Dec 7, 1982 Pg. 6-7 |
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Eating USED BOOK BUYBACK 'til 4:30. ate* Main Level n 430 'til closing. KENNEL BOOKSTORE Continued from page 5 "Through this, 1 also came to realize that it was kind of crazy to think anything focused on my weight or that anyone really cared about my weight except me. The most positive thing that came out of the ordeal was finding out that the people who really matter, really don't notice those things because they're looking at you, the person." Like most of the people with eating disorders, Rosemary was part of a family that expected a great deal from its child¬ ren. As the oldest child in the family, Rosemary most Hkely bore the brunt of those expectations. "My father and mother are both ed¬ ucators and there was always a lot of stress put on good grades," Rosemary said. "They also had a very adult attitude toward me, so 1 was expected to always act wisely, sensibly and maturely." Rosemary added that she and many bulimics also fall victim to the images of women depicted in the various media. "You start worrying about the ad¬ vertising images of the female body and it all gets blown out of proportion," she said. "You go down Blackstone Avenue and there's a billboard advertisement for Black Velvet with a beautiful, slender girl and you start thinking that you're sup¬ posed to look like that. Then they hit you on television with all those sexy girls in the diet Coke commercials. It (the images) is all around you. "Before you know it, you stop seeing your mind and your personality as the top priorities and you start seeing your physical images as what you have to fixate on. With me it was always, "Well, if 1 could just be this ideal shape— feminine but on the real.skinny side—everything else in my life would fall into place. Then 1 could handle school and everything else. You carry an ideal image around in your head and you can never measure up to it. It gives you an excuse for failing.", After using food for an escape for about eight years, Rosemary finally decided to do something about her problem. Through group therapy (with a local group called SHED) she began to over¬ come her fears and insecurities. But like Donna, she says there is rarely a firm stopping point. "Rather than think I'm recovered, I like to think of myself as recovering. I use that so 1 dpn't slip back into old habits. A lot of people feel that even though you're not binging or purging or starving yourself to death, you still may have the negative feelings arid you' re still in the recovery process. It all depends on what frame of mind y< "Nov obeir if 1 s i up and eat for the wrong reasons, at least 1 am aware of what I'm doing," she said. "Before, I might eat even if I wasn't hungry but now I try to do something else like calling up my boy¬ friend or someone from the (SHED) group. I try to get my mind on other Where to get help Persons experiencing the symptoms of an eating disorder', haue no fear —-there is help available. ~'""': .-." '•-. For bulimics, a local support group is now being formed by Katheryn Klassen Nuefeld, who says that complete confi¬ dentiality is assured. The group is open to university students or student spouses and will begin meeting the first week of For more information, call 252-9329 or 266-5880. Anorectic* and butirrbcs both can re¬ ceive group support from SHED ^SeH Help in Eating Disorders) by contacting Robert Allen of the Fresno County Men¬ tal Health Dept. Persons wishing more information about earmg-drsorders may wrtte-orveor all of the following organizations: — American Anorexia Nervosa Asso¬ ciation, 133 Cedar Lane, Teaneck, N.J. 07666. —Anorexia Nervosa and Related Eat¬ ing Disorders (ANRED), Box 1012, Grover City, CA, 93433. DECEMBER 7-8 9am — 6pm COLLEGE UNION LOUNGE Classifieds TYPING-Accurate, quick and rea¬ sonable. Paper furnished. Call Wanda 299-«043. EXPERT TYPING—$1.50/page, includes editing. Within walking dis¬ tance of CSUF. 229-9333. Marriage—Simple, Blood Test, for live-in; 03*3. -Earn Extra Money working part time. Unlimited potential. For self starters. Call 298-5579. Interviews- Thursdays. . after 6 p.m HEYGIRLS-Helpusgetour looking guys on campus for ; male calendar! Look for flyei campus for more info! Deadline December 15, 19S2. H«MclUMr» amd babysit¬ ter* eaaaal by a professional serv¬ ice company. $2 to $5/hr. Work •round your cla** *chedule. Call serv¬ ice plea**! 