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•-THE DAILY COLLEGIAN Thursday, May 6, 1976 No decision on ballot (Continued from Page 1) absences should be presented separately to students.* This would allow each student to choose which absence he felt permissible, Price's veto-memo added. The senate also refused to vote on Price's appointment of David Kllby as senator during yesterday's meeting. Price had recommended Kllby be approved as the senator from the School of Social Many of the senators had some sharp words regarding the appointment. *l don't feel he IS qualified or prepared for this office," Senator Debbie Tassls said. «1 don't think we should always be taking the recommendation of David Price.' Tassls went on to say that she had heard some negative things about Kllby from her roommates. Senator Barbara Kissinger said she had checked with some of the Instructors In the Social Science Department and many of them had never heard of Kllby. Senator Richard Carrlllo said that particular senate seat has been vacant all semester and by waiting until the application could be reviewed would waste even more time. There are only two senate Kllby said tl polisher.* The senate spend $500 oui Iso voted to allow campus rac of reserve expenditure budget Campus calendar 'TODAY 2:30 p.m.-Professors Robert Allison and Christopher Niggle will speak In the College Union lounge on the working people's struggle against political and economic exploitation. 7 p.m.-A Aim of the Mozart opera 'Die Zauberfloete* will be presented by the German Club In the Music Building, room 175. 7:10 p.m.-Donald P. Caver ot the Naval Postgraduate School In Monterey will speak on 'Mathematical Mode's ror Manpower Planning" In the Business Bulld- wlll hold his monthly rence in the Speech ng, room 172. The s open to the public. Students can pay registration fees with BankAmericard Students registering for classes for the fall 1976 semester will be able, for the first time; to put their fees *on the cuff.' With registration fee payments due during the summer, the university has adopted the practice of accepting payment of fees by BankAmericard. Credit cards are now accepted by many universities and colleges-Including State University and Colleges Tom McGonaglll, CSUF accounting officer, said the entire •n their class request forms to be officially registered. The deadline for receipt of the fee payment on campus is July 21. Students wishing to use the BankAmericard payment system will be charged a one per cent fee by the bank. McGonagtll said the procedure Is for the student to obtain a tuition form from a Bank of America branch or from the CSUF Business Office, fill It out and enclose It with the class request form. e Ash Broadcastlnp A life is rebuilt at CSUF f™oA ton ©* (Continued from page 1) nology. But before 1 w< school equivalency exam and laughed at the Idea." passed. She then 'shipped her bags to Fresno* and started the ogy, she said, for "teacl As tor giving up thedrughablt. bars.' she said simply, 'when you're ready to quit, you quit, whether anybody tells you to or not.* desire for challenge. In School apparently has been tar sped she has nol rhange. ■1 knew ltd never hut more rewarding than her other exploits. npllne myself In my 11 ■Expe'rtentlally." she said, admitted, -so It would I've already learned the materi al I'm studying. But most nt It discipline ol school. So copy plus XEROX COPIES It NO MINIMUM Bring Student ID - wc Guarantee Towers 1322 E. Shaw 3( as an English majo goal, then I derided tl HELP WANTED JOB. RESUMES ™7264-5672 DON'T DELAY Book By Phone TEACHERS WANTED Single, 20-35 years, for ARCHERY; ARTS & CRAFTS; GUITAR; CANOt- ING; FENCING; H1FLERY; SAILING; • SYNCH. SWIMMING; TENNIS; WATER- SKIING, ENGLISH RIDING; A GYMNASTICS for fine Kings Canyon Gkls Camp. Also, DINING ROOM SUPERVISOR, KITCHENWORKERS, STABLEHAND, LAUNDRESSES (2). EXPER. REO. Send Resume to: 1485 Redwood Dr. Los Altos or Call (415) 967-8612 Day or Eve. DATES: Jun 15-Aug 18 i SlVf IWhJo '%ffa T R ETC YOUR BUCK AT Me-N-Ed's Me-N-Ed's PIZZA PARLOR GOOD AT ANY ME-N-ED's EZ-WIDER ROLLING PAPER 23* a pack. 50 pki(yr. supply) $11.50. Details on disc, smoking acces. $1. Refund. Repeat Sales, Dept. COS, 180 Congdon St, Providence R J. 02908. Money back guarantee. Beatles* Eagles. Chicago. Rock 96 FM Stereo. Da,il CALIFORNIA STATE UNIVERSITY, FRESNO FRIDAY, MAY 7, 1976 Accessibility: Student wins Baxter audience-at last it- Stair Reporter accesible to students Is in Baxter, CSUF president? e Shukllan said It took him nearly two hours In telephone conversations, and a few threats, including a threat to go to the Fresno Bee, before he was able tn get an appointment with Bax- Shukllan's case may Illustrate ■i complaint sometimes heard among students that Baxter Is too isolated