March 12, 1982 Pg 4-5 |
Previous | 43 of 104 | Next |
|
|
This page
All
|
Loading content ...
Page 4—the Daily Collegian—March 12, 1982 Sports_ Bulldog golfers stumble in Mexico Applications due for run GUADALAJARA. Mi Bulldog golf team finds itself in 12th place in a 14-team field after one day in the Rafael Alarcon Invitational. Fresno State totalled 297 as a team yesterday over the par-72 Guadalajara Country Club. Freshman John Erickson shot a one- over 73 to pace the Bulldogs. Jim Matus It 74. Florida and Wake Forest led the field after the first day of the three-round event with 280 totals. Arizona State was one back at 281 and Oklahoma came in at 282. Brigham Young (284). Southern California (286) and FSU paced the west coast participants. Host Guadalajara University was in last FSU-UOP softball washed out, two to try again this afternoon place with a 318. Oklahoma's Andrew McGee fired a course-record 64, eight under par. to grab the first round individual lead. Oklahoma State's Tommy Moore had a 66 to tie Scott Harris of Arizona State. No Bulldogs were among the individual leaders. Erik Stewart (first round 75), Dan Hornig(75)and Ed Hamlett (76) are also competing for Fresno. Rain forced the postponement of yesterday's softball contest between Fresno State and Pacific. The two teams will try and play today at 2 p.m. in a doubleheader. The Bulldogs are 8-0 on the young season with six shutouts. FSU leads the series with UOP 13-3. The Lady Tigers were 6-10 in the Northern California Athletic Conference last season, good for third place behind Fresno and Cal. UOP infielder Laura Saulter hit .307 i 1981 and returns this season as one of the Tigers' top hitters. Bulldog head coach Donna Pickcl said she has respect for UOP, citing the Tigers' pitching as a strength. She said the UOP matchup is the toughest conference foe thus far for Fresno State. Sacramento to meet the Sacramento State Hornets for a pair. The Hornets are highly rated in Division II. _u__^y Rains force FSU net cancellation Rain is playing havoc with Bulldog sports this week. Yesterday the weather forced cancella- Fresno State. Cal-Davis and Stanislaus State in Turlock. The event is now slated to be held April /■*— "\ IM Scoreboard BASKETBALL Friday Games Thursday Results Man's Independent 10 a.m.-noon Women's Independent 6-7 p.m. The Terminals 10, Back In Action 27 Kappa Sigma "A" (2-0I vs. Uone (1-1) Sorority 7-8 p.m. Kappa Kappa Gamma 20. Phi Mu 12 DeNa Gamma11,AlphaXIDelia24 **h»- Fraternity 8-9 p.m. Sigma Chi U. Alpha Kappa Psi 29 Men'a Independent 9-10 p.m. Why <2. Alpha Phi Alpha 35 7 Deadly Sine Plus 1 2S. Delta Upsilon 39 Men'a Independent 10-11 p.m. Coi Brigade 52, Jsj Boys 32 L -J [VI !/1 \ /1)^ /'Vllfi^rtl •] 1 fwHATs rue 1 f mi ge&v so 1 a iMflTTrSewiTHl UJAIri SllMrjtT 5*) &^Z> r-slVl 1 1^Yj&^ijfc<M %Bs\j fl ^w^^m^h Drabble" rWllCK?l<tt*X)H0M£?fW PCT K OVER1. W POK'T WNE [■■■.nib mX Hi. RMrtT GbjJ JOKKF0O0A»W- UriiA M0M.I. POSOO VjVitEARMfc'?! I MiX uStKflb 60«-€RLrW lAHO 60T A Cntfc-SeWR&ER, ffi\e-> aw a cHocotATe •WHv«.! 50-U£T M£ HAVE UMOUKPeACEl CO SOU iMOeR-STAKOfT^- ^ TO Applications for the 3rd Annual Chihuahua Road Run Scholarships are now available for currently enrolled CSUF students. The scholarships are in recognition of two deceased employees of the firm who dedicated their time and knowledge to the growth of Chihuahua Inc.; Manuel Gonzales 31 and Rafael Maciel Jr. 19. Each scholarship awarded will be for SSOO.OO^Funds are raised for the scholarships at the annual Chihuahua Road Run which is held in June of each year in the West side of Fresno. To be eligible for the scholarships'all applicants must meet the following qualifications: -Have completed 60 units before the .Spring 1982 Semester. -Be a full-time student— 12 units or more. The deadline for applying is 5 p.m.. March 26. Applications may be picked up at Tutorial Services,.SR3-116. 294-3052, and La Raza Studies. SR4-116. 294-2848. Dieting can be unhealthy By Carolyn Braun Special to the Daily Collegian March has been declared National Nutrition Month. It is also the time of year when minds turn to thoughts of spring. ' warm weather, bathing suits, and the grudging task of shedding winter's excess' weight for the all-desired "slim." In many caves (Americans as a population tend to be overweight (dieting may be desirable for both appearance and health, but questions arc now being raised to determine if wc have, in fact, overdone our obsession with thinness. In a 1980 National Institutes of Health study conducted in Framingham. Massachusetts, it was found that the people at greatest health risk were the over-lean, not the moderately heavy. Heavier people tend to live longer. Persons who spend half their lives eating between 1200 and 1600 calories per