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•V-THE DAILY COLLEGIAN Thursday, February 5, 1976 Can cagers shift out of neutral? will advance to the NCAA region- ference at 3-0, followed by San al championships. "Jose State and Cal State Fuller- But that's much too (ar ahead ton (2-1) and Long Beach (2-2). for the Bulldogs to look. CSUF The Bulldogs, 9-10 over-all, ono-half game ahead of the Uni- with a 77-71 win over UOP. But crslty of Pacific (0-3). It has been downhill since. San Diego State leads the con- The Bulldogs lost at home (the only PCAA team to do It this Alter a slow start, 6-7 forward season) against San Jose 76-69 Roy Jones Is playing up to par two weeks ago. CSUF then met and leading the league ln scoring with disaster on the road, losing with a 21.0 average. The all- 1 San PCAA Diego (10 •I thii -8-1) tl eekend. • ago Is rebounding so third Northridge, Long Beach Women s squad hits road apldly Improving CSUF i basketball team will o Cal State Long Beach game. The Bulldogs will host UCLA Feb. 13 al 8 p.m. ln the CSUF gym and will then play Long Beach the following night game at Selland will precede the outstanding gan week, and I'm ; aging Ju st more t han nine a game'. The 1 ■nuch mil eageout of guard addan, wt 10 leads tne con- ference ln field goal percentage (78.2) a: nd assist s (9.5 per game). The Bulldogs will travel to rday for an 8:05 -ne. CSUF will then beoff tore hosting the 49ers ln Selland Arena Feb. 14. Coach ied by D' vlght Jones, the 6-6 Larry Hud- scorln^ average. s a 17.5 league The 4 9ers, se< :ondln the league Dawson , 6-8 Cla rence Ruffenand 99<(S'cHICK N^ SHACK 99< j S^L BUDGET SAVING SNAK-SACkJ ;inCKF.N SALAD SANDWICHES 59c February Taste Treat CHERRY TARTS only 25* 2369 E. SHAW - FRESNO .C3h?m*»5?^ *&***<&* VALENTINE'S DANCE STATONS FASCINATIONS MEZTIZO $ » SUNDAY, FEB. 15 9 RODEWAY INN BALLROOM Records; Tomas' Fashion, <\% I Downtown; Mexico Cafe; El Sarape Records Sy , Our College Plan: $1 a month buys all the bank you need. Bank of America's College Plan is a complete banking package just for students It's simple, convenient, economical and includes everything you're likely to need Here's what makes it so useful: 1. The College Plan Checking Account. Unlimited checkwriting for just $1 a month. With no minimum balance required And service charge at all for June. July August, or for any month a balance of $300 or more is maintained. You get a ment every month. And the stays open through the sumrr with a zero balance, saving you thi trouble of having to close it in Junt and reopen it in the fall. 2. Personalized Checks. Yours inexpensively. Scenic or other style checks for a I''"' 3. BankAmericard.K For students of sophomore standing or higher, who quali- (y the College Plan can also include BankAmericard. It's good for tuition at most state schools, check-cashing identification and all types of purchases. Parental guarantee is not required And conservative credit limits help you start building a good credit history. 4. Overdraft Protection. Our Instant Cash helps you avoid bounced checks, by covering all your checks up to the limit of your available BankAmericard credit. 5. Educational Loans. A Bank of America specialty. Complete details are available from any of our Student Loan Offices. 6. Savings Accounts. Lots of plans to choose from, all providing easy ways to save up for holidays and vacations. 7. Student Representatives. Usually students or recent graduates themselves, our Reps are located at all lur major college offices and offer individual help with any student banking or financial problems. Now that you know what's included, why not drop by one of our college offices, meet your Student Rep. and get in on our College Plan. $1 a month buys all the bank you need. Depend on us. More California college students do. BANKof AMERICA THE DAILY COLIEGIAN-7 Winless wrestlers seek to end nightmarish skid CU slates recreation tournament m College Unl llspons. i competition ln bll- ii.irds, bridge, chess, table ten- is and table soccer, Saturday and Sunday. u Top qualifiers In campuscom- ■f'tltlon will advance to the Association of College Unlons- ntarnattonal regional tourney -•■!'. 14-16, also hosted by CSUF. There will be men's and wom- ■ n's competition lnblllla/ds, with ■ ii'Rory advancing to the re- llonala. There will also be men's errata play, with the top four ■ ingles players representing e^H ■ ited States Chess Federation •■moors or Join at the tourney, ■nbership fee is $15. itt'glstration Is being taken at recreation desk of the College ilon. There Is no entry fee, and Jillne for sign-ups Is Friday, Sports Calendar 7:30 p.m. ln when they host UC Davis in a uonconference match. CSUF will continue action Saturday at 1 p.m. on campus against Long Beach State ln a Pacific Coast Athletic Conference battle. Quality of competition Is a key reason for the Bulldogs' poor record this season. CSUF has lostio such powerhouses as Oregon State, the University ol Oregon, UCLA, Portland State, Cal Poly, San Luis Obispo, and Brig- coming back to look up to. "Very quickly, thoyoungwres- tlers learn from them,".he con- skills but learning to compete Intensely. We've lacked Intensity, but we're definitely Improving. We could do well In