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8 The Daily Collegian Bulldogs win by ten Barnes scores 14 points in winning effort over UCSB Sports Fresno Stale center Scott Barnes scored 14 points and pulled down six rebounds to lead the Bulldogs to a 55-45 PCAA victory over the Gauchos of Santa Barbara last night at Selland Arena. A sellout crowd of 10, 132 vocal fans cheered the team to its fourth consecutive PCAA victory this season. The Bulldogs are now 7-1 in conference play and trail league leader UNLV by one game. The Bulldogs played sluggishly through¬ out most of the game, frustrated by the inside power play of Gaucho Scott Fisher who finished the night with 13 points. Although Santa Barbara is known as an outside shooting team because of its small lineup, the Gauchos penetrated the interior of the Bulldog defense time and time again for easy layups. The first half saw three lead changes with the Bulldogs taking a two point advantage at halftime, 26-24. Santa Barbara left the court at halftime having made 43-percent of their fieldgoals. and two three point baskets. But the Gauchos would have their shooting problems on the night as they made only 37-percent of their field goal attempts for the game. The Bulldogs won it with defense as they used the 2-3 matchup ?one for the rest of the game. The Bulldogs again played sluggishly in the opening moments of the second half. .ofne roar of the home crowd. With fifteen minutes remaining in the contest the Bull¬ dogs put together consectutive six-point scoring bursts to give FSU a 46-34 lead. The key point in the game came when FSU forward Brian Salone, 10 points, made a tremendous two handed stuff in a Gaucho basket with 8:15 remaining in the contest. That basket put the Bulldogs up by ten points, and gave them a perfect opportunity to use what has become known as Fresno State's sixth man at home games: the crowd. With the fans screaming at the top of their lungs. Santa Barbara was psycho¬ logically taken out of their offensive game as the Bulldogs forced them to make four consecutive turnovers in Fresno State's side of the court. The Bulldogs withheld a minor threat from the Gauchos when they cut the FSU lead to six, 50-44, with three minutes remaining. But Fresno State shut the door when guard Mitch Arnold hit an eight foot turnaround jumper with 1:50 remaining in the game to give the Bulldogs a 52-44 lead. Arnold, who helped force 16 Gaucho turnovers on the night, was held under ten points in scoring for the first time this year in conference play. However, Arnold made up for his six point performance by grabbing a team high eight rebounds and dishing out six assists. Overall it was Fresno States 12thvictpry on the year against five losses. The Gauchos on the other hand had their one game win streak snapped and slipped to 4-5 in conference play. DROP ON DOWN TO OUR General Book Department YOULL FIND: HOW TO STUDY BOOKS, SELF REVIEW BOOKS SUCH AS SCHAUM'S OUTLINE SERIES & BARNES & NOBLES OUTLINES, PROBLEM SOLVERS. CLIFF NOTES. TEST PREPARATION MANUALS FOR THE 6RE, THE GMAT, THE NTE AND OTHERS. DICTIONARIES, THESAURUSES, VID-ED CARDS, DATA GUIDES, TEACHING AIDS, COMPUTER BOOKS, NURSING BOOKS, GUIDES FOR RESUMES, TERM PAPERS AND THESES. CHILDREN'S BOOKS, CLASSICS, HARDBOUND AND PAPERBACK BESTSELLERS ALL THIS AMD MUCH MORE ON THE LOWER LEVEL of KENNEL BOOKSTORE Welcome Back Dance AQUA BOB also featuring THE COYOTIES Thursday Jan. 31 at 8:00 pm in the Satellite College Union all ages welcome Tickets: $2 CSUF" Students $4 General Admission The Daily Collegian Vol. XCI, #6 CSU, Fresno Tuesday, Jan. 29,1985 Mobile unit to give free tests on campus Singing in praise!— Micbele Pillar, a contemporary christian singer, performed in front of an audience of about 200 in the satUite college union last night. Abo performing was Tejillah, a christian rock group. For the second consecutive year Anheuser-Busch will give Fresno some¬ thing besides its world-famous suds. Anheuser-Busch, in conjunction with CSUF'i School of Health Education, will bring its mobile health unit to Fresno on Feb. 5-6. The mobile health unit will give free tests to Fresno's black community, checldrurprunarily for high blood pressure and Sickle Cell Anemia. "High blood pressure and Sickle Cell Anemia are two of tbe more frequent diseases found in blacks, so it's quite a service that is being done by the mobile health unit," said Dr. Robert Mikell, coordinator of CSUF's Black Studies Department. "There is a tremendous need for attention to diseases that affect blacks," he added. "The mobile health unit is just one of the ways to address that need." On Feb. 5, the health unit will arrive at CSUF in the Free Speech area. The unit will be available from 10 a.m. until 1:30 p.m. The following day the unit is scheduled to make stops at the Hinton' and King of Kings Community Centers in West Fresno. "We had a great turnout and response to tbe mobile health unit last year," said Alex Contreras, who acts as the public relations director for Donaghy Sales, Anheuser-Busch's Fresno distributor. "We were fortunate to have tbe service available because we found some real critical cases," Contreras