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May 7,1M2—the Daily Collegian—Page IS Page 19-the Daily Collegian-May 7, WW Golfers prepare for PCAA championship .Health By Jeff Domingu Daily Collegian Siafr Writer The biggest tournament of the season for the Bulldog golf team will come Monday in the PCAA Championships at Logan, Utah. Fresno State, despite its recent struggle, would have to be considered among the top four entering the tournament. And the golfers themselves see FSU as a viable contender. "We're as good, if not better, that anyone in there," senior Dan Hornig said. "It'll be San Jose (State), Long Beach (Sute), UOP and us.* Junior Jim Plotkin said the Bulldogs are "better than UOP" and speculated Fresno would be "right in there." Thursday was the final day for qualifying among the 'Dogs for the six spots on the team. Head coach Mike Watney indicated Hornig, Plotkin and two freshmen, John Erickson and Doug Harper, would be among the six. Ted Engberg, Jim Matuszcwski and Lawson Schaller in addition to Ed Hamlett and Brad Henin- ger were fighting for "the last two spots." "We're in good shape," Watney said of his team entering the championships. "WeVe had good Quality practice this week." Watney said it was a matter of working on various aspects of the players' respective games and getting into "a good routine.* *A guy can come out and beat golf balls all day long, but that's not quality practice." Watney explained. The Bulldogs have had early morning workouts and then rounds of golf in the afternoons. Watney rated Fresno State third among the four so-called leaders. San Jose State. ing. Plotkin and Harper are all averaging just more than 75 shots per round. Erick- son's best round this season isa 69. Horning and Plotkin each boast 68s. The 54-hole championships will have a slightly different format. The players will compete in a 36-hole day Monday and finish with 18 on Tuesday. The five best scores of six will count toward the team total. 'The other teams ahead of us are not so awesome that they can't be beaten.' despite a somewhat disappointing showing in the Fresno State Classic before Easter. They're pretty solid." Horning said, shaking his head. SJS is led by Joe Tam- burino and Ed DeVarona. Long Beach has surprised a few people this season while Pacific has been playing well in streaks. The other teams ahead of us are not so awesome that they can't be beaten," Watney said. Erickson is currently the FSU leader in scoring average witha 74.16 mark. Horn- Just two members of the Fresno State team which finished third last season are back in 1982. Plotkin (223) and Hornig (224) were joined by now-graduated Brady Meyers, who was third overall last year, and Ed Luethke, who was involved in the final rounds of the California State Amatuer last summer. Harper, Hornig, Plotkin and Watney played a light-hearted round yesterday at San Joaquin Country Club while in the group just ahead Engberg. Matuszcwski and Schaller were much more intense. Tamburino of SJS is the defending MAN HAS MADE HIS MATCH. NOW, IT'S HIS PROBLEM. ♦ * HARRISON FORD, mtimjc nunnen jEBR/ PtPE'.CulO .. BUD /OBKIN PRE1,! N •• ••■ ■■-tl DEtLF '-P.IOLEY SCOTT PRODUCTION • ABRiSONFORD . BLADE RUNNER .. RuTGERHAUER SEAN YOUNG iiNARDjAVESOLMOS -iVPTONFANCMFR . DAVIDPEOPLES iVPTONFANCMft- DOUGLAS TRUMBUU IMNGEUS 'VOR POWELL • :xorr OPENS JUNE 25 AT A THEATRE NEAR YOU! medalist from the 1981 tourney, while the Spartans are also defending its team title. Former individual competitors include UOP's Bryan Pirii. LBS's Mark O'Meara. Utah State's Jay Don Blake, San Diego State's Lennie Clements and Lon Hinckle. SJS's Mark Lye and Mike Watney of Fresno State (the same). All of these have made appearances on the professional tour. After finishing last in 1975. the Bulldogs have won three titles, including two straight in 1979-80. Fresno has finished no worse than third. Former Bulldog Dana Booth was the last FSU golfer to win indi- vi.i\lZ\ heron. "Z Hi "Ii iff i?77. Before Booth only Mike Paniccia (1970) has taken medalist honors. Harper. Hornig and Schaller were hit- ling the ball well for the Bulldogs yesterday at San Joaquin Country Club. San Joaquin, the site of the 1983 NCAA final lournament to be hosted by Fresno State. SJCC features water and well-placed bunkers that come into play on most every hole. Watney said the course will look much different next spring for the finals. As is usual for such an event, the rough will be rougher and the greens will be slicker. 