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Pas«6 NEWS Nov. 7,1985 Universities crack down on booze PEORIA, IL (CPS) — Police officers "have come to the door on a noise com¬ plaint, and have just walked in, and surted cardingpeople,"complained Mike Forman, Interfraternity Council president at Bradley University. "They don^ have the right to do that without a warrant." They may in fact have the right, and colleges across the country are using it more to keep a much closer eye on stu¬ dents this fall as the nationwide crack¬ down on student drinking begins its second tougher regulations and stricter enforce¬ ment actually are changing student drink¬ ing habits, campuses' switch to more aggressive anti-drinking tactics this fall is beyond question: • At Indiana University, the dean -of studenu makes surprise visits to campus parties to find underaged drinkers and enforce a new campus keg policy. • Yale now effectively prohibits alco¬ hol a and i; students "drinking cards" to help enforce the new rules, sr the crackdown, how- • Local police broke up traditional e campus "responsible school-opening street parties at West Vir- drinking" programs, forcing many stu- ginia and Western Michigan, arresting dents off campus — and into their cars some 42 students the first week of classes -to drink in less-controllable, more dan- at West Virginia. gerous situations. • Pittsburgh police have warned stu- And while observers can'i agree if dent groups they will drop into University CLASSIFIED Lost Wallet Brown Leather. CaU Jan 297-9483 or 227-8405 For Sale Kenwood 45W amp, tuner, turntable and condition, super sound Must sell! Best offer. Call or leave message 294-2223 Wanted Baby sitter lor 1 child, occasional nights, some weekends. CaU: 298-7253 Typing Close to CSUF. Accurate quality work on IBM selectric. Call Eva. 229-5592 Dsasc Jockey For your party, any occasion- Only $200. 298-5923 God & Mike Eaqlea Gov. Republican '86 CA. Truth, honesty, justice and a great American leader. For Sale Honda motorcycle. 1979 CM 400A 4400 miles. Like new $750 299-4746 Word Processing Elli Bessey, a professKjnal rytut. 224-8152 For Sale •78 Fuit 131. 2 door sedan. 5-speed. Excellent condition. $1400. Cal eve 226-3538 Typing Near CSUF. Reasonable rate. Call after 3PM. 229-3769 Female Wanted To share Coodo. furnished bedroom with pnvatebeth. Laundry & kitchen facilities — p^iJed. S^O/rorthpJu.depo.t." 292-3513 Wanted Female live-in babysitter. Free room & board. Week days are open, work evenings and weekends. Chestnut/Bullard area.Call Sherri 299-2801 or 225-4660 For Sale 77 Honda Accord. New paint & tires $1000 or best offer 294-3643 Record Exchange Opening Friday, Nov. 1st. Album rentals $1 to $2. Buy, sell, trade 4227 N. Shields (at Cedar) Typing Exccplional quoluy. By •pponnwr. Hh 222-3226 Typing & Editing Proofreading also available. $1 per page. Can 225-3396 Typing Unlimited Term papers. Reasonable rates. Barnyard Shopping Center Clovis 295-3835 Jay'* Typing ■ ™'222%62S_Cim,y3i Typing By Jay Electronic Typewriter. Near CSUF Call: _.sioo.PJq£. 222-9125 of Pittsburgh parlies unannounced to enforce new drinking age laws. • University of Florida administrators made a point of holding a public hearing into alleged violations of their new dry rush rules the very first week of school. Bradley officials had two ttudents arrested for violating drinking rules dur¬ ing their first week of classes, too. Boston University, Southern Cal, Ber¬ keley, Penn Sute, San Diego Sute. Ken¬ tucky and Arizona, among scores of other campusesvhave adopted ttrictet rules for student drinking Ihis fall. At Smith College, for example, under- aged drinkers no longer can get legal help from the college. Students can't have liquor in dorms at South DakoU state schools anymore, while Penn State res¬ tricts the kinds of parties (hat can have kegs. Administrators say they're responding to new minimum drinking ages and to the difficulty of buying liability insurance without proving they're trying to enforce No one is sure how much the crack¬ down is changing student drinking. "The keg is still Ihe major focus of a party, but there is a trend toward more responsible use of alcohol on our cam¬ pus," noted Harold Reynolds, director of student affairs at Cal-Berkeley, "There are some disgruntled views about tbe ban on alcohol, but we are living with it."