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I _____ The DaUy CoUsgUn Meet The Bulldogs COLLEGIAN SPORTS FSC Quintet Prepares For Capital City Five STEVE RODRIGUEZ Rodriguez ls a 8-4, 188-pound senior from Soulier Creek. The 21-year-old quarterback ls a physical education major. His experience Includes one year for Fresno Stats, one year at CahrUlo Junior Col¬ late and four years at San Lorenzo VaUey High School. Rodriguez was aU-Amerlcan honorable mention, all-coast and aU-conference choice In JC. RICHARD ROACHE Roache ls a 5-11, 180-pound safety from VacavlUe. The 19-year-old sophomore ls a clvU engineering major. His experience Includes one year on the Fresno State College frosh and four years at Vaca¬ vlUe High School. Roache was aU-league and most valuable player as a prep. (Dowoll Photos) 'Pups Start Fast But Fizzle To 0-5 Season Starting on an optimistic note combination of offense and de- agalnst Cal Poly, the FSC Bull- fense together the rest of tho way pups couldn't seem to get the and wound up their second con- ______________ secutlve season without a win. Optimism filled the Bullpups after their narrow opening loss to the Cal Poly yearlings 13-6. With only 18 squad members, FSC sparkled on defense and carried the ball game to their highly tout- Rich Paulson quarterbacked the •I* formation attack with Dick Bourne ln reserve. Defensive gems were WU¬ Uams, Frank Jeppl and Dave .^ With the 1965 grid wars two weeks away from Its finale, the Fresno State College hoop season ls rapidly bouncing into sight. FSC wUl begin its 26-game schedule against Sacramento Stats CoUege on Dec. 1 ln the Hornet gymnasium. Tbe BuUdogs will open their horns show on the 4th against the San Francisco State CoUege Gators ln the Fresno City CoUege gym. Fresno wUl find ItssU with a disadvantage as 14 of its 28 games wlU be played on the road with four home games scheduled for the FCC hardwoods. muoh too often with the option during offensive drUls (shooting tho first chance they get). •I think one of the most im¬ portant parts of the game Is to keep the opposition moving to the point where you get them off balance, but the fella's just aren't Moat of the work thus far has mon ones that we expect at this stage of the game,* said Gregory. He ls also pleased with the at¬ titude and good hustle shown by Have 18 bowls ol vintage burgundv ...00 OS! Fumbles, shoddy tackling and an Inept offense spelled defeat for the "Dogs ln their remaining games as they lost twice to Laney Junior College 42-6 and 46-0, ono of the toughest Junior coUege teams on the west coast. Coming off these drubbings, the FSC ball club refused to give up, but were soundly defeated by the San Jose State frosh, 21-0, and the Porter¬ vUle JC Pirates, 42-12. Standing out In an undis¬ tinguished season were ball car¬ riers Jack Tacchlno and Andy •DOG OPPONENTS Week of Nov. 13 COLORADO J WASHBURN Emporia St MONTANA ST SAN JOSE ST CAL POLY (SLO).... Santa Clara LOS ANGELES ST. .. LONG BEACH ST. . SAN DIEGO ST U.C. Santa Barbara ., First off, FSC will havo at Its helm Ed Gregory, who has taken over since the departure of Harry MUler. Second, FSC wUl be, according to Gregory, a running hall club rather than the deliberate, slow style that MUler employed... And third, the personnel wUl be, for tho most part, aU new with the exceptions of center Lonnle Hughey, guard Bobby Blanchard and forward Bob Jen- Intramural director Myron An- ' derson said today that all Intra¬ mural wresUers must weigh ln tonight before the matches begin. Weigh-ins wUl be held at 6:30 p.m., and competition wUl get started at 7 o'clock In the Men's Gymnasium. through-the-mlddle ullt qoAis AROMATIC SMOKING TOBACCO 51 J m J 5* 2,2 ! _:§ it I I S Havins the opportunity to work independently and de¬ velop your resources 10 their tullest potential may (it in it so. vou should investigate ihe field oi