Feb 23, 1984 Pg. 8- Feb 24, 1984 Pg. 1 |
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Feb.23, 1984 Bike accident retold; Cyclist more aware Bicyclists should always keep an eye on traffic but as CSUF Public Administra¬ tion student Steve Smith found out, there Smith was riding home from work late at night Jan. 31, when he collided with a vehicle parked on Shaw Avenue. Upon impact, he was propelled head first through the car's rear window, cutting the skin arund his right eye. " . • ccording concentrating on going fast," Smith said, recalling how the accident happened. "Il hit my face, because as I saw it coming 1 rolled and tucked my shoulder," said Smith. The person in the car he had just passed came back to help Smith, who was pulling himself out of the parked car. "The guy came up, who I'd passed, and •Wow! What happened?', and 1 The first emergency vehicle to arrive, said Smith, was a fire truck. The police came next, to Uke a report, followed shortly by an ambulance. "When the firemen got there the first guy bent down to look at mc. and 1 was scared but I wanted to show them 1 wasnt scared." Smith said. :old h I. At "So I s. y for w Smith, a is passing a ving When he cut back over to the curb. Sn overestimated the distance and slammed blood," said Si into the rear of a parked car. "Then I too! that point the driver called for i "I felt my face, and 1 felt warmth, but 1 didn't know what il was. Then I looked down, and blood was dripping from my face onto the ground. I saw the darkness nidi CLASSIFIEDS Found Bicycle Lady's brown 3-speed has been gathering rust in front of Keats Building. Is locked with combination plastic coated chain. Did you forget .where you parked it? First noticed the week before classes began. If it'yours, come and get it before the police do j ROOMMATES Female roommate wanted Prefer quiet christian. Own room and bathroom. Californian apts. Janice 221-9033 " 3br/2aba Hse., Pool Kitch. Accessible 3 m CSUF S210& 1/3 utili 294 0163 Kevin roommate wanted: To share a huge 1 bedroom apt. Nice location. Call anytime. jaflgfla. Roommate Wanted to share 2 bedroom apartment near CSUF. $165.00/monthly Manuel 222-0804 Wanted. • Female, non-smoker, love dogs. To share 3 bdrm, nice, quiet house. 5 minutes from campus. $125 plus 1/3 utilities (negotiable). Call Diane/John 222-3833. Need Male Baommate For 2-bedroom apt. Plaza Apartments. $157.50 plus 435-2131 TYPING "*»*"*■ Reports, term Papers, Resumes, Etc. Speedy, Accurate, Reasonable Rate! CaJI2ta-HT3 Typae** hy Maury Back-to-school special. Most work $l/pa9C **a\*5tar Word Processing and Secretarial Service For the professional look, let a type and print your reports, term paper, etc. on our letter quality Low introductory rate. 298-5333 Accurate atva DepemtlmbU. Janet* Professional Reaame Service Layou t -Revision- Typing-Composition. Call. . 224J.599*. t was my Duple steps back and AUTOMOBILE Motorcycle '81 Yamaha XS400. Fully loaded: many extra's. $1,100.00. 297-8382 10 X 50 Mobile Home 2 bedroom, adult park, neai Woodward Park. $6,000. 439-5828 '80 Camera Z28 Very clean & loaded. 2521116 or 1-638 2222 a»U for Rick Kawasaki KZ 305 (CSR) 1981 (3,800 miles). UKE NEW!! $900 or best offer. Call Anereas. 439-5404 EMPLOYMENT Help Wanted Cruiseships Hiring! $16-$30,000! Carribean, Hawaii, World. Call for guide, directory, newsletter. 1-916-944-4440 EXT CSUFRESNOCBUISE Part-time Employment Service Station Salesman 30 hr. per/wk. eves til 9pm'plus weekends. Chevron station Shields & Maroa HelssWa.tral Airlines Hiring! , Stewardesses, Reservationists! $14-$39,000. Worldwide! CaD for directory, guide, newsletter. 1-915-944-4440 EXTCaUFRESNOAlR FOB SALE SKIS FOat SALE: PRE 1200, length 185 Marker M40 Bandings. Must sefi due toaipury. IW8 CaM 292-4020 •aHam-tre Typi*»s at Proofreading . Theses, term papers, all jobs. Paper supplied. Call evenings and weekends. 227-—59 Perms $20 Ha.rcnt..$6 Frosti*H|..$18 Aak for Margaret Shear Delight Hair Salon CaI125I-e>**4 Tatorirag Chem, Physics, Geol, Math by former colege ptot. $S/hr Call Gilbert uys up'. Then I put rrtron a backboard, they were worried that 1 might have broken my neck," said Smith. He was taken to St. Agnes Hospital for emergency treatment. "They cleaned me up, then brought in a doctor."Smith said. "He looked at me and said. 