New guidelines set for degree requirements

5
·' .. ,f 1. : ' l, " ''. 1'. ... ., ,r . ' " ·- !; i , . ' • f •• '. ' .·. . , -, . '- ', < : ' ,. • I . i , . : I .. ' /- ' , ' •:. . . .. •. : '1 , . -I TUESDAY, JANUARY 11, 1986. BAKERSFIELD -COLLEGE VOLUME XLJV -- NUMBER 14 New guidelines set for degree requirements ;_ . ! ' ' ' '' -_ BY STEVEN LASHLEY' -. rently de:velopins new guidelines -- quirements are already ~nroμte to ~ourses above and inci~ding pass the r~ommendations-before the. ·state - comrri~nity _ colleges. Community News Editor -to stiffen requirements for the . the Office of Admltiistrative Law elementary algebra. the spring semester .deadline, the Since they are only regulation . Associa~e Arts degree, _said (OAL) t_o be fin.allied, accord.Ing .These new.' guidelines, which . guideiines will not go inio effect' change, they will not :need to be -- In what ts termed as "the mo·st Delena Bratton, communications · • to. _ BC Dean of Instructions _ .were _ approved -in_· June-. by.- the · -- until at least July, 1987; _ __ · pass.ed through t~ e state significant· movement within the. ·• and press relations, assistant. to -- Charles Carlson. Those included Board of- Governors. (B.G.O.) _ ' However, .Carlson _stated that legislature. . _ California community colleges in --. Chancellor Smith. - - - - are courses in English that are not •• must pass through the OAL -- _ colle'ge -administrators __ may ~o - -- •• - "Chan¢ellor Smith'wiU be con· th'e past decade,"· ,state Some of these new guidelines more than 'one level ,beto.w beforetheycaribeadoptedbythe ahead and adopt.the guidelines - suiting witl) trustees, students,. '_ \ J, ChanceUor Joshua Smith ls.cur- concerning .the AA degree re· · Engli'sh IA, and 'all mathematic - -Board. Since the office did not - without the, office's authoriia- teachers_a_rid other offidals . . tion, should they choose todo so; bef()re any type of j,rocess "Jike The decision ~ould 'ultimately be. ,ihis actually tak~:pl~~Jhough, ti '. J : ,, ~. t ·t- . , . : i . ~. _. .• ~."-: . · .. : '.·.·- ' . :--_-·,· . _ .. .. - -~ ._ .-,:-·-----:: -~--- + ·' ' .. "" . -.,' . . - .• '. ·J -_ --- _ItlLup~~to~in'einbers o(_the· 'Kl~il)s:a_lc(:. <_: -_- '--·- '' .. ' ·_ Acad_ e-~i- c Senate,: Adm_ inistrative . -- Th_e aue_m_·· pted thllO __ ge i~ po ... · ucy ; . 'i Council, -Associated . Student - marks the second _ time .. m five } BodY \ASB); General Ed~cation - _ years tha~ the comrii~nity coJleges _ _ -1· Committee and the Curriculum - have tried to ·_ upgrade re- . Committee. . , _ . - . _ quirements for the AA degree. In •- •j The changesare k. result of. a spring 1982, -the B:0.0. ~h~ged 1 . recent -B.O.Q. meetmg held m t~e m1mber of umts required for j ~an Fra.nciscothis past D.ecem~er . _ .-_ the ~egre~ from 1 S to the curi"~nt - j rn which ·_ Chance11or ·_ Smith · requirement of 18 •. _ _ presented a pac~age of proposals - - -Accoidingfo Bfatton, one of_ . - to the 15-memberpanel selected _ Smith's top priorities in his in- by Oov: deorge i:>eukmejiari, ac- - vestigation will t;,e strengthening· cording to Bratton. •• < _ · - the ·remedial edilc\l,t}ori _sian- · Jn·-_the ·.meetirig, ---Sinith ·urged -- dards ..• ''The purpose win be_(() __ . B.0.0. members to consider en- make sure that students wHf con· . dorsing an effon to strengtheri -_-. tiriue to take these'. kind of .. requirements for the degree for ' classes, l!Ild to erisurejhat they _-- al_l 106 co'minunity colleges. After .· will. be progressing in them," she careful consideration, the B.O;G. ·_ said.•--·-_ _ _ _ - --th~ri accepte_d the proposal; Brat- -. • · Bratt9_~ ---- revealed : ii· wa.s ton said;. . .. -. . .- __ - ... ' _--· . . estimat.ed last year that the com- Smitti.· then - ask~d the -RO:G. mtinity .colleges spent around $66 - - __ . t9 consider two more. pr6posals .. million ' in : reined fa) . edilcati()n .. directly relating .to the . i:'he an'nual budget for the com- requirements: One proposal dealt _ - muriity collegesJasty1:ar was $1;8 · _ wtth initiating • a Hinit on 'the billion, • . · -. _ .- -- _ _- - _ . amount ofremedial cOurses a stu~ _- In _reaction to 'the recent prO~ ___ _ dent• could Jake. The other con~ ·; posals; ,Carlson said, :('I think the- , • cern W~S rais'fng the manda,tory ·. -adoption Of lhese ·neW guidelines -. • _. grade point ~verag·e '(OP A) fora II· .• will Jncre~se academic standards _, _-_ -_ c6ritinuirig students from the.cur.- -. to where,_there .will be a signifi· ... - - ~'"rent 176 u~t'o'-2:0: :: "-,:.-··:- ~" ~.: ::cant=c\tistinctioiF 'between i _ the·. . -. . . .· ,._. ·.· -_ - .. _ ,'. - .-'._ '. _:_ , .... -:'-·------~·--> .-...,...·.--: ·. ·. ·-.. . .· ·._.·. -~ . ·~. -• 1 • . · However,· Bn1tton -stated the · degree and the high_: school·. - the 8.0.0: :Chose ntjt• to aclopf ._-·· diple>ma: . ' >' ,,,_ . : ' . : " :" ,,, ·: th{ proposals;. and have: asked - . -.- "Th~e new standards wiit'heip · Srriitt1 fo -fUrther investigate the bring unity between all'the corn· -.- - . issue: -SiniUi is expected_ fo report -- -_ rritinity : colleges. _ Four,year back to the 8.0.0. sometime this school$ will be more- aware of ·-.·_,-, .. _·_:_-.-_,- _··.- -_. _--,- ___ _ _ ._. __ ·· ._, ___ , .,_-_:,·_,,r:-:·' __ :_i':!::v::: . _ . . spring. > . __ - ___ _ __ - __ _ what a· S~udent.:accomplish~ - . .. ::::::=;:;:;.:;;::===·- :::-=-· ;., ~;:.:.:.~:·: : .:· :-'.::· _-,- ... . _- -• __ Ch~ges ·in the_ 'guidelines ·.for _ •-• now,'.' ·<:arlson emphasized .. -- , . ·'..·1 1 r: - MIKE BAZELE\'/IUpStarr - the "AA degre~, an~ all reirtedial - - -~I.son Jils the recent a~- . ·,_ J A y"ourig b~y; bo'red wUh the inside activities of the_Allled Van Lines -original construction. an·d p-resent restoration :or the statue and was - .cou'rses will only be a -regulations ·:· tempt -- for -di-angf · has been a - 1t . Traveling Museum of the Statue of Liberty, peeks oittslcle-.for a breath : --- free IQ the public. Donailons .were being accepted Jo heip fund the - :cltange within -.th~. ~ommunity tesult _- of the. state legislature's - l• of fresh air. The tour. of the fritck lncludecl a' preseniatlon on the restoranon project; The truck stopped in Bakersfield for one day, college system, 'according to' . ~- ." - · · - · Charlie ,K_ lein_ ,_- an· advocate __ - fot Pie_ ase see DEGRE_ E_ page 2~. · ., If: .. - ---~------..._ __________ ..................... -----~- ....... ------~ .............. ------.-11111 '/ .. f·.·.Committeeready to select assistant ch.ancellor I; . . ' ' ' ' ,, . ' . . ' ' ' ' . ' ' . '~ . _- .• -. By DARREN SABEDRA . . .. chancellor Ja:'mes Young, retired corrimitte~ after they (the_Board) •• ' the candidates' _w'e want 'to inter~ .. dudci the thre~ college presiden'ts .. min(sfrati~e' officers . crederiti~; ' I r, Editor iri Chief_ ... :.,_- ·.July 1; ,1985;: . _- _, _ , 1 -_ - meefw.ith·the Chancellor. ·, - yiew," Sautier said?: _ _ _ '. in tlJ_e' K<;:CD, t!li'~e.-classified. dfreclexperience with collective _ ' _ Harkins· will remain -in. the - .- ,;1 gues{ the tommittee is tftete - The committee wiH conduct in-. reps., aild on~ faculty rep>from _.bargaining: and have experience .r~ _ -In- th~ ·search_ for' a new. Ker~ -- -position un.til ;the new person is to· just infobi1'the -Chancellor: -- iervie~s -_Feb . .'· 24~25, -and··· then - 'Port~rville ~nd Cero Cos~. _ · i_ri an educational 'setting._ ' Comm~nity ,Colleg'e District ~lected> __ -.· _ - __ ' _ who they are' riot inter~ted in, - turri in '4~5 naines .to C~aricellor . - You'ng emphasized - that ihe · ,' . ''We wani someoni who 1 i - assistant chancell<;ir ,- a disfrici - _'The four BC:facult'y committee_- - an_d the Board"will make the deci- -. You_ng. Young will then inter.view ·_ position - wili . be -offered to all --• understands and likes people and _ i! . selection committee, which _in- members are: Lloyd Hokit, Dan · sion,;'-Sautter said; finalist March 4-5, anci the Boaid ".,.community college. ,districts in -·• s6meone -- whci understands l _ eludes four BC f~culty. members, Nysirom, . Merrie~ Palitz and - · Deaclline . for 'a:'pplications •is of Truste'es .will hppe to appoirit -- California;lt will also. be offered California pe~sonnel laws and .\· was recently :formed to help the Lucille Sautter. - Feb. 7; -_ _ the' new assistant diancellor at to commu.nity coHeges i!l :practices;'•. Young said. _ f · selecting process. _ -_ ' - Sautter said when the commit- - She explained ;that coQ1mittee - the March 6 Board meeting'. __ -_ Arizona, Nevada, New Mexico, - - "The faculty wants someone { . -_ ' The committee, which has_n:u:t - tee first met, there were sorrie dif; - -members wiH begin by reviewing -_ - Young is the·chair person for Oregon and Washingtort, -. . \Vho is sensative to personal mat- f." _one time,_ will_ : help · select _a ferences .with the s~le~tion pro- ·- applicatJon material the fir~t COU· . the committ~e: And besides the · , Job qualifications include: a . ters and someone who is agood , ;f - replacement· -for_ A~sista-nt cess for the posiiiori. -- . _- - - pie of weeks in February four BC faci.Ity reps;, the selec- Masters degree;although a doc· - listener for· matters faculty ) - Chancellor -Richard Harkins, _ _ ''Our concern was the Board - - . "On Feb. 19 we will have an all tion -committee. includes six tor ate·. is preferred; held .or be . member~ bring to_ that :, -_ who according to KCCI>° (of Trustees) sh.ould sit with the da)' working session to determine management reps:, _which in- qualified for the chief ad- individual,'' Sautter said. ;, . . / t _,, , - ' 1. Senate to discuss f.· Weill Institute trade I-' By DARREN SABEDRA Edttor irt Chief A proposal to trade the \Veill · nstitute for 12.5 acres and ,000 sq. feet of building (the e size as the \Veill Institute) in he Southwest v.ill be discussed at n open Academic Senate eetlng \Vedne.sday, according _( f _ o Senate President Gregory ' }\ ;:· {{~ '..:: ; Good\' - i dent Ri~~ ~- ').. - •• - ,, qutsted '.t :l:,;..: •• ,, ··e -~,-<.;,. wbkh \l-'0,1:d -:-:.·,r ·.e :~-:e~ A.sht R0-1J u -. ·~ ar:e Goodwin expla!ned tha~ the building must be "finished to BC spedfications." At press time, Wright was iri San Francisco, and u'navailable for comm1::nl. Kern Community District Chancellor James Young said late Thursday night that - the KCCD and BC are just now look- ing into the proposal. •. "The first step is to get the · · -~1vrd, and Dr. \ 1 /right - . ; -~; - .. ;J I h c di SC u;. 'on; .. - -- .. & 'I~ .. "' .. , -~ -~- -.r-: ,, . , . . ; - .... - studies - a 1966 district \llide . . study, which reported an e,en- tual move to the Southwest, and a basis for planning report done by'Dr. John Collins. "\Vith those two studies, we feel now is the lime to look into the move," Young said. Young also said a po~ible trade is just one proposal. "There is also the possibility of leasing - there are a lot of dif- ferent ways to go." he said. n, -,J,~in ,;iid: "The s~1-1::, ·,-, d 10 ,r,r ,- ... ·. · . - .. 1 - ,. - - "-"' ~:"' ;_ ... ,. ..._ -- - - ., '.J .: l : . Activities set for BC. Black History. season By CHERYL ISAAK Staff Writer In celebration of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.'s birthday, the BC Martin Luther-King Center (MLK) and Black Student Union (BSU) _ are sponsoring the BC Black History Observance. The theme for this year is "Through Our History We Unite and Grow." BSU Advisor Judy Mays ex- plains, "The significance behind the theme is if ., ' -,..,,t a good 11ra.1p of <'·11r r ·-· ,•-,,1 ,;,ow S1'j.l:.-. -~~· :..~·, J:-.-. sometmn;:. ·x ·,·. - . · · · · -~-, . -fromu,-,,., --7':'.- .---.-· .. ',' celebratiotJ _is a way of Triplett, Director or the MLK saying, «Thank - you, we ap- _ Center, students from BC-as well preciate you." · as former BC students were in- BJa·ck History - Observance volved in the program. Speakers began Jan. IS. Members of the included Rev. Carolyn Tyler, MLK Center Advisory Commit- Rev. Ishmael Kimbrough,-Rabbi tee and the Black Student Union Steve Peskind and Mary Shell, displayed an open ,house reccp- 5th District Supervisor. tion last week to honor the birth- · Next on the Black P.i1 · · ,y day of the late Dr. King. Observance 198.-; \:I - A candlelight march in com- Keynote Speaker .._,. ·• i.: ......... memoration of Dr. King was held world le<turer ar~ -:.; ,- it.· -a· yesterday. The march began at discuss the -'..··-:a- ·--.-:- --.· Emerson Jr. High School and Jud?.eo c-.- ".u: '., 1: :- :-r concluded at Mt. Zion B:intist Fe.. ~, - ":r ;: · -~.& R The Church. This spe,,:ial cal':-ic-,ny ·• ~' · -~ se(ond car,j1C1 .~i -a~:~. '.'•'" ,,,red ,t,y tnc B~l' ,1,~.: ,~; ·. tntet. p·~:-: .·.- •- :! :nnnmtf' m c • - .:-:-- IJ. es: tr <, \ii p.m Bi•·t "'~L,1 E..rllibio.an " .i . · .. '].

Transcript of New guidelines set for degree requirements

Page 1: New guidelines set for degree requirements

·' .. ,f 1. :

' l, " ''. 1'. ... ., , r .

' " ·-!; • i .· , . '

• f ••

'. ' .·. . , -, .

'-', <

: '

,.

• I . i , . : I

.. '

/- ' , ' •:.

. .

.. •. :

'1

, . - I

TUESDAY, JANUARY 11, 1986. BAKERSFIELD -COLLEGE VOLUME XLJV -- NUMBER 14

New guidelines set for degree requirements ;_ . ! ' ' ' ''

• -_ BY STEVEN LASHLEY' -. rently de:velopins new guidelines -- quirements are already ~nroµte to ~ourses above and inci~ding pass the r~ommendations-before the. ·state -comrri~nity _ colleges. Community News Editor -to stiffen requirements for the . the Office of Admltiistrative Law elementary algebra. the spring semester .deadline, the Since they are only a· regulation

. -· Associa~e Arts degree, _said (OAL) t_o be fin.allied, accord.Ing .· . These new.' guidelines, which . guideiines will not go inio effect' change, they will not :need to be - - In what ts termed as "the mo·st Delena Bratton, communications · • to. _ BC Dean of Instructions _ .were _ approved -in_· June-. by.- the · --until at least July, 1987; _ __ · pass.ed through t~ e state significant· movement within the. ·• and press relations, assistant. to -- Charles Carlson. Those included Board of- Governors. (B.G.O.) _ ' However, . Carlson _stated that legislature. .

