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The Dairy CoflegUft The Daily Collegian Chancellor's review adds fuel to CSUF fire Ihe best that can be said abou Chancellor Glenn S Dumke handling of the review of our col lege president s stewardship i that he does not appreciate the gra vtty of CS\.lf- s problems Kesentment over Dumke s pro (xjsed procedures tor the reviev and over the undemocratic manne he used to derive them is wide Dumke noted [see Wednesday Daily ( ollegian) that Baxter "has , responsibility to see that all infor mation he feels is (Jertinent to thi evaluation process becomes part o Kepr. gress o dent wants included in the review file is included He is not responsi ble for keeping material out of the of the campus community com plained, a member of the review team However, under the Chan cellor s guidelines we believe the president does have more input than is desireable iolve the problems at ( SU> we tor the review threaten faculty and -i only conclude that he has so students alike They have become only succeeded in aggravating part of the problem, not of the so- >se problems lution and should therefor be rl Professors of California the Associated Student Senate and the statewide Academic Senate all expressed their displeasure with the way Dumke has managed the Some of their reactions to the ( hancellor s review process are overreactions but most of them re fleet responsible evaluations ol the genuine inequities apparent in the way Dumke is handling the pro When Dumke spoke to the press on Oct 12. he stated that represen tatives of the CSUF- campus com niuiiity would be involved in the process of evaluating Baxter s performance The following day, he told Dr William York, chairman of the CSUF Academic Senate, that the review panel would be construe ted in a manner acceptable to the campus community When Dumke finally appointed the members of the three-man re view team, he did so without con suiting either students or faculty the two groups most concerned about the issues involved, and the two groups most likely to suffer is the review is mishandled While the reputations ot the individuals appointed to the review panel are beyond reproach, all three of them have operated at the highest levels of the educational structure One is a former CSUC executive vice chancellor, another is a former CSUC trustee, and the third is president of Claremont University Center There is neither student nor faculty representation on the review panel Student and faculty indignation over this lack of both input and representation is entirely justified The outrage expressed at a press conference Wednesday by faculty representatives, who stated that this means Baxter will determine what will and will not be considered 'pertinent,.' was unjustified The Chancellor's guidelines specify that Baxter is responsible for making sure that everything the presi- Chancelloi states fair and impartial Under Dumke s guidelines the president can review the file and add additional information or rebut the evidence presented against him Given the lack of trust many faculty and students have for the president, it would appear that Associated Student President Gordon Riddle was right when he communicated to the Chancellor that remarks made by members of the campus mid t andid ' 11 1 11 1 _ r-J - I 1 i 1 25^ i- i 1 j -^frD^S-'W "Hope these gold brakes hold!" '.- Ex-Dean of Business Buzick maintains Baxter should resign By MIKE FITZGERALD . Dean flu/icl iring by Pre- Norman Baxter last summer catalyzed elements of unrest in the CSUF faculty returned to CSUF Wednesday and re s'aled his opinion that Baxter should Buzick. visiting CSUF to deliver .i business lecture, said he has not hanged his mind regarding Baxter "I've said before that I think that a .hange of leadership is in the best interests of the university " he said the CSUC Trustees to review Baxter's presidential stewardship, Buzick said "I'm gratified And I don't think the trustees were merely responding to Baxter's request ' Buzick was referring to a recent public statement by Baxter claiming that the trustees had decided to con- Saying that he v by the support of the faculty, Buzick added that he had no guess as to the decision of the trustees regarding Baxter "It's in the hands of the trustees,' he said Buzick also added that regardless of the results of the investigation, he would not be returning to CSUF 'I have no ambition to return It took me 30 years to be able to do what I damn well-please and I'm going to do it." he said Five teams compete Few turn out for 'Ultimate Frisbee' contest The event that was scheduled to begin at noon at the lab school pond, didn't get under way until 1pm as the sponsoring