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Concert Treats Crowd To New Brand' Of f Jazz SAM DONAHUE . fee lured saxophonist By Richard Krikava Collegian Stafl Writer The Mb, powerful sound ot "Malaguena" by the Stan Kenton Orchestra will be stirring In th* mlnda of nearly 2S00 lass fans far quite some time aa s result of Presno Stste Col lees's first an¬ nual Jass Concert held Saturday niRhi In the Roosevelt HIgh School Auditorium. The tall man with his patented positive snd explosive progressive JSSS arrangements highlighted the ■how after the appearances of the Bruce Dsvts Quintet, Sue Ann Henryson, the Buddy DeFranco- Tommy Oumlno Quartet snd Er¬ nestine Anderson. Kenton and his 21-man orches¬ tra brought a new note to Fresno by Introduces a "new brand" of Jass. His five trumpets, ftve trombones, five saxophones, four mellophonium*, a bass and drum- mar exhibited fins balance, timing snd precision thst few big bands can match. As one observer point¬ ed out: "This band screams beau¬ tifully." Hiss Henryson ' captured the audience aa well. Backed by the Bruce Davis Quintet she exposed tome of her long swatted talent. Miss California or 1961 presented a smooth, easy going style lhat Offset the rampaging music ol Kenton that gave the entire show good balance. Some of the first comments hear.d^at the final curtain were: "What happened to June Chris¬ ty!" Despite her failure to ap¬ pear, there wss s slight let down when Miss Anderson hit tbe stsge Just before intermission. Her songs had a so-so effect, but toon caught fin wtth her "Gone With The Wind," which kspt the bail Sports Coach Larry rape's "miracle*' came true Friday aa his FSC golf ■quad walloped favored San Joss Stale lGtt-lOtt. John airman, playing second man for the Bulldogs, fired a 68, two under''par, for the day's low- eat score. Arnold Klraehenmann ■hot a 7! ss did Henry Fogg. Dsve Hodges uncorked a 78; Sd Sobs shot a TE snd Ed Sweltier scored s 79. The Bulldogs axe undefeated In three matches. Track Team Trampled The Unlveisity of Oregon track squid hsd no more than s cool workout ln Satellite Stadium Sat¬ urday as they defeated Bulldog runners 112H-17*. The Bulldogs almost made their afternoon worthwhile la ths final event when Hugh Adams, Eugene Manet te. Jerry Holland sad Dunne Reldenbach combined to run s 1:19.5 mile relay, but Ore¬ gon's OhlemaaD pushed ahead ln the final 100 yards to give ths noewheruers a sweep of the meet. Henderson To Lobby Wallace D. Henderson, Fresno Stste College professor or political science and s Fresno City council¬ man, has accepted s Job ss a lobbyist for the California Stste Employees Association In Sacra¬ mento. Don V. Doty, the CSEA presi¬ dent, said Henderson wilt begin bis job Tuesday sad will work about two days a week la Sacra¬ mento while the legislature is la Its present budget session. Henderson will take a leave ot Absence from teaching duties la June. Swimmers lose Two IIIks Nsvonns continued his blue ribbon diving over the week¬ end, but while the Bulldogs de¬ feated San Fernando Valley Stats 63-33. they lost to Long Beach 66-18 and University of Pacific 59-36. Dirk Tan Oelder turned la fins performances In Friday night's competition as he rushed from behind to win both ths 100 indi¬ vidual medley sad 200 breast- stroke. COLLEGIAN JS^^, FRESNO STATE COLLEGE VOLUME LXV FRESNO, CALIFORNIA, MONDAY. MARCH 19, 1962 Engle Will Talk About Poetry, People Paul Engle, poet, novelist, edi¬ tor, book reviewer and lyric writ¬ er, will speak tomorrow at i PM In the Music Building Auditorium. Engle, director of the Univers¬ ity of Iowa's creative writing pro¬ gram, will talk on "Poetry and People." To Illustrate the origins of the creative process Engle will read some of his own works dur¬ ing the lecture. Engle's poetry has been pub¬ lished In numerous magaxlnea In¬ cluding Life, Saturday Evening Post. Reader's Digest. Harper's, The Atlantic Monthi*/ wnnd ..Ths New Yorker. He has alio pub¬ lished books of poetry and a novel, "Always The Laud." From 1954 unUl 1969 Engle