April 2, 1984 Pg. 8- April 3, 1984 Pg. 1 |
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April 2,1984 ^IPCPfftig a*-!* eOzzie eBoston Continued from page 7 Ozzie Smith and George Hendrick ram ing havoc on opposing catchers. Montreal has acquired a Rose (Pete) but lost Manny Trilho and Al Oliver in off-season bungles. It's rumored that Grecian-formula Pete will be the Icadoff hitter for the Expos attack which would be like putting an Edsel on the poll posi¬ tion of the Indy 500. Pittsburgh has done a facelift and lovers of the game will do a double lake in looking at ihe "new Pi- fences with such sluggers as Dave Parker and Mike Easier gone. The Cubbies. Phils and Meis will stumble out of the blocks and fade fasi from there. AL West- major's weakest division. Oakland and Chicago will contest the race alone wilh powerful pitching staffs The A's hurlers are just out of diapers while Ihe White Sox have las! year's Cy Young, winner ijMarr f Hoyt ( it of lop I his division is loaded! Detroit. Bal¬ timore. Toronio and Milwaukee will all be in ihe hum for ihciopspoi. But one has to finally emerge from ihe smoke and it *ill be ihe Tigers of Detroit. Sparky And potential and then ship the Al West's winner (Oakland) in the playoffs before falling to ihe Dodger's in seven games in t Dan ready Baltimore will be hard pressed lo repeal but ihe World Series champs have the guns lo do A, As usual the Orioles have plenty of pitching and still have offensive weapons Eddie Murray and Cal Ripkein Jr Milwaukee's Brew Crew will terrorize ihe league again wilh a classic "Murderers Row "with Cecil Cooper. Ben Oglivc. Ted Simmons. Robin Younl. etc.. etc. The Jays will hang lough and fold in the Sep- Bosion. the Bronx Bombers of New York collection of prima donnas. By the time the season ends. Yogi Berra will be asking himself what Dave Rhigetti is doing in the bullpen and why he took the job in the first place. Boston—Same old story in Boston. Mur¬ derous hitting and no pitching to speak of. Cleveland—The Indians are going to try and run this year. They'll be interesting if nothing else. National League Waat Lo* Angela*—The division is improved, but the Dodgers will still win. With that starting pitching, il won't matter how many adventures take place on defense. Usorda will be jolly in October. Atlanta—The Braves have been watching too many clips of the Royals. The Braves were introublewith Pascual Perez. Without him. well... At least there's Dale Murphy. San Diego— The playoffs will once again be spared the sight of I he ugliest uniforms in baseball, next to Ihe Houston Astros. Those uniforms should have a question San Francisco—The Giants actually imroved themselves during the offseason. But Johnnie LeMaster leading off? Houston—The Astros could jusi as easily contend for second. New faces, but the same story. Lots of speed and pitching. Cincinnati—The good news is that Dave Parker has his weight under 400. The bad news is that manager Vern Rapp will drive SL Louie— Its hard to believe lhat every¬ body on this team will have an off-year again. The Cards were made for this suddenly weak divison. This track team will race all ihe way to the playoffs. Montreal—The Expos are the little boys who cried pennant one time to often. The masters of under achievement finish eight back, so what do they do? Trade Al Oliver and acquire an over the hill hustler who won't hit over .240. These guys, as talented as they are. are still a psychiatrists dream. PHtaburah— Not the lumber company, jusi the Q-Tip boys. If the Cards and Expos falter, they could clean up. Philadelphia—This year's model doesn't even resemble last year's division tililists. Sieve Carlton has lo get old sometime, and John Denny won't win any more awards. But anything is possible in this Chicago—Great coaching, hitting, fans, and the best park in the majors. But still no pitching. Just when you think Dallas Green is leading ihem lo contention, they make a Irade like for an outfielder lo go along wilh iheir 10 other ones. New York—As usual, the Meis arc Why. at this rate, they mighl Pesky Tigers earn split with Bulldogs STOCKTON—The Fresno Slate baseball team stumbled slightly on its weekend trip to Stockton, but still managed to main¬ tain its position at the top ofthe Northern California Baseball Association stand¬ ings. The Bulldogs, who took an 11-4 deci¬ sion from the University of Pacific Tigers Saturday, split a doubleheader with Ihe pesky tigers Sunday at Billy Herbert Field. The Bulldogs took the opener. 