April 1, 1982 Pg 8- April 1, 1982 La Voz Pg 1 |
Previous | 7 of 78 | Next |
|
|
This page
All
|
Loading content ...
Page «-tbe Daily Collegian-April 1, 1982 FSU hosts golf classic Ladv Doas By Jeff Doraingnes used in tie-breaking cases. J %D The Bulldog golf team will meet its biggest challenge of the season starting today as Fresno State hosts its FSU/Pepsi Golf Classic. The three-round event is scheduled for Fresno's Fort Washington Country Club. The 19th annual classic will include some 18 teams, including the nation's top- ranked team UCLA, and two teams from Fresno State. Defending NCAA champion Brigham- Young will also compete. The field will also include San Jose State. San Francisco. Oregon. Pacific, Utah State. Nevada-Reno and San Diego State. Festivities for the tournament got underway last night when PGA professional Kermit Zarley spoke at the pre- tourney banquet. Yesterday also marked a pro-am event. This will probably be our strongest field ever," FSU head coach Mike Watney said earlier in the season. "Well be up against some of the top talent in the country." -*■/ The tournament will be a 54-hole event covering three days. The classic concludes Saturday. The teams will be six-man contingents with the five best scores counting toward the team total. The sixth score is generally used in tie-breaking cases. Watney said the Bulldogs like to run the annual tournament like a PGA tourevent. "We have gifts in the players hotel rooms and try to make it a first class affair," he explained. The FSU event is considered a favorite by participating schools. The Bulldogs, who have been getting on their games of late, will send two freshman in their No. I team. The second team, Watney said, will also include a freshman. Thus far freshmen have been leaders for the Bulldogs. Doug Harper. Jim Matus- . zewski and John Erickson are the teams top players as far as average scores are concerned. Harper, with a 72.6 average, Matus- zewski, averaging 73, and Erickson (73), are in the first Fresno State team and are the team's top hitters. The rest of the No. I squad includes senior Dan Hornig (averaging 74.08). junior Jim Plotkin (76.09) and sophomore Lawson Schallcr (75.54). Sophomore Mike Schy (no average), junior Ted Engberg (78.5), junior Ed Hamlett (75.55), freshman Phil Marchi- ondo (no average), junior Brian Gray (no average) and senior Randy Norvelle (85) comprise the second team. The class of the field on the individual side will be Southern California's Jeff Hart and UCLA's Corey Pavin. ^ ALABAMA SLAMMERS MANDATORY T-Shirt Deadline: Friday, April 2 TOMORROW!! $10.00 HUMAN SACRIFICE "April Fools" Just kidding, but Vintage Days applications for AIR GUITAR and BOOMTOWN CARNIVAL Booths are due this Thursday. DON'T FORGET!! Continued from page 5 ground ball. Muratore walked to load the bags and Vilche singled to send in Taylor and Ketcham. Judy Tucker reached when Diaz fielded her nubber in front of the plate and could not nail Muratore at the plate. After Silva grounded out for the second out. Rodriguez walked and Ward drilled one just over the leftfielder Liz Hendley's glove for a three-run homer to make it 13-0. Taylor belted a three-run homer to key the five-inn fourth. Ward struck out five and walked just one in the first game. She was nearly perfect after she gave up a lead-off single to Mary Kay Seidler in the first. Ward allowed only one Bronco to get as far as third. Fresno in the opener. She also scored three runs. Vilche, who Pickel praised for her surprising bat prowess, drove in four and scored twice while going two-for-two officially at the plate. Deby Kellog came off the bench in the fourth and ripped a three-run homer. Today the Bulldogs are scheduled to make up the dark-delayed game with UOP — weather permitting. The game was stopped after three innings several weeks ago with Fresno State ahead 2-1. The game is slated to get underway at I Game 1 ti like tl The second game was st. Fresno got a small scare in me nitr Santa Clara appeared t howr With a runner at first and none out, Hendley nubbed one in front of the plate. Shell Voorhees pounced on the ball and threw down to first. But the ball hit Hendley in the back and rolled away. By the time Patti Dawes in rightfield came up -with the ball, the runner, Susan Corley, had scored and Hendley was trying for the plate. Voorhees did a good job of blocking the plate and getting a tag on Hendley for Then the umpires ruled Hendley had interfered with the ball running to first by stepping out of the baseline, sending Corley back to first and Hendley to the dugout with the first out. Cambria threw well, although she had some minor control problems. The freshman hurler struck out seven and walked three en route to the two-hitter. Fresno rallied for three in the first and put the game away with a six-run eruption in the second. Two runs in the third insured the 10-run rule. . Rodriguez's slam was the key to the second inning. Cambria (single), Tucker (reached on error) and Silva (fielder's choice) scored ahead of Rodriguez. Rodriguez drove in five runs, adding i the third, to pace the Bull- Game 2 i. Mur -ehadti ) hits in two offi- Ward's three hits and six RBIs sparked | The season is over... % i but not forgotten.m Sf Relive Fresno Slate's greatest basketball season ever I THE YEAR OF THE DOG A 52 page review of the highlights | a adz page review 01 me nigni ]J£ of 1981-82 Bulldog basketball: 3p "Complete final ■ 44 »An irPaeplfi pen mwmmmmimst/mia/i&i&iii&tml! ur AZTLAN California State University, Fresno _ Thursday, April 1,1982 Aparicio hopes to incorporate health into Clovis politics Running under a health platform, Irene Lopez-Aparicio jocularly says, 'Political- '', people think—Health?