** said George Kuntz, president of the Interfraternity and Sorority Council at Boston University. "In the past, 10 people would work on the homecoming committee. We had 35 this year. There is a definite increase in participation in school events, (t has worked phenomenally well." Kuntz'said of tbe new alcohol regulations. "I wouldn't say consumption has gone down in our house, but there is more awareness ofthe potential abuses of alco¬ hol," said Mike Allen, president of DelU Tau Delta at the University of Missouri- Columbia. At Yale, "there will be fewer large par¬ ties," predicted Mark Watts, of Yale's Joint Council of Social Chairmen. "1 expect there will be more coat and tie parties with more food and also more VCR renuls," he added. And at Texas's Austin campus, "there's not less drinking, but more responsible drinking," said Trina Hedemann of the school's Alcohol Education Task Force. The university now is debating whether to ban alcohol is Texas's dorms. Raising the drinking age will drive stu¬ denls from bars and dorms, probably sUrting "a trend toward private house parties," Hedemann speculated. Housing Continued from page 5 ...John Wetzel, the Director of Housing, said that it would be 'no problem' for dorm residents to stay through Memorial Day weekend al the cost of $4.75 per day. would compromise those who must work during the week. Il would give the student the weekend to visit with his/ her parents." — "By having two days separating finals and graduation it will serve to make graduate's last final, they will have two days to get the celebrating out of their system and have a more serious approach to the Saturday morning ceremonies. "The Senate realizes that celebrating is not always healthy, but to expect anything else is unrealistic." Sage Contlnue-d from page 3 "It's more literary non-fiction as opposed to journalistic non-fiction," she said. "But the best advice 1 could give to someone need would be to read some of the articles." SAGE is a descendent of the early 1980's poetry magazine "Backwash." The name was changed to SAGE in 1980-81 with a completely different format from today's.SAGE. the Varsity Sport ot the Mind ♦COLLEGE BOWL IS A GAME OF KNOWLEDGE EMPHASIZING QUICK RECALL *IF YOU ENJOY TRIVIAL PURSUIT, THEN COLLEGE BOWL IS THE GAME FOR YOU! •COME AND WATCH THE EXCITEMENT ♦CONTACT THE COORDINATOR OF RESIDENCE LIFE FOR INFORMATION AND APPLICATIONS. IS COMING TO: THE CAL—ST A TE FRESNO RESIDENCE HALLS WEDNESDA Y& THURSDAY, NOV. 6 & 7\ COMMONS LOUNGE Sponsord by Student Activities, the Residence Halls, and Pulse. "*\*\a\\\\*\\\\\%*\\\\\*Wma\^^ - "The magazine was much longer and had great campus involvement," said Spaulding. Spaulding explained that the magazine declined somewha" after that year, but rebounded in 1983 under the editorship of Greg Gaither. "Since the fall of S3 ii has gained a reputation of being a respected maga¬ zine," said Spaulding. "My goal as editor is to make SAGE more respected and well-known." Back issues of SAGE are available in the periodicals area of the library and are available for students to check out. Council Continued from page 1 know the issues," he said. "This may be structive. They simplly do not know the issues with open parties." Sigma Chi President Mark Paseulli disagreed with Manouel. "I don*! think he has the right to think which house is educated and which house isn't," Paseulli said. "I'd say our guys are pretty well versed." SAE President Jeff Cardell called the party problem a "volatile issue." Cardell said he was silent at the meeting because he wanted to have time to think about what Manouel said. "I know il's something we've considered