5-4. before dropping the seven-inning night¬ cap. 4-3. The Bulldogs, who will be in Reno Wednesday for a noon doubleheader with the Universityof Nevada-Reno Wolfpack. saw their record drop to 28-9-2 with the split, while UOP increased its mark to 17-21-1. The Bulldogs are 4-1 in NCBA play, while UOP is 3-5. Fresno State's Bob Jacobsen. despite striking out seven batters took the loss in the nightcap, dropping his record to 3-3. The Tigers'single run in the sixth inning gave Mike Pitz his fourth win of the sea¬ son against four losses. Senior hurler John Hoover was once again the star for Fresno State, blowing past the Tigers in the opener for his 10th win against just two losses. H oover struck out 11 UOP batters, increasing his nation- leading total to 121. The Bulldogs, led by Scott Buss and Tony Contelmo, scored three runs in the fifth inning lo put away the Tigers. •Track Continued from page 6 "IVe had a tendency nol lo gel high enough in my set position. Today I started high and it seemed to help." The Bulldogs got some added strength in points in the field events, led by seven- lime All-American Matt Mileham, witha 237-0 effort in the hammer throw. A- notjier weightman. Alan Graves, finished second in the javelin behind Long Beach State's Dan O 'Donald and third in the shot put at 47:6 1/2. One of the biggest surprises occurred in the weather-delayed pole-vault in which Bulldog freshman stand-out Doug Fraley failed to clear 15-6. although he has a best of 17-1. Instead. Fraley's teammate Mark k the c> : 16-0. Heppner t "It's always tough to come back after a break like thai." said Heppner of the hour-and-a-half delay from a spout of rain. "This is the best I've jumped in quite a while but not the best I've felt. Other important point earners included Jack Armour, who won the 800-meters. Larry Walker, who took the 400-mcters and placed second in the 200 meters, and Dan lliff, who placed second in the high jump at 6-10. In the distance events. Barasa Thomas won the 3000-meter steeplechase in 9:14.13 and Eddie Fuel placed third in the 5000 meters at 14:39. The Bulldogs will hit the track again this Saturday in ihe Fresno Bee Games at Warmerdam Field. Among the partici¬ pants expected fo/themeetisthe Finland •Softball Continued from page 6 freshmen Nusheen Zarneger tripled and then scored on a wild pitch in the first Saturday the Bulldogs ran into UOP's Tammy Joslin who not only silenced the Fresno State bats wilh her pitching pro¬ wess but also hurt Pickel and company on In the first game Joslin pitched the Tig¬ ers to a 1-0 win on a four-hitter. At the mate Laura Stubbs in the second inning off hard luck loser Cambria who saw her record dip to 12-8. ln.the second game Fresno State found itself down 2-0 but then picked up a run in the sixth off Tiger starter Shelly Mahoney and had the UOP pitcher on the ropes in the seventh when Joslin entered the fray in relief. With the bases loaded and one out in the final frame Joslin struck out Karen nduced Cindy John- o foul e Cambria in the opener. Romeiro ust six hils but wps also tagged with ss. dropping her record to 8-9 on the le by 1998. Summer Camp Jobs Camp Max Strauss is a resident camp located in Southern California. We provide a therapeutic ** recreation experience for boys who may be experiencing problems in school, at home, with peers, or who have some small degree of physical limitations. *cabin counselors *wranglers *nature specialists 'handicrafts 'garden specialists Applications available in JAB #256 or call collect Camp Max Strauss (213) 825-1234 Bulldog sports schedule laiional. Bulldog Field. 3:00 p.m. <DH) Tuesday, April 3 Softball versus U.S. Inte Wednesday, April 4 Baseball versus Nevada-Reno. 1:00 p.m. at Reno (DH) Softball versus Santa Clara. Bulldog Field. 2:00 pm (DH) Thursday, April 6 Men's Tennis versus UC Davis at Davis, 2:00 pm ' , Women's Tennis.versus Fresno Cily College at FCC. 2:00 pro kiUHt *> ***"**> * * Applications are now being accepted for the position of College Union Programming Publicity Coordinator.? Position requires minimum of 20 hours per week, [ stipend: $200.00 per month. Job description and application are available in CU Room 306 . Deadline for application, resume, letters of recommendation and samples of work is: Friday, April 13, 4:00PM Haggling to begin over outlay budget By Marty BuitMon The administration has a little more than a month to haggle over the 1984-85 Major Capitol Outlay Budget — which includes a $468,000 request (ot the new business building — with the CSU Chan¬ cellor's Office before the final program must be submitted May 4. A copy ofthe budget, which asks for the funding of two projects this year and eight others over the next five years, has already been received by the Chancellor's Office. According to Spaceand Facilities Planner Tim Johnson, the administration must now wait