9 research outputs found
Pelaksanaan Jasa Akuntansi dan Pajak di Kantor Akuntan Publik Heliantono dan Rekan
Pelaksanaan kerja magang dilaksanakan di KAP Heliantono dan Rekan, dengan penempatan di divisi accounting and tax sebagai accounting and tax internship. Selama melaksanakan kerja magang, pembimbing yang mengawasi proses kerja magang adalah Ibu Nur Zahra Dwi Lestari dan Ibu Tonggo Martina Lasmaria. Selama pelaksanaan kerja magang, terdapat 8 unit yang diperiksa dengan pekerjaan yang dilakukan antara lain melakukan input sales invoice, melakukan input purchase invoice, mencetak voucher pembelian, mencetak voucher penjualan, melakukan input sales return, melakukan stock adjustment atas barang persediaan, membuat jurnal pengeluaran, dan melalukan rekapitulasi PPh 21. Selama prosesnya, ditemukan beberapa kendala yang mempengaruhi kelancaran kinerja divisi accounting and tax. Salah satunya adalah dalam melakukan input penjualan dan pembelian, banyak nama barang yang tidak sesuai antara data penjualan dan pembelian dengan faktur pajak yang diterbitkan sehingga terjadi selisih antara nilai persediaan di faktur pajak yang dilaporkan dengan nilai persediaan yang tercatat dalam dokumen rekap penjualan atau pembelian. Sehingga menghambat dalam melakukan rekonsiliasi penjualan dan pembelian. Solusi yang diberikan adalah mencari barang dengan menggunakan kode barang di dokumen penjualan atau pembelian serta melakukan analisa terhadap diskon atau PPN yang dapat menimbulkan selisih antara faktur pajak dengan dokumen penjualan atau pembelian
STRENGTHENING CIVIC EDUCATION ON THE NATIONALISM ATTITUDE OF INDONESIAN MIGRANT WORKERS' CHILDREN IN SELANGOR MALAYSIA
The objective of this research is identify and understand the impact of strengthening civic education on the nationalism attitudes of children of Indonesian migrant workers in Selangor, Malaysia, and provide guidelines to strengthen their nationalism identity. This research is a descriptive study using qualitative methods and participatory and collaborative approaches. Data were collected through observation, interviews, data analysis and documentation of 4th, 5th and 6th grade students at Hulu Langat Guidance Center. The data analysis technique used is Qualitative data analysis technique including Data Reduction, Data Presentation and Conclusion Drawing or Verification. The results showed that the strengthening of comprehensive civic education had a significant effect on the knowledge and nationalism attitudes of children of migrant workers, including the Indonesian president, the basis of the state and the application of the Pancasila precepts in everyday life. So it is concluded that strengthening comprehensive civic education has a very important role in improving the nationalism attitudes of children of migrant worker
Analysis of Reading Difficulties of Muslim Student in Selangor, Malaysia
The ability to read is one of the initial abilities that students from an early age must possess. This aims to improve students' ability to understand the information conveyed as well as knowledge in the learning process. However, there are still many problems with students' initial reading skills that limit students' ability to understand the information and knowledge provided, one of which is the problem of beginning reading skills faced by students in a guidance center in Hulu Langat, Selangor, Malaysia. This study aims to observe the problems of students' beginning reading skills in guidance workshops in Hulu Langat, Selangor, Malaysia. This study uses a type of qualitative research with a descriptive approach and data collection techniques through observation, interviews, questionnaires, and documentation studies. Data analysis was performed using data reduction techniques, data display, conclusions, and data confirmation. The results of the study showed that many students had difficulties in beginning reading. Some students cannot read the letters of the alphabet or spell words, while others do not know syllables, cannot read sentences, and cannot write letters of the alphabet A-Z. Internal and external factors that affect students' reading ability are also observed. Internal factors include students' ability to read and write, while external factors include the lack of parental attention and the lack of sufficient guidance. In conclusion, there needs to be more intensive efforts in helping students overcome initial reading difficulties
Analisis Pemetaan Jaringan Komunikasi Karyawan Menggunakan Social Network Analysis pada Perusahaan Multifinance
Business development in the financial services sector improved competition among companies to give the best service to their customers. Having reliable services with a good communication network in the organization is the critical success of the company. This study aims to find the actors or people who influence organizations through formal and informal communication networks using Social Network Analysis (SNA). Information on casual and formal communication networks can be used by the HR department to measure the level of the social relationship of all employees that can improve their performance in the company. The author researched PT. BFI Salatiga. The results showed that tissue density was below 50% so that relationships were considered weak. The most dominant actor in degree centrality, closeness centrality, and betweenness centrality is the actor id#24 and id#29 from the collection division, actor id#27 from the operation division and actor id#30 from the credit division.Business development in the financial services sector improved competition among companies to give the best service to their customers. Having reliable services with a good communication network in the organization is the critical success of the company. This study aims to find the actors or people who influence organizations through formal and informal communication networks using Social Network Analysis (SNA). Information on casual and formal communication networks can be used by the HR department to measure the level of the social relationship of all employees that can improve their performance in the company. The author researched PT. BFI Salatiga. The results showed that tissue density was below 50% so that relationships were considered weak. The most dominant actor in degree centrality, closeness centrality, and betweenness centrality is the actor id#24 and id#29 from the collection division, actor id#27 from the operation division and actor id#30 from the credit division