for a while and want to review, some more before we make a commitment," he said. Manouel said any resolution to close the parties will have to wait for future IFC meetings. He seriously doubts if such a resolution would be supported by the other fraternity presidents. "I will be in conUct with the fraternity alumni groups of all CSUF fraternitie*," he said. "The alumni groups may be more concerned and may uke a more active role in dealing with Ihis problem. The material sent, to the alumni groups will have the endorsement of our national office." Sports Bulldogs wish to end Cope's hope SAC descends on Tiger country The Fresno Sute football team will once again deploy iu forces as it heads north to Stockton Ihis weekend to battle the Tigers of the University of Pacific in the oldest rivalry of the two schools. The 'Dogs lead the 60-game series dating back to 1921, 33-23-2, bul last year's game was won by UOP in Fresno UOP's reign as conference leader was short-lived u the Tigen have lost three straight conference games since. The last PCAA game — a 20-7 loss to Long Beach Sute — eliminated the Tigers from Cali¬ fornia Bowl contention. The Tigers did manage to travel to Hawaii and beat the Rainbow Warriors 24-15; tbe same Rainbows lhat battled tbe Bulldogs lo a 24-24 tie earlier in tbe "If you dont pressure the wishbone, youll be in for a long day." —Sweeney 24-6. Bob Cope's Tigers, 4-5 overall and 2-3 in the Pacific Coast Athletic Association, began the "85 campaign with a new look —Ihe wishbone — and have run il effec¬ tively. "If you don't pressure the wishbone, youll be in for a long day," said Coach Jim Sweeney. "They have experienced some success with (the wishbone), especial¬ ly against Hawaii, who tied us. I know Hue Jackson is an outsUnding athlete at quarterback." Jackson, a 6-foot, 180 pound junior, is a double-threat. While completing 56Of 108 passes for 884 yards and nine touch¬ downs, Jackson has also rushed for 510 yards. He is only averaging 2.9 yards per Besides Jackson, the Tigers have a host of running backs thai put the wishbone in motion. James Mackey, 353 yards, Ken Rhoads, 224 yards, Steve Souza, 191 yards and Ron Thornton, 177 yards, will all see action against the Bulldogs' de¬ fense. While the Tigers are nol considered a passing team, they posses two deep threats in Gene Thomas and Kurt Heinrich. Thomas has caught 17 receptions for 447 yards — a 26.3 average per catch — and five touchdowns. Heinrich is Ihe team's leading receiver with 20 catches for 358 yards, a 17.9 average. The Tigers' wishbone alignment has netted an average of 307.4 yards per game — 169 rushing and 138.4 passing. Coach Sweeney is beaming with con¬ fidence at this particular point in the season — and with good reason. The Bulldogs are one of five unbeaten teams in Division I-A and are second in ibe nation in scoring with a 39.2 average per game. "I want to speak up for Fresno Suu because this football team can play with any football team," said Coach Sweeney. "This football team belongs somewhere among the best football teams in the country. "We dont uke them (UOP) lightly." said Sweeney. "Bob Cope has a great background and you can count on the k ids he coaches lo be fired up and ready to Play." Although the Tigers have been success¬ ful wilh the wishbone offense. Coach Sweeney feels the element of surprise has been the'key. .' " ^ "It is a one-dimensional offense'm that it stresses the run. We have considerable expertise in defensing the veer offenses. (The veer or wishbone) has lost popularity and then regained it because people forgot how to defense it and haven't seen it in a long time. "We are still going to have a winning season." —Cope Defensively, the Tigers are led by line- Bulldof Notes — FSU U second la Uk nation >rlnf (3S.4) behind Air Fores <3«) and very well move Into first after this game. Air Force will battle Ihe laird hi then tcoriag team. Army, Ihis week...The Dogs are ilxtb In total offense with 444.7 yards and 14th la rnihJni (222.1) and 22ad in paaang (2214)...