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US April 24, 1984 FsJ®^© 1902-1984 [i 8at«utyrr«Ttvc«ph«ralft«a-^*w tetaaik¥iftaalrt1UB*t PUTSUS, t*a»*aV UW atsatt to b« ca-pftmd vvitMna. smart ai cTsation. Tha ey* fctjfcr goo, vWantmg to be t-sfatpfttvj, «rv«m for just a ascond train al stsfnrty. AiitMi Adarns, Bks ail great artra-te, dared to be captured and, in the process, captured beauty Itself. He dedicated his life to the imprisonment of his eyes and ♦rnitghtened others to the joys, gadness and wonders of nature and its always present but ss-KTvetirnes hidden beauty. born in San Francisco in 1902. As a teenager, on his first Yosemite, he took the first of a multitude of pictures that would later become his legacy. That km trip Mlthd b«vma« of « ktrig love airatr tor rhs yourta artist Hs tovsd ptSo*x>o>aphybut dtAnakdasMm* m* mistreats* and earftntrtTneiit unta he w— in hs»late20*. H*s cotTsrrutnvent to the rjrwtogiTtphic capture itix! tomtg of beauty consumed him almost to] the point of his being possessed. And now, his death brings muc J sorrow to those who knew him personally or through his works. His once living legacy will continue with his passing. The beauty he captured is no longer stalked by him, but waits to capture and imprison another man's eyes and to be captured and held again within rrvankind's heart CSUF Today Vintage Day* Maetmjj— The Vintage Days Competitve Events Sub-Committee will meet at 4 p.m. in the Upstairs Cafeteria, Room 200. ' Personnel Moating— The Personnel Committee will meet in the Main Cafeteria, 203 at 9:30 a.m. Business Banquet— The annual banquet to honor graduates in the School of Businessand Administra¬ tive Sciences will bC held at the Exhibit Hall of the Fresno Convention Center. Some 1,200 people are expected to attend. The social hour begins at 6 p.m. followed by dinner and the awared presentation. Lecture Armenian- will speak on topics relalingto the Armen¬ ian Genocide in a program sponsored by ihe Armenian Students organization and Armenian Studies Program. The program will begin at noon in Room 200 ofthe Old Cafeteria. Volleyball— Leilanl Ovcrstreet's Bulldog women's volleyball team will meet Boyd Grant's basketball team in the North Gymat 7:30 p.m. This is a benefit exhibition game to help the volleyball team's efforts to make a preseason tour of Hong Kong in August. Tickets are available at the Athletic Ticket Office and other locations in Fresno. Clo- -Interns Continued from page 1 ovcrwhclming"amount of time involved i research and filming. "Needless to say. 1 want lo get the very est students who can go oul and do a News briefs Grad* honored Nine CSUF students have been named Dean's Medalists as the outstanding graduates for 1984 and will be honored during the university's 73rd commence¬ ment ceremonies Saturday. May 19 in Bulldog Stadium The honorees represent each of Ihe uni¬ versity's eight schools and the Division of Graduate Studies and Research. One of Hie ingled o Associated Students Get Involved!!! '84-'85 faculty/student committee positions due. Are currently being filled by the A.S. personal Applications available at AS office. CU J16 Deadline April 27 at 5:00PM Each bronze mtdallibn depicting the university sea! and leads the processional for his or her respective school. The President's Medalist also receives a silver medallion presented during the ceremonies. The Schools and their Dean's Medal recipients are: School of "Agriculture and Home Eco¬ nomics. Caralee Albarian of Calaveras County. School of Arts and Humanities. Lola Scott of Fresno; School of Business and Administrative Sciences. John Meli- kian of Sanger; School of Education and Human Development, Barbara (Susie) Buckles of Seattle, Washington; School of Engineering, Kirk Wall of Fresno; School of Health and Social Work, Kathryn Elcheverry of Modesto; School of Natu¬ ral Sciences, William G. Griever, Jr. of Clovis; School of Social Sciences, Vickie Pochelle of Modesto; and Division of Graduate Studies and Research, J. Can- dyce King of Fresno. Musical opening The new musical comedy "Two l.oves Ago" will be performed at 8:15 p.m. this Friday in the Warnor's Theater. by