life insurance sales and sales management The lennes. and Provident Mutual II miRhl pay you Nick Masich Kuvor Associatei 1295 Wishon Ave. Suite A PROVIDENT MlJTUALJjMM LIFE a century of dedicated service Mossenheimer. Leading the of¬ fensive blocking were Greg BUI- lngton and Steve Burrage. Elected prior to the Porter¬ vUle gamo, the co-captalnsofthe squad were their all-around of¬ fensive-defensive whiz WUUams and offensive tackle Greg Billing- Heading the strategy board for the 1965 frosh season were as¬ sistant coaches Jim Fugman, Tim Simons and Fredle Lewis, aU FSC First Pro Game PHILADELPHIA — Ths first professional footbaU game ever played was ln 1895 when a team from Latrobe, Pa., defeated a team from Jeannette, Pa., 12-0. the frosh and Lloyd Talbot who Gregory Is pleased with the overall performance of hla squad but admits, 'The boys are Just a UtUe Impatient and are going pick a starting five, butanumber of good or almost sure bets are 6-7 Hughey,, Blanchard and smooth working lefthander Randy Thompsen, a 6-4 forward. Gregory feels that Ed Musolff, Jack Kennedy, Marlln Elrod and Jim Waldren wUl be battling all the way for a starting spot also. A-1 STARTS THE ACTION WITH STYLE! O'Reilly's ' Mechani repairs Across from Hoover HI Barstow at First 227-7220 THE TRIM (hut not too sum) /f* TAPERED ....-WLs' AUTHENTIC IVY SLACKS _ • K ^GUARANTEED Tapers. <§$ [YOUR CAMPUS A-1 DEALER GAROUTTE ■"" "Ths store with The CoUege Look* Located 1 block from FAC. In CoUege Square .Shopping Center THE DAILY •s) |I|COLLE ^li IfHl mW CDCSNO ST/ FRESNO STATE COLLEGE Weather Thursday, with Uttle change ln temperatures. Today's highs 6z- 67 degrees, Fresno 68. Lcw*>- nlght 55-40 degrees, Fresno 57. Light to ft~Us winds. Number 42 Proposal Is Dropped From Executive Meeting Agenda RAIN RAIN GO AWAY—DARN rr — Linda Falk, a freshman resident of Baker Hall, faces oneof the many problems brought by the rainy season. Not only ls the dampness uncomfortable and sloppy, lt creates problsms with extra nscessiUaa — urn- breallas. (Photo oy Vivian Hunnlcutt) An enterprising "Daily Col¬ legian* reporter was instrumen- tsl Tuesday In preventing a Stu¬ dent Executive CouncU faux pas. A Student Executive agenda ltom lor tonight included pro¬ posing a resolution concerning parking regulations—a resolu¬ tion which was passed two weeks ago by a different body. Glancing over the proposed agenda, the reporter noticed in¬ clusion of the proposed resolu¬ tion and quickly mentioned the item to Student President Ernie Kinney. Ths proposal, according to Kinney, askod that any valid park¬ ing permit be acceptable ln faculty restricted parking zones A similar resolution was approvsd by President Frederic Ness several —*- ' **- The ordinance now reads: •After 5 p.m_ Mor-lsy-Thurs- day, any valid permit will be honored in all areas (general, restricted and/or residence haUs The revised ordinance was adopted on Oct. 18. When notified of tho existing been Informed of tbe ordinance change and was acting on the parking regulations because of a letter he received from Executive Dean Orrln D. Wardle. Choir, Orchestra Peace Corps Team Will fiivA Recital Sets UP m*° Booth Will \7ive rvetnui , ^.„_,,,_ «__.-.«-*». he might get the regulation •1 guess woii just have to drop the Item from the agenda,* Kinney said. At the meeting executive mem- . bera wUl be asked to approve, sorted into the campus parking howover, a resolution against the ordinance. Community Zoning Proposal, Kinney, though not elaborating on reasons why the CouncU would object to the proposal, said rea¬ sons tor not favoring the proposal would be given at the A city planning staff recently released information on tbe coi¬ tion of Johann Sebastian Bach's -Magnificat ln D* by the Fresno State College A CappeUa Choir. The free recital wUl be held at 1 p.m. ln the Music Recital HaU. The "Magnificat* was