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Page 2 NEWS Oct. 1,1985 Pump Continued from paga 1 hat atthis wattage the i it2l gallons per minut. ducing the greatest amount of energy and thus pumping the largest quantity of water into the fields. Thomas said that this makes the unit very conducive to agricul¬ tural uses because il would be producing Economics for students interested in con- donated by Solarize of Sacramento and ducting irrigation research. Thomas is Solarexof_Maryland;thepumpandm —- growi ...during July the array is producing the greatest amount of energy and thus pumping the largest quantity of water into the fields. needed the most to keep the fields from drying up. A data logger will be attached to the solar unit tocontinuously record informa¬ tion on temperature, time, and total energy output by the array. This data will be used in evaluating Ihe operation and efficiency of the unit. Based on data provided by the logger it can be determined how much water was being pumped at any given minute on any given day, and whether the by Grundfos Pumps of Fresno; the gear drive for the tracking system by the Several donations made construction Windsmith Corporation; and the data of the solar unit economically feasible, logger by Pacific Gas and Electric Thomas said. The solar panels were Company. in what she was hearing. Bum pass plays the clarinet and is currently learning to play the viola da gamba, which she said had been an ambition of hers for Music Conttnuod from paga 1 two shape each other." She sa and w aid on o gerit-published. d she likes Fresno "very much" iders it "a fringe benefit" to live amount was sufficit Thomas constructed the solar unit us the facilities of the Center for Irrigat Technology, a laboratory provided by CSUF School of Agriculture and Ho o> All books published by PENGUIN 20% September 29 - October 12 In the General Book Department **> Bumpass'own interest in classical music began when she was preparing for college. She said she would stay up late at night reading and turn on the radio for back¬ ground music. The only program on that late was a classical music program, "Music Til Dawn." She said she found herself unable to read because she was so interested satisfies her arti< she investigates, in which she's gr ic interest and the more the more she feels she's t herself and the culture ir heritage is,"she said. ALERTING ALL CLUBS AND ORGANIZATIONS If you are funded by the Associated Students for the 1985-86 academic year, you are required to attend one of the four Budgeted Areas Orienta¬ tion to be held in CU Room 320 on: Monday, Sept. 30 10 AM-11 AM Tuesday, Oct. 1 11 AM- 12PM Wednesday, Oct. 2 10 AM- 11 AM Thursday, Oct. 3 11 AM- 12PM Oct. 1, 1985 SPORTS FSU diggers enter NorPac play outside setter played with a Sports Writer . coming up with 16 kills against OSU, 11 over Portland State and 10 against Port- The Bulldog volleyball team dropped land. She brought up her career total to matches to Oregon State, 3-2, Portland 610 and moved to the No. 2 spot on the State, 3-1, and Canadian University of all-time FSU kill chart. Victoria, 3-2 over the weekend as Fresno "Barbie (Snyder) was really quite State pulled out of the Safeway Challenge sirong again for us in this last tournament. Cup with a fourth place finish. not just her hitting, but her defense was _ . «, , _ . .... improved and her serving was just tre- The Bulldogs beat Portland 3-0 in the mendous,-Mid Coach Leilani Overstreet. tinal game to snap the three match losing streak and round up the weekend with a The Bulldogs open up the race in a 2-1 mark with the match against Victoria tough Northern Pacific Athletic Con- not counting in the Bulldog 4-9 overall ference against California on Friday and record. San Jose State Saturday. Barbie Snyder, the FSU 6-foot-4-inch "We have smoothed out some of our 'Dogs visit Cardinal The Fresno State sc n will open were defeated by San Diego State 1-0 tv Pacific Soccer Conference play this Wed- days later, dropping their record to (s-i. nesday as the "Dogs travel to Palo / take on the Cardinal of Stanford. The Cardinal, 4-4-2, are led by goal¬ keeper Tom Austin who has recorded six shutouts and allowed only six goals this season. However, the Cardinal offense