March 8, 1979 Pg. 4-5 |
Previous | 22 of 80 | Next |
|
|
This page
All
|
Loading content ...
The Daily Collegian Campus Crusade For Christ witt be pre- Lester's topic will be the 'Immorality ig Tom Lester, former actor on of Hollywood." the television show 'Green Acres,* The meeting is open to the public and I during its College Life meeting Sunday .m. in CU 312-314. Guerilla tactics in job hunting The U.S. Bureau of Labor Stat¬ istics reports that between now and 1985 college graduates will exceed lob openings which require degrees by 950,000. In a free lecture next Monday en¬ titled 'Cuerilla Tactics in the Job Market," a leading expert in job finding and employment systems will talk on getting the edge in job hunting. Tom Jackson will be lecturing at 8 p.m. in the CU Lounge and speci¬ fically designed the program for today's college student. He deals with personal work satisfaction, life planning, improving the quality of one's worklife, penetrating the hid- dent job market, preparing a perfect resume, getting beyond personnel, controlling the interview and in¬ creasing salary offers. 1 Story Penthouse In addition to this lecturing, Jack¬ son and his staff train several thou¬ sand corporate interviewers in hir¬ ing techniques, work with major organizations in career development and run dozens of workshops for counselors. Jackson started as a corporate personnel manager and his work covers 15 years of pragmatic direct experience at the cutting edge of the employment process. He has written three popular books in the field: "The Hidden Job Market," "28 Days to a Better Job," and "Cuerilla Tactics In the Job Mar¬ ket." He is head of the Career Dev¬ elopment Team, Inc., a New York based firm. This two-hour program is present¬ ed free of charge by the College Union Program Committee. CSUF lecturer elected to office Reno Colleti, Jr., a lecturer in communicative disorders at CSUF, has been elected president of the Central California Registry of In¬ terpreters for the Deaf (CCRID). The newty formed group serves 13 counties in Central California and is one of four RID's in California, which are dedicated to improving the quality of professional services for the deaf. Other new officers are Edward Truschel, vice president, Arlen Lev- y, secretary; and Missy Lessard, treasurer. Phil Chedester, Patricia Thron and Bob Yellord were named to two-year terms on the Board of Directors. The group will hold a training and leadership workshop on campus this Saturday, March 10. The session is scheduled from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. in room 163 of the Laboratory School. More workshops are planned in the future to give beginning and ad¬ vanced interpreters for the deaf opportunities to learn and prac¬ tice their skills. Persons interested in member¬ ship or further information should contact Arlen Levy at Kings Canyon Middle School in Fresno. Buffo to clown around in CU ?rtaining magic of clown, isician, dancer, mime and combined in Buffo the Clown, who will give a free perfor¬ mance Wednesday, March 14, at noon in the ) ohn Wright Theatre. Howard Buten, ne BUFFO, was born and grew up in Detroit, Michi¬ gan. By the time he graduated from high school, he had worked as a pro¬ fessional artist, having his work on display in local galleries; published some poems and articles in local mag¬ azines; and played music professional¬ ly as songwriter-guitarist, drummer, with a 'working knowledge' of the trumpet and violin. He attended the University of Mich¬ igan for two years before he ran away to join the circus. He was ac¬ cepted to and graduated from the Ringling Bros, and Bamum & Bailey Clown College of Venice, Florida; and toured for two years as the featured clown of the Circus Bartok, a Euro¬ pean-style one-ring tent circus. While on the road, he added concertina and banjo to his Musical Clown reper- In 1972 he returned to Detroit to write and co-star in WXYZ (ABC) television's 'Super Circus' show. Dis¬ illusioned with the inhibiting atmos¬ phere of local television, though, he left the network to do something total¬ ly unique. He became Buffo. Buten has composed dozens of songs, many especially for BUFFO; he plays trumpet, violin, cello, drums, guitar, concertina, banjo and harmon¬ ica. He has published thirty articles on a variety of subjects, has written four novels (as yet unpublished), speaks Chinese (Peking Mandarin), Polish and Spanish, has taught for a year and a half in the Wayne Stae University Theatre Dept. and twice toured Japan as Buffo. He is current¬ ly on the staff of the Children's Ortho¬ genic Center of Detroit as psycho¬ therapist specializing in work with Autistic Children. Robert Fischer is Buffo's full time partner/accompanist and is accom¬ plished on piano, guitar and saxa- phone and often supplies the music for Buffo's lyrics. The performance is sponsored by the CU Program Committee. Coehlo to speak here Congressman Tony Coelho i_ the 15th Congressional District will speak on campus this Friday, March 9, in a program sponsored by the