the con- last two years ln recruiting,'explained Francis. "A lot of people didn't think I was coming back and didn't know who was going to some guys ln the shuffle." tiers has an individual winning record but added many are improving rapidly. Francis called 158-pound Junior Kevin Clark the most Improved wrestler and said Scott Hasson (126), Bob Parker (177) and RayMoz(150)werealso doing well. Study In Guadalajara, Mexico The GUADALAJARA SUMMER SCHOOL, a fully accredited UNIVERSITY OF ARIZONA program, will offer July 5-August 13, anthropology, art, education, folklore, history, political science, language and literature. Tuition and tees, $195 board and room with Mexican family $280. Write to GUADALAJARA SUMMER SCHOOL. Olfice of Inter- Buy Hewlett-Packard's HP-21 Scientific at "100 before March IE And you get the new 10 HP-21 Application Book absolutely free! The new 120-page HP-21 Application Book—a $10 value—can be yours free if you buy an HP-21 now. Contains major sections on Statistics, Mathematics, Finance, Navigation, Surveying. Conversions. Gives you 50 valuable applications to help you get the most from your HP-21 Scientific Calculator. The HP21 puts incredible problem-solving power in your hands—at the remarkably low price of only $ 100. You get: 32 preprogrammed functions and operations. Including rectangular/polar coordinate conversion, register arithmetic, common log evaluation and trig functions in radians or degrees. Two display options. You can select fixed decimal, the most commonly-used notation, or scientific notation. When a number is too large or too small for fixed decimal, the HP-21 automatically switches to scientific. RPN logic. The professional error-saving system, with 4-memory stack, lets you solve problems your way—without copying parentheses, worrying about hierarchies or restructuring beforehand. Uncompromising HP quality. One reason Nobel Laureates, astronauts and 1,000,000 other professionals own and depend on Hewlett-Packard calculators. Get your HP-21 today, complete with owner's handbook, battery pack, recharging unit and soft carrying case with handy belt loop at only $100. Take advantage of this special value on the HP-21 today Offer good only between January 15 and March 15.1976. THE KENNEL BOOKSTORE
Object Description
Title | 1976_02 The Daily Collegian February 1976 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1976 |
Description | Daily (except weekends) during the school year. Microfilm. Palo Alto, Calif. |
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, 35mm. |
Technical Information | Scanned at 600 dpi; TIFF; Microfilm ScanPro 2000 "E-image data" |
Language | eng |
Description
Title | Feb 5, 1976 Pg. 6-7 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1976 |
Description | Daily (except weekends) during the school year. Microfilm. Palo Alto, Calif. |
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, 35mm. |
Technical Information | Scanned at 600 dpi; TIFF; Microfilm ScanPro 2000 "E-image data" |
Language | eng |
Full-Text-Search | •V-THE DAILY COLLEGIAN Thursday, February 5, 1976 Can cagers shift out of neutral? will advance to the NCAA region- ference at 3-0, followed by San al championships. "Jose State and Cal State Fuller- But that's much too (ar ahead ton (2-1) and Long Beach (2-2). for the Bulldogs to look. CSUF The Bulldogs, 9-10 over-all, ono-half game ahead of the Uni- with a 77-71 win over UOP. But crslty of Pacific (0-3). It has been downhill since. San Diego State leads the con- The Bulldogs lost at home (the only PCAA team to do It this Alter a slow start, 6-7 forward season) against San Jose 76-69 Roy Jones Is playing up to par two weeks ago. CSUF then met and leading the league ln scoring with disaster on the road, losing with a 21.0 average. The all- 1 San PCAA Diego (10 •I thii -8-1) tl eekend. • ago Is rebounding so third Northridge, Long Beach Women s squad hits road apldly Improving CSUF i basketball team will o Cal State Long Beach game. The Bulldogs will host UCLA Feb. 13 al 8 p.m. ln the CSUF gym and will then play Long Beach the following night game at Selland will precede the outstanding gan week, and I'm ; aging Ju st more t han nine a game'. The 1 ■nuch mil eageout of guard addan, wt 10 leads tne con- ference ln field goal percentage (78.2) a: nd assist s (9.5 per game). The Bulldogs will travel to rday for an 8:05 -ne. CSUF will then beoff tore hosting the 49ers ln Selland Arena Feb. 14. Coach ied by D' vlght Jones, the 6-6 Larry Hud- scorln^ average. s a 17.5 league The 4 9ers, se< :ondln the league Dawson , 6-8 Cla rence Ruffenand 99<(S'cHICK N^ SHACK 99< j S^L BUDGET SAVING SNAK-SACkJ ;inCKF.N SALAD SANDWICHES 59c February Taste Treat CHERRY TARTS only 25* 2369 E. SHAW - FRESNO .C3h?m*»5?