written in 1723, Bach's first year as cantor ln Leipzig. Although lt was written for Christmas, It soon came to be played for other feast days as well. The Biblical text ls taken from Canticle of the Virgin, St. Luke I: 45-55. It has been set to music by many composers, but Bach's setting Is an especially popular one, noted Arthur Huff, cbolr Huff added that whUe the 'Mag¬ nificat* was written for 30 voices, lt wlU be sung by the entire18o- volce choir with no changes. Soloists for the concert wUl be Kathleen Fries, soprano; Helenjane McKee, mezzo so¬ prano; Donna Coleman, alto; Tom Gelse, tenor; and Dave Schleber, bass. The tenor-alto duet wUl be sung by Dennis Weems and Alena There Recital HaU. No admission wUl Other works on Sunday's pro¬ gram wUl be "Winter* by Harry WUson and Two Kings* by Joseph Clokey. Graduate Record Test Application Is Due Today Today ls the final day appli¬ cations can be submitted tor the Dec 11 Graduate Record Exam¬ ination Advanced Test. The test Is required tor ad¬ vancement to candidacy tor Fresno State CoUege master of arts degrees ln biology, business, chemistry, economics, educa¬ tion, French, The "Magnificat* wlU be per¬ formed at a second concert Sun- day at 3 p,m. ln the Music $3.50 test fee. Both and the appUcation must be submitted to ths FSC Foundation Office, Agriculture Peace Corps information team is on campus this week to answer questions, hand out In¬ formation, show movies, and give speeches and placement tests. Any student Interested ln Join¬ ing the Peace Corps may flU out a questionnaire at the team's booth In the Education-Psychol¬ ogy Building snd take a place¬ ment test. Tests wlU be given Wednesday through Friday ln Business 245 at 4 p.m„ 7 p.m. Wednesday and Thursday ln Ed¬ ucation-Psychology BuUdlng 214, and Saturday at 9 a.ra. In Edu¬ cation-Psychology BuUdlng 219. The test wUl also be given on December 6 at the downtown post office at 3 p.m. The team members are Mr. and Mrs. Richard C.Mentzer, former school instructors ln Isfahan, Iran, under the Peace Corps Pro¬ gram; MUa Rosemarle Buen- rostro, who served ln Guatemala; Miss Marie C. Duff, who works ln the Peace Corps administra¬ tion office ln Washington, D.C, and Thomas F. Rls, who form¬ erly taught ln the Republic of SamaU and now ls operations of¬ ficer tor the Peace Corps In ths East Africa regional office. Thirty-three students have completed tours of duty in the Committee Is Not Needed •Since there ls already a Board of PubUcaUons manual governing campus pubUcaUons' poUdes.no need exists tor a Student Llfo- BOP ad hoc committee," said Dean of Students,-W.B. Albright. He clarified the confusing sit¬ uation that arose In last week's BOP meeting as to the exact pur¬ pose of the Student LUe Committee's proposal tor a Joint wise, I would not have made the suggestion,' explained Dean Al¬ bright. The whole matter goes back to a talk by Norman Epstein, chief legal consul tor the CaU¬ fornla State Coneges, at the Oct. 4 Dean of Students' meeting. Ep¬ stein discussed the legal aspects llcationsl poUcles on campus, •when I suggested the Student Ufe Committee propose the for¬ mation of the ad hoc committee I had not known about the exlst- Commlttee. tt was later that I found out about the BOP poUcy manual,* said Dean Albright. Dean Albright strsssedtheihls suggestton had "absolutely noth¬ ing to do with the recent sgttstion at Fresno State CoUege concern¬ ing The DaUy CoUeglan*. He added, This (ths mlx-up) ls a clear Indication of ths heed tor a clarification of responslbrutles regarding puMlcaJtlons' policies and authorization.