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12 The Daily Collegian News Bequest received The California Sute University, Fresno Foundation has received a bequest valued at nearly $225,000 from the estate of Leon S. Peters, longtime valley business leader and active supporter of the university. Included in the bequest are 7,715 shares of Ametek, Inc. stock valued at more than S214.000 and $10,619 in cash. Earle Bassett, director of auxiliary services at CSUF, said Mr. Peters' will specified that annual proceeds from the endowment established by the gift benefit the School of Agriculture and Home Economics, the School of Business and Administrative Sciences, and the School of Engineering. Half of each year's proceeds will be used for equipment purchases by the three schools and the remaining half will provide student scholarships. Bassett said some funding will be available from lhe endowment July I, 1985 with the first full year of proceeds becoming available July 1,1986. Other gifts from Mr Peters to the university in earlier years include a $50,000 endowment which esublished three annual leadership awards of $1,500 each to an outsunding student in the School of Agriculture and Home Economics, one in the School of Business and Administrative Sciences, and a third selected from one of Briefs the other schools in the university. He also was instumental in fund raising for the campus athletic facilities and served on numerous university advisory groups. He was a member of the CSU F Foundation Board of Governors from 1964 until his death in 1983 and had been chairman of the board since 1971. Colby showing Jennifer Colby will present her exhibi¬ tion "Border Crossings" April 28 to May 7 in the Phebe Conley Gallery at CSUF. Her paintings deal with the people of South and Central America and immi¬ grants to the United States. The reception for the artist is Sunday, April 28, 3 to 6 Vivid Images Specializing in: Resumes Newsletters Fryers Tickets Posters PMTa Reversals THE DAILY COLLEGIAN 294-2486 lct!°lTP™, • Graphic Design ■ Layout/Paste Up A. Typesetting All work done by students for students. Jennifer Colby is the winner of the Joyce Aiken Art Purchase award and the 1985 Graduate Dean _ Medal at CSUF. "The Future of Nursing: Where We Are Going and How To Get Tbere" ia the theme for the 1985 Legislative Forum sponsored by the Department of Nursing at CSUF. The Forum will be held Friday, April 26. The program, featuring nursing experts as speakers, will be held from 1 to 4 p.m. at Breuners hospitality room, located at Cedar and Shaw avenues. The program is free and refreshments will be available. Those interested in earning three units of continuing education credit will be charged $5. Dr. Joan Fiorello, co-director of the CSUF Interdisciplinary Center and a futurist, will talk about what health care professionals can expect in the future regarding employment opportunities, ed¬ ucation and health care settings. Barbara Badertscher, R.N. and local regional representative for the California Nurses' Association, will focus on the legislative process and how it has affected health care and how nurses can affect the legislative process. How you live may save your life You may find it surprising that up to 60% of all cancers can be prevented. By avoiding excessive exposure to sunlight, by not smoking cigarettes, by hot overeat¬ ing and by following" a diet high in fiber and low in fat. The battle isn't over but we are win-, ning. Please support the American Cancer Society. I AMERICAN $ CANCER _>* .«"****„ We do It for you CLEAN ■ SAFE • CONVENIENT * Carpeted * * Always Attended * * Giant-load Washers * • Same Day Rutf-N-Fold * 229-0467 As the representative for "Direct Patient Care" for tbe Sute Board of Registered Nurses, Patricia Hunter will speak on what should be known about the future concerning licensure and regula¬ tions that govern nursing. Computer technician coordinator and CSUF lecturer Chris Banigan will discuss how computer technology will be instru- menul in helping nurses achieve and be prepared for the future of health care in America. The final speaker of the day will be Sara���Sachsteder, director of nursing for the Madera Community Hospital Home Health Agency. She will examine the field of "Home Health Care" now and in the future. She will discuss the realities of, and the opportunities available in home health care, as well as what kind of personal, educational and financial preparation needs to be considered. The Legislative Forum is open to all nurses and health care professionals as well as nursing students and others inter¬ ested in the future of the nursing profes¬ sion. For further information, contact thc CSUF Department of Nursing at 294-2041. Special performance .Students of guitarist Juan Serrano, a lecturer in music at CSUF and inter¬ national musician will present a special concert on Thursday, May 2 at 1 p.m. The free concert will be held in the CSUF Music Building Recital Hall. The program will open with individual and small group performances of works by Carulli, Tarrega, Carcassi, Lecuona and Senano. Then, the group will combine into an esemble to conclude the concert with works by Capian, Handel, and Serrano. . Students on thp concert program include Mike Briggs, Blake Jones, Timothy Palko, Chris Koa, Lisa Peterson, Jody Hironaka, Susan Walker, Tracy Van Zanten and Patricia Hernandez. mu COMEDY NIGHT Need a good laugh? We've got it! Loosen up for Vintage Days with three of the funniest comedians ever to hit Fresno!