—how political in you get?" But Aparicio knows how very political health issues have been and continue to be. An intelligently dynamic woman, Aparicio is one of eight candidates seeking a post in the Clovis City Council election to be held on April 13th. A past graduate of Fresno State, Apari- o is'currently an occupational mental health therapist at Fresno Community Hospital and a part-time instructor in health and La Raza Studies here on campus. •| dont think people realize how politi- il an issue health has been. While the tizens of Clovis might not know—(Well she didnt put up a street sign)—I have helped politically for their health betterment," states Aparicio. Obtaining funds for the mentally retarded, legislating for shelter homes for battered women, and establishing halfway houses for alcoholic women have been but a few of her political endeavors. Aparicio also feels she has been instrumental in promoting health care legislation for the developmentally disabled. The results of years of hard work have been more parking spaces and easier i into buildings for the handicapped. "Things that we take for granted today,- So, how does Aparicio feel about "the ...took us writing letters and organizing decade of the Hispanic?" Pausing for a people," says Aparicio. She adds, "When moment; she smiles and says. The decade you help one person who has an illness of the Hispanics started before Columbus like alcoholism or drug abuse, you're not 'discovered' America." Aparicio sees the only helping that person, you're helping 80's as "the decade of human potential." the people that they affect..." ■ ■_ Thus being politically active all her life, "T>he decade of the Aparicio feels she is ready to take on the J ne aecuue OJ me challenge of engaging in city politics. Hispanic StQTted ^tT- Speaking with confidence, she states,'I'm _ .r . , ,. ready to make decisions. I'm scared of all JOre COlUmDUS CtlS- this pollution. I think health can be very , j mprirn ' ncorporated into the politics of city COVereQ /UTteriCd. As for her chances of winning the election, Aparicio is encouraged because people like what she says about health. "I feel I can work with other people and convince them that we have to work in a way that will be the most healthy for the people of Clovis, "and hopefully learn from the mistakes that other towns have made." With such an attitude of self-confidence, one cannot but help feel motivated by Apari- cio's enthusiasm. According to the latest census, Clovis comprises a population of 6,443 with Spanish surnames out of a total population of approximately 33,000. Despite this, Aparicio feels that Clovis has an active Chicano community being that a proportionate number of businesses are owed by Raza. Aparicio states, "I feel that I can represent a segment of society that has been heretofore unrepresented on the City Council." Speaking on behalf of the women's population, Aparicio says, 'Historically, Mexican women have been very political. A woman can be a political person and still be a mother. I'd like to dispel the image that a politician is a bald white man or someone with a cigar in his mouth!" As for some of the local political issues, Aparicio would like to see more crime awareness programs implemented, well- planned city expansion projects developed but not at the expense of agricultural lands, rent-control to aid senior citizens established, and more student participation in politics organized. Aparicio comments, "There's a lot of power in the vote^' She feels that people will go out and vote because they "are very frightened of the high prices, unemployment ' and 'people get mobilized into action not when things are going very well, but rather when things are going kind of bad.' She adds, 'Medi-Care and Medi-Cal are being scrutinized. The federal government is not going to take care of a lot of health problems of the people. It's going to come down to the state then to the cities. We are going to have to take care of ourselves. The Fear of the economy will mobilize people to come" As a final note, Aparicio is accepting financial contributions for her campaign because like she says, "Let's face it; money is what makes a lot of the ballgame. If you cannot tell people what you can offer them, they won't get the message!" 'I'd like to dispel the image that a politician is a bald white man or someone with a cigar in his mouth.'
