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FT 6-News The Daily Collegian September 1, 1992 •I ! * • r, . Kennel Bookstore For All Xm Back lb School Needs! MJGS? CafcuIalLorS M SUPPLIES' . REC01&3G ST?«noNj ^> - Books • Kennel Copy Center • VCR & Movie Rental- Personal Computers • One-Day Photo Processing • Imprinted Clothing & Gifts • Study Guides 'References- Supplies...^ / • ' Art, Engineering, Nursing , Biology, etc. Store Hours •/ - Mon. - Thurs. 7:45 a.m. - 7:15 p.m. ' (^Friday 7:45 a.m. - 5:00 p.ip.) a Saturday 10:00 a.m. - 3:00 p.m. ■M mm* 278-4062 KENNEL BOOKSTORE ( > • 4 I \ BACK TO SCHOOL SPECIALS! Macintosh Classic II 4/80 $1099 MacLCII4/80w/12-yonitor $1707 Mac llsi 5/80 CPU ? $1569 including Student Aid software package Style Writer printer $^19 Personal LaserWriter LS $759 Model 35-3T2 $1669^ Wh 4MB RAM, 40MB Hard Drive Model 35-3T3 $1829 with 4MB RAM, 80MB Hard Drive 2390 Printer $335 4019E Laser Printer $1129 'iniBifaiiWirMiiiiiiiin DeskJet 500/DeskWriter $389 DeskJet 500C/DeskWriter C $639 LaserJet IIP plus $789 LaserJet HIP $999 LaserJet III $1499 All'printers include 3 year warranty for academic purchases MaxLogic bv EVEREX 486/33 $1899 g includes: 4MB RAM, 105MB Hard Drive dual high-density floppies .28 Color Monitor $339 Tempo Carrier Notebooks $1939 I ! i i ULL-FEATURED SOFTWARE AT AT ACADEMIC PRICE! WordPerfect 5.1 $135 * Quattro Pro 4.0 $75 MS Word/Excel-Mac Combo $169 Microsoft Word - Mac $80 MS Word/Excel-Windows Combo $189 plus many more titles VISIT DURING DEMO DAYS Macintosh Days Sept 9-10 10:00-3:00 IBM & HP Days Sept 15-16 10:00-3:00 Regular Semester Hours Mon-Thur 7:45-7:15 Fri 7:45 -5:00 Sat 10:00 -3j0f KENNEL COMPUTER CENTER Computer Pickup Hours Mon-Fri 745 - 4:00 Sat Closed Ph 278-2116 New office : hours aimed to stop confusion By Rosalba Bo It ran StaffWriter To allow employees to do their* work and give students peace of mind, all campus office hours have been synchronized for this semes- i ter. * On August 18, a letter was dis¬ tributed throughout the campus by President John Welty announcing that, starting August 24, all of fices on campus serving the students and the public would continue be open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. The only change will be that the time ' between the hours of 8 and 10a.m. will be used by the office employ¬ ees to finish their work due to an extra workload caused by this year's budget cuts. Offices will be closed for lunch from 12 to 1 p.m. The Task Force on Improved Communication decided that this would be better than to have an¬ other crazed year of students run¬ ning around try ing to find an open office. So TFIC decided to take care of the problem by synchro¬ nizing all campus hours. There is' .one exception and mat is that all the cashiering windows on cam¬ pus will close at 4 p.m. during the month of September because a new computer system willbe-ihstallcd Students are glad the university has decided to standardize office hours, r As one senior noted, it "will help run the campus on a more professional level." ' He added mat knowing the hours will put him at ease because he'll know when offices will be opened and closed. A senior liberal studies major said mat the new hours are "good because the office employees can get their work done," in addtion to eliminating some o¥ the confusion that students have been faced with during the past years. She did say mat this new arrangement might not work because of die different budgets mat each office has. Offices with heavy student traf¬ fic will try to remain open during lunch hours. Services will still be provided to evening students from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. at the information desk in the University Student Union. KFSR Continued from page 5 which gives us continuity," she said. 1- ' -y/'KF^SR can dcf^whatcvcr it k Avanis musically-th&y don't have to uy to be popular. They should enjoy the.fact that they arc ground - breakers for new music."'