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Vol. 103, No. 31 Fricby,Oaober21,1994 CALI FO R N I A •■ S TATE* UN I V E ft ' S ITY» F RES N O Zia Nizami—THE COLLEGIAN CSU Sacramento student David D. Chapman, left, commutes 31/2 hours every week for a guitar lesson with Flamenco virtuoso and CSUF strings professor, Juan Serrano. Guitar lessons luxes 3 1/2-hour commuter By Annette Thissen David Chapman,b a 22- year-old senior at Sacramento State who makes a 31/2-hour triptoCSU,Fresnoevery other Thursday to study Flamenco guitar. Hb teacher, of course, b Juan'Serrano. Juan Serrano is a string teacher here at CSUF. He is known world¬ wide for hb books, videos, and performances. He has toured around the world playing guitar. When asked about David, Serrano said, "David b a very advanced pbyer. 'I'm very happy that he chose to take lessens from me" *v David b originally from Ecua¬ dor, where he grew up playing the guitar. He played South American folk music and earned a degree in classical guitar. In 1990, David, who b half American, decided to move to Sacramento because half of hb family lives there. He enrolled at Sacramento State, where he has been studying ever since. ' He is in the guitar and lute program on scholarship. Flamenco guitar b not of¬ fered at Sacramento State, so David Started talking lessons See Guitar, Page 4 Trustees approve fee hike n. By Olivia Reyes The California State Board of Trustees on Thursday approved a 10 percent fee increase for Cali¬ fornia State University under¬ graduate students, and a 15 per¬ cent increase for CSU graduate students. Students may be hit again with thb increase for the' 1995-1996 year, jf approved by the state Legblature. The action, which differenti¬ ates fee increases between un¬ dergraduates and graduates for the first time, would net $37 mil¬ lion, according to Jim Miller, CSU, Fresno director of public information Before the proposal can go into effect, the state Legblature and Gov. Pete Wilson must give th°ir final approval. However, the fee increase would not be implemented if the state Legislature and Wilson pro¬ vide $37 million to the CSU sys¬ tem from the state General Fund, Miller said. A decision on the matter may not be reached until next June. CSU, Fresno President John Welty could not be reached for comment Local stud en ts, however, are already predicting an increase. Pre-med student Lou Salazar said another fee increase only places more pressure on stu- See In crease, Page 4 Students RISE to challenge By Draeger Martinez Studenb attend college to stimubte the ir intellects in ways that they hope to find fulfilling, as well as in preparation for their . future pursuits. However, some studenb are missing, or even ignoring, important lessons outside the classroom that could easily change their lives as much as getting their degree. Statistics indicate some CSU, Fresno stu¬ dents are taking unnecessary sexual risks, and RISE intends to help educate them about avoiding these risks. Wednesday, Oct 19th marked the first campus visit by volunteers with the new group RISE' Responsible Initiators for Sex Education Co-sponsored by the Fresno County Health Services Agency and the CSUF Health and Counseling Center, RISE seeks to reach out to students one-on-one at areas on cam¬ pus with high student traffic, particularly the Free Speech area. The studenb of RISE identify them¬ selves via red shirts and black aprons, and intend to reach a broad cross-section of studenb, particularly those uncomfort¬ able in a workshop setting, or those too busy to attend He Jth Center forums. "I hope to ralk to studenb about sexual health issues," explained RISE member Valerie Laubacher, "especially about pre¬ venting sexually transmitted diseases, or STDs, as well as unintended pregnan¬ cies." ~ Laubacher, a health science senior, works with eight Other students on RISE; together, they attend a training course throughout the semester. The class covers sexual risks, risk pre¬ vention, warning signs and symptoms, and also teaches outreach and communi¬ cation skilbthrough role-pbying. As with most team members, Laubacher anticipates gaining valuable SeeRISE, Page3 Fore! Jeff Otto practices his stroke in beginning golf class classmates recently outsjdethe North Gym. — THE COLLEGIAN V
Object Description
Title | 1994_10 The Daily Collegian October 1994 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1994 |
