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Page* THE DAILY COLLEGIAN Tuesday, December 2, I960 Wrestlers open season tonight By Jeff Domingues With nowhere to go but up, the CSUF wrestling team is taking the liberty of looking as high as it can look. Coach Dick Francis Is very optimistic about this year's Bulldog squad. So optimistic, in fact, that in a moment of weakness he predicts his team will be a Sports major force In the Pacific Coast Athletic Association mat race Pulling himself together with a chuckle, Francis realizes that it will take more than optimism to surpass powerful PCAA foes San Jose State and Portland State But a little dreaming can't hurt. "In my heart I'd like to do better than the top clubs, but " he said. CSUF was the last place finisher in the PCAA wrestling tournament last year, winning only five of 17 matches in the 1979-80 campaign Things look better for the Bulldogs this season, however, because for the first time Francis had the major recruit¬ ing tool around at his disposal: scholar¬ ship money 'I couldn't talk to state champions (in the past) because they would be choos¬ ing between three or four full ride schol¬ arships," Francis said. "This Is the first time they're putting money into the wrestling program ' Francis, now in his 16th year at CSUF, has picked his share from a bountiful crop of wrestling recruits and is putting together what he calls the best team "In six or seven years" at CSUF. The biggest catch appears to be J C transfer AlvaroCano, who will wrestle in the 158 bracket Francis is hoping Cano will be available tonight when the Bull¬ dogs host Portland State, as Cano has been hospitalized with a double hernia. Available or not, Cano may not be at full strength coming back from an injury. Francis is very high on the bounty of freshmen lured to CSUF, and he feels their development will be a key for Fres¬ no in both the short and long term outlook Eric Osmer, a 126-pound man, comes off an outstanding year at Atwater High School, where he was seventh in the state in his weight class A pair of local boys, Jerry Salazar and Jeff Hassen, are also part of that fresh- r man crop. Both came out of Hoover High School. Francis said Salazar, a 150 wrestler, has been a pleasant surprise, while Hassan may be a powerful force already. He has a brother who wrestled at CSUF as well. Auberry native Bob Barton and Robert Juarez have been progressing nicely in the 142 and 158 classes, respectively. "The freshmen coming in, individually they do very well,* so the team's Im¬ provement can hinge on how well they blend with a talented group of returning wrestlers," said Francis. He said the team is stable with Paul Bolanos (118), Richard Sischo (177), Richard England (190), and heavyweight Bob Woy, coming off a year on the foot¬ ball team's defensive line, returning from last year's team. JC transfer Robin Green seems set at 167. Francis said the freshmen behind the starting wrestlers provide the Bulldogs with an element of depth that has not been there before. Thus, he can see some long term improvement for the CSUF squad. • It will be tough early. I hate to put so mucn pressure on the young guys," Francis said. The Bulldogs will need more balance this year, according to Francis, some¬ thing that was lacking last season. More individuals will have to be stronger. "We had very few conference place winners—I think four," he went on. San Jose State should be the favorite to capture the PCAA crown this year. Portland State and Utah State, perennial powerhouses, will be battling it out for second place, according to the CSUF mentor. Francis sees his club equal to Fullerton State and Long Beach State, and would like to think the Bulldogs will use its depth and wider spread talent to jump past the two toward an improve¬ ment in the PCAA. He said it will be hard to predict how the team will finish specifically, as it will take a meet or two to fully assess his club. CSUF will host Portland State tonight in the Men's Cym. The match will start at 7:30 p.m. Cagers top Air Force, Portland State Fresno State's men's basketball team got off to one of its best starts in recent years during the Thanksgiving weekend with "a pair of victories over the Air Force Academy and Portland State. The Bulldogs opened the season Friday night with a 55-40 win over Air Force, and then came back Saturday evening to blast Portland State 96-65 at Selland Arena Both contests were sellouts at the massive arena (capacity 6,530), but