4311603. Sports Grapplers 14th at Western Open LAS VEGAS — Sylvester Carver Sunday. He had four convincing win*, finished second in his weight class to lead including an 11-5 decision over *econd- i he Bulldog wrestling to a 14th place seeded Ho>ftrd Lawson of Cal Poiy-San showing in the Western Open during the Luis C*bi*po, to gain a *hot at Sheets, weekend. rankecLNo. 1 in the country. Carver, seeded third in the 167-pound Sheets, a two-time all-American, was ■.weight division, lost to top-seeded Mike second in the nation last year. Sheets of Oklahoma State jnjhe finals TheBullotofl*larKkdl*thoi34tfcamsiri the weekend tournament. Oklahoma Minnesota'* Ed Gdae took a 12-2 over¬ state and Oklahoma battled to th* end time decision in th* fourth, and the OSU Cowboy* wound up CUffe ,Go*»e, Fr**no'» 126-pound winning the tourney with 162 point*. The grappler, dropped hi* opening match to Sooner* were cloae behind at 132y4. Mark Markoe of Oregon State, 11-2 and Cal State-BakersSeldwa* third with 94 was ean^ted when Markoek^ hi* next points and Cal Poly was fourth with 87J4. match. San Jose State was s*venthj with 59 DeUddo said 134-pound John Vaga* point*, Utah State ninth at 46K and host i^ed good in spot* a* Vega wentM.He Nevada-Las Vegas 10th at 39% to high 05*^ ^h a 14-9 d**Jewn of Stanford's John Bradley and want on to crush ISfJs BghtPCAAl Fresno landed just behind Oregon State and edged out Central Oklahoma State by a half point. Carver improved bis personal record to 8-1 with the showing in th* Western Open. Bulldog coach Derm* DeLfckfo j^, Mexico, 8-1 JimSenara\HW. But Oklahoma Stat*'* Oar Anderson pinned the ekaStrnewded Vega with jus' three second* rernaWng ™ the match. Vega went on to lo»« to Tom Rardin o' said Carver, a junior transfer from Chabot JC, has potential to be a fore* tn the NCAA tournament later "m the season. He was a two-time aB-*tar at Chabot. Carver opened action with a 5-0 decision over Jack Norton and bested Ron Whitman of Wyoming, 8-4. After pounding sbthVeeected Melvin Dough* of CHdahorna State, Carver went on to defeat Lawson. Douglas is seventh in the Carver beat Whitman, 13-7. Against Sheets, Carver battled the Sooner to a 2-2 draw after one period. Sheets gained a three-point near fall on Carver in the secondhand then hung on to hold of Carver in the third. Ty McGuire opened action in the 150- pound divioon with a 14-6 win over Mesa's Tom Oaen and was pinned by the tournament champion in Kenny Monday of Oklahoma State. Monday got the pin at 457. McGuire came back to pin Oaremont's Bob Birdmen M 3:45 before toeing to Bakersfield's Troy Osboume, 14-4. Gene Auson, seeded No. 8 in .the 158- pound clas*, lost to Long Beach State wrestler Kefly Boyd. Afaon was efani rated when Boyd lo»t his next match. Tenth-seeded Robin Green decisioned Tom Mikataon of Biola, 18-5 to open his weekend in the 177-pound division, but ■„, o, , ,rv,, ,:, ,™ ,„„,,. was rinnadbyCWPok/. Roger Sayles at In the 118-pound weight, Abric Liley 3:45. A nb mjury forced Green to wrth- made it into the fourth round. He opened draw from the remainder of the hi* route with a quick pin of Mesa tournament. College's Mark Bahaza at 1:54. At 190 pounds, Phil Dunford, started Mike Clevervger of Louisiana State with a pin of Northern Arizona's Scott pinned Liley at 5:50 in the second round, Autenrith at 1:14 and then was ripped in a but Liley came back to down the Stanford 25-2 decision to eighth-seeded Tom representative, 17-5. Nolan. DOYOUR „ RWK^WaXltHF LEAVING CAMPUS... • Instant cash...anytime day or night. • Make deposits and payments. . Transfer money from one account to another. The MAX 24-Hour Teller, ^^h^^V^^^^ Coming soon to th* FSU campus. gJ£$fi5^ J * " MAX 24-Hour Teller on the Fresno State campus. With a MAXCard you can withdraw cash, m*k« deposits end toan payments, transfer money from checking to savings, end check your account balances instantly around the clock, seven days a week, without leaving campus. And vou can usa your MAXCard just about anywhere In the Calt»ybebaw weproyfoe more2*Hour automated tellers In the Valley than any other financial institution. And our new Student ChvsHna Account Is designed to m—t ymLMeds. W«v developed a special, tow-ooet ^STSJ-^lnt!^ students. It offers you a number of ways to y^™**J™. money, and begin eatebUehfng your personal credit A special -Bulldog" checkbook co»er Is now eveUab*. ■▲VINOS
Object Description
Title | 1982_12 The Daily Collegian December 1982 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1982 |
