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' 77ieDcBTvCoflegton Itieaday. April 11. 1989 PageB SILVA Continaed from page 1 office by 12 students, 11 of them female. The faculty and administration are also supporting Bedard Peter Klassen, Dean of Social Sci¬ ences, attended the class "to show my support for Dr. Bedard." Susan Arpad, coordinator for women's studies, was also in class Monday. The nature of women's studies classes and the emotions they bring out can lead to inappropriate behavior, said Arpad Kathie Mdlica, one of the students who showed up to lend support to Silva, said class is not a place to be protected. "We're all adults here," said Mollica, "If you don't feel you can handle it, don't stay." Bedard "certainly isn't the only one this has happened to." said Arpad Within the last two years, Arpad said at least seven students have been disciplined for their behavior in women's studies classes. Arpad said that the number could be higher, and that probably dozens of stu¬ dents have been handled more informally. She refused to comment on whether this was the first incident involving Bedard. Silva said he felt that incidents such as this have involved women's studies "10 times before." Jack Weisberg, Silva's lawyer, said the real Issue is freedom of speech. "You don't regulate the content of a classroom," said Weisberg. "Who decides what is offensive?" Precedent in this case would say that the professor has the right to decide, said Arpad. She added that in the past, prob¬ lems with students who have shown "in¬ appropriate behavior" in class have been resolved without this kind of conflict- Some have been given the opportunity tojake the class as an independent study. Silva was given this chance but both lie and his lawyer said they feel the situation was handled poody. "There are several things you do when you have a truly offensive person," said Weisberg. "This could have simply been handled by a meeting prior to class. That is called procedural due process." Both sides agreed that the issue has been blown out of proportion. "We talk in different languages," said Weisberg. "Nobody warned this to go on to the point of absurdity.' said Blue Weisberg said he was "much bumbled by the reaction" of the class, "I'm less arrogant now than I was when I arrived" As far as the administration is con¬ cerned, matters arc still pending. Corcoran said he didn't feel it was appropriate to comment at this time. Silva said some issues are yet to be resolved. 1 think rm owed a public apol¬ ogy by my instructor." Silva also said that his attorney would like all of the students in the class to call him and tell their versions of the incident "If the majority of the students say [Bedard] asked me to stop three times, I wiD drop the class," said Silva. "I'm glad rm back in the class," said Silva, "Maybe now they don't believe I am dangerous." RALLY Dana Jones, a member of the board and affiliated with the SJS ASL "What the ASI did was provide approxi- amately $2,000 to pay for buses for a bunch of students to come to the march," Jones said. Vick was not available for Continued from page 4 Jose State which had allocated $2,000 to its students. To comment on behalf of SJS was Of those who attended from CSUF, a shared belief was present as ASI Vice- President-elect Kathleen Solano said, "We only wished that the ASI would have gotten more involved, this is important for everyone on [CSUF]; there definitely could have been more support from ASI." Sharing her views of the day in general and how the rally would effect CSUF, Cogley said, "the impact will come from the students being exposed to the likes of John Vasconcellos, MAPA president, and Assemblywoman Maxine Waters." MAKING A DIFFERENCE Ed Hunt - Shaping Fresno County Fresno County District Attorney - Heading an office ranked as one of the states largest and most efficient Over a }-\ear period two of his teams recovered more than SI million ea^h in restitution (or victims in our county. ( ' Supervisor of the first Narcotics Task Force established in the state It doubled the number of arrests and convictions, and was the prototype for programs throughout California Member of San loaquin College of Law's first graduating class. An unknown quantity then. S|CL grads are now the largest concentration of attorneys in Fresno from any one law school. trim. You. too, can make a difference. Applications are now being accepted for Fall 1989. Call 225-4953. SAN JOAQUIN COLLEGE OF LAW iCpQtMD. Uv» islully «Kcicditcdb> the Cilifo»nu» Sutc'Cn C L AS S IF IE D A FOR SALE ROOMMATE TYPING MISCELLANEOUS KING SIZE WATERBED Bookcase, headboard w/ mirror $260.00436-1490 ROOMMATE WANTED 3 bedroom house. 