has proven to be ineffective this season, having scored nine goals. Fresno State has beaten Stanford six straight times. The Bulldogs, coming off a big win against third-ranked UCLA last week. San Diego State had 10 shots o. while the Bulldogs managed only Each goalkeeper recorded 10 saves game. The loss to the Aztecs was the second in a row for the Bulldogs, drop- ing a last years game 2-1. Big 5 Sporting Goods Management career opportunities We offer: *Top salary *Full-paid benefits *Great working conditions *Merchandise discounts West Coast 'steading sporting goods chain^feighty-se-yw stores (including eight in the San Joaquin Valley) is looking for recent and upcoming graduates to join our Management Trainee Program. Sign up in the Career center for an on- campus interview. Our representative will be here Friday, October 4th. CLASSIFIED eat For Rent 1 block from campus. 1 bedroom furnished 227-0390 For Safe I960 VW Bus. New paint, duel partly restored, $800. jjjfcjggt Stndeata aad FaeaKy For professional typing call Lydia 291-9473 TyFtas lear campus. Papers $1.0C/Page, Thesis 1130/page, Resume $15.00/pa9t. 291-9348 For Side 1978 Honda Civk. 5speed. AM/FM Cassetu Excellent body, engine, tires, and exlenor 299-3432 For Sale /. Fastback. 80.100 miles. AC. t So. J1.000 or besi orlei. Phone: 434-9149 Apartment for Heat ie block from cam^s, 1 bdrm.. fumn 227-M99 Juat Your Typa Quafaywork. 2*»-»lM B«tt./a Typing alewional wrvice. Ph. 291-: Typing umenl. Ph 222-3226 For Sale 75Toyola Corolla sedan. Excetten! shape, excepl upholslery. 531475. Call 299-8452 Avon al oc^xxtunrty, make $. Call Jane 299-5343 Classified Ad Policy in advance to The Dally Collegian two «tay< prior lo publication date. AH s>aym.... sntsal be annate b. axraonal check or caah receipt Iron the cashier* office in Joyal Astnsfn- Ulralioo NQ EXCEPTIONS! experience they needed feelw h of iced the home crowd right now to lire us up and get us ready to play," said The Golden Bears are 13-10 in the series against FSU, with the Bulldogs coming up San Jose State, the nation's fourth- ranked team, enters the week with an 11-2 mark. The Spartans tied the 'Dogs in the NorPac race last year withan 11-1 record. "San Jose Sute was picked in the preseason poll to win the conference, but our scouting reports say they are tough but beatable." said Overstreet. The lone goal of 48:27 when Aztec forward Steve Snyder headed the ball passed Fresno Sute goal¬ keeper Chato Elgorriaga on an assist from Keencan Mikal. goal PCAA Football Scores Fresno Sute 59, Cal Poly-SLO 10 Pacific 33, Uuh Sute 7 Arkansas 45. New Mexico Sute 13 Long Beach St. 28, Nev.-Las Vegas 24 Page3 Sports Briefs I TMalaavatablaforFSU-HawaH I A limited number of student tickets are available at the Bulldog ticket office for this Saturday's game against the Univer¬ sity of Hawaii. Tickets are $5 until Thurs¬ day when unsold student tickets will go on sale to tbe general public at 16-8-10. For more information call 294-DOGS. Warrtora-8irp«^oriJca at Mand Oct 3 The National Basketball Association opens exhibition play thi* week, bringing the Seattle Supersonics and Golden Sute Warriors to Selland Arena Thursday, Oct. 4. Tickeu are on sale for S8 and $9 with all seau reserved. The Warriors figure to be the most improved team in the league this seasor with the aquisition of journeyman for¬ ward Greg Ballard and the anticipated signing of All-American and Olympic sUr Chris Mullin. the Hear Soft Contact Lou— Back To School EXTENDED WEAR SOFT CONTACTS $129.00 mm, cov SOFT COLORED SOFT CONTACT LENSES $159.00 -thcou DAILY WEAR SOFT CONTACT LENSES $ MOO armco. EYEGLASSES SINGLE VISION (Frame 4 Lenses) . BIFOCAL (Frame 4. Lenses) • Some prescriptions slightly higher f Choose from our selected framei •Call our office for oeuils All liftings by a Doctor ot Optometry Aphakic - Toric - Bllocal lenses excludec Of(er Expires 10-7-85 . $39 00. $59.00. •Large selection of designer frames >ft»SIVAS \Camyon) ..2S1-4172 PRINT & COPY CENTER AT THE SELF SERVICE PHOTOCOPIER LOCATED NEAR THE *, LOWER LEVEL CASH REGISTERS . ^•nt»*aV*AA»»i>f*»AA-»»AAAAv»A*A»A»i «I I I Mill I M BOOKSTOREB V-
Object Description
Title | 1985_10 The Daily Collegian October 1985 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1985 |
