Sept 9, 1981 Pg. 6-7 |
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Sports Page 6/Seotember», 1M1—Dally Collegian wa/gmmtaBmmwmm^jmaammma Time, money needed to complete project By Denloe A. Rio* Staff Writer It is iust a matter of time—and money—before the stadium athletic facility, which will include showers and a locker room, is taken from the draw¬ ing boards and built next to CSUF's new stadium. "The stadium isn't complete until the athletic facility is completed,* said Robert Schumacher of the stadium de¬ velopment office. 'That's the way it was originally planned." He said they are only $500,000 short of the approximately' $2 million it will cost to build the facility. Funds so far have come from community donations, including a recent $250,000 gift from Bob and Dick Duncan of Duncan Ceram¬ ics. Their contributions to the entire stadium project total about $1 million, said Schumacher A half a million dol¬ lars left over from stadium donations was also used, and money made from the remaining seat options will go toward the athletic facility. 'We're hoping momentum from the football season will push donations," he PROJECT continued on page 7 /VOM, V¥KP, PiasFeSSO^ANP OASSMATES. 45 CtASS ■RZ£5fO£Hr, T WSH tx> thmk rue rvu<*/#/Q top heltt/vG M£ get THKouan COLLE&E.. JWAKTTtrmAtJKTHeaWKoe AMSWCA VERSATELLeR'AUrVMATtp ruia malw/me a»/focrfj first sreegr. amp thankyou Sofa f&r your free ccnujmek /A/EoRMATtOrVfaEPo^r^-ESPEC/ALVr THE ftcpoizr av //<*</ ro baiaatce- xxjk cxecKaooA??'' /Veer,iu/AttTTt) SHCW MYOKATITtAee ' FC*!8MK.°rAH£XlO<S ■ /NTT/ALINE" SERYiC£. ftS THECHEOUNQ -'<semmtMrouaufiep /frxTHATHEut&nE: ESTABLISH CREZXT &GWN/N6 /A/MY .SCFHOMcKE YEAR. H/tTtAUrfE SERVICE SAVE M£ OVERDRAFTPROTECTION, LET ME CZMUF/SOONEgFORA aWWeSe&ISf t/ISA'MP GAVE ME WE COURTESY* OIECK6UAKAJTIKECARC?, TOO. all inau, 7hexe are somany helpful CchaemsiTlccations anpservtces /rhCC£P7AK£LLMS£J?77MA/ rPVJT AfTEXNOOM rz> 7?MHK&NK<*Am£RKA For ALL THESE examples of- money Q#VWIEN£FHftE13EFGG£ TOFFER O/E $iG THANK. TW. to ■BANK of AMERICA f ~r / ACIA9 CLIP n.pCU\ CLAP CLAP J^ CLAP a r,A? CL*Pn • i • j : j ! at l-t *# i ill: 1-» ,mU9mje7 Project continued from page 6 said. Schumacher said the locker room will be located on the southeast portion of the stadium, across from Beiden Field. He said the location will make it more convenient for the players and coaches. 'When a visiting team comes,' be said, 'there's no place to put them during halftime. We have to use tents for locker rooms.' However, Schumacher said the 18,000-square foot facility will be much more than a shower and locker room. He said it will provide badly needed of¬ fice space for the fortfball, baseball, and soccer coaches. Currently, they are sharing office space with the ROTC on campus. Other rooms In the complex will be: —a weight training room. —training/therapeutic area. —administrative off ices. —team meeting room. —dressing room for officials. —home/visitor team locker rooms. —lockers and showers. Schumacher added that baseball will have permanent lockers because that sport is played year-round. He said that the building might also be the permanent housing for the Bull¬ dog Foundation, but added rent would be charged. He said ground breaking will probably . take place at.the end of the year, and the facility should be available for next season. Grant continued from page 1 to produce the alternate forms of energy. The eight basic components of the AETP are an alcohol plant, fermenta¬ tion unit, alcohol conversion teaching and demonstration unit, a small