* Dean Albright said that from now on the Student LUe Commit¬ tee will be solely concerned with student handbook revision snd will leave revision and up-dating of campus publications' poUcles In the hands of the Board of PubUcaUons. lng. Dr. M. Bruce Fisher, profes¬ sor of psychelogy and assistant to Dr. Dallas A. TueUer, aca¬ demic vice president, ls the Peace Corps' liaison officer with the coUege. Mentzer said there are no ed¬ ucation requirements tor appli¬ cants and no knowledge of a foreign language is necessary. Any special training of a volun¬ teer ls given during a three- month training period before ser¬ vice. The sppUcant must be al lesst 16, an American citizen and single. U he If. married, he must have no dependents under IS. The spouse must also apply tor duty. Editor Forms Are Available Editorship sppUcattons tor The Daily CoUeglan" and the ■Handbook* are now available at the Student Activities Office. The two editors wlU be chosen for the 1968 spring semester. Dec. 3 ls the deadllno tor the forms snd the selections wUl be msde at the next Board of PubU- cations meeting on Dec 8. IVCF Will Serve 'Smorgy' Dinner Ah InternaUonal Student's Smorgy sponsored by Inter-Vsx- slty Christian FeUowshlp wlU be held Friday at 7 p,m. Dress tor the affair wlU be casual. The dinner wUl be held at 3620 N. MUlbrook, between Cedar and First. The dinner Is sponsored sn- nuaUy by IVCF tor aU foreign students and students interested in the activities of IVCF, said Sandra Green, pubUctty chair¬ man. Entertainment wfll fellow Ex-Coach Dies s lost State CoUege sports a dear friend with the -football coach Clark death of ei Van Gaidar. Van Gaidar, 54, died lata yes¬ terday at a high school banquet ln Madison, Wis., from an ap¬ parent heart attack. The personsble Van Galder, who was respected by aU, had coached BuUdog teams from 1951 through 1958. He had resigned from tbe FSC helm to take a position as back- fleld coach at the University of Wisconsin. But, however he U remember¬ ed, "the smiling Duchman* wfll remain ln the hearts of many long-time BuUdog followers.
Object Description
Title | 1965_11 The Daily Collegian November 1965 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1965 |
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 | Nov 16, 1965 Pg. 4- Nov 17, 1965 Pg. 1 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1965 |
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 | I _____ The DaUy CoUsgUn Meet The Bulldogs COLLEGIAN SPORTS FSC Quintet Prepares For Capital City Five STEVE RODRIGUEZ Rodriguez ls a 8-4, 188-pound senior from Soulier Creek. The 21-year-old quarterback ls a physical education major. His experience Includes one year for Fresno Stats, one year at CahrUlo Junior Col¬ late and four years at San Lorenzo VaUey High School. Rodriguez was aU-Amerlcan honorable mention, all-coast and aU-conference choice In JC. RICHARD ROACHE Roache ls a 5-11, 180-pound safety from VacavlUe. The 19-year-old sophomore ls a clvU engineering major. His experience Includes one year on the Fresno State College frosh and four years at Vaca¬ vlUe High School. Roache was aU-league and most valuable player as a prep. (Dowoll Photos) 'Pups Start Fast But Fizzle To 0-5 Season Starting on an optimistic note combination of offense and de- agalnst Cal Poly, the FSC Bull- fense together the rest of tho way pups couldn't seem to get the and wound up their second con- ______________ secutlve season without a win. Optimism filled the Bullpups after their narrow opening loss to the Cal Poly yearlings 13-6. With only 18 squad members, FSC sparkled on defense and carried the ball game to their highly tout- Rich Paulson quarterbacked the •I* formation attack with Dick Bourne ln reserve. Defensive gems were WU¬ Uams, Frank Jeppl and Dave .