Oct 16, 1985 Pg. 2-3 |
Previous | 53 of 122 | Next |
|
|
This page
All
|
Loading content ...
Page 2 NEWS Oct. 16,1985 Women could regain'lost clout' WASHINGTON. D.C. (CPS) - Des¬ pite some negative input from a college president last week. Congress seems ready to pass a law forcing most college pro- equally. The bill, called the Civil Rights Resto¬ ration Act, would overrule a 1984 U.S Supreme Court decision that excused many college departments from having to pledge But some administrators and appar¬ ently some students as » leges asking if (they're) going to have I : want to protect our independ- Charles MacKenzie, president of City College (Pa), told Congress in gs last week. "The government at >oint may want to impose their secu- bill s sponsors college wome o challenge di — not the governi hey only, want "in campus programs. Last week's hearings only continued a debate that began when Congress approved Title IX ofthe Higher Education Amend mentsof 1972. Title IX, of course, bars colleges that FREE Demonstration of: LOTUS 12 3 One of today's top software packages Wednesday, October 16th 3:10 PM College Union, Room 308 Sponsored by The Ass nfor Inft take federal money from discriminating on the basis of gender. Many women's groups say Title IX provided the legal tool to open admissions to certain degree programs to women, gain more resources for female students' scholarship programs, and even funnel money into women's sports teams and facilities. Several schools — the University of Richmond, Hillsdale College and Grove City College among them — have gone to_ They've argued Title IX should not cover whole colleges, but only programs that get or use the federal government's money. Grove City asserted ihe govern¬ ment simply should leave campus pro¬ grams to campus administrators to run. "We did not want to accept the princi¬ ple of federal jurisdiction." MacKenzie told Congress last week. It was Grove City's legal challenge to the jurisdiction that made it to the Supreme Court last year. The court ruled Title IX applied only to programs that directly got federal money, not to all pro¬ grams on a campus that took some kind of federal aid. The court added, however, that campus student aid offices would have to comply with Title IX because they administer fed- Various women's and congressional groups were angered by the ruling. "It's completely absurd that women can only be protected in specific programs and buildings on a campus," says Kristin So* WOMEN, page 8 Graduated Savings. I October 14 -18 Time 10-4 IX-prrsitReq $40 KENNEL BOOKSTORE JOSTENS Daily Collegian —Founded in 1922— Pholo Edrtor-Gary Kuaatflaa Graph** Editor -Gin Film ami*. Marc B.a- Da»tWy, DnM for.l.r, J.rry CriaCO. t) ."-'» n><- :■■■'■:*■! i.m.-.ci \ii.cnI.,-., it The Daily Collegian t CLASSIFIED Students and Faculty For professional typing call Lydia 291-9473 Professional Typing Craiseskip Jobs Telephone lor information. 707-77S. IQett Free Hair Cot 2 people lor the pnee of one wi Bill. GM Ki.r Productions 225-5550 Maria's Typing Service Word Processing Thesis, reports, resumes, etc. Bonnie's Secretarial Service 486-7332 Sheer Delight ;rm« $22.00, Haircuts $6.0 Acrylics 25% Off 251-6664 For Sale 1973 Oldsmobile Cutlass Supreme beat offer. Call Phil: 291-8372 Camera For Sale ion FM2 w/motor drive. 2 lenses & Nikon flash. $550. Call 225-4311 Editing & Typing re down grammar problems 15 ye xperience. $1" per page. Kathy. 294-102T For old baseball cards. We tx 297-MU'i Typing cepi»nal quality. By iimem. Ph 222-3226 ortunity, make $. Call Jane 818-999-5668 '74 Plymouth Duster <cellenl condition, $1200 or make offi 255-0101 or 255-9467 God & Mike Eagle. Governor Republican '86 California. Truth,' honesty, and justice. Typing Unlimited m papers'. Reasonable rates. Ban Shopping Center Clovis. 298-3835 255-0181 or 255-9467 Typing By Jay Electronic Typewriter. Near CSUF. Call: $1.00/PaxK,223-»13~ Calligraphy Beautiful hand lettering for invitation! nenta, flyers, certificates. . ¥25-8694 Word Processing Term Papers, theses, cc^rearxinderrce.. research grants, manuscripts, resume's. Elii BesMy, a profestional typist. 224-8152 . Jay's Typing Excellent quality. Near i nffifiSa Marketing Co. seeks individual to work 1-2 days per week assisting students applying for credit cards. Earn $35-$60 per day. Call: 1-808-932-0528 Oct. 16,1985 NEWS P«sc3 Central America Week begins Immigration raids, the plight of immi¬ grants aid refugees, U.S. militarism in Centra/America, higher education in El Salvador, and the women's struggle in Central America will be topics for Central America Week, which begins tomorrow. The events are sponsored by the CSU F Latin American Support Committee, MEChA.and Associated StudenU. They arc scheduled to coincide with the "National Day of Justice for Immigrants and Refugees" and a west coast speaking tour by student leaders from El Salvador. On Thursday Gloria Sandoval will present a slide show on "Historical Con¬ tributions of Immigrants" and will speak on the Simpson Immigration Bill. She also will show a video ofthe Sept. 8,1984, Sanger immigration raid in which 150 law enforcement officals, armed with helicop¬ ters and automatic weapons, blockaded main street downtown Sanger and con¬ ducted a sweep of 16 bars: Everyone inside the bars was arrested, including legal resi¬ dents and U.S. citizens. A location for this presenation still needs to be secured. A rally in the free speech area will" Only 3 appointments show at AS meeting Ted C. Wills Community Center begin¬ ning at 1 p.m. At 7 p.m. a candlelight vigil will be held at the Immigration and Natu¬ ralization Service detention center on Motel Drive. The National Day of Jus¬ tice, endorsed by over 300 community, religious, labor, and