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 | Oct 1, 1985 Pg. 2-3 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1985 |
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 2 NEWS Oct. 1,1985 Pump Continued from paga 1 hat atthis wattage the i it2l gallons per minut. ducing the greatest amount of energy and thus pumping the largest quantity of water into the fields. Thomas said that this makes the unit very conducive to agricul¬ tural uses because il would be producing Economics for students interested in con- donated by Solarize of Sacramento and ducting irrigation research. Thomas is Solarexof_Maryland;thepumpandm —- growi ...during July the array is producing the greatest amount of energy and thus pumping the largest quantity of water into the fields. needed the most to keep the fields from drying up. A data logger will be attached to the solar unit tocontinuously record informa¬ tion on temperature, time, and total energy output by the array. This data will be used in evaluating Ihe operation and efficiency of the unit. Based on data provided by the logger it can be determined how much water was being pumped at any given minute on any given day, and whether the by Grundfos Pumps of Fresno; the gear drive for the tracking system by the Several donations made construction Windsmith Corporation; and the data of the solar unit economically feasible, logger by Pacific Gas and Electric Thomas said. The solar panels were Company. in what she was hearing. Bum pass plays the clarinet and is currently learning to play the viola da gamba, which she said had been an ambition of hers for Music Conttnuod from paga 1 two shape each other." She sa and w aid on o gerit-published. d she likes Fresno "very much" iders it "a fringe benefit" to live amount was sufficit Thomas constructed the solar unit us the facilities of the Center for Irrigat Technology, a laboratory provided by CSUF School of Agriculture and Ho o> All books published by PENGUIN 20% September 29 - October 12 In the General Book Department **> Bumpass'own interest in classical music began when she was preparing for college. She said she would stay up late at night reading and turn on the radio for back¬ ground music. The only program on that late was a classical music program, "Music Til Dawn." She said she found herself unable to read because she was so interested satisfies her arti< she investigates, in which she's gr ic interest and the more the more she feels she's t herself and the culture ir heritage is,"she said. ALERTING ALL CLUBS AND ORGANIZATIONS If you are funded by the Associated Students for the 1985-86 academic year, you are required to attend one of the four Budgeted Areas Orienta¬ tion to be held in CU Room 320 on: Monday, Sept. 30 10 AM-11 AM Tuesday, Oct. 1 11 AM- 12PM Wednesday, Oct. 2 10 AM- 11 AM Thursday, Oct. 3 11 AM- 12PM Oct. 1, 1985 SPORTS FSU diggers enter NorPac play outside setter played with a Sports Writer . coming up with 16 kills against OSU, 11 over Portland State and 10 against Port- The Bulldog volleyball team dropped land. She brought up her career total to matches to Oregon State, 3-2, Portland 610 and moved to the No. 2 spot on the State, 3-1, and Canadian University of all-time FSU kill chart. Victoria, 3-2 over the weekend as Fresno "Barbie (Snyder) was really quite State pulled out of the Safeway Challenge sirong again for us in this last tournament. Cup with a fourth place finish. not just her hitting, but her defense was _ . «, , _ . .... improved and her serving was just tre- The Bulldogs beat Portland 3-0 in the mendous,-Mid Coach Leilani Overstreet. tinal game to snap the three match losing streak and round up the weekend with a The Bulldogs open up the race in a 2-1 mark with the match against Victoria tough Northern Pacific Athletic Con- not counting in the Bulldog 4-9 overall ference against California on Friday and record. San Jose State Saturday. Barbie Snyder, the FSU 6-foot-4-inch "We have smoothed out some of our 'Dogs visit Cardinal The Fresno State sc n will open were defeated by San Diego State 1-0 tv Pacific Soccer Conference play this Wed- days later, dropping their record to (s-i. nesday as the "Dogs travel to Palo / take on the Cardinal of Stanford. The Cardinal, 4-4-2, are