^ With the 1965 grid wars two weeks away from Its finale, the Fresno State College hoop season ls rapidly bouncing into sight. FSC wUl begin its 26-game schedule against Sacramento Stats CoUege on Dec. 1 ln the Hornet gymnasium. Tbe BuUdogs will open their horns show on the 4th against the San Francisco State CoUege Gators ln the Fresno City CoUege gym. Fresno wUl find ItssU with a disadvantage as 14 of its 28 games wlU be played on the road with four home games scheduled for the FCC hardwoods. muoh too often with the option during offensive drUls (shooting tho first chance they get). •I think one of the most im¬ portant parts of the game Is to keep the opposition moving to the point where you get them off balance, but the fella's just aren't Moat of the work thus far has mon ones that we expect at this stage of the game,* said Gregory. He ls also pleased with the at¬ titude and good hustle shown by Have 18 bowls ol vintage burgundv ...00 OS! Fumbles, shoddy tackling and an Inept offense spelled defeat for the "Dogs ln their remaining games as they lost twice to Laney Junior College 42-6 and 46-0, ono of the toughest Junior coUege teams on the west coast. Coming off these drubbings, the FSC ball club refused to give up, but were soundly defeated by the San Jose State frosh, 21-0, and the Porter¬ vUle JC Pirates, 42-12. Standing out In an undis¬ tinguished season were ball car¬ riers Jack Tacchlno and Andy •DOG OPPONENTS Week of Nov. 13 COLORADO J WASHBURN Emporia St MONTANA ST SAN JOSE ST CAL POLY (SLO).... Santa Clara LOS ANGELES ST. .. LONG BEACH ST. . SAN DIEGO ST U.C. Santa Barbara ., First off, FSC will havo at Its helm Ed Gregory, who has taken over since the departure of Harry MUler. Second, FSC wUl be, according to Gregory, a running hall club rather than the deliberate, slow style that MUler employed... And third, the personnel wUl be, for tho most part, aU new with the exceptions of center Lonnle Hughey, guard Bobby Blanchard and forward Bob Jen- Intramural director Myron An- ' derson said today that all Intra¬ mural wresUers must weigh ln tonight before the matches begin. Weigh-ins wUl be held at 6:30 p.m., and competition wUl get started at 7 o'clock In the Men's Gymnasium. through-the-mlddle ullt qoAis AROMATIC SMOKING TOBACCO 51 J m J 5* 2,2 ! _:§ it I I S Havins the opportunity to work independently and de¬ velop your resources 10 their tullest potential may (it in it so. vou should investigate ihe field oi life insurance sales and sales management The lennes. and Provident Mutual II miRhl pay you Nick Masich Kuvor Associatei 1295 Wishon Ave. Suite A PROVIDENT MlJTUALJjMM LIFE a century of dedicated service Mossenheimer. Leading the of¬ fensive blocking were Greg BUI- lngton and Steve Burrage. Elected prior to the Porter¬ vUle gamo, the co-captalnsofthe squad were their all-around of¬ fensive-defensive whiz WUUams and offensive tackle Greg Billing- Heading the strategy board for the 1965 frosh season were as¬ sistant coaches Jim Fugman, Tim Simons and Fredle Lewis, aU FSC First Pro Game PHILADELPHIA — Ths first professional footbaU game ever played was ln 1895 when a team from Latrobe, Pa., defeated a team from Jeannette, Pa., 12-0. the frosh and Lloyd Talbot who Gregory Is pleased with the overall performance of hla squad but admits, 'The boys are Just a UtUe Impatient and are going pick a starting five, butanumber of good or almost sure bets are 6-7 Hughey,, Blanchard and smooth working lefthander Randy Thompsen, a 6-4 forward. Gregory feels that Ed Musolff, Jack Kennedy, Marlln Elrod and Jim Waldren wUl be battling all the way for a starting spot also. A-1 STARTS THE ACTION WITH STYLE! O'Reilly's ' Mechani repairs Across from Hoover HI Barstow at First 227-7220 THE TRIM (hut not too sum) /f* TAPERED ....