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MONDAY, APRIL 6, 1987 BAKERSFIEL):} COLLEGE. VOLUME XLVH NUMBER
20 :
, Coach, .· tennis team cancel season .' ..
'
. By STEVEN LASHLEY · . Staff Writer
Scatiered among the broken glass · .. and. wreckage lay . three
12-packs of beer; which ultimate- . •
In less than 48 ho~rs, the rnen's · ly would hah the title drive
dead ·. tennis team saw'a season of glory ·. in its tracks'. . . '
. . ..
dwindle into an escapade . of . After a one-hour meeting l11st .
, · . tragedy;. . . · . . · Thursday between players ~nd
· ·. Currently tied with L.A. Pie.rce BC administrators, the.
firial. ver-for first' place in the Wester~ . diet verified the·
worst. For'. the State Conference, se~en= players . first· time in
BC :history, a
· · and Head Coach Gaylen Lewis Renegade • athletic . team has
saw· the beginning·. of· the . end ·forfeited. the rest of its
season·.· when th~lr van slammed. int(? ll . ·. (foul'.· matches) .
because of
. flower beci on .ihe north side of . alcohol .. · . · · · . ·.
· · · · ·. · . · . ·.·. · • ._· the Science and, Engineering · ··
Officially, the. team-with the . · .. · - .,__. ·_ Bi.tildlng~last
Tuesday·~night· cm ... exception~ of. Quinn Miller-and~-·
. b •..
· their way home from a match . . . · · against Ventura College.
· . Please see TENNIS page 7. - . . . . . .
· · ·· .. Cqach Gaylen Lewis arrested .on· campus · fof f elOtlY
IJUl . .
By JUDY SHAY. - . . ; . . . ~ .. : . .. -·' . · ·Editor
in-Chief
• Wright said, "We are remov· ing hirrt as 'tennis
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-\\· \- ·.:' 't;f P.\GF. 2 MONDAY, APRIL 6, 1987 RENEGADE
RIP
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f""!"'"'!'---.;;;;.;.----;.;.:.;;;;.;;.;..;.;;:;.:.:;:,;:;:,::;=,;.;.~---'
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f;;
'!~...---··-. _N _____ · e_w_s _Br_ie_f __ s_· -----I Class
teaches car technology ©i:' USC rep here today .. · B~ DAN PoEHNER
v, '. Bllcla Modestin from the Office of School Rolatl.-ins at the
Staff Writer · :'}(. • Opiverslty of Southern California will be on
the BC campus to-. '.i/ · , · d~y, Aprll 24 and May 6. Students
Interested In transfer to USC (·. · :~liould check with the
Transfer Center for further details. ·~: . . '\• '
t .Restaurant course offered t: ;i: :C;ome to this class ~nd
learn about many different restaurants , : ::111:~own, 7-10 p.m.
tonight, at the Renegade Room. · r :\';:~lgn up Bl the door ..
Class fee $10. Class facilitators: Emily
.'.Thlr'oux and Albert Ochoa. · ' ·. · . . . . ·. : ' . . . . .
. . . . -- ... .... ~ . . : -, '; ·• . \ . I
:i)fresno rep here Wednesday · ·.· · .·. · : : : :Stella
Moniefongo from the office of Relai!ons with schools :j~ California
State University, Fresno wlll be on campus 9:30
;: .· : ,a;m.-12:30 p.m. Wednesday;:Students Interested In
transfer to ,;: ;::~~P should stcip by and visitMontelongo.
. . . .. . . . . . -;:.·., ..... · .. ·; -...... :.·
. :iChotr· concert here this Friday i · . : : '. ~r~e BC choirs
made up of 80 singers will present a Choral ' · : :Concert at 8
p.n'i. Friday in the Indoor Theater. The Concert
: ;C~olr and Chamber Singers y.,ill be using the Friday program
as . : ::a.~.'kick..oft"' for theiLApril 24;27 Concert T
\fµn Rurr·at College.Park· Saturday . : : ;A Fun Run !Ok, Sk and
ISOO meters will be held Saturday, at · : : (:allege Park on the
comer of Mt. Vernon ilnd Panorama. : : : :entry fee is $8 pre-race
and $10 on race day. Pre-race deadline : : ts'.)Ved.nesday. .. . .
· . . . : ·. · · . · ·.: : : : :Call 327-2424. Sponsored by the
American Cancer Society: .
~ . :· . . . . . -·. . . . -
· : Alumni· Trlithlon Saturday : ;'; The Third Annual Mighty
Mini Coors Light Triathalon is
. ·: se:heduled · for 8 a.m., Saturday, on t4e · CSB campus,
9001 . · Stockdale Hwy. · · · ~ ' ~-' . .
.. FLICS to show° ''Colonel Redl''
. · · The Film Lovers lnterriatiomil cinemlisoclety presenis
Klaus , . . . Mar_ia Brandauer (' 'Oufof Africa'.') as ari
idealistic man trapped
.. iii.a tryranwca1 world; selling h·is soul to the enemy in
"Colonel
~--·:·-. j·' -l .--. ' ' l ·. 1 : ~
,- ..
... , -.,. !';--
· .. Redl,'' 7:30 p:m. April 18, 24()0 ~· Chester Ave. Admission
is . $3,. . . . ' . ,· ·. . . . . . . . .
: CSEA workshop. April 20 . ·. . .
·. _· ·. Begin11ing April 20, CSEA. will sponsc,r a workshop. on
the communication process an_d its effectupon ourselves and others
.. The workshops will' be lield I :30-3:30 p.m: on Mondays and
· 'Wednesdays. · · · ·csEA _members are ericourage'd to attend.
one of the sessions · offered. Call Lisa Hutchiriso11, EOPS, CCcJ
for more informa-
. tlon, · · · · · · ·
· . ~res no ~acific Colleg~ · rep lier~ · ·_. •· · .· · Beth
Thomason from the AdmissionsOfflce·at.Fresno Pacific
. College will be on the:Bc campus 9:30 a.m.~12:30 p.in. April2L
.
. St1;1dents interested in transfering should stop by and talk
with·
. her. · · · · · ·
··justice· rephere_._.April 22 . : . Don Scott,,from the
d~partment of Criminal Justice wiil be in .
: · the Executive Board Room, 9:30-11:30 a.m, April 22, Students
. 'interested in transfer to _this program should schedule an ap~
..
pointment in the BC Transf~r 1:enter. . . . . .. . . .
· 11~k.e1\sff!l~;, Jazz Week coming .-.. · · .. ·• . Dizzy
Oi!Jesp1e will be the (eatuted artist during)'Bakersfleld . Jµz
Weck" _April 23-2S at BC and Cal State Bakersfield. . .
. Events inch1de the South. Valley. Jazz Festival with· competi-
. don. from jazz groups'from Jr. High schools through college; .
Apnl 23 at the BC Indoor Theater .. ' . · ·.. · .· .. · ·
. Dizzy OIIJespie will be featured with the BC Jazz Ensembl~ .
7:30 p.m., AP.ril 23 in the BC Outdoor.Theater. ·
• · A conimand perfor111ance of the top jazz groups from the' ·
· · South Valley competition will be held April 24': Also featured
1s •
th~ Los Angeles Jazz Wo,rkshop. . . · •. · • .•. · .· · · ... ·
From 2:10 p.m. April 2S Cal State.Bakersfield will hold a con~
cert featuring local jazz artists. . · . · Tickets for Dizzy
Gillespie are s10: Tickets for the Command Performance are SS.
·
Easter egg hunt coming . . The North Bakersfield Recreation -Mil
Park Districts River·
view Neighborhood Cente'r will hold its third annual easter egg
· . hunt at I :30 p.m., Saturday, April 11 for children ages 3-9.
The
. tgg hunt is free and participants must bring a basket to
collect . eggs. :
For more information contact C.J. Bone at 392-2020 .
UCSB representative here April 24 · Os«r Zavala, Community
Collegl: Liaison from UC Santa
Barbara, v.ill be on the BC campus 9:30-10:30 a.m. April 24.
Appointments will be set up throu'gh the BC Transfer Center for
students wh to' pay for.·.·· coinittee to receive the rest ofihe
lion as such: The employmerit In the last year, the.department the
mechan,ics' additional train- . eight possible certiflcaies last
fall; . · . training panel saw that mariy · received three donated.
vehicles, inl!, Most consumers don't want
· , Only three mechanics .schools . all recent models with. the.
elec- to pay the higher wage. Said , in the slate h~ve been
certified for · au to niechanics would be · frical . systems s the
· class . em'. ... Burr, "They either don 'l work on all . eight
areas: engine. repair; unemployed if noi retrained· for ·
phasizes:. A 1986. Ford Ranger, ·. them (their own cars) oi: they
find engine performance; electrical the field, arid thus went about
·. donated by Jim Burke FOrd; an shadetree mechanics 16 do the. ·
systems; suspensio·n an.ct st~ring( . setting \JP a program to
train· '86 Cadillac Sedan de Ville, . work for them." heating • and
air · conditioning; them with a student-worker ar- donated by
General Motors frain; manual drive and axles; auto rangemenL . . .
