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"~ Concert: from page 4 reading "Mangled Baby Ducks* said, T only came to see Blade Fry. My oldwbrotlw told rr« about then." Lisa Williams, a Roosevelt High School junior, said, It was the best concert I've seen In Fresno; and It was cheap, too," WHlianttsaMtrMtthecoricertwasago^ t get the chance to see live shows. BfflDajueiivl3,ashirtlesshu\Jorhi^ who don't often get the chance to « •creed withWilBama, saying, ^edw'tgettoseearw concerts unless they play at Selland Arena or somewhere like that And most of the bands that play there ain'tthekind of music we like. While Black Fry initiated the mosh circle and thrash dancing Mwdatedwithhaid-onepiiogreseiveb^ who caused major havoc. The Neanderthals, led by F^Rhoads, a John Behishl look-alike in ' dthe< dthe •look ^waiian shiit stirred the energetic fans into a frenzy. With song lyrics like, 1 like Legos," the Neanderthals created rfect mood for slam dandng and stage dives', which the fanstt perfect fulladv advantage of. The Neanderthal*' half-hour set was cut short after 20 minutes because of the general ro wellness of the fans. The rowdiness began when a man dressed as a carrot and another asa jester appeared on stage durmg the Neanderthals' set and began tothrow tou^papera^alargjestuffed Wiley E. Coyote doD into the This may have enthused the crowd, but it ultimately led to the disqualification of the Neanderthals and their chance to claim triem- selves as winner of the contest After a complaint was filed by runner-up Black Fry, the Neander- thab were disqualified fOTvfcdaiing I concert. AgerwraJ statementissuedFeb.5by Roger Banoom,USU production ccmcert prcfgrarr^,^^ that Black Ftywasdeemed the winner of the bash after National Media Croup president, Peter Kaplan, reviewed the issue and disqualified the Nearrfertiuus for their violation. Contest rules state that a five*-or-nwre-member band must have at least two students registered at the participating college. The violation occurred when the Neanderthals' carrot roan and jester were Included as members of the band, raising the number of band members from four to six New building for Education in the works Fee hike hits international students By Takayo Kai StaffWriter W and work harder," said Martha Hui, a freshman accounting major from Hong Kong, in response to the proposed 40 percent fee increase. She is one of more than 900 CSUF international students who were hit by last year's 20 percent increase, having to pay an additional $41 per unit for the 1991-92 school year. Non-resident students have to pay a tuition charge per unit in addition to registration fees. For the 1991-92 school year, the tuition was $246 per unit. If the proposed 40 percent fee increase is approved by the state legislature, international students will have to pay more than $10,000 per year if they take 18 units per semester. Tuition for out-of-state residents won't change. "I came here in 1988 and they've already increased the fee three times. Why don't you raise the tax?" said lnvianto Soebiantoro, a senior marketin major from Indonesia."We've already paid a lot more than American students." Polly Lui, a freshman busi- more professors and increase classes." The Master Plan for Higher Education established in 1960 states: "Non-resident tuition for all three public segments shall be equal to the average cost of instruction and related services, including adminis- "You are not California residents. You shouldn't be subsidized." —Carol B. Munshower ness major from Hong Kong, complained about CSUF's quality as well as the proposed increase. "The point is, if they raise the fee, we just pay. We gain nothing," said Lui. "If you want to increase, OK — but employ tration but excluding research, except that it shall not exceed the average charge at comparable institutions in other states." Carol B. Munshower, director of the International Students and Services Office, explained this section of the Master Plan: "You are not California residents. You shouldn't be subsidized." Kaiten Saw of Malaysia, who studied business at CSUF from 1985-87, said that the tuition was about $150 per unit when he attended here. "I became a resident last year, and I want to come back here and study again. But, still, the fee is too high. Maybe I will wait one more year to save money," he said. Under the Master Plan, ratification of the fee increase beyond 10 percent in any one year requires the state legislature to pass specific legislation. "The big issue of CSUF is, if the increase doesn't go through, we will have ajjout a $9 million shortage in the budget. That sure will decrease the quality of our education," said Munshower. By Aimee L. Fisher Staff Writer In the fall of 1993, the School of Education will be moving quarters to what is currently a ponding basin near Maple and Shaw avenues. In the ponding basin's place