there were plenty of no-shows. Those who turned out were treated to Fres¬ no's usual brand of defensive basketball, along with some fancy running and gun¬ ning in Saturday's romp over Portland State. The wins give coach Boyd' Grant's Bulldogs a 2-0 season mark. Results from last night's game at the Univer¬ sity of Arizona were too late for press time. In Friday's triumph over the Falcons, it wasn't until midway through the second half before Fresno finally took control defensively. Until that point, the Falcons had traded the lead with Fresno throughout the first half and most of the second before the Bulldogs controlled the tempo with its sticky man-to-man defense. Rod Higgins scored 13 to pace Fresno, and Donald Mason chipped in 12 more. Higgins was also, the leading rebounder for Fresno with six boards. In Saturday's easy win over the Vi¬ kings of Portland SUte, the Bulldogs broke open a semi-close game in the final six minutes of the first half, out- scoring the Vikings 21-0 to grab a 53-23 halftime advantage. With nine minutes gone in the second half, Fresno led 73-41 and Grant inserted his reserves for the remainder of the contest. Leading the way for the Bulldogs was backup center John Weather spoon, a 6-10 Junior who pumped in 20 points « OLD COMICS ! SC1-R MOVIE FANTASY POSTERS I OLD ROCK RECOWS FANTASY ART J SPORTS. NON-SPORTS CARDS j 2 free pinball fumes with coupon ■ Jf, Alpha-Omega Comic i # . * Tradir* Card Co. ,' * j 2J7J E. Shaw (across from CSUF) f4> expfresTs^ | f. . StUdfOTto 2.50 TUES.-WED. From Russia With Love 7:15 Thunderball 920 »♦♦*>*>♦« ,'■ ******** ****4uk** ■ 1 I I" I" I" ■■■"I"* "*■"* ■g""|""g""g""i""i" "SJ* Photo by Dave Nielsen TYRONE BRADLEY MANEUVERS AROUND AN OPPONENT Bulrdoot oXMtad Air Force and Portland State last week and WVlnsTVyt ■«■• "■»■*»■»**JJ**j*» aT*Wl V Wl vW.ef** vm ■ *•»*■ eaaaaajaaaf w *•*■•>*«* e*aaew% at WW ■*■*"*• PW -r# 4 Tee*w*sY« Deccteber 2, I960 THE DAILY COLLEGIAN Teachers Cunt anted from Page 2 anything to be excited about.' Heimbach added, though, that there is a good; pro¬ portion of Hispanic students. Heimbach conducted a study of ele¬ mentary first-year student teachers and what they seem to want "Is something practical, away from the academic oriented world and away from the voca¬ tional.' There is a lot of ambivalence, Heim¬ bach added. "We bewail the anti-aca¬ demic movement,' he said. *A liberal arts background is essential for a good teacher.* Student teachers are required to work Tighlman Continued from page 5 the lack of a permanent room or build¬ ing for her teaching purposes, but she hopes to rectify that situation in the future. Now she is relegated to cafeterias and stages for her classes. In the course of her short teaching career Tighlman has had a few memorable disasters. 'Once, I left the room, I got a phone call in the office or something, and I left two girls. When I came back the neck of a cello was broken. Another time, I checked a violin out to a stu¬ dent and when it came back there was no bridge, no strings, nothing except the body. "The only catastrophe I've had this year Is when a girl left a trumpet in a room, and who knows where it is now,* she laughed. Tighlman said her concerts usually don't go'that well. "Once we were getting ready to. play, and the bridge popped off a string bass. The kids were tugging on my sleeve saying .'Miss Tighlman, Miss Tighlman," she said, shaking her head. 'Fortunately, one of the parents In the audience was a string player, and he put trie bridge back on for me." ■ Last year Tighlman found herself presenting three Christmas programs oooooooooooooooooooo Associated Students § Presents o o every day at their school for one-and-a- half hours per day. They meet constantly with the university supervisor and the cooperating teacher. According to the elementary require¬ ments, the supervisor should observe the student in the classroom a minimum of eight times a semester. The student teacher also meets about two hours a week in a class seminar to discuss this work with other student teachers. The secondary school has no quantita¬ tive requirements, 'simply the relation¬ ship between the three people,' Echols said. Echols said that the first experience most of the teachers have is disillusion¬ ment. m 'The students don't behave the way they (the teachers) did when they were in school,' Echols said. Most student teachers were model students, and they didn't come in contact with the other kind of kids.' Reitman said that there is a low oo o o o o o o o 0 0 o 0 o o o o morale among many established teach¬ ers, a feeling that they are tired and burned out, overworked and unhappy with their conditions. There is an effort in the foundations courses to prepare the students for real teaching,* Reltman said, 'although we are tied down to a limited number of units that the law allows. Students can take more courses, but they won't get credit for them.