was the editor ot O. Henry Prise Stories. He also does book re¬ viewing for the New York Times��and New York Tribune and has written texts on music snd an opera libretto, "Golden Child." Called a "poet and a dynamo, an organizer and a teacher who la also a prophet" by Brooks At¬ kinson of the Times, Engle first came to public attention ln 1933. In that year his book of poems, "Worn Earth," won the Ysle Ser¬ ies of Younger Poets prise. Engle Joined the faculty of the University of Iowa In 1937 sfler three years as a Rhodes scholar. COLLEGIAN CALENDAR Monday. Mar. IS 7:80 I'M — Roger Williams Feliowalilp and Baptist Stu- ii-'iir. Union Joint meeting. College Y. Tuesday, Msr. 30 1H:45 PSI — Circle K meet¬ ing. Cafeteria Committee 1 — Janior Exec meeting, EdP 114. 1 — Parallel len ic meeting, Ed 101. 1—Frvrilinii.ii Womens Lunch¬ eon Club, It 115. 1—Sophomore Service Society,' I .omnil It ft' room tf2. 1:15—Triple 8 meeting, C*fe> tcria Committee room S3. 9:30 — Rodeo Club l-eservsv- tton, A (-"KM). 8 ■��— French Clnb meeting. College Y. 5:30 — InterHall Council Scholarship Banquet, Staff Dining Boom Cafeteria. T-ftft. Marringf for Moderns, Lab Ail Purpose Room. S—Oerman Clob, meeting and speaker, M 175. ,-. WedrrESday, Mar. at 13 PM — Baptist Stndent. Union nitfting. . Cafeteria Committee Boon -I. 4 AWS nwtinjr. EdP 111. 7 History Clnb, Calterta Commitleo room **a. Thiirsclny, Mar. 22 1—EWtlnn Commute*', B 121. 1—IntcrVjir-.lt j Christtan Fel¬ lowship, SP'IO*. 1 — You nc Republicans meet¬ ing IA 101. . 0::u> — Night #1. QUEEN APPLICANTS — Five of the.e coed. will bs selected as finalists in judging to¬ morrow afternoon. Applicant* are, left lo right, Gail MacCorthy, Betsy MacDontll, Kay Beauchamp, Jane Reinoehl, Jill Brail, Judy Green, lynrl Wo If.en, Donne lis Pelt [grew, rji Jerine Harlan, Nancy Jo Marko. Usa Da Vails, T ond Judy Brad.haw. Share* Fish ond Suzanne Walker are not pictured. —Photo by Marty Haskell U. S. Agriculture Instructors Meet Here For Convention More than 300 college agriculture instructors are expected to attend the first convention of the National Association of College Teachers of Agriculture on the west coast* The conference is now being held here and in the Hotel California*,. ,. Keynote speakers at the meet¬ ing will be Bradley Patterson of Washington. DC. the secretary of the peace corps; Dr. George Meh- ren ol Berkeley, the director ol the University of California Olan- nlnl Foundation and Presno May¬ or Arthur L. Selland. Dr. Arnold E. Joyal. tho col¬ lege president, will welcome the delegates at a 7 PM meeting ln the Vintage Room of the Hotel Calirornlao on the opening day. Lloyd Dowler, the dean of ag¬ riculture and secretary of the NACTA and seven other, FSC ag¬ riculture Instructors will tako part In the conference. Four FSC agriculture instruc¬ tors will be ln charge of events Sundsy night. At 8:30 PM. R. J. Selkirk will serve as tbe chairman of a dairy cattle judging contest, while J. T. Bell serves as the chairman of s livestock contest snd Dr. W.- C. Strong serves as a chairman ot a land Judging contest. While the contests are going on, George F. Ilg will lead a public relations committee meet¬ ing, which also will be held In the Vintage Room of the Hotel Callfornlan. Red Observer Will Speak Cross Currents will faatui Rev. E. E. Walllne tomorrow at 18:15 to 1 PM at the Collece Religious Center. Rev. Walllne was a Presbyte¬ rian missionary ia China until the Communist take-orer. He then assumed, responsibilities In church work lh Hon< Kong. Candidates Must File By Wednesday Time Is running out for stu¬ dents' who want to flls petitions for associated student body of¬ fices for next year. Petitions are due ln the Stu¬ dent Activities Ortice In tbe Ad¬ ministration Building Wednesday. The primary election will be held Apr. i, with the general elec¬ tion to follow Apr. 11. Seniors Ray Snow and Jerry Tahajlan have returned their pe¬ titions for the office of student body president. Both men have been declared eligible by the Ac¬ tivities Office. Snow