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2-THE DAILY COLLEGIAN Tuesday, February 11, 1975 Redbeard Growing strawberries flops for students By Martin Kllgore I was asked the other day ln the coffee shop about the growing of strawberries around here. I have always found lt Impossible to bring ln a strawberry crop. The little buggers grow up, have flowers, get pollinated, produce fruit and then Just as you go out¬ side to get yourself a nice tasty handful, they dematertallze. I don't know of a single sure fire method of preventing this. It ir old, c sine by a jwn people who grow 5 on their windowslll on out to the field with as many hands as you can assemble. I suggest you bring attractive members of the opposite sex so that after you have s 15 minutes stooping over those pestiferously low vines, you can ally. Do n. to watch them. Agricultural fields are no place for children. There are uncovered ditches all over the place, there are fierce dogs wllh crazy property sense, there are old cans of Insecticide, is God knows what else all se a digit ln rself, i bring c ads under *farm< •Pick your own 50C a flat Pho Phone the people 487-2123.' and you flix probably ; Strawberry wine is Imagine. Here I must Interject a warr lng. You have to know yourveg* tables and trulls Last surome we bought some really ches string beans this way. That I ■ Del I Having prepared yourself men¬ tally a I physh meet someone especially for you. Call Match Makers 222-5416 Hours 10 AM to 6 PM. child mortality tables. 1 in California piss Just he glad you don't make a •living* at picking. Anyway, the nice lady will give you a little rart that holds a boxes like they have at Alpha Beta. The reason the nice lady has the little rarts in her shed afford to pay to have them picked. The people we bought ours from last year had a Cadillac parked In front of a pretty nice house. just after the heal of the day has passed and while there Is still a Utile bit of light to see hy. You can pick strawberries until you can't tell red from green so that If you start alxxit G and the sun goes down at 8 (long be¬ fore you can't see) your hack will he telling you It's lime lo go Let me tell you what It's like to pick strawberries. Have you ever seen those pictures of the farmers planting rice shoots in the Philippines? Remember how it sort of sent sympathetic twlng- Well, that's how it feels after you fill your first little Iwx. This feeling increases at the rate of- •,#*$! equals B to the sixth power ' « fill andifMl i; iow your hack hurts. Actually if! II tight If you only do It onc< Study in Guadalajara, Mexico The GUADALAJARA SUMMER SCHOOL, a fully accredited UNI¬ VERSITY OF ARIZONA program will offer June 30 to August 9. anthropology, art. education. folk- Write loGUADALAJARA SUMMER SCHOOL. 413 New Psychology. University of Arizona. Tucson. Arizona 85721. oTckxis... in REP! ^ RED CLOGS FOR THE QUEEM OF YOUR HEART Fe*... \M^rfDmW while you'n >arathlon on the next field lg, or yeste-r- day for that matter. You begin to recall the stories of "El Cortlto,* the short handled hoe that ruins your hack after 20 years or so. berries so that you Anglos can have strawberries at your Safe¬ way produce counter and the CRLA has been trying for the I have tt out¬ lawed. If you were a migrant you wouldn't get workman's compen¬ sation or state disability. Further picking causes you to recall the words of our own for¬ mer US Sen. George Murphy, the dancing twit, to the effect that Mexican people were more suited to agriculture because they were boUt closer to the ground. If you don't get a Job this summer, you could always pick strawberries Along about a dozen boxes, you decide that you have plenty of* you pay the lady off and climb back Into your car with your fruit. You drive back to Fresno beside all the fields and orchards, you gradually remake friends with your sacroiliac and watch Ihe sun set over the foothills. Extension courses offered in the spring in Kings County Courses In education, history and geography will be offered ln Kings County during the spring semester by the Extension Divi¬ sion at CSUF. Two courses ln elementary education will be conducted at Hanford HlghSchool's West Cam¬ pus. 