will be an $115 million state-of-the-art building containing classrooms, offices and a learning development center. "A lot of the schools have technology much higher than we have, andwe are training teachers to go into those schools," said Ric Brown, research and statistics professor and coordinator for broad development The space that the School of Education currently occupies, the first floor of the Education/Psychology building, is "old, it's outdated and we don't ha ve lab space that we need," Brown said. The new five-story building will have 515 lecture seats, 300 lab stations, 142 computer stations, 82 faculty offices and a large conference room on the first level, according to Susan Aldrich, director of theCSUFFacilitiesand Planning office. The learning development center will function as a day carc as well as an observa tion lab for CSUF students training to become teachers, said Jacques Benninga, chairof the literacyand early education department. "We need a facility where about 15 students can observe kids being worked with by a professor," Brown said. "Then you need an area where you can sit down and say, 'Now, what difficulty dkl you notice?"' The Child Care Center will re main open, thereby greatly increasing the capacity for child care on campus, Benninga said. "We fully realize our commitment to train teachers and administrators for the local area, but also to serve the community," Benninga said. The building will be connected by cable and computer to local public schools, enabling students to observe actual classroom functioning. "We will also be able to do science experiments here on campus and beam them to the public schools directly," Benninga said. Brown said that while the school's current resources are limited in terms of space, the new building will make the school state- of-the-art in math, science and computer technology. Model classrooms and clinical labs for students going into counseling, learning disorders and special education are also included in the plans, Aldrich said. The first floor of the building will be the child development center and lab school, the second level will be classrooms and lecture halls, the third will be the graduate department and level four will house the media center and library, said Ann Castillo, an intern architect involved with the project. "The layout is utilizing the site in a pretty dynamic way," Castillo said. She added that School of Education faculty members played a key role in the building's development. "They really put in their part on the design requirements and what each department needed," she said. After the old building is empty. it willbe renovated andconvcrted foruse by the Schoolof Health and Social Work. I Precision Cuts 4311021 Cedar & Barstow We V Walk-ins! Bulldog Plaza Open Sundays I $2.00 Off I Any I Haircut JRcg.$10&up •$5.00 Off Perms, Colors & Cellophanes Reg. $35 & up $5.00 Off Hair Relaxcrs Reg.$10&u Please call for an appointment for perms, colors and relaxers. FIG TREE GALLERY Open !House ffeb. 16,1992 2-Sp.m. Slide Show and Discussion by Members. 1536 Jutton St. Amission Jree Jrtsno, Ot. 93721 MicfteU Shipp ^ Loz'e, Sfttrise and Dana 7-*^.«§ KENNEL BOOKSTORE Tempo386SX/16 $1499 While Supply Lasts! •2MB RAM •40MB Hard Drive •14" VGA Color Monitor. .28 Dot Pitch •3.5 & 5.25 High Density Floppy Drives •DOS 5.0 & MS Windows 3.0 Tempo LX Notebook $1899 • 386SX/20MHz Processor •1MB RAM •40MB Hard Drive •Weighs Less Than Seven Pounds •DOS 5.0 •Windows 3.0 •Carrying Cas£ •Mouse Tempo Carrier Notebook $2459 •2MB RAM •40MB Hard Drive •80386sx /20MHz Processor •Letter Size Footprint •Weighs 5.3 pounds •Carrying Case •DOS 5.0 and Windows 3.0 Included MICROCOMPUTER DEPARTMENT 278-2116 •Sir David Attenborough Natural Scientist The Trials of Life: Island Environments' Tuesday, February 25 7.30 p.m. > Dr. Henry Cisneros Former Mayor of San Antonio "Economic Development and Diversity' Tuesday, March 10 7:30 p.m. >Ms. Nadine Strossen epec A.C.L.U. President •*" "Freedom of Speech in America" Tuesday, May 12 7:30 p.m. Individual Lecture Tickets $2 CSUF Students S3 General Admission • Ms. Maxine Hong Kingston FREE Chinese-American Author Talk-Story and Mythic Reality" Monday. March 23 12:00 noon • Dr. Joan Borysenko Transpcrsonal Psychologist Forgiveness and Healing Relationships' Tuesday, April 7 7:30 p.m. 'Mr. Ray Bradbury Science-Fiction Author "Exploring Yestermorrow" Tuesday, April 28 730 p.m. Season Tickets on Sate Now at (JSU Information Desk $8 CSUF Students $12 General Admission fill totem to fag hold in thQ Satellite Student Onion ■
Object Description
Title | 1992_02 Insight February 1992 |
Alternative Title | Insight (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Dept. of Journalism, California State University, Fresno. |
Publication Date | 1992 |
