Nov 27, 1984 Pg. 8- Nov 28, 1984 Pg. 1 |
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8-The Daily Collegian November 27, 1984 'Dogs dealt losing hand in Vegas Jim Sweeney's Fresno State Bulldogs will face Nevada-Las Vegas in their 1985 season opener. And that's soon enough for the hard-luck 'Dogs, who failed to hit the jackpot against the PCAA-champion Rebels Saturday night in Vegas. FSU lost its fifth straight game, 27-13 to UNLV, opening kickoff of the second half and driven 80 yards, taking a 17-10 lead on an 18-yard Randall Cunningham touchdown pass and a successful two-point conver- The Bulldogs took th uingkic. ie ball, I c like The Bulldogs a attei but thc Rebels erased a 10-9 FSU halftime edge and went on to chalk up their 10th win of the season against only a single "We played a very hard-fought, tough football game for four quarters against them, and il was a much closer game than lhe score indicated," said Sweeney after the game. "As in most closely contested games, the winning edge sometimes is determined in the kicking game, and we made vital errors which swung field posi .ring rr r fa- Mike Mancini came in to punt down, unaware of what was about to take place. As Mancini stood, waiting to kick the ball, thc snap from center fell a couple of yards in front of him and skidded toward him along the wet ground. After trying unsuccessfully to field thc "greased pigskin", Mancini stepped forward and coolly booted the ball to midfield, where it was picked up by the UNLV return man. Nice move, huh? The only problem was thc referee ruled it illegal, penalized FSU 15 yards, and added a loss of down to boot. The Rebels got the ball on the Fresno State five-yard-linc. and scored easily on an end-around by David Brown from two yards oul. 24-10. The game was close for most ofthe first half, as UNLV's Joey Digiovanna and the Bulldogs' Barry Belli traded field goals times during the first hslf. But the Fresno State defense stiffened and allowed UNLV to come away with only six points. Then, near the end of the half, FSU's offense took over where the defense left off, taking the ball close to the 50-yard- lineand marching quickly downfield for a touchdown. The Bulldogs scored with 36 seconds left on the clock as Kevin Sweeney found Larry Willis doing a tightrope act on the sideline in the end zone. The catch, coupled with Belli's successful extra point attempt, gave FSU its only lead of the game. "I have to give credit to Fresno State," said UNLV head coach Harvey Hyde. "1 thought they played very well, especially in the first half. It was a great win." Fresno State looks ahead to next year hoping to rebuild a tattered runninggame decimated over the course ofthe season by injuries. "1 feel like the season was played almost in two parts: the first six games and the last six," said Coach Sweeney. "While we were in a position to physically maintain our productivity, we enjoyed a great first half of our 1984 season. Obviously, thc rash of almost epidemic proportion of injuries caused a freat fall-off in our productivity. We must now lay this season to rest and look forward to a productive recruiting season, a good win¬ ter weight program and a successful spring practice." In other words, come September, the Rebels might not be so lucky. Spikers to host Gauchos in NCAA's it 3-3. One such error-one that probably put .e game out of reach—came early in the The high-powered Rebel offense th cned to get it in'gear after that, dr i Bulldog ti Thc 19th-ranked Fresno State volley¬ ball team earned its first-ever NCAA playoff bid over thc weekend, and will host UC-Santa Barbara this Thursday in the North Gym at 7:30 p.m. Thc 17th-ranked Gauchos bring a 20-17 record into the playoffs, while the Bull¬ dogs, 24-1 an at-large team. Tickets are priced at S4 for adults, and S3 for students and children. Tickets may be purchased at the Bulldog Athletic Ticket Office, or at the door Thursday -r.ir.g o State is 1-2 against Santa B As a Marine Officer, you could be in charge of a Mach 2 + F/A-18A, a vertical take-off Harrier or oneofourc^her^orlielicoptere And you could (toitbytlietiuTTeyou're23. But it takes a special coniiriitrrient on your part. Vfe " demand leaders at all levels. Vfe teach you to be one. If you're Gofarther. a {rcshntan or sopliomore, ask about our under¬ graduate officer comiriissk>i]ing programs. If you're a junior, check out our graduate programs. Starting salaries