics around.
With the NCAA contract due to expire in 1978, some think that · been several surveys published
regarding cheating among
should the AS refuse to enter into another, Baxter may try a bit of
college students. I~ all of these .
persuasion during either this summer or the next. .
_By then, perhaps Baxter will have seen the light and take the
studies, the percentages show
considerations of others into account instead of -catering only to
that one third to a half of all
selfish motives.
college ·students engage on some
For as Baxter told a Downtown Rotary Club gathering in 1970, "I
form of fraud. This ratio is apask you to stand with me in maintaining the university as the unique palling.
institution to serve mankind, truth and society."
The student who earns an
-.Joe Ipsaro
honest degree is forced to
. compete for a degree of honor,
one . of which may get him no
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY!
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where in the job market. The
Stuff envelopes. $50 per 100,
ISRAEL
AFRICA
bachelor's degree no longer has
immediate ·earnings. Send
Student charter flllhta year round '
any meaning, and the master's
stamped addr;ssed envel-
forged like unto it, and call to were filled with fear and could
your aid whomsoever you can not provide a plausible exother than God-if you speak the planation of the irresistable
truth,. Hud:13.
beauty and power of the Quran. ·
The people in Arabia could not However, they had to find some
face the -humiliating challenge way to put people off and justify
again, and it was further reduced their own behavior. They into one Surah only. One Surah may vented lies and falsehoods.
be one line. Still the proud and (Therefore proclaim the praises
eloquent Arabs could not face the of your Lord for by the grace of
divine challenge. (Ordo they say, your Lord, you are no (vular)
He forged it? Say, bring then a soothsayer, nor are you one
Surah like unto it, and call to your possessed. Or do they say a poet! .
aid anyone you can, besides God, we wait for him some calamity
if it be you speak the truth.)
hatched by time. (Tur 29-30).
Yunus. 38.
·
That was the only excuse they
You can see the logic of could find to their failure and
reasoning and the rational ap- helplessness.
proach to convince people of its
A non-Arab may rightly pause .
miraculous quality. A Surah may .and ponder the truth of this
be one line, but the Arabs and claim. He may not grasp what it
non-Arabs cbuld not succeed in . is all about. He cannot read
their efforts to meet this standing Arabic and did not have the
challenge. The beauty of the chance to read the Book. This
Quran, the music, its strength of miracle might not appeal to nonconviction, logic, simplicity, · .Arabs and even to some extent to
depth, and wisdom are much the uneducated Arabs. The
above of what the Arabs and non- reason for the latter case is
Arabs knew or could wholly because of the deterioration of
conceive. When the Quran was spoken Arabic and its deviation
being recited by Muslims, from the classical norms.
idolators usually cloaed their
It is true that we need a miracle
ears; some _produced noise- in science, telling us what is in
whistling and shouting in order · the heavens and ourselves during
not to hear the Quran and be be this era. The Quran although not
witched. Many unbelievers were a scientific text, reveals many
caught by Islam through simple secrets of wonders in the
chance when listening to it while universe as part of its call to
passing by.
believe in the Creator.
The leaders of the unbelievers
Reza Razavi
'Nothing earned is nothing gained'
system has. Perhaps the pendulum will swing back, where the
values placed on education are
bound in pride and respect, for
both the essence of learning, and
those offering their wisdom.
Kathryn M. Hogan
r'
Adress to speak on
in
A student with little interest in
education itself will find the easy
road to a degree; one of fraud. It women
showbiz
takes little effort to copy .
another's work, be it a fellow
Stage, screen and television
student, a note concealed from · actress Angel Tompkins will
the instructor, or plagerism of a ·speak at CSUF Tuesday, Dec. 4,
literary source. The stu4ent who as a guest lecturer in the
this type of degree
·· has no Women's Forum series.
ISCA, 1809 Westwood Blvd. No. 103
earns
·Judith Rosenthal, associate
L.A., Qllif. 90024
ope to LEA-15, P.O. Box ·
has depreciated considerably as use for it in the future, for noth ing professor of -English and coor(213) U6 0955. 826-0955
628.Morro Bay, CA 93442._
well. Granted, the probity vs. earned is no th ing gained. "A dinator of the forum, said .
improbity conflict is only one of student wi thout ·a que5tion to be Tompkins will discuss the topic,
••••••••••••••••••••••••••~••••••••••••••••••••••••: the mariy factors in the lowered answered has no business in "Women in the Entertainment
:
college; he becomes dead w~ight, · In.dus•.'""" at 7 p.m. in room
. 26 of
you
• status of college education, h lding ba k. th
re amb1'tious
":"-.1
• however, the implications of thii ' tud
o
c
e
mo
San
Ramon
Building
·
1.
ts ,, 88
CSUF 1·n
:
one
Tompkins· studied thea
_ tre arts
e1/en begun?
fraud have. J more devastating · s tr en
to ,
ked
· :•
s
uc
r
remar
·
at
the
University
of
Texas,
El
effect
the total picture.
:.
· · One begins to wond~r what the _ Paso, and . the University of
·We're .close :.. ; Convenient :.. Offer
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Her films include Disney's • ~
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declining. These are contributing
factors in the problem of
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I
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1e
Tuesday, December 7, 1976
Baxter: 'no plans to leave' · ~enate· defeats res~i
(Continued from Page 1)
to seek employment at another
school had "no more truth to
Baxter said he expected to see
equal cuts from all departments. _ them now than when I came here
four years ago. I have no plans to
"I would be very surprised if he
leave Fresno," Baxter said.
(Louis Volpp, vice president for
-He would not be opposed to
academic affairs and in charge of
an open-door policy for students,
the cutbacks) made overvisiting him, but indicated it is
whelming cuts in one area,"
unlikely.
Baxter said. "I look tor a general
cut across-the-board, not in one
"If we felt it would be helpful,
school unless there's a great
we'd
bring it back," Baxter said.
imbalance in numbers."
"We had it in the past, and our
Baxter said he expects a cutpast experience was not very
back between 20 and 24 positions.
satisfactory ... we're open to any
In other action at the conpolicy where it would bring me
ference, Baxter said:
into more contact with the
students." Baxter said students
-The CSUF Association Board
who want to see him should write
of Directors should act "prompa letter instead of phoning.
tly " on the beer situation .
Through Thursday, three of the
-He was not "alarmed" at a
four board members required to
recent survey, showing 50 per
visit the Alcohol Beverage
cent of CSUF students admit to
Control Department had not done
cheating.
so. Until they submit a written
''The poll was not done on a
s ta tement and fingerprints,
scientific basis," he said of the
CSUF is unable to proceed with
poll. "I'm not alarmed unless I
its efforts to obtain a beer-selling
see figures (gathered) on a more
license.
reliable basis."
·
- Rumors of his leaving CSUF
Campus calendar
Tuesday, Dec. 7
Wednesday, Dec. 8
10 a .m.-The Young F armers
will sponsor an appearance of
Santa Claus today and Wednesday until 1 p.m. in the Free·
Speech Area. Persons can have
pictures of themselves and others
taken with Santa for $1.
11 a.m.-The First Annual Ski
Swap will be held in the College
Union Lounge.
Noon-John Caudillo, owner of
Professiona l Medical
Laboratory, will give a business
lecture in the Industrial ~rts
Building , r oom 101.
Noon-A Swine F lu Clinic will
be held on the second floor of the
College Union.
3 p.m.-Ved Vatuk will speak
on "Asian Folklore and Indian
Philosophy" in the College Union,
room 312.
8 p.m.-The CSUF Jazz Band
and Concert Band will play in the
College Union Lounge.
12 p.m.-George M. Koch will
speak on the "Impact of the
Carter Administration on the
Food Industry" in the Residence
Dining Hall, east room.
7 p.m.-A movie titled "The
Man Who Skied Down Everest"
will be shown in the College
Union Lounge.
(Continued from Page 1)
questioned as to why I was a
-Referred a req_uest for higher
"It is extremely improbable ·' voting delegate," he said. Brewer rates of the Child Day Care
that a price change will result noted that he was nearly thrown Center to its AS Finance and
from a resolution opposing price out of the conference because of Budget Committee. The request,
increases,'' his message read. the title confusion.
if approved, would institute in"However, a resolution excreases for full cost users of the
plaining why a 'particular raise
N onetheles,s,
Brewer's center in the Spring semester.
was unnecessary and calling for arguments failed to sway the -The increases would be from the
its retraction or a resolution votes of Paulette Boghosian, current $2. 75 to $3.25 for a half
stigge~ting how the service could senator of the School of day and from the current $5.50 to
be changed to allow for lower Professional Studies, and Alan $6 for a full day.
prices would be much more likely Benzler, proxy for Gary Nelson,
-Accepted the resignation of
to result in the desired price senator-at-large post four.
decrease."