CSUF Agricultural Business Club. His talk will be presented at 10:30 am. in room 101 of the Agriculture Building, and is open to the public. Coelho is expected to discuss ag¬ ricultural and other issues as they relate to federal legislation A ques¬ tion and answer session will be in¬ cluded in the program. The Daily CoHegun CSUF's wine cellar A library of bottles, not books Red Cross offers courses There is a little known library on campus not at all like the library most students are accustomed to. It main¬ tains a temperature of 60 degrees and presently contains 200-300 bottles of carefully bottled wine CSUF's wine library is just one of the features of the enology or wine- nuking department, located on the far north side of the campus. It is another little known fact that CSUF has a winemaking program with¬ in the department of Agricultural Industry and Education. And it is even a lesser known fact that CSUF is one of only two universities in the country that offer full-fledged winemaking pro¬ grams, sharing this distinction with the University of California at Davis. Crowing at a rate of 12 percent a year, winemaking is the fastest grow¬ ing industry within the food industry. Although few people know about CSUF's well kept secret, the depart¬ ment is well established and respected within the wine industry, according to Bruce Zoecklein, lecturer in the Viticul¬ ture department The enology program was first start¬ ed in 1950 by Joe Heitz who now runs Heltz Cellars in Napa Valley. Expanded in 1969, K has since grown to what it is today, a scaled down model of an actual winery with a sterile bottling room, a cold room, a tasting room with booths, a wine library, and other machinery, some of which has been donated by wineries The department is particularly proud of a centrifical juice separator worth $21,000 on loan from the Westfalia Company. A lot goes into making wine, as enology students find out In fact, according to Zoecklein, making wine is a 'complicated science." While at CSUF, students contract a plot of land where they concentrate on the production of grapes Different varieties of grapes are brought in to make wine, but many of the grapes used are grown in the campus vine¬ yards Muscat, table Thompson, Ribier, Calmeria, and Palomino are some of the varieties grown right on campus Although winemaking stu¬ dents are not required to make a specific amount of wine as part of their major, most do make at least 10 gallons of wine The department itself has the capa¬ city to make some 5,000 gallons of wine per year. Some of the wine made is stored in their library and periodically See Pate 7 certificate in the program enrolled in as the instructor course. A material and operating fee of $15 will be For more information and to reg- Cross/Fresno-Madera counties chap¬ ter/1841 Fulton Street/Fresno, or call 486-0701 BLACK,ECEJ^,ANP*iJirJf! THE 22nd ANNUAL FRESNO AUTORAMA WHAT ABOUT A CAREER AS AN ARMY ORKBt? Life as an Army officer is full and satisfying. "Youll-meet and get to know people of high caSber, and with similar interests. You will have free medical care and other service benefits. With the benefits you receive as an Army officer, your salary goes a long way. You can take that first step now toward a rewarding future by Creating to take the challenge of OCS! Cal Army Opportunities 264-5318 Courses are scheduled for six days Monday through Saturday, and the only prerequisite is a current bask f Congratulations on your Inrtiatlo* Delta Gamma Fail 78 "• l-fKATHY NANCY SHAW KfcLLIE fKAREN SHANNON NANCY tOIANA MICHELLE SUSANNE jLORI JILL KATHY SUSAN MARCH Bth, 9th, loth * 11th FRESNO FAIRGROUNDS (2 big ot 'OVER $2,000,000 DISPLAY OF THE WORLD'S MOST BEAUTIFUL CARS* • Dean Martin '»ftfS,*«»»iiti *slacklsawkcoii|», Iwr^ • The world's wildest pick up, 'The Mag* Dragon' from Kentucky • MM West Clur-4>»on, the M0,«00 * King sO*-** hw Wt*<sr»»in • A great collection of nationally famous vans-'The Massage PaHor,' 'Sonklst II,* "Out ol the Blue* • The world' s nwot beautiful roadster, winner at the Oakland Grand National • A fantastic collection ol le-riders including 'Tribute lo Elvis* direct from Las Vegas (Covered with Elvis) • Hand built sport cars....Full custom roadsters...Antiques... riders....Custom boats • Meet in person April '77 Playboy maga/in* centerfold Lisa Sohi Thurs. 3pm-11:30pm Fri. 11am-11:30pm Sat. 11am -11:30pm Sun. 11am-11pm Free 197* Indy SOO movies freeparking
Object Description
Title | 1979_03 The Daily Collegian March 1979 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1979 |
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 | March 8, 1979 Pg. 4-5 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1979 |
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 |
The Daily Collegian
Campus Crusade For Christ witt be pre- Lester's topic will be the 'Immorality
ig Tom Lester, former actor on of Hollywood."
the television show 'Green Acres,* The meeting is open to the public and I
during its College Life meeting Sunday
.m. in CU 312-314.