from what really goes on .iround campus, and that he tails th students. Shukllan wanted to give Baxter a petition bearing the signatures of slightly more than 100students who opposed Baxter's suggestion that the School of Social Sciences be disbanded. Blocking the path to Baxter's office, Shukllan alleged, was Jim Miller, director of public Information and Donald Winkler, director of public affairs. According to Shukllan, both MlUer and Winkler tried to dissuade him from seeing Baxter. Both denied the charge, sayln»lt is Baxter's policy not to personally accept petitions. Baxter, said Miller, receives numerous petition's on a multitude of issues and does not have the time to accept them all. Shukllan said he did not merely want to hand Baxter the petition, but also wanted to tell him what students thought about plans to disband the School of Social Scl- Both Miller and Winkler, however, said they had the Impression that Shukllan only wanted to give Baxter the petition. ;TijDENTS DISSECT a cadaver lo gain a thorough understanding of anatomy and kinesiology, the science >' human motion. At work are physical therapy students (from left) Susie McMahan, Kerrl Oberti and ^nor Sawyer. (Photo by Joe Laspina) Student survey AS service gripes aired by William UcEwen K the 100 students Interviewed v The Dally Collegian are rep- esentatlve of the entire student ody, then the majority of stu- ents are clearly dissatisfied 1th student government. While the majority of students 5*) feels there Is a need for ludent government, a sizeable attraction, 72 of the 100 stu- eny said an Increase In the $10 tudenl body fee might solve ome of the student government's Ho you feel you are gelling our monies' worth ((10) iron lude' government? One reason often cited for student dissatisfaction Is that student government does not have enough responsibility. •I'd like to see better food In the cafeteria, but what can they do about It?" said Paul Hammond, a business administration major. Walt Dreschler, also a business administration major, felt that student government should »rlm lis own expenditures. Tl* chief complaint of students residing In the dormitories Is that student government does not Include dormitory students In political process. Richard Martin, an ROTC student who lives In the dormitories, criticized student government for not being responsive to hl9 needs and pointed to the campus parking problem as an example. The greatest area of contro versy among the «. viewed concerned the role of minorities In student government and the amount of money that minority organizations received. - Walt Dreschler, a member ot Sigma Alpha Epsllon, summed up the attitude' of many white students when he said, They .jeep . shoveling out money for evtjry little group here and there.We need to form our own little group so we can get some of the money.... We're the 'unrepresented majority'.* But A Lam Kam Hung, an accounting student, said foreign students, need a greater voice In student government and there Is •a need for Improved mlnoTlty programs on campus." They said the normal procedure for turning a petition Into Baxter Is to give It to his secretory. It Js a whole different situation If a person wants to discuss something with the president. Then we will be happy to arrange an appointment with him,' Winkler said. Only after Shukllan Indicated he wanted to talk with Baxter was an appointment arranged, said Winkler. Shukllan, however, attributed his success toother reasons. It took a threat to go to the Fresno Bee and a lot of aggression on my part to get to see him (Baxter),' be said. Daring the coarse of his discussions with Miller and Winkler, Shukllan said he was taken aback when Miller told him the School of Social Sciences Issue was 'a dead horse,' and when Winkler allegedly asked, 'What id on Page 4, Col. 1) Cadaver study aids therapy students ; ' Stoll Reporter Right cadavers, embalmed and wrapped In plastic, lay on 'cadaver tables' In Ihe cool 08 degree temperature of the Physical Therapy Department's 'Anatomy Room." However, the room's stillness was soon broken after a lecture on Ihe racial region ended. Following the lecture, 30 students entered the room and began dissecting each cadaver's face with scalpels, clamps and prolies. The use ot cadavers is one part of a year-long course titled 'Applied Anatomy and Kinesiology.