* Heimbach said that the student teach¬ ers consider their stint in a 'real" ctass- ' room the best part of their college educa¬ tion. 'The usual problem that arises is a lack of communication between the teacher and the supervising teacher,* he said. 'Usually they develop a dose rela¬ tionship, which carries on over a period of years.* The ability of the student teacher to earn respect from the students depends on the person, Heimbach said. "If they don't know how to get respect they're on the same night, at three different schools. *l didn't know that I had three until almost the last minute,* she said 'My car was blocked in by other cars at the first school and I had to be at the next school in five minutes. A friend gave me a ride to the other two schools. When I got to the second school, all the chairs I had set up were gone. We ended up using kindergarten-sized chairs. I came running Into the next school just ip time to hear the princi¬ pal say, 'and now we have our band!" How do the other teachers at her schools treat her? 'Some schools, I kind of feel like an outsider," she said. 'Most of them are really friendly.* Besides teaching, Tighlman be¬ longs to an all-Fresno Elementary Music Teachers ensemble, which plays for the various elementary school in the district. Tighlman also belongs to the Fresno-Madera Music See Tighlman page ■ FILL YOUR FALL WITH FILMS This Week's Film is. •• ••••"•; 6 Nine Lives of : § Fritz the Cat •§ •2 So :2 to • ••I O Starring "Fritz" 5: Si SS o: ot. o o § Wednesday at 330 in g o Science 161 § ADMISSION IS FREE § oo oooooooooooooooooooo USED BOOK BUYBACK CASH FOR TEXTBOOKS DEC 1} DEC 16 DEC 17 DEC IS DEC It DEC 20 DEC 22 DEC 23 DEC 2* KM 8:30- 6i30 THE liSC- 6i30 WED 8:30- 6:30 TOT 9:30- 6:30 TH 8:30- »:30 SAT 10:00- 1:30 NO* 8:30- 6:30 TDE 8:30- 6:30 WED 8:30-lli30 Enter Lfaaajr L*V*I Until 4:30. KENNEL BOOKSTORE (In The Heart Of The Campus) not going to get it.' Reitman recounted the story of a middle-aged woman who survived a semester at a 'tough school. She made them (the students) see she was with it," he said. 'Four master teachers who worked with her ended up transferring. Teaching is a form of leadership.' 'If you don't have confidence in your¬ self, students can spot that right away,* Heimbacksaid. Students in the secondary program are placed by their coordinator. The coordin¬ ators work with a small enough number to know their students intimately. 'They use their Intuition about match¬ ing the person's styles and interests, to make the best possible relationship," Heimbach said. He said that with the elementary group the supervisor is the key to placing the students, the criteria being that the student is judged a success by his peers See Teachers page • WECX)rVf-lETE QUALITY OWENTED TYPING SERVICE PROFESSIONAL TRANSCRIPTION SERVICE Reuimes Manuscripts / Educational Papers 960 E. SNeWs. Sujtos 103 • 104 . Fresno 22o*4M UNLESS YOU PRINT YOUR OWN... {••kMbbtaikaplt. TW pi. »»«■■■■.»*■«* I SI i .1 I 1 latamw. fnafe)OTtoa«aa*)«iwra*m,j««t>aMH wtmmmxmxxmAktmmm. AS*.pTtiiiMmmi ■ II T«,ro»TI»f T»18Mrt■■!■«■. | lllll*»j,.<.iM<fajriil1li>li»»l«M«li if* fa »SM )Wr» rmuSnhg. IWi'm. Aa • mtxxtm mx kirn tSrmtt jWI aw* «* aiasasaiirr ask • sal aa* ft bwSa. loaHaoArtOTCir>nliid»Hn. A*4■*•r-'n.al■ •*BMla* A*!*■>■■/•its*. Tit a M»aa»ts«»»w*»—■>»«■ Hainii com a* vtaS* Ww. xxx caBaca. tnlStnr • ikb Ms SSBSSf II I *J. CONTACT AEROSPACE STUDIES, CALIF. STATE UNIV. FRESNO, FRESNO, CA 222-6400 ' r r\cjnv,V-A . *v**»-v HOTC Gateway to a great way of life. £>
Object Description
Title | 1980_12 The Daily Collegian December 1980 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1980 |
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 | Dec 2, 1980 Pg. 6-7 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1980 |
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 |
Page*
THE DAILY COLLEGIAN
Tuesday, December 2, I960
Wrestlers open season tonight
By Jeff Domingues
With nowhere to go but up, the CSUF
wrestling team is taking the liberty of
looking as high as it can look.