solar still demonstration unit, a blomass- methane unit, an alcohol-methane moni¬ toring unit, a photovoltaic powered sys¬ tem of existing irrigation unit, a sprink¬ ler and trickle irrigation testing facility, an underground trickle irrigation system and an automated irrigation system. "Through the assembly of these vari¬ ous alternative energy production sub¬ systems on the university farm, and by linking the subsystems together, an in¬ tegrated farm energy system will emerge, which will allow the demonstra¬ tion of an agricultural technology that is less dependent on off-farm energy supplies," said the summary. Bowerman estimated that the project should be in full swing in the spring semester, although people are already working and researching different as¬ pects of the project. *l think it (AETP) will significantly improve our teaching and farming operation,' said Brownell. The equip¬ ment used throughout the project will be used to train students, he noted. 'It's one of those things that dif¬ ferentiates a college from a university,' said Bowerman. Staffing plans call for experts from agricultural engineering, industrial technology, soil and water science, viticulture and enology, dairy opera¬ tions and animal science and plant sci¬ ence to be involved in the project. Although the staffs haven't been de¬ termined yet, Brownell, Dr. Charles F. Krauter, Dr. Carlos J. Muller and pro¬ fessor Howard J. Martin will be leaders in selected areas. Quilts continued from page 1 quilting threads, but 'everybody has their own preference,' Laury said. Laury taught in the CSUF Art Depart¬ ment for one year about 15 years ago. Since then, a great deal of her designs have been commissioned by magazines and public buildings. Today, Laury works in a studio in her home. 'I usually work a couple of hours at a time and then take a break,' she said. ,> 'The work is limiting because it gets to your back and shoulders," Laury said. As for the future, Laury feels quilts will follow two directions. 'Artists will use it as an art media, as a means of communicating through art,' she said, 'and, at the same time, there is a strong group of people who will stay with the traditional kind" of auilts. THE i EXAMINATION A COMPLETE REVIEW VOLUME 1 AND 2 Editors: Needles & WWams *y MAXIMIZES YOUR EXAM SCORE THROUGH INTENSIVE REVIEW EXERCISES Thoroughly prepares you for auditing problems, the single area with foe highest national failure rata. SAVES HOURS OF CRUCIAL STUDY TIME GENERAL BOOKS - LOWER LEVEL KENNEL BOOKSTORE "We did pretty good with the tourists this summer ever since we changed the town's name to 'GAS, FOOD AND LODGING."" Sports Calendar... FRIDAY Soccer: CSUF vs. UC Davis Bulldog Stadium, 7:30p.m. Water polo: CSUF vs. Whlttier College Whlttier, 4 p.m. SATURDAY Volleyball: CSUF at Western In¬ vitational Tournament UC Davis, all day Cross country: CSUF at Central California Championships Woodward Park, 10:30a.m. Football: CSUF vs. Oregon State Corvallls, Ore., 6 p.m. SUNDAY Soccer: CSUF VS. University of Portland Bulldog Stadium, 2 p.m. n»tt—n»»»»»tt*n****»***.»»t*»»*********n***».*r******t*t*********».