Sept 11, 1984 Pg. 4-5 |
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4 Sept. 11, 1984 FSU runners set sights on conference title n that :ar's top eight runne i Red Estes feels t tempt to impro e fastest five-m; mpeted for Flinders University in Aus- 1'ia last year and holds the Australian lior record for the steeplechase with a 8 seconds. Both m are closer together." 'Finishing fourth would be excellent." d Pagani. "We need to get more expe- ool in Austr PCAA Championships. But despite the record time. Fresno State finished fourth. Estes is hoping his team can regain the conference title it won in 1981. "1 think well improve on that," said Estes on last year's finish. "Potentially, this team is as good as any of our cham¬ pionship teams. We have as much depth' through our top 11 (runners) as IVe seen. Things look pretty healthy." Sam Barraza, who placed eighth at the incentive for championships, will battle seniors Gary Gonzales and Dave Lehrman for the top spot on the seven-man starting team. Gonzales, who is vying for his fourth cross country letter, and Lehrman, Fresno State's 1983 MVP. finished 15th and 17th respectively in the conference last year Senior Steve Fairman. junior Mark Beebe im Hardimon arc Estes'other prize recruits. Lewis, a junior transfer from San Jose City College, ran 3:48 in the 1500 meters as a sophomore. Hardimon, a junior transfer from Mt. San Antonio in Walnut Creek, finished third in the Southern California JC champion¬ ships, 1.1 seconds behind Brett, who fin- Sophomore Karen Martin is the top returning runner, finishing 32nd at the NorPae meet! Tone Nichols, who placed 33rd a is the only se Hardimon, however, was unable to lake part in rfiuch summer training and may red-shirt. Hewitt is suffering from a herniated hamstring muscle and as a result "The fight for our top seven will be lough." said Estes. "Seven of our 20 There's a little extra ;, because there's no State Women's team is fac- ilk of replacing All- Ortiz-Wyckoff. who has Sophomore transfer Tammy Moore competed one year at Chico State before transferring to University of California, Irvine and then to Fresno State. She recorded a best of 17:56 over five kilome¬ ters. Another transfer, Jill Moss, a junior miles. y Eileen Dyer, the lop-Vunner for three consecutive years at Patrick Henry High School in San Diego, heads a list of five freshmen hoping to break into the lop seven spots. The other fresnmen are Lisa Lewis, Joy Lowrie, Gina Montie and Denis Ockey. Both the men's and women's teams will open their season Saturday at the Hornet Invitational in Sacramento. CSUF spikers nab 3rd place tournament victory sophor : Steve Spark other lop jiyiior college runn ihe off season (o replace gradu; Thomas and Mike Herzog \ The Australians. Pete Brett dan Hewitt, are both sophom Wyckoff was Fresno State's top runner in every race in 1983 and took fifth place in the NorPae Region-8 Championships last year, leading the Bulldogs to a fifth place finish in the 10-team conference, which includes NCAA champion, Ore¬ gon. Coach Tom Pagani enters his third sea¬ son with an inexperienced but promising group. Five freshmen and three sopho¬ mores will join two reluming lelte The Fresno State University Volleyball team earned its highest tournament finish in four years Saturday when they defeated UC Santa Barbara for third place in the LionClassicat Loyola Marymount Univer- 'lt is exciting to be able to beat a top 20 m and prove we belong here," said Lei- ii Overstreet, coach ofthe 3-2 Bulldogs. UCSB. icing '. games to the Bulldogs by scores of 15-9. 15-10. and I5^J. Leading the devastating FSU attack was Ruth Lawanson with 13 kills and Denise Fowler with 11. Lawan- e gott. The Bulldogs also downed Host Loyola Marymount but fell to San Diego State and Pepperdine in earlier games at the three-day tournament. San Diego State finished off Pepperdine m the champion¬ ship match 15-10, 15-7, 15-11. The Bulldogs travel to Bakersfield State on Thursday for their next match. TlfflE IFIBES IPIMllJfflAIEM©MC ©DSCOfflESTTDSA with Dr. James Winter conducting Featuring the 1812 Overture in its entirety with cannon & fireworks display SUN. SEPT. 16 8:00 PM CSUF AMPITHEATRE TICKETS: $3.00 CSUF Students $3.00 Children under 12 $5.00 Season Ticket Holders $6.00 General Admission Available at CU Box Office, Miller Sheet Music, Fresno Philharmonic Office, and Stephenson