* KFSR music director Chuck Ncwingham, a senior telecommu¬ nications major, said 'The Edge" has had both a positive and ncga- Uve effect on programming. , "The^y have helped us with some projects' and have provided intern- -#Jiips for some of our employees but we have to counter-program our music to,be less commercial than they are," he said. "Some people listen to "The Edge" for sound quality, but we play a wider breadth of music." . KayiaPtoid mat although "The Edge" has cut into KFSR's main¬ stream market, it has had no effect * on other programming such as jazz, rap-and reggae. "People call 'The Edge" and request music that they have only heard at KFSR and vice versa." Ncwingham said a compilation album of local artists music and a concert series featuring local and national bands are in the planning stages to honor KFSR's tenth anniversary in November. Hawaii Continued from page 1 students themselves have not taken on-such optimistic views* Junior* Ken Whitaker, a Liberal sSludics major, expressed suong opinions *■ against spending hundreds of dol¬ lars on the trip. % • l "Money is hard to come by. Students could spend*ihe money on books, tuition or whatever." Whitaker further questioned the practicality of the enure trip itself. "Instead of sending the team to Hawaii, they ought to invest in some computers. There's the budget crisis and classes getting cut and they're sending the foot¬ ball team to Hawaii?" Tony Tqmas, a freshman Lib¬ eral Studies major said, "For stu¬ dents, it's too expensive. For someone who can afford it, it's a good deal. If I had the money, I'd go." Although the trip is open to anyone, including students, it has been aimed toward local business owners. "I just don't think the average Joe could afford it," Whitaker said. f
Object Description
Title | 1992_09 The Daily Collegian September 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 | September 1, 1992, Page 6 |
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 | FT 6-News The Daily Collegian September 1, 1992 •I ! * • r, . Kennel Bookstore For All Xm Back lb School Needs! MJGS? CafcuIalLorS M SUPPLIES' . REC01&3G ST?«noNj ^> - Books • Kennel Copy Center • VCR & Movie Rental- Personal Computers • One-Day Photo Processing • Imprinted Clothing & Gifts • Study Guides 'References- Supplies...^ / • ' Art, Engineering, Nursing , Biology, etc. Store Hours •/ - Mon. - Thurs. 7:45 a.m. - 7:15 p.m. ' (^Friday 7:45 a.m. - 5:00 p.ip.) a Saturday 10:00 a.m. - 3:00 p.m. ■M mm* 278-4062 KENNEL BOOKSTORE ( > • 4 I \ BACK TO SCHOOL SPECIALS! Macintosh Classic II 4/80 $1099 MacLCII4/80w/12-yonitor $1707 Mac llsi 5/80 CPU ? $1569 including Student Aid software package Style Writer printer $^19 Personal LaserWriter LS $759 Model 35-3T2 $1669^ Wh 4MB RAM, 40MB Hard Drive Model 35-3T3 $1829 with 4MB RAM, 80MB Hard Drive 2390 Printer $335 4019E Laser Printer $1129 'iniBifaiiWirMiiiiiiiin DeskJet 500/DeskWriter $389 DeskJet 500C/DeskWriter C $639 LaserJet IIP plus $789 LaserJet HIP $999 LaserJet III $1499 All'printers include 3 year warranty for academic purchases MaxLogic bv EVEREX 486/33 $1899 g includes: 4MB RAM, 105MB Hard Drive dual high-density floppies .28 Color Monitor $339 Tempo Carrier Notebooks $1939 I ! i i ULL-FEATURED SOFTWARE AT AT ACADEMIC PRICE! WordPerfect 5.1 $135 * Quattro Pro 4.0 $75 MS Word/Excel-Mac Combo $169 Microsoft Word - Mac $80 MS Word/Excel-Windows Combo $189 plus many more titles VISIT DURING DEMO DAYS Macintosh Days Sept 9-10 10:00-3:00 IBM & HP Days Sept 15-16 10:00-3:00 Regular Semester Hours Mon-Thur 7:45-7:15 Fri 7:45 -5:00 Sat 10:00 -3j0f KENNEL COMPUTER CENTER Computer Pickup Hours Mon-Fri 745 - 4:00 Sat Closed Ph 278-2116 New office : hours aimed to stop confusion By Rosalba Bo It ran StaffWriter To allow employees to do their* work