* Kinesiology Is the science which Investigates and analyzes human motion. According to Helen James, assistant professor of physical therapy, cadavers fulfill a need to provide physical therapy majors with an In-depth knowledge of anatomy and kinesiology. She said the department has to order the bodies from a local mortician. The cadavers are unclaimed bodies or those donated to Sex and body size can be requested when ordering, she said, and may be filled within a day. James defined a large male cadaver as standing six feet and weighing 200 pounds. A small male would be James estimated the costs for each cadaver as ranging from $150 and $200. The average age of the cadavers Is from 45 to 65. "it hasn't been difficult to get them,* she said. Upon their arrival, the embalmed bodies are preserved with phenol, a chemical which retains the body's molstness while retarding bacterial growth. . . Students dissect the entire corpse In the two-semester coarse, said James. During the first semester", activity Is concentrated on tho neck, shoulder, arm and the upper extremities of the body. In the second semester, the lower extremities and the head, neck and trunk are dissected. - _ ; •We deal more with the muscles of the human body than with the viscera," she said. The viscera refers to Internal organs like the the students are during and learning the Yet for any given lab session, the area to be dissected Is mined by the topic of her lecture, noted James. •When I lecture on the hand, for example, I sectlng the hand,' she said. They're U" """ function of joints and muscles, at relationships.* Every cadaver is used by two students In each of two lab periods, she noted. After the students fully dissect tti mated and sent to the Chapel of the Light rr According to James, most of the students do not find <ll human corpse an obstacle to their lab assignments. •Most students know ahead of Ome of what they're getting Into,' she said. "Most of them have had prior experience with cadavers In other classes or In working at hospitals.' Although rnost students pursue their work with seriousness, James said some non-students remain unaccustomed to having cadavers la the department. 'Some of the people like the campus workmen and staff In the (physical therapy) building probably find It unusual working next to a cadaver,* she said. The use of cadavers on campus, she said, Is tn Its second year. Prior to that, students had to work In the 'Gross Pathology Lab* at the Valley Medical Center of Fresno.
Object Description
Title | 1976_05 The Daily Collegian May 1976 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1976 |
Description | Daily (except weekends) during the school year. Microfilm. Palo Alto, Calif. |
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, 35mm. |
Technical Information | Scanned at 600 dpi; TIFF; Microfilm ScanPro 2000 "E-image data" |
Language | eng |
Description
Title | May 6, 1976 Pg. 8- May 7, 1976 Pg. 1 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1976 |
Description | Daily (except weekends) during the school year. Microfilm. Palo Alto, Calif. |
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, 35mm. |
Technical Information | Scanned at 600 dpi; TIFF; Microfilm ScanPro 2000 "E-image data" |
Language | eng |
Full-Text-Search |
•-THE DAILY COLLEGIAN Thursday, May 6, 1976
No decision on ballot
(Continued from Page 1)
absences should be presented separately to students.* This would
allow each student to choose which absence he felt permissible,
Price's veto-memo added.
The senate also refused to vote on Price's appointment of David
Kllby as senator during yesterday's meeting. Price had recommended Kllby be approved as the senator from the School of Social
Many of the senators had some sharp words regarding the appointment. *l don't feel he IS qualified or prepared for this office,"
Senator Debbie Tassls said. «1 don't think we should always be taking
the recommendation of David Price.'
Tassls went on to say that she had heard some negative things
about Kllby from her roommates.
Senator Barbara Kissinger said she had checked with some of the
Instructors In the Social Science Department and many of them had
never heard of Kllby.
Senator Richard Carrlllo said that particular senate seat has
been vacant all semester and by waiting until the application could
be reviewed would waste even more time. There are only two senate
Kllby said tl
polisher.*
The senate
spend $500 oui
Iso voted to allow campus rac
of reserve expenditure budget
Campus
calendar
'TODAY
2:30 p.m.-Professors Robert
Allison and Christopher Niggle
will speak In the College Union
lounge on the working people's
struggle against political and
economic exploitation.
7 p.m.-A Aim of the Mozart
opera 'Die Zauberfloete* will be
presented by the German Club In
the Music Building, room 175.
7:10 p.m.-Donald P. Caver ot
the Naval Postgraduate School In
Monterey will speak on 'Mathematical Mode's ror Manpower
Planning" In the Business Bulld-
wlll hold his monthly
rence in the Speech
ng, room 172. The
s open to the public.
Students can pay registration
fees with BankAmericard
Students registering for classes
for the fall 1976 semester will
be able, for the first time; to put
their fees *on the cuff.'
