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Page 6 March 16, \9H Wed 7:30 p.m.— Esther Rolle Speaks Out, Upstairs Cafeteria, Rm 200, students free, general public $3 8:00 p.m. — House of Blue Leaves, University Theatre, general public $8, CSUF faculty and students $6 8:00 p.m. — House of Blue Leaves, University Theatre, general public $8, CSUF faculty and students $6 Fri Tl»« ■ »• 7:30 p.m. — "Mueria" McLane Hall, Rm 121 8:00 p.m. — "Gotta Make This Journey" McLane Hall, Rml21 8:00 p.m. — CSUF Opera Workshop presents: Suor Angelica, The Impressario, and The Telephone, Vocal Performance Hall, general $8, students $5 8:30 p.m. — Theatre Three Repertory Company presents Italian American Reconciliation, 1544 Fulton St. 8:00 p.m. — House of Blue Leaves, University Theatre, general public $8, CSUF faculty and students $6 Sat 8:00 p.m. — House of Blue Leaves, University Theatre, general public $8, CSUF faculty and students $6 8:00 p.m. — CSUF Opera Workshop presents: Suor Angelica, The Impressario, ^r.H Tint Tolonhnnp Vocal Performance Hall, general $8, students $5 8:00 p.m. — Dr. Loco's Rockin' Jalapeiio Band, Fresno Fairgrounds, tickets $15, information 266-2623 Sun 3:00 p.m. — University Chamber Chorale presents A Festival of Great Choral Classics, Vocal Performance Hall, general $10, students $7 Tues 12 noon — "Women in the fi«>lri of Psychology" by Dr. Valerie Forward, Women's Resource Center (Keats, rm 110) 6:00 p.m. — AIDS and Women, Upstairs Cafeteria, Rm200. Time holds no bounds for Fresno women committed to change Women on display: Fresno City Hall spotlights Valley women who have made stides. Newspaper sales get kids well By Jenny Garrett StaffWriter If you are driving down main Fresno next week and suddenly find yourself surrounded by people screaming and waving newspapers at you, relax, you arc not being car jacked... it's Kid's Day. Tuesday March 22, thc seventh annual '■--■'""""""""■■''"""""""""■■HB Valley Children's Hospital Kid's Day, sponsored by The Fresno Bee and Channel 30, will once again send over 2,000 volunteers to ihe streets to sell the special issue of The Fresno Bee. Thc Sl newspaper contains photos of patients, staff and volunteers, stories of "Miracle Kids," and more than $800 in coupons wrapped around thc regular Fresno Bee newspaper. "Our goal is $100,000 which will go towards the S140 million needed for the building of a new hospital facility," said ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Rencc Nuancs, Special Events Coordina- ■'■■■'■■■■■■■i tor at Valley Children's Hospital. Last year newspaper sales raised $80,000 and Valley Children's Hospital is confident ihcy will reach ihis year's goal. Kappa Kappa Gamma, Kappa Sigma, Phi Mu and Delta Sigma Phi arc just four organizations al CSUF who participate every year in the 8-hour scll-a- thon from 6:30 a.m. io 2 p.m. "When you gel out there at 6:30 a.m. and sell papers you feel good all day about what you have contributed to," said Jcanctte Wilson of Kappa Kappa Gamma, "This is my third year volunteering wilh my sorority and it's always fun. Kappa Sigma and Kappa Kappa Gamma have teamed up this year to sell 2,000 newspapers in iwo locations. ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^_ "We neverhavcaproblem selling them," says Tina Tarantino, philanthropy chairman for Kappa Kappa Gamma. Radio stations are urging everyone to out for the excitement and givc- "When you get out there at 6:30 _ __ y» | • COM It. UUl lUl UIU -JAIIICI'IUII OJ1U £iv-w- a.m. and Sell papers yOU jeel gOOa aways at station locations scaucred on ... , , , Biackstone and Shaw Avenues. all day about what you have con tributed to..." Jeanette Wilson Valley Children's Hospital is Kappa Kappa Gamma's philanthropy and each year ihcy make the experience of Kid's Day memorable, beginning at 5:30 a.m. with a large breakfast donated by a local food distributor and then oul to lhc streets for a profitable day. ■BH"IHHHHHHHn Tarantino said, "Everyone's mo tivated and full of energy. Our house looks forward to it every