Analisis Pengembangan Potensi Wisata Desa Gajah
The existence of Gajah Village, Sambit District, Ponorogo Regency is one of the villages that can be developed in terms of natural tourism through the existence of the Puncak Kuik area. This paper will look at the analysis of the development of the tourism potential of Gajah Village through the actors in it. Research using qualitative methods with data collection methods are observation, interviews, and documentation, using interactive data analysis model. From the results of the research it is known that the model for developing the tourism potential of Gajah Village seen through the pentahelix model which consists of five actors namely government, community, academics, media, and the business world has not been realized optimally, the five actors have not been interconnected and collaborated so that the development of a tourist area Puncak Kuik has not been implemented optimally. The government is still very limited in its role in the development of this tourist area so that the business world is also not willing to enter the Puncak Kuik tourist area due to poor road access. Of the five actors, it is the community and the media that have a big role to play in developing the Puncak Kuik area through the potential that exists in it, the community with self-supporting funds and the media through news or social media many of which expose the existence of the Puncak Kuik tourist area as a new tourist spot in Ponorogo Regency
Understanding Resident Intention and Behavior toward Water Conservation Initiative in the Upstream of West Java, Indonesia
Upstream areas have long been targeted as the priority of water conservation initiatives. While earlier studies often considered underlying socio-psychological factors determining residents’ intention and behaviors in water conservation, studies that focused on the resident’s intention and behavior in upstream areas, where water is abundant, remain underexplored. The current study used socio-psychological constructs of the theory of planned behavior (TPB), i.e., subjective norm, attitudes toward behavior, and perceived behavioral control, to analyze the determinants of water conservation intention and behavior in two villages upstream of West Java (i.e., Cibeusi and Sanca villages), Indonesia. A total of 200 usable questionnaires were retrieved. Structural equation modeling was used to determine the linkages and strength of relationships among constructs. There was evidence that residents perceived behavioral control exerted the most significant influence on residents’ water conservation intention and behavior. Moreover, perceived behavioral control was an effective mediator of the linkage between attitude and residents’ intention and behavior. The findings confirmed the suitability of TPB in explaining interrelationships among determinant factors that explain residents’ intention and behavior, albeit with different mechanisms and effects. The study implied that increasing awareness of the value of water conservation would significantly affect residents’ attitudes, which subsequently increased their willingness to perform water conservation efforts. © 2022 The Author(s)
Scalable teacher forcing network for semi-supervised large scale data streams
The large-scale data stream problem refers to high-speed information flow which cannot be processed in scalable manner under a traditional computing platform. This problem also imposes expensive labelling cost making the deployment of fully supervised algorithms unfeasible. On the other hand, the problem of semi-supervised large-scale data streams is little explored in the literature because most works are designed in the traditional single-node computing environments while also being fully supervised approaches. This paper offers Weakly Supervised Scalable Teacher Forcing Network (WeScatterNet) to cope with the scarcity of labelled samples and the large-scale data streams simultaneously. WeScatterNet is crafted under distributed computing platform of Apache Spark with a data-free model fusion strategy for model compression after parallel computing stage. It features an open network structure to address the global and local drift problems while integrating a data augmentation, annotation and auto-correction (DA3) method for handling partially labelled data streams. The performance of WeScatterNet is numerically evaluated in the six large-scale data stream problems with only 25% label proportions. It shows highly competitive performance even if compared with fully supervised learners with 100% label proportions.Ministry of Education (MOE)This work is supported by Ministry of Education Republic of Singapore Tier 1 research grant. The third author acknowledges the support by the 'LCM - K2 Center for Symbiotic Mechatronics' within the framework of the Austrian COMET-K2 program
Wordsworth and death
Wordsworth is known as the poet of joy and hope, and to associate his name with death may seem at first strange. Yet, according to his own estimation, he was the poet not simply of joy but of “the very heart of man," of "human kind, and what we are”, of "men as they are men within themselves." Any vision of human nature which does not take into account the facts of mortality and bereavement is blinkered and inevitably inadequate and Wordsworth was committed to clarity of perception and the fullest insights of the Imagination. He did not shy away from the implications of “our mortal Nature”; throughout his career, he sought to portray in poetry the place of death in human life.