. ing technicians; and an '84 Pon~ The training course offered
to
· transmission. and transaxle;. and. . . · T~e.theortwas to pay
for the_ir tiac Sunbird from a Los Angeles _stude_nt-workers .. wiH
.be. open-brakes .. ·. )earning . instead of·. their ... training
facility. . . . . . enrollment rtex(falJ under the tis
unemployment.. · . . tie Automotive· 'Computer Burr:alsO sald
the department . ManY01.e~hanics have benefit~ ·. All three are
iinportant for Systems, or Automotive 66; ... ·.·
. i~ siiil • benefitting from a ted from the arrangement ... In
. their indivi4ual :Cducational · . Those who have their personal .
~150,000 grant from thC state it fact, Burr said lie has i9
students worth. The Ford is the niost re- . cars work~a on by the
students received.two years ago. The grant· enrolled; .ihen laughed
•. saying; · ·. cerit in trucks; the. Cadiliac has . buy aH pacts
as the department is made it pc,ssible · to buy new· . ''Five too
many." , . •· .·.· . , seven different computer systems ·· • not
allowed tQ r«eive monies for
. diagnostic equipment it did not : . • In the class,' Burr's
students to master, and ihe Sunbird has a • their_work, The waiting
list for have at'a time when the autci in- . work 'On cars donated
'to tlie • computer 'coritrolied' fuel injec- such work is
consistandy two lo dustry had st!irted to computerize · department
as well as those ciwn- . tion system. Ali three are in very three
weeks behind, but the .cost everything. . . . • -ed : by students
anci fac.ulty, • good, condition'. •.. . . . - . _l5_ unbeatable. .
. .• . . . . . ... ..::.
. ··1magewotkShbp•fot ·woinetlstaff By FRANCINE BLOOM · Image
~·onsultant:. D. J:. siOnscan be. It (dressing for sue- . ~d.
recog~iZilJg _apj)ropriaie.
.· · Staff Writer · · Throgmorton, Will cpnduct the cess) can
make the difference of clothing· personaiities for the 1 .•.. ·
workshop and share experience · whether we get the job or get .·
Workplace in Order to . save
. The BC. Re:en'try Center is gained in her own business asa
alle,id.'' She sJressed theimpor-. 'inoney . .Invesh11ent w~drobing
sponsoring a ''Dressing for Sue· .. wardrobe consultant in New .
lance of developin'g a: wardrobe will cover how to put together a :
cess" • wo.tkshop. frm noon,2 York City and in worldng with · to.
reflect individuai personality. complete wardr6be with just· 12 .
p:m., Friday in the Renegade Beauty Control, Inc. in A'llslin, . .
A~epresen\ative•from Casual' piecesof clot~ing; . . ·.·. .·
....
.. Room for alL women staff Texas, whom she·. presently • Corner
win assist Throgmorton · .. Qne orilietopics will be ''Out-members.
The workshop will in- . represents. . . . ,· •. . . . at th~
workshop to di.Seuss invest, dated orUpdated? The choice is elude
hirich for $4,25 and feature . · Throgmorton says, "We1. do .· ment
wardrobing; 'differences in yours/' f.demonsiration of how a.
make-over, color analysis. and .· not recognize tlie power we Ji~ve
·.· styles, quality of cloihes and how to. apply cosmetics will
also be investment Wardrobing. . . ·. . and how important first
impres- . to puU a.wardrobe together on 'a·.. part of the event. .
..... . . . . . • . · ..
budget. , . . . . . . BC women si'aff members in~
.-----------------........ -.....;._ .......... _ ... , The
workshop will cQver, crea~ . ter~sted in attending should make
Hon of the correct image; figure .· a reservation by calling'
the Re;
Calendar MONDAY, ·Ap~: 6 . . ~ .
9:00.am •· 1:00 pm Curnni ·Afralr1 Oub Bake Sale Foyer · 9:30 am
• .. 1,'oo pm CSB Reprfflnlatln . • . . • Foyer 10:30 am ·: 1:00 pm
w .. t,rn Diy,: FunfDung Game · · CC Pallo · Jl:00 p_m •. 1:00 pm
AkoboUcs AnonymoUJ Meellna ·. Thetlde .Room 12:i5 pm • 12:45 pm
ACTIVITIES BOARD. . utc Bd Rm 7:00 pm • 9:.00 pni Baplbt Studeot
Mlnblrl« fireside Rm
. TilESDAY, Apr. 1 10:30 am , · t :00 pm WHltrn Dt.yo:
Sttd-Spllllng
· Conlttl CC Patio 1;00 pm ' . 2:00 pm· EOPS CouauUaa . · C04
.Conlm~ce· Rm
· 2:00 pm ' 3:00 pm Hoiulii11 Still Meeting . 00 Con!m= Rm 2:09
pm· 3:00 pm BOARD. OF REPRESENTATIVF.SExte Bd Rm· 7:00 pm • 10:00
pm Newman Oub Flffllde Rm 7:30 pm • 9:00 pm C,clfafOab Exec Bd
Rm
WEDNESDAY, Apr. 8 . . 7:30 am ." 8:30 am . Atblttl<
Fonndallon Bo11d •
Mttllaa ·. 10:00 1m • 2:00 pm_ Vohatttr Income Tu.Aubluce
ute Bd Rm
Proaram Fonr 11:00 lUII • 12:00 pm Black Slndtnl Union MLll:
Ctnter 11:00 am• 2:00 pm Nania& Proir,,m B1kt Sale Foye, 12:00
pm • t:00 pm M.E.CII.A. · ·ute Bd Rm 12:00 pm • 1:00 pm lattr,Vmlty
Cllrutioa FtU01nllp Fltalde Rm
I :00 pm • l:00 pm PoUtkal Sdnct 41 CC4 Con!tttnct Rm 1:00 pm·
2:00 pm Comal Aflaln aub E.lte Bd Rm 4:00 pm • 5:00 pm Ptt-Mtd a,b
ute M Rm
Wwtna Dt.1• Compttltlo1 between "e dllrunt olrktt 01 tu1p ..
THURSDAY, Apr. 9 10:00 1m - 12:00 pm 11.S.nkt Dtpl1Ulltnl of
. Rtb1bDIUtfo1 10:30 .LID· 1:00 pm Wemn Dt.n: Bud 11:00 am·
12:00 pm A1rkuJ1an ilib l:00 pm • BtJ
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tea tu re
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RENEGADE RIP MONDAY, APRIL 6, 1987 PAGE 3-.
. J ,. >
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Aid given to addicted .moms, babies last of a series 011
/11/ants bom addlc.ttd to drugs.
By KIB REL YEA .. Feature Editor
. "Sometimes, the father of t~ baby Isn't supportive or he;s
usllig drugs," conch1des Bagwell. . · · · · ·. KMC teaches ihe
pregnant addict that she does .have someone to talk
"The trend lately has been to really bend over backw~ds tok~ep
the to, someone to educate her· . . . . . · mother and her baby
together," says Jo Burris, RN and sup,rvlsor of. ''lthlnk most
adults have heard that drugs and babies ~re not good," · the
neonatal Intensive care unit at Kern Medical Center. Her siatement
·. says Bagwell. . . , . . .
· reflects a new approach by the medical profession art'd other
institutions "Sotne drug users feel they will itot get
pregnaritbecause they're us; . ·• In helping the pregnant addict
and her baby. . . . ,, . Ing drugs/' conHnues Bag~ell. rhls Isn't
necessarily true• since ,some
·· ·uJust becaus.e a person ls ·a drug use_r;'it doesn't make
her a terrible studies have shown that cer,taln street drugs c'an
actually 12§rcase fertlll-. mother," stresses Sab.rinil Larkin,
women's s.ervlces specialist through, ty In women, according to
~-~gwel). . . . . . .... · Kaleidoscope. . . . . ·.. . · . .· ... ·
.• .• ·. . . . , . ,, The prc8nant addict oft_e~ experiences an
emotional roller coaster. .·· Now, the pregnailt addict doesn't
have to fe 11r that her baby wHI be There could be guilt,
therc·c.ould be anxiety; there ce1uld be depres· taken away If she
goes to the hospital for help. Instead, hospitals such sion" b~ause
the pregnant addict knows she'shqrting her. baby, but Is as KMC are
con~ntratlng more on providing a positive ~upportsystem unable. to
stop, says BagweU. .. . . . . . .... j .
·. for the pregnant add!ct. imd her baby ... · .·· .· ·.· .. ·
.... ·.· . . · ·. .·. . . , Accordln~ to~g"'.'ell, a pregnant
addict may have a victim mentality ·. · 1n the last two years, KMC
hes been more a war~ of tlie problems th,e where there s a fechng
of the.wo~~d has done ~er In, of not b~lng able
pregnant drug user has and has been trying to coordinate
services f . . · .. · · .· .. · .. · · ... · ·, •.. ·services
refenal, but we also tell CPS llll the things she's.been doing to;
... In order t? offset these ~r.o~lems, the ")other 1s taught to
w:rap h~r .. take.care of herself and the baby. · . . . · · baby
firmlr 1n a blanket w1th1t~ arms snuggl.ed close to the
c~est.'Th_1s ·
·•'It's very unlikely; unless the baby ts in danger,that it will
be removed serves to give the baby boundanes to redqc~ 1tsfeellngs
of _b~mg l~st 1n . froin the mother's 'custody." ··.• . . . . . .·
. . . . • .. . . . ... space! . : . . . . · During the pregnant
addict's firstvislt, Bagwell strongly encourages ·
her to cail the mental hea1th drug rehabilitation progrllll1 at
KMC or. . . Since.the baby experiencing wjihdrawal always has the
need to suck, . · Kaleidoscope, •which .also works with the
pregnant addict. . · . the nioiher should give it a pacifier or
t~ach it to suck ori Hs fist: By uring the 18 nionths, the:
. .· siaff Writer ' . . ·. pregna'nt'women would riot b~ ait i;
a suitable environment,· The .· . background. The quesuons ll , . .