are from $17,000 to $23,000. And *- you can count on d going farther...faster. ^^ W'nhokingibrafogoodmen. See Capt. Randy Smith on the Union Balcony from 10am-2pm, November 27, 28 and 29 ^^^^^{••^aiytanon^ojlatJoj^ollect^^ CSU, Fresno Wednesday, Nov. 28, 1984 The Daily Collegian of the rest of their afternoon ride along the lereta of t*t Senate to cancel fee freeze CSUF students » SI per semester increase in Associated Student Fees after the AS Senate decided yesterday to cancel the current freeze on AS fees. The freeze was placed on the fee in¬ crease by Chancellor W. Ann Reynolds because CSUF would have had one ofthe highest Associated Student fees in Cali¬ fornia according to Jodie Day, AS public relations spokesperson. Students paid S12 in AS fees for the Fall "84 semester and will pay J13 for the Spring "85 semester. The Senate in a split motion approved the SI per semester increase and sent the resolution to the Legal and Legislative Committee for rewording. By the academic year 1986-87 AS-fees will increase to S30. The new increase in AS fees will allow the present AS budget of S425.000 to increase to about S5I0.000. The Fee Increase Committee felt that the factor of inflation along with an increase of interest amongclubs and organ¬ izations justified the increase, and that •See Fees, page 4 Barta appointed to FLL committee Jennifer Lynn Dobn«H . committee of the Articulation Council. 7* art-anted Thr nhimiv. ■»n.<t.,.i. •»•■*. «,u~ ...-j .>... r—:„ . Dr. John Barta, chairman ofthe CSUF foreign Language Department, has been appointed to the Foreign Language Liaison Committee, which examines the problems and needs of foreign language education at all academic levels. Barta was asked to join the committee h> the statewide Academic Senate and »as officially appointed by CSU Chancellor W. Ann Reynolds in Sept- Kepresentatives from elementary, sec¬ ondary, junior college and university (both public and private) levels of education "~ '""se for three years. The a quasi-official sub- e of the Articulation Council, which studies the problems of placement in moving from one level of education to the next. "The problem is that there are so many levels of education with a lot of liberty for each campus, even within t he CS U system, to do whatever they want to do," said Barta. According to Barta, the liaison com¬ mittee studies particular educational problems and potential solutions. The akes recommendations to the council. Currently the! ining the criteria and policies for awarding advanced placement credit. More specif¬ ically, the committee is trying to determine who should receive credit and how much is granted. The objecti' Barta, is for the student t Another concern of the i the varying levels of instruction and the subsequent placement of students. Barta said that there is no accurate system of measuring a student's knowledge, there¬ fore, a student is not guaranteed accurate placement when moving from one edu¬ cational level to the next. The committee is examining a system of language competency that advances a student if, and only if, he meets certain competency/fluency requirements at his current level of study. Barta believes this system would better accommodate stu¬ dents. The competency program, he added, is already being implemented successfully at several learning i Barta, who said that foreign language study is a true test of one's capabilities asa student, believes it is fast becoming nec¬ essary to be multi-li ngual. "It's absolutely necessary," he said. "Studying a second language will give you more understanding of another culture, and a better understanding of people." Serving on the liaison committee will be a new "education" for Barta, and he said he's looking forward to interaction with foreign language educators from through¬ out the state. "Learning about other people's prob¬ lems will be a great education for me," said Barta. "I only hope that as a com¬ mittee we can make recommendations that will be fruitful in the long run." Clove cigarettes pose health hazard Imported clove cigarette* from Indon¬ esia have become increasingly popular among the high school and college age crowds in the past year, but the cigarettes *ith the sweet taste and lingering smell may not be as safe as they seem. . According to an Oakridge National Laboratory analysis done in Tennessee, 'he imports contain 60 percent tobacco, along with higher than average levels of