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llPap&cefl Dec. 2, 1983 Court sets hearing date for Watson case J '■"" 1 Emtl(Birft5fflmimCsSm^ e-Maria 4e ta F. Alcona as court secretary. Hamentary advisor; and Ron Gaul, Although only four members of the assistant to AS President Andrea court were present — Tony Brigantino, Hedgley. .Olivia Lucio, Armstrong and Alcorta Following his election as chief justice, cially forjhe first tune this semester, _ » quorum was established. Thefifth Armstrongsaidthepurposeofthecourt The Student Court, which rr elected officials, established procedures memberof the . and set a hearing for its first case. iongeT registered The court, which had failed to estab- fore cannot serve as a justice, lish a quorum of five justices at its pre- Also present at the meeting were Tom vious meeting attempts, elected Bruce Boyle, assistant dean of student affairs; Armstrong as chief justice and Irma Ron Avedisian, the court-appointed par- America Teach-in, which he says was propaganda. After considering the discussion, the j ustices decided to postpone the bearing until the first week in February. Cop?1 FANTASTIC t. Tun Thomas, is no ^interpretation of the AS Constitution. Armstrong originally suggested that CSUF, and there- He proposed several procedural guide- trle hearing be set for sometime within lines. the first two weeks of February, but The guidelines, all of which were Boyle and Brigantmo proposed hearing approved unanimously, included: the case before the end of the fall — Any student, member of the faculty jemester. or administrative officer at CSUF may submit a case to the court. — The court will return a decision on each case it hears within seven days of the hearing. — The justices may not discuss any case prior to the issuance of a decision. The first case heard by the court —:" $1 SALE ON A SPECIAL CROUP OF ATHLETIC FEATURING SUCH BRANDS AS: ADIDAS, NIKE, BROOKS, NEW BALANCE, TIGER & MORE HERE'S HOW IT WORKS:* BUY TWO PAIR. FOR THE MOST EXPENSIVE PAIR, YOU PAY • CURRENT PRICE ON 1983 MODELS • 1982 PRICE ON 1982 MODELS • IF PERFECT PRICE ON BLEMISHED SHOES THE SECOND PAIR IS ONLY $1 TENNIS • RUNNING • CASUAL WEAR MEN'S, WOMEN'S AND CHILDREN'S SIZES ES QOOO THROUGH 12 CoP <&& ***» or** The justices decided to postpone the hearing after Armstrong told the court that Watson had said a postponement was acceptable to him. Only three of the justices will be returning next semester to hear the case, because Brigantino will graduate this be Thomas T. Watson vs. Associated semester. Although the court can oper- Students Senate. Watson, an AS sena-' ate with a minimum of three justices, tor, has accused the Senate of violating Armstrong said he hopes the AS Senate by funding the Central will act promptly to fill the vt I In brief Winter Session Set Preregistration will be conducted Dec. 5-16. or students may enroll on A winter session that will include 42 Tuesday, Dec. 27 by picking up registra- classes will be offered by the Division of tion materials in class. Tuition is $54 for Extended Education Dec. 27 through one unit. Jan. 13. For registration information or a Courses will be available in a number complete schedule of courses, contact of fields including business, anthropol- the Division of Extended Education at ogy, basic English, communicative dis- 294-2524. food science, geography, speech, and Publication to CeaSe women's studies. The classes are being offered to the The Daily Collegian's last publica- general public as well as enrolled stu- tion day this semester is Wednesday, dents and may be taken for credit/no The Collegian will begin publishing in credit, audit, or for units toward grad- the spring during the week of Jan. 23. fCU FRIDAY] MOVIE DEC. 2 "It'll lift you up where you belong: GENTtEBAAN R.™ m 3:30 pm, JWTheatre 7:00,9:25,11:50 pm CU Lounge TIX: $1, CSUF Stu.; $2 Gen. Adm. JLWC.2.1MS CSUF dancer returns in teaching role There is a pile of shoes in a corner of Jorge Ladesma's office that is indicative of his profession. Dance shoes, soft ballet slippers and a scuffed pair of loafers he rumbled among a pile of stained socks. A pair of pink toe shoes sit on his desk. "Most male dancers don't need to learn point," Ladesma, a guest teacher for the CSUF dance department, said. "I use them to strengthen my ankles." Ladesma is a 1973 graduate who,, after completing a master's degree program in dance performance at UCLA, taught for one semester at the University of South Florida before continuing on to New York to launch his career as a professional dancer. "That first year I cleaned a lot of toilets, painted apartments