- Quarterback KrriB Sweeney moved Into second place on tbe PCAA career pawing jai* mat wtlh Us 2*4 yard day .fains* FaOertoa. He now has 7,3*4 total yards paana is No. 2 In tkw nation ini a*»r» te.-TaJltaKlia James Wunams (7M yard.) and Kelly Skipper (377 yards)have roi.aiia1 backers Jeff' Plunkett and Nick Holt, NaDi defensive backs Ron Talbot and Dean Sawyer and linemen Tim O'Keefe (235) and Kelvin Harden (270). UOP* best, defensive back Tommy Purvis, has been sidelined with a neck injury. Purvis is just one of twelve Tiger sutlers that are out with injuries. Despite the injuries, Coach Cope remains Sana....................................™ optimistic about his team and is generally aad Anthony MoaWy hart tram ad ■> roe 4*1 pleased with the improvement the UOP yards. The torn art amagaag 5.4 yank pas program has enjoyed this season. earryandl»iivtaeowal21ianMnglii»ihluii.n„^ "We still are going to have a winning Leading Fresno Suns dtfitlit atat chart fa season," Cope said. "We can still win as senior linebacker Georgt Ftttrson wttfc IM many conference games as we have ever points foOowsd by Mkfaaal Stewart (172), won. We are still going lo keep our Victor Benttt (1573), Graf Kamaty (l«*J) program running in the right direction." and Anthony Nana (143). Indeed, the Tigers have experienced a modicum of success this season. Opening „_____________ thc season with a big 49-17 blasting of w«k.t>m< wa fat earrttd Mr. oa KMJ radta Sacramento State, the Tigers lost to (5M AM>loe»flj knlaaiaf « 1:JS asa. The Central Michigan 27-10 and Arizona game wtf not be Uti.lmj. The atst Matett Sute 27-0 before beating Uuh Sute 33-7 wiBbat Long■«►«*State,Nav. 1 *,taMowad and New Mexico Sute 19-10. Tbe two fay ESPN1, anttoanl coram* at th* Fmbm PCAA wins put the Tigers in first place. Stata-WkhUa Stat, pw Tfaarsaay, nor. 21. Nov. 7,1*85 .The Daily Collegian •fjriM tW Titan'of UOf t. Sraektn." . "jB2^
Object Description
Title | 1985_11 The Daily Collegian November 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 | Nov 7, 1985 Pg. 6-7 |
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 | Pas«6 NEWS Nov. 7,1985 Universities crack down on booze PEORIA, IL (CPS) — Police officers "have come to the door on a noise com¬ plaint, and have just walked in, and surted cardingpeople,"complained Mike Forman, Interfraternity Council president at Bradley University. "They don^ have the right to do that without a warrant." They may in fact have the right, and colleges across the country are using it more to keep a much closer eye on stu¬ dents this fall as the nationwide crack¬ down on student drinking begins its second tougher regulations and stricter enforce¬ ment actually are changing student drink¬ ing habits, campuses' switch to more aggressive anti-drinking tactics this fall is beyond question: • At Indiana University, the dean -of studenu makes surprise visits to campus parties to find underaged drinkers and enforce a new campus keg policy. • Yale now effectively prohibits alco¬ hol a and i; students "drinking cards" to help enforce the new rules, sr the crackdown, how- • Local police broke up traditional e campus "responsible school-opening street parties at West Vir- drinking" programs, forcing many stu- ginia and Western Michigan, arresting dents off campus — and into their cars some 42 students the first week of classes -to drink in less-controllable, more dan- at West Virginia. gerous situations. • Pittsburgh police have warned stu- And while observers can'i agree if dent groups they will drop into University CLASSIFIED Lost Wallet Brown Leather. CaU Jan 297-9483 or 227-8405 For Sale Kenwood 45W amp, tuner, turntable and condition, super sound Must sell! Best offer. Call or leave message 294-2223 Wanted Baby sitter lor 1 child, occasional nights, some weekends. CaU: 298-7253 Typing Close to CSUF. Accurate quality work on IBM selectric. Call Eva. 229-5592 Dsasc Jockey For your party, any occasion- Only $200. 