Two basic ways of understanding mortality are considered in this thesis: the first is death as disjunction, extinction, the end; the second is death as part of a larger continuity, a threshold, a stage. The conflict between these two visions was fundamental to Wordsworth's thought, and writing. Isolation and despair were the corollaries of the first vision, while the capacity for love and hope which was essential to the life of the human spirit was nurtured and made possible by the second. Wordsworth wrestled in his writings with the effects of these different visions of death on the complexities of human nature.
The thesis has been divided into three main parts. Section I - Death in Wordsworth's Time - seeks to place the poet into a historical context. Section II - Death in Wordsworth' Life - is concerned with Wordsworth's personal experiences of loss and feelings about his own mortality, And in Section III - Death in Wordsworth's Poetry - what he had to say about death is considered in relation to some of the other major themes in his poetry
The Spark, Volume 24, No. 1
TALOR HALL 205, P.O. BOX 35009
artwork by Johnny Butler
DECEMBER 1988 VOL 24 NO.1
GEORGE SOOS NAMED
STATE TEACHER
OF THE YEA-R
George Soos, director of the
Mechanical and Manufacturing Engineering
Technology Program at
CPCC and the school's Teacher of
the Year, has been awarded the Ex-
ce llen-ce i- each· g A-ward by the
North Carolina Board of Community
Colleges.
Selected from more than 3,000
full-time instructors at 58 community
colleges in the state, he received
a cash award of 1,500 . The
award, sponsored annually by the
board and the First Union National
Bank, was established in 1986 to
give statewide recognition to outstanding
educators in North Carolina
who have consistently demonstrated
excellence in teaching.
Award criteria include motivational
and leadership skills, innovative
teaching techniques, and out standing
instruction.
The Hungarian-born instructor,
now a U.S. citizen, was honored
at a meeting of the board in
Raleigh and at the State Instructors'
Conference in Winston-Salem.
"George Soos represents the
kind of spirit and leadership that
we yearn for in · the community
college system," said System President
Robert W. Scott. 'He's an example
of the wealth of teaching
talent throughout our system."
Soos, who joined the CPCC
faculty in 1963 when the school
opened, has also been nominated
for the University of Texas Community
College Leadership Program
ward-Winning-Instrueto:rs1-Proje-et: - - 0~~
He will be invited to participate in a
special study and will be recognized
and honored at a special awards
ceremony at the 1_989 Annual International
Conference on Teaching
Excellence next year.
The award 'winner came to the
United States during the Hungarian
Revolution and served as an engineer
with several Charlotte firms
for a few years before "retiring" to
become a teacher. As a part-time
consultant, he designed and developed
hypothermic equipment and
a heart-lung, life-sustaining tender
for Heineman Medical Research
Center. He is a Registered Professional
Engineer in North Carolina
and a member of the Society of
Manufacturing Engineers and the
American Society for Engineer
ing Education.
"Choosing to become a teacher
was the single be~t choice of my
life," said Soos. "I love teaching.
Developing young minds is not a
job; it's a privilege. I feel there is an
element of service associated with
teaching. It gives me an opportunity
to give something back."
