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M Q1VS The Daily Collegian • March 4,19S& T -r ^SI from page 1 .•. and represent the student's f view. ^ «i In other business Tuesday, r the ASI approved two com¬ mittee appointments made by the Personnel Committee. Stacey Green was appointed to the Ethnic, Gender, Multic¬ ultural Perspective Commit¬ tee, and Chris Volkerts to the General Education(GE) Com¬ mittee. Oliveres said both commit¬ tees are important to students' curriculum. Volkerts said the position is "critical" because all students are affected. "An opening of the campus needs to be stressed," said Volkerts. Oliveres agreed, calling the GE program the "foundation" for all students. Diversity in the curriculum was also stressed by Green. "Multicultural (curriculum) is inevitable," said Green. Green hopes to start a trend among students to participate in the government process. "Students must be aware and take an active role," said Green. Both students were ap¬ proved by a unanimous vote of the ASI. REGISTRATION from page 1 Terrence Kendricks, 22, a junior, was not able to get the classes he wanted to add, and said it was frustrating at one point when the system was down. The phone registration sys¬ tem was in the discussion stages for years and the last two years were spent in con¬ crete steps to put the system into operation, Beddall said. The system uses a voice re¬ sponse unit with CSUF pro¬ fessor Bradley Myers from the theatre arts department as the telephone voice. Myers do- Hi FREE ANTIVIRUS SHAREWARE FOR PC Specially Delete Michelangelo Virus ♦ Bring this ad and a blank disk to: nated numerous hours to the system, Beddall said. The telephone registration system faces its big test in Augustwhen CSUF will shelve the mail registration system and replace it with phone reg¬ istration. About 18,000 stu- •* dents will register by phone for the first time at CSUF. Minerva Escobedo, regis¬ trar and coordinator of the phone registration, said she is very confident in the system. "We did plenty of testing with the student population, and we have been in contact , with other campuses who ©6e the system," Escobedo said. CSU campuses began us¬ ing phone registration about two or three years ago with success and CSUF is among the second group Of campuses to install the system, Escobedo said. "We love the system," Es¬ cobedo said. "If s a tremen¬ dous way of registering and we look forward to it for full registration." The telephone registration for the 1992 fall semester will occur during August. Fees must be paid by July 20, Esco¬ bedo said.' There will be no priority add-drop and no walk¬ through registration, Escobedo said. Information about the phone registration will go out " in May. Students will be given a date and time when they can begin the phone registration. Stu¬ dents may add or drop any time after they register until Aug. 21, Esobedo said*' Once instruction begins, students will have to revert to in-person registration: MALIOBORO INC. Expiration: 03-06-92 nputer Center 295 W. Cromwell suite 108 Fresno, Ca 93711 Tel:(209)4314101 Fax:431-4203 The Daily Collegian...cancelling important doctor appointments and important dates and important classes to bring you the news firstll! CPS from page 6 In 1986, Katherine Hawclka, a 19- year-old Cla rkson University student, was raped and killed in view of uni¬ versity security officers. The officers said they believed Hawelka and her attacker were engaged in a playful sexual romp. In July 1990, Hunter College stu¬ dent Stuart Wieser, 20, was stabbed and seriously injured by a dormitory security guard after reportedly insti¬ gating a petition drive to/oust the guard. L Residents of the dorm/brnplained that numerous incidents of sexual assault and abuse as well as thefts had occurred while the guard wason duty. They also told university officials that the guard assaulted two other stu¬ dents in separate incidents two weeks . before he stabbed Wieser. In November 1990, a Gallaudet University student died at the hands of campus security after they tried to stop an argument between the stu¬ dent and a professor about a grade. Carl Dupree, a deaf student, re¬ fused to leave, so the officers hand¬ cuffed him. A struggle ensued during which Dupree collapsed and died of asphyxiation. The incident prompted students at Gallaudet, a university with a student population that is predominantly deaf or hearing impaired, to call for special sensitivity framing of officers, espe¬ cially proficiency in sign language. Many claimed that Dupree's inability tocommurikate with the officers when he was handcuffed contributed to his death.