Henry Wells of Oakland. The musical on corporate office life," has 15 songs scored in the jazz style of the Big Band rsity and invol- Era. The cast includes black actors from Oakland and will be augmented locally by a chorus line of young women from When the musical ends its tour of the valley next month. Wells said he plans to make a videotape and sell or lease it to independent and cable television stations. TicketsarcS8and$l0. Promoters said the proceeds will benefit the West Fresno Boys Club. ►AQ Continued from page 1 "Animals compete with humans for pro¬ tein as feed. "The team has 90'minuies to research the subject. Osland welcomes the public to Ag 242. where ihe speeches will be presented from 4-«:30 p.m. Afler a half hour break, the teams will college c.Thelea. is will b< -NO OUT-OF-POCKET COST FREE SPINAL EXAMINATION Danger Sitrnals of l'incht-tl Nerves: 1. Headaches, Dizziness, Blurre.1 Vision 2. Nc,:k Pain. Ti(-lit Muscles. Spasm 3. ShoeMcr Pain, Pain Down Arms, Numbness in llamls .4. Pain Itel-eer. Shoulders. Difficult llrcalrNltg, Alxluiilirul I'jin. S. Uwr.r Bat* lain. Hip Msa-SHM rain.I'.i.,l»ownl^ KRKK? 'nioiiiamU of area residents have s|Miie relaleil problems IS our way of erxriMiupiiig you lo.fiml oul if yon have u prolilem lli.il 1ST INSIIItANCK ACCKITKI) AS I' MWF 9-7PM TTH 9-5:30PM SAT 9-12NOON Holmes Oiiropractit* Clin.4 MI-MI IN. Firsl-Slo. #H»:* Meat team wins Members of the CSUF meat judging team have concluded their 1983-84 year of competition with a decisive first place fin¬ ish at the Northwestern Meat Animal and Carcass Evaluation Contest held at Twin Falls, Idaho. The CSUF team won first place in all three_divisions: market animal, breeding animal and carcass, and finished more than 300 points ahead of its nearest com¬ petitor in the eight-team field, the Univer¬ sity of Wyoming. The University of New Mexico, Brigham Young University and Washington Slate University followed in CSUF's Steve Boren, Dave Lopes and third high individuals overall. Vincent Pike was sixth and Rick Klampe was scv- came in second, Pike was seventh, Boren was eighth and Klampe was tenth. Mor¬ ales, Lopes, Boren, Klampe. and Pike swept the top five spots in the breeding c best record wins. Throughout the competition, only the winning team will be announced. At the end of the two-day event, the overall first and second place teams will receive tro¬ phies or plaques, which will be placed in less like a competition and more like a ision. Boren was first. Morales placed second and Al Rapozo placed ninth. Other team members were Stacy Arthur, Dennis Jones. Frank Kennedy and John ached by John Jacobs, Done be left out keep informed... Qet Ljour tickets NOW/. Air Guitar has sold out for two gears straight! TrcJcct* on «a!« nowll ONLY S2W/ID in advance CU "t*-™ V*0 **?<* fFashton Fair- S3 Get-serai advance $4 da\| of show and Tower Records'. Earthquake jolts northern California • Authorities called Santa Clara I County in northern California a "local emergency area" Tuesday in the wake of an earthquake that registered 6.2 on- I the Richtcr scale and which was epicentered about 12 miles southeajt of Twelve people in Santa Clara county reportedly suffered minor injuries, and considerable ttructural damage throughout the county resulted from the earthquake, which occurred at about 1:15 p.m. The city of Morgan Hill, near San Jote, reportedly tuffered the mott e ttructural damage to ret- . Joaquin Valley dams or reservoirs, dential homes and other buildings. The quake, which latted about 20 Nevada, the Bay Area and parts ofthe Central Valley. . No personal injuries were reported in the San Joaquin Valley, but some damage was done to the California Aqueduct Pumping Station south of Los Banos, which was shut down due to "precautionary measures," accord¬ ing to Lt. Art Cox of the Fretno County Sheriff's Department. '• No damage wat reported to any San Cox si - Accord ing to a spokes man at the UC Berkeley Seismograph Station, the quake occurred along the Calaveras faultline and was termed a "moderate" earthquake considering tbe low level of property and personal damage for an earthquake of that magnitude. The