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.Tuesday, Feb. 3.1987. Page 8 N@w§ PROF started my classes, I had time left over, so I asked around in the chemistry department, and Dr. Russell set me up with Dr. Kauffman. "I want to be a pioneering scientist, work through a problem, and find things that have never been done before," Adams said. Kauffman said that while it is very common in graduate work for students to be involved in these types of experiments and publish articles based on them, it is unusual for undergraduates. He said he finds most of his students through volunteers for lecture demonstrations of his Chemistry 1 courses. Kauffman is on sabbatical this semester, but is still busy with three books currently in press. Twyo of the books are biographies of chemists, one of which was co-authored with two Soviet scientists. The third is the English translation of a Russian biography with a professor from the University of Wisconsin at Sheboygan. He is also the editor of four journals and is writing several papers for publication. This summer, Kauffman will lecture at the 75th Anniversary Celebration of the South African Chemical Institute, and also will talk to high school science teachers at Rhodes' University in South Africa. In August, he will also be going to China to organize a symposium oh educational and historical aspects of chemistry at the 25th International Conference on coordination chemistry. Speakers at the symposium will come from all areas of the world. Since Kauffman's first article was published in (1955 on the history of chemistry, he has in the last 32 years published 600 articles and 14 books, many of which have been translated in foreign languages such as Russian, German, Spanish, and Italian. Kauffman began teaching at CSUF in September 1956 and has always been involved with students outside the classroom. He also believes that it is important for him to teach the beginning chemistry classes. "That's where the challenge is. Students need an introduction to science and the scientific method since they live in a technological society," Kauffman said. "It is great to be able to get a student hooked on chemistry." When Kauffman was asked how he found time to do everything, he said he was often asked that question and the answer was very simple. "You find the time to do what you want, and cut corners when you can," he said. "It is called the 'Matthew Effect' and most things are done by the minority of people and it's the same in eyery field. "The 'Matthew Effect' started in, the sociology of science, from the "Bible's book of Matthew, and it states to the effect that 'so them that have it shall be given, and they shall have abundance,' Kauffman said. "And for him that have not, even that which he has will be taken away." In effect, he said, it means "them that docs gets and them that don't don't. "So I never run out of ideas, and one thing leads to another." ROUT Continued from page 7 The rampage was not over yet. Martell hit twice more from the outside, and reserve forward Till Daniels fired in a baseline jumper to stuff the fattening pillow to 72-48. Finally, Fullerton's Wendy Anae scored and the dust cleared. Fresno State's streak of 15 consecutive points had come to end. The Bulldogs went on and increased the lead to 25 points, then finally rambled into the winners' circle, victors by 22 Hitting on 10 of 14 field goal attempts and five of eight free throws, Roberts finished with For The Record... Errors in The Daily Collegian can be brought to our attention by calling 29* ■ 2486 or writing to us at Ike Keats Building, California Slate University, Fresno, Fresno. CA 93740. 