^ *&***<&* VALENTINE'S DANCE STATONS FASCINATIONS MEZTIZO $ » SUNDAY, FEB. 15 9 RODEWAY INN BALLROOM Records; Tomas' Fashion, <\% I Downtown; Mexico Cafe; El Sarape Records Sy , Our College Plan: $1 a month buys all the bank you need. Bank of America's College Plan is a complete banking package just for students It's simple, convenient, economical and includes everything you're likely to need Here's what makes it so useful: 1. The College Plan Checking Account. Unlimited checkwriting for just $1 a month. With no minimum balance required And service charge at all for June. July August, or for any month a balance of $300 or more is maintained. You get a ment every month. And the stays open through the sumrr with a zero balance, saving you thi trouble of having to close it in Junt and reopen it in the fall. 2. Personalized Checks. Yours inexpensively. Scenic or other style checks for a I''"' 3. BankAmericard.K For students of sophomore standing or higher, who quali- (y the College Plan can also include BankAmericard. It's good for tuition at most state schools, check-cashing identification and all types of purchases. Parental guarantee is not required And conservative credit limits help you start building a good credit history. 4. Overdraft Protection. Our Instant Cash helps you avoid bounced checks, by covering all your checks up to the limit of your available BankAmericard credit. 5. Educational Loans. A Bank of America specialty. Complete details are available from any of our Student Loan Offices. 6. Savings Accounts. Lots of plans to choose from, all providing easy ways to save up for holidays and vacations. 7. Student Representatives. Usually students or recent graduates themselves, our Reps are located at all lur major college offices and offer individual help with any student banking or financial problems. Now that you know what's included, why not drop by one of our college offices, meet your Student Rep. and get in on our College Plan. $1 a month buys all the bank you need. Depend on us. More California college students do. BANKof AMERICA THE DAILY COLIEGIAN-7 Winless wrestlers seek to end nightmarish skid CU slates recreation tournament m College Unl llspons. i competition ln bll- ii.irds, bridge, chess, table ten- is and table soccer, Saturday and Sunday. u Top qualifiers In campuscom- ■f'tltlon will advance to the Association of College Unlons- ntarnattonal regional tourney -•■!'. 14-16, also hosted by CSUF. There will be men's and wom- ■ n's competition lnblllla/ds, with ■ ii'Rory advancing to the re- llonala. There will also be men's errata play, with the top four ■ ingles players representing e^H ■ ited States Chess Federation •■moors or Join at the tourney, ■nbership fee is $15. itt'glstration Is being taken at recreation desk of the College ilon. There Is no entry fee, and Jillne for sign-ups Is Friday, Sports Calendar 7:30 p.m. ln when they host UC Davis in a uonconference match. CSUF will continue action Saturday at 1 p.m. on campus against Long Beach State ln a Pacific Coast Athletic Conference battle. Quality of competition Is a key reason for the Bulldogs' poor record this season. CSUF has lostio such powerhouses as Oregon State, the University ol Oregon, UCLA, Portland State, Cal Poly, San Luis Obispo, and Brig- coming back to look up to. "Very quickly, thoyoungwres- tlers learn from them,".he con- skills but learning to compete Intensely. We've lacked Intensity, but we're definitely Improving. We could do well In the con- last two years ln recruiting,'explained Francis. "A lot of people didn't think I was coming back and didn't know who was going to some guys ln the shuffle." tiers has an individual winning record but added many are improving rapidly. Francis called 158-pound Junior Kevin Clark the most Improved wrestler and said Scott Hasson (126), Bob Parker (177) and RayMoz(150)werealso doing well. Study In Guadalajara, Mexico The GUADALAJARA SUMMER SCHOOL, a fully accredited UNIVERSITY OF ARIZONA program, will offer July 5-August 13, anthropology, art, education, folklore, history, political science, language and literature. Tuition and tees, $195 board and room with Mexican family $280. Write to GUADALAJARA SUMMER SCHOOL. Olfice of Inter- Buy Hewlett-Packard's HP-21 Scientific at "100 before March IE And you get the new 10 HP-21 Application Book absolutely free! The new 120-page HP-21 Application Book—a $10 value—can be yours free if you buy an HP-21 now. Contains major sections on Statistics, Mathematics, Finance, Navigation, Surveying. Conversions. Gives you 50 valuable applications to help you get the most from your HP-21 Scientific Calculator. The HP21 puts incredible problem-solving power in your hands—at the remarkably low price of only $ 100. You get: 32 preprogrammed functions and operations. Including rectangular/polar coordinate conversion, register arithmetic, common log evaluation and trig functions in radians or degrees. Two display options. You can select fixed decimal, the most commonly-used notation, or scientific notation. When a number is too large or too small for fixed decimal, the HP-21 automatically switches to scientific. RPN logic. The professional error-saving system, with 4-memory stack, lets you solve problems your way—without copying parentheses, worrying about hierarchies or restructuring beforehand. Uncompromising HP quality. One reason Nobel Laureates, astronauts and 1,000,000 other professionals own and depend on Hewlett-Packard calculators. Get your HP-21 today, complete with owner's handbook, battery pack, recharging unit and soft carrying case with handy belt loop at only $100. Take advantage of this special value on the HP-21 today Offer good only between January 15 and March 15.1976. THE KENNEL BOOKSTORE |