*« Lambda Alpha Epsilon Phi Omega Alpha Chapter American Criminal Justice Association Rush Party Friday, Sept. 11, 1981 8:00 pm at DiCicco's Pizzeria at the corner of Clinton and Blackstone iMMHWWWHIW)WWWIWHWHWWWWW««M<IWMIWWWWH<WWIIHW ' PRESENTS Monday through Tuesday ••Prairie Fire Band" . Wednesday through Sunday "Stone Creek" •Dancing 7 Nights a Week* Happy Hour 4pm to 2arjn_ Every Wednesday and Thursday PUBLISHER NEEDS ON-CAMPUS CONSULTANT *■' W* ere looVIrca (of a faculty menViar or Wouw. oreduat* Itudent or *rjmlnittr*tiv* panon «vho would Ilk* to fupptar-ant pneenl Incom* with • weond cara*r In coH**e textbook publ i*i\ng. The rol. h one of public r»l•tioni. Th* praraquWtn er* relation• •hip* and familiarity with th* *c*dMnlc community. SVa will Provide you with th* »wib and fatowtoda* about textbook pubMilng. We ere e 63-year-old pubHehln* houa* with many author! already on campui. Th« person filtlno this position would oonault with on campui faculty mamotn about th* unique aapecta of our NEW DIMENSION Group at well es provide • lleseon whti our traditional publishing (roup*. Your Inquiry I* cmi-jtuaty con¬ fidential to tend • letter and raeum*... to,.. JameaSpivey * 100 How* Avenue A*. #663 a*W«w*nte,CA9*«a fT-^' »ieltr272962 lO"
Object Description
Title | 1981_09 The Daily Collegian September 1981 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1981 |
Description | Daily (except weedends) during the school year. Microfilm. Palo Alto, Calif.: BMI Library Microfilms, 1986- microfilm reels; 35 mm. Vol.1, no.1 (Feb 8, 1922)- |
Subject | California State University, Fresno -- Periodicals. |
Contributors | Associated Students of Fresno State. |
Coverage | Vol.1 no.1 (Feb 8, 1922)- to present |
Format | Microfilm reels, 35 mm. |
Technical Information | Scanned at 600 dpi; TIFF; Microfilm ScanPro 2000 "E-image data" |
Language | eng |
Description
Title | Sept 9, 1981 Pg. 6-7 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1981 |
Description | Daily (except weedends) during the school year. Microfilm. Palo Alto, Calif.: BMI Library Microfilms, 1986- microfilm reels; 35 mm. Vol.1, no.1 (Feb 8, 1922)- |
Subject | California State University, Fresno -- Periodicals. |
Contributors | Associated Students of Fresno State. |
Coverage | Vol.1 no.1 (Feb 8, 1922)- to present |
Format | Microfilm reels, 35 mm. |
Technical Information | Scanned at 600 dpi; TIFF; Microfilm ScanPro 2000 "E-image data" |
Language | eng |
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Sports
Page 6/Seotember», 1M1—Dally Collegian
wa/gmmtaBmmwmm^jmaammma
Time, money needed to complete project
By Denloe A. Rio*
Staff Writer
It is iust a matter of time—and
money—before the stadium athletic
facility, which will include showers and
a locker room, is taken from the draw¬
ing boards and built next to CSUF's
new stadium.
"The stadium isn't complete until the
athletic facility is completed,* said
Robert Schumacher of the stadium de¬
velopment office. 'That's the way it was
originally planned."
He said they are only $500,000 short of
the approximately' $2 million it will
cost to build the facility. Funds so far
have come from community donations,
including a recent $250,000 gift from
Bob and Dick Duncan of Duncan Ceram¬
ics.
Their contributions to the entire
stadium project total about $1 million,
said Schumacher A half a million dol¬
lars left over from stadium donations
was also used, and money made from
the remaining seat options will go
toward the athletic facility.
'We're hoping momentum from the
football season will push donations," he
PROJECT continued on page 7
/VOM, V¥KP,
PiasFeSSO^ANP
OASSMATES. 45 CtASS
■RZ£5fO£Hr, T WSH
tx> thmk rue
rvu<*/#/Q top heltt/vG
M£ get THKouan
COLLE&E..
JWAKTTtrmAtJKTHeaWKoe
AMSWCA VERSATELLeR'AUrVMATtp
ruia malw/me a»/focrfj first
sreegr. amp thankyou Sofa
f&r your free ccnujmek
/A/EoRMATtOrVfaEPo^r^-ESPEC/ALVr
THE ftcpoizr av //<* ro
baiaatce- xxjk cxecKaooA??''
/Veer,iu/AttTTt)
SHCW MYOKATITtAee
' FC*!8MK.°rAH£XlO |