April 7, 1980, Page 3 |
Previous | 3 of 212 | Next |
|
|
This page
All
|
Loading content ...
. VX7.. s, April 7,1980-the D«uy CoDegiaB-Page 1 Letters to th«y Editor Profs face layoff if Prop. 9 passes con tinned from page 3 toast sticking out of his pocket. Then I checked out the other halls. In each.I found pretty much the same problem:" the. snoring odor of fried butter, half eaten pieces of cold French toast lying about in the. halls, women for whose figures the nice sounding adjctive 'Rubinesque' was certainly ■ too weak ' and "bulbous" barely adequate. By now you're aware of the problem dear' dormie: one of rampant French toast abuse, a habit'which has obvious harmful effects on the abuser-obesity colesterbl build-up on the arterial walls, constipation, plugging of the sweat glands, bad.breath, flatulation. What will happen if we allow this problem to spread outside the dorm? What, could the effects on our society be? The president's physical fitness program would go to the dogs-or rather the toast. . . I call my fellow dormies to action. 11 have taken the problem to Police ■ Chief Bilious" Panderson and dorm ^supervisors Charlie Muler and Jon Weasel; but none of them seems in¬ terested. French toast, they say, is just not lis exciting as marijuana (even though nillions have been spent on research- ig marijuana, and nothing substant- 'il has been proven as to dangerous Yects-eureiy not as many dangerous fects anyway as are associated with ench toast abuse). French toast, ":se wise-men say, just doesn't make •h good press as marijuana busts. Scriblerus Tertiarus byToc CSUF President Harold Hank told the Academic Assembly recently that Prop. 9 may result in lay offs for ap¬ proximately TO instructors on campus if it is passed in June. He also said.that the university is struggling to plan a budget for next year despite the uncertaintiy surround¬ ing the impart of the initiative. "We're in a situation in which we have to.be vague in our approach to the possible passage of Prop. 9. We were hoping that the governor and the Dopt: of Finance would come up with some figures we.could work with, but that hasn't happened. They don't seem to know .much more than we do," he said. He told the gathering of faculty that the most pessimistic speculations predict a 15 percent cut for next year, while the most optimistic predict a five percent cut. The administration and the Budget Committee of the Academic Senate have therefore de¬ cided to plan on the basis of a 10 percent cut. "If five percent is optimistic and 15 percent is pessimistic, then 10 percent .is optimistic with pessimistic overtones," said Dave Clark, Academic Vice-Presi¬ dent. "It is impossible to make cuts in the university budget without affect¬ ing people," Clark said. "It is likewise impossible to absorb 10 percent budget cut without laying off tenure tract faculty, assuming that we will not be receiving tuition from the students." Hank said that the granting of pro¬ motions to faculty would not be af¬ fected by Prop. 9. ' , ■' "I'm not going to hold up some¬ body's promotion because of something that might happen further on down the road," he said. He also said that whether tuition is ultimately considered as an alternate means of funding, depends on the size- of the budget cuts throughout the system. "I don't think most of the trustees are in favor of tuition. And its my assumption that tuition won't be seriosly considered unless the budget cuts go over 10 percent. But obviously, toe likelihood of tuition will increase if the impact is higher than 10 per¬ cent,* he said. Haak said that there is no truth to rumors that the CSUC trustees' may consider eliminating campuses if Prop. 9 passes. "If Prop. 9 does not pass, our word¬ ing assumption is that we can get through the next decade with a high 10 out of 12 professors wiilagree ' PROFESSIONALLY TYPED TERM PAPERS Get a TOP GRADE Try us & You'11 Agree ALLIED OFFICE SERVICES 1500 W. Shaw, Suite 404 222-4111 Special Student Rates Toes—Tubes—Wheels CSUF Discount with ID Tire Corral Inc. Cedar &McKinley 252-0416 . • Free Pregnancy Testing Alternative Counciling And Pregnancy Termination by Caring Staff L 222-4405 KOTTAGE DAYS Boomtown Carnival the deadline for submitting applications for Bpomtown Carnival has been extended!! Your group can still get an application