Guerilla tactics in job hunting
The U.S. Bureau of Labor Stat¬
istics reports that between now and
1985 college graduates will exceed
lob openings which require degrees
by 950,000.
In a free lecture next Monday en¬
titled 'Cuerilla Tactics in the Job
Market," a leading expert in job
finding and employment systems
will talk on getting the edge in job
hunting.
Tom Jackson will be lecturing at
8 p.m. in the CU Lounge and speci¬
fically designed the program for
today's college student. He deals
with personal work satisfaction, life
planning, improving the quality of
one's worklife, penetrating the hid-
dent job market, preparing a perfect
resume, getting beyond personnel,
controlling the interview and in¬
creasing salary offers.
1 Story Penthouse
In addition to this lecturing, Jack¬
son and his staff train several thou¬
sand corporate interviewers in hir¬
ing techniques, work with major
organizations in career development
and run dozens of workshops for
counselors.
Jackson started as a corporate
personnel manager and his work
covers 15 years of pragmatic direct
experience at the cutting edge of
the employment process. He has
written three popular books in the
field: "The Hidden Job Market,"
"28 Days to a Better Job," and
"Cuerilla Tactics In the Job Mar¬
ket." He is head of the Career Dev¬
elopment Team, Inc., a New York
based firm.
This two-hour program is present¬
ed free of charge by the College
Union Program Committee.
CSUF lecturer elected to office
Reno Colleti, Jr., a lecturer in
communicative disorders at CSUF,
has been elected president of the
Central California Registry of In¬
terpreters for the Deaf (CCRID).
The newty formed group serves
13 counties in Central California and
is one of four RID's in California,
which are dedicated to improving
the quality of professional services
for the deaf.
Other new officers are Edward
Truschel, vice president, Arlen Lev-
y, secretary; and Missy Lessard,
treasurer. Phil Chedester, Patricia
Thron and Bob Yellord were named
to two-year terms on the Board of
Directors.
The group will hold a training and
leadership workshop on campus this
Saturday, March 10. The session is
scheduled from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. in
room 163 of the Laboratory School.
More workshops are planned in the
future to give beginning and ad¬
vanced interpreters for the deaf
opportunities to learn and prac¬
tice their skills.
Persons interested in member¬
ship or further information should
contact Arlen Levy at Kings Canyon
Middle School in Fresno.
Buffo to clown around in CU
?rtaining magic of clown,
isician, dancer, mime and
combined in Buffo the
Clown, who will give a free perfor¬
mance Wednesday, March 14, at noon
in the ) ohn Wright Theatre.
Howard Buten, ne BUFFO, was
born and grew up in Detroit, Michi¬
gan. By the time he graduated from
high school, he had worked as a pro¬
fessional artist, having his work on
display in local galleries; published
some poems and articles in local mag¬
azines; and played music professional¬
ly as songwriter-guitarist, drummer,
with a 'working knowledge' of the
trumpet and violin.
He attended the University of Mich¬
igan for two years before he ran
away to join the circus. He was ac¬
cepted to and graduated from the
Ringling Bros, and Bamum & Bailey
Clown College of Venice, Florida; and
toured for two years as the featured
clown of the Circus Bartok, a Euro¬
pean-style one-ring tent circus. While
on the road, he added concertina and
banjo to his Musical Clown reper-
In 1972 he returned to Detroit to
write and co-star in WXYZ (ABC)
television's 'Super Circus' show. Dis¬
illusioned with the inhibiting atmos¬
phere of local television, though, he
left the network to do something total¬
ly unique. He became Buffo.
Buten has composed dozens of
songs, many especially for BUFFO; he
plays trumpet, violin, cello, drums,
guitar, concertina, banjo and harmon¬
ica. He has published thirty articles
on a variety of subjects, has written
four novels (as yet unpublished),
speaks Chinese (Peking Mandarin),
Polish and Spanish, has taught for
a year and a half in the Wayne Stae
University Theatre Dept. and twice
toured Japan as Buffo. He is current¬
ly on the staff of the Children's Ortho¬
genic Center of Detroit as psycho¬
therapist specializing in work with
Autistic Children.