Benzler, who calls himself "a FelixMata, senator of the School
He later stated the resolution, good friend" of Brewer, said he of Humaniti~. Mata becomes the
fourth senator to resign this year.
though asserting the need to
cast his "no" vote on Nelson's
oppose the increases, failed to instructions.
.
-Announced that CSUF will
prove that need by its Jack of . Boghosian felt Brewer gave host the monthly meeting of the
factual information and a insufficient, insignificant reasons California State University and
proposed policy change.
to warrant the title change.
Colleges. Student Presidents
Despite his veto, Nikssarian
In other matters, the senate: Association on Dec. 11-12.
said he did not want the senate to
drop the issue.
In another issue, the senate
narrowly defeated a resolution
which would have changed the
title of College Union (CU) Vice
President to Administrative
Vice President of the Associated
Students.
Approval of the resolution,
number 2-3, required two-thirds
of the 15-member body or 10
votes . The vote was 9-2 in favor of
the resolutions.
Brewer, CU vice president,
spoke on behalf of the resolution,
and said the change would not
affect him , but his successors.
"I'll be out of office by the time
th_is change is adopted," he said
before the vote. " But there's
After college, what will I do? . starting salary, a challenging
confusion a bout this title. People
job, promotion opportunities,
ask me whether I'm the College
That's a question a lot of
and a secure future with a
Union Vice President or the Vice
young people ask themselves
modern Air Force. If you have
President of the College Union
these days.
two academic years remaining,
and how can you be if there's no
But a two-year Air Force find out today about the twoROTC scholarship can help
year
Air
Force
ROTC
President of the College Union
provide the answers. SuccesScholarship Program. It's a
and so on."
sful completion of the program
great way to serve your country
Most universities, he·said, have
gets you an Air Force commisand a great way to help pay for
no ties between their College
sion along with an excellent
your college education.
Union and their Associated
Aerospace studies:
Major Stephen Rowe
Students office. Subsequently, he
Galifornia State University, Fresno 222-6400
noted that CSP:L"'s case has
Air 11-trce INtTt~
caused him some problems.
" At one conference, I was
t;;1fe\\'a\• tea a t;reat ll'ay
IAlfe
••f
.Student banking problems are different.
Their bankers should be, too.
/
8 p.m .-The Chinese Student
Club will hold its last meeting of
the year in the College Union,
room 310.
8:15 p.m.-The play ''.Mrs.
Warren's P rofession" will bE:
shown a t this time each night
through Saturday in the John
Wright Thea tre .
:tt~n,
.
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sports
Tuesday, December 7, 1976
•
Bulldogs w,n and lose
It was an up-and-down ' Bulldogs still had to come up with
a clutch basket in the closing
weekend for the CSUF basketball
seconds to secure the win. Ahead
team.
just 70-68, CSUF's Ken Barnes
First the Bulldogs won their
put it away with a bucket with 10
third-straight contest, defeating
seconds· to play.
Boise 74-68 behind the excellent
play of David Wear. Then, the
Barnes finished with 14 points
'Dogs suffered their first loss of and 11 rebounds while teammate
the . season by falling to Idaho Doug Streeter also had 14 points.
State 77-64 Saturday.
The Bulldogs connected on 32 of
The 'Dogs will return home for 67 shots from the field (48 per
a game Thursday against Cal cent) and added 10 of 14 free
State Bakersfield at S: 15 p.m. in throws. Boise made 68 per cent of
Selland Arena.
its shots but lost it at the free
In the win over Boise, Wear, a throw line, hitting on just eight of
6-8 freshman center, hit on eight · 20. The 'Dogs made 23 fouls in the
of 11 from the field and added twc game.
free throws for 18 points. He also
In the Idaho game, the Bengals
excelled under the boards, held a massive rebounding edge
pulling down .13 rebounds.
(63-28). They had the lead
Despite Wear's effort, the throughout the foul-plagued
TRY THE KENNEL BOOKSTORE
. FOR CHRISTMAS GIFTS
contest. CSUF was called for 31
fouls while Idaho had 29 infractions.
The Bulldogs made .44 per cent
of their. field goal tries and bit on
20 of 30 free throws. The Bengals
hit 40 per cent from the floor and
21 of 33 from the foul line.
Barnes paced CSUF with 16
points while Streeter added 10.
Parker wins.
Except for Bob Parker, it was a
dismal weekend for the CSUF
wrestling team.
Parker, a 168-pounder, took a
victory in a dual meet against UC
Berkeley Friday and came back
with a second place in the Hugh
Mumby Tournament Saturday to .
be the team's only bright spot.
Parker's win was the only
victory against Cal as the
Bulldogs lost 39-4. And his second
place )lelped the Bulldogs forget
a sixth-place team finish in the
tourney.
take
consolation title
Women
SAN LUIS OBISPO-Getting
impressive play from Cindy
Addicott in the finals, the CSUF
women's basketball team won
consolation honors in the Cal Poly
Invitational Tournament.
Addicott poured in 19 points
and grabbed eight rebounds to
lead the team past Hayward 66-53
Saturday night.
Fresno lost to UC Santa Barbara 49-24 in the first round._
In the game against UCSB,
Fresno trailed 21-12 at halftime
but was outscored 28-7 in the
second half.
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White: Shrine-bound
Becoming the first CSUF
player so honored in 14
years, Del White has been
named to play iri the EastWest Football Classic Jan.
2 in Stanford Stadium.
White, a 6-3, 210
linebacker
for
the
Bulldogs, is the first
Bulldog to be named since
J .R. Williams was chosen
in 1962:
"We feel he is a very able
addition to our (West)
team's set of linebackers,"
said Lynn Wald, who heads
the selection committee for
the West squad.
"We have a lot of confidence he'll do well, based
on my personal observations and the reports
from other scouts who've
been checking him out."
White is a senior and a
two-yf'ar letterman for
CSUF. 'Dog head coach
Jim Sweeney said before
the season that "White has
good size and surprising
speed at the linebacker
position (arid) he has good
football sense."
That size, speed and
sense combined to give
White one of the most
prestigious honors in
college football. It may
also lead to a pro football
career. There will be
dozens of National Football
League scouts in attendance, loo~ing over the
players for future draft
picks. Last year, 58 of the
60 players in the Shrine
game were drafted by pro
clubs.
The first CSUF player to
go to the game was Jack
Mulkey, who got the call in
1941.
I
>
DE AZTLAN
,I
TlJESI).'\¥. -NOVEMBER 23, 1976
LXXXl-21
A special edition of THE COLLEGIAN, California State University, Fresno
Fall 1976 for Raza.
let down?
n========================;:==============1J
i QUE VIVA LA CAUSA
VIV A -LA RAZA!
Starting next semester this art of the Mayan G.od of Rebirth
Kukulcan will appear on the banner of each edition ot La Voz de Atzlan.
Legend has it that Kukulcan is actually Quetzalcoatl, a Toltec god.
When Quetzalcoatl was forced to leave the tribe, in the city of
Tenochtitlan (now Mexico City) he left word saying he would rE>turn.
Shortly after in Mayan History we find tne arrival of Kukulcan who
was worshiped as a God. History tells us that Kukulcan was actually
Quetzalcoatl in new form.
The art work was reproduced by La Voz staff member, Arturo
O'Campo.
La Voz De Aztlan is introducing this concept as a message to La
Gente, that perhaps change must come to us: a rebirth of our own. We
must assert ourselves and be active again on this racist campLlS of
higher education. We hope that we will all come back next year with
an approach such as that of Kukulcan.
Political alterna·tives .
•
•
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...
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0
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Cl)
Ill
0
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•
•
or.
• •
Trying to give
Raza's side
• • •
What does it take?
Tuesday' December 7, 19'6
2-THE COLLEGIAN
Bakke to
old
times?
UC action may bring end of speciq/
admissions: shaft for minorities
The Univenity of California
will appeal to the U.S. SUpreme
Court a
lower-court ruling
a1ain1t its medical schooJ's
special admiulons procram for
members of racial minority
IJ'OUPS• the Chronicle of Higher
Education reported lut week.
The Chronicle re~rted~ the
Supreme Court which ordered the
university to let Bakkf in.
Now the UC system is contelting the decision in what the
supporters of special admissions
program feel is actually an attempt to undermine m~ties.
However, the vote to appeal the
lower court ruling was "near
unanimous," a spokesman said.
The university expects a
decision by February on whether
the appeal will be gr~ted.
f
t
.late,. COG' s
causecrisis
.
·for··students .- cAJJ~"~!p;-r
· ~10 meetinp prior to . tbe UC Regents vote to go to the US
.