and I even did a strip show to survive," Ladesma said. "Martha Graham, the mother of modern dance, once said "How many leaps did Nijinski execute before he startled the world?' I used to say 'How many toilets will I have to clean before I get a dance job?'" By Ladesma's second year in New York City he was supporting himself through what he earned as a dancer. "Although I've never been a famous dancer, it's a real feather in my cap that I can support myself by dancing," Ladesma said. "At any point there are about 500 employed dancers in New York City but there are thousands of "In the acting profession about 87 percent of the actors are unemployed. I think dancing is comparable or worse because there are more acting positions. The competition is fierce." Ladesma, a 34 year old who looks younger than his years, worked with a "post modern" dance company in New York City called HARRY, as well as with smaller regional ballet companies, in operas and, occasionally, in fashion shows as a backup dancer. "My emphasis is experimental dance," Ladesma said. "I'm leaving the dancing profession though. I'm trying to start again as a teacher or choreographer. I'm 34 years old and I have to compete with I9 year olds. That's why I'm changing ■Ma-MMOTMalaWOaq jSWELVSOirS! iHOIJDATBESTJ TO YOU! 4p.m. to ftp. an. Sapper Special ! S for 1 SWENSOflTS ! I1AMBTRGEKS i 1/3 pound fresh ground beef hand* ! patted in Swenson'a own kitchen. ! | Buy one get one FREE! Offer good \ ■ 4-ap.m. M—F 12/31/83 J ! 1WMEUU-MIOTSWNVAE | ! New sundae featuring Thin Mint ■ ! Ice Cream, hot fudge.(everf a candy S [ cane) and with every purchase \ ■ receive a FREE Swenson'a 1984 \ i Ice Cream Lover's, Calender (while ] ! they last.) | AJTOMOllEJrEWlTEMS \ SWEWSOVS | ; 404E.SHAW { a Fair ! Jorge Ladesma prepares for the upcoming "Time, Space and Energy, Ladesma is currently teaching ballet A and B, Jazz A and B and Modern Dance C. He also is presenting the third movement to a dance he choreographed in a CSUF dance performance Sunday and Monday. The third movement comes from a performance Ladesma created called "Running at the Moon." the piece is broken into three movements entitled "Travelers," "Orbit l"and "Orbit 2." "1 followed the minimalist form," Lades ma said, "which is stripping move- ment of all embellishment and getting to the movement. In this performanie all I do is spin for 20 minutes — that's all. "The piece is a philisophical statement. It means that it's like running towards the moon but never getting there. I'm going nowhere but I have to keep going. v "We deceive ourselves by saying we're going. It's like that star you're chasing' or moon that you're following — you're ATTENTION BSN CLASS OF 1982 If you have an overall "B" average you may qualify for early commission as an Air Force nurse. There's no need to wait for your State Board results. Ask for details on our special internship program. CONTACT: RON FRY 208 W. Main St. VteaUa.CA 93277 (209) 732-0716 /7605 CALL COLLECT ^v really following yourself, revolving times," he continued. "It's a form of aroundyourself.tryingtofindyourself." expressing what's happening in Fresno Ladesma pointed out the differences right now. Dancers here are more serious in emphasis in the CSUF dance depart- and more conventional." ment since he was last here lOyearsago. Time. Space and Energy is the title of "Modem dance was a big thing when the dance performance to be presented I was here and now everybody seems to by students and faculty members of the be more conventional," he said. "Ballet theater and dance department. Perfor- is very popular now. Jazz is also big — "'manets will be Sunday at 2:15 and 8:15 when I was here jazz was offered every p.m. and Monday at 8:15 p.m. in the other semester. Arena Theater. Admission is $2 for stu- "Dance parallels the mood of the dents and $3 general. pW*f«MMM*M*M*"MMM*MW*M*M*MM*M***M1*M»l*MI1 THE ^ ADLER SATELLITE II Electronic Typewriter A Practical Christmas Gift Our low price $415.00 OmER QOOO WITH AD. OWUgfiMl ,.LoffeV,0*il I1*"0"**! 3 For awry SateMI. II | 1 YsURWAflrUI<r^(Rwg. 3 with warranty) , At First end Shield* near Gemco OPEN 8-6 Weekdays 9-S Saturdays.
Object Description
Title | 1983_12 The Daily Collegian December 1983 Reloaded |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of CSUF, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1983 |
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 CSUF. |
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 | Pg. 4-5 |
Full-Text-Search |
llPap&cefl
Dec. 2, 1983
Court sets hearing date for Watson case
J '■"" 1 Emtl(Birft5fflmimCsSm^
e-Maria 4e ta F.
