February 9Th 2001

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February 9Th 2001 California State University, San Bernardino CSUSB ScholarWorks Coyote Chronicle (1984-) Arthur E. Nelson University Archives 2-9-2001 February 9th 2001 CSUSB Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.lib.csusb.edu/coyote-chronicle Recommended Citation CSUSB, "February 9th 2001" (2001). Coyote Chronicle (1984-). 500. https://scholarworks.lib.csusb.edu/coyote-chronicle/500 This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the Arthur E. Nelson University Archives at CSUSB ScholarWorks. It has been accepted for inclusion in Coyote Chronicle (1984-) by an authorized administrator of CSUSB ScholarWorks. For more information, please contact [email protected]. A&E A&E A&E A&E eatures Features Features ^BCoyote Sports Coyote Sports Valentine's Day; A Do You Have Men's Basketball History Lesson a Valentine? Wins 'Again! on page 4 on page 7 on page 18 THE February 9, 2001 Circulation 5,000 Calilornia State University, San Bernardino Issue 11 Volume34 V ' Former FILIPINO COMMUNITY Music Chair SEEKS JUSTICE Named FILIPINO WW// President of the United Associate VETERANS TO VISIT States...And the orders of CAL STATE, SAN the officers appointed over By Dean of Arts and BERNARDINO CAMPUS; me...according to the rules Letters Cal State RECOGNITION AND and Articles of War. RESPECT TOP "With this pledge, ap­ Loren Filbeck, profes­ PRIORITIES proximately 250,000 Fili­ sor of music and former pino men joined the U.S. chair of the music de­ By John J. Eddy Armed Forces in the months partment at- Cal State News Editor before and the days jUst af­ San Bernardino, has "I, [Name] , do sol­ ter the Japanese attack on been named associate emnly swear...that I will Pearl Harbor. For the next dean of the University's bear true faith and several years, they would College of Arts and Let­ allegiance...to the United share the fate of their Ameri­ ters, according to Eri States of America...that I can counterparts on the Yasahara, dean. will serve them honestly and battlefield, in prisoner of Filbeck has been a Cal faithfully...against'all their courtesy offilcra -Filbeck enemies whomsoever...and 1 -Filipino FlUPINO YOUTH DEMONSTRATING FOR THEIR WWII VETERANS will obey the orders...of the Continue on page 3 Continue on page Voting Referendum Approaching of Cal State will be posal for the improve­ By Chris Walenta Polls open February 28 for Voting asked to vote on a ref­ ments that the student Executive Editor erendum that will in­ fees will contribute in Referendum. On Feb. 28 and again crease their student fees making. on March I the students each quarter by $43. If the referendum The fees will expand passes, in the Fall of i n s i d e the Student Uniorr, con­ 2001, the quarter fees struct a new Recreation paid by students will in­ news 2,3 Center, augment Cross- crease by $43. In the Cultural programming school year 2002-03 the and increase the ASI fee increase will jump to features 4 to augment programs, $55. The following year while also increasing it will jump to $66. Fi­ ODinions 5 the amount of intercol­ nally it will top out at legiate athletics grants- $78 in the 2004 school in-aid. year. Construction a & e 7,8 You may have seen would be scheduled to calendar the voter pamphlet that begin in the fall of classifieds 9 the Student Union and 2003. ASI put in the January Students may be look- sports 10.11.12 19 issue of the Chronicle. The pam­ -Uote phlet laid out the pro­ Continue on page 2 How will you vote? News '•'-i The Coyote Chronicle February 9,2001 Dr. McAfee Completes Mentor's Book Wolfgang Named Possibility of a Pulitzer Prize for Both Coordinator for Authors Looms in the Near Future Women's Studies Courtesy of Public Affairs Courtesy of UK. McAfee's homepage gram and in other aca­ Office, Cal State Courtesy of Public Affairs wrapped around race rela­ McAfee would end up cor­ demic programs. Office, Cal State tions and racial conflicts recting and finishing his Women's Studies wants Americans talk about routinely described be­ longtime mentor's work. Redlands resident and to enhance those types of race and racism in "black tween blacks and whites. Effective writing escaped French professor Aurora links, Wolfgang says. But and white context" because That narrow context of re­ him in those days, he ad­ Wolfgang has been named beyond involving more history compels them, says lations between blacks and mits. the new women's studies faculties in the program Ward McAfee, the Cal whites bothers a lot of "I recall him dissecting coordinator at Cal State, and raising awareness of State, San Bernardino his­ Americans, McAfee says, every sentence of the first San Bernardino. She of­ women's studies. tory