'Wow, do you mind if I take pictures of this? Because I lecture bicycle accidents and 1 advocate the use of helmets'." Smith had nol been wearing a helmet when the accident occurred, and agreed lo sign a release so the photographs could be taken. The doctor who treated •him told Smith he was going to use the pholos during his lectures on bicycle safety. "He laid me on my back and started move my head to Ihe left, and as soon as I did blood started gushing out agian. And "My mom saw the wounds and gol sick. She came back in and asked the doctor if I needed a plastic surgeon, and the doctor seemed like he fell he'd been chastised a Bilingual Continued from Page I then you can teach them." said Orozco. While the trend in bilingual education has been toward programs that were ac¬ comodating-, Orozco is optimistic for change in the future. to anTmern.'this is bad'. And the intern jsked if Ihey should bring in a plastic sur¬ geon, so the doctor said, 'yeah, we're Accordingto Smith, the plastic surgeon operated for over an hour. He said the nost pain he felt was when the local inesthetic was injected into his face, kee¬ ling him awake for the whole operation. "They couldn't put me under because hey were afraid that I might have a ."said Smith. "The only broken e I h Smith said that the hospital bills would have been paid by his insurance company if he had been admitted overnight. But he was treated as an out-patient, and the bulk of the expenses will not be covered One item which was covered, said Smith, was his bicycle. Two days after the accident his insurance company bought him a new one. But active bike thieves, who regularly frequent areas on and around the CSUF campus, stole it on Valentine's Day. When Smith was aked how he felt don't think that's ever going to happen again. I'm too much aware now of what's going on. I'm'mo re perceptive to automo¬ biles, and I especially keep an eye on the "As bad as (U.S. education) is. it's the best in the world," said Orozco. "because it allows for change." Bui change won't come easy adds it there enough people interested in solving these problems to really cause a change in In spite of continuous criticism. Orozco firmly backs bilingual education. "There's nothing harmful about bilingual educa- hard at teaching everyone English." •Steinbeck or interested ia theatre — he taid he -liked it." Tbe play arm presents difficulties in iis strange an of setting. It crater* around four characters, bat it places lbo*e character* in a different setting I n the <>r>rotirgac«, a circus backdrop is present, la the second act. the char¬ acters are owwd to a farm t*Mam$. A trnall room *a am ocean freighter i» the setting darting the final act. To mtifOoumlm tbeert chaaaae, P*ar- Miady adultery with Victor (Bill Westenberg), a man who hain't emotionally Mordeen it portrayed by Jacqueline Antajramian. «n accomplished C3SUF actrees doing her iftrst role for ETC. Westenberg describes hi* character - a* one who **ooe»n*t ursderstaod layer one who approaches life rfrom ttte, groin.*'' Fraccen said that the a4ay has many tiaaittoaaay Greek elements, aad be said that be tecs taettaracter of Friend h ia 'the same way mTfmmiS^^ made hi* job easy. "Buraratg Bright" >> about a 49-ytar- old main depressed because he has no cbiidrea Darrjr! Simonian portray, the middle-aged Joe Saul. For Simonian. playing a 49-year-old character is a challenge. "It's a rotten age to play. He's not an old, old man. He's a trapeze artist in the first acf.'a former ship captain in the third," the 21 -yeir-old actor said. It*about Saul.struggle todeal with Ins infertility, Frncoeri said. Sanl • wits, Mordeen. loves her huj- *mmm W, amtfmt try Rob Woods, -siMjtaamttwLiU k foe Sael. coesfi- mamtF.aTtmauaA taae. Wood* u working o« his third F.t C sua)* Ut *»ls that he had *o plana to aaafMa-M fat FriMsd Ed hi **t«rning m^SS^nemmmmtttUmgtmtmaatmtmta ■ iit^iijit.waveaaaw*.. eaJJaJ uooe ^tMe+emlpru,rmrmK* **.?*,*>*> . fa'fa* strsetc*', kaowletjga, mm* . oa*1h*eetmat arottactioa of «aWn- \at%\\a*am\r A Broadway product™ in the MM* fatted, but Frecceri said he ha* aorved some of tbe problem* of ihe New York show. Eleven contemporary songs have been added Ip the show, and Mordeen was played by three different actresses in tbe professional work, he said. Frecceri abo said that he received a copy of the scripted play used for Ihe Broadway production and it was dif¬ ferent from tbe book; so, be went back to the play-novette and transcribed it into script form. Tickets for "Burning Bright" are' available al the University Theatre Box Office. Price* are $2 Kudejns, $3 gen- 1|55©' , i, CSU, Fresno -J* Univ. of Archives t\ Henry Madden Library -•>— Attn: Jean Coffey \ ■ CSUF _L_ Friday, Feb. 24,1984 The Daily gwn - ■* ^ «•£■•* H /
Object Description