5 mile run to be held The first annual foothills 5 miler road run will be held at Finegold Creek Institute. Sunday. May 23. 1982. at 8 a.m. According to Ernest Johnson, art consultant and coordinator of the event the run will go past streams, creeks and lakes in the foothills of the Sierra to benefit the Artist-in-Residence program at Finegold Creek Institute which is a non-profit corporation. Johnson says. "It's an interesting course lhat will challenge the most dedicated runner." For further information call (209) 868- 3468 from 12 noon to 3 p.o. or write "Road Run"—Finegold Creek Institute— 49020 Road 210. Friant. CA 93626. Poetry reading May 13 Charles Hanzlicck (Dept. of English) will read from his two new books of poems — Calling the Dead (Carnegie- Mellon University Press)and A Dozenfor Ixah (Brandenburg Press)—on Thursday at 8 p.m. in the Conley Art Auditorium, room 101. Hanzlicck is the author of two other volumes of poetry: Living in It II97I)and 5;or5(l977). Academics- Athletics focus of meeting The campus dialogue committee is having a meeting on Tuesday. May 11 in the Upstairs Cafeteria room 200 concerning "Academics and Athletics." Presentation: Dean Richard Ford. School of Health and Social Work. "Retention and Graduation of the Student Athlete." Student-Athlete Reactors: Athletes Representative of major, minor, men's and women's sports progra.ns. Resource Respondents: Athletic Director Russ Sloan. Assistant Athletic Directors Pete Conrad and Diane Milutinovich. Professors Rhita Flake and Joanntr Schroll. Moderator for Program: Paul Canales. President-Elect. Associated Student Body. Health Center thanks students for suggestions By John A. Vandrick, M.D. Student Health Services Special lo ihe Daily Collegian "When E.F. Hutton speaks...* well, we would like youlo think that when CSUF undents speak to their Health Service we listen. Late last semester we installed a suggestion box on the counter in our lobby. The results rjave been very interesting. We would like to thank the many Uudents who have submitted suggestions, ideas and comments. We have received a total of about 70 suggestion slips and let ters. Many of the comments have been complimentary and encouraging. Who doesn't like a few kind strokes once in a while? Typical of this group is one of April 8,1982, The Health Center has been very useful and helpful to me during my schooling at FSU. Keep doing a good job in serving." Another says, "I have been on campus 5 years. I have been involved in student activities and 1 know this campus. One of the units I am most proud of is this Health Center. The services you offerare first rate, thanks." There have also been a group of very useful criticisms which have goaded us to action. An early one stated, 'When 1 came lo the Health Centerfora V.D.R.L.. I had to pay a nominal charge for a blood test. I signed a register for the fee and noticed a good friend on the list above mc. This was in invasion of privacy." Although the list mentioned does not indicate the lab test ordered, an inference could be drawn. The procedure was changed immediately shielding all prior names from viewl.'The criticism was most useful and helpful. More than one criticcommented on our reading materials, or lack thereof, in the waiting areas—quite justly. We have now >red People magazine and Time. Staff Clinging to the 'Ivy' tradition CAMBRIDGE. MA (CPS)—Harvard uudents don'i want logo loan Ivy League school without the ivy. But that's just what their administrators, refusing to cling to tradition, are asking them to do, as Harvard announced it will remove the ivy from 13 dorms in order to renovate the buildings this summer. "In order to repair the brick and mortar on the exterior of the buildings, it is just physically necessary to take the ivy down,* explains Harvard spokesman David Rosen. Students responded with a "Save the Ivy" committee that is planning what organizer David Shapiro calls the biggest demonstration on the campus since the anti-war era. The ivy is "one of the graver issues of our time,* Shapiro says. Over the last week, the campus has also witnessed the formation of