Music Co. CSUF Waterdogs take splitdecision in tourney By Stephen Provost FfCSM State's watc r polo team battled back from a pair of lo sscs on the opening day of the California Invitational Tour- es over Pacific and UC Davis on Sunday The Bulldogs lost t Stanford and host team California on Sa turday by scores of 5-0 and 4-1, respectiv ly, then rebounded the following day to defeat UOP, 6-5 and But the offense as a whole sputtered on the opening day of the tournament, and the 'Dogs managed only one goal in their two matches. "We had first-day jittets on Saturday, and our offense never really got on track," said Bulldog head coach Harold Zane. "The defense played well, and the offense long way logo. " The Bulldogs will play CS Los Angeles in their home opener at Clovis West on Thursday at 5 p.m. ATTENTION BSN CLASS OF 1985 Why an rtyour rsngri 5 BSN's. ■? The Air Forci has a special progri can enter Air Force active duty soon after graduation To apply, you must have an overall "B" average and meet Other basic officer entry requirements. As a newly commissioned nurse, you'll attend a five- month Internshipat a ma|or Air Force medical facility. It's •n excallant way to prepare for the wide range or experi¬ ence* you'll have serving your country as an Air Force nurse professional. For more Information, contact: TBtjL Ron Fry (2M) 4*7-5731 (eo-tocrl) ^ JMI wmm t> m^aX^ e break dancing j News briefs nrollments Falling, Campus Budgets Up There will be 50.000 fewer students nrolkd this fall, accordingto the National 'enter for Education Statistics' annual ppc.ir as numbers fiim up, projects nation- ,:dc enrollment of 12r3 million students, ust shy of last year's record college popu- classes, and Kaplan argued the list, pub¬ lished last October, had defamed him. But U.S. District Judge Robert P. Aguiiar last week disagreed, ruling the article hadn't really damaged Kaplan and had only represented the opinions of some students. Notes From All Over: Florida forced Pi Lambda Phi to tear down rush posters bragging of "notor¬ ious" parties lhat UFofficials thought too reminiscent of a gang sex incident at the : last spring..Cal-Berkeley has tossed hoi re beds t B perc mfor (high demand Campaign Continued from Pa{e 1 Provost. However, Jackson's efforts at getting out the black vote could be some what effective, when considering that ovei 90 percent of this nation's blacks tend tc vote Democratic. But Mondale can't totally embrace Jackson, contends Provost. "He [Mondale] has to walk'a fine line. He cant get too close, but he can't appear to be pushing him away," Provost said. Service Station -26 hours per |week- P.M. and weekends. Minimum wage, experience] not necessary. Appfyat tkls and Maroa Chevron. and 1982, the Nati ihe Humanities reports. But budget cuts forced colleges to create seen percent fewer new humanities posi- lions during the period. I exss A & M Must Recognize Gay Group Ihe New Orleans federal court ruled the university was violating the gays'first •imcridmcnt rights by refusing to grant them official student group status for the fne university says it may appeal Ihe 'rofessor Loses SI Million Libel Suit Vgainst Newsweek on Campus Ihe magazine included Prof. John ^iplan's Stanford course in a list of easy paper »jmml» Cards Gifts Party Goods Gifts for Greeks Stationary mention uiu ad Invitation, 10% OFF Professional Imprinting "«"•**• 6735 N>irs! SI.. Suite 10f Fresno, CA 93710 (209) 432-8144 Classified 294-4123 or 435-4291 Ride Needed Student needs ride from Goshen or Triors. 8 am. Return at S pm. IM pay for gas. a>n 651-I0T6 Business Cards Everyone needs an Impressfve way to leave a phone number! Business and soda) cards 294 9249 or 431-9757 Typing Professional typing, driest quatty. Phone 222-3226 ApprcurJnwte 15 hrj. a v*eett In my home (6 miles from FSU) One three year old. OM references required. Can 435.7446 CoktrAimmym Student Rotas Phone - 292-3752 Service stMon atandant- 26 toon per tt«t*M and weekends. IVsrwnum wag Jjrprnsnce not necessary. Apply at 9mjkMaraimamMOmMr}am*an. Ther* Traveling One A practical and versatile traveling pack. The Jasper fea¬ tures full grain leather bottom, 2 leather accessory patches, iralde pocket, „2 side pockets, removable zippered pouch, plus padded shoulder straps and waist belt. Paekctoth $38.95 Cordwrt $42.15 KENNEL BOOKSTORE
Object Description