25 points in addition to nine rebounds. Martell scored 20 points for the game and 12 in the final ten minutes. She also dished out seven assists, and made four steals; all in the second half. McGee, nailing six of seven shots from the field and all three'of her free throw attempts. ended up"Vtith 15, while Heinrichs scored 12 points, blocked four shots and recorded an uncharacteristically high total of six assists. "We were trying to post Laurie up high," said Spencer, "She was to shoot if she had a good shot at the free throw line, but she was (also) supposed to look for the open girl on the lane or on the wing. She did a good job of exercising good judgment." Benson and Hunt each scored 10 points, being the only Fullerton State players to reach double figures. Jones pulled down five rebounds and dished out five assists to lead the Titans. Collectively, the Titans (7-11, 4-5) made just 25 of 62 shots from the field for a .403 percentage. The Bulldogs continue their five-game homestandThusday night against the Antcatcrs of UC-lrvine. Tip-off time is 7:30-in the South Gym. MERILLY'S SINGING TELEGRAMS FUN, ENTERTAINMENT FOR ALL OCCASIONS. SPECIAL VALENTINE TELEGRAMS. 224-9543 GOD AND MIKE EAGLES PRESIDENT U.S.A. *88 REPUBLICAN LEADER GOD BLESS ALL NATIONS MALE ROOMMATE WANTED NEAR CAMPUS. SHARE 1/2 EXPENSES. CALL 226-3752 '67 VW BAJA BUG LOOKS AND RUNS GREAT. 183CC ENGINE. $1,900. 299-4635 RENT-A-WIFE HOUSECLEANTNG. ERRANDS FREE ESTIMATES REASONABLY PRICED 292-3722 VW FOR SALE KARM ANN GHIA 1968 CALL GARY AT: 292-1819 BAND MEMBERS WANTED INTERMEDIATE MUSICIANS NEEDED FOR LEISURE JAM SESSIONS. CALL ANITA AT 435-6128 MUST SELL!! 12-SPEED BIKE. ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER, MATTRESS SET AND MORE! 229-2076 ANYTIME 20 HRS/WEEK FOR GRAPHICS & PR. JOBS IN COLLEGE UNION STUDENT PROGRAMMING. BRING RESUME TO ROOM 306 IN THE COLLEGE UNION WANTED!! TEACHER CANDIDATES!! TO ATTEND TULARE-KINGS COUNTY TEACHER RECRUITING FAIR FEB. 22 & 23. 1987 9:00 A.M. TO 4:00 P.M. VISALIA CONVENTJON CENTER 303 E. ACEQUIA VISALIA, CALIFORNIA FOR MORE INFO. CALL GLEN LEWIS (209) 733-6306 GREAT DEAL! ' CONTRACT FOR ONE BEDROOM IN TWO BEDROOM APARTMENT FOR SALE. BULLDOG LANE VILLAGE TAKE OVER IMMEDIATELY. CALL 228-1639 FEMALE ROOMMATE NON-SMOKER, TO SHARE A 3 BEDROOM HOME S 240.00 PLUS 275-5347 (DAY) OR 276-26% (EVENING) ACADEMIC Continued from page 1 choices to the students if the proposed plan is to be implemented as presented, Haak said. The members present at the meeting later approved the minor and declared the issue would be brought forward in the Feb. 23 Academic Senate meeting . Dr. " John Gardner, a visiting professor from the University of South Carolina, spoke to the members of the committee about the "Freshman Year Experience." He discussed his experiences of implementing programs for freshman students. Additional items on the committee's agenda included a summary of faculty affbmative action committeee hearings. . Shareen Abramson, temporary chair far facudy affirmative action commit¬ tee, proposed that the Academic Senate support the inclusion of an anti¬ discrimination clause in the contract and voting rights for the affirmative- action designee. Total recommend¬ ations for the day equaled 19. Vice Pres¬ ident of Academic Affairs Dr. Judith Kuipers ruled most of the recom¬ mendations invalid. Most of the chang¬ es requested by the committee already existed, according to Kuipers. RUSH Continued from page 1 twtfce rushecs have, and answm 0115 qui Roberge said. "The counselors will be picked from each of the sororities," she said, "and during Rush Week they will disassociate themselves from their sororities." According to Roberge, they will not be allowed to visit their houses or associate with other sorority members. Counselors will work on the honor system and Roberge docs not feel there will be any problems with personal biases getting in the way. "I know that I can keep my personal feelings from getting in the way of giving the best advice," she said. The program is done on other campuses and works well,, Roberge said. It has the approval of all the houses and will be administered by Panhellinic Rush Coordinator Terry Gallagher. The Daily Collegian could have the right job for you. A graphics editor is needed. Apply now! >m>*7rrTT,/»»m}>»}s/?. aWaaaaaaaaWaWamat ■A KENNELS GOT IT ALL!! Free Check Cashing Free Gift Wrap , UPS Shipping One-Day Photo Processing Photo Copies VCR & Movie Rentals Clothing, Gifts, Supplies Much Much More!! Kennel Bookstore MON—THURS 7:45am-7:15pm FRI 7:45am-5:00pm SAT 10:00am-8:00pm KENNEL BOOKSTORE
Object Description
Title | 1987_02 The Daily Collegian February 1987 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1987 |