_ California community colleges in --. Chancellor Smith. - - - - are courses in English that are not •• must pass through the OAL -- _ colle'ge -administrators __ may ~o - --•• - "Chan¢ellor Smith'wiU be con· th'e past decade,"· ,state Some of these new guidelines more than 'one level ,beto.w beforetheycaribeadoptedbythe ahead and adopt.the guidelines - suiting witl) trustees, students,.

'_ i· \

J, ChanceUor Joshua Smith ls.cur- concerning .the AA degree re· · Engli'sh IA, and 'all mathematic - -Board. Since the office did not - without the, office's authoriia- teachers_a_rid other offidals

. . tion, should they choose todo so; bef()re any type of j,rocess "Jike The decision ~ould 'ultimately be. ,ihis actually tak~:pl~~Jhough, ti

'. J : ,, ~. t ·t- . , .

: i . ~. _.

.• ~."-: . · ..

: '.·.·-' .

:--_-·,·

. _ ..

.. --~ ._ ~ .-,:-·-----:: -~---

• + ·' ' ..

"" . -.,' . ~ . - .• '. ·J • -_

--- _ItlLup~~to~in'einbers o(_the· 'Kl~il)s:a_lc(:. <_: -_- '--·- '' .. ' _· ·_ Acad_ e-~i-c Senate,: Adm_ inistrative . -- Th_e aue_m_·· pted thllO __ ge i~ po ... · ucy ; . 'i Council, -Associated . Student - marks the second _ time .. m five } BodY \ASB); General Ed~cation -_ years tha~ the comrii~nity coJleges _ _ -1·

Committee and the Curriculum - have tried to ·_ upgrade re- . Committee. . , _· _ . - . _ quirements for the AA degree. In • - •j

The changesare k. result of. a spring 1982, -the B:0.0. ~h~ged 1 . recent -B.O.Q. meetmg held m t~e m1mber of umts required for j ~an Fra.nciscothis past D.ecem~er . _ .-_ the ~egre~ from 1 S to the curi"~nt - j rn which ·_ Chance11or ·_ Smith · requirement of 18 •. _ _ presented a pac~age of proposals - - -Accoidingfo Bfatton, one of_ .

- to the 15-memberpanel selected _ Smith's top priorities in his in­by Oov: deorge i:>eukmejiari, ac- - vestigation will t;,e strengthening· cording to Bratton. •• < _ · - the ·remedial edilc\l,t}ori _ sian­

· Jn·-_the ·.meetirig, ---Sinith ·urged -- dards ..• ''The purpose win be_(() __ . B.0.0. members to consider en- make sure that students wHf con· . dorsing an effon to strengtheri -_-. tiriue to take these'. kind of ..

requirements for the degree for ' classes, l!Ild to erisurejhat they _-­al_l 106 co'minunity colleges. After . · will. be progressing in them," she careful consideration, the B.O;G. ·_ said.•--·-_ _ _ _ -

--th~ri accepte_d the proposal; Brat- -. • · Bratt9_~ ---- revealed : ii· wa.s ton said;. . .. -. . . -__ - ... ' _--· . • . estimat.ed last year that the com-• Smitti.· then -ask~d the -RO:G. mtinity .colleges spent around $66 -

-__ . t9 consider two more. pr6posals '· .. million ' in : reined fa) . edilcati()n .. directly relating .to the . i:'he an'nual budget for the com­requirements: One proposal dealt _ - muriity collegesJasty1:ar was $1;8 ·

_ wtth initiating • a Hinit on 'the billion, • . · -. _ .- - - _ _ - - _ . amount ofremedial cOurses a stu~ _- In _reaction to 'the recent prO~ ___ _ dent• could Jake. The other con~ ·; posals; ,Carlson said, :('I think the- , • cern W~S rais'fng the manda,tory ·. -adoption Of lhese ·neW guidelines -. •

_ . grade point ~verag·e '(OP A) fora II· .• will Jncre~se academic standards _, _-_ -_ c6ritinuirig students from the.cur.- -. to where,_there .will be a signifi· ... -

-~'"rent 176 u~t'o'-2:0: :: "-,:.-··:- ~" ~.: ::cant=c\tistinctioiF 'between i _ the·. . -. . . . · ,._. ·.· -_ -.. _ ,'. - .-'._ '. _:_ , .... -:'-·------~·--> .-...,...·.--: ·. ·. ·-.. . .· .· ·._.·. -~ . ·~. -· -• 1 • . · However,· Bn1tton -stated the · degree and the high_: school·. -

the 8.0.0: :Chose ntjt• to aclopf ._-·· diple>ma: . ' >' ,,,_ . : ' . : " :" ,,, ·: th{ proposals;. and have: asked - . -.- "Th~e new standards wiit'heip · Srriitt1 fo -fUrther investigate the bring unity between all'the corn· -.-

- . issue: -SiniUi is expected_ fo report ---_ rritinity : colleges. _ Four,year back to the 8.0.0. sometime this school$ will be more- aware of

·-.·_,-, .. _·_:_-.-_,- _··.- -_. _--,- ___ _ _ ._. __ ·· ._, ___ , .,_-_:,·_,,r:-:·' __ :_i':!::v::: ~ . _ . . spring. > . __ - ___ _ __ -__ _ what a· S~udent.:accomplish~ -. .. ::::::=;:;:;.:;;::===·-:::-=-· ;., ~;:.:.:.~:·: : .:· :-'.::· _-,-... . _- -• __ Ch~ges ·in the_ 'guidelines ·.for _ •-• now,'.' ·<:arlson emphasized .. -- , .

·'..·11r : -MIKE BAZELE\'/IUpStarr - the "AA degre~, an~ all reirtedial - - -~I.son Jils the recent a~- . ·,_ J A y"ourig b~y; bo'red wUh the inside activities of the_Allled Van Lines -original construction. an·d p-resent restoration :or the statue and was - .cou'rses will only be a -regulations ·:· tempt -- for -di-angf · has been a -

1t . Traveling Museum of the Statue of Liberty, peeks oittslcle-.for a breath : --- free IQ the public. Donailons .were being accepted Jo heip fund the -:cltange within -.th~. ~ommunity tesult _- of the. state legislature's -l• of fresh air. The tour. of the fritck lncludecl a' preseniatlon on the restoranon project; The truck stopped in Bakersfield for one day, college system, 'according to' . ~- . " - · · - · Charlie ,K_ lein_ ,_- an· advocate __ - fot Pie_ ase see DEGRE_ E_ page 2~. · ., If: .. ----~------..._ __________ ..................... -----~-....... ------~ .............. ------.-11111 '/

..

f·.·.Committeeready to select assistant ch.ancellor I; . . ' ' ' ' ,, . ' . . ' ' ' ' . ' ' .

'~ . _- .• -. By DARREN SABEDRA . . .. chancellor Ja:'mes Young, retired corrimitte~ after they (the_Board) •• ' the candidates' _w'e want 'to inter~ .. dudci the thre~ college presiden'ts .. min(sfrati~e' officers . crederiti~; '

Ir, Editor iri Chief_ ... :.,_- ·.July 1; ,1985;: .· . _- _, _ , 1 -_ - meefw.ith·the Chancellor. ·, - yiew," Sautier said?: _ _ _ '. in tlJ_e' K<;:CD, t!li'~e.-classified. dfreclexperience with collective _ ' _ Harkins· will remain -in. the - .- ,;1 gues{ the tommittee is tftete - The committee wiH conduct in-. reps., aild on~ faculty rep>from _ .bargaining: and have experience .r~ _ -In- th~ ·search_ for' a new. Ker~ -- -position un.til ;the new person is to· just infobi1'the -Chancellor: -- iervie~s -_Feb . .'· 24~25, -and··· then - 'Port~rville ~nd Cero Cos~. _ · i_ri an educational 'setting._

' Comm~nity ,Colleg'e District ~lected> __ -.· _ -__ ' _ who they are' riot inter~ted in, - turri in '4~5 naines .to C~aricellor . - You'ng emphasized - that ihe · ,' . ''We wani someoni who 1i - assistant chancell<;ir ,- a disfrici - _'The four BC:facult'y committee_- - an_d the Board"will make the deci- - . You_ng. Young will then inter.view ·_ position -wili . be -offered to all --• understands and likes people and _ i! . selection committee, which _in- members are: Lloyd Hokit, Dan · sion,;'-Sautter said; finalist March 4-5, anci the Boaid ".,.community college. ,districts in -·• s6meone -- whci understands l _ eludes four BC f~culty. members, Nysirom, . Merrie~ Palitz and - · Deaclline . for 'a:'pplications •is of Truste'es .will hppe to appoirit -- California;lt will also. be offered California pe~sonnel laws and .\· was recently :formed to help the Lucille Sautter. - Feb. 7; - _ _ the' new assistant diancellor at to commu.nity coHeges i!l :practices;'•. Young said. _ f · selecting process. _ -_ ' - Sautter said when the commit- - She explained ;that coQ1mittee - the March 6 Board meeting'. __ -_ Arizona, Nevada, New Mexico, - - "The faculty wants someone { . -_ ' The committee, which has_n:u:t - tee first met, there were sorrie dif; - -members wiH begin by reviewing -_ - Young is the·chair person for Oregon and Washingtort, -. . \Vho is sensative to personal mat-f." _one time,_ will_ : help · select _a ferences .with the s~le~tion pro- ·- applicatJon material the fir~t COU· . the committ~e: And besides the · , Job qualifications include: a . ters and someone who is agood , ;f - replacement· -for_ A~sista-nt cess for the posiiiori. -- . _ - - - pie of weeks in February four BC faci.Ity reps;, the selec- Masters degree;although a doc· - listener for· matters faculty ) - Chancellor -Richard Harkins, _ _ ''Our concern was the Board - - . "On Feb. 19 we will have an all tion -committee. includes six tor ate·. is preferred; held . or be . member~ bring to_ that :, -_ who according to KCCI>° (of Trustees) sh.ould sit with the da)' working session to determine management reps:, _which in- qualified for the chief ad- individual,'' Sautter said. ;, . . / t _,, , - '

1. Senate to discuss f.· Weill Institute trade I-' By DARREN SABEDRA

Edttor irt Chief

A proposal to trade the \Veill · nstitute for 12.5 acres and

,000 sq. feet of building (the e size as the \Veill Institute) in

he Southwest v.ill be discussed at n open Academic Senate eetlng \Vedne.sday, according

_( f _ o Senate President Gregory ' }\ ;:· {{~ '..::

; Good\' -i

dent Ri~~ ~- ~ ').. - •• - ,, qutsted '.t :l:,;..: •• ,, ··e :· -~,-<.;,.

wbkh \l-'0,1:d -:-:.·,r ·.e :~-:e~ A.sht R0-1J a~~ u -. ·~ ~ ar:e

Goodwin expla!ned tha~ the building must be "finished to BC spedfications."

At press time, Wright was iri San Francisco, and u'navailable for comm1::nl.

Kern Community District Chancellor James Young said late Thursday night that - the KCCD and BC are just now look­ing into the proposal.

•.

"The first step is to get the · · -~1vrd, and Dr. \1/right

- . ; -~; - ~ .. ;J ~ I h c di SC u;. 'on; .. - - - ..

& 'I~

.. "' .. , -~ -~- -.r-:

,, . , . . ; -....

-studies - a 1966 district \llide . .

study, which reported an e,en-tual move to the Southwest, and a basis for planning report done by'Dr. John Collins.

"\Vith those two studies, we feel now is the lime to look into the move," Young said.

Young also said a po~ible trade is just one proposal. "There is also the possibility of leasing - there are a lot of dif­ferent ways to go." he said.

n, -,J,~in ,;iid: "The s~1-1::,

• ·,-, d 10 ,r,r ,- ... ·. · . - .. 1 - ,. - - • "-"' ~:"' ~ ;_ •

... ,. ..._ -- - -

., • '.J • .: • l : .

Activities set for BC. Black History. season

By CHERYL ISAAK Staff Writer

In celebration of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.'s birthday, the BC Martin Luther-King Center (MLK) and Black Student Union (BSU) _ are sponsoring the BC Black History Observance. The theme for this year is "Through Our History We Unite and Grow."

BSU Advisor Judy Mays ex­plains, "The significance behind the theme is if ., ' -,..,,t a good 11ra.1p of <'·11r r • ·-· ,•-,,1 ,;,ow S1'j.l:.-. -~~· :..~·, J:-.-.

sometmn;:. ·x ·,·. - . · · · · -~-, . -fromu,-,,., --7':'.- .---.-· ..

','

celebratiotJ _ is a way of Triplett, Director or the MLK saying, «Thank - you, we ap- _ Center, students from BC-as well preciate you." · as former BC students were in-

BJa·ck History - Observance volved in the program. Speakers began Jan. IS. Members of the included Rev. Carolyn Tyler, MLK Center Advisory Commit- Rev. Ishmael Kimbrough,-Rabbi tee and the Black Student Union Steve Peskind and Mary Shell, displayed an open ,house reccp- 5th District Supervisor. tion last week to honor the birth- · Next on the Black P.i1 · · ,y day of the late Dr. King. Observance 198.-; \:I a· - ~ ~

A candlelight march in com- Keynote Speaker .._,. ·• i.: ......... memoration of Dr. King was held world le<turer ar~ -:.; ,- -~~ it.· -a·

yesterday. The march began at discuss the -'..··-:a- ·--.-:- --.· Emerson Jr. High School and Jud?.eo c-.- ".u: '., 1: :- :-r concluded at Mt. Zion B:intist Fe.. ~, - ":r ;: · -~.& R ~ The Church. This spe,,:ial cal':-ic-,ny ·• ~' · -~ se(ond car,j1C1 .~i -a~:~. '.'•'" ,,,red ,t,y tnc B~l' ,1,~.: ,~; ~

·. tntet.

p·~:-: ~· .·.- •- :! :nnnmtf' m

c • - .:-:-- IJ. es: tr <, \ii p.m

~~ Bi•·t "'~L,1 E..rllibio.an

" .i -· . · .. '].

Page 2: New guidelines set for degree requirements

·.~:-~ :i"' .'. . t ·~ ,\ l . ' . ~· ~ : ·. PAGE 2 TUESDAY, JANUARY 21, 1986 RENEGADE RJP

~ : .·Qovernor sets -funds

. r;, · ·Pf Opo,Sed ,_ t

News Briefs

:; ·, .

"

... , )

budget limited he.Ip . By JUDY SHA y equipment, so we don't have a · district alone, we need $6 million for the llbr~ry but Is working on Cain pus News Editor . serious problein wHh equipments for deferred maintenance," em- plans to get° funds to update the

. right now," explained. Young. . phaslzed the chail~el19r. ·.. . llbr.ary, · . . Gov. Deukm!ljlan ha.s propos- . However; . in. areas: such as Young 'added· that one of the . Besides the budgets for defer·

ed .a budget for California com; "reworking . chemestry la\Js", inosi , critical areas that need red maintenance and instruc· . . : . rounlty colleges for' 1986-87 that "painting classrooms," and · mai.ntenance in :all three colleges iional equipment, the goy~rnor's :·::wm .- assist several . programs at "buying new desks'~ where BC is in this'distrlct (Bakersfield, Cerro proposal Includes: funding of the ·: BC, but will noi upgrade many. in need,.the $3.5 million will not Coso, Porterville) are the science statutory a·pportlonment

. · . programs that need help badly,. be ab1e·10 help. Theywlll be on a _ Jabs which need new lights and · mechanlsni.:,..C5,84 ·- percent. In~ : , '. said- Kern . Community. College. list of items that will use the S 12. 7 .. safety devices. creas¢ for cost of living ailowance

; District Chancellor J aines ·. · (COLA), .SB percentincrease:for · Young · -, · · · · · · equalizatioil .· for · low revenue-.

.. One. item on the governor's '' In our district. alone,, we need · districts and 1.6 percent lricr~ase . budgetproposalis$3Smlllionfor ·. ·$6_ - ··.m. i}}io. n.·- f.Or - de.ferted.. ·_. for average daily, 11ttendance

lnstnictional equipment which re- - (ADA); stability funds of $22 · .I quires a 25 percent match at !he. . .maintenance.-'' .· . million'for districts With declin•

. . nc offering finan~ial aid workshops . . . ·. .. - \.-

BC will be holding a series of financial aid workshops to assist students In applying. for financial aid. The workshops will be .. from 12-1 p.m. on Jan. 22, Feb. 5, .19, and 26 In Science and Engineering, Room 48. ·

Scholarship apps now available -Applications are now available-for 1986-87 scholarships in the

·financial aid office. Students are eligible to apply for a scholar. ship If they have a O.P.A. of 2.6 or better and lfthey are plann­ing to return to BC or if they are transferlng to a four-year cot, lege as a junior;

·.-•'The qualifications f9r schol,uships are varied; however, a stu­'dent need only file one general application .. On the basis of the

. application; the financial aid office will recornmend, the student .-· .. - .. : . ._· / · .. _- . . . . I district · tevel in i986·87; This . . . . · · · . · · . · ing ADA; :i percent increase for ·

' means BC can only use . this . -:--Chancellor Young categorical COLAS. -: ··.money for Instructional equip, . - . According. to Yo(!ng, the

for any scholarships that they may qualify for, - . Students are ~rged tci pick up their application as soon as ·.

