Local Office and Yet Many 'Of the Sports Programs That Have Struggled with Success Over the Past Sever Al Years Continue to Attract More Media Attention
1\ 1.- C h J '..I C, ~" U.l72';:1. b CS D?5 IJ l- 1- CJ n . ',/o.L. 45 no. '-,I Auq. :30, 20l~)Q) WEDNESDAY Mp~iam Library---CSU Chico ~he AUGUST 30, 2000 .Opinion .. ·..................................... · .. A6 Sports .......................................... B1 CALIFORNIA STATE UNIVERSITY, CHICO VOLUME 45, ISSUE t/ Entertainment .............................. C1 Calendar....................................... C4 ARE YOU N~SYNC? KICKING IT AGAIN? CHICOPOLITAN Dimensions .................................. 01 Boy and girl bands are fun to Men's, won1en's soccer Negalive self-image often eating hate, so why do we love them? ready to rumble in 2000 causes disorders hHp:llorion,csuchico,edu OPltjlON ~ C3 SPORTS ... B1 D1MEI~SIONS ~ D1 lIB ,. Chico I Ing Bridge over troubled water 'About three months ago, roughly the same time the Fort Hays State Tigers elim~nated the Cpico State University' men's baseball team from the National Collegiate Athletic Association Division II West Regional tour nament, a group of three civil .engineering students bonrded n plane en route to Texas. Once there, Kari Rowberg, John Bailer and Troy Kamisky embarnlssed their counterparts from 173 American universities in a steel bridge competition, the qetails of which are included in N lItnsha Klobas' story on page A4. The point, however, is thnt local media paid more' attention to the baseball team's failure than to the academic successes of one : :of the university's most ignored '. :departments. But the media's favoritism towlIrd athletics is nothing new, said Maurice Mow, civil engi-· neering chair. "ICs .' Pllrt., of .the. American drean~' to -[do"({;-':e-iiilletlcs' more than academic achievement," he said.
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