'
Supreme Court, civil rigbts
university'1 governing Board
made the decision in a cloeed representatives told the regents
door seaioo, despite the ob- that the special minority-group
admissions
program
that
jections of civil rilbta groups.
rejected Bakke WU weak case
The case involves Allan Bakke,
A large number of CSUF
tt:,,,
a wlllte applicant to the for a crucial test for affirmative students were faced with
California medical school at action.
somewhat of a crisis when they
Davis who was not accepted. He
found out that · their College
The university has said Bakke
claimed he was the victim of
Opportunity. Grants were late.
would
have
been
admitted
had
he
discrimination because he felt he
The near-fiasco began in the
come from a minority group.
was more qualified than 16 per
final weeks of August, students
Civil
rilltts
groups
contend
that
cent of the accepted students
if the casl is lost, the Supreme who had been notified they would
from minority groups.
Court would strike down as receive financial aid went to pick
''reverse discrimination'' special up their monthly checks only to 1
programs for minority groups all hear the checks weren't in yetPlaces for those students were
that they would not be ir. !•)T a few
over the country.
reserved under a special adThe Chronicle reported that weeks.
missions
program
for
Those few weeks tu:..rned into .
because the regents met in closed
economically disadvantaged
session, there ~as no public in- months, until the beginning of
blacks and Chicanos.
dication of their reaction to the November. What happened? It
He challenged the decision and
civil rights · group's pleas. seems that technology is the lone
eventually went to the California
culprit of the tardiness, according t(J Financial Aids
Director Joe Houston.
■
"The problem not in our offices," he ~xplaiiled. "The hold-·
up was m the Student Aid
Com,mission."
by Angie Rios
The Student Aid Commission's
office is located in Sacramento,
Yesterday's deadline to file for
along with the program's computer-the root of the whole upcoming municipal elections is
coupled with steps by the Fresno
In Nuclear Energy, Business Administration Naval
problem.
Aviation, Shipboard Operations, Aviation Mainten•
Referring to students' com- chapter of Mexican American
ance. Ship Design, All Engineering Fields.
. plaints that the Financial Aids Political Association (MAPA)
office should be held responsible, will be playing a major role this
~ouston said "We have zero input year.
"This year MAPA is interested
mto the COG's. Our offices are no
more than a verifying agent: we in identifying candidates interested in running for office "
certify that the student is
The Navy offers 14 different Officu Scholarship
said Manuel Perez, president ~f
enrolled
in
CSUF,
and
that
he
has
Programs.
·
·
MAPA.
the required number of units.
In the past, MAPA and the
"Our purpose here is to serve
Mexican community
have
the students, but all we can do is
contributed
to
the
successful
keep calling the Sacramento
candidacies of . some elected
offices to find out if the new
The chaUenge of people management plus
officials.
checks are ready yet."
.~8$p0!,sibility for millions of dollars worth of
"Primarily we are concerned
With this track record, it's
equipment is a .natural way of life to a new officer.
in getting Chicanos to accept
probably easy to guess how
these positions," said Perez. "If
December's checks will fare .
none are available, we will
Students may also take a hand
possibly support those candidates
in matters by writing a grievance
that best represent our views."
to
California
Student
Aid
ComGraduate level training is pro~ided in most programs.
MAP A has not made any
mission,
1415
5th
St.,
• Advanced degrees in 26 different fields can be earned'
committment
to any individual
Sacramento, CA., 95814. Ph. (916)
a~ the Navy's post graduate school.
seeking the positions.
322-2800.
Opportunities for earning advanced degrees from major
colleges and u~~versities are available also.
a
i
:Af't6.~
Stir·: . ·
=====-=-=========================================---•
MAPA to participate
In mu·nicipal elections
MANAGEMENT
DPPDRTUNITIES
SCHDLFIRSHIPS
CHFILLENCiE
.EDUCATION
ADVANTAGES ·
Annual 30 days paid vacation, free medical and dental
care, unlimited sick leave at full pay. space available
no cost travel, guaranteed pay raises at least every
two years.starting salaries f9., 5-00-13., 000.
·N eed Cash for
CHRISTMAS ?•
We are buying used textbooks for spring
semester. Half price for those books we need.
·Dates and times at buyback are listed below:
MEDICAL OPPORTUNITIES
Openings for PHYSICIANS: All specialti .
lo
.
. es,
f
cation 3uaranteed, startinc sAln~ies
~33-40,000, malpractice insuranc e provided.
· .NAVY OFFICER PRO&RAMS
REPRESENTATIVE
AT
Dec. 8-1 0
Dec. 1 l
Dec. 13-16
Dec. 17
Dec. 20-21
Dec. 22
THE .: PlILTON HOTEL ON
G,?,B,
ROOM 209
DECEMBER
NAVY
Kennel
Bookstore
8 a.m. - 4:30 p.m.
9 a.m. -12:30 p.m.
8 a.m. - 6:30 p.m.
8 a.m. - 4:30 p.m.
8 a.m. - · 6:30 p.m.
· 9 a.m. - 2:00 p.m.
"We are interested in supporting a candidate that will
win," said Perez. However, he
noted that the final decisions
would be left to the MAP A
membership.
"MAP A can play an extreme
part in the elections, in
developing a political base for the
Chicano community," said
Perez.
Perez added that Chicanos are
recognizing MAPA's role and are
taking great consideration in it as
a community organization.
MAP A is planning a meeting
for Dec. 13, at 7:30 p.m. at the
Pinedale Community Center.
"The purpose of the meeting is
to have a planning session which
will involve organizations interested in formulating an issues
conference to be held in
January," said Perez.
More information wiU be
available at the meeting. Anyone
interested is encouraged to come
to the meeting.
Editor
Angie Rios
Asst. Editor Tomas Uribes
Staff
Cindy Cabrera .
Miguel
Contreras,
Margaret Esparza, Anna
Noriega, Arturo Ocampo.
Celia
Ponce,
Pedro
Ramirez, Marta Uribes.
Contr.ibutors
Photographer
treras
GaryTell~z
Felix Con-
JOBSOVERSEAS
summer / year-round.
Europe, S. America,
Australia, Asia, etc·. All
fields, $500-$120<r monthly.
Expenses paid, sightseeing. Free inform.Write:
International Job Center,
Dept. CF, ·B ox 4490,
B~rkeley, CA 94704
esday, December 7 , 1976
THE COLLEGIAN-3
U survey; Slapped
in the face again?
UFW let_tuce on campus?
which was then investigating the
Last week, committee member
cafeteria's practice of using Sandy Ramirez said the comRaza ... get the latest:
UFW-label lettuce. A 1972 student mittee planned to look into the
Cesar Chavez' appearance and the rift over it may have contributed
senate resolution asked the food matter at their meeting Wed"minority programming" receiving the highest percentage of
services to provide UFW lettuce nesday (tommorrow) night.
when "economically feasible."
tudents desiring a decrease in the recent College Union survey•
Committee chairman Rosendo
The committee charged the Pena said no specific action was
This was the opinion offered by CU Program Director Gary
cafeteria was not abiding by this planned_as of Mondayother than
. ongiovanni to La Voz upon inquiry of the survey.
resolution but negotiations with discussion. He said no major
In the Collegian article last week, the results were printed stating
Finlay resolved the matter when efforts had been taken on it yet
at 37 pet cent of those polled were minorities.
he agreed to follow the students this semester because the
Despite this, the Collegian reported 16 per cent felt "minority
wishes. The terms agreed upon committee had devoted most of
programming'' should be decreased.
~--· . . ,
were to have a sign 1>9sted in the -its time the Prop. 14 campaign.
The staff reporter who wrote the article for the Collegian· f~iled to
cafeteria when unio1_1 iettuce was
Committee advisors Lea
'ndicate that, at the·same time, there was also an indication for in- ·
being served 1 ·_
Ybarra and Jorge Corralejo said
crease of the "minority programming" of 28.1 per cent.
··
they felt it was not a priority
A present member of the Programming Committee, felt that it was ·
issue at this time but that it was
ot a good survey, that it was too vague, and that it should have been
important to follow it through as
ore in-depth.
a -matter of principle since an
agreement was made last year.
Perhaps this was the intent of the maker of the survey, perhaps that
James Baloian, of the Baloian
erson was showing a bit of racism, something this institution is very
Produce Co., one of CSUF's two
M1ell known for . If you looked at the survey, you would have noticed
produce brokers, said he has
A $5,000 grant available for · according to Ernesto Palomino,
that questions 1-4 pertained mostly to the publicity given to College
been sending UFW-packed letChicana artistas is currently president of Brocha, which is an
Union. When it came to question 5, it states that bearing in mind of
tuce shipped by Noroian Farms
available through La Broche Del organization of Chicano artists.
limited resources, what CU program would you like to see increased.