professor who finished because so many other eth­ five pages of my disserta­ ficially assumes her post Wolfgang also plans more the manuscript on race re­ nic groups have suffered tion," says McAfee, who with the winter 2001 quar­ and closer community lations for the late Don E. discrimination in the finished his Ph.D. at ter. ties. Fehrenbacher, a Pulitzer United States. Stanford in 1965, and be­ "We're looking to ex­ Wolfgang earned her Prize-winning author and The Book also takes to gan his career at Cal State pand the program even Ph.D. in 1993 from New Stanford University profes­ task the almost "anti-hero" that same year. "My ego more," says Wolfgang, an York University in French sor. approach to American his­ was crushed art the time, expert in the literature of literature. She's been The book, "The tory over the last 15 years. but I used the information the women of France. published in many jour­ Slaveholding Republic," "It has become fashion­ contained in that criticism She came to Cal State in nals, and received a Na­ was published this past De­ able within the history pro­ to clean up the remainder 1992. tional Endowment for the cember and has the possi­ fession both to demean po­ of the work, which eventu­ Women's Studies, Humanities fellowship bility of receiving a litical history and to dimin­ ally became my first book." which is housed in the two years ago to finish her Pulitzer Prize as well, says ish the founding fathers and When Fehrenbacher College of Social and Be­ research on the feminine McAfee. But his fascina­ Abraham Lincoln as racist died, McAfee told a col­ havioral Sciences, is an voice in French novels tion with the subject was white men," explains league he was unsure if interdisciplinary area of and narratives from 1730 tiot the only reason McAfee. "Clearly, the ten­ anything he wrote now study that uses courses - 1782. The Study is the McAfee worked on the dency to hero worship that would mean much; be­ and faculty from several basis for her book, "Furi­ project. Fehrenbacher, was present in the 'old his­ cause writing to impress his disciplines to explore ously Female," which she who died three years ago, tory' was in need of correc­ cherished mentor had be­ women's issues. hopes to complete later was also his mentor. tion. But often the 'new come his inspiration to Making good use of fac­ next year. Wolfgang has The country's past was history' has gone to equal publish. He had no idea ulty expertise - particu­ made presentations at shaped, in large part, by extremes in denigrating then that Fehrenbacher's larly that of newer faculty many conferences, in­ slavery, and reinforced by past heroes." widow would ask him to - from those disciplines cluding the Interna­ lawfully practiced segre­ Thirty years ago, finish the uncompleted las Wolfgang thinking tional Congress on the gation according to McAfee's own academic manuscript. McAfee about more courses that Enlightenment as well Fehrenbacher and McAfee hero had left the young wrote about one-fifth of could be cross-listed, or as at the American So­ in the book, which cuts student's thesis with red ink the book, as well as do- serve as electives for both ciety for Eighteenth- through the thick tangle corrections, ironically, ing the editing. the women's studies pro- Century Studies. -Uote Continued from page 1 -Filbeck Building Bridges for Business Success 2001 ing at the increase as a Continued from page 1 low more seats as well the amount of time that A conference for Women waste of their money as higher quality food you pay this increased State, San Bernardino but the plans that the service establishments. fee will be added on af­ faculty member since Saturday, March 3 Student Union and ASI They also plan to add ter you graduate or 1972, and served 12 7ain to 4 pm plan to implement are conference rooms for leave the university. years, over several Cal State San Bernardino as followed: 1. In­ student groups that cur­ This will allow alumnus terms, as the music Commons Halt crease in quality and $4{).(K) Regi.s(ration fee includes: rently do not have a to come back to Cal chairman. In his new Continental Breakfast, availability of services home. A proposed, plan State and use the facili­ capacity, he will con­ Keynote Luncheon Speaker. Lunch, 12 and programs to all Workshops and Vendor Fair is to have a 500-seat am­ ties that they have con­ centrate on class • ($3.^ for student/seniors) students. 2. Provide a phitheater for guest tributed in building. 'scheduling, curricu­ choice of various din­ speakers to attend. The polls will open at lum development and Keynote speaker ing and recreational Gretchen Tibbits As far as the Recre^ 10 a.m.
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