Object Description
Title | 1982_04 The Daily Collegian April 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 | April 1, 1982 Pg 8- April 1, 1982 La Voz Pg 1 |
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 «-tbe Daily Collegian-April 1, 1982 FSU hosts golf classic Ladv Doas By Jeff Doraingnes used in tie-breaking cases. J %D The Bulldog golf team will meet its biggest challenge of the season starting today as Fresno State hosts its FSU/Pepsi Golf Classic. The three-round event is scheduled for Fresno's Fort Washington Country Club. The 19th annual classic will include some 18 teams, including the nation's top- ranked team UCLA, and two teams from Fresno State. Defending NCAA champion Brigham- Young will also compete. The field will also include San Jose State. San Francisco. Oregon. Pacific, Utah State. Nevada-Reno and San Diego State. Festivities for the tournament got underway last night when PGA professional Kermit Zarley spoke at the pre- tourney banquet. Yesterday also marked a pro-am event. This will probably be our strongest field ever," FSU head coach Mike Watney said earlier in the season. "Well be up against some of the top talent in the country." -*■/ The tournament will be a 54-hole event covering three days. The classic concludes Saturday. The teams will be six-man contingents with the five best scores counting toward the team total. The sixth score is generally used in tie-breaking cases. Watney said the Bulldogs like to run the annual tournament like a PGA tourevent. "We have gifts in the players hotel rooms and try to make it a first class affair," he explained. The FSU event is considered a favorite by participating schools. The Bulldogs, who have been getting on their games of late, will send two freshman in their No. I team. The second team, Watney said, will also include a freshman. Thus far freshmen have been leaders for the Bulldogs. Doug Harper. Jim Matus- . zewski and John Erickson are the teams top players as far as average scores are concerned. Harper, with a 72.6 average, Matus- zewski, averaging 73, and Erickson (73), are in the first Fresno State team and are the team's top hitters. The rest of the No. I squad includes senior Dan Hornig (averaging 74.08). junior Jim Plotkin (76.09) and sophomore Lawson Schallcr (75.54). Sophomore Mike Schy (no average), junior Ted Engberg (78.5), junior Ed Hamlett (75.55), freshman Phil Marchi- ondo (no average), junior Brian Gray (no average) and senior Randy Norvelle (85) comprise the second team. The class of the field on the individual side will be Southern California's Jeff Hart and UCLA's Corey Pavin. ^ ALABAMA SLAMMERS MANDATORY T-Shirt Deadline: Friday, April 2 TOMORROW!! $10.00 HUMAN SACRIFICE "April Fools" Just kidding, but Vintage Days applications for AIR GUITAR and BOOMTOWN CARNIVAL Booths are due this Thursday. DON'T FORGET!! Continued from page 5 ground ball. Muratore walked to load the bags and Vilche singled to send in Taylor and Ketcham. Judy Tucker reached when Diaz fielded her nubber in front of the plate and could not nail Muratore at the plate. After Silva grounded out for the second out. Rodriguez walked and Ward drilled one just over the leftfielder Liz Hendley's glove for a three-run homer to make it 13-0. Taylor belted a three-run homer to key the five-inn fourth. Ward struck out five and walked just one in the first game. She was nearly perfect after she gave up a lead-off single to Mary Kay Seidler in the first. Ward allowed only one Bronco to get as far as third. Fresno in the opener. She also scored three runs. Vilche, who Pickel praised for her surprising bat prowess, drove in four and scored twice while going two-for-two officially at the plate. Deby Kellog came off the bench in the fourth and ripped a three-run homer. Today the Bulldogs are scheduled to make up the dark-delayed game with UOP — weather permitting. The game was stopped after three innings several weeks ago with Fresno State ahead 2-1. The game is slated to get underway at I Game 1 ti like tl The second game was st. Fresno got a small scare in me nitr Santa Clara appeared t howr With a runner at first and none out, Hendley nubbed one in front of the plate. Shell Voorhees pounced on the ball and threw down to first. But the ball hit Hendley in the back and rolled away. By the time Patti Dawes in rightfield came up -with the ball, the runner, Susan Corley, had scored and Hendley was trying for the plate. Voorhees did a good job of blocking the plate and getting a tag on Hendley for Then the umpires ruled Hendley had interfered with the ball running to first by stepping out of the baseline, sending Corley back to first and Hendley to the dugout with the first out. Cambria threw well, although she had some minor control problems. The freshman hurler struck out seven and walked three en route to the two-hitter. Fresno rallied for three in the first and put the game away with a six-run eruption in the second. Two runs in the third insured the 10-run rule. . Rodriguez's slam was the key to the second inning. Cambria (single), Tucker (reached on error) and Silva (fielder's choice) scored ahead of Rodriguez. Rodriguez drove in five runs, adding i the third, to pace the Bull- Game 2 i. Mur -ehadti ) hits in two offi- Ward's three hits and six RBIs sparked | The season is over... % i but not forgotten.m Sf Relive Fresno Slate's greatest basketball season ever I THE YEAR OF THE DOG A 52 page review of the highlights | a adz page review 01 me nigni ]J£ of 1981-82 Bulldog basketball: 3p "Complete final ■ 44 »An irPaeplfi pen mwmmmmimst/mia/i&i&iii&tml! ur AZTLAN California State University, Fresno _ Thursday, April 1,1982 Aparicio hopes to incorporate health into Clovis politics Running under a health platform, Irene Lopez-Aparicio jocularly says, 'Political- '', people think—Health?