"We are, specifying that the for the past five weeks.
Valle.
decreased or stay the same? The survey then proceeds to list items
He said he also thought the
The money, is ear-marked for a
money be used by Chicanas
issue
was dead because the
of which the majority are line items in the programming budget, with
mural to be painted by Chicanas
because we wa·nt women to get
'' ALRB matter had been setthe exception of outdoors adventure and of course " minority
here in the valley: A labor camp
involved," said Palomino, "We
tled." He said he will probably be
in Parlier has been chosen as the
programming .''
want to give Chicanas some
sending
UFW-lettuce through site
for
the
mural
according
to
What we assert is that it serves less justice to lump any ethnic
recognition ." He also pointed out
December. For the future, he
Ernesto Palomino, president of
oriented activities into one category. After witnessing recent
that most of La Brocha 's
said students could be assured of
Brocha, which is an organization
members are men.
narrowminded attitudes, it's not difficult to assume some people
rec~iving UFW picked lettuce ''90
of
Chicano
artists
Vetonica Macias and Tomasa
would react "negatively" to anything carrying the label "minority."
per cent of the time if this is the
What did CU mean by "minority programming?"
The money, from the California Cruz, of Fresno, are involved preference."
enlisting· interested
Perhaps the survey was conducted to undermine minorities in
Arts Council, is ear•markecf • with
Matty Matoian, of OK PJ"oduce,
Chicanas
to participate in the
for
a
mural
to
be
painted
by
general. One wouldn't really need to stop and think very hard that if
said
"We've always done the best
Chicanas here in the valley. A mural-painting project.
the Program Director felt that maybe the Chavez appearance caused
we can to obtain UFW lettuce. We
"We will hold an art workshop
labor camp in Parlier has been
buy the best quality -at the best
negative reaction among those polled towards minority programsometime in early January," price."
chosen
as
the
site
for
the
mural
ming, than it would also be a sign that the rest of the 80.8 per cent
said Macia s . "We hope to
Finlay said the sign used last
might have felt the same way.
organize a group of women inyear "disappeared" but he would
terested in promoting cultural
obtain ar;iother by Wednesday.
It should not be said the College Union was the only one to show
interest in the valley."
Specific time and place in·Any Chicana interested may
their " true colors." It is easy for anyone who read the Collegian ·
formation for Wednesda y's
contact Veronica Macias at 264- meeting, UFW Support Comarticle, (11-30-76) , to see what was hinted in stating that while 16.9 per
0065 or Tomasa Cruz at 487-1021. mittee, may be obtained by
cent of the total polled wanted the decrease, 37 per cent of those polled
Chicana poets and writers are phoning .La Raza Studies, 487were of minority background. Are we being told minorities themAngie Cisneros, La Raza
.
Studies secretary, has been also encouraged to inquire.
selves do not want any type of minority programming? It was very
2848
appointed by Governor Brown to ~-IIDIIDIIIIIUIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIDIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII'!
misleading in terms of showing the wrong side of any story.
serve on the 9th District Medical
Quality Review Committee
Think about it Raza ...among many other low blows against us this
Commission.
year, we get attacked because of our political stands, Cesar is treated
The Commission deals with
downright indignantly, La Raza Studies is undergoing cuts, La Voz is
health and medical services
slowly fading ... and now another slap.
delivered by different variables
WHY ARE WE ALLOWING THIS????
in the valley.
The cafeteria will resume its
efforts Wednesday to publicize
the serving of lettuce picked by
the United Farm Workers.
Following up reports ·;that the
MEChA campus support committee of the UFW planned to
investigate the matter, La Voz
learned from Food Services
Manager Richard Finlay that--he
would try to get the UFW sign
back into use. '
The action actually stems from
an agreement made last Spring .
by Finlay and the committee ·
to
$5i000. grdnt Ovailable
- for Chicana m·uralists
LRS sec. on
sta te comm .
i
NOW OPEN!
i
I
i
'BUY AND SELL
new and old comic books
I COMICDEN
Downtown Clovis
Chicanos may be affected I 635 5th
•
·
I
by possible teacher strike
Street
Phone 299-1590
UWIIIUIUIIDIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIDIIIRll~I-
By
by Pete Ramirez
By a wide margin teachers of
the Fresno Unifjed School
District have voted to strike. The
·problem basically centers around
the salaries of teachers.
Jose Luis Barraza, president of
Associacion Educativa de Padres
Mexicanos, says they will more
than likely take a neutral stand.
The reason he says is for the
future welfare of the group, as a
division could occur.
Chicano students in general,
Barraza says, will definitely be
effected by the strike. As it is,
Chicanos are given a poor
education and with second rate
teachers
instructing
the -
CASH for·
CHRISTMAS
Sell your Used
Textbooks
Ke :' n el -B ookstore
Dec. 8-21
Chicanos, they're education may
come to a stand still.
It won't be that bad for
elementary students; says
Barraza, ''because they are
young and most likely the strike
will be over by the time they are
promoted to the next level." Who
we are concerned with is the
Chicano who is going to graduate,
and land a college career. The
=
I
i
i
I
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■---------------------------·
EXCITING THINGS ARE HAPPENING
individual most likely will not I
I
receive the best of education.
Barraza says that it is a proven I
fact that Chicanos are given less . I
attention in the classroom I
compared to the Anglo student. I
He says that if the strike does I
,I
occur, it will be a success for
Chicanos in general becaus, lt I
••
insures less classroom . sae and !1
the affirmative action will hire
I
more Chicano teachers.
•I
o,scour:1ces
Navy Bell Bottom _Pants
$8.95 and up
Jackets $9.95 and _up.
Coveralls and Shopcoats
$3.95 · and up
Book Packs 98c a·lid up
WAR SURPLUS
.DEPOT
Army
·
He_
a dquorters for
.· q_n·d Navy Clothingl
602 Broadway at Ventura:
✓
.
I
I
I
AT THE ACADEMY OF ART COLLEGE.
PAINTING!
Exhibit your talent by
learning to paint and draw
from the ground up. Let
our professional instructors
show you how...
IA
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
•·I
-
•~
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
. : To receive detailed information, fill out the bta·nk spaces below, i
1 tear out the complete ad and mail to the office of the Registrar: I
: N a m e - - - - - - - - - - - ' - - - - - - - -·:
: Address----'--------------- :
I College attending _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ :
I Number of semesters completed _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ I
1
• ACADEMY OF ART COLLEGE
·------
:
1 625 Sutter Street, San Francisco, CA 94102, 415/673-4200 1
I
·• • • • • • • • • • • • • ~ • • • • • • • ~
. ..
.
.
.
Edticational awareness seen as
goal of Chicano .Youth Confab
participate in the all-day conference for next month.
Workshops covering a variety
To make Chicano high school
of topics ranging from E.O.P. to
1tudents aware of the opproblems in the barrio will be
portunities--..of entering college
held in the morning. At lunch,
and its benefits is one of the main
free food will be provided along
objectives of the fourth annual
with entertainment by CSUF's
Chicano Youth Conference ·
Comparsa, Los Dan~ntes de
scheduled for Jan. 15 on the
Aztlan, and Te1tro Espll'ito.
CSUE campus.
Career workshops in the fields
According to 1976-77 C.Y.C ..
of Law, Business, Health,
Chairperson David Gomez, the ·
Engineering, Education, and
conference is also intended to
others will be conducted in the
"increase Chicano high school
afternoon.
students awareness of the inThe deans of each of the schools
volvement of Chicano students on
on campus will also be on hand to
campus and as well as to expose
answer any questions.Exhibits
the racism and oppression of
representing job opportunities,
society against Chicanos."
.
as welJ as Junior College and
Over 1,000 Chicano high school
Colejio de La Tierra represenstudents from all parts of the San
tatives, will be included.
Joaquin Valley are expected to
by Cella Ponce
Telephone
180 Shaw Ave.
Clovis, Ca. 93612
(209) 298-7557
Learn to Ski program ·
a complete ski 'p rogram
6 Sundays .
16, 23, 30 Feb. 6, 13 $115.00
BUS TRANSPORTATION (Tr_ansportation
only $6.50 , 6- weeks $39.00)
Jan. 9,
Lake Tahoe Hyatt Lodge Jan. 6,7, 8,
3 nights 3 day lift ticket . Plane
transportation Total cost $142.00
Snowbird Lodge
Feb. 12-19
Utah, Snowbird
7 nights
7 day lift ticket
Total cost $182.00
''The comedy album
of the year/"
All of those incredible
''SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE" ·
features, including special
guest appearances.