, ·· · . - , . . ·· - niillio.ii budget for. deferred Besides.- "reiorking" science governor· added .. the · lottery · 1 . · : , men!, and not for any other pro- niaintenanc.e proposed - by the . · 1abs, "funding the' libraries" .and mone{for community .colleges to .

I gr~ms that need attention, Young governor. . . .. "increasing faculty salaries'' are his promised 7.6 percent budget ; :: pointed out. _. . _ . ''The governor has proposed the other "top pdorlties'' on Increase over '.85-'86. Initially, :_/ _7 '., .· "Our.peop_Ie,hustled;~nd w~~'. th i_s • budget _ ff r. de.ferred -·. Yourig'{lisL ... · , . · •. _ · . · .. · the budget mqney was supposed · -_-----. ed·hard:-We_worked-'d1ligenlly to-. maintenance. but-1! 1s-for all-J06~· The chancellor-stated· that the· · ··· to be-idditional~ money for the" -

· secure up-to-date.. instructural community· colleges .. · In our .. district has hardly .any staie (urtds · colleges.

:!>'.Classes closed due·· to low··enrollment··-• ' • . • -. • • ' • • • • ' . • . • . • c • • •

.. early as possible; students ha;e . cancelled;' " stated Carlson. He . . When a class is dropped, ~sual-. I . . . . : · i . By ROCHELLE JOHNSTON .

possible because the deadline date is Tues. Feb. 18. · . . . ' . .

Free brake in~pections available · free brake inspections are now being 9ffered in the ·

.Autoinotiv.e Departnteni'; located iii: the fodusirial. Education 4'utldlng~· Tlfoillnterested~sliould" bring -tliei r-car~ ii'Ff roiff 9;1 F" -

a.m, in T&L3, or call Mr. Page between 12:30-2:00p.m. for an·_· . appointment St 395-4574. . . _ .- .

· If brake work is neccessary, anappqintment will be made to do · the work. owners wiH be required to furnish all neccessary repair . parts.

·UC Berkeley ·student here Jan. 29 · more alternatives;". . . ·. feels. the current. notification ly the whole department is af-

·~.Students were happy that we, system is more "personal'' and is - fected and switched around, so Michele Silva froin the Offi~e of School Relations at UC ". . !)ue to low. enrollment.' 156 notified them as soon as pc>ssible, . more effective that -''perhaps an . the couiidi "consults the. depart, Berkley will lie at BC from II a.m. to 1 :30 p.m,, Jan. 29 in ihe

·. ·· Staff Writer . ·

_students we.re enrolled. Ill 60 to. give them more options, the -· ad in The Bakersfield Cal/for- ment's chair and the faculty in- Transfer Center. . .· .. . · •.. · · . classes .carceBed -this semester, <response - has been · generally. -. nian.'' volved," when they do cancel a Ms. Silva will be available to advise students on transferring'to accordmg. to Dr. Charles positive,t' stated Carlson. He ad- Before a class \\lithJb~ enroi1: ' class; stated Carlson. - UC Berkley . . •. . . . ' . Carlson, dean of instruction and ded that there has been "very lit- . inent is cancelled, Carlson said · Students should bring copies bf their transcripts from high . J~nie Budy, BC registrar. tie negative response." ; . . three.things are taken. into con- .- . This semester, 60 dases were. schoo.l, BC and any other college(s) they may.have attended.

. Most of the . students were The· district saved $20,000. in · sideration · by. the instuctional . cancelled in .. 15 • dei:iar:tments. · · - · -notified by ,idirect mail'' prior to .. - ''extr!l pay" by the carice)lations . deans' council. The couricii .. Carlson sta!ed that in.athematics -. C_ e. nter ·.s. PO. n.s.or_in_ g ca.· .m. pus.vi. sit.s the start of instruction Mon(!ay, : .and the riew notification program . looks at the;enrollmeni pattern and philosophy wereuneffected .· . . _ . . . _ ... reported . ~arlson, The lefter - ''cost. weUUt!der $1,000,''·.accor- ·. from the'year. before,~then looks- because. the math. dept .· is.· . __ -.. ~~:-_. . ·:-'-'. ·.-- ... · ·. . . . c ·-· • _. · ••..

- ena~Ted recipients to. receive"firsf - ding-to Carfson. Jn the past, ifa . to see if the class has only orie . '"understaffed'' and there is ''lit" . . -•. The. ~rans fer Center will be. sponsormg _ca.mp~s vmts to-~ -priority in findinga new class or . class was cancellecl, -''a secretary section and .then '.ttie .class might : tie . keway" in. switching ·things . schools ~n UC: CS~C systems and s_electeq-pnvate independent

·. registering in a different section; . would come to the class ancl state• be dropped "if there is extra pay around, .while philosophy always . - schools m Cahforma.. ·-· _ . , . . _ · . _ . .. ._ ·~ Carlson explained. that in. the ''your class has hereby been involved in that area." . · has «full classes.": - . · .· Interested stu~ents should sign up m the Transfer. Center at . pasi, · the admin.istration · · · least twoweeks·m advance.

'. sometimes. waited three weeks to ·. . Cost for trips will be kept to. a minimum dependirtg on over- ·. cance1 a c1ass because they . Membership increased • nightacccimmodations and meals. ··

• depended mostly on actual head - . - , .

'I: counts;however, withtheadvent - ·1s.A learns· '.-Am·. e· r1·.c·a·_ n· way. o··f 11·.re·' ' i of computer registration and the -: ·-. accuracy oft he siatistlcs the cbrri- . . _ ·_- -. _ . .. .__ _ - _- . . . . _. . - ._ -. . _ ·. - . · . Do people have trouble uriderstanding you? Are you often ,

-Speech i1t'erapist available'

i -:': putifr compiles/tfie adm[fostra:·-, 7-'.-By MIKF.yAm¥S . :- ·: ihe -,sAiasTts jittle argurnenis: _ .• we do it thelernocratic way,--w--'-'-e--'·.~-I.: ansl'!ered with a "huh?." When you speak ~re you selfconscfousf" - -· ~ tion can predict.which classes are-·' - . · · ·-. Staff Writer -'. • . · _''B.ut from whatl'veseen," add •.. inet :so iriariy people and the at: . Are you purposely ayoidJng general speech or spe~h. com- •

not feasible to holf because of _ . . _ . ·•. _ ... _ ... _. . ._ ed w·iifard. - ''This is the mosphere alid mood is always municlltion·ctasses riecessaty for thii.AA requir<:ment? . . -- · .. · • tow .. enrollm~nt and . · can. be ·' · The ' International • $tudents .·- . friendliest club o.n campus.;' - . . friendly and enjoyable.'' · ·.· .. · · · .. Are you in:teres\ed in discov~rfiig the hfdden potential of your -cancelled · prior to · the. class Association Club (ISA), with . - A~cording to Willard; the club, . tutrentiy the club, which is _ voi~e? If YES is the answer·10 ahy of these questions·see Judy

- .· meeting. . -. . ·. - .. ·. members from ()Ver 20 countries, roughly 20 years .old started out spearheaded by President WaiM- . • . -Gari-ell, BC speechtherilpisi: This service is fr~ to BCsrndents. -. Carlson feel.s early cance_llati<in .. has begun to see a rise ininter.est .. ·. very active in the -'60s'. "After .. ·. fog Kong, fias been focusing all Call 395-4419 or stop by LA 106 for.. an appointmeni. - -

based on computer statistics )s . and me1nbership; and accqrding that time; the d~b just· dropped its attentio11: on: their upcoming . more advantageous to the stude.nt· . to Adviser . Caroline Willard is ._ dowri for ii whiie and nor much ·"Internatic>nal Fashion Show and . because «if we notify students as welconi i ng ··· .. an}' in i etest.ed -._ happened; ... she said. ~But. itis .•. pessert - Extravaganta, •• · .. said

students'. . / ·- _· ' pic_ked upiri the last four or five I) fi ta - -DEGREE •·· Ac.cording ( 0 . WHlard, !he ·.·.years and the club has become i;.~;showwhichwillbeonC-of

. -· club's inientior)H tq}am __ Hhuize • mo.re and more active, so much. - th.e ~_ lu. bs big-· g· est activii.ies_ . of th. e_.- ·· · . co. ntlnu, ed from page 1 . . . th -· t d ·1 1·. th' . . ·. -. . - - . - ' . . . . . .

· ISA· plans fashion sbow,. dessert . -. . - . . . . . . . .

.· e new S U en S Q IS country . that we. now have 30 to 40 year, ai:corclipg to_ Willard, ..yill -concerti of standards in• general .. · witb the 'American way ofiife;" members and is the biggest club display-· many-c- iriterriational .on. the collegiate level. "Their . lo do things ·they''>'._e ·never done on campus," she said: . designs as wen aS liefog cqm,

· '· . w.ithoul takinf iiway their native .- w·1r d .-.- - • - ... -·· . - - - Ji · .• plemented by desserts frorn other.

The al)nUal. "int;rnational Fa~hiori Show and Dessert Ei<, . travaganza,'' sponsored by the International Siudeni Assodaiion Of BC, is planned for7 p.rri. Friday,Jan; 3l in the fireside Room. Modern ~nd native fashions from various •. coimtries and gourmet

· treats preparedby the students will be· featured. Tickets for· the · - - -_ event are, $5 and are availabie at the BC ticket office (395-4326) ·

. and sponsoring stores. For more information. call the Inte.rna-..

c. ustoms. ''Our main obi'ectiv __ e_in_. • . ! ,ar :w,ent o_n_t_o. s~yJ at .. . ... -_ . . . th ncre t I b . c. o_ .un_ , .. ri.e. s made_ b __ y· the s. tii. dents .

;'· '. .,.--· ' ·~ -

'

having this club is to gi~e tire' I~ i .... as1ng act,,v, ies m cu . . .. stu.de_· n_ ts. a c. hance. to_ ad_ J·ust arid_.··• ,~ct1v1ty was I.he bas1sfor !

0hem ~e-.. -themselves; she said: •. j •

g am d I t t -_. According. to: Defiesta; . ihe -. be. C_· Orne f_r_ien. ds, With.OU_! plaClin_ -g .. In. .n . e : a~ year ~ m __ os · -t t nd I b . show will be h~ld Jan .. 31 at 7 any bciundaties 011·nationaJitieS,)I , OU S ! mg CU on .calllpUS,, . . - . -

sa_id • A.ssistant .. Soda1 _ -A.ffai'rs. · - B .. emg. ~ club for 1n1~rna!1onal ' p.m. in the Ffreside Room. The I d I fl t ea] t , ·cosffor this everii will be. $5 and .·· . . Direct.cir. Gin.a Defi.esra· .. -.·. s u. en. s is_.o e.n. no .. a.PP mg O . . . - . . . .

Am d d D fi . the price of the food is,ini::lilded . B_ ut D .. efiesta stated th. at this. . ,- , encan SIU ents, sa ... ' e0

1es_ta. _ _ . . . . . Not because they don t like . in the admission. .·- .

isn't always an easy task with all ;, . ,, • . . . . the differences in lang_uage. ·"The ._us, _ she srud. It s i.u.st t.h.al peo'. . The. show ·is being sponsored

I th t th I b t ti d by Contempo Casuals,- Oak Tree .. one thing- .-we do . have in ,. pe see . a _ e_c u I e .is.ma e common," said Defiesta, "is that to attract the students from and Nllida's Fasbion. Entertain-

. ·- . · inent and foo4 will be provided, we all basically know how to other countries,· and those thar mostly,. by the students speak English/' _ . · . . are from here are discouraged ·

. .

W_ il_iar.d sa .. id .she'.s very hap·p·y- . from· becoming a member. We themselves;. -· · - - · ·~we're trying to io all out on .. with the way the club is gorng and · do. n't want. that; our cl_uli is for · ·· -_ this one," said Willard. And ac-believes that as good as the club is everyone.'' . cording to Defiesta there's talk of · riglit now, that it will keep· on get:· Defiesta has been involved in · . a belly dancer being· provided for .

. c· . \

ting better,· Of course all clubs · .the club since the fall of J984. eniertainment as well as a jazz. .. _aren't perfect, she said. and even. - "Since I've been in the club I've. - · . _ . dance by a group of Filipinos. -

Joshua Smith

- purpose is to keep us (the com­munity colleges)° up. Y.,ith .­everyone else,". Carlson stated.

· One of the good points Carlson noted concerning· the changes is that it will ·make college institu­

·lions review their curriculum more frequently and ro.rce them to use only the most up-to-date academic standards.

A negative aspect to the upgrading according to Carlson, is that too much might be written in regulations that will

·tell community colj.eges what. kinds of policies they should be using.

While Carlson is ,1ill uncertain .just how r.Bny ,our ,· ,;11 be af.

,-lo. f«ied b· -., n··;.. -.-.i;·cs, he •! 'stlllfetl• ·r ·c, cioact ;f: should r·· ,· ·.· ·s· · -·-· at

' ihe college . - · a:· -.~ · c• · • 'H ( cnfOllmer.• a· :,,- -~·· , .. ~ C.,. <:<;e

· {.i.·:tiecl\JM "·· -.1.· .• -.ea- ~ - ~~ "'lO

t7';~.,fs =~' --.r•' {,'.' ..

· aren't as familiar with our form -"We're hoping that the people ·

MLK Continued from page 1

of governmen·t as they'd like. Bue. · who attend this extravaganza will as De fiesta explains, "when it. get a taste of the students native

. -comes time to elect new officers, cuitures," said Willard. .

and Reception wiil be take place .Feb. 10 in the Fireside Room. Also available ·to view will be origional paintings, drawings and sculptures by various black ar­tists. Featured artist is former BC student Warren Spirling. The art_ display may also be , viewed

_ through Thrusday, Feb. 13. In addition, a hot link and chili

bean lunch sale will be featured Feb. 19 in the. BC Campus Center Foyer.

The last event in celebration of Martin Luther King Jr. is titled the "Color of Sucess" talent and variety show Feb. 28 in the BC Inc; - ~h:atre.

•·r· •· •.· i~~1ss1on i, SJ for a( , · - S: '• ·. '0r s1~ac;,t bvdy : .! • '. , - ,a,,· a.·,,J S2 for children

- --~ . ...,, ' -

_ -. I,;__:,, c':- .:, -.

- - .

Weekly Calendar _MONDAY, JANUARY l()

HOLIDAY . TUESDAY, JANUARY lt

7:00 p.m. Ni..-m,a Oab Mttllnr, flrtddt Room _

7:00 p.m. C7clln1 Dub, ~<<otln Boord Room WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 21

ll:00 p.m. lnltr·Vtnlc1 OmClan ftllolflhlp, flmlde Room 1:00 p.m. Polllktl !ki<oet 4l, ~tcatlu Bond Room 1:34 p.m. C-01u,lo,·1 MttC1n1; flrt11de R<><>m

THURSDAY, JANUARY 1.1 10:00 1.m. U.S. Marla, C-Or,1/la!o Ttbl,, Foyrr 1:00 p.m. Blt<k Scudn1 U,lo1, flrtt'd• R0-0m t:00 p.r.,. E:OPS Pttr Cooal{llot, Ettc•the l!-Oord Room

FRIDAY, JANUARY 24 10:00 1.m. M.E.Cb.A. Food Sa!,, Foi-tr

SATURDAY, JA:"•HRY 25 8:00 1.m. HfpllOd Hf1h Sdool, C•rrwf, 7:30 p.m. Wl,trr Fon111t, fir~~• RO<Jl!I

. tional Student Center at.395-4419. . -

··nrama:111eeti11gWednesday ( . ' ·-

.... ·

---·· A meeting for students interested in a~- all·student:produced <lramaiic production wm take place at 4 p.m. Wednesday in SAM-_ 107: - . . . . - . . . .

I

'J)ance Is' We(Jnesday in gyril . . . - - - . . -: . - . . ' . ·- ..

· -· "Dance Is," a free lecture/demonstration of 111odern daI1¢e J,y Chapman College dancers;will be given at the BC gym Jani22 ill I! a.m. The half hour· demonstration sponsored by 'the BC -Physical Education and Dance. Depaitments, i~ open to· the .