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 | Dec 7, 1982 Pg. 6-7 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1982 |
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 |
Full-Text-Search | Eating USED BOOK BUYBACK 'til 4:30. ate* Main Level n 430 'til closing. KENNEL BOOKSTORE Continued from page 5 "Through this, 1 also came to realize that it was kind of crazy to think anything focused on my weight or that anyone really cared about my weight except me. The most positive thing that came out of the ordeal was finding out that the people who really matter, really don't notice those things because they're looking at you, the person." Like most of the people with eating disorders, Rosemary was part of a family that expected a great deal from its child¬ ren. As the oldest child in the family, Rosemary most Hkely bore the brunt of those expectations. "My father and mother are both ed¬ ucators and there was always a lot of stress put on good grades," Rosemary said. "They also had a very adult attitude toward me, so 1 was expected to always act wisely, sensibly and maturely." Rosemary added that she and many bulimics also fall victim to the images of women depicted in the various media. "You start worrying about the ad¬ vertising images of the female body and it all gets blown out of proportion," she said. "You go down Blackstone Avenue and there's a billboard advertisement for Black Velvet with a beautiful, slender girl and you start thinking that you're sup¬ posed to look like that. Then they hit you on television with all those sexy girls in the diet Coke commercials. It (the images) is all around you. "Before you know it, you stop seeing your mind and your personality as the top priorities and you start seeing your physical images as what you have to fixate on. With me it was always, "Well, if 1 could just be this ideal shape— feminine but on the real.skinny side—everything else in my life would fall into place. Then 1 could handle school and everything else. You carry an ideal image around in your head and you can never measure up to it. It gives you an excuse for failing.", After using food for an escape for about eight years, Rosemary finally decided to do something about her problem. Through group therapy (with a local group called SHED) she began to over¬ come her fears and insecurities. But like Donna, she says there is rarely a firm stopping point. "Rather than think I'm recovered, I like to think of myself as recovering. I use that so 1 dpn't slip back into old habits. A lot of people feel that even though you're not binging or purging or starving yourself to death, you still may have the negative feelings arid you' re still in the recovery process. It all depends on what frame of mind y< "Nov obeir if 1 s i up and eat for the wrong reasons, at least 1 am aware of what I'm doing," she said. "Before, I might eat even if I wasn't hungry but now I try to do something else like calling up my boy¬ friend or someone from the (SHED) group. I try to get my mind on other Where to get help Persons experiencing the symptoms of an eating disorder', haue no fear —-there is help available. ~'""': .-." '•-. For bulimics, a local support group is now being formed by Katheryn Klassen Nuefeld, who says that complete confi¬ dentiality is assured. The group is open to university students or student spouses and will begin meeting the first week of For more information, call 252-9329 or 266-5880. Anorectic* and butirrbcs both can re¬ ceive group support from SHED ^SeH Help in Eating Disorders) by contacting Robert Allen of the Fresno County Men¬ tal Health Dept. Persons wishing more information about earmg-drsorders may wrtte-orveor all of the following organizations: — American Anorexia Nervosa Asso¬ ciation, 133 Cedar Lane, Teaneck, N.J. 07666. —Anorexia Nervosa and Related Eat¬ ing Disorders (ANRED), Box 1012, Grover City, CA, 93433. DECEMBER 7-8 9am — 6pm COLLEGE UNION LOUNGE Classifieds TYPING-Accurate, quick and rea¬ sonable. Paper furnished. Call Wanda 299-«043. EXPERT TYPING—$1.50/page, includes editing. Within walking dis¬ tance of CSUF. 229-9333. Marriage—Simple, Blood Test, for live-in; 03*3. -Earn Extra Money working part time. Unlimited potential. For self starters. Call 298-5579. Interviews- Thursdays. . after 6 p.m HEYGIRLS-Helpusgetour looking guys on campus for ; male calendar! Look for flyei campus for more info! Deadline December 15, 19S2. H«MclUMr» amd babysit¬ ter* eaaaal by a professional serv¬ ice company. $2 to $5/hr. Work •round your cla** *chedule. Call serv¬ ice plea**! 