spokesman taid the damage ' resulting from the quake "wat not at great as, say, the 1971 San Fernando earthquake which had a magnitude of about 6.6 and occurred on a fault (San Andreas) that ran through a built-up area of the San Fernando Valley and Svtaar." Tuetday t earthquake it the strongest one felt in the Bay Area sirs* the IMO Livermore quake, the spoVetrnan taid. SmcelhedevastinglSOsVsan Francisco earthquake, there have been only four quaket lhat ranged greater than 6.0 in the Bay Area and Central California. Thit mott recent quake occurred just one week prior to the first anniversary of the May 2, 1983 Coeringa quake, which wat about 6.7 on the Rtchter acak. CSU, Fresno Wednesday, April 7Sr9 1984 The Daily Collegian Legality of AS budget vote in serious review Staff w, Afler threats of legal action from one of 115 senators; the AS Senate approved its 1984-85 budget for a second time on Tuesday. The budget was originally approved at the Senate meeting on April 10, but Sen. J oc Martucci told the Senate immediately afterward that the vote was illegal because the budget had not been listed on the meeting's agenda for 10 days as required by state law. The Senate was later notified that Wil¬ liam Corcoran, Dean of Student AfTairs, whose signature is needed on the budget, would not approve it until it was passed legally. ic second vote, Martucci o other I Tom Watson, said afler Tuesday's meet¬ ing that they would press charges against the Senate for the action taken at the April Fashion show generates nursing funds Students and faculty members of CSUF's nursing department substituted colorful, elegant attire for the customary white uniforms of their profession for a few hours April 14 in a fashion thow which celebrated the department t 25th anniversary. The underlying reason for tbe show was to ensure the departmenti continuity by raising funds to buy new equipment and supplies for tbe Nursing Learning Center, said Professor Anne Heisinger. CSUF is the primary source for nursing care in the valley, yet is often ignored when the department requests financial support, said Heisinger. "When we talked to various people in the community, they commented that they participated in the Red Wave and the Bulldogt but for some reason or another wouldn't support us. My question it, what is the quality of the nursing program to the community? We have new buses and airline tickets for the athletes, yet no dress¬ ing kits for the nursing students," she said. The profits derived from the $15 dona¬ tion are earmarked lo irhprove equip¬ ment now in the lab, which is "really beragged and steadily going downhill," aSee Fashion, page 6 was rescheduled, the Senate's actions at the earlier meeting were still illegal. "When you rob a bank you can't put the money back to make everything legal," he said. "It's still illegal — they (the Senate) broke the law." ■ . Martucci said that immediately before the April 10 meeting, the Senate's chair, Administrative Vice President Michael Baladjanian, had been notified by Assist¬ ant Dean of Student Affairs Tom Boyle, the Senate's advisor, that tbe budget vote was not on the agenda, Baladjanian said that although he knew, the budget was not on that week's agenda. he thought it had been published on an earlier agenda and only realized after he had called for the vote that that was not the case. Baladjanian said there is no reason for legal action to be taken by the senators. "They have a right to be doing what they're doing." he said after the meeting Tuesday, "but we've taken action to change the mistake we made. The budget has been legally passed." I n Tuedsay's vote the budget was passed unanimously by the 11 senators present. However, four ofthe senators including Green. Martucci. Wauonatvd Kelly Tay¬ lor all left the room during the vote. "If we had voted today (Tuesday)" said Watson, "il would have made all this rather a farce. We feel strongly that the have to take responsibility for what we did before, which was to vote against it (the budget) and we feel the same way today." Martucci Tint raited the question of legality when senators were not allowed to debate the budget at