—how political in you get?" But Aparicio knows how very political health issues have been and continue to be. An intelligently dynamic woman, Aparicio is one of eight candidates seeking a post in the Clovis City Council election to be held on April 13th. A past graduate of Fresno State, Apari- o is'currently an occupational mental health therapist at Fresno Community Hospital and a part-time instructor in health and La Raza Studies here on campus. •| dont think people realize how politi- il an issue health has been. While the tizens of Clovis might not know—(Well she didnt put up a street sign)—I have helped politically for their health betterment," states Aparicio. Obtaining funds for the mentally retarded, legislating for shelter homes for battered women, and establishing halfway houses for alcoholic women have been but a few of her political endeavors. Aparicio also feels she has been instrumental in promoting health care legislation for the developmentally disabled. The results of years of hard work have been more parking spaces and easier i into buildings for the handicapped. "Things that we take for granted today,- So, how does Aparicio feel about "the ...took us writing letters and organizing decade of the Hispanic?" Pausing for a people," says Aparicio. She adds, "When moment; she smiles and says. The decade you help one person who has an illness of the Hispanics started before Columbus like alcoholism or drug abuse, you're not 'discovered' America." Aparicio sees the only helping that person, you're helping 80's as "the decade of human potential." the people that they affect..." ■ ■_ Thus being politically active all her life, "T>he decade of the Aparicio feels she is ready to take on the J ne aecuue OJ me challenge of engaging in city politics. Hispanic StQTted ^tT- Speaking with confidence, she states,'I'm _ .r . , ,. ready to make decisions. I'm scared of all JOre COlUmDUS CtlS- this pollution. I think health can be very , j mprirn ' ncorporated into the politics of city COVereQ /UTteriCd. As for her chances of winning the election, Aparicio is encouraged because people like what she says about health. "I feel I can work with other people and convince them that we have to work in a way that will be the most healthy for the people of Clovis, "and hopefully learn from the mistakes that other towns have made." With such an attitude of self-confidence, one cannot but help feel motivated by Apari- cio's enthusiasm. According to the latest census, Clovis comprises a population of 6,443 with Spanish surnames out of a total population of approximately 33,000. Despite this, Aparicio feels that Clovis has an active Chicano community being that a proportionate number of businesses are owed by Raza. Aparicio states, "I feel that I can represent a segment of society that has been heretofore unrepresented on the City Council." Speaking on behalf of the women's population, Aparicio says, 'Historically, Mexican women have been very political. A woman can be a political person and still be a mother. I'd like to dispel the image that a politician is a bald white man or someone with a cigar in his mouth!" As for some of the local political issues, Aparicio would like to see more crime awareness programs implemented, well- planned city expansion projects developed but not at the expense of agricultural lands, rent-control to aid senior citizens established, and more student participation in politics organized. Aparicio comments, "There's a lot of power in the vote^' She feels that people will go out and vote because they "are very frightened of the high prices, unemployment ' and 'people get mobilized into action not when things are going very well, but rather when things are going kind of bad.' She adds, 'Medi-Care and Medi-Cal are being scrutinized. The federal government is not going to take care of a lot of health problems of the people. It's going to come down to the state then to the cities. We are going to have to take care of ourselves. The Fear of the economy will mobilize people to come" As a final note, Aparicio is accepting financial contributions for her campaign because like she says, "Let's face it; money is what makes a lot of the ballgame. If you cannot tell people what you can offer them, they won't get the message!" 'I'd like to dispel the image that a politician is a bald white man or someone with a cigar in his mouth.' |