and give students peace of mind, all campus office hours have been synchronized for this semes- i ter. * On August 18, a letter was dis¬ tributed throughout the campus by President John Welty announcing that, starting August 24, all of fices on campus serving the students and the public would continue be open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. The only change will be that the time ' between the hours of 8 and 10a.m. will be used by the office employ¬ ees to finish their work due to an extra workload caused by this year's budget cuts. Offices will be closed for lunch from 12 to 1 p.m. The Task Force on Improved Communication decided that this would be better than to have an¬ other crazed year of students run¬ ning around try ing to find an open office. So TFIC decided to take care of the problem by synchro¬ nizing all campus hours. There is' .one exception and mat is that all the cashiering windows on cam¬ pus will close at 4 p.m. during the month of September because a new computer system willbe-ihstallcd Students are glad the university has decided to standardize office hours, r As one senior noted, it "will help run the campus on a more professional level." ' He added mat knowing the hours will put him at ease because he'll know when offices will be opened and closed. A senior liberal studies major said mat the new hours are "good because the office employees can get their work done," in addtion to eliminating some o¥ the confusion that students have been faced with during the past years. She did say mat this new arrangement might not work because of die different budgets mat each office has. Offices with heavy student traf¬ fic will try to remain open during lunch hours. Services will still be provided to evening students from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. at the information desk in the University Student Union. KFSR Continued from page 5 which gives us continuity," she said. 1- ' -y/'KF^SR can dcf^whatcvcr it k Avanis musically-th&y don't have to uy to be popular. They should enjoy the.fact that they arc ground - breakers for new music."'* KFSR music director Chuck Ncwingham, a senior telecommu¬ nications major, said 'The Edge" has had both a positive and ncga- Uve effect on programming. , "The^y have helped us with some projects' and have provided intern- -#Jiips for some of our employees but we have to counter-program our music to,be less commercial than they are," he said. "Some people listen to "The Edge" for sound quality, but we play a wider breadth of music." . KayiaPtoid mat although "The Edge" has cut into KFSR's main¬ stream market, it has had no effect * on other programming such as jazz, rap-and reggae. "People call 'The Edge" and request music that they have only heard at KFSR and vice versa." Ncwingham said a compilation album of local artists music and a concert series featuring local and national bands are in the planning stages to honor KFSR's tenth anniversary in November. Hawaii Continued from page 1 students themselves have not taken on-such optimistic views* Junior* Ken Whitaker, a Liberal sSludics major, expressed suong opinions *■ against spending hundreds of dol¬ lars on the trip. % • l "Money is hard to come by. Students could spend*ihe money on books, tuition or whatever." Whitaker further questioned the practicality of the enure trip itself. "Instead of sending the team to Hawaii, they ought to invest in some computers. There's the budget crisis and classes getting cut and they're sending the foot¬ ball team to Hawaii?" Tony Tqmas, a freshman Lib¬ eral Studies major said, "For stu¬ dents, it's too expensive. For someone who can afford it, it's a good deal. If I had the money, I'd go." Although the trip is open to anyone, including students, it has been aimed toward local business owners. "I just don't think the average Joe could afford it," Whitaker said. f |