It will be held in the Parlier
Community Center, free of
charge, with doors opening at 7
p.m. and the performance at 7:30
p.m.
How long has it been since you
heard Castillan Spanish?Or,
when was the last time you heard
Spanish spoken in the "singsong" way of the Indians of
Mexico?
Opportunities to hear Spanish
spoken in the old ways of Mexico
here in Aztlan are very few. One
of those few chances is presenting itself in Parlier next week.
From Dec. 12-18, El Teatro
Barrio Libre de Parlier will
present the dramatic play, Las
Cuatro Pariciones de la Virgen
del Tepeyac.
$3,000.
According to a Teatro
The Luna Club of Sanger I Del
spokesman, the play, which will
Rey is also sponsoring a funbe conducted in both Castillan
dr aiser shopping spree now
Spanish and the "sing-song"
underway. Eighty per cent of the
dialect de los indios, is about the
club's proceeds is intended for
appearance of La Virgen and
conference expenses.
problems Juan Diego, who saw
Raffle tickets are being sold for
her, experienced in trying to
50 cents each and may be obconvince ot.hers ot his m1racu1ous
tained from Luna club members.
vision.
Other financial aid has also been
The play will be presented all
r~ceived from the community.
next week, beginning Sunday, in
Asked if he felt there would be . honor of el Dia de la Virgen de
any problems due to :_:•~ conGuadalupe (Dec. 12).
ference being he lei during
semester break, Gome-: replied,
"Not as far .as the high school
students are concerned, but a lot
of help will be needed for making
signs, registering students,
reserving ~he rooms in the
college l'Hion and serving as
guides.
If anyone is interested in
helping out, attend the C.Y.C.
meeting .tonight in the College
by Arturo Ocampo
Union at 6: 30 or leave a message
in the mailbox which is located in
"The camera can be your
La Raza Studies.
pencil, it has the ability to make
you see the world for what it is,"
said Ben Garza, a member of the
Chicano Media Association,
(CMA), and author of the book
Cine Aztlan.
The Chicano Media Association
:>egan as a group of professional
Chicano journalists in Fresno.
The Student Movement for Law Under the guidance of Al Reyes,
and Justice will hold its last Channel 30 T. V. reporter, CMA
meeting for this semester, originated a monthly Chicano
tomorrow at ·2:10 p.m. in room newsletter last summer.
220, San Ramon 4.
Recently La Brocha Del Valle,
For more information contact a group of Chicano artists, and
Cindy Cabrera at La Raza the CMA have joined forces with
Studies, 487-2848.
a possible merger in the near
future,, according to Garza. "We
look upon each other as a unit of
collective power: that all media
is more powerful than one media
alone,!' said Garza.
In November the Fresno
Housing Authority gave the CMA
and La Brocha the vacated Boys
Club building on Hamilton Street
east of Cedar Avenue. In return
the Chicano group must provide a
DanAykroyd
service in the community.
John Belushi
The CMA and La Brocha will be
Chevy Chase
using the building as their office
Chicana disco
to be held Fri
Law club
meets Wed.
Jane Curtin
Garrett Morris
LaraineN~n
Gilda Radner
of
of the Trailer of the Film of
and the
,:-<:,,:>;>::;:~,'I~Y'' <':'w·:·=~z,l·'•·····.··,:.::\
MONTY PYTHON & THE HOLY GRAIL
Original Soundtrack Recording
AL 4050
Las Adelitas and the Chicano
Business Student Association is
sponsoring the first "Discolandia
Chicana," disco dance this
Friday, Dec. 10, from 8 p.m. to 1
a.m.
Donation is $1.
For the past several weeks,
candidates for the Adelitas
Consentido have been selling
tickets. The winner will be announced during the dance.
Proceeds from the dance are
intended for a Christmas Party
for Calwa elementary school
children.
Club members with tickets and
money are instructed to return
them by Thursday, Dec. 9, to
Valentina Sepulvecla either at the
EOP Office or La Raza Studies.
For any other information call
226-0851.
C.M.A., Brocha
media center
••• And MONTY PYTHON's Most
Outrageous Album!
The Album the Soundtrack
HOLY GRAIL
Anuncios
'La Virgen' to
play iry Parlier
Concluding the day's program
will be a dance featuring,
Chevere.
Trying to provide more information relevant to Chicanos
today, other than those that are
just school oriented, has increased the amount of workshops
which will be offered at this
year's conference, Go~ez s~id.
Problems in the barrio, which
will deal with Chicano gangs, and
student rights in the educational
system will be two of the additional workshops.
The major financing of this
year's conference will be
provided by two agencies under
the Manpower Commission: the
Youth Manpower Service and
Economics Opportunity Commission, which together allocated
It's more fun than a barrel
of dead monkeys!
MONTY PYTHON
Tuesday, December 7,
1976
Opportunity unlimited.
Any one who car es _
~'bout good health wi II
· want this product.
People who care about
people can sell this
product. NEO-LIFE Co.
of America. Call collect
(209) 383-2649
(209) 226-847 4
and as a center to sponsor
workshops and classes on media
for the community. Among the
classes to be offered include,
photography, journalism, art and
hopefully film presentations, of
CMA and La Brocha 's joint efforts.
· ''Basically, the reason the CMA
and La Brocha came together
was because we had something
very much in common : Commuunication," said Al Reyes.
La Brocha has been in
existence for two years. They
consist of muralists, graphics,
silk screeners, etc., most of
whom are teaching art at different colleges and schools.
The CMA members consist
primarily
of
reporters,
cameramen, and broadcasters.
Along with La Brocha, the CMA
has expanded its newsletter into
a bilingual newspaper with its
first edition due by Christmas.
"There are many people who
are willing to help the Chicano in
areas of agriculture, science, and
education but not in media.
Media is too powerful, it affects
too
many people politically,
economically
and
educationally," said Garza.
If they ( the Anglo), will not hire
or place the Chicano in those
places of power in media (there is
no doubt that there are many
qualified Chicanos in the field of
media), then we must create our
own positions, which the center
will hopefully help bring about,"
said Garza.
"For this to come about the
community has to become involved and lend its support in our
efforts.
.
On Arista Records
6.:
AVJµLABLEAT ~LBECORDSTORES
TRY· THE KENNEL BOOKSTORE
FOR CHRISTMAS GIFTS.
-
....
THE COLLEGIAN
LXXXI-25
l\rlli.i'li ; ·.· ·
.
CALIFORNIA STATE UNIVERSITY. FRESNO
IIMi4iH .
;..,..-.~:::,.~-
TUESDAY. DECEMBER ~ • 19'16
Faculty first .
Baxter wants tenure ·review
by Jeff Evans
Staff Reporter
CSUF President Norman
Baxter believes all tenured
faculty should be · evaluated
regardless -0f the faculty member's length of employment with
the university.
In a press conference Friday,
Baxter said he would approve of
an evaluation of administrators
only after post-tenured faculty
are reviewed.
"It's much more important in
terms of the dollars involved and
the time involved to review a 40year faculty member," Baxter
said. "There's much more
benefit for the taxpayers and
students.
"The product there is much
more important than administrators, whose terms are
much, ·much shorter."
Baxter said if administrators
were evaluated, he would seek
imput from other groups as well
as faculty.
"I don't think it should be
faculty only evaluating administrators," he said. "There
ought to be other administrators
evaluating administrators. and
there ought to be some student
evaluation. If I could take one
and not the other, then I would
obviously take the post-tenured
review of faculty."
Later, Baxter indicated he
would·. favor a renewal of the
controversial NCAA contract
when it expires in 1978. The
current contract guarantees
intercollegiate athletics 33 per
cent of the Associated Student
budget each year.
"I favor a long-term approach
that saves a lot of year-to-year
bickering and gives some continuity to athleti~s and other IRA .
(Instructionly Related Activities)," Baxter said.
But the CSUF president was
unclear on whether he favored
contracts in other IRA programs.
Baxter did say· he would like to
see appropriation's for these
programs.
When asked about the expected
layoffs of part-time faculty,
· (Continued on Page 3, Col. 1)
Buckley likes Carter, fears 'left'
by Linda Brown
Staff Reporter
CHRISTMAS SEASON MAY be a time for cheer, but not for this
Santa who showed up in the Free Speech Area Monday and was
virtually ignored. His appearance was sponsored by the CSUF
Young Farmers who will be charging $1 to persons wishing to
pose with Santa. The offe~ will last today and tomorrow from 10
a.m.-1 p.m. (Photo by Scott Linnett.)
Senate fails override
on food resolution
by Jon Kawamoto
Staff Reporter
The Associated Student (AS)
Senate, which Nov . 19 passed a
vetoed resolution opposing the
recent campus food price increases, Friday afternoon chose
not to override the decision of AS
President David Nikssarian.