Is senior clsss president this year. Tahajlan is president of Theta Chi fraternity. World Youth Film Set The Roger Williams Fellowship and Baptist Student. Union will hojd a combined meeting tonight ut T: 30 o'clock at the College Re¬ ligious Center. .'The program will emphasise youth sctlvfly within the Baptist World Alliance. The_ topic Is "To¬ gether for One—B.W.A." Color rdldes -from the Fifth Baptist World'Youth Conference bald In Toronto, Canada, win be shown. The session wfll include "Gatewsy to the Holy Land," a (Urn announcing the nest world youth conference to be held la Beirut, Lebanon. In July. 1963. 20 Coeds To Be Auctioned Going once! Going twice! Sold! This will be the call heard at noon Wednesday In front ot the cafeteria as 20 lovely coeds are auctioned to the highest bidder. The proceeds from the Junior Class stave sate will go to promote the Junior-Settlor Prom, which is scheduled for May 6. One prize which will bo up for sale Is Campus Queen Shari Welch. Other girls Include presi¬ dents of sororities. Junior class csrds slso go on sale Wednesday. These cards en¬ title Juniors to sttend the prom. Wftte 30 Days Board Will Name Chancellor-Heilbron The state college trustees "anticipate that the filling of the office of chancellor will be resolved within'the next 30 days," according; to Louis Heilbron, board chairman. HeU- bron's prediction was made earlier this month at a meeting of the trustees in which a special committee was appointed *fto assist in the deliberations eon- Rodeo Queen To Be Chosen From 14 Coeds The 11 rodeo queen contestants will be Judged tomorrow after¬ noon to determine which of these ■pretty girls will be tho 19G2 FSC Rodeo Queen. The girls will be Judged on the basis of horsemanship, appear¬ ance and personality. Including an Individual Interview with the Judges. The horsemanship eliminations will take place Just south of the Horse Unit st 1 PM with Judge Ralph Chaffee or Modesto. Im¬ mediately following the girts will go to Ag. 109 where Gary Gilbert XTNO^wmjudge them on_nj>- pearan'ee and personality. Judg- will be open to the public. The contestants and their spon¬ soring- organisations are: Kay Beaucbamp, Alpha XI Delta; Jill Bratt. Sigma Nu: Judy Brads haw, Block and Bridle; Lisa DaValle, Alpha Oa ram a Rho; Sheree Klsh. Delta Gamma; Judy Green, Vltlr culture Club; Jerine Harlan, Ba¬ ker Hall; Gall MacCarthy. Homan Hall; Betsy MacDonnell, Hawaiian Club and Kappa Phrateres; Nancy Jo Marko. Dairy Club; Donnelle Pet- tlgrew. FSC Flrehouse; Jane Reinoehl, Rodeo Club; Susanne Walker, Pi Epsilon; and Lynn Wolfaen. Graves Hall. Life Savings Class Is Open Tbe FSC pool will bo tho site of a Senior Life Saving program directed by watersa'ety instructor Patty Lowe of the Red Cross. Instruction will begin Wednes¬ day and will continue throughout the semester. Classes will be from 7 PM unUl B FM each Wednesday corning the selection of a new chancellor. The chancellor's post was va¬ cated in February when Dr. Buell Gallagher, tbe first chancellor, re¬ signed the 132,000 a year Job to return to the presidency of New York City College. Gallagher was appointed Chan¬ cellor of the California State Col¬ lege System last July. He was constantly under attack from right-wing political elements In the state. At the meeting, the trustees adopted enrollment ceilings for all of the state colleges. The enrollment celling adopted for Fresno State Collego was 20,000. In accordance with the enrollment levels, the trustees sdopled higher admlasion stan¬ dards for the state college sys¬ tem. These elevated standards wUl tali* alteci in tha fail of 1B63. "In recognition of their func¬ tions ln tha state's tripartite sys¬ tem Of public higher education, the Board of Trustees of the Cali¬ fornia Stale Colleges will develop and adopt, over a three-year phas- lng-ln period, admission require¬ ments designed, to select rrom ths upper one-third of high school graduates," said the trustees. These requirements are part'of the California Master Plan for Higher