-WLs' AUTHENTIC IVY SLACKS _ • K ^GUARANTEED Tapers. <§$ [YOUR CAMPUS A-1 DEALER GAROUTTE ■"" "Ths store with The CoUege Look* Located 1 block from FAC. In CoUege Square .Shopping Center THE DAILY •s) |I|COLLE ^li IfHl mW CDCSNO ST/ FRESNO STATE COLLEGE Weather Thursday, with Uttle change ln temperatures. Today's highs 6z- 67 degrees, Fresno 68. Lcw*>- nlght 55-40 degrees, Fresno 57. Light to ft~Us winds. Number 42 Proposal Is Dropped From Executive Meeting Agenda RAIN RAIN GO AWAY—DARN rr — Linda Falk, a freshman resident of Baker Hall, faces oneof the many problems brought by the rainy season. Not only ls the dampness uncomfortable and sloppy, lt creates problsms with extra nscessiUaa — urn- breallas. (Photo oy Vivian Hunnlcutt) An enterprising "Daily Col¬ legian* reporter was instrumen- tsl Tuesday In preventing a Stu¬ dent Executive CouncU faux pas. A Student Executive agenda ltom lor tonight included pro¬ posing a resolution concerning parking regulations—a resolu¬ tion which was passed two weeks ago by a different body. Glancing over the proposed agenda, the reporter noticed in¬ clusion of the proposed resolu¬ tion and quickly mentioned the item to Student President Ernie Kinney. Ths proposal, according to Kinney, askod that any valid park¬ ing permit be acceptable ln faculty restricted parking zones A similar resolution was approvsd by President Frederic Ness several —*- ' **- The ordinance now reads: •After 5 p.m_ Mor-lsy-Thurs- day, any valid permit will be honored in all areas (general, restricted and/or residence haUs The revised ordinance was adopted on Oct. 18. When notified of tho existing been Informed of tbe ordinance change and was acting on the parking regulations because of a letter he received from Executive Dean Orrln D. Wardle. Choir, Orchestra Peace Corps Team Will fiivA Recital Sets UP m*° Booth Will \7ive rvetnui , ^.„_,,,_ «__.-.«-*». he might get the regulation •1 guess woii just have to drop the Item from the agenda,* Kinney said. At the meeting executive mem- . bera wUl be asked to approve, sorted into the campus parking howover, a resolution against the ordinance. Community Zoning Proposal, Kinney, though not elaborating on reasons why the CouncU would object to the proposal, said rea¬ sons tor not favoring the proposal would be given at the A city planning staff recently released information on tbe coi¬ tion of Johann Sebastian Bach's -Magnificat ln D* by the Fresno State College A CappeUa Choir. The free recital wUl be held at 1 p.m. ln the Music Recital HaU. The "Magnificat* was written in 1723, Bach's first year as cantor ln Leipzig. Although lt was written for Christmas, It soon came to be played for other feast days as well. The Biblical text ls taken from Canticle of the Virgin, St. Luke I: 45-55. It has been set to music by many composers, but Bach's setting Is an especially popular one, noted Arthur Huff, cbolr Huff added that whUe the 'Mag¬ nificat* was written for 30 voices, lt wlU be sung by the entire18o- volce choir with no changes. Soloists for the concert wUl be Kathleen Fries, soprano; Helenjane McKee, mezzo so¬ prano; Donna Coleman, alto; Tom Gelse, tenor; and Dave Schleber, bass. The tenor-alto duet wUl be sung by Dennis Weems and Alena There Recital HaU. No admission wUl Other works on Sunday's pro¬ gram wUl be "Winter* by Harry WUson and Two Kings* by Joseph Clokey. Graduate Record Test Application Is Due Today Today ls the final day appli¬ cations can be submitted tor the Dec 11 Graduate Record Exam¬ ination Advanced Test. The test Is required tor ad¬ vancement to candidacy tor Fresno State CoUege master of arts degrees ln biology, business, chemistry, economics, educa¬ tion, French, The "Magnificat* wlU be per¬ formed at a second concert Sun- day at 3 p,m. ln the Music $3.50 test fee. Both and the appUcation must be submitted to ths FSC Foundation Office, Agriculture Peace Corps information team is on campus this week to answer questions, hand out In¬ formation, show movies, and give speeches and placement tests. Any student Interested ln Join¬ ing the Peace Corps may flU out a questionnaire at the team's booth In the Education-Psychol¬ ogy Building snd take a place¬ ment test. Tests wlU be given Wednesday through Friday ln Business 245 at 4 p.m„ 7 p.m. Wednesday and Thursday ln Ed¬ ucation-Psychology BuUdlng 214, and Saturday