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 | February 3, 1987 Pg. 8 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1987 |
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 | .Tuesday, Feb. 3.1987. Page 8 N@w§ PROF started my classes, I had time left over, so I asked around in the chemistry department, and Dr. Russell set me up with Dr. Kauffman. "I want to be a pioneering scientist, work through a problem, and find things that have never been done before," Adams said. Kauffman said that while it is very common in graduate work for students to be involved in these types of experiments and publish articles based on them, it is unusual for undergraduates. He said he finds most of his students through volunteers for lecture demonstrations of his Chemistry 1 courses. Kauffman is on sabbatical this semester, but is still busy with three books currently in press. Twyo of the books are biographies of chemists, one of which was co-authored with two Soviet scientists. The third is the English translation of a Russian biography with a professor from the University of Wisconsin at Sheboygan. He is also the editor of four journals and is writing several papers for publication. This summer, Kauffman will lecture at the 75th Anniversary Celebration of the South African Chemical Institute, and also will talk to high school science teachers at Rhodes' University in South Africa. In August, he will also be going to China to organize a symposium oh educational and historical aspects of chemistry at the 25th International Conference on coordination chemistry. Speakers at the symposium will come from all areas of the world. Since Kauffman's first article was published in (1955 on the history of chemistry, he has in the last 32 years published 600 articles and 14 books, many of which have been translated in foreign languages such as Russian, German, Spanish, and Italian. Kauffman began teaching at CSUF in September 1956 and has always been involved with students outside the classroom. He also believes that it is important for him to teach the beginning chemistry classes. "That's where the challenge is. Students need an introduction to science and the scientific method since they live in a technological society," Kauffman said. "It is great to be able to get a student hooked on chemistry." When Kauffman was asked how he found time to do everything, he said he was often asked that question and the answer was very simple. "You find the time to do what you want, and cut corners when you can," he said. "It is called the 'Matthew Effect' and most things are done by the minority of people and it's the same in eyery field. "The 'Matthew Effect' started in, the sociology of science, from the "Bible's book of Matthew, and it states to the effect that 'so them that have it shall be given, and they shall have abundance,' Kauffman said. "And for him that have not, even that which he has will be taken away." In effect, he said, it means "them that docs gets and them that don't don't. "So I never run out of ideas, and one thing leads to another." ROUT Continued from page 7 The rampage was not over yet. Martell hit twice more from the outside, and reserve forward Till Daniels fired in a baseline jumper to stuff the fattening pillow to 72-48. Finally, Fullerton's Wendy Anae scored and the dust cleared. Fresno State's streak of 15 consecutive points had come to end. The Bulldogs went on and increased the lead to 25 points, then finally rambled into the winners' circle, victors by 22 Hitting on 10 of 14 field goal attempts and five of eight free throws, Roberts finished with For The Record... Errors in The Daily Collegian can be brought to our attention by calling 29* ■ 2486 or writing to us at Ike Keats Building, California Slate University, Fresno, Fresno. CA 93740. 