Title | 1984_09 The Daily Collegian September 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 | Sept 11, 1984 Pg. 4-5 |
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 | 4 Sept. 11, 1984 FSU runners set sights on conference title n that :ar's top eight runne i Red Estes feels t tempt to impro e fastest five-m; mpeted for Flinders University in Aus- 1'ia last year and holds the Australian lior record for the steeplechase with a 8 seconds. Both m are closer together." 'Finishing fourth would be excellent." d Pagani. "We need to get more expe- ool in Austr PCAA Championships. But despite the record time. Fresno State finished fourth. Estes is hoping his team can regain the conference title it won in 1981. "1 think well improve on that," said Estes on last year's finish. "Potentially, this team is as good as any of our cham¬ pionship teams. We have as much depth' through our top 11 (runners) as IVe seen. Things look pretty healthy." Sam Barraza, who placed eighth at the incentive for championships, will battle seniors Gary Gonzales and Dave Lehrman for the top spot on the seven-man starting team. Gonzales, who is vying for his fourth cross country letter, and Lehrman, Fresno State's 1983 MVP. finished 15th and 17th respectively in the conference last year Senior Steve Fairman. junior Mark Beebe im Hardimon arc Estes'other prize recruits. Lewis, a junior transfer from San Jose City College, ran 3:48 in the 1500 meters as a sophomore. Hardimon, a junior transfer from Mt. San Antonio in Walnut Creek, finished third in the Southern California JC champion¬ ships, 1.1 seconds behind Brett, who fin- Sophomore Karen Martin is the top returning runner, finishing 32nd at the NorPae meet! Tone Nichols, who placed 33rd a is the only se Hardimon, however, was unable to lake part in rfiuch summer training and may red-shirt. Hewitt is suffering from a herniated hamstring muscle and as a result "The fight for our top seven will be lough." said Estes. "Seven of our 20 There's a little extra ;, because there's no State Women's team is fac- ilk of replacing All- Ortiz-Wyckoff. who has Sophomore transfer Tammy Moore competed one year at Chico State before transferring to University of California, Irvine and then to Fresno State. She recorded a best of 17:56 over five kilome¬ ters. Another transfer, Jill Moss, a junior miles. y Eileen Dyer, the lop-Vunner for three consecutive years at Patrick Henry High School in San Diego, heads a list of five freshmen hoping to break into the lop seven spots. The other fresnmen are Lisa Lewis, Joy Lowrie, Gina Montie and Denis Ockey. Both the men's and women's teams will open their season Saturday at the Hornet Invitational in Sacramento. CSUF spikers nab 3rd place tournament victory sophor : Steve Spark other lop jiyiior college runn ihe off season (o replace gradu; Thomas and Mike Herzog \ The Australians. Pete Brett dan Hewitt, are both sophom Wyckoff was Fresno State's top runner in every race in 1983 and took fifth place in the NorPae Region-8 Championships last year, leading the Bulldogs to a fifth place finish in the 10-team conference, which includes NCAA champion, Ore¬ gon. Coach Tom Pagani enters his third sea¬ son with an inexperienced but promising group. Five freshmen and three sopho¬ mores will join two reluming lelte The Fresno State University Volleyball team earned its highest tournament finish in four years Saturday when they defeated UC Santa Barbara for third place in the LionClassicat Loyola Marymount Univer- 'lt is exciting to be able to beat a top 20 m and prove we belong here," said Lei- ii Overstreet, coach ofthe 3-2 Bulldogs. UCSB. icing '. games to the Bulldogs by scores of 15-9. 15-10. and I5^J. Leading the devastating FSU attack was Ruth Lawanson with 13 kills and Denise Fowler with 11. Lawan- e gott. The Bulldogs also downed Host Loyola Marymount but fell to San Diego State and Pepperdine in earlier games at the three-day tournament. San Diego State finished off Pepperdine m the champion¬ ship match 15-10, 15-7, 15-11. The Bulldogs travel to Bakersfield State on Thursday for their next match. TlfflE IFIBES IPIMllJfflAIEM©MC ©DSCOfflESTTDSA with Dr. James Winter conducting Featuring the 1812 Overture in its entirety with cannon & fireworks display SUN. SEPT. 16 8:00 PM CSUF AMPITHEATRE TICKETS: $3.00 CSUF Students $3.00 Children under 12 $5.00 Season Ticket Holders $6.00 General Admission Available at CU Box Office, Miller