Coach Dick Francis Is very optimistic
about this year's Bulldog squad. So
optimistic, in fact, that in a moment of
weakness he predicts his team will be a
Sports
major force In the Pacific Coast Athletic
Association mat race
Pulling himself together with a
chuckle, Francis realizes that it will take
more than optimism to surpass powerful
PCAA foes San Jose State and Portland
State But a little dreaming can't hurt.
"In my heart I'd like to do better than
the top clubs, but " he said.
CSUF was the last place finisher in the
PCAA wrestling tournament last year,
winning only five of 17 matches in the
1979-80 campaign
Things look better for the Bulldogs
this season, however, because for the
first time Francis had the major recruit¬
ing tool around at his disposal: scholar¬
ship money
'I couldn't talk to state champions (in
the past) because they would be choos¬
ing between three or four full ride schol¬
arships," Francis said. "This Is the first
time they're putting money into the
wrestling program '
Francis, now in his 16th year at CSUF,
has picked his share from a bountiful
crop of wrestling recruits and is putting
together what he calls the best team "In
six or seven years" at CSUF.
The biggest catch appears to be J C
transfer AlvaroCano, who will wrestle in
the 158 bracket Francis is hoping Cano
will be available tonight when the Bull¬
dogs host Portland State, as Cano has
been hospitalized with a double hernia.
Available or not, Cano may not be at full
strength coming back from an injury.
Francis is very high on the bounty of
freshmen lured to CSUF, and he feels
their development will be a key for Fres¬
no in both the short and long term
outlook
Eric Osmer, a 126-pound man, comes
off an outstanding year at Atwater High
School, where he was seventh in the
state in his weight class
A pair of local boys, Jerry Salazar and
Jeff Hassen, are also part of that fresh-
r
man crop. Both came out of Hoover High
School. Francis said Salazar, a 150
wrestler, has been a pleasant surprise,
while Hassan may be a powerful force
already. He has a brother who wrestled
at CSUF as well.
Auberry native Bob Barton and Robert
Juarez have been progressing nicely in
the 142 and 158 classes, respectively.
"The freshmen coming in, individually
they do very well,* so the team's Im¬
provement can hinge on how well they
blend with a talented group of returning
wrestlers," said Francis.
He said the team is stable with Paul
Bolanos (118), Richard Sischo (177),
Richard England (190), and heavyweight
Bob Woy, coming off a year on the foot¬
ball team's defensive line, returning
from last year's team. JC transfer Robin
Green seems set at 167.
Francis said the freshmen behind the
starting wrestlers provide the Bulldogs
with an element of depth that has not
been there before. Thus, he can see
some long term improvement for the
CSUF squad.
• It will be tough early. I hate to put so
mucn pressure on the young guys,"
Francis said.
The Bulldogs will need more balance
this year, according to Francis, some¬
thing that was lacking last season. More
individuals will have to be stronger.
"We had very few conference place
winners—I think four," he went on.
San Jose State should be the favorite
to capture the PCAA crown this year.
Portland State and Utah State, perennial
powerhouses, will be battling it out for
second place, according to the CSUF
mentor. Francis sees his club equal to
Fullerton State and Long Beach State,
and would like to think the Bulldogs will
use its depth and wider spread talent to
jump past the two toward an improve¬
ment in the PCAA.
He said it will be hard to predict how
the team will finish specifically, as it will
take a meet or two to fully assess his
club.
CSUF will host Portland State tonight
in the Men's Cym. The match will start
at 7:30 p.m.
Cagers top Air Force, Portland State
Fresno State's men's basketball team
got off to one of its best starts in recent
years during the Thanksgiving weekend
with "a pair of victories over the Air
Force Academy and Portland State.
The Bulldogs opened the season
Friday night with a 55-40 win over
Air Force, and then came back Saturday
evening to blast Portland State 96-65
at Selland Arena
Both contests were sellouts at the
massive arena (capacity 6,530), but
there were plenty of no-shows. Those
who turned out were treated to Fres¬
no's usual brand of defensive basketball,
along with some fancy running and gun¬
ning in Saturday's romp over Portland
State.