the Tint vote. Walton and Green both voted against the budget at the April 10 meeting while Martucci. who refuted to vote, wat counted as an abstention. All three taid they would have approved •See Senate, page * Faculty salaries show steady gain WASHINGTON, D.C. (CPS) — Fac- declining smountt of money ttate lcgnhs- wit ia I97X ulty salaries went up again thit year, but tsrret give to ccaleati*. Faeaatjummbaa at private rolsftjn did notssrapkllyat'ntJjepatt,ai>ewturvey WtseaaoMte«ski^»«tait«retitj*^ tlafhtiy better than those at nuhtecaa- of the college teaching profession hat a tendency to five Oat rums acrost the puses, the ssarwy fotsad. found. board".to faculty membert, the taid. Id lailinadisa eoBigs teachsn apt aver- i*l* average fiu-uhytatary hat gone up practice, that would mean tJteretlestofa age raisst shoot one |»erotnt batriatr than 5.7 percent tince the 1982-13 school year, talary o^ereisea batween full and esto- what fall protestors got, aad shout haJfa the American Assttsraation of Univertity date profetaort. r*rofttrort(AAUl*7foui>dmrMeliriuiiary Crrer the ktat two yt>»^ however, i»*b^ result! from its annual ttudy of h6w much ittratort have taid the nssjor reason they college teachers make. had to raise tuition ronch tatter than the tasartet until June. r**fa/^tytalarie«wentup7.9|*rcent ituTation rate it Iteoaaae they must pay La* *»»w, it found salaries at uswttrti- in 1912-83, and 9.9 percent in 1981-82. faculty memberimore. tie«avei^Wl£iO,w*tueB»esWMat<^ AAUPtpolrxtn«.nit^Molottlrjattri- Arece«Colle*f»iBc«s-*d.tii<ty leges without pad schools averaged buted[the trowing rate of increase* to the faculty buying power is bow test than it S22J90. Stop and smell the flower*— He was no -Brother Jed and he dttUt draw a targe crowd, hat Carlos , ■uatagi was dear sad slatpar: "Doat take We too seriously.** Ataaaaav, a ssajee s*«arrered hat wttty sttsujjjaa ta the Free Speech Area (ajatsttJay. "I just to not talk a boat anything twkMsa,** taid Alewata. "People always take
Object Description
Title | 1984_04 The Daily Collegian April 1984 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1984 |
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 24, 1984 Pg. 12- April 25, 1984 Pg. 1 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1984 |
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 |
US April 24, 1984
FsJ®^©
1902-1984
[i 8at«utyrr«Ttvc«ph«ralft«a-^*w
tetaaik¥iftaalrt1UB*t PUTSUS, t*a»*aV
UW atsatt to b« ca-pftmd vvitMna.
smart ai cTsation. Tha ey*
fctjfcr goo, vWantmg to be
t-sfatpfttvj, «rv«m for just a ascond
train al stsfnrty.
AiitMi Adarns, Bks ail great
artra-te, dared to be captured and,
in the process, captured beauty
Itself. He dedicated his life to the
imprisonment of his eyes and
♦rnitghtened others to the joys,
gadness and wonders of nature
and its always present but
ss-KTvetirnes hidden beauty.
born in San Francisco in
1902. As a teenager, on his first
Yosemite, he took the first
of a multitude of pictures that
would later become his legacy.
That km trip Mlthd b«vma«
of « ktrig love airatr tor rhs yourta
artist Hs tovsd ptSo*x>o>aphybut
dtAnakdasMm* m* mistreats*
and earftntrtTneiit unta he w— in
hs»late20*.
H*s cotTsrrutnvent to the
rjrwtogiTtphic capture itix! tomtg
of beauty consumed him almost to]
the point of his being possessed.
And now, his death brings muc J
sorrow to those who knew him
personally or through his works.
His once living legacy will continue
with his passing.
The beauty he captured is no
longer stalked by him, but waits to
capture and imprison another
man's eyes and to be captured and
held again within rrvankind's heart
CSUF Today
Vintage Day* Maetmjj—
The Vintage Days Competitve Events
Sub-Committee will meet at 4 p.m. in the
Upstairs Cafeteria, Room 200. '
Personnel Moating—
The Personnel Committee will meet in
the Main Cafeteria, 203 at 9:30 a.m.
Business Banquet—
The annual banquet to honor graduates
in the School of Businessand Administra¬
tive Sciences will bC held at the Exhibit
Hall of the Fresno Convention Center.
Some 1,200 people are expected to attend.
The social hour begins at 6 p.m. followed
by dinner and the awared presentation.