With registration fee payments
due during the summer, the university has adopted the practice
of accepting payment of fees by
BankAmericard. Credit cards
are now accepted by many universities and colleges-Including
State University and Colleges
Tom McGonaglll, CSUF accounting officer, said the entire
•n their
class request forms to be officially registered. The deadline
for receipt of the fee payment on
campus is July 21.
Students wishing to use the
BankAmericard payment system
will be charged a one per cent
fee by the bank. McGonagtll said
the procedure Is for the student
to obtain a tuition form from a
Bank of America branch or from
the CSUF Business Office, fill
It out and enclose It with the
class request form.
e Ash Broadcastlnp
A life is rebuilt at CSUF
f™oA
ton ©*
(Continued from page 1)
nology. But before 1 w<
school equivalency exam and
laughed at the Idea."
passed. She then 'shipped her
bags to Fresno* and started the
ogy, she said, for "teacl
As tor giving up thedrughablt.
bars.'
she said simply, 'when you're
ready to quit, you quit, whether
anybody tells you to or not.*
desire for challenge. In
School apparently has been tar
sped she has nol rhange.
■1 knew ltd never hut
more rewarding than her other
exploits.
npllne myself In my 11
■Expe'rtentlally." she said,
admitted, -so It would
I've already learned the materi
al I'm studying. But most nt It
discipline ol school. So
copy plus
XEROX COPIES It
NO MINIMUM
Bring Student ID - wc
Guarantee Towers
1322 E. Shaw
3(
as an English majo
goal, then I derided tl
HELP WANTED
JOB.
RESUMES
™7264-5672
DON'T DELAY
Book By Phone
TEACHERS
WANTED
Single, 20-35 years, for
ARCHERY; ARTS &
CRAFTS; GUITAR; CANOt-
ING; FENCING; H1FLERY;
SAILING; • SYNCH. SWIMMING; TENNIS; WATER-
SKIING, ENGLISH RIDING;
A GYMNASTICS for fine
Kings Canyon Gkls Camp.
Also, DINING ROOM SUPERVISOR, KITCHENWORKERS,
STABLEHAND, LAUNDRESSES (2). EXPER. REO.
Send Resume to:
1485 Redwood Dr. Los Altos
or Call (415) 967-8612 Day
or Eve.
DATES: Jun 15-Aug 18
i SlVf
IWhJo '%ffa
T R ETC
YOUR BUCK
AT Me-N-Ed's
Me-N-Ed's PIZZA PARLOR
GOOD AT ANY ME-N-ED's
EZ-WIDER ROLLING PAPER 23*
a pack. 50 pki(yr. supply) $11.50.
Details on disc, smoking acces.
$1. Refund. Repeat Sales, Dept.
COS, 180 Congdon St, Providence
R J. 02908. Money back guarantee.
Beatles* Eagles. Chicago.
Rock 96 FM Stereo.
Da,il
CALIFORNIA STATE UNIVERSITY, FRESNO
FRIDAY, MAY 7, 1976
Accessibility:
Student wins Baxter audience-at last
it-
Stair Reporter
accesible to students Is
in Baxter, CSUF president?
e Shukllan said It took him
nearly two hours In telephone
conversations, and a few threats,
including a threat to go to the
Fresno Bee, before he was able
tn get an appointment with Bax-
Shukllan's case may Illustrate
■i complaint sometimes heard
among students that Baxter Is too
isolated from what really goes on
.iround campus, and that he tails
th students.
Shukllan wanted to give Baxter
a petition bearing the signatures
of slightly more than 100students
who opposed Baxter's suggestion
that the School of Social Sciences
be disbanded.
Blocking the path to Baxter's
office, Shukllan alleged, was Jim
Miller, director of public Information and Donald Winkler, director of public affairs.
According to Shukllan, both
MlUer and Winkler tried to dissuade him from seeing Baxter.
Both denied the charge, sayln»lt
is Baxter's policy not to personally accept petitions.
Baxter, said Miller, receives
numerous petition's on a multitude
of issues and does not have the
time to accept them all.
Shukllan said he did not merely
want to hand Baxter the petition,
but also wanted to tell him what
students thought about plans to
disband the School of Social Scl-
Both Miller and Winkler, however, said they had the Impression that Shukllan only wanted to
give Baxter the petition.
;TijDENTS DISSECT a cadaver lo gain a thorough understanding of anatomy and kinesiology, the science
>' human motion. At work are physical therapy students (from left) Susie McMahan, Kerrl Oberti and
^nor Sawyer. (Photo by Joe Laspina)
Student survey
AS service gripes aired
by William UcEwen
K the 100 students Interviewed
v The Dally Collegian are rep-
esentatlve of the entire student
ody, then the majority of stu-
ents are clearly dissatisfied
1th student government.