1 mile from campus. $ 175.00 + 1/3 utilities. caU Kurt 436-9256 WORD PROCESSING, Resumes. Term Papers Lisa 222-9386 •CASH* I'll pay cash today for compact discs, albums and 45's RECORD EXCHANGE The fun store 2426 N. BLACKSTONE AT CLINTON For Sale: like new Smith-Corona Typewrlter$100.B/W Video camera $50.0Magnavox Color mon ltor$ 125 Panasonic Stereo tape deck$50 E lec broom $25. Call after 6 pm 203-4030 Typing / word processing ADCOMPBuslness and Associated services fThe term paper specialists) 251-7875 Lire-in Free Room in exchange for Ugh t housework. Shaw and Willow. 299-5243 TRADE Compact discs cassettes, albums RECORD EXCHANGE 2426 N. BLACKSTONE . AT C UN TON PERSONAL Female roommate needed Bulldog village 4 bedroom $225/month. Cindy 229-1076 DATA BASE SEARCHING Now Available ADCOMP Business and Associated Service 261-7875 God and Congressman Eagles Rich, All-Americsn Republican Community Leader i Female roommate wanted singl e level spacious Garden Apartment, pool, pets o-k. close to campus. $19O.00<-1/2 utilities Kathy 292-1770 TYPING /COMPUTER LAYOUT Papers. Resumes. Theses MLA. APA. Spell correction CaU Bbel 432-7409 MERRILYS SINGING TELEGRAMS Exotic Entertainment Fun For All Occasions 224-9643 (DANCERSWANTCD) - HELP WANTED Earn up to $200.00 per day. Must sing* be outgoing person. (200) 875-5792 MISCELLANEOUS . Female roommated wanted 2 bedroom* 1 bath MeadowwoodApt. $165+1/2 utilities 292-7829 HEALTH SERVICES STUDENT DENTAL/OPTICAL PLAN. ENROL NOW! Sere your teeth, eyes an 1 money. Cleanings and office visits at no cha ge. For brochure see Student He* 1th Center or caU (200)473-3225 "Telephone marketer* needed to recruit volunteers for the American Cancer Society's annual neighborhood educational/fundraislng campaign. Immediate openings lor 20 evening or weekend hours per week. $4.25 per hour. for seven weeks, will train but should have good telephone voice and like to talk to people. CaU Josette Merced, 2254200 for \ ■ WANTED! Compact Disc. Album Cassette, 45's. Ill pay cashtodayll Record Exchange 2426N.Blackstone st Clinton TYPING . TfPINO 226-39S3 Tutoring conversational Italian available for evening classes. Please 1 - Laser - Perfect term papers, W—aaM mttA WOJ pi" r MaaaWg CaU221-0484 » • PARTYPARTYPARTY Disc Jockeys and Bands RVP Entertainment 222-2229 Term papers.Theses. etc Expert, Fast. Call Frieda 224-8396 -
Object Description
Title | 1989_04 The Daily Collegian April 1989 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1989 |
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 11, 1989, Page 5 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1989 |
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 | ' 77ieDcBTvCoflegton Itieaday. April 11. 1989 PageB SILVA Continaed from page 1 office by 12 students, 11 of them female. The faculty and administration are also supporting Bedard Peter Klassen, Dean of Social Sci¬ ences, attended the class "to show my support for Dr. Bedard." Susan Arpad, coordinator for women's studies, was also in class Monday. The nature of women's studies classes and the emotions they bring out can lead to inappropriate behavior, said Arpad Kathie Mdlica, one of the students who showed up to lend support to Silva, said class is not a place to be protected. "We're all adults here," said Mollica, "If you don't feel you can handle it, don't stay." Bedard "certainly isn't the only one this has happened to." said Arpad Within the last two years, Arpad said at least seven students have been disciplined for their behavior in women's studies classes. Arpad said that the number could be higher, and that probably dozens of stu¬ dents have been handled more informally. She refused to comment on whether this was the first incident involving Bedard. Silva said he felt that incidents such as this have involved women's studies "10 times before." Jack Weisberg, Silva's lawyer, said the real Issue is freedom of speech. "You don't regulate the content of a classroom," said Weisberg. "Who decides what is offensive?" Precedent in this case would say that the professor has the right to decide, said Arpad. She added that in the past, prob¬ lems with students who have shown "in¬ appropriate behavior" in class have been resolved without this kind of conflict- Some have been given the opportunity tojake the class as an independent study. Silva was given this chance but both lie and his lawyer said they feel the situation was handled poody. "There are several things you do when you have a truly offensive person," said Weisberg. "This could have simply been handled by a meeting prior to class. That is called procedural due process." Both sides agreed that the issue has been blown out of proportion. "We talk in different languages," said Weisberg. "Nobody warned this to go on to the point of absurdity.' said Blue Weisberg said he was "much bumbled by the reaction" of the class, "I'm less arrogant now than I was when I arrived" As far as the administration is con¬ cerned, matters arc still pending. Corcoran said he didn't feel it was appropriate to comment at this time. Silva said some issues are yet to be resolved. 