Education. The plan will send the top 11 snd one-half per cent of high school graduates to University of California Institu¬ tions. The top 33 snd one third per cent of students wfll attend state colleges. The remaining <6 and one third per cent of tho Ugh school graduates planning to at¬ tend public colleges ln ths state will attend two-year colleges. In other, action, ths trust set adopted a resolution concerning stale college parking fees. The fees were set at IE a month "or a major portion ■there¬ of" for a reserved space. Non- reserved spsce wfll cost $13 a HONORED — Dr. A. R. Lang, left. Executive Dean Emeritus; and Dr. Mitchell Brlggi, Dean of Instruction Emeritus. —-Phofo by Mac Keithtey College Honors Former Deans Briggs, Lang Dr. Mitchell Briggs. Dean of Instruction Emeri¬ tus at Fresno State College, and Dr. A. S. Lang, Executive Dean Emeritus, were honored at an In¬ formal gathering In the FSC Administration Build¬ ing recently. President Arnold E. Joyal of FSC hosted the two former deans at a social hour ln his conference room.' Pictures of the men were then placed on east wall ot the administration building, facing the registration Office windows. Dr. Briggs; now executive secretary-treasurer of tbe Western College Association. Joined the FSC faculty In 191s and retired in September of l9Bi, as dean of instruction. Dr. Lang, now ln retirement, started his FSC career In 1937. Ho retired as executive deen tn 195S.
Object Description
Title | 1962_03 The Daily Collegian March 1962 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1962 |
Description | Daily (except weedends) during the school year. Microfilm. Palo Alto, Calif.: BMI Library Microfilms, 1986- microfilm reels; 35 mm. Vol.1, no.1 (Feb 8, 1922)- |
Subject | California State University, Fresno -- Periodicals. |
Contributors | Associated Students of Fresno State. |
Coverage | Vol.1 no.1 (Feb 8, 1922)- to present |
Format | Microfilm reels, 35 mm. |
Technical Information | Scanned at 600 dpi; TIFF; Microfilm ScanPro 2000 "E-image data" |
Language | eng |
Description
Title | March 19, 1962, Page 1 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1962 |
Description | Daily (except weedends) during the school year. Microfilm. Palo Alto, Calif.: BMI Library Microfilms, 1986- microfilm reels; 35 mm. Vol.1, no.1 (Feb 8, 1922)- |
Subject | California State University, Fresno -- Periodicals. |
Contributors | Associated Students of Fresno State. |
Coverage | Vol.1 no.1 (Feb 8, 1922)- to present |
Format | Microfilm reels, 35 mm. |
Technical Information | Scanned at 600 dpi; TIFF; Microfilm ScanPro 2000 "E-image data" |
Language | eng |
Full-Text-Search | Concert Treats Crowd To New Brand' Of f Jazz SAM DONAHUE . fee lured saxophonist By Richard Krikava Collegian Stafl Writer The Mb, powerful sound ot "Malaguena" by the Stan Kenton Orchestra will be stirring In th* mlnda of nearly 2S00 lass fans far quite some time aa s result of Presno Stste Col lees's first an¬ nual Jass Concert held Saturday niRhi In the Roosevelt HIgh School Auditorium. The tall man with his patented positive snd explosive progressive JSSS arrangements highlighted the ■how after the appearances of the Bruce Dsvts Quintet, Sue Ann Henryson, the Buddy DeFranco- Tommy Oumlno Quartet snd Er¬ nestine Anderson. Kenton and his 21-man orches¬ tra brought a new note to Fresno by Introduces a "new brand" of Jass. His five trumpets, ftve trombones, five saxophones, four mellophonium*, a bass and drum- mar exhibited fins balance, timing snd precision thst few big bands can match. As one observer point¬ ed out: "This band screams beau¬ tifully." Hiss Henryson ' captured the audience aa well. Backed by the Bruce Davis Quintet she exposed tome of her long swatted talent. Miss California or 1961 presented a smooth, easy going style lhat Offset the rampaging music ol Kenton that gave the entire show good balance. Some of the first comments hear.d^at the final curtain were: "What happened to June Chris¬ ty!" Despite her failure to ap¬ pear, there wss s slight let down