fraternity, Sigma Carter ok's college aid WASHING TON -President Carter has signed major education bills giving another 7 million young people access to college grants and loans and providing a $50 billion federal boost for grammar and high school children The college bill is specificially aimed at providing grants for an additional 1.5 million students from middle-income families that bring home $15,000 to $25,000a year And it paves the way to federally backed loans for another 457,000 students from even higher-in come families The second bill-a $50 billion, five- year extension of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act-includes a new program to beef up basic reading, writing and math skills among stu- Alpha Epsilon, waited testants to show According to Dave Dit student legislative six teams had signed up but only three, SAE, Sigma Chi, and Lamba Chi were there at the start of the event Miroyan felt that the lack of parti After the contest was underway, cipants was due to little publicity, is also showed up* 'he "odd hours' and the fact that and competed. this is the first year of the event. DAILY COLLEGIAN JOB OPENING Wanted-torneone to deliver 'The Dairy Collegian' to businesses In town. Pay: approx. $100 per mo. Hrs. to be arranged. Contact Bruce, Dennis or Mike at 'The Daily Collegian,' Keats Campus Bldg. Phone: 4*7-24at. Police Officer, City of San Jose, Bl- Lingual (Spanish/English) only. Salary range from $1,391 to $1,609 per month. Qualifications are: 21 to 35 years of age; 60 semester units of college. For further information, contact Police Recruitment at (408) 277-4951 or write P.O. Box 270, San Jose, California 95103. Bob Miroyan of SAE saw the small He explained that many people had irnout as disappointing 'This is too classes at noon and could not show id,' he remarked He felt that up for something at that hour. He felt -ice-president, "the Ultimate Frisbee' is amazing that the event should have been held keeps people running.' in the afternoon as are Intramurals Despite the small turnout, the competition was held and the winning SAE, with Sigma Chi finish-
Object Description
Title | 1978_11 The Daily Collegian November 1978 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1978 |
Description | Daily (except weekends) 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 | Assocated 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 | November 3, 1978, Page 4-5 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1978 |
Description | Daily (except weekends) 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 | Assocated 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 | The Dairy CoflegUft The Daily Collegian Chancellor's review adds fuel to CSUF fire Ihe best that can be said abou Chancellor Glenn S Dumke handling of the review of our col lege president s stewardship i that he does not appreciate the gra vtty of CS\.lf- s problems Kesentment over Dumke s pro (xjsed procedures tor the reviev and over the undemocratic manne he used to derive them is wide Dumke noted [see Wednesday Daily ( ollegian) that Baxter "has , responsibility to see that all infor mation he feels is (Jertinent to thi evaluation process becomes part o Kepr. gress o dent wants included in the review file is included He is not responsi ble for keeping material out of the of the campus community com plained, a member of the review team However, under the Chan cellor s guidelines we believe the president does have more input than is desireable iolve the problems at ( SU> we tor the review threaten faculty and -i only conclude that he has so students alike They have become only succeeded in aggravating part of the problem, not of the so- >se problems lution and should therefor be rl Professors of California the Associated Student Senate and the statewide Academic Senate all expressed their displeasure with the way Dumke has managed the Some of their reactions to the ( hancellor s review process are overreactions but most of them re fleet responsible evaluations ol the genuine inequities apparent in the way Dumke is handling the pro When Dumke spoke to the press on Oct 12. he stated that represen tatives of the CSUF- campus com niuiiity would be involved in the process of evaluating Baxter s performance The following day, he told Dr William York, chairman of the CSUF Academic Senate, that the review panel would be construe ted in a manner acceptable to the campus community When Dumke finally appointed the members of the three-man re view team, he did so without con suiting either students or faculty the two groups most concerned about the issues involved, and the two groups most likely to suffer is the review is mishandled While the