. . After the irivestigaiion is com- diild is placfd eiiiier •
with: When rui infant tests positive . issue. However. Jordan_
receives chHd' is pla~ed ill the Al )amisbn ask' while r~earching
her pastin- pleted, a pet it.ion is filed on.· relatives.in foster
homes or with: .
to drugs because its mother is an. approximately . 350•400 such.
Center·. for Children until other . elude \\'hether the mother is a
·. behalf o(theminor: '.fhe parent . the father if the f a01ily
isil~lii. · .. • . ··· addict, Claudetie · Jordan pf. phone call_s
a month; ·· · , ··..•. . arra,nge111ents. can be made .. ·· .••. ·
. . former drug 11ser and if the child · musl\hen prov~she is
capable of ·•. According to Jordan, a. high: . · · .
. . Child Protectiv~ Services .receives ..•. If the child te~ts
.positive io CPS has 48 hours to evaluate . would be cared for or
neglected if providing.the chi id with a proper. percentage of
moihers adhire \0: . . a phone call from KMC.. ·. drugs, CPS places
a legal hC>ld on the situation.· · . . . he•were sent back
hoine. environment, .· . .· . . the provision.sof the court.
Ifthc:
If this were an isolated inciden_t . the infant until an
in~estig;.tion • In that tinte'span it .. must ob, . money are made
:by the. CPS, . . "Every bod}' i:teeds :) secbond . child is'
return~ to. the parerit;: · · · ·· · · · chance . to get themselves
ack . CPS moniters the situation for a·
.Our>Co.mmitment · . .
. .
to.Excellence .. •. . . •. like baseball; ihree strikes and ment
in the case is discontinued.: .. ·.
· you'r~ ~ut," . . . ·. if the child is not returned to .· .
When the case goes to court, · ihe mother, communication with .
ihe judge usually . gives . the . the. father must • be
established . ·. mother 18 months to ~ehabilitate .·. before
parental ties are severed. ··
· . hers·elf. The motheri's usu.liy in- «We're supposed to do
sfructed by the courr to atten_d a .. drug program and.
counseling.· Please see CPS page 4.
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¥~!A~~.4 MONDAY, AfR1L 6, 1987 RENEG&DE RIP ~r.~ .. ·.. . .
. . . . ~- ·,
' ---., -.,. Feature Rock band The 77s/ Uniqu~, not in
limelight
. ~ . . - " : : : : DAN POEHNER ·
· · Staff Writer. Nonetheless, the .effort ·is if
strori~ one from Mark Tootle .· In fact, 11 is easy to get the
feel- Dowrl (1985), the new one shows · · unnerving; Roe · taking
back· chen mood of ''I Could Laugh." .·
Ing Roe was just beat up by ihe • >a grow11ng ability to ~ut
out solid. forgiveness · from someone who All this from a band that
isn't · (keyboards, guitars), Jan Eric
T~e:Sacramento collaboration . (ba/s);Aaron Smith (credited on
rqck ; band The 77s have just the. sleeve for «more pounding
released their third album, The ani;I · ihrashlng"), and'
bl!:Cding
big boys at the local park half an · song writing and a
combination · has apologized for a wrong. .·quite limellghi yet.·
SomethhJg's· ·.· hour ago and has come up to · of new wave, cow
punk, blues, Closing the first side Of the Ex-, missing fornow·,
but the talent Is
· your apartment for _ari ic~ pack. and eighties-style-sixties
jam. Im- · it Re.cords release is the only live · obviously there
and the following .•. agine the Psychedelic Furs, Lone · · cut ..
The . band drags Its feet of believers Is building, The next
. Seventy Sevens, showing· a pro- lejd singer Mike Roe. . .. By
the lime you reach the end. gression toward capturing.· their .
Roe's presence is. certainly .. of side one. he's ltlUddled up the
. unique. stage Ii.ct within the known during The 77s' perfor· ;
floor. and gotten blood on the stu'dio. Not quite, but dose. •
mances, and the emotion ls so. · carpei, but you don't mind. He's ·
.. The 77s are more ijlive on convincingly relayed to the living
proof that a man in pain is
Justice, '.)'he Byrds. and Dream through "Pearls Before Swine"
long play should be kl/ler. Syndicate, · all in a. pretty good as
the audience urges the four-·. · 1 · mood. . · . ·. · some to
finish what they started. · · Stiil, the rating received this · ·
Second song/first side is where What ... a ; . ; tease. . time sure
merits better. thai\ the
· the record really starts tci spin as · Side two Includes a
luscious usual, ''.Got a good beat, easy to Roe confesses "I Can't
Get Over . ·· pop rendition of "Don't . Say dance to . . . I'll
give it a 77 · It," H's a song that lyrically is. · Goodbye•• and
the moonlit kit- " , .
sta'g_e,; .more straightforward, grooves this time around. He Is
a· · honest. · · · · more: ~omethlng ... see, well.. i ma,ster
attaking ... his ..• own As a follow up 10· their weaker· ..
.. yo'u know ... It's hard io. ex- }. ; .. sweet ... time 'to
cry on previous albums Ping Pong Ofer ··•• plain. · · your cold
.shoulder. The Abyss (1983) and All Fall . · CPS Continued from
page 3. ·
. Lewis .• Continued froin page L . everything w~ can to try and
keep. chjld .. You ~ave people with ad~ . Legally,' CPS · can ..
act. in: . the ... family ·_.together,'' Jordan.· dictive
personalities and anything· · dependently within the hospital:
. . . said. . . ·.• . . .. . . • . . . . can be .used as an
excus.e." . . · If the child returns to the home . ., . .· · · ·. ·
· . · . · · Regaining custody of.her ·child . ·. Jordap said it is
typical for · environment, the agency must
~mlCffltW~~~CfflCS:eltt:SltWtt:SltWC$$3~1"-tltn)Cffl(:$:SJ.
The Kern County Museum. presents . . . . · .
A Trip into the past
1 l 'I· . r·
' . I I. ;· I" .. i£°i.l
•. ~ ,"l
:",·.'11 ., . •
. i' ., ·,
/
a ll>t more if I was taken out of in court." · · . home,
though." ... ·· · might not b~ t.he. only motiva_tlon "high risk''
families to have coordinate its steps with local law· '-·
·-1i:c''·1 · --··---Th. t -·-·1d'h · ' .lf·Le·w·I·,· t's-·
conv1'cted·of: ~elonv_ -· -He. com_ine. nted-oncthe-_dec. is. ion .
· · , · · · · ·· ue C assroom. . a .wou . ave l' 1 a mothe.r .has
for enrollins.in~a~ . more·tnan. orie ·stbling-removed~nforcment;·
:-,-- -·~ ·--~ -~-~~
· bee··n.·. wo· rse.· .. Teach'ing .1·.s ··my·· drunk
di'lvi.ng,. he wl_ II lose his by the Administration to cancel f h
h. · · · · · . · · · r, ,
drug program, Jordan maintain- · . rom t e ome. · life.- ••·. c'
:- . . . . . . teaching credentials, in com: the rest of the tennis
season. · · · ·. · · - are . most •. Educiition, a~cordirig .to
Jor-' .''The president-·(Wright)-has ~ance with the State
educational . \'Obviously, the coach is going ed;;_~·oLgoing to.
J'aH lriay .. _be an.· .. · · v~;~r~:1:g bt:!:e they can'( diiR is
the answer to this rising·
b · . . · . · · k · ·· · d · · · . . . · . to be biased. It's
hard to see such ·· · · . · · · .b· I . ·. ·. een very good. I thm
he's co e. .·. ·•· .. · · •· · ·· . . .. . . ·., .. ··.· . ·
incentive; It may also. be a joint protect themselves. . pro em. ·
· shown. me a lot of support,'' add· . . 4wis revea,led that he has
• a strong team ehminated from .. decision between everyone work: ·
Personally, I don't care what ''Catch kids while they're
. ed:Lewis.. . . re¢eived coaching. offers. from· ..
competiiion: . . . . . . . . . .. · . . . . . ·. . . . .. y_oti_ng
to lei them know drugs .. are· . - .,. · · · · ·· ·· I h · · ''I h
· · ·· d · · -Lewis added, "Tht's·sh'ou·ld.be.: irig .with the
child,''. Jordari an adult does .. You can mess up. .
Stat.ed . Walt Johnson, BC e sew ere. . ave receive two . your
life If you want, jusi don't bad," Jordan urged. «After you
atlil!llic director, "Gaylen. has offers In the last two days,"
said a. living . example.- · for other remarked, ''The
circumstances mess up the child'.s life," Jordan · do that, keep
telling them drugs done too many positive thiJ1gs on · ... the
20-year veteran.of BC. "BC is .. players ... A good lesson."· · ·.·
.. determine criteria for keeping the · said. are bad.". ·
campus to chuck it all/' · .. . Wright stressed that these ·are
the current .steps to be taken, pending . furiher information··.·
from .. police · reports and the District Attorney's Of fie¢ .. ·.