year." Thc hospital facility construction will break ground this September and is expected io open in 1997. Kid's Day leads up to the Childcm's Miracle Network on June 4 and 5 which also benefits Valley Children's Hospital. By Andriana Doukas StaffWriter Women's History Month is on display at Fresno City Hall. Ellic Bluesiein and Pat Wolk have put together photos and biographies thai examine the historical and cultural background of some outstanding women in Fresno Thc exhibit is called, "Women Committed to Change" and it recognizes 20 women who have made a contribution to their community and to other women. Thc program is made possible in part by grams from the California Council for lhc Humanities, Ihc National Endowment for the Humanities and lhc Fresno Free CollegeFoun- dalion. Bluesiein and Wolk have taken black and while photos of Ihc women and disbursed them along the walls, wiih a short biography. Each women has a unique biography, but have done a similar thing — fought for change. One women who is featured, Song Xiong, was born in Xicngkhoughand came to lhc U.S. not speaking a word of English. Xiong's story is aboul amazing courage and uncertainties. Hcr biography says, "It was very, very hard for mc when I first came to this country," said Xiong. "I told myself I would help other people who needed help. I don't want Ihem to feel like I did when I first came." Xiong is described as an excellent organizer and trusted member of the Hmong community. She is also a respected singer and sells hcr tapes throughout thc U.S. Donna McKiurick, professor of physical education at Kings River Community College is featured. She has been an educator for 32 years. Her story is about how shc became a speaker for the feminist movement in thc 1970s. In her biography shc is quoted as saying, "I went to bed and wokc-up a radical. I don't mean a destructive and IS willing iu nunc manges. Earslen Jones.a Fresnan, was proud of what shc saw at City Hall. "I think it is nice to honor these women in our community," said Jones as shc observed thc exhibit. "Often you see stories about women that are in other cities and states, but it is nice to sec women in our community." Another outstanding story is about Sudic Douglas, a women that worked as a riveter in an aircraft plant in World War II. When the war ended, Douglas came lo Fresno, where shc has been a member of lhc Council for Senior Citizens, a senior intern in Congressman Sick's office, and later one of thc 32 Americans chosen to spend 29 days in the Soviet Union and China. Barbara Taylor-Cooley was also overwhelmed by lhc outstanding Fresno women. "It is so wonderful to hear their stories, and to honor them this way," said Taylor-Cooley. Other women arc featured include Maia Ballas, Cindy Calvert, Mary Roper Curry, Jessie DcLaCruz, Sari Dworkin, Junka Kunitakc, Ernestine Burum Leas, June Loring. Linda Mack, Marcia McLane, Blanche Nosworthy, Esther Padilla, Teresa Perez, Wendy Rose, Elma Phyllis Sterling and Pam Whalen. Margaret Hudson, a well-known sculpturess, is also featured. Hudson is well known for hcr outstanding sculptors, poems, and hcr love and preservation of the earth. The exhibit will be on display through March. Visions West N Fresno State Team ational Student Advertis Competition 1994 ing IE ^ 31 £25£ (•ft- 1 /Si ."Si 3 K V hi - s 6455 N FRESHO *5ir*ftS*f-**«ft»U*».S12H .S »£ it* ,1* ffl * 2 *r K ,ft & Fa¥A»4Wi8f£.* + ***# *■**,#£*!.£*«.•**■■*■ ftfi* .) * a * 11*00AH-6*30PM . BLACKSTONE .CA93710 24 B 18 1 * it*. 