Nikssarian, who Nov. 29 made
the resolution his third veto of the
year, recommended that the
senate refer the issue to its AS
Public Affairs Committee. The
senate agreed.
The senate's most recent
s~nce constitutes a complete
Swine Flu shots
set Wednesday
A Swine Flu Shot Clinic
will be held Wednesday
from noon until 2 p.m. in
the College Union Lounge,
second floor.
Those wishing to receive
the shot should enter the
east side of the building.
The free clinic is part of a
nationwide
innoculation
pro.gram
aimed
at
preventing a possible
outbreak of swine flu.
Anne Edwards, chief
nur~·:- of the CSUF Health
Center, warns that persons
who have an allergic
reaction to egg yolks
should avoid the shot.
turnabout from its earlier approval of resolution 2-5.
In that resolution, the senate
noted the following reasons for its
decision: "seemingly" unimproved quality of foods and
beverages since the Nov. 8 price
increase; no change in quantities
served; and the second price
increase in beverages during the
semester.
The resolution and discussion
during the Nov. 19 meeting
stemmed from the price hike by
the CSUF Food Services Advisory Committee.
According to an article in the ·
Nov. 4 issue of The Collegian, the
five cents across-the-board increase was instituted to help
offset an estimated $45,000 loss in
food services.
At the beginning of the Fall
semester. beverage prices were
increased five cents as part of a
budgetary goal of the CSUF
Association Board of Directors,
according to Rick Finlay, administrator of food services.
Ironically, Finlay said at the
time that the goal was to provide
students with the lowest possible
food costs.
But since the recent price hike,
the cost of a small drink has risen
from 15 cents to 25 cents, a 67 per
cent increase from the start of
the semester.
In
his
veto
message,
Nikssarian stated two reasons for
his decision: the lac.k of constructive criticism
in the
resolution; and the senate's
unfamiliarity on the issue.
.
(Continued on Page 3, Col. 3)
President-elect Jimmy Carter
strength's will be tremendous
four years from now if he doesn't
"go jumping off to the left," said
noted conservative William F.
Buckley, Jr. at a recent press
conference in Fresno,
The press conference was held
following Buckley's appearance
at CSUF. The nationally famous
columnist was on campus to
fulfill a speaking engagement he
postponed last year.
Buckley told the local press
that he liked 9arter.
"I don't know that he is moved
by any hard political convictions,
but perhaps that is good," said
the Republican Buckley.
When asked why Ford lost,
Buckley said anytime you lose as
narrowly as Ford did, you can
point to anything.
Buckley spoke optimistically
about ' the future of the
Republican Party. He pointed out
that the majority of the 18-21
year-olds voted for Ford in the
_recent election · and also a
majority
of
the college
graduates.
"I think there is a move to
rejec't all the old endearments of
the populists like Hubert Humphrey." he said.
But Buckley also said that
there is a slight possibility of the
American government becoming
"mechanized," a situation where
.one political party always wins.
.'Fritz' set to return
by Dianne Solis
Everything from a sexy
animated cartoon about a cat
named "Fritz" to ~ drama about
a man called "Horse" will be
included in the CSUF Spring
semester film series.
Along with "The 9 Lives of
Fritz the Cat" and "A Man Called
Horse," the College Union
Program Committee plans to
show "Breakout," "Fist of
Fury," and "Trial of Billy Jack."
At Monday's meeting the
committee also chose: '~2001:
Space Odessey," "Sherlock
Holmes' Smarter Brother,"
"Lady Sings the Blues," "Funny
Lady," "Alice's Restaurant" and
"African Queen."
Committee chairman John
Adams said, "We've been losing
our shorts with this semester's
film series."
According to recent figures, the
films have lost ,about $400 this
semester.
In hopes of cutting losses next
semester, a $5 season pass to the
12-film series was suggested. The
pass would be sold the first two
weeks of the Spring semester and
would be good for any show, the
committee said.
Students could save $1 by
buying the season pass instead of
paying 50 cents to see each film.
The feasibility of this plan will be
examined before any final
proposal is offered, said Gary
Bongiovannj, program director.
In other action, the committee
allotted $300 of a $600 CSUF Jazz
Band request for a concert by two
guest artists in the Spring
semester. However. the full
request was not granted because
of the $400 loss in film revenue.
The committee also considered
a Russian rock group, "Sasha
and Yuri,'' as possible entertainment for next semester.
This group of Russi~n Jews are
asking $400, said Bongiovanni.
In
evaluating
latest
programming, the committee
termed last week's Craft's
Bazaar a "roaring success." Last
Friday's movie "Love and
Death" lost $155.
But the speech by William
Buckley raised $168 by charging
non-students a $3 admission.
Despite this, Adams said he felt
many students couldn't understand Buckley's immense
vocabulary or hear his soft voice.
"Next time I'll bring a dictionary," quipped Jay Sepulveda,
committee member.
_ He attributed the current
Democratic majority in Congress
to many factors, including the
huge black vote and the present
"stink" from the Republican
·label.
Buckley said that currently the
Jeadership of the Republican
Party is up inr grabs.
"My own feeling is that Ronald
Reagan is the most popular living
Republican," he said. "People
think of him as someone who is
genuinely -enthusiastic about the
Republican Party."
Carter named
new announcer
Jeff Carter, who once
was the ballpark announcer for the San
Francisco Giants
at
Candlestick Park, has
accepted the position as
announcer
of
the
remaining
CSUF
basketball games.
In making the announcement Monday,
CSUF athletic Director
Gene Bourdet said, "We
are happy to have a man of
Jeff's background join our
home basketball games."
Carter's background
started in 1948 with the
American
Broadcasting
Company where he served
in the news and sports
departments and hosted a
music program.
,. In addition, he has done
public address work for the
University of San Francisco, the Golden State
Warriors basketball team
and the San Francisco
Seals hockey team, now
called the Cleveland
Barons.
Carter, who moved to
California in 1955, has also
worked on two Bay Area
television stations. He is
currently employed at
McLaughlin Distributing
Co.
_.....
Tuesday, December 7, 1976
i-THE COL~GIAN -
fditoriaf
-Letters to the editor----
Honesty needed
A· humiliating and g·laring challenge .
It is high time for CSUF President Norman Baxter to shed his cloak
Editor:
of virtual anonymity and bring himself and his dealings into the open.
After six and one half years as president of this university, Baxter
The Quran was revealed 1400
has earned himself the reputation of a person who acts in the dark, far
years ago at Mecca and Medine.
from the light of public scrutiny.
The Arabs used to worship idols
His name is known among most students, but that is where the
of which the most important ones
familiarity ends. A mention of his name among many faculty
were enshrined in the Kaaba. The
members brings stories and rumors about Baxter's latest
Arabs lived a simple life, though
shenanigans and criticism over his latest assault on academic
it was savage in many aspects
freedom.
such as the exposure of chUdren
Not that the criticism is unearned.
because of poverty.
Since assuming the presidency here, Baxter has been directly
They were proud of their
responsible for a number of lawsuits brought against the university by
language and justifiably so since
professors who _charged they were illegally fired.
Arabic is a very rich and
These lawsuits have resulted in the awarding of several thousands
sophisticated language. Poets
of dollars in damages to those professors, not to mention the untold
and orators were read and
thousands of dollars taxpayers unwittingly pay state attorneys who
learned by rote and annual
were forced to defend the university.
poetry competitions were held
Baxter's most recent victim was Chester Cole, who was removed
at a place called Sup Ukadh. Thus
from the geography department chairmanship in June, 1975.
the Arabs became past masters
A report which details Baxter's actions during that affair was
at the art of literary competition.
recently ordered destroyed by the Executive Committee of the
The Quran was a challenge,
Academic Senate. It was a terrible decision. So much could have been
challenging them to produce a
learned.
similar Quran.
When Baxter is asked to explain his decision to remove Cole, he
(Say: If the whole of mankind
says that it "is a personnel m-tter and ·t is my policy not to discuss
and Jinn were to gather together
personnel matters."
to produce the kind of this Quran
But othersllave given some insight into the matter. Some say Cole
they could not produce the like
often opposed Baxter during Academic Senate meetings and that he
therefore even though they
was often a thorn in Baxter's side. Cole also is a member of the United
collaborated with each other.)