for the response that will signal the beginning ofthe "real" budget process. "We're just giving the Chancellor's Of¬ fice a clianoe to see what our thinking is," Johnson said. The period between the return of the outlay budget within the next two weeks and the May submission deadline will be spent arguing over the merits of the plan and specific dollar requests, Johnson said.' The result of the haggling will be sent to the Board of Trustees for final approval. "Well get back a copy ofthe outlay, and it will be all marked up and considerably changed."Johnsonsaid. "Well argue wilh them, win some arid lose some, and present it in May." The budget submitted lo the Chan¬ cellor's Office requests $26,000 for prelimi¬ nary P1**" and drawings for the construc¬ tion of a new shipping and receiving center in the corporation yard, as well as $468,000 for business building plans and drawings. The budget also makes refer¬ ence to other projects, including the remo¬ deling of the Speech Arts Building, the Science Building and the Swine Unit, for which the university will request funding during the next five years. According to Johnson, it's important to get the latter to the Chancellor's Office a few years in advance because money is tight and universities that wait too long to ask for something simply don't get the funding they need. "We're just giving them a brief sum¬ mary of what we have in mind," he said. "It's very important lhat sve start waiting in line in 1984." Before the revised budget is returned to the Chanreljpr's Office, Johnson said, it will go to Hfe Campus Planning Commit¬ tee aruJIpfcssibly to several other commit¬ tees fora final check. It's important for the campus to agree on its own budget, he The final major capitol outlay budget will contain two levels of materials. The first, the program justification, is a "very elaborate document" that gives the uni¬ versity's "whole case" for wanting certain funding. Program justifications will be included for the Business and Shipping/ •See Budget, page 3 CSU, Fresno Tuesday, April 3,19184 The Daily Collegian Hoop Dancing— Hart gets strength from youth ALBANY. NY (College Press Service) — When a lonely candidate named Gary Hart visited Albany in May 1983. Gov. Mario Cuomo was too busy to see him. Hart's organizers gave up trying to book a room at the State University of New York-Albany (SUNYA)campus be¬ cause, as one organizer remembers it, they were worried the candidate couldn't draw a crowd big enough to fill one. Things have changed. In the weeks before the April 3 New York primary, the campus chapter of Americans With Hart had about 100 volunteers, about 40 of whom were "active."says Michael Schmall, the campus campaign's co-coordinator. And while there is student support for both Walter Mondale and Jesse Jackson on the campus. Patty Salkin. the officialiy- 'Students who look at the issues and not at appearance are swinging to Mondale.' -White uncommitted head of the Albany State Young Democrats, concedes that "from what IVe seen and personal contact, I'd say rtiere's a lot of student interest in Hart." Indeed. for the first time since 1972, a Democratic presidential candidate seems to have cauaght fire among a broad cross section of students around the country. Over 5,000 studenu heard Hart speak at the University of Illinois two weeks ago. About 1.200 showedupto listen to him at Cal-Berkeley. while another 300 couldn't get in. During the Massachusetts primary. Hart handily won student precincts in Amherst. Eric Schwartz. Hart's youth coordina¬ tor, spoke of mobilizing a nationwide volunteer corps of 10.000 studenu to match Walter Mondale's volunteers from organized labor. At Marquette. Han seems to be draw¬ ing a lot of support on a campus thai is "about 80 percent Republican." reported Kevin Jcreczek. president of Marquette's Young Democrats' chapter. ' With the possible exception of schools in New York and Pennsylvania, explained the nominally-uncommitted Dave Smith of Young Democrats' headquarters in Washington D.C, "campuses are pro- Han as opposed to Moodalc." "I sense a great lack of enthusiasm and lack of inspiration for Mondale," said Cathy Campbell. Berkeley's student body •See Hart, page 4
Object Description
Title | 1984_04 The Daily Collegian April 1984 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1984 |
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 | April 2, 1984 Pg. 8- April 3, 1984 Pg. 1 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1984 |
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 |
April 2,1984
^IPCPfftig a*-!*
eOzzie eBoston
Continued from page 7
Ozzie Smith and George Hendrick ram ing
havoc on opposing catchers.