'Problems ln Elemen¬ tary Education: Mathematics for the Elementary School,* offered for three units, will be conducted Thursdays from 7-10 p.m. The class will meet Feb. 13 to May 29 and will be taught by Dr. Ivan Rowe. CSUF associate professor lems and Practices: Materials Development* will meet Feb. 21 from 4-10 p.m. and Feb. 22 from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. The one- unit course will be conducted by Harold Silvan! and William Walk¬ er, both lecturers In elementary education at CSUF. •History of World War II" and •European Regions: The Bal¬ kans,* a geography course, will be offered at Engvall School In Lemoore. Dr. Warren Gade, CSUF assistant professor of his¬ tory, will conduct the history course Monday evenings from 1-10. The three-unit course will meet from Feb. 10 to June 9. Ballet-modern dance courses taught by artist-in-residence Mary Jane Elsenberg. a mem¬ ber of the Louis Falco Modern Dance Company ln New York. at CSUF Feb. 8-14. Elsenberc will conduct ballet ind modern dance rlassesdurlng ihe day and will hold < Thecl eraphy a wighout the week. :e class EUROPEAN FLIGHTS Char-Tours on Pan-Am. Reservations: TGT714-546- 7015, 17965 Sky Park Blvd. 32G, Irvine, 92707. Monday through Modern Dance at noon Monday through Friday, and Beginning Modern Technique at 2 p.m. Monday and Wednesday and 3 p.m. Tuesday. Participation in the classes will lie limited lo students en¬ rolled ln the dance curriculum. However, other students and the general public are Invited to ob¬ serve the classes which will be held ln the CSUF Women* Gym. "The Balkans,* offered for three units, will be conducted Wednes¬ days from 7-10 p.m. by Dr. George Nasse, CSUF professor of geography. The class will meet from Feb. 19 to May 28. A one-unit field trip course, •Field Geography: Mother Lode," ts also open to Kings County residents. The class will meet May 8 from 6-10 p.m. ln the CSUF Science Building for regis¬ tration and Introductory pur¬ poses. The field trip will be con¬ ducted May 24-26 from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. by Dr. Merrill Stuart, as¬ sociate professor of geography, and Dr. Chester Cole, professor of geography. Tuition for Extension Division courses ls $28 per unit and stu¬ dents need not be enrolled ln the university. The classes are open to high school graduates, college students and others ln the com¬ munity provided they have met any stated course prerequisites. For further Information on these courses or other extension courses contact the CSUF Ex¬ tension Division Office In Room 132 of the Thomas Administra¬ tion Building, telephone 487-2549. The spring 1975 Extension Divi¬ sion Bulletin is available on re- THE DAILY COLLEGIAN Tuesday. February 11, 1975 THE DAILY COLU-QIAN-3 TODAY . through THURSDAY, FEB. 13 8 o.m. - 7:30 p.m.1 - Your Cloaeet Florlal• /■ONDITS W'nwHssam Cedar L. Shields Ph. 227-3564 I Building, l.leph :«mpui Building. I SPECIAL! EXTRAMOWf 4—-4«*n BILL MYERS HYPNOTIST MAGICAL* BERMANS' MAGIC SHOW SUN.-FEB.16-9 PM WILD BLUE YONDER UCLA sweeps Bulldogs in season opener By Rick Elklns Collegtan Sports Writer Mother nature shtned her light i [•-,• Bulldog baseball team,but joi Luck didn't give them an ch as the 'Dogs opened their )-'. baseball season losing three ia.nf, to visiting UCLA. The 'Dogs played tbelr games l0er threatening skies, b£ief inline, and at times rain', but ,vi.r with any degree "of luck. M xHithlandbasedBrulns swept „, series with a 9-7 victory Fri- a, ..nd then took Saturday's ",.: ..header 5-2 and 2-0. lit high hopes of better things ; -.175 and went away feeling „s |Ust could be thelryear.New ea : roach Gary Adams has put or . new wrinkles In the Bruins' u. including a bat girl and a ult .here every player Is re- uir-i to run, no matter what the liujnon (I.e. to first base fol- ,.. „• a walk). , :L. Bruins had accomplished .. .fral years over the Bull- .