·Public. For more information call 834-4815. .- ·

Speech judges sought.--. - · . · Students tbat are interested in judging high school sp~h teams·

for one unit of college credi! are· ericournged fo contact Paul ~rary, speech team coach in FA 63, 395-4544 or leave a m~age . m FA 43. - ·. - :

Spariish fQr· med students set A course designed to teach. medical students basic medical·

vocabulary in Spanish is being offered from 7-9 p.m. on Tuesdays at BC. The fee is S25, and the instructor is Margaret Lyman. The

-course is approved by the California Board of Registered Nurses· for eighteen contact hours. ;

Quilting class scheduled . .

A quilting class is now being offered from 9 a.m. to 12 p.m.· and fr~m 7_-10 p.m. on Mondays through March 17 at BC. The course 1s bemg instructed by Nina Palmer, and ihe cost is S30. The ~vur:e is d~signed to a~quaint students with the use of quilting in­mtenor design and to give them knowledge of quilting technique.s.

'Majestic Kid' audition set , Auditions for the BC spring play, "The Majestic Kid," will be:

helc' f- ,r· '·6 n.m. today and tomr;ivw in room 107 in t~t th~~ -· '· r·,·,;;red monologue is rtc,.,•r'.d, b·,1t it does not :·.av! to b~ .-- -- .- ....

--- -·~--~------ - .. -+. -----·-- - - ----.. --~--------..,.------- --

·- . - "' . ... '

(

' . RENEGADE RIP TUESDAY, JANUARY 21, 1986 PA.GE 3 . : . ·: ., ..... ·--~--- . . . .. ' I

' I • • I

I I

Efforts,death of Martin Luther King recalled I '

. . .

. 1j · By STEVEN LASHLEY ~as·. still· there,'' Tyler · Nevertheless, King had succeeded helped this countrY. see the life of Kin'g did, but couldn't ernpliaslze ~ing to Tyler,.thls parilcuiar lioH-

Community News Editor remembered; · .· Rabbi ·in forcing John F.- Kennedy to · the black man in· the south, the their feelings as powerfully arid day.'should be more than Just a• i Steven Pesklnd, a white r~ligo·us · propose the broadeslcivil rights ideals in which this country was as intensely as he might have; But celebration. · i. ''And then 1 got Into Memphis. leader for th~ Temple Beth El In legisl.ation · in U'.S. · history. inspired and the gap in between," these people· were. just as in-· i Ar1d some began to. ; . talk about Bakersfield, was a college student ):iut accllrdlng Tyler, w~o J>eskind added. · . · strumental In the ·black move- «It should be more than ll J. threats ... ,Or what would happen . . Jn Chicago at the time of King's herself had pushed for civil rights But.· it was· the •black. popula- · . ment · as anypne, '.' Tyler added. _·. celebration ~ it should be a l to me from some of our sick . death. 'While. Peskind with black activist leader Medgar tion, Tyler said, that formed the, · . Like most people around the . rememberance: The .main thing } .. white brothers. But I don't know acknowledged the fact that "the · Evers, revealed ihat King had not backbone to King's historic civil · 'nation, bot.h Tyler and Peskind . people should remember ihai we . I- what .will happen now. We've got.· teactloris coming f~om the black always been the leader he turned · rights movement. As she put it "I believe . that Dr .. Kirig. is very ·. only have ourselves left . to J , some difficult days ahead. But if population were quite rad!c~l, be· . ?Ut,to be'. •. , . _· . . _ .· . realize that ihere were a lo.t of deserving of a· national holiday fulfill"the dream" that Dr. King ! ·. r~ally .doesn't. matter with me . stressed that their reasoning was ."King was a brave leader who ·. peopJ~ who felt the same way ihat . · declared-in his honor. But accor- left behind {or us,''. Tyler said; : . nOWi becquse I've been . /() the . not abnormal. . : mountain tQp, and /don't mind. "Anger, fru;tration, - - · · ·· ·· ·

. , : _. -·· .Like anybody, I would like to. revolt. ; .that was·. the typical . vl• , . . • . ·1· . .· •d-. . . . . · 1· ·• . . . . 1· - • . ·.··_ . . . . ·t._ 'Jc. . . . . d. . : _live a /ongl/fe; longevity has its reaction from my viewpoint. I . £.· ·. j. nan .... _. -_.c ... -. 1 .. a. • . a __ I .· .a .. t n.·,.·'P_.,.. l. ca ... : lo ... n.s.· . ·.o.· _ ·. -. ere ... · -· .,_ ' grace: . But l'm not concerned -. think everyone who. was born '¥. L < ~th thafnow. I just wan/ to do . after- his death couldn't Imagine ·· · .. · · -· - . .· .. · · . · -· · , ' ' ·· · . -·· . . - . · · . . . · · - . · · '

I ·, God's wllh And He's alfowedme .. how life was for the black man By ROCHELLE JOHNSTON going;'' th.e California St.udent . help defray college costs; na, short statement outlining educa: ·

to go up· to. the mounra· in. An.d. · back'then,'.' Peskind commented.· _ . 'Staff Writer Aid Commission, which includes tional direct student loans are. . - '.'Cal_ . grail. ts A, B,··· and ___ -C,· - Jow-i.nte.res_t Joan. sglven· by· . .I.he· tional and career plans and goals,

I've l. ooked over, .and. I've _s-een . U. nlike __ )nany other biacks at · · F' - 'al. ·. · · - · · and three recom··111··-end~tions from · · mane, aid. a.nd. scholarship •. graduate.- fellowship·,·_·-. a· nd· b·_·,1- · .·_colleg. e . to. under.grad_ u_ilte. or -_ .. ·. . . '; . ·. . .. the p;omlsed land."---' Reverend · the time, Tyler adrnitied tliather • - · th f It The d di T Or, . Marti_._n •· Luth_e_ r_- K1'ng. Jr·.·,-·. - gut resp on, se ~ following .t_he season has started, and a:ccordin~ . ingual teacher grants;,; and .. gr ad oat e students; and .· . e acu. y_. . .. e11 ,rye is ues~

· to Mary Pou Wilson, director of · · · • ··. · _ . · ---· . guaranteed student loans are low- . day, Feb. 18,)986, · · · April 3, 1968: · 'assassination was not to blame finan_ cial aid_,. ·.mone_ia_ rY. a_id _ can.·. .- "federal s~- ,udenht finpan1c1 ,al· aid ·intere_st -.~o.an_.s .mad. e by· ·bait_ ks, - _ · SAACs · wil_l b.e ~~epted. 01,1

-C: Pe(haps·-envisioning-his o._w11 ....:,:thewhiteman_-inieneral.·--· --.·· -- - · ·fi- · - - · · · · · programs sue as e grants - Ja 2 1986 a d t ad d ~be bene tcial in helping a student . - · · ... • · · · ·. -.•. · -- . - .• •-credit unions or savings and Joans-~· ~· · ; -.- · • n 1 1s. vise · destiny, . Martin . Luther . Ki_ng's ·. , ."I.n fact, at that point in. time coniinue h. i_s or her educat'ion .- . according to I.he SAAC mtroduc- a · · . t ,. , ... 1 .. d. -· . · · · th_ at stude_ nts fill out. the form_ s as. - , · h. d h · . · · · - we h d hit h · · · · · _ . .. . · · · ssoc1a wns - o gra uate o.r ·-· ·· . . . · . I

V<ltce ec oe t rough the Mason . . . - a many w. _. es w o were m · _ Accordihg 10 the Studeni A.id · uon. undergrad~~te went. · . scio? ;is ~ssible, f~!the Univ. of _, . Street Temple as he addressed a .. the.·· government .who . were Apj)lkation(fo. r .. Califo. m.ia. -. in- . • There.are five federal student llC.has .. put lo_ oether (in '_a_dd.i· Cahfor.ma system. 11nd. Cal grants, . ,I

. cro. wd · of.. black mil'i.ta·n· ts··.· ,.,h· ,·1·e P.ush_ ing for civi.1 righ. ts. But at tile · · P th fil d di F b 11 ... . troduction, an in.terested student ' aid ·programs. Pell grants. are - tion fo the·SAAC) a scholarship . e .1 mg ea me IS _e . - . I.-· i sta~ding at ihe altar, rain dancing · same time: we all. knew there were sho.uld, first. start the scholar- given to students ne~ding money packet that an individual fills out .1986•, for ~he Cal State system the I a steady·. beat .. on .the. tin . roof . some white groups who were · .. ship/financial •aid process by fill- for college and.do.not need tO b~ which puts the applicanf in the .· deadlme IS March 1_. 19~6; and ! above. For King, the preminition · . desp~alely trying -to keep . the ing out the SAAC, Vihfch is a 63 • paid back; supplemental ~duca, ' many different . private- scholar- . · for BC the deadhn_e IS· May he envisioned would be deadly issue in ~h~ ~losets," Tyler said'. qu_ estio. n; ·questionnaire_ .. that tionalopp'ortui\ity grant. s are ·not ships given .. bY various. org'ani_za· .· 1 • 1986; <

- accurate: : : ..... · · · · · Ma1enal1zmg out of the streets .. The sp· eech would be hi~ last. and the Jim Crow churches in the dete.rmines the.student's ellgibjli-. repaid either and .. only lions and foundations. · · '. · . Students needing assistance or . · - · ty for.financial help.;._ · · . undergraduates are eligible; col- The packet incl.udes ··question-. more information are urged to to ,,

A merciless.bullet from.thegun. ··sou.th, _ Dr .. King preached . . . - . . . . b · It provides · informaiion _ fo_r lege wor.k study is a job ·program naires · askino about the· appli· obtairi it at the BC Financial Aid · of James Ea~I .Ray the very. next rotherhood and nonvio.lence to . ,. . "financial aid programs at col- where· an undergraduate or cant's general information and office, 397-4426, as· sooi:i as · · day, W<Juld be the. dev·astating a .divided and· · violent lands - leges where you are thinking of graduate student is given a job to financial standing; requires a · possible.· shotJhat would not only end the·.-·· life of perhaps the most powerful • ·.--------------------. ---... -. ----.------------.---.;... _____ -----..... ------.... -_ ..:.-... -----.;... __ _,;,,;. __ _

. black leader of the time •. but . . . Ch. • .· I . d-• t . . . . ··.~~i'~J~r~~e~ffti:·~-~~~pr~:.. . .- •.... ··.- o ... _ 051.n .. ·g __ a. . o._ .n .. g. 1 .. s ... a __ .n. c.e. -.. ·.-· .- ..

• mosi widespread racial disorder ..

: inii~yiolent-hlstor.y~-c.,---~· : - - -L. ---company· . -·,s· -a· . ·10· ,. ·,1•11ae· :c· ho.I a·. ·s·,n· , .•. ,· .. '.' · .... ,' ............. ' .. ) _ - Detroit, Philadelphia, Piit-L . sburgh;:lialtimore and practically ..

11•·;h:r~os~:;ryott!J1No:!:~;:;r~J!-· ... ·· ·a· ro· .. ·o· . m· ffl-··_ ate

.- i bac~drop ofint~nse rioting and · ... ·.· . ·. .•. . . . . . - . ·.- • : · .looting . from distraught. blacks

·- .

: . who befieved that : •• ,h¢ clreani;'. ! . had died aiong wi!h ihe Reverend .. -i Kinf in the assassination oftheir I b.eloved ieader. The riation would ·.· : .. never.be the s'ame. : - ---.. - -

. l • _·. llelm~ted. combat troops ... ! . eng.ulfed the surroundings of the I : White Hou.se like a blanket; . :1 bayoneted rifles at the ready, as i the · vlolence raged on in . the

.. ; streets .· of -. downtciwn ; Washington, DC. Everywhere,.

-. ihe impact of violence symbi:>Hz- .- : i ed ihe µnrt:St of the blac:kpopuia- ..

tion, who were -refaliating a vengence tha"i . could -never· be (

• . satisfied: . ' - . . . . .

Reverend Carolyn E>Tylei, .· ,. · pastor . of. The People's Mis· : -slonary Baptist Church here iri ·

Bakersfield, recalls her moments > ofgrief during that intense period · .. ·

, • of tragedy ~hile nviris in ).os ! .Angele~. And while the restoftlie

nation raged on iri violence, black -: .. leaders _. there . had a different .

philosophy . iowards . tlie -· assassination .. -_ . . , . . .. _

"Black· leaders in .. our·. com­munity desparately tried tq pre-.· vent rioting, frpm breaking out, i

. • ·arid djd so for the mos! part. Our ' - reaction was noi to ietaiiate, but

io ~arry on with what King had already begun .. The man might have been gone, but "the dream" ·

NEED TAX ADVICE?.

- Taxes, Bookkeeping.

· and other

Accoul\tlng services

Nancy J, Metzler, C.P.A. 120 Chesler Ave.

322-1117

Workers wanted for

Democratic Voter

Registration Drive

Co,ne by 26 BERNARD

STREET, SUITE 20

OR

CA T.J.: '.1Z2-7411 JIOR

,. •. , f"

- ... •

. .

,· .

It's better to know what.they're· .like before you move in •.

Living together with someone for the first time can be an "ed~cational" experience. .~ .

· And living with a long distance company isn't any different. Because some companies may not give you all the services you're used to. . getting from AThT. · -- For instance, \Vith some companies you have to spend a certain amount before you qualify for -their special volume discounts. With some others, voice quality may vary.

But ,vhen you choose AToT, there ,von'fbe · any surprises ,vhen you move in. You'll get the

---· ______ .,

-------------·-------'

. . ., . ---- .... ______ .

- .

same high-quality, trouble-free service you're used to.

With calls that sound as close as next door. ·Guaranteed 600!0 and 40% discounts off otir Day Rate-so you can talk dtJring the times you can relax. Immediate credit for \vrong numbers . Operator assistance and collect calling.

So ,vhen you're asked to choose a long dis­tance company; choose AThT. Because whether you're into Mozart or metal, quality is the one thing everyone can agree on. Reach out and touch someone!

AT&T The right choice.

' .

, '

' ' . 0 -

.

4 , ·-. ,·

. '. - . -- .

·- . . " . ·'

' .

..

1

) i • . ' • J

. ' • j

: I . ' ·, '. . !

'

! '

.-1

.---i ' . ;

.· !

Page 3: New guidelines set for degree requirements

. ' . .

.. f.\.GE 4 TUESDAY, J~.f\lUARY 21 1 1986 RENEGADE RIP ~I : ._.. ' , . . . . . -·

! ,· .. . . . . t :.·---------------------------~. -----. -~. ·.~. --------

r !Rainmakers strive to create cerebral sounds , : . By JENNIFER GIA . . started . the . band nine months had • worked . with. previously. . band; Charlie Walls more than . says: ''Let's face it.:....J'm not the . Scou played me a tape~the emo,

· ···· Entertainment Editor 'ago. "What It was more than• ."That's professional recording Stan Wcmch; I take the depth of · best ·singer to come down the tionrang true; I knew that's what anything was my desire. to see quality-state of. the ait-your the percussive attack ilhd pudt in line.-so this is a kind of voca- I wa~ted Jo do.i' · . . . .

Sundays the Rainmakers prac- something original-there isn't a ·. Whani record; are on 24-track,'' artful riotes. I .use a rhythm: tional program.II.. . . ' . ; Theyd<>n't feel theyhav¢to_hit dee at ·. the Studio· (Sounds helluva · tot going . o·n in this explains Sturt~vani. . . oriented attack; but I also play Candelaria, also enrolled in . "big time,0 to achieve success, As .