day just to maintain a five pound weight loss may not be consuming a nutritionally sound diet and therefore be at greater health risk than if thev allowed themselves the extra five pounds. For the first time since 1959. the Metropolitan Life Insurance Tables of Desired Weight (Ihc basis for many height/ weight charts) arc being revised this spring; most of the "desirable weights" will see an Naturally, one must also bear in mind the health risks of overweight such as high blood pressure, gallbladder disease, diabetes and coronary disease when deciding on your "desirable" weight. One can easily get caught in a Catch 22 situation of w hich risk to take-too thin or too fat? Most college women (70<*f in a 1980 study reported in the Journal of the American Dietetic Association) perceive themselves to be "overweight" whereas only 399r could be objectively classified as overweight. Obviously there is some distortion of body perception versus reality. Part of the problem invols cs the extreme empha- definitely considered a positive quality in In deciding on your desirable weight, ask vourself such questions as "Howdo I feel at what I perceive to Be my desirable weight?". "Do I have any energy or am I slugging around on insufficient calories?" and "How often do I get sick or just not feel good?" Answers to these questions may help you decide on a truly desirable weight for both optimum health and appearance: facts on nutrition and health as. well as a sense of proportion are definitely needed here. March 12, 1982-the Daily Inside: • The season In review • A lesson in Redlquette • A look at West Virginia • Northeastern remembered Above: Bulldog Bobby Davis drives In for 2 points in a game at Selland Arena. 'a***
Object Description
Title | 1982_03 The Daily Collegian March 1982 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1982 |
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 | March 12, 1982 Pg 4-5 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1982 |
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 |
Page 4—the Daily Collegian—March 12, 1982
Sports_
Bulldog golfers stumble in Mexico Applications
due for run
GUADALAJARA. Mi
Bulldog golf team finds itself in 12th place
in a 14-team field after one day in the
Rafael Alarcon Invitational.
Fresno State totalled 297 as a team yesterday over the par-72 Guadalajara Country Club.
Freshman John Erickson shot a one-
over 73 to pace the Bulldogs. Jim Matus
It 74.
Florida and Wake Forest led the field
after the first day of the three-round event
with 280 totals. Arizona State was one
back at 281 and Oklahoma came in at 282.
Brigham Young (284). Southern California (286) and FSU paced the west coast
participants.
Host Guadalajara University was in last
FSU-UOP softball washed out,
two to try again this afternoon
place with a 318.
Oklahoma's Andrew McGee fired a
course-record 64, eight under par. to grab
the first round individual lead. Oklahoma
State's Tommy Moore had a 66 to tie
Scott Harris of Arizona State.
No Bulldogs were among the individual
leaders.
Erik Stewart (first round 75), Dan
Hornig(75)and Ed Hamlett (76) are also
competing for Fresno.
Rain forced the postponement of yesterday's softball contest between Fresno
State and Pacific.
The two teams will try and play today at
2 p.m. in a doubleheader.
The Bulldogs are 8-0 on the young season with six shutouts. FSU leads the series
with UOP 13-3.
The Lady Tigers were 6-10 in the
Northern California Athletic Conference
last season, good for third place behind
Fresno and Cal.
UOP infielder Laura Saulter hit .307 i
1981 and returns this season as one of the
Tigers' top hitters.
Bulldog head coach Donna Pickcl said
she has respect for UOP, citing the Tigers'
pitching as a strength. She said the UOP
matchup is the toughest conference foe
thus far for Fresno State.
Sacramento to meet the Sacramento State
Hornets for a pair. The Hornets are highly
rated in Division II. _u__^y
Rains force FSU
net cancellation
Rain is playing havoc with Bulldog
sports this week.
Yesterday the weather forced cancella-
Fresno State. Cal-Davis and Stanislaus
State in Turlock.
The event is now slated to be held April
/■*—
"\
IM Scoreboard
BASKETBALL
Friday Games
Thursday Results
Man's Independent 10 a.m.-noon
Women's Independent 6-7 p.m.
The Terminals 10, Back In Action 27
Kappa Sigma "A" (2-0I vs. Uone (1-1)
Sorority 7-8 p.m.
Kappa Kappa Gamma 20. Phi Mu 12
DeNa Gamma11,AlphaXIDelia24 **h»-
Fraternity 8-9 p.m.
Sigma Chi U. Alpha Kappa Psi 29
Men'a Independent 9-10 p.m.
Why <2. Alpha Phi Alpha 35
7 Deadly Sine Plus 1 2S. Delta Upsilon 39
Men'a Independent 10-11 p.m.
Coi Brigade 52, Jsj Boys 32
L
-J
[VI !/1 \ /1)^ /'Vllfi^rtl
•] 1 fwHATs rue 1 f mi ge&v so 1
a iMflTTrSewiTHl UJAIri SllMrjtT
5*) &^Z> r-slVl 1
1^Yj&^ijfc |