The wins give coach Boyd' Grant's
Bulldogs a 2-0 season mark. Results
from last night's game at the Univer¬
sity of Arizona were too late for press
time.
In Friday's triumph over the Falcons,
it wasn't until midway through the
second half before Fresno finally took
control defensively. Until that point,
the Falcons had traded the lead with
Fresno throughout the first half and
most of the second before the Bulldogs
controlled the tempo with its sticky
man-to-man defense.
Rod Higgins scored 13 to pace Fresno,
and Donald Mason chipped in 12 more.
Higgins was also, the leading rebounder
for Fresno with six boards.
In Saturday's easy win over the Vi¬
kings of Portland SUte, the Bulldogs
broke open a semi-close game in the
final six minutes of the first half, out-
scoring the Vikings 21-0 to grab a
53-23 halftime advantage. With nine
minutes gone in the second half, Fresno
led 73-41 and Grant inserted his reserves
for the remainder of the contest.
Leading the way for the Bulldogs
was backup center John Weather spoon,
a 6-10 Junior who pumped in 20 points
« OLD COMICS
! SC1-R
MOVIE FANTASY POSTERS
I OLD ROCK RECOWS
FANTASY ART
J SPORTS. NON-SPORTS CARDS
j 2 free pinball fumes with coupon ■ Jf,
Alpha-Omega Comic i #
. * Tradir* Card Co. ,' *
j 2J7J E. Shaw (across from CSUF) f4>
expfresTs^ | f. . StUdfOTto 2.50
TUES.-WED.
From Russia With Love
7:15
Thunderball 920
»♦♦*>*>♦«
,'■
******** ****4uk**
■ 1 I I" I" I" ■■■"I"* "*■"* ■g""|""g""g""i""i" "SJ*
Photo by Dave Nielsen
TYRONE BRADLEY MANEUVERS AROUND AN OPPONENT
Bulrdoot oXMtad Air Force and Portland State last week and
WVlnsTVyt ■«■• "■»■*»■»**JJ**j*» aT*Wl V Wl vW.ef** vm ■ *•»*■ eaaaaajaaaf w *•*■•>*«* e*aaew% at WW ■*■*"*• PW
-r#
4
Tee*w*sY« Deccteber 2, I960
THE DAILY COLLEGIAN
Teachers
Cunt anted from Page 2
anything to be excited about.' Heimbach
added, though, that there is a good; pro¬
portion of Hispanic students.
Heimbach conducted a study of ele¬
mentary first-year student teachers and
what they seem to want "Is something
practical, away from the academic
oriented world and away from the voca¬
tional.'
There is a lot of ambivalence, Heim¬
bach added. "We bewail the anti-aca¬
demic movement,' he said. *A liberal
arts background is essential for a good
teacher.*
Student teachers are required to work
Tighlman
Continued from page 5
the lack of a permanent room or build¬
ing for her teaching purposes, but she
hopes to rectify that situation in the
future. Now she is relegated to
cafeterias and stages for her classes.
In the course of her short teaching
career Tighlman has had a few
memorable disasters.
'Once, I left the room, I got a phone
call in the office or something, and I
left two girls. When I came back the
neck of a cello was broken. Another
time, I checked a violin out to a stu¬
dent and when it came back there was
no bridge, no strings, nothing except
the body.
"The only catastrophe I've had this
year Is when a girl left a trumpet in a
room, and who knows where it is
now,* she laughed.
Tighlman said her concerts usually
don't go'that well.
"Once we were getting ready to.
play, and the bridge popped off a
string bass. The kids were tugging on
my sleeve saying .'Miss Tighlman,
Miss Tighlman," she said, shaking
her head. 'Fortunately, one of the
parents In the audience was a string
player, and he put trie bridge back on
for me." ■
Last year Tighlman found herself
presenting three Christmas programs
oooooooooooooooooooo
Associated Students §
Presents o
o
every day at their school for one-and-a-
half hours per day. They meet constantly
with the university supervisor and the
cooperating teacher.
According to the elementary require¬
ments, the supervisor should observe
the student in the classroom a minimum
of eight times a semester. The student
teacher also meets about two hours a
week in a class seminar to discuss this
work with other student teachers.