Description | Weekly during the school year. Vol. 1, no. 1 (Oct. 8, 1969)-v. 29, no. 23 (May 13, 1998). Ceased with May 13, 1998, issue. Title from masthead. Merged with Daily collegian. |
Subject | California State University, Fresno Periodicals |
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 | Insight Feb 12 1992 p 7 |
Alternative Title | Insight (California State University, Fresno) |
Publication Date | 1992 |
Full-Text-Search | "~ Concert: from page 4 reading "Mangled Baby Ducks* said, T only came to see Blade Fry. My oldwbrotlw told rr« about then." Lisa Williams, a Roosevelt High School junior, said, It was the best concert I've seen In Fresno; and It was cheap, too," WHlianttsaMtrMtthecoricertwasago^ t get the chance to see live shows. BfflDajueiivl3,ashirtlesshu\Jorhi^ who don't often get the chance to « •creed withWilBama, saying, ^edw'tgettoseearw concerts unless they play at Selland Arena or somewhere like that And most of the bands that play there ain'tthekind of music we like. While Black Fry initiated the mosh circle and thrash dancing Mwdatedwithhaid-onepiiogreseiveb^ who caused major havoc. The Neanderthals, led by F^Rhoads, a John Behishl look-alike in ' dthe< dthe •look ^waiian shiit stirred the energetic fans into a frenzy. With song lyrics like, 1 like Legos," the Neanderthals created rfect mood for slam dandng and stage dives', which the fanstt perfect fulladv advantage of. The Neanderthal*' half-hour set was cut short after 20 minutes because of the general ro wellness of the fans. The rowdiness began when a man dressed as a carrot and another asa jester appeared on stage durmg the Neanderthals' set and began tothrow tou^papera^alargjestuffed Wiley E. Coyote doD into the This may have enthused the crowd, but it ultimately led to the disqualification of the Neanderthals and their chance to claim triem- selves as winner of the contest After a complaint was filed by runner-up Black Fry, the Neander- thab were disqualified fOTvfcdaiing I concert. AgerwraJ statementissuedFeb.5by Roger Banoom,USU production ccmcert prcfgrarr^,^^ that Black Ftywasdeemed the winner of the bash after National Media Croup president, Peter Kaplan, reviewed the issue and disqualified the Nearrfertiuus for their violation. Contest rules state that a five*-or-nwre-member band must have at least two students registered at the participating college. The violation occurred when the Neanderthals' carrot roan and jester were Included as members of the band, raising the number of band members from four to six New building for Education in the works Fee hike hits international students By Takayo Kai StaffWriter W and work harder," said Martha Hui, a freshman accounting major from Hong Kong, in response to the proposed 40 percent fee increase. She is one of more than 900 CSUF international students who were hit by last year's 20 percent increase, having to pay an additional $41 per unit for the 1991-92 school year. Non-resident students have to pay a tuition charge per unit in addition to registration fees. For the 1991-92 school year, the tuition was $246 per unit. If the proposed 40 percent fee increase is approved by the state legislature, international students will have to pay more than $10,000 per year if they take 18 units per semester. Tuition for out-of-state residents won't change. "I came here in 1988 and they've already increased the fee three times. Why don't you raise the tax?" said lnvianto Soebiantoro, a senior marketin major from Indonesia."We've already paid a lot more than American students." Polly Lui, a freshman busi- more professors and increase classes." The Master Plan for Higher Education established in 1960 states: "Non-resident tuition for all three public segments shall be equal to the average cost of instruction and related services, including adminis- "You are not California residents. You shouldn't be subsidized." —Carol B. Munshower ness major from Hong Kong, complained about CSUF's quality as well as the proposed increase. "The point is, if they raise the fee, we just pay. We gain nothing," said Lui. "If you want to increase, OK — but employ tration but excluding research, except that it shall not exceed the average charge at comparable institutions in other states." Carol B. Munshower, director of the International Students and Services Office, explained this section of the Master Plan: "You are not California residents. You shouldn't be subsidized." Kaiten Saw of Malaysia, who studied business at CSUF from 1985-87, said that the tuition was about $150 per unit when he attended here. "I became a resident last year, and I want to come back here and study again. But, still, the fee is too high. Maybe I will wait one more year to save money," he said. Under the Master Plan, ratification of the fee increase beyond 10 percent in any one year requires the state legislature to pass specific legislation. "The big issue of CSUF is, if the increase doesn't go through, we will have