^ ? SOCIETY* Starring Dennis Blair He has performed with Joan Rivers and Rodney Dangerfield at Lake Ta. oe, Atlantic City and Las Vegas. The opening show will feature PHILLIP PITTZ Followed by comedian RENE SANDOVAL Wed., April 24 8 p.m. Satellite College Union Doors open at 7:30 $ 3 for CSUF Students w/I.D. S 4 General Admission The Daily Collegian ft .1 VPI nco Vol. XCI, #58 CSU, Fresno Monday, April 22,1985 NHnearrested in disputed frat fracas ttS^'"9^^' According to the no.iee „___, ,„ «__ _i aZ!*Vm\f. Jy Maria Carter Staff Writer The situation leading to the arrest of nine Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity members at their house early Friday morning was one created by the Fresno Police Department, say the presidents of SAE and Lambda Chi. Eight members were charged with disturbing the peace and one with drunk¬ enness. They were taken downtown and released on their own recognizance after I few hours, police said. "Nothing was really happening. They created thesituation,"said SAE president Jelf Cardell. Lambda Chi President Mike Manouel said the worst part of the evening was when about 100 fraternity members were singing on the vacant lot on the corner of Bulldog Lane and Millbrook Avenue Manouel said most of the group had dissipated toward the houses when about ten police cars and a paddy wagon arrived. According to the police report, the officers were called out because of a complaint about the noise level coming from Fraternity Row by one of the neighbors. The report says the Lambda Chi house was -very agreeable" in complying with their request to turn down the music and go inside, but the members of SAE "were either unwilling or too intoxicated to understand. " Cardell said he was trying to cooperate with police but they detained him outside, contrary to the report, which said the officers let him go into the house and quiet the party. Cardell also said he was surrounded by police who "coerced me into saying the party was out of control." » Reports of spitting on the officers are untrue, Cadell said, but overhead sprink¬ lers, which were temporarily - " outside of the.house for "Shower Cap Week," did come on and got one of the CSUF officers wet. "That's when they really started harassing me," Cardell said. He said the sprinklers were not turned on maliciously and were going off and on all night as part of their theme party. The shower caps are a spoof of Sigma Cht's "Derby Week," a fundraising drive to help a children's home in Colorado, Manouel said. Cardell said there had been some bad feelings during the week because Sigma Chi took offense to the parody of its activities. He said the tension was worked out between the clubs and the final reconciliation was ironically made by the singing which brought the police to the He said the parody was not intended to Set Arrests, page 4 . _ r „_ ._v Set Arrestt, page • Reporter says media is vital to Armenians By Van. K. Meat-Mian Contributing Writer Preparation — "idra (right) and mpeiltion dancing i Melissa Hale prepare their outfits In anticipation ol at the third annual Tewaquachl Club Pow-wow Saturday at The Armenian-American community has virtually ignored the power of the press in stating its case of systematic Genocide, an Armenian Los Angeles Times reporter said Thursday. Mark A rax, a metropolitan reporter for the Times who spoke in the main cafe¬ teria, criticized Armenians for not util¬ izing the media to their advantage. In comparing the Jewish and Armenian situations, Arax said the difference lies in the use of the media. "We [Armenians and Jews] share a common history of persecution and exile and a common acumen in business. But where we part as communities is the sophistication in dealing with the media." Arax discussed the importance of the media for Armenians in his lecture "The Armenian Question in the Media." The Fresno native said that the Armen¬ ian case in the media has shifted from one of demanding recognition by the present Turkish government to that of defending the fact that there ever was a genocide. Illustrating this, Arax referred to a Uni- • versity of Louisville historian, Justin McCarthy, who argues that a genocide "McCarthy's