„■- roach Bob Bennett couldn't i idglng by tbe first seven In- n(» of Friday afternoon's game, . »ould have thought the Bruins •i« not much different than past ,.rs. as the 'Dogs led 7-3going .the eighth Inning. But a big ..- run eighth, powered by Bobby ,1 hen a solo home run by Steve nora (son of actor Chuck nrs) tn the ninth did In the Fresno Jumped out to an early three run lead tn the first Inning, then upped It to 7-2 in the third. Second baseman Bob Felts had two hits tn the first two innings, ■; good for two RBI's. Third base- ( man Bob Jacobo had one RBI, Mark Moore knocked In two runs, and Bob Prieto added one RBI In Friday's contest. Bulldog hurler Bred ~Kelley pitched five good Innings, leaving the game ahead 7-3. Mike Murphy then came in to absorb the de- The Bulldogs managed to get men on base In Saturday's games, but failed .to get them across home plate. They left 12 men stranded on the bases In the first Freshman Steve Kala, a Bill¬ iard High School product, started the game for the 'Dogs and gave up four runs, six hits ln five - Innings. He struck out five and walked three. Brad Ross, who was 4-4 last year, collected the win for the Bruins. You could say that the 'Dogs got washed up tn the second gam & Saturday, tne last game of the series. It started raining ln the second inning and eventually be¬ came a. downpour by the fifth. But Mother Nature relaxed a little near the end of.the fifth' . and the game went the full seven Innings. UCLA went ahead In tbe third on an error at second base and added another run In tbe seventh on David Hill's single.-Fresno threatened In the fifth with two consecutive singles but then Ron Myers struck out to end the threat. The Bulldogs got their first two men on ln the last Inning, but Dave Bedroslan was tagged out at home trying to score on tbe long gly. That ended the 'Dogs' hopes - and the game. Gary Starling took the loss for Ditched. He run, which i gave up only three hits. Ed Cowan got the victory for UCLA. The diaroondmeo will travel to the Bay Area this weekend for a game with UC Berkeley and two games with San Francisco State. game a i the second , They did manage 13 for the day, eight In the opener and five In the second game. UCLA Jumped out to an early lead ln the opening game, scoring one run In the first Inning. The 'Dogs tied lt up In the second when Moore reached home on a bases loaded walk given up by Bruin pitcher Brad Rosa. The 'Dogs scored another run In the sixth on Bob binges' single. The Uclans went ahead for good on Venoy Garrison's two-run round tripper In the third Inning. The powerful slugger was the all-Pac-8 catcher last season and led his conference In batting (.423). Curt Peterson upped the Bruin lead to 4-1 with a solo homer In the fourth and the Bruins got an Insurance run In the fifth when Bulldog hurler AlCuadors walked Women's basketball team drops two; will play Cal Poly, San Luis Obispo uch Donna pickle's women's k*tball team dropped two lm- tant basketball contests this weekend, losing to visiting : A 89-51, and visiting North- « 59-58. ; the UCLA game Friday hi It looked as though the -s might upset tt ked Bruins from Los A he CSUF women hoopstersh i commendable 57 per cenl me first half, a ,umberone jsAng%es. e ahead by seven •mils. But the second half proved i* the women's downfall,.as ■■■;■ shot Just 27 per cent from '•• field. was 39-33 ln favor Of UCLA -.all, but much to the large ■id's dismay the Bruins raced .. quick 51 -33 lead before CSUF -hhle Kaztmlr was Fresno's ••j ting scorer as usual, tossing ■ 22 points. Kazlmlr, a 6-foot-3 • ior from Oxnard, Is CSUF's -■.imc scorer, averaging 21 Saturday's game against v nhridge lt was nlp-and-tuck ... 