Lecture Armenian-
will speak on topics relalingto the Armen¬
ian Genocide in a program sponsored by
ihe Armenian Students organization and
Armenian Studies Program. The program
will begin at noon in Room 200 ofthe Old
Cafeteria.
Volleyball—
Leilanl Ovcrstreet's Bulldog women's
volleyball team will meet Boyd Grant's
basketball team in the North Gymat 7:30
p.m. This is a benefit exhibition game to
help the volleyball team's efforts to make
a preseason tour of Hong Kong in August.
Tickets are available at the Athletic Ticket
Office and other locations in Fresno. Clo-
-Interns
Continued from page 1
ovcrwhclming"amount of time involved
i research and filming.
"Needless to say. 1 want lo get the very
est students who can go oul and do a
News briefs
Grad* honored
Nine CSUF students have been named
Dean's Medalists as the outstanding
graduates for 1984 and will be honored
during the university's 73rd commence¬
ment ceremonies Saturday. May 19 in
Bulldog Stadium
The honorees represent each of Ihe uni¬
versity's eight schools and the Division of
Graduate Studies and Research. One of
Hie
ingled o
Associated
Students
Get Involved!!!
'84-'85 faculty/student
committee positions due.
Are currently being filled
by the A.S. personal
Applications available at
AS office. CU J16
Deadline April 27 at 5:00PM
Each
bronze mtdallibn depicting the university
sea! and leads the processional for his or
her respective school. The President's
Medalist also receives a silver medallion
presented during the ceremonies.
The Schools and their Dean's Medal
recipients are:
School of "Agriculture and Home Eco¬
nomics. Caralee Albarian of Calaveras
County. School of Arts and Humanities.
Lola Scott of Fresno; School of Business
and Administrative Sciences. John Meli-
kian of Sanger; School of Education and
Human Development, Barbara (Susie)
Buckles of Seattle, Washington; School of
Engineering, Kirk Wall of Fresno; School
of Health and Social Work, Kathryn
Elcheverry of Modesto; School of Natu¬
ral Sciences, William G. Griever, Jr. of
Clovis; School of Social Sciences, Vickie
Pochelle of Modesto; and Division of
Graduate Studies and Research, J. Can-
dyce King of Fresno.
Musical opening
The new musical comedy "Two l.oves
Ago" will be performed at 8:15 p.m. this
Friday in the Warnor's Theater.
by Henry Wells of Oakland. The musical
on corporate office life," has 15 songs
scored in the jazz style of the Big Band
rsity and invol- Era. The cast includes black actors from
Oakland and will be augmented locally by
a chorus line of young women from
When the musical ends its tour of the
valley next month. Wells said he plans to
make a videotape and sell or lease it to
independent and cable television stations.
TicketsarcS8and$l0. Promoters said the
proceeds will benefit the West Fresno
Boys Club.
►AQ
Continued from page 1
"Animals compete with humans for pro¬
tein as feed. "The team has 90'minuies to
research the subject. Osland welcomes the
public to Ag 242. where ihe speeches will
be presented from 4-«:30 p.m.
Afler a half hour break, the teams will
college
c.Thelea.
is will b<
-NO OUT-OF-POCKET COST
FREE SPINAL
EXAMINATION
Danger Sitrnals of
l'incht-tl Nerves:
1. Headaches, Dizziness,
Blurre.1 Vision
2. Nc,:k Pain. Ti(-lit
Muscles. Spasm
3. ShoeMcr Pain, Pain
Down Arms, Numbness
in llamls
.4. Pain Itel-eer. Shoulders.
Difficult llrcalrNltg,
Alxluiilirul I'jin.
S. Uwr.r Bat* lain. Hip
Msa-SHM rain.I'.i.,l»ownl^
KRKK? 'nioiiiamU of area residents have s|Miie relaleil problems
IS our way of erxriMiupiiig you lo.fiml oul if yon have u prolilem lli.il
1ST INSIIItANCK ACCKITKI) AS I'
MWF 9-7PM
TTH 9-5:30PM
SAT 9-12NOON
Holmes Oiiropractit* Clin.4
MI-MI IN. Firsl-Slo. #H»:*
Meat team wins
Members of the CSUF meat judging
team have concluded their 1983-84 year of
competition with a decisive first place fin¬
ish at the Northwestern Meat Animal and
Carcass Evaluation Contest held at Twin
Falls, Idaho.