tar. nicotine, carbon monoxide and car¬ bon dioxide than those found in regular cigarettes. The laboratory found 30 to 40 mil- '■grams of tar in the imports, twice as much when compared to the 14 mil- ''g-ams of tar in normal cigarettes. Karl Guhm, acting director for the American Lung Association in Fresno, said that he had never heard of nor smelled the clove cigarettes prior to re¬ ceiving information about the imports six weeks ago. Guhm said that individuals have called the Fresno office four or five times a week within the last month asking about tbe tobacco-type-content of the cloves and the safeness of smoking them. "Cloves arent going lo make it healthy for you," he said, stressing that since the cigarettes contain tobacco, all of the to¬ bacco-related factors still apply. "It's equally, if not more, dangerous," Guhm said. "The burning of any sub¬ stance is dangerous whether it's burning lettuce, peanut hulls, tobacco, any leaf- type thing. The combustion will be releas¬ ing chemicals." "1*11 be willing to bet that other people smoke cloves in order to get away from the tobacco," he said, very bad scapegoat." Seventeen-year old Kathy Vargas con¬ sidered clove cigarettes candy-like and said she thought that regular cigarettes were worse because of their stronger smell "I'd say I'm not going to smoke a cigarette; I'm going to smoke a clove," she "I like the way they taste and they smell good," Vargas said. "You smoke these and lick your lips. They taste like a mint." Vargas said that it ha* become very popular at her high school for studenu to smoke cloves, especially among the fresh¬ men. She also said tbat among those clove smokers she see* at Fashion Fair, some are as young as 13 or 14. "I'd say you mostly see a lot of mods. I don't think I'm a mod, but the majority who smoke them are," she said. Varga* :r their said that a mod is trenchcoats and tiny buttons all oi CSUF junior Derek Bimat said that be smokes cloves once every one to two weeks, and that he know* do vet are worse on the lunjs than regular cigarettes. Even so. Bimat says that the clove cigarette* help him to relax. He alto like* tbe taste and uneli of dove*. "It has a smell all to it* own," he laid. "Its pleasurable. I like the sweet taste it leave* in your mouth too." At Kaleidoscope Tobacco and Gift* on North 81*ck*tone avenue, 21 brand* of clove* cigarettes are told. Price* for a bos of 10 range from SI .49 for (be US-made Sherman O^mteUo. to $2.70 for Djarum ICretek filter*. Reg¬ ular cigarette* average SI for a box of 30. •SaaC\orm,amaal
Object Description
Title | 1984_11 The Daily Collegian November 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 | Nov 27, 1984 Pg. 8- Nov 28, 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 |
8-The Daily Collegian
November 27, 1984
'Dogs dealt losing hand in Vegas
Jim Sweeney's Fresno State Bulldogs
will face Nevada-Las Vegas in their 1985
season opener. And that's soon enough
for the hard-luck 'Dogs, who failed to hit
the jackpot against the PCAA-champion
Rebels Saturday night in Vegas.
FSU lost its fifth straight game, 27-13 to
UNLV,
opening kickoff of the second half and
driven 80 yards, taking a 17-10 lead on an
18-yard Randall Cunningham touchdown
pass and a successful two-point conver-
The Bulldogs took th
uingkic.
ie ball, I
c like
The Bulldogs a
attei
but thc Rebels erased a 10-9 FSU halftime
edge and went on to chalk up their 10th
win of the season against only a single
"We played a very hard-fought, tough
football game for four quarters against
them, and il was a much closer game than
lhe score indicated," said Sweeney after
the game. "As in most closely contested
games, the winning edge sometimes is
determined in the kicking game, and we
made vital errors which swung field posi
.ring rr
r fa-
Mike Mancini came in to punt
down, unaware of what was about to take
place. As Mancini stood, waiting to kick
the ball, thc snap from center fell a couple
of yards in front of him and skidded
toward him along the wet ground. After
trying unsuccessfully to field thc "greased
pigskin", Mancini stepped forward and
coolly booted the ball to midfield, where it
was picked up by the UNLV return man.
Nice move, huh? The only problem was
thc referee ruled it illegal, penalized FSU
15 yards, and added a loss of down to
boot. The Rebels got the ball on the
Fresno State five-yard-linc. and scored
easily on an end-around by David Brown
from two yards oul. 24-10.