when Miss Anderson hit tbe stsge Just before intermission. Her songs had a so-so effect, but toon caught fin wtth her "Gone With The Wind," which kspt the bail Sports Coach Larry rape's "miracle*' came true Friday aa his FSC golf ■quad walloped favored San Joss Stale lGtt-lOtt. John airman, playing second man for the Bulldogs, fired a 68, two under''par, for the day's low- eat score. Arnold Klraehenmann ■hot a 7! ss did Henry Fogg. Dsve Hodges uncorked a 78; Sd Sobs shot a TE snd Ed Sweltier scored s 79. The Bulldogs axe undefeated In three matches. Track Team Trampled The Unlveisity of Oregon track squid hsd no more than s cool workout ln Satellite Stadium Sat¬ urday as they defeated Bulldog runners 112H-17*. The Bulldogs almost made their afternoon worthwhile la ths final event when Hugh Adams, Eugene Manet te. Jerry Holland sad Dunne Reldenbach combined to run s 1:19.5 mile relay, but Ore¬ gon's OhlemaaD pushed ahead ln the final 100 yards to give ths noewheruers a sweep of the meet. Henderson To Lobby Wallace D. Henderson, Fresno Stste College professor or political science and s Fresno City council¬ man, has accepted s Job ss a lobbyist for the California Stste Employees Association In Sacra¬ mento. Don V. Doty, the CSEA presi¬ dent, said Henderson wilt begin bis job Tuesday sad will work about two days a week la Sacra¬ mento while the legislature is la Its present budget session. Henderson will take a leave ot Absence from teaching duties la June. Swimmers lose Two IIIks Nsvonns continued his blue ribbon diving over the week¬ end, but while the Bulldogs de¬ feated San Fernando Valley Stats 63-33. they lost to Long Beach 66-18 and University of Pacific 59-36. Dirk Tan Oelder turned la fins performances In Friday night's competition as he rushed from behind to win both ths 100 indi¬ vidual medley sad 200 breast- stroke. COLLEGIAN JS^^, FRESNO STATE COLLEGE VOLUME LXV FRESNO, CALIFORNIA, MONDAY. MARCH 19, 1962 Engle Will Talk About Poetry, People Paul Engle, poet, novelist, edi¬ tor, book reviewer and lyric writ¬ er, will speak tomorrow at i PM In the Music Building Auditorium. Engle, director of the Univers¬ ity of Iowa's creative writing pro¬ gram, will talk on "Poetry and People." To Illustrate the origins of the creative process Engle will read some of his own works dur¬ ing the lecture. Engle's poetry has been pub¬ lished In numerous magaxlnea In¬ cluding Life, Saturday Evening Post. Reader's Digest. Harper's, The Atlantic Monthi*/ wnnd ..Ths New Yorker. He has alio pub¬ lished books of poetry and a novel, "Always The Laud." From 1954 unUl 1969 Engle was the editor ot O. Henry Prise Stories. He also does book re¬ viewing for the New York Times��and New York Tribune and has written texts on music snd an opera libretto, "Golden Child." Called a "poet and a dynamo, an organizer and a teacher who la also a prophet" by Brooks At¬ kinson of the Times, Engle first came to public attention ln 1933. In that year his book of poems, "Worn Earth," won the Ysle Ser¬ ies of Younger Poets prise. Engle Joined the faculty of the University of Iowa In 1937 sfler three years as a Rhodes scholar. COLLEGIAN CALENDAR Monday. Mar. IS 7:80 I'M — Roger Williams Feliowalilp and Baptist Stu- ii-'iir. Union Joint meeting. College Y. Tuesday, Msr. 30 1H:45 PSI — Circle K meet¬ ing. Cafeteria Committee 1 — Janior Exec meeting, EdP 114. 1 — Parallel len ic meeting, Ed 101. 1—Frvrilinii.ii Womens Lunch¬ eon Club, It 115. 1—Sophomore Service Society,' I .omnil It ft' room tf2. 1:15—Triple 8 meeting, C*fe> tcria Committee room S3. 9:30 — Rodeo Club l-eservsv- tton, A (-"KM). 8 ■��— French Clnb meeting. College Y. 5:30 — InterHall Council Scholarship Banquet, Staff Dining Boom Cafeteria. T-ftft. Marringf for Moderns, Lab Ail Purpose Room. S—Oerman Clob, meeting and speaker, M 175. ,-. WedrrESday, Mar. at 13 PM — Baptist Stndent. Union nitfting. . Cafeteria Committee Boon -I. 4 AWS nwtinjr. EdP 111. 7 History Clnb, Calterta Commitleo room **a. Thiirsclny, Mar. 22 1—EWtlnn Commute*', B 121. 