. Unliniltc<I In College .Center) . , ; • . town,". he says. ".The band's The· experience ~as ."great,•: what t~e guliar Is p!ayin11, I take. music da'sses. on campus, lists Coleman says, "I enjoy what I . It's a high-ceilinged Crl\nlped little· always had a driving spirit of Its · according to Candelaria·: "Before · the notes iheY're playing and cut John Tayl.c>rand Paul McCartney · do,-and that Is success," . . .

bohemla.n place with portraitures o.wn; I'm happy with. the way . I Went I'd be ~atchirig MTV and them in hal( I play off the vocal·. , as his main Influences; • of his . Says Sturte~ant, "We've sot to . i.'. of Blue Meanies and Johnn)'Rot· · we've evolved.'' . ·· · . • · · .. · · . when I ~awa clip of a band recor-: .·· an<!' guitar accentuations and they qrga11' line :1n "Di1unonds/' Col- . stand on our own; To say 'we're. . ten grinning . nastily.· from .. the New' , bass. piayer .··Chris. .· ding In ii studio, I'd just get bui- play off rile. .. . . . . . . . eman .says«Iwarited to inake it. n.ot going fo make it here'-'-that's \,doors and Walls. and the pa~tiers . Candelari11, calm and long-eyed, · . terntes." , . . . . ''l try not .tc}overplay; I keep sound like a Bach cantata-that such a cop-out.". · of the place have scrawled bl!s of came in in late August .. ••r was.· From there,: Graeff took .the..·. the dmms in their confines, I feel eery, spooky,· ringing sound.I' . · . • "Y<>u. don't· have.· to · go . esoterla.ali over , , . , it's a crazy, oui and when I came home;! had master tape to RCA records in drums ~te too far out ·in niusic St11rtevant wrote 'inany of the anywhere to rnake)t. If. yc>U have

lald;back; _hip ·. kind of'. hang: · a note on my dresser that • said .· . New'York, where he m~de copies . now; they'r~ taking more place. ·.· b,md's 9ld .songs, -but Gra'eff says •. ·. it together, ·you·. can · succeed out.:,..a low-rent Factory. gone· 'Call Scou.' T.he ne11t day, I audl; · .In their studio's. "What we're do:· than they de$erve'.H .· ·~ · .· · . . "all oLUs write. That first song · anywhere," ~ays Graeff. · wes~-domlnated by a beat-up tioned," he says, . · ing now· is.· shoppii;ig ·our· tape· .· Sturiev~n1 •• ·· 111e ·· only· Rain· was fylarvi11's lyi:ics..:.,we all add· · "You create your own luck," stage covered with instruments, Drummer· Dan Graeff enters aro\lnd, '.; he : explains. .. . . . · maker' with 'no formal musical · ed our Qwn Hcks: Musically, H's.a says t:andelaria, . . .· ·

'. wires, amps. '· . . coolly, setshisdrangedrink from . "There's been:'an offer ·fo .. training,· learned howl() play collaboraUve process~lyrically,· . :"And wer~·going to a'ssume . , · Local metalhead band. Forced Howard's on · .. his drum seat, · . make.ail offer," says Coleman. guitar by looking at the. pictures · someone comes up with the lyrics · people li)(e · our music~if they

. Entry has just finished practic- · diunps·a bag of batteries on the .• '°Right now we're. paying attenc in rock magazines arid figuring . and gives them to another guy for don't that's their tough luck,'', '. '.. "ing; • the Rainmakers are setting · carpet and putsthem In his elec· tion to what's gOirig on in New out wh,1t chord was bei°ng played, ·interpretation" .. ~·.~ .·. · . _. . . adds.Colenian. ,_ ·• . . .. . . . ..

; up. Maryin Cohrmari, one <>ftwo tric drum while Candelaria tunes · York; Between ilow and .June,•·· "Pete. Townshend had· a very · . The pr~sent'Rairirnaker lineup·· ··. ''.That's what it's all ab9ut,'' ; new members of the quartet, to Coleman's keyboard. ,·, It takes · e.nYthing could)appen.'' . . · distinct "way of fingering; he'll · has been together orily four mon- says Graeff .. "Leaving an impres, \ adjusts hi~ mike .and his red cai:I ·. eight for each drum," he says, . Graef f's percussion influences never know ho.w. much he helped . ths, bui it "ali fell into place," as sioil. We'd rather have a listener

· , .scarf while . Scot.t Sturievani; . "Lasts a couple hours." · stem.from "The sound of the old me,".. he· laughs. Sturtevant . is Graeff explains; "The chemistry . hate us ihan Jus!btow us off. We • founding father of. the . Rain- Just prior to Christmas, the powerful drummers," he says. . . enrolled currently at BC in vqcal is 1vhat',s so neat I was playing . ·. want to know whether ihey danc-makers, ·Stands nearby, jetting band cut a 24-track demo.iii LOS ''Ginger Baker from the past' . . . tn1ining and. choir.. "At this . punk-funk-JazZwith Big Jed (and ed, or whether they discussed it cigarette smoke. ·.Sturtevant. Allgeles ·with· people Co.leman Stan \Vencti from· Tom Petty's point, that's a care.er rriove/' tie · the Flatbeds, now defunct) and We Wl'lnt to be· evocative.;,

'

l I l :· l ~ I ' .

( ·•. l (.

/. (·'

j .. . '

Fashion career in works for high school senior : i:, . '· "'( By MIKE VALDES right" skills for my area. of in- . now i'm working at )udys,. and ferent,'' said Keni:er. stc;,res .for the past 21 years: It's• Kenzer states that with her 3,5 · ft•

·,

. ~· . ·. Staff Writer . . ., terest!' . '. ideas often come to me when , . ·. She feels her upbringing because of ihis that I get, a lot of · ·GPA ancCh~[b.i'~catiy-;'to'Jghll ·. 1· ·, AS the demand for a new look . . According to Kenzer, ye~;ning . work . late. Or···· I 'IL be waik1ng . .has b·een the biggest influence on .· support from my parents as well classes, her. time is . sc.ar~e and .. ·. . i .

in cwthing is e~er-present; so also for education in. the ·fieid. of. through stores and if I see things .· her since she said, "I've . been as my friends, who often ask me . valuable.' .'.'I'd like to start seUing · '· !; : Is the need for fresh ideas from fa'shion ilesig~ has brought her_tel · I like I come up with JO other · raised around fa,hion, and my io make them clothing," she· , and. maklng more clothes right · 1

1: ._::

prospective fashion designers like. believe tharshe.isready to'move :ways to make .it beuer or dif· familt has owned retail fashion said. now," she said; ''But' ljust don't ,; . .17-year-old Nicolle Kenier, · .. · . · on to" another school to learn . ·- - have the tiine. Once I. ·get, away · )I f' . ':' :":-Withji, mind ·full-of; ideas, more:..:CFiulm Fashion institute~ · frOm here to Fittims, I'll b'e'able · '.

· : Kenzer Only awaits the time when · ;."My: junioi year' t thought 1 . . to lay e~erything else aside and · 1' ,, · ·

. she wilI be able unleash .her might be ready to go io Brpoks concentrate 011 my career goal-. . . ·,: . unusual j;lesigns on what she calls . · College (a.notherdi:sign school}," • .. to own.·. the top fashion :design .· \

: "the international inatket. , said ~enzer.. But ~ftet Iooking . ,store and magazine in the coun-- l ' , . •iihave all kinds ·o(deslgns in .afou11d I found that Fitlims was try," said Kenzer. ·. · ·.. . . j

,·' iny head that I'm trying to ex: · .. the most prestigious~chooI I. had Her strategy for success wiii be. . ::. press,'; s!lld Kenzer with a· smile. seen .and de4ded that .that was . to always know the competition,. '··

However, her only regret is thai where I'd go next year~·· ·.···· ' . · . have a lotof confiden~e 11$ weHas, •. she really doesn't know how to . Keriier bflie~es th11i as sh?i' .· a good eye for fashion; and to .

1 ~··.·.·

. : draft her designs... . gotten olderheridea_s for ~esigri~... always be aware. of 'what" the .. ·. . <;urrentlr a senior. at ~as,t ~av~' ~?ne j~r~.ug~.:..5§mer publicwarits,- . ~ .... ·. ~._-:·!' ;i ·:: High~Kenzer may not be able Jo radical ~hang~s~ cWli~n I rnsL '. But for now; when she's noL : 1

: draw'out her ideas on !)aper, btii st~rted making, c)?thes. r,dic;l:"'t : . thinki,ng of: sqme new design. or . i thanks t<> her self:taught s.ewing ~lve a. style, , she }.a.1.d. , ( outfit, she has· her, school ac- i·.

' skills, she is able to take different .· •. · Ev.eryO!Je has to fii;tdJhe1~ own : . f.: t\vHles io keep her:occupied. . materials and create what she inc .style, My .first ilrtkl(of clothing .· •. ' · · . i'l'lll a very. involved student . · · · · · was a shirt m.ade of potato sack. . .. · whe1J:i1 com.es to school.," .said·. v1s1ons. , . . . . . . . "I use a pattern sometime( .canvas and gauze.'' Ken~t'11lso· ·. ·• .· .'c Kenzer: « The teachers' and tlie .·

but only aft~r I;ve changed it to\ said t~a.' ·, ~he's made )~1\/elry; .· ... i;s ·· · ;urrlcillu~. lire the best, an.d .l · ·, the way I want to make it;••.: s<>me of w~1c,h ?as been sold by a . ' love in{schooJ,'J she added. Cur·

kenzer coritinued. ''And I use former local business :kriown as . reritly.shidsYearbook editor' arid patterns to help, mi make my. «Bow Wow·;' ) .. · . .• . , . has been involved with senior designs because I, haveil'.t yet : .aut Ke~ze~·said her o~Je~t1ve · publicity,;., :

1 .< .• < .. ,

learned how to draft a pattern." · at th.ls pomt m her Cl\fCer •.sn t to. •. .· ·. ·At this point m Iler.life, i<;enzer

• Due to her inability fo draft worry iibout what she's we_ari?g, ·· .. • .... ~10a.idl• ... , .. !eh.·•.e1_'sis•f.·,u.'breuot •. fu•.wn .. h1.1.a1·.t.·1hehracvalel.·1

1'nhge .

. , oilt designs, Kenzer said she is but .to .~<;mcentrate on bnngmg ,, f, presently taking sewing; art, and ou~;heLidea~. · ·... , . , .·. ·.. time I need to jump into the basic drawing classes at BC. «I'm.·. . I have s~..,~~ny.id.eas 10 my,. · . fashion industry, '1•11 · just keep · glad Lhave these classes/.' said .. nund·, that It ov~r~hetms ·:me practicing,"what I've learned,,,. Kenzer. •.•1;.m '1earnjng a11 · the~ somehr,1es," she· ~aid.: O'.R1ght 'Budding rashlo~ designer 'Nikki' Keriz~r dlsplays lier wares,·.·· . she said. . . . .

O" s .... :..~·,.~.- .... :.._·.· •• ~· •• ~ • 0 '. •• ,.• ."•• ·.,

;Re(\ford same Jone, strong figure in 'Out of .Africa' I ! <. By JQH~ R. SWEET by' Meryl Streep) ~ho mo~es io their· envlromnent destroyed by . characters are t)ie same.· . allowed to crowd into an undue . And all the iime; . effort; '

. · ... , : ' 'Staff Writer . Africa' at the end of the 19th·ce~- . the ericroachnien.t of civilizatfon. . ..·. ~tr~i>:s \(aren ~li1Co_t i~ ·, ~· •. .share .of.the screen. • . . · ... ·. . :· meticulous technical . accuracy, .. · · 1 ·

· .. ·· . . · tury to marry Baron Bror.Blixen In ''Jeremiah Johnson•: the · strong as Finch Hatton but in a ·. ''Out of Africa's" theme is a aivesoflle photography, and the ..•. · : .Ther~ ·is··· a. \:'haracter • that. • (Kiaus M~ia Brandaurer), a man . m11untain man _takes a wife and . more 'subtle, ·. feminine way. reassu,ringly •. familiar .. and .· in~ · . $30 million spent on this movie . : •· : permeates AJ:tierican .literatwe. It .. she isn't quite 'in love with. . .. son only to lose them. Finch Hat- . Writer Kurt Luedtke's screenplay • telligent one: 'when man·· l)uilds . Went, toward one objective; As

' :,;Is the lone man in.the wildenress, ·. Streep is. near-perfect in the . ton refuses to become committed 'a.nd Sydney Pollack's ·i:!irection (civHii:ation) he· inevitably Pollack himseif stated, it was so ''' the Great White Hunter, bwaria, role, even down to a very ai.Jthen-. ="io Karen Blixon (Streep} and in . haie kept Redford's. American . ·. destroys (nature) .. We se'e this. that "those values she percieved

· · < keit\osabe. He is a figure familiar tic·Danish accent, and ther.e is no .. the end pays the .ultimate price: hunter in. his p~oper place, ·a. first through the eyes cif Denys•. could be transferred 10 the. ·•1·.·. :; to ·us ash~ roams the globe, from .. doubt. left in the viewer's mind · But these are only incidental dif- strong supporting character, . Finch . Hatton and eventually. viewer. You have to recreate the . . : the,'Rocky ~oiintains l?_tHe~iUs ,BbQut·, 'who is the leading' fe·rences, esseniially the essential JO the story but not .. through those of Karen Blixen. paradise to feel the loss.''

t>f. East ".fn~ •. al.one, .mdep~-. characier. , . ·. . . , . dent, sttong, carfY108 with him a ·. ·. ·. · .

. full but rnysterlous'past; .·'. , _. B~t early ori, Redford;s Denys ' : · ·H · . I ·th ' . ,,"'·' · · '·f · th. ·finch.Hatton establishes a strong •. , . · e s e ep1,ome o e . . . . . · . . . . '. l'ne Am' en· 'an·h. ·and h. · . presence . as .he stops the train , 01ascu , . c e(o e Bl' . , . 'd" . I d · · 1· ", · ·th h ·1· d · · ... · 1~en·1s fl mg on to. oa a pa.i.r ~· 1ves ,or e un un er Wlue .·. · - . -·, · . ·· · • kl · · "th· d ·n · h; of huge elephant tusks. The train · , open s es WI a, goo 11 e in 1s . . . .

· .. " h d · · · · · · · · : ·. pulls a.way as Finch Hatton walks · ·. an. s. · · ··, . ·. off into the prairie, alone except

. 'Hemingway unashamedly· ·for his r.ine.and Somali tracker. p,opulated ·,his. stories with thfs The figure · is reassuringly h,ero and ga,ve them plain, strong strong and confident and totally

.;: names like NicholM Adams or · romantic, ever) embarrassingly , : Robert Wilson. _sq: Redford is no stranger to this

More re«ntly, · act6r .Rober! character, in fact it is the only Redford has su·cceeded iri cilptur· role I've ever se~n him play.,The Jng this · character in .· the $30 ·. only diff~rence ~twee'n Denys mlllion Sydney Pollack r'noviee~.' ·.Finch Hatton and Jeremiah travaganza "Out of Afric~." I\, · 1oh.11sor\ (o.ne of Redford's .

The movieJtself is a glorious earlter roles) u the loc.ile they ex­pres{ntatlon, shot on-Joe.it ion ist in and the chara~t~ts they are among the Ngong Hilb.in Kenya. surrounded by. Finch Hatton The photography is literally could comfortably battle Crow

'.:'. bre.i.thUkirg, an Oscar-deserving · Indians and wolves in the _Rocky ···:.·pie« of ,..,k by David Watkins. Mountains; one can irnagine

· f:; But.the!'·· ' ,:,o~g too, and· Johnson downing a charging lion !\;:·: moving. ~· • •.·.· • -' ritt~n 'ly .,,,ith l-' 0 Hs • ,:;,'s gun. Elich ":].; ::Isak Oir.=:c 1, , - ,c: " .. •.· : · • ~· we,e - •· • • · · ·i r~ated from -·· ~ "' ~·1··' life In B .. '. ,. c.i" -~·· :,1 ~11··:,a· .. .·;ed into a,

-F!IZZA ..... 11-lOQ

11$ ,,,,:w CALL AHEAD · ORDER BY NUMBER

21 Varieties of The World's Greatest Pizza®

Thick or·Thin Crust Including • New Super Pan Pizza

I Cheesa 15 !lollon Sou,age & 2 Spice hpp•ronl Block Olive 3 Shok•y'• fomou, ltolion Sov,oge 16 Pollack 5pedol 4 froth Oround 8,eaf & Onion · 17 Tijuana Hots 5 Portv9ue,. Sou,ag• I B Howollan Delight" 6 Polish Sau,age Conadlon Style 7 lfoH_·r Salomi Bocon & Pinaoppla 8 P!lb•I, u,,uie Spoclol 19 Mod Menlmont• 9 Porl<>•.d Svprame Shrimp, Olivo &

10 >.r-< ... ~ ·-· ~ Mushr.oom 11 Jo,oo,,~c 20 Moc~ger'1 Cho!co 12 W"', ... Wv-.~-~."."-"';1

1 ') 'f-o,1"41'\ ~<II :.· 'l!'t

21 Shok•v'1 Spec.,1· Comf>·.·.~tlon W1tt,eiut

,,,

TRY SHAKEY'S CHICKEN & POTATOES

2 CONVENIENT LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU

EAST BAKERSF'EL ') SY..'~.!.· • •

323-6074 832-0750

, ' • t i

,, . " .

. ~:

. .

RENEGADE RIP TUESDAY, JANUARY 21, 1986 PAG.E 5

.. , r .

.1'·· ,,

.,,

It's hurry-up and w(lit 1- . ' , .

· at sp,:ing term sign-up . j

· Photos by MIKE BAZELEY. ,·

;'• ..

'

·· Mary ,Serbia (L) and Kathy Arriaga, lwo. of the hundreds QJ late registering stu~ents; search for classes on the. board. ,. ! .

-~·· .....

..;._ . I

f . J '

•,, j~ ..

. . . ~·-··-· - ~----.-

, . . { .

. : ,' ., . , ' ,; .