Object Description
Title | 1992_03 The Daily Collegian March 1992 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1992 |
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 4, 1992, Page 4 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1992 |
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 | M Q1VS The Daily Collegian • March 4,19S& T -r ^SI from page 1 .•. and represent the student's f view. ^ «i In other business Tuesday, r the ASI approved two com¬ mittee appointments made by the Personnel Committee. Stacey Green was appointed to the Ethnic, Gender, Multic¬ ultural Perspective Commit¬ tee, and Chris Volkerts to the General Education(GE) Com¬ mittee. Oliveres said both commit¬ tees are important to students' curriculum. Volkerts said the position is "critical" because all students are affected. "An opening of the campus needs to be stressed," said Volkerts. Oliveres agreed, calling the GE program the "foundation" for all students. Diversity in the curriculum was also stressed by Green. "Multicultural (curriculum) is inevitable," said Green. Green hopes to start a trend among students to participate in the government process. "Students must be aware and take an active role," said Green. Both students were ap¬ proved by a unanimous vote of the ASI. REGISTRATION from page 1 Terrence Kendricks, 22, a junior, was not able to get the classes he wanted to add, and said it was frustrating at one point when the system was down. The phone registration sys¬ tem was in the discussion stages for years and the last two years were spent in con¬ crete steps to put the system into operation, Beddall said. The system uses a voice re¬ sponse unit with CSUF pro¬ fessor Bradley Myers from the theatre arts department as the telephone voice. Myers do- Hi FREE ANTIVIRUS SHAREWARE FOR PC Specially Delete Michelangelo Virus ♦ Bring this ad and a blank disk to: nated numerous hours to the system, Beddall said. The telephone registration system faces its big test in Augustwhen CSUF will shelve the mail registration system and replace it with phone reg¬ istration. About 18,000 stu- •* dents will register by phone for the first time at CSUF. Minerva Escobedo, regis¬ trar and coordinator of the phone registration, said she is very confident in the system. "We did plenty of testing with the student population, and we have been in contact , with other campuses who ©6e the system," Escobedo said. CSU campuses began us¬ ing phone registration about two or three years ago with success and CSUF is among the second group Of campuses to install the system, Escobedo said. "We love the system," Es¬ cobedo said. "If s a tremen¬ dous way of registering and we look forward to it for full registration." The telephone registration for the 1992 fall semester will occur during August. Fees must be paid by July 20, Esco¬ bedo said.' There will be no priority add-drop and no walk¬ through registration, Escobedo said. Information about the phone registration will go out " in May. Students will be given a date and time when they can begin the phone registration. Stu¬ dents may add or drop any time after they register until Aug. 21, Esobedo said*' Once instruction begins, students will have to revert to in-person registration: MALIOBORO INC. Expiration: 03-06-92 nputer Center 295 W. Cromwell suite 108 Fresno, Ca 93711 Tel:(209)4314101 Fax:431-4203 The Daily Collegian...cancelling important doctor appointments and important dates and important classes to bring you the news firstll! CPS from page 6 In 1986, Katherine Hawclka, a 19- year-old Cla rkson University student, was raped and killed in view of uni¬ versity security officers. The officers said they believed Hawelka and her attacker were engaged in a playful sexual romp. In July 1990, Hunter College stu¬ dent Stuart Wieser, 20, was stabbed and seriously injured by a dormitory security guard after reportedly insti¬ gating a petition drive to/oust the guard. L Residents of the dorm/brnplained that numerous incidents of sexual assault and abuse as well as thefts had occurred while the guard wason duty. They also told university officials that the guard assaulted two other stu¬ dents in separate incidents two weeks . before he stabbed Wieser. In November 1990, a Gallaudet University student died at the hands of campus security after they tried to stop an argument between the stu¬ dent and a professor about a grade. Carl Dupree, a deaf student, re¬ fused to leave, so the officers hand¬ cuffed him. A struggle ensued during which Dupree collapsed and died of asphyxiation. The incident prompted students at Gallaudet, a university with a student population that is predominantly deaf or hearing impaired, to call for special sensitivity framing of officers, espe¬ cially proficiency in sign language. Many claimed that Dupree's inability tocommurikate with the officers when he was handcuffed contributed to his death. |