explained. Contreras said that approximately 120 people were tested by the unit last year. Dr. Mikell, who is currently pushing to have Black Studies 141 (Black Health Care) made a capstone course at CSUF, further explained the importance of tbe mobile health unit. "People living at or below the poverty line often cant or dont seek medical attention," Mikell stressed. "The mobile health unit is a good way to get past those twin problems." No qualifying test for chem., physics majors The qualifying exams for physics and chemistry students desiring to teach high school science can now be waived as part of a program adapted specifically to teaching, said a CSUF department chair- to ii duce science students to pick teaching high school as a career and give them a brooder area in which to major, Donaldson A three-year high school math require¬ ment has been adopted by the UC and CSU systems, and a three-year science requirement is on the way, according to Sun Ziegler, chemistry department chair- The new program is just as rigorous or more rigorous than the previous course outline which included passing tbe test, said John Donaldson, chairman of the physics department. The decision was made last November, European vacation for credit Staff Writer "Geography of Western Europe" is not your ordinary summer school class.There are no long, dreary lectures or late nights of cramming. Just 31 days of travel in Europe, including a seven day Mediterra- It's a class being offered by Student Travel International and taught in part by CSUF Geography Professor E. Frank Koller. Up to three units of lower or upper division transferable college credit can be earned from the course. The package price is $2,795 which in¬ cludes roundtrip airfare, hotel lodging, guided tours, the cruise, and registration for college credit. Koller said a large part of the meals is also covered, including daily continental breakfast. Not included c beverages with meals and visa fees. The price of the tour will be honored if paid before Feb. 10. Thereafter, the cost may go up if the airfare increases. "One of the reasons the price is so good, is that we dont use luxury hotels," said Koller. "We use good, clean tourist hotels with three to a room." Koller said about a third of those who have taken the trip in the past are college- age students. Most of the remaining tra¬ velers are teachers, who are able to use the "Most tourists like a city tour, then being turned loose on their own." —Koller trip as a tax deduction. Class size is limited to 48, the maximum occupancy of the bus, but Koller only expects 35-40 to sign up. "Those who take the trip are very friendly and congeniaJ,"said Koller. "They are very considerate of one another and get to know each other quickly." The trip begins July 19 with departure from either Los Angeles or San Francisco, whichever the student prefers. Upon arri¬ val, the group will meet a multi-lingual guide and spend four days in London before heading for Paris, Florence, Rome, the Greek Islands on a large cruise ship, Venice, Lucerne, Frankfurt and other continental sites. The course shies away from the rigidity of the common classroom experience, opting instead for a hands-on look at Most of the traveling will be on private air-conditioned buses, which are equipped with individual stereo cassette-systems. Students will lake notes and keep daily logs, but lecturing from Koller and a tour guide will be kept to a minimum. "I never want to lecture more than 15- 20 minutes in an hour while on the bus," said Koller, who will teach geography on sight. "I want to retain their attention and let them see what I'm talking about." The city tours will be conducted by area Sec Tour, Page 3 "If the si ___ into effect, high schools will have to teach more science and will need more science teachers," said Ziegler. The new BA programs for physics and chemistry teach¬ ing students, however, are still very tough, Ziegler and Donaldson agreed i. Though various theoretical math elect- ives were dropped from the physics course outline for future teachers, five classes were added. Similarly, aspiring high school chemistry teachers must take six science courses instead of three upper division labs previously required, said Ziegler. One reason the waiver program was instituted, Ziegler explained, was to broaden the areas of study for physics and chemistry majors in order to compensate for tbe fact that no physical science major exists at CSUF. Traditionally, a graduate in these areas was subsequently a physicist or chemist. Formerly, to teach high school, he or she had to have the degree, 24 units of teacher education and also pass the exam. The need for science teachers with full credentials is critical, said Ziegler. Small high schools in outlying areas of the state often have only one or two sections of science. Since hiring a science teacher for this load is impractical, any available teacher with a little background may be called upon to teach. Priorities are chang¬ ing, he stressed; the demand is up and the fact that 75 percent of high school science teachers are not fuUy accredited in science will have to be rem " Standards for cl SeeS.