· "Gaylen still violated college . regulations; Even if he's riot
con- •
· victed;.he's still not out ·of the .· . te.nk with us," Wright
sal.d ..
. Wright pointed 01,1i two sec-.. tipns in. the . college
board
manual: buties of Certificated .. Staff° .Section 5.1~5 .· -
Staff
members are expected lo assist In - . . . . , . . . -·
maln!alnlng ordeI · In college ·
facilities and t(l ,encourage ap-propriate studentj,ebavlor. Se'
:well. It's hard 10 say what f :·. t?t6:~i11 coul~ ~; :• done. f
;;' ::;!!~e ha~· c-, :,,· . • !~rl the van rt .UOiiJ-llleknc'-
·-c-~ ·~are."He t:>:'~:that a -- ""~ "Stimate on i;j!fo~e ..
us·, -.o. ~,>~:~·(reel JTe:!~ . ..,.,. -,r_l.C for what
.,,.,',':\. ·-- -~ -l·~ .-,1t~. It i..('11-- ~ ....a. d' 11
r-,J.-..w ,t }.l:'-"'~~H~ ·)iZa'D'dfpends on .. •,a:fi happening
'"' • .. ,: ~(-~:~ ·.
. . . <
QUESTION #4. . - . . . . . . . . ..
WHEN.SHOULD THE COLLEGE STUDENT
c .
© 1987 AT&T
· CALL F ILYAND FRIENDS? · .. ·.· •. ,p)·· · _··During weekends
until 5 pm Sunday, and from.11.pm· .•
· tc;, 8 am StJnday through Friday, to save over 50% off , ·
AT&T's weekday out~of-state rates. . · . · · ... • · -
.. -·,..;..:..:.':"'" .
·. The 111inu.te:yQur bank statement reveals a neggtive • $60
balance. · •·· .• .· .· . · · ··. . - : _ ·. ··-•·· · . ·. .· · .
·. · ·_.· .·._· ·
b)
c) •. · Between 5 pm and 11 pm, Sunday through Fridayi to save
38o/o off AT&T's weekday out-of-state rate. · .
; - . - . . - . . _., . . - . ' .
: .. _. ·. ' .. ~--' _ _:_ ·,;.·: .. ·. . . . ·' : . ·_ .. · ...
-. ·.-. .· /'. ;' ..• ~- - ·- .·
• d) ·. With AT&T, any tin,e you want a clet1r long distance
·. · - . . . - - . - " .· . - ' ~ ' - - . . . connection. . ~ · · ·
· · · · .. . · · · ·
.. : ....
e) · .. When you hear. they'v~ removed th_e mysterious . . ._ .
"Venetian 131il'ld'' ritual from.yourfrqternity initiation .. ·
-. : You'vejustaced.th~:calcu}us exaili· · that you'd b¢e11
dl'eading like the plagµe. · Yot1r date last nightfold you she had
an· "out.; -. of-body"experience: Your roommate'sjoined a ne\V cult
that \vorships luncheon meats. · · ·. When you're a\vay at
school,there are a million re ~-. sons to.stay inlouch \vjth the
people you miss. And there'i:r/:~, no easier \vay to do itthan
,vith 1\a'~~· ~,.,, ·
· Bet\veen ou1· discount calling periods and our everyday high .
quality service, the best time to call \Vith ~~~~
~t1~3fJPP.!i2llii1¥JM~,£llt~@ ··. '".. \\ 1# if"~AAl~tt#. . . ,
. . tJ:,}·.\ _.,• I~~:./ ~ . . -tt /j[; {\ y\'B. . i1 r . \\·:.·
-\if,\,,,~~
I
AT&T The right choice.
. .,._
.• i
"
.. ' , ....
. GldSco11tsbuddle around !belt -leader and· take tllrlls
reading the history of tile 1906 Western Tourist auto OJ:i display
.. ·· . .
.. , ., ..," .. ~-. :·
•
' ,.
· The door of a filling station could have looked like this; If
a · station could be found at all. Roadside restaurants were ·
slmllarly S
-
r
g/ ' '.t PAGE~ MONDAY,'APRIL 6,1987 RENEGADE Rll' ~··. . ' . .
~-· ' . t .Sports Sports
RENEGADE. RIP MONDAY, APRIL 6t 1987 PAGE 7 . .
..
Prop. ..
·48 . . . . . . .
Mazzie hopes for consiStency, state' title·· stresses ae
emic~athlete~_ ·_ -_ . STEVEN LASHLEY . appear Mliui~-mlght not
have a optionals last. year tor better ~·11&~' •
l. ' .
' ' -' 1 ,- - . I
i I .,
{
I } I
l
By JENNIFER SELF · Staff Wrlt~r
Proposition 48, the ruling passed four years ago by the NCAA to
strengthen ellglbllty requirements for studen'tathletes hoping io
attend Division I . schools, has bceh Instrumental -In.
''distilling the. Idea o-f the athlete as being athlete first and
stu-
-dent second," _-according·. to Glenn -Hanley, transfer center
director, · - ·. _ . · · •-·· • 'I .strongly believe that athletes
. have been
. whores. to academic Institutions," Hanley said.
-~.,. ,-,eu~ ... ,/..t" -. . KicKMAN
-4 YEAR - ·_-_ COL.t.c(;€.
'87 ' ': .
"Schools use athletes to galri athletic recognhlon · to the
tnstltutlon, giving nothing to the athletes.'.' · Students must
also achieve a inlilimum OPA of . complete 48 semester or 72 iiours
of transferable
Division .Jl . schools are currently In the process - . L9 and
minimum scores-of 720 or 16 on the SA 1' · _· degree .• credit
·acceptable.- towards - ahy · bac-
courses. . . _ _ _ . . . _. . Remedial, special education or
conpensatory
· classes are not considered core course.,,
of. deterinlnirig. whether to ad(jpt the policy, , and ACT
tests, respectively. . . _ . . . . - calaureate degree program a.t
the Institution or Hanley said. . . . . -· _ · ._ . - _ - __ ·. - .
__ Currenttr, ellgl~lllty .Is determined on-the basis - •Transfe_r.
a ~lnimutn of 24 semester or 36
--High school students musi coniplete at least 11 ·_· of a
sliding scale composed of)he GPA and test - . quarter hours with
an. accumulative GPA of 2.0 - academic courses, labeled "core
cours-es." The . s~ores. However, in 1988;cin!Ya OPA of:2~0 ana ·
--:and_ average 1:2-i!ours-of-transferable-degree-:credit -
courses Include: _ · a test sc?~e of at least 700 (SAT) OR H
(SAT) wlll acc~piab!e toward any baccalaurate degree pro-•Three
years tn English be acceptable. · · ._ _ · _ .·.· _ · , .··__ . - _
. gram at the institution. In addition, ttie student •two years In
mathematics_ . Commuiuty college (llhletes are classified as .be•
must sperid at least two semesters ophree· quarters •two years in
social science . _ . _ _ mg high school _qiral~flcrs lf they earn a
OPA of · In residence at the juhior college (excluding sum-
~•Two years In natural or physidal science · 2 .. 0 In high
schooL If they do not· receive the ... mer sessions), _ . . ._ . ·
. _ •Two_ years of_ addtlonal academic · credit .- · _ . minimum
GPA; they are nonquallfiers. · -Ifa nonqualifier was enrolled
full-time In a col·
- According to the NCAA athletic eligibility · · legiate
institution in February 1984, ·or later the - rules, a high school
qualifier must: -- following rules apply: ' . .
•."Graduate from the JC and satisfactorily. •Two or more
semesters or three quarters in residence ,and - . . - - -
.•A rninlmum cif48 transferrable units, and . · . •Graduate (AA
degree).",: _ .. ·- . . . . -
. -·-$150,000 this year_-
FollndatiOn Sets• goal · . Prior to the passage of Proposition
4's; students . -were required to have a GPA of. 2.0, but there.
were no course requirements and .SAT and ACT scores didn't courit.
· -
According to Men's Athletic Director >Walt · . JohnsC>n
and Head Football-Coach Carl Bowser,_ · rio BC athletes were
affected- by the ruling ih{s year. . . _ . _ _ ·. The twci agree
that BC will attract athlet~s who
-
· -· By KRISTY HAYNES " Staff Writer
- -
· The Athletic Foundation - is
.;• . ' ' .. - comment~d _ thaf donatfon~ _ are ·
. not always made with money.
- - now in the middle of a two month ._-
. Many times, use of services or . items ate donate·d tC> the
Founda-tion for the athletic programs. . . . . . .· .
· prove ineligible at other institutions next fall. · · However,
_ Johnson and-· Bowser_·_ disagree· on
inernbership .drive, which.- nins. frol;ri March· 1 f o May . L
The .
The · goal for. this year's· . membership drive is $150,000 ..
·
J -. purpo~e of the a·half gainer off ;he high board ~t
high-board compeiition and fifth was last season. l'rn beginning to
comes, I'll tiave io go for it;''.he the Renegade pool. - ·- - - -
. - . . · - . -place in the low-board, i( would polish off dives
that I used for added with a smile. · - · . · ' - - - .