'he way, CSUF losing by Just . ■ point (59-58). -uzlmlr was once again high s-orer with 16 points. ither CSUF standouts on the »Tiad are: Leslie Miller, Cindy v Her, Chris Howell,DlaneGray "i MarclaMcGlnnls. Miller, a 5-foot-U senior from Aiahelm, Is currently the wom¬ b's second leading scorer, aver- J"ng more than nine points (9.2) ■■ same. She was second behind iwimlr-last year ln average points per game (12), and led f re sno In total points with 254 This Friday the ladles travel to play Cal Poly, San Luis Obispo, game starts at 8 p.m. Fresno lofeated Cal Poly 76-39 earlier season in the CSUF.gym. imen are 6-4 overall this md 3-4 tn conference play. DEFENSE! LesllefVllller, CSUF's best defensive basketball player, attempts to block a shot by UCLA's Annie Meyers In l»st Friday's game In the women's gym. A poor second half enabled the Bruins to soundly defeat their hosts 89-81. CALIFORNIA STATE UNIVERSITY CHICO TRAVEL-STUDY 1975 ENGLAND: July 15 - August 4, *Free travel to August 13 London & vicinity, $920 EUROPE: June 25 - August 1, *Free travel to August 15 • Regensburg, Germany — $1150 • Dublin & Kilkenny, Ireland - $1145 •Florence, Italy — $1170 •Madrid & Santiago de Compostela, Spain—$1120 •Greece/Yugoslavia-,$1195 Travel, room & board, six units inclusive CRUISE: June 27 - July 12 • Mediterranean aboard the new Golden Odyssey, Fly L.A. to Athens; cruise 14 days.to Piraeus, Heraklion, Alexandria, Beirut, Famagusta, Haifa, Rhodes, etc. 3 units in religions and cultures of Mediterranean; $1094 complete AFRICA: June 25 - August 15 •Kenya from June 29 — August 1; six units In African Studies; Two weeks in London; $1795, complete FAR EAST: June 25 - July 29 •Japan, Korea, Taiwan, Hong Kong; 6 units in Asian Studies. Includes hotels, air fare, trans¬ fers, excursions, breakfast, some lunches and dinners, $1885 MEXICO: June 22 - July 25 • Guanajuato, Mexico; 6 units of credit in Spanish, culture, Mexico Today, etc.; Travel to center not included. $410 complete; Optional tours to Mexico City & Guadalajara, $507 The University Foundation, CSUC. WRITE: International Programs %* California State University, Chico Chico, Ca. 95926
Object Description
Title | 1975_02 The Daily Collegian February 1975 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1975 |
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 11, 1975 Pg. 2-3 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1975 |
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 | 2-THE DAILY COLLEGIAN Tuesday, February 11, 1975 Redbeard Growing strawberries flops for students By Martin Kllgore I was asked the other day ln the coffee shop about the growing of strawberries around here. I have always found lt Impossible to bring ln a strawberry crop. The little buggers grow up, have flowers, get pollinated, produce fruit and then Just as you go out¬ side to get yourself a nice tasty handful, they dematertallze. I don't know of a single sure fire method of preventing this. It ir old, c sine by a jwn people who grow 5 on their windowslll on out to the field with as many hands as you can assemble. I suggest you bring attractive members of the opposite sex so that after you have s 15 minutes stooping over those pestiferously low vines, you can ally. Do n. to watch them. Agricultural fields are no place for children. There are uncovered ditches all over the place, there are fierce dogs wllh crazy property sense, there are old cans of Insecticide, is God knows what else all se a digit ln rself, i bring c ads under *farm< •Pick your own 50C a flat Pho Phone the people 487-2123.' and you flix probably ; Strawberry wine is Imagine. Here I must Interject a warr lng. You have to know yourveg* tables and trulls Last surome we bought some really ches string beans this way. That I ■ Del I Having prepared yourself men¬ tally a I physh meet someone especially for you. Call Match Makers 222-5416 Hours 10 AM to 6 PM. child mortality tables. 