Object Description
Title | 1985_01 The Daily Collegian January 1985 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1985 |
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 | Jan 28, 1985 Pg. 8- Jan 29, 1985 Pg. 1 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1985 |
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 Bulldogs win by ten Barnes scores 14 points in winning effort over UCSB Sports Fresno Stale center Scott Barnes scored 14 points and pulled down six rebounds to lead the Bulldogs to a 55-45 PCAA victory over the Gauchos of Santa Barbara last night at Selland Arena. A sellout crowd of 10, 132 vocal fans cheered the team to its fourth consecutive PCAA victory this season. The Bulldogs are now 7-1 in conference play and trail league leader UNLV by one game. The Bulldogs played sluggishly through¬ out most of the game, frustrated by the inside power play of Gaucho Scott Fisher who finished the night with 13 points. Although Santa Barbara is known as an outside shooting team because of its small lineup, the Gauchos penetrated the interior of the Bulldog defense time and time again for easy layups. The first half saw three lead changes with the Bulldogs taking a two point advantage at halftime, 26-24. Santa Barbara left the court at halftime having made 43-percent of their fieldgoals. and two three point baskets. But the Gauchos would have their shooting problems on the night as they made only 37-percent of their field goal attempts for the game. The Bulldogs won it with defense as they used the 2-3 matchup ?one for the rest of the game. The Bulldogs again played sluggishly in the opening moments of the second half. .ofne roar of the home crowd. With fifteen minutes remaining in the contest the Bull¬ dogs put together consectutive six-point scoring bursts to give FSU a 46-34 lead. The key point in the game came when FSU forward Brian Salone, 10 points, made a tremendous two handed stuff in a Gaucho basket with 8:15 remaining in the contest. That basket put the Bulldogs up by ten points, and gave them a perfect opportunity to use what has become known as Fresno State's sixth man at home games: the crowd. With the fans screaming at the top of their lungs. Santa Barbara was psycho¬ logically taken out of their offensive game as the Bulldogs forced them to make four consecutive turnovers in Fresno State's side of the court. The Bulldogs withheld a minor threat from the Gauchos when they cut the FSU lead to six, 50-44, with three minutes remaining. But Fresno State shut the door when guard Mitch Arnold hit an eight foot turnaround jumper with 1:50 remaining in the game to give the Bulldogs a 52-44 lead. Arnold, who helped force 16 Gaucho turnovers on the night, was held under ten points in scoring for the first time this year in conference play. However, Arnold made up for his six point performance by grabbing a team high eight rebounds and dishing out six assists. Overall it was Fresno States 12thvictpry on the year against five losses. The Gauchos on the other hand had their one game win streak snapped and slipped to 4-5 in conference play. DROP ON DOWN TO OUR General Book Department YOULL FIND: HOW TO STUDY BOOKS, SELF REVIEW BOOKS SUCH AS SCHAUM'S OUTLINE SERIES & BARNES & NOBLES OUTLINES, PROBLEM SOLVERS. CLIFF NOTES. TEST PREPARATION MANUALS FOR THE 6RE, THE GMAT, THE NTE AND OTHERS. DICTIONARIES, THESAURUSES, VID-ED CARDS, DATA GUIDES, TEACHING AIDS, COMPUTER BOOKS, NURSING BOOKS, GUIDES FOR RESUMES, TERM PAPERS AND THESES. CHILDREN'S BOOKS, CLASSICS, HARDBOUND AND PAPERBACK BESTSELLERS ALL THIS AMD MUCH MORE ON THE LOWER LEVEL of KENNEL BOOKSTORE Welcome Back Dance AQUA BOB also featuring THE COYOTIES Thursday Jan. 31 at 8:00 pm in the Satellite College Union all ages welcome Tickets: $2 CSUF" Students $4 General Admission The Daily Collegian Vol. XCI, #6 CSU, Fresno Tuesday, Jan. 29,1985 Mobile unit to give free tests on campus Singing in praise!— Micbele Pillar, a contemporary christian singer, performed in front of an audience of about 200 in the satUite college union last night. Abo performing was Tejillah, a christian rock group. For the second consecutive year Anheuser-Busch will give Fresno some¬ thing besides its world-famous suds. Anheuser-Busch, in conjunction with CSUF'i School of Health Education, will bring its mobile health unit to Fresno on Feb. 5-6. The mobile health unit will give free tests to Fresno's black community, checldrurprunarily for high blood pressure and Sickle Cell Anemia. "High blood pressure and Sickle Cell Anemia are two of tbe more frequent diseases found in blacks, so it's quite a service that is being done by the mobile health unit," said Dr. Robert Mikell, coordinator of CSUF's Black Studies Department. "There is a tremendous need for attention to diseases that affect blacks," he added. "The mobile health unit is just one of the ways to address that need." On Feb. 5, the health unit will arrive at CSUF in the Free Speech area. The unit will be available from 10 a.m. until 1:30 p.m. The following day the unit is scheduled to make stops at the Hinton' and King of Kings Community Centers in West Fresno. "We had a great turnout and response to tbe mobile health unit last year," said Alex Contreras, who acts as the public relations director for Donaghy Sales, Anheuser-Busch's