Professors of california (UPC), a group frowned upon in some cirThe Night Journey: 88. The whole
cles. At one point, Baxter allegedly told Cole that "I can't have any of
of mankind in co-operation just to
my department chairmen belonging to UPC.''
produce one book! It is a
Faculty members are not the only ones subject to Baxter's whims.
humiliating challenge and a
An avid supporter of men's athletics, Baxter has been accused by
glaring one. Still the challenge
some past members of student government of pressuring them into
was reduced to 10 Surahs in order
signing a five-year contract that gives 33 per cent of the Associated
to prove to the whole of mankind
Student (AS) budget to the National Collegia\e Athletic Association . the unique quality if this book,
(NCAA).
(Or do they say He forget it,.
When once asked about the charge, Baxter asked rhetorically,
Say, Bring you then 10 Surahs
"What power do I have over the student budget?" He was reminded
thaf as CSUF president, he must approve all AS budgets. Baxter,
nonetheless, continues to deny the charge.
. It should be noted that Baxter removed Cole from the geography
department chair in June of 1975, not long after the Spring semester
Editor:
had officially ended. Baxter also allegedly coerced AS officials into
signing the NCAA contract in the summer of 1973. Summer is a great
In recent months there have
time for dirty work on a campus; there are few critics around.
With the NCAA contract due to expire in 1978, some think that · been several surveys published
regarding cheating among
should the AS refuse to enter into another, Baxter may try a bit of
college students. I~ all of these .
persuasion during either this summer or the next. .
_By then, perhaps Baxter will have seen the light and take the
studies, the percentages show
considerations of others into account instead of -catering only to
that one third to a half of all
selfish motives.
college ·students engage on some
For as Baxter told a Downtown Rotary Club gathering in 1970, "I
form of fraud. This ratio is apask you to stand with me in maintaining the university as the unique palling.
institution to serve mankind, truth and society."
The student who earns an
-.Joe Ipsaro
honest degree is forced to
. compete for a degree of honor,
one . of which may get him no
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY!
.'EUROPE
where in the job market. The
Stuff envelopes. $50 per 100,
ISRAEL
AFRICA
bachelor's degree no longer has
immediate ·earnings. Send
Student charter flllhta year round '
any meaning, and the master's
stamped addr;ssed envel-
forged like unto it, and call to were filled with fear and could
your aid whomsoever you can not provide a plausible exother than God-if you speak the planation of the irresistable
truth,. Hud:13.
beauty and power of the Quran. ·
The people in Arabia could not However, they had to find some
face the -humiliating challenge way to put people off and justify
again, and it was further reduced their own behavior. They into one Surah only. One Surah may vented lies and falsehoods.
be one line. Still the proud and (Therefore proclaim the praises
eloquent Arabs could not face the of your Lord for by the grace of
divine challenge. (Ordo they say, your Lord, you are no (vular)
He forged it? Say, bring then a soothsayer, nor are you one
Surah like unto it, and call to your possessed. Or do they say a poet! .
aid anyone you can, besides God, we wait for him some calamity
if it be you speak the truth.)
hatched by time. (Tur 29-30).
Yunus. 38.
·
That was the only excuse they
You can see the logic of could find to their failure and
reasoning and the rational ap- helplessness.
proach to convince people of its
A non-Arab may rightly pause .
miraculous quality. A Surah may .and ponder the truth of this
be one line, but the Arabs and claim. He may not grasp what it
non-Arabs cbuld not succeed in . is all about. He cannot read
their efforts to meet this standing Arabic and did not have the
challenge. The beauty of the chance to read the Book. This
Quran, the music, its strength of miracle might not appeal to nonconviction, logic, simplicity, · .Arabs and even to some extent to
depth, and wisdom are much the uneducated Arabs. The
above of what the Arabs and non- reason for the latter case is
Arabs knew or could wholly because of the deterioration of
conceive. When the Quran was spoken Arabic and its deviation
being recited by Muslims, from the classical norms.
idolators usually cloaed their
It is true that we need a miracle
ears; some _produced noise- in science, telling us what is in
whistling and shouting in order · the heavens and ourselves during
not to hear the Quran and be be this era. The Quran although not
witched. Many unbelievers were a scientific text, reveals many
caught by Islam through simple secrets of wonders in the
chance when listening to it while universe as part of its call to
passing by.
believe in the Creator.
The leaders of the unbelievers
Reza Razavi
'Nothing earned is nothing gained'
system has. Perhaps the pendulum will swing back, where the
values placed on education are
bound in pride and respect, for
both the essence of learning, and
those offering their wisdom.
Kathryn M. Hogan
r'
Adress to speak on
in
A student with little interest in
education itself will find the easy
road to a degree; one of fraud. It women
showbiz
takes little effort to copy .
another's work, be it a fellow
Stage, screen and television
student, a note concealed from · actress Angel Tompkins will
the instructor, or plagerism of a ·speak at CSUF Tuesday, Dec. 4,
literary source. The stu4ent who as a guest lecturer in the
this type of degree
·· has no Women's Forum series.
ISCA, 1809 Westwood Blvd. No. 103
earns
·Judith Rosenthal, associate
L.A., Qllif. 90024
ope to LEA-15, P.O. Box ·
has depreciated considerably as use for it in the future, for noth ing professor of -English and coor(213) U6 0955. 826-0955
628.Morro Bay, CA 93442._
well. Granted, the probity vs. earned is no th ing gained. "A dinator of the forum, said .
improbity conflict is only one of student wi thout ·a que5tion to be Tompkins will discuss the topic,
••••••••••••••••••••••••••~••••••••••••••••••••••••: the mariy factors in the lowered answered has no business in "Women in the Entertainment
:
college; he becomes dead w~ight, · In.dus•.'""" at 7 p.m. in room
. 26 of
you
• status of college education, h lding ba k. th
re amb1'tious
":"-.1
• however, the implications of thii ' tud
o
c
e
mo
San
Ramon
Building
·
1.
ts ,, 88
CSUF 1·n
:
one
Tompkins· studied thea
_ tre arts
e1/en begun?
fraud have. J more devastating · s tr en
to ,
ked
· :•
s
uc
r
remar
·
at
the
University
of
Texas,
El
effect
the total picture.
:.
· · One begins to wond~r what the _ Paso, and . the University of
·We're .close :.. ; Convenient :.. Offer
• . It ls argued that colleges are - purj,ose of higher education ·has Illinois, Cha,m~aign-Urbana.
.
. fr•e gift ·wrap_.·
: . accepting , and turnµig out too .' become,. how its · quality.. has
Her films include Disney's • ~
:
:
many students· today. 'lbe 'fact .declined, and wh•t future the "Hang Your _Hat. o~ the . Win~,"
: . Our- Mai·n -Lsevel ~stock's ·O··wide variety' ·-of-~: :____ , .
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Bren'davaccaro; "Walking Tall,
•
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A
Part II;" and "The.Don is.Dead,"
: From c~ndles to iewelry - ·to calculators : ·.
_:.._.;____....;..____________
with Antheny Quinn.
Hove
finishec/
shoppin·g - or
"'- ~
that many students pursue higher
education for a mere document
which will ''open doors in the
business world," and thus have
little interest in learning for the
sake of wisdom, indicates that
the quality of the student is
declining. These are contributing
factors in the problem of
cheating.
:
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your Christmas
on
.,cleas to
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D. 1scou·NT. C ....
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We also have an outstanding collection
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Why not stop in to see us at
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Dec. 8-21
I
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I
I
1e
Tuesday, December 7, 1976
Baxter: 'no plans to leave' · ~enate· defeats res~i
(Continued from Page 1)
to seek employment at another
school had "no more truth to
Baxter said he expected to see
equal cuts from all departments. _ them now than when I came here
four years ago. I have no plans to
"I would be very surprised if he
leave Fresno," Baxter said.
(Louis Volpp, vice president for
-He would not be opposed to
academic affairs and in charge of
an open-door policy for students,
the cutbacks) made overvisiting him, but indicated it is
whelming cuts in one area,"
unlikely.
Baxter said. "I look tor a general
cut across-the-board, not in one
"If we felt it would be helpful,
school unless there's a great
we'd
bring it back," Baxter said.
imbalance in numbers."
"We had it in the past, and our
Baxter said he expects a cutpast experience was not very
back between 20 and 24 positions.
satisfactory ... we're open to any
In other action at the conpolicy where it would bring me
ference, Baxter said:
into more contact with the
students." Baxter said students
-The CSUF Association Board
who want to see him should write
of Directors should act "prompa letter instead of phoning.
tly " on the beer situation .
Through Thursday, three of the
-He was not "alarmed" at a
four board members required to
recent survey, showing 50 per
visit the Alcohol Beverage
cent of CSUF students admit to
Control Department had not done
cheating.
so. Until they submit a written
''The poll was not done on a
s ta tement and fingerprints,
scientific basis," he said of the
CSUF is unable to proceed with
poll. "I'm not alarmed unless I
its efforts to obtain a beer-selling
see figures (gathered) on a more
license.
reliable basis."