298-5923 God & Mike Eaqlea Gov. Republican '86 CA. Truth, honesty, justice and a great American leader. For Sale Honda motorcycle. 1979 CM 400A 4400 miles. Like new $750 299-4746 Word Processing Elli Bessey, a professKjnal rytut. 224-8152 For Sale •78 Fuit 131. 2 door sedan. 5-speed. Excellent condition. $1400. Cal eve 226-3538 Typing Near CSUF. Reasonable rate. Call after 3PM. 229-3769 Female Wanted To share Coodo. furnished bedroom with pnvatebeth. Laundry & kitchen facilities — p^iJed. S^O/rorthpJu.depo.t." 292-3513 Wanted Female live-in babysitter. Free room & board. Week days are open, work evenings and weekends. Chestnut/Bullard area.Call Sherri 299-2801 or 225-4660 For Sale 77 Honda Accord. New paint & tires $1000 or best offer 294-3643 Record Exchange Opening Friday, Nov. 1st. Album rentals $1 to $2. Buy, sell, trade 4227 N. Shields (at Cedar) Typing Exccplional quoluy. By •pponnwr. Hh 222-3226 Typing & Editing Proofreading also available. $1 per page. Can 225-3396 Typing Unlimited Term papers. Reasonable rates. Barnyard Shopping Center Clovis 295-3835 Jay'* Typing ■ ™'222%62S_Cim,y3i Typing By Jay Electronic Typewriter. Near CSUF Call: _.sioo.PJq£. 222-9125 of Pittsburgh parlies unannounced to enforce new drinking age laws. • University of Florida administrators made a point of holding a public hearing into alleged violations of their new dry rush rules the very first week of school. Bradley officials had two ttudents arrested for violating drinking rules dur¬ ing their first week of classes, too. Boston University, Southern Cal, Ber¬ keley, Penn Sute, San Diego Sute. Ken¬ tucky and Arizona, among scores of other campusesvhave adopted ttrictet rules for student drinking Ihis fall. At Smith College, for example, under- aged drinkers no longer can get legal help from the college. Students can't have liquor in dorms at South DakoU state schools anymore, while Penn State res¬ tricts the kinds of parties (hat can have kegs. Administrators say they're responding to new minimum drinking ages and to the difficulty of buying liability insurance without proving they're trying to enforce No one is sure how much the crack¬ down is changing student drinking. "The keg is still Ihe major focus of a party, but there is a trend toward more responsible use of alcohol on our cam¬ pus," noted Harold Reynolds, director of student affairs at Cal-Berkeley, "There are some disgruntled views about tbe ban on alcohol, but we are living with it."** said George Kuntz, president of the Interfraternity and Sorority Council at Boston University. "In the past, 10 people would work on the homecoming committee. We had 35 this year. There is a definite increase in participation in school events, (t has worked phenomenally well." Kuntz'said of tbe new alcohol regulations. "I wouldn't say consumption has gone down in our house, but there is more awareness ofthe potential abuses of alco¬ hol," said Mike Allen, president of DelU Tau Delta at the University of Missouri- Columbia. At Yale, "there will be fewer large par¬ ties," predicted Mark Watts, of Yale's Joint Council of Social Chairmen. "1 expect there will be more coat and tie parties with more food and also more VCR renuls," he added. And at Texas's Austin campus, "there's not less drinking, but more responsible drinking," said Trina Hedemann of the school's Alcohol Education Task Force. The university now is debating whether to ban alcohol is Texas's dorms. Raising the drinking age will drive stu¬ denls from bars and dorms, probably sUrting "a trend toward private house parties," Hedemann speculated. Housing Continued from page 5 ...John Wetzel, the Director of Housing, said that it would be 'no problem' for dorm residents to stay through Memorial Day weekend al the cost of $4.75 per day. would compromise those who must work during the week. Il would give the student the weekend to visit with his/ her parents." — "By having two days separating finals and graduation it will serve to make graduate's last final, they will have two days to get the celebrating out