Alcona as court secretary. Hamentary advisor; and Ron Gaul,
Although only four members of the assistant to AS President Andrea
court were present — Tony Brigantino, Hedgley.
.Olivia Lucio, Armstrong and Alcorta Following his election as chief justice,
cially forjhe first tune this semester, _ » quorum was established. Thefifth Armstrongsaidthepurposeofthecourt
The Student Court, which rr
elected officials, established procedures memberof the .
and set a hearing for its first case. iongeT registered
The court, which had failed to estab- fore cannot serve as a justice,
lish a quorum of five justices at its pre- Also present at the meeting were Tom
vious meeting attempts, elected Bruce Boyle, assistant dean of student affairs;
Armstrong as chief justice and Irma Ron Avedisian, the court-appointed par-
America Teach-in, which he says was
propaganda.
After considering the discussion, the
j ustices decided to postpone the bearing
until the first week in February.
Cop?1
FANTASTIC
t. Tun Thomas, is no ^interpretation of the AS Constitution. Armstrong originally suggested that
CSUF, and there- He proposed several procedural guide- trle hearing be set for sometime within
lines. the first two weeks of February, but
The guidelines, all of which were Boyle and Brigantmo proposed hearing
approved unanimously, included: the case before the end of the fall
— Any student, member of the faculty jemester.
or administrative officer at CSUF may
submit a case to the court.
— The court will return a decision on
each case it hears within seven days of
the hearing.
— The justices may not discuss any case
prior to the issuance of a decision.
The first case heard by the court —:"
$1
SALE
ON A SPECIAL CROUP OF
ATHLETIC
FEATURING SUCH BRANDS AS:
ADIDAS, NIKE, BROOKS,
NEW BALANCE, TIGER & MORE
HERE'S HOW IT WORKS:*
BUY TWO PAIR. FOR THE MOST EXPENSIVE PAIR,
YOU PAY
• CURRENT PRICE ON 1983 MODELS
• 1982 PRICE ON 1982 MODELS
• IF PERFECT PRICE ON BLEMISHED SHOES
THE SECOND PAIR IS ONLY
$1
TENNIS • RUNNING • CASUAL WEAR
MEN'S, WOMEN'S AND CHILDREN'S SIZES
ES QOOO THROUGH 12
CoP
<&&
***»
or**
The justices decided to postpone the
hearing after Armstrong told the court
that Watson had said a postponement
was acceptable to him.
Only three of the justices will be
returning next semester to hear the case,
because Brigantino will graduate this
be Thomas T. Watson vs. Associated semester. Although the court can oper-
Students Senate. Watson, an AS sena-' ate with a minimum of three justices,
tor, has accused the Senate of violating Armstrong said he hopes the AS Senate
by funding the Central will act promptly to fill the vt
I In brief
Winter Session Set Preregistration will be conducted
Dec. 5-16. or students may enroll on
A winter session that will include 42 Tuesday, Dec. 27 by picking up registra-
classes will be offered by the Division of tion materials in class. Tuition is $54 for
Extended Education Dec. 27 through one unit.
Jan. 13. For registration information or a
Courses will be available in a number complete schedule of courses, contact
of fields including business, anthropol- the Division of Extended Education at
ogy, basic English, communicative dis- 294-2524.
food science, geography, speech, and Publication to CeaSe
women's studies.
The classes are being offered to the The Daily Collegian's last publica-
general public as well as enrolled stu- tion day this semester is Wednesday,
dents and may be taken for credit/no The Collegian will begin publishing in
credit, audit, or for units toward grad- the spring during the week of Jan. 23.
fCU FRIDAY]
MOVIE DEC. 2
"It'll lift you up where you belong:
GENTtEBAAN
R.™
m
3:30 pm, JWTheatre
7:00,9:25,11:50 pm CU Lounge
TIX: $1, CSUF Stu.; $2 Gen. Adm.
JLWC.2.1MS
CSUF dancer returns in teaching role
There is a pile of shoes in a corner of
Jorge Ladesma's office that is indicative
of his profession. Dance shoes, soft
ballet slippers and a scuffed pair of loafers he rumbled among a pile of stained
socks. A pair of pink toe shoes sit on his
desk.
"Most male dancers don't need to
learn point," Ladesma, a guest teacher
for the CSUF dance department, said.
"I use them to strengthen my ankles."