led by goal¬ keeper Tom Austin who has recorded six shutouts and allowed only six goals this season. However, the Cardinal offense has proven to be ineffective this season, having scored nine goals. Fresno State has beaten Stanford six straight times. The Bulldogs, coming off a big win against third-ranked UCLA last week. San Diego State had 10 shots o. while the Bulldogs managed only Each goalkeeper recorded 10 saves game. The loss to the Aztecs was the second in a row for the Bulldogs, drop- ing a last years game 2-1. Big 5 Sporting Goods Management career opportunities We offer: *Top salary *Full-paid benefits *Great working conditions *Merchandise discounts West Coast 'steading sporting goods chain^feighty-se-yw stores (including eight in the San Joaquin Valley) is looking for recent and upcoming graduates to join our Management Trainee Program. Sign up in the Career center for an on- campus interview. Our representative will be here Friday, October 4th. CLASSIFIED eat For Rent 1 block from campus. 1 bedroom furnished 227-0390 For Safe I960 VW Bus. New paint, duel partly restored, $800. jjjfcjggt Stndeata aad FaeaKy For professional typing call Lydia 291-9473 TyFtas lear campus. Papers $1.0C/Page, Thesis 1130/page, Resume $15.00/pa9t. 291-9348 For Side 1978 Honda Civk. 5speed. AM/FM Cassetu Excellent body, engine, tires, and exlenor 299-3432 For Sale /. Fastback. 80.100 miles. AC. t So. J1.000 or besi orlei. Phone: 434-9149 Apartment for Heat ie block from cam^s, 1 bdrm.. fumn 227-M99 Juat Your Typa Quafaywork. 2*»-»lM B«tt./a Typing alewional wrvice. Ph. 291-: Typing umenl. Ph 222-3226 For Sale 75Toyola Corolla sedan. Excetten! shape, excepl upholslery. 531475. Call 299-8452 Avon al oc^xxtunrty, make $. Call Jane 299-5343 Classified Ad Policy in advance to The Dally Collegian two «tay< prior lo publication date. AH s>aym.... sntsal be annate b. axraonal check or caah receipt Iron the cashier* office in Joyal Astnsfn- Ulralioo NQ EXCEPTIONS! experience they needed feelw h of iced the home crowd right now to lire us up and get us ready to play," said The Golden Bears are 13-10 in the series against FSU, with the Bulldogs coming up San Jose State, the nation's fourth- ranked team, enters the week with an 11-2 mark. The Spartans tied the 'Dogs in the NorPac race last year withan 11-1 record. "San Jose Sute was picked in the preseason poll to win the conference, but our scouting reports say they are tough but beatable." said Overstreet. The lone goal of 48:27 when Aztec forward Steve Snyder headed the ball passed Fresno Sute goal¬ keeper Chato Elgorriaga on an assist from Keencan Mikal. goal PCAA Football Scores Fresno Sute 59, Cal Poly-SLO 10 Pacific 33, Uuh Sute 7 Arkansas 45. New Mexico Sute 13 Long Beach St. 28, Nev.-Las Vegas 24 Page3 Sports Briefs I TMalaavatablaforFSU-HawaH I A limited number of student tickets are available at the Bulldog ticket office for this Saturday's game against the Univer¬ sity of Hawaii. Tickets are $5 until Thurs¬ day when unsold student tickets will go on sale to tbe general public at 16-8-10. For more information call 294-DOGS. Warrtora-8irp«^oriJca at Mand Oct 3 The National Basketball Association opens exhibition play thi* week, bringing the Seattle Supersonics and Golden Sute Warriors to Selland Arena Thursday, Oct. 4. Tickeu are on sale for S8 and $9 with all seau reserved. The Warriors figure to be the most improved team in the league this seasor with the aquisition of journeyman for¬ ward Greg Ballard and the anticipated signing of All-American and Olympic sUr Chris Mullin. the Hear Soft Contact Lou— Back To School EXTENDED WEAR SOFT CONTACTS $129.00 mm, cov SOFT COLORED SOFT CONTACT LENSES $159.00 -thcou DAILY WEAR SOFT CONTACT LENSES $ MOO armco. EYEGLASSES SINGLE VISION (Frame 4 Lenses) . BIFOCAL (Frame 4. Lenses) • Some prescriptions slightly higher f Choose from our selected framei •Call our office for oeuils All liftings by a Doctor ot Optometry Aphakic - Toric - Bllocal lenses excludec Of(er Expires 10-7-85 . $39 00. $59.00. •Large selection of designer frames >ft»SIVAS \Camyon) ..2S1-4172 PRINT & COPY CENTER AT THE SELF SERVICE PHOTOCOPIER LOCATED NEAR THE *, LOWER LEVEL CASH REGISTERS . ^•nt»*aV*AA»»i>f*»AA-»»AAAAv»A*A»A»i «I I I Mill I M BOOKSTOREB V- |