civil liberties organi¬ zations, has been called as a response to increased attacks on the rights of immi¬ grants, according to its organizers. On Monday, Oct. 2I-, Andrew Barlow will speak in the Upstairs Cafeteria room 200 at noon. Barlow is editor of the "For Peace and Solidarity" newspaper that focuses heavily on Central America and South Africa. "U S. Militarism in Central America" is the topic of his lecture. As part of a 30-university U.S. tour, two student leaders from Ihe National University of El Salvador will visit CSUF Oct. 23. Antonio Quezada, president, and Rudolfo Rosales, vice-president of AGEUS (the General Association of Sal¬ vadoran University Students), will speak in tbe Upstairs Cafeteria r n 200 a AGEUSwas closed June 26,1980, by the U.S. backed Salvadoran military. While classes were in session, 800 soldier* invaded the school with .tanks, helicopters, and machine guns. Much of the university was closed, and 60 students and faculty were killed. * After the university was reopened in 1984, politically active students from AGEUS, including Quezada and Rosales, have had their lives publiclythreated by right-wing death squads. On Oct. 24, Mechelle Mouton, from Somos Hermanas (We are Sisters), a San Francisco Bay-area Women's Solidarity Project, will speak on the women's strug¬ gle in Central America. She will also report on the Women's Conference in Niarobi, Kenya, where Somos Hermanas participated in a panel discussion on Nicaragua. This event will lake place in the Upstairs Cafeteria room 200 at 12:30 It looked like the Associated Students Senate would adjourn in two hours Tuesday, but the last agenda item — dis¬ tribution of student basketball tickets — tacked another hour onto the meeting. The rest of the meeting consisted of money allocations and communications. Several committee appointments were made Thev were: Sen. Rebekah Burger, At Large Post I, to the Food Services Advisory Committee; Christopher Chan, Learning Assistance Center Committee; Antoinette Cloutier, Terrance Blanken- ship. Bonny Jewell and Jill Heiman, Pub¬ lic Affairs; Waldo Porter, Programming Committee; John Fry. Academic Senate; and Kathyrn Ehlers, Legal and Legislative After all the new appointments were unanimously approved. Sen. Steve Wood, School of Engineering, asked why hardly any ofthe nominated students were pres- were there. Afler a short debate, Bob Whalen, legis¬ lative vice president, asked Personnel Committee Chairman Jeff Daugherty to request nominees to be present at the meeting at which the Senate voted on their appointment. The Senate also decided to: — Fund the Chinese Overseas Students Association $900 for a publication. A motion to send the COSA request back to theFinanceand Budget Committee failed. Some senators wanted them to be funded more than S900. The organization had requested $1,760. — Fund Pi Sigma Epsilon, a marketing fraternity, $2,000 for travel; — Fund Students in Criminology $ 1.425 for speakers and publicity, — Sent a funding request of $608 by the National Students Exchange to the Finance and Budget Committee. STUDY GUIDES TO ACCOMPANY: Intro to Chemical Principles by Kowerskl/Peters Calculus & Analytic Geometry by Edwards & Penney Calculus & Analytic Geometry by Thomaa/Ftnoey The Power of Mathematics by Whlpkey Child Development by Clarke-Stewart Business Law by Davidson Fundamentals of Management Science by Turban Contemporary Business Law Prlnc. & Cases ~» - a>. — —, —. — by Highsmitb ALRSAvl! Understanding Computers & Data Processing by Parker Intro to Met Science Quantitative Approaches to Decision Making by Anderson AVAILABLE IN GENERAL BOOK DEPARTMENT Record fall enrollment figures in ; Enrollment for the fall semester at dents is then allocated for the campus CSUF is a record 16,920 students, 466 Cromthestategeneralfund.CSUFreceived more than the previous high mark in the $4,933 for each FTE student in the 1985- ; * " if 1984, continuing an upward trend 86 budget. ie campus population for the fourth year. Dr. Harold Best, director of institu¬ tional research, said the full-time student equivalent enrollment for the year is ex¬ pected to be 13,880, an increase of 138 FTE over last year and comparing favor¬ ably with the budgeted number of 13,750. FTE is based id of 15 Dr. Best said that because of the.in¬ creased enrollment, the university will request that budgetary enrollment figures for 1986-87 be increased from the pro¬ jected 13,900 to a new level of 14.000. Other data revealed in the enrollment figures are that the average student course average student load is 12.54 units this fall, slightly below and ia determined the 12.76 units recorded Last fall, and there by dividing 15 into the total number of isa 4.4 percent decline in freshman enroll- class units in which all students have regis- ment but an Increase of 7.7 percent ir tered. A dollar amount for each FTE stu- graduate studenU. TMrnrntava-mrmarrm- am tTwrtntmn-' m —tne————i-giim LOOKING FOR A WAY TO GET INVOLVED? Associated Students announces ♦Student Faculty Committees ♦KFSR Advisory Board ♦AS Standing Committee ♦AS Auxiliary Committee ♦Academic Senate 100 positions are still open Applications available in CUH316 PULSE' R E T U R N TO A GALAXY FAR, FAR AWAY 2:30, 7:00, & 9:40 PM FRIDAY, OCTOBER 18 SATELLITE CU $1.50 CSUF Students $2.50 General Admission
Object Description
Title | 1985_10 The Daily Collegian October 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 | Oct 16, 1985 Pg. 2-3 |
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 |
Page 2
NEWS
Oct. 16,1985
Women could regain'lost clout'
WASHINGTON. D.C. (CPS) - Des¬
pite some negative input from a college
president last week. Congress seems ready
to pass a law forcing most college pro-
equally.