CPCC Press Release
-... ™1
-~ HOLIDAY REFLECTIONS ~-
by Jay Gentile
Assistant Editor
As the holiday season quickly
approaches • I find myself reflecting
on all that's happened to me and
why it has happened one way or
another this past year. This time of
year means nothing but getting
presents to a great many people,
and I must admit it ·wasn't until
recently that I had changed from
that philosophy myself.
This season means three things
to me: LOVE, FRIENDS and
FAMILY. You may wonder why
we are choosing to give a personal
definition of the season; the answer
is actually very _simple . . Sure, it 's
nice to get lots of gifts, but, you
also need to . be surrounded by the
Assistant
Editor . . . . ... . .. . . Jay Gentile
Advertising
Editor . . . . . . Darlene Earnhardt
Photography
Editor. . . .. .. . . . Anita Thomas
Staff Writers . .. Darlene Earnhardt
Paul Sitler
Tim Southers
Malik Tillman
Eddie Lee Williams
Charles Young
Staff
Photographers . . Johnny Butler
William Gay
Nancy Smith
Anita Thomas
Malik Tillman
Eddie Lee Williams
Charles Young
Staff Artist . . . .. . . Johnny Butler
Staff Cartoonist . . . Doug Williams
Typesetting . . ... ... Anja Benbow
Mary Murchison
Student Publica tions
Advisor. . . . . . . Mary Murchison
Director of Student
Activities .. . .. .. Ross Surphlis
THE SPARK is a news publication fi·
nanced by student activity fee, and
written and published by studtnt
journalists for the CPCC community. It
is not an official college publication. Any
viewpoints expre,sed should not be interpreted
a, representing official CPCC
positions.
people that make this time of year
COMPLETE. Don't you? (Just
think of Scrooge.)
Just being close to all of my
relatives and friends is a nice
enough present for me. I don'. t
think I could handle an important
holiday without my family, simply
because even though I might receive
lots of gifts not a . ony of them
would mean anything if I couldn't
receive them along with the smiles
of my loved ones.
My holiday will be made
complete by being around the
people I feel close to. Even though
I'm not able to see some of them
during this time in person, just
being able to hear their voices
·----------- :THE SPARK
I
NEEDS
REPORTERS
AND
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00
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Telephone I
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342-6665 I
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for details ! I
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I
'·---------- ,.
l •
brings a smile to my face and that's
all you can ask for from a friend.
Then there are the special
friends that make you who you are.
In my case. Flip, Robert Ural, Mr
Griffin, and a really terrific girl
friend, Laura. Of course, I can't
forget my 'big brother," Bob.
All these are the people who are
my definition of a true joyous holiday
season. They are the ones who
have helped me all year through. I
definitely wouldn't be the same
person if it weren't for them. I reflect
on all the happiness I've
~~ 6 (,E1ftN A-st~LE
c"~ZE ~,s~ IN L\tS Sc:,C.~
'Ot~ 'i'E._~.
shared with all these people and I
can't thank them enough for such
great times and look forward to the
good times which are yet to come.
As you are reading this, you
may be wondering why I've basically
told all about me in a school
newspaper. It's to force people to
reflect on THEIR OWN family and
friends as I have done. It 's also to
make people realize that this season
belongs to family and friends .
The · true meaning is not the importance
of gifts, but the importance
of LOVED ONES!!
IJ\~' A "'B\t
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7/merican Secretanal Center
Olte pnfessional
secretanal serrice.
• Word processing
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on its way
REASONAf;LE
PRICES
24 hour dial-in MODEM CAP ABILITY 377-0149
342-9740 300-22E. PARK Ave. SYLVIA FISHER
Michele Dalton, poet and singer, entertained a rapt audience
in the Student Activities Center on October 31.
Sara James of News presented her documentary "The
Life and Ttmes of Harnesses the Great" to an overflow crowd
in Pease Conference Room on October 25.
FIRST NIGHT CHARLOTTE
by_ Darlene Earnhardt
Advertising Editor
WANT TO PARTY?
How about:
FIRST-NIGHT CHARLOTTE,
Saturday, December 31
with an expected 100,000 people attending?
It's sure to be the biggest and best party in Charlotte!