1 in California piss Just he glad you don't make a •living* at picking. Anyway, the nice lady will give you a little rart that holds a boxes like they have at Alpha Beta. The reason the nice lady has the little rarts in her shed afford to pay to have them picked. The people we bought ours from last year had a Cadillac parked In front of a pretty nice house. just after the heal of the day has passed and while there Is still a Utile bit of light to see hy. You can pick strawberries until you can't tell red from green so that If you start alxxit G and the sun goes down at 8 (long be¬ fore you can't see) your hack will he telling you It's lime lo go Let me tell you what It's like to pick strawberries. Have you ever seen those pictures of the farmers planting rice shoots in the Philippines? Remember how it sort of sent sympathetic twlng- Well, that's how it feels after you fill your first little Iwx. This feeling increases at the rate of- •,#*$! equals B to the sixth power ' « fill andifMl i; iow your hack hurts. Actually if! II tight If you only do It onc< Study in Guadalajara, Mexico The GUADALAJARA SUMMER SCHOOL, a fully accredited UNI¬ VERSITY OF ARIZONA program will offer June 30 to August 9. anthropology, art. education. folk- Write loGUADALAJARA SUMMER SCHOOL. 413 New Psychology. University of Arizona. Tucson. Arizona 85721. oTckxis... in REP! ^ RED CLOGS FOR THE QUEEM OF YOUR HEART Fe*... \M^rfDmW while you'n >arathlon on the next field lg, or yeste-r- day for that matter. You begin to recall the stories of "El Cortlto,* the short handled hoe that ruins your hack after 20 years or so. berries so that you Anglos can have strawberries at your Safe¬ way produce counter and the CRLA has been trying for the I have tt out¬ lawed. If you were a migrant you wouldn't get workman's compen¬ sation or state disability. Further picking causes you to recall the words of our own for¬ mer US Sen. George Murphy, the dancing twit, to the effect that Mexican people were more suited to agriculture because they were boUt closer to the ground. If you don't get a Job this summer, you could always pick strawberries Along about a dozen boxes, you decide that you have plenty of* you pay the lady off and climb back Into your car with your fruit. You drive back to Fresno beside all the fields and orchards, you gradually remake friends with your sacroiliac and watch Ihe sun set over the foothills. Extension courses offered in the spring in Kings County Courses In education, history and geography will be offered ln Kings County during the spring semester by the Extension Divi¬ sion at CSUF. Two courses ln elementary education will be conducted at Hanford HlghSchool's West Cam¬ pus. 'Problems ln Elemen¬ tary Education: Mathematics for the Elementary School,* offered for three units, will be conducted Thursdays from 7-10 p.m. The class will meet Feb. 13 to May 29 and will be taught by Dr. Ivan Rowe. CSUF associate professor lems and Practices: Materials Development* will meet Feb. 21 from 4-10 p.m. and Feb. 22 from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. The one- unit course will be conducted by Harold Silvan! and William Walk¬ er, both lecturers In elementary education at CSUF. •History of World War II" and •European Regions: The Bal¬ kans,* a geography course, will be offered at Engvall School In Lemoore. Dr. Warren Gade, CSUF assistant professor of his¬ tory, will conduct the history course Monday evenings from 1-10. The three-unit course will meet from Feb. 10 to June 9. Ballet-modern dance courses taught by artist-in-residence Mary Jane Elsenberg. a mem¬ ber of the Louis Falco Modern Dance Company ln New York. at CSUF Feb. 8-14. Elsenberc will conduct ballet ind modern dance rlassesdurlng ihe day and will hold < Thecl eraphy a wighout the week. :e class EUROPEAN FLIGHTS Char-Tours on Pan-Am. Reservations: TGT714-546- 7015, 17965 Sky Park Blvd. 32G, Irvine, 92707. Monday through Modern Dance at noon Monday through Friday, and Beginning Modern Technique at 2 p.m. Monday and Wednesday and 3 p.m. Tuesday. Participation in the classes will lie limited lo students en¬ rolled ln the dance curriculum. However, other students and the general public are Invited to ob¬ serve the classes which will be held ln the CSUF Women* Gym. "The Balkans,* offered for three units, will be conducted Wednes¬ days from 7-10 p.m. by Dr. George Nasse, CSUF professor