The bill, called the Civil Rights Resto¬
ration Act, would overrule a 1984 U.S
Supreme Court decision that excused many
college departments from having to pledge
But some administrators and appar¬
ently some students as »
leges asking if (they're) going to have I
: want to protect our independ-
Charles MacKenzie, president of
City College (Pa), told Congress in
gs last week. "The government at
>oint may want to impose their secu-
bill s sponsors
college wome
o challenge di
— not the governi
hey only, want
"in campus programs.
Last week's hearings only continued a
debate that began when Congress approved
Title IX ofthe Higher Education Amend
mentsof 1972.
Title IX, of course, bars colleges that
FREE
Demonstration of:
LOTUS 12 3
One of today's top
software packages
Wednesday, October 16th
3:10 PM
College Union, Room 308
Sponsored by The Ass
nfor Inft
take federal money from discriminating
on the basis of gender.
Many women's groups say Title IX
provided the legal tool to open admissions
to certain degree programs to women,
gain more resources for female students'
scholarship programs, and even funnel
money into women's sports teams and
facilities.
Several schools — the University of
Richmond, Hillsdale College and Grove
City College among them — have gone to_
They've argued Title IX should not
cover whole colleges, but only programs
that get or use the federal government's
money. Grove City asserted ihe govern¬
ment simply should leave campus pro¬
grams to campus administrators to run.
"We did not want to accept the princi¬
ple of federal jurisdiction." MacKenzie
told Congress last week.
It was Grove City's legal challenge to
the jurisdiction that made it to the
Supreme Court last year. The court ruled
Title IX applied only to programs that
directly got federal money, not to all pro¬
grams on a campus that took some kind of
federal aid.
The court added, however, that campus
student aid offices would have to comply
with Title IX because they administer fed-
Various women's and congressional
groups were angered by the ruling.
"It's completely absurd that women can
only be protected in specific programs and
buildings on a campus," says Kristin
So* WOMEN, page 8
Graduated Savings.
I October 14 -18 Time 10-4 IX-prrsitReq $40
KENNEL BOOKSTORE
JOSTENS
Daily Collegian
—Founded in 1922—
Pholo Edrtor-Gary Kuaatflaa
Graph** Editor -Gin Film
ami*. Marc B.a-
Da»tWy, DnM for.l.r, J.rry CriaCO.
t) ."-'» n><- :■■■'■:*■! i.m.-.ci \ii.cnI.,-.,
it The Daily Collegian t
CLASSIFIED
Students and Faculty
For professional typing call Lydia
291-9473
Professional Typing
Craiseskip Jobs
Telephone lor information.
707-77S. IQett
Free Hair Cot
2 people lor the pnee of one wi
Bill. GM Ki.r Productions
225-5550
Maria's Typing Service
Word Processing
Thesis, reports, resumes, etc.
Bonnie's Secretarial Service
486-7332
Sheer Delight
;rm« $22.00, Haircuts $6.0
Acrylics 25% Off
251-6664
For Sale
1973 Oldsmobile Cutlass Supreme
beat offer. Call Phil:
291-8372
Camera For Sale
ion FM2 w/motor drive. 2 lenses &
Nikon flash. $550. Call
225-4311
Editing & Typing
re down grammar problems 15 ye
xperience. $1" per page. Kathy.
294-102T
For old baseball cards. We tx
297-MU'i
Typing
cepi»nal quality. By
iimem. Ph 222-3226
ortunity, make $. Call Jane
818-999-5668
'74 Plymouth Duster
|