Sheet Music, Fresno Philharmonic Office, and Stephenson Music Co. CSUF Waterdogs take splitdecision in tourney By Stephen Provost FfCSM State's watc r polo team battled back from a pair of lo sscs on the opening day of the California Invitational Tour- es over Pacific and UC Davis on Sunday The Bulldogs lost t Stanford and host team California on Sa turday by scores of 5-0 and 4-1, respectiv ly, then rebounded the following day to defeat UOP, 6-5 and But the offense as a whole sputtered on the opening day of the tournament, and the 'Dogs managed only one goal in their two matches. "We had first-day jittets on Saturday, and our offense never really got on track," said Bulldog head coach Harold Zane. "The defense played well, and the offense long way logo. " The Bulldogs will play CS Los Angeles in their home opener at Clovis West on Thursday at 5 p.m. ATTENTION BSN CLASS OF 1985 Why an rtyour rsngri 5 BSN's. ■? The Air Forci has a special progri can enter Air Force active duty soon after graduation To apply, you must have an overall "B" average and meet Other basic officer entry requirements. As a newly commissioned nurse, you'll attend a five- month Internshipat a ma|or Air Force medical facility. It's •n excallant way to prepare for the wide range or experi¬ ence* you'll have serving your country as an Air Force nurse professional. For more Information, contact: TBtjL Ron Fry (2M) 4*7-5731 (eo-tocrl) ^ JMI wmm t> m^aX^ e break dancing j News briefs nrollments Falling, Campus Budgets Up There will be 50.000 fewer students nrolkd this fall, accordingto the National 'enter for Education Statistics' annual ppc.ir as numbers fiim up, projects nation- ,:dc enrollment of 12r3 million students, ust shy of last year's record college popu- classes, and Kaplan argued the list, pub¬ lished last October, had defamed him. But U.S. District Judge Robert P. Aguiiar last week disagreed, ruling the article hadn't really damaged Kaplan and had only represented the opinions of some students. Notes From All Over: Florida forced Pi Lambda Phi to tear down rush posters bragging of "notor¬ ious" parties lhat UFofficials thought too reminiscent of a gang sex incident at the : last spring..Cal-Berkeley has tossed hoi re beds t B perc mfor (high demand Campaign Continued from Pa{e 1 Provost. However, Jackson's efforts at getting out the black vote could be some what effective, when considering that ovei 90 percent of this nation's blacks tend tc vote Democratic. But Mondale can't totally embrace Jackson, contends Provost. "He [Mondale] has to walk'a fine line. He cant get too close, but he can't appear to be pushing him away," Provost said. Service Station -26 hours per |week- P.M. and weekends. Minimum wage, experience] not necessary. Appfyat tkls and Maroa Chevron. and 1982, the Nati ihe Humanities reports. But budget cuts forced colleges to create seen percent fewer new humanities posi- lions during the period. I exss A & M Must Recognize Gay Group Ihe New Orleans federal court ruled the university was violating the gays'first •imcridmcnt rights by refusing to grant them official student group status for the fne university says it may appeal Ihe 'rofessor Loses SI Million Libel Suit Vgainst Newsweek on Campus Ihe magazine included Prof. John ^iplan's Stanford course in a list of easy paper »jmml» Cards Gifts Party Goods Gifts for Greeks Stationary mention uiu ad Invitation, 10% OFF Professional Imprinting "«"•**• 6735 N>irs! SI.. Suite 10f Fresno, CA 93710 (209) 432-8144 Classified 294-4123 or 435-4291 Ride Needed Student needs ride from Goshen or Triors. 8 am. Return at S pm. IM pay for gas. a>n 651-I0T6 Business Cards Everyone needs an Impressfve way to leave a phone number! Business and soda) cards 294 9249 or 431-9757 Typing Professional typing, driest quatty. Phone 222-3226 ApprcurJnwte 15 hrj. a v*eett In my home (6 miles from FSU) One three year old. OM references required. Can 435.7446 CoktrAimmym Student Rotas Phone - 292-3752 Service stMon atandant- 26 toon per tt«t*M and weekends. IVsrwnum wag Jjrprnsnce not necessary. Apply at 9mjkMaraimamMOmMr}am*an. Ther* Traveling One A practical and versatile traveling pack. The Jasper fea¬ tures full grain leather bottom, 2 leather accessory patches, iralde pocket, „2 side pockets, removable zippered pouch, plus padded shoulder straps and waist belt. Paekctoth $38.95 Cordwrt $42.15 KENNEL BOOKSTORE |