,. . . · ... > , . . . ., :f' JI&

' . '·; ' . . ·, ' .

. I ., A ·~ ·' . . '":

~ ,,· ,

; , .

• •.. i . } . t

, · .

. .. ... . BDo/<:~,

Dil~ld Tyler receives some last minute advice from counselor Judy Mays before flnaUzlng his ~~hedule. . . . , . : . . : .

Hr.··. ! ;it·· < . . .':I ... ' ct~· : :1 ·.·,~ · ·,

. . ~

1i"·· ,, . •.

·.:-1 ·'

: " .

•,,

I , I

' ; , ,· i j .

! . I

\ ·:·· ·_:,. ..

T{~ Ricai'ds, ~~iere.ndurlng anoth~r of the miu\y long tines, tries to add a ~ouple o( dasses: Lynne Puget; arter enduring hun; •· .. dreds-~fstildenis, doe.s ~.er' best Jo help/ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ~ . ·.·. . . \· .

. .,_

,. .

..... . --.Jf'

~oo~,1r.:, •int• 12,in rriiehed aa unappullng lent, further tt1tlng tJ,e ph)slcal endurance or the student body.

:_·\· revolve,, .,..,,,J~ I..,·,-. ~ .. ,..,.. !lrim1l" • · •.,. , ,.e,e eaten up ..::· ~yed maicai,J•~:·. - 'e ",::-, ...,,., .l -.~.'. :: ..., ·,~. only to see·

·i~T~ ' &

~ ...... ... ~ ~: .

."ICl"t.1~-,~-·

I /!

; ' _ _. .L:.: ~---~~~---~-----~·-----------------· j

•' . . ·~ ~ ! i. .-} ,- .. :~ _;_ ,, ,• ,;:.) ,' -~:-~ ... ~ ., ,,) ·:"' . . . . . : : .. .:. ... · ,::"!·,_:.

Page 4: New guidelines set for degree requirements

i 'i \ . ,.1 I I

. . . ' . • . • j .

PAGE 6 TUESDA \', JANUARY 11, 19~ RENE<,ADE RIP '. . ·. .· . . .

'·"'.; ...

. (

,::"-·

,\ '­' •.

J''wI•iH Lady hoop 3~0 in Metro ..;.,..:..~--.;.,.....;..:..;;.~~ . - . .

. 1- '~

., J X f •11 p'-.- t . . - 1· t ? By MIKE V ALOES Dahl a'~d Alvidrez both agree

Y·Y l -a s ge -resp~c .. Staff.Writer '!~:;e:tefo~eae:chh~i:er: ~~:r:r~ By DARREN SABEDRA team. . • _ . . , . _ .. _ · The ~omen's basketball team mance In a game. ''I've seen that

; 'If there are problems with . a play, the girls can free lance so ·well they can pull us through.

-.-· _;

· Editor tn·Chlef .When did this new New England team show tip has ·ended it's pre· the tealh has gouJ .:011•i:"1ity and l: · Well; I feel It was the night of Dec; 9 In Miami. Th .. season play with a 12·4' record . works well together. - ,,11J D"tri Pll'•'c see 'GADES page 7 ·

<; ' . : :rn the ~idst of the. N~w En/iand Patriois• -. Patriots were battBn~ ihe Dolphins;__ a'team the} and has overcome a rash of iii-..•. 31~14 triumph over the Miami Dolphins one had 16 hadn't beaten In theQrange Bowl since i966- fo juries whith · plagued the teain

' · · · · • · · the AFC- E t n DI I t Th. · p· f h- ·. earlier th!_• seaso-_n,· · , · wi;l~der If the Pats w6uld receive the respect they . . - - - - as er v s on crown.·· e ats oug ' · , . · · ? ~cs_ence entering Sunday's super Bowl against the · Miami toe to toe, bµt they caine up a buck short The team, now very · well

,. <;h!cago Bears. - · 30;27; _ _· . _ .. · _ · adapt_ed to both offense anc\ , ifhey aren't. _ . . . Despite the loss, the Patriots showed the ~ntlr defense, has beg'un the regular : [)espite playof(victorles over the Jets, Raiders nation they are for real.. _ -_ · . •. _ season with a 3-0 record, accor· .

lllld Dolphins, all on .the road, the Patriots have But against the mighty Bears; New England can' ding to • head coach -Jenniefer been placed as a 10 point underdog for SB.XX in count on six turnovers, as was ihe case last wee DahL . Dahl commented • that

•.f .. '. · New Orleans. . .. . . - : . •· - against Miami and the week before agalnst_Lo because two teams were unable to · Fans around the country, with the'exception of .· · AngeJes, They also can;t coimt on just a strong run makC: a showing, the Lady 'Gades

the ones .In Massachusetts, can't seem to put their ning game, as was the case irt all of their playof -· we!'}t three weeks without a game . -.;~ faith behind the Pats. Fans believe New.England's • w_i_ns, -" .· _ _. _ .. ____ ~ ___ __ _before winning their first three

(. only edge Is not having to'face the. neiv-Monsieis of But here are a few facts that could mean fate is i -· league games. -- , '.: the:Midway in the confines of Soldier Field. New England's hands:- · - "After our l~rig vacation, I : : -- OQter than that, everyone says ·all stats · 1ead - - -*The last wild card. team to play in the Supe thought it would be dift'icuit for '. · towards aBeat victory. . · . . . · ' Bowl --: the O_akland Raiders - was the only wit us to win our first league game -: : >Their reasons_ are that the Bears are not only a card to win it. · . -.. : - . · · -· against Santa Barbara," said ·< team of destiny, but a team with no weaknesses. .*The Raiders' SB XV victory over Philadelphi center Valerie Alvidrez. "But we '.: They also feelthe ghost of George Halas, the Bears' was iii _the Super Dome, the arena in which th played tough and beat them

· : . late coach and president, is looking over the team in Patriots and. Bears Will !)lay Sunday. - 7045, ;, she said, adding that the ': its quesi for the Super Bowl crown. . _ . ·. . *_Oakland lost to Philly during its Super Bow team seemed really tired after the . But after watching New England dismantle its season, as did the Pats, when they lost to Chicago win ... ·. •- . . ·_ . - . - -· · -·; rugged playoff schedule, orie shouldn't have'much this season .. - .. · · · Tired or. not Alvidrez has

·l : : problem putting Jaith behind this group from But I think rnost fans wouid agree that you can't managed to stay the teams : < Ma~sachusetts. · -. . ._ . . compar¢ tbis year's Chicago team to the '8 leading rebounder .. with · an

i: . New England has one thirtgfew National Foot· Ph!ladelphia team. During the '80 season, average 7.3 rebou~ds a game, ac~ . : : ball League teams will ever have,;....; character'. · - -. Phdadelphia wasn't thinking about the Super Bowl cording to. D·ahl; Stacie

: ·- , -· As a group, they believe in thernselves. They have shuffle until it beat arch rival Dallas in the NFC title · McManus, who - sprained. · her 1 : . few superstars, ~ut the ingredients they have seems game. .- - · __ ·· · · _ _·. ._. _ ·. • ·.. . .. _ ankle in the Santa Barbara game, ... to mi:icweUtogether. • •.. . ·•. ·_._ .-- . -. . ·.-• . However, despite Chicago's strong showing in shadows .Alviiliez's record with

' "· Why haven't we heard about ihis teamitll-siasoir-~Clth_oL.its-_playoff _victories;_:_ l feel if Patriot -an~average ~i-:rebounds a-ganie. -j _·_.-- ......- a la the Chicago Bears? The reason is the - quarterback Tony Eason plays wel_l. as he's done - ".Val~rie's record is good, but for : · · P!!triots began the season at 2,3, with orie of those ; · throughout the playoffs,· and running back Graig . the size she is I hope to have .her . · , - ; ~e,~eats being a 20-7 decision at Chicago. Bufdon't James has another good day, New England has a bring it up to 10 rebounds a • c panic, Patriot fans, that loss was back in week two· · good chance. . game,''- said Dahl.· · - ·

. r • • . - - . . . . t . . • - . - - - . . . , .

~hl!l-~'L.J:al!!Jl~t~o!!.rBJO~l.!.!lei!ln.:. . .;JTh:!l!lis~· UL.Qt.~~~~-l&l.lw.ll-... ,:;:M;::y~pE;i~ck~:~N~e~w:::_•!E~nii!.!la.!lnd!U24~C~· J!;hi!,Sc~a~o~2:!0!;.._ ...... .J ·~ _ According to Dahl, the inju;ies -

. J·C- athletic- eligibility req. ·u· 1· res ~~=~er~a~a_~~v~_:_1:t0 ~1/~~ ~-! . . . replaced with the· common cold ,· 2-0. 0. p·A - . . .. .··· ._ -.· · ·. -aswellasthefl~--- · ·

:- · .. ___ .-_·-·• ___ ·_---._- __ .. _·. __ · ___ -._ · ·-...• ;--CO'.aches.·in favor ju:~jdls~sh~s::t:~~1!~c~v~~i

. --... By ALLEN ~ONTES. ·.- .. ·w~1t. J~h~sor/ said that ;h~~;~· -. L'HwiU-make the people who. :r?;hat1~:rn~~h!lecid~st!vfas~; . .- Sports Eclit_or · --- . . - some athletic directors. have -. are non cbalenl;towards ·school· ·.- deals whh," she added: Alvidrez

criticized the new,ruling, he is in push hard~r/' said bllsketball explained that .tbere has been Ht·

. '. ; ~it~ the·rec~n\ passing ofilew .• fa~~h~k~t~~s a greai deal of op; ii_1i;hn~~e;e s~::fr:'i:1_._:t'while th_ e de affect on her performance

. _-e1Jg1~ihly. requ1rem_ents for _com,-._ position at :the state meeting;''. ,cases are rare, there· have- been .. thanks to the back brace she noiv -. m, umty c?_lleg.e at~letes, the t~rm ~a_id_Johnson._ ··.r agree_-_ WI,. 'th the.• . ·so_m_e·:_ st1.1de·n·1·s'fro·m.-_Bc· · 'th•a't h·ad. wew:s.. . - - -. -· • . -dumb Jock m fade nto . Alvic.rez;· who.is.a.f(eshriten, -.

, , -- . · . -- ay · · 1 - new ruling·.· We·. are -_not.• in -a· n··a1hlet·1·c.sc· h_o'_1.·ars-h1'p. _-t. o- ·a· _-,o-ur· · h. · ed. · · · · obscurity • -. - as manag _ to keep· lip ~ scoring . · .· ...• · -· __ · · · ... · _·.. . -· athletics simply.to mak. e people ·year.-sc-h_oo·1 t·ak-en· aw·· ·a·y b-_e·c-_au·s-e · fl.. - · · · -the new ruhng q res a 2 O · percentage o : _ 4:8 poJnts ,1 game, ·

:• GPA' in all units :tte~pted, but better ath_letes." · _ .· -. _ .. · .· of low grades, Johnson also feels· .•. _ second to. Geri Monianio's I s.1 ·· .- - an athlete must have at least i2 --- '')feel the ilew nilfis a step in - the tougher stahdards now re. scoring average,'saicl Dahl. "I exc · ..

units per semester. The ruiing - the right direction,''. said Bows~r' - quired J!'l~Y help some sfudents pected Vaierie to do this well II .

. . wi!l !!ffect ·a11 athletes, except in· ''.I think that we should go one. · get a direction in life. ·. .. . _ _ said Dahl, adding that AJvidr~i -

. coining freslfnien, beginning next step farther and make nine of the -''We have some real dedicated. always seems willing to i~arn: ! - ·year; All athletesthat pla'yeda·· !Ztinits beacadefllic,'' -- .•. - ... students," said Johnson; ''but . ~·It's different coming out.of-·

fall sport ibis year will also be af· - Up until the mid_ '60's the re· sometimes Student atlileies have - high school and playing toilege _ .f fected by the ruling if they'wish quirement was a i._O GPA in 10· • no real dircction of what .they ball,'' said Alvidrez( "I have to

. , to 'participate in a spring spori. - -units, . nine -of which .. were -want· •. to . do .. I hope this wiU -_ be smarter and qu.icker. because . - The old requirement, which academic, ·. · · __ - . - , _ . change some,C>f _that.''. - the ball is always moving. :_ just required 'passing i2 units of - Worqen's Athletic : Director ·.· - . · · · ---. · - - · · · . Sandy Bowers was. also in favor - · - . .. · - .. - classes; was changed by a state of ttic ruling, but felt it may have a· - u· . r· .. c· . -. : : .. i • . • - : . : : . . • .

: coli1miuee made ui> 0r athletic , some negative affects: _ ·. - .- . . -.. . · .. -. . -:_- . ·.·. 0_ m __ . m l_tm· .. _e· _ n- ·,·._· .. -·•_i - direct_' ors, administrators, deans, . . .

1 . _ "Pm fearfulthat -some of the - -. - i, · and other faculty. · - .. • . · -student~ mighi take the· easy way - ' · 1-- - -/) B!~tr:11~~~~~~~::c:r!;~: oBout by ta~_iwng easy1.1c1adsses:·_·hsaid _ to Exce fence - · - f · · ·d· · ·h NC-AA wers. e rea y on t ave · 0 increase presrure I e· - · many p· roblems with the women .

has put on four-year colleges and · - _ . - · . - - • .· . · . - . ·_ · but every once m. a while you universities to increase the· co · - alb · h · 1· h · - . f h . me across a re rig t g1r w _ 0 academic performance o t e1r is call · · cl · · thi r · b ,. athletes. · - - - r, Y goo in. a e 1cs, _ut ·

" "Th - NCAA h h can t do that well m school. If we • · e . as put so muc tell her she can't participate, then ·

, · __ . pressure on the four-year schools she. wi'II P -b bl . d f . -} ' · · h all . h · · · · · d ro a . y rop _ rom . __ , _ wit t e invest1ga1Jons an school and .. d . h-- ; ~ · . · . · . , win up on t e· , , • putting them on probation that st 1 ,, · .1 ~ : they have had .to raise __ their en- _ rBeeo~·e 5· al , 1 th I h .11 -. - · ,. Id w r so ,ee s a t ere wi ! . .. trance requirements, sa be dd d · th h-11 , Bo - · . a e pressureon. ecoac es. i' wser. . . "The coaches wilf really have · i ·, _. George Smit~, quar~er.ba.ck to keep on top of the athletes and l i coach at University of M1ss1ss1p- sa th bef -1h h h · • eed ve em ore ey reac t e

pi,.,agr · - point of ineligibility.'' . "{~ have gotten so much - "If you want to go to a four­pressif(~ /rom the NC~ about year school, you will have to have ?u_r_athle(es, but I don t feel.t~~t good grades," said 'Gade foot· it is a semor colie~es resPQns1b1h· ball player Rick Smith. "The new ty to .~eac~ a k~d l~

1 read and ruling will force us to get better

wr1te, said Sm1~h. I_. feel we grades.'' need _10 start improving t~e "It (the ruling) is great," said

. schoo,1;"g at the gra~ root' BC basketball player Vince level. - COpeland. "You have to· put

BC Men's Athletic Dire,~or school first, 'and the,·, athletics." ,..,,.,,.,.,.,.,..,..,.,.,.,~,,.,..,.,,,,.._,.,l't'+t-#~~tltlt,,:iC,, ,,,,~(It#,

~nusdeGMilo &( *Aerobics *Firming *Toning Equipment *Certified Instructors *Free Weights

l 1d,... f·rn~~· c~11ter 1 .'1,1-, n 111, S-,1. c :,o

. -lll'!• off to ail ...... B ( ard holrjrrs I .... ~ " -

(·.I~ "•'"'f ] . : . . . ..,, ' ~

- . . - ·. q;, - - . .

Staff .Dining Room-

~.coffee Sh OP . :,lt,

'-~·

..

v.. .· .. - , ._ . -

\?, -.. :

. . - -- . - MIKE BAZELEY /Rlp Storr -Lady 'Gade Valerie Alvidrez · drives through tw~ Pasadena defenders for ii layup •..

It's IRA Season! _ Save on taxes now • •. • -. -

. . . . - . - - . .

·. and. RETIRE A MILLIONAIRE!* . . ·. - ~ . . . . . .

- . -

·A-sk me how!• - S. Craig Holland

· Prudent1al·Bache -· _ · · •. Secunt1es

1100 Mohawk St.•·. · Bakersfield

·~.ised o~ S~.000 ;nnUa1 contiibu1ion for ta~payer . sge_25, compounded st 12.So/o

326~03'01

brother. COMPACTRONIC I

AB DICK/JPS

(HT x;- ,_, ........ -~-· -

1200--18th St.

..... ,..

Ask about ou-r lease/rental plan

327-7386

...... - .. 1,...,, ..