The game was close for most ofthe first
half, as UNLV's Joey Digiovanna and the
Bulldogs' Barry Belli traded field goals
times during the first hslf. But the Fresno
State defense stiffened and allowed UNLV
to come away with only six points.
Then, near the end of the half, FSU's
offense took over where the defense left
off, taking the ball close to the 50-yard-
lineand marching quickly downfield for a
touchdown. The Bulldogs scored with 36
seconds left on the clock as Kevin Sweeney
found Larry Willis doing a tightrope act
on the sideline in the end zone. The catch,
coupled with Belli's successful extra point
attempt, gave FSU its only lead of the
game.
"I have to give credit to Fresno State,"
said UNLV head coach Harvey Hyde. "1
thought they played very well, especially
in the first half. It was a great win."
Fresno State looks ahead to next year
hoping to rebuild a tattered runninggame
decimated over the course ofthe season by
injuries.
"1 feel like the season was played almost
in two parts: the first six games and the
last six," said Coach Sweeney. "While we
were in a position to physically maintain
our productivity, we enjoyed a great first
half of our 1984 season. Obviously, thc
rash of almost epidemic proportion of
injuries caused a freat fall-off in our
productivity. We must now lay this
season to rest and look forward to a
productive recruiting season, a good win¬
ter weight program and a successful spring
practice."
In other words, come September, the
Rebels might not be so lucky.
Spikers to host Gauchos in NCAA's
it 3-3.
One such error-one that probably put
.e game out of reach—came early in the
The high-powered Rebel offense th
cned to get it in'gear after that, dr
i Bulldog ti
Thc 19th-ranked Fresno State volley¬
ball team earned its first-ever NCAA
playoff bid over thc weekend, and will
host UC-Santa Barbara this Thursday in
the North Gym at 7:30 p.m.
Thc 17th-ranked Gauchos bring a 20-17
record into the playoffs, while the Bull¬
dogs, 24-1
an at-large team.
Tickets are priced at S4 for adults, and
S3 for students and children. Tickets may
be purchased at the Bulldog Athletic
Ticket Office, or at the door Thursday
-r.ir.g
o State is 1-2 against Santa B
As a Marine Officer, you could be in charge of a
Mach 2 + F/A-18A, a vertical take-off Harrier or
oneofourc^her^orlielicoptere And you could
(toitbytlietiuTTeyou're23. But it takes a special
coniiriitrrient on your part. Vfe "
demand leaders at all levels.
Vfe teach you to be one. If you're
Gofarther.
a {rcshntan or sopliomore, ask about our under¬
graduate officer comiriissk>i]ing programs. If you're a
junior, check out our graduate programs. Starting
salaries are from $17,000 to $23,000. And *-
you can count on
d going farther...faster. ^^
W'nhokingibrafogoodmen.
See Capt. Randy Smith on the Union Balcony from 10am-2pm, November 27, 28 and 29
^^^^^{••^aiytanon^ojlatJoj^ollect^^
CSU, Fresno
Wednesday, Nov. 28, 1984
The Daily Collegian
of the rest of their afternoon ride along the lereta of t*t
Senate to
cancel
fee freeze
CSUF students »
SI per semester increase in Associated
Student Fees after the AS Senate decided
yesterday to cancel the current freeze on
AS fees.
The freeze was placed on the fee in¬
crease by Chancellor W. Ann Reynolds
because CSUF would have had one ofthe
highest Associated Student fees in Cali¬
fornia according to Jodie Day, AS public
relations spokesperson.
Students paid S12 in AS fees for the Fall
"84 semester and will pay J13 for the
Spring "85 semester.
The Senate in a split motion approved
the SI per semester increase and sent the
resolution to the Legal and Legislative
Committee for rewording.
By the academic year 1986-87 AS-fees
will increase to S30.
The new increase in AS fees will allow
the present AS budget of S425.000 to
increase to about S5I0.000.
The Fee Increase Committee felt
that the factor of inflation along with an
increase of interest amongclubs and organ¬
izations justified the increase, and that
•See Fees, page 4
Barta appointed to FLL committee
Jennifer Lynn Dobn«H . committee of the Articulation Council. 7* art-anted Thr nhimiv. ■»n. |