" J· , __ --. ___ -- __ . __ .. _ . . _ _ .. __ · __ . . _ . _ ,
_ ·-: , . " . With one meet left 1 BIG CHALLENGE . ···· ,
sWiIIlmers sti11 ·· a.float
" •
Jl!l'!J~'; r ' r1'r': ... ~,.'. t.'-l ,• ... ".j .- . ; . _-· ·
__ ·_- . _· : : . . ' . . .
' J . ' • ,
~ . · ..
. qt,:
. '
· Tti'e areas of business which the . -Gerrf_Collls ... · : - --
· · -·- · . . · - · ·
\
: ___ ._- F~undation is being repres~itted ,111\lllity,'' stat;d
Coliis>Collis ac- _.·t. Thhe ~obuse;bwhlich the Founda; ·. -b- .
..• . - . crediied th_e_·_-gene_ro __ u~ don_ at_ ions_ -. : IOll
as een ui ding ·as II meails . . Y • are: Agriculture,.-.
Attorney~. -· ---- offunclraising, will be finished in
- . - CPA's, 'Fin_llllce'; Energ/ and to a. community who cares
about the middle of April. Collis said ' -. Pet-roleum,
Construction, _theyoungpeople, _._- - .. -·. h . b . . - . - - .
·'. : _ . _ . , _ . - . , . , . , . _ _ _ . · . _. _ __ t at a
out.JO percent of the labor . 1 G __ overnmMentd'~~/Dgenc,ales,
In-· Collis also felt that many peo: was· donated, enabling the
Foun-
,As a.Mariqe Corps officer,you'll be keeping some very selec-t
-_ · company. Thafs beqiuseyou'U be serving \\Tith some ofthe ·.
·._ . - finest officers the military has tq offer. Officers that
will be -_ -
leading a group _of m~n who aresecondt~ none. Hyou're a. __
-college student or graduate who thinks this is the_ -· =
Am_:. _._-_ •• _a_ :_S_O_._n. --_-·-.r.· ___ e_._ ac_ h ___
--.e_s __ --·. f O_ r_ .. ·_ -_t .. ·o ___ -· __ .p--_ ._-.-- __
.·_ - By NICK GILMER beat L.A. Pierce-,-both men arid·_ make the
'transition from high . -- Staff Wrjter. women." - . . - - --- -
schoolt6 college .as gracefully:as
By DEBBIE'.MCCASKILL mill st~le of pitching e~~ly io her ..
b~ause. the bati~r experiences . . - . : According to iurrter, the
five the ladies this season; Much of Staff Writer - -high scho:01
career._:_c__ . - - _ _ more diffi_cultyin hitting it; In . bdpping
dry as the 1987 girls mostHkely to dive into the this had t()dO
with the fa.ct they _
. --. As a student at South High addition; the defense is- able
to season comes(() an end; both -the state champi9nship pool are:
-had onlythree returners this year; __ . - In a.recent win over
Allen Han- .. School,she'parjicipated in varsi- handle a rise ball
better when hit . men's -artci women's _ swimming Jjana<
i-lii'denbrand, (bteasi- -- One 111
She is required by head coach amounts to "expul~ion from this _
to keep the incident - of the are being used for that purpose,"
Perky Newcombe to pitch 180 · institution if they don't conduct
Le·..:s added. · - players' records. "' balls each practice day and
com- themselves_ - to all the rules, I "If they complete those
things For the players, the decision · p etc various drills to
assure pro- guidelines, and expeciations of asked of them, there's
nothing ha~ been a combination of disap-'
per hip rotation. She feels there is the college,'' said Wright;
th t -11 .-., h · d d polntment and re.lief. a harder workout to be
done on __ Finally, players involved in the a WI C=·, on I eir
recor an -the junior college level as com- incident will be
mandated 10 at- noihin_g that should have to travel "I think it was
a fair pared to high school because a tend an alcohol education
with them later on," he said. decision," commented player· geat
deai m.ore_ is_ req_ ui_rcd of y_ou. awareness program before they
. In response to the sanctions, Gilbert Naranjo. -"I figure we·
Wright says he feels the decision made the wrong decision when
She cannot see any room for can clear probation. was not too harsh
on the players ,we did what we did, so we deserve.
individuality in the sport. Soft- As for Miller and Hov.-ry, and
adds: "We felt the cancelia· 'what we _g_qt. _ _ _ . _ ball is a
vital activity in her life neither will be mandated to com- tion of
the program was an ap- I While Johnson admits ,~ '""' 1 and she
tries to represent the col- ply Yrith the sanctions said propriate
act to deliver the right remorse for _having rr d~0c '..!le lege
with pride as a student Wright. Not affected by the rul- message to
the program. We · program for this yea, he ~.ii athlete. In return,
she is able to ing, both players are still declared aren't going to
condone this kind questions the pla·,·~, jo:a,on, compete in a
strong program and eligible, and Men's Athletic of activity.'' to
hide th, ~itua1,or. :·cirr. t~ ac l~rn to work with other players
Director Walt Johnson currently Johnson, though, f~ls Jes-, ,,..1th
mutual goals. is looking into placing both into strongly about the
d«:faion.
Amason is an accounting ma- the conference and st.ate finals
"Sometimes people are jor who maintains a 3.6 grade scheduled later
this spring. ' anxio11s for )'OU to make II deci-point average. She
plans to "We re~ .. ze and t>,ev (the sion ,w,ckly. \.-.d wr ui,
a. transfer to a f,·,r.,,,ir !,hool and pla,ers) r,,: :e tha· a
·_.-.. -,.·I ·,, h -.JI u1J.1:-,. S("t ~.-:7,r~1me;. ., •• : -..,_·
c,)mo1ete r,c:~ - -•;.~r.: ~ f:.r a
-
f(·,. ; . :
fl\ PAGf: 8 MONDAY_, APRIL 6, 1987 RENEGADE RlP 'l .i· •.
Opinion } .. :·' '~ t••.
· Staff.·editorial ' . \
Last week a yan carrying star players of a star been. removed
from coaching for the remainder of _In too many ways, this
incid_ent hits too dose to tion and firmness. / . ·.. . . . . .· .
· terinis team; with· Ii dedicated coach at the wheel . the year.
He will continue teaching in classrooms, home. We nod and say
41there but by the grace of At the same time,. they have
recogniied. that crashed lnio the flower bed neiirthe Science arid
·. according to college president Dr; ·Richard · God gO I" and
know-too well the truth oflt. ,human beings . are;' prone to make
Incorrect .
. . Engineering Building. Wllh It crashed the hopes . Wrlghi,
unless the.district attorney decides to file And it Is easy to say
t ourselves', "We.all do ltl j11dgenients. They dld. not pass out
mindless, by •. and dreams ofa chainplonship season and dulled .
felony drunk driving chlU'ges. . . .. We an have done it I For
God's sake, give the the-rule:book punlshmenL.Instead, the}' sought
a forever one of the brightest momJhts In BC sports. The tennis
players involved could have been ex· players a break and give them
their glory_back, 1' . solution which educates .and promotes
personal
. . this year. . · ,: · · pelled or ,,uspended .. ·· . .· ·
growth ~ something .this col!egeJs suppose to be . . . · . · . .
Wright announced last week the players would · . But the hard fact
ls that Lewis knew what he about. . , :
The villia-il wasn't any one per'son. be placed on Social.
Probation .. meaning any was doing. The players knew what ihey were
do, ,., ·.· -, , > . . The viUlan. was alcohol. .. . . violation
of the student code would result in ex- Ing. A conscience decision
was made by everyone · It wHI be interesting' to see.If fellow
students can .·
.. : The studenis and coach were ln direct violation ' pulsion.
Individually, or 115 'a team, the players will involved. and those
choices have their ccinse~. give the playersftnd the coach the same
measure of '
. ofthe Student Condu~t Policy; Article 1, Section · participate
inari alcohol awareness prograin. queilces • even the seemingly
mundane choice of understanding and support as the
Adinlnlsiraticin. K which reads: ."No student shall use, possess,·
· Most hurtful of all, the tennis matches for the buying a beer to
celebrate. · . . . .. . It is too easy \o chide .and make fun. It
Is too
. distribute, or be under the inniience of alcoholic rest of the
season have been forfeiied;. . Tlie administration, responsible to
students, .. easy t condemn and pass judgement.. ~verages,
nar.cotics or other dangerous drugs, It is easy to complain the
punishment should fit : first, then to parents and the· community,
was. . · We hope the harder route of empathy and corn'.·. such as
marijuana and LSD, except as expressly. · tlie crime. Drinking; on
gut reaction, seems too right _to cilncell the :remaining
·matches;• Rather··. passion will be the roµte . students on
cainpus
·. permitted byiaw.-''- ··-. _. '-c_---.. -· ... · ·-. .
-.-·--human lllT offenmo--wamnnh-eliiss'oH"o g'reat-a ·- than seek
scapegoats ancl point fingers.They dealt . - choose as their
response to what can only be-··-Gaylen Lewis, coach of the tennis
team, has . l,,1i1is team :!nd 5::ch.a sh~t at glory.. · with the
real villian of alcohol abuse with convlc- described as a bitter
tragedy •.
. - . . . . . ·. . . . .
'Gade Feedback: Should Sugar.Ray -Leonard fight ,, PETE ESPtNOZ
,\
April Wattenbataer (Undecided) Jolene Gurone (Ag. Business) "It
''l don't think be'should, because he's aolriil to lose his eye,
he
. he hlil already made It bia, 80 .· shouldn't fight.•• . ~h)'
chance aolrig blind .now?"