"'-<" . ·. '. - ... -.. -r ---·· ::,...-,..

12), ... ,.;

: 55 year 'Gade fan

· Adams· gives time, money to BC ·' . . . . . . '

By ALLEN MONTES Sports Editor. -

school,-" said Adams. ''At that • said lieact' football c6ach Carl Adams Memorial scholaiship . time Bakersfield High' and BC . • Bowser. '.'He works really hatd worth $500 thai is given yearly to we1e on the same camp_us." .. for free. He comes in on Sundays the best student In architecture or

Not many people w6uid work . . -After attending BC. for two ·. clurlng the. football season . and landscape architecture. over 30 hours and up to seven and one half years where he was a . does our statistics. He ls the kind . ·. . . .. . days a week fo-r nothing-except_,, yell lead_ ei'-,'lie trans_fered .to_ Texas ·.· of pers_on a. good athletic e_i,,,-,-f•, :•Gre_.~ 1d_am. s w _____ as __ - the: son_ of

· Chu.ck Adams.·· . _ . · . Christian. University. He then ··_ gra"rfi needs, but most community~- Chuck and Leora .. -He attended · Adams lfln-hls-;econd year as · join~dthe Air For .. ce for 14 years, . colleges can't afford orie, so we . BC and_ the11 tra~sfered to Cal -

sports information. director, and ·. where. he retired as a Captain. He are very lucky to have him."· . - Poly San Luis ';)b.1sp~, where_ he In his 55th year as a Renegade . is. now a retired accountaht from . · Men's Athletic Director Walt wa~ kllie~ :rag1cally In an auto fan. .. . _ • Kern Medical Center. , ·Johnson agreed; , acc1d~nt.m. 73. . . .

"I have been attending llaines. -- . · - · · . · · · · . C'l:Ie .was concerned th~t some since my freshman year in high . ''He is•our -right-hand man;'' !'Chuck has had an intense in- architecture students With. as

terest in BC for years. He works . much talent and drive as him · . wouldn't have a chance to make it because they couldn't afford· the schooling, so my wife and• I. dedded Jo make a scholarship in his" na:ine... . . . -

I

,__ _ _ Adams has also been of, . -. ficiatii:is track at BC for 28 years. -

From 1961,66 Adams was· the . -head of the booster club at BC .· .

. arid sponsorect' afeed 'for' all the -. - 'Gade. -fClo)baH players .. in his backyard every sunday. ·

.. · - . . '

Chuck Adams doing what he en-· Joys .: most..'..attending a BC

. athletic event.

Beginning this year, . Adams . · .will sponsor th~ Leora E: Adams

trophy for academ[c excellence. . One would wonderwhyAdams . would take a job that .would re.· quire so much work and so little pay .

"Walt io)uison appr9ached .·-me. and . said . they_ needed so:

meorie; and I said yes," said · . Adams. ''I knew whenI took the.

.. '-- - - - ' - ' · · joti that I wouldn't be gettfng any verfhard at ;h~th~ does:" · -. - . mciriey, but-I like the work iind

. Besides hefog sports iriforma- _ --· enjoy the coinradesh-ip of the · tion director, Adams confribuies . -.· athletes ·and the athjetic sta'ff." · .

. to ihe coHege in othet ways. - Right now Adams doesn't

RENEGADE RIP TUESDAY, JANUARY 21, 1986 PAGE 7

T9gether with his wlfe; L_eora, . kno_w how-!Clrig he will 111aintajn

t · t , . d l they have established the Greg L, his position asjnforniatiqndirec~ _. _ . . . . . . . . JOH_N LAWREN<;:E/R e 1olf s en O war s goa Adams Memorial award giver\ tor, __ but•· the BC: j athletic staff- · Forwa_rd' Vince Copeland shoots for two of his 12 points against• -J:-' , · . each year to the male athlete with · hope; that he will be here frir a_ L.A. Pierce. - . ·

Elig-ibility rule is a·

-. -. By AL~EN MONTES de~t ~~ulcln\ be~onte elig~lii~ bY .. ·- . the highest GPA and the Greg L ..• -- lo~g :-hHe. Sports Editor · taking all: PE or other no_nc . - . . · . . .. . _ . .·· -·. < - . . . .. _ . . . . . . . . . _ . . . . .

. •· A step fo· the dght directiqri .· -. ~c:~i~"ttrc~~~see~~h~~t~ t~ ~~I~~! -Camel .. carries ... ·. B c ·._._··over . I j ier.ce: - -.

was made by a state commiitee of books, w_hic~js the purpo~e: of . .- - · .. -. . . . . - . . - : . • . . - -·- - ·. . . . . - - . - -. - . . .· . -

·. athietic ctire:ctors, deans, and · th~~!:_- rpee_~;le_e:~:t~ that ~ome . By MATT H!Lt:IARI> wayofair, usipg th~ baseline as a_. · There was. ;6irie ptishi-ilg and·. of the seconii' half, over a call - other facult)'.. . ·• -•-- - -. - . . . · - · · · - · · -- Staff Writer ·take off.pOirit, giving the crowd shoving.for positi<>n, but it was a thai was, according to Les"sett, - .·.

·· That stepwas the passing of a kids:)ust areri't sniart enough to <1 . - - - - . (>{3oci what ii came lo see_ ex- clean. g~me to me;'' said. le~s than honest towards Pierce .. new eligibility rule ihatrequires a d_o college work, ancl athletics is . It was a. happy, - but not - .. - . . .. - - - Co (· d . . . But_ th_e. capper_ • for the· n_-ight.

. . their only chance to be successful sat1'_s_fi-1ed1

_--BC. m_e·n•s.- b. asketb·a·11·. ·. citerrteht. - . PP1.eerac~ ._-.:.-h···e·_·a'..d_ -·c_o·a··c·h:.· ·L"a· ·r-r_y_ . -from· .. L·e .. s.se·.-tt. ·c· a·m·· e· w·1·1h· -a-· 'e·w · ·_ 2.0 GPA in at least 12 units per . J'f .b .1 . _ .t. - .. 1- .-",1 · _ .·. -. __ . __ _. . . : '_.'! did_a_good-_J_·o_ b_ an_ d rn_y a_t __ ._-. c~ •· semester · m I e, u 1_n mos cases I isn · coach Dean Jones·at the end of · ·. · · ·. ... · · L·e·s·s __ .e-tt, ·a'•1·s:·o-__ 1·n· __ h·_;1sfi.-1r·st-.sea·s·_·o·n.'a·s · • ·1·f · · - h .. - d ·h· ·1r

- -' .·. --. - · · - · · : that the athlete. caii't cl!> the -· . : .- : . · • - - . . titude was a lot better.The coach _ mmutes e l in I e secon . a . In a time. wh~n .f<>rmer.co)lege work; it's the fact that they don't the 'Gade-L.A, Pie~ce, game.. -s~id thatw~en aiiyone\vas'6p_eJ'I ._ ... a coach in the Metro' conference; .. when .. he remarked as 19 ihe • --athl_etes are s1!ing their alma·mat~ · . - - · · __ W_ ednesd

1ilY at th_e_.-_· B ___ C_· __ g_ym_·., -.. ·-.·-·.· .-· ._th,.e __ y. •h_Q_ .. li_ .. 1" _tak_ e-th __ ,. __ s __ h .. o. 1·_.,_ .. r_ t_o_ ok • _ was less\hait happy with the play Wideness of one officials beltiirie .. --

- · ·· · h , 1·· · · h - wa_nttodQ._thewor_k.:;:,-:--:.·.·:. Th G" d k d p •- \' " · · · · .. · --· · · · · - - · ters .because t ey ,ee. that t ey . . . : e_ ... ·_ ·. _aaes_. ·. u_. __ n _e .... --_ 1erce · the shot __ ._ J h_it_- a cQup-_le. and_-J'ust of his_ te..i_ m_ .. ; b_11t_-_it w __ as .viih_.-the _ - .- ' · -.· - - .. T_his' iullng· will.-_ ·_benefit m.ore 63 1 hal · · · · · · · · · · - - · · didn't-· receive . a ... $atisfactory peopleJhan it wHl-hu.rt. __ · . · · 75· -._ 1n ~ emotJ~:>na tw_o -. _ves , kept 'going,'' Camel said. . - rererees that Lessett found the-.·. . "Lose some wefght.!," Lessett

educatio~. it. is good to see that - . .-. . . -. . - . of basketball that saw l3.P come - - . most fauidn. : screamed froni ihe sideline . : the ~olleges- are frying to' protect. - By the time an· athlete gets to out of a cl\lSe first-half to run· - _ Theoth~r main cc,ntribili<>f to - .- . -Lessett 'voiced liis "disposition: Ariefi.lie game, LesseU voiced --- themselves. and . help Oil( •. the. -coliege, he or.she' should have a . away with the contest. However, the -'Gade' scodrtg pile- 'was towards the refs with gibes ~nd _· his dissatisfaction with the gaine --

athletes at the same time. _ ·.·. ·_ basic education: To i~sure this, -- · despite --th_e yiciory; -the- 'Gades· - number.- 50, _·. forward-· Vince teasing.: ;,You are absohltely ter~. - saying, 'I should have took my · •, School provides the opportuni· · -!~~g_u_f Jr J~~-t:r:psp\7!i.gii ~choois • ball handling was'nc,t upJO par. Copeland .• Copeland, who)~iicls . rib_le as an official," Lessett com~ .. moms advice and become .a' doc·' iy to learn, bµtilis the respon· , The' .s.taie- committee rnade· -a··. _ O•\.ve didn'lparticulariy play as the Metro_ Conference.in scoring · plained to one official at the last. tor."

. sjbilitY of the st~d~nt tci learii. : - well as we could have; Ii will take wfth 19.5 points per game; added -. BC footliall coach .Carl Bowser. step.in the dght direc!iol), a.nd for - better play to win. i~ Meiro. We · !2 to follow Caine! fo/the night> _ feels the rnliilg should be cartied everyones sake; let's hope that - just have tci p1ay better,'' Jones . ·. "it• was a good gaine, we

- one step further hy making nine they continue to step in thesaine said of the.'Gades play in their plaYed good as a team .. The free . ·. of the 12 units academic, so a stti· -.· direction and not backtrack; .. ·. -14th• win this' year, -·. - . - (hrows: came : through - at the __

· - Though play_ was pCJCli, end,,. Copeland said. . . . . freshm'an guard Joe Camel had - .- The main source of scoring for . his best night as a college piayer .. Pierce came from forward Cedric·_ 'GAD:ES

COnUnued froni page 6. Camel.- led ihe 'Gades . scoring Purney with -l 8 points: Purney .-They've lear_ned to help each our belt; our team is full of int en· ~th 25 points as he hit the net - al sci led Pierce in rebounds. wiih otherout especiaHyondefense.;,·· sity.Thegirlsfeellikethey'reon from all ·over the court.- A - seven. -·- .. · -.. _--. - _.··• _ - '. , · - · · · -· top of a plateau; now we just pleasure_io watch, Caine! carried. - . "They (Pierce) were ki~d of

: ._ -· A~cording 10. Dahl,. the team. - need to stay up there. I'll feel bet·· a few of his ·shots downtown by. short so thev had to get physical. : 'lacks a COl)Slstantly .strong· ter when lseethemplaysotough

defense. ''We_r~lly .need to c~n_- in practice and in games th-at I ex· - · · centrate on . bemg intense -with. peel them to play like _that ali the - JOIN SALLY FOR A everything we do in practice,''. . . .-, - 'd Dahl · - , WILD AND WOOL Y WORKOUT!

. "W . . k tu~e. sat . 1., * · - *

--..

sh~ said. . e ~ometn~es t~ e ln spite of some weaknesses in : · - ~ _ t)•WR. l'(•f~ things to lightly m practice: 1 ve the teams defense Dahl still reels i-~~ seen the girls play some to~g~ stronger than eve; that-her Lady : / 1 ~ > ~ Firefighters Union Hall

. defensesomedays;otherdaysJt s 'Gades will finish as one of the - • ~1~·,'· _ 3615 Mt, Vernon like they don't. know what top'threeteamsinthe~onference. , -- _ ~----~'--, Sundays 9:30am-Tues.!Thur. 5:30pm

defense Is. My biggest job is con· _ "We hear talk that other teams . \ 1/ First class FREE to all -vincing them that how they do are. so -good and big,'.'. said I BC faculty and students! and play~ practice is how they'll Alvidrez. "Well we're Just as .; , do in a game,- good and jus! as big as the other .) _ For more Information, call 322-3175

"With these three wins under teams.'' ·· · ·• · ..

JOB OPPORTUNntIS

II yon ue rnrolltd In ,u Ul!J or mort, JOU art rUJlbk for wlsta.nct 1• lladl•& tmploymut tbtouaJ, 1h St•dut Emplo7m1nt Ollkr, Tbt ollk< It op<u dally, M-F, & 1.m.-3,JO p.m., Ss-l9, Mn. H~•• a!JO b 1ull1btr al tbr Wtlll lutltat•

. on Thun<la1 l-l1:JO a.m. HS·5U Hoaukt•J>tr

B-115 DtllHt}

Q-115 Prula.,t ,rorku

T,115 w,Mrr

S1turd11 only 81m-l9m, nulblt Auht ,rltb boos«l11nl•&· (SW bk1nd) 5'1.50 ptr ••. Food d1llv1t}, SJ.)~p!UJ!llr., Mo1t bu 1ood drlrl11 rxord. Mut ho" '°" to dr1o 1tlck 1blt1. Put-time p<r· m I D<tl I II{) t I tlo • . Part•tlmr A Foll·tlme po1l1loni. Ftbru117 0>,Jll <Pn 5-4 !>'r >'1n11ure (FT). SlOO/ptr .... \. T!fflj}<lf'ITf ~·

tloa. s~· or;)\~: .... ,.~··•"'f.-,·,er-w ... ..

6,t'!lf ..... ; V I~ :(' ' ............... ..,,,. .. ..

~r'!t 11)4' 'lt"""'II, Mf•Llf9W1 9 •-r' ·r1M•

...... ~,.,. Oo(MI~ g. .")I'"\ :I' ,.... flM,f

_µ .....

'-.f • ? A.M.

DANC~TO THf. MIR ,r.r BAND · FIV PIECF. TOP ¥1 ROCK

O~DAY -,t.,T1 RDAY 9 o m . 1 , m.

-

·-.

. TRUE~ OR FALSE.-.-O O~ly the_ rich call ~fford an attorney •. - ·

O Attorneys care ·about money, not people. -

--0 Attorneys don't fight hard enough for you.

O A tlorneys talk legalese. . . .

'0 Attorneys never let you know whlit's going on:

O Attorneys can't be trusted.

O Attorneys.charge for a consultation •

lf you've answered TRUE to even one of these, you haven '.t been to the right attorneys! We know what con­cerns you have about attorneys-we've taken the time

. to find out. NOW, why don't you find out about us. When you do, you'll find we're "your kind of attorney!" .

CHAIN, YOUNGER, LEMUCCHI, NORIEGA, COHN,

STILES & RODRIGUEZ

1128 Truxtun Ave.

324-6501

i Free ( on ,u/rarion Se Habla Espanol ·, •-

Page 5: New guidelines set for degree requirements

' j '' ··-

. .

· .PAGE 8'TUESDAV, JANUARY ii, 1986 RENEGADE RIP ' ' ' , . . . . .

'-· '. .. '

., ..

.. -----------..... --------------..----------.... ----.... -------------... ----' . . -

-~ . . . . . . . I , • • ~ •. -

·. . \' '

shown . .

!Respect for· slain leader ..

across America : . . - : ·. : . ' .. - - ...

' .

By.JUDY SHAX . Staff Writer

. · and rally. Does' this m~an they so hard for them to underst~nd . ·. "resource'' by convlm:lng the na- Anti-King forces have been op- -· ·must have been serJous · con, were less ''interested" In .the · . -tha(the blacks didn't want to b~ .. tlon that' Integration Is vital for ·_ posed to the official federal holi- slderatlons: Probably, one lnteri- .. , )

.observari~e of this holiday ~onor. outcasts? . · . - . . . . - . · power and success. With the pro- · day for King. )'hey believe the.re tiori was .to set aside ~ day when ! . ·1n Rhode Island, churchbells . ing King? . _· _ . . . . • •· It was:not understanding that· -grtss th_is /'melting pot" has .. are other history makers that . ·a11 people in this country can .