Montreal has acquired a Rose (Pete)
but lost Manny Trilho and Al Oliver in
off-season bungles. It's rumored that
Grecian-formula Pete will be the Icadoff
hitter for the Expos attack which would
be like putting an Edsel on the poll posi¬
tion of the Indy 500. Pittsburgh has done a
facelift and lovers of the game will do a
double lake in looking at ihe "new Pi-
fences with such sluggers as Dave Parker
and Mike Easier gone. The Cubbies. Phils
and Meis will stumble out of the blocks
and fade fasi from there.
AL West-
major's weakest division. Oakland and
Chicago will contest the race alone wilh
powerful pitching staffs The A's hurlers
are just out of diapers while Ihe White Sox
have las! year's Cy Young, winner ijMarr
f Hoyt (
it of
lop I his division is loaded! Detroit. Bal¬
timore. Toronio and Milwaukee will all
be in ihe hum for ihciopspoi. But one has
to finally emerge from ihe smoke and it
*ill be ihe Tigers of Detroit. Sparky And
potential and then ship the Al West's
winner (Oakland) in the playoffs before
falling to ihe Dodger's in seven games in
t Dan
ready
Baltimore will be hard pressed lo repeal
but ihe World Series champs have the
guns lo do A, As usual the Orioles have
plenty of pitching and still have offensive
weapons Eddie Murray and Cal Ripkein
Jr Milwaukee's Brew Crew will terrorize
ihe league again wilh a classic "Murderers
Row "with Cecil Cooper. Ben Oglivc. Ted
Simmons. Robin Younl. etc.. etc. The
Jays will hang lough and fold in the Sep-
Bosion. the Bronx Bombers of New York
collection of prima donnas. By the time
the season ends. Yogi Berra will be asking
himself what Dave Rhigetti is doing in the
bullpen and why he took the job in the
first place.
Boston—Same old story in Boston. Mur¬
derous hitting and no pitching to speak of.
Cleveland—The Indians are going to try
and run this year. They'll be interesting if
nothing else.
National League Waat
Lo* Angela*—The division is improved,
but the Dodgers will still win. With that
starting pitching, il won't matter how
many adventures take place on defense.
Usorda will be jolly in October.
Atlanta—The Braves have been watching
too many clips of the Royals. The Braves
were introublewith Pascual Perez. Without
him. well... At least there's Dale Murphy.
San Diego— The playoffs will once again
be spared the sight of I he ugliest uniforms
in baseball, next to Ihe Houston Astros.
Those uniforms should have a question
San Francisco—The Giants actually
imroved themselves during the offseason.
But Johnnie LeMaster leading off?
Houston—The Astros could jusi as easily
contend for second. New faces, but the
same story. Lots of speed and pitching.
Cincinnati—The good news is that Dave
Parker has his weight under 400. The bad
news is that manager Vern Rapp will drive
SL Louie— Its hard to believe lhat every¬
body on this team will have an off-year
again. The Cards were made for this
suddenly weak divison. This track team
will race all ihe way to the playoffs.
Montreal—The Expos are the little boys
who cried pennant one time to often. The
masters of under achievement finish eight
back, so what do they do? Trade Al Oliver
and acquire an over the hill hustler who
won't hit over .240. These guys, as talented
as they are. are still a psychiatrists dream.
PHtaburah— Not the lumber company,
jusi the Q-Tip boys. If the Cards and
Expos falter, they could clean up.
Philadelphia—This year's model doesn't
even resemble last year's division tililists.
Sieve Carlton has lo get old sometime,
and John Denny won't win any more
awards. But anything is possible in this
Chicago—Great coaching, hitting, fans,
and the best park in the majors. But still
no pitching. Just when you think Dallas
Green is leading ihem lo contention, they
make a Irade like for an outfielder lo go
along wilh iheir 10 other ones.