demographs show that maybe 600,000 Armenians died, but there were 2.5 million Moslems that died." "They [Turkish revisionists] are gaining credibility. That's why it U important that the Armenian community become more sophisticated in its dealings with the media, because that is the battleground —it is newspapers, it is television." Arax said that the U.S. State de¬ partment was even more vehement in opposing recognition of the genocide. The State Department values Turkey as an ally because of the strategic military location of the country, and therefore follows Turkey's line of denial. "I was interviewing the lady at thc head desk [in the State Department] and I just had to bite my lip." When asked why newspapers cast doubt on the factuality of the genocide by stating the Turkish case, Arax answered, "Because there is a growing body of Se«Arai,t Apartheid holdings questioned Afrits r may join an increasing-number •rsities that includes Columbia and d should a resolution recently <*d to the AS Senate lead to a Jrc of financial ties with South Fm. „,nVes,mel" Portf«>«o of the CSUF acikv l'°n contain» 15 companies with F0_'rf-ln South Africa- since ,98°-the "Waiion has maintained a policy with t5lmcm counselors Dodge ft Cox that- all investment decisions must follow guidelines of social responsibility. Among these guidelines are the Sullivan Prin¬ ciples, formulated by a Philadelphia Baptist minister. These principles require non-segrega¬ tion of all facilities, equal and fairemploy- ment practices for all employees, and equal pay for equal work. Additional principles specify -increasing efforts to .ra and advance blacks, colored and Asians and to become involved in improv¬ ing the quality of employees' lives outside the work environment." There are two categories for companies (hat claim adherence to the Sullivan Principles. Category I is for those com¬ panies judged as having met the first three principles and making "good progress"on the last three. Category II is for those companies meeting the first three prin¬ ciples and making progress on the last three. Eastman Kodak, Exxon, Fluor, Gen¬ eral Motors, Eli Lilly, IBM, Xerox, and Texaco are Category Icompanies in¬ vested in by the Foundation. CIGNA, Caterpillar, Dow Chemical, John Deere, S«*Ap_rtM<.|Mfa4
Object Description
Title | 1985_04 The Daily Collegian April 1985 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1985 |
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 19, 1985 Pg. 12- April 22, 1985 Pg. 1 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1985 |
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 | 12 The Daily Collegian News Bequest received The California Sute University, Fresno Foundation has received a bequest valued at nearly $225,000 from the estate of Leon S. Peters, longtime valley business leader and active supporter of the university. Included in the bequest are 7,715 shares of Ametek, Inc. stock valued at more than S214.000 and $10,619 in cash. Earle Bassett, director of auxiliary services at CSUF, said Mr. Peters' will specified that annual proceeds from the endowment established by the gift benefit the School of Agriculture and Home Economics, the School of Business and Administrative Sciences, and the School of Engineering. Half of each year's proceeds will be used for equipment purchases by the three schools and the remaining half will provide student scholarships. Bassett said some funding will be available from lhe endowment July I, 1985 with the first full year of proceeds becoming available July 1,1986. Other gifts from Mr Peters to the university in earlier years include a $50,000 endowment which esublished three annual leadership awards of $1,500 each to an outsunding student in the School of Agriculture and Home Economics, one in the School of Business and Administrative Sciences, and a third selected from one of Briefs the other schools in the university. He also was instumental in fund raising for the campus athletic facilities and served on numerous university advisory groups. He was a member of the CSU F Foundation Board of Governors from 1964 until his death in 1983 and had been chairman of the board since 1971. Colby showing Jennifer Colby will present her exhibi¬ tion "Border Crossings" April 28 to May 7 in the Phebe Conley Gallery at CSUF. Her paintings deal with the people of South and Central America and immi¬ grants to the United States. The reception for the artist is Sunday, April 28, 3 to 6 Vivid Images Specializing in: Resumes Newsletters Fryers Tickets Posters PMTa Reversals THE DAILY COLLEGIAN 294-2486 lct!