The CSUF team won first place in all
three_divisions: market animal, breeding
animal and carcass, and finished more
than 300 points ahead of its nearest com¬
petitor in the eight-team field, the Univer¬
sity of Wyoming. The University of New
Mexico, Brigham Young University and
Washington Slate University followed in
CSUF's Steve Boren, Dave Lopes and
third high individuals overall. Vincent
Pike was sixth and Rick Klampe was scv-
came in second, Pike was seventh, Boren
was eighth and Klampe was tenth. Mor¬
ales, Lopes, Boren, Klampe. and Pike
swept the top five spots in the breeding
c best record wins.
Throughout the competition, only the
winning team will be announced. At the
end of the two-day event, the overall first
and second place teams will receive tro¬
phies or plaques, which will be placed in
less like a competition and more like a
ision. Boren was first. Morales placed
second and Al Rapozo placed ninth.
Other team members were Stacy Arthur,
Dennis Jones. Frank Kennedy and John
ached by John Jacobs,
Done be left out
keep informed...
Qet Ljour tickets NOW/.
Air Guitar has sold out
for two gears straight!
TrcJcct* on «a!« nowll
ONLY S2W/ID in advance CU "t*-™ V*0 **?<* fFashton Fair-
S3 Get-serai advance
$4 da\| of show
and Tower Records'.
Earthquake jolts northern California
• Authorities called Santa Clara
I County in northern California a "local
emergency area" Tuesday in the wake
of an earthquake that registered 6.2 on-
I the Richtcr scale and which was
epicentered about 12 miles southeajt of
Twelve people in Santa Clara county
reportedly suffered minor injuries, and
considerable ttructural damage
throughout the county resulted from
the earthquake, which occurred at
about 1:15 p.m.
The city of Morgan Hill, near San
Jote, reportedly tuffered the mott
e ttructural damage to ret- . Joaquin Valley dams or reservoirs,
dential homes and other buildings. The
quake, which latted about 20
Nevada, the Bay Area and parts ofthe
Central Valley. .
No personal injuries were reported
in the San Joaquin Valley, but some
damage was done to the California
Aqueduct Pumping Station south of
Los Banos, which was shut down due
to "precautionary measures," accord¬
ing to Lt. Art Cox of the Fretno
County Sheriff's Department. '•
No damage wat reported to any San
Cox si
- Accord ing to a spokes man at the UC
Berkeley Seismograph Station, the
quake occurred along the Calaveras
faultline and was termed a "moderate"
earthquake considering tbe low level of
property and personal damage for an
earthquake of that magnitude.
The spokesman taid the damage
' resulting from the quake "wat not at
great as, say, the 1971 San Fernando
earthquake which had a magnitude of
about 6.6 and occurred on a fault (San
Andreas) that ran through a built-up
area of the San Fernando Valley and
Svtaar."
Tuetday t earthquake it the strongest
one felt in the Bay Area sirs* the IMO
Livermore quake, the spoVetrnan taid.
SmcelhedevastinglSOsVsan Francisco
earthquake, there have been only four
quaket lhat ranged greater than 6.0 in
the Bay Area and Central California.
Thit mott recent quake occurred just
one week prior to the first anniversary
of the May 2, 1983 Coeringa quake,
which wat about 6.7 on the Rtchter
acak.
CSU, Fresno
Wednesday, April 7Sr9 1984
The Daily Collegian
Legality of AS budget
vote in serious review
Staff w,
Afler threats of legal action from one of
115 senators; the AS Senate approved its
1984-85 budget for a second time on
Tuesday.
The budget was originally approved at
the Senate meeting on April 10, but Sen.
J oc Martucci told the Senate immediately
afterward that the vote was illegal because
the budget had not been listed on the
meeting's agenda for 10 days as required
by state law.
The Senate was later notified that Wil¬
liam Corcoran, Dean of Student AfTairs,
whose signature is needed on the budget,
would not approve it until it was passed
legally.
ic second vote, Martucci
o other I
Tom Watson, said afler Tuesday's meet¬
ing that they would press charges against
the Senate for the action taken at the April
Fashion show
generates
nursing funds
Students and faculty members of
CSUF's nursing department substituted
colorful, elegant attire for the customary
white uniforms of their profession for a
few hours April 14 in a fashion thow
which celebrated the department t 25th
anniversary.