Title | 1984_02 The Daily Collegian February 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 | Feb 23, 1984 Pg. 8- Feb 24, 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 | Feb.23, 1984 Bike accident retold; Cyclist more aware Bicyclists should always keep an eye on traffic but as CSUF Public Administra¬ tion student Steve Smith found out, there Smith was riding home from work late at night Jan. 31, when he collided with a vehicle parked on Shaw Avenue. Upon impact, he was propelled head first through the car's rear window, cutting the skin arund his right eye. " . • ccording concentrating on going fast," Smith said, recalling how the accident happened. "Il hit my face, because as I saw it coming 1 rolled and tucked my shoulder," said Smith. The person in the car he had just passed came back to help Smith, who was pulling himself out of the parked car. "The guy came up, who I'd passed, and •Wow! What happened?', and 1 The first emergency vehicle to arrive, said Smith, was a fire truck. The police came next, to Uke a report, followed shortly by an ambulance. "When the firemen got there the first guy bent down to look at mc. and 1 was scared but I wanted to show them 1 wasnt scared." Smith said. :old h I. At "So I s. y for w Smith, a is passing a ving When he cut back over to the curb. Sn overestimated the distance and slammed blood," said Si into the rear of a parked car. "Then I too! that point the driver called for i "I felt my face, and 1 felt warmth, but 1 didn't know what il was. Then I looked down, and blood was dripping from my face onto the ground. I saw the darkness nidi CLASSIFIEDS Found Bicycle Lady's brown 3-speed has been gathering rust in front of Keats Building. Is locked with combination plastic coated chain. Did you forget .where you parked it? First noticed the week before classes began. If it'yours, come and get it before the police do j ROOMMATES Female roommate wanted Prefer quiet christian. Own room and bathroom. Californian apts. Janice 221-9033 " 3br/2aba Hse., Pool Kitch. Accessible 3 m CSUF S210& 1/3 utili 294 0163 Kevin roommate wanted: To share a huge 1 bedroom apt. Nice location. Call anytime. jaflgfla. Roommate Wanted to share 2 bedroom apartment near CSUF. $165.00/monthly Manuel 222-0804 Wanted. • Female, non-smoker, love dogs. To share 3 bdrm, nice, quiet house. 5 minutes from campus. $125 plus 1/3 utilities (negotiable). Call Diane/John 222-3833. Need Male Baommate For 2-bedroom apt. Plaza Apartments. $157.50 plus 435-2131 TYPING "*»*"*■ Reports, term Papers, Resumes, Etc. Speedy, Accurate, Reasonable Rate! CaJI2ta-HT3 Typae** hy Maury Back-to-school special. Most work $l/pa9C **a\*5tar Word Processing and Secretarial Service For the professional look, let a type and print your reports, term paper, etc. on our letter quality Low introductory rate. 298-5333 Accurate atva DepemtlmbU. Janet* Professional Reaame Service Layou t -Revision- Typing-Composition. Call. . 224J.599*. t was my Duple steps back and AUTOMOBILE Motorcycle '81 Yamaha XS400. Fully loaded: many extra's. $1,100.00. 297-8382 10 X 50 Mobile Home 2 bedroom, adult park, neai Woodward Park. $6,000. 439-5828 '80 Camera Z28 Very clean & loaded. 2521116 or 1-638 2222 a»U for Rick Kawasaki KZ 305 (CSR) 1981 (3,800 miles). UKE NEW!! $900 or best offer. Call Anereas. 439-5404 EMPLOYMENT Help Wanted Cruiseships Hiring! $16-$30,000! Carribean, Hawaii, World. Call for guide, directory, newsletter. 1-916-944-4440 EXT CSUFRESNOCBUISE Part-time Employment Service Station Salesman 30 hr. per/wk. eves til 9pm'plus weekends. Chevron station Shields & Maroa HelssWa.tral Airlines Hiring! , Stewardesses, Reservationists! $14-$39,000. Worldwide! CaD for directory, guide, newsletter. 1-915-944-4440 EXTCaUFRESNOAlR FOB SALE SKIS FOat SALE: PRE 1200, length 185 Marker M40 Bandings. Must sefi due toaipury. IW8 CaM 292-4020 •aHam-tre Typi*»s at Proofreading . Theses, term papers, all jobs. Paper supplied. Call evenings and weekends. 227-—59 Perms $20 Ha.rcnt..$6 Frosti*H|..$18 Aak for Margaret Shear Delight Hair Salon CaI125I-e>**4 Tatorirag Chem, Physics, Geol, Math by former colege ptot. $S/hr Call Gilbert uys up'. Then I put rrtron a backboard, they were worried that 1 might have broken my neck," said Smith. He was taken to St. Agnes Hospital for emergency treatment. "They cleaned me up, then brought in a doctor."Smith said. "He looked at me and said. 