1—IntcrVjir-.lt j Christtan Fel¬ lowship, SP'IO*. 1 — You nc Republicans meet¬ ing IA 101. . 0::u> — Night #1. QUEEN APPLICANTS — Five of the.e coed. will bs selected as finalists in judging to¬ morrow afternoon. Applicant* are, left lo right, Gail MacCorthy, Betsy MacDontll, Kay Beauchamp, Jane Reinoehl, Jill Brail, Judy Green, lynrl Wo If.en, Donne lis Pelt [grew, rji Jerine Harlan, Nancy Jo Marko. Usa Da Vails, T ond Judy Brad.haw. Share* Fish ond Suzanne Walker are not pictured. —Photo by Marty Haskell U. S. Agriculture Instructors Meet Here For Convention More than 300 college agriculture instructors are expected to attend the first convention of the National Association of College Teachers of Agriculture on the west coast* The conference is now being held here and in the Hotel California*,. ,. Keynote speakers at the meet¬ ing will be Bradley Patterson of Washington. DC. the secretary of the peace corps; Dr. George Meh- ren ol Berkeley, the director ol the University of California Olan- nlnl Foundation and Presno May¬ or Arthur L. Selland. Dr. Arnold E. Joyal. tho col¬ lege president, will welcome the delegates at a 7 PM meeting ln the Vintage Room of the Hotel Calirornlao on the opening day. Lloyd Dowler, the dean of ag¬ riculture and secretary of the NACTA and seven other, FSC ag¬ riculture Instructors will tako part In the conference. Four FSC agriculture instruc¬ tors will be ln charge of events Sundsy night. At 8:30 PM. R. J. Selkirk will serve as tbe chairman of a dairy cattle judging contest, while J. T. Bell serves as the chairman of s livestock contest snd Dr. W.- C. Strong serves as a chairman ot a land Judging contest. While the contests are going on, George F. Ilg will lead a public relations committee meet¬ ing, which also will be held In the Vintage Room of the Hotel Callfornlan. Red Observer Will Speak Cross Currents will faatui Rev. E. E. Walllne tomorrow at 18:15 to 1 PM at the Collece Religious Center. Rev. Walllne was a Presbyte¬ rian missionary ia China until the Communist take-orer. He then assumed, responsibilities In church work lh Hon< Kong. Candidates Must File By Wednesday Time Is running out for stu¬ dents' who want to flls petitions for associated student body of¬ fices for next year. Petitions are due ln the Stu¬ dent Activities Ortice In tbe Ad¬ ministration Building Wednesday. The primary election will be held Apr. i, with the general elec¬ tion to follow Apr. 11. Seniors Ray Snow and Jerry Tahajlan have returned their pe¬ titions for the office of student body president. Both men have been declared eligible by the Ac¬ tivities Office. Snow Is senior clsss president this year. Tahajlan is president of Theta Chi fraternity. World Youth Film Set The Roger Williams Fellowship and Baptist Student. Union will hojd a combined meeting tonight ut T: 30 o'clock at the College Re¬ ligious Center. .'The program will emphasise youth sctlvfly within the Baptist World Alliance. The_ topic Is "To¬ gether for One—B.W.A." Color rdldes -from the Fifth Baptist World'Youth Conference bald In Toronto, Canada, win be shown. The session wfll include "Gatewsy to the Holy Land," a (Urn announcing the nest world youth conference to be held la Beirut, Lebanon. In July. 1963. 20 Coeds To Be Auctioned Going once! Going twice! Sold! This will be the call heard at noon Wednesday In front ot the cafeteria as 20 lovely coeds are auctioned to the highest bidder. The proceeds from the Junior Class stave sate will go to promote the Junior-Settlor Prom, which is scheduled for May 6. One prize which will bo up for sale Is Campus Queen Shari Welch. Other girls Include presi¬ dents of sororities. Junior class csrds slso go on sale Wednesday. These cards en¬ title Juniors to sttend the prom. Wftte 30 Days Board Will Name Chancellor-Heilbron The state college trustees "anticipate that the filling of the office of chancellor will be resolved within'the next 30 days," according; to Louis Heilbron, board chairman. HeU- bron's prediction was made earlier this month at a meeting of the trustees in