The underlying reason for tbe show was
to ensure the departmenti continuity by
raising funds to buy new equipment and
supplies for tbe Nursing Learning Center,
said Professor Anne Heisinger.
CSUF is the primary source for nursing
care in the valley, yet is often ignored
when the department requests financial
support, said Heisinger.
"When we talked to various people in
the community, they commented that
they participated in the Red Wave and the
Bulldogt but for some reason or another
wouldn't support us. My question it, what
is the quality of the nursing program to
the community? We have new buses and
airline tickets for the athletes, yet no dress¬
ing kits for the nursing students," she said.
The profits derived from the $15 dona¬
tion are earmarked lo irhprove equip¬
ment now in the lab, which is "really
beragged and steadily going downhill,"
aSee Fashion, page 6
was rescheduled, the Senate's actions at
the earlier meeting were still illegal.
"When you rob a bank you can't put
the money back to make everything
legal," he said. "It's still illegal — they (the
Senate) broke the law." ■ .
Martucci said that immediately before
the April 10 meeting, the Senate's chair,
Administrative Vice President Michael
Baladjanian, had been notified by Assist¬
ant Dean of Student Affairs Tom Boyle,
the Senate's advisor, that tbe budget vote
was not on the agenda,
Baladjanian said that although he knew,
the budget was not on that week's agenda.
he thought it had been published on an
earlier agenda and only realized after he
had called for the vote that that was not
the case.
Baladjanian said there is no reason for
legal action to be taken by the senators.
"They have a right to be doing what
they're doing." he said after the meeting
Tuesday, "but we've taken action to change
the mistake we made. The budget has been
legally passed."
I n Tuedsay's vote the budget was passed
unanimously by the 11 senators present.
However, four ofthe senators including
Green. Martucci. Wauonatvd Kelly Tay¬
lor all left the room during the vote.
"If we had voted today (Tuesday)" said
Watson, "il would have made all this
rather a farce. We feel strongly that the
have to take responsibility for what we did
before, which was to vote against it (the
budget) and we feel the same way today."
Martucci Tint raited the question of
legality when senators were not allowed to
debate the budget at the Tint vote.
Walton and Green both voted against
the budget at the April 10 meeting while
Martucci. who refuted to vote, wat
counted as an abstention.
All three taid they would have approved
•See Senate, page *
Faculty salaries show steady gain
WASHINGTON, D.C. (CPS) — Fac- declining smountt of money ttate lcgnhs- wit ia I97X
ulty salaries went up again thit year, but tsrret give to ccaleati*. Faeaatjummbaa at private rolsftjn did
notssrapkllyat'ntJjepatt,ai>ewturvey WtseaaoMte«ski^»«tait«retitj*^ tlafhtiy better than those at nuhtecaa-
of the college teaching profession hat a tendency to five Oat rums acrost the puses, the ssarwy fotsad.
found. board".to faculty membert, the taid. Id lailinadisa eoBigs teachsn apt aver-
i*l* average fiu-uhytatary hat gone up practice, that would mean tJteretlestofa age raisst shoot one |»erotnt batriatr than
5.7 percent tince the 1982-13 school year, talary o^ereisea batween full and esto- what fall protestors got, aad shout haJfa
the American Assttsraation of Univertity date profetaort.
r*rofttrort(AAUl*7foui>dmrMeliriuiiary Crrer the ktat two yt>»^ however, i»*b^
result! from its annual ttudy of h6w much ittratort have taid the nssjor reason they
college teachers make. had to raise tuition ronch tatter than the tasartet until June.
r**fa/^tytalarie«wentup7.9|*rcent ituTation rate it Iteoaaae they must pay La* *»»w, it found salaries at uswttrti-
in 1912-83, and 9.9 percent in 1981-82. faculty memberimore. tie«avei^Wl£iO,w*tueB»esWMat<^
AAUPtpolrxtn«.nit^Molottlrjattri- Arece«Colle*f»iBc«s-*d.tii |