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Page 24 text:
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j, 3 L B' 3 little bit of faculty soul .
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Page 23 text:
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STATE 33 San Luis Obispo 22 By Reed Nessel Gater Sports Editor Question marks turned to excla- mation points at Cox Stadium Satur- day, September 21, as STATE'S Golden Gators smashed the Cal Poly Mustangs 33-22, The defense held Cal Poly to a -15 rushing figure, and a total offense of 119 yards. The performance was a tribute to jim Sochor, said Head Coach Vic Rowen of his defensive backfield coach. The Gators had only one experi- enced backfield man-Tim. Tierney- at the opening of the practice ses- sions, and Tierney's experience was limited to four games last season. End Gil Haskell was converted to a defensive back at the scrimmage a Weekbefore the game, and sophomore Bob Suter and transfer Rusty Hubbard joined these two. The results were evident at Saturday's game. Tierney also contributed an 89- yard punt return for the Gator's final touchdown of the day, setting a new Gator record for punt returns which eclipsed Charley Fuller's mark. Mike Garson turned in a good ef- fort at the quarterback slot-passing well and calling a smart game. Car- son accounted for one TD pass, a five-yarder to end Gary Chiotti. The veteran STATE offensive line pried open holes in the Cal Poly de- fense, clearing the wayfor a potent running game which counted for 214 yards. Tom Manney rolled for ll3 yards and scored the first two TD's for STATE - both on heady maneuvers. Fullback jerry Brown ran for 49 yards on six carries, and scored once. The 22 points registered by Cal Poly are misleading as far as the de- fense is concerned. One TD was scored on an 85 yard kickoff return by jim Ramos, and another on a 42 yard pass interception by Gary Walker. '--Nick KN ATZ... f f' Gn Ramos' return the Gators closed up on him too fast, allowing Ramos cutting room, and safety man Tierney seemed to misjudge the Mus- tang's speed. The finalCal Poly touchdown came on a pass play with only l9 seconds left in the game.
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Page 25 text:
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Although few of the faculty are di- rectly involved in teaching art, many contributed to the Faculty Art Show, held September 23 through October 15 in the Gallery Lounge. It gave them a chance to show how well they practice what they preach. Most came through flying colors. KNO pun intended.D however, didn't fare so well. l ey Qffas might be expected, the works heavy, academic overtones and one could readily sense the Instructor's contribution, apart from the Artist's. The display included oils, water- colors, photographs, collages, sculp- tures, industrial art exhibits and even a seaworthy catamaran. The latter, going for 35300, represented by far the best buy of the show. The other prices at times got out of purse. For instance, a collage consisting of a piece of driftwood with a pile of salt-shakers balanced in the middle and two ornamented chopsticks at the helm was priced at a robust 315150. A collage, looking like the leftovers from a day at nursery school glued on a note book and mounted, went for 550. An oil resembling an unfinished jigsaw puzzle was priced at 5250. There seemed to be atacit agreement that nothing, no matter trivial , would Sen for less than 550. Several students were asked what about the exhibit, and if ,il particular had impressed snltinn T Charles Rickard, jr. , a junior in history, liked a photo nfigocks, Moss Beach, Cal. , by Don Worth. lt produces a true image. It makes you feel you're there. But he wouldn't pay 550 for any of them. They're priced a little too high. Freshman Bob Mull, a premed. student, merely shook his head when asked about prices. He didn't think much of the show as a whole, but I did like the water-colors, the more abstract ones. Libby Nakagawa, a senior major- ing in sociology was impressed by the show in general. Ididn't look at the prices. E
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