A NC Highway patrolman explained DWI laws
to interested studen1s in VE 107 on October 21.
Junius Scales. former communist and author of CAUSE AT
HEART: A FORMER COMMUNIST REMEMBERS. talked
about his life during the McCarthy era to students in VE 107
on November 7. .
A variety of music, !heatre, mime, visual arts and street festivities will
start at 7: 30 and continue until 11: 30, when activities move to the Square
(Trade and Tryon Sts.) for the grand finale .
Admission to see 23 performing groups requires a First Night button:
4.00 for adults,
3.00 for children, ages 3-12.
Buttons will be available at the Arts and Science Council Office at 121 W.
Seventh St. or any performance location on New Year's Eve. Snacks and
non-alcoholic beverages will be provided by street vendors.
Anyone wanting to work as a First Night Volunteer on New Year's Eve
should call the Arts and Science Council office at 372-9667.
So come on out and celebrate the coming of the New Year and help
support the Arts and Science Council. You can't help but have funjust
ask one of the 75 ,000 people who attended last year. They're
sure to be there!
,.
.t
...
Page'
CPCC THEATRE:
WINTER PREVEIW
ANIMAL FARM, George Orwell's
famous political novel, has
been adapted into musical theatre
and will be brought to CPCC by the
National Players on their annual
tour. We have scheduled them for
three shows. Last season,
I
DRACULA sold out and only those
patrons with Season Tickets got to
see i t. The extra performance of
ANIMAL FARM will accommodate
more of our patrons. The musical
ANIMAL FARM will be staged
January 20, 21, and 22 .
DOWN WITH THE OLD
,.,, I
.! @j'
.J
fJi!_tp;fJ
NUTS, our third show of the:season,
has been called the best
courtroom melodrama since WITNESS
FOR THE PROSECUTION
and THE CAINE MUTINY COURT
MARTIAL. Set in a courtroom in
New York's Bellevue Hospital, the
story concerns an incarcerated
woman.'s valiant attempt to fight
the Powers That Be, who want to
have her committed as mentally
incompetent to stand trial on a
manslaughter charge. A frank adult
drama, NUTS moved from a very
successful off-off.•Broadway run to
an_ equally successful Broadway
run. The film version starring Bar- ~
bra Streisand and Richard Dreyfuss
was nominated for an Academy
Award. NUTS goes on stage February
3, 4, 5, 10 and 11.
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On November 6, a Charlo~e landmark, The Hotel Charlotte, comes doWIL
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UP WITH THE NEW
by Jay Gentile
Assistant Editor
Last month, CPCC's Board of
Trustees voted to demolish two of
the campus buildings (Mason and
Tuner); in their place will go a
building for automotive programs.
The new buildings will give CPCC
more space, which is desperately
needed.
According to an article in the
CHARLOTTE OB SER VER on
Nov. 10, the trustees also want to
buy Mecklenburg County's Detox
Center on Seventh Street and renovate
it for the housing construction
trade programs, such as carpentry
and plumbing.
Jerry Fox, County Manager,
says that the county is weighing its
options right now, to decide
whether to sell, relocate or renovate
the Detox Center for county use.
CPCC will pay for the projects
with approximately 3.55 million
from a 1987 bond issue. The projects
are scheduled for completion
by spring, 1991 .
CPCC
Buildings
, To Be
Toy Demolished
Mason and Tuner have approximately
21,000 square feet, but not
all of it is usable. The new facility
will have 38,000 square feet for
auto body repair and auto technology
programs.
Replacing th_e old with the new
lias rea ly made an impact on he
man who heads the automotive
technology program. Ted Bost says
he's "tickled to death" about the
new building.
"We're spread out over four
locations, so we're constantly shuffling
equipment from one facility
to another," he said. Staying under
one roof "will mean a tremendous
boost in our delivery of instruction."
OPENING
DOORS&
MINDS#
25·YEARS.
1963-1988
GARDNER-PARKE'
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9 AM- 7:30 PM
EVERY
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TEXTBOOKS) ~2O0F%F~~
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BOOKSTORE
' ............................................................... '
Than•:s for shopping •t the CPCC BOOt<STORE
We sincerely appreci•te your busines5 !