at 9 a.ra. In Edu¬ cation-Psychology BuUdlng 219. The test wUl also be given on December 6 at the downtown post office at 3 p.m. The team members are Mr. and Mrs. Richard C.Mentzer, former school instructors ln Isfahan, Iran, under the Peace Corps Pro¬ gram; MUa Rosemarle Buen- rostro, who served ln Guatemala; Miss Marie C. Duff, who works ln the Peace Corps administra¬ tion office ln Washington, D.C, and Thomas F. Rls, who form¬ erly taught ln the Republic of SamaU and now ls operations of¬ ficer tor the Peace Corps In ths East Africa regional office. Thirty-three students have completed tours of duty in the Committee Is Not Needed •Since there ls already a Board of PubUcaUons manual governing campus pubUcaUons' poUdes.no need exists tor a Student Llfo- BOP ad hoc committee," said Dean of Students,-W.B. Albright. He clarified the confusing sit¬ uation that arose In last week's BOP meeting as to the exact pur¬ pose of the Student LUe Committee's proposal tor a Joint wise, I would not have made the suggestion,' explained Dean Al¬ bright. The whole matter goes back to a talk by Norman Epstein, chief legal consul tor the CaU¬ fornla State Coneges, at the Oct. 4 Dean of Students' meeting. Ep¬ stein discussed the legal aspects llcationsl poUcles on campus, •when I suggested the Student Ufe Committee propose the for¬ mation of the ad hoc committee I had not known about the exlst- Commlttee. tt was later that I found out about the BOP poUcy manual,* said Dean Albright. Dean Albright strsssedtheihls suggestton had "absolutely noth¬ ing to do with the recent sgttstion at Fresno State CoUege concern¬ ing The DaUy CoUeglan*. He added, This (ths mlx-up) ls a clear Indication of ths heed tor a clarification of responslbrutles regarding puMlcaJtlons' policies and authorization.* Dean Albright said that from now on the Student LUe Commit¬ tee will be solely concerned with student handbook revision snd will leave revision and up-dating of campus publications' poUcles In the hands of the Board of PubUcaUons. lng. Dr. M. Bruce Fisher, profes¬ sor of psychelogy and assistant to Dr. Dallas A. TueUer, aca¬ demic vice president, ls the Peace Corps' liaison officer with the coUege. Mentzer said there are no ed¬ ucation requirements tor appli¬ cants and no knowledge of a foreign language is necessary. Any special training of a volun¬ teer ls given during a three- month training period before ser¬ vice. The sppUcant must be al lesst 16, an American citizen and single. U he If. married, he must have no dependents under IS. The spouse must also apply tor duty. Editor Forms Are Available Editorship sppUcattons tor The Daily CoUeglan" and the ■Handbook* are now available at the Student Activities Office. The two editors wlU be chosen for the 1968 spring semester. Dec. 3 ls the deadllno tor the forms snd the selections wUl be msde at the next Board of PubU- cations meeting on Dec 8. IVCF Will Serve 'Smorgy' Dinner Ah InternaUonal Student's Smorgy sponsored by Inter-Vsx- slty Christian FeUowshlp wlU be held Friday at 7 p,m. Dress tor the affair wlU be casual. The dinner wUl be held at 3620 N. MUlbrook, between Cedar and First. The dinner Is sponsored sn- nuaUy by IVCF tor aU foreign students and students interested in the activities of IVCF, said Sandra Green, pubUctty chair¬ man. Entertainment wfll fellow Ex-Coach Dies s lost State CoUege sports a dear friend with the -football coach Clark death of ei Van Gaidar. Van Gaidar, 54, died lata yes¬ terday at a high school banquet ln Madison, Wis., from an ap¬ parent heart attack. The personsble Van Galder, who was respected by aU, had coached BuUdog teams from 1951 through 1958. He had resigned from tbe FSC helm to take a position as back- fleld coach at the University of Wisconsin. But, however he U remember¬ ed, "the smiling Duchman* wfll remain ln the hearts of many long-time BuUdog followers. |