The Ranger (San Antonio, Tex.), Vol. 57, No. 16, Ed. 1 Friday, February 18, 1983 Page: 3 of 12
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assistants, any renovation that
CAMPUS NEWS
Methodist program
to
Catholic retreat
UMAS meeting
February 23-24
SEVEN DAYS IN
CONSULTANTS
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CALL FOR APPOINTMENT
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• no experience required
• management training program
• massive expansion
• rapid advancement
• sales or mgt. exp. helpful
needed for
fast-growing nutrition company
Friday, Saturday, Sunday and Monday
from 8 a.m. to noon.
Miss Wiesskopf will be interviewing
from I-6 p.m. weekends.
Sbowipgs at 1=30 p.rp. & 7:3op.rp. ip the
Fiesta Roon? -Loftip Studept Cepter
Gutierrez; photographer.
Ortiz suggested the club have a
bake sale at the beginning of March.
Members agreed this would be a
good idea.
The carnation sale for Valentine’s
Day was discussed. Carnations were
You say you don’t know the
difference between a prime rate
and a mortgage rate? Do
homeowner’s warranties have
A cross-cultural retreat begins
today in Leakey, sponsored by
the Catholic Student Center.
The three-day retreat, entitled
“Journey and Opposites,” will
focus on personal growth and
relationships, exploring dif-
ferences among groups of peo-
ple, Sister Maria Flores, direc-
tor of the center, said.
“We are on a journey that is
Members of the United Mex-
ican American Student club
will meet at noon today in the
Fiesta Room of Loftin Student
Center to discuss Heritage
Week and upcoming events.
heritage Week, set for Feb.
28-March 4, will celebrate the
heritages of different ethnic
groups on campus.
A cascarone sale will be held
on March 1 to celebrate
Heritage Week, Manuel Seritin,
president of UMAS, said.
Jose Trevino, a member of
A
UMAS, said his mariachi group,
Mariachi San Antonio, will play
from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. March 1
in the Coffeehouse of Loftin
Student Center.
Seratin said the last chance
for members to vote for spring
officers will be at the meeting,
today.*
Mary Truss, education major, receives ash on her
forehead from Father Ed Everitt of the Catholic Student
Center. The ashes and Wednesday signify the start of
Lent.
EARN AS MUCH AS
$500 A WEEK
5®
EXTRA INCOME
Part-time or Full-time
- < •
both a physical and spiritual
pilgrimage through a world
where people are different. Part
of the challenge of that
pilgrimage is in learning, accep-
ting and understanding those
differences,” Flores said.
Different types of people have
been invited to the retreat to
emphasize social differences,
Flores said.
“Young and old, handicapped
people, different religions and
careers” will be represented,
she added.
Transportation will be provid-
ed at 6 p.m. today from the
Catholic Student Center. There
is a $20 charge to attend.*
“It’s a pretty big budget for a
biologist,” Goerner, a former biology
professor, quipped.
With Goerner appointed to the arts
and sciences position, the total
number of deans on campus went
Dean Lewis Goerner
“I’ve also been trying to meet my and pens and pencils,
counterparts in the other parts of the
city,” he added.
But Goerner said one of his main
concerns has been working with
department chairmen on for-
mulating budgets.
“I’m working with 20 departments up to four. Nellie Thorogood is the
helping them with their budgets for dean of occupational and technical
the 1983-84 school year. education, and Robert Garza is now
“If they leave out any part of the the acting dean of extended services,
plan, it won’t be implemented. How Dick Thiessen is the dean of continu-
many teachers, how many computer ing education.
assistants, any renovation that “Arts and sciences supposedly ac-
needs to be done, they even have to counts for 70 percent of the students
try to estimate telephone expenses at this college, and about 30 percent
li I
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I
L • 5
VICTORI A’SPRINCIPLES
Moody Learning Center, Room 301
. As interpreted by /'
w. San Antonio College Faculty
Tuesday, Feb. 22—9:25 a.m.
“Art and Music of Victorian England”
Don Drummond
“Scientific Development,“William Haley
Wednesday, Feb. 23—10 a.m.
“Art and Music of Victorian England,”
Don Drummond
“Charles Darwin,“Dr. David Smith
Thursday, Feb. 24—10:50 a.m.
“Social History of Victorian England,”
Sydney Janak
“Literature of Victorian England,”
Marjorie Wells
VICTORIAN EXHIBITS
Moody Learning Center
Foyer, Second Floor
Created by Irma Dee Everts
Dorothy Langmore Studio, participating
VICTORIAN FESTIVAL
rtf' I ' 1 ♦ i if
/.»»»»» i »,
you confused?
Jim Bradley, market analyst
for Ray Ellison Industries, will
explain these topics at 7 p.m.
Feb. 25 in Room 158 of the con-
tinuing education building.
Included in the discussion on
warranties will be a short film
on owner-builder relationships.
The SAC Home Building
Association is sponsoring the
speech. There is no charge and
the public is invited to attend,
Charlie Gomez, president of the
association, said.*
r ■
sL . ’ I
WASHINGTON, DC.
Saturday, March 19,. to Saturday. March 26
COST: S482.IX)
INCLUDES:
Airfare, hotel, three tours which include
deluxe tour of Washington, interior of public
buildings, and Williamsburg.
ADDITIONAL EXPENSES:
Transfer from Airport to Hotel, other local
travel (allow about $50). and meals.