SPECIAL FRIDAY AFTERNOON BUYBACK
Frid•y, J•n. 6 - 12130 pm - 2130 pm
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SPEC17RUM
Data Management Services
Page 5
(704) 536-0371 6621 Saddle Point Road Charloue, NC 28212
DPMA
NEWS
by Maiik Tillman~
Staff Writer
The Data Processing Management
Association (DPMA), founded
in 1951 as the National Machine
Accountants Association, is the
largest professional management
group in information processing.
Charlotte's business · community
has a local chapter with elected officers
from various backgrounds in
the computer industry. CPCC is a
member of this national professional
organization and has 55
members on the student chapter's
roster. There are only two other
schools in the state of North Carolina
which have official chapters'
Bel~ont Abbey College and Cleveland
Technical School.
To become a member of
DPMA'~ student chapter, a student
must be enrolled in either the Computer
Programming, Computer
Operations or Data Entry programs.
The membership fee is only 15 per
year (as long as you are a student).
Active members are eligible for
scholarships awarded by the Charlotte
professional chapter of the
DPMA, which has a track record for
consistently providing its members
with educational activities such as
career planning and employment assistance.
Each memper receives a monthly
magazine published by the national
headquarters. This publication
keeps members informed
about current trends in the data
processing industry concerning
hardware, software developments
and data management. Also, every
six months a newsletter is mailed to
all members from its headquarters.
Each month, a main meeting
and presentation is held at the
Royce Hotel by the Charlotte
professional chapter of the DPMA.
These meetings· are attended by
the students and local corporate
employers. Students get to expand
their knowledge of the computer
industry by exposure to such topics
as leadership training, information
, management, stress management,
technical communications and
managing for positive results in the
form of mini-seminars.
Also, each quarter, DPMA students
get to tour one of Charlotte's
major corporations. This past quarter,
they toured the new First
Union Bank tower. Spring quarter,
they visited Alltel Company, a
mobile phone company. Last
month, they explored the facilities
of Knight Publishing Company.
In addition to the company
tours, the CPCC chapter stages a
luncheon at the Quad dining room
in the Citizens' Center. Guest
speakers are invited to talk to students
about job interviews and such
topics as how to prepare yourself
for the job market.
On November 17, 1988, the students
hosted a presentation to
Charlotte 's corporate community in
the form of a slide show. The content
was about the history of the
college's data processing curriculum,
job placement, cooperative
education , and the new High
Technology Building at CPCC.
Student members sell diskettes
and cases from the main micro
lab and conduct bake sales to raise
funds in the Garinger Building.
For more
DPMA, please
(advisor) at
342-6639.
information about
contact Wilna Ates
SL 122 or call
PREGNANT?
we care and we want to Help. . . _
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(704) 372-5981
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one full '.'.ize cxpan~i1ln '.'.lot.
'.'.Crial & par • .tllc-1 jX)rt. enhanced
keyboard. Hi!!h re:-.olutinn 12"
color display. Mou'.'.C. OOS ➔ .O
and Wim..i()Y.ls Kit for PSI:!. Proprinter
11 dot matrix. high
speed dr.1ft or near letter quality
prin1er with cable.
LIST
2460
3591
YOUR
PRICE*
1595
1098
1648
*From Augw,t 31. 1988 until funher notice for eligible students. fa.:ulty and staff.
IBM. Personal System/2 and Propnnter II are regtstered trademarks of IBM Corporat10n. Mcrosoft is a reg1S!_ered trademark of Microsoft Corporat10n.
NEW SEASON FOR
MEN'S BASKETBALL -TIGERS CLOSE SUCCESSFUL SEASON
by Eddie Lee Williams
Staff Writer
The '88•'89 CPCC Tigers are a
month into their current season.
This is the third year CPCC will
participate in the National Junior
College Association (NJCA). This
year's team consists of 15 players
who practice I½ hours a day, four
to five_ dax~ week.
"I'm very impressed with the -
basketball team this year," states
Jim Foster, Jr. , the assistant
coach. "We have more height than
any of our previous teams. The
average height of our players is 6
feet, 3 inches. This team has more
experience in playing · organized
basketball also Most of them have
played in high school and they
show more organization on the
court. They are really learning to
react well together. I can see
progress on ' a day-to-day basis.
They are truly · responding like a
well-defined team."
