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the Daily Collegian California State University, Fresno MONDAY. MAY IS, 1969 . • Hard loss a crane* at tha NCAA regional playoffs at stake, Futerton't Danny DaVMa. SEE STORY PAGE 6. tots Sunday to the BuMoga ThoiSwituDmljColkpaH taken vary hard by the Titan's ASI closure proposed Task force wants senate office shutdown for semester By Mike Klingbcil Staff Writer In a continued effort to bring about a peaceful solution to the embittered dis¬ pute between the Associated Students, Inc. and Unity-SRG supporters, a task force created proposals Friday that would, among other things, shut down the ASI offices for the rest of the semester. According to Dr. Alex Gonzales, co- chair of the task force, one proposal would make it mandatory to have Student Activities Director Steve Mortenson, one current ASI senator and one officer-elect power. from next year's administration present at the ASI facilities whenever business is conducted. Dean of Student Affairs William Corcoran said having an SRG member, which Gonzales suggested be ASI Presi¬ dent-elect Karen Cogley or Legislative Vice President-elect Kathleen Solano, would "help in the transition process." Once the semester is over, the ASI would "operate on a part-tune basis until July 1," added Corcoran, who is a member of the task force. At that point, Cogley's administration will assume Moreover, the task force also plans to target the March ASI elections for scru- tinization of "possible racist and sexist overtones" as well as the credibility of the proposed bylaw changes that were vetoed by ASI President Scott Vick last week. The task force was created by CSUF President Harold Haak Thursday in response to the protesters' show of disobedience during the two-day sit-in at the ASI offices which ended Wednesday night with the arrests of 28 of 45 See ASI, Findings in tomb revealed By Stevelciitlitz Staff Writer A 2,500-year-old tomb in northern Peru is yielding the greatest archeoiogical treasure ever found in the Western Hemi¬ sphere, an authority on the civilization that built the tomb told a CSUF audience Sunday. Christopher B. Donnan, director of the Museum of Cultural History at UCLA, was in Fresno to present a slide-illustrated lecture displaying the priceless artifacts to a full crowd in the John Wright Theatre. "This is clearly the richest tomb any archeologist has ever found in the Wes¬ tern Hemisphere," Donnan said. Continued research at the si te is being financed by the National Geographic Soci¬ ety, which featured the story of Sipan, home of the ancient Moche civilization, in its October, 1988, magazine. A team of archeologists, headed by Walter Alva, director of the Bruning Archaeological Museum in Pent; became aware of the tomb in ■early 1987, when objects uncovered by tomb robbers began to appear on the black market Authorities traced the source to the Sipan site, and salvage work was started to save anything remaining after the rob¬ bers had done their digging. What was found has been called the New World's equivalent of King Tin's tomb in Egypt Sipan consists of a series of pyramid- shaped mounds, made of sun dried bricks. See DONNAN, pace 4 remed I cholars lauded By *■»!_ *, rtefa*. Staff Writer Horporirtg uwtergraduates who will be entering the medkal field in the near future, some 16 CSUP students werij rriC^fffoerJ i Oprxxturaty the Smuggler's tan Friday Sponsored by the honored were students fi CSUF clnK the Chicano Health Or¬ ganisation mi the Charles Drew Society, Those students being hon<.-ed have been accepted into summer programs or have been accepted into health r^fessionaS schools. The banquet also cc^raemoraied the 10th armiversary of HCOP. "This is a uniqoe event in that a condensation of mmority stvideots, par¬ ents of students, minority health prr> fesrooab and CSUF staff and admin¬ istration asend the banquet and also participate in the planning of the ,evm," ^.ftpcteo Pineda, director &» HCOP. pate 3
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 15, 1989, Page 1 |
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 Daily Collegian California State University, Fresno MONDAY. MAY IS, 1969 . • Hard loss a crane* at tha NCAA regional playoffs at stake, Futerton't Danny DaVMa. SEE STORY PAGE 6. tots Sunday to the BuMoga ThoiSwituDmljColkpaH taken vary hard by the Titan's ASI closure proposed Task force wants senate office shutdown for semester By Mike Klingbcil Staff Writer In a continued effort to bring about a peaceful solution to the embittered dis¬ pute between the Associated Students, Inc. and Unity-SRG supporters, a task force created proposals Friday that would, among other things, shut down the ASI offices for the rest of the semester. According to Dr. Alex Gonzales, co- chair of the task force, one proposal would make it mandatory to have Student Activities Director Steve Mortenson, one current ASI senator and one officer-elect power. from next year's administration present at the ASI facilities whenever business is conducted. Dean of Student Affairs William Corcoran said having an SRG member, which Gonzales suggested be ASI Presi¬ dent-elect Karen Cogley or Legislative Vice President-elect Kathleen Solano, would "help in the transition process." Once the semester is over, the ASI would "operate on a part-tune basis until July 1," added Corcoran, who is a member of the task force. At that point, Cogley's administration will assume Moreover, the task force also plans to target the March ASI elections for scru- tinization of "possible racist and sexist overtones" as well as the credibility of the proposed bylaw changes that were vetoed by ASI President Scott Vick last week. The task force was created by CSUF President Harold Haak Thursday in response to the protesters' show of disobedience during the two-day sit-in at the ASI offices which ended Wednesday night with the arrests of 28 of 45 See ASI, Findings in tomb revealed By Stevelciitlitz Staff Writer A 2,500-year-old tomb in northern Peru is yielding the greatest archeoiogical treasure ever found in the Western Hemi¬ sphere, an authority on the civilization that built the tomb told a CSUF audience Sunday. Christopher B. Donnan, director of the Museum of Cultural History at UCLA, was in Fresno to present a slide-illustrated lecture displaying the priceless artifacts to a full crowd in the John Wright Theatre. "This is clearly the richest tomb any archeologist has ever found in the Wes¬ tern Hemisphere," Donnan said. Continued research at the si te is being financed by the National Geographic Soci¬ ety, which featured the story of Sipan, home of the ancient Moche civilization, in its October, 1988, magazine. A team of archeologists, headed by Walter Alva, director of the Bruning Archaeological Museum in Pent; became aware of the tomb in ■early 1987, when objects uncovered by tomb robbers began to appear on the black market Authorities traced the source to the Sipan site, and salvage work was started to save anything remaining after the rob¬ bers had done their digging. What was found has been called the New World's equivalent of King Tin's tomb in Egypt Sipan consists of a series of pyramid- shaped mounds, made of sun dried bricks. See DONNAN, pace 4 remed I cholars lauded By *■»!_ *, rtefa*. Staff Writer Horporirtg uwtergraduates who will be entering the medkal field in the near future, some 16 CSUP students werij rriC^fffoerJ i Oprxxturaty the Smuggler's tan Friday Sponsored by the honored were students fi CSUF clnK the Chicano Health Or¬ ganisation mi the Charles Drew Society, Those students being hon<.-ed have been accepted into summer programs or have been accepted into health r^fessionaS schools. The banquet also cc^raemoraied the 10th armiversary of HCOP. "This is a uniqoe event in that a condensation of mmority stvideots, par¬ ents of students, minority health prr> fesrooab and CSUF staff and admin¬ istration asend the banquet and also participate in the planning of the ,evm," ^.ftpcteo Pineda, director &» HCOP. pate 3 |