While the majority of students
5*) feels there Is a need for
ludent government, a sizeable
attraction, 72 of the 100 stu-
eny said an Increase In the $10
tudenl body fee might solve
ome of the student government's
Ho you feel you are gelling
our monies' worth ((10) iron
lude' government?
One reason often cited for student dissatisfaction Is that student government does not have
enough responsibility.
•I'd like to see better food In
the cafeteria, but what can they
do about It?" said Paul Hammond,
a business administration major.
Walt Dreschler, also a business administration major, felt
that student government should
»rlm lis own expenditures.
Tl* chief complaint of students
residing In the dormitories Is
that student government does not
Include dormitory students In
political process. Richard Martin, an ROTC student who lives
In the dormitories, criticized
student government for not being
responsive to hl9 needs and
pointed to the campus parking
problem as an example.
The greatest area of contro
versy among the «.
viewed concerned the role of minorities In student government
and the amount of money that
minority organizations received.
- Walt Dreschler, a member ot
Sigma Alpha Epsllon, summed up
the attitude' of many white students when he said, They .jeep .
shoveling out money for evtjry
little group here and there.We
need to form our own little group
so we can get some of the money....
We're the 'unrepresented majority'.*
But A Lam Kam Hung, an accounting student, said foreign
students, need a greater voice In
student government and there Is
•a need for Improved mlnoTlty
programs on campus."
They said the normal procedure for turning a petition Into
Baxter Is to give It to his secretory.
It Js a whole different situation
If a person wants to discuss
something with the president.
Then we will be happy to arrange
an appointment with him,' Winkler said.
Only after Shukllan Indicated
he wanted to talk with Baxter was
an appointment arranged, said
Winkler.
Shukllan, however, attributed
his success toother reasons.
It took a threat to go to the
Fresno Bee and a lot of aggression on my part to get to see him
(Baxter),' be said.
Daring the coarse of his discussions with Miller and Winkler, Shukllan said he was taken
aback when Miller told him the
School of Social Sciences Issue
was 'a dead horse,' and when
Winkler allegedly asked, 'What
id on Page 4, Col. 1)
Cadaver study aids
therapy students
; ' Stoll Reporter
Right cadavers, embalmed and wrapped In plastic, lay on 'cadaver
tables' In Ihe cool 08 degree temperature of the Physical Therapy
Department's 'Anatomy Room."
However, the room's stillness was soon broken after a lecture
on Ihe racial region ended. Following the lecture, 30 students
entered the room and began dissecting each cadaver's face with
scalpels, clamps and prolies.
The use ot cadavers is one part of a year-long course titled
'Applied Anatomy and Kinesiology.* Kinesiology Is the science
which Investigates and analyzes human motion.
According to Helen James, assistant professor of physical therapy,
cadavers fulfill a need to provide physical therapy majors with an
In-depth knowledge of anatomy and kinesiology.
She said the department has to order the bodies from a local
mortician. The cadavers are unclaimed bodies or those donated to
Sex and body size can be requested when ordering, she said, and
may be filled within a day. James defined a large male cadaver
as standing six feet and weighing 200 pounds. A small male would be
James estimated the costs for each cadaver as ranging from
$150 and $200. The average age of the cadavers Is from 45 to 65.
"it hasn't been difficult to get them,* she said.
Upon their arrival, the embalmed bodies are preserved with
phenol, a chemical which retains the body's molstness while retarding bacterial growth. . .
Students dissect the entire corpse In the two-semester coarse,
said James. During the first semester", activity Is concentrated
on tho neck, shoulder, arm and the upper extremities of the body.
In the second semester, the lower extremities and the head, neck
and trunk are dissected. - _ ;
•We deal more with the muscles of the human body than with the
viscera," she said. The viscera refers to Internal organs like the
the students are during and learning the
Yet for any given lab session, the area to be dissected Is
mined by the topic of her lecture, noted James.
•When I lecture on the hand, for example, I
sectlng the hand,' she said. They're U" """
function of joints and muscles, at
relationships.*
Every cadaver is used by two students In each of two lab periods,
she noted.
After the students fully dissect tti
mated and sent to the Chapel of the Light rr
According to James, most of the students do not find |