·
- Rumors of his leaving CSUF
Campus calendar
Tuesday, Dec. 7
Wednesday, Dec. 8
10 a .m.-The Young F armers
will sponsor an appearance of
Santa Claus today and Wednesday until 1 p.m. in the Free·
Speech Area. Persons can have
pictures of themselves and others
taken with Santa for $1.
11 a.m.-The First Annual Ski
Swap will be held in the College
Union Lounge.
Noon-John Caudillo, owner of
Professiona l Medical
Laboratory, will give a business
lecture in the Industrial ~rts
Building , r oom 101.
Noon-A Swine F lu Clinic will
be held on the second floor of the
College Union.
3 p.m.-Ved Vatuk will speak
on "Asian Folklore and Indian
Philosophy" in the College Union,
room 312.
8 p.m.-The CSUF Jazz Band
and Concert Band will play in the
College Union Lounge.
12 p.m.-George M. Koch will
speak on the "Impact of the
Carter Administration on the
Food Industry" in the Residence
Dining Hall, east room.
7 p.m.-A movie titled "The
Man Who Skied Down Everest"
will be shown in the College
Union Lounge.
(Continued from Page 1)
questioned as to why I was a
-Referred a req_uest for higher
"It is extremely improbable ·' voting delegate," he said. Brewer rates of the Child Day Care
that a price change will result noted that he was nearly thrown Center to its AS Finance and
from a resolution opposing price out of the conference because of Budget Committee. The request,
increases,'' his message read. the title confusion.
if approved, would institute in"However, a resolution excreases for full cost users of the
plaining why a 'particular raise
N onetheles,s,
Brewer's center in the Spring semester.
was unnecessary and calling for arguments failed to sway the -The increases would be from the
its retraction or a resolution votes of Paulette Boghosian, current $2. 75 to $3.25 for a half
stigge~ting how the service could senator of the School of day and from the current $5.50 to
be changed to allow for lower Professional Studies, and Alan $6 for a full day.
prices would be much more likely Benzler, proxy for Gary Nelson,
-Accepted the resignation of
to result in the desired price senator-at-large post four.
decrease."
Benzler, who calls himself "a FelixMata, senator of the School
He later stated the resolution, good friend" of Brewer, said he of Humaniti~. Mata becomes the
fourth senator to resign this year.
though asserting the need to
cast his "no" vote on Nelson's
oppose the increases, failed to instructions.
.
-Announced that CSUF will
prove that need by its Jack of . Boghosian felt Brewer gave host the monthly meeting of the
factual information and a insufficient, insignificant reasons California State University and
proposed policy change.
to warrant the title change.
Colleges. Student Presidents
Despite his veto, Nikssarian
In other matters, the senate: Association on Dec. 11-12.
said he did not want the senate to
drop the issue.
In another issue, the senate
narrowly defeated a resolution
which would have changed the
title of College Union (CU) Vice
President to Administrative
Vice President of the Associated
Students.
Approval of the resolution,
number 2-3, required two-thirds
of the 15-member body or 10
votes . The vote was 9-2 in favor of
the resolutions.
Brewer, CU vice president,
spoke on behalf of the resolution,
and said the change would not
affect him , but his successors.
"I'll be out of office by the time
th_is change is adopted," he said
before the vote. " But there's
After college, what will I do? . starting salary, a challenging
confusion a bout this title. People
job, promotion opportunities,
ask me whether I'm the College
That's a question a lot of
and a secure future with a
Union Vice President or the Vice
young people ask themselves
modern Air Force. If you have
President of the College Union
these days.
two academic years remaining,
and how can you be if there's no
But a two-year Air Force find out today about the twoROTC scholarship can help
year
Air
Force
ROTC
President of the College Union
provide the answers. SuccesScholarship Program. It's a
and so on."
sful completion of the program
great way to serve your country
Most universities, he·said, have
gets you an Air Force commisand a great way to help pay for
no ties between their College
sion along with an excellent
your college education.
Union and their Associated
Aerospace studies:
Major Stephen Rowe
Students office. Subsequently, he
Galifornia State University, Fresno 222-6400
noted that CSP:L"'s case has
Air 11-trce INtTt~
caused him some problems.
" At one conference, I was
t;;1fe\\'a\• tea a t;reat ll'ay
IAlfe
••f
.Student banking problems are different.
Their bankers should be, too.
/
8 p.m .-The Chinese Student
Club will hold its last meeting of
the year in the College Union,
room 310.
8:15 p.m.-The play ''.Mrs.
Warren's P rofession" will bE:
shown a t this time each night
through Saturday in the John
Wright Thea tre .
:tt~n,
.
CASH for
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Sell your Used
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Dec. 8-21
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That's why Bank of America has Student Representatives close by at offices near major
college campuses in California. They're always students or recent graduates themselves.
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m.
sports
Tuesday, December 7, 1976
•
Bulldogs w,n and lose
It was an up-and-down ' Bulldogs still had to come up with
a clutch basket in the closing
weekend for the CSUF basketball
seconds to secure the win. Ahead
team.
just 70-68, CSUF's Ken Barnes
First the Bulldogs won their
put it away with a bucket with 10
third-straight contest, defeating
seconds· to play.
Boise 74-68 behind the excellent
play of David Wear. Then, the
Barnes finished with 14 points
'Dogs suffered their first loss of and 11 rebounds while teammate
the . season by falling to Idaho Doug Streeter also had 14 points.
State 77-64 Saturday.
The Bulldogs connected on 32 of
The 'Dogs will return home for 67 shots from the field (48 per
a game Thursday against Cal cent) and added 10 of 14 free
State Bakersfield at S: 15 p.m. in throws. Boise made 68 per cent of
Selland Arena.
its shots but lost it at the free
In the win over Boise, Wear, a throw line, hitting on just eight of
6-8 freshman center, hit on eight · 20. The 'Dogs made 23 fouls in the
of 11 from the field and added twc game.
free throws for 18 points. He also
In the Idaho game, the Bengals
excelled under the boards, held a massive rebounding edge
pulling down .13 rebounds.
(63-28). They had the lead
Despite Wear's effort, the throughout the foul-plagued
TRY THE KENNEL BOOKSTORE
. FOR CHRISTMAS GIFTS
contest. CSUF was called for 31
fouls while Idaho had 29 infractions.
The Bulldogs made .44 per cent
of their. field goal tries and bit on
20 of 30 free throws. The Bengals
hit 40 per cent from the floor and
21 of 33 from the foul line.
Barnes paced CSUF with 16
points while Streeter added 10.
Parker wins.
Except for Bob Parker, it was a
dismal weekend for the CSUF
wrestling team.
Parker, a 168-pounder, took a
victory in a dual meet against UC
Berkeley Friday and came back
with a second place in the Hugh
Mumby Tournament Saturday to .
be the team's only bright spot.
Parker's win was the only
victory against Cal as the
Bulldogs lost 39-4. And his second
place )lelped the Bulldogs forget
a sixth-place team finish in the
tourney.
take
consolation title
Women
SAN LUIS OBISPO-Getting
impressive play from Cindy
Addicott in the finals, the CSUF
women's basketball team won
consolation honors in the Cal Poly
Invitational Tournament.
Addicott poured in 19 points
and grabbed eight rebounds to
lead the team past Hayward 66-53
Saturday night.
Fresno lost to UC Santa Barbara 49-24 in the first round._
In the game against UCSB,
Fresno trailed 21-12 at halftime
but was outscored 28-7 in the
second half.
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White: Shrine-bound
Becoming the first CSUF
player so honored in 14
years, Del White has been
named to play iri the EastWest Football Classic Jan.
2 in Stanford Stadium.
White, a 6-3, 210
linebacker
for
the
Bulldogs, is the first
Bulldog to be named since
J .R. Williams was chosen
in 1962:
"We feel he is a very able
addition to our (West)
team's set of linebackers,"
said Lynn Wald, who heads
the selection committee for
the West squad.
"We have a lot of confidence he'll do well, based
on my personal observations and the reports
from other scouts who've
been checking him out."
White is a senior and a
two-yf'ar letterman for
CSUF. 'Dog head coach
Jim Sweeney said before
the season that "White has
good size and surprising
speed at the linebacker
position (arid) he has good
football sense."
That size, speed and
sense combined to give
White one of the most
prestigious honors in
college football. It may
also lead to a pro football
career. There will be
dozens of National Football
League scouts in attendance, loo~ing over the
players for future draft
picks. Last year, 58 of the
60 players in the Shrine
game were drafted by pro
clubs.
The first CSUF player to
go to the game was Jack
Mulkey, who got the call in
1941.