Feb 21, 1979 Pg. 6-7 |
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Surging Bulldog cagers travel to San Jose The question of whether there were enough left-overs bagged by the CSUF basketball Bulldogs after feasting on UC Irvine and Cal State Fullerton last week will be answered Thursday night in San Jose The Bulldog--, all alone in the second spot of the Pacific Coast Athletic Asso¬ ciation with a 9-4 record, will be attempting to hold on to the position when they travel to San Jose Thursday The contest will wrap up pre-tourna- CSUF, trailing University of Paci¬ fic's 10-2 mark and only one game ahead of Utah State's 8-5 record, has clinched at least a tie for second. The Bulldogs even have a shot at, once again, reigning as co-champions in the PCAA-should they finish at 10-4 while UOP loses at Utah State on Thursday and at San Jose State on Sunday. Should the 'Dogs be the lone inhabi¬ tants of the No. 2 position in the final standings, it appears that either San Jose State or UC Irvine will be the Bull- IMPROVE YOUR MEMORY WITH *ptC.P.! LET THE MEMORY SCHOOL SHOW YOU HOW TO BETTER REMEMBER NAMES AND FACES, DATES, TELEPHONE NUMBERS AND ABSTRACT CONCEPTS. IN FACT, ANYTHING! CALL NOWI 229-0787 OUR GUARANTEE IMPROVE YOUR MEMORY OR YOUR TUITION REFUNDED! ^Proper techniques, expert Coaching, controlled Practice dogs' opening opponent in the PCAA tourney. San Jose State and UC Irvine are each presently 3-9. The fourth annual conference tourna¬ ment, to be held at the Anaheim Con¬ vention Center, will run March 1, 2 and 3 Ticket prices range from S3 to $7 per night or from $9 to $18 for all three nights The Bulldogs have a big transition facing them, having stayed in their doghouse nearly three weeks CSUF has played its last four games at Sell- CSUF, however, is carrying a six- game winning streak into San Jose, having rolled up an 8-1 record over the past two months All of the wins have come bv at least an eiBhl-ooint margin although a few - such as Saturday's 70-62 triumph over Fullerton •- were much closer than the final outcome indicated. San Jose State was defeated by Long Beach State (92-80) and Santa Barbara (93-86) last week The Spartans have been hurt by a weak defense which has yielded about 80 points per PCAA game - highest in the conference The Spartans have also exhibited shooting problems both from the field and at the free throw line, ranking second to last in each category San Jose State's one outstanding team Qantas introduces new Bear Minimum Fare from San Francisco to Sydney. Fly Down Under in April, May or June and return between July 1 and July 15 or anytime in September and the fare is down to just $641! And if you can return in October or November, the fare goes down to a low, low $515! Yet you fly on our luxurious Boeing 747B's - ihc biggest jets on the As you'd expect, there are Jfew requirements: Scat availabilii and travel dates are limited. Price according to season. You must make nervations and purchase tickets 45 d; i advance. I And 25% of the fare is non- ' refundable if you cancel within 45 days of departure. Call us for details. Better yet, bear down on your Travel Agent! Free! Brochures about "in" and inexpensive places to stay and ways to sec Mail the coupon down under. \ Addison, IL 60101- ^N. ■W J State ft Zip . W * W / Travel Agcnl -I~r The Australian Airline. forward Mickey Jackson. Jackson is fourth in the PCAA in rebounding and third in shooting percentage. The Spartans' other forward -- 6-6 Wally Rank - is their high scorer, how¬ ever. Rank, one of the conference's top free throw shooters, heads a line-up that looks good on paper. San Jose State' s frontliners are fed by 6-4 guard Michael Mendez and 6-0 guard Crover Brown, with the pair ranked one-two in the PCAA in assists,'averaging a com¬ bined 12 assists per game. Sophomore Bulldog forward Pete Verhoeven, a 6-8 product from nearby Hanford, emerged last week as a major force Verhoeven gave what Crant called probably the best single game effort ever by any Bulldog in Thursday night' s 55-44 victory over Irvine. Verhoeven scored 32 points and pulled in 23 rebounds in last week's two games. He started many fast breaks going against Irvine with his outlet passes following a rebound or steal Dog junior center Art Williams returned to a long-lost form Saturday with a 20-poinl effort against Fullerton. PCAA Standings W L UOP 10 2 CSUF 9 4 Utah State 8 5 CS Fullerton 6 6 CS Long Beach 5 7 UC Santa Barbara 5 7 UC Irvin ■ it.jt,' •ssgffi OIHECTDIAL PHONES IN CALIFORNIA TOLL FREE (800) 822-5971 CABANA INN OR CALL DIRECT (916)541-5^00 LOCATED IN THE HEART OF SOUTH LAKETAHOE - *ILE FROM CASINO NIGHT LIFE February 21, W» The Daily Collegian Movie Review lovie Keview 'Movie Movie9 offers double satire of early 30's By DON SCHLIENZ It's George C. Scott as you have never seen him