in and join the fun! FINAL deadline is 12:00, Tuesda; At rflfS^ir the Student Activities Ofl 1 CU, Rm. 310. Sc Ai tivites) gst our application (from Student > get your ideas together and it back to us on or before April 8 12:00 noon. oaai&SL*- ii possibility of no layoffs," Haak said, citing contributing factors such as a modest increase in enrollment and a slight lowering of the student/faculty ratio for universities throughout the CSUCsystem. But uncertainty reigns, at least for the next few months, over any attempt to plan a realistic budget. "We're in a sea with'no bearings, with no compass, and an inexperi¬ enced captain," Haak said. Indian report slated The San Joaquin Valley Town Hal lecture series will close April 16, in the Fresno Convention Center Theatre, with Ruth Beebe Hill, author of the critically acclaimed Hants Yo: An American Saga, an epic report on the American Indian. The lecture will begin at 10:30 a.m. Student admission is 40 cents. The book traces two American Indian families from the late 1700's, revealing for the first time an American Indian culture from the inside. Reviewers have praised Hill's best, seller, calling the book as important a contribution to our understanding of the American Indian as Roots is for our understanding of > Black Americans. IIII AM)AIR TO EUROPE OKA BIG BIRD AJffJA ^ LOW FARE s499 s533 Roundtrip from ■ New York 10 Luxembourg Hound trip from Chicago to Luxembourg Mo restrictions Confirmed reservations * free .wine with dinner, cognac after • no restrictions on stays to I yr. or advance purchase. Prices valid from U.S. from March 10 thru May 14,1980. AI! schedules and prices subject to change and government approval. Purchase .tickets tn the U.S. See your travel agent or write Dcpt. #CN Icelandair P.O. Box 105, .« ■ .. - West Hempstead, NY 11552. Call in NYC, 757-8585; elsewhere, call 800-555-1212 for the toll-free number in your area. Please send me: D An Icelandair flight timetable. Q Your European Vacations brochure. I Address _ I Ciry_ | Sate -Zin_ \ ICELANDAIR
Object Description
Title | 1980_04 The Daily Collegian April 1980 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1980 |
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 | April 7, 1980, Page 3 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1980 |
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 | . VX7.. s, April 7,1980-the D«uy CoDegiaB-Page 1 Letters to th«y Editor Profs face layoff if Prop. 9 passes con tinned from page 3 toast sticking out of his pocket. Then I checked out the other halls. In each.I found pretty much the same problem:" the. snoring odor of fried butter, half eaten pieces of cold French toast lying about in the. halls, women for whose figures the nice sounding adjctive 'Rubinesque' was certainly ■ too weak ' and "bulbous" barely adequate. By now you're aware of the problem dear' dormie: one of rampant French toast abuse, a habit'which has obvious harmful effects on the abuser-obesity colesterbl build-up on the arterial walls, constipation, plugging of the sweat glands, bad.breath, flatulation. What will happen if we allow this problem to spread outside the dorm? What, could the effects on our society be? The president's physical fitness program would go to the dogs-or rather the toast. . . I call my fellow dormies to action. 11 have taken the problem to Police ■ Chief Bilious" Panderson and dorm ^supervisors Charlie Muler and Jon Weasel; but none of them seems in¬ terested. French toast, they say, is just not lis exciting as marijuana (even though nillions have been spent on research- ig marijuana, and nothing substant- 'il has been proven as to dangerous Yects-eureiy not as many dangerous fects anyway as are associated with ench toast abuse). French toast, ":se wise-men say, just doesn't make •h good press as marijuana busts. Scriblerus Tertiarus byToc CSUF President Harold Hank told the Academic Assembly recently that Prop. 9 may result in lay offs for ap¬ proximately TO instructors on campus if it is passed in June. He also said.that the university is struggling to plan a budget for next year despite the uncertaintiy surround¬ ing the impart of the initiative. "We're in a situation in which we have to.be vague in our approach to the possible passage of Prop. 9. We were hoping that the governor and the