°lTP™, • Graphic Design ■ Layout/Paste Up A. Typesetting All work done by students for students. Jennifer Colby is the winner of the Joyce Aiken Art Purchase award and the 1985 Graduate Dean _ Medal at CSUF. "The Future of Nursing: Where We Are Going and How To Get Tbere" ia the theme for the 1985 Legislative Forum sponsored by the Department of Nursing at CSUF. The Forum will be held Friday, April 26. The program, featuring nursing experts as speakers, will be held from 1 to 4 p.m. at Breuners hospitality room, located at Cedar and Shaw avenues. The program is free and refreshments will be available. Those interested in earning three units of continuing education credit will be charged $5. Dr. Joan Fiorello, co-director of the CSUF Interdisciplinary Center and a futurist, will talk about what health care professionals can expect in the future regarding employment opportunities, ed¬ ucation and health care settings. Barbara Badertscher, R.N. and local regional representative for the California Nurses' Association, will focus on the legislative process and how it has affected health care and how nurses can affect the legislative process. How you live may save your life You may find it surprising that up to 60% of all cancers can be prevented. By avoiding excessive exposure to sunlight, by not smoking cigarettes, by hot overeat¬ ing and by following" a diet high in fiber and low in fat. The battle isn't over but we are win-, ning. Please support the American Cancer Society. I AMERICAN $ CANCER _>* .«"****„ We do It for you CLEAN ■ SAFE • CONVENIENT * Carpeted * * Always Attended * * Giant-load Washers * • Same Day Rutf-N-Fold * 229-0467 As the representative for "Direct Patient Care" for tbe Sute Board of Registered Nurses, Patricia Hunter will speak on what should be known about the future concerning licensure and regula¬ tions that govern nursing. Computer technician coordinator and CSUF lecturer Chris Banigan will discuss how computer technology will be instru- menul in helping nurses achieve and be prepared for the future of health care in America. The final speaker of the day will be Sara���Sachsteder, director of nursing for the Madera Community Hospital Home Health Agency. She will examine the field of "Home Health Care" now and in the future. She will discuss the realities of, and the opportunities available in home health care, as well as what kind of personal, educational and financial preparation needs to be considered. The Legislative Forum is open to all nurses and health care professionals as well as nursing students and others inter¬ ested in the future of the nursing profes¬ sion. For further information, contact thc CSUF Department of Nursing at 294-2041. Special performance .Students of guitarist Juan Serrano, a lecturer in music at CSUF and inter¬ national musician will present a special concert on Thursday, May 2 at 1 p.m. The free concert will be held in the CSUF Music Building Recital Hall. The program will open with individual and small group performances of works by Carulli, Tarrega, Carcassi, Lecuona and Senano. Then, the group will combine into an esemble to conclude the concert with works by Capian, Handel, and Serrano. . Students on thp concert program include Mike Briggs, Blake Jones, Timothy Palko, Chris Koa, Lisa Peterson, Jody Hironaka, Susan Walker, Tracy Van Zanten and Patricia Hernandez. mu COMEDY NIGHT Need a good laugh? We've got it! Loosen up for Vintage Days with three of the funniest comedians ever to hit Fresno!^ ? SOCIETY* Starring Dennis Blair He has performed with Joan Rivers and Rodney Dangerfield at Lake Ta. oe, Atlantic City and Las Vegas. The opening show will feature PHILLIP PITTZ Followed by comedian RENE SANDOVAL Wed., April 24 8 p.m. Satellite College Union Doors open at 7:30 $ 3 for CSUF Students w/I.D. S 4 General Admission The Daily Collegian ft .1 VPI nco Vol. XCI, #58 CSU, Fresno Monday, April 22,1985 NHnearrested in disputed frat fracas ttS^'"9^^' According to the no.iee „___, ,„ «__ _i aZ!*Vm\f. Jy Maria Carter Staff Writer The situation leading to the arrest of nine Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity members at their house early Friday morning was one created by the Fresno Police Department, say the presidents of SAE and Lambda Chi. Eight members were charged with disturbing the peace and one with drunk¬ enness. They were taken downtown and released on their own recognizance after I few hours, police said. "Nothing was really happening. They created thesituation,"said SAE president Jelf Cardell. Lambda Chi President Mike Manouel said the worst part of the evening was when about 100 fraternity members were singing on the vacant lot on the corner of Bulldog Lane and Millbrook Avenue Manouel said most of the group had dissipated toward the houses when about ten police cars and a paddy wagon arrived. According to the police report, the officers were called out because of a complaint about the noise level coming from Fraternity Row by one of the neighbors. The report says the Lambda Chi house was -very agreeable" in complying with their request to turn down the music and