before - twice. In 'Movie Movie,' Scott plays two roles in two movies In one. The com¬ plete show is a satire of the carry 30s productions, where every movie had a moral, and the stars consisted of clean- cut kids and grouchy but lovable old The first film is 'Dynamite Hands" a remake of the cliche about a slum kid who is 'good with his dukes* and en¬ ters the world of fighting, only because his sister's eyes are going bad and a specialist* in Vienna, who charges $20,000 for the operation ($10,000 an eye), is her only hope. Whewt Sound familiar? Scott portrays the venerable fight manager who gives 'the kid" his first break. The second film is an example of the musicals that Hollywood insisted on turning out only because audiences in¬ sisted on going to see them. 'Baxter's Beauties of 1933* take-off of the Ziegfield Follies with Scott playing Spats Baxter, a producer of Broadway miracles. Baxter is told by his doctor (Art Car¬ ney) that he only has six months to live, from the last visit five months ago. ('Oh, well that gives me 30 days.' 'No, Spats, it's February.*) Baxter sets out to make the best pro¬ duction ever and ends up dying during the second curtain call on opening night. TYPING Term papers, thesises, etc. Work guaranteed. Allied Office Services 1500 W Shaw Suite 404 222-4111 'Movie Movie* did not draw outra¬ geous laughter from the less-than- packed theatre while I was there. Some of the word-play and mixed metaphors went over the audience's heads People familiar with the movies of the 30's, either by living through the era or watching Sunday afternoon movies, should enjoy this film im- Playing at UA Movies Four. Rated I AUDIO | CAN MAKE MONEY I FflRYOU! HELP WANTED Canvassers, part time, no ex¬ perience necessary, will train. J6/hr. Interviews Tuesday, Wednesday, and Friday at 6p.m. Classic Exteriors 567 W. Shaw Ave. Suite B3B. 225-6870 t GUADALAJARA SUMMER SCHOOL University of Arizona otters more than 40 courses, I.e., anthropology, bilingual edu¬ cation, history, Spanish, etc. at Guadalajara, Mexico, July 2 - August 10. Tuition: $265. Board and room with Mexican family: $300. Write Guadalajara Summer School Alumni 211 University ol Arizona Tucson 85721 (602) 626-4729 Now is the time to make a great deal on a Texas Instruments programmable calculator.
Object Description
Title | 1979_02 The Daily Collegian February 1979 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1979 |
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 21, 1979 Pg. 6-7 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1979 |
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 | Surging Bulldog cagers travel to San Jose The question of whether there were enough left-overs bagged by the CSUF basketball Bulldogs after feasting on UC Irvine and Cal State Fullerton last week will be answered Thursday night in San Jose The Bulldog--, all alone in the second spot of the Pacific Coast Athletic Asso¬ ciation with a 9-4 record, will be attempting to hold on to the position when they travel to San Jose Thursday The contest will wrap up pre-tourna- CSUF, trailing University of Paci¬ fic's 10-2 mark and only one game ahead of Utah State's 8-5 record, has clinched at least a tie for second. The Bulldogs even have a shot at, once again, reigning as co-champions in the PCAA-should they finish at 10-4 while UOP loses at Utah State on Thursday and at San Jose State on Sunday. Should the 'Dogs be the lone inhabi¬ tants of the No. 2 position in the final standings, it appears that either San Jose State or UC Irvine will be the Bull- IMPROVE YOUR MEMORY WITH *ptC.P.! LET THE MEMORY SCHOOL SHOW YOU HOW TO BETTER REMEMBER NAMES AND FACES, DATES, TELEPHONE NUMBERS AND ABSTRACT CONCEPTS. IN FACT, ANYTHING! CALL NOWI 229-0787 OUR GUARANTEE IMPROVE YOUR MEMORY OR YOUR TUITION REFUNDED! ^Proper techniques, expert Coaching, controlled Practice dogs' opening opponent in the PCAA tourney. San Jose State and UC Irvine are each presently 3-9. The fourth annual conference tourna¬ ment, to be held at the Anaheim Con¬ vention Center, will run March 1, 2 and 3 Ticket prices range from S3 to $7 per night or from $9 to $18 for all three nights The Bulldogs have a big transition facing them, having stayed in their doghouse nearly three weeks CSUF has played its last four games at Sell- CSUF, however, is carrying a six- game winning streak into San Jose, having rolled up an 8-1 record over the past two months All of the wins have come bv at least an eiBhl-ooint margin although a few - such as Saturday's 70-62 triumph over Fullerton •- were much closer than the final outcome indicated. San Jose State was defeated by Long Beach State (92-80) and Santa Barbara (93-86) last week The Spartans have been hurt by a weak defense which has yielded about 80 points per PCAA game - highest in the conference The Spartans