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•' OCTODER 16,1992 ~\ ..... .'. . .-« . The Daily Collegian News-5 Colleeian Ads: 278-5734 AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF UNIVERSITY WOMEN 2Sth ANNUAL USED BOOK SALE October 17-25 1992 Colonial Square 47§0E Shields attfrestnut M on-Sat 10-6 Sundays 10-4 On-call driver needed to deliver The Daily Collegian to Madera for printing Sunday through Thursday. Pay is $200 per month, minus gas (about $40). For more information call 278-2486 and ask for Aimee or jason PATIO SALE October 15 & 16 9:00 a.jn. - 4:00 p.m. Main Level Patio wRusseU"Scconds Assorted Schools Sweatshirt $7.50 rted Schools T-shirts $3.2$ •** 40% on already discounted Fresno State/CSUF clothing items Save up to 50% on selected gifts & supplies Save on a new shipment of sale books f€STIVfll CIN€MfiS ISPLEASEDTO/WOUNCE STUDENT DISCOUNT PRICE Present Your Valid Student I. D. Card at the Boxofflce to Receive Student Discount Price Welty starts fundraising campaign By Mike Palmer Staff Wrrter Last month President John Welty initiated a new donor cam¬ paign to raise several hundred thousand dollars for faculty re¬ cruitment, new equipment and ether goals beginning with his own $1,000 contribution. The New Directions Fund will solicit major contributors on cam¬ pus and in the Fresno community, said Lynn D. Hemink, Vice Presi- dentforCommunity Development Those that donate $1,000 re¬ ceive a membership in the President's Circle which, among other perks, allows admission to the President's skybox during Bulldog football games. The President's Circle is a new category of donor that augments the $500 University Club and the $250 President's Club categories. Both allow admission to the prestigious President's fall dinner but not use of the skybox. The fund raising effort will continue all year, but a major push is scheduled for this fall. Tne University Foundation Board of Governors will match dollar-for-dollar the first $50,000 in contributions. In the New Directions Fund brochure, Welty said that the money raised will be available for grants to be used for "regional concerns such as crime, pollution and educational reforms to pro¬ vide students and faculty With state-of-the art equipment and to compete for talented new faculty." The criteria for grant applica¬ tions has not yet been established, Welty said. He plans to review the criteria with the Academic Senate before the end of the scmestcf. Although amounts have not been established, they will be small, and used as "seed money" for larger projects. All contributions are tax de¬ ductible. CO-OP Continued f ROM PAGE 4 Corporations, government agencies, non-profit groups and even mom-and-pop operations welcome co-op students because they do work that flees up other employees and meet fluctuating staffing needs. Officials say that co-op students draw fair wages, often much higher than the minimum wage. * Companies usually pay the students a percentage o&vhat they would pay a new graduate that year, for example, a sophomore might make 40.percent of that figure, while a senior might make 80 percent "Our average annual earnings last year were $8,166 for six months of work. We demand a reasonable wage for the job. We feel that makes it 'real world,'" V Sorvilla said. Running a top-flight co-op program can be costly, however, and many of the best programs have felt the recession's squeeze. This year, there are 700 co-op programs throughout the United States, almost one-third less than the 1,000 programs available sev¬ eral years ago when federal granfc money was easier to get. 1992 JOMAKME COMPOSER AND CLASSICAL MUSIC ARTIST Thursday October 22 7:30 pm SATELLITE STUDENT UNION Admission Student* «3.00 General *5.00 m7/ff^bcf7(,'ys CALIFORNIA STATE UNIVERSITY, FRESNO • \ ' f
Object Description
Title | 1992_10 The Daily Collegian October 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 | October 16, 1992, Page 5 |
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 | •' OCTODER 16,1992 ~\ ..... .'. . .-« . The Daily Collegian News-5 Colleeian Ads: 278-5734 AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF UNIVERSITY WOMEN 2Sth ANNUAL USED BOOK SALE October 17-25 1992 Colonial Square 47§0E Shields attfrestnut M on-Sat 10-6 Sundays 10-4 On-call driver needed to deliver The Daily Collegian to Madera for printing Sunday through Thursday. Pay is $200 per month, minus gas (about $40). For more information call 278-2486 and ask for Aimee or jason PATIO SALE October 15 & 16 9:00 a.jn. - 4:00 p.m. Main Level Patio wRusseU"Scconds Assorted Schools Sweatshirt $7.50 rted Schools T-shirts $3.2$ •** 40% on already discounted Fresno State/CSUF clothing items Save up to 50% on selected gifts & supplies Save on a new shipment of sale books f€STIVfll CIN€MfiS ISPLEASEDTO/WOUNCE STUDENT DISCOUNT PRICE Present Your Valid Student I. D. Card at the Boxofflce to Receive Student Discount Price Welty starts fundraising campaign By Mike Palmer Staff Wrrter Last month President John Welty initiated a new donor cam¬ paign to raise several hundred thousand dollars for faculty re¬ cruitment, new equipment and ether goals beginning with his own $1,000 contribution. The New Directions Fund will solicit major contributors on cam¬ pus and in the Fresno community, said Lynn D. Hemink, Vice Presi- dentforCommunity Development Those that donate $1,000 re¬ ceive a membership in the President's Circle which, among other perks, allows admission to the President's skybox during Bulldog football games. The President's Circle is a new category of donor that augments the $500 University Club and the $250 President's Club categories. Both allow admission to the prestigious President's fall dinner but not use of the skybox. The fund raising effort will continue all year, but a major push is scheduled for this fall. Tne University Foundation Board of Governors will match dollar-for-dollar the first $50,000 in contributions. In the New Directions Fund brochure, Welty said that the money raised will be available for grants to be used for "regional concerns such as crime, pollution and educational reforms to pro¬ vide students and faculty With state-of-the art equipment and to compete for talented new faculty." The criteria for grant applica¬ tions has not yet been established, Welty said. He plans to review the criteria with the Academic Senate before the end of the scmestcf. Although amounts have not been established, they will be small, and used as "seed money" for larger projects. All contributions are tax de¬ ductible. CO-OP Continued f ROM PAGE 4 Corporations, government agencies, non-profit groups and even mom-and-pop operations welcome co-op students because they do work that flees up other employees and meet fluctuating staffing needs. Officials say that co-op students draw fair wages, often much higher than the minimum wage. * Companies usually pay the students a percentage o&vhat they would pay a new graduate that year, for example, a sophomore might make 40.percent of that figure, while a senior might make 80 percent "Our average annual earnings last year were $8,166 for six months of work. We demand a reasonable wage for the job. We feel that makes it 'real world,'" V Sorvilla said. Running a top-flight co-op program can be costly, however, and many of the best programs have felt the recession's squeeze. This year, there are 700 co-op programs throughout the United States, almost one-third less than the 1,000 programs available sev¬ eral years ago when federal granfc money was easier to get. 1992 JOMAKME COMPOSER AND CLASSICAL MUSIC ARTIST Thursday October 22 7:30 pm SATELLITE STUDENT UNION Admission Student* «3.00 General *5.00 m7/ff^bcf7(,'ys CALIFORNIA STATE UNIVERSITY, FRESNO • \ ' f |