of their system and have a more serious approach to the Saturday morning ceremonies. "The Senate realizes that celebrating is not always healthy, but to expect anything else is unrealistic." Sage Contlnue-d from page 3 "It's more literary non-fiction as opposed to journalistic non-fiction," she said. "But the best advice 1 could give to someone need would be to read some of the articles." SAGE is a descendent of the early 1980's poetry magazine "Backwash." The name was changed to SAGE in 1980-81 with a completely different format from today's.SAGE. the Varsity Sport ot the Mind ♦COLLEGE BOWL IS A GAME OF KNOWLEDGE EMPHASIZING QUICK RECALL *IF YOU ENJOY TRIVIAL PURSUIT, THEN COLLEGE BOWL IS THE GAME FOR YOU! •COME AND WATCH THE EXCITEMENT ♦CONTACT THE COORDINATOR OF RESIDENCE LIFE FOR INFORMATION AND APPLICATIONS. IS COMING TO: THE CAL—ST A TE FRESNO RESIDENCE HALLS WEDNESDA Y& THURSDAY, NOV. 6 & 7\ COMMONS LOUNGE Sponsord by Student Activities, the Residence Halls, and Pulse. "*\*\a\\\\*\\\\\%*\\\\\*Wma\^^ - "The magazine was much longer and had great campus involvement," said Spaulding. Spaulding explained that the magazine declined somewha" after that year, but rebounded in 1983 under the editorship of Greg Gaither. "Since the fall of S3 ii has gained a reputation of being a respected maga¬ zine," said Spaulding. "My goal as editor is to make SAGE more respected and well-known." Back issues of SAGE are available in the periodicals area of the library and are available for students to check out. Council Continued from page 1 know the issues," he said. "This may be structive. They simplly do not know the issues with open parties." Sigma Chi President Mark Paseulli disagreed with Manouel. "I don*! think he has the right to think which house is educated and which house isn't," Paseulli said. "I'd say our guys are pretty well versed." SAE President Jeff Cardell called the party problem a "volatile issue." Cardell said he was silent at the meeting because he wanted to have time to think about what Manouel said. "I know il's something we've considered for a while and want to review, some more before we make a commitment," he said. Manouel said any resolution to close the parties will have to wait for future IFC meetings. He seriously doubts if such a resolution would be supported by the other fraternity presidents. "I will be in conUct with the fraternity alumni groups of all CSUF fraternitie*," he said. "The alumni groups may be more concerned and may uke a more active role in dealing with Ihis problem. The material sent, to the alumni groups will have the endorsement of our national office." Sports Bulldogs wish to end Cope's hope SAC descends on Tiger country The Fresno Sute football team will once again deploy iu forces as it heads north to Stockton Ihis weekend to battle the Tigers of the University of Pacific in the oldest rivalry of the two schools. The 'Dogs lead the 60-game series dating back to 1921, 33-23-2, bul last year's game was won by UOP in Fresno UOP's reign as conference leader was short-lived u the Tigen have lost three straight conference games since. The last PCAA game — a 20-7 loss to Long Beach Sute — eliminated the Tigers from Cali¬ fornia Bowl contention. The Tigers did manage to travel to Hawaii and beat the Rainbow Warriors 24-15; tbe same Rainbows lhat battled tbe Bulldogs lo a 24-24 tie earlier in tbe "If you dont pressure the wishbone, youll be in for a long day." —Sweeney 24-6. Bob Cope's Tigers, 4-5 overall and 2-3 in the Pacific Coast Athletic Association, began the "85 campaign with a new look —Ihe wishbone — and have run il effec¬ tively. "If you don't pressure the wishbone, youll be in for a long day," said Coach Jim Sweeney. "They have experienced some success with (the wishbone), especial¬ ly against Hawaii, who tied us. I know Hue Jackson is an outsUnding athlete at quarterback." Jackson, a 6-foot, 180 pound junior, is a double-threat. While completing 56Of 108 passes for 884 yards and nine touch¬ downs, Jackson has