Fresno distributor. "We were fortunate to have tbe service available because we found some real critical cases," Contreras explained. Contreras said that approximately 120 people were tested by the unit last year. Dr. Mikell, who is currently pushing to have Black Studies 141 (Black Health Care) made a capstone course at CSUF, further explained the importance of tbe mobile health unit. "People living at or below the poverty line often cant or dont seek medical attention," Mikell stressed. "The mobile health unit is a good way to get past those twin problems." No qualifying test for chem., physics majors The qualifying exams for physics and chemistry students desiring to teach high school science can now be waived as part of a program adapted specifically to teaching, said a CSUF department chair- to ii duce science students to pick teaching high school as a career and give them a brooder area in which to major, Donaldson A three-year high school math require¬ ment has been adopted by the UC and CSU systems, and a three-year science requirement is on the way, according to Sun Ziegler, chemistry department chair- The new program is just as rigorous or more rigorous than the previous course outline which included passing tbe test, said John Donaldson, chairman of the physics department. The decision was made last November, European vacation for credit Staff Writer "Geography of Western Europe" is not your ordinary summer school class.There are no long, dreary lectures or late nights of cramming. Just 31 days of travel in Europe, including a seven day Mediterra- It's a class being offered by Student Travel International and taught in part by CSUF Geography Professor E. Frank Koller. Up to three units of lower or upper division transferable college credit can be earned from the course. The package price is $2,795 which in¬ cludes roundtrip airfare, hotel lodging, guided tours, the cruise, and registration for college credit. Koller said a large part of the meals is also covered, including daily continental breakfast. Not included c beverages with meals and visa fees. The price of the tour will be honored if paid before Feb. 10. Thereafter, the cost may go up if the airfare increases. "One of the reasons the price is so good, is that we dont use luxury hotels," said Koller. "We use good, clean tourist hotels with three to a room." Koller said about a third of those who have taken the trip in the past are college- age students. Most of the remaining tra¬ velers are teachers, who are able to use the "Most tourists like a city tour, then being turned loose on their own." —Koller trip as a tax deduction. Class size is limited to 48, the maximum occupancy of the bus, but Koller only expects 35-40 to sign up. "Those who take the trip are very friendly and congeniaJ,"said Koller. "They are very considerate of one another and get to know each other quickly." The trip begins July 19 with departure from either Los Angeles or San Francisco, whichever the student prefers. Upon arri¬ val, the group will meet a multi-lingual guide and spend four days in London before heading for Paris, Florence, Rome, the Greek Islands on a large cruise ship, Venice, Lucerne, Frankfurt and other continental sites. The course shies away from the rigidity of the common classroom experience, opting instead for a hands-on look at Most of the traveling will be on private air-conditioned buses, which are equipped with individual stereo cassette-systems. Students will lake notes and keep daily logs, but lecturing from Koller and a tour guide will be kept to a minimum. "I never want to lecture more than 15- 20 minutes in an hour while on the bus," said Koller, who will teach geography on sight. "I want to retain their attention and let them see what I'm talking about." The city tours will be conducted by area Sec Tour, Page 3 "If the si ___ into effect, high schools will have to teach more science and will need more science teachers," said Ziegler. The new BA programs for physics and chemistry teach¬ ing students, however, are still very tough, Ziegler and Donaldson agreed i. Though various theoretical math elect- ives were dropped from the physics course outline for future teachers, five classes were added. Similarly, aspiring high school chemistry teachers must take six science courses instead of three upper division labs previously required, said Ziegler. One reason the waiver program was instituted, Ziegler explained, was to broaden the areas of study for physics and chemistry majors in order to compensate for tbe fact that no physical science major exists at CSUF. Traditionally, a graduate in these areas was subsequently a physicist or chemist. Formerly, to teach high school, he or she had to have the degree, 24 units of teacher education and also pass the exam. The need for science teachers with full credentials is critical, said Ziegler. Small high schools in outlying areas of the state often have only one or two sections of science. Since hiring a science teacher for this load is impractical, any available teacher with a little background may be called upon to teach. Priorities are chang¬ ing, he stressed; the demand is up and the fact that 75 percent of high school science teachers are not fuUy accredited in science will have to be rem " Standards for cl SeeS. |