go inside, but the members of SAE "were either unwilling or too intoxicated to understand. " Cardell said he was trying to cooperate with police but they detained him outside, contrary to the report, which said the officers let him go into the house and quiet the party. Cardell also said he was surrounded by police who "coerced me into saying the party was out of control." » Reports of spitting on the officers are untrue, Cadell said, but overhead sprink¬ lers, which were temporarily - " outside of the.house for "Shower Cap Week," did come on and got one of the CSUF officers wet. "That's when they really started harassing me," Cardell said. He said the sprinklers were not turned on maliciously and were going off and on all night as part of their theme party. The shower caps are a spoof of Sigma Cht's "Derby Week," a fundraising drive to help a children's home in Colorado, Manouel said. Cardell said there had been some bad feelings during the week because Sigma Chi took offense to the parody of its activities. He said the tension was worked out between the clubs and the final reconciliation was ironically made by the singing which brought the police to the He said the parody was not intended to Set Arrests, page 4 . _ r „_ ._v Set Arrestt, page • Reporter says media is vital to Armenians By Van. K. Meat-Mian Contributing Writer Preparation — "idra (right) and mpeiltion dancing i Melissa Hale prepare their outfits In anticipation ol at the third annual Tewaquachl Club Pow-wow Saturday at The Armenian-American community has virtually ignored the power of the press in stating its case of systematic Genocide, an Armenian Los Angeles Times reporter said Thursday. Mark A rax, a metropolitan reporter for the Times who spoke in the main cafe¬ teria, criticized Armenians for not util¬ izing the media to their advantage. In comparing the Jewish and Armenian situations, Arax said the difference lies in the use of the media. "We [Armenians and Jews] share a common history of persecution and exile and a common acumen in business. But where we part as communities is the sophistication in dealing with the media." Arax discussed the importance of the media for Armenians in his lecture "The Armenian Question in the Media." The Fresno native said that the Armen¬ ian case in the media has shifted from one of demanding recognition by the present Turkish government to that of defending the fact that there ever was a genocide. Illustrating this, Arax referred to a Uni- • versity of Louisville historian, Justin McCarthy, who argues that a genocide "McCarthy's demographs show that maybe 600,000 Armenians died, but there were 2.5 million Moslems that died." "They [Turkish revisionists] are gaining credibility. That's why it U important that the Armenian community become more sophisticated in its dealings with the media, because that is the battleground —it is newspapers, it is television." Arax said that the U.S. State de¬ partment was even more vehement in opposing recognition of the genocide. The State Department values Turkey as an ally because of the strategic military location of the country, and therefore follows Turkey's line of denial. "I was interviewing the lady at thc head desk [in the State Department] and I just had to bite my lip." When asked why newspapers cast doubt on the factuality of the genocide by stating the Turkish case, Arax answered, "Because there is a growing body of Se«Arai,t Apartheid holdings questioned Afrits r may join an increasing-number •rsities that includes Columbia and d should a resolution recently <*d to the AS Senate lead to a Jrc of financial ties with South Fm. „,nVes,mel" Portf«>«o of the CSUF acikv l'°n contain» 15 companies with F0_'rf-ln South Africa- since ,98°-the "Waiion has maintained a policy with t5lmcm counselors Dodge ft Cox that- all investment decisions must follow guidelines of social responsibility. Among these guidelines are the Sullivan Prin¬ ciples, formulated by a Philadelphia Baptist minister. These principles require non-segrega¬ tion of all facilities, equal and fairemploy- ment practices for all employees, and equal pay for equal work. Additional principles specify -increasing efforts to .ra and advance blacks, colored and Asians and to become involved in improv¬ ing the quality of employees' lives outside the work environment." There are two categories for companies (hat claim adherence to the Sullivan Principles. Category I is for those com¬ panies judged as having met the first three principles and making "good progress"on the last three. Category II is for those companies meeting the first three prin¬ ciples and making progress on the last three. Eastman Kodak, Exxon, Fluor, Gen¬ eral Motors, Eli Lilly, IBM, Xerox, and Texaco are Category Icompanies in¬ vested in by the Foundation. CIGNA, Caterpillar, Dow Chemical, John Deere, S«*Ap_rtM<.|Mfa4 |