1 ipMvi (jEL = (2 09)447-5638 E-Sbb J Kennel Bookstore HYPER HAIR YOUR fAMlA HAIR CARE CENTER HAIR CUTS %b PERM SP£C/**US $25* COLOR W£*V£S M0 + NO /tPPOlNlMlNH WtCtSSx'i 279</ WILLOW SUtie CORNiR Of Gf'TYSflUrtG , (209) 291-5242 03 CRUISE JOBS Students Needed! Earn up to $2,000+ per month working for Cruise Ships or Land-Tour companies. World Travel (Hawaii, Mexico, thc Caribbean, cct.). Summer and Full-Time employment available. No experience nctxssary. For more information Cruise Employment Services (206) 634-0468 cxt. C6206 What other computers will run tomorrow, Power Macintosh runs today OKA SUSHI ||[ LUNCH * Mon-Fri 11:30-2:00 DINNER Mon-Thu 5:00-10:00 ®Fri-Sat 5:00-11:00 CLOSE SUNDAY TAKE-OUT SERVICE "FRESHEST FISH IN TOWN" 2Q4Q W. BULL\RD AV 432-1475 PowerPC™* technology is changing the face of personal computing And so are Power Macintosh" computers—the first members of the Apple" Macintosh* family to include PowerPC microprocessors Power Macintosh computers deliver thc raw processing speed once reserved for network servers and high-end workstations—making them ideally suited for graphics, Apple AV technologies, and computation-intensive applications They also work with System 7~ software, so Macintosh users can get going right away with no additional training With Power Macintosh you can run your current applications without changing a thing Just double-click and go And with SoftWindows software, you can run DOS and Windows applications, as well' But that's just thc beginning. There are dozens of Power Macintosh applications designed to take full advantage of the RISC technology built into every PowerPC chip—and developers are writing still more And right now you can choose from three Power Macintosh computers—the affordably priced Power Macintosh 6100/60, thc mainstream 7100/66, or the 8100/80, our most powerful Macintosh ever. Of course, the PowerPC advantage won't be limited to just Power Macintosh computers Apple is bringing out PowerPC upgrades for many of its most popular Macintosh computers.' So stop in today and see ihe future of computing. Power Macintosh The future is here. Kennel Computer Center -278-2116
Object Description
Title | 1994_03 Insight March 1994 |
Alternative Title | Insight (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Dept. of Journalism, California State University, Fresno. |
Publication Date | 1994 |
Description | Weekly during the school year. Vol. 1, no. 1 (Oct. 8 1969-v. 29, no. 23 (May 13, 1998, issue. Title from masthead. Merged with Daily collegian. |
Subject | California State University, Fresno -- Periodials |
Contributors | California State University, Fresno Dept. of Journalism |
Coverage | October 8, 1969 - May 13, 1998 |
Format | Microfilm reels, 35mm |
Technical Information | Scanned at 600 dpi, TIFF; Microfilm ScanPro 2000 "E-image data" |
Language | eng |
Description
Title | 024_Insight Mar 16 1994 p 6 |
Alternative Title | Insight (California State University, Fresno) |
Publication Date | 1994 |
Full-Text-Search | Page 6 March 16, \9H Wed 7:30 p.m.— Esther Rolle Speaks Out, Upstairs Cafeteria, Rm 200, students free, general public $3 8:00 p.m. — House of Blue Leaves, University Theatre, general public $8, CSUF faculty and students $6 8:00 p.m. — House of Blue Leaves, University Theatre, general public $8, CSUF faculty and students $6 Fri Tl»« ■ »• 7:30 p.m. — "Mueria" McLane Hall, Rm 121 8:00 p.m. — "Gotta Make This Journey" McLane Hall, Rml21 8:00 p.m. — CSUF Opera Workshop presents: Suor Angelica, The Impressario, and The Telephone, Vocal Performance Hall, general $8, students $5 8:30 p.m. — Theatre Three Repertory Company presents Italian American Reconciliation, 1544 Fulton St. 8:00 p.m. — House of Blue Leaves, University Theatre, general public $8, CSUF faculty and students $6 Sat 8:00 p.m. — House of Blue Leaves, University Theatre, general public $8, CSUF faculty and students $6 8:00 p.m. — CSUF Opera Workshop presents: Suor Angelica, The Impressario, ^r.H Tint Tolonhnnp Vocal Performance Hall, general $8, students $5 8:00 p.m. — Dr. Loco's Rockin' Jalapeiio Band, Fresno Fairgrounds, tickets $15, information 266-2623 Sun 3:00 p.m. — University Chamber Chorale presents A Festival of Great Choral Classics, Vocal Performance Hall, general $10, students $7 Tues 12 noon — "Women in the fi«>lri of Psychology" by Dr. Valerie Forward, Women's Resource Center (Keats, rm 110) 6:00 p.m. — AIDS and Women, Upstairs Cafeteria, Rm200. Time holds no bounds for Fresno women committed to change Women on display: Fresno City Hall spotlights Valley women who have made