ajjout a $9 million shortage in the budget. That sure will decrease the quality of our education," said Munshower. By Aimee L. Fisher Staff Writer In the fall of 1993, the School of Education will be moving quarters to what is currently a ponding basin near Maple and Shaw avenues. In the ponding basin's place will be an $115 million state-of-the-art building containing classrooms, offices and a learning development center. "A lot of the schools have technology much higher than we have, andwe are training teachers to go into those schools," said Ric Brown, research and statistics professor and coordinator for broad development The space that the School of Education currently occupies, the first floor of the Education/Psychology building, is "old, it's outdated and we don't ha ve lab space that we need," Brown said. The new five-story building will have 515 lecture seats, 300 lab stations, 142 computer stations, 82 faculty offices and a large conference room on the first level, according to Susan Aldrich, director of theCSUFFacilitiesand Planning office. The learning development center will function as a day carc as well as an observa tion lab for CSUF students training to become teachers, said Jacques Benninga, chairof the literacyand early education department. "We need a facility where about 15 students can observe kids being worked with by a professor," Brown said. "Then you need an area where you can sit down and say, 'Now, what difficulty dkl you notice?"' The Child Care Center will re main open, thereby greatly increasing the capacity for child care on campus, Benninga said. "We fully realize our commitment to train teachers and administrators for the local area, but also to serve the community," Benninga said. The building will be connected by cable and computer to local public schools, enabling students to observe actual classroom functioning. "We will also be able to do science experiments here on campus and beam them to the public schools directly," Benninga said. Brown said that while the school's current resources are limited in terms of space, the new building will make the school state- of-the-art in math, science and computer technology. Model classrooms and clinical labs for students going into counseling, learning disorders and special education are also included in the plans, Aldrich said. The first floor of the building will be the child development center and lab school, the second level will be classrooms and lecture halls, the third will be the graduate department and level four will house the media center and library, said Ann Castillo, an intern architect involved with the project. "The layout is utilizing the site in a pretty dynamic way," Castillo said. She added that School of Education faculty members played a key role in the building's development. "They really put in their part on the design requirements and what each department needed," she said. After the old building is empty. it willbe renovated andconvcrted foruse by the Schoolof Health and Social Work. I Precision Cuts 4311021 Cedar & Barstow We V Walk-ins! Bulldog Plaza Open Sundays I $2.00 Off I Any I Haircut JRcg.$10&up •$5.00 Off Perms, Colors & Cellophanes Reg. $35 & up $5.00 Off Hair Relaxcrs Reg.$10&u Please call for an appointment for perms, colors and relaxers. FIG TREE GALLERY Open !House ffeb. 16,1992 2-Sp.m. Slide Show and Discussion by Members. 1536 Jutton St. Amission Jree Jrtsno, Ot. 93721 MicfteU Shipp ^ Loz'e, Sfttrise and Dana 7-*^.«§ KENNEL BOOKSTORE Tempo386SX/16 $1499 While Supply Lasts! •2MB RAM •40MB Hard Drive •14" VGA Color Monitor. .28 Dot Pitch •3.5 & 5.25 High Density Floppy Drives •DOS 5.0 & MS Windows 3.0 Tempo LX Notebook $1899 • 386SX/20MHz Processor •1MB RAM •40MB Hard Drive •Weighs Less Than Seven Pounds •DOS 5.0 •Windows 3.0 •Carrying Cas£ •Mouse Tempo Carrier Notebook $2459 •2MB RAM •40MB Hard Drive •80386sx /20MHz Processor •Letter Size Footprint •Weighs 5.3 pounds •Carrying Case •DOS 5.0 and Windows 3.0 Included MICROCOMPUTER DEPARTMENT 278-2116 •Sir David Attenborough Natural Scientist The Trials of Life: Island Environments' Tuesday, February 25 7.30 p.m. > Dr. Henry Cisneros Former Mayor of San Antonio "Economic Development and Diversity' Tuesday, March 10 7:30 p.m. >Ms. Nadine Strossen epec A.C.L.U. President •*" "Freedom of Speech in America" Tuesday, May 12 7:30 p.m. Individual Lecture Tickets $2 CSUF Students S3 General Admission • Ms. Maxine Hong Kingston FREE Chinese-American Author Talk-Story and Mythic Reality" Monday. March 23 12:00 noon • Dr. Joan Borysenko Transpcrsonal Psychologist Forgiveness and Healing Relationships' Tuesday, April 7 7:30 p.m. 'Mr. Ray Bradbury Science-Fiction Author "Exploring Yestermorrow" Tuesday, April 28 730 p.m. Season Tickets on Sate Now at (JSU Information Desk $8 CSUF Students $12 General Admission fill totem to fag hold in thQ Satellite Student Onion ■ |