of geography. The class will meet from Feb. 19 to May 28. A one-unit field trip course, •Field Geography: Mother Lode," ts also open to Kings County residents. The class will meet May 8 from 6-10 p.m. ln the CSUF Science Building for regis¬ tration and Introductory pur¬ poses. The field trip will be con¬ ducted May 24-26 from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. by Dr. Merrill Stuart, as¬ sociate professor of geography, and Dr. Chester Cole, professor of geography. Tuition for Extension Division courses ls $28 per unit and stu¬ dents need not be enrolled ln the university. The classes are open to high school graduates, college students and others ln the com¬ munity provided they have met any stated course prerequisites. For further Information on these courses or other extension courses contact the CSUF Ex¬ tension Division Office In Room 132 of the Thomas Administra¬ tion Building, telephone 487-2549. The spring 1975 Extension Divi¬ sion Bulletin is available on re- THE DAILY COLLEGIAN Tuesday. February 11, 1975 THE DAILY COLU-QIAN-3 TODAY . through THURSDAY, FEB. 13 8 o.m. - 7:30 p.m.1 - Your Cloaeet Florlal• /■ONDITS W'nwHssam Cedar L. Shields Ph. 227-3564 I Building, l.leph :«mpui Building. I SPECIAL! EXTRAMOWf 4—-4«*n BILL MYERS HYPNOTIST MAGICAL* BERMANS' MAGIC SHOW SUN.-FEB.16-9 PM WILD BLUE YONDER UCLA sweeps Bulldogs in season opener By Rick Elklns Collegtan Sports Writer Mother nature shtned her light i [•-,• Bulldog baseball team,but joi Luck didn't give them an ch as the 'Dogs opened their )-'. baseball season losing three ia.nf, to visiting UCLA. The 'Dogs played tbelr games l0er threatening skies, b£ief inline, and at times rain', but ,vi.r with any degree "of luck. M xHithlandbasedBrulns swept „, series with a 9-7 victory Fri- a, ..nd then took Saturday's ",.: ..header 5-2 and 2-0. lit high hopes of better things ; -.175 and went away feeling „s |Ust could be thelryear.New ea : roach Gary Adams has put or . new wrinkles In the Bruins' u. including a bat girl and a ult .here every player Is re- uir-i to run, no matter what the liujnon (I.e. to first base fol- ,.. „• a walk). , :L. Bruins had accomplished .. .fral years over the Bull- .„■- roach Bob Bennett couldn't i idglng by tbe first seven In- n(» of Friday afternoon's game, . »ould have thought the Bruins •i« not much different than past ,.rs. as the 'Dogs led 7-3going .the eighth Inning. But a big ..- run eighth, powered by Bobby ,1 hen a solo home run by Steve nora (son of actor Chuck nrs) tn the ninth did In the Fresno Jumped out to an early three run lead tn the first Inning, then upped It to 7-2 in the third. Second baseman Bob Felts had two hits tn the first two innings, ■; good for two RBI's. Third base- ( man Bob Jacobo had one RBI, Mark Moore knocked In two runs, and Bob Prieto added one RBI In Friday's contest. Bulldog hurler Bred ~Kelley pitched five good Innings, leaving the game ahead 7-3. Mike Murphy then came in to absorb the de- The Bulldogs managed to get men on base In Saturday's games, but failed .to get them across home plate. They left 12 men stranded on the bases In the first Freshman Steve Kala, a Bill¬ iard High School product, started the game for the 'Dogs and gave up four runs, six hits ln five - Innings. He struck out five and walked three. Brad Ross, who was 4-4 last year, collected the win for the Bruins. You could say that the 'Dogs got washed up tn the second gam & Saturday, tne last game of the series. It started raining ln the second inning and eventually be¬ came a. downpour by the fifth. But Mother Nature relaxed a little near the end of.the fifth' . and the game went the full seven Innings. UCLA went ahead In tbe third on an error at second base and added another run In tbe seventh on David Hill's single.