stides. Newspaper sales get kids well By Jenny Garrett StaffWriter If you are driving down main Fresno next week and suddenly find yourself surrounded by people screaming and waving newspapers at you, relax, you arc not being car jacked... it's Kid's Day. Tuesday March 22, thc seventh annual '■--■'""""""""■■''"""""""""■■HB Valley Children's Hospital Kid's Day, sponsored by The Fresno Bee and Channel 30, will once again send over 2,000 volunteers to ihe streets to sell the special issue of The Fresno Bee. Thc Sl newspaper contains photos of patients, staff and volunteers, stories of "Miracle Kids," and more than $800 in coupons wrapped around thc regular Fresno Bee newspaper. "Our goal is $100,000 which will go towards the S140 million needed for the building of a new hospital facility," said ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Rencc Nuancs, Special Events Coordina- ■'■■■'■■■■■■■i tor at Valley Children's Hospital. Last year newspaper sales raised $80,000 and Valley Children's Hospital is confident ihcy will reach ihis year's goal. Kappa Kappa Gamma, Kappa Sigma, Phi Mu and Delta Sigma Phi arc just four organizations al CSUF who participate every year in the 8-hour scll-a- thon from 6:30 a.m. io 2 p.m. "When you gel out there at 6:30 a.m. and sell papers you feel good all day about what you have contributed to," said Jcanctte Wilson of Kappa Kappa Gamma, "This is my third year volunteering wilh my sorority and it's always fun. Kappa Sigma and Kappa Kappa Gamma have teamed up this year to sell 2,000 newspapers in iwo locations. ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^_ "We neverhavcaproblem selling them," says Tina Tarantino, philanthropy chairman for Kappa Kappa Gamma. Radio stations are urging everyone to out for the excitement and givc- "When you get out there at 6:30 _ __ y» | • COM It. UUl lUl UIU -JAIIICI'IUII OJ1U £iv-w- a.m. and Sell papers yOU jeel gOOa aways at station locations scaucred on ... , , , Biackstone and Shaw Avenues. all day about what you have con tributed to..." Jeanette Wilson Valley Children's Hospital is Kappa Kappa Gamma's philanthropy and each year ihcy make the experience of Kid's Day memorable, beginning at 5:30 a.m. with a large breakfast donated by a local food distributor and then oul to lhc streets for a profitable day. ■BH"IHHHHHHHn Tarantino said, "Everyone's mo tivated and full of energy. Our house looks forward to it every year." Thc hospital facility construction will break ground this September and is expected io open in 1997. Kid's Day leads up to the Childcm's Miracle Network on June 4 and 5 which also benefits Valley Children's Hospital. By Andriana Doukas StaffWriter Women's History Month is on display at Fresno City Hall. Ellic Bluesiein and Pat Wolk have put together photos and biographies thai examine the historical and cultural background of some outstanding women in Fresno Thc exhibit is called, "Women Committed to Change" and it recognizes 20 women who have made a contribution to their community and to other women. Thc program is made possible in part by grams from the California Council for lhc Humanities, Ihc National Endowment for the Humanities and lhc Fresno Free CollegeFoun- dalion. Bluesiein and Wolk have taken black and while photos of Ihc women and disbursed them along the walls, wiih a short biography. Each women has a unique biography, but have done a similar thing — fought for change. One women who is featured, Song Xiong, was born in Xicngkhoughand came to lhc U.S. not speaking a word of English. Xiong's story is aboul amazing courage and uncertainties. Hcr biography says, "It was very, very hard for mc when I first came to this country," said Xiong. "I told myself I would help other people who needed help. I don't want Ihem to feel like I did when I first came." Xiong is described as an excellent organizer and trusted member of the Hmong community. She is also a respected singer and sells hcr tapes throughout thc U.S. Donna McKiurick, professor of physical education at Kings River Community