4311603. Sports Grapplers 14th at Western Open LAS VEGAS — Sylvester Carver Sunday. He had four convincing win*, finished second in his weight class to lead including an 11-5 decision over *econd- i he Bulldog wrestling to a 14th place seeded Ho>ftrd Lawson of Cal Poiy-San showing in the Western Open during the Luis C*bi*po, to gain a *hot at Sheets, weekend. rankecLNo. 1 in the country. Carver, seeded third in the 167-pound Sheets, a two-time all-American, was ■.weight division, lost to top-seeded Mike second in the nation last year. Sheets of Oklahoma State jnjhe finals TheBullotofl*larKkdl*thoi34tfcamsiri the weekend tournament. Oklahoma Minnesota'* Ed Gdae took a 12-2 over¬ state and Oklahoma battled to th* end time decision in th* fourth, and the OSU Cowboy* wound up CUffe ,Go*»e, Fr**no'» 126-pound winning the tourney with 162 point*. The grappler, dropped hi* opening match to Sooner* were cloae behind at 132y4. Mark Markoe of Oregon State, 11-2 and Cal State-BakersSeldwa* third with 94 was ean^ted when Markoek^ hi* next points and Cal Poly was fourth with 87J4. match. San Jose State was s*venthj with 59 DeUddo said 134-pound John Vaga* point*, Utah State ninth at 46K and host i^ed good in spot* a* Vega wentM.He Nevada-Las Vegas 10th at 39% to high 05*^ ^h a 14-9 d**Jewn of Stanford's John Bradley and want on to crush ISfJs BghtPCAAl Fresno landed just behind Oregon State and edged out Central Oklahoma State by a half point. Carver improved bis personal record to 8-1 with the showing in th* Western Open. Bulldog coach Derm* DeLfckfo j^, Mexico, 8-1 JimSenara\HW. But Oklahoma Stat*'* Oar Anderson pinned the ekaStrnewded Vega with jus' three second* rernaWng ™ the match. Vega went on to lo»« to Tom Rardin o' said Carver, a junior transfer from Chabot JC, has potential to be a fore* tn the NCAA tournament later "m the season. He was a two-time aB-*tar at Chabot. Carver opened action with a 5-0 decision over Jack Norton and bested Ron Whitman of Wyoming, 8-4. After pounding sbthVeeected Melvin Dough* of CHdahorna State, Carver went on to defeat Lawson. Douglas is seventh in the Carver beat Whitman, 13-7. Against Sheets, Carver battled the Sooner to a 2-2 draw after one period. Sheets gained a three-point near fall on Carver in the secondhand then hung on to hold of Carver in the third. Ty McGuire opened action in the 150- pound divioon with a 14-6 win over Mesa's Tom Oaen and was pinned by the tournament champion in Kenny Monday of Oklahoma State. Monday got the pin at 457. McGuire came back to pin Oaremont's Bob Birdmen M 3:45 before toeing to Bakersfield's Troy Osboume, 14-4. Gene Auson, seeded No. 8 in .the 158- pound clas*, lost to Long Beach State wrestler Kefly Boyd. Afaon was efani rated when Boyd lo»t his next match. Tenth-seeded Robin Green decisioned Tom Mikataon of Biola, 18-5 to open his weekend in the 177-pound division, but ■„, o, , ,rv,, ,:, ,™ ,„„,,. was rinnadbyCWPok/. Roger Sayles at In the 118-pound weight, Abric Liley 3:45. A nb mjury forced Green to wrth- made it into the fourth round. He opened draw from the remainder of the hi* route with a quick pin of Mesa tournament. College's Mark Bahaza at 1:54. At 190 pounds, Phil Dunford, started Mike Clevervger of Louisiana State with a pin of Northern Arizona's Scott pinned Liley at 5:50 in the second round, Autenrith at 1:14 and then was ripped in a but Liley came back to down the Stanford 25-2 decision to eighth-seeded Tom representative, 17-5. Nolan. DOYOUR „ RWK^WaXltHF LEAVING CAMPUS... • Instant cash...anytime day or night. • Make deposits and payments. . Transfer money from one account to another. The MAX 24-Hour Teller, ^^h^^V^^^^ Coming soon to th* FSU campus. gJ£$fi5^ J * " MAX 24-Hour Teller on the Fresno State campus. With a MAXCard you can withdraw cash, m*k« deposits end toan payments, transfer money from checking to savings, end check your account balances instantly around the clock, seven days a week, without leaving campus. And vou can usa your MAXCard just about anywhere In the Calt»ybebaw weproyfoe more2*Hour automated tellers In the Valley than any other financial institution. And our new Student ChvsHna Account Is designed to m—t ymLMeds. W«v developed a special, tow-ooet ^STSJ-^lnt!^ students. It offers you a number of ways to y^™**J™. money, and begin eatebUehfng your personal credit A special -Bulldog" checkbook co»er Is now eveUab*. ■▲VINOS |