. '
.. ' ';_ ·)-~{:\·:·
. ,.,,\\~( .. · , . f.:pt'i_ ,.,-.-'•
jfa~"\:11~ . Mark Wheeler (Busl~ess) 'iVes, . Jennifer Vlastrom
(Undecided) · Lawrence Watson (Computer Lowell Syers, (U~declded)
"Yes . . because I want to see him get beat ''Y'8, became It's his
owi1 decl· · Science) "To me lbe inan knows · because It's his own
choice. He's ·.··
up by Hagler.'' .· ·. . · slon. If be wants to cbince loslnll ..
what he wants and he's golnll for . an adult and· bu the rlghl to ·
his eye, lt'sup to him." .... It,'' • . . . . make his own
dedslons;''
Used. books . key .. to.1ower BG·.book prices•.·
• '
MONDAY, APRIL 27, 1987 BAKERSFIELD COLLEGE VOLUMEXLVII NUMBER
11.
Smooching the pig
..
. PETE. ESPINOZA/Rip Staff ·
.· K,athy Ro~elllni, director of siudent lj{falrs, and I.Isa
Hutchinson, EOPS secretary, plays around and , kisses the pig
during the A.SB Westem Days, Students were asked to put pennies In
jars for lhe t~achers . . they wanted to kiss the pig. I>eggy_
Lee, professor of chemistry, an_d Dean. Jones, .men's
basketball
. . coach, were choseri, bu_i were unable _to kiss lhe pig
because It ran away. Holding the pig Is Bill Kelly . from the
agriculture department .
Mail-in .registration starts · By FRANCINE BLOOM 12 or more
units for·· the-fall while continually - processing
. Staff.Writer . . . semesier or eight or. more for.the·· them
on a ·,,f~rst··in, first -ciut''
CSEA, Board address major. contract issu.es,,;
-By DEBO~AH' MISH date. set for a response by . the . receive
the ~e reprCS5ftatiop a~ . · · .. · St tiff WJiter · .. ·.. ·.
distrJct. He speculated that work un_lon members,·:
>·H111chlns.on . ·
As part of the process foi- ~e~ · m11y be hampered · because a
said. · · · .. · · · , · . gotiating a new yearly contract ..
count~r proposal for the · The CSEA al.sOpropose{lon·" . with the
Kern County Corriniuni- . Califonria Teachers Association gevity
and merii ln,cr~~enh b~· ty College District, the California
_coni~act Is aiso being Prepared: given· to employees :,-s,ervlni
20",: School Employees .. Association · · If 11n angency shop i_s
approved years or more. .· : (CSEA) has submitted a series of. by
thedisirici; employees who do Currently; employeesJre given ·.'
·· ·· · · · · · · · · · 1 · · ·1 · pay raises in thelrjOtli,, I
Sili and ·. contract changes to the Board -~f · not , Join · the.
union vo untan y . -Trustees, according to CSEA would be required
"a~ a condi- 19th years ofenij,loyment. , . President Lisa
Hutchinson. ;ion .:( continued·. employment . . CSEA proposes a S
perceni In·
... Among the proposals under ..... : : to pay CSEA a service
fee as crease a(Jhe 20 year mark, and a ·· coifsideiation-by
~the-:i3oard'-ot--ac-contribution~ toward ·· admin'.-. 5
P~~~_.t_lncrease. foLeach.s.caL_ ..
T ·t ·, · · · · · ·n 10· ·ere.ate istraton oftheAgreement an_d
the _.of contmuous service therellfte_r. rus ees 1s a provmo . · .
. · . . ·· · c · · ·1· · • · · ff · • · an "agency shop,"
Hutchinson representation . of ·SIJCh_ · ~rrent Y; lime O .
~etween_. said. . . employees. The service fee sha)I .. ~hnstmas
an~ Ne"". Year sis c~n ..
Also includ_ ed are provisions to lie in the same arnouni and
pay. side~ed ~acaliConSEtAime,h Hutchin·. · . · · .• · · · · · · ·
· · · · · · .· son said. . · opes to give a s percent pay incre,1se
per. able at the same time as CSEAls . . . · . ·. . h . '" ·. . I
.. "f' d . ·1·. . regular dues, exclusive of eliminate this by
proposing t e . . .
year to: c_ass_1 te_ .·. emp oyees ·''period of time_. between ·
employed for 20 year~ or more, registration fees," accordi111t :to·
Christmas 'and New Year's be increase health: benefHs for eye . the
written proposal submitted to . aid holidii s." . care and
establish the .days bet· the bo:i.rd. P __ ....c.-Y .. · . . . .
.
· ween Christmas and New Year's · The only exemption from pay~
.· .. Finally, CSEA proposed the as paid holidays. . ing this.fee
is"when'it conflicts di.stri:t adopt a visio~ plan which.
· with :religious ·beliefs; Then, the w1Hg1ve more extensive
coverage Hutchinson said she had no . · · ·· · ·. · · · · · · ·. ·
· · · · · · monies would still be• paid,· llllt . for.eye care
.
. t'de• a· . h"ow. these.· and other .. pro.. .· . . . h"" would
go to a non-religious chari·.· ·.·.Elected last January; Hutc in~.:
pOsals - t~e bul_k b(which seek to . table cause, "ihe proposai
stated. son said her goal as CSEA presi- · • clarify vague
coritnii:t language . Hutchinson emphasized em'.· dent is
''topromote personal and
.. -will be redeved by the district. . ployees are free to
choose union . prof~ssioital growth with!n ·a11 .· ·:·. Dr. David
Scott; de.an of ad'. meinbership or not. Those no: classified
employees and improve
·min1strative .services said, "We· .. joining would·b~ required
topay . upon arid create positive corn-. are stili 'reviewing the.
pro"posal the service Jee for representation . municaticin lines
between the .
and expect a response from the . · and coriiract enforcement ·by
the districi ·and CSEA· m~mbe~s." district soon.". CSEA. under:the
proposal.· . •. Hutchinson also said she .
Dr, Johh Madden, · assistant . . . . .·. . . . . . . . . ·
believes . the current propos11Js" . . chanc.ellor . for.
personnel·. said, . •• The fe.e chargea would be pro- . re.fleet
her. goa[ • of iniprciving «We ·a. re working on a counter.· · · ·d
d' · · 1 · h · · I · . rate accor mg to sa ary in .t e
communica(ion ines between proposai ·" same manner union. dues is
pro· CSEA and the district. In clarifyc .
Madden said;the· second board. rated, Hutchinson said: . ing the
contract terms, potentials ·. meeting in April was the tentative .
Non~union employees "will .. · problems could b"e avoided~
.. Priority rnail;inregistration for . summer session; on
proll(ltioni. basis. "It wiil give the admissions .
ir JENNIFER.SELF'. ·.··. y .... · . . . · Opinion Editor
all currenily enrolled students is '.'Studenis dort't have to
fill out . office a chance io set up•without · TSr A . . 1, 1, • ,~
-o~r.1· to day "being introduced at BC irfari ef- . the top portion
of the form -"-ihe inierruptionsat the· window," .1 J .rt; w. -e.
el\ /1, lCI\_ .. ' s_. . . . .. · .·. . . . . . •, '. .. fort "to
deqease ihe long ]ires at .: computer already s~its out all said
Oornick. ''It will go much
this poHciy. ·. . ' .• . . . ·.. SUS o_n ii quaiity te~t, the BC
iiseci boo°k program Iicc~ntiy. the ASB ass11med-0Wnership 6(the .
- the refords office arid to aid work - tha(iriformatioi\, so
errors are quicker." - . . . . . . . . . . . • . By DAN POEl{NER -
,_between 5:45 p.rll. and 7 p.m.; friends; aini chlkaturi;t. Martin
. · 1(. dlifgeiltly adhered· to by instru~tors, the ·. would
prosper. .. ·. . · . · · . bookstore ·and the riew owners have
prop(jsed a •: ·. · flow in admissions .. Frank Gor- .. avoided,
>ls.aid (lorriick .. ,• ·· ' "We hope to be .refining the .. ··
Staff Writer• ·. · while tlie fas hi oh show ivjH run• . "Candia
will do 'p~ts611al cartooils
.· The most prevalentcoinplalntamong.students · ai: any . higher
!earning institution.·_ ls ·· the · astronomical p,rlces _• of
Jextbook_s: 11a~uity.
members and bookstore employ~s try to placate disgruntfed
students by telling_them that prices lire out of their control. · ·
· ·
• \Yhlle faculty members are sympathetic, they're riot au
sincere.when they pass the blame of high t~xtbook costs On to
someone else. . . . . . According to Bookstore· Manager Robert Day,
•..
a.two year book adoption.policy-was" puf.into ef-. feet a couple
ofy_ears ago .. The policy states that · an instructor
should-:commlt to using ·the same
. . . textbook for at least two years. Day estimates that .
about 10 percent of BC Instructors are violating .··
policy could save students a considerable· amount Do we get what
we pay for? plan to Increase used books~ If the proposal goes · .
nick, deari of students, s
-
.. ; ,.~< ,ff· ... · . .\'~ -_. ·,_ N. :l_c·_-e· c· •. _.,
... -s·· o·o-·.,·~_-f.o_n· ig" ··nt·.·_-· --~-'-_.--···· -··. - . '
. --· The--ASB PresldefiHs expected. -voting, member- ,I~ Cllp
~afe.'' MQllion's . The Mqusetrap and vaudevllle
- pOpcornand hQt dogs arc passed to snob1'ish, to mysterious
and, perfection: Wren's statement that -.· .Of course, murderis in
the air, original .tunes a:re
-
,Ji.·,. ' ........ - .