Harvard's first ad hoc fraternity—Mu Tant Psi, which requires members to streak, drink and demonstrate "oral agility'—and a takeover by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology's undergraduate government, which passed a resolution making Har- Chicano Commencement May 22 The Sixth Annual Chicano Commencement Ceremony for Chicano students who are being graduated from CSUF will be held May 22 in the Univorsity Amphitheatre. Sponsored by the CSUF Chicano Alumni Association, the bilingual program will be held at 6 p.m. and is open to the public. A reception for the graduates, their families and friends will be held at 8 p.m. in the Vintage Room of the CSUF Cafeteria Building. The evening's activities will conclude" with a celebration dance beginning at 9 p.m. at the Rainbow Ballroom in downtown Fresno. The annual program was established by the Chicano Alumni Association to provide special recognition for the Chicano graduates and honor them and their families for their educational achievement. For more information on the events, contact Manuel Olgin at 294-3052. THE GOOD BOOK Now's the perfect time to tend ' for our exciting new catalog. Advertising. Graphic Design, Illustration, Interior Design, Photography, and Fine Art (Drawing, Painting, Sculpture and Printmaking). Academy of Art College, 540 Powell Street, San Francisco Ca 94108. 673-4200. 2C^" vard an MIT colony. Shapiro, however, says he's serious. "At $12,000 per year tuition, who the hell wants to go to an Ivy League school that doesn't have any ivy?" he asks. He fears the problem could "spread slowly" and "we could lose it all" before renovation efforts are finished up campus-wide. Indeed, Harvard would probably become an ivy-less campus if administrators had their way. University officials say they spend $50,000 a year just to keep the ivy trimmed back from windows and doorways. But the ivy tradition probably didn't even start at Harvard. "According to research, ivy was first grown at Yale and Princeton to provide decoration,* Rosen says. 'Harvard probably followed the tradition.* Harvard won't be the first to lose its ivy, either. Severe budget cuts in 1981 forced Michigan State to rip ivy off some buildings in order to save on maintenance costs. members also have been contributing from their own supplies. We have also tried to cut waiting time with revision of scheduling. It was suggested by one person that doctors go to lunch in shifts. Actually, the doctors and nurses do go to lunch in shifts io that service can now be provided continuously through the noon hour. The lab is also open at the noon hour and the pharmacy three days a week. We are hoping for additional help in the pharmacy next semester and plan for it to be open at noon every day. Several criticisms relate to appointment making procedures. This can be especially trying on the initial visit when wc request that the health history form be completed. In response to this concern, we are now planning to mail the health form to new students so that it can be filled out leisurely at home when they aren't feeling sick. That should help quite a bit. We will, in addition, be conducting a review of the front desk procedures, looking for simpler ind faster ways to perform the essential tasks. In that review we will also consider Ihe possibility of extending our appointments-by-telephone service. One student observed that there was no shelf in the washrooms where one could put books and felt it was unhygienic to have to put them on the floor. We agree ind have requested that shelves be installed. We don't have space to discuss all the suggestions, but wedo review each one ind appreciate the input. We are hoping next semester to increase our dialogue with students by interspersing a medical question and answer feature with our health education columns. We look forward as well to further involvement of students with our Student Health , Center Advisory Committee. When CSUF students speak, we do listen. Let's hear from you. The Associated Students and the College Union Present The Arts and Humanities Forum AN EVENING OF FOLKLORE LYNWOOD tMONTELL I FOLKLORiST ORAL HISTORIAN Professor at Western Kentucky University TUESDAY. MAY 11 8=00 PM-CU LOUNGE FREE ADMISSION
Object Description