-Fresno threatened In the fifth with two consecutive singles but then Ron Myers struck out to end the threat. The Bulldogs got their first two men on ln the last Inning, but Dave Bedroslan was tagged out at home trying to score on tbe long gly. That ended the 'Dogs' hopes - and the game. Gary Starling took the loss for Ditched. He run, which i gave up only three hits. Ed Cowan got the victory for UCLA. The diaroondmeo will travel to the Bay Area this weekend for a game with UC Berkeley and two games with San Francisco State. game a i the second , They did manage 13 for the day, eight In the opener and five In the second game. UCLA Jumped out to an early lead ln the opening game, scoring one run In the first Inning. The 'Dogs tied lt up In the second when Moore reached home on a bases loaded walk given up by Bruin pitcher Brad Rosa. The 'Dogs scored another run In the sixth on Bob binges' single. The Uclans went ahead for good on Venoy Garrison's two-run round tripper In the third Inning. The powerful slugger was the all-Pac-8 catcher last season and led his conference In batting (.423). Curt Peterson upped the Bruin lead to 4-1 with a solo homer In the fourth and the Bruins got an Insurance run In the fifth when Bulldog hurler AlCuadors walked Women's basketball team drops two; will play Cal Poly, San Luis Obispo uch Donna pickle's women's k*tball team dropped two lm- tant basketball contests this weekend, losing to visiting : A 89-51, and visiting North- « 59-58. ; the UCLA game Friday hi It looked as though the -s might upset tt ked Bruins from Los A he CSUF women hoopstersh i commendable 57 per cenl me first half, a ,umberone jsAng%es. e ahead by seven •mils. But the second half proved i* the women's downfall,.as ■■■;■ shot Just 27 per cent from '•• field. was 39-33 ln favor Of UCLA -.all, but much to the large ■id's dismay the Bruins raced .. quick 51 -33 lead before CSUF -hhle Kaztmlr was Fresno's ••j ting scorer as usual, tossing ■ 22 points. Kazlmlr, a 6-foot-3 • ior from Oxnard, Is CSUF's -■.imc scorer, averaging 21 Saturday's game against v nhridge lt was nlp-and-tuck ... 'he way, CSUF losing by Just . ■ point (59-58). -uzlmlr was once again high s-orer with 16 points. ither CSUF standouts on the »Tiad are: Leslie Miller, Cindy v Her, Chris Howell,DlaneGray "i MarclaMcGlnnls. Miller, a 5-foot-U senior from Aiahelm, Is currently the wom¬ b's second leading scorer, aver- J"ng more than nine points (9.2) ■■ same. She was second behind iwimlr-last year ln average points per game (12), and led f re sno In total points with 254 This Friday the ladles travel to play Cal Poly, San Luis Obispo, game starts at 8 p.m. Fresno lofeated Cal Poly 76-39 earlier season in the CSUF.gym. imen are 6-4 overall this md 3-4 tn conference play. DEFENSE! LesllefVllller, CSUF's best defensive basketball player, attempts to block a shot by UCLA's Annie Meyers In l»st Friday's game In the women's gym. A poor second half enabled the Bruins to soundly defeat their hosts 89-81. CALIFORNIA STATE UNIVERSITY CHICO TRAVEL-STUDY 1975 ENGLAND: July 15 - August 4, *Free travel to August 13 London & vicinity, $920 EUROPE: June 25 - August 1, *Free travel to August 15 • Regensburg, Germany — $1150 • Dublin & Kilkenny, Ireland - $1145 •Florence, Italy — $1170 •Madrid & Santiago de Compostela, Spain—$1120 •Greece/Yugoslavia-,$1195 Travel, room & board, six units inclusive CRUISE: June 27 - July 12 • Mediterranean aboard the new Golden Odyssey, Fly L.A. to Athens; cruise 14 days.to Piraeus, Heraklion, Alexandria, Beirut, Famagusta, Haifa, Rhodes, etc. 3 units in religions and cultures of Mediterranean; $1094 complete AFRICA: June 25 - August 15 •Kenya from June 29 — August 1; six units In African Studies; Two weeks in London; $1795, complete FAR EAST: June 25 - July 29 •Japan, Korea, Taiwan, Hong Kong; 6 units in Asian Studies. Includes hotels, air fare, trans¬ fers, excursions, breakfast, some lunches and dinners, $1885 MEXICO: June 22 - July 25 • Guanajuato, Mexico; 6 units of credit in Spanish, culture, Mexico Today, etc.; Travel to center not included. $410 complete; Optional tours to Mexico City & Guadalajara, $507 The University Foundation, CSUC. WRITE: International Programs %* California State University, Chico Chico, Ca. 95926 |