College is featured. She has been an educator for 32 years. Her story is about how shc became a speaker for the feminist movement in thc 1970s. In her biography shc is quoted as saying, "I went to bed and wokc-up a radical. I don't mean a destructive and IS willing iu nunc manges. Earslen Jones.a Fresnan, was proud of what shc saw at City Hall. "I think it is nice to honor these women in our community," said Jones as shc observed thc exhibit. "Often you see stories about women that are in other cities and states, but it is nice to sec women in our community." Another outstanding story is about Sudic Douglas, a women that worked as a riveter in an aircraft plant in World War II. When the war ended, Douglas came lo Fresno, where shc has been a member of lhc Council for Senior Citizens, a senior intern in Congressman Sick's office, and later one of thc 32 Americans chosen to spend 29 days in the Soviet Union and China. Barbara Taylor-Cooley was also overwhelmed by lhc outstanding Fresno women. "It is so wonderful to hear their stories, and to honor them this way," said Taylor-Cooley. Other women arc featured include Maia Ballas, Cindy Calvert, Mary Roper Curry, Jessie DcLaCruz, Sari Dworkin, Junka Kunitakc, Ernestine Burum Leas, June Loring. Linda Mack, Marcia McLane, Blanche Nosworthy, Esther Padilla, Teresa Perez, Wendy Rose, Elma Phyllis Sterling and Pam Whalen. Margaret Hudson, a well-known sculpturess, is also featured. Hudson is well known for hcr outstanding sculptors, poems, and hcr love and preservation of the earth. The exhibit will be on display through March. Visions West N Fresno State Team ational Student Advertis Competition 1994 ing IE ^ 31 £25£ (•ft- 1 /Si ."Si 3 K V hi - s 6455 N FRESHO *5ir*ftS*f-**«ft»U*».S12H .S »£ it* ,1* ffl * 2 *r K ,ft & Fa¥A»4Wi8f£.* + ***# *■**,#£*!.£*«.•**■■*■ ftfi* .) * a * 11*00AH-6*30PM . BLACKSTONE .CA93710 24 B 18 1 * it*. 1 ipMvi (jEL = (2 09)447-5638 E-Sbb J Kennel Bookstore HYPER HAIR YOUR fAMlA HAIR CARE CENTER HAIR CUTS %b PERM SP£C/**US $25* COLOR W£*V£S M0 + NO /tPPOlNlMlNH WtCtSSx'i 279 WILLOW SUtie CORNiR Of Gf'TYSflUrtG , (209) 291-5242 03 CRUISE JOBS Students Needed! Earn up to $2,000+ per month working for Cruise Ships or Land-Tour companies. World Travel (Hawaii, Mexico, thc Caribbean, cct.). Summer and Full-Time employment available. No experience nctxssary. For more information Cruise Employment Services (206) 634-0468 cxt. C6206 What other computers will run tomorrow, Power Macintosh runs today OKA SUSHI ||[ LUNCH * Mon-Fri 11:30-2:00 DINNER Mon-Thu 5:00-10:00 ®Fri-Sat 5:00-11:00 CLOSE SUNDAY TAKE-OUT SERVICE "FRESHEST FISH IN TOWN" 2Q4Q W. BULL\RD AV 432-1475 PowerPC™* technology is changing the face of personal computing And so are Power Macintosh" computers—the first members of the Apple" Macintosh* family to include PowerPC microprocessors Power Macintosh computers deliver thc raw processing speed once reserved for network servers and high-end workstations—making them ideally suited for graphics, Apple AV technologies, and computation-intensive applications They also work with System 7~ software, so Macintosh users can get going right away with no additional training With Power Macintosh you can run your current applications without changing a thing Just double-click and go And with SoftWindows software, you can run DOS and Windows applications, as well' But that's just thc beginning. There are dozens of Power Macintosh applications designed to take full advantage of the RISC technology built into every PowerPC chip—and developers are writing still more And right now you can choose from three Power Macintosh computers—the affordably priced Power Macintosh 6100/60, thc mainstream 7100/66, or the 8100/80, our most powerful Macintosh ever. Of course, the PowerPC advantage won't be limited to just Power Macintosh computers Apple is bringing out PowerPC upgrades for many of its most popular Macintosh computers.' So stop in today and see ihe future of computing. Power Macintosh The future is here. Kennel Computer Center -278-2116 |