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The Dairy Collegian Monday, Miry 1,1989 Page 5 FAIR Continued from page 1 educational credit—lo students, who often cite lack of tree time arid the need to meet educational expenses as roadblocks to volunteering. "Right now, they have to do it for the sake of volunteering," said Espino, who added thai grants or stipends may become available in the future. Espino's goal is to have,--within 10 years, 75 percent of students doing some form of volunteer work. He sees the need for the establishment on campus of a center, modeled on the student employ¬ ment office, which would coordinate and match students with volunteer-hungry agencies. Espino has been working with' the office of the vice president for academic affairs to get the word out about the new legislation, by meeting with campus groups and organizations. The office also provided a $200 in¬ centive prize to be given to the student organization which bad the most mem¬ bers sign up as volunteers. Forty percent of die volunteers must complete their agreed-upon service by Dec. 1 for the prize to be awarded, according to Espino. While the volunteer event faced tough competition for student attention from Vintage Days activities such as the pie eating contest, Espino was pleased with the interest it generated, and hopes to make it an annual event. The date was actually selected to coincide with Vintage Days, Espino said, because of the high pedestrian traffic it Reaction to the fair was unanimously positive from students and agency repre¬ sentatives. Teresa Stovall, a representative from the Fresno County Library Literacy Pro¬ gram, said publicizing her program was nearly as important as recruiting volun¬ teers. The program seeks to find and educate the nearly 80,000 functionally illiterate adults in Fresno County. Volunteers meet several hours a week wilh non-readers, individually or in groups, to teach mem enough to handle everyday reading tasks. Another program was the Fresno' Unified School District Apple Connec¬ tion, a program which seeks to enrich the educational system by making the time and talents of the community available to school children. The Apple Connection was the program selected by one of Friday's volun¬ teers. Grant Hasson, a CSUF pre-med major. Hasson said he probably wouldn't have made the commitment to the pro¬ gram, which has volunteers working at jobs such as tutors and library assistants, without the on-campus volunteer fair.. "You think about [volunteer work], but don't make the effort," Hasson said. Another volunteer was Joe Odicta, an electrical engineering major. Odicta selected the Volunteer Bureau's Parent-Aide program, which has volun¬ teers oversee family visitation sessions. "I was interested in volunteering, I've got a lot of time," said Odicta. Seeing the program's representative on campus provided the opportunity to finally make a decision. "I saw what they were about and I liked what I heard," Odicta said. Daily Collegian Classifieds work just great. The SOCIETY of AUTOMOTIVE ENGINEERS PRESENTS MR. ELLIOTGREEN kL= Consultant I Aeronautical Design Support and Management MAY 2,^989 at 6:00 pm LA. 154 Topic: DEVELOPMENT OF A MODERN TRANSPORT AIRCRAFT EVERYONE WELCOME! GENERAL ELECTIONS AT 5:00 PM SPECIAL! M FILM DEVELOPING* : 294-4268 The Division of Extended Education For Summer Courses • 4 three-week sessions • 3 six-week sessions • from May 30 - August 18 Preregister May 1-5,1989 Tuition: $88 per semester unit Catalog available in the Division of Extended Education San Ramon 3, Room 141 csu FRESNO FRESNO DODGE / DAIHATSU College Graduate Buyer Plan 89 COLT $139 00 MO #072668 $300 rebate, $400 cash back incentive 7015cap,$1455.93Res. 600 mos. LEASE! OCA A. Graduated within last 12 months B. Be within 4 months of graduating C. 2 or 4 yr degree incl. Nursing Program D. Be permanently employed or have verifiable committment of employement E. No Previous CREDIT F. Three personal • references G. Auto Insurance 6162N. Blackstone 431-4000 .V;-;. m - i
Object Description
Title | 1989_05 The Daily Collegian May 1989 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1989 |
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 | May 1, 1989, Page 5 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1989 |
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 | The Dairy Collegian Monday, Miry 1,1989 Page 5 FAIR Continued from page 1 educational credit—lo students, who often cite lack of tree time arid the need to meet educational expenses as roadblocks to volunteering. "Right now, they have to do it for the sake of volunteering," said Espino, who added thai grants or stipends may become available in the future. Espino's goal is to have,--within 10 years, 75 percent of students doing some form of volunteer work. He sees the need for the establishment on campus of a center, modeled on the student employ¬ ment office, which would coordinate and match students with volunteer-hungry agencies. Espino has been working with' the office of the vice president for academic affairs to get the word out about the new legislation, by meeting with campus groups and organizations. The office also provided a $200 in¬ centive prize to be given to the student organization which bad the most mem¬ bers sign up as volunteers. Forty percent of die volunteers must complete their agreed-upon service by Dec. 1 for the prize to be awarded, according to Espino. While the volunteer event faced tough competition for student attention from Vintage Days activities such as the pie eating contest, Espino was pleased with the interest it generated, and hopes to make it an annual event. The date was actually selected to coincide with Vintage Days, Espino said, because of the high pedestrian traffic it Reaction to the fair was unanimously positive from students and agency repre¬ sentatives. Teresa Stovall, a representative from the Fresno County Library Literacy Pro¬ gram, said publicizing her program was nearly as important as recruiting volun¬ teers. The program seeks to find and educate the nearly 80,000 functionally illiterate adults in Fresno County. Volunteers meet several hours a week wilh non-readers, individually or in groups, to teach mem enough to handle everyday reading tasks. Another program was the Fresno' Unified School District Apple Connec¬ tion, a program which seeks to enrich the educational system by making the time and talents of the community available to school children. The Apple Connection was the program selected by one of Friday's volun¬ teers. Grant Hasson, a CSUF pre-med major. Hasson said he probably wouldn't have made the commitment to the pro¬ gram, which has volunteers working at jobs such as tutors and library assistants, without the on-campus volunteer fair.. "You think about [volunteer work], but don't make the effort," Hasson said. Another volunteer was Joe Odicta, an electrical engineering major. Odicta selected the Volunteer Bureau's Parent-Aide program, which has volun¬ teers oversee family visitation sessions. "I was interested in volunteering, I've got a lot of time," said Odicta. Seeing the program's representative on campus provided the opportunity to finally make a decision. "I saw what they were about and I liked what I heard," Odicta said. Daily Collegian Classifieds work just great. The SOCIETY of AUTOMOTIVE ENGINEERS PRESENTS MR. ELLIOTGREEN kL= Consultant I Aeronautical Design Support and Management MAY 2,^989 at 6:00 pm LA. 154 Topic: DEVELOPMENT OF A MODERN TRANSPORT AIRCRAFT EVERYONE WELCOME! GENERAL ELECTIONS AT 5:00 PM SPECIAL! M FILM DEVELOPING* : 294-4268 The Division of Extended Education For Summer Courses • 4 three-week sessions • 3 six-week sessions • from May 30 - August 18 Preregister May 1-5,1989 Tuition: $88 per semester unit Catalog available in the Division of Extended Education San Ramon 3, Room 141 csu FRESNO FRESNO DODGE / DAIHATSU College Graduate Buyer Plan 89 COLT $139 00 MO #072668 $300 rebate, $400 cash back incentive 7015cap,$1455.93Res. 600 mos. LEASE! OCA A. Graduated within last 12 months B. Be within 4 months of graduating C. 2 or 4 yr degree incl. Nursing Program D. Be permanently employed or have verifiable committment of employement E. No Previous CREDIT F. Three personal • references G. Auto Insurance 6162N. Blackstone 431-4000 .V;-;. m - i |