The secondary school has no quantita¬
tive requirements, 'simply the relation¬
ship between the three people,' Echols
said.
Echols said that the first experience
most of the teachers have is disillusion¬
ment. m
'The students don't behave the way
they (the teachers) did when they were
in school,' Echols said. Most student
teachers were model students, and they
didn't come in contact with the other
kind of kids.'
Reitman said that there is a low
oo
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
0
0
o
0
o
o
o
o
morale among many established teach¬
ers, a feeling that they are tired and
burned out, overworked and unhappy
with their conditions.
There is an effort in the foundations
courses to prepare the students for real
teaching,* Reltman said, 'although we
are tied down to a limited number of
units that the law allows. Students can
take more courses, but they won't get
credit for them.*
Heimbach said that the student teach¬
ers consider their stint in a 'real" ctass-
' room the best part of their college educa¬
tion.
'The usual problem that arises is a
lack of communication between the
teacher and the supervising teacher,* he
said. 'Usually they develop a dose rela¬
tionship, which carries on over a period
of years.*
The ability of the student teacher to
earn respect from the students depends
on the person, Heimbach said. "If they
don't know how to get respect they're
on the same night, at three different
schools.
*l didn't know that I had three until
almost the last minute,* she said 'My
car was blocked in by other cars at the
first school and I had to be at the next
school in five minutes. A friend gave
me a ride to the other two schools.
When I got to the second school, all
the chairs I had set up were gone. We
ended up using kindergarten-sized
chairs. I came running Into the next
school just ip time to hear the princi¬
pal say, 'and now we have our
band!"
How do the other teachers at her
schools treat her?
'Some schools, I kind of feel like an
outsider," she said. 'Most of them
are really friendly.*
Besides teaching, Tighlman be¬
longs to an all-Fresno Elementary
Music Teachers ensemble, which
plays for the various elementary
school in the district. Tighlman also
belongs to the Fresno-Madera Music
See Tighlman page ■
FILL YOUR FALL
WITH FILMS
This Week's Film is.
•• ••••"•; 6
Nine Lives of : §
Fritz the Cat •§
•2
So
:2
to
• ••I O
Starring
"Fritz"
5:
Si
SS
o:
ot.
o o
§ Wednesday at 330 in g
o Science 161
§ ADMISSION IS FREE §
oo oooooooooooooooooooo
USED BOOK
BUYBACK
CASH FOR TEXTBOOKS
DEC 1}
DEC 16
DEC 17
DEC IS
DEC It
DEC 20
DEC 22
DEC 23
DEC 2*
KM 8:30- 6i30
THE liSC- 6i30
WED 8:30- 6:30
TOT 9:30- 6:30
TH 8:30- »:30
SAT 10:00- 1:30
NO* 8:30- 6:30
TDE 8:30- 6:30
WED 8:30-lli30
Enter Lfaaajr L*V*I
Until 4:30.
KENNEL
BOOKSTORE
(In The Heart Of The Campus)
not going to get it.'
Reitman recounted the story of a
middle-aged woman who survived a
semester at a 'tough school. She made
them (the students) see she was with it,"
he said. 'Four master teachers who
worked with her ended up transferring.
Teaching is a form of leadership.'
'If you don't have confidence in your¬
self, students can spot that right away,*
Heimbacksaid.
Students in the secondary program are
placed by their coordinator. The coordin¬
ators work with a small enough number
to know their students intimately.
'They use their Intuition about match¬
ing the person's styles and interests, to
make the best possible relationship,"
Heimbach said.
He said that with the elementary
group the supervisor is the key to placing
the students, the criteria being that the
student is judged a success by his peers
See Teachers page •
WECX)rVf-lETE
QUALITY OWENTED TYPING SERVICE
PROFESSIONAL TRANSCRIPTION
SERVICE
Reuimes
Manuscripts / Educational Papers
960 E. SNeWs. Sujtos 103 • 104 . Fresno
22o*4M
UNLESS YOU
PRINT YOUR
OWN...
{••kMbbtaikaplt. TW pi.
»»«■■■■.»*■«* I SI i .1 I 1 latamw.
fnafe)OTtoa«aa*)«iwra*m,j««t>aMH
wtmmmxmxxmAktmmm. AS*.pTtiiiMmmi ■ II T«,ro»TI»f
T»18Mrt■■!■«■. | lllll*»j,.<.iM |