-.--· rang throughout the. state .. ·. __ .· .. · . . No;lt doe_sn't because admir- .. the anti~clvll right$ people ladked,. · e.chlcved during the last 40 year&,. . ·d~serve. the honor m()re than. remember King and thataJI men -.·· ' · , ._·. , In St.-• Augustine~ Fla.;·. Gov. -ing King is 811 in the heart and. They: lacked co.ur~ge; T}-iey were·_ : can anyone say King was untrue Kini does·. But, when the blJI was . are equal,' wnlth,' hopefully; will . -;

Bob Graham hostecf an awards: soul. . _ · . . . . . afraid.'' .To them; letting Jhe with his words? passed three years ago, there combat prejudice. · · . · ,: luncheon that followed a march . · . King had a drearn which touch-. blacks sit beside them In a bus, · and a ·rally at the SJave Market · \?d ,nlllions of people,. and not . letiing .them use.the same public . Pla'za .. ' . . . I . . . . just the blacks. He believed in . resfroomsi letting then\ go to the

i _ In Olympia, Wash;, a racial equality and non-violent same schools were frJghterilng i•Freedom Train" transported social change. . . . situations. . · ·

-,': ·. poor people from Seattle. to· During the 1950s. and -'60s, Unfortunately, the ''whites'' Tacoma to the state Capital fore. · J(irtg • . laUl'lched numero'1.1 s .. )nust .have. thought. they were·

i rally and parade; . . . . . movements fo gain eciualrigbts superior t<) the blacks: If the { ~ .. · ._: These events were just a few of· ·.for the blacks .. To him. and• to ''.whites''t_ruly believed they were .. · :th(ma_ny cele.bratlon ceremQnies man'y others; segregation _of the · superior, there would not have , · that swept through mariy cities in·. bfacks . was. an· infrJngement on . been fears of the bl~cks becoming f · the nation .Monday,.thefirst ot- - their tights as citizen~ of .the. an equaJ. I3u( fear certainly ex- .

·_ .. -. : ficlal. observance· of the .hqlrday Urtit.ed. StateS. As be pointed out . lsted·:. It probably cau·s·ed Jarnes · t :i hQnoring·the late Dr. Rev. Mar_. to 250,0()0 . dvH (ighisi Earl Ray, King's assifsin,to pull· . f'i' . tlnJuthet King Jr.. . _ . . . demonstrators· at· the -Lincoln.·.-_ the trigger in Memphis; Tenn:,-· , · Many· people celebrated.· by . Memorial on Aug. 28, 1968 in his on April 4, 1968. -- _ , .

marching ahd . rallying. They ·_ historical "I Have. A Dream" . King's death brol.lgnt greafsor. ; . : gathered whh hundreds and even' speech, Ki rig empltaslzed the fact row to thousands of people. He .

i 1 . th9usands· of oihers tentem~ering . that the forefathers had written. was a great leader. He chailenged _.1i -_ King with signs and songs. s~irie -_ 1·a11 men had ·the rights of life,·_ a whole nation with his . civ11

: celebrations were even televised libert)\ and the pursuit of hllP· - rights beiiefs~· beliefs, not only . l • :and probably shown worldwide. · piness" in the Constit'ution and blacks, b_ut people of all races, ·1 ·.· . ·.. However. there were also many the Declaratiq'n of Independence. coiors and sexeScari relate to. -

'who are supporters and admirers· . ·was its<;lhard for some of the He died a 14heroi•. He made·•· l of the inspirational civil rights ·. ''white people'' to tinder-stand the United .States"ofAmerica· a , , leader who chose_ not to march. Kfog's intention and goal? Was it .. strong nation · of ·great .i ., l -··(· .. · . . .

. . . .

-., i

·-:

1 ·' ..

J

·•·· California condors receive Sentenc·eit(> state~zee-. -_---·-_. -, .- - ' .. ' - . . ' ._ .. . .....

. ' r

• By CHERYL ISAAK : · . . the ·Bakersfield. Califoi'llian; ·. · though. AQ3 •-• (the ·_ recently ill · Th.e- s~ remaining :wgd bi~ds -- . something to tat there." . extinctcondofs :·in, the. hab.itat , :Staff Writer · , animal authorities are trying to female) and her mate are pro due- . have chosen to make-their· home ' -_. Instead .ofjaiUrig _these animals they prefer and multiply in; .the )

. · ._ . . . •. capture the la'st :_wild -c~>n~ors to ing eggs in the wiid. ·. · · ... · . -·and rals·e their younghi'the Hu~-.· .. _ i~ a_zoo where· theydo not ·pro- .. U.S., Fish· and Wiidlife Service · • . Tbe federally~endartgere<l · include th~m in the zoo families. . . . Ho_wever, according. to. zoo · son . ranch; .a.· 13,820-acre land_-·_ d~se youn.g, Cohgress'has of~ . along with : the state·· Fish and

1- . California condor has receiveq a . "The. U.S. Fish and Wildlife . authorities no condors have bred ·. s_pace. · ,Ore~ . San,~ers .... ()f.: ,t~e. - . ferJd :~~. pu~chase the Hudson_ . _ ·Ga~e .. peplJ.ftmertt wants. t~' _Im~ . :" .. Hf¢ sentence to prison in· a~sfate - Servic_e has decided iocaptute the - in captivii?. < . . ·- 'Audubo·n Society's- Condor .·: ranc.h asa reserve to protect the · . prison-these birds..:..n'egictina the

.. zoo. Here)_he wild bird l~s~s. its . -~as:t ~ix wild "cplidors to "pre\ie~t •... ·Scientists have made a habit of .. -Rese~c~:-_:reairi iir_ Kern County . _cond~rs. . . . . . -_ ~-·. . . ' :f~ct thaf tftecondors will not pro· -· .· f.r~edom, to become an exh_1b1tto,n imminent ·.extmc~1Qn. of the a1· · -·· · d · . · . th · · · calls the Huds<>11 _ranch 0 alrrio$t _· · l'p. pu.rchaseJhe ranch for t~e duce in captivity; also neglecting :

,_ for ga\Vkhig toudsis. This b.sup~ ,'.species.·,. Th~: :propos_at- _is,. ~up- ·. ·. ~~i:i~~~nOf ri:g~i;: ·'o:t;r~;~ ·.··· priceles('._ in terms _Qf the Califo\ •. ·_ ·co;ri~or_s._ Co~gress; set.- aside J9 •. _· thtr generous offer by 'ihe .Con-. _· \ __ -. ·pQ_sed,_to aid in saving the almost .. j:,or_ted . by the st~te_ fish. :and . ·h-· · · h. · ·d:•- · .. th· · . · · ... ·Th, · • nla c __ ondor._ ·. ·_ :· .. _.·.. _ .. -_ ,. :._-._'. ; ~--·,· 11U_lh()11_, b __ ut · Jnt~no,r S~_-__ reta_ry: .. · gr_ ess.to briy·t_h_ e_ Hu_dson __ ranch __ ._as __ · . · · . b' d ·- · . 0 . · --·. · . · , ... · - · .. · . . . .· ate an raise em m zoos. · e . D aid p H d 1 f h ext met 1r . . . . . . . . : am.e Depart111ent I but IS oppos-.. . . . -· . : . . . . . .... ·: . ;: .. · .. -··· .... · He. states, ''Throughout lhe. . on_ . . (i e roie t e ex~n~ . ll reserve for the' aniirials. . .

. I . There are six remaining con~ _ed. by the Auduban' S~iety, 1 healthaly bhirdbs .. tarte ~ep_thm, thi~ uh_ n~: .· summer' and ffil!Ch of the fall, . : diture_ a~ter the Federal of~ce of . ·. . . ThtA_ u_· 'dubon:So~ietyseerrts fo i . · .. d , . h -id -.11 -1. • • . -. · - -· - - - . .. . - · · . -. natur ·.· a I a m . ope t at . . . M t d B d t . . . . . .

·. • .. ors In t e wor . • Stl_ . 1ving -•.n _ .-·.which. contends _that_ so~e con- _ : mu Ill Ii cation of the S edes will.. every .Cal1f9inia cpndor uses that. < _ ·. anagerne!' •. an . · .• U ge . :ques- · • think·• the condor would better.· . r , . . freedom. !he Los. Anietes .zoo 1s . dors must ?e le.ft m t~e wilderness . result - ·. · · P · site; Five years ago::wheri we had ti one~· the expense wheh there , benefit fro in a wild· life · at:the · · ! · now holding ll btrds: captive, 10 · · to preserve their habitat,'·' the ar- · · .. _. . - 20 bird{iri the population; ihat is w~s.)10 guararit~ that. condors .. · Hudson ranch where "they: will .. • •· L .. more are imprisoned .at. the. s'an . ticle stated. . : . . . .· . . . . ·_. _· . . . . ,·'But, ~.ccord!~g ~() the G_alifor- . where w~ woul~ :s~. every bird.·,.-. w.o~~d<r~~ain in the wild .t!) use .. ·_ inultiP!Y. ins_~~lld. of dyin$ off irt . .. . Diego Wild Animal Park. . · ... · .. Federai and stat~ agencies want ·. nran article, . no ~ondprs have Sumt11:er 1s the tm:ie of least food _ the teed1_ngarea. · -: · · • · _ _ · , the wos.: Many animal !Overs

. · -· -- ·According to ~ recent artid{in · to bring· in ·all six" birds' even' -· bred in ·captivity." · • · · : · , · availability, ·• yet they're fin~irig __ -· · · lrtstea(L of kee·p,ing · the. nearly · seem to thlnk the same; ·: ·. ·. __ . . ··.r

Aif. (rq,ge<1tes sensationalized> by .A:ffz,erlcaf,. medill~_--. - ,.

I j By BRENT.·tlAY' . ' . . ... w~rkout in' 198f.ls ~early :2:000 . ona d~ily ba,sls; the muititudes of. 'making a lane ch~ge in froht ~f .American' Cai} renew _his. driver's .·. A '. probleQ) .Jhat ohly. now . is .·, - -._ Staff ~rite_r• : . -···· people .wer~:Jcilled in afr crashes:• .. pe9ple wh,o_ perish on the riation's • ·. me, whcnilso hap·p~rts to be ten-· • u~ense"no riia'tter:what triple~igit _· · begiri!)ing to be.recogniied by the [, .. : around the World. According to a ~ ;highways should not go UIUlOtk~ . ding to the three kids. in the_ car · _· age he a,ttains, asl(jng- as he ~·an. ge_neraf poi,uJa,don. The nurn;ber ., · Every time it ·happens the. recent Timemagazine,·)_985 waS ed .. .'.·: : . .::. : / _.-. :. · . i : with~ ~er_ aridlrying to·,,Ught a .. find t~e l)MV ~uilding and can of_peopl~ -~lied. in air crash~ is .

, '/ · w~rld knows about it ~I most in~ ; international.·. ,avia!foil :~ w.prst,/ .:: · :1~ _,· is po~sipie ·,that' ~he -~am~_ ·_._· cigar~ft,e at ,the's;~e }in:ie- . :· ·. < .... _ s~e well_ ~n·ough ,to ~pen. thfd~or: · ... V1rtually_ms1gnificant_y.,~e_l'l c_<>m-_ ·_ .. · ; . stantly. Th.rough:the wonders of year. 1'he chance otbemgJjlle{· }groups tha('.caJI for tougher air .. -· 'J'he age or a1rhne pilots :and . _ .- .Not to be left,out·of the l9ng :: P~~ to;th,e ~umber of pee>ple . -~ .• · radio, .. television . and .. corri-: -•. in an air crash was r~ised fro~ ~afetyjtandards every tinie news <)heir aircraft. ar~ :also closely .. li~t of dangers on the road is_ the .. killed or Injured by drunken or . l . puterized newsprirtt; every crash ~in 3.7 miHionJn 1984}?. J .in. ofa air disaster is pfayed'across rrtonitered . .- · The·. average -· horror ofth«: intoxicated driver. drugged.··· drivers.

ofa commercial aircraft is hand- 600,000 in 1985. the front page wouid turn. their· . · •. ' . ed to the public like news of the : •. Although air crashesllre.tragk . sights 'to .road safety anl tr'affic . . . . . . . . . .

r ~5;~~t,~·~r1~:~~,·~~~ . ~:~·~~~rd't~.r:£:25: ·. il~~:.f :~~;1~~{:~~~1:.~;r~r Letters to the/Editor .. ·. . . . . - went through three schools, seven .· approxJm·ately lOOJimes as likley -· disaster: · . . _.. · '. · -

. , . . . . . . . . .. jhat of Matt HiUaid's in this last -Th' . . ' I .b . H. 'Iii d ;, · · mobile . home · ·parks -. and . · a -. to die in an iuito accident as in a · • Personally, being one of the .To the editor: - · e art1c e · Y Mr.· 1 ar ' h_ o_spital,· gets the a_ dr_enallri of_ a . · plane crash. · · · . issue of the 'Rip . - - • - . ·_ _ once again assures me that the · . mil_li<>ns of _people · running · · I · · · B b · H · l · · · . · · _ newsman pumping Jike -s1n -air . . · . · , . , , ·. · . , . • · . . .... · . ·. n . my opinion O ' aene l ' word . associated -still d.oes · not

. . . . . . How many lives are taken around loose with a drivers This letter 1s m refer_ence to the was just trying to do his job. A · · - ·, d fi 't' · th' 11 · _crash: ·: _ ·_ .. . . · .· away· each day on America's licens~, I worr~ more. if I_ wi.11. article "Rai~makers rai-~ed.,o~t_. job, which by the way, is under- m_;a:t: ;,;~~lion m _ is co ege.

.. : · · _ Not only can the pubhc hear of .· streets ancl highways that go vir~ . make 1t to the airport alive than 1f . by money ~sunderstandmg _ m . rated an_d over worked. as t feel ASB Vice-President Fall 1984 ._ .. , such a Crl\,Sh. On both local-and. )ua]Jy Without notice by the news . the plane will crash before it th~ Dec 16 ISSU_e' of the Renegade Bob js. · _ _ _ _ __ . {.: _ . . · .. ' 1

• _ network news programs, but t_hey media? · . -:- . reaches i.ts destination. Rip. , To be an officer, any officer m DudUne for aubml111na-Lttter, 10 the ; can get the full scoop late at night · ' . - · · - · · · · Editor Is noon Wtil.11esdaJ; let1er, 1llould . I . _ with Ted Koppel and first thing · ~t~~ugh it _would be an im- • I trust "_the . pilot ·and· the · · Let me start by-saying that I the ASB. takts great understan-· . be dtUrertd to CampUJ Ctnttt I or 1t11t

in the morning with Jane Pauiey. poss1b1hty to send a newsteam.to · me<:hanics that worked ,on the .. have never read a more unfair ding, tenacity and benevolence. 10 Tbe Rt11tiadt RJp, l8-0I Panonma

_;

i . . .. i ! .

~ ,·

" , ·. '; . ' ~ ~-

.. Ted and Jane both got quite a every traffic accident that occurs plane !Ti ore than I trust the lady and one-dimensional article theri · . At times, the job is insane at best. . o,.,Baktnnetd, cA 93305.

'Gade Feedback

Who will win the Super Bowl?

. Altr .. -.~lil:~ '.c",-'1111<e the Bears, I ·. · think ··a: · ."le·- ~. ! •. ...,. · .•

. ,•

.- . - ' . ·~ -

Luc"- P~e • Likai .t..._.-,

I ihink the Bears Yrill win because they ha ,e a ~ttu quarterback.

v,~,.. Phomphakdy 8·,~1ness

. !

·.

T'-11' P.111,,,t., ~ave ~one so far a• a ,\~ .. : .·.a.:~ · ~ ... 'Tl 1 ·A Jufd Jiie t(l ~te t~r- ~ ~ - ,· · ·.-1.: 1he & .. rs A 'I •. ; i. ~ •

a· .:e-

. - ! ~· .

DARREN SABEDRA Editor in Chlef

Steve Lashley/Community News Editor Judy Shay/Campus News Editor Brent Ray/Opinion Editor Allen Montes/Sports Editor. Jennifer Gia/Entertainment Editor Mike Ba.zeley/Photo Editor

Staff Reporters: Matt Hilliard, Cheryl Isaak, Rochelle Johnston, John R. Sweet, Mike Valdes, N3ncy Eckroth.

The Bakersfield College Renegade Rip is produced by the

11:)C journalism classes, printed by The Bakersfield Californian, and distributed on Mondays during the ~hoot year. The Rip is published under the auspices of Kern Community College District Board of Trustees; however, sole responsibility for its content rr.~1, with the Rip Editorial Board.

The Rip is a mtrnber o' · · t California Newspa~r Puj!:, - ~-' Associa1ion 'Cl'-tn !.. ' and · - ~ Jot'rn:..:·~iT .. \; ·.··· · .~ih:i. _, - , • I. -~- ~ - .\.

• ~- -< ~ ... r;::. --: ,· .., :- . • 80 I ::.1.--~a.-;;

~.: ~-- ~

,· --, ·:·:-7

I

I