'Wow, do you mind if I take pictures of this? Because I lecture bicycle accidents and 1 advocate the use of helmets'." Smith had nol been wearing a helmet when the accident occurred, and agreed lo sign a release so the photographs could be taken. The doctor who treated •him told Smith he was going to use the pholos during his lectures on bicycle safety. "He laid me on my back and started move my head to Ihe left, and as soon as I did blood started gushing out agian. And "My mom saw the wounds and gol sick. She came back in and asked the doctor if I needed a plastic surgeon, and the doctor seemed like he fell he'd been chastised a Bilingual Continued from Page I then you can teach them." said Orozco. While the trend in bilingual education has been toward programs that were ac¬ comodating-, Orozco is optimistic for change in the future. to anTmern.'this is bad'. And the intern jsked if Ihey should bring in a plastic sur¬ geon, so the doctor said, 'yeah, we're Accordingto Smith, the plastic surgeon operated for over an hour. He said the nost pain he felt was when the local inesthetic was injected into his face, kee¬ ling him awake for the whole operation. "They couldn't put me under because hey were afraid that I might have a ."said Smith. "The only broken e I h Smith said that the hospital bills would have been paid by his insurance company if he had been admitted overnight. But he was treated as an out-patient, and the bulk of the expenses will not be covered One item which was covered, said Smith, was his bicycle. Two days after the accident his insurance company bought him a new one. But active bike thieves, who regularly frequent areas on and around the CSUF campus, stole it on Valentine's Day. When Smith was aked how he felt don't think that's ever going to happen again. I'm too much aware now of what's going on. I'm'mo re perceptive to automo¬ biles, and I especially keep an eye on the "As bad as (U.S. education) is. it's the best in the world," said Orozco. "because it allows for change." Bui change won't come easy adds it there enough people interested in solving these problems to really cause a change in In spite of continuous criticism. Orozco firmly backs bilingual education. "There's nothing harmful about bilingual educa- hard at teaching everyone English." •Steinbeck or interested ia theatre — he taid he -liked it." Tbe play arm presents difficulties in iis strange an of setting. It crater* around four characters, bat it places lbo*e character* in a different setting I n the <>r>rotirgac«, a circus backdrop is present, la the second act. the char¬ acters are owwd to a farm t*Mam$. A trnall room *a am ocean freighter i» the setting darting the final act. To mtifOoumlm tbeert chaaaae, P*ar- Miady adultery with Victor (Bill Westenberg), a man who hain't emotionally Mordeen it portrayed by Jacqueline Antajramian. «n accomplished C3SUF actrees doing her iftrst role for ETC. Westenberg describes hi* character - a* one who **ooe»n*t ursderstaod layer one who approaches life rfrom ttte, groin.*'' Fraccen said that the a4ay has many tiaaittoaaay Greek elements, aad be said that be tecs taettaracter of Friend h ia 'the same way mTfmmiS^^ made hi* job easy. "Buraratg Bright" >> about a 49-ytar- old main depressed because he has no cbiidrea Darrjr! Simonian portray, the middle-aged Joe Saul. For Simonian. playing a 49-year-old character is a challenge. "It's a rotten age to play. He's not an old, old man. He's a trapeze artist in the first acf.'a former ship captain in the third," the 21 -yeir-old actor said. It*about Saul.struggle todeal with Ins infertility, Frncoeri said. Sanl • wits, Mordeen. loves her huj- *mmm W, amtfmt try Rob Woods, -siMjtaamttwLiU k foe Sael. coesfi- mamtF.aTtmauaA taae. Wood* u working o« his third F.t C sua)* Ut *»ls that he had *o plana to aaafMa-M fat FriMsd Ed hi **t«rning m^SS^nemmmmtttUmgtmtmaatmtmta ■ iit^iijit.waveaaaw*.. eaJJaJ uooe ^tMe+emlpru,rmrmK* **.?*,*>*> . fa'fa* strsetc*', kaowletjga, mm* . oa*1h*eetmat arottactioa of «aWn- \at%\\a*am\r A Broadway product™ in the MM* fatted, but Frecceri said he ha* aorved some of tbe problem* of ihe New York show. Eleven contemporary songs have been added Ip the show, and Mordeen was played by three different actresses in tbe professional work, he said. Frecceri abo said that he received a copy of the scripted play used for Ihe Broadway production and it was dif¬ ferent from tbe book; so, be went back to the play-novette and transcribed it into script form. Tickets for "Burning Bright" are' available al the University Theatre Box Office. Price* are $2 Kudejns, $3 gen- 1|55©' , i, CSU, Fresno -J* Univ. of Archives t\ Henry Madden Library -•>— Attn: Jean Coffey \ ■ CSUF _L_ Friday, Feb. 24,1984 The Daily gwn - ■* ^ «•£■•* H / |