Title | 1982_05 The Daily Collegian May 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 | May 7, 1982 Pg 18-19 |
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 | May 7,1M2—the Daily Collegian—Page IS Page 19-the Daily Collegian-May 7, WW Golfers prepare for PCAA championship .Health By Jeff Domingu Daily Collegian Siafr Writer The biggest tournament of the season for the Bulldog golf team will come Monday in the PCAA Championships at Logan, Utah. Fresno State, despite its recent struggle, would have to be considered among the top four entering the tournament. And the golfers themselves see FSU as a viable contender. "We're as good, if not better, that anyone in there," senior Dan Hornig said. "It'll be San Jose (State), Long Beach (Sute), UOP and us.* Junior Jim Plotkin said the Bulldogs are "better than UOP" and speculated Fresno would be "right in there." Thursday was the final day for qualifying among the 'Dogs for the six spots on the team. Head coach Mike Watney indicated Hornig, Plotkin and two freshmen, John Erickson and Doug Harper, would be among the six. Ted Engberg, Jim Matuszcwski and Lawson Schaller in addition to Ed Hamlett and Brad Henin- ger were fighting for "the last two spots." "We're in good shape," Watney said of his team entering the championships. "WeVe had good Quality practice this week." Watney said it was a matter of working on various aspects of the players' respective games and getting into "a good routine.* *A guy can come out and beat golf balls all day long, but that's not quality practice." Watney explained. The Bulldogs have had early morning workouts and then rounds of golf in the afternoons. Watney rated Fresno State third among the four so-called leaders. San Jose State. ing. Plotkin and Harper are all averaging just more than 75 shots per round. Erick- son's best round this season isa 69. Horning and Plotkin each boast 68s. The 54-hole championships will have a slightly different format. The players will compete in a 36-hole day Monday and finish with 18 on Tuesday. The five best scores of six will count toward the team total. 'The other teams ahead of us are not so awesome that they can't be beaten.' despite a somewhat disappointing showing in the Fresno State Classic before Easter. They're pretty solid." Horning said, shaking his head. SJS is led by Joe Tam- burino and Ed DeVarona. Long Beach has surprised a few people this season while Pacific has been playing well in streaks. The other teams ahead of us are not so awesome that they can't be beaten," Watney said. Erickson is currently the FSU leader in scoring average witha 74.16 mark. Horn- Just two members of the Fresno State team which finished third last season are back in 1982. Plotkin (223) and Hornig (224) were joined by now-graduated Brady Meyers, who was third overall last year, and Ed Luethke, who was involved in the final rounds of the California State Amatuer last summer. Harper, Hornig, Plotkin and Watney played a light-hearted round yesterday at San Joaquin Country Club while in the group just ahead Engberg. Matuszcwski and Schaller were much more intense. Tamburino of SJS is the defending MAN HAS MADE HIS MATCH. NOW, IT'S HIS PROBLEM. ♦ * HARRISON FORD, mtimjc nunnen jEBR/ PtPE'.CulO .. BUD /OBKIN PRE1,! N •• ••■ ■■-tl DEtLF '-P.IOLEY SCOTT PRODUCTION • ABRiSONFORD . BLADE RUNNER .. RuTGERHAUER SEAN YOUNG iiNARDjAVESOLMOS -iVPTONFANCMFR . DAVIDPEOPLES iVPTONFANCMft- DOUGLAS TRUMBUU IMNGEUS 'VOR POWELL • :xorr OPENS JUNE 25 AT A THEATRE NEAR YOU! medalist from the 1981 tourney, while the Spartans are also defending its team title. Former individual competitors include UOP's Bryan Pirii. LBS's Mark O'Meara. Utah State's Jay Don Blake, San Diego State's Lennie Clements and Lon Hinckle. SJS's Mark Lye and Mike Watney of Fresno State (the same). All of these have made appearances on the professional tour. After finishing last in 1975. the Bulldogs have won three titles, including two straight in 1979-80. Fresno has finished no worse than third. Former Bulldog Dana Booth was the last FSU golfer to win indi- vi.i\lZ\ heron. "Z Hi "Ii iff i?77. Before Booth only Mike Paniccia (1970) has taken medalist honors. Harper. Hornig and Schaller were hit- ling the ball well for the Bulldogs yesterday at San Joaquin Country Club. San Joaquin, the site of the 1983 NCAA final lournament to be hosted by Fresno State. SJCC features water and well-placed bunkers that come into play on most every hole. Watney said the course will look much different next spring for the finals. As is usual for such an event, the rough will be rougher and the greens will be slicker. 