which a special committee was appointed *fto assist in the deliberations eon- Rodeo Queen To Be Chosen From 14 Coeds The 11 rodeo queen contestants will be Judged tomorrow after¬ noon to determine which of these ■pretty girls will be tho 19G2 FSC Rodeo Queen. The girls will be Judged on the basis of horsemanship, appear¬ ance and personality. Including an Individual Interview with the Judges. The horsemanship eliminations will take place Just south of the Horse Unit st 1 PM with Judge Ralph Chaffee or Modesto. Im¬ mediately following the girts will go to Ag. 109 where Gary Gilbert XTNO^wmjudge them on_nj>- pearan'ee and personality. Judg- will be open to the public. The contestants and their spon¬ soring- organisations are: Kay Beaucbamp, Alpha XI Delta; Jill Bratt. Sigma Nu: Judy Brads haw, Block and Bridle; Lisa DaValle, Alpha Oa ram a Rho; Sheree Klsh. Delta Gamma; Judy Green, Vltlr culture Club; Jerine Harlan, Ba¬ ker Hall; Gall MacCarthy. Homan Hall; Betsy MacDonnell, Hawaiian Club and Kappa Phrateres; Nancy Jo Marko. Dairy Club; Donnelle Pet- tlgrew. FSC Flrehouse; Jane Reinoehl, Rodeo Club; Susanne Walker, Pi Epsilon; and Lynn Wolfaen. Graves Hall. Life Savings Class Is Open Tbe FSC pool will bo tho site of a Senior Life Saving program directed by watersa'ety instructor Patty Lowe of the Red Cross. Instruction will begin Wednes¬ day and will continue throughout the semester. Classes will be from 7 PM unUl B FM each Wednesday corning the selection of a new chancellor. The chancellor's post was va¬ cated in February when Dr. Buell Gallagher, tbe first chancellor, re¬ signed the 132,000 a year Job to return to the presidency of New York City College. Gallagher was appointed Chan¬ cellor of the California State Col¬ lege System last July. He was constantly under attack from right-wing political elements In the state. At the meeting, the trustees adopted enrollment ceilings for all of the state colleges. The enrollment celling adopted for Fresno State Collego was 20,000. In accordance with the enrollment levels, the trustees sdopled higher admlasion stan¬ dards for the state college sys¬ tem. These elevated standards wUl tali* alteci in tha fail of 1B63. "In recognition of their func¬ tions ln tha state's tripartite sys¬ tem Of public higher education, the Board of Trustees of the Cali¬ fornia Stale Colleges will develop and adopt, over a three-year phas- lng-ln period, admission require¬ ments designed, to select rrom ths upper one-third of high school graduates," said the trustees. These requirements are part'of the California Master Plan for Higher Education. The plan will send the top 11 snd one-half per cent of high school graduates to University of California Institu¬ tions. The top 33 snd one third per cent of students wfll attend state colleges. The remaining <6 and one third per cent of tho Ugh school graduates planning to at¬ tend public colleges ln ths state will attend two-year colleges. In other, action, ths trust set adopted a resolution concerning stale college parking fees. The fees were set at IE a month "or a major portion ■there¬ of" for a reserved space. Non- reserved spsce wfll cost $13 a HONORED — Dr. A. R. Lang, left. Executive Dean Emeritus; and Dr. Mitchell Brlggi, Dean of Instruction Emeritus. —-Phofo by Mac Keithtey College Honors Former Deans Briggs, Lang Dr. Mitchell Briggs. Dean of Instruction Emeri¬ tus at Fresno State College, and Dr. A. S. Lang, Executive Dean Emeritus, were honored at an In¬ formal gathering In the FSC Administration Build¬ ing recently. President Arnold E. Joyal of FSC hosted the two former deans at a social hour ln his conference room.' Pictures of the men were then placed on east wall ot the administration building, facing the registration Office windows. Dr. Briggs; now executive secretary-treasurer of tbe Western College Association. Joined the FSC faculty In 191s and retired in September of l9Bi, as dean of instruction. Dr. Lang, now ln retirement, started his FSC career In 1937. Ho retired as executive deen tn 195S. |