Dopt: of Finance would come up with some figures we.could work with, but that hasn't happened. They don't seem to know .much more than we do," he said. He told the gathering of faculty that the most pessimistic speculations predict a 15 percent cut for next year, while the most optimistic predict a five percent cut. The administration and the Budget Committee of the Academic Senate have therefore de¬ cided to plan on the basis of a 10 percent cut. "If five percent is optimistic and 15 percent is pessimistic, then 10 percent .is optimistic with pessimistic overtones," said Dave Clark, Academic Vice-Presi¬ dent. "It is impossible to make cuts in the university budget without affect¬ ing people," Clark said. "It is likewise impossible to absorb 10 percent budget cut without laying off tenure tract faculty, assuming that we will not be receiving tuition from the students." Hank said that the granting of pro¬ motions to faculty would not be af¬ fected by Prop. 9. ' , ■' "I'm not going to hold up some¬ body's promotion because of something that might happen further on down the road," he said. He also said that whether tuition is ultimately considered as an alternate means of funding, depends on the size- of the budget cuts throughout the system. "I don't think most of the trustees are in favor of tuition. And its my assumption that tuition won't be seriosly considered unless the budget cuts go over 10 percent. But obviously, toe likelihood of tuition will increase if the impact is higher than 10 per¬ cent,* he said. Haak said that there is no truth to rumors that the CSUC trustees' may consider eliminating campuses if Prop. 9 passes. "If Prop. 9 does not pass, our word¬ ing assumption is that we can get through the next decade with a high 10 out of 12 professors wiilagree ' PROFESSIONALLY TYPED TERM PAPERS Get a TOP GRADE Try us & You'11 Agree ALLIED OFFICE SERVICES 1500 W. Shaw, Suite 404 222-4111 Special Student Rates Toes—Tubes—Wheels CSUF Discount with ID Tire Corral Inc. Cedar &McKinley 252-0416 . • Free Pregnancy Testing Alternative Counciling And Pregnancy Termination by Caring Staff L 222-4405 KOTTAGE DAYS Boomtown Carnival the deadline for submitting applications for Bpomtown Carnival has been extended!! Your group can still get an application in and join the fun! FINAL deadline is 12:00, Tuesda; At rflfS^ir the Student Activities Ofl 1 CU, Rm. 310. Sc Ai tivites) gst our application (from Student > get your ideas together and it back to us on or before April 8 12:00 noon. oaai&SL*- ii possibility of no layoffs," Haak said, citing contributing factors such as a modest increase in enrollment and a slight lowering of the student/faculty ratio for universities throughout the CSUCsystem. But uncertainty reigns, at least for the next few months, over any attempt to plan a realistic budget. "We're in a sea with'no bearings, with no compass, and an inexperi¬ enced captain," Haak said. Indian report slated The San Joaquin Valley Town Hal lecture series will close April 16, in the Fresno Convention Center Theatre, with Ruth Beebe Hill, author of the critically acclaimed Hants Yo: An American Saga, an epic report on the American Indian. The lecture will begin at 10:30 a.m. Student admission is 40 cents. The book traces two American Indian families from the late 1700's, revealing for the first time an American Indian culture from the inside. Reviewers have praised Hill's best, seller, calling the book as important a contribution to our understanding of the American Indian as Roots is for our understanding of > Black Americans. IIII AM)AIR TO EUROPE OKA BIG BIRD AJffJA ^ LOW FARE s499 s533 Roundtrip from ■ New York 10 Luxembourg Hound trip from Chicago to Luxembourg Mo restrictions Confirmed reservations * free .wine with dinner, cognac after • no restrictions on stays to I yr. or advance purchase. Prices valid from U.S. from March 10 thru May 14,1980. AI! schedules and prices subject to change and government approval. Purchase .tickets tn the U.S. See your travel agent or write Dcpt. #CN Icelandair P.O. Box 105, .« ■ .. - West Hempstead, NY 11552. Call in NYC, 757-8585; elsewhere, call 800-555-1212 for the toll-free number in your area. Please send me: D An Icelandair flight timetable. Q Your European Vacations brochure. I Address _ I Ciry_ | Sate -Zin_ \ ICELANDAIR |