5 mile run to be held The first annual foothills 5 miler road run will be held at Finegold Creek Institute. Sunday. May 23. 1982. at 8 a.m. According to Ernest Johnson, art consultant and coordinator of the event the run will go past streams, creeks and lakes in the foothills of the Sierra to benefit the Artist-in-Residence program at Finegold Creek Institute which is a non-profit corporation. Johnson says. "It's an interesting course lhat will challenge the most dedicated runner." For further information call (209) 868- 3468 from 12 noon to 3 p.o. or write "Road Run"—Finegold Creek Institute— 49020 Road 210. Friant. CA 93626. Poetry reading May 13 Charles Hanzlicck (Dept. of English) will read from his two new books of poems — Calling the Dead (Carnegie- Mellon University Press)and A Dozenfor Ixah (Brandenburg Press)—on Thursday at 8 p.m. in the Conley Art Auditorium, room 101. Hanzlicck is the author of two other volumes of poetry: Living in It II97I)and 5;or5(l977). Academics- Athletics focus of meeting The campus dialogue committee is having a meeting on Tuesday. May 11 in the Upstairs Cafeteria room 200 concerning "Academics and Athletics." Presentation: Dean Richard Ford. School of Health and Social Work. "Retention and Graduation of the Student Athlete." Student-Athlete Reactors: Athletes Representative of major, minor, men's and women's sports progra.ns. Resource Respondents: Athletic Director Russ Sloan. Assistant Athletic Directors Pete Conrad and Diane Milutinovich. Professors Rhita Flake and Joanntr Schroll. Moderator for Program: Paul Canales. President-Elect. Associated Student Body. Health Center thanks students for suggestions By John A. Vandrick, M.D. Student Health Services Special lo ihe Daily Collegian "When E.F. Hutton speaks...* well, we would like youlo think that when CSUF undents speak to their Health Service we listen. Late last semester we installed a suggestion box on the counter in our lobby. The results rjave been very interesting. We would like to thank the many Uudents who have submitted suggestions, ideas and comments. We have received a total of about 70 suggestion slips and let ters. Many of the comments have been complimentary and encouraging. Who doesn't like a few kind strokes once in a while? Typical of this group is one of April 8,1982, The Health Center has been very useful and helpful to me during my schooling at FSU. Keep doing a good job in serving." Another says, "I have been on campus 5 years. I have been involved in student activities and 1 know this campus. One of the units I am most proud of is this Health Center. The services you offerare first rate, thanks." There have also been a group of very useful criticisms which have goaded us to action. An early one stated, 'When 1 came lo the Health Centerfora V.D.R.L.. I had to pay a nominal charge for a blood test. I signed a register for the fee and noticed a good friend on the list above mc. This was in invasion of privacy." Although the list mentioned does not indicate the lab test ordered, an inference could be drawn. The procedure was changed immediately shielding all prior names from viewl.'The criticism was most useful and helpful. More than one criticcommented on our reading materials, or lack thereof, in the waiting areas—quite justly. We have now >red People magazine and Time. Staff Clinging to the 'Ivy' tradition CAMBRIDGE. MA (CPS)—Harvard uudents don'i want logo loan Ivy League school without the ivy. But that's just what their administrators, refusing to cling to tradition, are asking them to do, as Harvard announced it will remove the ivy from 13 dorms in order to renovate the buildings this summer. "In order to repair the brick and mortar on the exterior of the buildings, it is just physically necessary to take the ivy down,* explains Harvard spokesman David Rosen. Students responded with a "Save the Ivy" committee that is planning what organizer David Shapiro calls the biggest demonstration on the campus since the anti-war era. The ivy is "one of the graver issues of our time,* Shapiro