have also exhibited shooting problems both from the field and at the free throw line, ranking second to last in each category San Jose State's one outstanding team Qantas introduces new Bear Minimum Fare from San Francisco to Sydney. Fly Down Under in April, May or June and return between July 1 and July 15 or anytime in September and the fare is down to just $641! And if you can return in October or November, the fare goes down to a low, low $515! Yet you fly on our luxurious Boeing 747B's - ihc biggest jets on the As you'd expect, there are Jfew requirements: Scat availabilii and travel dates are limited. Price according to season. You must make nervations and purchase tickets 45 d; i advance. I And 25% of the fare is non- ' refundable if you cancel within 45 days of departure. Call us for details. Better yet, bear down on your Travel Agent! Free! Brochures about "in" and inexpensive places to stay and ways to sec Mail the coupon down under. \ Addison, IL 60101- ^N. ■W J State ft Zip . W * W / Travel Agcnl -I~r The Australian Airline. forward Mickey Jackson. Jackson is fourth in the PCAA in rebounding and third in shooting percentage. The Spartans' other forward -- 6-6 Wally Rank - is their high scorer, how¬ ever. Rank, one of the conference's top free throw shooters, heads a line-up that looks good on paper. San Jose State' s frontliners are fed by 6-4 guard Michael Mendez and 6-0 guard Crover Brown, with the pair ranked one-two in the PCAA in assists,'averaging a com¬ bined 12 assists per game. Sophomore Bulldog forward Pete Verhoeven, a 6-8 product from nearby Hanford, emerged last week as a major force Verhoeven gave what Crant called probably the best single game effort ever by any Bulldog in Thursday night' s 55-44 victory over Irvine. Verhoeven scored 32 points and pulled in 23 rebounds in last week's two games. He started many fast breaks going against Irvine with his outlet passes following a rebound or steal Dog junior center Art Williams returned to a long-lost form Saturday with a 20-poinl effort against Fullerton. PCAA Standings W L UOP 10 2 CSUF 9 4 Utah State 8 5 CS Fullerton 6 6 CS Long Beach 5 7 UC Santa Barbara 5 7 UC Irvin ■ it.jt,' •ssgffi OIHECTDIAL PHONES IN CALIFORNIA TOLL FREE (800) 822-5971 CABANA INN OR CALL DIRECT (916)541-5^00 LOCATED IN THE HEART OF SOUTH LAKETAHOE - *ILE FROM CASINO NIGHT LIFE February 21, W» The Daily Collegian Movie Review lovie Keview 'Movie Movie9 offers double satire of early 30's By DON SCHLIENZ It's George C. Scott as you have never seen him before - twice. In 'Movie Movie,' Scott plays two roles in two movies In one. The com¬ plete show is a satire of the carry 30s productions, where every movie had a moral, and the stars consisted of clean- cut kids and grouchy but lovable old The first film is 'Dynamite Hands" a remake of the cliche about a slum kid who is 'good with his dukes* and en¬ ters the world of fighting, only because his sister's eyes are going bad and a specialist* in Vienna, who charges $20,000 for the operation ($10,000 an eye), is her only hope. Whewt Sound familiar? Scott portrays the venerable fight manager who gives 'the kid" his first break. The second film is an example of the musicals that Hollywood insisted on turning out only because audiences in¬ sisted on going to see them. 'Baxter's Beauties of 1933* take-off of the Ziegfield Follies with Scott playing Spats Baxter, a producer of Broadway miracles. Baxter is told by his doctor (Art Car¬ ney) that he only has six months to live, from the last visit five months ago. ('Oh, well that gives me 30 days.' 'No, Spats, it's February.*) Baxter sets out to make the best pro¬ duction ever and ends up dying during the second curtain call on opening night. TYPING Term papers, thesises, etc. Work guaranteed. Allied Office Services 1500 W Shaw Suite 404 222-4111 'Movie Movie* did not draw outra¬ geous laughter from the less-than- packed theatre while I was there. Some of the word-play and mixed metaphors went over the audience's heads People familiar with the movies of the 30's, either by living through the era or watching Sunday afternoon movies, should enjoy this film im- Playing at UA Movies Four. Rated I AUDIO | CAN MAKE MONEY I FflRYOU! HELP WANTED Canvassers, part time, no ex¬ perience necessary, will train. J6/hr. Interviews Tuesday, Wednesday, and Friday at 6p.m. Classic Exteriors 567 W. Shaw Ave. Suite B3B. 225-6870 t GUADALAJARA SUMMER SCHOOL University of Arizona otters more than 40 courses, I.e., anthropology, bilingual edu¬ cation, history, Spanish, etc. at Guadalajara, Mexico, July 2 - August 10. Tuition: $265. Board and room with Mexican family: $300. Write Guadalajara Summer School Alumni 211 University ol Arizona Tucson 85721 (602) 626-4729 Now is the time to make a great deal on a Texas Instruments programmable calculator. |