1 think rm owed a public apol¬ ogy by my instructor." Silva also said that his attorney would like all of the students in the class to call him and tell their versions of the incident "If the majority of the students say [Bedard] asked me to stop three times, I wiD drop the class," said Silva. "I'm glad rm back in the class," said Silva, "Maybe now they don't believe I am dangerous." RALLY Dana Jones, a member of the board and affiliated with the SJS ASL "What the ASI did was provide approxi- amately $2,000 to pay for buses for a bunch of students to come to the march," Jones said. Vick was not available for Continued from page 4 Jose State which had allocated $2,000 to its students. To comment on behalf of SJS was Of those who attended from CSUF, a shared belief was present as ASI Vice- President-elect Kathleen Solano said, "We only wished that the ASI would have gotten more involved, this is important for everyone on [CSUF]; there definitely could have been more support from ASI." Sharing her views of the day in general and how the rally would effect CSUF, Cogley said, "the impact will come from the students being exposed to the likes of John Vasconcellos, MAPA president, and Assemblywoman Maxine Waters." MAKING A DIFFERENCE Ed Hunt - Shaping Fresno County Fresno County District Attorney - Heading an office ranked as one of the states largest and most efficient Over a }-\ear period two of his teams recovered more than SI million ea^h in restitution (or victims in our county. ( ' Supervisor of the first Narcotics Task Force established in the state It doubled the number of arrests and convictions, and was the prototype for programs throughout California Member of San loaquin College of Law's first graduating class. An unknown quantity then. S|CL grads are now the largest concentration of attorneys in Fresno from any one law school. trim. You. too, can make a difference. Applications are now being accepted for Fall 1989. Call 225-4953. SAN JOAQUIN COLLEGE OF LAW iCpQtMD. Uv» islully «Kcicditcdb> the Cilifo»nu» Sutc'Cn C L AS S IF IE D A FOR SALE ROOMMATE TYPING MISCELLANEOUS KING SIZE WATERBED Bookcase, headboard w/ mirror $260.00436-1490 ROOMMATE WANTED 3 bedroom house. 1 mile from campus. $ 175.00 + 1/3 utilities. caU Kurt 436-9256 WORD PROCESSING, Resumes. Term Papers Lisa 222-9386 •CASH* I'll pay cash today for compact discs, albums and 45's RECORD EXCHANGE The fun store 2426 N. BLACKSTONE AT CLINTON For Sale: like new Smith-Corona Typewrlter$100.B/W Video camera $50.0Magnavox Color mon ltor$ 125 Panasonic Stereo tape deck$50 E lec broom $25. Call after 6 pm 203-4030 Typing / word processing ADCOMPBuslness and Associated services fThe term paper specialists) 251-7875 Lire-in Free Room in exchange for Ugh t housework. Shaw and Willow. 299-5243 TRADE Compact discs cassettes, albums RECORD EXCHANGE 2426 N. BLACKSTONE . AT C UN TON PERSONAL Female roommate needed Bulldog village 4 bedroom $225/month. Cindy 229-1076 DATA BASE SEARCHING Now Available ADCOMP Business and Associated Service 261-7875 God and Congressman Eagles Rich, All-Americsn Republican Community Leader i Female roommate wanted singl e level spacious Garden Apartment, pool, pets o-k. close to campus. $19O.00<-1/2 utilities Kathy 292-1770 TYPING /COMPUTER LAYOUT Papers. Resumes. Theses MLA. APA. Spell correction CaU Bbel 432-7409 MERRILYS SINGING TELEGRAMS Exotic Entertainment Fun For All Occasions 224-9643 (DANCERSWANTCD) - HELP WANTED Earn up to $200.00 per day. Must sing* be outgoing person. (200) 875-5792 MISCELLANEOUS . Female roommated wanted 2 bedroom* 1 bath MeadowwoodApt. $165+1/2 utilities 292-7829 HEALTH SERVICES STUDENT DENTAL/OPTICAL PLAN. ENROL NOW! Sere your teeth, eyes an 1 money. Cleanings and office visits at no cha ge. For brochure see Student He* 1th Center or caU (200)473-3225 "Telephone marketer* needed to recruit volunteers for the American Cancer Society's annual neighborhood educational/fundraislng campaign. Immediate openings lor 20 evening or weekend hours per week. $4.25 per hour. for seven weeks, will train but should have good telephone voice and like to talk to people. CaU Josette Merced, 2254200 for \ ■ WANTED! Compact Disc. Album Cassette, 45's. Ill pay cashtodayll Record Exchange 2426N.Blackstone st Clinton TYPING . TfPINO 226-39S3 Tutoring conversational Italian available for evening classes. Please 1 - Laser - Perfect term papers, W—aaM mttA WOJ pi" r MaaaWg CaU221-0484 » • PARTYPARTYPARTY Disc Jockeys and Bands RVP Entertainment 222-2229 Term papers.Theses. etc Expert, Fast. Call Frieda 224-8396 - |