Robert Fischer is Buffo's full time
partner/accompanist and is accom¬
plished on piano, guitar and saxa-
phone and often supplies the music
for Buffo's lyrics.
The performance is sponsored by
the CU Program Committee.
Coehlo to speak here
Congressman Tony Coelho i_
the 15th Congressional District
will speak on campus this Friday,
March 9, in a program sponsored by
the CSUF Agricultural Business
Club.
His talk will be presented at 10:30
am. in room 101 of the Agriculture
Building, and is open to the public.
Coelho is expected to discuss ag¬
ricultural and other issues as they
relate to federal legislation A ques¬
tion and answer session will be in¬
cluded in the program.
The Daily CoHegun
CSUF's wine cellar
A library of bottles, not books
Red Cross offers courses
There is a little known library on
campus not at all like the library most
students are accustomed to. It main¬
tains a temperature of 60 degrees and
presently contains 200-300 bottles of
carefully bottled wine
CSUF's wine library is just one of
the features of the enology or wine-
nuking department, located on the far
north side of the campus.
It is another little known fact that
CSUF has a winemaking program with¬
in the department of Agricultural
Industry and Education. And it is even
a lesser known fact that CSUF is one of
only two universities in the country that
offer full-fledged winemaking pro¬
grams, sharing this distinction with
the University of California at Davis.
Crowing at a rate of 12 percent a
year, winemaking is the fastest grow¬
ing industry within the food industry.
Although few people know about
CSUF's well kept secret, the depart¬
ment is well established and respected
within the wine industry, according to
Bruce Zoecklein, lecturer in the Viticul¬
ture department
The enology program was first start¬
ed in 1950 by Joe Heitz who now runs
Heltz Cellars in Napa Valley. Expanded
in 1969, K has since grown to what it
is today, a scaled down model of an
actual winery with a sterile bottling
room, a cold room, a tasting room with
booths, a wine library, and other
machinery, some of which has been
donated by wineries The department
is particularly proud of a centrifical
juice separator worth $21,000 on loan
from the Westfalia Company.
A lot goes into making wine, as
enology students find out In fact,
according to Zoecklein, making wine is
a 'complicated science."
While at CSUF, students contract a
plot of land where they concentrate on
the production of grapes Different
varieties of grapes are brought in to
make wine, but many of the grapes
used are grown in the campus vine¬
yards Muscat, table Thompson,
Ribier, Calmeria, and Palomino are
some of the varieties grown right on
campus Although winemaking stu¬
dents are not required to make a
specific amount of wine as part of their
major, most do make at least 10 gallons
of wine
The department itself has the capa¬
city to make some 5,000 gallons of wine
per year. Some of the wine made is
stored in their library and periodically
See Pate 7
certificate in the program enrolled in
as the instructor course. A material
and operating fee of $15 will be
For more information and to reg-
Cross/Fresno-Madera counties chap¬
ter/1841 Fulton Street/Fresno, or
call 486-0701
BLACK,ECEJ^,ANP*iJirJf!
THE 22nd ANNUAL FRESNO AUTORAMA
WHAT ABOUT A CAREER
AS AN ARMY ORKBt?
Life as an Army officer is full and satisfying.
"Youll-meet and get to know people of high caSber,
and with similar interests.
You will have free medical care and other service
benefits. With the benefits you receive as an Army
officer, your salary goes a long way.
You can take that first step now toward a rewarding
future by Creating to take the challenge of OCS!
Cal Army Opportunities 264-5318
Courses are scheduled for six days
Monday through Saturday, and the
only prerequisite is a current bask
f Congratulations on your Inrtiatlo*
Delta Gamma Fail 78
"• l-fKATHY NANCY SHAW KfcLLIE
fKAREN SHANNON NANCY
tOIANA MICHELLE SUSANNE
jLORI JILL KATHY SUSAN
MARCH Bth, 9th, loth * 11th
FRESNO FAIRGROUNDS (2 big ot
'OVER $2,000,000 DISPLAY OF THE WORLD'S MOST BEAUTIFUL CARS*
• Dean Martin '»ftfS,*«»»iiti *slacklsawkcoii|», Iwr^
• The world's wildest pick up, 'The Mag* Dragon' from Kentucky
• MM West Clur-4>»on, the M0,«00 * King sO*-** hw Wt* |