, J:~~:\~:~· '_ :. '·.: ' . , ' - . ' }~·.'.f~~~ 4 MONDAY, APRIL
27, 1997 RENEGADE RIP· . , . .
IJDay .care for sick children av~ilable "l • • - • ~ • I • •
' • >
By JENNIFER SELF of working P@rcnts. . following 11 topics,
according to ,'.l11fants • · ilpeciar· ,considera-Staff Writer . ·
have been done at 14 Kern Coun· . · the announcement: tlons."
i. ,:: . RespOndlng to the current need ty businesses
representing 4,584 · •"Behavior changes In the · · · · '' '' 1 • •
· · · . . A child must have a physician's ·
;.'·.~.·j : >for a day care facility for mildly employees, An
average of ~7 per· mildly 111 child. consent before being admitted
10 ·: Ul childrcii, the Community Con· cent 1>f respondents
checked find- . . •A Therapeutic.· environment· the facl!ltY.,
Additional admission
::i : · nectlon for Childcare (CCCC) Ing care for II sick;chlld
as a com- for the trtlldly In chUd. · · criteria include: , · · · k
,: has created the Recuperating tnon problem." . . •Common
communicable. •'!Only children with mild iU-.;i ·.'. Child Care
Program. · . · diseases. nesses who are rec. uperating ca.n JI' , ·
According to a CCCC public Currently, there are 10 licensed ·be
·admlt.te .. d·. :
· d Id h h · · •Other non,communicable if .. service
announcement, "A recent . ay care prov erst at ave com· . •Health'
histo. ry form· m.ust .be· :i . survey of S,000 Kerri County pleted
the required IS hour tr.aln- .. diseases and injuries. 1" · · i ·
·· •fmm11nizatlons. · . · .·.. filled out by parent. :! .. :
employee~ revtnled that sick child· . ng program. · 0 Id l! f ·· ·
: .. __ "1• ·. care is ihe most common problem · The program
cover.s the · ' 11 e · nes or acceptance and •In. structlons. fro.
m the phys!.~ . restriction · of children .to the l · cia. n/.
p~re. nt. for. spe.cl. al · ·.care \, · J : · · 1 • · · · RCCP
program.· : · .. ·o ·.' ' . ' . . ·g· e· •ts
ancl/oradmlnistrntlonofmedica-i,;l,: 1. l ·.· · ... urna Ism.' : '
.· .·· ,' •Proceduretofollowifcom-
tionmustbewrlttenouninds!gri-
' municable child contacts other ed by the parent. . . . ·
...
:.:l1!1 ]WO r ks hop grant :~!.~i~'~i::!::::;·,.:·:.~
::i~m:)~}];:l~1:f ~)l~;
services for child . If warranted must be signed."
At a recent CCCC press con· fereilce it was cited that the
.in-crease In women In the work force,. has '.contributed ·to. the
problem of ~bsenteelsm because of sick children .
. According to the announce-' ment; "These changes In the tabor
force, have prompted an in- ' terest in 'sick 'child '~are as It
relates< to absenteeism. While . most companies allow ·tlrile
off '
· when an.ernployeelsHl, few com~ panies' allow the use 'of
those same sick days to care fora sick chiid. ·
The responslbll!ty f the sick: child usually falls 11>'.the
mother,; according to the announcement, However, two ; parent
f1111111!es'. · usually alterllate sick leave while.·. ' caring for
a recuperating chlld,;
l ' ' the announcement stated. ·· . ' i .
· An issue bro\lght up at the : · · press. conference' was · I
hat of · · parents having to pay for ihek · ·
. , . I ' - ·.·
. regula~. sou~ce of day care while simultaneously payi11g for
special accomodations when the child is' · . sick. ·· · · ··.
· The cccc · doesn't ha,ve a solution to the problem of paying
·. dQuble.' . · , · ·
Funding for the• program Is : . provided by the Blanche and '. :
· Irma WeJII Foundation. .
. ' I .
, \. · ,: , · 1 RENEGADE RIP MONDAY, APRii, 27, 1'87 PAGE 5 t L
.......... -----------ffl--N#rNIIIIHIU
'. ),. • ... 0. f the ..t-~, ·• ~,:r Sa.!' ,· .. '. i.C- I; _
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.... ,· ·- _ ..... p, ,, .,\_~, ~r;c:ar. (,:J·. "Hold it Th.a: , ""
· r:-: ·~frtewrote th.al .. He -...: • · ~-• .~,. : ' IJilal not.cs
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"!( wu t,, '"'.l,h:.
•
Mountain Fresh Rainiers · Sighted Near Palm Springs
Dr .. Helnrkh Tschutter or the Beaumont Citizen.,' Cti~ttee im
Carbonated Phenomena displays a recent phot~ph of a Rainier seen
oear'indlo. .· - . . . . ~ . . . - . . . . - - .
'· . . . . . . . - - . . SAt-1 RERNARDINO.- New ,i~h1in~, of
Mount,in Frc,h. .... .
Rilinil·-~ .k.·rt1.,,,.._ n1ui:h ti( Stiuthcrn Califrlrriia
ha\-·C nov,· hcc·n · . .· _ .,,. .. ..:. c.·(_1Jltinn¢J hY ~-V\!fjl
Unhia-..cil ~)Url·c:,;, a ... ·,:orcJin!! ~o or; .. ~ ;_:P- _r: ·
:
_ t,_..:!nri~h_T~hu1.1cr.ch.1i~man~1r1hc_Bi;aun1on~ri1i_tcn,_·
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T..,c..huucrtolJaha,1- · t; ;' .
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an: ju,1 a mJttcr .,.. ·, . . . ~ of11nh.'" , _ ·
Hurn11r ... c.:ork.\.,n1ng the intmincnl ;irjlc.ararKc of ~1FR
·~ in 1f'k..~ :,r~a h,!-\'I! tx....:n 1:ifl'U!Jtin~ for n1onth, •
.JnJ yc,1cr
lin:.1." ,.::,j l, ... r:i:i...r ·· ,\r.d I. r1'('1\r-,.,;- .
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.... Bu[ ,~r .... ·r ... , pi..·rt, LhJP\·nr,:d r ....._ hua ..
·(,. l n1~· rr;\·(,•! J< •n. '•,:\1.'f .JJ L'llf1 ,"-'I. (Uf i
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lifhl. tr\·,h. f11!Jcn. L·Jrh.lfl°Jr,·J . .,-.int\"il_l, ol \11-K",
1\r~u1n!,'lh1, p.1ir,1 ,-1111,i11~1n~I~ v..r, \\'J!r}' "Uu11"
l.n1r1'f-1 . ..1:1 \11 R-lrJ-..L,·r f,-.r 1.-.,.-, ~II ),·,a,.
Vltii-1 \' l.11 ni, h I h,1\ \' h, '\'d ,111 h l[j ~ i}rlo: ~ rt
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··.i::J r111,·ll )llU. 1r.,·) .rr.: ,11,.'Nl) .ii'"J ..
·,1r.:111,:I} r..:fr ... ·,hin~. fl:ul I f(\fJr.J r:t, ,:"
i-V\.·1,·\· .,·1'n"i1,,:1n~ n~ 1h.,11 1~~ · R · Jr,J · J1nr..:r·
ro~-..::11';,:1 n1..1\,: lJr Jn~ JJr!,'.',·r \,l.11rJ ..
r '"' ti LJ 11..: r h.11.I r.11 1:.~011n11,; r, I r,' r..1rJ In~
1--:r: tr1 'f' 1 \ r.: n·,J r~ \. t-,..JI t-..._· lf1,n11,..._·J
.-., ''11;,ufr1 .. ·t,,.·;,1l~ &·•.:ur,:,,nfl.·J" 1~~
f\.'O:~r., ,r,.i:....· ,~f ,ii: hi 111~, 1 if .J , ;1rt.1 r,t
'f\.'\-1..:, 111.u\. .. ·J .. R J! t. :..:-r l.1_::l'H
~-,.' ~·t ... , '-
1.·Jn ho..· ..
The~ rtrnair.s, thouiht boe 1tn py MF R's; ~re round nrar Lake
Arro,-head. i
I
' . -:-....
' . ' -! -
' .
. '
Sprir).g run-pff ... •
.By April'fhe snbwsfroin the high Sierras.·· begin to
melteasing_vdlleyfarmers' worrie,r .· for irrigating summer .
c:r(!pS . ... J:eaming · waters in Yosemite and Sequoia National •
parks delight visitors and
-
;'"'. ·,_; :; .~ '. I
il ... ~.1~~;~:1.: /.,. ;- :, . : ·, ' - . t,;-- .. ·. ., . . .
. i:~(:~AGE.6 MONDAY, APRIL 27, 1987 RENEGADE RIP
,c.·,·--~------------~...;;.;;~ .....