Since these new players bring
more options to the court, the
Tigers have incorporated some new
plays into their strategy this season.
The Tigers hold the distinction
of being the only non-scholarship
team in the league; none of our
players are given scholarships because
CPCC, as a community college,
can't offer any. Our players
are strictly playing on their own
initiative and volunteering their personal
time. We can be assured that
every player on CPCC's team has a
personal commitment to the team
and to the sport of basketball.
This year's schedule consists of
23 games. Complete schedules for
the '88-'89 season will be available
in the Student Activities office.
The Tigers are off to a 4-2 start.
The next game will be · Dec. 16 at
CPCC's Taylor Hall gym at 7:30
p.m. against USC at Salkahatchie.
Come on out and support our
team!
by Charles Young
Staff Writer
The CPCC Soccer team, under
the direction of coach Tony Kandakai,
completed the regular season
of competition with an 8-0
record. The Tigers competed in the
Charlotte Park and Recreation
Amateur Soccer League at McAlpine
Park.
The Tigers competed in the
playoffs held on the weekend of Nov.
19-20 and advanced to the
semifinals before losing to the Charlotte
Loafers. So the Tigers ended
the season with a 9-1 record.
Coach Kandakai is from Liberia
but grew up in New York City; he
has been in Charlotte for two years.
Tony is also a student in the Air
Conditioning and Refrigeration
program with an interest in Psychology.
Coach K. says that he
began playing soccer at an early age
in Liberia and continued to play after
coming to America. "There
were people here who wanted to
play soccer but nobody was there
to coach them. So I volunteered to
coach the team," he relates.
The Soccer Team, like all sports
teams at CPCC, are administered
through Student Activities. The
Soccer Team was born, or reborn,
I should say, because a desire was
expressed by international students
to have a Soccer Team through the
"Student Foru_ms" held by Dr.
Ruth Shaw.
Through the efforts of Coach K.
and the cooperation of Student
Activities, a Soccer . Team was organized
and outfitted. The team
was entered in the Charlotte Parks
and Recreation Amateur Soccer
League at McAlpine Park.
BLOOD GROUP B'S
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from 300 a month as a blood donor
free blood typing and antibody sneening
F.M.l. call
SEROLOGICALS, INC.
366-4215 Closed Wednesdays ·
The 1988 CPCC Soccer Team -Und~
feated in regular season games
Unexpectedly, the team · proceeded
to go undefeated in regular
season play, and in the players' !ind
coach's mirtds- unnoticed. "I would
have liked Jo see someone from the
administration come see us play, we
were undefeated," says Coach K.
Some of the players who helped
make soccer a success are: Gary Sisco,
Edwin Dokie Lakie, Jr., Robert
Martinez, Jorge Mesqivta, Habib
Ghaderi, Kary Koke , Erol Tune,
Sean Kennedy, Jerry Roach, Rabia
Kafozi (Asst. Captain), Farid Alan-sari,
Moshen Khordehforosh (Cap-
The soccer season is now over tain), Said Karoubi (Keeper), Hadi
and we onl -can o back to the old J · d n:-h cLM ni.. · _o_uman an _--Ail, ar . c.c:.uerson. _ ·
cliche, "Wait till next year." With All these players are to be con-the
success of this year's team, it _ gratulated on a fine season and
would seem that CPCC would try it for representing the name of CPCC
again next year and that ,will give in such a fine fashion.
everyone a chance to get behind the
team.
STUDENTS, YOU KNOW WHO THE BEST TEACHERS ARE.
DO YOU WANT EVERYONE TO KNOW? REWARD A
GOOD TEACHER BY FILLING OUT THIS FORM AND
GIVING IT TO
· l\lARCiERY ORELL, URCUL.-\TION DESK. CPCC LIBRARY . .
I THINK THIS TEACHER IS THE GREATEST -----
MY NAME IS =-=-=---="'==--=c=PHONE
(If YOU WOULD RATHER WRITE IN TH--E-N_A_~_I_E_O_f_A
LIBRARIAN, COUNSELOR, SECRETARY, ADMINISTRATDR,
OR ANY OTHER EMPLOYEE AT CPCC, PLEASE FEEL FREE
TO DO THAT TOO!) .
EMPEROR HA