also rushed for 510 yards. He is only averaging 2.9 yards per Besides Jackson, the Tigers have a host of running backs thai put the wishbone in motion. James Mackey, 353 yards, Ken Rhoads, 224 yards, Steve Souza, 191 yards and Ron Thornton, 177 yards, will all see action against the Bulldogs' de¬ fense. While the Tigers are nol considered a passing team, they posses two deep threats in Gene Thomas and Kurt Heinrich. Thomas has caught 17 receptions for 447 yards — a 26.3 average per catch — and five touchdowns. Heinrich is Ihe team's leading receiver with 20 catches for 358 yards, a 17.9 average. The Tigers' wishbone alignment has netted an average of 307.4 yards per game — 169 rushing and 138.4 passing. Coach Sweeney is beaming with con¬ fidence at this particular point in the season — and with good reason. The Bulldogs are one of five unbeaten teams in Division I-A and are second in ibe nation in scoring with a 39.2 average per game. "I want to speak up for Fresno Suu because this football team can play with any football team," said Coach Sweeney. "This football team belongs somewhere among the best football teams in the country. "We dont uke them (UOP) lightly." said Sweeney. "Bob Cope has a great background and you can count on the k ids he coaches lo be fired up and ready to Play." Although the Tigers have been success¬ ful wilh the wishbone offense. Coach Sweeney feels the element of surprise has been the'key. .' " ^ "It is a one-dimensional offense'm that it stresses the run. We have considerable expertise in defensing the veer offenses. (The veer or wishbone) has lost popularity and then regained it because people forgot how to defense it and haven't seen it in a long time. "We are still going to have a winning season." —Cope Defensively, the Tigers are led by line- Bulldof Notes — FSU U second la Uk nation >rlnf (3S.4) behind Air Fores <3«) and very well move Into first after this game. Air Force will battle Ihe laird hi then tcoriag team. Army, Ihis week...The Dogs are ilxtb In total offense with 444.7 yards and 14th la rnihJni (222.1) and 22ad in paaang (2214)...- Quarterback KrriB Sweeney moved Into second place on tbe PCAA career pawing jai* mat wtlh Us 2*4 yard day .fains* FaOertoa. He now has 7,3*4 total yards paana is No. 2 In tkw nation ini a*»r» te.-TaJltaKlia James Wunams (7M yard.) and Kelly Skipper (377 yards)have roi.aiia1 backers Jeff' Plunkett and Nick Holt, NaDi defensive backs Ron Talbot and Dean Sawyer and linemen Tim O'Keefe (235) and Kelvin Harden (270). UOP* best, defensive back Tommy Purvis, has been sidelined with a neck injury. Purvis is just one of twelve Tiger sutlers that are out with injuries. Despite the injuries, Coach Cope remains Sana....................................™ optimistic about his team and is generally aad Anthony MoaWy hart tram ad ■> roe 4*1 pleased with the improvement the UOP yards. The torn art amagaag 5.4 yank pas program has enjoyed this season. earryandl»iivtaeowal21ianMnglii»ihluii.n„^ "We still are going to have a winning Leading Fresno Suns dtfitlit atat chart fa season," Cope said. "We can still win as senior linebacker Georgt Ftttrson wttfc IM many conference games as we have ever points foOowsd by Mkfaaal Stewart (172), won. We are still going lo keep our Victor Benttt (1573), Graf Kamaty (l«*J) program running in the right direction." and Anthony Nana (143). Indeed, the Tigers have experienced a modicum of success this season. Opening „_____________ thc season with a big 49-17 blasting of w«k.t>m< wa fat earrttd Mr. oa KMJ radta Sacramento State, the Tigers lost to (5M AM>loe»flj knlaaiaf « 1:JS asa. The Central Michigan 27-10 and Arizona game wtf not be Uti.lmj. The atst Matett Sute 27-0 before beating Uuh Sute 33-7 wiBbat Long■«►«*State,Nav. 1 *,taMowad and New Mexico Sute 19-10. Tbe two fay ESPN1, anttoanl coram* at th* Fmbm PCAA wins put the Tigers in first place. Stata-WkhUa Stat, pw Tfaarsaay, nor. 21. Nov. 7,1*85 .The Daily Collegian •fjriM tW Titan'of UOf t. Sraektn." . "jB2^ |