reputations ot the individuals appointed to the review panel are beyond reproach, all three of them have operated at the highest levels of the educational structure One is a former CSUC executive vice chancellor, another is a former CSUC trustee, and the third is president of Claremont University Center There is neither student nor faculty representation on the review panel Student and faculty indignation over this lack of both input and representation is entirely justified The outrage expressed at a press conference Wednesday by faculty representatives, who stated that this means Baxter will determine what will and will not be considered 'pertinent,.' was unjustified The Chancellor's guidelines specify that Baxter is responsible for making sure that everything the presi- Chancelloi states fair and impartial Under Dumke s guidelines the president can review the file and add additional information or rebut the evidence presented against him Given the lack of trust many faculty and students have for the president, it would appear that Associated Student President Gordon Riddle was right when he communicated to the Chancellor that remarks made by members of the campus mid t andid ' 11 1 11 1 _ r-J - I 1 i 1 25^ i- i 1 j -^frD^S-'W "Hope these gold brakes hold!" '.- Ex-Dean of Business Buzick maintains Baxter should resign By MIKE FITZGERALD . Dean flu/icl iring by Pre- Norman Baxter last summer catalyzed elements of unrest in the CSUF faculty returned to CSUF Wednesday and re s'aled his opinion that Baxter should Buzick. visiting CSUF to deliver .i business lecture, said he has not hanged his mind regarding Baxter "I've said before that I think that a .hange of leadership is in the best interests of the university " he said the CSUC Trustees to review Baxter's presidential stewardship, Buzick said "I'm gratified And I don't think the trustees were merely responding to Baxter's request ' Buzick was referring to a recent public statement by Baxter claiming that the trustees had decided to con- Saying that he v by the support of the faculty, Buzick added that he had no guess as to the decision of the trustees regarding Baxter "It's in the hands of the trustees,' he said Buzick also added that regardless of the results of the investigation, he would not be returning to CSUF 'I have no ambition to return It took me 30 years to be able to do what I damn well-please and I'm going to do it." he said Five teams compete Few turn out for 'Ultimate Frisbee' contest The event that was scheduled to begin at noon at the lab school pond, didn't get under way until 1pm as the sponsoring fraternity, Sigma Carter ok's college aid WASHING TON -President Carter has signed major education bills giving another 7 million young people access to college grants and loans and providing a $50 billion federal boost for grammar and high school children The college bill is specificially aimed at providing grants for an additional 1.5 million students from middle-income families that bring home $15,000 to $25,000a year And it paves the way to federally backed loans for another 457,000 students from even higher-in come families The second bill-a $50 billion, five- year extension of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act-includes a new program to beef up basic reading, writing and math skills among stu- Alpha Epsilon, waited testants to show According to Dave Dit student legislative six teams had signed up but only three, SAE, Sigma Chi, and Lamba Chi were there at the start of the event Miroyan felt that the lack of parti After the contest was underway, cipants was due to little publicity, is also showed up* 'he "odd hours' and the fact that and competed. this is the first year of the event. DAILY COLLEGIAN JOB OPENING Wanted-torneone to deliver 'The Dairy Collegian' to businesses In town. Pay: approx. $100 per mo. Hrs. to be arranged. Contact Bruce, Dennis or Mike at 'The Daily Collegian,' Keats Campus Bldg. Phone: 4*7-24at. Police Officer, City of San Jose, Bl- Lingual (Spanish/English) only. Salary range from $1,391 to $1,609 per month. Qualifications are: 21 to 35 years of age; 60 semester units of college. For further information, contact Police Recruitment at (408) 277-4951 or write P.O. Box 270, San Jose, California 95103. Bob Miroyan of SAE saw the small He explained that many people had irnout as disappointing 'This is too classes at noon and could not show id,' he remarked He felt that up for something at that hour. He felt -ice-president, "the Ultimate Frisbee' is amazing that the event should have been held keeps people running.' in the afternoon as are Intramurals Despite the small turnout, the competition was held and the winning SAE, with Sigma Chi finish- |