-""".""-----------------------------;_,,..__, __ .,..._.;. ___ _
"i"; • I ~:. :· . ~ ,·,' ..•
-~~·_,,,-.: ·,
·,_:,
..
l 1 1 ·-·
1 ...... . . i · ..
''
I
'
. : -. . W:hen my friends. and I graduated · from high school,
we all took part-time ·Jobs to pay for college._ · - . . -. · . · .
.. They ended· up in car washes and.·• h~In;btirger joints, putting
in long h·outs for little pay~ . . : · · . . -
-. Not me. My job takes just one . · -weekend a month and two
week§ a· year. Yet, I'm earning$18,000 for college.-: • . · Because
I joined my local Arrr1y · :National Guard.·· -· ...
· -They're the people who help our :state during emergencies
like -~urri- · ·canes and flo9ds. They're also an :important part
of our country's mil1tary :defense. - .
So, since I'm helping them dosuch :an important job, they're
helping me !make it through school. ·
:-' ·~ -·
. •
i . . . • '
..
''
. . .· As soon as I finished Advanced : . -Training,
the-Guaj-cl~gaVe me a-tash . - ~
bonµs·of$2,000.Then,underthe-New' .. G~ l?ill, I'm getting
another $5,000 for · tuition and books. . · ,
· ... ·· .·•· ·_Not-to mention my monthly Ar1ny ~-Guard
paychecks. They'll add up to•··.· .. · ·.·. ._ more than $11,000
over the six years· ,
. I'm in the Guard.·_·.··.··•·•· ·_· ... · ·. ·. ·._·. · ... ···
.· · :
. · •.. '.·.··.·.And if I take out a college lOq11, the : Guard
will help m~ pay it back-up to : $1,500 a year, plus interest. · .
· . . · ._.···· __ •... · •. · Italla9dsuJ?to$i?,OOO-ormore.·_. ·
-for_·coll,ege for-JUst·aitttle of my time .. • .. And thats a heck
of a better deal.than . any car wash will give you.·< . . . . .·
... • THE GUARD CAN HELP PUT YOU THROUGH C_OLLEGE, TOO. SEE YOUR
LOCAL RECRUITER···.·.-.
· FOROETAILS,CALLTOLL-FREE' ·800-63.8-7600::: OR MAIL THIS . . .
. . . ·.· .· . . . . ' . . . . . . . .· . . . .·COUPON .. ··_.· . .
. .... · ··.· . -c-·.-.-·--·- _-. ·. - - . ~--~.~-,-. ·----:"
~In Ha\~aii: 737.-5255; P6ertoRi~o: 721-4550; Guan,: 4 77-9957;
Virgin Islands •. (St. ~rOJ_){ ): 773:6_438; New Jersey:
800-452-5794. Jn Alaska; consult ydur local.··. p~one directory. ·
.. · · , . .. . : ·._. ·. . · • . .•. · · · . · . . ·. ·. •. · ··:
. ·. c 19.85. United States Goven1n1ent·as represented by the
Secretary ofDefe~se. AH nghts reserved. · · · · · · · · · ·
r~~-~~-~-~~~~~-~-~~~~ I MAIL TO: Army National Guard; P.O. Box
6000, Clif!on, NJ07015 l I· OM DF.·I
NAME•• ·-. · I I I . ADDRESS I . I ··I
. . .
I CITY/STATE/ZIP . I I . US CITIZEN. 0 YES O NO ' AREA CODE
PHONE I '.
: . SOCIAL SECURITY NUMBER BIRTH DAT" I ' I OCCUPATION I .
..
I STUDENT O HIGH SCHOOL O COLLEGE I I PRIOR MILITARY SERVICE O
YES ONO. I _ I . .
RRANcH RANK AFM1Mos National Gt•anl I ·. : I Tl-!£
HQPj,J.).rO,., rQJ YO..r>c.f -'.R\ 1 P.:lOVOE NC.lrJ:»tG TCVI"
s.oc,...._ St C\A rv """"'6EA · I 1'11'\.l 9l VSlCro-=i ~C'IUf~
?...,ciP()~ SCH..v ,.o.A SOC•.4'. Slci..AT"r'H..Netlll' L
,.._,eo;u,.,oro .... ._,,. .. Y
Urilessi of course, you identify ·. . - · · Jaughter; . . · .
with an underdog. Here-it is, th'e 8.89; .which is. ano\her way of·
· Amble. . And after 90 minutes the final red' and :white mase-0t's
.outfit . saying opponents have scored "What's Balcer?'... score is
1-0. The run ls unearned: we've all fit into at some point or · ·
another. . . .
Through the peepholes yo11 can · observe· the action of last
Tues-·
day's practice: With a week to go it's too late ..
for Lango to be angry. He says -so. Assistant coach Rob Amble
said the sanie thing a minute ago. At this point a winning streak
would screw up the mood around here. We might .have to be serious,
might have to talk to that Rip reporter, Steve Whats-hisname. ·
Nah, let's not. As Whatshisnrune hiu so often
chronicled on these pages, it was pitching that stuck it.s best
foot forward ... and tripped. Then like . dominos the fielders,
hitters, coaches-Gosh,
· e r y b o d y I- re po rte r s , • ·lfriends ... they all fell
down to , 45 degree angle, laughing. · 'On't be cautious, join
them.
Lango explains it like this. At 1e start of the season the
-
Opinion ' , . . .. . . . . ..
. :_:.:' :Staff -- editori~l--. ' . - . .
r Court· says 'yes' to family/career for women l -- Over the
years, the tradition of_ __ married tluit states m11y order p1lvat~
flrrns to grant shori, --- How'can women be expected tb keep a job
and - - -pregn~t working \VC>men more opportunltes? - - -l .
women staying home and raising children -has . unpaid disability
ieaves to new niothers; -- - . - __ -•· have children If they are
not guaranteed their old - -- Women riced to have the freedom to
maintain_ . slowly faded away. Due to the advancement of . . . .
This ruling stems from the case ·of Lillian jobs back? . . . ' her
job even after sh~ chooses·_to have children,
If,. __ - women and econoltlic· neces~ltles, women have . __ --
- Garland;: a:reeeptlonist at the California Federal _-_ _
ThcSi.tpre111e Court ruling Is a start In the rlghf They must have
the same rights as men: to have -I. moved. strongly Into the work
force. _-. . . . • Savings andloaris Association .. _ :". . . . .
direction for. Wotklng women, but a .lot ntore. both 'a family and
keep a job if they choose to._ .· .. l · : : Moving lrit9 the work
force has been_ wonder~ · · . Tw months after_ Garland gave birth,
she tried · -__ -needs tQ be done. - - -__ ._ . If things· don't
change, what 1.t will come down_ t - ful. But; as working women,
there ate_ also other to get ·het job h!lck. The bank refused to
reln:state · Compared to other countdes, we_ are extremely _ to Is
maklrig women choose between having bable~ ] : -expectations that
may harm thelrjobs. · _ - her in her previous position. They argued
that the conservative when It c(?mes to granting paid - - and Jobs.
-- __ -_ -_ - - . · -__ -• - -_ - - _- . - -\ . - bne topic that
ha.s been .In hot debate since the-• position had
alteadybeen.filled. _ _ __ maternity leave ~nd job security. - -
--._ Women have come· a long way ti:ylrig to over~ . : · ·
beginning of this year concerns maternity leave._ Garland took th~
ca~e · to the federal court; throw the traditional ritual of just
staying home · - whtch upheld a California law that gra.nts pies·
-__ - A :Newsweeek survey. sho'W~d that only five - and raising
klds. They have been aple to work · i. --- .. There_ are two things
that are expected from nant -workers four months _ of unpaid
maternity _ _- ~t!l,tes _In_ the Urtltet _ single shot7 _- _ ' - .
- --._ who make computers be the Qhes • -• incurred in his las(
atte1t1pt at the _ the time• to start_ t_aking _in -t_he _ -. a
time;_. tf for .no ot_her reason _ In his_ face,: Ha~e. yo,u:
noticed· •-•-- The nioral is that :~ith inter~al _- to revive
'education:in Attlerka : Democrati!.! nomination. < -, . _ __ .
newscasts an.d fig~t thrc,ugh tne
__ . · - than to find out what falls out. -· Carter . and_·-•
Reagan _ (someone --. fighting there is --no _ external • ·_·as
Steverifobs and HO Ross Pero~ --__ :. -_ -Equ~lly -important - are
-. the traffic of pronii~es thaf Will tease . - - - - vih9 was
no(Carter), both have defense. - are doing_with N~i{T Comp_uter~. C
namesof-those on the lists ~fEx- you over th¢ nextyear arid seven
:.. _: .Reagan,_.H~~ a natiJin's grand< ha~ major pr_oblems\vith
tetricfr· . . · .. ;~ . ·... . __ - .. :·__ May_~~ freeze iax~s and
-~ipe k by
its cover or you may be deceived -and never turn away what has
nor been tasted before you try it·.
· I guess, in a way, I'm embar-rassed by what's going on today
with Christianity becuase of the'_ way it's publicized on TV. Even
though television is_ making Christianity out to be trendy, trendy
it is notl It cannot be bought I So don't look to the television
for the truth. There isn't a television in the sky! Jesus sald, "I
am the way the truth and the life." Not RCA, Magnavox
. or Sony.
So the next time you have an article on· evangelism or Chris·
tianity plea