Ladesma is a 1973 graduate who,,
after completing a master's degree program in dance performance at UCLA,
taught for one semester at the University of South Florida before continuing
on to New York to launch his career as a
professional dancer.
"That first year I cleaned a lot of
toilets, painted apartments and I even
did a strip show to survive," Ladesma
said. "Martha Graham, the mother of
modern dance, once said "How many
leaps did Nijinski execute before he
startled the world?' I used to say 'How
many toilets will I have to clean before I
get a dance job?'"
By Ladesma's second year in New
York City he was supporting himself
through what he earned as a dancer.
"Although I've never been a famous
dancer, it's a real feather in my cap that
I can support myself by dancing,"
Ladesma said. "At any point there are
about 500 employed dancers in New
York City but there are thousands of
"In the acting profession about 87
percent of the actors are unemployed. I
think dancing is comparable or worse
because there are more acting positions.
The competition is fierce."
Ladesma, a 34 year old who looks
younger than his years, worked with a
"post modern" dance company in New
York City called HARRY, as well as
with smaller regional ballet companies,
in operas and, occasionally, in fashion
shows as a backup dancer.
"My emphasis is experimental dance,"
Ladesma said. "I'm leaving the dancing
profession though. I'm trying to start
again as a teacher or choreographer. I'm
34 years old and I have to compete with
I9 year olds. That's why I'm changing
■Ma-MMOTMalaWOaq
jSWELVSOirS!
iHOIJDATBESTJ
TO YOU!
4p.m. to ftp. an.
Sapper Special
! S for 1 SWENSOflTS !
I1AMBTRGEKS
i 1/3 pound fresh ground beef hand*
! patted in Swenson'a own kitchen. !
| Buy one get one FREE! Offer good \
■ 4-ap.m. M—F 12/31/83 J
! 1WMEUU-MIOTSWNVAE |
! New sundae featuring Thin Mint ■
! Ice Cream, hot fudge.(everf a candy S
[ cane) and with every purchase \
■ receive a FREE Swenson'a 1984 \
i Ice Cream Lover's, Calender (while ]
! they last.)
| AJTOMOllEJrEWlTEMS \
SWEWSOVS |
; 404E.SHAW {
a Fair !
Jorge Ladesma prepares for the upcoming "Time, Space and Energy,
Ladesma is currently teaching ballet
A and B, Jazz A and B and Modern
Dance C. He also is presenting the third
movement to a dance he choreographed
in a CSUF dance performance Sunday
and Monday.
The third movement comes from a
performance Ladesma created called
"Running at the Moon." the piece is
broken into three movements entitled
"Travelers," "Orbit l"and "Orbit 2."
"1 followed the minimalist form,"
Lades ma said, "which is stripping move-
ment of all embellishment and getting to
the movement. In this performanie all I
do is spin for 20 minutes — that's all.
"The piece is a philisophical statement. It means that it's like running
towards the moon but never getting
there. I'm going nowhere but I have to
keep going. v
"We deceive ourselves by saying we're
going. It's like that star you're chasing'
or moon that you're following — you're
ATTENTION
BSN
CLASS OF
1982
If you have an overall "B" average you
may qualify for early
commission as an
Air Force nurse.
There's no need to
wait for your State
Board results. Ask
for details on our
special internship
program.
CONTACT:
RON FRY
208 W. Main St.
VteaUa.CA 93277
(209) 732-0716
/7605
CALL COLLECT
^v
really following yourself, revolving times," he continued. "It's a form of
aroundyourself.tryingtofindyourself." expressing what's happening in Fresno
Ladesma pointed out the differences right now. Dancers here are more serious
in emphasis in the CSUF dance depart- and more conventional."
ment since he was last here lOyearsago. Time. Space and Energy is the title of
"Modem dance was a big thing when the dance performance to be presented
I was here and now everybody seems to by students and faculty members of the
be more conventional," he said. "Ballet theater and dance department. Perfor-
is very popular now. Jazz is also big — "'manets will be Sunday at 2:15 and 8:15
when I was here jazz was offered every p.m. and Monday at 8:15 p.m. in the
other semester. Arena Theater. Admission is $2 for stu-
"Dance parallels the mood of the dents and $3 general.
pW*f«MMM*M*M*"MMM*MW*M*M*MM*M***M1*M»l*MI1
THE ^
ADLER SATELLITE II
Electronic Typewriter
A Practical Christmas Gift
Our low price
$415.00
OmER QOOO WITH AD.
OWUgfiMl
,.LoffeV,0*il I1*"0"**!
3
For awry SateMI. II |
1 YsURWAflrUI |