CONTACT:
Office of Student ?\ctivities
Loftin Student Center
755-2682
Dr Billie Phillips. English Department
Moody Darning Center. Doom 645
733-2522
RInger/3
Feb. 18, 1983
*
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“FAR FROM THE '
MADDING CROWD”
starrii>§ Julie Christie a Alai, Bates
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Signatures
will travel
to capital
Fifteen hundred signatures will be
flying to the offices of Texas con-
gressman today.
Mary Jane Lipsett, criminal justice
major, estimated Tuesday she had
collected that many names on a peti-
tion to protest President Reagan’s
proposed cuts in financial aid to
students. She added she will try to
get more signatures before today to
add to the list.
Students who wish to sign up may
do so from 3 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. today
m El Alamo Room of Loftin Student
Center.
“I’m not giving up yet,” she said.
‘ The response to her petition drive
has encouraged her to collect more
names before mailing the petitions
to Washington. She said most peo-
ple have supported her efforts.
“The people who sign them (the
petitions) encourage me with the
statements they make. They en-
courage their friends to come and
sign up,” she said.
Lipsett hopes the petitions will let
congressional representatives know
what college students think about
the proposed cuts in aid to students.
■ “It will encourage Henry B. Gon-
zales to know one person took the
time to do something like that,” she
Said.
Lipsett encouraged those who sup-
port her views to “take the time to
write to senators and congressmen”
about the administration’s propos-
ed aid cuts.*
are in occ/tech (occupational and
technical education). But you’d think
it was the other way around. Nellie
Thorogood has been such a good
spokesperson for occ/tech,” Goerner
said.
Part of my job will be to keep my
ears open,” Goerner said. “Two
things we’re looking at are bilingual
or ESL (English as a second
language) programs and retraining
our math and science faculty.
“There are some grants that are
getting ready to come down the line
that should get a good deal of
publicity. It’s going to be my job to
see that we get our share of the
money.
“Although they emphasize the
high-tech high school, students will
still have to be trained in physics,
math and chemistry.
“There are quite a few things on
the academic side of the house.
“What it comes down to is we are
poorly funded,” Goerner said. “Even
though we’re a community college,
we get less than 15 percent of our
revenue from our tax base. We’re
funded at a lower level than the four-
year colleges, even though the bulk
of college students in Texas spend
their first two years in community
colleges.
“If we want any equipment-
computers or anything like that—it
has to come from some sort of grant.
We can afford the basics, but any ex-
tras have to come from another
source,” he said.
But all those projects aside,
Goerner still says he needs to have
the faculty know where he is and
what he does.
Goerner also said he hopes he can
help make a few people’s lives a lit-
tle less hectic. •
_______01,
Members plan Lent begins
spring voting
Twelve members of the United
Mexican American Students club
met Feb. 11 in Loftin Student Center
to discuss nominations for the club’s
spring elections.
Paul Ortiz, current vice-president
of UMAS, presided over the meeting.
r Ortiz said members had a chance
to vote this week in the game room
at Loftin Student Center.
Manuel Serafin was nominated to
the office of president. Mike Mar-
tinez was nominated to the office of
vice president.
£ Ortiz declined nomination to the
•office of vice president because he is
“vice-president in the state chapter of
“the club.
Nominees for office are Helen Bar-
rera, secretary; Paul Revilla,
Viewing prime-timeTV
proves luxury for dean
After 71/z years, Dr. Lewis Goerner
is feeling guilty about being able to
watch prime-time television.
He doesn’t have anything against
television, but his former position as
director of extended services did not
allow him much spare time at night.
His new position as the dean of
arts and sciences has changed that.
“It’s an adjustment to change from
evening hours to day hours. I feel
kind of guilty sitting home and wat-
ching TV or listening to music. I even
get to go see some concerts with my
wife that we wouldn’t have been
able to see before,” Goerner said.
But some things have not changed.
Goerner described a day in the life
of the dean of arts and sciences as
“busy!” Goerner showed a crowded
calendar of events to help illustrate
his point.
“I like to plan a day ahead, but I
think I may have to find a different
way of managing this,” he said,
pointing to the heavily scribbled-on
calendar.
“I’m still on the committee I had
when I was with extended services
plus committees pertaining to arts
and sciences,” Goerner said.
The uses and abuses of per-
sonal power will be the topic of
this week’s program in the con-
tinuing mini-course, “Steps to
Rediscovering the Person,” to-
day at noon today in the
Methodist Student Center, 102
treasurer; Cindy Garcia, public rela- Belknap Place.
tions; Frank Rodriguez and Leon David L. Semrad and Herman
Otineros, sergeant at arms; and Sal Lipsius of the Methodist Stu-
dent Center and Nancy Rice,
counselor, will lead the pro-
gram, which also will explore
decision making. Lunch will be
provided.
The mini-course is sponsored
ToTd ’to faculty,7t5f and s~tudents for by the United Methodist Cam-
$1.25. pus Ministry. •
Ortiz brought up the idea to have -------------------------------
a dance later this spring. Rodriguez
said his band, Alexander Band, pro- Warranties talk
bably could play for the club without
a fee.
Jose Trevino of Mariachi San An-
tonio said the mariachis may be able
vto donate time to UMAS to raise
'.'money also.*
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San Antonio College. The Ranger (San Antonio, Tex.), Vol. 57, No. 16, Ed. 1 Friday, February 18, 1983, newspaper, February 18, 1983; San Antonio, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1333683/m1/3/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting San Antonio College.