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 | October 21, 1994, Page 1 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1994 |
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 | Vol. 103, No. 31 Fricby,Oaober21,1994 CALI FO R N I A •■ S TATE* UN I V E ft ' S ITY» F RES N O Zia Nizami—THE COLLEGIAN CSU Sacramento student David D. Chapman, left, commutes 31/2 hours every week for a guitar lesson with Flamenco virtuoso and CSUF strings professor, Juan Serrano. Guitar lessons luxes 3 1/2-hour commuter By Annette Thissen David Chapman,b a 22- year-old senior at Sacramento State who makes a 31/2-hour triptoCSU,Fresnoevery other Thursday to study Flamenco guitar. Hb teacher, of course, b Juan'Serrano. Juan Serrano is a string teacher here at CSUF. He is known world¬ wide for hb books, videos, and performances. He has toured around the world playing guitar. When asked about David, Serrano said, "David b a very advanced pbyer. 'I'm very happy that he chose to take lessens from me" *v David b originally from Ecua¬ dor, where he grew up playing the guitar. He played South American folk music and earned a degree in classical guitar. In 1990, David, who b half American, decided to move to Sacramento because half of hb family lives there. He enrolled at Sacramento State, where he has been studying ever since. ' He is in the guitar and lute program on scholarship. Flamenco guitar b not of¬ fered at Sacramento State, so David Started talking lessons See Guitar, Page 4 Trustees approve fee hike n. By Olivia Reyes The California State Board of Trustees on Thursday approved a 10 percent fee increase for Cali¬ fornia State University under¬ graduate students, and a 15 per¬ cent increase for CSU graduate students. Students may be hit again with thb increase for the' 1995-1996 year, jf approved by the state Legblature. The action, which differenti¬ ates fee increases between un¬ dergraduates and graduates for the first time, would net $37 mil¬ lion, according to Jim Miller, CSU, Fresno director of public information Before the proposal can go into effect, the state Legblature and Gov. Pete Wilson must give th°ir final approval. However, the fee increase would not be implemented if the state Legislature and Wilson pro¬ vide $37 million to the CSU sys¬ tem from the state General Fund, Miller said. A decision on the matter may not be reached until next June. CSU, Fresno President John Welty could not be reached for comment Local stud en ts, however, are already predicting an increase. Pre-med student Lou Salazar said another fee increase only places more pressure on stu- See In crease, Page 4 Students RISE to challenge By Draeger Martinez Studenb attend college to stimubte the ir intellects in ways that they hope to find fulfilling, as well as in preparation for their . future pursuits. However, some studenb are missing, or even ignoring, important lessons outside the classroom that could easily change their lives as much as getting their degree. Statistics indicate some CSU, Fresno stu¬ dents are taking unnecessary sexual risks, and RISE intends to help educate them about avoiding these risks. Wednesday, Oct 19th marked the first campus visit by volunteers with the new group RISE' Responsible Initiators for Sex Education Co-sponsored by the Fresno County Health Services Agency and the CSUF Health and Counseling Center, RISE seeks to reach out to students one-on-one at areas on cam¬ pus with high student traffic, particularly the Free Speech area. The studenb of RISE identify them¬ selves via red shirts and black aprons, and intend to reach a broad cross-section of studenb, particularly those uncomfort¬ able in a workshop setting, or those too busy to attend He Jth Center forums. "I hope to ralk to studenb about sexual health issues," explained RISE member Valerie Laubacher, "especially about pre¬ venting sexually transmitted diseases, or STDs, as well as unintended pregnan¬ cies." ~ Laubacher, a health science senior, works with eight Other students on RISE; together, they attend a training course throughout the semester. The class covers sexual risks, risk pre¬ vention, warning signs and symptoms, and also teaches outreach and communi¬ cation skilbthrough role-pbying. As with most team members, Laubacher anticipates gaining valuable SeeRISE, Page3 Fore! Jeff Otto practices his stroke in beginning golf class classmates recently outsjdethe North Gym. — THE COLLEGIAN V |