says. Over the last week, the campus has also witnessed the formation of Harvard's first ad hoc fraternity—Mu Tant Psi, which requires members to streak, drink and demonstrate "oral agility'—and a takeover by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology's undergraduate government, which passed a resolution making Har- Chicano Commencement May 22 The Sixth Annual Chicano Commencement Ceremony for Chicano students who are being graduated from CSUF will be held May 22 in the Univorsity Amphitheatre. Sponsored by the CSUF Chicano Alumni Association, the bilingual program will be held at 6 p.m. and is open to the public. A reception for the graduates, their families and friends will be held at 8 p.m. in the Vintage Room of the CSUF Cafeteria Building. The evening's activities will conclude" with a celebration dance beginning at 9 p.m. at the Rainbow Ballroom in downtown Fresno. The annual program was established by the Chicano Alumni Association to provide special recognition for the Chicano graduates and honor them and their families for their educational achievement. For more information on the events, contact Manuel Olgin at 294-3052. THE GOOD BOOK Now's the perfect time to tend ' for our exciting new catalog. Advertising. Graphic Design, Illustration, Interior Design, Photography, and Fine Art (Drawing, Painting, Sculpture and Printmaking). Academy of Art College, 540 Powell Street, San Francisco Ca 94108. 673-4200. 2C^" vard an MIT colony. Shapiro, however, says he's serious. "At $12,000 per year tuition, who the hell wants to go to an Ivy League school that doesn't have any ivy?" he asks. He fears the problem could "spread slowly" and "we could lose it all" before renovation efforts are finished up campus-wide. Indeed, Harvard would probably become an ivy-less campus if administrators had their way. University officials say they spend $50,000 a year just to keep the ivy trimmed back from windows and doorways. But the ivy tradition probably didn't even start at Harvard. "According to research, ivy was first grown at Yale and Princeton to provide decoration,* Rosen says. 'Harvard probably followed the tradition.* Harvard won't be the first to lose its ivy, either. Severe budget cuts in 1981 forced Michigan State to rip ivy off some buildings in order to save on maintenance costs. members also have been contributing from their own supplies. We have also tried to cut waiting time with revision of scheduling. It was suggested by one person that doctors go to lunch in shifts. Actually, the doctors and nurses do go to lunch in shifts io that service can now be provided continuously through the noon hour. The lab is also open at the noon hour and the pharmacy three days a week. We are hoping for additional help in the pharmacy next semester and plan for it to be open at noon every day. Several criticisms relate to appointment making procedures. This can be especially trying on the initial visit when wc request that the health history form be completed. In response to this concern, we are now planning to mail the health form to new students so that it can be filled out leisurely at home when they aren't feeling sick. That should help quite a bit. We will, in addition, be conducting a review of the front desk procedures, looking for simpler ind faster ways to perform the essential tasks. In that review we will also consider Ihe possibility of extending our appointments-by-telephone service. One student observed that there was no shelf in the washrooms where one could put books and felt it was unhygienic to have to put them on the floor. We agree ind have requested that shelves be installed. We don't have space to discuss all the suggestions, but wedo review each one ind appreciate the input. We are hoping next semester to increase our dialogue with students by interspersing a medical question and answer feature with our health education columns. We look forward as well to further involvement of students with our Student Health , Center Advisory Committee. When CSUF students speak, we do listen. Let's hear from you. The Associated Students and the College Union Present The Arts and Humanities Forum AN EVENING OF FOLKLORE LYNWOOD tMONTELL I FOLKLORiST ORAL HISTORIAN Professor at Western Kentucky University TUESDAY. MAY 11 8=00 PM-CU LOUNGE FREE ADMISSION |