New York—As usual, the Meis arc
Why. at this rate, they mighl
Pesky Tigers earn
split with Bulldogs
STOCKTON—The Fresno Slate baseball
team stumbled slightly on its weekend trip
to Stockton, but still managed to main¬
tain its position at the top ofthe Northern
California Baseball Association stand¬
ings.
The Bulldogs, who took an 11-4 deci¬
sion from the University of Pacific Tigers
Saturday, split a doubleheader with Ihe
pesky tigers Sunday at Billy Herbert Field.
The Bulldogs took the opener. 5-4.
before dropping the seven-inning night¬
cap. 4-3.
The Bulldogs, who will be in Reno
Wednesday for a noon doubleheader with
the Universityof Nevada-Reno Wolfpack.
saw their record drop to 28-9-2 with the
split, while UOP increased its mark to
17-21-1.
The Bulldogs are 4-1 in NCBA play,
while UOP is 3-5.
Fresno State's Bob Jacobsen. despite
striking out seven batters took the loss in
the nightcap, dropping his record to 3-3.
The Tigers'single run in the sixth inning
gave Mike Pitz his fourth win of the sea¬
son against four losses.
Senior hurler John Hoover was once
again the star for Fresno State, blowing
past the Tigers in the opener for his 10th
win against just two losses. H oover struck
out 11 UOP batters, increasing his nation-
leading total to 121.
The Bulldogs, led by Scott Buss and
Tony Contelmo, scored three runs in the
fifth inning lo put away the Tigers.
•Track
Continued from page 6
"IVe had a tendency nol lo gel high
enough in my set position. Today I started
high and it seemed to help."
The Bulldogs got some added strength
in points in the field events, led by seven-
lime All-American Matt Mileham, witha
237-0 effort in the hammer throw. A-
notjier weightman. Alan Graves, finished
second in the javelin behind Long Beach
State's Dan O 'Donald and third in the
shot put at 47:6 1/2.
One of the biggest surprises occurred in
the weather-delayed pole-vault in which
Bulldog freshman stand-out Doug Fraley
failed to clear 15-6. although he has a best
of 17-1. Instead. Fraley's teammate Mark
k the c>
: 16-0.
Heppner t
"It's always tough to come back after a
break like thai." said Heppner of the
hour-and-a-half delay from a spout of
rain. "This is the best I've jumped in quite
a while but not the best I've felt.
Other important point earners included
Jack Armour, who won the 800-meters.
Larry Walker, who took the 400-mcters
and placed second in the 200 meters, and
Dan lliff, who placed second in the high
jump at 6-10.
In the distance events. Barasa Thomas
won the 3000-meter steeplechase in 9:14.13
and Eddie Fuel placed third in the 5000
meters at 14:39.
The Bulldogs will hit the track again
this Saturday in ihe Fresno Bee Games at
Warmerdam Field. Among the partici¬
pants expected fo/themeetisthe Finland
•Softball
Continued from page 6
freshmen Nusheen Zarneger tripled and
then scored on a wild pitch in the first
Saturday the Bulldogs ran into UOP's
Tammy Joslin who not only silenced the
Fresno State bats wilh her pitching pro¬
wess but also hurt Pickel and company on
In the first game Joslin pitched the Tig¬
ers to a 1-0 win on a four-hitter. At the
mate Laura Stubbs in the second inning
off hard luck loser Cambria who saw her
record dip to 12-8.
ln.the second game Fresno State found
itself down 2-0 but then picked up a run in
the sixth off Tiger starter Shelly Mahoney
and had the UOP pitcher on the ropes in
the seventh when Joslin entered the fray in
relief. With the bases loaded and one out
in the final frame Joslin struck out Karen
nduced Cindy John-
o foul
e Cambria in the opener. Romeiro
ust six hils but wps also tagged with
ss. dropping her record to 8-9 on the
le by 1998.
Summer Camp Jobs
Camp Max Strauss is a resident camp located in
Southern California. We provide a therapeutic **
recreation experience for boys who may be
experiencing problems in school, at home, with
peers, or who have some small degree of physical
limitations.
*cabin counselors
*wranglers
*nature specialists
'handicrafts
'garden specialists
Applications available in JAB #256
or call collect Camp Max Strauss
(213) 825-1234
Bulldog sports schedule
laiional. Bulldog Field. 3:00 p.m. |