25 points in addition to nine rebounds. Martell scored 20 points for the game and 12 in the final ten minutes. She also dished out seven assists, and made four steals; all in the second half. McGee, nailing six of seven shots from the field and all three'of her free throw attempts. ended up"Vtith 15, while Heinrichs scored 12 points, blocked four shots and recorded an uncharacteristically high total of six assists. "We were trying to post Laurie up high," said Spencer, "She was to shoot if she had a good shot at the free throw line, but she was (also) supposed to look for the open girl on the lane or on the wing. She did a good job of exercising good judgment." Benson and Hunt each scored 10 points, being the only Fullerton State players to reach double figures. Jones pulled down five rebounds and dished out five assists to lead the Titans. Collectively, the Titans (7-11, 4-5) made just 25 of 62 shots from the field for a .403 percentage. The Bulldogs continue their five-game homestandThusday night against the Antcatcrs of UC-lrvine. Tip-off time is 7:30-in the South Gym. MERILLY'S SINGING TELEGRAMS FUN, ENTERTAINMENT FOR ALL OCCASIONS. SPECIAL VALENTINE TELEGRAMS. 224-9543 GOD AND MIKE EAGLES PRESIDENT U.S.A. *88 REPUBLICAN LEADER GOD BLESS ALL NATIONS MALE ROOMMATE WANTED NEAR CAMPUS. SHARE 1/2 EXPENSES. CALL 226-3752 '67 VW BAJA BUG LOOKS AND RUNS GREAT. 183CC ENGINE. $1,900. 299-4635 RENT-A-WIFE HOUSECLEANTNG. ERRANDS FREE ESTIMATES REASONABLY PRICED 292-3722 VW FOR SALE KARM ANN GHIA 1968 CALL GARY AT: 292-1819 BAND MEMBERS WANTED INTERMEDIATE MUSICIANS NEEDED FOR LEISURE JAM SESSIONS. CALL ANITA AT 435-6128 MUST SELL!! 12-SPEED BIKE. ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER, MATTRESS SET AND MORE! 229-2076 ANYTIME 20 HRS/WEEK FOR GRAPHICS & PR. JOBS IN COLLEGE UNION STUDENT PROGRAMMING. BRING RESUME TO ROOM 306 IN THE COLLEGE UNION WANTED!! TEACHER CANDIDATES!! TO ATTEND TULARE-KINGS COUNTY TEACHER RECRUITING FAIR FEB. 22 & 23. 1987 9:00 A.M. TO 4:00 P.M. VISALIA CONVENTJON CENTER 303 E. ACEQUIA VISALIA, CALIFORNIA FOR MORE INFO. CALL GLEN LEWIS (209) 733-6306 GREAT DEAL! ' CONTRACT FOR ONE BEDROOM IN TWO BEDROOM APARTMENT FOR SALE. BULLDOG LANE VILLAGE TAKE OVER IMMEDIATELY. CALL 228-1639 FEMALE ROOMMATE NON-SMOKER, TO SHARE A 3 BEDROOM HOME S 240.00 PLUS 275-5347 (DAY) OR 276-26% (EVENING) ACADEMIC Continued from page 1 choices to the students if the proposed plan is to be implemented as presented, Haak said. The members present at the meeting later approved the minor and declared the issue would be brought forward in the Feb. 23 Academic Senate meeting . Dr. " John Gardner, a visiting professor from the University of South Carolina, spoke to the members of the committee about the "Freshman Year Experience." He discussed his experiences of implementing programs for freshman students. Additional items on the committee's agenda included a summary of faculty affbmative action committeee hearings. . Shareen Abramson, temporary chair far facudy affirmative action commit¬ tee, proposed that the Academic Senate support the inclusion of an anti¬ discrimination clause in the contract and voting rights for the affirmative- action designee. Total recommend¬ ations for the day equaled 19. Vice Pres¬ ident of Academic Affairs Dr. Judith Kuipers ruled most of the recom¬ mendations invalid. Most of the chang¬ es requested by the committee already existed, according to Kuipers. RUSH Continued from page 1 twtfce rushecs have, and answm 0115 qui Roberge said. "The counselors will be picked from each of the sororities," she said, "and during Rush Week they will disassociate themselves from their sororities." According to Roberge, they will not be allowed to visit their houses or associate with other sorority members. Counselors will work on the honor system and Roberge docs not feel there will be any problems with personal biases getting in the way. "I know that I can keep my personal feelings from getting in the way of giving the best advice," she said. The program is done on other campuses and works well,, Roberge said. It has the approval of all the houses and will be administered by Panhellinic Rush Coordinator Terry Gallagher. The Daily Collegian could have the right job for you. A graphics editor is needed. Apply now! >m>*7rrTT,/»»m}>»}s/?. aWaaaaaaaaWaWamat ■A KENNELS GOT IT ALL!! Free Check Cashing Free Gift Wrap , UPS Shipping One-Day Photo Processing Photo Copies VCR & Movie Rentals Clothing, Gifts, Supplies Much Much More!! Kennel Bookstore MON—THURS 7:45am-7:15pm FRI 7:45am-5:00pm SAT 10:00am-8:00pm KENNEL BOOKSTORE |